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A53696 Exercitations on the Epistle to the Hebrews also concerning the Messiah wherein the promises concerning him to be a spiritual redeemer of mankind are explained and vindicated, his coming and accomplishment of his work according to the promises is proved and confirmed, the person, or who he is, is declared, the whole oeconomy of the mosaical law, rites, worship, and sacrifice is explained : and in all the doctrine of the person, office, and work of the Messiah is opened, the nature and demerit of the first sin is unfolded, the opinions and traditions of the antient and modern Jews are examined, their objections against the Lord Christ and the Gospel are answered, the time of the coming of the Messiah is stated, and the great fundamental truths of the Gospel vindicated : with an exposition and discourses on the two first chapters of the said epistle to the Hebrews / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1668 (1668) Wing O753; ESTC R18100 1,091,989 640

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the declaration of the Orall Instructions of our Lord Jesus Christ and his Apostles But herein the Jews deal with us far more ingeniously than they They tell us plainly that now their whole Orall Law is written and that they have no reserve of authentick Traditions not yet declared So that where Austin sayes of his Adversaries Nescit habere praeter Scripturas Legitimas Propheticas Judaeos quasdam traditiones suas quas non Scriptas habent sed memoriter tenent alter in alterum loquendo transfundit quam deuterosin vocant either he knew not of the Mishnae that was then written or this opinion of Secret Traditions was continued untill the finishing and promulgation of the Babilonical Talmud which was sundry years after his Death But here the Romanists fail us for although they have given us heaps upon heaps of their Traditions by the means afore mentioned yet they plead that they have still an inexhaustible Treasure of them laid up in their Church stores and Breast of their Holy Father to be drawn forth at all times as occasion shall require And thus have we taken a brief Prospect of the Consent of both the Apostatical Churches in that Principle which hath been the means of their Apostasie and is the great Engine whereby they are rendered incurable therein Exercitatio VIII The First Dissertation concerning the Messiah proving him to be promised of Old Principles presupposed in the Apostles Discourse in his Epistle to the Hebrews First A Messiah promised from the Foundation of the World Of the Evil that is in the World Of Sin and Punishment Original and Entrance of them Ignorance of Mankind about them The Sin and Fall of Adam Their Consequents Jews Opinion about the Sin of Adam Also of the Curse and corruption of Nature Their sense of both at large evinced God not unjust if all mankind had perished in this condition Instance of the Sin and Punishment of Angels Differences between the Sin of Angels and Man Angels lost Mankind relieved Evidences of that Deliverance How attainable Not by Men themselves Not by Angels Nor the Law That proved against the Jews Their Fable of the Law made before the World with the occasion of it The Patriarchs saved before the giving of the Law Observation of the Moral Precepts of the Law no means of Relief nor the Sacrifices of it The New Covenant God the Author of it How to be accomplished The first Promise of it Gen. 3.16 discussed Sense of the Jews upon it manifested Examined Promise of a Deliverer the Foundation of all Religion in the World The Promise renewed unto Abraham Gen. 12.1 2 3. Nature of it as given unto him Testified unto and confirmed Gen. 49.10 Numb 24.17 19. Job 19.25 Opened with sundry other Places End of the Separation of the Posterity of Abraham unto ● peculiar People and Church This Deliverer the MESSIAH Denotation of the Word The Person who WEE proceed now unto our Principal intendment in all these Discourses which is the Consideration and Discussion of those great Principles as of all Religion in general so of the Christian in particular which the Ap●stle supposeth as the Foundation of his whole Treaty with the Hebrews and which § 1 are the Basis that he stands upon in the management of his whole Design For in all Discourses that are Paraenetical as this Epistle for the most part is there are alwayes some Principles taken for granted which give Life and Efficacy unto the Exhortations in them and whereinto they are resolved For as to perswade men unto particul●rs in Faith Opinion or Practice without a previous conviction of such general Principles of Truth as from which the Perswasions used do naturally flow and arise is a thing weak and inefficacious so to be exercised in the Demonstration of the Principles themselves when the especial End aimed is to perswade would bring confusion into all Discourse Wherefore although our Apostle do assert and confirm those dogmata and Articles of Truth which he dealt with the Hebrews in a way of Perswasion to embrace yet he supposeth and takes for granted those more general 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or first Maxims which are the Foundation both of the Doctrines and Exhortations insisted on as all skill in teaching doth require And these are those which now we aim to draw forth and consider being these that follow First That there was a Messiah or Saviour of mankind from Sin and Punishment promised upon and from the first entrance of Sin into the World in whom all acceptable Worship of God was founded and in whom all the Religion of the Sons of men was to center Secondly That this Messiah long before Promised was now actually exhibited in the world and had finished the work committed unto him when the Apostle wrote this Epistle Thirdly That Jesus of Nazareth was this Messiah and that what he had done and suffered was the work and duty promised of old concerning him There is not a Line in the Epistle to the Hebrews that doth not virtually begin and end in these Principles not an Assertion not a Doctrine not an Exhortation that is not built on this Triple Foundation They are also the great Verities 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Christian Profession or Religion A sincere endeavour therefore in their Explanation and Vindication especially in these dayes wherein as on the one hand there are various thoughts of heart about the Jews their present condition and expectation so on the other there are many who are ready with a presumptuous boldness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to call in question the fundamentals of all Religion may not be unacceptable Now the first of these Principles is at this day by several vain imaginations obscured by the Jews to their utter loss of all benefit by it and hath been so for many Generations although it were the Life and Soul of the Religion of their fore-fathers as shall be demonstrated and the two latter are by them expresly denyed and maliciously contended against Here then we shall fix and confirm these Principles in the order wherein we have laid them down declaring on every one of them the Conceptions and Perswasions of the Jews concerning the promised Messiah removing in the Close their Objections against the Faith of Christians in this matter in a peculiar Exercitation to that Purpose And the Confirmation and Vindication of the first of these Principles is that which our present Discourse is designed unto Besides the Testimony of God himself in his Word we have a concurrent suffrage § 2 from the whole Creation that man in the Beginning was formed as in the Image so in the Favour of God and unto his Glory And as he was not liable unto any evil which is the effect of Gods displeasure nor defective in any Good necessary to preserve him in the condition wherein he was made so he was destitute of nothing that was any way requisite to carry him on
Ghest but lastly as the Master of the House see James 1.14 15. And according to their wonted manner on Gen. 4. v. 7. where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Masculine Gender is joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Foeminine they observe in Bereshith Rabba sec. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 at first it is like a woman but afterwards it waxeth strong like a man § 12 More Testimonies of this nature from the Writings that are of Authority amongst them might be produced but that these are sufficient unto our Purpose That we aim at is to evidence their Conviction of that manifold misery which came upon mankind on the Entrance of Sin into the world And two things we have produced their Suffrage and Consent unto First The Change of the Primitive Condition of Man by his Defection from the Law of his Creation This made him obnoxious in his whole Person and all his Concernments to the displeasure and Curse of God to all the Evil which in this world he feels or fears in another to Death Temporal and Eternal And hence did all the disorder which is in the Vniverse arise All this we have found them freely testifying unto And this must be acknowledged by all men who will not brutishly deny what their own Consciences dictate unto them and which the condition of the whole lower world proclaims or irrationally ascribe such things unto God as are utterly inconsistent with his Wisdom Goodness Righteousness and Holiness And Secondly We have manifested their acknowledgement that a Principle of Sin or Moral Evil hath invaded the nature of man or that from the sin of our first Parents there is an Evil Concupiscence in the heart of every man continually and incessantly inclining the Soul unto Operations suitable unto it that is unto all Moral Evil whatever From both these it unavoidably follows on the first Notions of the Righteousness Holiness Veracity and Faithfulness of God that mankind in this estate and condition can justly expect nothing but a confluence of Evil in this world and at the close of their Pilgrimage to perish with a Ruine Commensurate unto their Existence For God having in Wisdom and Righteousness as the Soveraign Lord of his Creature given them a Law good just and equal and having appointed the Penalty of Death and his everlasting displeasure therein unto the Transgression thereof and withall having sufficiently promulgated both Law and Penalty all which things we have before demonstrated the Transgression prohibited actually ensuing God himself being Judge it remains that all this Constitution of a Law and threatning of a penalty was vain and ludricous as Satan in the Serpent pretended or that mankind is rendered absolutely miserable and cursed and that for ever Now which of these is to be concluded Divine Revelation in the Scripture Reason and the Event of things will readily determine § 13 That God without the least impeachment of his Righteousness or Goodness might have left all mankind remediless in this Condition is manifest both from what hath been discoursed concerning the means whereby they were brought into it and his dealing with Angels on the like occasion The condition wherein man was created was morally good and upright the state wherein he was placed outwardly happy and blessed the Law given unto him just and equall the Reward proposed unto him glorious and sure and his Defection from this condition voluntary What shall we say then is God unjust who inflicteth Vengeance God forbid The Execution of a Righteous Sentence upon the voluntary Transgression of a Law just and equal hath no unrighteousness in it And this was the summ of what God did in this matter as to the misery that came on mankind And who should judge Him if he left him for ever to eat of the fruit of his own wayes and to be filled with his own devices He had before as expressed his Power and Wisdom so satisfied his Goodness and Bounty in his Creation with his endowments and enjoyments according unto the Law thereof and what could man look for farther at his hands Hence Adam when his eyes were opened to see the nature of Evil in that actual sense which he had in his Conscience of the guilt that he had contracted had not the least Expectation of Relief or Mercy And the folly of the course which he took in hiding himself argues sufficiently both his present Amazement and that he knew of nothing better to betake himself unto Therefore doth he give that account of the Result of his thoughts as unto the Relation that was between God and him and what only he now looked for from him I heard thy voice and was afraid Neither would any Revelation that God had then made of himself either by the Works of his Power and Wisdom or by any inbred impressions on the souls of men concreated with them give encouragement unto them that had sinned against him to expect Relief Besides He had dealt thus with Angels Upon their first Sin he spared them not but at once without hope of Recovery cast them under the Chains of Darkness to be kept unto the final Judgement of the last day This our Apostle discourseth unto the Hebrews chap. 2. Now God dealt not unsuitably unto any of the Excellencies of his Nature when he left the Apostatizing Angels to perish without Remedy unto Eternity Had he dealt so also with Apostatizing Mankind who were drawn into a conspiracy against him by the Head of the Defection his wayes had been Holy and Righteous Yet doth not this great Instance of Gods dealing with Angels absolutely conclude his § 14 leaving of mankind remediless in his misery also He might justly do so but thence it doth not follow that necessarily he must so do And although the chief and indeed only Reason of his extending Grace and Mercy unto Men and not unto Angels was his own Soveraign Will and Pleasure concerning which who can say unto him What doest thou yet there was such a difference between these two sorts of Original Transgresso●s as may manifest a Condecency or suitableness unto his Righteousness and Goodness in his various proceeding with them For there are sundry things that put an Aggravation on the Rebellion of Angels above that of man and some that render their ruine less destructive unto the Glory of the Universe than that of mankind would have been For First The Angels were created in an estate and condition much superiour unto and more excellent than that of Man and so likewise were their present or actual enjoyments far above his though they also were admirable and blessed The place of their first Habitation which they left Jude 6. was the Highest Heavens the most glorious receptacle of created Beings in opposition whereunto they are said to be cast into the lowest Hell 2 Pet. 2.4 Whereas Man was placed in the Earth which although then beautifull and excellently suited to his condition yet was every way inferiour
reproved l. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 256. l. 31. large Discourses p. 260. l. 16. also r. after l. 10. à fine commission r. omission p. 275. l. 2. r. Judicial p. 276. l. 16. Sanction r. Section p. 290. l. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 308. l. 5. who thought l. 26. and other p. 311. l. 17. laying r. flaying p. 315. l. 4. serebrito r. seretrio There are sundry other mistakes in pointings changes and transpositions of letters in the Hebrew and English which a diligent and Candid Reader will easily observe and amend And it is not worth the while to collect them for those who are otherwise Exercitatio I. The Canonical authority of the Epistle to the Hebrews Notation of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kaneh a measuring reed The beam of a ballance Thence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the same signification Metaphorically a moral rule Rectum and Canon how far the same The Scripture a rule Canonical The Antiquity of that Appellation The Canon of the Scripture What required to render a book Canonical All books of the holy Scripture equall as to their divine Original Jews distinction of the books of the old Testament as to the manner of their writing disproved All equally Canonical No book Canonical of a second sort or degree The Epistle to the Hebrews Canonical Opposed by Hereticks of old Not received into the Latin Church untill the dayes of Hierome Proved against Baronius Not rejected by any of that Church only not publiquely approved The Church of Rome not the sole proposer of books Canonical Occasion of its n●n-admittance at Rome Boldness of some in rejecting and corrupting the Scripture By whom this Epistle opposed of late The objection of the uncertainty of the Pen-man Answered Citations out of the old Testament not found therein Answer Citations not to his purpose Answer Countenance to old Heresies Answer General heads of Arguments to prove its Canonical Authority Characters to discover between books of divine inspiration and others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The General Arguments of books truly Canonical Subject Matter Design Style Of the style of the Sacred writings Mistakes of many about it The nature of Eloquence Excellency of Scripture Style Energie Efficacy Tradition concerning the Authority of this Epistle not justly lyable to any exceptions from the Author Circumstances Subject Matter Style Testimonyes Conclusion THe Canonical Authority of the Epistle unto the Hebrews having § 1 been by some called into Question we must in our entrance declare both what it is which we intend thereby as also the clear interest of this Epistle therein for this is the foundation of all those ensuing discourses from it and that exposition of it which we intend The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which gives rise unto that term Canonical § 2 seems to be derived from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kaneh and this as it sometimes denotes an Aromatical cane that contained spices in it used in the worship of God as Isai. 43. v. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou hast bought me no sweet Cane with silver for this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 precious Cane growing not in their own Countrey was bought from a far off Jer. 6.20 so in general it signifies any reed whatever 1 Kings 14.15 Isai. 42.3 whence a multitude of fierce and wicked men compared to the devouring Crocodile whose lurking place is in the canes or reeds are termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beast of the reed Psal. 68.30 Particularly it signifies a reed made into an instrument wherewith they measured their buildings containing six Cubits in length Ezek. 40.7 Chap. 42.16 And hence indefinitely it is taken for a Rule or a Measure Besides it signifies the jugum or scapus or beam with the tongue of a ballance keeping the poyse of the scales equal and discovering the rectitude or declensions thereof Isai. 46.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they weighed silver on the Cane that is saith the Targum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the ballance the supporter and director of the scales being put for the whole The Rabbins call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the reed of the scales that which tryes and weighs and gives every thing its just moment § 3 And this also is the first and proper signification of the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Canon So the Scholiast on that of Aristophanes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tells us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly that which is over the scales bringing them and the things weighed in them to equality The very same with the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from which it is derived So Varinus tells us that it is properly the tongue in the ballance and in use 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus Aristotle sayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by that which is right we know its self and that which is crooked for the Canon is judge of both where he useth the word for any kind of rule or measure answering unto the other signification of Kaneh in the Hebrew Rectum and Canon that which is right and the rule are one and the same the one expression denoting the nature of any thing the other its Use and Application § 4 From this original proper importance of the word is its metaphorical use deduced which is most Common and therein it signifi●s a moral Rule or a measure for direction tryall and judgement Hence the Philosopher calls the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rule of the administration or government of the Common-wealth that whereby all the parts of it ar● disposed into their proper places whereby they are regulated and all things done in it are tryed and judged And in this sense it is applyed by St. Paul unto divine Revelation Gal. 6.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as many as proceed orderly that is in a direct way for so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes according to this rule or Canon And to the same purpose he useth again the sam● expression Phil. 3.16 For as the words of the Scripture are in themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of Truth so the writing it self is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a right writing or as the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is written in uprightness to be a rule and Judge unto all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Genitivus adjuncti not materiae declaring the property of the writing not the subject matter that is it is Canonical for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is right and a rule we have shewed to be the same And from hence it is that the Scripture or written Word of God being in it self every way absolutely right and perfect and appointed by him to be the Rule or Canon of the Churches faith and obedience requiring trying regulating judging wholly and absolutely of them is become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
those that follow He affirms they may be expounded by that of Philo de Coloniis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But whether this Platonical Declaration of the Nature and Work of the Word of God employed by him as an Instrument in the Making and Government of the World would have been accepted in the Primitive Church when this Place was vexed by the Arians and studiously vindicated by the Orthodox Fathers I much question But to return If the Law and the observance of it be the only Remedy provided of God against the sin and misery of man the only means of Reconciliation with him all that dyed before the giving of it must perish and that eternally But the contrary appears from this very consideration and is undeniably proved by our Apostle in the Instance of Abraham Gal. 3. v. 17. For he received the Promise and was taken into Covenant with God four hundred and thirty years before the giving of the Law And that Covenant conveyed unto him the Love and Favour of God with Deliverance from Sin and the Curse as themselves will not deny There was therefore a Remedy in this case provided long before the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai and therefore the Law was not given unto that purpose but for other Ends at large declared by our Apostle Either then they must grant that all the Patriarchs and he in especiall of whom they boast perished eternally or else that there was a means of Deliverance provided before the giving of the Law and consequently that the Law was not given for that End The first they will not do nor can without an absolute Renunciation of their own Sacred Writings wherein none have obtained a larger Testimony that they pleased God than they The latter therefore followeth undeniably If they shall say they had a way of Deliverance but God provided another afterwards as this would be spoken without Warrant or Authority from the Scripture so I desire to know both what that way was and why it was rejected Of Gods appointment it was and effectual it was unto them that embraced it and why it should be laid aside who can declare Again as was before observed there are two parts of the Law The Moral Precepts § 20 of it and the instituted Worship appointed in it Unto this latter part do the Sacrifices of it belong But neither of these are sufficient unto the End proposed nor jointly can they attain it Two things are evidently necessary from what hath been discoursed unto the Deliverance enquired after First That Man be reconciled unto God by the removal of the Curse and the Wrath due unto him for his Apostacy Secondly That his Nature be freed from that Principle of Sin and enmity against God the evil figment that it is tainted yea possessed withall And neither of these can be effected by the Law or either part of it For First The Moral Precepts of it are the same with those that were written in the heart of man by Nature or the Law of his Creation which he transgressed in his first Rebellion And he must be delivered from that guilt before any new Obedience can be accepted of him His old debt must be satisfied for before he can treat for a new Reward which inseparably follows all acceptable Obedience But this the Precepts of the Law take no notice of nor direct unto any way for its removal only supposing the doing of it by some other means it requires exact Obedience in them that come to God thereby Hence our Apostle concludes that it could not give life but was weak and insufficient in its self unto any such purpose Besides secondly it could not absolutely preserve men in its own Observation for it required that Obedience which never any sinner did or could in all things perform as the Scriptures of the Old Testament abundantly manifest For they tell us there is is no man that sinneth not 1 Kings 8. v. 46. 2 Chron. 6. v. 36. That if the Lord should mark iniquity no man could stand Psal. 130. v. 3. And that if he enter into Judgement according to the Law no man living can be justified in his sight Psal. 143. v. 2. To this Purpose see the excellent Discourse and invincible Reasonings of our Apostle Rom. chap. 3. 4. This the Holy Men of Old confessed this the Scripture bears testimony unto and this Experience confirmes seeing every sin and transgression of that Law was put under a Curse Deut. 27. v. 26. Where then there is no man that sinneth not and every sin is put under the curse the Law in the Preceptive part of it can be no means of delivery from the one or other but is rather a certain means of increasing and aggravating of them both Neither is there any Testimony given concerning any one under the Old Testament that he was any other way justified before God but by Faith and the Pardon of Sins which are not of the Works of the Law See Gen. 15. v. 6. Psal. 32. v. 1 2. Of Noah indeed it is said that he was upright and perfect in his Generation that is sincere in his Obedience and free from the open wickedness of the Age wherein he lived But as this was before the giving of the Law by Moses so the Ground of his Freedom and Deliverance is added to be the Gracious Love and Favour of God This the Jews themselves confess in Bereshith Rabba Sect. 29. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Even Noah himself who was left of them was not every way as he should be but that he found Grace or Favour in the eyes of the Lord. And to the same purpose they speak concerning Abraham himself elsewhere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou findest that Abraham our Father inherited not this world and the world to come any otherwise than by Faith as it is said he believed God This part therefore of the Law is plainly convinced to be insufficient to deliver sinners from an Antecedent guilt and Curse due thereunto § 21 It remains then that the Sacrifices of the Law must yield the Relief enquired after or we are still at a loss in this matter And these the Jews would willingly place their chief confidence in they did so of old Since indeed they have been driven from their Observation they have betaken themselves unto other Helps that they might not appear to be utterly hopeless But they sufficiently manifest their great reserve against the Accusation of their Consciences to be in them by the ludicrous wayes of representing or rather counterfeiting of them that they have invented 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a man and among the Rabbins a Cock also Hence Ben Vzziel renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezion Geber The name of a City Deut. 2.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the City of a Cock And Isa. 22. v. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendered by Hierom Gallus Gallinaceus Granting therefore that the Punishment of Geber is required unto
unto the remainder of his Ministry These brief remarks being given upon the preparation for and the manner of the giving of the Law we shall summarily consider the general nature of the Law and its Sanction in our next Exercitation Exercitatio XX. What meant by the Law among the Jews The common distribution of it into Moral Ceremonial and Judaical by them rejected The ground of that distribution 613 Precepts collected by the Jews Reasons of that number Of these 248 Affirmative 365 Negative Twelve Houses of each sort First House of Affirmatives concerning God and his Worship in twenty Precepts The second concerning the Temple and Priesthood in number 19. The third concerning Sacrifices in 57 Precepts The fourth of Cleanness and Vncleanness 18. The fifth of Alms and Tithes in 32 Precepts The sixth about things to be eaten in seven commands The seventh concerning the Passover and Festivals 20. The eighth of Rule and Judgment in 13 Precepts The ninth of Doctrine and Truth whose commands are 25. The tenth concerning Women and Matrimony in 12 Precepts The eleventh of Criminal Judgments and Punishments in eight Precepts The twelfth of civil Judgments in 17 Precepts Censure of this Collection Negative Precepts in 12 Families 1. Of false Worship in 47 Prohibitions c. THe Law it self and its Sanctions are the next thing that our Apostle makes § 1 mention of in the Oeconomy of the Judaical Church By this Law he especially understands the Law given on Mount Sinai or partly there partly from the Tabernacle the Type of Christ after it was erected The Jews by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Law generally understand the whole five books of Moses as they are also called in the New Testament and all Precepts that they can gather out of them any where they refer to the Law wherein they are not to be contended withall This whole Law is generally distributed into three parts First the Moral Secondly § 2 the Ceremonial Thirdly the Judicial part of it And indeed there is no Precept but may conveniently be referred unto one or other of these Heads as they are usually explained That which is commonly called the Moral Law the Scripture terms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 34.28 The words of the Covenant the ten words from whence is the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Law of ten words or precepts all which in their substance are moral and universally obligatory to all the sons of men That part of the Law which the Scripture calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Judgments Exod. 21.1 determining of Rights between Man and Man and of punishments upon transgressions with especial reference unto the interest of the people in the Land of Canaan is by us usually termed the Judicial Law And the institutions of Ceremonial Worship are most commonly expressed by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole system whereof is termed the Law Ceremonial The Jews either acknowledge not or insist not much on this distinction which § 3 is evidently founded in the things themselves but casting all these parts of the Law together contend that there is amongst them 613 Precepts For the numeral Letters of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denote 611 of them and the other two which as they say are the two first of the Decalogue were delivered by God himself to the people and so come not within the compass of the word Torah in that place whence they take this important consideration namely Deut. 33.4 Moses commanded us a Law that is of 611 Precepts two being given by God himself compleats the number of 613. There is none who sees not the vanity and folly of these things which yet is a part of their Oral Law whereunto as hath been shewed they ascribe more oftentimes then to the written Word it self Of these 613 Precepts 248 they say are Affirmative Precepts because there are as § 4 they affirm which I leave to our Anatomists to judge of so many distinct members or bones in the body of a man And 365 Negative Precepts because there are so many days in the year man being bound to keep the Law with his whole body all the year long both which numbers make up 613. And lest this observation should not seem sufficiently strengthned by these arguments they add that which they suppose conclusive namely that in the Decalogue there are 613 Letters if you will but set aside the last two words which in common civility cannot be well denied unto them § 5 These 613 Precepts they divide or distinguish into twelve Families according to the number of the Tribes of Israel that is either general part into twelve First the Affirmative and secondly the Negative And although their distribution be not satisfactory for many Reasons and hath been also represented by others yet for the advantage of the Reader I shall here give a summary account of them § 6 The first Family which hath Relation to God in his Worship consists of twenty Precepts which I shall briefly enumerate as those following without any examination of their stating of them and due fixing to their several stations 1. Faith and acknowledgment of God's divine Essence and Existence Exod. 20.2 2. Faith of the Vnity of God Deut. 6.4 chap. 32.39 3. Love of God Deut. 6.5 chap. 10.12 4. Fear of God Deut. 6.13 5. Acknowledgment of God's Righteousness in Afflictions Deut. 8.5 6. Prayer unto God Exod. 23.25 Deut. 11.13 7. Adherence unto God Deut. 10.20 8. To swear by the name of God Exod. 6.13 Deut. 10.20 9. To walk in the ways of God Deut. 28.9 10. To sanctifie the Name of God Levit. 22.32 11. Twice a day to repeat that Sanction Hear O Israel Deut. 6.7 chap. 11.19 12. That we learn and teach the Law Deut. 5.1 chap. 11 8. 13. To wear Philacteries or Tephilin on the head Deut. 6.8 14. To wear them on the arm in the same place 15. To make Fringes Numb 15.38 39 40. 16. To put Writings of the Scripture on the posts of our doors Deut. 6.9 17. That the People be called together to hear the Law at the end of the Feast of Tabernacles Duet 31.12 18. That every one write him a Copy of the Law Deut. 31.19 19. That the King moreover write out another for himself as King Deut. 17.28 20. That at our eating of meat we give thanks or bless God Deut. 8.10 This is the first Family which though it sometimes fail in educing its precepts from the Word yet good use may be made of the observation in reducing these things to one certain head § 7 The second Family of the first general Head of Affirmative precepts contain those which concern the Sanctuary and Priesthood being nineteen in number 1. That a Sanctuary Tabernacle or Temple should be built Exod. 25.8 2. That being built it should be reverenced Levit. 19.30 3. That the Priests and Levites always keep the Temple and no others Numb 18.2 4. That the work or
his own likeness and Image are hereby made partakers of such inestimable Benefits as indispensably call for rejoycing in a way of Thankfulness and Gratitude This the whole Gospel declares and therefore it needs not our particular improvement in this place And if this be the duty of the whole Creation it is easie to discern in what a special manner it is incumbent on them that believe whose Benefit Advantage and Glory was principally intended in this whole work of God Should they be found wanting in this Duty God might as of old call Heaven and Earth to witness against them Yea Thankfulness to God for the bringing forth of the first-born into the world is the summ and substance of all that Obedience which God requires at the hands of believers IV. The Command of God is the ground and Reason of all Religious Worship The Angels are to worship the Lord Christ the Mediator and the ground of their so doing is Gods command he saith Worship him all ye Angels Now the command of God is twofold 1. Formal and vocal when God gives out a Law or Precept unto any creature superadded to the Law of its Creation Such was the Command given unto our first Parents in the Garden concerning the Tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil and such were all the Laws Precepts and Institutions which he afterwards gave unto his Church with those which to this day continue as the Rule and Reason of their Obedience 2. Real and interpretative consisting in an impression of the Mind and Will of God upon the nature of his creatures with respect unto that Obedience which their state condition and dependance on him requireth The very nature of an intellectual Creature made for the Glory of God and placed in a moral dependance upon him and subjection unto him hath in it the force of a Command as to the Worship and Service that God requireth at their hands But this Law in man being blotted weakned impaired through sin God hath in mercy unto us collected drawn forth and disposed all the Directions and Commands of it in vocal formal Precepts recorded in his Word whereunto he hath superadded sundry new Commands in the Institutions of his Worship Wi●h Angels it is otherwise The ingrafted Law of their Creation requiring of them the Worship of God and Obedience to his whole Will is kept and preserved entire so that they have no need to have it repeated and expressed in vocal formal Commands And by vertue of this Law were they obliged to constant and everlasting Worship of the Eternal Son of God as being created and upheld in an universal dependance upon him But now when God brings forth his Son into the world and placeth him in a new condition of being incarnate and becoming so the Head of his Church there is a new Modification of the Worship that is due to him brought in and a new respect unto things not considered in the first creation With reference hereunto God gives a new Command unto the Angels for that peculiar kind of Worship and Honour which is due unto him in that state and condition which he had taken upon himself This the Law of their Creation in general directed them unto but in particular required not of them It enjoyned the Worship of the Son of God in every condition but that condition was not expressed This God supplies by a new Command That is such an Intimation of his Mind and Will unto them as answers unto a vocal Command given unto men who by that means only may come to know the Will of God Thus in one way or other Command is the Ground and Cause of all Worship For 1. All Worship is Obedience Obedience respects Authority and Authority exerts it self in Commands And if this Authority be not the Authority of God the Worship performed in Obedience unto it is not the Worship of God but of him or them whose Commands and Authority are the Reason and cause of it It is the Authority of God alone that can make any Worship to be religious or the performance of it to be an Act of Obedience unto him 2. God would never allow that the Will and Wisdom of any of his Creatures should be the rise Rule or measure of his Worship or any part of it or any thing that belongs unto it This Honour he hath reserved unto himself neither will he part with it unto any other He alone knows what becomes his own Greatness and Holiness and what tends to the Advancement of his Glory Hence the Scripture abounds with severe Interdictions and Comminations against them who shall presume to do or appoint any thing in his Worship besides or beyond his own Institution 3. All Prescriptions of Worship are vain where men have not strength to perform it in a due manner nor Assurance of Acceptance when it is performed Now both these are and must be from God alone nor doth he give strength and ability for any thing in his Worship but what himself commands nor doth he promise to accept any thing but what is of his own Appointment so that it is the greatest folly imaginable to undertake any thing in his Worship and Service but what his Appointment gives warrant for And this should teach us in all that we have to do in the Worship of God carefully to look after his word of Command and Institution Without this all that we do is lost as being no Obedience unto God Yea it is an open setting up of our own Wills and Wisdom against him and that in things of his own especial concernment which is intolerable boldness and presumption Let us deal thus with our Rulers amongst men and obey them not according to their Laws but our own fancies and see whether they will accept our persons And is the Great and Holy God less to be regarded besides what we have our own Inventions or the Commands of other men as the ground and reason of our doing it we have nothing but our own or their warranty for its Acceptance with God and how far this will secure us is easie to judge We might hence also farther observe V. That the Mediator of the New Covenant is in his own Person God blessed for ever to whom Divine or Religious Worship is due from the Angels themselves As also that VI. The Father upon the account of the Work of Christ in the World and his Kingdom that ensued it gives a new Commandment unto the Angels to Worship him his Glory being greatly concerned therein And that VII Great is the Churches security and Honour when the Head of it is worshipped by all the Angels in Heaven as also that VIII It can be no duty of the Saints of the New Testament to worship Angels who are their fellow servants in the worship of Jesus Christ. Verse VII HAving in one Testimony from the Scripture expressing the subjection of Angels unto the Lord Christ signally proved his main Design
offence unto them with whom he had to do It appears then that from hence no light can be given unto our enquiry after the Language wherein this Epistle was Originally written though it be clear enough upon other Considerations Exercitatio VI. Oneness of the Church Mistake of the Jews about the Nature of the Promises Promise of the Messiah the Foundation of the Church But as including the Covenant The Church confined unto the Person and Posterity of Abraham His Call and Separation for a double End Who properly the Seed of Abraham Mistakes of the Jews about the Covenant Abraham the Father of the faithful and Heir of the world on what account The Church still the same § 1 THe Jews at the Time of writing this Epistle and their posterity in all succeeding Generations follow their Example and Tradition were not a little confirmed in their obstinacy and unbelief by a misapprehension of the true sense and nature of the Promises of the Old Testament For whereas they found many glorious Promises made unto the Church in the dayes of the Messiah especially concerning the great access of the Gentiles unto it they looked upon themselves the posterity of Abraham on the account of their being his children according to the flesh as the first proper and indeed only subject of them unto whom in their accomplishment others were to be proselyted and joyned the substance and foundation of the Church remaining still with them But the Event answered not their expectation Instead of inheriting all the Promises meerly upon their carnal interest and priviledge which they looked for and continue so to do unto this day they found that themselves must come in on a new account to be sharers in them in common with others or be rejected whilest those others were admitted unto the inheritance This filled them with wrath and envy which greatly added to the strengthening of their Unbelief They could not bear with patience an intimation of letting out the Vineyard to other Husbandmen With this Principle and Prejudice of theirs the Apostle dealt directly in his Epistle to the Romans Chap. 9 10 11. On the same grounds he proceedeth with them in this Epistle And because his Answer to their Objection from the Promises lyes at the foundation of many of his reasonings with them the nature of it must be here previously explained Not that I shall here enter into a consideration of the Jews Argument to prove the Messiah not yet to be come because the Promises in their sense of them are not yet accomplished which shall be fully removed in the Close of these Discourses but only as I said open the nature in general of that Answer which our Apostle returns unto them and builds his Reasonings with them upon § 2 We shall have occasion afterwards at large to shew how after the entrance of sin God founded his Church in the Promise of the Messiah given unto Adam Now though that Promise was the supportment and incouragement of mankind to seek the Lord a Promise absolutely considered proceeding from meer Grace and Mercy yet as it was the foundation of the Church it included in it the nature of a Covenant vertually requiring a re-stipulation unto obedience in them who by faith come to have an interest therein And this the nature of the thing its self required for the Promise was given unto this end and purpose that men might have a new bottom and Foundation of Obedience that of the first Covenant being disannulled Hence in the following Explications of the Promise this condition of Obedience is expresly added So upon its renewall unto Abraham God required that he should walk before him and be upright This Promise then as it hath the nature of a Covenant including the Grace that God would shew unto sinners in the Messiah and the Obedience that he required from them was from the the first giving of it the foundation of the Church and the whole Worship of God therein Unto this Church so founded and built on this Covenant and by the means thereof the Redeeming Mediatory Seed promised therein were all the following Promises and the Priviledges exhibited in them given and annexed Neither hath or ever had any individual Person any Spiritual right unto or interest in any of those Promises or Priviledges whatever his outward condition were but only by vertue of his Membership in the Church built on the Covenant whereunto as we said they do all appertain On this account the Church before the dayes of Abraham though scattered up and down in the world and subject unto many changes in its worship by the addition of New Revelations was still but one and the same because founded in the same Covenant and intrusted thereby in all the Benefits or Priviledges that God had given or granted or would do so at any time unto his Church In process of time God was pleased to confine this Church as unto the ordinary visible § 3 dispensation of his Grace unto the Person and Posterity of Abraham Upon this restriction of the Church Covenant and Promise the Jews of old mannaged a Plea in their own Justification against the Doctrine of the Lord Christ and his Apostles We are the children the seed of Abraham was their continual cry on the account whereof they presumed that all the Promises belonged unto them and upon the matter unto them alone And this their perswasion hath cast them as we shall see upon a woful and fatal mistake Two Priviledges did God grant unto Abraham upon his Separation to a special interest in the Old Promise and Covenant First That according to the flesh he should be the Father of the Messiah the promised seed who was the very Life of the Covenant the Fountain and Cause of all the Blessings contained in it That this Priviledge was temporary having a limited season time and end appointed unto it the very nature of the thing it self doth demonstrate For upon this actual Exhibition in the flesh it was to cease In pursuit hereof were his posterity separated from the rest of the world and preserved a peculiar people that through them the promised seed might be brought forth in the fulness of time and be of them according unto the flesh Rom. 9.5 Secondly Together with this he had also another Priviledge granted unto him namely that his faith whereby he was personally interested in the Covenant should be the Pattern of the faith of the Church in all generations and that none should ever come to be a member of it or a sharer in its Blessings but by the same faith that he had fixed on the seed that was in the Promise to be brought forth from him in the world On the account of this Priviledge he became the Father of all them that do believe For they that are of the faith the same are the children of Abraham Gal. 3.7 Rom. 4.11 as also Heirs of the World Rom. 4.13 in that all that should believe
themselves without Certainty or Consistency we are clearly acquainted withall by Divine Revelation The summ of it is briefly proposed by the Apostle Rom. 5. v. 12. By one man sin entered into the World and Death by Sin Sin and Death are comprehensive of all that is Evil in any kind in the world All that is morally so is sin all that is poenally so is Death The entrance of both into the World was by the sin of one man that is Adam the common Father of us all This the Philosophers knew not and therefore knew nothing clearly of the Condition of Mankind in relation unto God But two things doth the Scripture teach us concerning this entrance of Evil into the world First The Punishment that was threatned unto and inflicted on the disobedience of Adam Whatever there is of Disorder Darkness or Confusion in the nature of things here below whatever is uncertain irregular horrid unequal destructive in the Vniverse what ever is poenal unto man or may be so in this Life or unto Eternity what ever the Wrath of the Holy Righteous God revealing its self from Heaven hath brought or shall ever bring on the Works of his hands are to be referred unto this head Other Original of them can no man assign Secondly The moral corruption of the Nature of man the Spring of all sin the other head of Evil proceeded Hence also For by this means that which before was good and upright is become an inexhaustible Treasure of Sin And this was the state of things in the World immediately upon the Fall and Sin of Adam Now the work which we assign unto the Messiah is the Deliverance of Mankind from this State and condition Upon the Supposition and Revelation of this Entran●e of Sin and the Evil that ensued thereon is the whole Doctrine of his Office founded as shall afterwards more largely be declared And because we contend against the Jews that he wa● promised and exhibited for a Relief in the Wisdom Grace and Righteousness of God against this sin and misery of mankind as our Apostle also expresly proveth Chap. 2. of his Epistle unto them this being denyed by them as that which would overthrow all their fond imaginations about his Person and Office we must consider what is their Sense and Apprehension about these things with what may be thence educed for their own Conviction and then confirm the Truth of our Assertion from those Testimonies of Scripture which themselves own and receive The first effect and consequent of the sin of Adam was the punishment wherewith it § 6 was attended What is written hereof 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Scripture the Jews neither can nor do deny Death was in the commination given to deter him from his Transgression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 2.17 Dying thou shalt dye Neither can it be reasonably pretended to be singly Death unto his own Person which is intended in that expression The Event sufficiently evinceth the contrary What ever is or might be Evil unto himself and his whole Posterity with the residue of the Creation so far as he or they might be any way concerned therein hath grown out of this commination And this is sufficiently manifested in the first Execution of it Gen. 3.16 17 18 19. The Malediction was but the Execution of the Commination It was not consistent with the Justice of God to increase the Penalty after the sin was committed The threatning therefore was the Rule and measure of the Curse But this is here extended by God himself not only to all the miseries of Man Adam and his whole Posterity in this Life in labour disappointment sweat and sorrow with Death under and by vertue of the Curse but to the whole Earth also and consequently unto those superiour Regions and Orbs of Heaven by whose influence the Earth is as it were governed and disposed unto the Use of Man Hos. 2. v. 21 22. It may be yet farther enquired what was to be the duration and continuance of the Punishment to be inflicted in the pursuit of this Commination and Malediction Now there is not any thing in the least to intimate that it should have a term prefixed unto it wherein it should expire or that it should not be commensurate unto the existence or being of the sinner God layes the Curse on man and there he leaves him and that for ever A miserable life he was to spend and then to dye under the Curse of God without hopes of emerging into a better condition About his subsistence after this Life we have no controversie with the Jews They all acknowledge the immortality of the Soul for the Sect of the Sadducees is long since extinct neither are they followed by the Karaeans in their Atheistical Opinions as hath been declared Some of them indeed encline unto the Pythagorean Metempsuchosis but all acknowledge the Souls Perpetuity Supposing then Adam to dye poenally under the Curse of God as without extraordinary Relief he must have done the Righteousness and Truth of God being engaged for the Execution of the Threatning against him I desire to know what should have been the State and condition of his Soul Doth either Revelation or Reason intimate that he should not have continued for ever under the same Penalty and Curse in a state of Death or Separation from God And if he should have done so then was Death eternal in the Commination This is that which with respect unto the present effects in this life and the punishment due to sin is termed by our Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thess. 1. v. 10. the Wrath to come from whence the Messiah is the Deliverer Nor will the Jews themselves contend that the guilt of any sin respects only temporal punishment The Event of Sin unto themselves they take to be that only imagining their Observation of the Law of Moses such as it is to be a sufficient Expiation of Punishment eternal But unto all strangers from the Law all that have not a Relief provided they make every sin mortal and Adam as I suppose had not the Priviledge of the Present Jews to observe Moses Law Wherefore they all agree that by his Repentance he delivered himself from Death eternal which if it were not due unto his Sin he could not do for no man can by any means escape that whereof he is in no danger And this Repentance of his they affirm to have been attended with severe Discipline and self maceration intimating the greatness of his sin and the difficulty of his escape from the punishment due thereunto So Rabbi Eliezer in Pirke Aboth cap. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 On the first day of the Week Adam entred into the Waters of the upper Gihon until the Waters came unto his neck and he afflicted himself seven Weeks untill his Body became like a Sieve And Adam said before the Holy Blessed God Lord of the whole World let my sins I pray thee be
done away from me and accept of my Repentance that all Ages may know that there is Repentance and that thou wilt receive them that Repent and turn unto thee Hence also they tell us that upon the Pardon of his sin he sang a Song of Praise unto the Lord on the Sabbath Day which is mentioned in the Targum on the Song of Solomon chap. 1. v. 1. as one of the Songs in reference whereunto that of Solomon is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Song of Songs or the most excellent of them And although indeed that expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dying thou shalt dye according to the propriety of the Hebrew Tongue denotes only the Certainty and Vehemency of the Death threatned in which case it useth reduplications yet some of them have not been averse to apprehend a twofold death of the Body and of the Soul to be intimated in that expression as Fagius on the place well observes Body and Soul they say both sinned and therefore both were to be punished 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If the flesh s●n without the spirit why is the soul punished Is it one thing that sins and another that is punished or rather is it not thus that both sin together and so both are justly punished together § 7 Thus is the condition of the Sin and Punishment of our first Parents themselves acknowledged by them And the same is that of their Posterity What was threatned unto what was inflicted upon those who first sinned they are all liable and obnoxious unto Are they not all as subject unto Death as was Adam himself Are the miseries of man in his labour or the sorrows of Women in Childbearing taken away Is the Earth its self freed from the Effects of the Curse Do they not dye who never sinned after the similitude of Adams Transgression The Jews themselves grant that all death is poenal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is no Death without Sin no Punishment or Correction without iniquity It is the saying of R. Ame in the Talmud Tractat Sabbat cited in Sepher Ikharim lib. 4. cap. 13. And this Principle M●imonides carries so high as to deny all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Correction of Love affirming none to be of that mind but some Gaeonims deceived by the Sect of Muatzali More Nebuch p. 3. cap. 17. And they who dye poenally under the Curse abide in no other estate than that mentioned They acknowledge also the remainder of the Curse on the Earth its self on the same account 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The whole World sayes one of their Masters was not created but for man and therefore after man sinned it came short of its first perfection But these things being of some use for their Conviction as also to discover the perverse obstinacy of some of their later Masters we may a little more particularly take them along with us § 8 First They acknowledge that Adam was a common Head unto all mankind So saith Manasse Ben. Israel from their Principles Cum itaque esset Adam futurus caput principium humanae naturae necesse erat illi a Deo conferri omnem perfectionem scientiam De Fragilitate pag. 34. Whereas Adam was to be the Head and Principle of humane nature it was necessary that God should endow him with all perfection and knowledge And this Perfection of his knowledge Aben Ezra on Gen. 12. proves from Gods bringing all Creatures unto him to give them Names according to their Nature And the same Author again in his Discourse de Termino Vitae Aben Ezra inquit nominibus propriis in Sacra Scriptura non praefigi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He demonstrativum quod tamen in voce Adam fit Gen. 3.22 ratio est quia in Adamo notantur omnes ejus posteri universa species humana designatur Aben Ezra sayes that He Hajedia is not prefixed unto proper names in the Scripture only it is so unto the Word Adam Gen. 3. v. 22. and the Reason is because in Adam all his Posterity the whole Race of Mankind is denoted and signified Now this could not be but by vertue of some Divine Constitution For naturally Adam could have no other Relation to his Posterity than every other man hath unto his own And this was no other but that Covenant which God made with all mankind in him whose Promises and Threatnings Rewards and Punishments must therefore equally respect them with him Wherefore Secondly they grant that on this account his Sin was imputed unto all his Posterity That is some of them do so and those the most sober of them So Rabbi Menahem Rakanatensis in sec. Bereshith c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is no wonder why the Sin of Adam and Eve was engraven and sealed with the Signet of the King to be propagated unto all following Generations For in the day that Adam was created all things were finished so that he was the Perfection and Complement of the whole workmanship of this world Therefore when he sinned the whole world sinned whose Sin we hear and suffer which is not so in the Sin of his Posterity To be sealed with the Signet of the King is their Expression of Gods Constitution And these words are very consonant to those of our Apostle Rom. 5.12 As by one man Sin entered into the World and Death by Sin so Death passed upon all men for that or because in him all have sinned To the same purpose speaks the Targum on Eccles. 7. v. 29. in the Copies followed by the Jayan and London Bibles for so the words are not in those of Buxtorf nor the Biblia Regia God made the First man upright and innocent before him but the Serpent and Eve seduced him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and gave cause why the day of Death should come on him and all the Inhabitants of the Earth And we can have no more Authentick Testimony of the Apprehensions of their antient Doctors than what their Targums afford us And therefore Joseph Albo in Scher Itharim expresly concludes lib. 1. chap. 11. that all the punishments relating unto Adam and Eve for their first Sin belong unto all mankind And whereas they fancy that some Persons spent their dayes without actual sin at least any such as should deserve Death they charge their Death on the guilt of the sin of Adam So the Targum on the last Chapter of Ruth And Hobed begat Jesse who was called Nachash and there was no iniquity or corruption in him for which he should be delivered into the h●nd of the Angel of Death to take his soul from him and he lived man● dayes untill the Counsell that the Serpent gave to Eve abode before the Lord and upon that Couns●ll were all the inhabitants of the Earth made guilty of death and upon the a●●●unt of that sin dyed Jesse the Righteous Lud. Capellus in his Annotations on John 3. hath an observation on this passage in the Targum not
any Cause or Reason he should contrary unto all these engagements of his Holy Perfections wholly ren●● and take it off Nay this would plainly justifie the Se●pent in his Calumny that what ever he pretended yet indeed that no Execution of his Threatning would ever ens●● How also can it be supposed that any of his future C●mminations should have a just weight upon the souls of men if that first great and fundamental one sh●uld be frustrated and evacuated or what Authority would be left unto his Law when he himself should dissolve the Sanction of it Besides if God should do thus which Reason Revelation and the Event of things do manifest that he neither would nor c●u●d for he cannot deny himself this would have been his work and not an acquisition of men themselves which we are now enquiring after So that this way of deliverance as it is but imaginary so it is here of no consideration There is no other way then for man if he will not perish eternally under the punishment due unto his Apostasie and Rebellion but secondly to find out some way of Commutation or making a Recompence for the Evil of sin unto the Law and Righteousness of God But herein his utter insufficiency quickly manifests it self What ever he is or hath or can pretend any Interest in lyes no less under the Curse than he doth himself And that which is under the Curse can contribute nothing unto its removall That which is in its whole Being obnoxious unto the greatest Punishment can have nothing wherewithall to make Commutation for it For that must first be accepted in and for its self which can either make Attonement or be received for any other in Exchange And this is the condition of man and of every individuall of mankind and will be so to Eternity unless Relief arise from another place It is farther also evident that all the endeavours of men must needs be unspeakably disproportionate unto the Effect and End aimed at from the concernment of the other parts of the Creation in the Curse against sin What can they do to restore the Vniverse unto its first Glory and Beauty How can they reduce the Creation unto its Original Harmony Wherewith shall they recompence the Great God for the defacing of so great a portion of that impress of his Glory and Goodness that he had enstamped on it In a word they who from their first date unto their utmost Period are alwayes under the Punishment can do nothing for the total removall of it The Experience also of five thousand years hath sufficiently evinced how insufficient man is to be a Saviour unto himself All the various and uncertain motions of Adam's Posterity in Religion from the Extremity of Atheism unto that of Sacrificing themselves and one another have been destined in vain towards this End Neither can any of them to this day find out a better or more likely way for them to thrive in than those wherewith their Progenitors deluded themselves And in the Issue of all we see that as to what man hath been able of himself to do towards his own Deliverance both himself and the whole world are continued in the same state wherein they were upon the first Entrance of Sin cumulated as it were with another world of Confusion Disorder Mischief and Misery There is also another head of the Misery of man and that is the corrupt spring of Moral Evil that is in his nature This also is Vniversal and Endless It mixeth its self with all and every thing that man doth or can do as a Moral Agent and that alwayes and for ever Gen. 6. v. 5. It is then impossible that it should have an end unless it do either destroy or spend its self But seeing it will do neither of these ever sinning which man cannot but be is not the way to disentangle himself from sin If then any Deliverance be ever obtained for mankind it must be by some other § 17 not involved in the same misery with themselves This must either be God himself or good Angels Other Rational Agents there are none If we look to the latter we must suppose them to undertake this work either by the Appointment of God or upon their own Accord without his previous Command or Direction The latter cannot be supposed They knew too much of the Majesty Holiness and Terror of the great God to venture on an interposition of themselves upon his Counsels and Wayes uncommanded To do so would have been a sinfull dissolution of the Law of their Creation So much also they might discern of the work its self as to stifle unto Eternity every thought of engaging themselves into it Besides they knew the Will of God by what they saw come to pass They saw his Justice and Holiness glorified in the Evils which he had brought upon the world That He would not for ever satisfie himself in that Glory they knew not And what was man unto them that they should busie themselves to retrive him from that condition whereinto he had cast himself by sin finding Him glorified therein in conformity unto whose will their Happiness and Perfection doth consist As remote as men are from thoughts of recovering Fallen Angells so far were they contriving the Recovery of Man But it may be said the God himself might design them to work out the Salvation and deliverance enquired after as was before supposed But this makes God and not them to be the Saviour and them only the Instruments in the Accomplishment of his work Neither yet hath he done so nor were they meet so to be employed What ever is purely poenall in the misery of man is an Effect of the Righteous Judgement of God This as we have manifested could be no otherwise diverted from him but by the undergoing of it by some other in his stead And two things are required in him or them that should so undergoe it First That they were not themselves obnoxious unto it either Personally or upon the first common account Should they be so they ought to look to their own concernment in the first place Secondly that they were such as that the Benefit of their Vndergoing that Penalty might according to the Rules of Justice redound unto them for whom and in whose stead they underwent it otherwise they would suffer in vain Now although the Angels might answer the first of these in their Personal immunity from obnoxiousness unto the Curse yet the latter they were unsuited for They had no Relation unto mankind but only that they were the Workmanship of the same Creator But this is not sufficient to warrant such a substitution Had Angels been to be delivered their Redemption must have been wrought in the Angelical Nature as the Apostle declares Heb. 2. v. 16. But what Justice is it that Man should sin and Angels suffer or from whence should it arise that from their suffering it should be Righteous that he
WORD that is of God who was represented in that Vision as shall be manifested Some would put another sense on that Expression of the Targumists as though it intended nothing but God himself and instances of the use of it in that sense have been observed As Eccles. 8. v. 17. If a wise man say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his word that is say in himself Gen. 6. v. 6. It repented the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his word Also Ruth 3. v. 8. is urged to give countenance unto this suspicion As did Paltiel the Son of Laish who placed his sword 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between his Word and Michal the daughter of Saul the Wife of David But 1. The former places use not the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is peculiar unto the sense contended for 2. The Targums on the Hagiographa are a late Postalmudical endeavour made in imitation of those of Onkelos and Ben Vzziel when the Jews had lost both all sense of their old Traditions and use of the Chaldee Language any other than what they learned from those former Paraphrases Nothing therefore can hence be concluded as to the intention of the Targumists in these words And they can have no other sense in that of Psalm 110. v. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lord said in or to his word for to my Lord as in the Original The Jews discern that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walking relates in this place immediately to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 § 3 the voice and not unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord God and therefore endeavour to render a Reason of that kind of Expression So Aben Ezra on the place giveth instances where a voice or sound in its Progress is said to walk As Exod. 19. v. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the voice of the Trumpet went and waxed strong and Jer. 46. v. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the voice thereof shall go like a Serpent But these Examples reach not that under consideration For although 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may express sometimes the Progression or increase of a Voice yet it doth not so but where it is intimated to be begun before but here was nothing spoken by God untill after that Adam had heard this Word of God walking And therefore R. Jona cited by Aben Ezra would apply 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walking unto Adam He heard the voice of God as he was himself walking in the Garden the absurdity of which Fiction the Words of the Text and Context sufficiently evince For not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 would answer unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning of the Verse It is therefore most probable that in the great alteration which was now coming upon the whole Creation of God mankind being to be cast out of Covenant the Serpent and the Earth being to be Cursed and a way of Recovery for the Elect of God to be revealed that He by whom all things were made and by whom all were to be renewed that were to be brought again unto God did in an especial and glorious manner appear unto our first Parents as he in whom this whole dispensation centered and unto whom it was committed And as after the Promise given He appeared 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in an humane shape to instruct the Church in the Mysterie of his future Incarnation and under the Name of Angel to shaddow out his Office as sent unto it and employed in it by the Father so here before the Promise he discovered his distinct glorious Person as the eternal Voice or Word of the Father § 4 Gen. 18. v. 1 2 3. And the Lord appeared unto him Abraham in the Plains of Mamre and he sate in the Tent door in the heat of the Day and he lift up his Eyes and looked and lo three men stood by him and when he saw them he came to meet them from the Tent door and bowed himself toward the ground and said my Lord if I have now found favour in thy sight c. The Jews in Bereshith Ketanna say that this Appearance of God unto Abraham was three dayes after his circumcision from the sore whereof being not recovered he sate in the door of his Tent and that God came to visit him in his sickness But the Reason of his sitting in the door of the Tent is given in the Text namely because it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in or about the heat of the Day as the day grew hot in an opposition unto the time of Gods appearance unto Adam which was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the cool aire of the day For as when God comes to curse nothing shall refresh the creature though in its own nature suited thereunto it shall wither in the cool of the day so when he comes to bless nothing shall hinder the influence of it upon his creatures however any thing in its self may like the heat of the day be troublesome or perplexing § 5 He lift up his Eyes and looked and behold three men stood by him The Title is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Lord appeared unto him and the Narrative is lo three men stood by him The Lord therefore was amongst them And it seems to be a sudden appearance that was made to him he saw them on a sudden standing by him he looked up and saw them and this satisfied him that it was an heavenly Apparition § 6 The business of God with Abraham at this time was to renew unto him the Promise of the Blessing Seed and to confine it unto his Posterity by Sarah now when he was utterly hopeless thereof and began to desire that Ishmael might be the Heir thereof Unto this signal work of mercy was adjoyned the intimation of an eminent effect of Vindictive Justice wherein God would set forth an Example of it unto all ensuing Generations in the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah And both these were the proper works of him on whom the Care of the Church was in an especial manner incumbent all whose blessedness depended on that Promise and to whom the Rule of the World the present and future Judgement thereof is committed that is the Person of the Son And hence in the overthrow of those Cities He is said to set forth an ensample of his future dealing with ungodly men who is to be their Judge 2 Pet. 2.6 § 7 Aben Ezra reflects with scorn on the Christians who from this Place because three men are said to appear unto Abraham and he calls them My Lord would prove the Tri-personality of the Deity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because of the appearance of three men God is three and he is one and they are not separated or divided How then doth he answer what they say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Behold they forget that there came two Angels unto Sodom That is that two of those who appeared were Angels and no more But if any
not like Manasseth of late who supposeth that it might not abide above forty years and those immediately preceding the Day of Judgement § 21 It is sufficiently evident that this Opinion and Perswasion of the Jews which is Catholick unto them and hath been so ever since they rejected the true Messiah contains an absolute renunciation of the faith of the Church of old and an utter rejection of all the ends for which the Messiah was promised I shall not therefore enter here upon a particular refutation of it for it will occur in our ensuing Discourses Neither is this the Person about whom we contend with them nor have we any concernment in him When he comes let them make their b●st of him we have already received the Captain of our Salvation What also they plead for themselves as the ground of their obstinacy in refusing the True Messiah must afterwards be particularly discussed At present therefore I shall only reflect on those depraved habits of their minds which in concurrence with occasions and Temptations suited unto them have seduced them into these low carnal and earthly imaginations about the Promised Seed his Person Office and Work that he was to perform § 22 In things therefore of this kind Ignorance of their miserable condition by nature both as to sin and wrath justly claims the first place For although as was by instances before manifested the Evidence of Truth and Power of Traditions amongst them have prevailed with some to avow the notion of the Sin of Adam and the corruption of our nature thereby yet indeed there is not any of them that have a true sense and conviction of their Natural Condition and the misery that doth attend it The Messiah as we have proved at large was first promised to relieve mankind from that state whereinto they were cast by the Apostasie of Adam the Common Root and Parent of them all Such as are mens apprehensions of that condition such also will be their thoughts concerning the Messiah who was promised to be a Deliverer from it They who know themselves cast out of the favour of God thereby made obnoxious unto his eternal displeasure and disenabled to do any thing that shall please him as being cast into a state of universal Enmity against him must needs look on the Messiah promised in the Grace Goodness and Wisdom of God for a Saviour and Deliverer to be One that must by suitable wayes and means free them from Sin and Wrath procure for them the favour of God enable them to serve him again unto Acceptation and so bring them at length unto their chief End the everlasting enjoyment of him As these things answer one another and are on both sides fully revealed in the Scripture so the Church of old who had a due Apprehension of their own condition looked for such a Messiah as God had promised Ignorance therefore of this condition is no small cause of the present Judaical misbelief What ever may be the estate of other men about which they do not much trouble themselves for their parts they are Children of Abraham exempted from the common condition of mankind by the Priviledge of their Nativity or at least they are relieved by their circumcision by the pain whereof they make sufficient satisfaction for any ill they bring with them into this world That they are dead in Trespasses and Sins standing in need to be born again that they are by nature children of wrath obnoxious unto the curse of God that the sin of our first Parents is imputed unto them or that if it be that it was of any such demerit as Christians teach they believe not Upon the matter they know no misery but what consists in Poverty Captivity and want of Rule and Dominion And what should a spiritual Redeemer do unto these men What beauty or comeliness can he have in him for which of them he should be desired What Reason can they see why they should understand the Promises concerning him in such a way and sense as that they should not be concerned in them And this blindness had in a great measure possessed their minds at the first promulgation of the Gospel See John 8. v. 33 34. Chap. 9. v. 40 41. And therefore our Apostle in his Epistle unto the Romans wherein he deals both with Jews and Gentiles before he declares the Propitiation that was made with the Justification that was to be obtained by the blood of Christ convinceth them all of their miserable lost condition on the account of sin Original and Actual Chap. 1 2 3. Untill therefore this Pride self-fulness and Ignorance of themselves be taken from them and rooted out of their hearts all Promises of a spiritual Redeemer must needs be unsavoury unto them They stand in no need of him and why should they desire him An Earthly King that would give them Liberty Wealth Ease and Dominion they would gladly embrace and have long in vain looked for Secondly Ignorance of the Righteousness of God both as to what he requireth § 23 that a man may be justified before him and of his Judgement concerning the desert of sin hath the same effect upon them Rom. 10. v. 3 4. The great End for which the Messiah was promised as we have in part declared and shall afterwards farther evince was to make Attonement for sin and to bring in Everlasting Righteousness Dan. 9.24 A Righteousness was to be brought in that might answer the Justice of God and abide its trial Of what nature this Righteousness must be the Scripture declares and that as well in the Revelation it makes of the Holiness of God Psal. 5. v. 4 5. Joshua 24. v. 19. Hab. 1. v. 13. as of the purity and severity of his Law Deut. 33. v. 2. Chap. 27. v. 26. and the absolute Perfection of his Justice in the Execution of it Psalm 50. v. 21. An Universal spotless innocency with a constant unerring Obedience in all things and that in the highest degree of Perfection are required to find Acceptation with this Holy and Righteous God Of the Nature and necessity of this Righteousness the Jews are ignorant and regardless They and their Masters were so of old Matth. 5. v. 20. An outside partial hypocritical Observance of the Law of Moses they suppose will serve their Turns See Rom. 9. v. 31. And indeed there is not any thing that more openly discovers the miserable blindness of the present Jews then the consideration of what they insist upon as their Righteousness before God The Faith and Obedience of their Fore-fathers the Priviledge of Circumcision some outward Observances of Mosaical Precepts with anxious scrupulous abstinencies self macerations in fasts with prayers by tale and number Sabbath rests from outward labour with the like bodily exercises are the summ of what they plead for themselves Now if these things which are absolutely in their own power will compose and make up a Righteou●ness acceptable unto God cover all
Relation unto God in and through him they received by his means God gathering up all things to a consistency and permanency in him Ephes. 1.10 And hence also it became equal that the Rule and power over them should be committed unto him by whom although they were not like us recovered from ruine yet they were preserved from all danger of it So that in their subjection unto him consists their principal Honour and all their safety And as this act of God in appointing Christ Lord of Angels hath these equitable foundations so it hath also sundry glorious Ends. 1. It was as an addition unto that Glory that was set before him in his undertaking to redeem sinners A Kingdom was of old promised unto him and to render it exceedingly glorious the Rule and Scepter of it is extended not only to his Redeemed ones but to the holy Angels also and the sovereignty over them is granted him as a part of his Reward Phil. 2.8 9 10 11. Ephes. 1.20 21. 2. God hereby gathers up his whole family at first distinguished by the Law of their Creation into two especial kinds and then differenced and set at variance by Sin into one Body under one Head reducing them that originally were twain into one entire family Ephes. 1.10 In the fulness of time he gathered together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are in earth in him as was before declared Before this the Angels had no immediate created Head for themselves are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gods Psal. 97.7 1 Cor. 8.5 Who ever is the Head must be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the God of Gods or Lord of Lords which Christ alone is and in him or under him as One Head is the whole Family of God united 3. The Church of Mankind militant on the earth whose conduct unto Eternal Glory is committed unto Christ stands in need of the ministery of Angels And therefore hath God granted Rule and Power over them unto him that nothing might be wanting to enable him to save unto the uttermost them that come unto God by him So God hath given him to be head over all things to the Church Ephes. 1.22 that he should with an absolute sovereignty use and dispose of all things to the benefit and advantage of the Church This is the first branch of the Lordship and Dominion of Christ according to the distribution of the severals of it before laid down He is Lord of Angels and they are all of them his servants the fellow-servants of them that have the testimony of Jesus And as some men do wilfully cast themselves by their Religious adoration of Angels under the curse of Canaan to be servants unto servants Gen. 8.25 so it is the great honour and priviledge of true believers that in their worship of Christ they are admitted into the society of an innumerable company of Angels Heb. 12.22 Rev. 15.11 13. for they are not ashamed to esteem them their fellow-servants whom their Lord and King is not ashamed to call his Brethren And herein consists our communion with them that we have one common Head and Lord and any intercourse with them but only on this account or any worship performed towards them breaks the bond of that communion and causeth us not to hold the Head Col. 2.19 The priviledge the safety and advantage of the Church from this subjection of Angels to its Head and Saviour are by many spoken unto II. There is another sort of Angels who by sin left their primitive station and fell off from God of whom their Sin Fall Malice Wrath Business Craft in evil and Final judgment the Scripture treateth at large These belong not indeed to the possession of Christ as he is the Heir but they belong unto his Dominion as he is a Lord. Though he be not a King and Head unto them yet he is a Judge and Ruler over them All things being given into his hand they also are subjected unto his power Now as under the former head I shall consider 1. The Right or Equity and 2. The End of this Authority of Christ over this second sort of the first Race of Intellectual Creatures the Angels that have sinned 1. As before this Right is founded in his Divine Nature by vertue whereof he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fit for this Dominion He made these Angels also and therefore as God hath an absolute Dominion over them The Creatures cannot cast off the Dominion of the Creator by rebellion though they may lose their moral Relation unto God as obedient creatures yet their natural as creatures cannot be dissolved God will be God still be his creatures never so wicked and if they obey not his Will they shall bear his Justice And this Dominion of Christ over faln Angels as God makes the grant of Rule over them to him as Mediator just and equal 2. The immediate and peculiar Foundation of his Right unto Rule over faln Angels rendring the special grant of it equal and righteous is Lawful Conquest This gives a special Right Gen. 48.22 Now that Christ should conquer faln Angels was promised from the foundation of the world Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman the Messias was to break the Serpents head despoil him of his power and bring him into subjection which he performed accordingly Col. 2.15 He spoiled principalities and powers divested faln Angels of all that Title they had got to the world by the sin of man triumphing over them as Captives to be disposed of at his pleasure He stilled or made to cease as to his power this Enemy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and self-avenger Psal. 8.2 leading captivity captive Psal. 6.18 breaking in pieces the Head over the large earth Psal. 110.6 binding the strong man armed and spoiling his goods And the Scripture of the New Testament is full of instances as to his executing his Power and Authority over Evil Angels They take up a good part of the Historical Books of it Man having sinned by the instigation of Satan he was by the just Judgement of God delivered up unto his power Heb. 2.14 The Lord Christ undertaking to recover lost man from under his power by destroying his works 1 Joh. 3.8 and to bring them again into favour with God Satan with all his might sets himself to oppose him in his Work and failing in his enterprise being utterly conquered he became absolutely subjected unto him trodden under his feet and the prey he had taken delivered from him This is the next Foundation of the Authority of Christ over the Evil Angels He had a great Contest and War with them and that about the Glory of God his own Kingdom and the Eternal Salvation of the Elect prevailing absolutely against them he made a Conquest over them and they are put in subjection unto him for ever They are subjected unto him as to their present actings and future condition He now rules them and will
●●●e and immortality were brought to light by the Gospel so death and hell the pun●●●ment of sin under the wrath of God are more fully declared therein The Nature of the judgment to come the duration of the penalties to be inflicted on unbelievers with such intimations of the nature and kind of them as our understandings are able to receive are fully and frequently insisted on in the New Testament whereas they are very obscurely only gathered out of the Writings of the Old 2. The punishment threatned in the Gospel is as unto degrees greater and more sore than that which was annexed to the meer transgression of the first Covenant Hence the Apostle calls it death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 by reason of the sore aggravations which the first sentence of death will receive from the wrath due unto the contempt of the Gospel Separation from God under eternal punishment was unquestionably due to the sin of Adam and so consequently unto every transgression against the first Covenant Gen. 2.17 Rom. 5.12 13 14. But yet this hinders not but that the same penalty for the nature and kind of it may receive many and great aggravations upon mens sinning against that great Remedy provided against the first guilt and prevarication which it also doth as shall farther afterwards be declared And this ought they to be well acquainted withall who are called unto the Dispensation of the Gospel A fond conceit hath befallen some that all denunciations of future wrath even unto unbelievers is Legal which therefore it doth not become the Preachers of the Gospel to insist upon so would men make themselves wiser than Jesus Christ and all his Apostles yea they would disarm the Lord Christ and expose him to the contempt of his vilest enemies There is also we see a great use in these Evangelical threatnings unto believers themselves And they have been observed to have had an effectual ministery both unto Conversion and Edification who have been made wise and dextrous in managing Gospel Comminations towards the consciences of their hearers And those also that hear the Word may hence learn their duty when such threatnings are handled and opened unto them II. All punishments annexed unto the transgression either of the Law or Gospel are effects of God's vindictive Justice and consequently just and equal A meet recompence of reward What it is the Apostle doth not declare but he doth that it is just and equal which depends on the Justice of God appointing and designing of it Foolish men have always had tumultuating thoughts about the judgments of God Some have disputed with him about the equity and equality of his ways in judgments temporal Ezek. 18. and some about those that shall be eternal Hence was the vain imagination of them of old who dreamed that an end should be put after some season unto the punishment of Devils and wicked men so turning hell into a kind of Purgatory Others have disputed in our days that there shall be no hell at all but a meer annihilation of ungodly men at the last day These things being so expresly contrary to the Scripture can have no other rise but the corrupt minds and affections of men not conceiving the reasons of God's judgments nor acquiescing in his Sovereignty That which they seem principally to have stumbled at is the assignation of a punishment infinite as to its duration as well as in its nature extended unto the utmost capacity of the subject unto a fault temporary finite and transient Now that we may justifie God herein and the more clearly discern that the punishment inflicted finally on sin is but a meet recompence of reward we must consider First That God's Justice constituting and in the end inflicting the reward of sin is essential unto him Is God unjust saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 anger or wrath is not that from whence punishment proceedeth but punishment it self God inflicteth wrath anger or vengeance And therefore when we read of the anger or wrath of God against sin or sinners as Rom. 1.18 the expression is metonymical the cause being designed by the effect The true fountain and cause of the punishment of sin is the Justice of God which is an Essential property of his Nature natural unto him and inseparable from any of his works And this absolutely is the same with his Holiness or the infinite Purity of his Nature So that God doth not assign the punishment of sin arbitrarily that he might do so or otherwise without any impeachment of his Glory but his Justice and his Holiness indispensibly require that it should be punished even as it is indispensibly necessary that God in all things should be just and holy The holy God will do no iniquity the Judge of all the earth will do right and will by no means acquit the guilty This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the judgement of God that which his Justice requireth that they which commit sin are worthy of death Rom. 1.32 And God cannot but do that which it is just that he should do See 2 Thess. 1.6 We have no more Reason then to quarrel with the Punishment of sin than we have to repine that God is Holy and Just that is that he is God for the one naturally and necessarily followeth upon the other Now there is no Principle of a more uncontrolable and Soveraign Truth written in the hearts of all men than this that what the Nature of God or any of his Essential Properties require to be is holy meet equal just and good Secondly That this Righteousness or Justice of God is in the Exercise of it inseparably accompanied with infinite Wisdom These things are not diverse in God but are distinguished with respect unto the various manners of his actings and the variety of the Objects which he acteth towards and so denote a different Habitude of the Divine Nature not diverse things in God They are therefore inseparable in all the works of God Now from this Infinite Wisdom of God which his Righteousness in the constitution of the punishment of sin is eternally accompanied withal two things ensue 1. That He alone knoweth what is the true desert and demerit of sin and but from his Declaration of creatures not any And how shall we judge of what we know nothing but from him but only by what he doth We see amongst men that the guilt of crimes is aggravated according to the Dignity of the Persons against whom they are committed Now no creature knowing him perfectly against whom all sin is committed none can truly and perfectly know what is the desert and demerit of sin but by his Revelation who is perfectly known unto himself And what a madness is it to judge otherwise of that we do no otherwise understand Shall we make our selves Judges of what sin against God doth deserve Let us first by searching find out the Almighty unto Perfection and then
she might be meet for him And the Lord Christ taking this Bride unto himself by the conquest he hath made of her must by Sanctification make them meet for this Relation with himself And therefore he doth it Ephes. 5.25 26. Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word v. 27. that he might present it unto himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such things but that it should be holy and without blemish This it became him to do this was the End why he did it he sanctifieth his Church that he may present it a meet Bride or Spouse unto himself The like may be said of all other Relations wherein the Lord Christ stands unto his people there is no one of them but makes their sanctification absolutely necessary On the part of the Children themselves for unless they are Regenerate or born again wherein the foundation of their sanctification is laid they can by no means enter into the Kingdom of God It is this that makes them meet for the inheritance of the Saints in light As without it they are not meet for their Duty so are they not capable of their Reward Yea Heaven it self in the true light and notion of it is undesirable unto an unsanctified person Such an one neither can nor would enjoy God if he might In a word There is no one thing required of the Sons of God that an unsanctified Person can do no one thing promised unto them that he can enjoy There is surely then a woful mistake in the world If Christ sanctifier all whom he saves many will appear to have been mistaken in their Expectations another day It is grown amongst us almost an Abhorrency unto all flesh to say that the Church of God is to holy What though God hath promised that it should be so that Christ hath undertaken to make it so What if it be required to be so What if all the duties of it he rejected of God if it be not so it is all one if men be baptized whether they will or no and outwardly profess the name of Christ though not one of them be truly sanctified yet they are as it is said the Church of Christ. Why then let them be so but what are they the better for it Are their Persons or their Services therefore accepted with God Are they related or united unto Christ Are they under his conduct unto glory Are they meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in light not at all not all not any of these things do they obtain thereby What is it then that they get by the furious contest which they make for the Reputation of this Previledge Only this that satisfying their minds by it resting if not p●iding themselves in it they obtain many Advantages to stifle all convictions of their condition and so perish unavoidably A sad success and son ever to be bewailed Yet is there nothing at this day more contended for in this world than that Christ might be thought to be a Captain of salvation unto them unto whom he is not a Sanctifier that he may have an unholy Church a dead Body These things tend neither to the glory of Christ nor to the good of the souls of men Let none then deceive themselves sanctification is a qualification indispensibly necessary unto them who will be under the conduct of the Lord Christ unto salvation to lead none to heaven but whom he sanctifies on the earth The holy God will not receive unholy persons This living Head will not admit of dead members nor bring men into the possession of a glory which they neither love nor like Secondly Having given this description of the Captain of salvation and of the sons to be brought unto glory The Apostle affirms of them that they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one which made it meet for him to suffer and for them to be made partakers of his sufferings The equity hereof lies in the agreement that he and they are of one which what it is we must now enquire The word hath this ambiguity in it that it may be of the Masculine Gender and denote one person or of the Neuter and signifie one thing If it relate unto the person it may have a double interpretation First That it is God who is intended they are of one that is God And this may be spoken in several respects The Son was of him by Eternal Generation the many sons by Temporal Creation they were made by him Or they are all of him he ordained him to be the Sanctifier them to be sanctified Him to be the Captain of salvation and them to be brought unto glory And this sense the last testimony produced by the Apostles seems to give countenance unto Behold I and the children whom God hath given unto me Me to be their Father Captain Leader they to be the children to be cared for and conducted by me And this way went most of the Antients in their Exposition of this place In this sense the reason yielded by the Apostle in these words why the Captain of salvation should be made perfect by sufferings because the sons to be brought unto glory were also to suffer and they were all of one both he and they even of God But though these things are true yet they contain not a full reason of what the Apostle intends to prove by this assertion For this Interpretation allows no other Relation to be expressed between Christ and the sons than what is between him and Angels they are also with him of one God And yet the Apostle afterward sheweth that there was another Vnion and Relation between Christ and the Elect needful that they might be saved by him than any that was between him and Angels And if nothing be intimated but the good pleasure of God appointing him to be a Saviour and them to be saved because they were all of himself of one God which was sufficient to make that appointment just and righteous then is here nothing asserted to prove the meetness of Christ to be a Saviour unto men and not to Angels which yet the Apostle in the following Verses expresly deduceth from hence Secondly If it respect a Person it may be ex uno homine of one man that is of Adam they are all of one common Root and stock he and they came all of one Adam unto him is the Genealogie of Christ referred by Luke And as a common stock of our nature he is often called the One the One man Rom. 5. And this for the substance of it falls in with what will be next considered Secondly It may be taken in the Neuter sense and denote one thing and so also it may receive a double Interpretation First It may denote the same mass of humane nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one and the same mass of humane nature or
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so it is said of all mankind that God made them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one blood Acts 17.26 of one common principle which gives an Alliance Cognation and Brotherhood unto the whole Race of Mankind As the making of all mankind by one God gives them all a relation unto him as saith the Apostle We are all his off-spring so their being made of one blood gives them a Brotherhood among themselves See Acts 14.15 And this interpretation differs not in the substance of it from that last preceding in as much as the whole mass of humane nature had its existence in the person of Adam only it refers not the Oneness mentioned formally unto his person but unto the nature it self whereof he was made partaker And this sense the Apostle farther explains verse 14. as he also observes it Rom. 9.5 Secondly By One some understand the same spiritual nature the principles of spiritual life which is in Christ the Head and the children his members And this they say is that which is their peculiar Oneness or being of one seeing all wicked men even Reprobates are of the same common mass of humane nature as well as the children But yet this is not satisfactory It is true indeed that after the children are really sanctified they are of one and the same spiritual nature with their Head 1 Cor. 12.12 and hereby are they differenced from all others But the Apostle here treats of their being so of One that he might be meet to suffer for them which is antecedent unto their being sanctified as the Cause is unto the Effect Neither is it of any weight that the Reprobates are partakers of the same common nature with the children seeing the Lord Christ partook of it only on the childrens account as verse 14. And of their nature he could not be partaker without being partaker of that which was common to them all seeing that of one blood God made all Nations under heaven But the bond of nature it self is in the Covenant reckoned only unto them that shall be sanctified It is then one common nature that is here intended He and they are of the same nature of one mass of one blood And hereby he became to be meet to suffer for them and they to be in a capacity of enjoying the benefit of his sufferings which how it answers the whole design of the Apostle in this place doth evidently appear First He intends to shew that the Lord Christ was meet to suffer for the children and this arose from hence that he was of the same nature with them as he afterwards at large declares And he was meet to sanctifie them by his sufferings as in this verse he intimates For as in an Offering made unto the Lord of the first Fruits of Meat or of Meal a parcel of the same nature with the whole was taken and offered whereby the whole was sanctified Levit. 2. So the Lord Jesus Christ being taken as the first fruits of the nature of the children and offered unto God the whole lump or the whole nature of man in the children that is all the Elect is separated unto God and effectually sanctified in their season And this gives the ground unto all the testimonies which the Apostle produceth unto his purpose out of the Old Testament For being thus of one nature with them he is not ashamed to call them brethren as he proves from Psal. 22. For although it be true that as brethren is a term of spiritual cognation and love he calls them not so until they are made partakers of his Spirit and of the same spiritual nature that is in him yet the first foundation of this Appellation lies in his participation of the same nature with them without which however he might love them he could not properly call them Brethren Also his participation of their nature was that which brought him into such a condition as wherein it was needful for him to put his trust in God and to look for deliverance from hi● in a time of danger which the Apostle proves in the second place by a testimony out of Psal. 18. which could not in any sense have been said of Christ had he not been partaker of that nature which is exposed unto all kind of wants and troubles with outward streights and oppositions which the nature of Angels is not And as his being thus of One with us made him our Brother and placed him in that condition with us wherein it was necessary for him to put his trust in God for deliverance so being the principal Head and first Fruits of our nature and therein the Author and finisher of our salvation he is a Father unto us and we are his children which the Apostle proveth by his last testimony from Isa. 8. Behold I and the children which the Lord hath given unto me And further upon the close of these testimonies the Apostle assumes again his Proposition and asserts it unto the same purpose verse 14. shewing in what sense he and the children were of one namely in their mutual participation of flesh and blood And thus this interpretation of the word will sufficiently bear the whole weight of the Apostles Argument and Inferences But if any one list to extend the word farther and to comprize in it the manifold Relation that is between Christ and his Members I shall not contend about it There may be in it 1. Their being of one God designing him and them to be one mystical body one Church he the Head they the Members 2. Their taking into one Covenant made originally with him and exemplified in them 3. Their being of one common principle of humane nature 4. Disigned unto a manifold spiritual union in respect of that new nature which the children receive from him with every other thing that concurs to serve the union and relation between them but that which we have insisted on is principally intended and to be so considered by us And we might teach from hence that III. The agreement of Christ and the Elect in one common nature is the foundation of his fitness to be an Undertaker on their behalf and of the equity of their being made partakers of the benefits of his Mediation But that this will occur unto us again more fully verse 14. And by all this doth the Apostle discover unto the Hebrews the unreasonableness of their offence at the affl●cted condition and sufferings of the Messiah He had minded them of the work that he had to do which was to save his Elect by a spiritual and eternal salvation He had also intimated what was their condition by nature wherein they were unclean unsanctifi'd separate from God And withall had made known what the Justice of God as the Supreme Governour and Judge of all required that sinners might be saved He now minds them of the Union that was between him and them whereby he became fit to suffer for
Neither is the nature of Angels exposed to such Dangers and Troubles as to make it necessary for them to betake themselves unto Gods Protection with respect thereunto And this the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by the Psalmist properly signifies to betake a mans self unto the Care and Protection of another as Psal. 2. ult This then the condition of the Lord Christ required and this he did perform in all Troubles and Difficulties that he had contended withal He put his trust in God as Isa. 50.8 9. Psal. 22.19 And this evinceth him to have been truly and really of one with the children his brethren seeing it was his Duty no less than it is theirs to depend on God in troubles and distresses And in vain doth Schlictingius hence endeavour to prove that Christ was the Son of God by Grace only because he is said to depend on him which if he had been God by nature he could not do True if he had been God only but the Apostle is now proving that he was man also like unto us in all things sin only excepted And as such his duty it was in all streights to betake himself by faith unto the care and protection of God And some things may hence also be briefly observed As 1. That the Lord Christ the Captain of our salvation was exposed in the dayes of his flesh unto great Difficulties Anxiety of mind Dangers and Troubles This is included in what he here affirms about putting his trust in God And they were all typified out by the great sufferings of David before he came unto his Kingdom In the consideration of the sufferings of Christ men commonly fix their thoughts solely unto his Death And indeed therein was a Recapitulation of all that he had before undergone with an addition of the Wrath of God But yet neither are the sufferings of his Life to be disregarded Such they were as made his whole Pilgrimage on the earth dangerous and dolorous There was upon him a confluence of every thing that is evil or troublesome unto Humane Nature And herein is he principally our Example at least so far that we should think no kind of sufferings strange unto us 2. The Lord Christ in all his Perplexities and troubles betook himself unto the protection of God trusting in him See Isa. 50.7 8. And he alwayes made an open Profession of this trust insomuch as that his Enemies reproached him with it in his greatest distress Matth. 27.39 But this was his Course this was his Refuge wherein at length he had blessed and glorious success 3. He both suffered and trusted as our Head and President What he did in both these kinds he calls us unto As he did so must we undergo Perplexities and Dangers in the course of our Pilgrimage The Scripture abounds with Instructions unto this purpose and Experience confims it And Professors of the Gospel do but indulge unto pleasing dreams when they fancy any other condition in this world unto themselves They would not be willing I suppose to purchase it at the price of Inconformity unto Jesus Christ. And he is a President unto us in trusting as well as in suffering As he betook himself unto the protection of God so should we do also and we shall have the same blessed success with him There remains yet one Testimony more which we shall briefly pass through the consideration of Behold I and the children which God hath given me It is taken from Isa. 8.18 That it was a Prophecy of Christ which is there insisted on we have proved at large in our Prolegomena so that we need not here again farther to discourse that matter That which the Apostle aims at in the citation of this Testimony is farther to confirm the Vnion in nature and the Relation that ensues thereupon between the Captain of salvation and the Sons to be brought unto glory Now as this is such that thereon he calls them Brethren and came into the same condition of trouble with them so they are by the Grant and Appointment of God his children Being of the same nature with them and so meet to become a common Parent unto them all God by an act of Soveraign Grace gives them unto him for his children This is the aim of the Apostle in the use of this Testimony unto his present purpose In the words themselves we may consider First That God gives all the Sons that are to be brought unto glory to Jesus Christ. The Lord hath given them unto me Thine they were saith he and thou gavest them unto me John 17.6 God having separated them as his peculiar Portion in the Eternal Counsel of his Will gives them unto the Son to take care of them that they may be preserved and brought unto the glory that he had designed for them And this work he testifies that he undertook so that none of them shall be lost but that what ever difficulties they may pass through he will raise them up at the last day and give them an entrance into Life and Immortality Secondly He gives them to him as his children to be provided for and to have an Inheritance purchased for them that they may become Heirs of God and Coheirs with himself Adam was their first Parent by nature and in him they lost that Inheritance which they might have expected by the Law of their Creation They are threrefore given to the second Adam as their Parent by Grace to have an inheritance provided for them which accordingly he hath purchased with the Price of his Blood Thirdly That the Lord Christ is satisfied with and rejoyceth in the portion given him of his Father his Children his Redeemed ones This the manner of the Expression informs us in Behold I and the children though he considers himself and them at that time as signs and wonders to be spoken against He rejoyceth in his Portion and doth not call it Chabul as Hiram did the Cities given him of Solomon because they displeased him He is not only satisfied upon the sight of the travail of his soul Isa. 53.11 but glorieth also that the lines are fallen unto him in pleasantnesses that he hath a goodly heritage Psal. 16.6 Such was his Love such was his Grace for we in our selves are a people not to be desired Fourthly That the Lord Jesus assumes the children given him of his Father into the same condition with himself both as to Life and Eternity I and the children as he is so are they His lot is their lot his God is their God his Father their Father and his Glory shall be theirs Fifthly From the Context of the words in the Prophet expressing the separation of Christ and the Children from the world and all the Hypocrites therein combined together in the pursuit of their sinful courses we are taught that Christ and believers are in the same Covenant confederate to trust in God in difficulties and troubles in opposition unto all the
which as they are contained in the first Promise so that they were allowed of by the Hebrews of old we have fully proved else-where And by all these doth the Apostle yield a reason of his former concession that the Messiah was for a little while made lower than the Angels the Causes and Ends whereof he here declares There are in the words First A supposition of a two-fold state and condition of the children to be brought unto glory First Natural or their natural state and condition they were all of them in common partakers of flesh and bloud For as much then as the children were partakers of flesh and blood Secondly Moral their moral state and condition they were obnoxious unto death as it is poenal for sin and in great bondage through fear of it them who through fear of death were all their life time subject unto bondage Secondly There is a double inference with respect unto this supposition on the part of Christ the Captain of salvation First As to their natural condition that he did partake of it he was so to do He himself also did partake of the same Secondly As to their moral condition he freed them from it and deliver them Thirdly The means whereby he did this or this was to be done evidencing the necessity of his participation with them in their condition of nature that he might relieve them from their condition of trouble he did it by death that by death Fourthly The immediate Effect of his death tending unto their delivery and freedom and that is the destruction of the devil as to his power over and interest in death as poenal whereof their deliverance is an infallible consequent and destroy him c. In the first place the Apostle expresseth as by way of supposition the natural condition of the children that is the children whom God designed to bring unto glory those who were given unto Christ they were in common partakers of flesh and blood I shall not stay to remove the conceit of some who yet are not a few among the Romanists who refer those words unto the participation of the flesh and blood of Christ in the Sacrament whereunto also as we observed the Aethiopick Version gives countenance For not only is there not any thing in the expression that inclines unto such an imagination but also it enervates the whole design of the Apostles discourse and argument as from the former consideration of it doth appear Flesh and blood are by an usual Synecdoche put for the whole humane nature not as though by blood the soul was intended because the life is said to be in it as not acting without it but this expression is used because it is not humane nature as absolutely considered but as mortal passible subject unto infirmities and death it self that is intended And it is no more than if he had said the children were men subject unto death For he gives his reason herein why the Lord Christ was made a man subject unto death That he and the children should be of one nature he had shewed before for as much then as this was the condition of the children that they were all partakers of humane nature liable to sufferings sorrow and death he was so also And this is thus expressed to set forth the love and condescension of Jesus Christ as will afterward appear The second thing in these words is the moral condition of the children and there are sundry things partly intimated partly expressed in the description that is here given us of it as 1. Their estate absolutely considered they were subject to death 2. The consequences of that estate 1. It wrought fear in them 2. That fear brought them into bondage 3. The continuance of that condition it was for the whole course of their lives First It is implied that they were subject obnoxious unto guilty of death and that as it was poenal due to sin as contained in the curse of the Law which what it comprehendeth and how far it is extended is usually declared On this supposition lies the whole weight of the Mediation of Christ. The children to be brought unto glory were obnoxious unto death the curse and wrath of God therein which he came to deliver them from Secondly The first effect and consequent of this obnoxiousness unto death concurring unto their state and condition is that they were filled with fear of it for fear of death Fear is a perturbation of mind arising from the apprehension of a future imminent evil And the greater this evil is the greater will the perturbation of the mind be provided the apprehension of it be answerable The fear of death then here intended is that trouble of mind which men have in the expectation of death to be inflicted on them as a punishment due unto their sins And this apprehension is common to all men arising from a general presumption that death is poenal and that it is the judgment of God that they which commit sin are worthy of death as Rom. 1.32 chap. 2.15 But it is cleared and confirmed by the Law whose known sentence it is The soul that sinneth shall die And the troublesome expectation of the event of this apprehension is the fear of death here intended And according unto the means that men have to come unto the knowledge of the righteousness of God are or ought to be their apprehensions of the evil that is in death But even those who had lost all clear knowledge of the consequents of death natural or the dissolution of their present mortal condition yet on a confused apprehension of its being poenal always esteemed it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the most dreadful of all things that are so unto humane nature And in some this is heightned and increased until it come to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as our Apostle speaks chap. 10.27 A fearful expectation of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries And this is the second thing that is in this description of the estate and condition of the children to be brought unto glory being obnoxious unto the sentence of death they could not but live in fear of the execution of it Thirdly They are by this means brought into bondage The troublesome expectation of death as poenal brings them into bondage into the nature whereof we must a little enquire Sundry things concur to make any state a state of bondage as 1. That it be involuntary no man is in bondage by his will that which a man chuseth is not bondage unto him A man that would have his ear bored though he were always a servant was never in bondage for he enjoyed the condition that pleased him Properly all bondage is involuntary 2. Bondage ingenerates strong desires after and puts men on all manner of attempts for liberty Yokes gall and make them on whom they are desire ease So long as men are sensible of bondage which is against nature for that
Attonement required and the matter was rolled on his hand alone it was a Joy unto him that he had Body prepared wherein he might discharge his work although he knew what he had to do and suffer therein Psal. 40.8 9. Heb. 10.6 7 8 9. He rejoyced to do the will of God in taking the body prepared for him because the children were partakers of flesh and blood Though he was in the form of God equal unto him yet that Mind that Love that Affection towards us was in him that to be like unto us and thereby to save us he emptyed himself and took on him the form of a servant our form and became like unto us Phil. 2.5 6 7 8. He would be like unto us that he might make us like unto himself he would take our flesh that he might give unto his Spirit He would joyn himself unto us and become one flesh with us that we might be joyned unto him and become one Spirit with him 1 Cor. 6.17 And as this was a Fruit of his Eternal antecedent Love so it is a spring of consequent Love When Eve was brought unto Adam after she was taken out of him Gen. 2.23 to manifest the ground of that Affection which was to be alwayes between them he sayes of her this is now bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh And by this condescention of Christ saith the Apostle are we members of his body and of his flesh and of his bones Ephes. 5.30 Whence he infers that he loves and nourisheth his Church as a man doth his own flesh And how should this inexpressible Love of Christ constrain us to love him and to live unto him 2 Cor. 14 15. As also to labour to be like unto him wherein all our blessedness consisteth seeing for that end he was willing to be like unto us whence all his troubles and sufferings arose Here also we see that V. It was only in flesh and blood the substance and essence of humane nature and not in our personal infirmities that the Lord Christ was made like unto us He took to himself the nature of all men and not the Person of any man We have not only humane nature in common but we have every one particular Infirmities and weaknesses following that nature as existing in our sinful persons Such are the sicknesses and pains of our bodies from inward distempers and the disorder of the Passions of our minds Of these the Lord Christ did not partake It was not needful it was not possible that he should do so not needful because he could provide for their cure without assuming them not possible for they can have no place in a nature innocent and holy And therefore he took our nature not by an immediate new creation out of nothing or of the dust of the earth like Adam for if so though he might have been like unto us yet he would have been no kin to us and so could not have been our Goel to whom the right of Redemption did belong nor by natural Generation which would have rendered our nature in him obnoxious to the sin and punishment of Adam but by a miraculous conception of a Virgin whereby he had truly our nature yet not subject on its own account unto any one of those evils whereunto it is liable as propagated from Adam in an ordinary course And thus though he was joyned unto us in our nature yet as he was holy harmless and undefiled in that nature he was separate from sinners Heb. 7.25 So that although our nature suffered more in his Person then it was capable of in the Person of any meer man yet not being debased by any sinful imperfection it was alwayes excellent beautiful and glorious And then VI. That the Son of God should take part in humane nature with the children is the greatest and most admirable effect of Divine Love Wisdom and Grace So our Apostle proposeth it 1 Tim. 3.16 A Mysterie which the Angels with all diligence desire to look into 1 Pet. 1.11 12. See John 1.14 Isa. 9.6 Rom. 9.5 Atheists scoff at it deluded Christians deny it but the Angels adore it the Church professeth it Believers find the comfort and benefit of it The Heavens indeed declare the glory of God and the Firmament sheweth his handy work Psal. 19.1 And the invisible things of God from the creation of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead Rom. 1.20 In particular man himself is fearfully and wonderfully made These works of Gods Power and Providence do greatly manifest the glory of his Wisdom Omnipotency and Goodness and are like the light which was created the first day at the beginning of all things as we have shewed But in this instance of assuming humane nature into Personal su●sistence with himself that scattered light is gathered into one Sun giving out most glorious beams unto the manifestation of his Infinite Excellencies far above all other things And this surely was not done but for the greatest End that can be conceived and such is the salvation of sinners But we must proceed with our Apostle and he gives the Reason and End of this wonderful Dispensation The End is the Delivery of the children from the condition before described And first the means whereby he wrought and brought about this End is proposed unto us by death he was to do it by death That by death he might deliver them that is by his own death This as it is placed as one principal End of his being made partaker of flesh and blood so it is also the means of the farther end aimed at namely the delivery of the children out of the condition expressed Some Translations add by his own death which is evidently understood though it be not literally in the Text the death which he underwent in the nature of man whereof he was partaker His Death was the means of delivering them from death Some distinguish between Death in the first place which Christ underwent and that death in the close of the Verse which the children are said to be in fear of for this latter they say is more extensive than the former as comprizing death eternal also But there doth not any thing in the Text appear to intimate that the Captain of Salvation by death of one kind should deliver the children from that of another Neither will the Apostles discourse well bear such a supposition For if he might have freed the children by any way or means but only by undergoing that which was due unto them for sin whence could arise that indispensible necessity which he pleads for by so many considerations of his being made like unto them seeing without the participation of their nature which he urgeth he might have done any other thing for their good and benefit but only suffer what was due to them And if it be said that without this participation of their nature
A person offended to be pacified attoned reconciled 3. A person offending to be pardoned accepted 4. A Sac●i●ice or other means of making the attonement sometimes one is expressed sometimes another but the use of the word hath respect unto them all And in vain doth Crellius pretend ad Grot. ad cap. 7. p. 360. that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the same and denote the same thing the former always denoting the person offended the latter the person offending or the offence it self the one is to attone or appease another the other to make attonement for another which surely are sufficiently different 3. The Jews to whom Paul wrote knew that the principal work of the High Priest was to make attonement with God for sin whereof their Expiations and freedom from it was a consequent and therefore they understood this act and duty accordingly it b●ing the usual expression of it that the Apostle applies unto it They knew that the great work of their High Priest was to make attonement for them for their sins and transgressions that they might not die that the punishment threatned in the Law might not come upon them as Levit. 16.10 and 21. is fully declared And the Apostle now instructs them in the substance of what they had before attended unto in types and shadows Nor is there any mention in the Scripture of the expiation of sins but by attonement nor doth this word ever in any place signifie the real cleansing of sin inherent from the sinner so that the latter sense proposed hath no consistency with it The difficulty pretended from the construction is not of any moment The sense and constant use of the word being what we have evinced there must be an Ellipsis supposed and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same in sense with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make reconciliation with God for sins as the same phrase is in other places explained Sixthly There is a farther double enforcement of the necessity of what was before affirmed concerning his being made like unto his brethren in all things with reference unto his Priesthood and the first is taken from what he did or suffered in that condition the other from the benefits and advantages which ensued thereon The first in those words For that he himself hath suffered being tempted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for in that that is say some in the same nature he suffered in the flesh that he took being tempted But the words seem rather only an illation of what the Apostle concludes or infers from that which he had before laid down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereas in as much seeing that so both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are often used Rom. 6.12 Now it is here affirmed of Christ that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he suffered being tempted not it hapned unto him to be tempted which we before rejected The Vulgar Latin and Expositors following that Translation He suffered and was tempted But the and inserted we have shewed to be superfluous and it is acknowledged to be so by Erasmus Estius A Lapide though Tena with some others contend for the retaining of it It is not the suffering of Christ in general that is here intended nor is the end mentioned of it that of his suffering in general which was to make reconciliation but the succouring and relieving of them that are tempted which regards the sufferings that befell him in his temptations It is not his sufferings absolutely considered nor his being tempted that is peculiarly designed but his suffering in his temptation as was before observed To know then what were these sufferings we must enquire what were his temptations and how he was affected with them To tempt and temptations are things in themselves of an indifferent nature and have no moral evil in them absolutely considered What ever attends them of that kind proceeds either from the intention of the tempter or the condition of them that are tempted Hence God is said to tempt men but not to induce them unto sin Gen. 22.1 James 1.13 What of evil ensues on temptation is from the tempted themselves Moreover though temptation seems to be of an active importance yet in it self it is meerly for the most part neutral Hence it compriseth any thing state or condition whereby a man may be tried exercised or tempted And this will give us light into the various temptations under which the Lord Christ suffered For although they were all external and by impressions from without yet they were not confined unto the assaults of Sathan which are principally regarded under that name Some of the heads of them we may briefly recount 1. His state and condition in the world He was poor despised persecuted reproached especially from the beginning unto the end of his publick ministery Herein lay one continued temptation that is a trial of his obedience by all manner of hardships Hence he calls this whole time the time of his temptations You have abode with me in my temptations or in the work that he carried on in a constant course of temptation arising from his outward state and condition See James 1.2 1 Pet. 5.9 In this temptation he suffered Hunger Poverty Weariness Sorrow Reproach Shame Contempt wherewith his holy Soul was deeply affected And he underwent it cheerfully because it was to be the condition of them whose preservation and salvation as their High Priest he had undertaken as we shall see And his experience hereof is the spring of their comfort and safety 2. Whilst he was in this state and condition innumerable particular temptations befell him under all which he suffered 1. Temptations from his Relations in the flesh being disregarded and disbelieved by them which deeply affected his compassionate heart with sorrow 2. From his Followers being forsaken by them upon his preaching the Mysteries of the Gospel 3. From his chosen Disciples all of whom left him one denyed him and one betrayed him 4. From the anguish of his Mother when a sword pierced through her soul in his sufferings 5. From his enemies of all sorts All which are at large related in the Gospel from all which his sufferings were inexpressible 3. Satan had a principal hand in the temptations wherein he suffered He set upon him in the entrance of his Ministery immediately in his own Person and followed him in the whole course of it by the instruments that he set on work He had also a season an hour of darkness allowed unto him when he was to try his utmost strength and policy against him under which assault from him he suffered as was fore-told from the foundation of the world the bruising of his heel or the temporal ruine of all his concernments 4. Gods desertion of him was another temptation under which he suffered As this was most mysterious so his sufferings under it were his greatest perplexity Psal. 22.1 2. Heb. 5.7 These