Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n love_v neighbour_n self_n 2,652 5 9.4322 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to stand to this liberty he subjoyneth by love serve one another 7. Though Christianity doth not abolish the civil distinction of masters and servants Eph. 6. 5 9. And though all Christians be in some respects the Lords free-men 1 Cor. 7. 22. yet they are all even the greatest not being excepted mutually servants one to another in so far as being fellow-members of one body 1 Cor. 12. 27. they ought not to live unto themselves only but to spend themselves in their respective imployments for the spiritual and civil advantage of the whole body and of every particular member thereof so far as their capacity and calling 2 Cor. 8. 12 13. do reach for the Apostle enjoyneth unto all without exception serve one another 8. It is not sufficient we do those things which are in themselves materially good or conducing to our neighbours profit and advantage except what is done of that kind do flow from the fountain of christian love towards him 1 Cor. 13. 2 for saith he serve one another by love 9. There is no duty so onerous in it self or so far below us in our esteem but the grace of love being lively in the heart will make us pleasantly stoop unto it if it were even to serve the meanest person in the world for he commandeth all even the greatest to serve one another by love importing where love is not this service will hardly be undergon and that love will make it easie Vers. 14. For all the Law is fulfilled in one word even in this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self HE inforceth the last Rule by two Reasons first This serving one another by love is the most compendious way to keep the whole Law seing the whole Law is summed up in that one Word or Precept for the ten Precepts of the Law are called so many Words Exod. 34. 27. of loving our neighbour that is every one without exception to whom we have any opportunity offered of doing good Luke 10. 36 37. and that with as much sincerity as we do our selves Now love to our neighbour is called the fulfilling of the Law not as if love to God were not thereby commanded also Mat. 22. 37. but because love to our neighbour supposeth love to God and floweth from it as a stream from the fountain 1 Joh. 5. 1. and is an evidence of it 1 Joh. 4. 21. Doct. 1. Though Believers in Jesus Christ be delivered from the condemning sentence of the Law Rom. 8. 1. yet not from the directing power thereof The Law doth alwayes remain a rule of our new obedience though it cease from being a Judge either to justifie or condemn us for the Apostle inforceth the duty of love from the authority of the Law which doth enjoyn it for all the Law is fulfilled in one word c. saith he 2. Love to our neighbour is a most comprehensive duty as comprising not only inward affection but also outward action and extending it self to all the duties both positive and negative which are enjoyned by the whole second Table See Mat. 22. 39. love thy neighbour as thy self 3. There is not any of whatsoever rank or condition whether friend or foe Mat. 5. 44. to whom we do not owe the affection of love and the consciencious discharge of all those duties which are commanded in the second Table for we are commanded to love our neighbour that is as Christ explaineth Luke 10. 36 37. every man as opportunity doth offer 4. As the Precepts of the second Table do enjoyn every man to love and go about all other commanded duties towards his neighbour so also towards himself For although that inordinate and excessive love to self which is in every man by nature and whereby a man doth so love himself as that he postponeth Gods glory and his neighbours good to the fulfilling of his own fleshly lusts be no-where commanded but expresly guarded against Mat. 10. 39. Yet there is a lawfull orderly love to self which is enjoyned unto every man so as that by all lawfull means he labour to maintain what honour God hath put upon himself according to the fifth Command and to preserve his own life according to the sixth Command and so forth of the rest for the Command to love our neighbour as our self supposeth we ought to love our self to wit with subordination to God 5. The love and other duties flowing from love which every man is to carry unto and to discharge towards himself in subordination to God have the force of a rule and measure unto that love which we owe unto others so as that we are to love them first for God and His Command 1 Joh. 4. 21. Secondly in subordination to God Mat. 10. 37. Thirdly in sincerity there being both affection and action flowing from affection in our love to Him 1 Joh. 3. 18. for so we do and ought to love our selves Now the Law commandeth to love our neighbour as our selves Vers. 15. But if ye bite and devour one another take heed that ye be not consumed one of another HEre is a second argument to inforce the exercise of mutual love taken from some dangerous effects which doubtlesse had already followed in part among those Galatians occasioned by their debates and controversies and would yet follow more upon the want of love to wit first Their bitter strifes backbitings railings and reproaches set forth by the biting of wilde beasts And secondly other real injuries by fraud or violence which seem to be pointed at by devouring which is more than biting And lastly as a consequence of the two former a total vastation and consumption of the whole Church Doct. 1. As it is a matter of no small difficulty to entertain love among the members of a Church when they are divided in opinion and judgment about religious Truths So where love groweth cold Church-divisions have ordinarily sad and scandalous effects which argue little of a tender frame of heart in those who have them even such as are here mentioned biting and devouring one another 2. However a sectarian spirit doth ordinarily pretend to much sobriety and meeknesse especially when it first appeareth and hath but few to give it any countenance Rom. 16. 18. yet so soon as it hath gathered strength and gained many followers it hath been alwayes found most bitter and cruel for the effects of this renting schismatick spirit among those Galatians were no lesse than biting and devouring one another 3. In time of Church-divisions though that party which is for truth and piety be alwayes the most sober Jude v. 20. 21. yet considering that even they have much unmortified corruption apt to be provoked by the insolency of their schismatick adversaries there is no small hazard lest even they vent much of fleshly zeal and passion and while they are defending Truth become guilty of several miscarriages and so be rendred much the worse of their contests and divisions for the sin which
23. that the husband is the head of the wife he inferreth here So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies 3. Though there be a sinfull love to a mans self whereby a man preferreth himself and the fulfilling of his inordinate desires to Gods glory and the good of his neighbour Philip. 2. 21. which by all means is to be eschewed and mortified Luke 9. 23. yet there is an orderly lawfull and allowed love to self whereby a man doth seek his own preservation both in soul and body by just and lawfull means with due subordination to Gods glory and without any opposition to or setting himself against his neighbours good for Paul supponeth this love ought to be in every man towards himself and doth urge it as the reason and rule of the love which the husband oweth to his wife while he saith men ought to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself 4. The love which husbands do carry to their wives ought not to have its rise from any such extrinsecal considerations as love to their own peace and ease fear of shame and disgrace if through want of love secret discontents break out to publick strife or from any satisfaction which they find to their carnal affections but from respect to Gods holy Ordinance whereby their wives are made a piece of themselves hence their love shall be most native operative yea and insuperable by any provocations or infirmities when they shall look upon their wives as themselves and consequently upon their infirmities shame hurt as their own for Paul will have their love to flow from this fountain while he saith men ought to love their wives as their own bodies c. 5. That husbands may carry themselves aright towards their wives which holdeth of all superiours with relation to their inferiours they would seriously consider not so much what is in the power of their hand and what they are able to do or may be for their profit and advantage or tend to get themselves obeyed feared and respected to the utmost as what they ought and is incumbent for them to do and what the Law of God and the state they are in do require from them as their duty for the Apostle repeateth the former exhortation held forth ver 25. with the addition of one word to wit ought whereby he mindeth husbands that the thing pressed was their duty and therefore they were to mind it So ought men to love their wives saith he Vers. 29. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it even as the Lord the Church HE proveth the consequence of the former argument to wit that husbands are to love their wives because they are their own bodies by three reasons The first is taken from the universal custom of all men to wit who are in their right wit not demented and wofully deluded by the devil which is set down first negatively no man did ever hate his own flesh or from hatred did any dammage to it and next positively every such man doth to his utmost provide for and allow upon his own flesh all things necessary both for nourishing or feeding it and for cherishing and keeping it warm with such a sort of care and tendernesse as hens have toward their young ones while by casting their wings over them they do with their own natural heat keep the young ones warm for the word rendered cherishing is a mephor taken from the practice of those tender and loving creatures By all which he not only proveth that husbands should love their wives as being their own body but also hinteth at some of those effects wherein their love should be made manifest whereof particular mention shall be made among the Observations Secondly he proveth the same consequence and also further cleareth with what care and tendernesse the husband should carry himself unto his wife as to his own body from Christs example who nourisheth and cherisheth the Church His body by providing for her and allowing on her all things necessary for soul and body Doct. 1. It is no lesse monstruous and unnatural for a man to hate and from hatred to carry himself austerely saucily and undutifully to his wife than if in a fit of phrensie he should hate and from hatred refuse to do all duty to himself But in stead thereof to be cruel against himself for the Apostle mentioneth this no man not demented did never hate his own flesh to shew that therefore husbands ought as much to abhor and abstain from hating their wives for no man ever yet hated his own flesh 2. It is not sufficient that husbands do not carry any hatred to their wives but they must also love them and evidence their love to them not in empty words and flattering insinuations but in providing all things necessary for them both in food and raiment for he holdeth forth indirectly the husbands duty to his wife in that allowed care which every man hath or ought to have of his own flesh No man ever yet bated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it 3. It is the duty of an husband to provide things necessary unto his wife not grudgingly or too sparingly as to a stranger or to his childe or servant but liberally according to her rank and station as being his equal and confidently without craving an exact accompt from her of every thing which she receiveth as having a common right and interest with him in all things that are his and cheerfully by testifying such contentment in her even while he bestoweth things necessary on her as he would do in bestowing the same or the like on himself for so much is implyed in a mans nourishing and cherishing of his own flesh which is held forth as the rule of the husbands tender care and liberal benevolence toward his wife but nourisheth and cherisheth it 4. The husband under pretence of cherishing his wife ought not to pamper her or lavishly to wast his estate in upholding her prodigality in apparel unnecessary expensive ornaments and such like vanities but the rule according to which he is to walk in those things and more than which the wife ought not to expect from her husband nor yet complaine if he come up to it is what his own rank requireth his necessity doth permit and that tender care which is taken by him in nourishing and cherishing himself for this is here held forth as his rule But nourisheth and cherisheth it to wit his own flesh 5. Though there be an excessive pampering of the flesh which is sinfull and forbidden when provision is made for it to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 13. 14. yet there is a lawfull and necessary care of the flesh or of a mans own body whereby things necessary for food and raiment are bestowed upon it in so far that health and strength be not inlacking for discharging the duties of our calling for
worthy to be received whoever do preach it neither doth it borrow any intrinsick authority from the person of the Preacher Hence the Galatians are commended that in this respect they received Paul as an Angel of God even as Christ Jesus See Luke 10. 16. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. The onely thing which maketh a people happy is to have the doctrine of the Gospel which is the mean of our reconciliation with God in Christ 2 Cor. 5. 18. preached among them and to receive this Doctrine and the faithfull Preachers of it with all due reverence love and subjection The injoying of honour riches and abundance of outward peace is no blessednesse being compared with this Psal. 4. 6 7. for the Apostle speaketh of these Galatians while they were in that case What or how great was then your blessednesse 2. Injuries received afterwards will not obliterate the inward sense or mar the outward acknowledgment of favours formerly received in a thankfull mind for though the Galatians had done no private injury to Paul ver 12. yet in their defection from Truth they had wronged him for the Truth 's sake and notwithstanding he proclaimeth those evidences of their love and respect which he had received formerly both in the former verse and more expresly here while he saith I bear you record ye would have plucked out your eyes c. 3. The love and reverence which People owe to Ministers ought not to be verbal and in profession only but real also even such as may evidence it self in the hearty bestowing of any thing which may be for their encouragement or for advancing the Work of God in their hands for Paul proveth these Galatians had received him as they ought from their readinesse to impart unto him all things necessary and possible for his encouragement Ye received me saith he for I bear you record ye would have plucked out your eyes 4. Though as is usually said Charity begins at home and we be commanded to love our neighbour only as our self Mat. 22. 39. Yet there is a certain case in which we must consider our neighbour not only as a neighbour but as a special instrument of God and thus we are in some respects to love and prefer him unto our selves and especially when he is an instrument imployed by God for the defence and propagation of the Gospel we ought to be ready to forsake the dearest things we have in the world though it were our own hands eyes feet yea and our very life if so it may promote the Work of God in his hands for in this case it is not our neighbour but Christ and the Gospel which we prefer unto our selves according to Mat. 10. 37. Hence because Paul was such an instrument the Galatians are commended for their readinesse to pluck out their own eyes and to give them to him 5. The wisdom and goodnesse of God hath so provided that the hands eyes and other members of our body being cut off or plucked out cannot be serviceable or usefull unto the body of any other hereby preventing the cruelty and tyranny of the greater sort who would make no scruple to mutilate the bodies of their inferiours if those mutilated members could serve for any use to themselves afterwards for saith he If it had been possible they would have plucked out their own eyes importing it was impossible not simply to pluck them out but that their eyes being plucked out could serve for the same use to him for which they did serve unto themselves Vers. 16. Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the truth THe Apostle concludeth from what he hath said of their former kindnesse to him that he was not now turned their enemy nor estranged in his affection from them for the interrogative hath the force of a vehement denial and that they had no reason to think so of him this only excepted that with much candor and ingenuity he had declared the Truth unto them in opposition to the Errors of the false Apostles the absurdity of which reason is also imported by the interrogative propounded to them Doct. 1. For Christians to entertain malice or a spirit of private revenge one against another as it is in any case sinfull so when there hath been no personal injury offered it is abominable and hardly can it be conceived that a man of conscience will be guilty of it for Paul having declared that they had done him no injury but shown much love and reverence unto him denyeth that there was any just reason why they could so much as conceive that he was turned an enemy unto them Am I therefore become your enemy 2. When men are once engaged in a sinfull course and especially in the way of error they are so dementate with it that they can put no difference betwixt it and themselves they have common friends and enemies and whosoever is an enemy to it is looked upon by them as an enemy to themselves for Paul by telling the Truth in opposition to their Error is looked upon as an enemy Am I therefore become your enemy because I tell you the Truth 3. However a faithfull Minister will readily be mistaken for his freedom and ingenuity in the reproof of sin as if he were an unfriend and enemy to the person reproved when really he can give no such evident proof of his love and respect Psal. 141. 5. he is neverthelesse to go on in his duty labouring to obviate all such mistakes and prejudices as he best may for Paul ceaseth not to tell them the Truth although he was looked upon as an enemy for his so doing only he laboureth to clear them of their mistake Am I therefore become your enemy c. Vers. 17. They zealously affect you but not well yea they would exclude you that you might affect them 18. But it is good to be zealously affected alwayes in a good thing and not only when I am present with you THe Apostle in further prosecution of the former purpose obviateth an objection arising from that fervent zeal or that intense love joyned with serious endeavours to oppose and a kind of indignation against any thing that might prove hurtfull unto them which the false Apostles seemed to carry towards them beyond what Paul did so that yet they had reason to doubt of his affection to them The Apostle answereth It was true indeed that the false Apostles pretended great love to and zeal for them but their zeal was not of the right stamp as not having that which is truly good for its object to wit the edification of those for whom they seemed zealous but rather their destruction while all their zealous endeavours did tend to exclude them and rent their affection from Paul himself and other faithful Pastors And again as their zeal did deviate in the object so also in the scope proposed which was not to gain these Galatians to Christ but popular applause to themselves
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
which is betwixt Christ and His Church for what was spoken historically of marriage is here applied mystically to Christ For this cause shall a man leave c. 3. As the Church of true Believers is the Bride the Lambs wife espoused already to Christ So never any man did more to purchase a Bride to himself than Christ hath done for His. He laid aside the glory which He had with the Father and became of no reputation as was mystically foretold in this history of the first marriage A man shall leave his father and mother 4. The great travel and trouble which Christ was put to for purchasing a Bride unto Himself doth not make Him regard her the lesse now when He hath her for He doth inseparably cleave unto her with most ardent and exemplary affection as was also mystically foretold And shall be joyned to his wife Vers. 32. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church THe Apostle concludeth this purpose concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church here made use of to illustrate that near conjunction betwixt husband and wife with an observable acclamation that it is a great mysterie which word as it is usually taken in Scripture doth signifie a thing secret not obvious to every understanding and hid either in it self or in its cause and reason whether it be held out in plain terms or under the vail of some external sign or figure to represent it See 1 Tim. 3. 16. Eph. 3. 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. Rom. 11. 25. 2 Thess. 2. 7. And lest by reason of his speaking all alongs of the bodily marriage betwixt husband and wife any had so far mistaken him as to think he called that a mysterie therefore he explaineth himself by shewing he was to be understood not of the bodily marriage but of the spiritual or that strict union or conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church Now he calleth this union a great mysterie because it is a thing hid in it self before it be revealed 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. yea and after it remaineth unsearchable by the light of reason how Christ now glorified in heaven can be one with us on earth and can only be acknowledged by faith Heb. 11. 1. Beside the bonds of this blessed union and conjunction are not naturall or bodily but spirituall even the Spirit of Christ Eph. 2. 18. and the grace of faith Eph. 3. 17. and therefore though the conjunction following upon these bonds be real Joh. 17. 21. operative Joh. 15. 5. and indissoluble Joh. 10. 28 29. yet the way of it is wholly spirituall and heavenly and consequently not so much to be searched into by reason what or how it is as to be believed that it is and improved for attaining and finding in our selves those blessed effects which do attend it where it is Doct. 1. That Papists have not ground from this place to make marriage a Sacrament properly so called is clear from the Apostle's own commentary whereby he sheweth by the mysterie here spoken of he doth not understand the bodily marriage but the spiritual beside that the word mysterie as we shew in the use of Scripture doth signifie a sacred secret not obvious to ordinary capacity and therefore every mysterie is not a Sacrament See 2 Thess. 2. 7. Rom. 11. 25. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church 2. The more a man doth attain to know of this mysterie of the mystical union and conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church the more he will be ravished with admiration at the unsearchable deepnesse and profundity of it so far will he be from thinking himself able sufficiently to comprehend it for even Paul who saw as far in this mysterie as any other Eph. 3. 4. doth stand admire and cry This is a great mysterie 3. As Ministers are bound to set forth to the Lords People that most near and blessed union betwixt Christ and believing souls and to presse upon them the study of the knowledge of it So both Pastors and People have need of much sobriety of spirit in diving into this subject not trusting to the quicknesse of their own wit nor judging of it by natural reason but resting upon what God hath revealed and made known concerning it and choosing rather to remain ignorant where he hath not revealed than curiously to search and pry further than is revealed for Paul while he is instructing them in this subject seeth it necessary to minde them of the profoundnesse of it this is a great mysterie 4. As we are ready through ignorance or inadvertence to mistake the right meaning and sense of Scripture So the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath carefully guarded against all such mistakes while he doth clear the right and genuine sense of a doubt some and dark Scripture by Scripture it self either in the same place or another for so doth Paul here while to obviate a possible mistake he saith But I speak concerning Christ and the Church Vers. 33. Neverthelesse let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself and the wife see that she reverence her husband HE doth here by way of diversion from dipping further at this time in that spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church exhort both husband and wife to learn from that forementioned law of marriage a short sum of their respective duties and first that every husband without exception or admitting any excuse would love his wife as himself that is seing she is a piece of himself as ver 28. otherwise if the particle as were only a note of similitude comparing different things and making a mans love unto himself the rule of his love unto his wife Then every man's neighbours should be equally loved with his wife for every man is to love his neighbour as himself in that sense Gal. 5. 14. And secondly he enjoyneth the wife that she reverence or as the word signifieth from love do fear her husband the meaning whereof is that she inwardly acknowledge that degree of honour which God hath put upon him 1 Cor. 11. 3. and give evident testimony of her inward esteem in words 1 Pet. 3. 6. actions and whole carriage and especially in her loathnesse to offend him 1 Pet. 3. 2. Doct. 1. Though there be some latent mysteries intended by the Spirit of God to be set forth by some plain histories recorded in Scripture besides their historicall and literall sense yet we are not upon that pretence to turn the whole Scripture into an allegory as if no more were intended in those Scriptures by the Spirit of God but only to set forth the spirituall mysterie We ought to look upon the historicall and literall sense of them also and mainly and make such use of them as being so taken they will afford for Paul having shown the mystical and allegorical use of Adam's words doth divert from that
10. 31. duties of our lawful imployments Heb. 11. 33. and to our carriage under crosses Heb. 11. 24 25. for by the life which Paul lived in the flesh is meaned this natural life Heb. 5. 7. 1 Pet. 4. 2. and his living this spiritual life of Faith was extended even to the things of that life The life which I now live in the flesh is by the Faith of the Son of God Doct. 7. As Jesus Christ did give Himself a Ransom for the Elect See chap. 1. 4. so no worth in us no good which He expecteth from us or need which He stood in of us but only love in Him to us did move Him so to do He loved me and gave Himself for me 8. Though the full perswasion and assurance of Christ's special love unto and His dying for me in particular is not the very essence and being of saving Faith Eph. 1. 13. for saving Faith may be without it Isa. 50. 10. Yet it is a thing which may be had without extraordinary revelation the Spirit of God enabling the Believer to discern in himself those graces 1 Cor. 2. 12. which are set down as marks of His special love and favour in Scripture 1 Joh. 3. 14 18 19 21 24. and bearing witnesse with His Spirit that he is a childe of God Rom. 8. 16. and this assurance should be aimed at in the right method by all 2 Pet. 1. 10. for Paul speaking in the name of other Believers sheweth he had attained it Who loved me and gave Himself for me saith he 9. This full perswasion and assurance in its own nature is so far from making those who have it loose the reigns to wickednesse and security that upon the contrary it serveth as a strong incitement to make them mortifie sin and live that spiritual life of Faith which is here spoken of for it served for this use unto Paul I live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself forme Vers. 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God for if rightebusnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain HAving removed the objection the Apostle proceedeth to establish Justification by Faith and not by the Works of the Law by a second argument to this purpose If we be justified by the Law or works done in obedience to the Law Then those two absurdities would follow 1. God's free grace and favour should be rejected despised frustrated and made uselesse for the word signifieth all these and the reason of the consequence lyeth in this That if Justification be by Works Then it cannot be by Grace Rom. 11. 6. 2. Christ's death had been in vain without any necessary cause or reason if the Justification of finners could have been attained by Works or by any other mean Doct. 1. They who have attained unto the perswasion and full assurance of God's favour and love in Christ ought above all others to maintain the glory of His Grace and Mercy in saving of sinners freely not admitting of any thing whether in practice or opinion whether in themselves or so far as is possible in others which may incroach upon it obscure it or weaken the thoughts of the excellency of it in the minds of men for Paul who was perswaded of Christ's love ver 20. doth look upon this as his duty flowing from that assurance I do not frustrate the Grace of God saith he 2. The joyning of Works with Faith in the matter of Justification is a total excluding of God's Free-grace and favour from having any hand in this Work for Grace admitteth of no partner so that if Grace do not all it doth nothing if any thing be added to it that addition maketh Grace to be no Grace Rom. 4. 4. for the Apostle reasoning against those who would have made Works to share with God's Free-grace and favour in Justification sheweth his joyning with them in that opinion would be a total rejecting and making uselesse of God's Grace I do not frustrate the Grace of God 3. That the Apostle doth exclude in this dispute from having any influence in Justification the Works not only of the Ceremonial but also of the Moral Law appeareth from this That he opposeth the Merit of Christ's death to all Merit of our own whether by obedience to the one Law or to the other neither can any reason be given for which our meriting by obedience to the Ceremonial Law maketh Christ to have died in vain which is not applicabl to the Moral Law For if righteousness come by the Law then Christ died in vain 4. That he excludeth also not only the Works of the Moral Law which are performed by the natural and unregenerate man but also those which the Godly do perform by vertue of Faith drawing influence from Christ appeareth from this that the Apostle useth this argument taken from the uselesnesse of Christ's death not against the unconverted Jews who had not received the Gospel and so would easily have granted that Christ was dead in vain but against those who had received the Gospel and so would never have pleaded that any Works done by a natural man but those only which flow from the Grace of Christ could justifie a sinner and yet Paul reasoneth against those If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain 5. That he doth exclude also all Works of ours whatsoever from being the meritorious cause of our Justification not only in whole and their alone without the Merit of Christ but also in part and joyntly with His Merit appeareth from the former ground that he is reasoning against professed Christians who doubtlesse did give Christ's Merit and Death some share at least in Justification else the absurdity which is deduced from their Doctrine by Paul should have had no weight with them as being no absurdity in their mind Then Christ is dead in vain 6. If there had been any other way possible in Heaven or Earth by which the Salvation of lost sinners could have been brought about but by the Death of Christ then Christ would not have died our disease was desperate as to any other cure for while he saith If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain he affirmeth two things 1. That to suppose Christ hath died in vain or without cause is a great absurdity no wayes to be admitted of 2. If the Justification and Salvation of sinners could have been attained by Works or any other mean then His Death had been in vain and so that it were an absurd thing to suppose he would have died in that case CHAP. III. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle having sharply rebuked these Galatians for their defection ver 1. useth five other Arguments to prove that we are justified by Faith and not by Works First They had received the saving Graces of God's Spirit by hearing the Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works ver 2.
Kingdom of God FOr the better understanding and observing of the rule delivered ver 13. use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh he maketh a Catalogue of some works of the flesh which were best known to those Galatians And first he declareth the nature condition of those works that though the inward root of concupiscence from whence they flow be hid and therefore it is not easie to convince a man that he is led by it yet those effects and works of the flesh are evident and patent so that a man may passe judgment upon the prevalency of flesh and concupiscence in his heart when those its effects do break out in his life Secondly he maketh a particular enumeration of seventeen of those works expresly shewing that there are several other works of the flesh besides these only he thinketh it sufficient to have instanced these and these rather than others because probably they have been too commonly practised among the Galatians which works of the flesh here enumerated are First Adultery or the sin of filthynesse betwixt parties whereof one at least is married Secondly Fornication or the sin of filthinesse betwixt parties both free from the yoke of marriage Thirdly Uncleannesse under which are usually comprehended all other sorts of filthy lusts and particularly that against nature Rom. 1. 24. Fourthly Lasciviousnesse or wantonnesse whereby is meaned all petulant and wanton behaviour tending to excite the lust of filthinesse whether in our selves or others These are ver 19. Fifthly Idolatry a sin whereby religious worship due to God only Mat. 4. 10. is given unto those which by nature are no gods chap. 4. 9. or whereby the true God is worshiped in or before Images Exod. 32. 4 5. The former idolatry is forbidden in the first Command the latter in the second Sixthly Witchcraft or a devilish art whereby certain men or women having under some violent fit of a tentation entred a covenant either expresse or implicite with the Devil are enabled by the Devil's assistance upon their using certain rites and ceremonies prescribed by him to work things strange and wonderfull so far as God permitteth Seventhly Hatred or as the word signifieth enimity and hatred in the heart towards our neighbour joyned with a rooted desire to do him hurt whether for apprehended or real injuries Eightly Variance or contention and strife by disgraceful and opprobrious words arising from the fore-mentioned enimity and alienation of hearts Ninthly Emulations not that good emulation whereby we strive to excell others in that which is good not for love of applause or other by-respects but meerly from the love which we carry unto that which is good this is commanded 1 Cor. 14. 12. but carnal emulations whereby we are grieved at the good which is in others not so much from hatred to their good as because it overshadoweth us and therefore is joyned with a desire to outstrip them in that good which we are grieved for wherein it differeth from envy Tenthly Wrath whereby according to the force of the word in the original is meaned that sudden passionate commotion and perturbation of the affections through apprehension of an injury offered transforming a man to a very beast and thrusting him forward to act some mischief Luke 4. 28 29. Eleventhly Strife which as it differeth from the eight work of the flesh formerly mentioned doth signifie a certain kind of litigious striving probably about civil rights and interests which when it is for trifling matters or in defence of unrighteousnesse 1 Cor. 6. 8. or separated from a spirit of Christian meeknesse and condescendence 1 Cor. 6. 7. is a work of the flesh here condemned Twelfthly Seaitions or renting of those into divers factions who ought to be joyned in one common society for so much the word in the Original doth hint at which renting work when it falleth out in the State is called by the name of sedition and in the Church by the name of schism especially when there is a rent not only in opinion but also in affection and design or endeavour each party labouring to countermine the other Thirteenthly Heresies which are somewhat more than simple schism and faction 1 Cor. 11. 18 19. even grosse and dangerous errors voluntarily held Tit. 3. 11. and factiously maintained by some person or persons within the visible Church Act. 20. 30. in opposition to some chief or substantial Truths grounded upon and drawn from the holy Scripture as the places cited and the notation of the word in the Original will in a good part bear These are ver 20. Fourteenthly Envyings which are those base passions whereby we grieve at the good and prosperity of others without any endeavour to attain unto that good our selves Fifteenthly Murders or slaughters which frequently follow upon the for 〈…〉 whereby is not meaned the execution of publick justice upon malefactors for that is commanded Lev. 24. 21. but the satisfaction of private revenge by shedding of bloud and the taking away of our neighbour's life unjustly though under pretence of publick justice 1 King 21. 13. Sixteenthly Drunkennesse when men do drink wine or strong drink excessively and beyond that measure which fitteth them both in soul and body for the service of God and duties of their calling Seventeenthly Revellings The word doth usually signifie excesse of belly-chear in riotous feasts joyned with all sorts of lascivious behaviour The Apostle having made this enumeration that he might terrifie them from the practice of those evils giveth them timous warning now by Letter as he had done formerly by Preaching when he was with them that impenitent persisters in these and such like sins should never inherite the Kingdom of Heaven and by consequence should be eternally damned Mat. 25. 41. I say impenitent persisters for this and all such threatnings are to be understood with the exception of repentance Jer. 18. 7 8. Doct. 1. It is not sufficient that a Minister having divided his hearers in two ranks to wit spiritual and carnal or renewed and unrenewed denounce eternal wrath to the latter and promise God's favour and life eternal to the former but it is also necessary that he give evident and discriminating marks of both and of the one from the other whereby every one may be in some measure enabled without mistake to judge of his own inward estate and so to know whether the judgment denounced or mercy promised be his allotted portion for the Apostle giveth such discriminating marks of flesh and Spirit from their respective effects The works of the flesh are manifest saith he and ver 22. the fruit of the Spirit is love 2. As it is not sufficient for a Minister to condemn and reprove sin in the general without condescending upon some particular instances and examples because general doctrine is not so well understood and especially in the reproof of sin it is looked upon almost by every hearer as if he himself were not concerned in it So in
committing sin our selves but of being the occasion of sin unto others and therefore would eschew it for this is it the Apostle forbiddeth even provoking one another 5. In setting against any sin we would look not only upon that sin alone but also upon those other possibly lesse pleasant and baser sins which of necessity do accompany it that so our indignation may be heightned the more against it as carrying with it a train of such attendants for here the Apostle dehorting them from the desire of vain glory that he may make them the more to detest it holdeth forth the necessary dependance which two other vexations and base evils have upon it Provoking one another envying one another saith he CHAP. VI. IN the first part of this Chapter he presseth the exercise of mutual love in two exhortations And first he exhorteth them to endeavour the reclaiming of those who were fallen ver 1. and to bear patiently with the sinfull infirmities one of another because first hereby they should obey the Command enjoyning mutual love ver 2. Secondly self-conceit which marreth the exercise of this duty is but a self-deceiving ver 3. And therefore he prescribeth a remedy against that evil to wit self-searching And inforceth it because first they should attain to such gloriation as God alloweth of ver 4. And secondly every man must give an accompt of his own actions to God ver 5. In the second place he exhorteth unto beneficence in the general and especially towards their Ministers ver 6. And having held forth God for a party unto those who neglect this duty he doth presse it from the similitude of sowing and reaping ver 7. which he enlargeth and applyeth to an harvest of death and corruption to be reaped by those who do evil and of life eternal by those who do well ver 8. whence he inforceth perseverance in the study of beneficence promising the expected fruit of their so doing in due time ver 9. and so concludeth the exhortation pressing upon them the use-making of the present opportunity ver 10. In the second part he concludeth the Epistle first insinuating how much he loved them ver 11. Secondly insinuating that the false Apostles were not acted from love to them but from hypocrisie worldly policy ver 12. and from vain glory ver 13. Thirdly he opposeth his own truly Christian carriage to those sins of the false Apostles shewing he gloried only in the crosse of Christ and that the world and applause from men were undervalued by him ver 14. Of both which he giveth two reasons first nothing worldly is accompted of by Christ but the new creature only ver 15. Secondly glorying in Christ and in the study of piety and of the new creature is the only rule in walking according to which there is peace ver 16. Fourthly The Apostle having discharged any to trouble him further whether by their errors or calumnies seing the standing prints of his sufferings did abundantly refute both ver 17 saluteth them with his ordinary farewell-wish ver 18. Vers. 1. BRethren if a man be overtaken in a fault ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the spirit of meeknesse considering thy self lest thou also be tempted THe Apostle having chap. 5. ver 26. dehorted from some vices which do wholly impede that service by love which is enjoyned chap. 5. 13. he doth in the first part of this Chapter exhort them to several duties in which the exercise of mutual love doth consist And first he speaketh to those who are spiritual that is such as had received a large measure of spiritual graces whereby they were preserved from the subtil snares of sin and Satan which had intrapped others and who are called strong Rom. 15. 1. and perfect to wit comparatively Philip. 3. 15. Those he exhorteth to endeavour the reclaiming and restoring both to the sense of God's pardoning grace and to amendment of life of all such who were overtaken and as it were inconsideratly and suddenly surprized with any sin for the active Verb of the word overtaken in the Original signifieth to do a thing preposterously and in hast 1 Cor. 11. 21. And in order hereto that in the use of all means undertaken for this end whether of admonition reproof or necessary correction they would exercise the grace of spiritual meeknesse suppressing all fleshly passions and revengefull affections Which exhortation he inforceth by two arguments the first whereof is laid down by way of admonition in this Verse that every man even the best while he dealeth with the faults of others would enter in a deep consideration of his own frailty and how easily under a tentation he may be surprized with the same the like or a greater sin Doct. 1. Though it be very ordinary for men to bear too much with sin both in themselves and others 1 Sam. 3. -13. Yet there is another sinfull extremity to be avoided to wit when under pretence of hatred to or just indignation against the sins of others we give them over as incorrigible and cannot admonish reprove or in any thing carry our selves towards them in the spirit of meeknesse for saith the Apostle If aman or as the word may also read by way of obviating an objection Though a man be overtaken in a fault restore such an one c. which supposeth that some were apt to think themselves freed from the duty here commanded towards a person so overtaken and the Apostle sheweth that neverthelesse they were bound to restore him and deal meekly with him even though he were overtaken in a fault 2. This sin of too much rigor and severity towards the sinful failings and escapes of others though it pretend to zeal Isa. 65. 5. yet hath its rise from pride and ambition while the rigid critick and lofty censurer of another mans faults doth not so much seek after his brother's amendment as to beget in the minds of others a good opinion of himself as if he were singular for holiness and hatred of sin above others for the connexion of the two Chapters doth shew that this sin here guarded against hath some kind of dependance upon vain-glory Let us not be desirous of vain-glory chap. 5. 26. And if a man be overtaken in a fault restore him in the spirit of meeknesse 3. The Minister of Jesus Christ would labour so to digest his exhortations unto duties that his very expressions and convey of them being fitted to the purpose in hand may be as so many forcible motives to bear-in that duty unto which he exhorteth for the Apostle being here to inforce the exercise of love and meeknesse upon those Galatians in the recovery of those who had fallen calleth them Brethren thereby expressing his love to them and minding them of that love they ought to carry one to another as being Brethren and designeth the person to be restored by the common name of a man thereby pointing at the common frailty of
past will not possibly return therefore are we to look upon them as a pressing call from the Lord to set about the duty and ought without delay or foreslowing close with that call for all this is imported by saying As we have opportunity let us do good seing as we shew this opportunity relateth in part to some pieces of our time in this life in which we have more ready accesse to the duties of beneficency than at other times and it hath the force of an argument to presse the duty as supposing it will not alwayes last 4. As all opportunities of this kind are confined within the narrow precinct of this present life there being no possibility of doing good in the way which we now do it or of being benificial unto others after this life the time of repentance of making sure our election by well-doing of making our peace with God is then past and where the tree falleth there it lyeth Eccles. 11. 3. So because the time of this life is uncertain Iam. 4. 14. therefore we ought to bestir our selves in the use-making of the present time as not knowing how soon our time may end and all opportunity of doing good come to an end with it for so much is imported in the words as this opportunity doth hold out the whole time of this life As or while we have opportunity let us do good 5. This duty of beneficency is to be extended unto all men even our very enemies nor excepted as their necessity doth require Exod. 23. 4 5. and our own ability may furnish 2 Cor. 8. 12. and that because of Gods own example Mat. 5. 45. and the ty of one common nature betwixt them and us Isa. 58. 7. for saith he Let us do good unto all men 6. As the Church is God's family and houshold whereof He himself is the head and master Eph. 3. 15. His Ministers are stewards to dispense the bread of life 1 Cor. 4. 1. and particular Christians are members of this family orderly conjoyned and knit together by the profession of one common Faith in Christ Jesus and therefore the Church is but a small number a family even an handfull in comparison of the world Luke 12. 32. And being Christ's family cannot but be cared and provided-for by Him 1 Tim. 5. 8. So the members of this family are in a special manner obliged to love one another and to evidence their love by being beneficial one to another under their necessities and straits in which God doth suffer often even those of His own family to fall for their own good 1 Pet. 1. 6. and that as for other reasons so because of that near relation under which they stand as being children and domesticks of one family which is the Lord's for saith he Do good especially unto them who are of the houshold of faith the designation which he giveth them of one houshold containing the force of an argument 7. There is an order to be keeped in the exercise of our beneficency And this first that it be exercised to those of our own family 1 Tim. 5. 8. Secondly to our parents 1 Tim. 5. 4. Thirdly to our kinred 1 Tim. 5. 8 And fourthly among strangers unto those who professe the same Faith with us and among those to such who do evidence most the reality of their Faith by the fruits of a good life 1 Tim. 5. 9 10. And lastly unto all men whosoever when occasion offereth for the Apostle doth expresse the two last links of this order and thereby giveth ground for searching out the rest from other Scriptures Do good unto all men but especially to them which are of the houshold of faith he saith especially because the comparison is among those who are strangers and not under any relation of kinred to us Vers. 11. Ye see how large a Letter I have written unto you with mine own hand THe Apostle in the second part of the Chapter being to conclude the Epistle doth first insinnate how much he truly loved them and desired their salvation As it appeareth 1. from his writing so large a Letter to them 2. from his writing of it with his own hand whether because his straits were such that he had not a Secretary to write for him whom he might trust or that he might hereby prevent the calumnies of the false Apostles who might have objected that this Epistle was not Pauls if he had imployed a Secretary or Scribe as he did in writing his other Epistles Rom. 16. 22. subscribing the Salutation only with his own hand 1 Cor. 16. 21. 2 Thess. 3. 17. So that though he wrote larger Epistles to some other Churches yet he never wrote with his own hand so large an Epistle unto any Church as unto these Galatians Doct. 1. The Minister of Jesus Christ ought to refuse no toil or pains whereby he may reduce a straying people and any way advance the good of souls committed to his charge for Paul in order to the reclaiming of those Galatians notwithstanding of his other manifold distractions and of the eminent hazard wherein he was for the time doth undergo the great trouble of writing so large a Letter with his own hand 2. It is nothing contrary to christian modesty and sobriety but very lawfull in it self and advantagious for the Lord's People that a Minister make known unto them sometimes though but sparingly and as it were occasionally what great pains he hath been at for bringing about their spiritual good providing this be not done from ostentation and desire of vain-glory 2 Cor. 10. 18. but from a purpose hereby to excite the people to bring forth fruits answerable to his pains for in order to this end the Apostle doth modestly and as it were on the by propound to their consideration what pains he had been at in writing this Epistle Ye see or consider ye for the word will read both wayes how large a Letter I have written unto you with mine own hand 3. The greater pai●s are taken upon a people in order to their salvation by Christ's Ministers they ought to be the more perswaded of their affection and love and take the greater pains in making use of the labours of such Ministers for working out their own salvation themselves otherwise the more laborious Ministers are the more inexcusable shall people be and their condemnation the greater Mat. 11. 22. for the Apostle to perswade the Galatians how much he loved them and that they might be excited to bring forth fruits answerable to his pains doth shew how large a Letter he had written unto them with his own hand Vers. 12. As many as desire to make a fair shew in the fles● they constrain you to be circumcised only lest they should suffer persecusion for the crosse of Christ. SEcondly in the Conclusion of the Epistle the Apostle insinuateth that the false Apostles were not acted from love to those Galatians in their so much urging
glory of his grace and therefore matter of praise for grace behoved to be manifested in His choosing of us when it is revealed otherwise He should not have taken a convenient mean for bringing about the intended end 4. That great and supream end which God intended most to be brought about by this eternal decree of Election and to which the other two ends formerly mentioned to wit the sanctification and glorification of the Elect are but subordinate means for bringing of it about was that hereby Men and Angels might see matter of praise and thanksgiving unto His rich mercy and free-grace and be excited to set forth the praises thereof accordingly not as if He stood in need to have His glory acknowledged or praised by creatures nor as if their praising of Him could adde any perfection to Him who was compleatly glorified in Himself from all eternity Joh. 17. 5. but He holdeth forth matter of His own praise that the Elect may be perfected in praising of Him for saith the Apostle God hath predestinated us to the praise of the glory of his grace 5. There ought to be a sweet concord and harmony betwixt a Ministers doctrine and practice his hand and tongue would joyntly preach and presse the same Truth for so his doctrine shall have greater weight with hearers when he doth commend and seal the truth of it by his own example and practice Thus Paul while he is pointing out the duty of the Elect to be the praising of God's glorious grace he himself is practising this duty for as is clear from ver 3. he is speaking all-alongs of this purpose by way of praise and thanksgiving to God 6. Though the Elect from all eternity are loved by God with His love of benevolence whereby he willed good unto them and decreed to bestow good upon them ver 4. Yet there is a love of complacency or delight in God whereby He not only willeth good unto the persons so beloved but accepteth of them acquiesceth in them as in His own children and friends reconciled to Him and delighteth Himself in His own graces bestowed upon them in which respect the Elect as being children of wrath by nature are not from eternity beloved of God nor accepted of by Him yea not before they be effectually called and reconciled to God through faith in Jesus Christ Heb. 11. 6 for Paul speaketh of Gods making us accepted and lovely or of His accepting us as of an action done in time Wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beleved 7. Whomsoever God hath elected before time those He accepteth of and is well pleased with in time both in their persons and actions if they be good having first made them lovely and fit to be accepted of by Him which He doth by working in them a conformity both as to their state and actions with the rule according to which He doth accept not the rule prescribed by the Law which requireth no lesse than a perfect and personall righteousnesse in order to our acceptation by God Gal. 3. 10. but the rule prescribed by the Gospel which admitteth the imputed righteousnesse of a cautioner in place of a perfect personal righteousnesse whereby our persons are accepted and made lovely to God Rom. 5. 19. and of sincerity in our actions in place of perfection whereby they are also accepted Psal. 119. 6. for saith Paul speaking of the Elect He hath made us accepted 8. That same grace free-favour and good-will which moved God to elect us before time moveth Him also to make us accepted lovely and well-pleasing to Himself and to accept of us in time whence it followeth that as the eternal decree of Election was most free and in nothing dependent on our works So that work of God whereby He draweth souls out of nature cloatheth them with Christ's righteousnesse and bestoweth grace upon them is wholly free also as to us and cometh only from His most free grace without respect had to any worth of ours for saith he Wherein or in which grace whereof he spoke formerly as the fountain-cause of Election He hath made us accepted 9. Christ is beloved and accepted by the Father being considered even as Mediator in so far as that He was sent and intrusted by the Father to discharge that office Joh. 5. 30. and carryed Himself in the discharge of it according to what was enjoyned by the Father Heb. 10. 7. and did finish all in order to the redemption of the Elect which He had undertaken to the Father Joh. 19. 30. for the Apostle speaking of Christ as Mediator calleth Him Beloved He hath made us accepted in the Beloved 10. Christ as Mediator is so much beloved of the Father That all the Elect being once effectually called are made lovely and acceptable to God through Him Neither doth God accept of the persons or actions of any but through Him who is Jehovah our righteousnesse Jer. 23. 6. and being laid hold upon by faith we who are in our selves unrighteous are made righteous 2 Cor. 5. 21. and the sinfull failings of our best actions hid and covered in Him So that both our persons and actions are accepted For he hath made us accepted in the Beloved 11. God's free-grace and Christ's merit are no wayes inconsistent but do well agree together as the procuring causes of our acceptation and reconciliation with God for though Christ hath purchased a state of favour and friendship unto us by the payment of an equivalent price yet all cometh from grace unto us in so far as it was grace in God that made him give his Son to die for us Joh. 3. 16. So it was grace in Christ that made him undertake to die in our place Joh. 10. 18. And it is no lesse of free-grace that the price payed by Him is accepted of in our name Joh. 33. 24. for the Apostle doth mention grace and Christ's merit as the joynt causes of our being accepted Wherein or in which grace he hath made us accepted in the Beloved Vers. 7. In whom we have redemption through his bloud the forgiveness of sins according to the riches of his grace THe Apostle having already spoken of those spiritual blessings mentioned ver 3. as they were prepared and appointed for Believers in God's eternal decree of Election doth now speak of them as they were purchased by Christ in that great and marvellous work of redemption by shewing first That Jesus Christ hath given a ransom even his own bloud in satisfaction to divine justice for our wrongs whence floweth our redemption from sin Satan and God's wrath which is begun here Rom. 6. 22. and shall be compleated hereafter at the last day Rom. 8. 23. Secondly he explaineth this great benefit of redemption by the forgivenesse of our sins in justification which is an effect of redemption as redemption is taken for the laying down of the price by Christ and a principal part of redemption as it speaketh our actual delivery
is among you he could not say positively that all of them had faith but faith was among them 6. Saving faith is an excellent fruit of the Gospel preached among a People without which the Word cannot profit Heb. 4. 2. and by which we are united to Christ and have right to all the spiritual blessings purchased by Christ who is the chief object of faith whom it doth apprehend as He is offered in the Promise for Paul doth mention their faith in Jesus Christ as an excellent praise-worthy fruit of the Gospel for which he blesseth God After I heard of your faith in Jesus Christ saith he 7. The grace of love to our neighbour with the duties thereof flowing from love to God in the first place 1 Joh. 4. 12. is an excellent praise-worthy fruit of the Gospel preached among a People especially when the Saints have most of this love as resembling God most And when their love is laid forth upon Saints as they are Saints and for the reality or appearance of God in them and not for other by-respects only or mainly and in a word when it is extended unto all Saints for Paul doth mention their love to the Saints and to all Saints as another excellent praise-worthy fruit of the Gospel for which he blesseth God After I heard of your love unto all the Saints 8. As the graces of faith in Christ and love to the Saints are alwayes conjoyned they being in a manner the two legs of a Christian without any one whereof he cannot walk and the other is but dead and withered I am 2. 17. so faith in its exercise hath the precedency of love faith being the fountain from which the streams of love do flow in so far as faith laying hold upon God's love in Christ inflameth the heart with love to God which love to God consisteth in keeping of His Commandments 1 Joh. 5. 3. and the chief of God's Commands next unto love to Himself is that we love our brother 1 Joh. 4. 21. for the Apostle here as elsewhere Col. 1. 4. 1 Thess. 1. 4. conjoyneth these two graces and giveth faith the precedency After I heard of your faith in Christ Jesus and love to all the Saints From Vers. 16. Learn 1. As the duties both of thanksgiving and prayer ought to be made conscience of by Christians so the practice of these two duties do well together for each of them doth contribute for the help of another in so far as thanksgiving to God for favours received doth notably tend to suppresse that fretting quarrelling impatient humour which often venteth it self against God in our prayers Psal. 77. 7. compared with 10 11. and the exercise of prayer doth elevate the heart somewhat towards God and so in some measure warm the affections with love to God Psal. 25. 1. and thus disposeth much for the duty of thanksgiving for the Apostle maketh conscience of both those duties and that joyntly I cease not to give thanks in my prayers 2. It is not sufficient for Christians once to begin well and break off fair in the practice of those duties but they must continue in them there being always abiding reasons both for thanksgiving and prayer and when there is a lazy falling off from the practice of them for a time it is usually found a task of greater difficulty to begin of new than it was at first for the Apostle saith I cease not to give thanks in my prayers he ceased not to wit so far as his other necessary imployments and duties of his calling did permit for what we do frequently and alwayes when occasion offereth we are said to do it without ceasing 3. The Ministers of Jesus Christ especially ought not to be puffed up with any successe which the Lord is pleased to give unto their labours or sacrifice to their own drag or net Gal. 6. 13. but would ascribe the praise thereof to God who alone maketh His People to profit Isa. 48. 17. for Paul hearing of their faith and love ceased not to give thanks for them to God 4. As it is the duty of one Christian to pray for another and especially of a Minister for his Flock So our prayers for others will avail little except we be daily making conscience of praying to God for our selves for saith Paul I make mention of you in my prayers he had his own ordinary prayers for himself wherein he did remember them 5. As to the occasion of his praying for them see upon Col. 1. 9. doct 1. Vers. 17. That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him 18. The eyes of your understanding being enlightened THe Apostle in the second place giveth a short sum of his prayer unto God for them And first he describeth God the Father unto whom he prayeth to be the God of our Lord Jesus Christ to wit as Christ is man Psal. 22. 10. as He is our Mediator Psal. 40. 8. and with relation to that Covenant of Redemption betwixt God and Christ as mediator Heb. 2. 13. And the Father of glory so called because He is in His own nature infinitly glorious Psal. 145. 5. the fountain of the whole Godhead and all the divine Attributes in the Son Psal. 2. 7. and holy Ghost Joh. 14. 26. for glory is sometimes taken for the Godhead and divine Attributes Joh. 2. 11. and because He is the first cause of all that glory which is in any of the creatures Psal. 8. 5. And lastly He is the object of all glory to whom all glory is due from the creatures Psal. 19. 1. Secondly he sheweth what he sought in prayer even wisdom or a further encrease of that wisdom and saving knowledge of divine mysteries whereof the Spirit of God is the author mentioned ver 8. together with a clearer insight in Scripture where those mysteries are revealed by the same Spirit Which wisdom he sheweth doth mainly consist in the saving believing and operative knowledge of Him that is of Jesus Christ ver 17. And having more clearly expressed what he meaneth by this Spirit of wisdom even the removing of the natural blindnesse of their understandings and enduing them with a clear discerning in the things of God ver 17 he doth illustrate it further from those ends for the attainment whereof he would have this wisdom bestowed as shall be cleared afterwards Hence Learn 1. The more painfull and laborious that others whether Ministers parents friends or neighbours are for bringing about our salvation and spiritual good we ought to be so much the more excited to painfulnesse and diligence about the same thing our selves else their pains will not only do us no good but also much hurt the Lord usually judicially plaguing the man whom every one would have doing well only himself will not for the Apostle sheweth that he prayed and what he prayed for from God unto them not
life And they are said to have been quickned with Christ though not in their own persons for they were so quickned a long time after Christ's resurrection in their effectual calling but they were then quickned in their head and atturney Jesus Christ whose quickning after death was a sure pledge that they every one in his own time should be quickned also 1 Cor. 15. 20. and that the vertue purchased by Christs death Rom. 8. 11. and to be applyed unto them by Him who is now alive and liveth for evermore for that end Heb. 7. 25. And therefore the Apostle expresseth Gods bestowing of this spiritual life upon them by His quickning them with Christ. And before he mention the other pieces of their delivery he doth in the close of this vers ascribe the whole work of their salvation to Gods free grace which is the same in effect with His mercy and love spoken of ver 4. Only it further expresseth the freedom of those in opposition to any merit or worth in the persons to be saved which might procure their salvation Doct. 1. The Ministers of Christ would not only inculcate the doctrine of sin and misery but having insisted so much upon this subject as may serve to bring down that high conceit which people naturally have of their own righteousnesse and to convince them of their need of Jesus Christ a Saviour Then is it timous for them to open up the riches of Gods free grace and good will to save the vilest of sinners and what He hath freely done for bringing about salvation to their hand for the Apostle having set forth unto the life the natural misery of those Ephesians doth now openup the rich treasures of Gods free grace in Christ But God who is rich in mercy 2. The Lords Ministers when they fall upon this subject of Gods delivering lost sinners from their natural state of sin and misery through Christ they would labour to speak to it so fully affectionatly sensibly and with such life and power as that they may not only inform the understandings of the Lords People in those truths but also inflame their affections with love to them and admiration at the wisdom mercy goodnesse and other attributes of God manifested in this work for so doth the Apostle speak of this purpose not simply by saying God hath quickned us but God who is rich in mercy according to His great love and so forward in the two following verses 3. There is nothing contributeth more to inable a Minister to speak to the commendation of God's free grace in the salvation of sinners with that fulnesse sense life and affection as he ought than a deep insight in his own misery and the great need which he himself doth stand in of God's mercy for Paul in the third verse fore-going doth shew how sensible he was of the depth and breadth of his own misery hence he doth here speak so fully and movingly to the present purpose But God who is rich in mercy c. 4. The quickning of sinners and drawing them out of nature unto grace is only God's work there being no lesse required for bringing this about than omnipotent creating power See ver 10. And there being not only no principle left in man who is by nature dead in sins and trespasses whereby he might work or concur with God in working towards his own quickning Rom. 9. 16. but also much to oppose and resist it 2 Cor. 10. 5. So that in the first instant of his conversion and untill a new heart be given him and the seeds and habits of saving graces infused in him he is wholly passive as to any actual influence upon the effect which is wrought Jer. 31. 33. for Paul here condescending upon the cause of their quickning doth pitch not upon their own free will in whole or in part but upon God only while he saith But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 5. This attribute of mercy in God whereby without any grief or perturbation of mind which accompanieth men in the exercise of mercy he hath a propension and inclination to do good to the sinfull and miserable so far as His wisdom seeth convenient is the only thing in opposition unto all that is in a mans self which moveth God to quicken and bestow grace upon dead and gracelesse sinners for the Apostle speaking of God's quickning of those Ephesians describeth Him from His mercy to shew it was not their worth but His own mercy which moved Him to quicken them But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 6. As God is rich and overflowing in the exercise of this attribute of mercy which will appear if we consider that there is no creature towards which He doth not exercise His mercy Psal. 104. 24. and that mercy is exercised not only without but also often contrary to the deserving of those upon whom it is exercised Ezek. 36. 21 22. so there is nothing wherein God doth more manifest the riches and abundance of His mercy than in the work of quickning dead sinners and of carrying-on the work of grace in them untill it be perfected in glory The misery Ezek. 16. 3 c. and bad deservings of the object Jer. 14. 7. the great good things which are bestowed upon those miserable objects Luke 12. 32. the course taken for satisfying divine justice that so those good things might be without wronging of justice bestowed Joh. 3. 16. and the multitude of sins which mercy covereth in those objects not only before their conversion Isa. 55. 7. but also after it Prov. 24. 16. All these and many considerations besides these do manifest God to be rich in mercy in quickning of dead sinners But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 7. The highest cause which moveth God to manifest this His rich and special mercy upon any of lost mankind and from mercy to quicken them and bestow His saving graces on them was His love towards them which is no other than His will and resolution to impart those good things unto them together with His hearty acquiescence in the thing as that wherewith He is well pleased He did it because He would do it resolved to do it and had pleasure in the doing of it for saith he God who is rich in mercy for His great love hath quickned us 8. As God's love towards those whom He converteth doth not begin when they are converted but is of a more ancient even an eternal rise chap. 1. 4. So it is not an ordinary but a great love wherewith He loveth them The infinit distance betwixt Him and them Psal. 8. 4. His loving them when they were yet enemies Rom. 5. 8. the great things bestowed by His love Rom. 5. 6 7 8. and His unchangeablenesse in His love even notwithstanding of great provocations to the contrary Psal. 89. 33. All these and many besides these do abundantly declare that this love is a great
wonderfull and matchlesse love for saith he For His great love wherewith He loved us 9. The Lord hath love to the Elect even when they are children of wrath and liable in the course of justice to the stroke of His vindictive anger for although God could not with safety of His own justice bestow Heaven upon them when they were actually such yet nothing hindereth why He might not love them being such that is have a will and fixed resolution even when they were liable unto wrath to bestow Heaven upon them having first from that same love given His own Son to deliver them from that state of wrath that so what eternal love had resolved to give them might be actually bestowed upon them without doing injury to divine justice for ver 3. he sheweth they were children of wrath and here that God loved them and both these before He quickned them Wherewith He loved us saith he even in the by-past time 10. The doctrine of our natural misery and spirituall death through sin is a lesson most necessary to be learned which we have no great pleasure to learn and which we are prone to forget as to a deep and lively impression of it even when it is learned for the Apostle's repeating this doctrine almost in the same words by which he had expressed it ver 1. doth hint at all these Even when we were dead in sins saith he 11. There is no application of the doctrine of God's mercy in order to our delivery from sin and misery except the doctrine of sin and misery be first applied and taken with for Paul being to apply God's mercy in quickning sinners unto himself and his country-men the believing Jews he doth first apply the doctrine of natural sin and misery unto them while he doth now speak of himself and the Jews also whereas ver 1. he spoke of the Gentiles only as appeareth by the change of the person Even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us 12. Whatever a man be before his conversion as to the point of civility and right use of his natural parts yet he is looked upon by God when He cometh to quicken him as one dead in sins who can neither help himself nor merit help at God's hand for therfore doth the Apostle assert that they were dead in sins immediatly before yea and in the act of God's quickning of them while he saith Even when we were dead in sins He hath quickned us 13. The state of grace which sinners dead by nature are brought unto at their conversion and wherein they continue untill death is a state of life the sentence of eternall death which they were liable unto ver -3. being taken off Rom. 8. 1. there being also new principles and powers infused in them at their effectuall calling whereby they are enabled to do those actions of a spiritual life Ezek. 36. 26 27. which powers are also continually actuated and excited to their work by renewed influence from the Spirit of God Philip. 2. 13. and accompanied oftimes in their actings with assurance of God's love Rom. 8. 16. peace of conscience Rom. 5. 1 2. and joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. whereby also they have not only a right unto Joh. 3. 16. but also the first fruits and begun possession of eternall life Joh. 17. 3. for the Apostle expresseth God's bringing them to and continuing them in the state of grace by His quickning of them hath quickned us saith he 14. Though love and mercy in God do set Him on work to quicken dead sinners yet this work cannot be brought about or accomplished without the intervention of Christ's merit and intercession who behoved to satisfie divine justice and thereby acquire unto us those things which love and mercy had prepared for us Isa. 53. 5. seing they were all lost in Adam Rom. 5. 15 16. and who being now exalted doth also apply them to us Act. 5. 31. for notwithstanding of what was said ver 4. of God's mercy and love as the inward impulsive causes moving God to quicken them yet the Apostle here sheweth that their actual quickning had a necessary dependance upon Christ's merit and mediation while he saith He hath quickned us together with Christ. 15. That Jesus Christ behoved of necessity to strike-in with His merit and mediation hereby to acquire and apply saving grace and salvation unto us doth in nothing hinder but that notwithstanding our compleat salvation from the first step unto the last doth wholly flow from God's free grace seing it was of grace that the Father did send the Son to die for us Joh. 3. 16. It was of grace that the Son did undertake Joh. 15. 12 13. And it is no lesse grace that what He did or suffered should be accepted in our name Rom. 3. 24 25. So that all is of grace and free good-will as to us for the Apostle having pointed at the necessity of Christ's mediation in order to their quickning doth presently adde as in a parenthesis by grace are ye saved 16. There is an infallible connexion betwixt converting grace and salvation so that all those who are now converted and quickned shall be undoubtedly saved for what the Apostle calleth quickned in the former part of the verse he calleth saved in the close so that he taketh the one for the other He hath quickned us By grace are ye saved Vers. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us fit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus HEre are the other two branches of their delivery to wit first The raising of their bodies at the last day for their spiritual resurrection from the death of sin to newnesse of life was mentioned ver 5. Secondly Their glorification in Heaven both which are yet to come 2 Tim. 2. 18. Mat. 25. 34. And yet he speaketh of them as already past when the Father raised and glorified Christ because seing Christ in His resurrection and entering of heaven did sustain a publick person representing all the Elect as their Head and Atturney-generall Job 10. 15. Therefore He was judicially looked upon by God in those actions as if all the Elect had risen when He rose and taken possession of Heaven when He did enter it Hence it is that in the close of the verse it is added in Christ to shew we are not yet raised and glorified in our own persons but in Christ our Head And the Spirit of God doth choose to set forth their future resurrection and glorification by shewing these are already accomplished in Christ their Head rather than by saying God shall raise them up and glorifie them that he may with one and the same labour point out the dependencie which their resurrection and glorification have upon Christs as the effect upon the cause the thing promised upon the pledge thereof as also the undoubted certainty that those shall come to passe a certainty greater than that of a simple prediction and
the exercise of meeknesse and long-suffering those only being able to moderate anger and to restrain the inundations of their impetuous passions when stirred and provoked by real injuries who being conscious of their own infirmities do judge but meanly of themselves and therefore not too good to have by the Lords wise and gracious dispensation a suffering lot from the wicked and injurious carriage of others 2 Sam. 16. 10. for he presseth humility in the first place as the foundation of and enterance unto all the rest With all lowlinesse and meeknesse with long-suffering 4. There is an all-nesse or universality which ought to be in the grace of lowlinesse first with respect to the subject it ought to extend it self to the whole man as being seated in the heart Philip. 2. 3 and kything in the outward carriage Luk. 14. 8. Secondly with respect to all objects There must be humility towards God Acts 20. 19. and humility also towards men Philip. 2. 3. and towards all sorts of men not only superiours Levit. 19. 32 but inferiours also Job 31. 13. Thirdly with respect to the grace it self as being without any mixture of the contrary vice so far as is possible Psal. 131. 1 2. and daily growing up towards perfection 2 Corinth 7. 1. Fourthly with respect to all cases so as it be exercised in prosperity Ezek. 16. 49. as well as adversity for saith he with all lowlinesse which note of universality is oft made use of by the Apostle when he would expresse a great measure and degree of any gift or grace See 1 Cor. 1. 5. Philip. 1. -9. Doct. 5. Meeknesse and long-suffering as they differ but little in substance and are commendable graces in themselves so they are notable means and helps to fit men for the duty of mutuall forbearance in order to unity in so far as they do render him who is endued with them gentle affable and easie to be conversed with and do moderate anger which is ready to blow the bellows of contention and to stir up strife Prov. 15. 18. for he exhorteth unto meéknesse and long-suffering in order to forbearance and unity With meeknesse long-suffering forbearing one another endeavouring to keep unity 6. The best of men have their own infirmities mistakes and failings mutually justling and rubbing upon each other whereby they prove often unpleasant and burdensome one to another for this is supposed while they are commanded to forbear one another 7. It is the duty of Christians mutually to tolerate and forbear one another even when there are real grounds of displeasure for hereby a man overcometh himself and his own corrupt nature which thirsteth after revenge Prov. 16. 32. hereby he overcometh and shameth his party who did him wrong 1 Sam. 24. 17. and keepeth Gods way in overcoming of him Rom. 12. 17 21. and hereby a man also in some comfortable measure doth entertain peace with others which otherwise upon every occasion would blow up and evanish for he enjoyneth this mutuall forbearance as a remedy against the clashing of mutuall infirmities and for entertaining of unity and peace forbearing one another endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit 8. This duty of forbearance is to be exercised to the person of our brother rather than his faults we are so to bear with his person as to endeavour the bearing down of his sin by admonition 2 Thess. 3. 15. reproof Levit. 19. 17. or correction Prov. 13. 24. as we have otherwise accesse and yet we are so to meddle with his faults as in the mean time we may give due respect to his person not irritating or provoking his corruptions while we intend to cure them for saith he forbearing one another which relateth to persons rather than to faults 9. This duty of forbearance ought to be mutuall and cannot in reason be expected by any from others to themselves who are not ready themselves to repay it unto others seing there is no man who wanteth his own infirmities which call for forbearance Iam. 3. 2. and that every man is obliged to do as he would be done to by others Matth. 7. 12. for saith he forbearing one another 10. Love to our neighbour whereby our heart and inmost affections are inclined and disposed towards him for his good as they ought as it is the great root and fountain of all duties towards others without which they are but counterfeit shadows and not real and sincere 1 Cor. 13. 3. So it doth in a speciall manner dispose and fit us for this duty of mutuall forbearance love covereth a multitude of sins 1 Pet. 4. 8. and maketh us bear with many things in the person loved 1 Cor. 13. 4 7. which otherwise flesh and bloud would not digest 2 Cor. 12. 15. for he holdeth out love as the fountain of all the rest and especially of mutuall forbearance With all lowlinesse forbearing one another in love 11. Whence it followeth that this duty of mutuall forbearance ought to flow from a principle of love and therefore though we forbear from necessity because we dare not do otherwise or from policie untill we get opportunity to right our selves or from respect to our own ease only lest by resenting injuries and miscarriages we create trouble to ourselves or if we tolerate connive at and foster the sins of others under a pretence of forbearing them which is inconsistent with love to them Lev. 19. 17. In all those cases our forbearance is not acceptable service to God nor yet in any case but when it is performed in love and from a principle thereof for the forbearance he enjoyneth is forbearing one another in love Vers. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace HE doth now fall upon the main scope of this first part of the Chapter exhorting them by all possible endeavours to keep the union of all the members of the Church being united together by the holy Ghost even in heart and especially in things spiritual all which are implyed in this unity of the spirit and that in order to this unity they would be of a peaceable disposition and deportment to wit so as not to make unnecessary ruptures and breaches upon every difference whereby they should be firmly knit together as the members of one body by its several ligaments and sinnews Doct. 〈◊〉 As there are several sorts of union in the Church and more particularly besides that union which is amongst the members of the invisible Church the bond whereof is the saving graces of Gods Spirit all of them being united to Christ the head by faith Eph. 3. 17. and one to another by love Col. 3. 14. There is an union also of the visible Church and the members thereof amongst themselves and this is twofold the one necessary to the being of a Church and being of a Church-member so that a Church cannot be a Church nor a man a member of the visible Church without it the ty of
do find himself inclined and constrained to improve in his station and according to his measure all his receipts whether of saving graces or common gifts to the spirituall advantage of others and chiefly for the common good of the whole body he may the more certainly conclude that he hath the grace of sincere love and charity rooted in his heart and is acted by it for he maketh love the impulsive cause why the severall members do improve all their receipts for promoving the edification of the whole Church while he saith it maketh increase to the edifying of it self in love Vers. 17. This I say therefore and testifie in the Lord that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk in the vanity of their mind THe Apostle being in the second part of the Chapter to dehort them from all impiety and profanity in the general contrary to that walking worthy of their vocation pressed ver 1. giveth an example of that wickednesse from which he dehorteth them in the conversation of those other Gentiles who were yet unconverted and living in paganism And first while he doth most seriously and under a grave obtestation by the Lord Jesus Christ as they would answer to Him and evidence their esteem of Him dehort them from walking as those other Gentiles he giveth a short sum of that godlesse conversation of theirs calling it a walking in the vanity of the mind that is a following and practising of whatsoever their unrenewed understanding and mind did teach and prescribe to which he ascribeth vanity and calleth the mind of unrenewed men vain because it is empty of the knowledge of God in Christ 1 Cor. 2. 14. and what knowledge it hath of God or of right and wrong is nothing but evanishing notions Rom. 1. 21. and wholly unprofitable as to the attaining of life and salvation Rom. 1. -20. for a vain thing according to the common and scripture-use of the word is an empty thing Isa. 41. 29. an evanishing thing Prov. 31. 30 and a thing unprofitable to attain the end intended Psal. 33. 17. Doct. 1. To live in a course of profanity and to be a member of Christs mystical body drawing life nourishment and growth from Christ the head are wholly inconsistent if the one be the other cannot be seing profanity of life is not only directly opposit to that new life of grace which all the members of that body do live but also doth wholly obstruct the passages betwixt the head and the members whereby spiritual influence for life and growth should be conveyed 1 Joh. 1. 6. for the Apostle from what he spake of influence for life and growth conveyed from Christ the head to all the members doth infer here that therefore and as they would evidence themselves lively members of that body so they would abandon profanity while he saith This I say therefore that ye walk not as other Gentiles 2. Ministers ought to be serious in pressing the duties of sanctification upon the Lords people not only simply exhorting but sometimes most gravely obtesting them by that which is dearest to them whereby the Lords people may know that their obedience to what is pressed is no trifling matter but such as their eternal welbeing is most highly concerned in for therefore doth Paul not only say and exhort them but also testifie and obtest them in the Lord that they walk not henceforth as other Gentiles 3. Our long continuance in sin already is so far from being an argument in reason to make us hold on in that course for the time coming that upon the contrary this very same consideration should be a strong argument to shame us from it for so much is implyed in his saying that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles as if he had said Ye have done so hithertils therefore do no more so See 1 Pet. 4. 3. Doct. 4. Our turning to God in earnest to expect life and salvation from Him through Jesus Christ doth call for and will be attended with an other sort of conversation than what we formerly had before conversion or that naturall men dead in sins and trespasses for the present have for Paul exhorteth these converted Ephesians not to walk as they themselves somtimes did nor as the unconverted Gentiles at present did I testifie saith he that ye hence-forth walk not as other Gentiles walk 5. Sense of mercy received from God is a strong incitement unto dutie toward God for he doth not obscurely hint at Gods mercy in separating them from the common lot of other Gentiles that so they may be the more incited to eschew what might dishonour Him that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles 6. The vilenesse of sin is such that it cannot be sufficiently expressed and so expressed as to make us abhor it by doctrine or word-speaking therefore it is sometimes profitable to take a look of it in its vilenesse power and tyrannie as it manifesteth it self in the lives of unrenewed men who are captive slaves unto it providing we so look to it as to make us abhor it and carry at a greater distance from it for therefore doth Paul hold forth a map of that wickednesse which he deborteth them from in the example of those unconverted Gentiles that by seeing of it they might the more abhor it That ye hence-forth walk not as other Gentiles walk 7. The conversation of all men unrenewed is vain and fruitlesse as spending their money for that which is not bread and their labour for that which satisfieth not Isa. 55. 2. for he speaketh of all the unconverted Gentiles that they walk in vanity 8. Whatever vanity or wickednesse is in the outward conversation of a naturall man it doth wholly flow from the vanity of the mind and understanding within and as the mind is so will the conversation be and therefore even the mind it self the chief seat of reason is corrupted and vain and so vain that from thence doth flow corruption and vanity to the whole man for he ascribeth the vanity of their walking to the vanity of their mind As other Gentiles walk in the vanity of their mind saith he Vers. 18. Having the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart NExt that the Apostle may the more effectually deter them from walking as these other Gentiles did he doth more largely and distinctly set forth that vain and godlesse conversation of theirs by shewing severall branches and degrees thereof both inward in their understanding and affections and outward in their life and conversation And first he sheweth that their understanding and knowing part or that part of it whereby men do reason inferring one thing from another for so the word signifieth was wholly blind and darkened to wit as to those things which relate to God and heaven 1 Cor. 1. 21. whatever was their understanding and quicknesse of judgement in
of Christs body are by nature lost and gone even dead in sin and children of wrath Eph. 2. 1. -3. So there was no way for their recovery but by Jesus Christ His becoming man and suffering death and uniting Himself being now risen from death unto them as their head that so He may bestow the influences of spirituall life with a right to heaven upon them here and at last take them to Himself in glory hereafter for he sheweth that Christ is become the Churches head that He might be a Saviour of his lost body 6. The dominion and power which husbands have over their wives is not tyrannicall rigid or soveraign but loving gentle warm and amiable and such as the wife may look upon as a mercy to her self as well as a dignity unto her husband for it is compared here unto that sweet and naturall power which the head exerciseth over the body and Christ over His Church who maketh His people willing in the day of His power and it ought to be employed wholly for the good and safety of his wife as Christ is the Saviour of the body Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be to their own husbands in every thing THe Apostle secondly repeateth the exhortation as a conclusion from the former argument that wives should subject themselves unto their own husbands and addeth two things 1. The manner of this subjection to wit such as it may resemble the subjection of the Church unto Christ which is to be understood not in all things for wives are not to subject their souls and consciences to their husbands as Believers do to Christ trusting in Him for life and salvation but in some things only to wit so as they may subject themselves willingly chearfully lovingly chastly and dutifully unto their husbands for so doth the Church subject herself unto Christ. He addeth secondly the extent of this subjection and obedience even to all things which is not to be understood of all things absolutly and without exception Acts 5. 29 but all things lawfull godly honest and which are not forbidden in the Word of God even though they crosse the humour of the wives and argue little discretion in the husband who commandeth them Numb 5. 14 15. c. for nothing is excepted here but what is contrary to that subjection which is due to Him who hath commanded this subjection of wives to their husbands as Paul commenteth upon an expression like to this 1 Cor. 15. 27. Doct. 1. As subjection in wives unto their husbands is a most necessary duty So considering the inbred pride arrogance and self-willednesse which is in all the sons and daughters of Adam by nature it is a work of no small difficulty to get wives peswaded to give that hearty chearfull loving and dutifull respect and obedience unto their husbands which both the Law of nature and the written Word of God do require from them for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be unto their own husbands 2. Though there be much unmortified corruption in the Church of true Believers and a law in their members rebelling against the law of their mind Rom. 7. 23. yet God doth look upon them as true and loyall subjects to Christ in so far as with the Spirit and better part according to which God doth reckon with them they serve the Law of God Rom. 7. 25. and do groan after and long for the time when they shall be fully freed from the body of death and throughly subjected unto the will of God Phil. 1. 23. for while he saith as the Church is subject unto Christ it is supponed that the Church is subject unto Him and looked upon by God as such 3. The servants of Christ in pressing duties ought mainly to guard against that extremity which people naturally are most prone to fall into especially seing all the guards which can be used will have sufficient work to keep the heart from breaking over upon that hand for though there be some things excepted from coming under that obedience which wives do owe to their husbands as was cleared in the exposition yet because wives are more inclined to multiplie exceptions in this purpose than to diminish them Therefore he extendeth this obedience expresly to all things leaving them only to gather from the circumstances of the Text and other places of Scripture those few things which are excepted that thereby he may with one word cut off all unscriptural exceptions limitations and restrictions which imperious aspiring spirits impatient of the yoke are ready to bound and straiten this submission and obedience by Let them be subject in every thing saith he Vers. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave Himself for it THe Apostle doth now exhort husbands to their duty which he first proponeth summarily under the name of love to their wives whereby the heart and inmost affections of the husband ought to be so inclined and disposed towards his wife as that not only he do wish her good but also endeavour unto his utmost to bring it about which is not to be so understood as if the wife were not bound to love her husband also Tit. 2. 4. But he presseth love upon the husband in particular because he is most ready to fail in this duty of love and to abuse that superiority which God hath given him over his wife by proving rigorous and bitter against her Col. 3. -19. Now this love enjoyned to husbands is not that common Christian love which is extended unto all Christians of both sexes as unto brethren and sisters in Christ Joh. 13. 34. but a speciall and conjugall love which ought to be extended unto none but unto a mans own wife and it includeth cohabitation with his wife and contentation with her love only Prov. 5. 18 19. a patient bearing with her infirmities and frailties 1 Pet. 3. 7. with a fatherly care to defend her 1 Sam. 30. 5 c. to provide for her in all things according to his power which either her necessity or dignity of her rank doth require 1 Tim. 5. 8. lovingly to govern direct and instruct her 1 Cor. 14. 35. yea and to cherish her ver 29. Next he inforceth this duty by two arguments The first whereof is proponed in this verse to wit Christ's example who loved His Church and from love gave Himself for it See upon ver 2. Which example of Christ's love doth not only inforce the duty as an argument but also point forth the right manner of the duty as a pattern In so far as the husbands love ought to resemble Christs to wit in the chastity of His love who loveth none to His Church Joh. 17. 9. the sincerity of His love who loveth the Church not for His but
for her advantage Prov. 8. 30. with Gal. 2. -20. not for what is hers but for her self Hos. 14. 4 and not in words only but in deeds also testifying His love by the effects Joh. 15. 13. and in the constancie of His love who loveth whom He loveth unto the end Joh. 13. -1. even notwithstanding of their infirmities Psal. 89. 30 33. such ought the husband's love to be Doct. 1. Though husbands are not to suffer their wives to exercise dominion and authority over them that being contrary to the Ordinance of God and the good both of husband and wife ver 22. 23. yet seing the nature of men and of husbands in particular with relation to their wives are sufficiently bent of their own accord to exercise any power and authority they have and rather to exceed their due than to keep within it therefore neither ought they themselves so much to mind their power neither is it so necessary for them to be minded thereof by others as to be carefull how to use their power and authority well and as it ought for therefore the Apostle though he commanded the wives to submit yet he doth not expresly bid the husbands rule over their wives but husbands love your wives as thinking it more fit to let them understand how to use their power well than to stir them up to the exercise of it 2. The great and main duty which an husband as an husband ought to learn and so learn as to practise it is love to his wife and so to love her as to make love kyth in all his deportment towards her and in all those other duties which he oweth to her this being that one thing in the husband which sweetneth the yoke of subjection laid upon the wife giveth her courage under it and maketh her willingly submit unto it when it receiveth such a sweet return from her husband for Paul doth hold forth this as the husbands great lesson and the sum of all his other duty Husbands love your wives 3. There is no husband whatever he be for birth parts authority or power who is not tyed to love his wife and to evidence his love to her in all those duties mentioned in opening up the Text for he speaketh indefinitly unto all Husbands love your wives 4. Neither is there any wife to whom all those duties flowing from the fountain of love are not due by her husband No meannesse of birth Esther 2. 17. no personall infirmity 1 Sam. 1. 5. adultery being excepted Matth. 19. 9 nor frowardnesse of nature Joh. 19. 17. do prejudge her of them for he speaketh indefinitly also of the wives Husbands love your wives 5. Though it concerneth husbands and wives and others also who are tied together by mutuall relations as masters and servants parents and children to take some sort of inspection one of another lest any of their relations come short of their duty 2 King 5. 13. yet it concerneth every one most to make conscience of his own duty not only to God but also to his relations and that as for other reasons so for this There can be no greater encouragement to stir up his relations to make conscience of their duty to him for he commandeth every one to mind their own duty most the wives to submit themselves the husbands to love their wives and so in the rest 6. As Jesus Christ hath deigned Himself to undergo the relation of an husband to His Church So this and those other relations taken on by Him are not empty titles He doth the duties which all such relations do bind to even to the utmost And particularly He is such an husband that for love to His Church and all other duties flowing from love He is exemplary unto all other husbands seing greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down His life for His friends Joh. 14. 13. for as Paul implyeth here and in the verses following that Christ is the Churches husband so he holdeth forth His love as a pattern to be imitated by all Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church 7. The love which a husband carrieth to his wife ought to be founded not upon beauty riches health or any such thing only which is subject unto decay but also and principally upon that unchangable foundation of the love of Christ unto His Church which is here held forth not only as a pattern but as an argument also and the reason wherefore husbands ought to love their wives even as Christ also loved the Church 8. As those whom Christ doth love with a speciall love are only His that is real Believers who are subject to Him ver 24. So Jesus Christ did give Himself to death not for all and every one Joh. 17. 9. but only for His Church which is His All and consisteth of some of all Nations and of all ranks in the world in which respect only Christ is said to have died for all 1 Tim. 2. 6. for Paul astricteth both His love and His death to the Church As Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it See some further Doctrines gathered from the like words ver 2. Vers. 26. That he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word HE insisteth upon this excellent pattern of love by shewing two ends why Christ from love did give Himself for His Church The first whereof is attained in the present life and expressed in this verse to wit that He might sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself Which sanctifying work as it is here taken doth comprehend that whole complex businesse of translating the Elect from the state of sin and death to the state of grace and life even our regeneration justification and the gracious change of our dispositions or sanctification strictly so called as Joh. 17. 17. which he calleth a cleansing of us expressing the manner how Christ doth sanctifie His Church even by doing away the guilt of sin or obligation to wrath because of sin in justification Rom. 8. 1. and the filth power and activity of sin in the renovation of our natures after His own Image Rom. 6. 14. which cleansing work is here described from the externall means and instruments by which Christ doth cleanse His Church and make application of the vertue and power of His death and sufferings in order to that end And those are 1. the Sacrament of Baptism called the washing of water because of the externall rite and element used in that Sacrament and cleansing is ascribed to this washing not as if there were any vertue bestowed upon the water by God whereby grace is conferred and really wrought 1 Pet. 3. 21. but because though it be God alone who wholly and effectually doth sanctifie and cleanse us 1 Cor. 3. 7. yet this Sacrament as also the other are made use of by Him not only to represent Christ and those gracious saving works of His 1 Corinth
10. 16. but also to confirm the grant of them to us if we believe Rom. 4. 11 yea and to exhibit a greater measure of those saving graces unto us upon our right using of them 1 Cor. 11. 24. therefore is it that the thing signified is ascribed unto the sign and seal Now the Apostle doth mention Baptism only and not the Lords Supper either because there is the same reason for both and therefore it was sufficient to expresse the one or because Baptism is the first and leading Sacrament and sealeth up our regeneration and new birth in a peculiar manner Tit. 3. 5. and therefore it is most appositly mentioned here where he speaketh of God's work in bringing sinners out of nature unto the state of grace The second mean and instrument which God maketh use of is the Word to wit the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel and preached by sent Ministers Rom. 10. 15. which the Lord doth blesse for conveying grace to gracelesse sinners and so for sanctifying and cleansing them not by any vertue in the sound syllabs or sentences of this Word but by the effectuall working of His own Spirit Acts 16. 14. whereby He doth accompany His Word when and where He pleaseth Joh. 3. 8. Doct. 1. The love which an husband carrieth unto his wife ought to make it self evident not only in these things which tend to her welbeing in things temporall but also and chiefly in his sincere endeavours to bring about her spiritual and eternall good by labouring to instruct her in the saving knowledge of God in Christ 1 Pet. 3. 7. lovingly to admonish her for her faults Job 2. 10. and to pray with her and for her 1 Pet. 3. -7. for the example of Christs love to His Church which he is to imitate doth teach so much seing He from love gave Himself for the Church that He might sanctifie and cleanse her 2. As Gods Image was lost and forfeited by Adam's fall unto all his posterity so there was not any possible way for our recovering of it except a price and no lesse price than the bloud of Christ had been first payed to provoked justice for it for Christ behoved to give Himself and thereby purchase sanctification for us that so He might sanctifie and cleanse the Church 3. Our dying Lord had an actuall intention in due time to sanctifie and accordingly doth regenerate justifie and sanctifie yea and bring unto glory all those for whom he died and gave Himself a sacrifice and offering unto God for His intentions cannot be frustrated but He must see the travell of His soul Isa. 53. 11. Now that He intended to sanctifie all such is clear For He gave Himself for it that He might sanctifie and cleanse it 4. As all those for whom Christ our Lord did from love give Himself and whom by His death He intended to sanctifie were in themselves polluted and unclean lying in their bloud defiled both with the guilt of sin already committed and with the filthy vilenesse of sin yet indwelling Eph. 2. 1 -3. So such was the fervency of love in Christ to lost sinners and such was the vertue of His merit that no uncleannesse of this kind did make Him loath them or despare of getting them made clean For that He gave Himself for the Church to cleanse it supponeth that they were unclean and yet He loveth them and from love setteth about to cleanse them 5. The stain and blot of sin both in its filth and guilt hath so much sunk down in and polluted the whole man in soul and body that no liquor under heaven can wash it out or cleanse the soul from it but only the washing cleansing vertue of Christs most precious bloud For He gave Himself for the Church that He might cleanse it 6. This precious liquor of Christs bloud did not cleanse and sanctifie all those for whom He gave Himself so soon as it was shed upon the crosse no there neither was nor can be any cleansing of any by the bloud of Christ untill it be effectually applied unto the filthy soul for he mentioneth the Word and Sacraments as the means whereby Christ applieth the vertue of His death and ascribeth therefore this effect of cleansing unto them He gave Himself that He might cleanse it by the washing of water by the word 7. As this work and duty of applying the cleansing vertue of Christs death by a lively faith Act. 15. 9. is of all the other most difficult So the goodnesse of God hath provided many means by the help whereof we may be carried on towards it the chief whereof are the Word preached and the Sacraments administrated the former containing the charter or grant of Christ and of all His benefits from God unto every one who will receive Him Job 3. 16. The latter being the great seal of heaven annexed to this grant Rom. 4. 11. that thereby we may be more and more confirmed in the faith of it for His providing these means doth point at both the difficultie of applying Christ and his care to have us brought up to it That He might cleanse it by the washing of water and by the word 8. The Spirit of God prescribeth means unto Himself by which He bringeth about the work of grace in gracelesse sinners not to ty Himself absolutely and in all cases to such means but that we may be tyed to depend on Him in the use of them His ordinary way being to convey grace by these for though He may sanctifie some from the womb before they hear the Word or receive any Sacrament Jer. 1. 5. yet He holdeth these forth as the ordinary means by which He cleanseth even the washing of water by the word Vers. 27. That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish HEre is the second end of Christs giving Himself for His Church as also of His sanctifying it which end is not attained untill the life to come for besides that he hath spoken of the Churches state of grace ver 26 the words here used are so comprehensive and large that they cannot be well understood to have their full accomplishment untill Believers be brought by Christ unto that full perfection in grace which shall be attained in glory Which state of perfection is here set forth by that most perfect union and conjunction which the Church shall have with Christ being presented to Him as the Bride to the Bridegroom for the through accomplishing of the marriage by vertue of which most perfect union the Church shall be glorious that is perfectly holy and happy as he after explaineth shewing all evil whether of sin or misery shall be removed even the least spot of sin or wrinkle through old age or misery not excepted and that all contrary good shall be bestowed both perfect holinesse and happinesse in such a measure that
the most rigid critick or Momus himself shall not find any inlack or defect in either as the word rendered without blemish will bear Doct. 1. All those who are justified and sanctified here and none but they shall be glorified hereafter for Christ must see the travel of His soul Isa. 53. 11. which is not only to sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself ver 26. but also to glorifie them and to bring them to glory by the way of holinesse That He might present it to Himself a glorious Church 2. Christ hath purchased by His death not only sanctification to His Church but also heaven it self and therefore our glory in heaven is not merited by our holinesse but being purchased by Christ is freely gifted to us Rom. 6. 23. He gave Himself for it that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church saith he 3. Though Belivers even while they are here be brought near to God in Christ by faith Eph. 2. 13. and have fellowship with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. -3. yet all that fellowship and nearnesse is but a distance and kind of estrangement being compared with that most perfect presence and intimate fellowship which shall be enjoyed hereafter the former being but mediate through the glaste of Ordinances 1 Cor. 13. 12. frequently interrupted Psal. 30. 7. and no wayes full 1 Cor. 13. 12. but the latter shall be immediate 1 Cor. 13. 12. constant 1 Thess. 4. 17. and so full that they who enjoy the meanest degree shall find no inlack Psal. 17. 15. for he speaketh of Christs presenting His Church to Himself in glory at the great day as if there were nothing but uncouthnesse and distance betwixt Him and the Church untill then that he might present it to himself a glorious Church saith he 4. Though every believing soul is when the Father draweth it to Christ contracted and handfasted with Him Hos. 2. 19 20. yet for good and wise reasons it pleaseth the Lord Christ to delay the taking of us home to Himself and the accomplishment and consummation of the begun marriage untill all the Elect being effectually called shall be presented to Him at once and so this spirituall marriage shall be fully accomplished betwixt Jesus Christ and the Bride the Lambs wife Rev. 19. 7. even as in earthly marriages there is first a Contract or Espousals and then for just and honest reasons some space of time ought to interveen betwixt that and the full accomplishment of the marriage Deut. 20. 7. Matth. 1. 18. for Paul sheweth that then at the great day the whole Church of real Believers shall be presented to Christ as the Bride is to the Bridegroom for the solemn consummation of the marriage That he might present it to himself a glorious Church 5. As believing souls even after their being contracted with Christ by faith and after they are renewed and cleansed in part do not get all their filthy garments put off there being a body of sin and death which cleaveth unto the best So at the finall solemnization of the marriage in the great day the Church of Believers the Bride and Lambs wife shall be clad in garments of glory being fully freed from the smallest remnant of sin and misery and made wholly glorious both in soul Matth. 22. 30. and body Phil. 3. 21. for he saith that he might present it unto himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c. 6. Those garments of glory and needle-work wherewith the Church the Lambs wife shall be arrayed in the marriage-day are dearly purchased and freely bestowed upon her by Christ her Bridegroom and head for Paul saith Christ gave himself for the Church that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c 7. This perfect glorious state wherein the Church shall be for ever with Christ her Lord her Head her Husband is such as none can positively declare what it is yea neither can the heart of man comprehend it and all the knowledge which can be here in our state of imperfection attained of it is not so much positive or a knowing what it is as negative or a knowing what it is not by removing all those things from it which imply the least degree of sin and misery for therefore doth Paul set it out here by four negatives Not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing and without blemish and by one affirmative only that it should be holy Vers. 28. So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself FOlloweth the second argument to inforce this duty of love upon husbands towards their wives taken from the near conjunction betwixt husband and wife which he doth propound in this verse by shewing that the wife is the husbands body in so far as by the law of marriage which shall be explained ver 30. they two become one flesh so that in loving her he doth love himself to wit not so much because his so doing tendeth to his own good and peace though that be also truth Prov. 5. 17 18 19. as that she is his own body a piece of himself yea and his whole self or a second self they two being one flesh and therefore he ought to love her yea and to love her with the same sincerity and ardency of affection kything in the same or like effects wherewith he loveth his own body yea both his soul and body which are himself for the words as their own bodies are both an argument to inforce upon them the duty and a rule to direct them in the right manner of practising the duty Doct. 1. As love in husbands toward their wives after the pattern of Christs love unto His Church is a most necessary duty So considering the many quench-coals of love which the mutual infirmities both of husbands and wives do frequently furnish together with that naturall pronenesse which is in corrupt man being advanced and preferred above others to abuse his authority to domineer with a kind of tyranny over such as are under him it will be found a task not so easie as at the first it would appear for husbands to keep this affection and love flowing from the right fountain and manifesting it self in all its necessary effects towards their wives for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies 2. That place of honour and superiority which God hath given the man over the wife as appointing him to be her head doth tye him unto answerable duty so that the greater his honour is the greater is his burden and in particular it bindeth him to love her and from love to govern instruct cherish her and provide for her and to all other things by proportion which the head doth for the body for from what he said ver
approven by their masters not with eye-service as men-pleasers 4. To propose unto our selves the pleasing of men and gaining of approbation good liking and applause from them as our great design to be gained upon any tearmes is inconsistent with the work of grace in the heart and with that subjection which we owe to the Lord Christ a man cannot serve two masters Matth. 6. 24. for he opposeth men-pleasers to the servants of Christ not as men-pleasers but as the servants of Christ saith he 5. The meanest and basest of services which men go about in their lawfull callings being done with the right qualifications from right motives for a right end and in the right manner is service done to Christ and will be accepted of by Him as such because He doth command it and it is done if done a right in obedience to His command for he will have the meanest servants to go about their service as servants to Christ and doing the will of God 6. Then may we reckon the going about of our ordinary imploiments to be service done to Christ when we look upon what we do as commanded by God do it in obedience to His command and are heartily sincere in what we do as aiming singly without hypocrisie and dissimulation at the honour of God and the good of these whose good we pretend to and ought to aim at for he explaineth how servants may reckon themselves as servants to Christ even by their doing the will of God from their heart 7. Our eyeing of God and taking Him for our partie to whom we must give an accompt even in those things which we do unto men is a singular help to make us single and straight in all our affairs and to banish all double dealing deceit hunting after applause and all such-like vices which our heart presumeth to make bold with when we look to no higher partie than poor fecklesse man for that they may be single in heart and eschew eye-service and man-pleasing he directeth them to take God for their partie but as servants to Christ doing the will of God from the heart 8. Then is the will of God acceptably done when not only the outward man as tongue hand and other members of the body do act every one their part but the heart and in-most affections are brought up to the work otherwise our performances are but a lame sacrifice as being destitute of that which God doth mainly call-for Prov. 23. 26. for he saith doing the will of God from the heart Vers. 7. With good will doing service as to the Lord and not to men HEre is a third thing required to the service and obedience of servants in singlnesse of heart even that it be with goodwill and love to their masters person and to the thriving of his affairs which is opposit to the doing of their service grudgingly unpleasantly or from fear of punishment and an eye to their own advantage only and that they may be encouraged to do service from this principle even to their unworthie masters he directeth them to fasten their eye upon the Lord who had subjected them unto such masters and to know that in yeelding that obedience unto them which was commanded by God they did service to Him rather than to them and might therefore do it with better will for the negative particle doth not deny simply but comparativly So that as to the Lord and not to men is to the Lord more than to men Mark 9. 37. Doct. 1. Fear and love of one and the same person may well consist and both be a conjunct principle having influence upon one and the same duty yea then only is that duty which floweth from fear acceptable unto God when the partie to whom the dutie is done whether it be God or men is not only feared but also loved for the obedience of servants must not only flow from fear and trembling ver 5. but also from love and good-will with good-will doing service 2. That a man do service to God whether in the duties af immediate worship or of his ordinary calling it is of necessity required that he do it cheerfully not as of necessity and constraint but with a delight and pleasure in it as in that which God doth call-for at his hands the Lord doth love a cheerfull giver 2 Cor. 9. -7. for that servants may go about their service to their masters as servants to Christ and thereby do the will of God it is required that with good-will they do their service 3. The most base and meanest of imployments which God doth call us to discharge ought to be undertaken and discharged by us with cheerfulnesse and good will it being no small credit for prodigal rebels to be entrusted in the meanest piece of service to Him yea and the more mean and fecklesse the service be which we discharge it ought to be gone about with more of cheerfulnesse that what is inlacking in the worth of the work may be made up by the hearty affection and good-will of the worker for he will have even servants going about their basest imployments with good-will because they did thereby service to God and He did call them to it with good-will doing service as to the Lord. 4. So ingrate is man for the most part and so slow to reward those from whom he receiveth favour and advantage yea so prone to requite them evill for good Judg. 9. 17 18. that a man can never heartily and with such good-will as he ought do service to the most of men except he look to God in and above men and know that they are thereby doing service to Him whom to serve in the meanest imployment is a sufficient reward for it self 1 Chron. 29. 14. besides that He will have none to serve Him for nothing as the following verse doth teach for the Apostle implyeth they can never serve their masters with good-will except they look to God more than to man therefore he saith with good-will doing service as to the Lord and not to men Vers. 8. Knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free THe Apostle having thus held forth the necessary requisits of that obedience enjoyned unto servants he doth thirdly perswade them to it in this verse by an argument taken from the great advantage they should reap thereby while he sheweth that though their reward from their earthly masters was little or none yet so mercifull is God that of His own free grace Rom. 11. 35. and not for any merit in mans service which is none Luke 17. 10. He doth largely recompense sometimes here Mark 20. 30. and alwayes hereafter Col. 3. 24. all those who make conscience of doing good or of going about their calling as service to Him and that in this free retribution of a reward He taketh notice of the poor bond-servant who serveth God in his calling as well as
All which he wisheth from God the Father not excluding but including the Son and holy Ghost See upon Col. 3. 17. doct 3. and from Jesus Christ the Mediator through vertue of whose merit and intercession all saving benefits are conveyed unto the Elect. Doct. 1. Ministers who would have their pains attended with successe towards the Lords people ought to beg that from God by prayer to be wrought in them which by their preaching they endeavour to inculcate on them for peace love and faith are the sum of all which he hath been presently instructing them in and pressing upon them and here he seeketh all from God by prayer Peace be to the brethren 2. A Ministers prayers for obtaining the Lords blessing upon his pains towards his flock should be serious servent insisted upon and often inculcated untill a gracious answer thereof be granted for the Apostle began with this prayer or wish chap. 1. 2. and here he closeth with it Peace be to the brethren 3. Even Believers are not made perfect in grace at the first the Lord doth carry on that work by steps and degrees that somewhat of Him may be seen in every step and therefore as themselves are bound to grow in grace by adding one grace to another 2 Pet. 1. 5 6. and one degree of the same grace to the former 2 Pet. 3. 18. So it is the duty of others to help them on towards growth by their prayers and wishes for those who were already regenerated among the Ephesians had faith love and peace wrought in them at the first and Paul wisheth here a further degree of and growth in those from God to them Peace be to the brethren 4. Though it be the duty of all to live in peace and love yet a truely Christian and peaceable frame of spirit together with love which is not a meer moral vertue but a saving grace flowing from the root of faith is only to be found among true Believers and should be sought-after by such especially coldrifenesse of affection and unpeaceable walking being more unbeseeming them than any others for therefore doth he wish for peace and love to the brethren that is those chiefly who were brethren in Christ and born of God 5. There cannot be a peaceable frame of spirit in any towards others nor yet an harmonious walking with them nor any thing else except sinfull renting and shamelesse striving but where the grace of love is whereby the heart is armed against all irritations arising from the infirmities of others to break the bond of peace Eph. 4. 2 3. for he conjoyneth these two in his wish peace whereof one branch is a peaceable frame of heart and harmonious walking and love Peace be to the brethren and love 6. As the graces of faith and love are different and therefore the one cannot be the form or essence of the other So they are alwayes conjoyned where one is there the other must be also for he speaketh of them as two different graces whereof the one doth necessarily follow upon the other And love with faith 7. See what is already observed from Gal. 1. 3. Philip. 1. 2. Col. 1. -2. upon the persons from whom and through whom those good things are wished and sought even from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. Vers. 24. Grace be with all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity Amen HEre the Apostle wisheth for grace that is Gods free favour and love in Christ the fountain and sum of all the former good things wished-for and enlargeth his wish towards all Believers described from this that they love Jesus Christ in sincerity or incorruption as the word signifieth that is not for a time only but constantly not in hypocrisie or shew only but sincerely and really and so closeth up all with his Amen as an evidence both of his affectionate desire and confidence of an answer Doct. 1. Though we may have a more particular eye to some than to others by making mention of them expresly in our prayers because of our charge of them present imployment about them or other near relations towards them yet we ought not to exclude any especially of these who have relation to Christ but are to remember all such at least in generall and seek the same good things from God to them which we wish for others for the Apostle having made expresse mention of the believing Ephesians under the name of Brethren ver 23. doth here extend his charity and prayers towards all who love our Lord Jesus Christ in generall Grace be with all them saith he 2. The more the heart is exercised in spirituall duties especially in prayer it groweth more warm and more enlarged to the exercise of all those saving graces required in that duty and especially to publick-mindednesse and the exercise of charity towards the Saints and of faith in Jesus Christ for Paul continuing his prayers and wish untill this verse getteth his charity enlarged in the exercise of it towards all Christians in generall and his faith strengthened to the owning of Christ as his own Grace be with all that love our Lord. 3. Gods grace or free favour is the sum of all which a man needeth to wish either for himself or others it is virtually all things so that the man that hath it wanteth nothing he hath all good and necessary things in their cause and fountain he doth also possesse all such things in that measure God seeth fitting for him for in this part of his wish which relateth to all lovers of Christ in generall he doth only make expresse mention of grace as virtually comprysing peace love and faith which he wished to the brethren ver 23. Grace be with all them that love our Lord. 4. Love to Jesus Christ is a sure mark of those who have saving interest in the good things purchased by Him and one of those marks which are best known to the person who hath it love to Christ where it is cannot be well hid for Paul designing those who might plead interest in the good things prayed-for describeth them by their love to Christ as being a mark both sure and easily discerned With all them that love our Lord. 5. The Lords Servants ought to endeavour that those who are in a gracious state and have right to the great and good things purchased by Christ may know so much and for that end would furnish them with the knowledge of such marks and evidences as may be most easily discerned where they are and infallibly prove the soul that hath them to be in a state of grace for Paul giveth such a mark of those who had interest in the good things prayed-for even love to Christ that they might know so much of themselves With all them that love our Lord Jesus Christ. 6. It is the duty of Ministers to lay hold on all occasions to recommend this grace of love to Christ by holding forth those many good and excellent things which do accompany it and are made evident to be in the heart by it that so the Lords people may be the more incited to bestow their love and heart upon Him for Paul to stir them up to the love of Christ recommendeth this grace by making it the mark and evidence of the man that hath interest in all the good things wished-for with all them that love our Lord. 7. Though we are bound to pray even for those who are graclesse that God may bestow grace upon them yet the more speaking evidences there be of true grace in any we may be the more encouraged to pray to God for them and with greater confidence to expect a gracious return of our prayers upon them for Pauls wishes to God to which he affixeth an Amen in evidence of his confidence to be heard are put up in behalf of those who do love our Lord Jesus Christ. 8. As there are many who professe love to Christ whose love is and when it is tryed will be found to be but counterfeir unsincere and not reall So the good things promised to those who love the Lord Jesus Christ do not at all belong to any of that sort whatsoever their deluded hearts may sancie to the contrary but to such only who love Him really sincerely and testifie their love into Him by keeping His commandments Joh. 14. 15. and especially by loving those who are His 1 Joh. 4. 20 21. for the Apostle qualifieth that love to Christ which is an evidence of interest in the good things wished-for by sincerity which implyeth there is somelove not sincere That love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity 9. The more sincere a man is in the exercise of any grace or practice of any duty he will endure the longer sincerity in good is alwayes attended with perseverance but hypocrisie doth soon faint and wholly sit up at the last Joh. 27. 8 9. with 10. So much is implyed by the word here rendered sincerity as Tit. 2. -7. which also signifieth incorruption That love our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity Amen FINIS ERRATA Page Line Read 21 22 Ephes. 5. 2. 22 3 dele shall 26 22 Col. 46 37 Philip. 2. 13. 60 12 inheritance 91 5 by the 138 6 and His 202 10 actuated 213 12 over their 233 38 dividing 235 19 Gen. 13. 253 2 subsistence 267 3 its own 268 35 dycing of ibid 36 or dycing 310 5 any other 327 34 nearby 333 16 6. 10. 343 1 wrought by 347 12 doct 3. 356 26 so see 363 10 6. 10. 364 29 Whatever 413 24 1 Joh. 2. 425 30 Mark 10. 432 32 biddeth 456 1 and 463 28 Gal. 6.