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A58800 The Christian life. Part II wherein that fundamental principle of Christian duty, the doctrine of our Saviours mediation, is explained and proved, volume II / by John Scott ... Scott, John, 1639-1695. 1687 (1687) Wing S2053; ESTC R15914 386,391 678

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doth as much signifie his being really God as his being in the form of men doth his being really man But for further satisfaction concerning these two last cited Texts I refer the Reader to that most learned and incomparable Treatise Pearson's Exposition of the Creed fol. 121 and 127. where the Cavils of the Socinians are all shamefully baffled with clear and convincing reasons Thus as it is highly requisite in it self that the Mediator should partake of the Natures of both the Parties between whom he interposes so we are sufficiently assured that he doth by Scripture Testimony So that now in his Mediation for God with us we have all the reason in the world to dread and reverence his Authority and also to resign up our selves to its conduct with a free and chearful mind For being God we are sure that he hath an all-seeing Eye that inspects our hearts and pries into the inmost thoughts and purposes of our Souls and an Almighty Arm that can stretch forth it self to the remotest distance and reach us even to the bottomless Pit and being thus exposed to the inspection of an all-seeing Eye and the vengeance of an Almighty Arm how dare we harbour any thought or purpose any desire or affection with which that Eye is offended or that Arm provoked But then being Man as well as God his Authority comes armed to us with equal Sweetness and Majesty and is every whit as apt to affect our love and ingenuity as our dread and reverence For how can we refuse to obey him when he commands us in our own nature a nature which is most intimate and familiar to us and which we are most inured to love and to obey and above all a nature wherein he bled and died for us and chearfully exposed himself to sorrow and shame and torment that we might live and be happy for ever And so on the other hand in his Mediation for us with God we have all the reason in the World stedfastly to relie upon his meritorious Sacrifice and powerful Intercession for as he was man he was not only capacitated to suffer for us but he actually suffered in our nature that very nature wherein we had justly deserved to suffer for ever So that what he suffered for us came as near to our suffering for our selves and consequently did as much satisfie the ends of divine Justice in exacting punishment of Offenders as it was possible for any substituted or vicarious punishment to do For though our persons escape our nature hath been punished in him But then being God as well as Man what he suffered for us was not only instead of what we ought to have suffered but equivalent to it So that our ransom from eternal punishment being paid with the bloud of one of our own kind hypostatically united to God we did as much suffer in him as we could do without suffering in our own persons and what we suffered in him was every way equivalent to what we had deserved to suffer in our own persons So that now we have all possible assurance that the Divine Justice is so far satisfied by what Christ hath suffered for our sins that if we repent and forsake them we shall be freely discharged from all that infinite Debt of punishment which we have justly contracted by them And then again being Man we may be secure that he hath a most tender sympathy with the whole Mass of humane nature by what distances soever of time or place divided and dispers'd and consequently that having in himself experienced its weaknesses and temptations so far as was consistent with his innocence he must needs be a very concerned and zealous Advocate for us with the Almighty Father And then being God-man the Son of the Almighty Father's Essence as well as the Son of man we may be equally secure that he cannot fail being successful in his Advocation especially when he pleads for us as he doth in the right of his own meritorious Bloud by which he purchased our admission into the divine Grace and Favour So that considering all these things it is evident that there could have been no Mediator between God and us so every way fit and proper to govern us for God and intercede for us with God none in whom both God and we could have reposed that Trust and Confidence as a Theanthropos or God-man V. Another thing which the Scripture proposes to our belief concerning this Mediator is that as he partakes of the natures of both the Parties between whom he mediates so that he might transact personally with both he was sent down from Heaven to us and is returned again from us to Heaven For since he was appointed to Mediate between God and Men it was highly expedient that he should personally address to both Parties that so he might more closely and effectually solicite a mutual reconciliation between them and that being personally known to both they might both repose their trust in him with greater confidence and assurance He was well known to the Father in whose bosom he dwelt from all Eternity to be a Person every way fitted to be intrusted with his authority and the administration of his Government as communicating with him in the same divine Essence and consequently essential Dominion by reason of which no person in the World could be so much concerned for his Father's Authority as he was and consequently no Person could be so proper to be intrusted with it and therefore when upon the first breach between God and men there arose an occasion for a Mediator God could not but be infinitely satisfied that there was none so fit to act on his part or Mediate for him as his own Son. But then since he was neither known to us by person nor allied to us by nature as he was to his Father we could have no such reason as the Father had to place our trust and confidence in him and therefore though when he first undertook his Mediatorship between God and us he was not related to us by nature as he was to the Father yet it was upon an agreement between the Father and him that he should hereafter assume this relation to us and become the Son of Man as well as the Son of God that he was admitted to this Office. So that though from our Fall to his Incarnation he was not Man but only God yet all that time he Mediated as God-man between God and Men he Mediated for God as actually subsisting in the Divine Nature he Mediated for men as he was infallibly to subsist in the humane nature also He having therefore vertually and intentionally assumed our nature from his very first entrance on his Mediatorship did thereupon become equally related to both Parties but till he had actually assumed our natures and therein manifested himself unto us we could not have that knowledge of him nor of his relation to us that the Father had nor consequently that
do any way fall short of it instead of being our kind and merciful Advocate our Mediator will become our implacable Judge and doom us to a place of dismal torment where we shall live with everlasting horrour and despair so that now we can no longer persevere in our impenitence without trampling at the same time on the highest encouragements and charging headlong through the most amazing danger IV. That as he acts for and in the behalf of God and Men so he partakes of the natures of both For that this high and important Office might be the more effectually executed and performed the eternal Father thought meet to place it in the hands of his own eternal Son the Son of his natural Generation to whom he communicated from all eternity his own Divine Essence and Nature and whom in due time he appointed to assume the Humane Nature into a personal union with his Divinity that so being God-man in one person he might be the better fitted and accomplished to Mediate between God and Men. For in Mediating Authoritatively for God with us he was to perform the Office of a divine King to rule and Govern us as God's Vicegerent and either reduce us under his Authority or chastise us for our Rebellion against him which is a Sphere so vast and so sublime as needs no less than some divine Intelligence to inform and actuate it For to wield the Divine Scepter and Government is a Province that requires a Divine Knowledge and Power for the souls and hearts of men are the principal Seat and Subject of the divine Government and therefore it is very requisite that he who is intrusted with the administration of it should have a through and perfect inspection of all our most secret Thoughts and Intentions and Purposes and Resolutions otherwise how is it possible he should take cognizance of them so as to command and over-rule and reward and punish them But to know the hearts of men is in Scripture always appropriated to the divine Omniscience so 1 Kings 8 3● Thou even thou only knowest the hearts of the Children of men and if only God's all-searching Eye can penetrate into the hearts of men who but a God can Rule and Govern them And accordingly our Saviour upon whose shoulders this inward and spiritual Government rests challenges to himself this divine Prerogative which is so necessary a qualification for it Rev. 2.23 And all the Churches shall know saith he that I am he which searcheth the reins and hearts and will give to every one of you according to his works Nor is it less requisite to qualifie him for this spiritual Empire that he should be Almighty than that he should be Omniscient for to enable him to rule the hearts and souls of men it is necessary that he should have the Command and Disposal of all those outward Events and Accidents in which they are any way concerned since it is by these in a great measure that their hearts are swayed their affections formed their intentions and resolutions squared and regulated and in a word their good and evil actions rewarded and punished in this World and to wield and manage moderate and dispose such infinite numbers of Events as concern such infinite numbers of Men so vastly distant from one another in place condition and temper requires a power that can do whatsoever it pleases both in Heaven and Earth which the Psalmist appropriates to the divine Power as its peculiar Prerogative Psal. 135.6 7. and if it be only a divine power that can manage and dispose all the affairs of all men what can be more requisite than that he who rules and governs them should communicate of the divine Omnipotence And accordingly our Saviour upon whom this Government is devolved assures his Disciples that all power was communicated to him both in Heaven and Earth Matt. 28.18 which being the Prerogative of the divine Power seems impossible to have been communicated to any but a divine Person And therefore the Prophet Isaiah speaking of the Government of Christ tells us that his name should be called Wonderful Counsellour the mighty God Isa. 9.6 where by Counsellour and mighty God he seems to design his infinite Knowledge and Power whereby he should be qualified for this his divine Government for so Mighty God doth always in the Scripture-phrase signifie Almighty God so in Deut. 7.21 Psal. 50.1 Ier. 32.18 Hab. 1.12 and elsewhere By all which it is evident that to Mediate Authoritatively for God with men is a Province so sublime as that it requires no less than divine perfections in the Person that undertakes and manages it and consequently that it is requisite he should be God. Nor is it less requisite to render his Government more awful and Majestick For though the condition of the Person alters not the nature of the Authority he is vested with yet in the estimation of men the same Authority is more or less venerable according as the quality and condition of ●he Persons cloathed with it is more or less considerable Since therefore the quality of the Person doth always cast a Cloud or Lustre on the Office it was very requisite that he who was Authorized to Mediate for God with men which is the highest Office under God the Father should be a Person of the highest Rank and Dignity next to God the Father himself and consequently that he should be God the Son and hence the Author to the Hebrews Chap. 1. to render his Authority mo●e awful takes a great deal of pains to imblazon the dignity of his Person in which he gives him such Stiles and Characters as cannot without extreme force be applied to any but a Person divine he stiles him The brightness of his Father's Glory and the express Image of his Person the Founder of the Earth and the Maker of the Heavens and the Vpholder of all things by the word of his power Vers. 3.10 he tells us that he was set far above the Angels and that the Father had ordered all his Angels to worship him declaring him to be God in these terms Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever and then he concludes all with this application Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard of him Chap. 2. v. 1. which shews that in the Apostle's sense to Mediate for God is a station so sublime that it was very fit it should be supplied as it was with a Person of the highest Dignity that so his Person might reflect a Majesty on his Office and render it more awful and venerable in the World. And as to accomplish him for this high Office of Mediating for God with Men it was most fit he should be God so it was no less requisite he should be Man. For Man being naturally a sensitive as well as a rational Creature in this degenerate state of his nature wherein his sensitive part is predominant there are
Spirit or Holy Ghost whom Christ hath substituted to carry on his Mediation for God with men in his absence is no other than the third divine Person subsisting in the eternal Godhead And indeed considering the mighty part he was to act viz. to Mediate under Christ for God with men the same reason which rendered it necessary for Christ to be God to qualifie him for this Office vide Page 24. do render it altogether as necessary for the Holy Ghost to be so And indeed how is it possible he should operate upon so many men together at such remote distances as he is obliged to do by his Office and at once move every member of that vast Body of Christ the Catholick Church dispersed over the Face of the whole Earth unless like an Omnipres●nt soul he be diffused through the whole and co-exists with every part and if he be Omnipres●nt ●e must be God. And now having given an account of the Person and Quality of this Divine Spirit I proceed Secondly To explain his subordination and substitution to Christ in this part of his Mediatorship for God with men In order to which it is to be considered that this subordination of the sacred Persons in the holy Trinity proceeds not from any inequality of Essence but from the inequality of their personal Properties For as to their Essence they are all of them God i. e. infinite in being and perfections and being infinite they must all be equal there being no such thing as more or less in infinity and then being equal in Essence they must necessarily be equal in essential Power and Dominion and consequently as such are no way subject or subordinate to one another But as to their personal Properties it cannot be denied but they are unequal for the Father who begot must in that respect be superiour to the Son who was begotten and the Holy Ghost who proceeded must in that respect be inferiour to the Father and Son from whom he proceeded and upon this inequality their subordination is founded For as there is a stated Number in the Trinity by which the sacred Persons are determined to Three so there is also a stated Order by which they are ranked into a First a Second and a Third which Order is not made by mutual consent or arbitrary constitution but founded in the nature of those personal properties by which they are distinguished from one another For as the Father being the Fountain of Godhead to the Son must be first in order of nature and as the Son together with the Father was the Fountain of Godhead to the Holy Ghost and therefore must be second to the Father and in order of nature before the Holy Ghost so the Holy Ghost proceeding from the Father and the Son must of the Three be in order of nature the Third For so the Scripture expresly asserts that he proceeded from the Father John 15.26 and also that he is the Spirit of the Son Gal. 4.6 and the Spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 and the Spirit of Iesus Christ Phil. 1.19 And being the Spirit both of the Father and the Son he must be supposed to proceed from both And where-ever the Holy Ghost is in the Old Testament called the Spirit of God it is in the Hebrew Ruach Elohim in the Plural which seems to intimate that he proceeded not from one but from two divine Persons i. e. not from the Father alone but from the Son also So that though as to their Godhead they are all equal yet in order of nature and in respect of their personal properties the third is inferiour the second superiour and the first supreme and being unequal in those personal Properties by which they stand related to each other it is very reasonable that according to these their personal inequalities they should be subordinate to one another and consequently that the Father who is the Fountain of the Divinity should be supreme in the Divine Monarchy and that the Son who was begotten of him should minister to him and that the Holy Ghost who proceeded from the Father and the Son should minister to both And accordingly in all its external actions and administrations this hath ever been the Oeconomy of the Holy Trinity for the Father to act by the Ministry of the Son and the Son by the Ministry of the Holy Ghost For so before the Fall of man and consequently before this Mediation of the Son commenced it is evident that even in creating the World the Father acted by the Son and therefore is said to have made the World by him Heb. 1.2 and the Son acted by the Spirit who is said to have moved upon the face of the Chaos Gen. 1.2 for that by the Spirit of God there is meant the third Person in the Holy Trinity we have reason to believe because he is elsewhere said to have made man and to have garnished the Heavens as hath been already shewn And in the same Method of subordination the Godhead hath always proceeded in its transactions with the world and that more especially and remarkably in this great affair of Mediating with mankind wherein the Father hath always used the Ministry of the Son and the Son the Ministry of the Holy Ghost but in the matter of the Mediation it is evident that this subordination of these sacred persons was founded not only in these their personal inequalities but also in a mutual agreement between them in which the Son agreed with the Father that in case he would be so far reconciled to Rebellious Mankind as to grant them a Covenant of mercy and therein among other blessings to promise them his Holy Spirit he himself would assume our natures and therein not only treat with us personally in order to the reducing us to our bounden Allegiance but also die a Sacrifice for our sins upon which agreement the Father long before the Son had actually performed his part of it even from our first Apostasie granted his Spirit to mankind which Spirit was granted to this end that under the Son he should Mediate with men in order to the reducing them to their due subjection to the Father For all that heavenly influence which the Holy Ghost sheds forth upon the minds of men is wholly Mediatorial in God's behalf and in order to the reconciling men's minds unto him and therefore in this his Mediation he must be supposed to act in subordination to the Son who is supreme Mediator and accordingly as the Son hath been and will be always Mediating with men by this blessed Spirit even from his Ascension to the end of the World so I make no doubt but he always Mediated with them by the same Spirit even from the Fall of man to his Incarnation For so in the time of the Old World we read of the Spirit 's striving with men i. e. in order to the subduing their stubborn Wills to a due subjection to the Will of the Father Gen.
is actually and as they will be at the day of Judgment when the good are Crowned and the wicked consigned to that fearful Execution Then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that did put all things under him which necessarily implies that then he should enter into a different state of subjection to the Father from that wherein he was before Why Then shall the Son himself be subject to him Was he not subject to him before Yes doubtless he was and therefore either this then must be impertinent or then he shall be so subject to him as he was not before before he was subject to him as he was his Mediatorial King or Viceroy as he reigned under him and by his Authority but then he is to be subject to him after a different manner For the explication of which it is to be considered that now the Son considered as Mediator reigns under God in the right of what he did and suffered in his human Nature Hypostatically united to his God-head for it was because he humbled himself and became obedient to the death even the Death of the Cross that God highly exalted him Phil. 2.8.9 Now 't was as he was Man that he became obedient to death and 't was in the right of that obedience that God exalted him to his Mediatorial Kingdom so that now as Mediator he not only reigns in his human Nature but in right of the passion of his human Nature his Mediatorial Kingdom is the purchase of his Blood by which he both obtained the new Covenant for us and Regal Power to execute it upon us When therefore he hath executed it to the full as we are sure he will do at the day of Judgment this Regal Power of his which he purchased with his Blood will cease as having fully accomplish'd that for which it was given and intended And now he being to Reign no longer in right of the sufferings of his human Nature his human Nature will be subject to the Father in a more different manner than it was before Before it was subject to him as Authorized in consideration of its passion to reign and govern under him but then having delivered up its Reign and Government it will be subject to him in a more private capacity as the Presidents of the Roman Empire were subject to Caesar while they governed under him but when they rendered back their Character they became his Subjects in a more private station Not that the humanity of Christ shall be any way depressed or degraded by his delivering up his Mediatorial Kingdom but as an Embassador after he is discharged of the burthen of his Embassie doth still retain the honour and dignity of it so the Human Nature of Christ after he hath surrendered up its Mediatorial Dominion shall still remain as highly exalted in Honour Dignity and Beatitude as ever and Angels and Saints shall for ever render to it the same religious respect and veneration as they did before he surrendered it for it shall still remain Hypostatically united to his Godhead and so God shall for ever reign in it tho it shall not for ever reign with God so that it being still the Temple of the Deity and all the glorious atchievements it made during its Humiliation and Mediatorial Reign reflecting still the same honour and praise and glory upon it it will to eternity be as great and glorious throughout all the Heavenly World as ever it was in the full splendor of its Kingdom so that in this respect what the ancient Fathers added to the Nicene Creed is most true his Kingdom shall have no end because without possessing it he shall for ever enjoy the Glory and Honour and Beatitude of it 5. And lastly That the Son being thus subjected to the Father all Power and Dominion shall from thenceforth be immediately exercised by the Deity that is to say by God the Father God the Son and God the Holy Ghost for so ver 18. Then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that did put all things under him that God may be all in all Where the variation of the Person is very observable for it is not said that the Son shall be subject to him that did put all things under him i. e. the Father that he may be all in all but that God may be all in all that is the Triune Godhead subsisting in three Persons the Father Son and Holy Ghost for had he meant the Father only he ought according to the common rules of speech to have said he or the Father of whom he had been before speaking instead of God nor can it be reasonably supposed that after the resignation of the Mediatorial Kingdom the Father only shall act and reign and the Son and Holy Ghost sit still for ever and do nothing but the meaning is that this Mediatorial Kingdom ceasing in which the Son as Man as well as God now reigns there shall from thenceforth be no other Kingdom or Dominion exercised in that Celestial State but what is essential to the Godhead in which the Son and Holy Ghost subsisting together with the Father shall for ever reign together with him for this I take to be the meaning of that phrase that God may be all in all that is that he may rule and govern all things immediately by himself that his immediate Will may reign alone in all and be the proximate guide of all that blessed world that there may be no mediate or Mediatorial Governour between him and us to exact our obedience and convey to us his favours and rewards but that we may render all our duty immediately to him and derive all our happiness immediately from him so that as now Christ the Theantropos or God-man is all in all Col. 3.11 because the Father doth all things and governs all things by him having given him all power in heaven and earth so when this Oeconomy ceases God alone or the Triune Godhead shall be all in all because he shall do all things and govern all things by himself immediately Thus when the Son of Man is subjected to him that did put all things under him that one divine Essence whence all things did proceed and in which the Father Son and Holy Ghost subsist shall from thenceforth resume all Rule and Dominion to it self and only the Son of God together with the Father and the Holy Ghost shall reign But yet in this purely divine Government there is no doubt but those divine persons will still continue to act in subordination to each other according to that natural subordination in which they are placed by their personal properties For the Godhead being communicated from the Father to the Son the Father in the order of nature must necessarily be Prior to the Son and the same Godhead being communicated to the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son both Father and Son must also in order of nature be Prior to
consequently he was before all time and the most ancient of all things Again as they affirm of their word that it is not separated from the first Good or Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. but of necessity is together with him being separatee from him only in personality Plot. En. 5. l. 1. c. 6. So S. Iohn affirms of his Word that it was with God from the beginning ver 2. that is in an inseparable union and conjunction for otherwise all other things were as much with God as he Again as they affirm of their Word that he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the cause or artificer of the World for so all the Platonick Schools frequently stile him and so Plato himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. which World the Word which of all things is the most divine framed and set in order Epinom and Philo call him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Instrument by whom God made the World Phil. lib. Chereb So S. Iohn affirms of his word that all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made ver 3. Again as they affirm of their word that he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. if I may coin a word the Be-er and that this Be-er 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. is not a dead Be-er that is neither life nor mind but that mind and life and Be-er are the same thing Plotin Enn. 5. lib. 1. c. 2. So S. Iohn affirms of his word that in him was life ver 4. As they affirm that the life or being of their Word was knowledge or understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. neither is this Mind or Word in Potentia neither is it self one thing and its knowledge another but its knowledge is it self or its own being ibid. lib. 3. c. 5. So S. Iohn affirms of his Word that his life was the light of men i. e. that it consisted of knowledge which is the light of human minds ver 4. as they affirm that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Intelligible light proceeded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the word Phil. de Opif. mund and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. that all light is from this word or wisdom Arist●b apud Euseb. praepar p. 324. So S. Iohn tells us of his Word that he was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world ver 9. In short as they stile their word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the Son of God Plot. Enn. 5. l. 8 c 5 And again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the Son or Child of God the full beautiful mind even the mind that is full of God as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the most ancient Son of the Father of the Universe Phil. lib. cui Tit. Deterius perf●ctiori semper infestum esse And also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the first born Son of God Ibid. lib. 1. de Agricu●t So S. Iohn stiles his Word the only begotten Son of the Father ver 14.18 Thus from first to last S. Iohn discourses of his Word and in the same Phrase and Language gives the same account of him as the Jewish and Gentile Divines did of theirs so that he must be supposed either to mean the same thing by him viz. a divine eternal Person or to design to make the World believe he meant so for he who speaks or writes must either equivocate and dissemble his meaning or mean according to the vulgar acceptation of the words and phrases he speaks or writes so that supposing S. Iohn doth here sincerely express his own meaning no man that understands the common use and acceptation of his phrases can reasonably understand them any otherwise than of a divine Person and whether this were not his meaning at least in all appearance I appeal to a very indifferent Judge viz. Amelius a Pagan Philosopher who very well understood the Language and Doctrine of the Gentile Schools concerning the divine Legos or Word so often mentioned in their Writings and who casting his eyes upon this discourse of S. Iohn doth with all confidence pronounce this to be the sense of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. this was that Word who according to Heraclitus existed from Eternity and made all things and whom by Iupiter the Barbarian places in the order and dignity of a Principal declaring him to have been with God and to be God and that all things were made by him and that in him all things that were had life and being Vid. Euseb Praep. Evan. 540. Page 51. Line 3. d For thus Porphyry as S. Cyril quotes him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the divine essence extends it self to three persons whereof the highest God is the Good after him the second is the Maker of the World and the third is the Soul of the World for to this Soul the Divine Essence extends it self And of these three divine persons Plotinus hath treated at large whom he expresly calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 three persons that are principles viz. the Good or the One the Mind and the Soul assuring us that these Doctrines concerning this divine Trinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. that they were no new or of ye●terday but were anciently though obscurely taught and that what is now discoursed concerning them is only a farther explication of them but we have faithful Witnesses that these Doctrines were taught of old and particularly in the Writings of Plato himself before whom also Parmenides delivered them And indeed Plato very frequently mentions these three divine Persons particularly Phileb p. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. but Wisdom and Mind can never be or act without Soul wherefore in the Nature of God there is a Kingly Soul and a Kingly Mind And indeed so ancient is this Doctrine of three divine Persons subsisting in the Godhead that Proclus calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Tradition of the three Gods in Timae Plat. p. 93. for so they sometimes call these three Persons three Gods though as themselves elsewhere explain it they are only three subsistences in the same divine indivisible Essence And the same Proclus calls this Doctrine of the Trinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the divinely inspired or delivered Theology which teaches that this World was compleated by these three By these and sundry other testimonies that might be produced it is evident that the ancient Divines of the Gentiles acknowledged a Trinity of Persons in the Godhead the last of which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Soul for so thee Chaldee Oracle quoted by the above-named Proclus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. after the Paternal mind which in our Language is God the Son I Psyche or Soul dwell and this Psyche or as our Scriptures phrase it Holy
Imprimatur CAROLUS ALSTON R.P.D. Hen. Episc. Lond. à Sacris Domesticis ●nii 26. 1686. THE Christian Life PART II. Wherein that FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE OF Christian Duty THE Doctrine of our SAVIOURS Mediation is Explained and Proved VOLUME II. By JOHN SCOTT D. D. Rector of S. Peters Poor London The Second Edition LONDON Printed for Walter Kettilby at the Bishops-head in S. Paul's Church-Yard and Thomas Horn at the South Entrance of the Royal Exchange 1687. AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER THis second Volume of the second Part of the Christian Life had long since been made Publick had it not been for an unfortunate Accident which befel me when it was almost finished by which I was necessitated almost to begin again and cast the whole into a different Method from what I first designed for according to my first Draught this second Volume had not ammounted to much above half of what it now is only I intended to have added some Notes at the end of it for the fuller proof and explanation of several Points therein handled which now I am forced to leave out the Book being already swell'd so much beyond my first Intention only three or four of them I am forced to Print with it because I had referr'd to them in two of the Sheets which were Printed before I new model'd the whole Design I pray God prosper this Work according to its honest Intention and that will be an abundant compensation for all the Pains and Labor I have undergone in composing it THE CONTENTS SECT I. OF the Signification and Notion of a Mediator pag. 4 c. Six general Articles proposed to our belief in Scripture concerning the Person and Offices of the Mediator First That he is designed and authorized to this Office by God who is our absolute Lord and Sovereign 6. Vpon what accounts the belief of this is necessary 8. Secondly That this Office to which he is Authorized consists in acting for and in the behalf of God and Men who are the Parties between whom he mediates 10. the belief of which Article carries with it the most indispensible Obligations to Christian Piety and Vertue 11. Thirdly That his Mediation proceeds upon certain terms and stipulations between God and Man which terms he obtained of God for us and in Gods Name hath published to us 17. what these terms are ibid. the performance of these Terms our Saviour solicits both of God and us 18. Fourthly That as he acts for and in the behalf of God and Men so be partakes of the Natures of both 23. That he should partake of the Nature of God was highly necessary to qualifie him for this sublime Office of mediating for God with Men 24. and the same necessity there was that he should partake of the nature of Man 27. That he should also partake of the nature of both no less requisite to qualifie him to Mediate for Men with God 30. That he is God as well as Man proved from Scripture 34. and also that he is Man as well as God 39. Fifthly That as he partakes of the Natures of both so that he might transact Personally with both he was sent down from Heaven to us and is returned from us to Heaven 42. Of the Birth and Personal Vnion of the Divine and Humane Natures in Christ 44. Of his Death Resurrection and Ascension 46 c. Sixthly That upon his return to Heaven there to mediate Personally for Men with God he substituted the Divine and Omnipresent Spirit personally to promote and effectuate his mediation for God with Men 49 50. This Divine Spirit is the third Person in the Tri●une Godhead 50. That there is a third Person subsisting in the Divine Nature and that he is the same with the Spirit of God in the Old Testament 51. And first That this Spirit is a Person ibid. Secondly That he is a Divine Person 53. Thirdly That he is the third Divine Person 56. Of the subordination of these Divine Persons and that it arises not from any inequality of Essence but from the inequalities of their Personal properties 57 c. That there was always a subordination of the Son to the Father and of the Holy Ghost to both 58. That in the affair of the Mediation this subordination was founded not only in the inequalities of their Personal properties but also in a mutual compact and agreement 59. That the Holy Spirit acts and hath always acted under Christ in the Kingdom of God 60. That by the Holy Spirit Christ himself acted while he was upon Earth 60 61. That this Spirit is sent both from the Father and the Son and of the different nature of their Missions 61 c. Some things which the Holy Spirit hath done in the pursuance of his Ministry to our Saviour and hath long since ceased to do as first he inspired the Apostles and Disciples of our Saviour with the gift of Languages 65 66. Secondly He fully instructed them by his immediate Inspirations in the Doctrine which they were to teach the World 67 c. Thirdly He gave the most convincing evidence of the Truth and Divinity of their Doctrine 70. Fourthly He conducted them by his infallible advice through all the emergent difficulties of their Ministry 72. Of the cessation of these miraculous Assistances 74 c. Other things which the Holy Spirit hath always done and always continues in pursuance of this his Ministry as being continually present with the Church 76. We receive him in our Baptism 77. Of the different manner of his ordinary Operations now from what it was heretofore 78 c. That these his ordinary Operations are all performed by impression of thoughts 81 82. they are all reduced to five Heads First Illumination 83 c. Secondly Sanctification 85. Thirdly Quickning or Excitation 88. Fourthly Comforting and supporting 90. Fifthly Intercession 93. SECT II. Concerning the particular Offices of Christs Mediation From the respective states and conditions of the Parties between whom Christ mediates is shewn the necessity of his being Prophet Priest and King 98. The order in which our Saviour proceeds in the discharge of these Offices 100. SECT III. Concerning the Prophetick Office of Christ. The great need of this Office 101. That the Messias was to be a Prophet 102. Of the import of the word Prophesie 103. The admirable accomplishments of our Saviour for this Office shewn in three Particulars First That when he came down to Prophesie to us he came immediately from the Bosom of the Father 104. Secondly That he came down into our own Natures 160. Thirdly That while he abode among us he was always full of the Holy Ghost 109. how effectualy he discharged this Office shewn in six Particulars First He made a full declaration of his Fathers Will to the World 113. Secondly He proved and confirmed what he declared by Miracles 116. Thirdly He gave a perfect example of Obedience to what he declared and proved to be his Fathers
no sorts of objects do so vigorously impress and affect him as those which strike immediately on his senses and hence it is that he so greedily prefers carnal before rational and sensitive before spiritual goods notwithstanding the later are in themselves infinitely greater and more eligible and that in his conceptions of spiritual objects he is so prone to blend and intermix them with carnal and Corporeal Phantasms because his mind is so estranged from spiritual objects by its continual intimacy and familiarity with sensual ones that it can hardly frame any Idea of them without disguising them into some bodily semblance God therefore being a spiritual and invisible Essence and upon this account far removed out of the Ken and Prospect of our sense our sensual and depraved minds must either be naturally indisposed to think seriously of and consequently to be duly affected by him which renders us prone to Irreligion or to sophisticate our conceptions of him with corporeal Images and Phantasms which renders us prone to Idolatry to prevent both which God in great condescension to this deplorable weakness of humane minds hath always thought meet to converse with us under some sensible appearance or visible Symbol of his Divine Presence Thus when God conducted his Chosen People through the Red Sea and Wilderness he went before them in a Pillar of Cloud by day and in a Pillar of Fire by night and when afterwards he gave them his Law he descended upon Mount Sinai in a bright and glorious flame overcast with thick and solemn clouds in which illustrious appearance he afterwards made his entrance into the Tabernacle where he made his constant abode and from whence he frequently exhibited himself to the Peoples eyes and senses in a body of visible light and glory which visible light is in holy Scripture very often called the Glory of the Lord. And since God in condescension to the weakness of humane minds thought it meet to present himself to the senses of men in some visible appearance there is the same reason why the Mediator should assume some visible substance to his invisible Godhead that therein he might exhibit himself to our sense and thereby at once affect our minds with a great love and dread of his divine Majesty and by vouchsafing us a visible presence prevent our framing Idols and false Images and Representations of him in our own minds Now of all sensible substance there was none so proper for this end as Humane Nature which is that above all others that we are most intimately acquainted with and most accustomed to love and reverence and obey It is true had his design been to Govern us by terrors and affrightments as he did the Iews it would have been more proper for him to assume that dreadful appearance of a consuming fire in which he was wont to converse with them but his design being to erect his Empire in mens Souls and to captivate their Wills into a free and generous obedience he could not have appeared to us in any visible substance so proper for this end so apt to oblige and aw to indear and terrifie us together as Humane Nature And accordingly as God dwelt of old in the Iewish Tabernacle and thence displayed himself before the Eyes of that People in a visible Glory so the Word as St. Iohn tells was made flesh and tabernacled among us for so the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies i. e. as in condescension to the weakness of the Iews he pitched his Tabernacle among them and thence frequently appeared in a visible Glory to their sense so in condescension to ours he pitched his Tabernacle in our flesh or nature from whence as he proceeds we behold his Glory i. e. at his Baptism and Transfiguration as the glory of the only begotten Son or in which the only begotten Son was wont to display himself from between the Cherubins Iohn 1.14 In short therefore since in Mediating for God with us it was very needful that in compliance with our weakness he should address to our sense in some visible appearance and since there was no visible appearance in which he could so advantagiously address to us as that of Humane Nature it hence evidently appears how requisite it was that he should assume our Nature to his Deity and be Man as well as God. And as it was requisite he should be God-man in order to his Mediating for God with us so was it also no less requisite in order to his Mediating for us with God because as I shall shew hereafter to Mediate for us with God implies first his making an atonement for our sins with his Bloud Secondly his appearing for us as our Advocate in Heaven Now as for the first it was highly requisite that he should be Man that so he might suffer for us his Divinity being wholly impassible and this reason the Apostle himself assigns Heb. 2.14 Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and bloud he also himself speaking of Christ took part of the same that through death he might destroy him who hath the power of death and seeing he was to assume another Nature to his Divinity that so he might suffer for us it was most fit and proper that he should assume ours rather than any other For since God in mercy had consented to accept of another person's suffering for our sins it was very requisite that what he suffered for us should come as near to our own personal suffering as it was possible that so it might be more exemplary to us and more nearly affect us with dread and horrour for our sins and next to our own personal suffering is the suffering of our Nature and therefore since the punishment of our sins was to be transferred from our Persons it was highly fit it should be inflicted on our Nature which it could not have been had not he been Man who endured it And as it was requisite that he should be Man that so he might suffer and that so the Nature at least that had sinned might suffer so it was no less requisite that he should be God-man in one and the same person to render his sufferings a valuable Consideration for all that Punishment that was due to God upon the score of the infinite sins of an infinite number of sinners For how could the bloud of one man though never so innocent or excellent have amounted to a valuable commutation for the forfeited lives and souls of a world of guilty sinners Or what less than the bloud of God-man could have been any way equivalent to that Eternal Punishment that was due to God from the whole Race of Mankind And yet that it should be in some measure equivalent was highly requisite as I shall shew hereafter both to satisfie the divine Iustice for what is past and to secure the divine Authority for the future and accordingly we are said to be purchased with the bloud of God Acts
20.28 not that the Divine Essence can suffer or bleed but being united into one Person with the Humane Nature the Properties of this Nature and also the Actions and Passions thence proceeding may be truly attributed to it and therefore since in the Person of Christ God was united to Man whatsoever his Humanity suffered may be truly called the suffering of God and being so it was a suffering every way equivalent to the Eternal damnation of the whole world of sinners Lastly As he was to appear as our Advocate at the right hand of God it was very fit he should be Man that so as the Apostle discourses having an High Priest that was in all points tempted like as we are as having been placed in our Nature and Circumstances he might be the more affectionately touched with the feeling of our infirmities Heb. 4.15 i. e. that so our nature being a part of himself and that himself having experienced its weakness and infirmity he might be the more nearly concerned for it and be touched with a more tender compassion towards it consequently solicite its cause and interest at the right hand of God with greater zeal and importunity For so the same Author reasons Heb. 3.17 18. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the People for in that himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted And that he should be God as well as Man is no less requisite to create in us the greater confidence of the success of his Advocation For what Reason or Argument could be great enough to satisfie our guilty and therefore anxious minds that ever a meer man who had nothing beyond our selves to recommend him to God but only his Innocence and Vertue should be able to obtain such a prevailing interest in Heaven as not only to reconcile the Almighty Father of all things to a world of sinful men against whom he was so justly and so highly incensed but also to obtain of him to imbrace them with infinite Love and crown them with eternal Favours which is such a stupendous success as we could scarce have modestly hoped for from the most importunate intercession not only of the best man that ever was upon earth but of the highest Angel in Heaven For unless we could reasonably suppose God to be more pleased with one innocent man or Angel than he is displeased with a world of guilty sinners which is hardly supposable we could have no just ground to hope that the cries of the ones intercessions should be more prevalent with him than the cries of the others guilts But when we consider that he who hath undertaken our cause is the Son of God the Son of his natural Generation that from all Eternity was begotten of his Essence God of God Light of Light very God of very God what may we not expect from the Prayers of one so near and dear to the Eternal Father that is fit either for him to ask or for the Eternal Father to bestow For this we may be confident of that he can never be so highly displeased with us as he is pleased with his own Son who is the stamp of his very Essence and express Character of his Person and that therefore his pleasure in him will be far more prevalent than all his displeasure against us and while it is so we have all the security in the world that he will succeed in his Advocation and prevail in our behalf Thus that Christ should be God-man was in it self highly expedient to qualifie him for all the Parts and Offices of his Mediation and accordingly the holy Scripture expresly declares him to be so For first That he is God is as plainly asserted as any Proposition in the Bible For thus not to instance in the Old Testament where he is frequently stiled Iehovah the incommunicable name of God and the Mighty or Almighty God and Immanuel that is God with us In the New Testament he is not only called God Acts 20.28 where the Pastors are exhorted to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own bloud which can be applied to none but Christ and Iohn 20.28 where Thomas calls him my Lord and my God which Confession of his our Saviour himself approves Verse 29. but moreover he is called the true God 1 John 5.20 And we are in him that is true even in his Son Iesus Christ he is the true God and eternal life and God over all blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 and accordingly the Father himself is brought in thus bespeaking him Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Heb. 1.8 where his design is to shew the excellency of Christ above the Angels for saith he in Verse 7. Of the Angels he saith who maketh his Angels Spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire but unto the Son he saith Thy Throne O God c. which stile O God here must necessarily import something greater than was ever attributed to Angels and consequently something greater than a Nominal or Titular Deity which our Adversaries in this Article allow was frequently given to the Angel of the Lord in the Old Testament If therefore that Angel of the Lord were a meer created Angel as they affirm he had as much attributed to him as our Saviour unless we suppose this stile O God to import real and essential Deity and not meerly nominal So also Iohn 1.1 In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. For the clearing of which noble Text which our Adversaries with a world of Art have indeavoured to perplex and intangle it is to be considered that this Phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word was a term of Art by which in that very Age when this Gospel was written and long before and after it both the Iewish and Heathen Writers were wont to express and signifie a divine Person by whom the Ancient Jews understood the Messias who is that very Person the Apostle here treats of Since therefore by this Phrase the Word both Jews and Gentiles when S. Iohn wrote this Gospel understood a divine Person and since by this divine Person the Jews understood the Messias there is no reason to imagine that S. Iohn here meant it in any other signification since in so doing he could not but foresee he should impose upon the World and take an effectual course to make us believe he meant what he never intended For he is so far from explaining this Phrase into any different sence from that of the Jewish and Gentile Writers that he all along explains himself in the very same Now it is hardly to be imagined by any one whose mind is not deeply tinctured with Heretical Pravity but that had the Apostle
atomes so the Holy Spirit by diffusing himself throughout this mystical body joyns and unites all its parts together and makes it one separate and individual Corporation So that when by Baptism we are once incorporated into this body we are intitled to and do at least de jure participate of the vital influence of the Holy Ghost who is the Soul of it and accordingly as Baptism joyns us to that body of which this divine Spirit is the Soul so it also conveys that divine Spirit to us So that as in natural bodies those Ligaments which unite and tie the parts to one another do also convey life and spirit to them all so also in this mystical body those federal rights of Baptism and the Lord's Supper which are as it were its Nerves and Arteries that joyn and confederate its members to one another are also the conveyances of that spiritual life from the Holy Ghost which moves and actuates them all And hence the washing of Regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost the being born of water and of the Holy Ghost are put together as concurrent things and in Acts 2.38 Baptism is affirmed to be necessary to our receiving the Holy Ghost and if by Baptism we receive the Holy Ghost that is a right and title to his Grace and Influence then must the Holy Ghost be still supposed vitally united to the Church whereof we are made members by our Baptism and like an Omnipresent Soul to be diffused all through it and to move and actuate every part of it by his heavenly Grace and Influence It is true he doth not move and actuate us by meer force and irresistible power so as to necessitate us or to determine our natural liberty one way or t'other nor doth he ordinarily work upon men in such a strange and miraculous way as he did in the first Ministration of the Gospel when he frequently transformed men in an instant from Beasts and Devils into Saints and as it were at one act turned the whole Tide of their natures into a quite contrary Current For so Origen against Celsus very often triumphs in these sudden and miraculous Conversions wrought by the Christian Religion so lib. 1. p. 21. should any man saith he release men's Souls from all sorts of wickedness from Lust and Unrighteousness and Contempt of God and this but in a hundred instances surely no man would imagine that he could ever have inspired so many men with reasons strong enough to conquer so many Vices without a divine assistance but if you enquire into the lives of those that have imbraced Christianity you will find that whereas before they lived in all impurities and lusts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. from that very time wherein they received the Word how much more equal and temperate serious and constant are they grown So again li. 2. p. 78. in answer to Celsus who calls Christianity a pestilent Doctrine neither Jew saith he nor any one else can ever make it out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. that a pestilent Doctrine should so wonderfully convert the most profligate persons that embraced it to a life most sutable to Nature and Reason and all manner of Vertue Such were the miraculous operations of the Holy Ghost in those days as to transport men in an instant from an inveterate habit of wickedness to a habit of Piety and Vertue For so Lactantius de fals sup lib. 3. c. 26. what a mighty influence the divine Precepts have upon mens Souls daily experience shews for saith he Da mihi virum qui sit iracundus maledicus effraenatus paucissimis Dei Verbis tam placidum quam ovem reddam da cupidum avarum tenacem jam tibi eum liberalem dabo pecuniam suam plenis manibus largientem da timidum doloris ac mortis jam cruces ignes Taurum contemnet da libidinosum Adulterum Ganeonem jam sobrium castum continentem videbis da crudelem sanguinis appetentem jam in veram clementiam furor ille mutabitur da injustum insipientem peccatorem continuò aequus prudens innocens erit i. e. Give me a man who is wrathful reproachful ungovernable and with a few words of God I will render him as placid as a Lamb give me a covetous a niggardly and tenacious man I will return him to thee liberal and distributing his money with a bountiful hand give me one that is timorous of grief and death he shall despise all manner of torment give me one that is lustful adulterous and a Buffoon you shall presently see him sober chaste and continent give me one that is cruel and thirsty of bloud his fury shall be immediately converted into pity and clemency give me one that is unjust foolish and criminal and he shall be presently rendred just prudent and innocent which wondrous Changes were so very frequent in the Primitive times that the Heathen as St. Austin hath observed were very much amazed at them and therefore attributed them to the power of Magick thinking it impossible they should ever be effected without the assistance of some very powerful Spirit But since Christianity hath been spread through the World and prevailed so far as to be the Religion of Nations the divine Spirit doth not ordinarily work upon men in such a strange and miraculous way nor produce in them such sudden Changes and instantaneous Conversions but proceeds more gradually and more suitably to the Methods of Humane Nature by joyning in with our understandings and leading us on by reason and persuasion from Acts to Dispositions and from Dispositions to Habits of Piety So that whatsoever Grace he now affords us it ordinarily works on us in the same way and after the same manner as if all were performed by the strength of our own reason so that in the Renovation of our natures we cannot certainly distinguish what is done by the Spirit from what is done by our natural Reason and Conscience co-operating with him only this we do most certainly know that in this blessed work the Spirit is the main and principal Agent that without him we can do nothing and that he is the Author and Finisher of our faith who worketh in us to will and to do according to his own pleasure but yet that he doth not work upon us as a Mechanick upon dead materials but as upon living and free Agents that can and must cooperate with him that he acts not on us by any necessary causality but in such a way as is fairly consistent with the natural liberty of our Wills and doth not renew us whether we will or no but takes our free consent and endeavour along with him and that having done all on his part that is necessary to perswade us he expects that we should consider what he saith and upon that consent to his gracious Motions and express this consent in a constant course of holy and vertuous endeavour and
edifie our understandings and therefore for this reason among others Christ thought meet to assume our natures that so he might treat with us in such a way as is most accommodate thereunto and deliver his divine Doctrines to us in a humane form and voice that so being conveyed to us in the most natural and familiar manner they might not so alarm our dread as to confound our attention but might instruct our minds instead of scaring and amusing them And therefore he did not only qualifie the terrour and dreadfulness of his divine Majesty by putting on our nature but together with it he put on all the condescensions and sweetnesses of a most familiar and endearing conversation and conversed among men in such a generous friendly and courteous manner as charmed and enamoured all ingenuous minds and thereby attracted their attention to his Doctrine So that as Christ was the Son of God he perfectly understood his Father's Will and as he was the Son of Man he was perfectly fitted to reveal and declare it to Mankind And as by being God-man he was most perfectly accomplished to declare God's Will to us so he was also to give us a perfect Example of Obedience to it which as I shall shew hereafter was a necessary part of his Prophetick Office. For without assuming humane Nature he could never have been an example of humane Vertue which consists in acting sutably to the nature of a Man who is a Compound of Spirit and Matter Reason and Sense Angel and Brute from which contrary Principles there arise in him contrary inclinations and affections in the good or bad government whereof all humane Vertue and Vice consists How then could he have practised those vertues which consist in the dominion of spiritual and rational faculties over brutal and sensitive such as Temperance Chastity Equanimity and the like had he not assumed that nature which is compounded of both How could he have shewn us by his own example how to govern the Passions and conduct our selves in the Circumstances of men had he not communicated with us in the Passions and Circumstances of humane Nature He might have come down from the Heavens to us inrobed with splendor and light or have preached his Gospel to the World in the midst of a Choir of Angels from some bright Throne in the Clouds and it would have been more convenient for himself to have done so because more sutable to the natural Dignity and Majesty of his Person but he consulted not so much his own convenience as ours he knew well enough that his appearance among us in such an illustrious equipage would have been more apt to astonish than to instruct us to have amused our thoughts into a profound admiration of his glories than to have directed our steps in the paths of Piety and Vertue and that it would be much more for our interest that he should conduct us by his example than amaze us by his appearance and therefore he rather chose to appear to us in our own nature that so by going before us as a man he might shew us by his example what became men to do and trace out to us the way to our happiness with the print of his own footsteps So that his coming among us in our own nature was of vast moment to his Prophetick Office both in declaring his Father's Will to us and setting us an example of obedience to it III. And lastly It is farther to be considered that as he came down immediately from the Father to Prophesie to us in our own natures so while he abode among us he was always endued with the Holy Ghost the Spirit of the Lord from whom all Prophetick Inspiration proceeds rested on him and made its constant residence and abode in his humane nature So that whereas it descended upon other Prophets only at certain times and upon certain occasions by reason of which it was not in their power to Prophesie when they pleased but they were fain to attend the arbitrary motions of the Holy Ghost and like dead Organ Pipes were mute and silent as oft as he withdrew and ceased to breath into them his divine Enthusiasms our blessed Saviour had the Prophetick Influx at command and could Prophesie whensoever he pleased For the Holy Ghost resided in his mind and like an assisting Form or Genius was always present with his Understanding and being as was shewed before subordinate to him both by personal Property and Agreement with the Father it operated in him whensoever howsoever and whatsoever he pleased and was as intirely at his disposal as his own most voluntary motions So that whensoever he had occasion for a Revelation he no sooner willed it but the Holy Ghost immediately inspired it into him and whensoever he wanted a Miracle to confirm a Revelation he no sooner called for it but the Holy Ghost immediately exerted it by him For as I shewed before he did both Prophesie and effect his Miracles by the Holy Ghost that was in him and that was so entirely subject to him through the whole course of his Ministry that he could Prophesie and do Miracles by him whensoever he pleased and hence he is said to be anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Acts 10.38 that is to be consecrated to the Prophetick Office by the descent of the Holy Ghost upon him by whom he was impowered to Prophesie and to confirm his Prophecy by Miracles for so it follows He went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed with the Devil for God was with him and accordingly at his Baptism he was solemnly consecrated the great Prophet of God by a visible Vnction of the Holy Ghost who as St. Luke tells us descended on him in a bodily form or appearance Chap. 3. ver 22. which St. Matthew thus expresses the Spirit of God descended like a Dove and light upon him Chap. 3. ver 16. not as if he descended in the form of a Dove but as it seems most probable he assumed a body of light or fire and therein came down from above just as a Dove with its Wings spread forth is observed to do and gathering about our Saviour's head crowned it with a visible Glory For so in the Nazaren Gospel as Grotius observes it is said that upon this descent of the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. there immediately shone a great light round about the place and Iustin Martyr tells us that when Christ was Baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that there was a fire lighted in the River Iordan that is by the reflection of that bright and flaming appearance in which the Holy Ghost descended the River seemed to be all on fire So that as God did signalize his presence in the Old Tabernacle by a visible Light or Glory so the Holy Ghost by descending on our Saviour in this shining appearance declared him to be the Tabernacle of his divine Presence wherein he meant from
bestows upon us he bestows by the hand of Jesus Christ whom upon his first Oblation of his precious Sacrifice in heaven and continual intercession with it he constituted and continues the Royal distributer of all his graces and favours to the World. And therefore since there is no doubt but that that which he obtains by his intercession is the thing which he intercedes for it necessarily follows that the thing which he intercedes for is power to bestow on us the blessings of the New Covenant because he hath actually obtained that power by his Intercession Having thus given as plain and as brief an account as I could of this second Priestly Act of our Saviour viz. his Intercession for us in Heaven by the continual Oblation of his Sacrifice there I proceed in the second place to shew the admirable tendency of this method of God's communicating his Graces and Favours to us through the intercession of our Saviour to reduce and reform Mankind which will plainly appear by considering the following particulars First This method naturally tends to excite in us a mighty aw and reverence of God's Majesty Secondly It also tends to give us the strongest conviction of God's hatred and abhorrence of our sins Thirdly It also tends most effectually to secure us from presuming upon God's mercy while we continue in our sins Fourthly It tends to encourage us to draw near to God with Chearfulness and freedom Fifthly It tends to give us the most ample assurance of his gracious intentions towards us if we repent and return to our duty I. This method of God's communicating his Favours to us through our Saviour's intercession is naturally apt to excite in us a mighty aw and reverence of the divine Majesty For in this degenerate condition wherein our Nature is inverted and turned upside down and our sensitive faculties have got the ascendant of our Reason rational Objects have incomparably less force on and prevalence with us than material and sensitive And hence it is that we are so unapt to be affected with the Majesty of God though in it self infinite and incomprehensible because it being purely spiritual is objected only to our Faith and Reason and doth not strike upon our sense with the Rays of a visible glory And hence it was that under the Old Testament God so frequently exhibited himself to mens eyes in sensible appearances as particularly sometimes in a humane shape and sometimes in a body of light or of shining flame that so by making an impression of his great Majesty on their sense he might affect them with a sutable aw and dread of it And for the same reason that he conversed with them in these sensible appearances he also treated with them by a Mediator on Mount Sinai for God commanded that bounds should be set round about the Mountain which the People were forbid upon peril of death to break through unto the Lord to gaze and only Moses their Mediator together with his Brother Aaron were permitted to ascend the Mount and to have immediate access to him and by thus keeping them at a distence from his sacred presence and only suffering them to approach him by their Mediator he took an effectual course to inspire their minds with a reverential aw of his divine Majesty which is in it self so infinitely sacred and August that it seems it would have been an high Prophanation in them to have conversed with it immediately And accordingly God by keeping us at a distance from him and allowing us to have access to him only by our Mediator expresses the greatness of his Majesty which is too sacred to be mingled in conversation with us too sublime to admit of the immediate addresses of poor Mortals yea and which no Mortal must approach without the Mediation of his own Eternal Son for thus Plato in his Sympos gives it as an instance of the Majesty of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. God doth not mingle himself with men but all the converse and intercourse between him and us is transacted by the Mediation of Demons And if it were thought so great an instance of God's Majesty that he would not be approached by us without the Mediation of Angels to what an infinite height must he be exalted above us when no less a person than he who is God-man can so much as give us access to him or present our Prayers and Supplications at his feet O! what an awful sense therefore of the Majesty of God should this consideration beget in our minds For how can we think of him without dread and reverence when we consider how he is secluded by the infinite sacredness of his own Majesty from all immediate converse and intercourse with us and how he is exalted so infinitely above us as that we cannot have access to him so much as by our Prayers and Supplications without the interposition of a Mediator who is greater than the greatest of all the Kings on Earth or Angels in Heaven Surely he who can thus think of God without being struck into a profound aw and reverence of his Majesty must have a mind so hardened against all the impressions of Reason as that no wise thought can ever move or affect it II. This method of God's communicating his favours to us through our Saviour's Intercession tends also to give us the strongest conviction of God's hatred and abhorrence of our sins For doubtless to convince us how deeply he resents our sinful behaviour towards him the most effectual course he could take next to that of banishing us from his presence for ever was to exclude us from all immediate intercourse with him and not to admit of any more addresses or supplications from us but by the hand of some Mediator Hereby he plainly demonstrates how infinitely pure and abhorrent to sin his nature is that he will not suffer a sinful Creature to come near him but by Proxy nor accept of a service from a guilty hand nor listen to a Prayer from a sinful mouth till it is first hallowed and presented to him by a pure and holy Mediator If therefore we are not infinitely conceited of our selves this procedure of his cannot but lay us low in our own eyes and make us deeply sensible of our own vileness and baseness For how infinitely detestable must our sins be in his eyes when notwithstanding all his kindness and benevolence towards us he keeps us at such a distance from him and will not be prevailed with without some powerful intercession so much as to hear our Prayers or to have any kind of communication or intercourse with us And accordingly you find that when the three Friends of Iob had treated him so despitefully and uncharitably God to manifest his displeasure against them commands them to make use of Iob's Mediation Iob 42.7 My wrath saith he to Elephas is kindled against thee and against thy two Friends for ye have not spoken of me the thing that
is right as my servant Iob hath therefore take unto you seven Bullocks and seven Rams and go to my servant Iob and offer up for your selves a burnt Offering and my servant Iob shall pray for you for him will I accept lest I deal with you after your folly as if he should have said that you may see how ill I resent your severe and cruel usage of that good man know that if you offer to address to me immediately for your selves I will certainly throw your Prayers back upon your faces as therefore you hope to be restored to my favour go to that injured Friend of yours and beseech him to mediate for you and I will hear him though I will not hear you And after the same manner doth God manifest his high displeasure against our sins that he will not suffer us to approach him immediately to present our Petitions to him with our own hands but will have them all presented to him by a hand that is more acceptable to him than our own and not only so but by the greatest and most acceptable hand in the World even that of his own Eternal Son the Son of his Essence and delight in whom he is for ever well pleased For it is through him alone that we have access to the Father whom our sins have so horribly incensed against us that no Advocate in Heaven or Earth less great and less dear to him than his own Son can prevail with him to be reconciled to us upon our most unfeigned repentance or so much as to accept of our humble Supplications O good God! what a woful distance have my sins made between thee and me that notwithstanding the infinite goodness and benignity of thy nature I cannot be admitted to thee nor expect any favour at thy hands upon any less powerful interest or application than that of thine only begotten Son but O stupid creature that I am to make light of those sins that have so highly incensed thee against me that none in Heaven or Earth but only that dearly beloved Son can prevail with thee to cast a propitious eye on me or so much as to give me access to the footstool of the Throne of thy grace III. This way of God's communicating his favours to us through the intercession of Christ is also most apt to secure us from presuming upon God's mercy while we continue in our sins There is no one thing doth more universally obstruct the reformation of men than their confident presumption that God will be merciful to them notwithstanding they persist in their rebellions against him For all men have a natural notion of the infinite goodness and benevolence of the Divine Nature together with which all bad men have a natural desire to sin without disturbance when therefore their Conscience begins to clamour against their wickedness and to vex and persecute them for it the mercy of God is the usual Sanctuary they fly to Peace froward Conscience cry they God is a most gracious and merciful Being hard to be provoked and easie to be pacified fear not therefore his mercy is infinitely greater than my faults and I am sure so good a God as he is can never find in his heart to destroy his Creature and Off-spring for such Peccadillo's as these With such presumptions as these they commonly lull their Consciences asleep and so sin on securely in despite of all the threats and warnings of Heaven that Thunder about their ears Now to prevent such presumptions as these and dash them quite out of countenance there is no consideration in the world can be more effectual than this of God's communicating his mercies to us through the intercession of our Saviour For if notwithstanding the goodness of his nature he will not be propitious to us no not upon our repentace without being moved thereunto by the powerful intercession of his own Son how can we ever expect that he should be propitious to us whether we repent or no Is it likely he should be more indulgent to us for our own sake than he is for his Son's sake and our own together or that when all that his Son can obtain for us is to receive us into favour in case we will lay down our Arms that we by our own interest should prevail with him to receive us while we persist in our obstinacy and rebellion in short if our repentance which is the best thing we can render him be not sufficient to move him to pardon us without being seconded and enforced with the powerful Oratory of our Saviour's Intercession what should move him when we have neither repentance nor a Saviour to intercede for us For our Saviour will not intercede for us unless we repent and our repentance will not prevail for us unless he intercede what hope have we therefore while we continue impenitent when our repentance it self which is the best thing we can do to move God to be propitious to us is insufficient without Christ's intercession and when without our repentance Christ will not intercede for us and if the tears of a penitent suppliant will not prevail with him without an Intercessor what hope is there that the affronts of an impenitent rebel should But suppose we might reasonably presume upon the benignity of God's nature that he will be propitious to us notwithstanding our impenitence yet it is to be considered that now he hath placed the dispensation of his mercy in the hand of a Mediator who is not left to dispose of it arbitrarily as he shall think fit but is confined and limited to dispose of it only to penitent offenders For Christ's Trust can extend no farther than to dispence God's mercy to us upon the terms of that Covenant of which he is Mediator which Covenant proposes mercy to us only upon condition of our repentance So that now we can expect no mercy from God but what passes through the hands of Jesus our Mediator who cannot without violating his trust dispence the mercy of God to us except we repent and amend For now God cannot dispence his mercy to us immediately without displacing his Son from his Mediatorship and his Son cannot dispence his mercy to us unconditionally without transgressing the bounds and limits that are prescribed to him and therefore since God hath restrained himself to dispence his mercy only through his Son and restrained his Son to dispence it only to penitents for us to presume upon the mercy of God while we continue impenitent is the greatest nonsense in the world it is to suppose either that God will cancel the Oeconomy of his mercy for our sakes and resume the dispensation of it immediately into his own hands meerly to favour and encourage us in our Rebellion against him or that Christ will betray the trust which his Father hath reposed in him and dispence his mercy to us contrary to his Orders that is either that God the Father will depose his Son
is joy in the presence of the Angels of God over one sinner that repents Luke 15.10 we cannot but suppose that so far as their own ability and the Laws of the invisible World will permit them they do promote and further our repentance since in so doing they contribute to their own joy and in a word since the Scripture assures us that the Angels are present in our holy Assemblies which that passage of S. Paul seems necessarily to imply 1 Cor. 11.10 For this cause ought the woman to have power over her head i. e. to be veiled in the sacred Assemblies because of the Angels or out of a decent respect and reverence to those blessed Spirits who are supposed to be present there since I say they are present in our Religious Assemblies we cannot reasonably suppose them to be present merely as Idle Auditors and Spectators who have nothing else to do but only to observe and gaze upon our holy solemnities and therefore must conclude that their great business there is to assist us in the performance of them to remove our indispositions and recollect our wandrings to fix our attention excite our affections and inflame our devotions for besides as they are the Ministers of the divine Providence they have many opportunities of presenting good objects to us and removing temptations from us of disciplining our natures with prosperities and afflictions and of so ordering and varying our outward Circumstances as to render our duty more facile and easie to us besides which I say as they are Spirits they have a very near and familiar access to our souls not that they can make any immediate impressions on our Vnderstanding or Will which are a sphere of light to which no created spirit can approach it being under the immediate Oeconomy of the Father of Spirits but yet being Spirits there is no doubt but they may and oftentimes do insinuate themselves into our fancies and mingle with the spirits and humours of our bodies and by that means never want opportunity both to suggest good thoughts to us and raise holy affections in us For that they can work upon our fancies is apparent else there could be neither Angelical nor Diabolical dreams and if they can so act upon our fancies as to excite new images and representations in them they may by this means communicate new thoughts to our understandi●g which naturally Prints off from the fancy those Ideas and Images which it there finds set and composed And as they can work upon our fancies so there is no doubt but they can influence our spirits and humours else they have not the power so much ●s to cure or inflict a disease and by thus working ●pon our spirits they can moderate as they please the violence of our passions which are nothing but the flowings and reflowings of our spirits to and fro from our hearts and by influencing our humours they can compose us when they please into such a sedate and serious temper as is most apt to receive religious impressions and to be influenced by the Heavenly motions of the Holy Ghost These things I doubt not the blessed Angels can and frequently do though we perceive it not and though by the Laws of the world of Spirits they may probably be restrained from doing their utmost for us that so we may still act with an uncontrouled freedom and be left under a necessity of a constant and diligent endeavour yet this we may be sure of that as the evil Angels are always busie to pervert and seduce us from our duty so the good are no less active to reduce us to and assist us in it VI. Another instance of the Ministry of Angels in the Kingdom of Christ is their conducting the separated Spirits of his faithful Subjects to the Mansions of Glory It was an ancient Tradition among the Jews that the Souls of the Faithful were conducted by Angels into Paradise of which the Chaldee Paraphrase makes mention on Cant. 4.12 and this Tradition of theirs is confirmed by our Saviour Luke 16.22 where he tells us that when Lazarus died he was carried by Angels into Abraham's bosom i. e. into that place of refreshment where the Soul of Abraham who was the Father of the Faithful dwells and in all probability that fiery Chariot and Horses wherein Elias was mounted up to Heaven 2 Kings 2.11 was nothing but a Convoy of Angels and accordingly Tertullian de anima c. 52. stiles the Angels Evocatores animarum i. e. the Messengers of God that call forth the lingring souls out of their bodies and shew them the Paraturam diversorii the preparation of those blessed Mansions where they are to abide till the Resurrection And this Office the good Angels do perform to the Souls of the faithful not meerly to congratulate their safe arrival into the world of blessedness though there is no doubt but that they who do so heartily rejoyce in the Conversion of sinners are ready enough to congratulate their Glorification but that which seems to be the great reason of this Ministration of theirs is to guard holy Souls when they leave their bodies through those lower Regions of the Air which are the Seat and Principality of the Apostate Angels who may therefore be very reasonably supposed to be continually lying in wait there like birds of prey to seize upon the Souls of men as soon as they are escaped out of the Cage of their bodies into the open Air and either to s●are and terrifie them in their passage to Heaven or to lead them away captive into their dark Prisons of endless horrour and despair and therefore to prevent their affrighting good souls which is all the hurt they can do them as they pass along through their Territories they are no sooner parted from their bodies but they are taken into the custody of some good Angel or Angels who guard them safe through the Enemies quarters and beat off those evil Spirits from them that would fain be infesting and assaulting them and it is not at all improbable but that by this very thing those evil Spirits do distinguish what Souls do belong to them from what do not viz. their being destitute of or attended with this holy Guard of Angels When they behold a separated Spirit under this Heavenly Convoy they fly away from it with infinite rage and envy to see it irrecoverably rescued out of their power to make it miserable but when they perceive one destitute and abandoned of this Angelick guard they immediately seize it as their own and so commit it to their Chains of darkness And as the good Angels do guard good Souls as they pass through the Air against the power and malice of the Prince of the power of the Air so they also conduct and guide them to their Mansions of blessedness For when the departed Soul is waf●ed through the Air into those immense tracts of Aether wherein the Sun and all the Heavenly bodies
to base Compliances with the lusts of men and the iniquities of times for a maintenance and that so Religion it self may not be exposed to contempt through their wretched Poverty and indigence who are the Ministers of it and who for want of a fair and honourable subsistence can never obtain Credit and Authority enough to do any considerable good in the World. And this is the food and sustenance of the Church without which it cannot long flourish either in true Knowledge or true Piety but must insensibly wither away and degenerate into Barbarity and Ignorance And accordingly if you consult Ecclesiastical History you will find that it was ever the practice of Pious Princes and Emperors to take care both for the erecting of decent and convenient Churches in all parts of their Dominions for the Celebration of Divine Worship and to furnish them with all the decent Accommodations and Ornaments that were proper thereunto and also for the endowing the Bishops and Pastors of the Church with such honourable subsistences as becomes the Port and Dignity of their several Orders and Offices in which they did no more than what they stood obliged to as they were the Viceroys of Jesus and the foster Fathers of his Church by vertue of which Relation to it they are bound in duty to supply it with decent Raiment and convenient Food And now having explained the subjection of the Sovereign Powers of the Earth to our Lord and Saviour and shewn what those Ministries are which they are obliged to render to him in his Kingdom I proceed to the Fourth and last sort of his Ministers by which he governs his Kingdom viz. the Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Governours in treating of which I shall endeavor these three things First To shew that Christ hath erected a spiritual Government to minister to him in his Church Secondly To shew in what hands this spiritual Government is placed Thirdly To shew what are the proper Ministries of this Government I. That Christ hath erected a spiritual Government in his Church And indeed supposing the Church to be a regular and formed Society subsisting of it self distinct from all other Societies it must necessarily have a distinct Government in it because Government is essentially included in the very notion of all regular Society which without Rule and Subjection is not a formed Society but a confused multitude for what else do we mean by a Humane Society but only such a company of men united together by such and such Laws and Regulations But how can any company of men be united by Laws without having in it some Governing Power to rule by those Laws and exact obedience to them So that we may as well suppose a compleat Body without a Head as a Regular Society without a Government Now that the Church is a Regular Society utterly distinct from all Civil Society is as evident as the truth of Christianity which all along declares and Recognizes the Law or Covenant upon which it is founded and by which it is united to be Divine and consequently to be superior to and independent upon all Civil Laws and if that which constitutes the Church be Divine Law and not Civil then the Constitution of the Church must be Divine and not Civil for that which makes us Christians at the same time makes us parts of the Christian Church and that which makes all the parts of the Church makes the Church it self which is nothing but the whole or Collection of all the parts together and therefore as we are not made Christians so neither are we made a Christian Church by the Laws of the Commonwealth but by the Laws and Constitutions of our Saviour which were promulgated to the World long before there were any Laws of the Commonwealth to found a Christian Church on for there was a Christian Church for three hundred years together before ever it had the least favour or protection from the Laws of Nations In all which time it subsisted apart from all other Societies and was as much a Church or Christian Society as it is now and as it is now it is only a continued Succession of that Primitive Church and therefore as to the Constitution of it must necessarily be as distinct now from all other Societies as it was then when it subsisted not only apart from but against the Laws and Edicts of all other Societies in the World in short therefore since the Church of Christ is founded on a Charter and incorporated by a Law that is utterly distinct from the Charters and Laws of all Civil Societies it hence necessarily follows that it self is a distinct Society from them all because that which individuates any Society or makes it a distinct body from all other Societies is the Charter or Law upon which it is founded and accordingly our Saviour tells Pilate when he asked him whether he was a King that he was a King indeed but that his Kingdom was not of this world Joh. 18.36 i. e. though my Kingdom be in this World yet is it not of the World for neither are the Laws of it Humane but Divine nor the powers of it external but invisible nor the Rewards and Punishments of it temporal but Spiritual and eternal From the whole therefore these two things are evident First That Government is Essential to formed and regular Societies Secondly That the Church of Christ is in the Nature and Constitution of it a formed and regular Society distinct from all other Societies from both which it necessarily followeth that it must have a distinct Government included in the very essence and being of it And accordingly in the New Testament besides the Civil Magistrates we frequently read of Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Governors so Heb. 13.17 there is mention made of the Rulers that watch for our souls and a strict injunction to obey and submit our selves to 'em and so again in the 7th and 24th Verses and in 1 Tim. 5.17 The Apostle speaks of the Elders that Rule well who are to be accounted worthy of double Honour And indeed the Greek Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies a Bishop or Overseer doth in Scripture always import a Ruler or Governour Vid. Hammond Acts 1. Note 1. and therefore being applied as it is frequently in the New Testament to a certain Order of Men in the Christian Church it must necessarily denote 'em to be the Rulers and Governors of it and this power to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. Oversee and Rule and Govern the Church was derived to 'em from Christ the Supreme Bishop of our Souls even by that Commission he gave 'em John 20.21 As the Father hath sent me so send I you i. e. so I Commission you with the same Authority in kind to Teach and Govern in my Kingdom as I my self have received from the Father and accordingly as Christ is called the Pastor or Shepherd which name imports Authority to Govern his Flock for
Spirit we could have no imagination of him because imaginations are nothing but the Images of sensible things we can now by the strength of our Imagination fetch him down from the Heavens when we please and set him before our minds in all that venerable Majesty wherein he sits at the right hand of his Father So that tho he be never present to our outward sense yet which is almost equivalent when ever we have occasion to converse with him we can make him present to our inward viz. our fancy and imagination into this spacious Gallery of the Pictures of sensible things our mind can walk when it pleases and there behold him in Effigie tho it cannot see him face to face and considering how much we are governed in this degenerate state of our nature by fancy and imagination as well as by sight and feeling it is doubtless a most advantageous circumstance of Gods Government of the World that he governs us by one whom we can fancy and imagine when we cannot see or feel him There are a great many men that never saw the King who yet are overawed by the imagination they have of his Majesty and greatness whereas were not the King a man but a pure invisible Spirit they could form no imagination of him the want of which would very much abate if not utterly extinguish their aw and reverence of his Person Considering therefore how much we are governed by our sense in this state of our Apostacy it was doubtless a wonderful wise contrivance of God who is a pure Spirit to assume to himself some sensible matter that therein by presenting himself to our outward or inward sense he might strike the deeper aw on us and thereby the more effectually rule and govern us But of all sensible matter none could be so proper to this purpose as a human form in which we are inured and accustomed to be governed and of which as was hinted before we have of all sensible things the greatest love and veneration during this our Degeneracy therefore by which we are so unqualified to be governed by God immediately God the Father hath most wisely contrived to govern us by God-man i. e. by his own eternal Son Hypostatically united to our natures But when once mankind is recovered out of this lapsed condition when our sense is perfectly subdued to our reason and all our faculties are reduced into their Primitive Order then we shall return under Gods immediate Dominion for then God-man shall deliver up the Kingdom and God shall be all in all II. God now governs us by his own eternal Son in our natures to cure and prevent the spreading contagion of Idolatry There is no one Vice to which our corrupt nature is more propense and of which it hath been more universally tardy than that of Idolatry for as for other Vices they have their peculiar Provinces and such a Vice is more predominant in such a Clime and Temperament of Air In one Nation Pride reigns in another Intemperance in another Treachery and in a fourth Malice and Revenge as for Idolatry it 's an universal Monarch to whose Empire all the World hath been enslaved and subjected and notwithstanding all the care which God hath taken to prevent it it hath spread like the Plague till it became the Epidemical Disease of human Nature Now to be sure such an universal effect must necessarily be owing to some universal cause and what other can that be than the universal degeneracy of human Nature from its primitive life of Reason into a life of Sense For while Man was under the Government of his Reason he was as much influenced by dry arguments as he is now by his Sense and the full reason he had to believe that there is an invisible divine Being presiding over all things did as vigorously excite him to adore and worship him as the sight of him could have done had he appeared to his bodily eyes in a Glory proportionable to the immense perfections of his Nature But when once his sense had usurped the Throne of his reason and enslaved him to its Empire the case was quite altered now Reason and Argument have very little influence on him unless it be back'd with some impressions on his sense and his predominant affections are those that are raised by the strokes of sensible objects upon the sensories of his Sight and Taste and Feeling which the divine substance and perfections can never touch they being purely spiritual by which means that communication and intercourse which was between God and man whilst man was governed by reason is mightily disturbed and interrupted tho it be not altogether stopt and intercepted for still our reason which was not extinguished by the degeneracy of our natures suggests to us that there is a God and inspires us with an awful sense of his divine perfections which still maintains in us Religious Inclinations and Affections whereby we are importuned and solicited to adore and worship but we being under the Government of Sense are thereby naturally inclined either to look upon God who is in himself a pure invisible Spirit under the notion of a sensible Being and as such to worship him for so anciently some adored the Sun for God others the universal material Nature others such particular parts of it and in this consists that gross Idolatry of worshiping false Gods or at least to blend our conceptions of him with corporeal Phantasms and then to express those Phantasms in outward visible Images by them to excite and direct our Worship to him for so in most Nations the supreme Numen was heretofore adored in Statues and Images of several shapes and figures copied from the several Images by which they represented him to themselves in their own vain and roving imaginations and herein consists that more refined Idolatry of worshiping the true God in a false manner Thus the general cause of all Idolatry is nothing but the general Apostacy of human nature from the life of reason to the life of sense by which we are naturally inclined either to transform God into a gross and sensible nature or at least to assist our selves in conceiving of and adoring and worshiping him by sensible and visible Objects To prevent which God hath been graciously pleased to assume some material substance and therein from time to time to exhibit to mens eyes a visible presence of himself which in Scripture is frequently called the Glory of the Lord and by the ancient Jews the Shechinah or habitation of God and consisted of a shining luminous matter which exhibited a glorious lustre of flame or light set off with thick and solemn clouds whence it is probable he is said to cover himself with light as with a garment Psal. 104.2 and in this glorious appearance he conducted Israel through the Red Sea and Wilderness came down upon Mount Sinai and was seen by Moses and the Elders of Israel and from thence removed into
and of our own form and shape which of all others is most familiar to and most beloved and reverenced by us and consequently of all others is most familiar to and most beloved and reverenced by us and consequently of all others is most apt to encourage our prayers and inflame our zeal and raise our admiration For in what sensible appearance could God have more powerfully affected our sense than in that which we are most inclined to love most prone to trust to and most accustomed to reverence and obey and than that in which alone we discern the Image of God and the reflections of those divine Attributes of Wisdom and Goodness and Truth and Justice for which we reverence and adore him There being therefore no visible substance in which God could more advantageously exhibit himself to us in order to the exciting our worship to him and determining it upon him than that of a humane form he thought meet to assume our natures into a personal union with his Divinity and therein to rule and govern us So that now the Humanity of our Saviour is the Tabernacle and Shechinah of God wherein the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily and these two natures united in Person and Glory are the immediate object of our worship wherefore as the ancient Iews fell upon their faces and worshipped when they beheld the Shechinah or glory of the Lord their imagination being thereby assisted and their affections excited Levit. 9.24 So when we by our internal sense or imagination look up to the Glorified Humanity of our Saviour in Heaven it is our duty to raise up our affections to Heaven by that sensible Shechinah of God and thereupon to fall down and worship But as the Iews when they fell down before their Shechinah did not worship the visible light or glory separately from God but as it was united to and assumed into conjunction with him so neither ought we to worship our Shechinah viz. the humanity of our Saviour separately from his Divinity but in Union and Conjunction with it and in short as it was utterly unlawful for the Iews to worship God in any other Shechinah or sensible appearance either unshapen or shaped than in that Glorious one which he himself vouchsafed to them that being sufficient to affect their sense and thereby to raise up their minds and affections to him so is it utterly unlawful for us Christians to worship God in any other Shechinah Image similitude or visible appearance than that of the glorified humanity of our Saviour that being sufficient to assist our imaginations and elevate our hearts and devotions to him For though we cannot behold his glorified Humanity with our bodily Eyes now he is removed into Heaven yet so neither did the Iews the Glory of the Lord at least but very rarely after the Ark whereupon it sat was removed into the Holy of Holies which was a figure of Heaven yet as they being assured it was there could easily view it in their imaginations and thereby assist their devotion so we being assured from Scripture that Christs humanity is in Heaven can look up thither in our imagination and by beholding its glory there lift up our heavy minds and affections to the eternal Divinity that inhabits it so that if we Christians make any other Shechinah or Image to worship God in besides his own humanity which he himself made and wherein he now dwells above in the Heavens we are of all false worshippers the most inexcusable because by assuming our humanity God hath vouchsafed to us such an Image and Shechinah of himself as is of all others the most proper and effectual to excite and determine our Devotions III. God hath chosen to Govern us by his own eternal Son in our natures that he might thereby the more powerfully incourage us to obedience for now we have all the assurance in the World that the great design of his Government is to do us good and to advance our happiness and that under his blessed Empire we shall be sure to enjoy all the graces and favours that can be wisely indulged on his part or modestly expected on ours Had he Governed us immediately by himself we could not have been so secure of our interest in him as we have reason to be of our interest in his Son hypostatically united to our nature because the divine Nature considered purely as such is infinitly distant from ours and has no other relation to it than as it is the common cause of all things and being so distant in nature from us it would have been hard for us to imagine how he could be touched with the same tender and compassionate regard for us as he would be if he were nearer allied to us especially when we reflected upon our own demerit and considered that by our sins we had set our selves at a wider distance from him than we were by our natures this together with that anxiety which naturally arises in guilty minds could not but have rendered us very suspicious of Gods intentions towards us had he governed us immediately by himself but now that he governs us by his own Son cloathed in our own nature at his hands we may with full confidence expect a most gracious and merciful treatment For now we are assured we have a close and most intimate interest in him by reason of his kindred and Alliance to us in the same common nature which makes him every mans another self under different accidents and circumstances and his nature being perfectly happy and perfectly pure from all irregular passions and appetites cannot but be affected with a most tender regard to all the individuals of its own kind because being compleatly happy himself he can have nothing farther to desire for himself but that his kindred by nature who are all his own substance dilated and multiplied may be happy too and being intirely good he can have nothing of that sordid selfishness in him which doth too often contract and narrow our benevolence and cause us like Serpents to infold our selves within our selves and to turn out our stings to all the World besides Upon both these accounts therefore as he is a perfectly happy and perfectly good man he cannot but bear a hearty and universal good will to mankind and that he doth so he hath given us too many dear experiments to make the least doubt of it for while he was among us he all along prefer'd our interest before his own he made himself poor to inrich us exposed himself to contempt to raise us to glory took upon him our guilt to release us from punishment and willingly underwent a most miserable death that we might live happily for ever In all which he gave us the most Glorious demonstrations how infinitely dear the humane nature of which he participated was to him in all those numberless individuals into which it hath been multiplied The consideration of which is exceedingly pregnant with
the works which the Father hath given me to finish the same works that I do bear witness of me that the Father hath sent me So also Iohn 10.25 The works which I do in my Fathers Name they bear witness of me And in Iohn 15.24 Our Saviour makes the inexcusable aggravation of the Iews infidelity to be this that they would not be convinced by all those miraculous works which he had done among them If I had not done among them the works which none other man did they had not had sin but now have they both seen and hated me and my Father In these and sundry other places our Saviour appeals to those miraculous works which he did as to a certain Testimony from God that he was the only true Messias or Mediator between God and men And indeed seeing the great aim and design of our Saviours Mediation is to advance the Honour of God and the perfection of Souls and seeing how admirably it is framed and contrived to promote those blessed ends Miracles are a most certain attestation of the truth of it For though the Scripture tells us of false Miracles wrought by the power of evil Spirits and History furnishes us with innumerable instances of it yet it is against all reason to imagin that ever evil Spirits would exert their power to attest a Doctrine so infinitely repugnant to their own temper and interest Had the design of our Saviours Mediation been to alienate mens minds from God and Goodness we might have justly concluded all his miraculous works to be nothing but Magical Tricks performed by confederacy with the Devil For how could we have imagined either that God or any good Spirit would ever have employed his power to propagate a Doctrine so infinitely repugnant to his Will and nature seeing it is equally incredible either that a bad Religion should be the Will of a good God or that the God of truth should bear false witness to a lie and therefore we always find that those false Miracles effected by evil Spirits whereof the Scripture and History make mention were always wrought to deprave mens minds with vicious principles and to seduce men from God to superstition and Idolatry or to confirm them in it but that an impious spirit should ever work Miracles to promote true Piety to inspire mens minds with great and worthy thoughts of God and sutable affections towards him that a malicious proud unjust and revengeful Spirit should by miraculous Signs endeavour to reduce the World to the practice of Charity humility justice patience meekness and equanimity is infinitely incredible and therefore since the Doctrine of our Saviours Mediation doth above all the Religions that ever were professed in the World most powerfully oblige us to these and all other instances of Piety and Vertue we may depend upon it that though the Devil had known it to be a Lye he would never have been so great a fool as to cheat the World into the belief of it for though he loves to deceive yet there is nothing in nature he more hates than to deceive men into Piety and Vertue because hereby he deceives himself and betrays his own interest in the World. The Miracles of our Saviour therefore being all designed to attest a most pure and heavenly Doctrine a Doctrine that is throughout exactly conformable to the Nature of God and infinitely abhorrent to the Genius of Devils must necessarily be the effects of a Divine power because to work Miracles for the attestation of such a Doctrine could be neither agreeable to any other nature nor serviceable to any other interest but Gods. Now of all the miraculous testimonies which God gave to our Saviour there is none to which he did so often appeal and upon which he did so much stake the credit of his Doctrine as that of his own Resurrection from the dead for thus when he had performed that heroick act of Zeal whipping the Money Changers out of the Temple and the Jews required some sign of him by what authority he did it he bad them destroy this Temple pointing to his own body and in three days I will raise it up again John 2.19 So also when the Pharisees desired him to give them some sign of his being the true Messias he tells them that no other sign should be given them but only the sign of the Prophet Jonas for as Jonas was three days and three nights in the Whales belly so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth which necessarily implies that after that he should rise again Mark 8.12 and accordingly we find that after he was risen and ascended the principal business of his Apostles was to testifie his Resurrection to the World for so Acts 1.22 S. Peter makes this to be the reason why it was necessary that one should be chosen into the Apostolate to supply the room of Iudas that he might be a witness with them of Christs Resurrection and in Acts 4.33 we are told that with great power the Apostles gave witness of the Resurrection of the Lord Iesus and still when they were to prove any Article of the Christian Faith this they urge as the great argument Thus from the Resurrection of Christ S. Paul proves the general Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. so also Acts 17.31 he proves that God hath appointed a day wherein he will judge the World in righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained viz. Christ Jesus by this very topick whereof he hath given assurance unto all men in that he hath raised him from the dead and 1 Pet. 1.3 that Apostle makes Christs Resurrection from the dead to be the great motive of credibility by which God had begotten them again into a lively hope of future happiness so also Acts 2.36 Therefore saith the same Apostle i. e. because God had raised him from the dead ver 24. let all the house of Israel know that God hath made this same Iesus both Lord and Christ and Rom. 1.4 he is said to be declared the Son of God by the Resurrection from the dead yea so undoubted an argument is this of Christs being the true Messias or Mediator that the Jews themselves were convinced that they must either allow him to be so or else outface the truth of his Resurrection which put them upon all possible ways of stifling the report of it knowing that if once it obtained credit in the World the last error would be worse than the first Mat. 27.64 from all which it is evident that it was taken for granted not only by Christ himself and his Apostles but even by his most avowed Enemies that supposing his Resurrection to be true it would from thence undeniably follow that he was the Messias or Mediator In the management of this Argument therefore I shall endeavour these two things First To prove the truth and reality of this miraculous attestation which God gave to our
was upon Earth were plain demonstrations of his being sent from God and therefore to these as I shewed before he frequently appeals in his excellent Disputations with the unbelieving Iews and when Iohn Baptist sent to inquire of him whether he were the Messias or no he returns no other Answer but this Go and shew John those things which ye see and hear that the blind receive their sight and the lame walk the Lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear and the dead are raised up and the poor have the Gospel preached unto them Matt. 11.4 5. But his own Resurrection being the greatest Miracle that he ever performed to this both himself and his Apostles did most commonly appeal insomuch that S. Paul 1 Cor. 15.14 says That if Christ be not risen then is our preaching vain and our faith vain because this being the Grand Miracle on which Christ staked the credit of his whole Doctrine if this had failed there had been no reason to give any Credit to any thing that he taught The Resurrection of Christ therefore is a certain evidence of the truth of his Doctrine only as it was the greatest of his miraculous works it proved his Doctrine no otherwise than his other Miracles did but it was the highest proof of it as it was the greatest of his Miracles Wherefore to shew what an excellent proof of his Doctrine his Resurrection was I shall endeavour to shew that Miracles in general and particularly this of Christs Resurrection are the best evidences of a Divine Revelation that the nature of the thing will bear and this I shall do by shewing First that this is the most proper and convenient Evidence Secondly That it is the most certain and infallible Thirdly that it is the plainest and most popular Fourthly That it is the shortest and most compendious I. First That this evidence of Miracles is the most proper and convenient to prove the truth of any pretence to Revelation For as for the intrinsick Arguments drawn from the nature and quality of the Revelation they may prove it indeed to be wise and good and holy but how they should prove it to be immediately revealed from God I cannot apprehend For as for the Moral Writings of the Heathen Philosophers they were most of them very good and wise and holy but yet it doth not hence follow that the Authors of them were immediately inspired when they wrote them notwithstanding their goodness they might be and doubtless were the dictates of their own natural reason and so may any other Doctrine how good soever it be and tho the Authors of such Writings may pretend to be inspired yet that is no argument that they are For all that I know they may pretend to it to give credit to their Doctrine or they may think themselves inspired when they are not so that they have no other way to convince me that what they pretend is true but only by giving me some certain sign and token that they are really inspired from above and no sign can reasonably convince me of this but such a one as I have reason to believe God alone did inable them to give me for so long as I have just reason to suspect that the sign which they give me was produced either by their own power or by the power of some other Agent besides God it is no sign at all to me of their being inspired by God. Miracles therefore being the only signs we can reasonably believe are produced by the immediate power of God 't is they alone can indicate a mans being immediately inspired by God. For how can I be assured that what a man saith is immediately revealed to him by God unless God himself give me some sign or token that he is so and how can I know that this or that is a sign or token from God unless it be something so extraordinary and miraculous as that all things considered I may reasonably conclude 't was God alone that produced it I confess indeed a Miracle singly is not sufficient to demonstrate any Doctrine to be of divine Revelation for unless the Doctrine it self be good at least unless it hath no apparent evil in it there is no Miracle whatsoever can prove it to be divine For there is no argument in the World can persuade a reasonable man to believe God against himself but to believe a bad Doctrine to be the Will of God because it is confirmed by Miracles is to believe Gods Power against his Goodness and it is not more certain that God doth will what he confirms by Miracles than that he doth not cannot will iniquity nay of the two I should rather believe a good Doctrine to be from God barely because it is good than that a bad Doctrine is so because it is confirmed by Miracles it being more possible for a wicked Impostor to work a Miracle than for a holy God to will sin But yet the goodness of a Doctrine singly considered and without the confirmation of Miracles is no certain proof that 't is of divine revelation 'T is true those things in any Doctrine which are morally good and founded upon eternal reasons may be demonstrated true by moral arguments without any additional confirmation by Miracles but if the Doctrine contain in it any Proposition that is matter of pure Revelation and cannot be known without it it is hardly possible to prove such a Doctrine true without producing some miraculous sign of its truth and divinity As for instance how can a man know that God hath appointed Jesus to be the Mediator between himself and us which is matter of pure revelation wholly depending on the free will of God unless God himself give us some miraculous sign by which we may know that it is his Will and Appointment And therefore we find that there is no Revelation or pretence of Revelation but what lays claim to this way of confirmation Thus the Mosaick Religion was confirmed by sundry great and stupendous Miracles and even the false Religion of the Heathen pretended to this way of confirmation also for generally they established their superstitious Rites by Magical Tricks and Incantations they conjured their Demons into their consecrated Images and made the liveless Stocks to move and speak they pretended to effect extraordinary Cures by the invocation of their Idols they often raised the Devils they adored by their Charms and Inchantments and made them appear in strange visible shapes to their superstitious Votaries and by these and such like miraculous pretences they introduced all their Idolatrous Ceremonies which is a plain evidence that they thought Miracles to be the most proper and natural arguments of the truth of any Revelation and since the thing is capable of no better way of demonstration it is an unreasonable thing not to be satisfied with this for he who will not believe that a thing which may be is without an impossible proof of its existence is unreasonably
than this it had been a Religion fit only for the Schools of Philosophers and the Vulgar who are not capable of close and strict discourse and have neither time nor skill enough to trace the footsteps of truth through all the intricacies of reasoning and discourse must have been damned to eternal infidelity and this without doubt was one main reason why the Moral Philosophy of the Heathen had so little influence upon the People because the Arguments by which its Principles were proved and demonstrated were too fine and subtile for vulgar apprehensions insomuch that there were but few in comparison that could comprehend the strength and force of them and in all probability as little effect would Christianity have found in the World had it not been proved and demonstrated by such evidence as is adapted to all capacities As for instance the immortality of the Soul is one great Principle of the Christian Religion but now had we no other way of proving this Principle than by Philosophical Arguments how impossible would it have been to convince the Vulgar of the truth of it For first we must have proved that the Soul is immaterial by shewing that its operations such as Free-will and Reflection are incompetent with Matter from hence we must have inferred that it is immortal by shewing that what is immaterial hath no quantitative extension and consequently is incapable of division and corruption Now I beseech you what Iargon what unintelligible Gibberish would this appear to vulgar understandings What an insignificant noise would such fine Speculations make in the ears of an honest Plowman But now the miraculous Resurrection of our Saviour is so plain and intelligible a proof of it that every man may apprehend the force of it that hath the free use of his own faculties for it is but arguing thus and the thing is clearly proved Christ told the World whilst he was alive that the Soul is immortal and that there are everlasting habitations of weal or woe prepared for her in another World and in token that what he said was true he promised that the third day after his death he would rise again which he could never have verified had not God given him power to do it and to be sure God would never have given him this power had not his saying been true wherefore since God did impower him to rise again it is plain that he thereby approved the truth of his saying and justified his Doctrine to the World. This is such a plain and intelligible way of arguing that the shallowest minds may easily apprehend the force of it wherefore since God designed Christianity to be a Religion as well for the Vulgar as for the more refined and elevated understandings it was highly reasonable that the way of proving its Principles should be plain and intelligible to all capacities of men IV. And lastly This evidence of Miracles is the most short and compendious way of proving the truth of Revelation One reason why the moral Philosophy of the Heathen had so little influence on the Vulgar was because their way of proving the Principles of it was so long and tedious for they were fain to prove them by parcels and when they had convinced their Auditors of the truth of one Proposition they proceeded to another and so they were fain to prove them all singly and apart by distinct and different arguments which was so tedious a way that the vulgar had not leisure enough to attend to so great a variety of reasonings nor yet capacity enough to retain them but he that works a real Miracle in token that such a Doctrine is true proves it all at once and needs not trouble himself to demonstrate one Proposition after another for by giving a miraculous sign of the truth of such a Doctrine God doth openly approve every Proposition contained in it because it cannot be supposed that the God of truth would approve any Doctrine in the gross if any part or Proposition of it had been false since in so doing he must necessarily have abused our understandings and wittingly betrayed us into a false belief which to affirm of God is equally absurd and blasphemous When therefore God raised our Saviour from the dead he did by that one Act openly avow the truth of his whole Doctrine and proclaim to all the World that every Article in it is as true as truth it self So that now we need not trouble our selves to hunt out for several Arguments to prove the several Articles of our Faith for this one Argument serves instead of all that God by sundry Miracles and particularly by raising Jesus from the dead hath given Testimony that the Doctrine which he taught is a true revelation of his Mind and Will to the World. And thus you see what a clear and excellent evidence Christs Miracles and especially his Resurrection is of the truth of his Doctrine No wonder therefore that the Apostle doth so much prefer it above all other evidence as we find he doth 1 Cor. 2.4 For saith he my speech and my teaching was not with the enticing words of mans wisdom but in demonstration of spirit and of power that is I did not go about to convince ye with Rhetorical Harangues or fine Philosophical Reasonings but I clearly demonstrated the truth of what I preached by the Miracles which through the power of the Divine Spirit I wrought amongst you So that whether we consider the certainty of Christs Miracles but especially of his Resurrection or the powerful evidence which they give to his Doctrine I doubt not but upon an impartial view of the whole it will appear that we have all the reason in the world firmly to assent to the truth of Christianity and consequently to this Article which comprehends it all that Iesus Christ is the Mediator between God and Man. FINIS NOTES Page 35. Line 18. a FOr thus Tertullian hunc i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Zeno determinat factitorem qui cuncta in dispositione formaverit eundemque fatum vocari Deum animum Iovis Apologet. 36 Pam. i. e. this Word Zeno declares to be the Maker of the World who formed all things in a due temper and is called Fate and God and the Soul of Iupiter And the Ancient Orpheus calls him the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the divine Word and immortal King C●em Strom. l. 5. p. 60 So also Numenius the Pythagorean as he is quoted by S. Cyril cont Iul. lib. 8. calls the Father the First and the Word the Second God. So also Plotinus Enn. 5. l. 5. c. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 speaking of this divine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. and this nature is God a second God and as for the Jews it is evident from the Septuagint and Philo and the Chaldee Paraphrase that by the Word they meant a divine