Selected quad for the lemma: nature_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
nature_n divine_a father_n subsist_v 2,744 5 11.7766 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55302 Christus in corde, or, The mystical union between Christ and believers considered in its resemblances, bonds, seals, priviledges and marks by Edward Polhil ..., Esq. Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694? 1680 (1680) Wing P2751; ESTC R3312 145,980 330

There are 18 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

his Son Jesus Christ and love one another 1 Joh. 3.23 Love is for our Brother but Faith for Christ only no meer creature is an object fit for it Cursed is the man that trusteth in man Jer. 17.5 We are united to Christ as an influencing Head not so to our fellow-Christians The Wise Virgins had Oyl little enough for themselves the most excellent Christians have no Grace to spare the great spring of all Grace is in Christ the Head to go to another than him for it is to fall off from him and as the Apostle speaks of the Worshippers of Angels Not to hold the head from which all the body by joints and bands having nourishment ministred and knit together increaseth with the increase of God Col. 2.19 Might we have Grace from another He who is the Head and universal Principle of Grace would become useless and altogether superfluous The Romanists who earnestly contend that the Pope is Head of the Church do yet qualifie their opinion Aqu. 3. pars qu. 8. and say That the Pope is only Head secundum exteriorem gubernationem according to external government but Christ alone is Head secundum interiorem influxum according to internal influx Christians are united one to another by Love but unto Christ they are united as unto an Head of influence Hence the union is more than a Moral one There is an union of Love between Christ and the Holy Angels they are the top of the Creation sublime in Knowledg unspotted in Sanctity excellent in Perfections ever a ministring to the Church and doing one piece of the Divine Will or other it cannot be otherwise but that he must have a great Love for them he is the brightness of the Fathers Glory the Character or express Image of his Person he made the Angelical World and all its perfections he came down into the humane nature to repair us and raise us up out of the ruins of the fall the highest design of Gods Glory was carried on by him the Divine Wisdom Holiness Justice Mercy Truth did shew forth themselves upon the Theater of his humane Nature the Holy Angels cannot but have a Love for him and because he is an object of Excellency and they creatures of perfection their Love to him must be a very Eminent one their Intellects have not as ours any blinds or dark shades in them but are full of pure and coelestial light they have not as we only some glimpses but a full view of the attractive Beauties and Excellencies in him their Love is not as ours subject to damps and clogs of corruption but ever pure and in holy Orders they do not as we dwell here below in houses of Clay but stand above attending upon his glorious Person All which must needs promote their Love in a very high degree Thus there is an union of Love between Christ and Angels But if in the glass of Scripture we look upon the union between Christ and Believers we shall find much more in it than in that between him and Angels there is a different foundation Christ took on him not the nature of Angels but of men he died on a Cross not for Angels but for men our union with him is founded on his Incarnation and atoning-Passion but the union of Angels is not so There is also a different way it is very proper for us fallen creatures to be joined to a Mediator not so for Angels who stand in their integrity without need of a Mediator in us there is an unitive Grace Faith in a Mediator not so in Angels they have a Faith of dependance on God but I suppose they have not a Faith of recumbence in a Mediator it is through the satisfactory and meritorious Sufferings of Christ that the same Holy Spirit which is upon him the head comes down upon us his members to repair the Divine Image in us but it is not so with Angels the Grace given unto them is not repairing but confirming neither doth it proceed through the blood of a Mediator but immediately from God These things considered our union with Christ must needs be more than a Moral one as having that in it which cannot be found in the union of Angels with him 3dly The union between Christ and Believers is such that he doth support them The resemblance of the foundation and building is a very lively and genuine proof of this the building doth not bear up it self but is supported by the foundation Believers do not bear up themselves but are supported by Christ this is a very admirable thing to consider Adam in Innocency had not the least seed of corruption in him yet he fell Angels much greater than he had no corruption or tempter yet many of them fell but Believers are supported there are dregs and reliques of corruption in them there are alluring and flattering objects round about them there is a subtile Devil using many arts and methods to draw out their corruption into act yet in these dangerous circumstances they are supported because they are united to Christ there is a very remarkable difference between Angels and men Angels stood or fell personally only not in another in an head of their own nature but it is otherwise with men All mankind fell in Adam their root or head and all believers stand in Christ the root and head of the Church hence it is that they are supported hence they are said to be preserved in Christ Jesus Jude 1. Adam in Innocency was soon unframed but they stand in Christ in him one sin drove out a stock of pure immaculate Grace in a moment in them the many remnants of corruption cannot do so the reason is he with his perfect Graces stood alone but they with their imperfect ones are in union with Christ Hence it is that their Graces live like a spark in water and spring up even in the midst of briars Corruption is driven out by little and little and at last perfection is attained in Heaven if they stumble and fall in the way thither yet they rise again the Holy Spirit visits them again fresh acts of Faith and Repentance are put forth Aug. de Cor. cap. 9. Humiliores redeunt doctiores they become more humble and learned especially in that great point of dependance upon Christ they see plainly that they are weak in themselves and all their support is in him One object one forbidden tree drew away Adam from God but many objects cannot draw away Believers from Christ though their corrupt flesh such is its inordinate propensity to outward and sensible things would close with every thing and turn the whole world into Snares and Idols yet are they not drawn away their Faith is a victory over the World 1 John 5.4 not meerly in it self as it is a Divine Grace but as it unites them to Christ who overcame the world not as a private person but as a publick one on their behalf
all these glorious appearances operate intimately and immediately he penetrates into the inmost spirit and is more intimate to it than that is to it self he operates not only by an immediation of virtue but by an immediation of essence for his virtue is not distinct from his essence Thus there is a communication of the Spirit an excellent operative intimate presence with Believers as if he were a kind of soul to them to quicken them unto every good work But alas how short are our thoughts in this point how little a portion of it do we know The Master of the Sentences out of St. Chrysostom asserts That we cannot comprehend how God is every where much less can we comprehend how he who is every where is in a special manner in Believers I verily think that those Phrases of Scripture which express the Spirit to be communicated to them have in them a mystery much deeper than we can dive into I shall therefore make no further answer to the Quaere it is enough for me to say with Fulgentius That the inhabitation of the Holy Trinity in us De Pers Christ is non localis sed immensa non comprehensibilis cogitatione sed venerabilis fide not local but immense not comprehensible in thought but venerable in Faith I conclude with that of Zanchy De trib El. lib. 4. cap. 1. Spiritus Sanctus quia immensus est ideo ubique est maximè in omnibus fidelibus speciali quodam sed incomprehensibili modo The Holy Spirit because he is immense therefore he is every-where most of all he is in all the faithful after a certain special but incomprehensible manner The next thing which comes to be considered in this discourse is the Operations of the Spirit I touched upon this before but now I will speak a little more to it It 's true these Operations being among the opera ad extra are common to the whole Trinity yet in Scripture they are in a peculiar manner attributed to the Spirit the reason of which is because of that order which is among the persons in the Sacred Trinity the Father is of himself fons Deitatis the fountain of the Deity the Son is from the Father lumen de lumine light of light the Holy Spirit is from the Father and the Son he proceeds by an eternal spiration from both of them And as is the order of subsisting so is the order of operating the Father operates from himself the Son from the Father the Holy Spirit from both Hence in the three great Works of God Creation which is the first rise of things out of nothing is in a special manner attributed to the Father Redemption which helps up a poor fallen creature is in a special manner attributed to the Son Sanctification which perfects the redeemed is in a special manner attributed to the Holy Spirit Hence in the great Work of Salvation the Father laid the counsel and platform of it the Son carries on the work in a middle mediating way the Holy Spirit according to his place in order consummates it by working Faith and all other Graces But this is only by the way In treating of these Operations I shall note two things that is what is in them of respect to union with Christ and what is in them of respect to the Inhabitation of the Spirit or which is all one to the Inhabitation of the whole Sacred Trinity The first Operation of the Spirit in Believers is this He forms all holy Graces in them he draws the very Picture of Christ upon them in humility love meekness mercy goodness heavenliness patience this operation is requisite upon a double account One that Christ may have a seed the Father promised him a seed he himself merited one yet a seed he could not have unless the Spirit did work these Graces which make us to bear a resemblance of him Another that God might have a Temple under the Old Testament he had an outward Temple but even then he would have an inward one a Sanctuary in the heart under the New Testament he had a Temple in the humane nature of Christ but even in that he aimed to have a Tabernacle in men but this could not be unless the Spirit did come and turn the heart into an holy place for him As touching this Operation the holy Graces may be considered under a double notion either as they make us to have one common nature with Christ and thus they import union with him or else as they are tokens of the divine Presence and thus they import the Inhabitation of God in us These Graces make us to have one common nature with Christ and thus they import union with him there is as the learned Camero observes a double union one ab uno communi simpliciter from one common nature simply considered thus all men are united there being one humane nature in them another ab uno communicato from one nature communicated thus a Father and a Son are united the Son having the same nature communicated from the Father To apply this distinction First Believers have one common humane nature with Christ not only in that large sense in which all men have the same nature with him but in a more strict sense peculiar to believers only He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one Hebr. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one not of one God so Angels also are not of one Adam so wicked men also are but of one nature and condition Christ hath an humane nature sanctified by the Spirit and so have Believers this is one peculiar thing in which he and they meet there is no other holy flesh in all the world but what is in him and them This tells us that they are so united to him in one common nature as no other creature in Heaven or Earth is Angels are not so they are holy but not flesh unregenerate men are not so they are flesh but not holy Believers only have as Christ hath an humane nature sanctified by the Spirit Further which advances the Union they have this sanctified nature from him we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5.30 In this sanctified nature there are two things a carnal substance and an holy quality as to the carnal substance he is of our flesh and of our bones he did partake of flesh and blood with us As to the holy quality we are of his flesh and of his bones by him we are partakers of the divine nature Thus believers are joyned to him as to the Fountan of their Sanctity their holy Graces all hang upon him as beams upon the Sun If the Children of Reuben and Gad had been asked What part have you in the Lord they would have shewed the pattern of the Altar If Believers be asked What part have you in Christ they can shew forth their holy Graces These are Copies drawn after him
is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the literal sense of it Touching his Power to do it they say there is an hypostatical union of the divine and humane natures in Christ his Hypostasis is communicated to the humane nature therefore so are the divine Properties such as Immensity is he sits in the humane nature at the right hand of God and that right hand is every-where The union of the two natures is inseparable therefore where his Deity is there is his Humanity he is everywhere God incarnate therefore no-where excarnate or out of the flesh In answer unto this I shall offer some things As touching the Will of Christ expressed in those words This is my body The Lutherans seem to stand for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Letter of the Text but their Interpretation is not a litteral one This is not properly in with and under this in propriety This is my body is one thing in with and under This is my body is another neither is their Interpretation true Baptism is a Sacrament of the New Testament as well as the Lords Supper as in the one the blood of Christ is not in with and under the water so in the other the body is not in with and under the bread the reason is alike in both Sacraments If in the Eucharist the body be in with and under the bread then the blood is in with and under the wine consequently the blood is separate from the body There is put upon Christ now in Glory not to say a second passion but as many passions as there are Eucharists It is not easie to imagine how the bread should be broken and the body under it not be so or how the body should be broken on Earth and at the same time glorious in Heaven or how the same body at the same instant can be present in as many distant places as there are Eucharists in the world or if such a Presence might be how the body coúld be finite or indeed a body All which strange Riddles the Lutherans must maintain to make good their opinion As touching the Power of Christ to do it the particulars must be considered First The Hypostasis is communicated to the humane nature therefore so are the divine Properties such as Immensity is Theol. Ancil 51. I answer with the learned Baronius the Hypostasis of the Word is communicated to the humane nature not inhaesivè or denominativè but sustentativè the humane nature of Christ is not a Person it may no more be called a person than Christ may have two persons it doth not subsist but exist in the person of the Word there is no personality in it but it is received and taken into the person of the Word and the person of the Word doth stay and sustain it Hence it is evident that the hypostasis not being communicated to the humane nature inhesively or denominatively the divine Properties are not so communicated to it neither is there any immensity therein It 's true from the hypostatical union of the divine and humane natures in Christ there doth issue a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a communication of Properties the Properies of both natures are truly and really attributed to the Person the Person subsists in both natures both natures are united together in the Person but the Properties of the divine nature are not communicated to the humane for then the humane should be not immense only but infinite and eternal nay God himself because the divine Properties are all one with the divine Essence The second thing is Christ in his humane nature sits at Gods right hand and that right hand is everywhere I answer This argument supposes that the body of Christ is as the right hand of God is which is utterly untrue the right hand of God is incorporeal is the body of Christ so or can it be so and not cease to be a body The right hand of God is infinite is the humane nature of Christ so or can it be so and not become a God In like manner the right hand is everywhere must the humane nature be so too Scripture opposes it in those very Texts which mention Christs Session Christ sits at the right hand of God but where It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in heavenly places Eph. 1.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the high places Heb. 1.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Heavens Hebr. 8.1 The Session therefore notes out his state of Glory in Heaven not his universal Presence The Apostle tells the Colossians that Christ sits on the right hand of God and from thence presses them to set their affections on things above not on things on the earth Col. 3.1 2. But if the Session note an universal Presence the Apostles exhortation vanishes into nothing Stephen looketh up and saw the heavens opened and Jesus standing at the right hand of God Acts 7.55 56. But if the being at the right hand did point out an universal Presence what needed any looking up or opening of Heaven to see him who in his humane nature is every-where Again If the Ubiquity of Christs humane nature be from his Session then it is not from the hypostatical Union which was long before in the first moment of his Incarnation or if it be from the hypostatical union then it is not from the Session which was after his Passion and Resurrection The next thing is the union of the two natures in Christ is inseparable therefore where his Deity is there is his Humanity I answer There may be an union and yet the united may not co-exist in all places a Star is united to its Orb yet the Orb is where the Star is not The humane nature of Christ is united to the divine yet the divine nature is where the humane is not the reason is evident where the united are equal there may be a full co-existence in place but where they are unequal as the two natures in Christ must needs be there it cannot be so the infinite nature is not put into finite straits the finite one is not stretcht into an infinity the union joyns not destroys the natures the humane nature must have its limits the divine can have none Hence it appears that the divine nature must needs be where the humane is not The last thing is Christ is everywhere God incarnate no-where excarnate or out of the flesh I answer As to that he is every where God incarnate it may be taken two ways either thus God who is in the flesh is every where and this is true but proves not the ubiquity of the flesh or thus the flesh in which God is is every where and this would make for ubiquity but it is untrue As to the other He is no where excarnate or out of the flesh he may be said to be out of the flesh two ways either thus The union of the natures is dissolved the divine nature is separated from the humane and
Christus in Corde OR THE MYSTICAL UNION BETWEEN CHRIST AND BELIEVERS CONSIDERED IN ITS Resemblances Bonds Seals Priviledges and Marks By EDWARD POLHIL of Burwash in Sussex Esq LONDON Printed by A. M. and R. R. for Tho. Cockerill at the Three-Legs in the Poultrey over-against the Stocks Market 1680. TO THE Christian Reader THERE are three admirable Unions noted by Divines the essential Union of the Three persons in the Sacred Trinity the Hypostatical Union of the divine and humane natures in the Person of Christ and the Mystical Union which is between Christ and Believers In the first we have salvation in the primary fountain of it in the second we have it in the channel or excellent medium of it in the third we have it in the application or actual possession of it The Deity is an Immense Ocean of mercy and goodness but it flows out to us only in and through a Mediator Jesus Christ is a Mediator of Alsufficient righteousness and merit but he communicates himself only to those that are in union with him All our righteousness Caput membra sunt quasi una persona mystica ideò satisfactio Christi ad omnes fideles pertinet Aqu. 3. pars quaest 48. Art 2. Fiant corpus Christi si volunt vivere de Spiritu Christi Aust in Joh. Tract 26. In 3. part Thom. qu. 49. grace peace salvation depends on that Union If we are in him then his satisfactory righteousness covers us his Holy Spirit dwells in us but if we are out of him then our case is as desperate as if he had never satisfied justice as if he had never merited grace and eternal life for us Most true is that of Medina Tota ratio nostrae salutis in eo consistit ut induamus Christum the total sum of our salvation stands in this That we put on Christ who as a learned man hath it is in his imputed righteousness as an artificial garment to us and in his imparted graces as a natural one This mystical union which is of such high concern to our salvation is very signally set forth in Scripture There it is said that Christ dwells in Believers and they in him he abides in them and they in him which expressions point out a mutual inexistence of him and them But because this mystery is very deep the Holy Ghost in condescension to our weakness shadows out this Union by many earthly patterns viz. by the Law-union of a King and Subjects by the Love-union of an Husband and Wife by the Artificial union of the Foundation and Building by the Natural union of the Vine and Branches the Head and Members by the intimate union and incorporation of the Food and the Body There is that in the Mystical union which answer to all these earthly patterns and withal that which as much exceeds them as a substance doth a shadow The bonds of this union are Faith and the Holy Spirit Faith sees comes to receives leans on puts on feeds upon Christ as being the universal capacity to take in Christ into the Soul the Holy Spirit is primaria commissura the primary ligature which knits us to Christ That Spirit which is as St. Austin speaks Patris filii communio brings us into union with Christ that Spirit which united the two natures in Christ unites us to Christ Hence we become mystical parts of him of his flesh and of his bone nay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one spirit with him The Seals of this union are Baptism and the Lords Supper Baptism is called by an Ancient Christianismi investitura in it we are said to be buried with Christ and to be risen with him which is notably adumbrated by the baptismal immersion into the water and eduction out of it In the Lords Supper the body and blood of Christ are really though spiritually present to our Faith we may eat his flesh and drink his blood unto life eternal we are as St. Cyprian speaks united to him spiritali transitione by a spiritual transition or passing into him and as St. Chrysostom hath it we are united to his body as that is to the word The priviledges of this union are so great that they are worthy to attract all men into conjunction with Christ the marks of this union are so plain in Scripture that Believers reflecting on themselves may have the comfort of their being in him These are the things that the ensuing discourse offers to the Reader with this only request that he would agnoscere quod Dei est and ignoscere quod hominis est If any glory may come to Christ or comfort to his members by this Treatise it is enough and as much as is aimed at by him who is A Lover of Truth Edward Polhil THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. MIllions in the Church miscarry for want of Vnion with Christ This is cleared from the two Covenants of Works and of Grace from the two heads Adam and Christ from the two ways and periods of mankind Two Vnions with Christ one in appearance another in truth this latter is a mystery it carries a respect to the Vnion of the Sacred persons in Trinity and to the hypostatical Vnion of two natures in Christ it depends on them it resembles them it is that the hypostatical Vnion aims at it is not to be measured by human Reason but by Scripture CHAP. II. The Scripture useth Metaphors to express holy Mysteries by because the mysteries are sublime because it would make us seek the things above It sets forth the mystical union by resemblances There is an analogy between it and other unions an excellency in it above them It sets forth the mystical union by that between a King and his Subjects The mystical union exceeds in the worthiness and nearness of the persons united in the rightness of Laws and Administrations in the intimacy of the union in the benefits of government particularly in protection and rewards CHAP. III. The Mystical Vnion set forth by the Conjugal one There is a mutual consent between Christ and believers The believers consent imports a right knowledg a free choice and a present compliance with Christ Christs consent is purely gratuitous believers purely supernatural Christ and believers mutually make over themselves each to other The Emphasis of that phrase one spirit opened There is an intimate love between Christ and believers he put on an humane nature for them they put off a corrupt nature for him He died for expiation they die in mortification There is a communication of good things from Christ to the Church the Church propagates in Believers and good works The mystical Vnion set forth by that of a foundation and a building Christ laid and Believers built on him by Divine Art The double cement of faith and the holy Spirit Christ is a large and strong foundation he bears up the Church by Divine influences CHAP. IV. The Mystical Vnion set forth by the Vine and the Branches Christ
to Jesus Christ We find them drowning in sensual pleasures or earthing themselves in worldly profits or breathing after popular air and vain-glory but they will not come to Christ to wash in his Blood or subject to his Scepter or tread in his holy steps that they may live for ever so they perish as if there were no Sayiour or Gospel Two or three things will make this evident There are Two Covenants the one of Works which runs thus Do this and live the other of Grace which runs thus Believe and live the first in congruity to man in his primitive integrity calls for perfect sinless obedience the other in condescension to man in his fallen estate asks only faith All men as sinners being short of the first Covenant none can be saved but by the second nor by that neither unless they be united to Christ the Charter of salvation gives nothing to those who are in a separate estate from the fountain the unbeliever who is so is condemned already condemned by the first Covenant and not saved by the second There are two Heads Adam and Christ both communicate to those who are theirs Adam communicates sin and death to his posterity Christ communicates righteousness and life to his believing seed There being nothing but sin and death from the first Adam none can be saved but by the second nor by him neither unless they be in conjunction with him He is the Saviour of the body there is no condemnation to those who are in him nor nothing else to those who are out of him There are two ways and two periods of mankind those who are in Christ walk after the spirit in the pure way of holiness and so pass on to that Heaven which is the center of sanctity those who stay in the first Adam in a state of corruption walk after the flesh in a way of disobedience and so pass on to that Hell which is the center of iniquity Hence it appears That Union with Christ is the critical point upon which eternal life and death depend upon this account the Apostle exhorts us to examine our selves in this great concern Know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Which is as much as to say if Christ took our flesh and we have not his spirit if he were a propitiatory Sacrifice and we are not sprinkled with his blood if he rose again from the dead and we are dead in sins and trespasses he profits us not at all To us as an * Sunt quibus nondum natus est Christus nondum est passus non surrexit usque adhuc Bern. de Resurr Dom. Ser. 4 Ancient speaks he is not yet born he hath not yet suffered he is not yet risen That is he is of no effect to us we are no better than reprobates rejectaneous persons such as God will put away as the dross of the earth Memorable are the words of the Learned Zanchy * De Verâ Dispensat 4. Tota verae justitiae salutis vitae participatio ex hâc pernecessariâ cum Christo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pendet The whole participation of true righteousness salvation life depends on that very necessary Union with Christ Union is a very extensive term the Philosophers reckon up many kinds of it some learned men distinguish Unity Unition and Union Unity is of one individual thing Union is of more than one met in conjunction Unition is the act of the efficient which joins things together Union is the state of the united which is produced by the unitive act There may be Union without Unition between the persons in the sacred Trinity there is an Union but it being an eternal one Unition which imports a temporal act can have no place therein but in all temporal Unions an Unition cannot be wanting that being it which tacks things together and of two makes them in a sort to become one In Union both the extremes are united but both are not always changed Thus in the Union of the Divine nature in Christ with the humane the change is not in the Divine nature but only in the Humane which is taken into one person with the Divine * In 3. Part. Aq. Art 7. In Quest 2. Medina taking Union so largely as to comprehend Unition in it observes in Union three things first the action by which things are united then the Union of the things united lastly the relation which arises between the extremes from the two former the conjunction of the extremes depends upon the unitive act the relation between them results from both the unitive act and the conjunction Union with Christ is union with him who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and man in one person were he only God the union of a faln creature to him being immediate and without a Mediator would be impossible were he only man the union of a faln creature to him being but a creature and so uncapable to be a Mediator would be unprofitable and to no purpose God-man is the Sponsor Mediator Head God-man obeyed suffered satisfied for us with him it is that the union is A double union with Christ may be noted the one is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in appearance only Thus the meer professor is united to him living in the Church and coming to the Ordinances he looks like a member of Christ and is as our Saviour speaks Joh. 15.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quasi branch in him he seems to be such but in truth is not so he hath not the Spirit of Christ and so is none of his he is in union with sin and in that state cannot be in union with Christ What fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness what communion hath light with darkness Bellarmine who holds hypocrites to be members of Christ confesses that they are but membra mortua dead members which is as much as to say they are but equivocal members or rather none at all Membrum mortuum est membrum pictum saith Aristotle a dead member is but a painted one Upon this account other learned Papists as Melchior Canus will not have them to be members at all but only parts members say they cannot be without life but parts may St. Austin best of all saith * Tract 3. in Epist Joh. That they are but as evil humours in the body Aut in membris sumus aut in humoribus malis either we are among the members or among the humours hypocrites are but as corrupt humours in the Church they do not fill up the Body of Christ but corrupt and deturpate it putatively they belong to Christ but really to Satan The other is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in truth and reality thus belivers are united to him as subjects they are under him as living stones they are built on him as a dear Spouse they are joined to him as fruitful branches they are implanted into him as mystical members they
are incorporated into him there is a kind of spiritual continuity between him and them that holy Spirit which resides in him falls down in a measure upon them The Scripture signally sets forth this Union He dwells in believers and they in him Joh. 6.56 He abides in them and they in him Joh. 15.4 He is in them the hope of Glory Col. 1.27 And they are in him that is true in Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 5.20 He lives in them and they live by the faith of him Gal. 2.20 He partakes with them Heb. 2.14 And they partake of him Heb. 3.14 Eternal life is in him and they having the Son have life 1 Joh. 5.11 12. He is one flesh with them and they are one spirit with him These things shew that there is a real union between them This real union which is what I aim at is by Divines stiled a mystical one and that upon very good reason the Holy Ghost in Scripture calls it a mystery that is it is a Divine Secret or holy Arcanam above humane reason and only conceivable by a supernatural light De Eccles visib 464. The Learned Whitaker saith of this union that it is mystica plane mirifica mystical and plainly wonderful The noble Sadeel calls it De spirit Mand. 226. magnum adorandum mysterium a mystery great and to be adored as being above nature and all humane bonds Life of Christ 462. Dr. Reynolds stiles it one of the deep things of God which are not discernable without the Spirit There are three admirable Unions the essential union of three persons in the Sacred Trinity These three are one 1 Joh. 5.7 That is one in essence The hypostatical Union of the Divine and Humane natures in the person of Christ Great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 The mystical union which is between Christ and his Church We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones this is a great mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church saith the Apostle Ephes 5.30 and 32. Touching these three unions * Christus habet in se Patrem cum quo est unâ substantia habet assumptum hominem cum quo est una persona habet adhaerentem sibifidelem animam cum quâ est spiritus unus Bern. de Verb. Psal 23. fol. 415. an Ancient hath observed That all three may be seen in Christ he hath a Father I may add and a Spirit with whom he is one substance he hath an humane nature with which he is one person he hath adhering Believers with whom he is one Spirit Unto this observation I shall add another the mystical Union which is the last of the three bears a respect to the two former Two or three things will manifest this First The mystical union depends upon the two former a hint of this we have in the words of our Saviour who speaking of himself as God-man and of giving his flesh for the life of the World saith As the living father hath sent me and I live by the father so he that eateth me even he shall live by me Joh. 6.57 Here are tres viveatis three livers one under another the Father who is fons Trinitatis the fountain of the Trinity lives of himself Christ lives by the Father as he is the Word he hath life from him by the eternal generation as he is man he hath it by the hypostatical union The believer who spiritually eats Christ lives by him Conjunction with the Father is that by which Christ lives conjunction with Christ is that by which the Believer lives were there no essential union there could be no hypostatical one which supposes that the second Person in the Trinity doth assume an humane nature made by all three Incarnation say the Schoolmen is effectivè belonging to the whole Trinity but terminativè it is peculiar to the Son who is the alone term unto which the humane nature is assumed were there no hypostatical union there could be no mystical one which imports that belivers are united unto God-man Were he only God how should we fallen creatures ever have an immediate approach unto him or if we could what use would there be of a Mediator It is through him as Mediator that we have access to the Father Eph. 2.18 The way into the holy of holies lies through the vail of his flesh Were he only man to what purpose should we be united to a meer creature or how should we dare to fix our faith on such an one To trust in a meer man is a curse to worship a meer creature a piece of Idolatry Believers therefore are united to God-man the mystical union depends upon the hypostatical and the hypostatical upon the essential Without a Sacred Trinity there would be no God-man without God-man there would be no fit person for Blievers to be united unto Again There is in the mystical union a shadow or dark resemblance of the two other unions There is a resemblance of the essential union This is hinted in our Saviours Prayer As thou father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Joh. 17.21 From which words St. Hilary concludes De Trinit Lib. 8. That the union between Christ and Believers is not meerly a moral union of will and affections for then our Saviour who is the eternal Word and knew how to speak would have prayed thus Pater sicut nos unum volumus ita illi unum velint unum per concordiam simus omnes Father as we will one and the same thing so let them also do and let us all be one by concord But instead thereof our Saviour prays thus As thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us The particle as notes some kind of similitude the words thou father art in me and I in thee note out the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or mutual inexistence of the Father and Son a resemblance of which we have in the mystical union which in Scripture is expressed by the mutual inexistence of Christ and Believers he is in them and they in him he dwells in them and they in him Very remarkable are the words of our Saviour I am in the father and you in me and I in you Joh. 14.20 We have here in one Text mentioned the high mystery of the Sacred Trinity and the mystical union together First The inexistence of the Son in the Father and which is implied and to be understood of the Father in the Son is signified and then immediately follows the mutual inexistence of Christ and Believers which shews that in this latter there is a resemblance of the former Again there is in the mystical union a resemblance of the hypostatical one this I gather from the likeness of those Scripture-phrases which express both the unions Christ was conceived of the Holy Ghost
this Believers are united to him who is God-man In some of them there is union without vital influence in this there is union with it in others of them there is an influence but it is only of a natural life and that only while a local conjunction between the things united is maintained But in this there is an influence of a spiritual and Divine life and this notwithstanding that the local distance between Christ and Believers be as vast as it is between Heaven and Earth In them there is nothing but plain Law or Love or Art or Nature but in this there is a secret a mystery of grace an admirable conjunction of Believers to Christ and by him to the Father I conclude with the excellent words of Zanchy De tribus Elok lib. 4. fol. 180. Hoc est mirabile hujusce unitatis mysterium quae constat Deo Patre Christo Mediatore Ecclesiâ vinculo Spiritûs Sancti cum Christo cum Patre conjuncta This is the admirable mystery of this Union which is made up of God the Father Christ the Mediator and the Church by the bond of the holy Spirit with Christ and with the Father conjoined These two things being laid down which are to be observed in all the after discourse touching these resemblances I proceed to consider the resemblances in particular in which much profitable matter will offer it self to us First The Union between Christ and Believers is set forth by that which is between a King and his Subject In government the humane instinct is gratified in society and a multitude is reduced to unity a King and his Subjects become politically one he protects them they are under his shadow he governs them they are in subjection to him protection as the Lawyers speak draws subjection and subjection draws protection His royal care over them is returned in their reverence towards him and their reverence towards him falls down upon themselves in the benefits of government Ar. Eth. lib. 5. c. 6. he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the keeper of right for them and they render him the honour due to his greatness Thus they are knit together for that common good which is the great center of Government In like manner Christ is King and Believers are his Subjects His Kingdom as it imports power is over all creatures but as it imports union it is only over Believers Tyrants saith the Philosopher rule over men against their wills but Kings rule over the willing The Emperor Justinus plainly told the great oppressors Spondan Ann. Anno. 568. Ego contumacibus imperare nolo I will not rule over the disobedient Our Lord Christ doth not own rebellious sinners while such as Subjects but look upon them as enemies Believers only are his Subjects he is their great Protector they are under the wings of his grace and power he rules and governs them they are obedient to him his care is over them their obedience is towards him he maintains their right they render him the honour of his government Thus they are knit together to promote the glory of Christ and the salvation of Believers It 's true in this resemblance the meer Analogy proves no more than a political Union but the excellency of that union which is between the spiritual King and Believers shews forth a mystery For the explaining of this I shall lay down several particulars 1st The more worthy and near in blood the persons united in government are the more excellent is the union David was an excellent one worth Ten thousand others those over whom he reigned were Gods own peculiar people the nearness was such that the people told him Behold we are thy bone and thy flesh 2 Sam. 5.1 In these circumstances the union between David and his people could not but be a very excellent one much more excellent is that between Christ and his Subjects what an one is He how admirably accomplished for government he is higher than the Kings of the earth it was not a little material oyl but the Holy Ghost which anointed him to his office His wisdom is incomparable no secret is hid from his eyes Solomon's large heart was but a little thing to the vast treasures of wisdom and knowledg in him His Wisdom is as much above a meer mans as the Fathers bosom from whence he came is above mans heart His power is exceeding great he can do every thing earthly Princes set upon their thrones here below he sits above at the right hand of Power Ahasuerus had power over an Hundred and seven and twenty Provinces but he hath all the power in Heaven and Earth None is so able to save to the uttermost as he his goodness and mercy are beyond parallel His Divine bowels were up very early in a design of grace towards fallen man his humane compassions far transcend all those in the creature Nay further he himself would suffer being tempted that he might have an experimental fitness to succour the tempted His clemency is such that he is very tender over those infirm ones who are as the bruised reed and have grace in desire only His justice is very illustrious he reigns in righteousness he doth nothing but what is right truth may as soon lie and rectitude it self decline as there can be any blot or jeofail in his goverment Such a King is Christ And what are his Subjects They are no common people but excellent ones their pure heart hath a kind of Oracle in it the secret of the Lord is with them they are wise in the greatest concernments strong in the hardest duties their hearts are melted in acts of love towards God and man their hands are ever doing that which is just and right and the reason of all is because some of the holy unction which anointed their Lord falls down upon them and puts a glory on them Such are the Subjects And what is the nearness between the King and them On the one hand he though the Son of God came down from Heaven and became partaker of flesh and blood with them on the the other they though naturally but the sons of fallen Adam became through grace the seed of Christ himself his blood runs in their consciences his Divine Spirit breathes in them his holy image appears in their hearts and lives the Subjects are all Sons and resemble their Governor Here is not a single relation but one relation upon another this is the nearness The result is this he being so incomparable a King they being such excellent Subjects the nearness between them being so great the union must needs be a very choice one Who would now live under the power of sin and not much rather join himself to the blessed kingdom A better Ruler or Society then there cannot be found 2dly The more right the Laws and Administrations of a Kingdom are the better is the Union There are two sorts of Laws there are Laws of
constitution according to which a King is made if he be in by election or succession he stands upon some positive Law or consent which amounts to a Law if he be in by conquest in a just War he stands upon the Law of Nature which saith that the captive must be subject to the victor There are also Laws of Administration according to which a King is to Govern his Subjects without the first Laws there can be no King rightly constituted to have Subjects united to him a people may be under a Tyrant but it is not united to him Without the second Laws there will be no rule of government no right administration of things in a Kingdom According to this distinction I shall lay down two things touching the Mediatory Kingdom of Christ The one is this The Law of constitution must needs be very righteous as being no less than the Decree and Ordinance of God himself he was made a King immediately by God his Kingdom was not as ordinary ones in part are an human creature but a pure Theocracy altogether of Divine Ordination I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion saith God of Christ Psal 2.6 I have done it not man The Decree of Heaven was for it as the next verse tells us The Lord said unto my Lord that is the Father said to Christ sit thou at my right hand Psal 110.1 Dicere hîc est discernere To say here is to decree That Christ should sit in Royal state and Majesty he is a King meerly of Divine Ordination yet he enters upon his Kingdom by Conquest in the Belial heart of fallen man nothing is in a fit posture to receive this holy King The carnal mind is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be strong holds must be cast down thoughts must be captivated and wills must be overcome or else Christ cannot have a Kingdom Therefore he takes up his spiritual arms goes forth in the power of his spirit and word and subdues the minds and hearts of men to himself so he enters by conquest and that in a very just nay merciful war it being to rescue poor captive creatures and reduce them back again to their Creator but though he come in by conquest yet there is consensus populi his people are willing they own him as their King subject to his Scepter and give up themselves to his government Thus he hath a Title to his kingdom as good as a Divine ordination a just conquest and a free consent can make it The other is this the Law of Administration is righteous and gracious righteous in that which he commands his subjects to do gracious in that which he promises to do for them His Commands which call for faith humility holiness rightiousness meekness mercy temperance patience are as right as any thing can be they are the counterpanes of Gods heart the copies of that Divine Will which is Rectitude it self they perfect the humane nature and being practically embraced they set man in a true posture towards God himself and his fellow creatures His Promises in which he engages himself that the Believer shall be justified that the poor in spirit shall have the kingdom that the pure in heart shall see God that the righteous shall be compassed with Divine favour that the meek shall be beautified with salvation that the merciful shall obtain mercy that all his obedient subjects shall enter into Heaven and enjoy the blessed God there are exceeding gracious and true not one of them shall fail he hath will and power enough to make them all good this is the Administration The sum of all is Christ being a King by Divine Ordination entring by just conquest obtaining a free consent and administring his kingdom so admirably that nothing is in his government but meer rectitude and grace the union between him and his subjects bound together by such right and good Laws must needs be very excellent Here can be no reason to complain no colour of occasion to break off from such a King or to say What portion have we in David Here are no scruples about the Governors Title no unjust Laws to be repealed no grievous burdens to be removed no heavy yokes to be taken off not the least shadow of a male-administration to be found nothing is here to be seen but rectitude and goodness which must needs make the union very firm and stable 3dly The more intimate the union is and the more internal the bonds of it are the more excellent is the union Between an earthly King and his Subjects the bonds are external there are outward thrones and scepters outward pieces of state and majesty outward laws and proclamations the King looking on his Subjects may see the outward man but no further He may exact an outward conformity but cannot touch or move their hearts there is not one spirit between him and them but several which may easily run apart and in different ways But between Christ and his Subjects the bonds are internal his kingdom comes not with observation or outward splendor but in inward power and efficacy his Kingdom is within his Throne is in the heart his Laws are not only without in the Letter but inwardly ingraven in the hearts of his Subjects they are the very Epistles of Christ written not with ink but with the spirit of the living God not in tables of stone but in the fleshly tables of the heart 2 Cor. 3.3 Besides the outward literal Edition of the Law there is an inward spiritual one which answers thereunto this spiritual King can not only look into the hearts of his Subjects but touch and move them unto obedience he can so draw as to make them run after him it is his Royal Prerogative to rule wills and hearts his Subjects have the mind of their Lord nay the same holy Spirit which is in him is in them also to inspire a measure of holiness and obedience into them O! what a union is here and how full of mystery No King can rule after this sort neither could he himself unless he were God do so In a word his Kingdom and Laws being within his Subjects having the same mind and spirit with himself the union must needs be very intimate and excellent 4thly The greater the benefits of government are the more secure is the union a King resembling God in the doing of good acting like one given to the kingdom for a common blessing his vigilancy securing the repose of his Subjects his care procuring their quiet his study being for their good as his own his Subjects resting under his shadow and enjoying the sweet ends of a well-ordered Government the union in such a case must needs be very much confirmed I shall instance but in two benefits of Government Protection and Rewards As for Protection it is incomparable in the Kingdom of Christ no earthly Kings have such a foresight and care to protect as
as our excellent English Annotator speaks Locutio verbi infusio doni to call her fair is to make her so her beauty was not a jewel of nature but a love-token given from him Therefore in the next verse the Church breaks out Behold thou art fair my beloved she gives back all to him her beauty was but the reflection of his she shines not of her self but radiis mariti with the beams of her Husband and to him may say I am Japha because thou art Japhe I am fair because thou art so Indeed he espoused her upon a design of grace to change her Ethiopian skin and put a Divine beauty upon her Thus his consent was meerly gratuitous The other is this The Believers consent is purely supernatural Wives consent to their Husbands out of principles of nature but Believers consent to Christ out of principles of grace They are born not of blood of humane seed not of the will of the flesh of carnal concupiscence not of the will of man of the heroical acts of moral virtue but of God Joh. 1.13 His Holy Word is the Seed his Divine Love the Mover he himself the Generator of them their faith which is their consent is not of themselves but the gift of God Eph. 2.8 No ordinary wooing can produce their consent Christ doth not as common Suitors do woo outwardly only but he speaks to the heart and that not meerly as Shechem did to Dinah in kind words but as God did to Lydia in the inward operation of his spirit which opens the heart and from thence draws out a consent In the fall of man all the faculties fell and among the rest the believing faculty fell also and as it lies in the ruines it cannot without the elevations of supernatural grace lift up it self and give a consent to Christ he is a supernatural object and a consent to him must be from a supernatural principle no less than an heavenly suada can draw it out towards him Again In Marriage Man and Wife do by consent pass over themselves each to other hence the Apostle tells us The wife hath not power of her own body but the husband the husband hath not power of his own body but the wife 1 Cor. 7.4 There is a communion of bodies between them in re sociali no one hath a plenary right each one hath a right in the other In like manner in the spiritual marriage Christ and Believers do by consent pass over themselves each to other Hence the Church saith My beloved is mine and I am his Cant. 2.16 each one of them hath a communion and propriety in the other Christ gives himself to Believers his atoning blood is his own yet they may wash in it his resurrection is his own yet are they raised up and made to sit together in heavenly places in him his intercession is his own in the glory and excellency of it yet is it theirs for their singular use and benefit Again Believers give themselves to Christ their minds are devoted to his holy light their wills are resigned to his sacred will their pious posture tells the world That they are not their own but his to give him all is their duty to keep back the least part from him is no less than sacriledg because all is consecrated to him Thus in both the Marriages there is a giving of themselves each to other yet still there is an excellency on the spiritual side Man and Wife make over themselves mutually so as to become one flesh but Christ and Believers make over themselves mutually so as to become one spirit It is the Apostles observation He that is joined to an harlot is one body for two saith he shall be one flesh But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 6.16 17. A communion of bodies is a great thing but what is it to that union which is between Christ and his Church in which there is one and the same spirit in both Man and Wife however united in love have two different souls but in Christ and Believers there is but one spirit I know some Divines interpret this one spirit to be only this That there is one temper in Christ and Believers but this though a very great truth is not the all or full Emphasis of the Text. When the Scripture tells us that the mind of Christ is in us it may be fairly interpreted of one temper but when it tells us of one spirit it must needs import something more high and mysterious To make this appear the circumstances of the Text must be considered the Apostle in this place dehorts them from fornication not only because it is a sin against our own bodies vers 18. but from three other reasons First our bodies are the members of Christ and shall we make them the members of an Harlot vers 15. Then we are joined and one spirit with Christ and shall we be joined and one flesh with an Harlot vers 16 and 17 Lastly our bodies are the Temples of the Holy Ghost and shall we profane that Temple by finning against it vers 18 and 19 Here it is to be noted That these three Reasons are fundamentally but this one viz. That we have the Spirit of Christ in us this Spirit makes us Members this Spirit being in us we are one Spirit with Christ this Spirit hath a Temple in us therefore upon the account of this Spirit we should fly fornication It is also to be noted that these Reasons which are fundamentally one do depend upon one another the first is confirmed by the second and the second is explained by the third that we are members of Christ is clearly confirmed in that we are one spirit with him and that we are one spirit with him is excellently explained in that we are the Temples of the Spirit all three Reasons hang together and make one great argument against Fornication This being the scope and order of the place the phrase one spirit must be construed in such a way as may sute to the antecedents and consequents as to the antecedents it must import that spirit which makes us members of Christ as to the consequents it must import that spirit which hath a temple in us either way it must needs be meant of the holy Spirit It is that which makes us members of Christ If any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Non potest vivere corpus Christi nisi de Spiritu Christi In Joh. Tract 26. saith St. Austin The Body of Christ cannot live but by the Spirit of Christ That is no member which hath not the same spirit with the head Also it is that which hath a Temple in us Deus Templum habet De spir sancto l. 3. c. 13. creatura Templum non habet saith St. Ambrose God only hath a Temple the creature hath none Si Deus Spiritus Sanctus non esset
Jewels and attire If Adam had a world Eve did participate with him Thus it is in the earthly marriage much more is it so in the spiritual one When such an one as Christ is joined to Believers what and how great must the communications be The earthly Husband according to his state and degree doth communicate to his Wife what then doth Christ who hath a Deity and unfearchable riches in him communicate to those who are in conjunction with him Want they cannot while he hath a Deity or be without a supply till his riches be exhausted They go no longer in the rags of their own unworthiness but are covered with the robe of his pure righteousness guilt can no longer abide on them because they are sprinkled with his aroning blood while he hath an Holy Spirit they cannot want the Jewels and ornaments of Grace their love meekness obedience patience shew that he hath put some of his beauty upon them his wine-cellar of Scriptures and Ordinances stands open to them that they may taste and drink of Divine Consolations at last they shall enter into the palace of Heaven and there partake of his glory No Husband but himself can so communicate The other is this That in Marriage there is a due propagation of mankind individuals dye but mankind is preserved generation supplies what death devours Also in the spiritual marriage there is a double propagation one of Believers another of good works First in the Church there is a propagation of Believers such an one as Christ could not but have a seed his name was to be continued as long as the Sun Psal 72.17 In the original it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his name shall be sonned or childed in a succession of Believers The Church at first was in a Believer or two but being Christs Spouse she becomes Mother of thousands a spiritual Eve to bring forth Sons unto God In the power of the Word and Spirit which are as the seed and formative virtue in this heavenly generation multitudes of Believers come forth as the dew from the womb of the morning not in the Jewish Church only but in the Gentile world also the wilderness buds and blossoms the barren sing for joy the tent is enlarged the curtains are stretched forth the Church breaks out on the right hand and on the left in an admirable fertility this is the fruit of this Divine Marriage between Christ and his Church Again In particular Believers there is a propagation of good works as we are in conjunction with Adam we are impotent and barren but as soon as we are in conjunction with Christ we have power and holy fruits To open this it will be worth while to consider the words of the Apostle Ye are become dead to the law by the body of Christ that ye should be married to another to him who is raised from the dead that we should bring forth fruit unto God For when we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death But now we are delivered from the law that being dead wherein we were held that we should serve in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter Rom. 7.4 5 6. Here we have two sorts of persons the unregenerate who are in the flesh of corrupt nature and the regenerate who have a new spirit or principle in them Two sorts of Marriage one unto the Law in the unregenerate and another unto Christ in the regenerate Two sorts of fruit one unto death in sinful actions another unto God in good works The unregenerate are married to the Law they are under the curse of it as sinners they have but the naked letter of it which commands but helps not Nay their corruption is accidentally irritated by it their inward malignity swells and rises against the holy commands which stand in Scripture as so many dams and bars to their impetuous lusts Hence they bring forth nothing but fruit unto death what they seem to do in Gods service they do only in the oldness of the letter in the external work without a spirit or principle for it The regenerate are dead to the Law and married to Christ they are not under the curse of the Law but pardoned in Christ they have not the meer outward letter only but the quickning spirit they are not irritated by the command but delight in it as in their joy and treasure Hence they bring forth fruit unto God they serve him in newness of spirit in the suavity of internal holy principles their good works are not brought forth in bondage and servility but by a free spirit and in the easiness of the new creature We see here that the progeny of good works issues not out of nature or the letter of the Law but out of a conjunction and spiritual marriage with Christ who by his Holy Spirit quickens Believers to bear holy fruits The conjugal union in the earthly pattern not being enough the Holy Ghost goes on to set forth the mystical union by that which is between the foundation and the building Christ in Scripture is called a foundation upon a double account he is the foundation of Doctrine Other foundation can no man lay than that is laid which is Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 Here the Apostle speaks of a foundation of Doctrine the consequent words make this appear the gold silver and precious stones are pure and solid Doctrines the wood hay and stubble are vain and frivolous ones both are called mans work which the fire shall try He is also the foundation of Believers They are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner stone Ephes 2.20 It 's true the Apostles and Prophets are here called a foundation but they are only a doctrinal foundation Christ is the personal one they are a foundation metonymically only Christ is so properly upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets is no other than upon Christ whom they in their Preaching laid as the foundation of the Church The Foundation and the Corner-stone are both one and the same Christ as a Foundation he bears up and sustains the Church as a Corner-stone he joins and holds together the two walls of it made up of Jews and Gentiles In this resemblance three or four things may be considered The Foundation and the Building are both framed by Art First the pattern is in the mind of the Builder and then the thing is set up In the Spiritual Foundation and Building the Art was not humane but Divine the Idea of them was not in mans mind but in Gods man falling off from his bottom of primitive integrity could not have a foundation in himself God in infinite wisdom contrived that he might have one in another the way was admirable the eternal Word was made flesh two natures met in one person an humane in
words of the Reverend Vsher Serm befor the Commons 1620. The union between Christ and believers is altogether spiritual and supernatural no Physical or Mathematical continuity or contiguity is any ways requisite thereunto it is sufficient for the making of this union that Christ and we be knit together by those spiritual ligatures the quickning spirit and a lively faith Again no distance of time can do it In all the earthly patterns the united are together in time but the ancient Saints under the Old Testament who were in time before the Incarnation of our Saviour were yet united to him saved they were and by whom but by him who is the only Saviour of the world Salvation is not in any other his name is the only name under heaven for that end A Mediator they had and who could that be but the one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Jesus no other but he could be really such A pardon they had and not without shedding of blood the blood of bulls and goats could not take away sin it was only the blood of Christ could do it At the last day they shall be raised up to life and that because they are members of Christ As in Adam all die so in Christ shall all be made alive 1 Cor. 15.22 In these words both the All 's respect members only the last All refers only to Christs members this is very evident Christ is opposed to Adam in Adam members only die in Christ members only are made alive In the next verse it is said That Christ rose as the first fruits and afterwards they that are Christs that is the members of Christ who are the sanctified lump Wicked men rise again by virtue of the threatning of eternal death but all the Saints ancient or latter rise as parts and members of Christ In the Mystical union two things may be noted the foundation of it and the bonds The foundation is the satisfactory and meritorious Passion of Christ out of which springs the Church which is his body the bonds are faith and the holy Spirit Faith ascends up to him the holy Spirit comes down upon believers If we apply these things to the ancient Saints it will appear that they were united to Christ his Death which is the foundation was for them He died as the Scripture tells us for all for every man He gave himself for the world the whole world Which phrases must needs take in those under the Old Testament as well as those under the New and which is most express he is a Mediator for the redemption of transgressions under the first Testament Heb. 9.15 The Ancients were not saved by types and shadows but by Christ Their Moral guilt was not done away by the blood of brutes but by his only sacrifice which though offered up but once in the end of the world was in virtue all one as if he had been slain from the beginning of time Thus the foundation did reach unto them Neither were the bonds of union wanting they had faith in Christ the first promise of the Messiah Gen. 3.15 did point out his humane nature in the seed of the Woman his sufferings therein in the bruise of the heel his victory over Satan in the breaking of the head there was much of Christ in that first Gospel I doubt not but Adam had his eyes opened to see him there Abel by faith offered up a Sacrifice to God Heb. 11.4 that is by a faith proper to a sacrifice such as did look through it to the great Sacrifice of the Messiah Abraham is a great pattern of believing even to us who live under the Gospel His faith and ours have not variant objects or centers but both are set upon one and the same Christ He saw Christ a coming at a very great distance we see him come in the flesh Venturus vexit De Vtilit Panit. diversa verba sunt sed idem Christus to come and come are two different words but it is the same Christ saith St. Austin It is the same faith for substance in both the Fathers in Moses's time did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink for they drank of that spiritual rock that followed them and that rock was Christ 1 Cor. 10.3 4. The unbelievers did look only at the figure the Manna and the Rock but the believers did by faith feed upon Christ Erant ibi saith St. Austin qui quod manducabant De Vtilit Panit. intelligebant erant ibi quibus plus Christus in corde quàm Manna in ore sapiebat there were there those who understood what they eat there were those who did more relish Christ in the heart than Manna in the mouth Thus the Ancients had faith in Christ and which ever accompanies it they had the holy Spirit also What were Moses's Meekness David's Zeal Abraham's Obedience Job's Patience but the fruits of the holy Spirit communicated from Christ the head He is void of the holy Spirit who denies it to be there where such eminent graces are Gods ancient people had the good Spirit to instruct them Neh. 9.20 David prays Take not thy holy Spirit from me Psal 51.11 The holy Spirit was communicated under the Old Testament These things make it appear that the Ancients were united unto Christ But possibly it may be objected The mystical union is to Christ God-man in the time of those Ancients he was not man they therefore were not united unto him union cannot be to a non-entity De Ver Relig. l. 4. c. 3. a thing that is not quis non videt in eum qui non est credi minimè posse who seeth not that a man cannot believe in him who is not So Volkelius The like may be said of union a man cannot be united to him who is not In answer to this objection I shall offer two or three things Were that of the Socinians true That Christ was not in being till he was conceived of the Virgin this objection might be something but before the Incarnation he was a Divine person after it he was the very same person in our assumed flesh so the union of the Ancients was not to a non-entity or to one not in being Christs humane nature though not in actual being in those times was yet present in such sort that the Ancients were capable of being united to him it was present with their Faith though it had not an absolute existence as a thing put forth out of its causes yet it had a relative existence in the promise so as to be an object of their Faith which being the hypostasis or subsistence of things hoped for could not but presentiate the Messiah to them he being one of the prime things they looked for and upon that account called the hope of Israel Acts 28.20 It was also present with God in his Decree as sure to be as the eternal Rolls
Believer in this posture is sure to hear of him he shall be more and more led into holy Truths his ear is opened and his mind in a readiness for further instruction The Spirit will make deeper impressions and seal divine Truths upon his heart The rich Mines of Precepts and Promises shall lye more open before his eyes Again Christ is a great King higher than the Kings of the Earth he was anointed with the Holy Ghost he hath all the power in Heaven and Earth his Laws are all rectitude and grace his Throne must be set up in the hearts and spirits of men Unto this Faith answers by that obediential temper which is in it It owns his Soveraignty it kisses his Scepter it chuses him as a Lord ●t loves to live in his Dominions if he come forth in his Royal Command it opens the everlasting doors that he may reign within This is a fit posture it is called receiving Christ Jesus the Lord Col. 2.6 Christ will own such as his Subjects he will more and more lift up his Throne in their hearts he will let them see more of his power and glory he will make them taste the fruits of his Government in protection and excellent rewards This is the second step of union between Christ and Believers There is that in Faith which answers to all his Offices there is satisfaction in him and recumbency in them instruction in him and docibleness in them Royalty in him and obedientialness in them 3ly There is by faith a right unto Christ God did not only send his Son in the flesh to satisfie and merit for us but he hath let down from Heaven a Charter of Promises that we might see upon what terms we may have a title to Christ By that Charter sealed with his blood the believer who also seals to it by faith hath a clear right unto him My beloved is mine saith the Church Cant. 2.16 Believers have a right to claim him as their own though he be an infinite person one who is a center of Perfections a treasury of merits having in himself enough to satisfie the heart of God and supply the wants of men yet may they claim him as their own His blood is theirs it is the blood of their Sponsor and Head it was shed on purpose to justifie them as to the Law to cleanse away their sins His Spirit is theirs it is upon him as an Head and Trustee accordingly it is to be communicated to them it is to flow in their hearts in rivers of living graces They have also a right to become the sons of God It 's true they are not as he is natural Sons but they are adopted ones In their adoptive Sonship there is as Aquinas observes a shadow of the Eternal One. He is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sum. 3. part q. 23. Ar. 2. or brightness of his Father and in them there is a splendor of grace resembling God in a measure at last they shall as sons enter into his joy and sit down with him in his Throne and there not only behold his glory but have a share in the blessed region and all this is made good by the Gospel one jot or tittle of which can no more fail than God can forfeit his truth and faithfulness This is another step there is by faith a true right unto Christ 4thly There is by faith more than a meer right to Christ there is an intimate union with him believers are built upon him as a foundation inserted into him as a Vine incorporated with him as an Head To understand which of a meer right is utterly to evacuate these Metaphors which were planted in Scripture on purpose to signifie a very near union with him It is said in Scripture That we are in him and he is in us We dwell in him and he dwells in us We abide in him and he abides in us To interpret these phrases of a meer right as if all the meaning were but this We have a right to him and he hath a right to us is to dispirit those expressions which do as Emphatically speak a very near union as any words can possibly do No man ever used such words to express a right no man can use higher to express an union In those phrases therefore we have an intimate union set forth unto us so also we have in that of the Apostle We are made partakers of Christ Heb. 3.14 Not meerly of his benefits but of himself When the same Apostle would set forth the Hypostatical union of our nature to Christ he saith That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he did partake of our flesh and blood Heb. 2.14 When in this place he would set forth the Mystical union of believers to him he saith That we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 partakers of him we do in a sort possess him we partake of him as members do of their head His satisfaction reaches down to us to make us stand before God his Spirit is communicated to us to make us a fit Temple for himself By faith we come to be in intimate union with him and in a spiritual manner possessed of him Thus much touching Faith as a bond of union with Christ The other bond is the holy Spirit The Scripture speaks of it negatively and positively Negatively If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 The Spirit of Christ is that which just before is called the Spirit of God which quickens our mortal bodies ver 11. which leads the sons of God ver 14. which makes them cry Abba Father ver 15. which bears witness with their spirit ver 16. He that hath not this Spirit in such measure as is necessary to Salvation he is none of Christs he is not united to him as a member none of his members are void of the Spirit Positively He that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he is in us because he hath given us of his spirit 1 Joh. 4.13 The same holy Spirit which is upon Christ the Head falls down upon believers as members of him though Christ an infinite person assumed an humane nature though his humane nature was in the same person with his Divine yet which is admirable to consider the holy Spirit had a special hand in uniting the humane nature to his person and in sanctifying it the holy Spirit came upon the Virgin Luk. 1.35 The holy Spirit descended like a Dove and lighted upon him Mat. 3.16 His Divine Nature was alsufficient and near enough to the humane yet was he anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Act. 10.38 The sanctifying of his humane nature is in a peculiar manner attributed to the holy Spirit The reason I take it is this God in his wise counsel would have it to be so that the same Spirit which united the two Natures in the Person of Christ
the great Samplar of Holiness nay they are drawn by him by the finger of his own Spirit Again These Graces are tokens of the divine Presence and so import the Inhabitation of God in us these are tokens of the divine Presence When nature exceeds it self and rises above its own level as the Sea did when the waters were as a Wall to Israel on both hands it is a sure sign that God is there When poor lapsed men are lifted up above their natural self and elevated into a divine Life as it always is when the holy Graces are wrought in them it is a sure sign that God is there of a truth Humane nature cannot of it self ascend into the sphere of Grace only a supernatural power can do such a thing These Graces are such tokens of Presence that where-ever they are there God doth inhabit In the old Temple there were divers tokens of Presence such as the Vrim and Thummim the Ark with the Tables in it the Lamps the fire from Heaven and the Holy of Holies were Hence it is said that God did dwell in it but in Believers there are better tokens of Presence than those if we look to the intrinsecal value of things the breast-plate of Faith and Love is before the Vrim and Thummim the Law in the heart exceeds the Tables in the Ark an illuminated mind is more excellent than outward Lamps an holy ardor of affections is more valuable than the fire from Heaven a pure heart is above any outward Oracle those tokens in the Temple were material things a-kin in the matter of them to this lower world the Sanctuary it self was but a worldly Sanctuary but these Graces are spiritual things their birth are as high as Heaven Believers in whom they are are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a spiritual house for God to dwell in those were typical tokens made such by meer institution without which they would be but as other parts of matter but these are real tokens in their own nature bearing the very image and resemblance of God himself where these are there God dwells in an eminent manner the Shechinah or habitation of God in the Saints is a middle thing between the hypostatical dwelling of the Godhead in Christ and the typical dwelling of it in the Temple it is much higher than all types and shadows and in excellency next unto God in the flesh The next Operation of the Spirit in Believers is this He actuates their holy Graces he moves the new Creature by divine Influences there is an effectual working in every part of it Love in the Spirit as it is said Col. 1.8 and other Graces in the Spirit all of them go forth in the power of that Spirit which formed them at first As touching this Operation the Spirit may be considered either as the principle and first mover that actuates these Graces and this speaks union with Christ or else as the terminus or ultimate object of these Graces actuated and this speaks the Inhabitation of God in us The Spirit is the principle or first mover that actuates these Graces and this speaks union with Christ the Spirit which is upon him falls down upon believers to actuate the Graces in them Believers are all one body and as one body they have one spirit in them from Christ the Head they are all one new man in Christ Eph. 2.15 Though the Apostle there speak of Jews and Gentiles yet he saith not one people but which is more emphatical one new man in Christ they are one new man because as one man they are acted by one spirit they are one new man in Christ because the Holy Spirit which is upon him is that one Spirit which acts them the Sons of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are acted and moved by the Spirit Rom. 8.14 That Spirit which anointed the humane nature of Christ the natural Son falls down upon the adopted ones to act and move them Actuation by one spirit proves that they are in intimate union with him that they are indeed mystical parts and members of him who acts and moves them by his own Spirit This may be illustrated by that in the first Chapter of Ezekiel when the wheels went as the living creatures did and were lifted up as they were it was plain that there were some invisible bands between them the spirit of the living creature was in the wheels vers 21. In like manner when believers shew forth the virtues of Christ and walk as he walked it is very plain that they are in near conjunction with him the Spirit doth act them in ways of conformity to him who as an Head is joyned unto them That phrase of walking in Christ Col. 2.6 points out a walking not meerly after his pattern and command but in his power and spirit as becomes those who have received him and are united to him Again The Spirit is the terminus or ultimate object of these graces actuated and this speaks the Inhabitation of God in us As these Graces come from God as the fountain so they terminate in him as the ultimate object Holy fear terminates in his Majesty and Greatness Faith terminates in his Truth and Mercy Love terminates in his Goodness and Excellency Every Grace moves to him as its great Center Where these Graces are actuated there an Honour an inward Worship is done to him where that is in truth there he hath a Temple in the heart and objectively dwells there as in an holy place Hence Aquinas saith that God is in the Saints sicut cognitum in cognoscente amatum in amante 1. Pars q. 43. Art 3. as an object known is in the knower and an object loved is in the lover by knowledg and love a man attingit ad ipsum Deum reaches to God himself his heart becomes a Sanctuary for the Holy One. This is that inward Temple which the Primitive Christians gloried in Nonne meliùs in nostrâ dedicandus est mente in nostro imo consecrandus est pectore litabilis hostia bonus animus pura mens sinceraconscientia Min. Fel. When Pagans objected against them that they had no Temples no Altars no Sacrifices they made this answer That they had all within in themselves in mental Consecrations in a pure mind and heart What was said of the Temple that may be said of a Pious soul There is Gods Name there he is consecrated and sanctified there he dwells as in a sanctuary or holy place The next Operation of the Spirit in believers is this He preserves believers in their spiritual being he bears up their graces by continual influences that they fail not in the way to Heaven As touching this Operation Believers are preserved either as Members of Christ and this shews union or as Temples of God and this shews Inhabitation Believers are preserved as Members of Christ and this shews union Adam fell Angels fell but Believers are preserved in themselves they are but
this never is or can be though the divine nature be where the humane is not yet the union remains it being made cum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non cum loco with the word not with place the Divine nature being immense cannot possibly by distance be separated from any thing if in the least point it were separated it should cease to be immense or else thus The Divine Nature is not shut up in the limits of the flesh but doth transcendently exceed them and thus the Divine Nature is not so properly out of the flesh as beyond it according to its Infinity it is where the humane is not Thus much touching the Doctrine of the Lutherans in this point But if there is not a corporal presence of the body of Christ in the Eucharist is there no presence at all Are the Sacraments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 naked signs and empty figures of Christ crucified This indeed is charged upon us by the Papists and Lutherans When Calvin saith that the body of Christ is exhibited to us in the Sacrament De Euch. lib. 1. c. 1. Bellarmine cries out that it is but mera ludificatio When Wendilin speaks of the presence of Christs body in the Eucharist Wend. Ex. 103. the Lutherans cry out fucus est dolus est it is a colour a cheat Nevertheless we say that the body and blood of Christ are truly though spiritually present not as contained in the elements but as exhibited to our Faith Thus Reverend Calvin hath it Inst lib. 4. c. 17. s 11. Dico in coenae mysterio per symbola panis vini Christum verè nobis exhiberi in the mystery of the Supper by the Symbols of bread and wine Christ is truly exhibited to us Thus the excellent Vsher Serm before the Commons 1620. Of his precious body and blood we are really made partakers that is in truth and in deed and not in imagination only although in a spiritual and not a corporal manner Thus the Church of England Hom. 1st of the Sacrament In the Supper of the Lord there is no vain ceremony no bare sign no untrue figure of a thing absent but the Table of the Lord the bread and cup of the Lord the memory of Christ the annunciation of his death yea the communion of the body and blood of the Lord in a marvelous incorporation which by the operation of the Holy Ghost the very bond of our conjunction with Christ is through Faith wrought in the Souls of the faithful And again The body of Christ is given Art the 28. taken and eaten in the Supper only after an heavenly and spiritual manner It 's true the Papists and Lutherans make light of this spiritual presence Gregory de Valentiâ calls it merum somnium Calvinisticum a meer Calvinistical dream The Lutherans say that this is not a true presence of Christs body but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imago a spectrum or image In answer to this I shall offer two or three things The Papists and Lutherans who cast off this spiritual presence as a fancy do yet in explaining a corporal presence make the notion too fine to consist with the nature of a body De Euch. Lib. 1. c. 2. Lib. 3. c. 4. Bellarmine will not have the body of Christ in the Eucharist to be visible sensible tangible it exists after the manner of Spirits nay it is present after the manner of God The Lutherans will not have the body of Christ in the Eucharist to be visible palpable local circumscribed with place it exists in a supernatural manner it is present praesentiâ divinâ by a Divine presence Thus they who slight the spiritual presence do make the corporal one so fine that the body of Christ after they have stript it of its essential properties is more like a Spirit than a Body The presence of Christ in the Eucharist is a spiritual one This is clear the presence is such as the faculty is to which the thing is presented the Bread and Wine which are the outward symbols of the Sacrament are presented to our sense the Body and Blood of Christ which are the inward marrow of it are presented to our Faith In the former a corporal presence is necessary in the latter a spiritual one Again The presence is such as the eating is the eating of Christ is spiritual it is as appears in the sixth chapter of St. John from spiritual principles to a spiritual end from the quickening spirit to life eternal the presence therefore must be a spiritual one that it may sute to the eating Further The presence is as the union is the union between Christ and us is spiritual he dwells in us by Faith he lives in us by his Spirit the presence therefore must be a spiritual one that it may agree with the union The Fathers are not for a corporal but a spiritual presence St. Cyprian treating of the Eucharist saith (a) Non tàm corporali quàm spiritali transitione Christo nos uniri de Caenâ That we are united to Christ not by a corporal but spiritual transition St. Ambrose saith (b) In illo Sacramento Christus est quia corpus est Christi non ergò corporalis esca sed spiritalis est De iis qui initiantur cap. 9. In the Sacrament is Christ because it is the Body of Christ it is not therefore corporal food but spiritual St. Athanasius saith of the Body of Christ (c) Corpus meum in cibum dabitur ut spiritualitèr unicûique tribuatur In illud qui dixerit Verbum That it is given for food that it may be spiritually distributed to every one St. Austin saith (d) Habuit Christum Ecclesia secundum praesentiam carnis paucis diebus modò fide tenet Tract in Joh. 50. The Church had Christ according to the presence of flesh a few days now she holds him by faith St. Bernard saith (e) Eadem caro nobis sed spiritualitèr non carnalitèr exhibeatur in fest Mart. That the flesh of Christ is exhibited to us spiritually not carnally Thus the Ancients are not for a corporal presence but a spiritual one This spiritual presence is so great a mystery that reverend Calvin saith Instit lib. 4. c. 17. Nec mens plane cogitando nec linguà explicando par esse potest the mind cannot conceive it the tongue cannot utter it Where mysteries are deep to speak a little is enough I shall therefore only touch on two things The one is this the body of Christ is objectively present to our faith St. Paul tells the Galatians that before their eyes Jesus Christ had been evidently set forth crucified among them his Cross was at Jerusalem his glorious residence in Heaven yet he is before our faith in the Gospel and particularly in the Eucharist in which as in a sacred Crucifix we see him as it were a suffering for us It is here to be
Goodness every thing calls upon them to fall down and adore him who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Fountain and Principle of all things Further They know the right use of blessings they do not take Creature-comforts into their heart which is an holy place for God but bid them stand without and minister to the body they do not rest and center in them but as Pilgrims and Strangers march on to the heavenly Countrey in the fullest affluence of outward things still they cry out Dulcius ex ipso fonte a single God is sweeter than all they look upon them not as fuel to lust but as incentives to holy Love and Obedience they do not as absolute Proprietors ingross all to themselves but as faithful Stewards distribute to others they know they receive outward things not to have and to hold but to communicate Mercies in their hands are as blood in the Veins or water in the Conduit for publick use the goodness of God to them makes them good to others the open hand of the great Donor makes them ashamed to shut their own Also they are happy in times of adversity If a storm of persecution come their happiness is not diminished but increased they never had their Souls in such a posture they never had such appearances of God as at such a time they melt in fresh acts of repentance God draws their pardon afresh and more legible than ever they sigh and cry for the abominations in the Land God sets a mark and a seal of distinction upon them their hearts tremble for the Ark his bowels are moved for them their care is for his interest and great name his care is to make up his Jewels their Faith ascends up and fixes it self upon him his Power Wisdom Goodness Mercy come down and command Salvation for them they cry and wrestle with him in their prayers that that Gospel the glory may not depart away from them he hears them in one measure of grace or other the Gospel it may be shall not depart from the Land at least not from their hearts they are tossed in a Sea of troubles but there is a calm within and an Haven of rest to which every wave gives them a lift near at hand they may look to Heaven and sing as the Martyr Babylas did Return unto thy rest O my soul They are poor weak creatures but the power of Christ rests upon them that divine Power which bore up his humane nature in his Sufferings bears up them in theirs being in the true Immanuel they are sure to have God with them how heavy soever the Cross be his everlasting Arms are under them how bloody soever the Persecutor be his rich Mercies are towards them when great men leave them naked to their Enemies he covers them with his wings when outward comforts depart from them he will never never leave them no more than Christs Divinity did forsake his Humanity the joy of the Holy Ghost is their cordial in the greatest troubles the Love of God shed abroad in their hearts is able to sweeten Prisons and fiery Furnaces to them when they have least of Earth then they have most of Heaven there are some sparkles of glory let down into their hearts they taste some drops of the pure Rivers of pleasure which are above Valeat vita vileart faculltates inquit Julitta Mart. Cent. 4. Magdeb. This makes them able to bid farewel to life and all things here that they may go though through the greatest losses and sufferings to be with Christ Thus much touching the Priviledges of union with Christ It is a notable passage in Antoninus Every thing saith he is designed for some work Beasts and Plants and Sun and Stars 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and what are you for what is your great business It is a shame for a man much more for a Christian not to know the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great work he is to do Our Saviour tells us that it is Faith in himself John 6.29 St. Paul made it his chief business to be found in Christ Phil. 3.9 Sit down O Christian and consider where thy interest lies Is it not thy interest to be delivered from the wrath to come and to enjoy the blessed God in Heaven Do not the pangs in conscience and the sense of a Deity tell thee that it is so To be saved for ever must needs be a great thing and how canst thou be saved but by Christ the only Saviour or whom doth he save but those that are in conjunction with him Is it not thy interest to have such an Advocate as Christ to appear in the Presence of God and to plead for all good things for thee Art thou not at a vast distance from God and are not thy Righteousnesses as a filthy rag before him Sure it must be well for thee to have a Mediator to plead and intercede for thee that thou mayest have the returns of his Blood in Pardons and Graces And how can this be unless thou art joyned to him For whom doth he so intercede but for those that come unto God by him Is it not thy interest to be made a Son of God to have the Holy Spirit living and breathing in thee How desirable must Adoption be to a Child of wrath how much doth thy natural spirit want a better one to new-frame and actuate it and how canst thou be adopted unless thou art united to the natural Son or which way canst thou expect to have the Holy Spirit moving and dwelling in thee unless thou become a Member of Christ Is it not thy interest to have communion with the great God how excellent a thing is it to have thy Services answer to Gods call and his divine Communications answer to thy Services This is a little Heaven here below but without union with Christ it cannot be Is it not thy interest to be happy in every condition how admirable is it to have pure Mercies and comfortable Sufferings to have the love and gracious Presence of God in every estate This is a choice benefit but not to be attained but in and through Christ to have him is to have all things to want him is a misery worse than nothing Union with him therefore is the great work of all How earnest should our pursuits of it be how ardent our prayers for it how constant our endeavours after it how should we gad up and down from Ordinance to Ordinance seeking of Christ breathing after union with him running sweating striving with all our might to be joyned to him This is totum hominis the All of man a matter of that consequence that it infinitely out-ballances all things here below it being the only thing that raises up our nature to its utmost perfection Let us by no means suffer a vanity or a lust or indeed a world to stop us in our pursuit after it without it we cannot be happy with it we cannot
out unto God to increase their faith to help their unbelief they never think their faith strong enough nor their union with Christ near enough They would be more grounded and setled in faith they would be in more close and intimate conjunction with Christ This is the temper of those that are in him Also they have a tender respect to the holy Spirit the other bond of union It is the holy Spirit which first takes hold on them which works faith and other graces in them which is the very life of their souls and graces which makes them breathe in prayer melt in charity move in obedience act like mystical parts of Christ in conformity to him such operations as these endear the Spirit to them They would not grieve him for a world they will not wallow in sensual pleasures that they may be filled with him They put away all bitterness envy malice hatred out of their hearts that the good Spirit may dwell in them They will not suffer worldly things to throng and make a noise in their minds that the Holy One who hath a Temple there may not be disturbed They would do nothing to cause him to withdraw his Presence from them it being more tolerable in their eyes to have their own souls part from their bodies than to have him depart from their souls He cannot depart but their light life grace peace will be all gone It 's a grievous thing to them to quench him The light which he lets in is to them more precious than that of the Sun Moon and Stars The motions which he inspires are to them more dear than the breath in their nostrils The still voice which he utters is to them more sweet than all the charms of the world It is one of their great cares to walk in his light yield to his motions and obey his voice He comes velut imber sanctificationis as a shower of Sanctification from Christ their Head he comes to inlighten strengthen quicken actuate comfort guide them to the blessed region above and how welcome do they make him All the dews and distillations of grace find their hearts open every gale and inspiration meets with a compliance in them When they have most of him they still desire more of him that corruptions may be more subdued Ordinances more filled Truths more illustrated Holiness more imprinted Promises more sealed the love of God more shed abroad in their hearts They never think themselves to have enough of him This is the right temper of those that are in Christ Another mark of this Union is conformity to Christ A wicked man while such cannot be in union with him What communion hath light with darkness What concord hath Christ with Belial Can his blood save those that are void of his Spirit May his Promises comfort those that trample his Laws under their feet No surely such are indeed not members of Christ but of Satan not heirs of Salvation but children of wrath All that are in union with Christ are conformed to his Image Every branch in him answers to the root Every member suits to the Head in Heaven all that are in him do in a measure resemble him In this Conformity three things may be noted The first is this There is a Conformity in graces Beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord we are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 We have here the two bonds of Union faith set forth by a transformative view of Christ and the Spirit called the Spirit of the Lord. And withal we have here mention of a change into the Divine Image which ever accompanies the Union● and is a sure mark of it In this Conformity two things may be observed There is a conformity of their graces in the rise of them to the conception of Christ his humane nature was not brought forth generatione sed jussione not in an ordinary way by knowing a man but in an extrordinary by the power of the Highest and the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost i● conformity to this the new Creature with its graces is not born of blood nor of th● will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1.13 It is not by an humane but by a Divine power It is not fro● mans Spirit but from Gods overshadowin● the heart The same Spirit which forme Christ in the womb forms him in the hear All the graces of believers are produced like their Saviours flesh in a pure supernatural way Again there is a conformity of their graces in the kinds of them to the graces in Christ the same holy Spirit which anointed his humane nature in an Hypostatical union anoints believers in the Mystical one Of his fulness they receive grace for grace Joh. 1.16 Grace in a measure answering to the grace in him Was he meek and lowly they have a measure of those lovely graces Did he burn with zeal for the glory of God some of the same holy fire is in their hearts Was he full of love to God and man their love inflamed by his goes out towards both Was he holy in perfection they are so in sincerity Had he large bowels of mercy and compassion unto men in misery their hearts also melt with the same graces Was he perfectly obedient to his Fathers will they are upright and endeavour to do it their graces answer to those in him this is an infallible sign of union If a man would know whether he be in Christ or not he must look within and ask his own heart what is there hath the holy Spirit been there Is there any thing above nature wrought Are there any pieces of the new Creature or Divine Image What is there of humility zeal or holy love What of purity mercy or obedience See how it is within if a meer vacuum be there if the heart be void of these graces it is a vain presumption to think that he is in union with Christ that there should be humility in the Head and pride in the members zeal and love in the Head and coldness and hatred in the members purity mercy and obedience in the Head and uncleanness cruelty and rebellion in the members is a thing too absurd to be imagined by any considering man That Christ should be an Head and not communicate his Spirit or men should be members and not receive it that he should be Head and not rule his members or they should be members and of a contrary temper to the Head is utterly impossible The beams of the Sun may sooner be dark than the members of Christ be unlike him The streams of a sweet fountain may sooner be bitter than those that are united to the fountain of Grace can want it All that are in him have grace answering to his This is the first Conformity The second is this there is a conformity in sufferings they that are in Christ
into eternity theirchope takes its leave of this world and enters in within the Vail their Love is inflamed and ascends up to him who is Goodness it self their Souls empty out themselves in holy Pantings and Anhelations after him their hearts follow hard after him and can find no Sabbath of rest but in him every part of the new-creature looks up and breathes after its original Heaven from whence their graces descend becomes an attractive Center to them Christ who is at the right hand of Majesty gives such holy touches upon their hearts as lifts them up to himself the main stream of their desires and affections runs out towards the things above They first seek the kingdom of God and his righteousness that other things may be cast in to them This is the temper of those that are in Christ An eminent instance of this we have in the Primitive Christians who talked so much of the Kingdom the Kingdom that the Heathen Emperors were jealous as if the Christians had aimed at a Kingdom here below Indeed it is for Heathens to seek after this world but Christians look for a better their treasures and their hearts too are above it is but meer vanity for a man who sets his heart upon earthly things to say that he is in Christ to espouse him and the world too to be joyned to the Head in Heaven and to Earth here below is a thing utterly impossible all that are in him seek after the things above as his Death morrifies them to Earth so his Resurrection quickens them to Heaven Also there is a Conformity to his Resurrection in newness of life Thus the Apostle Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life Rom 6.4 Those that are in him walk in newness of life they do not walk as they did in the way of sin but as becomes them in a way of Holiness In this new life two things may be noted the Matter of it and the Manner As for the Matter of it those that are in him apply themselves to do that which God commands they do not walk after the flesh but after the spirit they do not walk after their own wills but after Gods like David they are for all the wills of God like Zachary and Elizabeth they walk in all his Commandments they are for both Tables not only for Piety towards God but for Charity and Justice towards men their Piety is not hypocrisie for it hath Justice and Charity joyned with it their Justice and Charity are not meer Morality for they have Piety joyned with them as God hath coupled his Commands together in the Law so they couple them together in Obedience it is a never-failing rule Quicquid propter Deum fit aequalitèr fit True obedience as it disputeth not the command but obeys immediately so neither doth it divide the command but obeys equally those that are in Christ have an universal respect to the holy Precepts the same Holy Spirit which led Christ to a sinless obedience leads them to a sincere one This is the matter of a new life it stands in doing that which God commands As for the Manner of it two things may be observed The one is a pure intention towards the glory of God As God is Alpha so he must be Omega as he is the first Good so he must be the ultimate End in all reason a creature should be referred to its Creator and a finite good should terminate in an infinite one to center in a creature is Idolatry to make God a Medium is Practical blasphemy as if there were something better than he to be enjoyed for it self St. Austin observes it as an essential defect in the Moral Virtues of the Pagans that in them they did not look at the glory of God but at themselves Hence he observes Contr. Jul. lib. 4. c. 3. that the whole body of their virtuous Works for want of a single eye at the great End was full of darkness he pronounces their Virtues to be no true Virtues he cannot be just who is without the Faith of Christ there cannot be true Purity in a Soul fornicating from God nor true Virtue in which God is not served he asserts De Civ Dei lib. 19. c. 25. that Virtutes cum ad seipsas referuntur inflatae superbae sunt they are no longer Virtues but pieces of pride and presumption Neither need we wonder at this the Pagans not being in union with Christ nor having any touches from his Resurrection had but a meer humane Spirit in them which elevates a man no higher than himself Our Saviour charges them with hypocrisie who fast pray and give alms 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be seen of men Matth. 6. They do but set themselves upon the Stage to act a part not to God but to men accordingly they have their reward not from him but from them who seeing only the outside commend them neither need we admire at this these hypocrites believe not they are not in union with him who elevates humane nature above it self therefore all that they do terminates in themselves but those that are in Christ have an higher Spirit than their own his Spirit doth direct them in all their good works to aim at the glory of God there is a pure intention to consecrate all to him their Holiness is to shine as a little beam or spark from the holy One the drops of Mercy in them are to point out the infinite Ocean of Goodness in him their Obedience is to tell the world that he is the Supreme Lord of all their Sincerity is to testifie his Omniscience all that good they do is to serve his interest and shew forth his praise still there is oculus in metam a pure intention at his Glory The Church tells us that all her fruits were laid up for Christ Cant. 7.13 Propter te Domine propter te is the Christians Motto in all his good Works Now if we look into our hearts and see the spring of actions there we may clearly see whether we are in Christ or not Whose Will do we look at Gods or our own What is our Rule and Center Do we aim at the great End Do we indeed desire that God in all things may be glorified If we do so it is a sure sign that we are united to Christ we know the power of his Resurrection and by his Spirit are lifted up above our selves to the great End of all things The other is an humble dependance upon the influences of Christ the Head as in Christ personal the humane nature depends upon the divine so in Christ mystical the members depend upon the head as Christs humane nature acted in union with the divine so Christians do all in union with Christ there is a Spirit flowing from Christ which touches and moves all his members Hence they are said
hath one nature with Believers they are as branches in him and receive juice from him The mystical union set forth by the natural head and the body Those two famous Texts Ephes 4. 16. Col. 2. 19. considered which import more than when Christ is called Head over all things Head of principality and power Head of every man Head of the Heathen or Head of the Church as an Husband Christ as an Head hath the same nature with Believers but exceeds them in order as being first and highest in perfection as being full of Grace in virtue as influencing into the Church The necessity matter and way of this influence Christ an Head above all other heads as making of no member a member and as having virtue enough for a world CHAP. V. The mystical union set forth by that between the food and the body Christ is the true food He strengthens against the cursing Law He strengthens unto all duties He is united to Believers He is food by way of eminency Several conclusions drawn from the resemblances viz. That the Vnion between Christ and Believers is not meerly a political one That it is not meerly a moral one Several reasons to prove the same That this Vnion affords support to Believers That it gives a vital influence to them That it is a very intimate Vnion That it hath a great mystery in it That it is very lasting and durable CHAP. VI. There are two Bonds of this Vnion Faith and the Holy Spirit Faith sees and presentiates Christ to the Believer it puts the soul into an apt posture for him it gives a right to him it intimately unites to him The Spirit it self is in some sort communicated to Believers he is sent to them he is given to them he dwells in them his special operative immediate presence is with them he forms Holy Graces in them he actuates and preserves those Graces he sheds abroad Gods Love in their heart In all these Operations two things are noted viz. somewhat of Vnion with Christ and somewhat of the Inhabitation of the Spirit CHAP. VII The Seals of the mystical Vnion are Baptism and the Lords Supper Baptism is a Seal of Vnion not to all but to Believers Some Infants are in their infancy in union with Christ some come to it afterwards some never attain to it The Lords Supper is a Seal to confirm and exhibit Christ to us The presence of Christ in the Eucharist is not a corporal one The Bread and Wine are not as the Papists say turned into his Body and Blood His Body and Blood are not as the Lutherans say in with and under the Bread and Wine The presence of Christ is spiritual He is present objectively to our Faith and virtually in the communicate Spirit Also the eating of Christ is not oral but spiritual CHAP. VIII The Priviledges of those that are in Christ are great Christs righteousness is imputatively derived upon them to deliver them from wrath to intitle them to life eternal Christ is their Advocate above he pleads for them that they may have pardon the spirit access to God They are adopted in him as sons they have a freedom in holy things a continual indulgence from God an heavenly inheritance They have the Holy Spirit in them it lives breathes moves operates in them They have communion with God their services answer to his call his communications answer to their services They are happy in every condition in prosperity their mercies are pure in adversity they have God with them and admirably appearing to them Our great work is Vnion with Christ CHAP. IX The Marks of Vnion considered In general the marks are internal no meer outward thing is a mark the marks are cordial no meer notion is a mark the marks are supernatural no meer moral virtue is a mark In particular The first mark is poverty of Spirit the second is an high estimation of Christ the third is a tender respect to the Bonds of Vnion the Spirit and Faith the fourth is a conformity to Christ a conformity to him in Graces in the rise of them and in the kinds a conformity to him in Sufferings in the mortification of Sin and in bearing of the Cross a conformity to him in his resurrection in heavenliness of mind and newness of life in matter and manner The conclusion in two words of advice one to those that are not in union with him the other to those that are in union with him ERRATA PAge 8. l. 5. read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 9. l. 4. r. arcanum p. 10. l. 20. r. viventes p. 48. in Marg. r. pignus p. 70. in Marg. r. vinea p. 72. l. 17. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 75. l. 16. r. Insititious p. 78. in Marg. r. palmitibus Ibid. r. moventem in se habere Christum movere in Christo Ibid. r. Araus p. 95. l. 15. r. secundum p. 110. l. 26. r. niti p. 112. l. 19. r. Capernaitical p. 121. l. 20. r. forinsecus p. 123. l. 12. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 146. l. 5. r. venit p. 168. l. 16. put a at self and dele at waiting p. 176. l. 18. Marg. r. unum p. 184. l. 10. r. nisi Christus in Corde OR The Mystical Union between Christ and Believers considered CHAP. I. Millions in the Church miscarry for want of Vnion with Christ This is cleared from the two Covenants of Works and Grace from the two heads Adam and Christ from the two ways and periods of mankind Two Vnions with Christ one in appearance another in truth this latter is a mystery it carries a respect to the Vnion of the Sacred persons in Trinity and to the hypostatical Vnion of two natures in Christ it depends on them it resembles them it is that the hypostatical Vnion aims at it is not to be measured by human Reason but by Scripture GREAT preparations are made in the Gospel for the salvation of men there God proclaims himself in rich titles of grace and mercy Christ is set forth as an All-sufficient Saviour and Redeemer His blood is a Laver able to wash away all sin his treasures of grace are enough to supply all wants In his precepts we have the true way of holiness and righteousness manifested to us in his Promises we have an heaven of life and immortality opened before our eyes all things are ready on Gods part one would think they should be so on mans whose elective faculty and instinct after happiness might in all reason prompt him to accept of so great an offer Nevertheless Millions in the bosom of the Church utterly miscarry their sins are unpardoned their souls are unsanctified the pure way of holiness is forsaken Heaven the region of bliss is lost and which is the prodigy of corrupt nature they run into perdition as if it were what it is impossible to be their choice or option The reason of this is because they are not nor will be united