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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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death that is the Devil Argum. 10. Christ out of his love to the Elect the Children of God would partake of the same humane Nature with them that hee might by his death satisfie for them and so abolish the power of the Devil which hee as an exe●utioner hath by the Law against all sinners Therefore the reputation of Christ is not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 15. And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Argum. 11. Amongst the fruits and ends of Christs death this is one that hee might deliver his from the fear of death both temporal and eternal under which fear all sinners are held all their life long till they see themselves freed from sin and death upon the merit of Christ dying for them Therefore c. Vers. 16. For verily hee took not on him the nature of Angels but hee took on him the seed of Abraham Argum. 12. Christ by assuming the seed of Abraham or humane nature into the unity of his person wherein from eternity hee subsisted he● advanced the humane nature in respect to priviledges dignity and honour above the Nature of Angels which hee took not Therefore the reputation of Christ is no● to bee lessened because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 17. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to bee made like unto his Brethren that hee might bee a merciful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Argum. 13. Christ ought to bee made like his Brethren the Elect in Nature Properties Affections and all infirmities except sin that his Brethren might bee the more certain and assured of his faithfulness and mercy in the exercise of his Priestly Office and perpetual intercession with God for them Therefore the excellency of Christ ought not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 18. For in that hee himself hath suffered being tempted hee is able to succour them that are tempted Argum. 14. Confirming the former Christ by his suffering afflictions and temptations in the humane Nature was fitted by his experience of sufferings in whom wee may trust to bee able and willing to succour us under the like trials Therefore his reputation is not to bee diminished because of his sufferings in the flesh And thus as in the former Chapter it was demonstrated that Christ is the true Son of God so in this Chapter hee hath demonstrated him to bee the son of man The one true God-man and hath removed the scandal of infirmities and sufferings of Christ in the flesh which all the beleeving Hebrews did dash against CHAP. III. THe excellency of the Prophetical Office and person of Christ being vindicated in the fore-going discourse even under all his sufferings in the flesh Hee exhorts them now to a consideration of this excellency that they may hold fast the profession of the Christian Faith and not apostatize from it to this end producing fifteen Arguments Vers. 1. Wherefore holy Brethren partakers of the heavenly calling consider the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Christ Iesus The Proposition concerning the holding fast their Profession of the Faith is contained in an Exhortation to a serious consideration of Christ the Apostle and High Priest of our Profession Argum. 1. Yee are sanctified and by Faith made partakers of an effectual calling to heavenly things Therefore you ought to hold fast the Profession of this Faith Apostle Argum. 2. Yee have Jesus Christ the Son of God the Apostle or Teacher of your Faith sent from God and our High Priest who hath expiated our sins by his blood You have him I say the Author of this Profession Therefore it is to bee held fast Vers. 2. Who was faithful to him that appointed him as also Moses was faithful in all his house Argum. 3. Christ in the administration of his Apostleship and Priesthood committed to him is not less faithful than Moses who obtained testimony from God that hee was faithful in all his house Therefore ought yee to hold fast your Christian Profession Because the Hebrews ascribed too much to Moses and could hardly bee drawn away from Mosaical Ceremonies that they might bee brought to Christ Therefore here on set purpose hee compares Christ with Moses Vers. 3. For this man was counted worthy of more glory than Moses inasmuch as hee who hath builded the house hath more honour than the house Argum. 4. Christ is so much more excellent than Moses and the whole Church also by how much the builder of the house is more excellent than the house it self or any part of it Moses also is but a member of that Church and a part onely of that house Therefore the Profession of your Faith is to bee held fast Vers. 4. For every house is builded by some man but hee that built all things is God Argum. 5. Confirming the former under the same comparison As no house not part of an house is built by it self but by another man so neither the Church nor Moses who is a member of the Church is built by himself but owes his building to some higher Architect But Christ who is proved God is the builder of the Church and of every member of it and also of all things Therefore hee is more excellent than Moses and the Faith and Profession of his Doctrine is to bee held fast Vers. 5. And Moses verily was faithful in all his house as a servant for a testimony of those things which were to bee spoken after 6. But Christ as a Son over his own house whose house are wee if wee hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope firm unto the end Argum. 6. Moses was faithful as a servant in anothers family to testifie and that indeed darkly which afterwards more fully and openly was to bee spoken of Christ and his dominion But Christ is faithful as Son and Heir who is over his house and speaks from his own authority Therefore Christ is more excellent than Moses and the Profession of his Doctrine is to bee held fast Whose house Argum. 7. If wee firmly hold fast the confidence and hope of eternal life procured for us by Christ and to bee communicated in which hope wee now make our boast wee shall declare our selves to bee his house or his true Church in which the Lord will dwell Therefore the Profession of our Faith is to bee held fast Vers. 7. Wherefore as the Holy Ghost saith Today if yee will hear his voice 8. Harden not your hearts as in the provocation in the day of temptation in the wilderness 9. When your Fathers tempted mee proved mee and saw my works forty years Argum. 8. From Psal. 95.8 9 c. unless you hold fast the Faith of Christ you will disobey the Holy Ghost who in the Scripture forbids you to harden your hearts when you hear the Word of God
him I am to bee countable for my service Therefore you Romans ought with all readiness of mind to entertain the things which I write in this Epistle By Calling Argu. 2. By Calling I am an Apostle i. e. A Servant extraordinary who as an Embassador am sent from Christ with instructions to preach the Gospel having received power to found and govern Churches which office I have not invaded but immediately called I have received it Therefore you ought with all submission to receive those things which I have writ unto you Separated Argum. 3. I am set apart to the Gospel of God i. e. I am designed by the Counsel of God that I should give up my self to this Office alone being separated from the womb Gal. 1.15 appointed by the special authority of Christ separated by the Holy Ghost Act. 13.2 Sent to preach to you Gentiles the glad tidings of mans redemption by Christ Therefore with all reverence and willingness ought you to receive the things I have written unto you Vers. 2. Which he had promised afore by his Prophets in the holy Scriptures Before Argum. 4. The Gospel which I preach is not new or feigned but that most antient Word of God which in times past God promised by his Prophets should bee revealed as it is set forth to bee read in the Holy Writings of the Old Testament Therefore ought yee to imbrace the following doctrin with all readiness of mind Vers. 3. Concerning his Son Iesus Christ our Lord which was made of the Seed of David according to the flesh 4. And declared to bee the Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by the resurrection from the dead Argum. 5. The matter of the Gospel which I preach is not any common or ordinary thing but Jesus Christ our Lord the Son of God God-man in the unity of person truly man conceived by the Holy Ghost of the substance of the Virgin Mary of the seed of David according to the flesh or his humane nature Also very God as is apparent by many signes so especially by his resurrection from the dead whereby hee is expresly manifested to bee the most powerful Son of God according to his divine nature which is called the Spirit most holy 1 Tim. 3.16 and 1 Pet. 3.18 Therefore ought you with reverence and willingness to receive the subsequent doctrin Vers. 5. By whom wee have received grace and Apostleship for obedience to the faith among all Nations for his Name Argum. 6. To this very end the glorious office of the Apostleship was freely bestowed upon the other Apostles and my self by Christ that according to that authority which Christ hath and hath granted to us wee might obtain amongst all Nations that saving obedience which is due to the doctrine of faith Therefore you ought with all subjection of minde to entertain this doctrin of the Gospel Vers. 6. Among whom are yee also the called of Iesus Christ. Argum. 7. Amongst the Gentiles to whom I am sent you beleeving Romans are the chief because you are effectually called by Christ and to him are you subjected in obedience of the faith Therefore ought you to receive this doctrine of the Gospel with all submission of minde Vers. 7. To all that bee in Rome beloved of God called to bee Saints Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Iesus Christ. In the inscription of the Epistle there remains the description and salutation of those to whom hee writes wherein the Eighth Argument is contained to this purpose You are the Beloved of God effectually called and in part sanctified and heirs of grace and peace so that I may justly in the Name of God apply to you the blessing of the Gospel and wish you Grace i. e. All good things which by way of Sanctification flow from the special favour of God Peace i. e. all those things which conduce to your happiness either in this present life or that which is to come from God through Christ the Mediatour to bee communicated to you Therefore ought you with all willingness of minde to hearken to my doctrin Vers. 8. First I thank my God through Iesus Christ for you all that your faith is spoken of throughout the whole world In the other verses of the beginning wee have his procmial speech whereof this is the scope Argum. 9. Throughout the world the report of your faith is famous which you yeeld to the Gospel whereat I rejoyce and give thanks to God by Christ our Mediatour for you all Therefore you ought to attend to my Gospel with all readiness of mind Vers. 9. For God is my witness whom I serve with my spirit in the Gospel of his Son that without ceasing I make mention of you alwayes in my prayers Argum. 10. The care which I have of your salvation and the desire I have of your good will not let mee bee unmindful of you in my prayers which because it cannot otherwise appear to you I call God to witness who best knows with what sincerity of heart I serve him in the Ministery of the Gospel of his Son Therefore ought you to obey mee in what I write to you Vers. 10. Making request if by any means now at length I might have a prosperous journey by the will of God to come unto you Argum. 11. That I may bee profitable unto you I do not onely not decline the labour of comming unto you but I earnestly desire of God that hee would at length grant mee a prosperous journey unto you when it shall seem good to him Therefore ought you willingly to hearken Vers. 11. For I long to see you that I may impart unto you some spiritual gift to the end you may bee established Argum. 12. I am very desirous to see you not that I might partake of your outward injoyments but that I might communicate to you a fuller knowledge of the Mystery of the Gospel as some spiritual gift whereby you may bee established in the faith against what ever tentations Therefore you ought willingly to entertain this doctrine Vers. 12. That is that I may bee comforted together with you by the mutual faith both of you and mee Hee unfolds this Argument lest it might seem arrogantly spoken modestly intimating that hee was as ready to receive comfort and edification from their faith as hee was to administer the same to them from his Vers. 13. Now I would not have you ignorant Brethren that oftentimes I purposed to come unto you but was let hitherto that I might have some fruit among you also even as among other Gentiles Argum. 13. Although I have been hitherto hindred from comming to you yet after many impediments I resumed my purpose of comming unto you again that by the preaching of the Gospel I might not onely confirm you in the faith and obedience of the Gospel but might bee a means of converting some amongst you to the faith even as among the
earth The Writer is Paul the Apostle who according to the Will of God by Christ speaking from heaven was sent as an extraordinary Embassador to the Church which should afterwards bee gathered to Christ here is authority enough Those to whom hee writes are the Saints and Faithful in Christ at Ephesus who being planted into Christ by Faith were consecrated to the service of God here 's praise enough Vers. 2. Grace bee to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ. In the Salutation is contained an Apostolical Benediction in which 1 Hee wisheth the Ephesians Grace that is all heavenly good things which are necessary to Sanctification and Salvation 2 Hee wishes them the special fruit of this Grace to wit Peace or all things which might conduce to their happiness but especially quietness of mind arising from the redemption of Christ which Redemption applied to them by the Word and the Spirit of God would assure them of reconciliation with God and assure them of freedome from evil 3 Hee opens to them the fountain and chanel of this Grace and Peace wished to them viz. God from whom and Christ the Mediatour by whom and for whose sake this Grace and Peace is conferred upon us Here 's good will enough towards the Ephesians And Arguments also sufficient to prepare their minds to receive the following Doctrine with that submission and willingness of mind which became them Vers. 3. Blessed bee the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ. After the Preface follows the Thanksgiving containing a Proposition to bee proved in the first part of this Chapter which is this That the Grace of God in Christ ought to bee celebrated with an acknowledgement of Gods blessing towards us in the whole business of the Salvation of Beleevers For our blessing as it hath relation to God is nothing else but an acknowledgement that God is every way the Author of all blessing or Grace towards us In this Proposition hee puts a difference between God the Father and Jesus Christ the Mediator God-man that the person and office of the Mediatour might more manifestly appear And hee calls God the Father the God of Christ 1 Because of that Grace whereby the humane nature of Christ was predestinated to the personal union with the Word his Son 2 Because of the Covenant of Redemption made between God and Christ the Mediatour And then hee calls him the Father of Jesus Christ 1 Because of the eternal Generation of the Son by which the Father hath from all eternity communicated to him his whole infinite essence 2 Because of the personal union of the assumed humane Nature by which the Son of man is made the Son of God The chief Arguments to prove the aforesaid Proposition are Thirteen Hath blessed Arg. 1. The God and Father of Christ hath blessed us beleevers or hath graciously hea●t upon us all spiritual and heavenly blessings in Christ. Therefore he is to be blessed or his grace is to bee celebrated by us To this purpose that the grace of God might appear and bee celebrated all the words of this Argument tend every one whereof breathes ou● grace For 1. The giver of these benefits is called God and the Father of Jesus Christ and by consequence the God and Father of all us which are in Christ and that from the Covenant made between the Father and Christ concerning us and consequently our Father who with a fatherly affection gives us all things Hath blessed 2. The giving of these benefits is actively called the blessing of God that is the actual or effectual demonstration of Gods grace according to his word in deed towards us Hath blessed us 3. And here is grace For we whom God blesseth are by nature the sons of wrath and liable to the curse of God in whom there is nothing nor can be any thing which can deserve any good With all blessing 4. The nature and matter of the benefits themselves includes grace for a blessing taken passively is nothing else but a benefit taking its rise from meer grace Spiritual blessings 5 Here is grace also For the benefits which are bestowed on us before others are spiritual such as have reference to the eternal salvation of the spirit or soul which do far exceed all measure of proportion to any earthly and temporal works which wee can perform in this body and therefore they are of grace All blessing 6. This tends to grace too Because every spiritual gift which pertains to the salvation of souls is bestowed upon us of which gifts there is none which flows not from the fountain of grace and blessing and is freely given to us without any merit of ours or respect to our works whether they bee knowledge of God or acknowledgement of our sin or repentance or faith or any effect of faith or any good work or intention of a good work all this is freely given by him who blesseth us with all spiritual blessing Therefore they are of grace In heaven Hear is a beam of grace too because these benefits with which wee above others are blessed are heavenly that is they are such as take their original from heaven are conversant in heaven and shall bee compleated in heaven nor do they any wayes savour any thing of our flesh but yet do season to us our condition on earth In Christ Here the whole ocean of grace is opened for all these benefits are ours in Christ who himself is ours and all these are made ours in him as in the root and fountain as in our head and common parent before they come to us that so they may bee derived on us by him in whom as wee are united together wee possess those things wee have and in whom wee have right to those things which as yet wee have not and by whom wee shall hereafter receive those things which remain and as hee hath obtained all things for us so hee keeps both them in himself for our use and us that wee may use and enjoy them From all and every one of which it follows that all our spiritual benefits are free and gracious or effects of meer grace and therefore wee ought to celebrate the grace of God as the fountain and cause of them Vers. 4. According as hee hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that wee should bee holy and without blame before him in love Argum. 1. Confirming the former God actually in time freely bestows all these spiritual blessings upon us in Christ even as before time hee of his grace chose us in him that at length wee might obain these benefits Therefore wee ought to bles● him All the wo●ds of this Argument also are proofs of his free and gracious election For 1. Our election was of God unto life before others our companions who were in the same condition whom God leaving and
Christs preceding humiliation that is his incarnation and his abasement of himself unto the common infirmities of the flesh unto the suffering of both soul and body and unto burial Whence is hinted Argum. 9. For the preservation of the Churches unity Christ descended into the lower parts of the earth by this very phrase David describes his conception in the womb Psal. 139.18 and also ascended again for the gathering of the Church into one and uniting it to God Therefore c. Vers. 10. Hee that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that hee might fill all things From the same prophecie hee gathers that Christ God who descended to bee incarnate or that hee might take flesh was not made another or any other person when hee ascended as God incarnate or having taken flesh upon him that the humane nature assumed did not add any thing to the constituting or perfecting the person of the Son of God but onely was taken into the unity of the person and therefore Christs descending and ascending was the same even as hee that puts on a garment is the same as hee was when naked Furthermore coming to shew the end of his Ascension hee adds Argum. 10. Christ ascended into Heaven that hee might accomplish all things which were to bee accomplished viz. that hee might gather and preserve the Church and communicate unto it what was necessary for it Therefore c. Vers. 11. And hee gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers Hee in part shews how Christ hath accomplished all things as much as is sufficient to his purpose by ennumerating the several orders of Ecclesiastical Ministery some temporary and extraordinary as Apostles Prophets Evangelists ordained for the laying the foundations of all Churches some ordinary and perpetual as Pastors and Teachers instituted for the continuing of the Church Vers. 12. For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ Argum. 11. From the end and use for which Christ did bestow these offices and gifts 1 That the Saints might bee restored even as members loosened and out of joynt set and brought to their proper place 2 That the Ministers avoiding idleness and tyrannizing government should follow the work of their Ministery that so every of the Elect as straying sheep might bee brought home to Christ their Shepheard and abide in him 3 That the whole body of the Church might bee edified and built up and every one make proficiency in Faith and Holiness and to this purpose Christ appointed Offices in the Church that by the help and Ministery of men all the Saints might so grow up together as to constitute one mystical body of Christ Therefore c. Vers. 13. Till wee all come in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. Argum. 12. From the term of the duration of the Ministery This Ministery must continue until all wee Elect come unto the unity of the Faith and the Knowledge of Christ that is not onely until wee bee united to Christ by Faith and Knowledge which is of Faith but also until all wee that are redeemed or that are elected as many as do live or shall live I say until wee all come one after another to a present Knowledge in an immediate vision or to a perfect regeneration and incorporation in Christ when all the Elect being now united and perfected shall constitute one Mystical Christ who shall bee every way compleat and perfect and attain his full stature which shall bee in the resurrection Therefore for this end and purpose that this business may bee advanced wee should strive for unity and concord Vers. 14. That wee henceforth bee no more children tossed to and fro and carryed about with every wind of Doctrine by the sleight of men and cunning craftiness whereby they lye in wait to deceive Argum. 13. From another end of the institution of the Ministery Christ appointed the Ministery that wee should not bee alwaies children ignorant of those things which wee ought to know that wee should not bee wavering and inconstant tossed with the wind of contrary Doctrines that wee should not bee separated from Christ and his Church through unsetledness in Faith that wee should not bee deceived by the subtilty deceit and treacherous seducing of corrupt men Therefore for the furtherance of this end wee should as much as in us lyes endeavour the unity of the Church Vers. 15. But speaking the Truth in love may grow up into him in all things which is the Head even Christ Argum. 14. From the third end of the institution of the Ministery Christ ordained the Ministery in the Church not onely that wee might shun seducing but also that wee might follow the Truth of the heavenly Doctrine with charity and so by truth and charity wee might thrive in all virtues into one Christ mystical Therefore for this end wee should study the unity of the Church and charity that Christ our Head might appear excellent among us and wee who cannot otherwise encrease should become strong and mighty in him Vers. 16. From whom the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joynt supplieth according to the effectual working in the measure of every part maketh encrease of the body unto the edifying of it self in love Argum. 15. Taken from the description of Christ mystical or of Christ and the Church wherin by a similitude of the natural head and body hee illustrates what hee said touching encrease in charity and the knowledge of the Truth to the advancing the glory of Christ and the good of the Church In this description hee shews 1 That the whole body of the Church depends upon Christ as its head and original and from him all the nourishment of its body that is all saving Truth together with the living Spirit of Christ is derived upon all its true members so that no man knows any thing unless hee bee taught by Christ. 2 That for the diversity of the gifts of the Spirit of the offices and of the condition of every member of the Catholick Church the body should bee fitly framed or composed in the most beautiful and most befitting order and should bee tyed to him and joyned in him by the most strict bond of the Spirit of Faith and of Love also by the several relations partly betwixt Christ and us such as are of the Head and Members the Bridegroom the Advocate the Surety c. Partly betwixt one another such as are the relations of Brethren and Sisters of co-heirs of Pastors and the Flock of Parents and Children c. by all which wee are daily tyed more strictly to Christ and among our selves 3 That there are several bands for the administration of nourishment through which as through chanels or
that hee did in himself cease to bee what hee was but that hee laid aside the manifestation of his Glory and Majesty and so hid it under the form of a servant as if hee had had none or as if hee had so left it off that it could not bee perceived by the world nay nor by his servants that were eye-witnesses unless it were so much of it through the chinks of his Words and Works as was requisite for the dispensation of the Work of Redemption The degrees or parts of this voluntary humiliation or exinanition are five 1. That hee took or assumed the form of a servant or the true humane nature such as is found in the vilest servants or in men of the lowest rank and united the humane nature to himself by a personal union thus hee debased himself from Heaven to Earth 2 That in the humane Nature hee debased himself below the condition of free men to an external condition most reproachful among men which is servile for hee took upon him the form of a servant The likeness Hee shews the truth of his incarnation in that hee was made like to us as one of us in the essential parts of humane nature body and soul like in the natural properties of the humane nature and in all the affections like in the common infirmities which follow man-kind Lastly that hee is like to us in all things sin onely excepted Being found in fashion Hee confirms the truth of his incarnation that hee was found in fashion as a man for all that were conversant with him both good and bad by all waies whereby a man is known to bee a man observed and found that hee was true man and they did certainly know it from the true shape and substance of his humane body from the true actions of humane life and from the true properties of one truly man and from every fashion that any man is found in Hee humbled himself 3 That being now made man though hee was not obliged but by his voluntary Covenant because hee was not meerly man though truly man but God in the flesh whose flesh was the flesh of God and therefore being Lord of the Law hee was not subject to it to stay in the earth or to undergo the yoak of the Law imposed upon those that are meerly men yet hee humbled himself or by his voluntary disposition and order hee made himself in the state of humiliation less than his Father for in respect of the Divine Nature which is the same in both Father and Son hee could not bee less and took upon him the yoak of the Law appointed for meer men and not onely so but hee also absolutely submitted himself to perform all things which the Father should command for the perfecting the redemption of men Became obedient unto 4 That hee did all his life-time patiently bear the yoak hee took upon him fulfilling his Fathers commands in all things even unto death or the laying down his humane life for his sheep according to his Fathers command Of the Cross 5 That hee was obedient to the violent cursed most dishonourable death of the Cross. Vers. 9. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name 10. That at the name of Iesus every knee should bow of things in Heaven and things in Earth and things under the Earth 11. And that every tongue should confess that Iesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Here in these three verses wee have Christs reward according to his humane Nature for his being humbled for us which is by his exaltation and that for us too Whence wee may gather Argument 8. to this purpose As Christ after hee had humbled himself to reconcile men unto God and to procure the confirmation of peace betwixt the parties was exalted by God and crowned with glory so you may expect exaltation if you humble your selves that yee may maintain the Churches concord Therefore if yee will keep the true way to glory you must imitate Christ and humble your selves for the preservation of unity Wherefore The meaning is this Because Christ of his own accord hath humbled himself for our sakes in our flesh being made obedient even unto death God hath for our sakes and in our flesh also advanced him to the highest honour For having raised Christ from the dead to a glorious and immortal life hee lifted him up to the highest Heaven and placed him at his own right hand in dignity and authority above all creatures hee hath according to his gracious will and the gracious dispensation of the business of our salvation given him a name above every name glorifying him with that glory which hee had from the beginning with the Father to wit by manifesting the glory of the deity which before was obscured and by making known the hypostatical union of the humane Nature commanding and causing that Christ crucified should bee preached rule bee adored bee called upon every where as true God and the onely begotten Son of God At the name The Apostle shews how the efficacy and effect of this exaltation of Christ doth follow viz. That every creature shall at length bee subject unto Christ so that unless it willingly submit it shall at last bee compelled to acknowledge his name or his power authority and dominion which is expressed by a Metonymy of bending the knee As to heavenly things there is no doubt but Angels and the spirits of just men shall bow the knee that is submit to him for spirits properly have no knees As to earthly things all men shall at last if not willingly at least unwillingly and compelled confess Christ crucified to bee the Judge the Lord and the Son of God And lastly for things under the earth by which name are understood the Devils and the spirits of the damned who are in prison All those unclean spirits shall appear before his tribunal whether they will or no and shall yeeld to the sentence of the Judge with acknowledgement of his dominion and Majesty And thus all his enemies whoever they bee that now oppose him shall bow the knee unto him And every tongue Lastly lest all acknowledgement of the name and power of Christ should wholly seem to bee deferred till the last judgement hee shews that it shall come to pass that every tongue or that of every Country and Nation Christ shall receive glory either in the voluntary confession and profession of the converted Gentiles that Christ is the Lord and that to the glory of the Father who will bee honoured in the glorifying of his onely begotten Son or seeing that many shall not bee converted it shall come to pass at last in the judgement of God that the dominion of Christ shall bee clearly and fully manifested when all creatures in Heaven in Earth and Hell shall acknowledge him to bee the Lord. Vers. 12. Wherefore my Beloved as yee have alwayes obeyed not
Saints cannot finde out nor the needs of all men exhaust or consume Vers. 4. And this I say lest any man should beguile you with intising words 5 The endeavour and care of the Apostle is that the Colossians may not bee seduced by the false Apostles and that they might bee fortified against all the Impostures of them who by teaching that which Christ hath not taught did draw the unstable and unwary from Christ partly by Paralogisms and Sophistical Argumentations partly by insinuating and covering their errours with a painted eloquence to which subtilties of the false Apostles hee aims in the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 beguile and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enticing words Vers. 5. For though I bee absent in the flesh yet am I with you in the Spirit joying and beholding your order and the stedfastness of your Faith in Christ. 6 His endeavour concerning their salvation The joy which he received concerning the Doctrine and Discipline rightly setled amongst them not onely from the relation of Epaphras but from a Prophetical Spirit or the inspiration of the Holy Ghost dictating this Epistle for although hee was absent in body yet hee beholding all things by the Spirit hee did greatly rejoyce upon the observation of the most beautiful order in all Ecclesiastical things and of their solid Faith in Christ So that hee could not but bee careful concerning the preservation of so famous an heavenly work amongst them left this order bee disturbed or his Doctrine corrupted by the subtilties of the false Apostles and arts of the Devil The Second Part. Vers. 6. As yee have therefore received Christ Iesus the Lord so walk yee in him The second part of the Chapter follows in which from his endeavour for their salvation and from the causes of this disputation undertaken against the false Apostles hee inferrs an exhortation to persevere in the Faith of Christ and to beware of corruptions The parts of his Exhortation are five 1 That they hold fast Christ Jesus already received by Faith who is the onely and true Saviour and admit no other invented by the false Apostles 2 That they being ingrafted into Christ by Faith so abide and lead their lives according to his prescription following the guidance of the Spirit of Christ. Vers. 7. Rooted and built up in him and stablished in the Faith as yee have been taught abounding therein with thanksgiving 3 That they endeavour for a most near and firm conjunction with Christ through the strengthening of their Faith according to the Doctrine of Epaphras Hee illustrates this soundness of Faith by a similitude taken partly from the firmness of trees spreading their roots deep in the earth partly from the stability of buildings solidly founded Abounding 4 That they bee not onely confirmed in the Faith but also make progress in it and abound to a fuller knowledge of the mysteries of Christ and that with a daily thanksgiving to God the Author of this so great a benefit Vers. 8. Beware lest any man spoil you through Philosophy and vain deceit after the tradition of men after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ. 5 That they take heed to themselves touching seducers who take the people of God by their Impostures as beasts are taken in nets and make a prey of them Hee reckons three kindes of impostures whereof the first is Philosophy or a vain deceit so called not simply but as it exceeds its bounds and aspires to heavenly and spiritual things and doth from the model of corrupt and carnal reason determine concerning the doctrine in the word of God In which respect although it shews openly the form of wisdome yet it is found to bee vain deceit The other kinde is The tradition of men concerning the vain and superstitious rites invented by humane wit The third sort is the injunction of Legal or Levitical rites which are called here the Rudiments of the world because they are the earthly and carnal Rudiments of the ancient people by whom as by a Schoolmaster they were lead before the coming of Christ which after his coming vanished away like shadows Vers. 9. For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the God-head bodily Hee adds ten Arguments of his Exhortation all which prove that they must not go so much as a nails breadth from Christ Argum. 1. It is in vain to seek any thing necessary to salvation out of Christ seeing that in him or in his person the fulness of the God-head hypostatically united to the humane nature is founded so that hee necessarily seeks something to salvation out of God who seeks things that may bring salvation out of Christ Therefore wee must not depart from Christ. Vers. 10. And yee are compleat in him which is the head of all Principality and power Argum. 2. Christ is not onely a most full fountain in himself but also hee fills all the faithful beleeving in him insomuch that hee communicates to them righteousness and life eternal which hee hath in himself first by way of imputation further by the infusion of grace for grace till at length they are perfected Therefore wee must not seek for any thing out of him The head Argum. 3. Hee is the head of all Principality and Power even of the most excellent creatures in heaven and earth partly because hee created and governs all things even the Angels themselves partly because by the influence of his power hee upholds even the Angels and also men communicating to them whatsoever they injoy Therefore from him alone and in no wise from the most excellent Angels do wee expect any good Vers. 11. In whom also yee are circumcised with the Circumcision made without hands in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the Circumcision of Christ. Argum. 4. The truth of all Legal ceremonies is in Christ for in him the faithful have that which is prefigured by them as for example they have spiritual Circumcision wrought by the Spirit of Christ in the heart which consists in the subduing of the old man or the flesh or the body of sin which Circumcision was prefigured in the carnal Circumcision made by hands Therefore it is not fit that you should in the carnal Circumcision of those that Judaize seek anything out of Christ. Vers. 12. Buried with him in Baptism wherein also you are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God who hath raised him from the dead Argum. 5. Yee that beleeve in Christ are baptized which is the lawful sign of internal Circumcision set up in the place of Circumcision by Christ so that neither the internal thing yea nor the external sign of an internal thing is to bee sought after without Christ Therefore you must not depart from Christ. Buried Argum. 6. Yee beleevers have right to Christ dead and buried and communion with him in his death and burying and so right to all the benefits and effects of his death and burying in baptism
the Truth is sustained as with a pillar and certain Butteress by the Church Because the Church preserves the Truth as it were in a treasury In the Church onely divine Truth is held forth to the world and there hath its seat and abiding and the Church alone it is that by her Ministers takes care that this truth bee every where preached proclaimed and communicated and defends it against all adversaries and that with weapons properly appertaining to the truth Vers. 16. And without controversie great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh justified in the Spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles beleeved on in the world received up into glory Artic. 3. Contains the great mystery of godliness and the pillar and ground of all Evangelical truths or the first foundations of the Gospel whereupon all other saving Doctrines lean which foundations the Pastors of the Church by all means ought to defend The fundamental Doctrines which are comprehended in this Article and which are necessary to bee acknowledged with an unanimous consent of all true Christians are seven 1 The Summe of the Gospel is the Mystery of godliness and that indeed is great The Gospel is called a Mystery because it is hid from natural reason nor can ever bee understood by any one without Divine manifestation and supernatural Revelation so that in this Mystery wee must not confide in our own reason but in the word of God And that wee may understand the word of God wee must beg the illumination of the Spirit It is called the Mystery of godliness because it hath for its end Christian piety which consists in faith and obedience to the commands of Christ or in faith which worketh by love Great It is called Great because it treats of God Christ the great work of Redemption of the glory of Righteousness and Divine grace and our salvation which of all things are the greatest God The second fundamental Doctrine is this In the person of Christ God was manifested in the flesh God viz. The onely begotten Son of God and consequently truly and eternally God Manifest viz. To the whole world visibly and openly shewed forth In the flesh viz. In the humane nature even mortal and frail but free from sin hee shewed forth himself the true Immanuel and God with us And here the two Natures are pointed out the Divine which did assume and the Humane which was assumed and the whole debasement of Christ in the flesh is herein contained Iustified Doct. 3. In the person of Christ God was manifested in the flesh justified by the Spirit i. e. Christ by his Divine power which shewed it self forth in his doctrine and life also in his Miracles especially in his glorious Resurrection from the dead was not onely just and true but also abundantly declared the onely begotten Son of God and the supreme Prophet of the Church and King and Priest eternal and acquitted from all the calumnies and reproaches of the Jewes and all his enemies Of Angels Doct. 4. God manifested in the flesh was seen of Angels i. e. acknowledged of the Angels and by the clearer manifestation of his Majesty and also of the Divine will Christ God incarnate was more apparently seen and therefore the Angels are made use of by God as fit witnesses of the Conception Birth Suffering and Resurrection of Christ who hitherto admire this mystery amazed with the excellency of the matter desire further to look into it stooping down to behold the things which are revealed to the Church by the Spirit 1 Pet. 1.12 Eph. 3.10 For touching the manner of our Redemption it was thought meet to conceal it from the Angels for a time that the goodness of God might bee the more admired Preached Doc● 5. God manifest in the flesh and preached to the Gentiles is a great mystery for it is a wonderful thing that the Gentiles who as yet wandred in the blindness of their mindes should have the Revelation of the Son of God which Doctrine was at first concealed from the Apostles themselves as also the Angels of Heaven Beleeved on Doct. 6. It s no small part of this Mystery that the efficacy of the Gospel should bee such in the world which lyes in evil and is contrary unto God by the labour of mean men and no wayes garnished with humane splendor when all passages were stopped and locked up the faith of Christ conquering all difficulties should bee entertained and gain the victory after an incredible manner so that the name of Christ is beleeved in and acknowledged in the world which way soever the preaching of the Gospel spreads it self Received up Doct. 7. The Mystery is great and worthy of admiration that Christ who in the infirmity of the flesh in the most abject condition of a servant lay hid so many years in the world and at length crucified seeming to end his life most miserably yet notwithstanding should bee received up into glory From whence sending the Holy Ghost and giving gifts unto men to this very day he manifests the glory of his Deity shewing what power hee hath in heaven and earth that all things are put under his feet These are the Doctrines which hee wills the Churches to hold fast from whence all the rest derive their original and establishment CHAP. IV. HEe proceeds to the instruction of Timothy how hee ought to carry himself in the house of God There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee forewarns him about Apostacy from the true faith which would fall out in the Church in the last times to vers 6. In the latter part hee sets down the duties of a good Pastor and Governour of the Church whereby they might preserve themselves and their people free from that defection and Apostacy Vers. 1. Now the Spirit speaketh expresly that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of Devils As to what concerns the Prophecie of the future Apostasie from the faith or sound doctrine of the Gospel hee premises four things Whereof the first is concerning the certainty of the Defection because the Holy Ghost not obscurely or darkly but expresly forewarned them of this Apostacy and foretold them of the times immediately following wherein the defection from the faith should begin and should prevail in the visible Church The second contains three causes of their defection Cause 1 Deceiving spirits i. e. Devils authors of all kinde of errors and impostures Cause 2 False teachers who taught and propagated by the inspiration of the Devill false doctrines or doctrines of Devils invented by him in the Church Cause 3 Attention hearkning to and miserable men giving credit to those Teachers and Devils Vers. 2. Speaking lyes in hypocrisie having their conscience seared with an hot iron In the third place hee describes those Diabolical Teachers or instruments of the Devil by whom the Devils bring in those false Doctrines into
who live under the Gospel his whole Will in the last times of the world Therefore the excellency of his Prophetical Office is incomparable Vers. 2. Hath in these last dayes spoken to us by his Son whom hee hath appointed heir of all things by whom also hee made the worlds Arg. 2. Christ as hee is by nature born Heir so also by the eternal appointment of God to his Mediatorship and by special Covenant hee is appointed Heir or Lord Proprietor of all the creatures in heaven and earth Therefore his Excellency is incomparable By whom Arg. 3. By him having his being from Eternity the Father made the world and all things in it not as by an instrument but as by his word and Wisdome Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Vers. 3. Who being the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person upholding all things by the word of his power when he had by himself purged our sins sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high Arg. 4. Christ so far as an imperfect similitude can manifest is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the brightness of his Fathers glory or the beaming forth of his glorious nature shining in light inaccessible In and of the Father begotten of the substance of the Father who although the Father never was without him nor can bee yet hee is distinct from the Father and eternally undivided by whom the Father reveals and communicates his glory as the Sun by its shining is made conspicuous to us Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Image Arg. 5. Christ is the express Image or Character of the Person of the Father i. e. as much as an imperfect similitude can instruct us hee is a distinct person from the Father resembling his Father in all things of one and the same form or essence who represents the Father to the life unto us that we may acknowledge the Father to be such as the Son is Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Upholding Arg. 6. Christ upholds supports preserves all creatures in heaven and earth by the Divine word of his power or the vertue of his Deity Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Purged Arg. 7. Hee hath obtained purchased the purging of our sins fully as hee is the High Priest God and man receiving no assistance from any one not by any legal Sacrifice but by himself once offered upon the Cross Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Sitteth Arg. 8. After the expiation of our sins by himself alone once made hee sate down God-man as King of the Church at the right hand of the Majesty on high reigning in equal honour and power with God the Father and governing all things Therefore his Excellency is incomparable Ver. 4. Being made so much better than the Angels as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they Arg. 9. Christ is so much more excellent than the Angels by how much the name of Son is more excellent than the name of an Angel or Messenger But the name of the Son of God belongs to Christ and according to his Divinity by eternal Generation the whole Divine Essence being communicated to him And further according to his Humanity not by Adoption but this Name is given him by union so that the same person which was the Son of God to bee incarnate is now the Son of God incarnate his humane Nature being taken unto the unity of the second Person Vers. 5. For unto which of the Angels said hee at any time Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee And again I will bee to him a Father and he shall bee to mee a Son This last Argument the Apostle confirms with eight Reasons whereof the seven first are taken out of so many places of Scripture Reas. 1. From Psal. 2.7 Concerning Christ saith God the Father Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee From which place the Deity of Christ is proved that hee after another and higher manner is a Son than any of the Angel● A Son to wit by eternal Generation which is confirmed out of Act. 3.33 and Rom. 1.4 where this place is applied to the manifestation of the Deity of Christ which hee had from Eternity before hee was manifested in his Resurrection from the dead For had not Christ been in himself a Son hee could not bee declared a Son to the world And although in Scripture some things are said to bee done when they are manifested And so This day have I begotten thee will bee This day have I declared thee to the world to bee my onely begotten Son Yet This day ought not to signifie onely the time of Christs declaration as a Son but also his eternal and immutable Generation For Eternity is very well expressed by This day whereby the present day is signified because Eternity is as one day and alwayes wholly present wherein there is nothing successive or one after another as in our time but one constant permanency And here also hee uses a word of the Pretertense that although thou hearest of him as present yet thou mayest understand his Generation perfectly past or eternal as the shining of the Sun is perfect and yet it continually beams forth from the Sun Therefore Christ is so much the more excellent above Angels by how much a Son is more excellent than a Messenger And I will bee Reas. 2. From 2 Sam. 7.19 Where in Solomon the type God promises the sending of Messias whom hee would openly acknowledge for his Son and declare him so to the world Vers. 6. And again when hee bringeth in the first-begotten into the world hee saith And let all the Angels of God worship him Reas. 3. From Psal. 97.7 When God was as it were bringing his Son into the world by his incarnation as his first-born or the heir of all things because of his native right over all things hee communicates to him as his Essence so the glory which is proper to God alone commanding that even all the Angels should worship him Therefore Christ is more excellent than the Angels Vers. 7. And of the Angels hee saith who maketh his Angels spirits and his Ministers a flame of fire Reas. 4. From Psal. 104.5 God hath secluded the Angels from divine glory or worship and hath appointed them his Ministers who as the winds or flames might serve him at his beck Therefore Christ is more excellent than the Angels Vers. 8. But unto the Son hee saith Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever a Scepter of Righteousness is the Scepter of thy Kingdome 9. Thou hast loved righteousness and hated iniquity therefore God even thy God hath anointed thee with the oyl of gladness above thy fellows Reas. 5. From Psal. 45.7 8. God by the mouth of the Prophet witnesses concerning his Son 1. That hee is God 2. That hee hath an eternal Throne or Dominion over the Elect. 3. That by the Omnipotent grace of his Spirit he perfects his
the things is without descent or genealogy without all Kindred and naturall or earthly consanguinity Nor end Mark 9. As Melchisedec in his historical and typical state So Christ is truly eternal without beginning of daies or end of life wherefore they seem to bee over curious and bold who dare to search after and define even out of the Scripture the Genealogy of Melchisedec which God hath purposely concealed Made like That this comparison may bee known to bee solid the Apostle shews that all the parts of this description are to bee conceived typically and in that assimilation wherein hee represented the Son of God as Priest eternal Vers. 4. Now consider how great this man was unto whom even the Patriarch Abraham gave the tenth of the spoils Mark 10. As Abraham although Conqueror of so many Kings and a Patriarch or a most noble Prince of the Fathers in paying tithes of the spoils yet hee acknowledgeth Melchisedec superiour to himself viz. wherein Melchisedec was a type of Christ So hee necessarily acknowledged Christ represented in that type much above himself Vers. 5. And verily they that are of the Sons of Levi who receive the office of the Priest-hood have a commandement to take tithes of the people according to the Law that is of their Brethren though they come out of the loyns of Abraham The Apostle proves this a mark of Christs excellency from this That Levi upon this very account is above his Brethren because according to the command of God hee received tithes of his Brethren Therefore for the same reason Melchisedec i● superior to Abraham who of his own accord offering tithes acknowledged himself inferiour to Melchisedec Vers. 6. But hee whose descent is not counted from them received tithes of Abraham and blessed him that had the Promises Mark 11. Melchisedec who is not reckoned amongst the stock of the Levites did not onely receive tithes of Abraham but also as superior blessed Abraham Abraham himself I say who in the name of all the faithful first received the Promises Therefore Christ whose type and shadow hee onely was is much more excellent than both Abraham and all the Levitical Priests which sprung of him Vers. 7. And without all contradiction the less is blessed of the better Hee proves this to bee a mark of Excellency from this that it is without controversie that the less is blessed by the greater which is not to bee understood of the blessing of Praise whereby wee bless God not of the blessing of Charity whereby wee pray for good things one to another but of the blessing of Power whereby God effectually blesseth his or of Authority whether ordinary whereby Pastors and Parents by office commonly or extraordinary whereby the Embassadors of God extraordinary by special commission apply the blessing of God to any one by prayer In this kind hee that blesseth as such an one is greater than hee that is blessed Vers. 8. And here men that die receive tithes ● but there hee receiveth them of whom it is witnessed that hee liveth Mark 12. Melchisedec although neither in a Physical state nor Civil yet in a typical and scriptural state received tithes as ever living as the Image of the immortal God But the Levites receive tithes as mortal men Therefore Christ represented by Melchisedec who by nature is God truly immortal compared with the Levites is far more excellent than they Vers. 9. And as I may so say Levi also who receiveth tithes payed tithes in Abraham 10. For hee was yet in the loyns of his Father when Melchisedec met him Mark 13. Melchisedec as a type of Christ and by consequence Christ himself the truth represented in Melchisedec received tithes not onely of Abraham but also of Levi who was in the loyns of Abraham according to the account of Natural Generation when Abraham offered tithes to Melchisedec and to Christ represented by him Therefore the true Melchisedec Christ both in himself and compared with the Levites is far more excellent than they It is true that Christ was to spring out of the seed of Abraham when Abraham paid tithes to Melchisedec but hee was not to spring of him according to the account of the eternal Priest-hood of a Mediatour whereof here hee speaks nor according to the account of his Natural Generation nor of his person simply but onely according to his humane Nature the matter of his flesh wherein although Christ was to administer his Priest-hood yet not as meer man as the Levites but as God-man the God of Abraham and Mediatour betwixt God and Abraham in which respect Christ is not contained in Abraham but is opposed in the type of Melchisedec both to Abraham and all others sprung from him as above them and far more excellent Therefore the Argument strongly holds Vers. 11. If therefore perfection were by the Levitical Priest-hood for under it the people received the Law what further need was there that another Priest should rise after the order of Melchisedec and not bee called after the order of Aaron Wee have spoken of the Excellency of Christ Person The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the excellency of Christs Priest-hood is proved to bee above the Levitical Priest-hood and that by seventeen Arguments Argum. 1. The perfection or effectual consummation of the worshipers of God as to the expiation of sin Justification Sanctification and Eternal life could not bee obtained by the Levitical Priest-hood Therefore the Levitical Priest-hood is imperfect nor so excellent as the Priest-hood of Christ. What further Argum. 2. Confirming the former If perfection could have been obtained by the Levitical Priest-hood there was no need that another more excellent Priest should arise viz. Christ after the order of Melchisedec not after the order of Aaron Hee leaves the Assumption to us to gather which is this But there was a necessity that a more excellent Priest should arise as it appears from Psalm 110. Therefore perfection by the Levitical Priest-hood cannot bee obtained but by the Priest-hood of Christ and therefore it is more excellent The people A Reason confirming the Major Proposition The Law was given under this Priest-hood and the people were exercised in its Discipline and whatsoever force the Law or the Legal Covenant had all this is ascribed by those that are zealous of the Law that the worshipers by this Priesthood might bee perfected but in vain Therefore if by this Priest-hood or the Law or by the Legal Covenant joyned with it the worshipers might obtain perfection there had been no need of a more excellent Priest-hood and another Law But seeing that perfection by this Priest-hood could not be obtained there was need of another more excellent Vers. 12. For the Priest-hood being changed there is made of necessity a change also of the Law Argum. 3. Proving withall that Christ should arise a Priest after the order of Melchisedéc not denominated after the order of Aaron nor obnoxious to the Levitical Law The
Judgement or Hell as deserved by themselves 3. Christs death delivereth his Subjects from the danger of this evil and from the bondage of this fear also 4. None but a Childe of Christ can have solid and true courage against death neither is there a free man in the world except true Christians Vers. 16. For verily Hee took not on Him the nature of Angels But Hee took on him the seed of Abraham Hee insisteth in the Doctrine of Christs Incarnation because it is the ground of all our comfort and secludeth the Angels from such an honour as wee have thereby The Son of God took on him the seed of Abraham and not the nature of Angels saith the Apostle Then 1. Christ hath his proper subsistance and being in himself before the Incarnation even his own Divine Nature with personal properties existing For hee is the Son of God the second person of the God-head before hee took on our nature 2. Hee chose to assume our nature for our delivery and not the Angels nature for delivery of such as were fallen of their kind 3. The nature that hee taketh on is mans very nature the seed of Abraham 4. Hee preventeth the personal subsistance of our nature hee assumeth the seed of Abraham 5. Hee maketh an Union of our nature with his Divine Nature 6. The way of making the Union is Assumption or Taking of our nature unto his own whereby remaining the same which hee was before to wit The Son of God hee joyneth our nature to himself and becometh what hee was not before to wit The Son of Man 7. Hee assumeth the seed of Abraham that hee may be known to be no other but the same Messias which was promised by the Prophets to the Fathers 8. When hee hath assumed Mans Nature to His own Divine Nature Hee remaineth the same Hee that Hee was before still one person So Christ Jesus is the promised Messias the second person of the God-head very God from everlasting and very Man since the conception of the Virgin Mary before his Incarnation having onely his own Divine Nature in his person but now since that time having our Nature also personally united with his Divine Nature so to remain both God and Man in one person for our good for ever Vers. 17. Wherefore in all things it behoved Him to be made like unto His Brethren that Hee might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Hee concludeth That Christ behoved to partake both of our nature and punishment or misery that wee might receive the more good of Him 1. First Hee saith Hee behoved to be like his Brethren in all things that is for substance of nature for natural properties for sinless infirmities for fellowship in temptations and miseries and in all things whatsoever our good did require his making like unto us Then 1. They who imagine and worship a Christ not like to us in all these things wherein the Scripture pronounceth him like unto us do mistake the true Christ and worship a false 2. It is very necessary that wee conceive rightly of Christs person seeing the Scripture doth press the knowledge thereof upon us so particularly 2. Hee sheweth the end of his conforming himself unto us to be That hee might be a faithful and merciful High Priest Then 1. As Christ took on our nature so in our nature hee took on a special Office of Priest-hood to do us good 2. In this his Office hee is faithful and will neglect nothing night nor day that may help us 3. In our slips and over-sights hee will bee merciful unto us 4. Seeing hee hath conformed himself to us for this end wee may take his communion of nature and miseries with us for a Pawn and pledge to assure us that hee will both pitty and help us 3. The extent of his Priest-hood hee maketh in general to be in all things pertaining to God and in special To make Reconciliation for the sins of the people Then 1. If God have any thing to do with us any Direction or Comfort or Blessing to bestow upon us it must come by our High Priest Jesus unto us 2. If hee command us in any thing or be to make covenant with us or have controversie to debate with us our High-Priest will answer for us 3. If wee have any thing to do with God to seek any good thing of him or deprecate any evil or to offer any Offering of Praise or Service Christs Office stretcheth it self to all this to do for us 4. In special as our sins daily deserve and provoke Gods anger so doth Christs Priest-hood pacifie Gods wrath and work Reconciliation to us Vers. 18. For in that Hee Himself hath suffered being tempted Hee is able to succour them that are tempted 1. Hee sheweth Christs experience to be both of sufferings and temptations that whether of the two annoy us wee may get comfort for either or both from him Then 1. There are two Evils which attend the Children of God to annoy them to wit Troubles and Sin or Sin and Misery 2. Christ hath experience albeit not of Sin in his own person yet of temptation to sin and of suffering of trouble 2. Hee applieth the Comfort expresly to the tempted Then 1. Men in trouble have need of comfort and relief but men under temptation to sin much more 2. Yea sin and temptation to sin is more grievous to a true Childe of God when hee seeth matters rightly than any trouble 3. No bearing out under tryals or standing in temptations but by succour and help from Christ. 4. Christs experience of temptation may assure us both of his ability and willingness to succour such as seek relief from him in this case The Summe of Chap. III. THerefore weigh well what a one Christ is and prefer none before him Vers. 1. For he is as faithful in his Message for changing of the typical Priesthood as Moses was in his Message when hee delivered it Vers. 2. And so much more honourable than Moses as the Builder is over the stones builded Vers. 3 4. And Moses was faithful as a servant in the Church Vers. 5. But Christ as Son and Lord over the Church to dispose of the service thereof at his pleasure Vers. 6. Therefore beware of old Israels hard heart lest you be debarred of Gods rest Vers. 7 8 9 10 11. Beware of like unbelief for it is the ground of Apostacy Vers. 12. And do your best to preserve others from it also Vers. 13. For perseverance in Faith is necessary to salvation Vers. 14. For Davids words do prove that there were some albeit not all hearers of Gods word of old that did provoke him Vers. 15 16. And who were these but such as hee punished Vers. 17. And whom punished hee but unbeleevers Vers. 18. So misbelief debarred them out of Gods rest of old and will also do the like
ordinary So do Gods Ministers bless the people in the Lords name 4. A blessing of authority extraordinary So Melchisedec blessed Abraham and the Prophets and Patriarchs such as by inspiration they were directed to bless And this official blessing with authority proveth Superiority whether it be ordinary or extraordinary 5. There is a blessing of power of it self effectual So blesseth Christ and so God blesseth men From this 1. The Excellency of the office of Gods Ministers is evident who are appointed to bless the people in Gods Name 2. And how they should bee respected in love for their work sake 3. And how they should walk worthy of that high and holy employment le●t their sins make them vile and contemptible before the people as in Malachies time Mal. 2.9 Vers. 8. And here men that dye receive Tythes but there hee receiveth them of whom it is witnessed that hee liveth Another point of Comparison tending to this end The Levites in their tything were mortal men one succeeding another But Melchisedec in type of his Priesthood and Scriptural being and Christ in the truth of his Priesthood are immortal And therefore Melchisedec as the typical Priest and Christ as the true Priest are greater than Levitical Priests by as much as immortality is above mortality Then Every Age hath Christ for a Priest living in their own time to deal for them with God And what benefit they get by him in their own time hee can make forth-comming unto them even for ever Vers. 9. And as I may so say Levi also who receiveth Tythes paid Tythes in Abraham 10. For hee was yet in the loyns of his Father when Melchisedec met him Another reason to this same purpose Levi paid Tythes to Melchisedec in Abrahams loyns Therefore Melchisedec is greater in his Priesthood than the Levitical Priests So was Christ in Abrahams loyns will you say I answer Christ was the true represented Priest even when Melchisedec met Abraham and in Melchisedec's person as type the honour was done to Christ in truth and to his Priesthood by Abraham And again Christ was in Abrahams loyns onely in regard of the matter of humane nature not for the manner of propagation and so is exempted from the Law of natural posterity 1. Alwaies from this reasoning wee learn That as receiving Tythes proveth superiority in office So paying of Tythes or maintenance in room of Tythes proveth subjection to that office and office-bearers which receive the same And so maintenance of Ministers should be a matter of honouring of them or rather of him that sent them of its own proper institution though men turn it into a beggarly stipend and count the more basely of the office because of the manner of maintenance 2. From the reason of Levies paying of Tythes in Abrahams loyns wee learn That there is ground in nature for imputation of the Fathers deed unto the children descended of him by natural propagation so that as justly may God impute unto us Adams sins as to Levi Abrahams Tythes paying Vers. 11. If therefore perfection were by the Levitical Priesthood for under it the people received the Law what further need was there that another Priest should rise after the order of Melchisedec and not be called after the order of Aaron To the end of the Chapter he sheweth a necessity of the abolishing of the Levitical Priesthood and establishing of Christs One reason is in this verse because perfection was not to be had by the Levitical Priesthood By Perfection is understood a perfect satisfaction for our sins and a perfect purchase of all that wee have need of unto eternal life He proveth that such perfection could not be had by Aarons Priesthood because then there had been no need of another Priesthood after Aarons if perfection could have been by his Priesthood But the Scripture sheweth that there behoved to arise a Priest after Melchisedec's order by whom perfection was to be gotten Psalm 110. 1. Therefore perfection could not be by Aarons Priesthood From this wee learn That under the Law remission of sins and eternal life was not obtained by virtue of any sacrifice then offered but by the virtue of Christs Sacrifice and Christs Priesthood represented thereby 2. But why could not perfection be by that Priesthood He giveth a reason saying For under it the people received the Law The word importeth as much as the people were then legalized disciplined after a Legal manner that is the Law was still urged upon them still they were pressed to give perfect obedience under pain of the curse still God dealt in the external form of handing them as one not satisfied for any thing that was offered as yet in their name Therefore perfection could not be had by that service For it was evident that neither God was pacified nor their consciences quieted by any thing in that Priesthood but all were sent to the thing signified and to the time which was to come in the Messia's manifestation Then Comparing their time and ours for outward manner of handling as they were legalized that is straightly urged by the yoak of the Law wee were evangelized that is smoothly entreated under the Gospel God laying aside terrour entreating us to bee reconciled and to come and receive Grace for Grace Vers. 12. For the Priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a change also of the Law From the change of the Levitical Priesthood he inferreth of necessity the abolishing of the Levitical Law and of our obligation thereunto Then 1. The Levitical Priesthood and the Levitical Law do stand and fall together 2. The Levitical Law cannot stand with any other Priesthood than Aarons it cannot stand with Christs under the Gospel 3. Christs Priesthood seeing it is another than Aarons must have another Law other Ordinances and Statutes than Aarons a Law and Ordinances suitable unto it self 4. To use Levitical Ceremonies under the Gospel is to confound the Priesthood of Aaron and Christ. Vers. 13. For hee of whom these things are spoken pertaineth to another tribe of which no man gave attendance at the Altar 14. For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Judah of which Tribe Moses spake nothing concerning Priesthood 15. And it is yet far more evident For that after the similitude of Melchisedec there ariseth another Priest 1. Hee proveth that Aarons Priesthood is changed and the Ordinance thereof because Psal. 110. speaketh of Christs Priesthood that is f●eed from the service of the Altar By the Altar hee meaneth the material Altar commanded in the Law Another Altar hee knoweth not And Christs Priesthood hee declareth to be freed from the service of this Altar beside which no Law could tye it to any other Altar Then Christs Priesthood is freed from the Altar which God commandeth and all the service thereof And whosoever will erect another material Altar in Christs Priesthood and tye his Church unto it must look by what Law they do it 2. From
2. But for Christs Priesthood God is bound with an Oath Never to change it and it leaneth on his nature which cannot altar nor repent and upon his Oath which cannot be violated 2. Another comparison betwixt the Levitical Covenant and the Evangelical Covenant As far as the Oath is above the changeable commandement by so much is the new Covenant better than the Covenant under the Law Then 1. There was a Covenant or Testament whereby Beleevers were saved as well under the Law as under the Gospel 2. The Covenant now though in substance of salvation one with the former yet in the manner of down-setting the Articles and the form of it is better than the Covenant then more clear more free more full more largely extended and more firm 3. Christ is here called Surety of this Covenant Then 1. Christ must see the Covenant kept and be good for it 2. God hath Christ to crave for our performance of the Covenant and we have Christ to crave for Gods part of the Covenant Yea and Christ to crave to give us Grace to perform that which God requireth of us in his Covenant 3. Jesus is content to be Surety and the Father hath consented and ordained and made him Surety So it resteth only that wee bee content also and make much of Christ that hee may do all our work for us and all Gods work in us Vers. 23. And they truly were many Priests because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death 24. But this man because hee continueth ever hath an unchangeable Priesthood Another Excellency of Christs Priesthood above the Levitical which may be branched out in th●se particulars following 1. The Levitical Priests were many both at one time and one after another by reason whereof that Priesthood was weakened while one part of the Office for such a time was in the hands of this man and another part for another time was in the hands of that man And because one man could not be ready to take the Sacrifices from all the people therefore several men behoved to take several parts of the burden But in Christs Priesthood there is but one man even himself His Priesthood is undivided no man beareth a part of the burden with him Hee alone attendeth all mens Sacrifices by himself Hee is at leisure for every mans employment at all times in the greatest throng of Sacrifices Then as long as Christ is at leisure no reason to employ another to carry our prayers 2. The Levitical Priesthood did pass from one person to another Death made interruption But Christs Priesthood cannot pass from his own person to any other neither death nor any other infirmity can interrupt his Office Then 1. To make any Priest by special Office in the New Testament beside Christ is to rent the Priesthood of Christ and make it imperfect like Aarons which for the same reason that it had many Priests was weak and imperfect and inferiour to Christs 2. To make Priests by office in the New Testament to offer up any corporal Sacrifice is to make Christs Priesthood separable from his own person which is against the nature of Christs Priesthood which cannot pass from one to another for so importeth the word 3. To make plurality of Priests in Christs Priesthood Vicars or Substitutes or in any respect partaker of the office with him is to presuppose that Christ is not able to do that office alone but is either dead or weak that hee cannot fulfil that office contrary to the Text here which saith Because hee continueth ever he hath an unchangeable Priesthood or a Priesthood which cannot pass from one to another Vers. 25. Wherefore hee is able also to save them to the uttermost which come unto God by him seeing hee ever liveth to make intercession for them 1. Hee sheweth the fruit of Christs keeping still the Priesthood altogether in his own person to be the perfect Salvation of all beleevers for ever Hee is able to save to the uttermost them that come unto God through him Then 1. Whosoever communicateth Christs Priesthood with any other beside his own person maketh Christ not able alone to save to the utmost those that come unto God through him 2. From this ground also it doth follow that Christ not only beginneth the beleevers salvation but perfecteth it also Hee doth not work a part of a mans salvation and leave the rest to his own merits or the merits of others but perfecteth it himself even to the uttermost 3. And if a man joyn any thing meritorious unto Christs Priesthood or any Mediatour for intercession beside him or seeketh by his own works to purchase salvation hee denieth Christ to be able to save him to the uttermost 2. Hee describeth Beleevers to be those that come to God through Christ. Then 1. Christ is the door and the way through which onely access is gotten to God By Saints or Angels there is not a way to come to God but by Christ onely 2. They that come not through him alone to God seclude themselves from the sufficiency of salvation to be had in him 3. The nature of beleeving is to make a man come towards God to get communion with him through Christ. 4. And none but such as come in Faith to God through Christ can take comfort from his Priesthood or look for salvation 3. Hee giveth a reason why perfect salvation is to be had for such as come to God through Christ Because Hee liveth for ever to make intercession for them Hee saith not to offer or cause to offer up the sacrifice of his body for them But Hee liveth and is not to be offered any more and liveth to make intercession Then 1. The sacrificing part is done and ended His intercession hath now the place and by his intercession wee get the merit of his death and passion applied unto us and not by any new oblation 2. If hee brook his life hee will not fail to intercede for us who come unto God through him and not through Saint or Angel or any person beside For hee liveth for ever to make intercession for us Vers. 26. For such an High-Priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners and made higher than the Heavens To the end hee may force the Hebrews to forsake the Priesthood of Levi hee draweth a strong reason from the nature of our estate under the Gospel Whereby hee proveth not onely that the Priests of Aarons Order are abolished but also every Son of Adam is excluded from the office of the Priesthood except Jesus Christ in his own person onely Because every Priest that wanteth the properties of Jesus Christ is unbeseeming for us under the Gospel A sinful man might have been a Priest under the Law to prefigure Christ before hee came But now no sinful man may be a Priest by office but Christ onely in whom there is no sin When the Sacrifice was a beast then a
of the New Testament is with an oath and so cannot be changed Then To make a Priest in the Gospel who is not consecrated by an oath to abide for evermore in the office but may be changed and another come in in his place is contrary to the institution of the Evangelical Priesthood The next difference hee maketh this The Law admitteth men in the plural number a plurality of Priests but the Gospel admitteth no plurality of Priests but the Son onely to be Priest Melchisedec's order in the type hath no Priest but one in it without a Suffragane or substituted Priest Therefore Christ the true Melchisedec is alone in his Priesthood without partner or Deputy or Suffragane Then To make plurality of Priests in the Gospel is to alter the order of Melchesedes sworn with an oath and to renounce the March set betwixt the Law and the Gospel 3. The third Difference The Law maketh men Priests but the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son of God Priest for the Gospel Then To make a man Priest now is to mar the Son of Gods priviledge to whom the priviledge onely belongeth 4. The fourth Difference The Law maketh such Priests as have infirmity that is sinful men who cannot make the Sacrifice which they offer effectual to pacifie nor the blessing which they pronounce to come nor the instruction which they give forcible to open the eyes But the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son who is able to save to the uttermost all that come to God through him Then To make a sinful and weak man a Priest now is to weaken the Priesthood of the Gospel and make it like the Law 5. The fift Difference The Law maketh men Priests which have infirmities over whom death had power that they could not be consecrated but for their short life time But the Evangelical Oath maketh the Son whom the sorrows of death could not hold and hath consecrated him for evermore Then As long as Christs Consecration lasteth none must meddle with his office 6. The last Difference The Law instituting Priests was not Gods last will but might suffer addition But the Evangelical Oath is since the Law and Gods last and unchangeable Will Therefore To adde unto it and bring in as many Priests now as did serve in the Temple of old is to provoke God to adde as many plagues as are written in Gods Book upon themselves and their Priests also The Summe of Chap. VIII THis is the Sum of all that I have spoken We have no Priest now but Christ who is equal in glory to his Father in Heaven vers 1. The offerer of his own body signified by the Tabernacle vers 2. For every Priest must offer something Therefore so must Christ vers 3. But the typical Sacrifice hee could not offer by the Law albeit hee were on earth vers 4. Because hee is not of the Tribe of Levi whose proper office was to meddle with the shadows Therefore hee must be the offerer of the Substance that is of his own Body signified by the shadows vers 5. And so now hee hath taken the office over the Levites head and hath an office more excellent than they and is Mediatour of a better Covenant than the Covenant which was in their time vers 6. For if that Covenant had been perfect another had been needless vers 7. But another Covenant was needful and God promised to make a new one vers 8. A better Covenant than that old which the people brake vers 9. For in this Covenant God undertaketh to make us keep our part of it vers 10.11 And to pardon where wee fail vers 12. Now when God promised a New Covenant hee declared the other to be old and to be abolished when the new came vers 13. The Doctrine of Chap. VIII Vers. 1. Now of the things which wee have spoken this is the Summe Wee have such an High Priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the Heavens 1. THe Apostle accommodating himself to help the capacity and memory of the Hebrews and urging the special point of his discourse is worthy of imitation 2. In saying Wee have such an High Priest who is set down on the right hand c. Hee setteth forth the glory of Christs person that hee may commend his Priesthood Then 1. The glory of Christs office is not seen till the glory of his person be seen 2. The glory of his person is not seen till his glorious Soveraignty and Government of the world be seen 3. Yea the glory of Christ is not rightly seen till his equality with the Father in glory be seen and acknowledged 3. In saying that Christ as High-Priest is set down on the right hand of the Throne hee giveth us to understand That Christ as in his Divine Nature hee is undivided from the Father in Glory and Dominion So in his humane Nature hee is exalted to the fellowship of Divine Glory with the Father Because of the union of the humane Nature with the Divine in one person of the Mediatour The two natures still remaining distinguished but not divided nor separated the one from the other 4. Hee noteth the place of this Glory to be in the Heavens wherein hee preferreth Christ above the Levitical Priests for their Priesthood is onely exercised on Earth But Christs in Heaven And therefore when wee will employ our High-Priest wee have no earthly City to seek him in but in the Heaven the onely place and palace of his residence Vers. 2. A Minister of the Sanctuary and of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not man 1. For all this glory yet Christ is still called here a Minister to shew us That his high honour hindreth him not to do his office for our good 2. Hee is called A Minister of the Sanctuary or of the holy things for the word will agree with both and both tend to one purpose for the holy things were all tyed to the Sanctuary and hee that was Minister of the Sanctuary was Minister of the holy things also and that in name of the Saints Now the Sanctuary or the holy things which here is spoken of is the thing signified by the Sanctuary and by the holy things And so taking all the significations of the word together we are taught That Christ in his glory is not idle but as a faithful Agent in the heavenly Sanctuary taking the care of all the holy things which his Saints and people are commanded to present procuring and giving forth all holy and spiritual things from Heaven to his Saints which their estate requireth 3. He is called a Minister of the true Tabernacle which God pitched and not man That is the Ministers of his own Body miraculously formed by God not after the ordinary manner of other men signified and represented by the Typical Tabernacle Then the Tabernacle and Temple under the Law was but the shadow and Christs Body was the true Tabernacle
of their Sanctification and the reliques of sin Which consolation hee appropriates to those that are justified endeavouring after holiness secluding those that are unregenerate and delight in sin to ver 9. which hee applyes to the Romans to ver 12. and thus applyed hee shews the use of it to ver 17. The second part contains the Consolations of the Iustified in respect to the calamities of this life to which the godly are lyable to ver 31. The third part contains the triumph of those that are justified over all their enemies to the end Vers. 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit From what hath been spoken hee infers consolation to those that are justified against the fear of condemnation which the conscience of sin dwelling in us may easily affright us with There is no condemnation saith hee to those which by true Faith are ingrafted into Christ And because many profess the Faith they have not hee describes true Believers and justified persons from this property that they do not indulge themselves in sin neither do they willingly follow the guidance of the flesh and corrupt nature but walk after the Commands of God and the motions of the Holy Ghost inwardly perswading them to direct the course of their life according to the Rule of the Word of God Vers. 2. For the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Iesus hath made mee free from the Law of Sin and Death That this consolation belongs to them that are truly justified and endeavour after holiness hee proves by three Arguments Argum. 1. The Law of Faith of Life and the Spirit in Christ or the Covenant of Grace hath freed every Believer and mee in particular from the law of sin and death or the Covenant of Works Therefore to them that are justified truly united unto Christ there is no condemnation For by the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hee understands the Law of Faith or the Covenant of Grace because by Faith or the Covenant of Grace the Spirit is received and communion with the Life of Christ. And by the Law of Sin and Death hee understands the Law of Works as Rom. 3.27 or the Covenant of Works by which Law or Covenant conviction of sin is made and condemnation unto death of them that are guilty Vers. 3. For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh Argum. 2. Seeing the Law was found weak to procure for us Justification by reason of the infirmity of the flesh or humane nature now corrupted not able to yeeld perfect obedience to the Law God sending his Son in the flesh of the same nature with us and in all things like unto us sin excepted in the flesh of his Son crucified condemned our sin that satisfaction being made for us it might bee abolished in us Therefore sin in us that are justified who are in Christ cannot bee the cause of condemnation and thus there is no condemnation to us Vers. 4. That the righteousness of the Law might bee fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Argum. 3. To this very end sin is condemned in Christ that is condemned and dead for us that wee being once dead and condemned in him it might appear that the Law is satisfied in us I say who follow not the lusts of the flesh but the guidance of the Holy Ghost Therefore now no condemnation remains us Vers. 5. For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit the things of the spirit Hee gives four reasons why hee makes this consolation peculiar to them that follow after holiness secluding all that are unregenerate and continue in sin The first reason They that are carnal and unregenerate savour and affect only those things that are carnal and wicked but those that are regenerate savour and affect spiritual things Therefore its no wonder that only they that follow after holiness are admitted to the consolation of an immunity from condemnation and they which are carnal are excluded Vers. 6. For to bee carnally minded is death but to bee spiritually minded is life and peace Reason 2. The wisdome of carnal men which is the Governour of their counsels and actions and is carried only to those things which please the flesh whether in respect to God or eternal life and so it inclines to death But the wisdome of the spirit or an habit directing the actions of regenerate men is carried to those things which belong to spiritual life and peace Therefore it s no wonder if only they that are regenerate and spiritual are exempted from condemnation but not they that are carnal Vers. 7. Because the carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can bee Reason 3. Confirming the former the wisdome of the flesh it self the principal virtue of politick wits is enmity against God for it only seeks and cares for its own rejecting God neither is it subject to the Law of God or can bee subject for it cannot but subject to its own carnal ends the Soul Heaven God and all things and pursue after these so far as it thinks them conducible to carnal ends Therefore it s no wonder that carnal men are not freed from condemnation Vers. 8. So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God Reason 4. Whoever are unregenerate in the state of corrupt nature or the flesh cannot please God because they cannot but follow after those things which please them Therefore no wonder they are not freed from condemnation Vers. 9. But yee are not in the flesh but in the spirit if so bee that the Spirit of God dwell in you Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ hee is none of his Applying the character of justified persons out of the judgement of charity to the Romans hee also applies to the same Romans to whom hee writes the consolation which arises from freedome from condemnation hee prudently in the mean time bespeaks them that they would not indulge hypocrisie in any and hee gives four Reasons of this application The first Reason You are not subject to the dom●nion of the flesh you are not unregenerate but in a spiritual condition following the guidance of the Spirit Therefore there is no condemnation to you or which is the same to you belongs the foresaid consolation Reas. 2. Confirming the former the Spirit of God dwelling in you framing your hearts and lives unto holiness for unless I should thus judge of you I should think you did not belong unto Christ for hee that hath not the sanctifying Spirit of Christ is not yet a living member of Christ Therefore there is no condemnation unto
apprehend admire and magnifie but that which is Humane they suspect and only they that are Novices and ignorant altogether of Divine things admire it Not of this world Comparison 2. Humane Wisdome is only of this world or temporary but the wisdome of the Gospel is of the world which is to come or Eternal Of the Princes Comparison 3. Humane Wisdome is of men who although they are accounted by the world for Princes yet they perish with their wisdome and come to nought Vers. 7. But wee speak the wisdome of God in a mystery even the hidden wisdome which God ordained before the world unto our glory The other part of the Comparison The Wisdome of the Gospel is the wisdome of the Living and Eternal God because it was wisely contrived of God and because in it the wonderful Wisdome of God is revealed touching the Salvation and Redemption of men In a mystery Comparison 4. Humane Philosophy is common and obvious to every one that is indued with the gifts of Nature but the Wisdome of the Gospel is a Mystery or hidden wisdome because it is not understood by natural reason as Humane Philosophy but by Supernatural Revelation Before the world Comparison 5. In the antiquity of it the Wisdome of the Gospel is not of yesterday but ordained of God before the world But Humane Philosophy is an invention lately found out and not yet perfected or finished Glory Comparison 6. The Wisdome of the Gospel appertains to Glory and Salvation especially of us who live under grace But Humane Wisdome compared with this appertains not to salvation but vain speculation Vers. 8. Which none of the Princes of this world knew for had they known it they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory Comparison 7. Humane Wisdome may consist with the not knowing of Christ but Divine Wisdome cannot This comparison is confirmed by experience because the chief heads of the Jews and the Rulers of the Gentiles who in respect to their wisdome seemed to get a name in the world understood nothing of the Wisdome of the Gospel which hee proves by this instance because had they known any thing of the Gospel they had either out of reverence to the Divine Power or out of fear been wary of Crucifying the Lord of Glory so ignominiously Vers. 9. But as it is written Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath entred into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him Comparison 8. By which hee confirms and illustrates the fourth and sixth comparison The object of Humane Wisdome is apprehended by the external senses and the understanding or the natural light of reason but the object of that Wisdome which is unfolded in the Gospel containing those things which Christ hath procured for us to bee enjoyed in this present and in the world to come cannot bee apprehended either by the outward senses or the understanding founded in sensible things or by the discourse of reason without revelation because the knowledge of it as Isaiah speaks Chap. 64.14 cannot come into the heart of man naturally From all the parts of this comparison arises Argum. 6. The Wisdome of the Gospel which the plain way of preaching it best opens far excells all humane wisdome which only the wisdome of words used for preaching opens and that with obscuring the wisdome of the Gospel Therefore the preaching of the Gospel in simplicity is for the best The sum of all is plainness of speech shews to the hearers the depth of the wisdome of God but wisdome of words shews how learned the Preacher is in humane wisdome Vers. 10. But God hath revealed them to us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God Hee illustrates this Doctrine by answering two Objections Objection 1. From whence therefore do you know the Gospel Hee answers From the revelation of the Spirit through Faith wee understand the subject of the Gospel which hee confirms from the end and properties of the Holy Spirit which is given unto us because the Holy Ghost as it were by searching perfectly knows all things even the hidden things of God and reveals to us these mysteries Vers. 11. For what man knoweth the things of a man save the spirit of man which is in him Even so the things of God knoweth no man but the Spirit of God This property of the Spirit hee proves by way of comparison As the Spirit of a man can best know the things which are in man so the Spirit of God only can know the deep things of God and by consequence reveal them Vers. 12. Now wee have received not the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that wee may know the things that are freely given to us of God Objection 2. But if the Spirit only knows what have you to do with the Spirit Hee answers That the Spirit is given to us that believe not that common spirit of the world not the gift of Eloquence or worldly wisdome but the Spirit or the gift of spiritual grace to this end that wee may know those spiritual gifts viz. Christ with his benefits freely bestowed upon us through the grace of God Vers. 13. Which things also wee speak not in the words which mans wisdome teacheth but which the Holy Ghost teacheth comparing spiritual things with spiritual Argum. 7. Confirmed by the practice of the Apostles Spiritual things ought to bee manifested if the Apostles practice bee to bee imitated not with the painted language of mans wisdome but in a spiritual stile and in words which the Holy Ghost teaches Therefore this is the best manner of preaching This heavenly business cares not to bee adorned but is content to bee taught Hee that speaks saith Peter let him speak as the Oracles of God that is let him use pious language reverend sanctified speaking of divine things as becomes the Oracles of God Spiritual things Confirming this argument hee subjoyns the eighth Because to spiritual things and spiritual men or men indued with the Spirit of God a spiritual stile and manner of speech ought to bee fitted using spiritual arguments taken out of the Scripture which will not bee if the preaching of the Gospel bee cloathed with Rhetorical flourishes and Philosophical sentences with painted speeches for such kind of speech is as much unbecoming the Gospel as Herods Purple Garment was unbecoming Christ Therefore this manner of preaching is the most excellent Vers. 14. But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can hee know them because they are spiritually discerned Hee illustrates this Doctrine by occurring to an Objection Some man might say This Doctrine of the Apostle cannot bee admitted by humane reason for there is no man but accounts it folly not to set out the most excellent and spiritual things with the most elegant manner of speech Hee answers by distinguishing men or
God is a Mediatour by whom God would have expiation for sin made his life being laid down upon the Cross and expiation being made by his death hee would that reconciliation and a renewing of friendship betwixt God and them should bee made that are the members of the Church no less betwixt God and those members which are in the Earth than betwixt God and those that are in Heaven yea hee would have reconciliation made in himself or by the intuition of his glory amongst the heavenly Angels and earthly men amongst whom by reason of sin there is a natural disagreeing Lastly Hee would have the Elect Angels to bee confirmed whose various and changeable nature is already demonstrated by the fall of wicked Angels and that by a gathering of them together to himself For the Angels are added to Christ as a surplusage in the Covenant of Redemption for the use of his body that is the Church that they might bee ministring spirits for the use of the redeemed ones All which as they did confirm the solidity and certainty of Redemption so the Faith of the Colossians very much in Christ and ought also to confirm ours Vers. 21. And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works yet now hath hee reconciled 22. In the body of his flesh through death to present you holy and unblameable and unreprovable in his sight The 5. Reason of his thanksgiving is the grace of reconciliation made with the Colossians by name Hee amplifies this benefit by nine Arguments 1 Hee saith that you were sometimes alienated from God strangers from the Common-wealth of Israel and the life of God 2 Yee were not onely born strangers but were made more and more strangers by the custome of sinning 3 Neither this onely but yee were enemies and with an hostile mind did both disdain and speak against God 4 That you were enemies not only in your sensitive appetite and your affections but also in your mind which should bee the most excellentest faculty the Mistress and Captain of all the rest 5 That yee have expressed the enmities conceived in your mind by wicked works 6 That nevertheless Christ now hath reconciled you 7 That hee hath obtained reconciliation in taking upon him in the body of his flesh the humane nature like to us in all things sin onely excepted 8 That by his death hee hath paid the price of your Redemption and Reconciliation 9 That Christ hath determined with himself that at length you should remain holy in his sight and the sight of God without any spot of sin and misery viz. to the day of his comming all which did chiefly make for the upholding of their Faith Vers. 23. If yee continue in the faith grounded and settled and bee not moved away from the hope of the Gospel which yee have heard and which was preached to every creature which is under heaven whereof I Paul am made a Minister The fourth manner of confirming the Colossians faith follows by an exhortation to perseverance in the faith of the Gospel to which hee passeth giving a caution for this end that hee might suspend the benefit commonly applied to them given as it were the Characteristical note of them to whom the benefit of reconciliation belongs viz. That they who have right to these benefits may remain in the faith of Christ upon which the other degrees of perseverance depend The Arguments of the Exhortation are chiefly three If Argum. 1. It is contained in the condition of perseverance Your constancy in the faith of Christ and hope of the Gospel is a sign not onely of your reconciliation made through Christ but also of your holiness and salvation to bee perfected by him Therefore persevere yee In the mean while three things are required to their perseverance 1 That they bee grounded in the faith that is that they lay hold upon the foundations of faith solidly laid in the truth goodness and power of God 2 That they bee settled i. e. Now they are grounded in Christ they may fixedly abide may adhere to Christ and bee joyned to this truth 3 That they resist all temptations with which they may by any manner bee moved from the hope of eternal life or the good things promised in the Gospel The force of this Argument is you shall not possess the good things fore-spoken of except you have persevered in the faith Therefore persevere yee Preached Argum. 2. Of his exhortation to perseverance The Gospel which you have heard from Epaphras your Pastor is the same with the Gospel preached by the other servants of God to every creature through the whole world or all kindes of men Jews and Gentiles without difference Therefore abide you founded and settled in the same faith Whereof Argum. 3. I Paul my self am made a Minister to preach this Gospel to the Gentiles with great approbation from God and his blessing poured upon all that are faithful amongst the Gentiles Therefore persevere yee in that faith Vers. 24. Who now rejoyce in my sufferings for you and fill up that which is behinde of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church Hee insists in this Argument and commendeth his Ministry to them by fourteen Arguments all which confirm his glorious Ministry Argum. 1. I Paul in the administration of this Gospel do bear afflictions with joy Therefore my Ministry is glorious Argum. 2. I bare those afflictions for the sake of you Colossians or for your confirmation in the faith Therefore my Ministry is glorious amongst you Argum. 3. Seeing that after the personal sufferings of Christ for our redemption the suffering of the Martyrs remain for a testimony of the truth of Christs doctrine I Paul in some part do so fill up the appointed measure of those afflictions that I am prepared to seal this my Ministry even with my death Therefore this my Ministry is glorious Argum. 4. I suffer these afflictions for Christs honour and his whole Churches edification viz. That his mystical body may bee knit together in faith Therefore my Ministry is glorious All these make to the taking away the offence of the Cross incumbent upon the Apostle Vers. 25. Wherefore I am made a Minister according to the dispensation of God which is given to mee for you to fulfil the word of God Argum. 5. I am appointed a Minister of the Catholick Church and am made an Apostle of the Gentiles both by special authority and divine dispensation Therefore is my Ministry glorious To fulfil Arg. 6. I am constituted an Apostle especially for this end that fully manifesting the Gospel amongst the Gentiles I might fulfil by my Ministry not onely my Office but also the Decree of God and the Prophecies concerning the calling of the Gentiles and the grace of Christ which was to come unto them Therefore this my Ministry is glorious Vers. 26. Even the Mystery that hath been bid from ages and from
to a right knowledge and profession of the truth For the Apostle doth not declare any thing concerning the total loss of faith in Christ but on the contrary hopes for their repentance and their possible salvation hereafter CHAP II. IN this Chapter hee delivers four Precepts wherein all the faithful are to bee instructed how they ought decently to behave themselves in their publick Assemblies both men and women Vers. 1. I exhort therefore that first of all supplications prayers intercessions and giving of thanks bee made for all men Precept 1. That prayers in the publick Assembly especially might not bee neglected but that supplications ought to bee made for the turning of evils away and prayers for the obtaining of good things intercessions for other men and thanksgiving for benefits received in publick prayers which the whole Church the Pastor going before ought to conceive and that for all sorts of men bee they of what condition they will Vers. 2. For Kings and for all that are in authority that wee may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty Hee expounds the special Precept and in particular commands them to pray for Kings and all Magistrates in great places who because they sit at the helm of the Commonwealth ought to bee most dear to us and upon that account ought they to bee mentioned by us in the prayers of the Church Peaceable The Reasons of the Precept are nine Reas. 1. From the profitable end because the Magistrates being safe and managing their offices in peace the faithful may lead a quiet and peaceable life In godliness or obedience to the first Table And honesty or obedience to the second Table Therefore must wee pray for them Vers. 3. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour Reas. 2. To pray for Kings and all orders of men is good or acceptable unto God Therefore ought wee to pray for them God is said to bee our Saviour because although Christ is our Saviour by special office yet in the effecting and execution of his office hee doth not actually save us but with the Father and the Holy Spirit Vers. 4. Who will have all men to bee saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth Reas. 3. Confirming the former God will have all sorts of men therefore some amongst Kings and Magistrates and all orders of men to bee saved and come to the Faith of the Gospel Therefore hee wills that wee pray for all sorts or men and by name for Kings and those in authority concerning whom wee are obliged to hope well Vers. 5. For there is one God and one Mediatour between God and men the man Christ Iesus Reas. 4. Although men are distinguished several waies amongst themselves and there are divers orders whereof many are strangers to the Faith and many enemies yet it is enough to engage our prayers for all because God is one under whose power and dominion all are comprehended and that God is the God of the Jews as well as the Gentiles without acception of persons Therefore ought wee to pray for all sorts of men And one Mediatour Reas. 5. What ever distances there are amongst men by which they may bee distinguished from each others it is enough notwithstanding to ingage us to pray for all because to all Nations and all conditions of men there is one Mediatour appointed betwixt God and men by whom an access is open to all that come unto him Therefore ought wee to pray for all The man Reas. 6. Wee have reason to pray for all men inasmuch as that One Mediatour of all men is Man By the incarnation of the Word by the common bond of humane nature hee is united to all m●n viz. Jesus Christ who intercedes for all i. e. for his sheep collected out of all sorts of men Therefore wee ought to pray for all Vers. 6. Who gave himself a ransome for all to bee testified in due time Reas. 7. Christ gave himself a full and sufficient price of Redemption for men of all kinds Therefore ought wee to pray for all sorts of men A Testimony Reas. 8. The Gospel or Testimony of Christs redeeming all sorts of men which God had designed in due time to reveal is now made manifest Therefore in making prayers for all men the testimony of this truth is to bee produced in Christian Churches Vers. 7. Whereunto I am ordained a Preacher and an Apostle I speak the truth in Christ and lye no● a Teacher of the Gentiles in faith and verity Reas. 9. The preaching of this Testimony or Gospel and the Doctrine of the price of Redemption paid for all sorts of men by Christ is in special manner committed unto mee that I might bee also a Teacher of the Gentiles to instruct them in the Faith and all Truth which leads to eternal life seeing therefore I know that many of the Gentiles are to bee saved and now I publickly teach you this prayers ought publickly to bee made in all Christian Churches for all sorts of men In the mean time because hee knew that some amongst the Jews would take ill the mentioning of his Apostleship and his embassage to the Gentiles hee confirms that expression of his being sen● to the Gentiles with a grave asseveration lest any one should doubt Vers. 8. I will therefore that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting Those things that follow belong to the circumstances of publick worship Therefore the second Precept follows touching persons fit for conceiving publick prayers in the Church Also concerning the place and dispositions both of the soul and body accommodated to that matter As for the persons Hee commands the men onely not women to speak in the Church and to precede the people in their prayers In every place As to the place hee shews according to that prediction of Christ Ioh. 4. that all difference of places which was in the Old Testament when they were thrice a year to meet at the Temple in Ierusalem and their face was to bee turned to the Sanctuary whether they were near or afar off from the Temple is taken away and that now liberty is granted that Christians in every place may honestly and decently celebrate their Assemblies Lifting up As to the body hee requires that the gesture should bee such as may testifie reverence to the divine Majesty and may enkindle our devotion which kind of gesture is the lifting up of the hands whether they bee spread abroad or closed together Purely As for the whole man and chiefly the soul hee requires first Integrity and innocency of life which h●e means by purity of hands 2 That wrath bee laid aside strifes and all evil affections that they all bee of one accord 3 That they make no doubt whether God will hear or grant those things which wee who come to him by Jesus Christ ask of him according to his revealed will Vers. 9. In like
an one Christ is i. e. how excellent hee is in the offices of his Apostleship or of his Prophetical and Priestly office wherein hee humbled himself and suffered Argum. 1. From Psal. 8.5 to this purpose The man Christ is highly accounted of with God and other men are subjected because of him if the Majesty of God and the Magnificence of his works bee compared with the meanness of humane nature or if it bee considered how great God is and how eminent his other works and how mean and low man is Therefore the excellency of Christ as man ought not to bee lessened with us because of the infirmities and sufferings of the humane nature which hee took Vers. 7. Thou madest him a little lower than the Angels thou crownedst him with glory and honour and didst set him ruler over the works of thy hands Argum. 2. From Psal. 8.6 Although Christ in the time of his humiliation was made lower than the Angels in respect to his sufferings in the flesh yet that humiliation was not perpetual but for a short time and onely in part in respect to the humane nature that suffered Because the price of Redemption being paid hee was raised from the dead exalted to the right hand of God and crowned with glory and honour declared Lord and King over all the works of God Therefore wee ought not to detract from him because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 8. Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet For in that hee put all in subjection under him hee left nothing that is not put under him But now wee see not yet all things put under him 9. But wee see Iesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the Grace of God should taste death for every man Argum. 3. From Psal. 8.7 Christ is the Lord of Angels even as hee is man For God hath put all the works of his hands without exception in subjection to him and so amongst the rest Angels Therefore c. But now Argum. 4. Propounded by way of Solution to an Objection Although yet wee see not all things subjected unto Christ in respect to his members which are daily opposed by very many enemies Yet wee see not with the eyes of Faith onely but even the light of reason by many tokens and are convinced by the multitude of miracles Christ after his humiliation below the condition of Angels now crowned with glory and honour in his own person in Heaven and sitting at the right hand of his Father till all his enemies bee made his foot-stool and thus wee see the victory of Christ begun Therefore wee must not detract any thing from the excellency of Christ because of his sufferings either in his own person or in his members A little Argum. 5. From the fore-telling of his humiliation Psal. 8.6 From the decree of God and to the fulfilling the Prophecies of Christ it behoved him to bee humbled and suffer death and to this end in a sort to bee made lower than the Angels that hee might suffer death Therefore c. Taste Argum. 6. Not unadvisedly or compelled by necessity did Christ suffer but freely or out of the gracious good will of God towards us hee tasted death for a short time not for himself but for all us his Sons that hee might bring us to salvation as it is expounded in the following verse Therefore his estimation is not to bee lessened because of his sufferings in his assumed flesh Vers. 10. For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto Glory to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings Argum. 7. It was agreeable to the Glory of God who is the Author and End of all things seeing that his justice mercy wisdome power and the rest of his Attributes might bee manifested chiefly by the sufferings of Christ that hee might consecrate inaugurate consummate and every waies make him meet to bee Captain of our salvation the more conveniently by afflictions to bring many Sons his Elect to life and glory not by his Doctrine onely nor onely by the example of his life but also by the merit of his death undergone for the redeeming of them Therefore his excellency ought not to bee abated because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 11. For both hee that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one For which cause hee is not ashamed to call them Brethren Argum. 8. The Redeemer and the Redeemed Hee that sanctifies and they that are sanctified not onely by the decree of God and the predictions of Scripture but also from Justice it self are of one and the same Nature of the same Natural lump derived from the same Adam For the Justice and Wisdome of God required that in the humane Nature which had sinned sin should bee punished And therefore required that the Redeemer of men should bee truly man Therefore the reputation of Christ the Son of God because of his assuming the infirmities of humane Nature is not to bee diminished For which Argum. 9. Confirming the former The Messias would bee incarnate that wee might bee his Brethren and that hee might shew forth himself a Brother unto us And although hee is the Son of God yet hee is not ashamed to call the Redeemed or Elect his Brethren Therefore the reputation of Christ is not to bee lessened because of his sufferings in humane flesh but rather ought wee to boast in his relation to us and to glorifie him so much the more because of his sufferings for us Ver● 12. Saying I will declare thy name unto my Brethren in the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto thee This Argument hee proves by three Testimonies of Scripture The first is taken from Psal. 22.22 wherein Christ undertakes to pay the price of our Redemption and promiseth to preach the Righteousness purchased by his Obedience to his Brethren the Elect or the Church of the faithful in whose Congregations hee is present by his Spirit even after his ascension stirring up joy and thanksgiving in the hearts of the faithful by the preaching of Righteousness Vers. 13. And again I will put my trust in him and again Behold I and the children which God hath given mee The second Testimony is taken from Psal. 18.3 whence Christ is proved to bee man because put in the number of the Covenanters depending upon God by Faith Again Testimony the third From Isa. 8.18 where Christ is brought in by the Prophet associating himself with Children as his Brethren whom God had chosen and given to him to bee redeemed and saved whom hee presents with himself to the Father to bee glorified Vers. 14. Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood hee also himself took part of the same that through death hee might destroy him that had the power of
holiness dwells yet our High Priest is merciful and sometime felt those temptations in his flesh which wee feel yet without sin Therefore wee may boldly press unto him and wee ought to endeavour to enter into that rest Vers. 16. Let us therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace that wee may obtain mercy and finde Grace to help in time of need Argum. 11. God doth not sit in the Throne of Justice upon our approaches to him in Christ but in the Throne of Grace that hee may communicate help to us in time of need under all our necessities Therefore wee ought to come with boldness to the Throne of Grace that wee may rest under the wings of the Propitiatory which is the same with entring into Gods Rest by Faith CHAP. V. THe Excellency of Christs Prophetical Office and the necessity of cleaving to him and his Doctrine who is the Apostle and great Prophet of our Profession hath been spoken to The Excellency of his Priestly Office follows There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee proves Christ to bee the chief and great Priest more excellent than any typical Priest that hee might instruct the Hebrews to moderate their thoughts about the Levitical Priesthood which they too highly esteemed of to the prejudice of Christ to vers 11. In the second part ●ee reproves the slothfulness of the Hebrews that hee might render them more attentive to the following Doctrine And hee proves the Excellency of Christs Priesthood above the Levitical by nine Arguments Vers. 1. For every High Priest taken from among men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God that hee may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins 2. Who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for that hee himself also is compassed with infirmity 3. And by reason hereof hee ought as for the people so also for himself to offer for sins Argum. 1. The perfections which were required in the Levitical Priests vers 1 2. were joyned with some notes of imperfection and with the sins of the Priests vers 2 3. Therefore Christ which was declared a Priest without sin in the end of the former Chapter is more excellent than the Levitical Priests Among men The Perfections of the Levitical High Priest were four 1 The Levitical Priest was taken from among men and was chosen one of many 2 Was ordained for men in those things which appertained to God i. e. That in the place and name of the people hee should administer about the worship of God praying to him for the people teaching the people in the name of God and that hee should by all possible means promote the Glory of God and the salvation of the people 3 Hee offered gifts of inanimate things and sacrifices of beasts sometimes burnt-offerings for the sins of the people sometimes peace-offerings for the obtaining of benefits sometimes thank-offerings for benefits received other whiles sacrifices for special sins By all which the virtues of Jesus Christs Sacrifice was dimly shadowed out Have compassion 4 The fourth perfection requisite in the Priestly Office is a sympathy and commiseration proportioned to the greatness of the peoples misery wherewith they ought to bee touched towards sinners whether sinning out of ignorance or voluntary errour and deliberate counsel For that There are two notes of Imperfection in the Priest-hood 1 That they themselves were obnoxious to the same infirmities i. e. of ignorance and errours and the miseries consequent to sin So also 2 This second n●●e demonstrates the former That they are obliged out of duty to offer Sacrifices no less for their own sins than the sins of the people This is the first Argument Vers. 4. And no man taketh this honour unto himself but hee that is called of God as was Aaron 5. So also Christ glorifieth not himself to bee made an High Priest but hee that said unto him Thou art my Son to day have I begotten thee Argum. 2. As the lawful Priests were called to the honour of this office so Christ was not onely lawfully called by the Father as Aaron but also further was acknowledged and declared the onely begotten Son of God in this Priestly office Therefore hee is much more excellent than the Levitical Priests The Antecedent is proved out of Psalm 2. where the Father speaking to his Son vers 7. calls him his Son whom hee begot before hee command him vers 8. to ask of him the ends of the earth or intercede for the salvation of men which are parts of the Priests office Therefore in this Psalm hee is not onely called by the Father to his Priestly office but also is acknowledged his Son and so more excellent than the Levitical Priests Vers. 6. As hee saith also in another place Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Argum. 3. From Psal. 110. Christ is appointed by the Father a Priest for ever of whose Priest-hood there is no end according to the order of Melchisedec the type Therefore hee is more excellent than the Levitical High Priests Vers. 7. Who in the daies of his flesh when hee had offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save him from death and was heard in that hee feared Argum. 4. This Argument consists of five Branches which may bee so many Arguments 1 Christ is so the Son of God that hee is man also the Son in our flesh the infirmiti●s whereof sometime hee felt without sin and so is a more excellent man than the Levitical Priests 2 Hee offered up prayers and supplications and himself to death for his people and so offered a more excellent Sacrifice than the Levitical Priests 3 Hee interceded with a greater sense of our misery and guilt with strong crying and tears and so in his sympathy towards us excelled the Levitical Priests 4 With greater confidence hee pleaded our cause than any of the typical Priests could even then when in the pangs of death and sense of the Divine wrath or curse due to our sins his sanctified humane nature conflicted with the terrours of death 5 Hee prayed with greater efficacy and fruit than any typical Priest For hee was freed according to his prayer from fear which the sight of an angry God put upon his sense and holy reason because having paid a sufficient price for us all cause of anger and fear was taken away Therefore Christ is a far more excellent Priest than the Levitical Priests Vers. 8. Though hee were a Son yet learned hee obedience by the things which hee suffered Argum. 5. Drawn from the former which with the removal of the scandal of the Cross shews also the excellency of Christs Priest-hood Christ was not imployed in beholding of the Sacrifices slain and himself free from all suffering as the Levitical Priests in the slaying of Sacrifices but although hee was the Son of God yet hee really felt by
So hee but by his Word commandeth and all standeth fast And this his Word is nothing else but his powerful Will ordaining things to bee and continue and powerfully making them so to bee and continue so long as hee will 4. Christ by himself purged our sins To wit by bearing our sins upon his body on the Tree 1 Pet. 2.4 Then 1. Our sins are filthiness that must bee purged 2. The satisfactory cleansing of our sins is not a thing to bee done by mens meritorious doings or sufferings but already done and ended by Christ before hee ascended and that by himself alone all creatures being secluded 3. Hee that upholdeth all things by the Word of his own Power and hee that purged our sins by his own Blood is but one self-same Person God and Man is He in one Person 5. Christ sate down on the right hand of the Majesty on high That is when Christ had cleansed our sins by his death hee ascended to Heaven and possessed himself as Man in the fellowship of the same Glory which as God hee had before the World was Joh. 17.4 5. Then 1. The Son is joyned in the fellowship of the same Glory with the Father as well in his Manhead after his Resurrection as in his Godhead before his Incarnation For though the glory of Christs Godhead was hid for a while by the sufferings of his Manhead yet was it not abolished nor in it self abated thereby but the Manhead first assumed unto the unity of Person with the Godhead that our Ransome might bee rich and then to the union of the same Glory that the Redeemer after the Ransomes paying might bee altogether glorious 2. Seeing hee that hath cleansed our sins is so glorious a Person all the means of his cleansing us how base soever such as were his Hunger and Thirst his Poverty and Weakness his shameful and painful Death should bee glorious in our eyes also 3. Majesty and Magnificence and Grandeur properly so called is the Lords The highest excellencies of the creature are but sparks of his Majesty and weak resemblances onely albeit their earthly glory often hold mens eyes so as they forget the Lords Greatness Vers. 4. Being made so much b●tter than the Angels as hee hath by Inheritance obtained a more excellent Name than they 1. Hee proveth Christ to bee greater than the Angels because his Name is more excellent than theirs For they are called Angels and hee Gods Son which hee is said to have by inheritance as due to him both as God by eternal Generation and as Man by assumption of our Nature in unity of one person according to which hee is not the adopted but natural Son of God Filius natus non filius factus Then God giveth not idle titles as God calleth things so they are or are made to be Christ as God is called Gods Son because by eternal Generation hee is so as Man hee is called Gods Son because by assumption of the humane nature unto the personal union of his Godhead hee is made so to be 2. As far as Sonship is above servile imployment so far is Christ more excellent than the Angels Vers. 5. For unto which of the Angels said hee at any time Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee And again I will be to him a Father and hee shall be to mee a Son 1. Hee proveth this point by Scripture Psal. 2.7 2 Sam. 7.19 and putteth them to improbation of his Doctrine by Scripture if they could Then 1. In the Primitive Church in matters of Religion all Authority was silent and Divine Scripture spake and determined questioned points of Truth 2. The Apostle counted it sufficient to bring Scripture for his Doctrine and permitteth no impugning of it but by Scripture 2. Onely of Christ saith God I have begotten thee Then 1. Howsoever God hath many Sons by Creation by Office by Grace and Adoption yet a Son by Generation a native Son hath hee none but Christ. 2. Christ is of the same Nature and Essence with the Father consubstantial with him because begotten of him in himself without beginning the Son being eternally in the Father and the Father eternally in the Son of the self-same Nature and God-head 3. This day have I begotten thee Being understood of Christ according to his God-head signifieth the Fathers timeless eternal perpetual constant and present Generation of his Son in himself being understood according to his state in his Man-head it signifieth the Fathers bringing forth of the Son to the knowledge of the World and declaring him to bee the Son of God with power by his Resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 These places it is true were spoken of David and Solomon as Types of Christ typically in a slender resemblance Psal. 2.7 and 2 Sam 7.19 But the body of the Truth aimed at and signified was Christ resembled by them as here wee see Whence wee learn that typical speeches in Scripture have not their perfect meaning neither can be fully expounded nor truly understood till they be drawn to Christ in whom they have their accomplishment and of whom they mean to speak under the name of the Types And therefore neither could the old Church of the Jews nor can wee get comfort in any of them till Christ in whom all the Promises are Yea and Amen be found included in them Vers. 6. And again when hee bringeth in the first begotten into the world Hee saith And let all the Angels of God worship him 1. Hee saith that is the Father saith Psal. 97.7 Then The Scripture which elsewhere is called the Speech of the Holy Ghost is also the speech of the Father 2. Hee bringeth in his first begotten into the World Then 1. The Father is the Author of Christs Incarnation and of his Kingdome amongst Men and of Divine Glory given to him in his Kingdome 2. Christ is the Fathers first begotten both for the eternity of his Person begotten without beginning before the world was and for the excellency of his Person being more glorious than all Angels or Men which get the name of Children either by Creation or Adoption 3. The Father commandeth Let all the Angels of God adore Him Then 1. The Father communicateth to Christ as his own Nature and God-head by Generation so also his own Glory by commanding the creatures to adore him 2. What the creatures adore they acknowledge by adoration to be God so God esteemeth 3. And Christ is the Angels God because they must adore Him Vers. 7. And of the Angels Hee saith Who maketh His Angels Spirits and His Ministers a flame of fire Hee maketh his Angels Spirits c. Psal. 104.5 Then 1. God made not the Angels to get any part of Christs room in the Churches worship but to serve Christ as lowly as any of the meanest creatures 2. And the Angels indeed are as ready to do so and as swift and active in their service as the Winds and fire-slaughts
esteemed by us Vers. 10. For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto glory to make the Captain of their Salvation perfect through sufferings 1. Another reason of Christs Suffering This way of our saving by Christs Sufferings made for the Glory of God and our good Then When the reasons of Christs Death are seen the scandal of his Cross ceaseth 2. There is a work to do here a great many of Sons to bee brought to glory Then 1. All the Elect and saved Souls are in the rank of Children 2. Albeit they bee few in comparison of the world yet are they many of them all together 3. There is not one of them all who can go to Heaven or Salvation but by Christs leading and conduct 3. The Captain of their Salvation must bee made perfect through suffering Then 1. How perfect soever Christ be in himself yet before his suffering hee lacked one thing which his Office towards us required to wit experimental suffering of such sorrows as his souldiers and followers are subject unto 2. When his sufferings were ended hee was perfectly fitted to comfort us seeing hee found our sorrows in himself sometime 4. Hee saith It became God for whom and by whom are all things that the matter should bee so brought about Then 1. All things are for Gods Glory at the end and so should the manner of our salvation bee also 2. All things are by Gods Hand and Power brought about and reason too that hee dispose of the means of our salvation as hee pleaseth 3. This way became God most of any It brought him greatest Glory by the Shame Sorrow and Death of one to bring Glory and Joy and Life to many Vers. 11. For both Hee that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one For which cause hee is not ashamed to call them Brethren 1. If any should further ask how could hee die or how could Iustice accept him in our stead Hee answereth Because hee is one of our kind and nature Then 1. There is a natural Band betwixt Christ and his Followers They are of the same stock of the same natural substance 2. Christs natural Band with us maketh him a direct entress to redeem us 2. Hee calleth Christ him that sanctifieth and the Beleevers they who are sanctified Then 1. The Band of Nature betwixt Christ and Men is reckoned unto those onely who are sanctified with none other will Christ reckon Kindred 2. Therefore they must study to Holiness that would claim Kindred to Christ. 3. The sanctification which it behoveth us to have must proceed from Christ no holiness until a man bee in him 3. Hee saith Christ is not ashamed to call the Sanctified Brethren Then 1. As Christ hath dimitted himself to our Nature so also to the stiles of consanguinity with us 2. Christ is as kindly affectioned to his Followers as ever Brother was to another hee will not misken his own albeit unworthy 3. That which may serve to our glory and comfort Christ will think it no disgrace to himself Vers. 12. Saying I will declare Thy Name unto my Brethren In the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto Thee Hee proveth that hee calleth us Brethren from Psal. 20. vers 22. The Messias there taketh upon him to preach to men and to praise the Father Then 1. With our Nature Christ took on also the Yoke of the Exercises of Religion 2. Hee joyneth with us in the Discharge of them 3. Hee is first in the Exercise not onely because hee discharged them in his own proper person but also because still by his Spirit where two or three are gathered together in his Name hee is in the midst of them moving and moderating the Spirits of his own delectable Organs Vers. 13. And again I will put my trust in him And again Behold I and the children which God hath given mee 1. The next proof is from Psal. 18. Vers. 2. Where Christ under the type of David promiseth to beleeve in the Father Then 1. Christ is one of the number of Beleevers one of the Covenant of Grace confederate by Faith and therefore hee behoved to be a man to this end 2. Then have wee in the sense of our unbeleef the comfort of the soundness and strength of Christs beleeving as well as of his other Perfections 2. The third proof is from Isa. 8.18 Wherein Christ under the type of the Prophet Isaiah presenteth himself with his chosen Children before the Father Then 1. Christ is our Father also and wee his Children 2. Wee are given to him of the Father 3. Wee are not presented before the Father without our Mediatour Christ. 4. Christ and wee his little ones joyned together and separated from the world are a pleasant sight for the Father to behold Vers. 14. Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood Hee also Himself likewise took part of the same that through death Hee might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil 1. Hee giveth further reasons of his Incarnation And first hee behoved by death to destroy the Devil that had the power of death and so behoved to bee a Man that hee might dye Then 1. Sinners without Christ are under the sentence of death temporal and eternal 2. Satan hath power of Death as the Burrio hath power over the Pit and Gallows at death to take them away to torment who are not delivered from his power 3. Christ hath destroyed Satans power and tyranny in this point in behalf of all his Elect and true Beleevers 4. The way how Christ hath overcome Satan is by his own death ransoming his own 5. For as death behoved to bee the way it behoved also Christ to bee a mortal man as well as God that hee might dye 2. Again hee saith Christ took part of flesh and blood with the Children that is with the Elect given to him Then 1. Love to the Elect made the Son of God come down and make himself a Man also 2. Christ in his humane Nature is as kindly a Man as any of the Elect having flesh and blood and bones as well as wee His flesh and blood is not onely like to ours but is a part of our substance who is come of the same stock of Adam and Eve as surely as ours and not made either by Creation of nothing or by trans-substantiation of some other things than our substance Vers. 15. And deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage Another fruit of Christs death is the delivery of Beleevers from the bondage of the fear of death wherein they do lye before Beleef Then 1. There is a natural fear of Death and the Devil and Hell rooted in all men alwaies albeit not as yet felt yet easily wakened 2. This fear putteth men in bondage that they dare not meditate on Death or Gods
follow by consequence that Beleevers do enter in This latter part is not expressed in the Text but left unto us to gather by consequence Whence wee learn 1 That God alloweth us to draw consequences from his Scripture 2 Yea traineth us on by his own example to draw them forth by reason 3 Yea hee will of necessity force us to draw consequences from his words or else not let us understand his meaning by leaving something not expressed to be collected by us Vers. 7 Again hee limiteth a certain da● saying in David To day after so long a time as it is said To day if yee will hear his voice harden not your hearts In that he reasoneth from the circumstance of t●me when David uttered these words he teacheth us That oftentimes there is matter of great moment imported in the least circumstances of the scrip●●res writing and therefore that the circumstances of time place and person who speaketh and to whom and at what time c. should not be passed over in our consideration of a Text but diligently bee marked Vers. 8. For if Iesus had given them rest then would hee not afterwards have spoken of another day 9. There remaineth therefore rest to the people of God 10. For hee that is entred into his Rest hee also hath ceased from his own works as God did from his 1. This reasoning from the time of Davids speaking sheweth How infallibly th●● were led that wrote the Scriptusre that they could not fail in setting down a word nor speak one word that could cross any othe● word poken by any other Prophet before or after 2. David taught of the Spiritual Rest in his time and so did Moses Then 1. The old Church was not straightned with earthly promises so but that they had heavenly and spiritual promises given them also as signified by the earthly and typical promises 2. Their types had some star-light of interpretation and they were taught to look through the veil of Ceremonies and Types 3. Hee saith Hee that is entred into his Rest ceaseth from his own works Then 1. Before a man bee reconciled to God by Faith in Christ hee is working his own works doing his own will and not Gods 2. Hee is working without ceasing his own unrest and his own torment which hee procureth by working his own will 3. The man that thinketh hee is entred into Gods Rest must be Gods Workman and no more work what pleaseth himself but what pleaseth God ceasing from sinful works and doing what is lawful and good in way of obedience unto him Vers. 11. Let us labour therefore to enter into that Rest lest any man fall after the same example of unbeleef 1. In the third verse hee said The Beleevers entred into Gods Rest here bee exhorteth the Beleever to labour to enter into it Then 1. The Rest of God is entred into by degrees 2. They who have entred must study to en●er yet more going on from Faith to Faith and from obedience to further obedience and from grace to grace till they have gone all the way that leadeth unto glory 2. Hee requireth labour and diligence to enter in Then 1. Gods rest is no rest to the flesh but rest to the soul as Mat. 11.29 Christ promiseth 2. Without care and diligence a man cannot promise to himself to enter in For the way is called Straight which leadeth unto Heaven 3. Hee requireth this diligence lest a man fall as the Israelites did Then as some of the Israelites fell in a temporal mis-beleef and drew on temporal judgements upon themselves as Moses and Aaron so many Professors now also do even Elect. Again as some fell in unbeleef with hardened hearts yea in obstinate misbeleef and perished in their sin so yet amongst Professors some may fall into obstinate mis-beleef and perish except they give diligence to make progress towards their Rest. Vers. 12. For the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharpe● than any two-edged sword peircing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the Ioynts and Marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the Heart 1. Le●t any one should shift off this threatning as expired with those to whom it was first spoken or cloak and dissemble their sins and purpose of defection when they should see th●ir time hee letteth them know the power of the Word and of God their adversary Then the use extent and nature of Gods Word must bee well studied lest through mistaking or ignorance hereof a man should mis-apply or mis-regard it 2. The first property of the Word it is Quick that is dieth not when those die to whom first it was directed but endureth speaking on with that same authority to all that hear it in all times after Then the Word is not a dead Letter nor expired with former Ages but the same to us that it was before to others fit for operation and working the work for which it is sent for convincing or converting the hearer alway 3. Again It is Powerful That is not fit to work onely but active and operative in effect actually binding the conscience to obedience or judgement make the sinner what opposition hee will Yea it falleth a working on the hearer if hee beleeve it presently to clear his mind rectifie his will and reform his life and to bring about his good and safety If a man beleeve it not it falleth a working also presently to binde him guilty unto judgement and to augment his natural blindness and his hearts hardness and to bring on some degree of the deserved punishment upon himself albeit not of its own nature but by the disposition of the object whereupon it worketh Then 1. The Word wanteth not the own effect whensoever it is preached but alwaies helpeth or hurteth the hearer as hee yeeldeth to it or rejecteth or neglecteth it 2. Wee shall do well to observe what sort of operation it hath upon us seeing it must have some that wee may bee framed to the better by it 4. Another property of the Word It is sharper than any two-edged sword because it peirceth speedily through a brazen Brow and dissembling countenance and a lying mouth and thrusteth it self without suffering resistance into the conscience of the most obstinate with a secret blow and maketh him guilty within his own breast Then 1. Let not Preachers think their labour l●st when they have to do with obstinate sinners The stroke is given at the hearing of the Word which will bee found uncured after 2. Neither let dissemblers please themselves with a fair countenance put upon the matter as if the Word did not touch them but rather give glory to God in time when they are pricked at the heart For if they dissemble the wound received of this Sword the wound will prove deadly 5. Peircing even to the dividing asunder of the Soul and the Spirit That is those most secret devices and plots of the
Himself to bee made an High-Priest But hee that said unto Him Thou art My Son to day have I begotten Thee 1. Our Lord is commended for not glorifying himself by intrusion in his Office Then 1. Such as pretend to bee Christs Servants must beware to intrude themselves into any Office and must attend as Christ did Gods Calling to Gods Employment 2. Hee that usurpeth a Calling doth glorifie himself and taketh the honour that is not given him for which hee must give a Reckoning 2. Thou art My Son this day have I begotten Thee doth import by the Apostles alledging not onely Christs God-head and Declaration to be Gods Son but also the Declaration of him To be High-Priest in his Man-head taken out from amongst men So deep are the Consequences of Scripture when the Spirit bringeth forth his own Mind from it Vers. 6. As hee saith also in another place Thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchisedec Hee alledgeth another place more clear Then Howbeit Truth may bee proved from one place yet it is needful also for the ●earers cause to alledge more places till the hearer bee convinced Vers. 7. Who in the daies of his flesh when hee had offered up Prayers and Supplications with strong Crying and Tears unto him that was able to save him from Death and was heard in that hee feared Having proved Christs Office hee sheweth his Exercise of it in offering for our sins a more precious Oblation than the typical Even himself with Tears to Death In these words Then Christ is pointed out unto us 1. An High-Priest taken from amongst men a very true Man of our substance Flesh of our flesh 2. A Man subject to the sinless infirmities of our nature as Grief Fear Mourning Death 3. Having a set-time during which hee was to bear these our infirmities in the daies of his flesh 4. Exercising his Priestly Office in these his daies and offering his precious Tears and Cryes yea his life for us 5. One who howsoever Fear was upon his holy Nature yet knew hee should bee delivered from death 6. Who as a man in confidence of delivery made prayers to the Father 7. Whose prayers are not refused but accepted and heard on our behalf 8. And that these his sufferings were ended with the daies of his humiliation 1. These Acts of Fear and Tears c. are the proper Acts of his humane nature Then 1. As the Divine Nature had its own Acts proper to it self so had the humane Nature acts proper to it self also and some acts were common to both the Natures So of Christs acts some are Divine some Humane some are both Divine and Humane 2. As Man hee was unable to bear our burthen or to help himself and therefore behoved to have the help of the God-head 3. Albeit hee was God in his own person yet as Man hee behoved to take our room and place and pray for assistance both as surety for us and teacher of us To give us example how to behave our selves in straights 2. Hee feared death and offered Prayers and Tears and strong cries Because not onely death temporal presented it self before him but which was much more the curse of the Law the Fathers wrath for sin duly deserved by us was set in a Cup to his head which should have swallowed him up for ever if hee had not by the worthiness of his person overcome it and turned the eternal wrath and curse due unto us into a temporal equivalent to himself Then 1. The sense of Gods wrath whom will it not terrifie since it wrought so on Christ And Nature cannot chuse but fear when sense feeleth wrath 2. Felt wrath seemeth to threaten yet more and worse and therefore beside feeling doth breed yet further fear 3. The curse of God due to our sins virtually implying the deserved pains of Hell is more terrible than can bee told and such as the Creature cannot chuse but fear and abhor 4. Christs sufferings were no phantasie but very earnest vehement and terrible 5. No weapon nor Buckler against wrath but flying to God by supplication and crying and tears 3. Hee prayed to him that was able to save him and was heard Then 1. Albeit sense of wrath seeth no out-gate but black fears are alwaies before it yet Faith looking to Gods omnipotency seeth an out-gate 2. Christs prayers in our behalf receive no repulse but are heard 3. Christ both died and was saved from death also because it could not keep Dominion over him So shall wee bee saved from death though wee die Vers. 8. Though hee were a Son yet learned hee obedience by the things which hee suffered Hee removeth the scandal of his Cross by shewing the necessity and use thereof Albeit hee was the Son yet hee learned obedience by those things which hee suffered Then 1. In the time of Christs deepest humiliation the union betwixt his God-head and Man-head was not loosed hee remained the Son of God still 2. The excellency of his person exempted him not from suffering having once taken on our debt 3. Christ knew what suffering was before hee suffered but hee knew not by experience till hee actually suffered 4. Christs holy life was a part of his obedience to the Father but his obedience in suffering for our sins was obedience in an higher degree 5. To obey God by way of action is a common lesson to every holy creature but that a sinless and holy person should suffer for sin was a new lesson proper to Christ a practick which never passed but in Christs person onely Vers. 9. And being made perfect hee became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him 1. The suffering of Christ is called his Perfection Then 1. Christ though perfect in his person yet hee wanted something to make him perfect in his Office till hee suffered for hee could not satisfie the Fathers justice till hee suffered nor yet could hee have fellow-feeling from experience of the miseries of his members 2. After suffering Christ lacketh nothing that may pacifie God or comfort and save sinners 2. The fruit followeth Being perfected hee is become the Author of salvation to all that obey him Then 1. The proper cause of our salvation is to bee sought in Christ perfected by suffering not in any one part of his holiness or obedience in doing or any part of his suffering but in him perfected by his obedience even to the death of the Cross. Wee may take comfort from and make use of his holy conception life and several virtues but wee must remember that his accomplished obedience in doing and suffering is our ransome joyntly considered and not any particular act looked on alone 2. None should stumble at Christs sufferings which perfected him in his Office and likewise perfected our ransome to the Father 3. Christ felt the bitterness of his own sufferings himself but wee got the sweet fruit thereof even eternal life 4. Onely they
sinful man might be a Priest But now when the Son of God is the Sacrifice and hath offered up himself already and is gone in into the Sanctuary with his own blood to make intercession there must be no more any sacrificing till hee come out of the Sanctuary again at the day of judgement nor any Priest but hee till hee have ended his intercession For such an High-Priest became us who is holy harmless c. Question But why is it unbeseeming us under the Gospel to have a Priest without these properties I answer The Sacrifice of the New Testament is the unspotted Lamb of God Jesus Christ holy harmless c. Therefore it becommeth us to have such a Priest who is holy harmless and undefiled For it were unseemly that the Priest should be worse than the Sacrifice Next our Priest hath our sins original and actual to remove and Heaven to open unto us And therefore it were unbeseeming that any should be our Priest who hath not his own sins altogether removed nor yet hath gotten entry as yet into Heaven himself 1. In that hee draweth them of necessity to quit all mens Priesthood and betake them unto Christ as Priest onely wee learn That our necessities being well weighed with the insufficiency of any beside Christ to do our turn wee shall be forced to quit all Priests but Christ onely For what Priest can know all our needs all our sins all our thoughts all our desires all our prayers all our purposes and wait on upon our business with God night and day to see that no wrath break out upon us Who can do this but Christ onely What Man What Saint What Angel 2. In that hee reckoneth a number of perfections necessary to be in a Priest in the time of the Gospel all of them in Christ and all such as wee stand in need of wee learn That all the perfections whereof wee have need in a Priest are all in Christ And the perfections which are in Christ we have need of them all and should make use of them all 3. The first property of a Priest under the Gospel is this Hee must be holy that is of his own nature holy in his original holy Then no sinful man can be a sufficient Priest in the New Testament to do for us who wants holiness by Nature 4. The next property Our Priest must be harmless ill-less free from any original guiltiness Then No man come of Adam by natural propagation can be a Priest for us now to satisfie our necessities who have sin original in us 5. The third property Wee have need of a Priest undefiled that is free from actual sin Then No Priest can suffice us who are defiled with actual sin but Christ who never sinned 6. The fourth property A Priest meet for us must be free from the pollution of those amongst whom hee converseth Then Wee who are of polluted lips and lives and dwell among such a people communicating many waies of their guiltiness cannot have sufficient comfort through any Priest who can be infected with sin And hee who is a man of polluted lips is not meet to be a Priest for us The fift property A Priest meet for us behoved to have his residence in Heaven and have commandment over Heaven to open it unto us and give us entry Then None other but Christ could suffice us on whom by nature the doors of Heaven are closed No Priest out of Heaven is meet for us Vers. 27. Who needeth not daily as those High-Priests to offer up Sacrifice first for his own sins and then for the peoples For this hee did once when hee offered up himself 1. The sixt property of a fit Priest for us Hee must have no need to offer Sacrifice for his own sins Then neither Levi nor any sinful man after him can be a Priest ander the New Testament but Christ onely who never sinned and so had never need to offer for himself 2. The seventh property Hee must not have need to offer daily for the peoples sins who must be our Priest For if he should offer the second day then the first daies Sacrifice should be declared unsufficient Or else why offereth hee again after that which is sufficient Then 1. The Priest of the New Testament needeth not to offer oftner than once 2. And if Christs Sacrifice were offered oftner than once or daily hee could not be a fit Priest for us nor offer a perfect Sacrifice for us for the oft offering should declare the former offerings unsufficient and imperfect 3. Hee giveth a reason why Christ needed not to offer up oftner Because hee hath offered up himself once for the sins of the people Then 1. Christ was both the Priest and the Sacrifice in his own offering 2. Christs Sacrifice cannot be offered up by any but himself another than Christs self cannot offer up Christ. 3. Betwixt the comming of Christ and the writing of this Epistle which was sundry years after Christs Ascention the Apostle knew no offering of Christ but that onely once upon the Cross and yet times out of number was the Sacrament of the Lords Supper celebrated before this time 4. In that hee maketh that once offering the reason of his not offering daily it teacheth us That the perfection of that once offered Sacrifice maketh the repetition needless And whosoever maketh it needful that Christ be offered daily maketh both Christ an imperfect Priest and his Sacrifice imperfect also Vers. 28. For the Law maketh men High Priest which have infirmity but the word of the oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for evermore Hee giveth a special reason why it beseemeth not us under the Gospel to have a sinful man for our Priest because this is the very difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel 1. The Law maketh men which have infirmities High Priests But the word of the oath which was since the Law maketh the Son and none but the Son who is consecrated for evermore Then The Scripture knoweth no Priest but the Levitical Priests of Aarons posterity for the time of the Law or else that one Priest which was made by an oath for the time of the Gospel Beside these the Apostle acknowledgeth none nor were there any other in his time in the Church 2. Hee maketh the difference of the Law and the Gospel to stand amongst other things in the difference of Priests so as the Gospel cannot admit such Priests as the Law admitted Then To have Priests now after the similitude of the Priests under the Law were to remove the difference which God hath made betwixt the Law and the Gospel 3. The differences as the Apostle setteth them down here are 1. The course taken about Priests under the Law was alterable they were made without an oath the Law-giver declaring it to be his will to change that course when hee saw it fit But the course taken about the Priests
in these words must be this Where remission of sins is already purchased by offering of the true Expiatory Sacrifice as now it is under the New Covenant there no more offering can be for sin any more Then 1. The Apostle acknowledgeth no use for any sacrifice under the New Testament after Christs Ascension else his reason should not hold 2. The sacrifice which is offered to wit the body of JESUS hath already suffered for sin so that now the remission of those that is of sin and iniquity all sorts of the Elects sinnes is obtained thereby already 3. Not onely No Sacrifice is any more to be offered for sin under the New Covenant but also No Offering saith hee bloody or unbloody is to be offered 4. That Church which pretendeth to offer any Offering for sins of quick or dead now under the Gospel professeth That no remission of sin is to be had in such a Church Because where there is remission of sin there is no more offering for sin saith the Apostle expresly Vers. 19. Having therefore Brethren boldness to enter into the Holiest by the blood of Iesus From the by-past Doctrine of Christs Excellency and Riches of Grace which commeth unto us through him hee draweth Exhortations for use-making of this Doctrine in soundness of Faith and the fruits thereof unto the end of the Epistle And first hee exhorteth to seek unto communion with God in Heaven through Christ using the terms of the Ceremonial Law but mixed with words touching the excellency of the thing signified above those Ceremonies to shew the Hebrews that those Ceremonies had nothing in themselves but did serve to represent Christ and his Benefits And so to draw them from those shadows unto the truth of that which once being signified by them is now manifested in Christ. To make the Exhortation to be the better received hee setteth down sundry Priviledges of the Faithful vers 19 20 21. From which hee inferreth his Exhortation vers 22. For the first Priviledge hee saith Wee have liberty to enter into the Holiest That is into Heaven 1. In that hee maketh this Priviledge proper to the Society of Christians himself and others hee teacheth us 1. That so long as men are without Christ they are debarred out of Heaven no Door nor Way open but the flaming sword of Gods justice to keep out every one that shall press to enter before Christ bring them But such as come to Christ by Faith Heaven is opened unto them and the Door cast up for them to enter in who were exiled before 2. Next Hee commendeth this Priviledge by calling the place The Holiest the place where Gods Holiness dwelleth represented by the Sanctuary where nothing can enter but that which is holy Teaching us thereby That the faithful are so washed from their sins through Faith in Christ that God will admit them into the place of his dwelling into his heavenly Sanctuary by Faith now and fruition hereafter 3. Hee commen●eth this Priviledge by calling it a Liberty The word properly signifieth Liberty to speak all our mind as hath been marked before Whereby hee teacheth us 1. How wee do enter into the Holiest to wit by prayer sending up our Supplications to Heaven And again 2. That in our prayers to God wee may use freedome of speech telling him all our mind all our griefs all our fears all our desires and even poure out our hearts before him at all times 4. Hee commendeth this Priviledge by the Price of the Purchase thereof even the blood of Iesus Whereby he teacheth us 1. To have this Priviledge in high estimation 2. To make good use of it 3. To be confident of the standing of it and all because it is so dearly bought 5. Lastly Hee commendeth this Priviledge by the Common Right which all Beleevers have unto it the Apostle and these Hebrews as his Brethren and all other of that Society Whereby bee teacheth That albeit there be great difference in the measure of Faith and other Graces betwixt Christians some being stronger some weaker some as Apostles some as these weak Hebrews c. yet all are the children of one Father all are Brethren and all are admitted by prayer to come and enter into Heaven freely to poure out their souls at all times unto God Vers. 20. By a new and living way which hee hath consecrated for us though the Veil that is to say his flesh This is one Priviledge That wee have liberty to enter into Heaven followeth another There is a way made to lead us on thereunto which is Christs flesh compared to the veil of the Sanctuary which hid those things which were within the Sanctuary and yet yeelded an entry through it self unto the Sanctuary So is Christs Flesh the Veil of his God-head which did hide the glory of his Deity from the carnal beholders who stumbled at his baseness and yet opened a door for the spiritual man to look in upon him that was invisible while as hee observed the brightness of the glory of God breaking through the Doctrine and works of the man Christ. 1. Hee maketh the way to be Christs Flesh or Christ as incarnate or Christ considered according to his humanity Because Christs taking on our nature is the onely mean of reconciling us unto God No man ever came to the Father but by him No other Name whereby men are saved but the Name of Jesus Christ. And therefore as in the way a man must enter and hold on still till hee come to the end to the place where hee would be Even so must every man who would be at Heaven begin at Christ and hold on making progress in him still from Faith to Faith from Grace to Grace till hee come to his rest 2. This way of Christs own making hee hath devised it and consecrated it Hee who is the Fathers wisdome hath thought it the best way to bring man to GOD that GOD should become Man that the Word should be made flesh The best way to bring men to Heaven that God should come down to the earth to take on mans nature upon him that hee might make man partaker of the Divine Nature 3. Hee hath consecrated and dedicated his flesh his humane Nature set apart and sanctified himself to this same end that men might make their means with God by him as Man and by the Bands of Nature with him be helped up to the Bands of Grace with GOD by comming to the man Christ might finde God in Christ. 4. Hee calleth it a New Way 1. Because of the clear manifesting of the way to Heaven under the Gospel in comparison of the time of the Law 2. Because a ready plain and safe way without stumbling blocks pits or snares dangers or inconveniences to such as keep themselves therein such as new-made waies use to be 3. Because it waxeth never old is now established and never to be altered or abolished 5. It is a Living Way 1. Because Christ liveth
the performance of Gods Promises and in hope thereof renounced the world therefore God honoureth them as his confederates vers 13 14 15 16. Faith made Abraham to offer his onely Son vers 17 18 19. Isaac and Iacob and Ioseph by Faith at their death comforted themselves and others also in hope of the performance of Gods Truth vers 20 21 22. The Parents of Moses overcame the fear of man by Faith vers 23. Moses by Faith got strength to chuse the Cross of Christ before the riches and honours and pleasures of Egypt vers 24 25 26. Faith made him constant in his choise and patient vers 27. By Faith hee got the people of Israel to be saved when the first-born of Egypt were slain vers 28. By Faith the deep Sea gave open way vers 29. High walled Towns were thrown down vers 30. Rachab was saved when others perished vers 31. By Faith numbers of Gods Children did wonderful things and received wonderful comforts and overcame all persecutions vers 32 33 34 35 36 37 38. All these died in the Faith of Christ and were justified albeit Christ was not yet come vers 39. God having reserved the accomplishment of the Prophecies and Types in the comming of Jesus Christ until our time that the Fathers might not get Salvation except by looking to our times and joyning with us in the Faith of Jesus in whom they and wee also are perfected vers 40. The Doctrine of Chap. XI Vers. 1. Now Faith is the substance of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen HEE pointeth out the Nature of Faith to help them to live by it Then Hee that would live by Faith had need skilfully to search out the nature thereof 2. In describing Faith hee ascribeth unto it the property of the Word which Faith layeth hold upon For it is the Word properly which is the substance of things not seen Then There is such an union betwixt Faith and the Word that what the Word is in force and effect that Faith is said to be in force and effect also As Faith honoureth the Word so God honoureth Faith in giving it the like commendation for force with the Word What is the original of the being and existence of any thing but this God willeth it to be or promiseth it shall come to pass or commandeth that it may be Therefore let Faith get a hold of the Promise or Word and it taketh hold of the thing promised by the root thereof And in the hand of Faith doth Truth bud out and flourish unto the ripe fruit of full satisfaction in performance 3. The word Evidence in the Original is a tearm of Logick importing that it is the nature of Faith by dispensation to convince Then It were wisdome for helping of our weak Faith to make Syllogisms from the Word and to reason so convincingly against all opposition of incredulity in us as there might be a consent and yeelding to the Truth extorted from us As for example When wee cannot take to heart the danger wee are in by entertaining any known sin from Rom. 8.13 wee may reason thus The Scripture saith If yee live after the flesh yee shall dye But if I forsake not and mortifie not this known sin in mee I live after the flesh Therefore if I forsake not and mortifie not this known sin I shall die Again the Scripture saith If yee through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body yee shall live Therefore if I by the Spirit mortifie such and such lusts I have Gods promise that I shall live And so in other particulars Vers. 2. For by it the Elders obtained a good report Hee proveth the nature of Faith to be as hee hath said because the Elders were approved of God as blessed in their beleeving who could not otherwise be partakers of the promised blessing in the Messiah to come except Faith had furnished unto them the substance and evidence of that hoped-for blessing Then 1. The Fathers under the Law were endued with justifying Faith and accepted of God even as wee 2. Men how base soever are brought into credit with God and into good estimation with his Church by Faith Vers. 3. Through Faith wee understand that the Worlds were framed by the Word of God So that things which are seen were not made of things which do appear Another proof to shew that Faith is the evidence of things not seen Because wee can have no other evidence of the Worlds Creation but by looking thereupon in the Word as it were in doing before our eyes Then 1. Faith must not stand whether there be Appearances or Probabilities or not of such things as are promised in the Word or else it could not beleeve the Creation which is the making of all things of nothing 2. The whole works of Creation are Pawns and Evidences of the possibility yea certainty of every thing promised For the works of Creation stand upon no better ground than Gods Word This sentence God shall make our vile bodies like unto the glorious body of Christ Iesus is as powerful to make us so as this sentence Let there be Light was powerful to create Light when there was none before Vers. 4. By Faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain by which he obtained witness that he was righteous God testifying of his gifts and by it he being dead yet speaketh In the Catalogue of Believers he beginneth at Abel the first persecuted man for Righteousness and that by Cain professing the same worship with him Wherein we learn 1. That the wicked may joyn in the outward worship and pure forms of Religion with the godly as Cain did with Abel 2. That Faith putteth the difference betwixt their persons and service 3. That a mans person must first please God before his actions can please him For therefore was Abels Sacrifice accepted because by faith his person was justified 4. Faith maketh Abel still a speaking Doctor to the Church directing all who love to have such a reward to cleave unto God as he did and albeit they should dye for it by the hand of their persecuting and bloody Brethren not to wonder at it Vers. 5. By Faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death and was not found because God had translated him For before his translation he had this Testimony that he pleased God Enochs full felicity is expressed by Gods translating of him Then if we ask where Enoch went to we must search for him by Scriptures warrant onely in the company of God the Translator of him For before he was translated he lived a blessed man in fellowship with God And it is injurious to God and Enoch both to put him out of Gods fellowship as not blessed when he is translated 2. Enochs Translation beareth witness 1. That the blessedness of everlasting life with God after death was known in the Old Testament 2. That the Fathers got possession of
Messengers of Israel and dismissed them safe Therefore vain is the profession of an idle faith That Iames takes Justification for no other than as we have said doth appear from this that he calls Rahab an Harlot or prostitute to filthy lusts Therefore how impossible was it for her to be justified by workes before God but onely by true faith which sheweth it self to be true by works Vers. 26. For as the body without the spirit is dead so faith without works is dead also Argum. 9. Even as an animate body if it doth not breathe it is dead so faith if it doth not produce works it is dead Therefore vain is the boasting of such an idle faith wherein hypocrites please themselves CHAP. III. THis Chapter contains two Admonitions The first for governing of the tongue to vers 13. The other concerning wisdom which asswages the evils of the tongue and avoids strifes and contentions to the end Vers. 1. My brethren be not many masters knowing that we shall receive greater condemnation As for the first Admonition he commands them to bridle the tongue namely from invective and rigid rehearsals of other mens vices or infirmities Be not saith he many masters i. e. arrogate not to your selves the authority of mastership over others and too much liberty of carping at things as many do but bridle your tongues He confirms the admonition by ten Arguments Knowing Argum. 1. Because that unjust censurers should suffer heavier judgement from God the revenger of injuries Therefore the tongue is to be bridled lest ye suffer an heavier judgement Vers. 2. For in many things we offend all If any man offend not in word the same is a perfect man and able also to bridle the whole body Argum. 2. Seeing that we are all liable to many failings it becometh us to deal more diligently with the infirmities of others not to arrogate the authority of judging without a calling or to shew our selves unjust in judging If any man Argum. 3. If any man know how to govern his tongue he hath this to manifest a perfect or sincere man who can moderate all his actions and on the contrary he that cannot moderately rule his tongue but in all things carps at the carriages of other men hath the sign of an hypocrite Therefore the tongue is to be bridled Vers. 3. Behold we put bits in the horses mouthes that they may obey us and we turn about their whole body 4. Behold also the ships which though they be so great and are driven of fierce winds yet are they turned about with a very small helm whithersoever the governor listeth 5. Even so the tongue is a little member and boasteth great things Behold how great a matter a little fire kindleth 6. And the tongue is a fire a world of iniquity So is the tongue amongst our members that it defileth the whole body and setteth on fire the course of nature and it is set on fire of hell Argum. 4. Confirming the former Even as if thou guidest the bridle thou also rulest the horse and if thou rulest the stern of the ship thou dost also the ship even so if thou hast rightly governed thy tongue thou wilt also rule thy whole body and thy outward actions although those instruments are small and the tongue is a small member Therefore c. Boasts Argum. 5. The tongue carrieth it self highly and boasteth it self gloriously that it can on both sides perform much good in speaking the truth in constancy taciturnity courtesie and such like and also much evil in lyes reproaches calumnies and such like Therefore it ought to be governed with great care A fire Argum. 6. Because as a small fire can kindle and devour much matter so the tongue unless it be appeased and bridled can stir up a world of evils and create infinite sins and seeing it is a small part of the body it can involve and defile all the other members and the whole body with wickednesses and set on fire with its wickedness the wheel or course of all natural faculties Therefore it is diligently to be governed Of bell Argum. 7. There is some affinity of an evil tongue with Hell and the Devil whom the tongue is ready to serve and from him to send the flame of lyes calumnies and brawlings to burn the whole world Therefore there is need of great diligence in ruling the tongue Vers. 7. For every kinde of beasts and of birds and of serpents and things in the sea is tamed and hath been tamed of man kinde 8. But the tongue can no man tame it is an unruly evil full of deadly poyson Argum. 8. There is no kinde of beasts but may be tamed by humane reason or art and experience teacheth us that some of all kindes are tamed ver 7. but the tongue no humane reason or art can tame because it is in its own nature an unquiet and an unruly evil full of deadly poyson whereby it brings and is ready to bring deadly mischiefs unto others Therefore ye must diligently endeavour to bridle the tongue by Gods supernatural grace Vers. 9. Therewith bless we God even the Father and therewith curse we men which are made after the similitude of God 10. Out of the same mouth proceedeth blessing and cursing my brethren these things ought not so to be Argum. 9. The tongue is mutable deceitful crafty one while pretending it self to very good blessing God another while openly putting forth its nature expresly by cursing men and God obliquely to whose similitude men are made from the same mouth sometimes sending forth blessing sometimes cursing ver 9. But this is absurd and monstrous which is in no wise to be suffered ver 10. Therefore ye must necessarily endeavour the ruling of the tongue Vers. 11. Doth a fountain send forth at the same place sweet water and bitter 12. Can the fig-tree my brethren bear olive berries either a vine figs so can no fountain both yield salt water and fresh Argum. 10. Confirming the former by a fourfold similitude of a fountain a fig-tree a vine and the sea And he argues from this which is impossible according to nature to an absurdity in manners As it is not naturally that from the same channel of the fountain sweet and bitter water should flow or a fig-tree should bring forth grapes and a vine figs or the same sea should both yield salt and sweet water so reason doth not suffer us to believe that it is the tongue of a regenerated man which although sometimes it blesses yet being unbridled it is carried otherwise to cursing for a bad tree doth not bear good fruits Therefore it becomes the Regenerate to follow the simplicity of holiness in speech and to endeavour to bridle their tongues The second part Vers. 13. Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge amongst you let him shew out of a good conversation his workes with meeknesse of wisdom The other Admonition wherein he exhorts to wisdom
of the Doctrine of Christ wherein with a stedfast purpose of mind yee now stand but also yee ought to endeavour after further progress and growth in grace holiness and in the knowledge or Faith of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory Hee shuts up the Epistle with a famous doxology wherein hee acknowledges Christ to be the true God For glory is onely due to God Also hee propounds Christ who is to be glorified both now whilst wee are in the warfare of the world and also in the world to come which hee calls the day of eternity because that whole eternity is one day Glory bee unto him Amen The first Epistle of IOHN Analytically expounded The Contents THere are three Epistles of John the Apostle who writ both the Gospel and the Revelation ex●ant The scope of this which is the first is to teach by what means wee may have communion with God and how wee may be certain of that communion to a full consolation both in life and death To which end hee propounds the summe of the Doctrine of the Gospel Chap. 1. Hee shews the use of this Doctrine in divers Exhortations to follow after Holiness to love the Brethren to hate the world and constancy in the Faith Chap. 2. Hee prosecutes the Exhortation to the following after Righteousness and brotherly love Chap. 3. In like manner after the Exhortation to beware of seducers hee goes on in an Exhortation to the loving of the Brethren Chap. 4. Lastly That they which beleeve may know themselves to have life and knowing it they may more and more beleeve in Iesus Christ hee gathers together many Notes of Beleevers and Arguments to beleeve Chap. 5. The Method of this Epistle is very artificial for the Christian mysteries and rules of Faith are lincked together as with a chain For alwaies from the end of the preceding Doctrine there ariseth a following Discourse CHAP. I. In this Chapter hee propounds the summe of the Doctrine of the Gospel preached by himself and the rest of the Apostles There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee confirms the excellency of his preaching and shews the object of Saving Faith to vers 6. In the other hee laies down the notes of a true Beleever to whom the Grace of the Gospel preached truly belongs to the end Vers. 1. That which was from the beginning which wee have heard which wee have seen with our eies which wee have looked upon and our hands have handled of the word of life Hee confirms the excellency of the Gospel which hee preached by eight reasons Of the word Reas. 1. Is contained in the last words of this verse viz. That his Gospel treats of the most excellent object viz. the word of life i. e. of Jesus Christ the Son of God who is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word that wee may conceive the distinction of the person of the Son from the Father and the order of their working seeing that it is the Word of some one viz. the word of the Father And that hee may teach the spiritual and immanent manner of the Sons Generation and that his subsistence is inseparable from the Father and that wee may behold especially his office which is to manifest God and the counsel of God concerning our salvation Furthermore hee is called the word of Life 1. Because hee hath life in himself and hee himself is life 2. Because hee hath purchased life for us and hath shewed it to us and Lastly Because hee applies that to us and brings it about that wee may live an eternal life That which was Reas. 2. Of the excellency of his preaching that it is the ancient Truth preached viz. that which was from the beginning partly inasmuch as there was never any other ground of salvation besides this in Christ alone who is the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world partly because Christ preached by the Apostle did subsist as to his Divinity before his incarnation from the beginning of the world the same SON of GOD and MEDIATOUR of our salvation and was in the beginning of the world when created things did not as yet subsist but began to be or who is the same from eternity to eternity Therefore the subject of our Gospel is most excellent Which wee have seen Reas. 3. Because the Truth preached is certain and experienced by the Apostles because they by the infallible testimony of their senses being eye and ear-witnesses had observed that Christ himself in his own time was manifested in the flesh or incarnate Partly by hearing with their ears day by day the Doctrine of Christ which was published by an holy and audible voice partly by seeing with their eyes both the ordinary and miraculous works his sufferings in the flesh and glorification in his transfiguration and his Resurrection from the dead and by most clearly perceiving them after a most deep inquisition into the truth of the thing Lastly partly by feeling with their hands or handling his flesh or his assumed humane nature From whence the certainty of their testimony concerning Christ offered is so manifest that it cannot be doubtful Therefore most excellent is the truth that is preached by us Vers. 2. For the life was manifested and wee have seen it and bear witness and shew unto you that eternal life which was with the Father and was manifested unto us Reas. 4. By a Parenthesis confirming the former wee have known concerning Christ 1. That hee is life it self the true Jehovah who is essentially life in himself and causally in respect of us For hee is the Author of our life not onely natural but also spiritual and eternal the Author of light and illumination the Author of grace and every pious or commendable motion 2. That he is by divine inspiration manifested to be such and revealed to us and by that revelation seen and acknowledged by us to be that life 3. Whom wee have seen and acknowledge to be the life revealed him wee testifie to be life and preach him to you viz. to be both God eternal and the Procuror Giver and Preserver of eternal life to be communicated unto us 4. Wee have known the Son of God the second distinct person of the Trinity which was from eternity with the Father and from the making of the world did plead our cause with the Father and is now revealed unto us after his incarnation by divine Revelation Therefore this our preaching of Truth and Life is both most excellent and most certain Vers. 3. That which wee have seen and heard declare wee unto you that yee also may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Iesus Christ. Reas. 5. Through the Truth preached by us Apostles eye and ear-witnesses beleevers are made partakers with us of the same felicity and the same good things Therefore the Truth preached by us is most excellent And our fellowship Reas.
Hunt in 8. The use of the Quadrant fitted for daily practice by Samuel Foster late Professor of Astronomy in 4. The Art of Dialling by Sam. Foster Formulae Oratoriae in usum scholarum concin●atae cum pra●i usu earundem in Epistolis Th●matibus Declamationibus conterendis accessit d●x po●ticus cum suis al●quo● po●matiolis Edit Novissima Authoris lima expolitis per Ioh. Clark in 12. Select and choice phrases Latin and English at first briefly collected for the use and benefit of young scholars by Iohn Clark and since recognized and made more useful by William Du Gard Master of Merchant-Tailors School in London in 12. Also Phrasologiae Puerills sive Sermones or select Latin and English Phrases methodically digested by way of common place and alphabetically for the more easie 〈…〉 is desired very useful for young Latinists to prevent Barbarism and bald Latin making and to initiate them in speaking and writing elegantly in both languages The third Edition very much inlarged by the same Author Iohn Clark B. D. and sometimes Master of a Free-school in Lincoln in 8. C. Salustii Crispi Catilina seu Bellum Catilinarium in 24. Lucii Annaei Flori rerum Romanorum libri quatuor Ex museo Io. Isaci Poniani in 24. The Map of England with the pictures of all the Kings since the Conquest cut in a Copper plate it being the most exactest Map that hath been done by William Holler The Needles Excellency a most excellent Book for Ladies and Gentlewomen to draw all sort of works by cut in brass Plates in 4. Iohannes Possellii Syntaxis Graeca utilissimis exemplis Illustrata una cum regulis ejusdem de accentibus Varen●ii de iisdem tractatu in 80. Esopes Fables in verse illustrated with Emblems or Pictures and also grammatically translated into prose with apt Morals and printed according to the order of the Latin Copy together with the History of his life from the best Greek Copies very useful for all but especially for young Scholars in 12. Rhetoricae Compendium Ang. Lat. per Thom. Hor● Master of Eaten Colledge in 8. School Probation in 8. Rhetorices Elementa in 8. Vestibulum Linguae Latinae rerum ●inguarum fundamenta exhibens The Rudiments of the Latin Tongue all four by Willian Du Guard Master of Merchant-Taylors School in London in 8. 〈◊〉 Lexicon in 8. 〈…〉 translated into English in 4. Symb●la 〈◊〉 in tribus Classibus Authore Nicbo Reus●ero ●●orino I.C. Plat. Caes. in 12. The Sc●●s design discovered relating their dangerous attempts lately practised against England with the sad consequences of the same by a noble person in 4. Speculations on the excrements of Urin with the distinctions causes colours and contents thereof with other symptomes observed in Nature by Henry Hamand in 8. The whole Trial of Lieutenant Collonel Io. Lilbourn by an extraordinary Commission of Oyer and Terminer at the Guild-Hall of London truly set forth with his manner of pleading in a brass plate in 4. The Common-wealths friend shewing an exact and speedy way to Justice and Right for the preventing and determining tedious Law-sutes by Iohn March of Grayes Inne in 8. The duty of Constables Overseers for the poor and Surveyers of High-waies by Iohn Layer Counsellor at Law in 8. A faithful Register of the transactions in Parliament in the third and fourth years of the Reign of King Charles containing several Speeches Cases Arguments of Law and the grand Mysteries of the Kingdome then in agitation by Thomas Fuller in folio A Collection of Speeches in Parliament by Sir Edward Dearing in 4. A discourse of proper Sacrifice by Sir Ed. Dearing in 4. Monuments in the Saxon Tongue written seven hundred years since proving that the Old and New Testament Lords Prayer and the Creed were then used in the Mother tongue in 4. History of Heliodorus translated into English in 4. History of Bees shewing their admirable Nature and Properties their Generation and Colonies their Government Loyalty Art Industry Enemies Wars Magnanimity c. By Char●es 〈◊〉 of Magdalen Colledge in 4. King Iames Proverbs in 16. A Manuel of Controversies by Osiander in 8. The height of Eloquence translated out of the Greek by Iohn Hall Esquire Herocles on the golden Verses of Pythagoras teaching a virtuous and godly life by Iohn Hall Esquire in 8. Letters of Mounsieur de Balzac the first second third and fourth parts translated into English by Sir Richard Baker Knight and others collected into one Volume in 8. Theatre of Complements and Art of Eloquence stored with variety of Love-songs Sonnets Letters and Amorous Dialogues in 12. Choice Poems relating Songs Sonnets Epigrams Carrols Posies Dialogues with variety of other Mirth together with his noble Numbers or his pious peeces by Robert Herick Esquire All the works of Iohn Taylor the famous Water-Poet collected in one Vol. in fol. Also Wit and Mirth by Iohn Taylor in 8. Arcadia Plaies in 4. Antiquary Plaies in 4. Antigony Plaies in 4. Challenge for Beauty Plaies in 4. Coronation Plaies in 4. Chabot Plaies in 4. Discontented Collonel Plaies in 4. Humerous Courtier Plaies in 4. Hide Park Plaies in 4. Lady of Pleasure Plaies in 4. Mad world my Master● Plaies in 4. Noble Stranger Plaies in 4. Phoenix Plaies in 4. Richard the third Plaies in 4. Seven Champions Plaies in 4. Wollastin Plaies in 4. Woman will have her Will Plaies in 4.