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A53734 Two discourses concerning the Holy Spirit, and His work the one, Of the Spirit as a comforter, the other, As He is the author of spiritual gifts ... / by ... John Owen. Owen, John, 1616-1683.; Mather, Nathanael, 1631-1697.; Owen, John, 1616-1683. Discourse of spiritual gifts. 1693 (1693) Wing O818; ESTC R2819 174,342 306

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in its proper Order If men be not first sanctified by him they can never be comforted by him And they will themselves prefer in their Troubles any natural or rational Reliefs before the best and highest of his Consolations For however they may be proposed unto them however they may be instructed in the Nature Wayes and Means of them yet they belong not unto them and why should they value that which is not theirs The World cannot receive him He worketh on the World for Conviction Joh. 16. 8. and on the Elect for Conversion Joh. 3. 8. But none can receive him as a Comforter but Believers Therefore is this whole Work of the Holy Spirit little taken notice of by the most and despised by many Yet is it never the less glorious in it self being fully declared in the Scripture nor the less usefull to the Church being testified unto by the Experience of them that truely believe THAT which remaineth for the full Declaration of this Office and Work of the Holy Ghost is the Consideration of those Acts of his which belong properly thereunto and of those Priviledges whereof Believers are made Partakers thereby And whereas many blessed Mysteries of Evangelical Truth are contained herein they would require much Time and Diligence in their Explanation But as to the most of them according unto the Measure of Light and Experience which I have attained I have prevented my self the handling of them in this place For I have spoken already unto most of them in two other Discourses the one concerning the Perseverance of True Believers and the other of our Communion with God and of the Holy Spirit in particular As therefore I shall be sparing in the Repetition of what is already in them proposed unto publick View so it is not much that I shall add thereunto Yet what is necessary unto our present Design must not be wholly omitted especially seeing I find that further Light and Evidence may be added unto our former Endeavours in this kind CHAP. IV. Inhabitation of the Spirit the first thing promised THE first thing which the Comforter is promised for unto Believers is that he should dwell in them which is their great Fundamental Priviledge and whereon all other do depend This therefore must in the first place be enquired into THE Inhabitation of the Spirit in Believers is among those things which we ought as to the Nature or Being of it firmly to believe but as to the Manner of it cannot fully conceive Nor can this be the least Impeachment of it's Truth unto any who assent unto the Gospel wherein we have sundry things proposed as Objects of our Faith which our Reason cannot comprehend We shall therefore assert no more in this matter but what the Scripture directly and expresly goeth before us in And where we have the express Letter of the Scripture for our Warrant we are eternally safe whilst we affix no Sence thereunto that is absolutely repugnant unto Reason or contrary unto more plain Testimonies in other places Wherefore to make plain what we intend herein the ensuing Observations must be premised FIRST This Personal Inhabitation of the Holy Spirit in Believers is distinct and different from his Essential Omnipresence whereby he is in all things Omnipresence is Essential Inhabitation is Personal Omnipresence is a necessary Property of his Nature and so not of him as a distinct Person in the Trinity but as God essentially one and the same in Being and Substance with the Father and the Son To be every where to fill all things to be present with them or indistant from them always equally existing in the Power of an Infinite Being is an inseparable Property of the Divine Nature as such But this Inhabitation is Personal or what belongs unto him distinctly as the Holy Ghost Besides it is voluntary and that which might not have been whence it is the Subject of a Free Promise of God and wholly depends on a Free Act of the Will of the Holy Spirit himself SECONDLY It is not a Presence by Vertue of a Metonymical Denomination or an Expression of the Cause for the Effect that is intended The meaning of this Promise The Spirit shall dwell in you is not He shall work graciously in you for this he can without any especial Presence Being essentially every where he can work where and how he pleaseth without any especial Presence But it is the Spirit himself that is promised and his Presence in an especial manner and an especial manner of that Presence he shall be in you and dwell in you as we shall see The only Enquiry in this matter is whether the Holy Spirit himself be promised unto Believers or only his Grace which we shall immediately enquire into THIRDLY The dwelling of the Person of the Holy Spirit in the Persons of Believers of what Nature soever it be doth not effect a Personal Union between them That which we call a Personal Union is the Union of Divers Natures in the same Person and there can be but one Person by Vertue of this Union Such is the Hypostatical Union in the Person of the Son of God It was our Nature he assumed and not the Person of any And it was impossible he should so assume any more but in one Individual Instance For if he could have assumed another Individual Being of our Nature then it must differ personally from that which he did assume For there is nothing that differs one Man from another but a distinct Personal Subsistence of each And it implies the highest Contradiction that the Son of God could be Hypostatically united unto more than one For if they are more than one they must be more Persons than one And many Persons cannot be Hypostatically united for that is to be one Person and no more There may be a manifold Union Mystical and Moral or divers of many Persons but a Personal Union there cannot be of any thing but of distinct Natures And as the Son of God could not assume many Persons so supposing that Humane Nature which he did unite to himself to have been a Person that is to have had a distinct Subsistence of it's own Antecedent unto it's Union and there could have been no Personal Union between it and the Son of God For the Son of God was a distinct Person and if the Humane Nature had been so too there would have been two Persons still and so no Personal Union Nor can it be said that although the Humane Nature of Christ was a Person in it self yet it ceased so to be upon its Union with the Divine and so two Persons were conjoyned and compounded into one For if ever Humane Nature have in any Instance a personal Subsistence of it's own it cannot be separated from it without the Destruction and Annihilation of the Individual For to suppose otherwise is to make it to continue what it was and not what it was for it is what it is distinct
is in it self that Spring from whence their secret Refreshments and Supportments do arise And there is none of them but upon Guidance and Instruction are able to conceive how their chiefest Joys and Comforts even those whereby they are supported in and against all their Troubles are resolved into that Spiritual Understanding which they have into the Mysteries of the Will Love and Grace of God in Christ with that ineffable Complacency and Satisfaction which they find in them whereby their Wills are engaged into an unconquerable Constancy in their Choice And there is no small Consolation in a due Apprehension of that Spiritual Dignity which ensues hereon For when they meet with the greatest Troubles and the most contemptuous Scorns in this World a due Apprehension of their Acceptance with God as being made Kings and Priests unto him yield them a Refreshment which the World knows nothing of and which themselves are not able to express CHAP. VI. The Spirit a Seal and How SECONDLY Another Effect of the Holy Spirit as the Comforter of the Church is that by him Believers are sealed 2 Cor. 1. 21 22. He who anointed us is God who hath also sealed us And how this is done the same Apostle declares Eph. 1. 13. In whom also after ye believed ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of Promise And Chap. 4. 30. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed to the Day of Redemption In the first place it is expresly said that we are sealed with the Spirit whereby the Spirit himself is expressed as this Seal and not any of his especial Operations as he is also directly said himself to be the Pledge of our Inheritance In the latter the Words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in whom in and by the receiving of whom ye are sealed Wherefore no especial Act of the Spirit but only an especial Effect of his Communication unto us seems to be intended hereby THE common Exposition of this Sealing is taken from the Nature and Use of Sealing among Men. The Summ whereof is this Sealing may be considered as a Natural or Moral Action that is either with respect unto the Act of it as an Act or with respect unto its Use and End In the first way it is the Communication of the Character or Image that is on the Seal unto the thing that is Sealed or that the Impression of the Seal is set unto In answer hereunto the Sealing of the Spirit should consist in the Communication of his own Spiritual Nature and Likeness unto the Souls of Believers So this Sealing should materially be the same with our Sanctification The End and Use of Sealing among Men is two-fold 1 To give Security unto the Performance of Deeds Grants Promises Testaments and Wills or the like engaging Signification of our Minds And in answer hereunto we may be said to be Sealed when the Promises of God are confirmed and established unto our Souls and we are secured of them by the Holy Ghost But the Truth is this were to Seal the Promises of God and not Believers But it is Persons and not Promises that are said to be Sealed 2 It is for the safe-keeping or Preservation of that which a Seal is set upon So things precious and highly valuable are sealed up that they may be kept safe and inviolable So on the other hand when Job expressed his Apprehension that God would keep an everlasting Remembrance of his Sin that it should not be lost or out of the way he saith his Transgression was sealed up in a Bag Chap. 14. 17. And so it is that Power which the Holy Ghost puts forth in the Preservation of Believers which is intended And in this respect they are said to be Sealed unto the Day of Redemption THESE things have been spoken unto and enlarged on by many so that there is no need again to insist upon them And what is commonly delivered unto this purpose is good and useful in the Substance of it and I have on several occasions long since my self made use of them But upon renewed Thoughts and Consideration I cannot fully acquiesce in them For 1 I am not satisfied that there is such an Allusion herein unto the use of Sealing among Men as is pretended And if there be it will fall out as we see it hath done that there being so many Considerations of Seals and Sealing it will be hard to determine on any one Particular which is principally intended And if you take in more as the manner of the most is to take in all they can think of it will be unavoidable that Acts and Effects of various kinds will be assigned unto the Holy Ghost under the Term of Sealing and so we shall never come to know what is that one determinate Act and Priviledge which is intended therein 2 All things which are usually assigned as those wherein this Sealing doth consist are Acts or Effects of the Holy Ghost upon us whereby he Seals us whereas it is not said that the Holy Spirit Seals us but that we are Sealed with him He is God's Seal unto us ALL our Spiritual Priviledges as they are immediately communicated unto us by Christ so they consist wholly in a Participation of that Head Spring and Fulness of them which is in him And as they proceed from our Union with him so their principal End is Conformity unto him And in him in whom all things are conspicuous we may learn the Nature of those things which in lesser measure and much Darkness in our selves we are made Partakers of So do we learn our Unction in his So must we enquire into the Nature of our being Sealed by the Spirit in his Sealing also For as it is said that he who hath sealed us is God 2 Cor. 1. 21 22. so of him it is said emphatically For him hath God the Father Sealed Joh. 6. 27. And if we can learn aright how God the Father sealed Christ we shall learn how we are sealed in a Participation of the same Priviledge I confess there are variety of Apprehensions concerning the Act of God whereby Christ was sealed or what it is that is intended thereby Maldonate on the Place reckons up Ten several Expositions of the Words among the Fathers and yet embraceth no one of them It is not suited unto my Design to examine or refute the Expositions of others whereof a large and plain Field doth here open it self unto us I shall only give an Account of what I conceive to be the Mind of the Holy Ghost in that Expression And we may observe FIRST That this is not spoken of Christ with respect unto his Divine Nature He is indeed said to be the Character of the Person of the Father in his Divine Person as the Son because there are in him communicated unto him from the Father all the Essential Properties of the Divine Nature as the thing Sealed receiveth the Character or Image of the Seal
But this Communication is by Eternal Generation and not by Sealing But it is an external transient Act of God the Father on the Humane Nature with respect unto the Discharge of his Office For it is given as the Reason why he should be complied withal and believed in in that Work Labour for that Bread which the Son of Man shall give unto you for him hath God the Father Sealed It is the Ground whereon he perswades them to Faith and Obedience unto himself SECONDLY It is not spoken of him with an especial respect unto his Kingly Office as some conceive For this Sealing of Christ they would have to be his Designation of God unto his Kingdom in opposition unto what is affirmed Ver. 15. That the People designed to come and make him a King by Force For that is only an occasional Expression of the Sence of the People the principal Subject treated on is of a Nobler Nature But whereas the People did flock after him on the account of a Temporal Benefit received by him in that they were fed filled and satisfied with the Loaves which he had miraculously encreased Ver. 26. He takes occasion from thence to propose unto them the Spiritual Mercies that he had to tender unto them And this he doth in answer unto the Bread that he had eat under the Name of Meat and Bread enduring to everlasting Life which he would give unto them Under this Name and Notion of Meat he did comprize all the Spiritual Nourishment in his Doctrine Person Mediation and Grace that he had prepared for them But on what Grounds should they look for these things from him how might it appear that he was Authorized and enabled thereunto In answer unto that Enquiry he gives this Account of himself For him hath God the Father Sealed namely unto this End THIRDLY Wherefore the Sealing of God unto this End and Purpose must have two Properties and two Ends also annexed unto it 1 There is in it a Communication of Authority and Ability For the Enquiry is how he could give them that Meat which endured unto everlasting Life As afterwards they ask expresly How can this Man give us his Flesh to eat Ver. 52. To this it is answered That God the Father had Sealed him that is He it was who was enabled of God the Father to give and dispense the Spiritual Food of the Souls of Men. This therefore is evidently included in this Sealing 2 It must have Evidence in it also that is somewhat whereby it may be evinced that he was thus authorized and enabled by God the Father For whatever Authority or Ability any one may have unto any End none is obliged to make Application unto him for it or depend upon him therein unless it be evidenced that he hath that Authority and Ability This the Jews immediately enquired after What Sign say they dost thou then that we may see and believe thee What dost thou work Ver. 30. How shall it be demonstrated unto us that thou art authorized and enabled to give us the Spiritual Food of our Souls This also belonged unto his Sealing for therein there was such an express Representation of Divine Power communicated unto him as evidently manifested that he was appointed of God unto this Work These two Properties therefore must be found in this Sealing of the Lord Christ with respect unto the End here mentioned namely that he might be the Promuscondus or principal Dispenser of the Spiritual Food of the Souls of Men. FOURTHLY It being God's Seal it must also have two Ends designed in it 1 God's owning of him to be his Him hath God the Father Sealed unto this End that all may know and take notice of his Owning and Approbation of him He would have him not looked on as one among the rest of them that dispensed Spiritual things but as him whom he had singled out and peculiarly marked for himself And therefore this he publickly and gloriously testified at the Entrance and again a little before the fininishing of his Ministry For upon his Baptism there came a Voice from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Matth. 3. 17. which was nothing but a publick Declaration that this was He whom God had Sealed and so owned in a peculiar manner And this Testimony was afterwards renewed again at his Transfiguration in the Mount Matth. 17. 5. Behold a Voice out of the Cloud which said This is my Beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased hear ye him This is he whom I have Sealed And this Testimony is pleaded by the Apostle Peter us that whereinto their Faith in him as the Sealed One of God was resolved 2 Pet. 1. 17 18. 2 To manifest that God would take Care of him and preserve him in his Work unto the End Isa. 42. FIFTHLY Wherefore this Sealing of the Son is the Communication of the Holy Spirit in all Fulness unto him authorizing him unto and acting his Divine Power in all the Acts and Duties of his Office so as to evidence the Presence of God with him and Approbation of him as the only Person that was to distribute the Spiritual Food of their Souls unto Men. For the Holy Spirit by his powerful Operations in him and by him did evince and manifest that he was called and appointed of God to this Work owned by him and accepted with him which was God's Sealing of him Hence the Sin of them who despised this Seal of God was unpardonable For God neither will nor can give greater Testimony unto his Approbation of any Person than by the Great Seal of his Spirit And this was given unto Christ in all the Fulness of it He was declared to be the Son of God according to the Spirit of Holiness Rom. 1. 4. and justified in the Spirit or by his Power evidencing that God was with him 1 Tim. 3. 16. Thus did God Seal the Head of the Church with the Holy Spirit and thence undoubtedly may we best learn how the Members are sealed with the same Spirit seeing we have all our Measures out of his Fulness and our Conformity unto him in the design of all gracious Communications unto us SIXTHLY Wherefore Gods Sealing of Believers with the Holy Spirit is his gracious Communication of the Holy Ghost unto them so to act his Divine Power in them as to enable them unto all the Duties of their Holy Calling evidencing them to be accepted with him both unto themselves and others and asserting their Preservation unto Eternal Salvation The Effects of this Sealing are gracious Operations of the Holy Spirit in and upon Believers but the Sealing it self is the Communication of the Spirit unto them They are Sealed with the Spirit And farther to evidence the Nature of it with the Truth of our Declaration of this Priviledge we may observe 1. THAT when any Persons are so effectually called as to become true Believers they are brought into many new Relations
his Office so to do CHAP. II. General Adjuncts or Properties of the Office of a Comforter as exercised by the Holy Spirit TO evidence yet further the Nature of this Office and Work we may consider and enquire into the general Adjuncts of it as exercised by the Holy Spirit And they are Four FIRST Infinite Condescention This is among those Mysteries of the Divine Dispensation which we may admire but cannot comprehend And it is the Property of Faith alone to act and live upon incomprehensible Objects What Reason cannot comprehend it will neglect as that which it hath no concernment in nor can have Benefit by Faith is most satisfied and cherished with what is infinite and inconceivable as resting absolutely in Divine Revelation Such is this Condescention of the Holy Ghost He is by Nature over all God blessed for ever And it is a Condescention in the Divine Excellency to concern it self in a particular manner in any Creature whatever God humbleth himself to behold the things that are done in Heaven and in Earth Psal. 113. 5 6. How much more doth he do so in submitting himself unto the Discharge of an Office in the behalf of poor Worms here below THIS I confess is most astonishing and attended with the most incomprehensible Rays of Divine Wisdom and Goodness in the Condescention of the Son For he carried the Term of it unto the lowest and most abject Condition that a rational intelligent Nature is capable of So is it represented by the Apostle Phil. 2. 6 7 8. For he not only took our Nature into Personal Union with himself but became in it in his outward Condition as a Servant yea as a Worm and no Man a Reproach of Men and despised of the People and became subject to Death the Ignominious shameful Death of the Cross. Hence this Dispensation of God was filled up with Infinite Wisdom Goodness and Grace How this Exinanition of the Son of God was compensated with the Glory that did ensue we shall rejoyce in the Contemplation of unto all Eternity And then shall the Character of all Divine Excellencies be more gloriously conspicuous on this Condescention of the Son of God than ever they were on the Works of the whole Creation when this Goodly Fabrick of Heaven and Earth was brought by Divine Power and Wisdom through Darkness and Confusion out of nothing THE Condescention of the Holy Spirit unto his Work and Office is not indeed of the same kind as to the Terminus ad quem or the Object of it He assumes not our Nature he exposeth not himself unto the Injuries of an outward State and Condition But yet it is such as is more to be the Object of our Faith in Adoration than of our Reason in Disquisition Consider the thing in it self how one Person in the Holy Trinity subsisting in the Unity of the same Divine Nature should undertake to execute the Love and Grace of the other Persons and in their Names What do we understand of it This Holy Oeconomy in the distinct and subordinate Actings of the Divine Persons in these external Works is known only unto is understood only by themselves Our Wisdom it is to acquiesce in express Divine Revelation Nor have they scarcely more dangerously erred by whom these things are denyed than those have done who by a proud and conceited Subtilty of Mind pretend unto a Conception of them which they express in Words and Terms as they say precise and accurate indeed foolish and curious whether of other Men's coyning or their own finding out Faith keeps the Soul at an Holy Distance from these infinite Depths of the Divine Wisdom where it profits more by Reverence and Holy Fear than any can do by their utmost Attempt to draw nigh unto that inaccessable Light wherein these Glories of the Divine Nature do dwell BUT we may more steddily consider this Condescention with respect unto its Object the Holy Spirit thereby becomes a Comforter unto us poor miserable Worms of the Earth And what Heart can conceive the Glory of this Grace What Tongue can express it Especially will its Eminency appear if we consider the Ways and Means whereby he doth so comfort us and the Opposition from us which he meets withal therein whereof we must treat afterwards SECONDLY Unspeakable Love accompanieth the Susception and Discharge of this Office and that working by Tenderness and Compassion The Holy Spirit is said to be the Divine Eternal mutual Love of the Father and the Son And although I know that much Wariness is to be used in the Declaration of those Mysteries nor are Expressions concerning them to be ventured on not warranted by the Letter of the Scripture yet I judge that this Notion doth excellently express if not the distinct manner of Subsistence yet the mutual internal Operation of the Persons of the Blessed Trinity For we have no Term for nor Notion of that inessable Complacence and eternal Rest which is therein beyond this of Love Hence it is said that God is Love 1 John 4. 8 16. It doth not seem to be an essential Property of the Nature of God only that the Apostle doth intend For it is proposed unto us as a Motive unto mutual Love among our selves And this consists not simply in the Habit or Affection of Love but in the Actings of it in all its Fruits and Duties For so is God Love as that the Internal Actings of the Holy Persons which are in and by the Spirit are all the ineffable Actings of Love wherein the Nature of the Holy Spirit is expressed unto us The Apostle prays for the Presence of the Spirit with the Corinthians under the Name of the God of Love and Peace 2 Epist. 13. 11. And the Communication of the whole Love of God unto us is committed unto the Spirit for the Love of God is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Rom. 5. And hence the same Apostle distinctly mentioneth the Love of the Spirit conjoyning it with all the Effects of the Mediation of Christ Rom. 15. 30. I beseech you Brethren for the Lord Jesus Christ his sake and for the Love of the Spirit I do so on the Account of the respect you have unto Christ and all that he hath done for you which is a Motive irresistible unto Believers I do it also for the Love of the Spirit all that Love which he acts and communicates unto you Wherefore in all the Actings of the Holy Ghost towards us and especially in this of his Susception of an Office in the behalf of the Church which is the Foundation of them all his Love is principally to be considered and that he chuseth this way of acting and working towards us to express his peculiar personal Character as he is the Eternal Love of the Father and the Son And among all his Actings towards us which are all Acts of Love this is most conspicuous in those wherein he is a
part of the Body of Christ of the Essence of it by the same quickning animating Spirit of Grace but one is an Eye another an Hand another a Foot in the Body by vertue of peculiar Gifts For unto every one of us is given Grace according to the measure of the Gift of Christ Eph. 4. 7. § 2. THESE Gifts are not saving sanctifying Graces those were not so in themselves which made the most glorious and astonishing appearance in the World and which were most eminently useful in the Foundation of the Church and propagation of the Gospel Such as were those that were Extraordinary and Miraculous There is something of the Divine Nature in the least Grace that is not in the most glorious Gift which is only so It will therefore be part of our work to shew wherein the Essential Difference between these Gifts and sanctifying Graces doth consist as also what is their Nature and Use must be enquired into For although they are not Grace yet they are that without which the Church cannot subsist in the World nor can Believers be useful unto one another and the rest of Mankind unto the Glory of Christ as they ought to be They are the powers of the World to come those effectual Operations of the power of Christ whereby his Kingdom was Erected and is preserved § 3. AND hereby is the Church state under the New Testament differenced from that under the Old There is indeed a great Difference between their Ordinances and ours theirs being suited unto the dark apprehensions which they had of Spiritual things ours accommodated unto the clearer Light of the Gospel more plainly and expresly representing Heavenly things unto us Heb. 10. 1. But our Ordinances with their Spirit would be carnal also The principal Difference lyes in the Administration of the Spirit for the due performance of Gospel Worship by vertue of these Gifts bestowed on Men for that very End Hence the whole of Evangelical Worship is called the Ministration of the Spirit and thence said to be glorious 2 Cor. 3. 8. And where they are neglected I see not the Advantage of the outward Worship and Ordinances of the Gospel above those of the Law For although their Institutions are accommodated unto that Administration of Grace and Truth which came by Jesus Christ yet they must lose their whole Glory Force and Efficacy if they be not dispensed and the Duties of them performed by vertue of these spiritual Gifts And therefore no sort of Men by whom they are neglected do or can content themselves with the pure and immixed Gospel Institutions in these things but do rest principally in the outward part of Divine Service in things of their own finding out For as Gospel Gifts are useless without attending unto Gospel Institutions so Gospel Institutions are found to be fruitless and unsatisfactory without the attaining and exercising of Gospel Gifts § 4. BE it so therefore that these Gifts we intend are not in themselves saving Graces yet are they not to be despised For they are as we shall shew The powers of the World to come by means whereof the Kingdom of Christ is preserved carried on and propagated in the World And although they are not Grace yet are they the great means whereby all Grace is ingenerated and exercised And although the spiritual Life of the Church doth not consist in them yet the Order and Edification of the Church depends wholly on them And therefore are they so frequently mentioned in the Scripture as the great priviledge of the New Testament Directions being multiplyed in the Writings of the Apostles about their nature and proper use And we are commanded earnestly to desire and labour after them especially those which are most useful and subservient unto Edification 1 Cor. 12. 31. And as the neglect of Internal saving Grace wherein the power of Godliness doth consist hath been the Bane of Christian Profession as to Obedience issuing in that Form of it which is consistent with all manner of Lusts so the neglect of these Gifts hath been the Ruin of the same Profession as to Worship and Order which hath thereon issued in fond Superstition § 5. THE great and signal promise of the Communication of these Gifts is recorded Psal. 68. 18. Thou hast ascended on high thou hast led Captivity Captive thou hast received Gifts for Men. For these words are applyed by the Apostle unto that Communication of spiritual Gifts from Christ whereby the Church was founded and edified Ephes. 4. 8. And whereas it is foretold in the Psalm that Christ should receive Gifts that is to give them unto Men as that Expression is Expounded by the Apostle so he did this by receiving of the Spirit the proper cause and immodiate Author of them all as Peter declares Acts 2. 23. Therefore being by the Right Hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the Promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which ye now see and hear speaking of the miraculous Gifts conferred on the Aposties at the Day of Pentecost For these Gifts are from Christ not as God absolutely but as Mediator in which Capacity he received all from the Father in a way of free Donation Thus therefore he received the Spirit as the Author of all spiritual Gifts And whereas all the powers of the World to come consisted in them and the whole work of the Building and Propagation of the Church depended on them the Apostles after all the Instructions they had received from Christ whilst he conversed with them in the Days of his Flesh and also after his Resurrection were commanded not to go about the great work which they had received Commission for until they had received power by the coming of the Holy Ghost upon them in the Communication of those Gifts Acts 1. 4 8. And as they neither might nor could do any thing in their peculiar work as to the laying of the Foundation of the Christian Church until they had actually received those extraordinary Gifts which gave them power so to do so if those who undertake in any Place Degree or Office to carry on the Edification of the Church do not receive those more ordinary Gifts which are continued unto that end they have neither Right to undertake that work nor Power to perform it in a due manner § 6. The things which we are to enquire into concerning these Gifts are 1. Their Name 2. Their Nature in general and therein how they agree with and differ from Saving Graces 3. Their Distinction 4. The particular Nature of them and 5. Their Use in the Church of God § 7. 1. THE general Name of those Spiritual Endowments which we intend is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so the Apostle renders 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 4. 8. from Psal. 68. 18. Dona Gifts That is they are free and undeserved Effects of Divine Bounty In the Minds of Men on whom they are bestowed they are Spiritual Powers