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A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

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second person the Mediator did bear unto his Father for this very end saith the Apostle God sent his own Son made of a woman Gal. 4.4.5 6. that we might receive the Adoption of Sons wherefore thou art no more a servant but a Son and if a son then an heir of God through Christ intimating thereby that what relation Christ hath unto God by nature we being found in him have the very same by Grace Rom. 8.29 Exod. 4.22 23 he was Gods Son by nature and we are his Sons by Grace he was in a peculiar manner the first born among many Brethren and in him and for him the rest of the Brethren by grace of Adoption are accounted as first-born Heb. 12.23 Heb. 2.16 2. The nature assumed was the seed of Abraham for verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham Rom. 1.3 Gen. 3.15 Gal. 4.4 elsewhere the Apostle calls it the seed of David He is made the seed of David according to the Flesh and elsewhere he is called the seed of the Woman I will put enmity between thee and the Woman and between thy seed and her seed and when the fulness of time was come God sent forth his son made of a woman no question she was the passive and material principle of which that precious flesh was made and the Holy Ghost the agent and efficient that blessed womb of her was the Bride-Chamber wherein the holy Ghost did knit that indissoluble knot betwixt our humane Nature and his Deity the Son of God assuming into the unity of his person that which before he was not even our humane Nature O with what astonishment may we behold our dust and ashes assumed into the unity of Gods own Person 3. For the reason of this way why did the person assume a Nature or rather why did not the person of the Son of God joyn it self to a perfect person of the Son of man I answer 1. Because then there could not have been a personal union of both natures and so Christ had not been a perfect Mediator 2. Because then the work of each of the Natures of Christ could not have been counted the works of the whole person whereas now by this union of both natures in one person the obedience of Christ performed in the Manhood is become of infinite merit as being the Obedience of God and thereupon God is said to have purchased the Church with his own Blood Acts. 20.28 3. Because if the Person of the Son of God had been joyned to the Person of man there should have been four Persons in the Trinity It is very observable how for the better preservation of the integrity of the blessed Trinity in the Godhead the humane Nature was assumed into the unity of the second person for if the fulness of the Godhead should have dwelt in any humane Person there should then have been a fourth Person necessarily added unto the Godhead and if any of the three Persons besides the second had been born of a Woman there should then have been two Sons in the Trinity whereas now the Son of God and the Son of Man being but one Person he is consequently but one Son and so no alteration at all made in the relations of the Persons of the Trinity but they are still one Father one Son and one Holy Ghost These are the deep things of God and indeed so exceedingly mystical that they can never be perfectly declared by any man Bernard compares this ineffable mystery of the union of two natures with that incomprehensible mystery of the Trinity in unity In the Trinity is three Persons and one Nature in Christ is two Natures and one Person that of the Trinity is indeed the greatest and this of the Incarnation is like unto it they both far exceed mans capacity for his way is in the Sea and his path in the great waters Psal 77.19 and his footsteps are not known 2. For the effects and Benefits of this Hypostatical Union they are either in respect of Christ or in respect of Christians 1. Those in respect of Christ are 1. An exemption of all sin 2. A Collation of all Graces 3. A Communication of all the properties 1. We find that although Christ appeared as a sinner and that he was numbred among the wicked or with the Transgressors Isa 53.12 Isa 53.12 Yet in very Deed and Truth he did no sin neither was any guile found in his mouth 1 Pet. 2.22 1 Pet. 2.22 Heb. 7.36 The Apostle tells us he was holy harmless undefiled and separate from Sinners he assumed the nature of man yet by reason of his pure Conception and of this Hypostatical Union he was conceived and born and lived without sin he took upon him the seed of man but not the Sin of man save only by imputation but on this point I shall not stay 2. The Graces collated unto the humanity of Christ by reason of his union are very many I shall instance in some As 1. That the Manhood hath its subsistence in the second Person of the Trinity whereof it self as of it self is destitute 2. That the Manhood is a peculiar Temple for the Deity of Christ to dwell in it is the place wherein the Godhead shews it self more manifestly and more Gloriously than in any other Creature whatsoever it is true that by his providence he shews himself in all his Creatures and by his Grace in his Saints but he is only most Gloriously eternally according to the fulness of his Deity and by an Hypostatical Union in the humanity of Jesus Christ in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Some are of opinion that as now in this Life Col. 2.9 No man cometh unto God but by Christ so hereafter in the next life no man shall see God but in the face of Jesus Christ 3. That in the Manhood is a nearer familiarity with the Godhead than any other Creature whether Men or Angels as sometimes he said My Father and I are one i.e. one essence so he may as truly say the Manhood and I are one i.e. one person for ever 4. That the Manhood of Christ according to its measure is a partner with the Godhead in the work of Redemption and Mediation as he is Immanuel in respect of his person so he is Immanuel in respect of his office He must needs be man as well as God that he might be able to send this comfortable message to the Sons of men go to my Brethren John 20 17. and say to them I ascend unto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God I as man am in the work of redemption and in the work of mediation as well as God my Flesh is indeed the Bread of Life 5. That the Manhood of Christ together with the Godhead is adored and worshipped with Divine honour as in like case
the honour done to the King redounds to the Crown upon his head not that we worship the Manhood alone as meerly a Creature but that we adore the person of Christ which consisteth of the Manhood and of the Godhead 6. That the Manhood hath an extraordinary measure without measure of habitual Graces poured into it in this he excels the very Angels for to them was given Grace only by measure but to the humanity of Christ was given Grace without measure even so much as a Creature is any ways capable of I know it is said that Jesus increased in Wisdom and Stature and in favour with God and Man Luk. 2.52 but this increase or growth in Wisdom is not to be understood in respect of the essence or extension of the habit for that he had from the beginning even from the first moment of his incarnation and he brought it with him out of the womb but in respect of the act and use of it or in respect of his experimental knowledg so he increased and not otherwise Never was there any but Christ whose Graces were no way stinted and that was absolutely full of Grace Divines tell us of a double Grace in Christ the one of union and that is infinite the other of unction which is all one with Grace habitual and that is in a sort infinite for howsoever it be but a finite and created thing yet in the nature of Grace it hath no limitation no bounds no stint but includeth in it self whatsoever any way pertains to Grace or that cometh within the compass of it The reason of this illimited donation of Grace bestowed on the Nature of man in Christ was for that Grace was given to it as to the universal cause whence it was to be derived unto all others he is the Fountain of Grace John 1.16 and of his fulness we receive Grace for Grace 3. For the Communication of the Properties It is a kind of phrase of speech peculiar to the Scriptures when the properties of either Nature of Christ considered singly and apart are attributed to the person of Christ from which soever of the natures they be denominated For the understanding of this observe 1. That words are either abstractive or concretive the former speaks the Nature of things the latter speaks the person that hath that nature as the God-Head and God the Man Hood and Man Holiness and Holy 2. Observe that abstractive Words noting precisely the distinct Natures cannot be affirmed one of the other we cannot say the God head suffered or the Man-hood created but we may truly say that God suffered and man created because the person which these concretive words imply is one and all actions passions and qualities agree really to the person though in respect somtimes of one nature and sometimes of another thus God purchased the Church with his own blood Acts. 20.28 John 3.13 not that the God-head shed blood but the person which was God and thus the Son of man talking with Nicodemus is said to be in Heaven not that the Man-hood was in Heaven while he was on earth but the person of the Son of Man Thus we may say that God was born of a Virgin and that God suffered and God was crucified not simply in respect of his God-head but in respect of his person or in respect of the humane nature which God united to himself because God here is a concrete word and not an abstract and signifieth the Person of Christ and not the divine nature of Christ And thus we may say that the Man Christ is Almighty Omniscient Omnipresent yet not simply in respect of its Man-hood but in respect of the Person which is the same God and Man or in respect of the divine nature of the man Christ Jesus for that here also Man is a concrete word and not an abstract and signifieth the whole person of Christ and not the humane nature but on the contrary we may not say that the God-head of Christ was born of a Virgin or suffered or was crucified nor may we say that the Manhood of Christ is Almighty Omniscient Omnipresent because the Godhead and Manhood are abstract words i.e. such words as note to us the two natures of Christ the one divine the other humane and not the person of Christ And this I think is the mind of Luther and his Followers and yet O wonder what a deal of objections are made to the multiplying of needless and fruitless contentions The Lutherans confess however they hold the ubiquitary presence of the humanity of Christ that his Body is only in one place locally If we ask them saith Zanchius * Zanchius in judicio de dissidio caenae Dominicae whether Christs body be every where they answer that locally it is but in one place but that personally it is every where now if they mean saith he that in respect of Essence his Body is finite and confined to one certain place but in respect of the being of subsistence or of his person it is infinite and every where they say the truth and there is no difference amongst us Happy are the Reconcilers of dissenting Brethren Vnto their Assembly mine honour be thou united 2. The Effects or benefits of this hypostatical union in respect of Christians are their spiritual union and communion with God and Christ 1. There is a spiritual union of Christians with God in Christ O the wonder of these two blessed unions first of the personal or hypostatical union secondly of this spiritual or mystical union in the personal union it pleased God to assume and unite our humane Nature to the Diety in this spiritual union it pleased God to unite the person of every Believer to the person of the Son of God This union is mystical and yet our very Persons natures bodies souls are in a spiritual way conjoyned to the Body and Soul of Christ Eph. 5.30 so that we are members of the Body of Christ and of the Flesh of Christ and of the Bones of Christ and as this conjunction is immediately made with his humane nature 2 Pet. 1.4 so thereby we are also united to the divine nature yea the person of the Believer is indissolubly united to the Glorious person of the Son God Now concerning this union for our better understanding observe these four things 1. It is a most real union it is not a meer notional and intellectual union that consists only in the understanding and without the understanding is nothing it is not an imaginary thing that hath no other being but only in the Brain no no it is a true real essential substantial union In natural unions I confess there may be more evidence but there cannot be more truth spiritual Agents neither have nor put forth less virtue because sense cannot discern their manner of Working even the Load-stone though an earthen substance yet when it is out of sight whether under the
two but one person so must our natures and persons though at greatest distance from God be inseparably joyned and united to Christ and thereby also to God John 17.21 I Pray saith Christ that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us That union of Christs two natures we call a personal hypostatical union and this union of Christ with us we call a mystical and Spiritual union yet though it be mystical and Spiritual this hinders not but that it is a true real essential substantial union whereby the person of the believer is indissolubly united to the glorious person of the Son of God For our better understanding we may consider if you please of a threefold unity either of persons of one nature or of natures in one person or of natures and Persons in one spirit in the first is one God in the second is one Christ in the third is one Church with Christ our union unto Christ is the last of these whereby he and we are all spiritually united to the making up of one mystical body O what a priviledge is this a poor believer be he never so mean or miserable in the eye of the world yet he is one with Christ as Christ is one with the Father our fellowship is with the Father 1 John 1.3 and with his Son Jesus Christ every Saint is Christs fellow there is a kind of analogical proportion between Christ and his Saints in every thing if we take a view of all Christ what he is in his Person in his Glory in his Spirit in his Graces in his Fathers Love and in the access he hath to the Father in all these we are in a sort fellows with Christ only with this difference that Christ hath the preheminence in all things all comes from the Father first to Christ and all we have is by Marriage with Jesus Christ Christ by his union hath all good things without measure but we by our union have them only in measure as it pleaseth him to distribute But herein if we resemble Christ whether in his union with the Father or in his union of the two natures in one Person of a Mediator if by looking on Christ we come to this likeness to be one with Jesus Christ Oh what a priviledg is this had we not good warrant for so high a challeng it could be no less than a Blasphemous arrogance to lay claim to the Royal blood of Heaven but the Lord is pleased to dignifie a poor worm that every believer may truly say I am one with Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ is one with me To sweeten this union to our thoughts I shall acquaint you with the priviledg flowing from it and let the same stir you up to conform Hence it is that Christ lives in us and that Christ both gives life and is our life When Christ which is our life shall appear Christ is to me to live and I live yet not I Col. 3.4 Phil. 2.21 Gal. 2.20 but Christ liveth in me There is a spiritual and natural life for the natural life what is it but a bubble a vapour a shaddow a dream a nothing but this Spiritual life is an excellent life it is wrought in us by the Spirit of Christ there is a world of difference betwixt the natural and the spiritual life and that makes the difference betwixt what I do as a man and what I do as a Christian as a man I have eyes ears motions affections understandings naturally as my own but as a Christian I have all these from him with whom I am spiritually one the Lord Jesus Christ as a man I have bodily eyes and I behold bodily and material things but as a Christian I have spiritual eyes and I see invisible and eternal things as it is said of Moses that he endured Heb. 11 27. as seeing him who is invisible as a man I have outward ears and I hear outward sounds of all sorts whether articulate or inarticulate but as a Christian I have inward ears and so I hear the voice of Christ and of Gods Spirit speaking to my soul as a man I have bodily feet and by them I move in my own secular wayes but as a Christian I have spiritual feet and on them I walk with God in all the wayes of his Commandments as a man I have natural affections and so I love beauty and fear pain and hate an enemy and I rejoyce in outward prosperity or the like but as a Christian I have renewed affections and so I loved goodness and hate nothing but sin and I fear above all the displeasure of my God and I rejoyce in Gods favour which is better than life Surely this is a blessed life and as soon as ever I am united to Christ why then I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me First Christ is conceived and then Christ is formed and then Christ is born and then grows in me to a blessed fulness Gal. 4.19 My little Children of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you formation follows conception and travail implies a birth then after this we are babes in Christ 1 Cor. 3.1 1 John 2.14 Eph. 4.13 or Christ is as a babe in us from thence we grow up to strength of youth I have written unto you young men because ye are strong and at last we come to Gospel perfection even towards the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Is this all nay if my union be firm and Christ live in me why then I go on Rom. 6.8 Rom. 6.4 1. Col 3 1. Rom. 8.17 and in this condition I am dead with Christ and I am buried with Christ and I am alive again unto God through Christ and I am risen with Christ and I am glorified with Christ Nay yet more my sufferings are Christs Col. 1.24 and Christs sufferings are mine Rom. 8.17 I am in Christ an ●eir of Glory Rom. 8.17 and Christ is in me the hope of Glory Col. 12 7. O my Christ my life what am I or what is my Fathers house that thou shouldest come down into me that thou shouldest be conceived in the womb of my poor sinful heart that thou shouldest give my soul a new and spiritual life a life begun in Grace and ending in eternal Glory I shall not reckon up any more priviledges of this union me-thinks I should not need if I tell you of Grace and Glory what can I more Glory is the highest pitch and Christ tells you concerning it the Glory whic● thou gavest me John 17.22 I have given them that they may be one even as we are one Ah my brethren to be so like Christ as to be one with Christ it is near indeed O let us conform to Christ in this he is one with our nature in an hypostatical personal union let us
be one with him in a spiritual holy and a mystical union if God be not in our persons as truely though not as fully as in our nature we have no particular comfort from this design of his personal hypostatical and wonderful union 6. Christ was born so must we be new-born to this I have spoken when I laid it down as an evidence that unto us a Child is born and unto us a son is given only one word more we must be new born as once born by nature so new born by Grace there must be some resemblances in us of Christ born amongst us As 1. Christ born had a Father in Heaven and a Mother on Earth so in our new Birth we must look on God as our Father in Heaven and on the Church as our Mother on Earth it was usually said out of the Church no salvation and to this the Apostle alludes Jerusalem which is above is free Gal. 4.26 which is the Mother of us all indeed out of the Church there is no means of Salvation no Word to teach no Sacraments to confirm nothing at all to hold forth Christ to a soul and without Christ how should there be the Salvation of souls ●o that we must look on the Church as our Mother and on God as our Father not that we deny some to be as spiritual Fathers unto others Paul tells the Corinthians 1 Cor. 4.15 that he was their Father though yea have ten thousand instructers in Christ yet have ye not many Fathers for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospel but al●s such Fathers are but ministerial Fathers and therefore Paul seems to correct himself 1 Cor. 3.7 who is ●aul and who is Apollo but Ministers by whom yea believed even as the Lord gave to every man it is God only is our Father principally originally supreamly God only puts Grace and vertue into the womb of the Soul it is not possible that any creature should be a Creator of the new Creature O then let us look up to Heaven and say O Lord n●w make me n●w Create me O be thou my Father 2. When Christ was born all Jerusalem was troubled so when this new birth is we must look for it that much commotion and much division of heart will be the Devi● could not be cast out of the professed person but he would exc●edingly fear and ●orment and vex the poss●ssed person the truth is we cannot expect that Christ should expel Satan from those holds and dominions he hath over us but he will be sure to put us to great fear and terror in heart Besides not only the evil Spirit but Gods Spirit is for a while a Spirit of Bondage to make every thing as a mighty burden unto us there are many pr●tenders to the grace of God in Christ but they cannot abide to hear of any pains or pangs in this new Birth O this is legal but I pray thee tell me dost thou ever know any woman bring forth in her sleep or in a dream without feeling any pain and how then should the heart of man be thus new changed and moulded without several pangs look as it is in the natural birth there are many pangs and troubles in in sorrow shalt thou bring forth Children so it is and must be in our spiritual birth there is usually I will not say alwayes to such or such a degree many pangs and troubles there 's many a throb and many an heart-ach ere Christ can be formed in us 3. When Christ was born there was a discovery of many of the Glorious attributes of God then Mercy and Truth met together and righteousness and peace kissed each other then especially was a discovery of the Goodness and Power and Wisdom and Holiness of God So when this New Birth is we must look upon it as a glorious discovery of those lovely Attributes As 1. Of his Mercy Goodness Love how often is this called his Grace and the riches of his Grace Christians you that know what the New Birth means do you not say The Goodness of God appears in this surely it was Gods Goodness to make a World but this is the riches of his Goodness to create a New Heart in you when Man by his sin was fallen he might have been thrown away as refuse fit fuel only for everlasting flames it might have been with mankind as it was with Devils in their deluge God did not provide an Ark to save so many as eight persons not one Angel that fell was the Object of Gods Grace And that God should pass by all those Angels and many thousands of the Sons Men and yet that he should look upon you in your Blood and bid you Live O the goodness of God! 2. As of the Goodness so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of Gods power and hence it is called a New Creature The very same Power that framed the World Gal. 6.15 is the framer of this New Creature the work of Conversion is set forth by the Work of Creation God only creates Man and God only converts Man in the Creation God said Let there be Light and there was Light in our conversion God saith Let there be Light and presently the same God shines in our hearts Nay this Power of conversion in some sense far passeth the Creation To whom is the Arm of the Lo●d revealed Isa 53.1 the Lord puts to his Arm his Power his Strength indeed in Conversion of Souls when he made the World he met with nothing to resist him he only spake the word and it was do●e but in the conversion of a sinner God meets with the whole frame of all creatures opposing and resisting him the Devil and the World without and sin and corruption within here then must needs be a Power against all Power 3. As of the Goodness and Power of God so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of the Wisdom of God I might instance in many particulars As 1. In that the regenerate are most-what of the meanest and contemptiblest persons not many wise 1 Cor. 1.27 not many noble c. 2. In that many times God takes the worst Weeds and makes them the sweetest Flowers thus Paul Zacheus the Publicans and Harlots 3. In that the regenerate are of the fewest and least number many are called but few are chosen 4. In that God chooseth such a time to be his time of love wherein he usually discovers many concurrences of strange love meeting together read Ezek. 16.4 5 6 8 9. in all these particulars is his Wisdom wonderful 4. As of the Goodness Power and Wisdom of God so in this New Birth there 's a discovery of the holiness of God If a clod of Earth or a piece of Muck should be made a glorious Star in Heaven it is not more wonderful than for a sinner to be made like an Angel doing the Will of God it argues the
constant in it at least for eighty one days in one year so for eighty one days in every year during thy life and then for thy meditations on any other subject I shall not take thee quite off but leave the remainder of the year which is above three parts more to thy own choice If thou art so resolved I shall say no more but the Lord be with thee and if sooner or later thou findest any benefit by this work give God the glory and remember him in thy prayers who hath took this pains for Christ's honour and thy souls good So rests Thy Servant in Christ Jesus I. A. The CONTENTS of This BOOK BOOK I. Chap. 1. THe Proem Division and Opening of the Words Page 1 Chap. 2. Sect. 1. The Duty of Looking off all other Things Confirmed and Cleared Page 2 Sect. 2. An Exhortation to Look off all other Things Page 5 Sect. 3. Directions how to Look off all other Things Page 7 Chap. 3. Sect. 1. An Explanation of the Act and Object Page 8 Sect. 2. The main Doctrine and Confirmation of it Page 10 Sect. 3. Vse of Reproof Page 11 Sect. 4. Vse of Exhortation Page 13 Sect. 5. Motives from our Wants in case of Neglect Page 14 Sect. 6. Motives from our Riches in case we are lively in this Duty Page 16 Sect. 7. More Motives to Encourage us in this Work Page 18 Sect. 8. Vse of Direction Page 21 BOOK II. Chap. 1. Sect. 1. Of the Eternal Generation of our Jesus Page 23 Sect. 2. Of our Election in Christ before all Worlds Page 26 Sect. 3. Of that great Treaty in Eternity betwixt God and Christ to save Souls Page 27 Sect. 4. The Project Page 28 Sect. 5. The Counsel ibid. Sect. 6. The Foreknowledge Page 31 Sect. 7. The Purpose Page 33 Sect. 8. The Decree Page 34 Sect. 9. The Covenant Page 35 Chap. 2. Sect. 1. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the Great Work of our Salvation in that Eternity Page 38 Sect. 2. Of Considering Jesus in that Respect ibid. Sect. 3. Of Desiring after Jesus in that respect Page 45 Sect. 4. Of Hoping in Jesus in that respect Page 47 Sect. 5. Of Believing in Jesus in that respect Page 49 Sect. 6. Of Loving Jesus in that respect Page 51 Sect. 7. Of Joying in Jesus in that respect Page 53 Sect. 8. Of Calling on Jesus in that respect Page 54 Sect. 9. Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect ibid. BOOK III. Chap. 1. Sect. 1. Of Christ promised by Degrees Page 57 Sect. 2. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to Adam Page 59 Sect. 3. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to Abraham Page 64 Sect. 4. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to Moses Page 69 Sect. 5. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to David Page 77 Sect. 6. Of the Covenant of Promise as manifested to Israel about the Time of the Captivity Page 81 Chap. 2. Sect. 1. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the Great Work of our Salvation from the Creation until His First Coming Page 90 Sect. 2. Of Considering Jesus in that respect ibid. Sect. 3. Of Desiring Jesus in that respect Page 96 Sect. 4. Of Hoping in Jesus in that respect Page 100 Sect. 5. Of Believing in Jesus in that respect Page 102 Sect. 6. Of Loving Jesus in that respect Page 105 Sect. 7. Of Joying in Jesus in that respect Page 108 Sect. 8. Of Calling on Jesus in that respect Page 110 Sect. 9. Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect Page 111 BOOK IV. PART I. Chap. 1. Sect. 1. Of the Tydings of Christ Page 117 Sect. 2. Of the Conception of Christ Page 119 Sect. 3. Of the Duplicity of Natures in Christ Page 122 Sect. 4. Of the Distinction of the Two Natures in Christ Page 124 Sect. 5. Of the Vnion of the Two Natures of Christ in one and the same Person Page 125 Sect. 6. Of the Birth of Christ Page 133 Sect. 7. Of some Consequents after Christ's Birth Page 139 Chap. 2. Sect. 1. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the Great Work of our Salvation in His Birth Page 141 Sect. 2. Of Considering Jesus in that respect Page 142 Sect. 3. Of Desiring after Jesus in that respect Page 146 Sect. 4. Of Hoping in Jesus in that respect Page 147 Sect. 5. Of Believing in Jesus in that respect Page 150 Sect. 6. Of Loving Jesus in that respect Page 155 Sect. 7. Of Joying in Jesus in that respect Page 157 Sect. 8. Of Calling on Jesus in that respect Page 160 Sect. 9. Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect ibid. BOOK V. PART II. Chap. 1. Sect. 1. Of the First Year of Christ's Ministry And therein of the Beginning of the Gospel Page 167 Sect. 2. Of the Preaching of John Baptist Page 168 Sect. 3. Of the Baptism of Jesus Page 170 Sect. 4. Of the Fasting and Temptation of Christ Page 174 Sect. 5. Of the First Manifestations of Christ Page 180 Sect. 6. Of Christ's Whipping the Buyers and Sellers out of the Temple Page 182 Chap. 2. Sect. 1. Of the Second Year of Christ's Ministry and of His Acts in general for that Year Page 175 Sect. 2. Of Christ's Sermons this Year Page 176 Sect. 3. Of Christ's Prophetical Office Page 177 Sect. 4. Of Christ's Miracles Page 179 Chap. 3. Sect. 1. Of the Third Year of Christ's Ministry and generally of his Actings in that Year Page 184 Sect. 2. Of Christ's Ordination of His Apostles ibid. Sect. 3. Of Christ's Reception of Sinners Page 187 Sect. 4. Of Christ's easie Yoke and light Burthen Page 192 Chap. 4. Sect. 1. Of the Fourth Year of Christ's Ministry and generally of His Actings in that Year Page 200 Sect. 2. Of the Distinction or several Divisions of Christ's Righteousness ibid. Sect. 3. Of the Holiness of Christ's Nature Page 201 Sect. 4. Of the Holiness of Christ's Life Page 202 Sect. 5. Of the great Controversie Whether we are not Justifyed by the Passive Righteousness of Christ only without any Consideration had to the Righteousness of Christ either Inherent in Him or Performed by Him Page 204 Chap. 5. Sect. 1. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the Great Work of our Salvation in His Life Page 207 Sect. 2. Of Considering Jesus in that respect Page 208 Sect. 3. Of Desiring after Jesus in that respect Page 315 Sect. 4. Of Hoping in Jesus in that respect Page 317 Sect. 5. Of Believing in Jesus in that respect Page 320 Sect. 6. Of Loving Jesus in that respect Page 324 Sect. 7. Of Joying in Jesus in that respect Page 326 Sect. 8. Of Calling on Jesus in that respect Page 328 Sect. 9. Of Conforming to Jesus in that respect Page 329 BOOK VI. PART III. Chap. 1. Sect. 1. Of the Day of Christ's Sufferings divided into Parts Hours Page 339 Sect. 2. Of the Brook over which Christ passed Page 341 Sect. 3. Of the Garden into which Christ ontred Page 344 Sect. 4. Of the Prayer that Christ there
find help in our necessities having such an High-Priest as was in all things tempted like unto us and was acquainted with our infirmities in his own person Heb. 4.15 5.2 SECT IV. Of the distinction of the two Natures of Christ 4. A Real distinction of these two Natures is evident 1. In regard of essence the Godhead cannot be Manhood nor can the Manhood be the Godhead 2. In regard of proprieties the Godhead is most wise just omnipotent yea wisdom justice omnipotency it self and so is not the Manhood neither can it be 3. They have distinct Wills Luke 22.42 Not my Will but thy Will be done O Father Plainly differencing the Will of a Creature from the Will of a Creator 4. The very actions in the work of Redemption are indeed inseparable John 10.18 and yet distinguishable I lay down my life and take it up again to lay it down was the action of man not of God and to take it up was the action of God not of man in these respects we say each nature remains in it self entire without any conversion composition commixtion or confusion there is no conversion of one into the other as when he changed water into wine no composition of both no abolition of either no confusion at all It is easy to observe this real distinction of his two natures from first to last as first He was conceived as others and so he was man but he was conceived by the holy Ghost as never man was and so he is God 2. He was born as others and so he was man but he was born of a Virgin as never man was and this speaks him a God 3. He was crucified died and was buried and so he was man but he rose again from the dead ascended into Heaven and from thence shall come at last to judge the quick and the dead and so he is God Or if from the Apostles Symbol we go to the Gospel which speaks both natures at large we find there 1. He was born of his Mother and wrapped in swadling-clouts as being a man but the Star shines over him and the wise men adore him as being a God 2. He was Baptized in Jordan as being a man but the holy Ghost from heaven descended upon him as being a God 3. He is tempted of Satan as being a man but he overcame Satan and dispossessed Devils as being a God 4. He travelled and was thirsty and hungry and weary as being a man but he refreshed the weary and fed the hungry and gave drink even water of life to the thirsty as being a God 5. He slept in the Ship and his Disciples awoke him as being a man but he rebuked the winds and stilled the raging of the tumultuous Seas as being a God 6. He was poor and needy had not an house to put his head in as being a man but he was and is rich and mighty and cannot be contained in the heaven of heavens as being a God 7. He was sorrowful and sad he wept and he prayed as being a man but he comforts the sorrowful and heareth the prayers of all his Saints as being a God 8. He was whipped and rent and torn and crucified as being a man but he rent the vail of the Temple and caused the Sun to hide his face for shame when he was crucified as being a God 9. He cried out on the Cross Eloi Eloi lamasabacthani as being a man but he could say to the Thief To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise as being a God 10. He died and was buried and lay in the grave as being a man but he overcame death and destroyed the Devil and raised up himself to life again as being a God 11. After his Resurrection he appeared to his Disciples and ate with them and talked with them as being a man but he provided meat and vanished out of their sight as being a God 12. He ascended into heaven and the heavens now contain him as he is Man but he sustains the Heavens and commands all therein and rides on the same as being a God Thus we see all along two real distinct natures still continuing in Christ God being become Man the Deity being abolished but the humane nature was adjoyned according to the old Distich Sum quod eram nec eram quod sum c. I am that I was but I was not that I am You will say How then is it said the word was made flesh or God became Man I answer one thing may become another either by way of change as when the water was turned into wine but thus was not Christ the Godhead was for a time concealed but it was never cancelled or one thing may become another either by way of union as when one substance is adjoyned unto another and yet is not transferred or changed into the nature of the other thus a Souldier putting on his Armour is an armed man or a man wearing on his Garments is no more a naked but a cloathed man and yet the Armour and the Souldier the man and his Apparel are distinct things and thus was it with Christ the flesh is said to be deified and the Deity is said to be incarnate not by the conversion of either into the nature of the other but by assuming and adjoyning the humane nature to the divine and yet still the humane nature and the divine are distinct things both the natures in Christ do remain entire and inconfused indeed the humanity is much magnified by the divinity but the divinity is nothing altered by the humanity Thus much for the distinction of his two Natures SECT V. Of the Vnion of the two Natures of Christ in one and the same Person 5. THe Union of two Natures of Christ in one and the self-same person is that great wonder which now we must speak of as we are able but alas how should we speak this union and not be confounded in our selves It is a great mystery a secret a wonder many wonders have been since the beginning of the world but all the wonders that ever were must give place to this and in respect thereof cease to be wonderful neither the Creation of all things out of nothing nor the restauration of all things into their perfect being I mean neither the first work nor the last work of God in this world though most admirable pieces may be compared with this This Union of the two Natures of Christ into one person is the highest pitch if any thing may be said highest in that which is infinite of God's wisdom goodness power and glory well therefore said the Angel to Mary The power of the highest shall overshadow thee and if God did overshadow this Mystery with his own Vail How should we presume with the men of Bethshemesh to look into it Christians If you will needs put it to the question How that wonderful connection of two so infinitely differing natures in the unity of one
person should be effected I must answer you with the Apostle Who is sufficient for these things Certainly these are the things which the Angels desire to stoop and look into It is an Inquisition fitter for an Angelical intelligence than for our shallow capacity 1 Pet. 1.12 and yet as Moses could not chuse but wonder though he must not draw nigh to the Bush burning with fire and not consumed so though we dare not draw too nigh to see this great sight How poor dust and ashes should be assumed into the unity of God's own person and that in the midst of those everlasting burnings the Bush should remain unconsumed Isa 33.14 and continue fresh and green for evermore yet what doth hinder but we may stand aloof off and wonder at it this is one piece of our duty to recite all the long-fore-passed acts and benefits of God as well as we may Scripture still going along that thereby we may admire and adore and express our Love and Thankfulness unto God For the untying of this Knot I cannot but wonder what a world of questions have been tossed in Schools As 1. Whether the union of the Word incarnate was in the Nature 2. Whether the union of the Word incarnate was in the Person 3. Whether the humane Nature was united to the Word by way of accident 4. Whether the union of the divine Nature be something cremated 5. Whether the union of the Word incarnate be the same with assumption 6. Whether the union of the two Natures of Christ be the chief of all unions 7. Whether the union of the two Natures of Christ was made by Grace 8. Whether it was convenient for the divine person to assume a created Nature 9. Whether a divine Person could assume the Nature humane 10. Whether more persons divine could assume one Nature humane 11. Whether it was more convenient that the person of the Son should assume humane nature than any other of the persons in the Godhead 12. Whether the humane nature was more assumptible by the Son of God than any other nature 13. Whether the Son of God did not assume the person of man 14. Whether the Son of God assumed the humane nature in all its Individuals or as abstracted from all Individuals 15. Whether the Son of God assumed a true Body Soul and all its Intellects 16. Whether the Son of God in respect of nature though not of time did first assume the Soul and then the Body of man 17. Whether the Son of God in humane nature assumed all the defects of the Body 18. Whether the Son of God assumed all the defects of the Soul of man 19. Whether by Virtue of this union those things which are agreeable to the Son of man may be predicated of the Son of God and e converso 20. Whether Christ be one or two and whether in Christ be one or two Wills one or more Operations These and many other like Questions are raised that in their discussions make up large Volums but I shall leave them all to the Schools In the explication of this union that which I shall insist on as the most necessary for our understanding is 1. The Union it self 2. The Effects or Benefits of it 1. For the Union it self we shall discuss 1. Of the sorts of Union and of what sort this is 2. Of the very thing it self wherein this union consists 3. Of the Scriptural Texts that confirm this union 4. Of the similitudes that hold sorth this union 5. Of the person assuming and of the nature assumed and of the reason of this way And of these as briefly as I may I would rather say much in a little than a little in much 1. Union is of divers sorts as natural and mystical accidental and substantial essential and integral But I shall pass these by and speak only of these sorts 1. When one of the things united is turned into the other as when a drop of water is poured into a vessel of Wine 2. When both the things united are changed in nature and essence as when the Elements are united to make mixt or compounded bodies 3. When there is no change of things united but the constitution of a third nature out of them both as is the union of the soul and body 4. When there is neither a change of natures united nor constitution of a third out of them both but only the founding setling and staying of the one of the things united in the other and the drawing of it into the unity of the personal being or subsistence of the other so the Branch of a Tree being put upon the stock of another Tree it is drawn into the unity of the subsistence of that Tree into which it is put and whereas if it had been set in the Ground it would have grown as a separate Tree in it self now it groweth in the Tree into which it is graffed and pertaineth to the unity of it and this kind of union doth of all others most perfectly resemble the personal union of the two Natures of God and man in Christ wherein the nature of man that would have been a person in it self if it had been left to it self is drawn into the unity of the divine person and subsisteth in it being prevented from subsisting in it self by this personal union and assumption 2. For the thing wherein this union of two natures consists we say that this union consists in that dependance of the humane nature on the person of the Word and in that communicating of the person or substance of the Word with the humane nature that is assumed so that it is an hypostatical or personal union that is such an union as that both natures do make but one person of Christ for the better understanding of this we must consider what the difference is betwixt Nature and Person and what makes an individual Nature to be a Person briefly thus To be this or that we say is an individual nature to be this or that in or for it self is a person or subsistence to be this or that in or for another is to pertain to the person or subsistence of another Now amongst those created things which are naturally apt to make a personal being or to subsist in and for themselves there is a very great difference for 1. Some things of this kind may become parts of another more entire thing of the same kind as we see in all those things wherein every part hath the same nature that the whole hath as every drop of water is water and being lest to it self it is a subsistence in it self and hath its quality nature and being in and for it self but if it be joyned to a greater quantity of water it hath now no being quantity nor operation but in and for that greater quantity of water into which it is poured 2. Other things of this kind cannot naturally put themselves into the
unity of any other thing and yet by the help of some forreign cause they may be united as the branch of a Tree of one kind which put into the ground would be an intire distinct Tree in it self may by the hand of a man be put into the unity of a Tree of another kind and so grow move and bear fruit not distinctly in and for it self but jointly in and for that Tree into which it is planted 3. Other things of this kind cannot by force of natural causes nor by the help of any forreign thing ever become parts of any other created thing or pertain to the unity of the substance of any such thing as the nature of man and the nature of all living things and yet by divine and supernatural working it may be drawn into the unity of the subsistence of any of the Persons of the blessed Trinity wherein the fulness of all being and the Perfection of all created things is in a more eminent sort than in themselves for though all created things have their own being yet seeing God is nearer to them than they are to themselves and they are in a better fort in him than they are in themselves there is no question but that they may be prevented and staid from being in and for themselves and caused to be in and for one of the divine persons of the blessed Trinity So that as one drop of water that formerly subsisted in it self if it be poured into a vessel containing a greater quantity it becomes one in subsistence with the greater quantity of water and as a branch of a Tree that being set in the ground and left to it self would be an intire and independant tree becomes one in subsistence with that tree into which it is grafted so the individual nature of man assumed into the unity of one of the Persons of the Blessed Trinity it looseth that kind of being that naturally left to it self it would have had and it becomes one with the Person for now it is not in and for it self but hath got a new Relation of dependance and being in another But you will say all the Creatures in the world have their being in God and dependance on God and therefore all Creatures as well as Man may pertain to the Person or Subsistence of God I Answer it is not a general being in and depend●nce on God but a strict dependance on mans part and a Communicating of the subsistence on Gods part that makes up this union Hence we say that there are four degrees of the presence of God in his Creatures the first is his general presence whereby he preserves the substances of all Creatures and gives unto them to live and to move and to have their being Acts. 7.28 and this extends it self to all Creatures good and bad The Second degree is the presence of Grace whereby he doth not only preserve the substance of his Creature but also gives Grace unto it and this agrees to the Saints and Gods People on earth The third degree is the presence of glory peculiar to the Saints and Angels in heaven and hereby God doth not only preserve their substances and give them plenty of his Grace but he also admits them into his Glorious presence so as they may behold him face to face The fourth and last degree is that whereby the God-Head of the Son is present with and dwells in the Manhood giving unto it in some part his own subsistence whereby it comes to pass that this Manhood assumed is proper to the Son and cannot be the Manhood of the Father or of the Holy Ghost or of any Creature whatsoever And this is a thing so admirable and unspeakable that though we may find some similitudes yet there cannot be found another example hereof in all the World Hence it follows that in the Manhood of Christ consisting of Body and Soul there is a Nature only and not a Person because it doth not subsist alone as other men Peter Paul and John do but it wholly depends on the Person of the Word into the unity whereof it is received and this dependance of the humane nature on the person of the Word and the communicating of the Person or subsistence of the Word with the humane nature is the very thing it self wherein this union consists 3. For the Scriptural texts that confirm this Union you see the Well is very deep but where is the Bucket What texts of Scripture have we to confirm this wonderful Union of two Natures in one Person Amongst many I shall only cite these Mat. 16.13 16. When Christ asked his Apostles Whom do men say that I the Son of man am Simon Peter answered Thou art the Christ the Son of the living God Now if but one Christ then surely but one Person and if the Son of man be the Son of the Living God then surely there are two natures in that one Person Observe how the Son of man and the Son of God very Man and very God concenter in Christ as the Soul and the Body make but one man so the Son of man and the Son of God make but one Christ Rom. 1.3 4. Thou art Christ saith Peter the Son of the Living God So Paul speaking of Jesus the Son of God he tells us that he was made of the seed of David according to the Flesh and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit 1. Made of the Seed of David of the substance of the Virgin who was Davids posterity 2. Declared to be the Son of God not made the Son of God as he was made the Son of Man but declared to be the Son of God The word in the Original signifies a Declaration by a solemn sentence or difinitive judgment I will declare the Decree the Lord hath said unto me Thou art my Son That which I point at he is the Son of David Psal 2.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of his Manhood and he is the Son of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in respect of his Godhead here be the two Natures but i●●he words before these two natures make but one Son Jesus Christ our Lord and 〈◊〉 ●●●ry words themselves he is declared to be the Son of God he doth not say Som● 〈◊〉 two but his Son Jesus Christ first before and then after to shew unto us th●●●●fore his making so after his making he is still but one Son or one person of the 〈◊〉 ●●●tinct natures subsisting Col. 2.9 To the same purpose is that same Text In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily by the union of the divine nature with the humane in the unity of his person the Godhead dwelleth in Christ as the Soul in the Body it dwelleth in him bodily not seemingly but really truly and indeed not figuratively and in a shadow as he dwelleth in the Temple not by power and efficacy as he dwells
in all the Creatures not by Grace as in his People nor by Glory as in the Saints above but essentially substantially personally the humane nature being assumed into Union with the person of the Word Observe the passages he in whom that fulness dwells is the Person that fulness which doth so dwell in him is the Nature now there dwells in him not only the fulness of the Godhead but the fulness of the Manhood also for we believe him to be both perfect God begotten of the substance of his Father before all Worlds and perfect man made of the substance of this Mother in this World only he in whom the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth is one and he in whom the fulness of the Manhood dwelleth is another but he in whom the fulness of both these natures dwelleth is one and the same Immanuel and consequently one and the same person in him i. in his person dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead and all the fulness of the Manhood In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily 4. For the similitudes that resemble or set forth this mystery many are given but for our better understanding let us consider these few The first is of the soul and body that make but one man as the soul and body are two distinct things and of several natures yet being united by the hand of God they make one Person so the Godhead and Manhood are two distinct things and of several Natures yet being united by the hand of God they make but one Person Indeed herein is the similitude defective first in that the Soul and Body being imperfect natures they concur to make one full and perfect nature of a man Secondly in that the one of them is not drawn into the unity of the substance of the other but both depend on a third substance which is that of the whole The second is of Light and Sun as after the Collection of and Union of the Light with the Body of the Sun no man can pluck them asunder nor doth any man call one part the Sun and another part the Light but both of them jointly together we call the Sun even so after the Union of Flesh with that true Light the Word no man doth call the Word apart to be one Son of God and the Son of Man another Son of God but both of them jointly together we call one and the self-same Christ I know in this similitude are mamy defectives Justin Martyr de recta confes de Coessent Trinit yet if hereby we be not altogether able to attain the truth of this great Mystery certainly we have herein a most excellent similitude which will greatly help and contentedly suffice the godly and moderate searchers of this divine truth The third is of a fiery and flaming Sword as the subsistences of the Fire and Sword are so nearly conjoyned that the operations of them for the most part concur for a fiery sword in cutting burneth and in burning cutteth and we may say of the whole that this fiery thing is a sharp piercing Sword and that this sharp piercing Sword is a fiery thing even so in the union of the two natures of Christ there is a communication of properties from one of them to the other as shall be declared if the Lord permit only this similitude is defective in this in that the nature of the Iron is not drawn into the unity of the subsistence of fire nor is the nature of the fire drawn into the Unity of the subsistence of Iron so that we cannot say this fire is Iron or this Iron is fire The fourth is of one man having two qualities or accidental natures as a man that is both a Physitian and a Divine he is but one person and yet there are two natures concurring and meeting in that same one Person so we may rightly say of such a one this Physitian is a Divine and this Divine is a Physitian this Physitian is happy in saving souls and this Divine is careful in curing bodies even so is Christ both God and Man and yet but one Christ and in that one Christ according to the several natures are denominations of either part as that this man is God and this God is man or that this man made the world and this God died upon the Cross but in this similitude is this deffect in that the different natures are accidental and not essential or substantial The fifth and last is of the Branch and Tree into which it is engraffed as suppose a Vine-branch and an Olive-tree now as this Olive-tree is but one but hath two different natures in it and so it beareth two kinds of fruit and yet between the Tree and the Branch there is a composition not hujus ex his but hujus ad hoc i.e. not of a third thing out of the two things united but of one of the two things united or adjoyned to the other even so Christ is one but he hath two different natures and in them he performs the different actions pertaining to either of them and yet between the different natures the Divine and Humane nature there is a composition not hujus ex his but hujus ad hoc not of a third nature arising out of these but of the humane nature added or united to the Divine in unity of the same person so that now we may say as this Vine is an Olive-tree and this Olive-tree is a Vine or as this Vine bears Olives and this Olive-tree bears Grapes so the Son of man is the Son of God and the Son of God is the Son of Man or this Son of Man laid the Foundation of the Earth and this Son of God was born of Mary and crucified by the Jews This similitude I take it is the aptest and fullest of all the other though in some things also it doth fail for the branch hath first a separate subsistence in it self and losing it after then it is drawn into the unity of the subsistence of that Tree into which it is implanted but it is otherwise with the humane nature of Christ it never had any subsistence of its own until it was united to the person or subsistence of the Son of God 5. For the person assuming and the nature assumed and for the reason of this way we say 1. That the person assuming was a Divine person it was not the Divine nature that assumed an humane person but the Divine person that assumed an humane nature and that of the three Divine persons it was neither first nor the third neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost that did assume this nature but it was the Son the middle person who was to be the middle one that thereby 1. He might undertake the mediation between God and us 2. He might better preserve the integrity of the blessed Trinity in the Godhead 3. He might higher advance man-kind by means of that relation which the
table or behind a solid partition it stirreth the needle as effectually as if it were within view Shall not he contradict his sences that will say It cannot work because I see it not Oh my Saviour thou art more mine than my Body is mine my sense feels that present but so as that I must lose it but my faith so feels and sees thee present with me as that I shall never be parted from thee 2. It is a very near union You will say how near If an Angel were to speak to you he cannot satisfie you in this only as far as our understanding can reach it and the Creatures can serve to illustrate these things take it thus Whatsoever by way of comparison can be alledged concerning the combination of any one thing with another that and much more may be said of our union with Jesus Christ To give instance out of the Scripture see what one stick is to another being glewed together see what one friend is to another as Jonathan and David who were said to be woven and knit each one to other see how near the father and the child are how near the husband and the wife are 1 Cor. 6 17. 1 Sam. 18.1 Isa 62.5 see what union is between the Branches and the Vine the members and the head nay one thing more see what the the soul is to the body such is Christ and so near is Christ and nearer to the person of every true believer I live yet not I saith Paul but Christ liveth in me John 15.5 1 Cor. 12 12. Gal. 2.20 q. d. as the soul is to the body of a natural man that acts and enlivens it naturally so is Jesus Christ to my soul and body O there is a marvellous nearness in this mystical union 3. It is a total union i.e. whole Christ is united to the whole believer soul and body If thou art united to Christ thou hast all Christ thou art one with him in his nature in his name thou hast the same Image Grace and Spirit in thee as he hath the same precious Promises the same access to God by prayer as he thou hast the same love of the Father all that he did or suffered thou hast a share in it thou hast his life and death all is thine so on thy part he hath thee wholly thy nature thy sins the punishment of thy sins thy wrath thy curse thy shame yea thy wit and wealth and strength all that thou art or hast or canst do possibly for him It is a total union My beloved is mine and I am his whole Christ from top to toe is mine and all that I am have or can do for evermore is his 4. It is an inseparable union it can never be broken I will make saith God an everlasting Covenant with them Jer. 32.40 and I will not turn away from them to do them good I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me This is a glorious promise some poor souls may say True Lord thou wilt not turn away from me I know thou wilt not Oh but I fear I shall turn away from thee Oh alass I turn every day towards sin and Satan Nay saith God I will put my fear in their heart that thou shalt not turn away from me q. d. We shall be kept together for evermore and never be separated Hence Paul triumphantly challenges all enemies on earth or rather in hell to do their worst to break this knot Rom. 8.5 Who shall separate us from the love of God in Christ shall tribulation Distress Famine Nakedness Peril or Sword Come all that can come and see if that blessed union betwixt me and Christ shall ever be broken by all that you can do Thus for this union 2. There is a spiritual communion with God in Christ Both these are the effects of Christs personal or hypostatical union first union to his person and then communion with his benefits union in proper speaking is not unto any of the benefits flowing to us from Christ we are not united to forgiveness of Sin Holiness Peace of Conscience but unto the person of the Son of God himself and then secondly comes this communication of all the benefits arising immediately from this union to the Lord Jesus that as Christ was Priest Prophet and King so we also by him are after a sort Priests Prophets and Kings for being made one with him we are thereby possessed of all things that are his as the Wife is of the wealth of her Husband now all things are yours saith the Apostle whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the World c. Hitherto have we took a view of Christ in his Mothers Womb 1 Cor. 3 21.23 and O what marvails there Did ever womb carry such a fruit Well might the Angel say Blessed art thou amongst Women and well might Elizabeth say Blessed is the Fruit of thy Womb but the blessing is not only in conceiving but in bearing and therefore we proceed SECT VI. Of the Birth of Christ 6. THe birth of Christ now follows Now was it that the Son of Righteousness should break forth from his bed where nine months he had hid himself as behind a fruitful cloud this was the worlds wonder a thing so wonderful that it was given for a sign unto believers seven hundred and forty years before it was accomplished Isa 7.14 therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son A wonder indeed and great beyond all comparison that the Son of God should be born of a Woman that he who is the true Melchizedech without Father and without Mother must yet have a mother-Virgin that he that is before Abraham was should yet be born after Abraham a matter of two thousand years that he who was Davids Son therefore born in Bethlehem should yet be Davids Lord wonderful things are spoken of thee Heb. 7.3 O thou Son of God before he was born the Prophets sing the Sybils prophesie the Patriarchs typisie the Types foretel God promiseth and the Son of God performeth when he was born Angels run errands Gabriel brings tidings the glory of Heaven shines a Star displaies and wise men are the Heralds that proclaim his Birth But come yet a little nearer Let us go to Bethlehem as the Shepherds said and see this thing which is come to pass if we step but one step into his loding Heavens wonder is before our eyes now Look upon Jesus Luke 2.15 look on him as in fulness of time he carried on the great work of our Salvation here now you may read the meaning of Adams Covenant Abrahams promise Moses revelation Davids succession these were but vailes but now shall we draw aside the Curtains come take a view of the truth it self O wonder of wonders whom find we in this lodging a Babe in a Cratch a Mother-maid a
Humane Nature incourageth us to come unto him even after his Resurrection he was pleased to send this comfortable message to the sons of men Iohn 20.17 Go to my Brethren and say unto them I ascend to my Father and your Father and to my God and your God now as long as he is not ashamed to call us Brethren Heb. 11.16 God is not ashamed to be called our God O the sweet fruit that we may gather of this Tree the real distinction of two Natures in Christ As long as Christ is man as well as God we have a motive strong enough to appease his Father and to turn his favourable countenance towards us here is our happiness that there is one Mediator between God and Man 1 Tim. 1.5 the Man Christ Jesus 5. consider the Union of the two natures of Christ in one and the same Person as he was the branch of the Lord and the fruit of the Earth so these two natures were tied with such a Gordian knot as sin hell and the grave were never able to untie yea though in the death of Christ there was a separation of the soul from the body yet in that separation the hypostatical Union remained firm unshaken and indissoluble in this Meditation thou hast great cause O my Soul to admire and adore wonderful things are spoken of thee O Christ he is God in a Person of a God-head so as neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost were made flesh and he is man in the nature of man not properly the Person the humane nature of Christ never having any Personal subsistence out of the God-head this is a mystery that no Angel much less man is able to comprehend we have not another example of such an Union as you have heard only the nearest similitude or resemblance we can find is that of the Branch and Tree into which it is ingraffed we see one Tree may be set into another and it groweth in the Stock thereof and becometh one and the same Tree though there be two natures or kinds of fruit still remaining therein so in the Son of God made man though there be two natures yet both being united into one Person there is but one Son of God and one Jesus Christ If thou wilt consider this great mystery of Godliness any further review what hath been said in the object propounded where this union is set forth more largely and particularly but especially consider the blessed effects of this union in reference to thy self as our nature in the person of Christ is united to the God-head so our persons in and by this Union of Christ are brought nigh to God Hence it is that God doth set his Sanctuary and Tabernacle among us and that he dwells with us and which is more that he makes us houses and habitations wherein he himself is pleased to dwell by his holy Spirit Ye are the Temple of the Living God as God hath said I will dewll in them and walk in them and I will be their God John 17 20 21 22 23. and they shall be my People 2. Cor. 6.16 Was not this Christs Prayer in our behalf I pray not for these alone but for them also which shall believe on me through their word that they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us that the world may believe that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in me that they may be perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me and hast loved them as thou hast loved me By reason of this hypostatical union of Christ Gal. 4.6 the Spirit of Christ is given to us in the very moment of our regeneration And because ye are Sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father and hereby we know that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit As the members of the Body howsoever distinct amongst themselves and all differing from the head yet by reason of one soul informing both the head and members they all make one compositum or man so all believers in Christ howsoever distinct Persons amongst themselves and all distinct from the Person of Christ and especially from the Godhead which is incommunicable yet by one and the same spirit abiding in Christ Eph. 4.4 1 Cor. 6.17 and all his Members they become one there is one body and one spirit he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit O my Soul consider of this and in considering believe thy part in this and the rather because the means of this union on thy part is a true and lively faith faith is the first effect and instrument of the Spirit of Christ disposing and enabling thy soul to cleave unto Christ and for this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ that Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith Eph. 3.14 17. 6. Consider the birth of Christ this man-God God-man who in his divine generation was the Son of God in his humane generation was born in a stable for the saving of the Children of men who were as the oxe and mule having no understanding It were a fruitful meditation to consider over and over that sweet resemblance of Christ being a Vine me-thinks I hear the Voice of my beloved Cant. 2.10 13. rise up my love the fig-tree putteth forth her green figs and the vine with the tender grapes gives a good smell arise my love my fair one and come away if Christ knocks at the door who will not awake and arise if Christ comes in view who will not look unto Jesus if Christ the Vine calls us to come see the vine with the tender grape who will not taste the goodness smell the sweetness and after a little taste of that goodness and sweetness that is in him who would not long after more till we come from the first fruits to the last-fruits of the Spirit even to those visions and fruitions of Christ in Glory Consider O my soul of this Vine till thou hast brought Christ near and close unto thy self Suppose thy heart the Garden wherein this Vine was planted wherein it budded blossomed and bare fruit suppose the holy Ghost to come upon thee and to form and fashion in thee Jesus Christ thus Paul bespeaks the Galathians my little Children of whom I travel in Birth again untill Christ be formed in you would not this affect would not the whole soul be taken up with this come receive Christ into thy soul or if that work be done if Christ be formed in thee O Cherish him I speak of the Spiritual birth O keep him in thy heart let him there bud and blossome and bear fruit let him fill thy soul with his Divine Graces O that thou couldst say it feelingly I live yet not I but Christ
Blessed Object here is matter for it to work upon if thou canst possibly rejoyce in any thing at all O rejoyce in the Lord and again I say rejoyce Is there not cause read and spell what 's the meaning of the Gospel of Christ what is Gospel but Good spell or good tidings and wherein lies the good ridings according to its emency is it not in the glorious incarnation of the Son of God Luke 2.10.11 behold I bring you a Gospel so it is in the Original or behold I bring you good tidings of great joy which shall be to all People for unto you is born this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. The Birth of Christ to them that have but touched hearts is the comfort of comforts and the sweetest balm and confection that ever was Oh my Soul what ailes thee Why art thou cast down and disquieted within me Is it because thou art a sinner why unto thee is born a Saviour his Name is Saviour and therefore Saviour because he will save his people from their sins Come then and bring out thy Sins and weigh them to the utmost aggravation of them and take in every Circumstance both of Law and Gospel and set but this in the other Scale that unto thee is born a Saviour surely all thy iniquities will seem lighter than vanity yea they will be as nothing in comparison thereof My Soul doth Magnifie the Lord said Mary and my spirit rejoyceth in God my Saviour Luke 1.46.47 Her soul and her spirit within her rejoyced at this Birth of Christ there is cause that every Soul and every Spirit should rejoyce that hath any interest in this Birth of Christ O my soul how shouldest thou but rejoyce if thou wilt consider these particulars 1. God himself is come down into the World because it was impossible for thee to come to him he is come to thee this consideration made the Prophet cry out Rejoyce greatly O thou Daughter of Zion Z●ch 9.9 shout O Daughter of Jerusalem behold thy King cometh unto thee he is called a King and therefore he is able and he is thy King and therefore he is willing but in that thy King cometh unto thee here is the marvilous love and mercy of God in Christ Kings do not usually come to visit and wait upon their Subjects it is well if poor Subjects may come to them and be admitted into their Presence to wait on them O but see the great King of Heaven Earth the King of Kings and Lord of Lords stooping and bowing the heavens to come down to thee surely this is good tidings of great joy and therefore rejoyce greatly O Daughter of Zion A little joy is too scant and narrow for this news hearts should be enlarged the doors and gates should be set wide open for this King of Glory to come in as Balaam said of Israel God is with him and the shout of a King is amongst them Num. 23.21 so now may we say God is with us and the shout of a King is amongst us Rejoyce Zion Shout O Daughter of Jerusalem 2. God is come down in flesh he hath laid aside as it were his own Glory whilest he converseth with thee when God manifested himself as on Mount Sinai he came down in Thunder and Lightning and if now he had appeared in Thunder and Lightning if now he had been guarded with an innumerable Company of Angels all having their Swords of vengeance and justice drawn well might poor souls have trembled and have run into corners for who could ever be able to endure his coming in this way but lo poor Soul God is come down in flesh he hath made his appearance as a man as one of us and there is not in this regard the least distance betwixt him and us Surely this is fewel for joy to feed upon O why should God come down so sutably so lowly as in our nature if he would have thy poor soul to be afraid of him doth not this very design intend consolation to thy soul O gather up thy Spirit anoint thy heart with the Oyl of gladness see God himself is come down in flesh to live amongst us he professeth he will have no other life but amongst the Sons of men see what a sweet way of familiarity and entercourse is made betwixt God and us now he is come down in humane frailty 3. God hath took on him our Nature as a vast pipe to his Godhead that it may flow out in all manner of sweetness upon our hearts if God had come down in flesh only to have been seen of us Exod. 33.12 it had been a wonderful condescention and a great mercy if I have found favour in thy eyes said Moses shew me thy way that I may know thee but to come down in flesh and to come down in flesh not only to be seen but to dispatch the great business of our souls Salvation here 's comfort indeed with what joy should we draw water out of this well of salvation Surely the great reason of the shallowness of our Comforts shortness of our Hopes the faintness of our spirits the lowness of our Graces is from the not knowing or the not heeding of this particular Christ in flesh stands not for a Cypher but it is an Organ of life and grace unto us it is a fountain of comfort that can never run dry In this flesh there is laid in on purpose such a fulness of the Godhead that of his fulness we might receive in our measure grace for grace O my soul thou art daily busy in eying this and that but above all know that all the fulness God lies in Christ incarnate to be emptied upon thee this was the meaning of Christ taking on him flesh that through his flesh he might convey to thee whatsoever is in himself as God As for instance God in himself is Good and Gracious and Powerful and All-sufficient and Merciful and what not Now by his being in flesh he suites all this and conveyes all this to thee observe this for thy eternal comfort God in and through the flesh makes all his Attributes and Glory serviceable to thy soul 4. God in our Nature hath laid out the Model and Draught of what he will do unto all his Saints for ever humane nature was never so advanced before what to be glorified above the Angels to be united in a Personal union with the second person of the Godhead surely hence may be expected great matters here 's a fair step for the bringing of our Persons up to the enjoyment of God if God be come down in the likeness of man why then he will bring us up into the likeness of God look what was done to our nature in Christ the very same as far as we are capable shall be done to our persons in Heaven Think of it O my soul why hath God made flesh so
cancelling of the bond so the payment was wrought by Christ's death and the cancelling of the Bond was at his resurrection I shall not disprove either of these I am sure this is without all controversie that Christ rose that it might fully appear that now the Bond was cancelled and Gods Justice satisfied 4. That he might overcome and conquer sin death and devil and hence the Apostle cryes victory upon the occasion of Christ's resurrection 1. Cor. 15.55 O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory now was the day that he broke the prison and carryed the keys of death and hell at his own girdle now was the day that he spoiled Principalities and Powers that he troad on the Serpents head and all-to-bruised it that he came upon him took from him his armour wherein he trusted and divided his spoyles now was the day that the Jew lost his rage and death his sting and the grave his corruption and Hell his purchase now was the day of his victory over all his enemies now was the day that the Phaenix sprung up out of its own ashes that Jonas came safe out of the belly of the whale that the Tabernacle of David that was fallen was raised again that the Son of righteousness covered with a cloud appeared and shone with greater lustre than before that Sampson took the gates of the City and carryed them away He arose even upon that account 1 Cor. 15.20 5. That he might become the first-fruits of them that slept Christ is called the first-fruits in a double respect 1. In respect of the day whereon he rose Paul was an excellent critick the very feast carryed him to the word as the day of his passion was the day of the passeover and the Apostle thence could say Christ is our passeover 1 Cor. 15.7 1 Cor. 5.7 1 Cor. 15.20 Lev. 22.10 11. So the day of Christ's rising was the day of the first-fruits and the Apostle thence could say Christ is our first-fruits Concerning this feast of the first fruits we read Lev. 22.10 11. It was their first harvest of their basest grain Barley but the full harvest of their best grain of Wheat was not till pentecost Now upon this day the morrow after the Sabbath the beginning of their first harvest when the sheaf of their first-fruits was brought unto the Priest and waved before the Lord Christ arose from the dead and in this respect Paul calls him the first fruits of them that sleep of all the Saints 1 Cor. 15.20 He arose first as on this day for the full Harvest is not till doomes-day the general Resurrection day 2. he is called the first-fruits in respect of them whom he thereby sanctified for as an handful of the first-fruits sanctified the whole Field of corn that was growing so Jesus Christ the first-fruits of the dead sanctifies all those who are lying in the grave to rise again by his Power even when they are in the dust of death 1 Cor. 15.17 28. If Christ be not risen saith the Apostle ye are yet in your sins But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep 6. That being formerly abased as a servant and crucified as a sinner he might thus be declared to be the Son of God and exalted to be a Prince and Saviour of men and so his name might be glorified of all the World He was made of the Seed of David according to the flesh Rom. 1.3 4. and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of Holiness by the resurrection from the dead It was of necessary consequence that he that was so humbled must be thus exalted therefore will I divide him a portion with the great Isa 53.12 and he shall divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his soul unto death agreeable to which is that of Christ Thus it is written and thus it behooved Christ to suffer Luke 24.46 and to rise from the dead the third day When Peter was Preaching Christ to the high Priest and councel that condemned him to death he told them that the God of our Fathers hath raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a tree him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour Act. 5.30 31. Phil. 2.8.9 and suitable to this is that of Paul he humbled himself and became obedient to the death even to the death of the Cross wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name It was for his own glory and his Fathers glory that he should rise again from the dead 1 Pet. 1.21 Phil. 2.11 God raised him up from the dead and gave him glory and he was therefore exalted that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Of all the reasons of Christ's resurrection we must look upon this as the main for as he hath made all things for himself so he hath done all things for his own glory Rom. 6.4 Christ was raised up from the dead saith the Apostle by the glory of the Father By the glory or to the glory or for the glory of himself and of his Father SECT III. Of the manner of Christ's Resurrection 3. HOw he rose for the manner of his resurrection we may consider in it these particulars 1. That Christ rose again as a common Person he stood in our stead and therefore when he rose from death we and all the Church of Christ rose together with him and in him We have formerly observed that Christ took upon him the Person of no man he took only the nature of man into the union of the second Person that so he might dye and rise again not as a Particular but a common Person that he might be as a representative in our room and stead that he might be as a Spiritual head and as the second Adam who could infuse life into all his members In this respect the Apostle makes comparison betwixt Adam and Christ now Adam we know was reckoned before his fall as a common publick Person not standing singly or alone for himself but as representing all mankinde to come of him so Jesus Christ is reckoned to us both before his death and in his death and after his death as a common publick Person not living dying or rising again singly or alone for himself but as representing all the believers in the world and hence it is that Adam is called the first man 1 Cor. 15.47 and Jesus Christ is called the second man as if there never had been nor ever should be any more men in the world save only these two and why but because these two between them had all the rest of the Sons of men hanging at their girdles Adam had all the Sons of men born into this world called
gone to Heaven surely this was the meaning God would rather that the main points of faith should be learned by hearing than by seeing however Christ's own Disciples were taught the same by sight that they might better teach others which should not see yet the ordinary means to come by faith is hearing Rom. 10.14 17 18. how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard so then faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God And as for the Jews saith the Apostle have they not heard yes verily their sound went into all the earth and their words unto the end of the world 3. He ascended principally by the mighty power of his God-head thus never any ascended up into heaven but Jesus Christ for though Enoch and Elijah were assumed into heaven yet not by their own power nor by themselves it was God's power by which they ascended 2 Kings 2.11 and it was by the help and Ministry of Angels there appeared a chariot of fire and horses of fire and Elijah went up by a Whirl-wine into Heaven Acts 1 9. 4. He ascended in a cloud While they beheld he was taken up and a cloud received him out of their sight Hereby he shews that he is Lord of all the creatures he had already trampled upon the earth walked upon the sea vanquished hell or the grave and now the clouds received him and the heavens are opened to make way for this King of Glory to enter in Mat. 24.30 Mat. 26.4 When Christ shall come again it is said that he shall come in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power and coming in the clouds of heaven Which verifies that saying of the Angel Acts 1.11 This same Jesus which is taken up from you into heaven shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven He went up in clouds and he shall come again in clouds 5. He ascended in the found of a trumpet not on earth sounding Hosanna but in Heaven Psal 47.5 crying Hallelujah So the Psalmist God is gone up with a shout the Lord with the sound of a trumpet Certainly great joy was in heaven at Christ's ascending thither the very Angels struck up their Harps and welcomed him thither with Hymns and Praises 6. He ascended in triumph as a Roman Victor ascended to the Capitol or as David ascended after his conquest up to Zion Now we read of two triumphal Acts in Christs Ascension whereof the first was his leading of his captives and the second was the dispersing of his gifts the Apostle and the Psalmist joyn both together Psal 68.18 Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men 1. He led them captive who had captivated us Death was led captive without a sting Hell was led captive as one that had lost her victory the Law was led captive being rent and fastened to his Cross as it were Ensign wise the Serpents head being bruised was led before him in triumph as was Golias's head by David returning from the victory and this was the first Act of his triumph 2. He gave gifts unto men this was as the running of Conduits with wine or as the casting abroad of new Coyn or as the shutting up of Christs triumph in his ascension up to heaven what these gifts were we shall speak in the Mission of the holy Ghost only thus much for the present SECT II. Of the place whither he ascended 3. WHither he ascended the Gospel tells us into heaven only Paul saith that he ascended far above all heavens But the meaning is Ephes 4 10. he went above all these visible Heavens into those heavenly Mansions where the Angels and the Spirits of the just have their aboad Or if the highest heavens be included I see no absurdity in it the highest Heaven we usually call The Kingdom of Heaven which is either Heaven material or heaven s●iritual and first for the material Heaven in some sense he may be said to ascend above that both in respect of his Body because the Body of Christ is more glorious than any material Heaven And in respect of his soul because the Soul of Christ is more blessed than all things else whatsoever And 2 For the spiritual Heaven i.e. all Angelical or Heavenly perfections he is said to ascend above them all both in respect of his humiliation because he hath vilified himself below all things and therefore he is worthily exalted above all things and in respect of his perfection because the humane nature of Christ is more excellent than any creature it being joyned to the Godhead by an hypostatical union Some there are that understand this place of Christs ascending far above all Heavens not so much by a l●cal motion as by a Spiritual mutation and exaltation of his person as earth heightned unto a flame changeth not its place only but form and figure so the person of our Saviour was raised to a greatness and glory vastly differing from and surmounting any image of things visible or invisible in this Creation so it is fitly expressed Heb. 7.26 He was made higher than the Heavens he was heightened to a splendor enlarged to a capacity and compass above the brightest and beyond the widest Heavens he transcended all in the spirituallity of his Ascension but I shall not much insist on that SECT III. Of the Reasons why he Ascended 4. WHy he ascended the Reasons are 1. On Christ's part that through his Passion he might pass to glory Luke 24.26 Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and so to enter into his glory I shall not insist on that controversie whether Christ merited for himself this is without controversie that by his Passion I will not say he properly merited but he obtained glory because he humbled himself so low God exalted him above the Grave in his Resurrection above the Earth in his Ascension and above the Heavens in placing him at his right hand And he ascended that all those Prophesies which were foretold of Christ might be accomplished Thou hast ascended on high And his feet shall stand in that day upon the Mount of Olives Psal 68.18 Zach. 14.4 which is before Jerusalem on the East The types of this were Enoch's translation Elijahs's ascension Sampson's transportation of the gates of Gezza into an high mountain the high Priests going into the Holy of Holies Seeing that we have a great high Priest Heb. 4.14 that is passed into the heavens Jesus the Son of God Why all these prophesies types figures must needs be accomplished and therefore on his part it was necessary that Christ must ascend and go into Heaven 2. The Reasons on our part are 1. That in our stead he might triumph over sin death and hell In his Resurrection he conquered but in his
to obey their Commands and to imitate their Godly Example we cannot honour God more than when we are Humbled at his Feet to receive his Word than when we renounce the Manners of the world Deut. 31.3 Ephes 5.1 to become his Followers as dear Children O think of this for when we conform indeed then are we Holy as he is Holy and Pure as he is Pure and then How should this but tend to the Honour and Glory of our Good God Thus far we have Looked on Jesus as our Jesus in that dark Time before His Coming in the Flesh Our next Work is to Look on Jesus carrying on the Great VVork of Man's Salvation in His First Coming or Incarnation LOOKING UNTO JESUS In His Birth The Fourth Book CHAP. I. Luke 2.15 Let us now go even to Bethlehem and see this Thing SECT I. Of the Tidings of Christ IN this Period as in the former we shall first lay down the Object and secondly direct you how to Look unto it The Object is Jesus carrying on the Work of Man's Salvation in His first Coming in the Flesh until His Coming again But because in this long Period we have many Transactions which we cannot with Conveniency dispatch together we shall therefore break it into smaller pieces and present this Object Jesus Christ 1. In his Birth 2. In his Life 3. In his Death 4. In his Resurrection 5. In his Ascension Session at God's Right Hand and Mission of his Holy Spirit 6. In his Intercession for his Saints in which Business he now is and will be employed till his Second Coming to Judgment 1. First For the Transactions of Jesus in His Birth Some things we must propound before and some things after his Birth so that we shall continue this Period till the Time of John's Baptism or the Exercise of his Ministry upon Earth Now in all the Transactions of this Time we shall especially handle these 1. The Tidings of Christ 2. The Conception of Christ 3. The Duplicity of Natures in Christ 4. The real Distinction in that Duty 5. The wonderful Union notwithstanding that Distinction 6. The Birth of Christ 7. Some Consequents after his Birth whil'st yet a Child of Twelve Years old The First Passage in Relation to his Birth is The Tidings of Christ This appears Luk. 1.26 27 28 c. And in the Sixth Month the Angel Gabriel wat sent from God c. Luk. 1.26 31. I shall a little ins●st on some of these Words 1. The Messenger is an Angel Man was too mean to carry the News of the Conception of God Never any Business was Conceived in Heaven that did so much concern the Earth as the Conception of the God of Heaven in a Womb of Earth no less therefore than an Angel was worthy to bear these Tidings and never Angel received a greater Honour than of this Embassage Angels have been sent to divers as to Gideon Manoah David Daniel Eliah Zechariah c. And then the Angel honoured the Message but here 's a Message that doth honour the Angel he was highly glorious before but this added to his glory Indeed the Incarnation of God could have no less a Reporter than the Angel of God When God intended to begin his Gospel he would first visit the World wirh his Angel before he would visit the World with his Son His Angel must come in the Form of Man before his Son must come in the Nature of Man This Angel salutes the Virgin Hail thou that art highly favoured the Lord is with thee blessed art thou among Women Luke 1.28 Many Men and Women have been and are the Spiritual Temples of God but never was any the material Temple of God but only Mary and therefore Blessed art thou amongst Women and yet we cannot say that she was so Blessed in Bearing Christ as she was in Believing in Christ her Bearing indeed was more Miraculous but her Believing was more Beneficial to her Soul that was her Priviledge but this was her Happiness Christians If we believe in Christ and if we obey the Word of Christ we are the Mothers of Christ Whosoever doth the Will of My Father which is in H●aven Mat. 12.50 Luke 11.27 he is my Brother and Sister and Mother Every renewed Heart is another Mary a spiritual Sanctuary of the Lord Jesus It was the Woman's Acclamation Blessed is the Womb that bare thee and the Paps that gave thee suck True said Christ but that Blessing extends only to one I will tell you how many are Blessed and rather Blessed yea Vers 28. rather Blessed are they that hear God's Word and keep it Blessed are they that so incarnate the written Word by doing it as the Blessed Virgin gave Flesh to the Eternal Word by bearing it those that hear and keep God's Word are they that Travel in Birth again until Christ be formed in them Gal. 41.9 Hearing they Receive the Immortal Seed of the Word by a firm Purpose of doing they conceive by a longing Desire they quicken by an earnest Endeavourr they travel and when the Work is wrought then have they incarnate the Word and Christ is formed in them In this Respect was Mary ●lessed and I make no question but in this Respect also the Angel calls her Blessed and Elizabeth calls her Blessed and Simeon calls her Blessed and She calls her self Blessed and all Generations call her Blessed and God Himself calls and makes her Blessed yea as Paul said Cometh this Blessedness on the Circumcision only so cometh this Blessedness on the Virgin only No Rom. 4.9 Mat. 5.3 4 5. Psal 32.2 even Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Blessed are they that mourn Blessed are the Meek and Blessed are they whose Sins are not imputed Even these hath God blessed with Spiritual Blessings in Heavenly Places and these shall Christ entertain with a Come ye Blessed of My Father Luke 1.29 3. This Virgin is Troubled at this Salute She might well be troubled For 1. If it had been but a Man that had come in so suddenly when she expected none or so secretly when she had no other Company or so strangely the Doors being probably shut she had cause to be troubled How much more when the shining Glory of the Angel so heightned the Astonishment 2. Her Sex was more subject to fear If Zachary were amazed with the sight of this Angel How much more the Virgin We flatter our selves how well we could endure such Visions but there is a difference betwixt our Faith and our Senses to apprehend here the Presence of God by Faith this goes down sweetly But should a Glorious Angel appear among us it would amaze us all But for this the Angel comforts her Vers 30. Fear not Mary for thou hast found Favour with God The Troubles of Holy Minds ever end in Peace or Comfort Joy was the Errand of the Angel and not Terrour and therefore suddenly he revives her
liveth in me Gal. 2.20 O that this were the Issue of thy meditation on Christs Birth even whiles thou art going with the shepherds to Bethelem and there findest thy Saviour lying in a Cratch that thou wouldst bring him thence and make thy heart to be his Cradle I would not give a farthing for a meditation meerly on the History of Christ's Birth either draw vertue from him by feeling him within or thy meditation will be fruitless 7. Consider those few consequents after Christs Birth every action of Christ is our instruction here are many particulars but none in vain Christ is considered under much variety of notion but he is still sweet under all Is it possible O my soul that thou shouldst tyre thy self in the contemplations of Jesus Christ if one flower yield thee not pleasure or delight go to a second a third observe how the Bees gather honey after a while that they have sucked one flower they go to another so for a while observe the circumcision of Jesus Christ and suck there and gather some honey out of that flower Christ had never been Circumcised but that the same might be done to our souls that was done to his Body O that the same Christ would do that in us that was done to him for us Again observe Christs presentation in the Temple this was the Law of those that first opened the womb now Christ was the first-born of Mary and indeed the first-born of all Creatures and he was consecrate unto God that by him we might be consecrate and made holy and that by him we might be accepted when we are offered unto the Lord. Again observe Christs flight into Egypt though the infancy is usually most quiet and devoyd of trouble yet here life and toyle began together and see how speedily this comes after Christs dedication unto God Alas Alas We are no sooner born again then we are persecuted if the Church travel and bring forth a Male she is in danger of the Dragons streams Again observe Christ's return into Judea Mat. 15.25 he was not sent but to the lost Sheep of the House of Israel with them alone he was personally to converse in his Ministry in which respect he was called a Minister of Circumcision Rom. 15.8 And where should he be trained and shew himself but amongst them to whom God had sent him The Gospel first began there and as a preparation to it Christ now in his Childhood returns thither Again observe Christ Disputing with the Doctors in the Temple in his very non-age Christ gives a taste of his future proof see how early his divine graces put forth themselves In Him were hid saith the Apostle all the Treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge Col. 2.3 all the treasures were hid in him and yet some of those treasures appeared very early betimes his wisdom in his very infancy is admired at nor is it without our profit for of God he is made wisdom unto us 1 Cor. 1.38 Again observe how he spent the remainder of his Youth in all his examples he meant our Instructions He went down with his Parents and was subject to them Lam. 3.27 he was not idely bred but serves his Generation in the poor way of a Carpenter It is every way good for a Man to bear God's Yoke even from his Infancy Christ is enured betimes to the hardship of life and to the strict observation of the Law both of God and Nature See O my Soul what a world of matter is before thee to consider of here is Jesus under many a Nation here 's the annuntiation of Jesus the conception of Jesus the duplicity of natures in Jesus the real distinction the wonderful union the nativity of Jesus together with some consequents after it Go over these with often and frequent thoughts give not over till thou feelest thy Heart begin to warm true Meditation is as the bellows of the Soul that doth kindle and inflame holy affections and by renewed and more forcible thoughts as by renewed and stronger blasts it doth renew and increase the flame SECT III. Of Desiring after Jesus in that Respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation at his first coming or incarnation It is not enough to know and consider but we must desire Now What is desire but a certain Motion of the Appetite by which the Soul darts it self towards the absent good purposely to draw near and to unite it self thereunto The incarnation of Christ according to the Letter was the desire of Nations so the Prophet Hag. 2.7 I will shake all Nations and the Desire of all Nations shall come O how they that lived before Christ Desired after this coming of Christ Abraham Desired to see that day Two Thousand Years and more before it came it was the expectation of all the Patriarchs O when will that day come And surely the incarnation of Christ in the fruit or efficacy or application is or should be the Desire of all Christians There is merit and vertue in Jesus Christ in every passage of Christ in his conception incarnation in his birth and in those consequents after his birth now to make these ours that we may have our share and part and interest in them we must here begin O my soul do thou desire do thou seek to possess thy self of Christ set thy desire as the Needle point aright and all the rest will follow never will union be with the absent good but the Soul by Desire must first dart it self towards it True it is and pity it is Millions of Souls stand at a distance from Jesus Christ and why they have no desire towards him but O that my soul and thy soul whosoever thou art that readest would Desire O that we could Desire and long after him until we languish and be compelled to cry out with the spouse Cant. 2.5 Stay me with flaggons and comfort me with Apples for I am Sick of Love Is there not good reason for it What is there in Christ that is not Desirable view over all those excellencies of his conception of his two natures really distinguished and yet wonderfully united of his birth of those few consequents after his birth but above all see the fruit of all he was conceived that our conceptions might be sanctified he was the Son of man that he might suffer for us and the Son of God that he might satisfie divine justice he was God and Man in one person that we might be one with him Members of his Body and of his Flesh and of his Bones Eph. 5.30 he was born of the Virgin that there might be a spiritual conception and birth of Christ in our Virgin-hearts or he was conceived and born that we might conceive the grace of Christ in our hearts and bring it forth in our lives What Are not these desirable things Never tell me of thy present
there 's no room for faith in this case these are the hinderances 2. The helps of faith in this sad condition are these 1. A consideration that God is pleased to pass by and to overlook the unworthiness of his poor creatures this we see plain in the very act of his incarnation himself disdains not to be as his poor creatures to wear their own flesh to take upon him humane nature and in all things to become like unto man sin only excepted 2. A consideration that God satisfies Justice by setting up Christ who is Justice it self now was it that mercy and truth met together and righteousness and peace kissed each other now was it that free grace and merit that fulness and nothingness were made one now was it that all things became nothing and nothing all things our nature which lay in rags was enriched with the unsearchable treasures of glory now was it that God was made flesh and so that flesh which was so weak as not able to save its own life was now enabled to save millions of souls and to bring forth the greatest designs of God now was it that truth ran to mercy and embraced her and righteousness to peace and kissed her in Christ they meet yea in him was the infinite exactness of God's Justice satisfied 3. A consideration that God hath set up Christ as a Mediator that he was incarnate in order to reconciliation and salvation of souls but for the accomplishment of this design Christ had never been incarnate the very end of his uniting flesh unto him was in order to the reconciliation of us poor souls alas we had sinned and by sin deserved everlasting damnation but to save us and to satisfie himself God takes our nature and joyns it to his Son and calls that Christ a Saviour This is the Gospel-notion of Christ for what is Christ but God himself in our nature transacting our peace In this Christ is that fulness and righteousness and love and bowels to receive the first acts of our faith and to have immediate union and communion with us indeed we pitch not our faith first or immediately on God himself yet at last we come to him and our faith lives in God as one saith sweetly before it is aware through the sweet intervention of that person which is God himself only called by another name the Lord Jesus Christ and these are the helps of faith in reference to our unworthiness Gods justice and the want of a Mediator betwixt God and us 3. The manner how to act our faith on Christ incarnate is this 1. Faith must directly go to Christ we find indeed in the Bible some particular promises of this and that grace and in proper speaking the way to live by faith it is to live upon the promises in the want of the thing or to apprehend the thing it self contained in the promise but the promises are not given to the elect immediately without Christ no no first Christ and then all other things Encline your ears and come unto me 1. Come unto Christ and then I will make an everlasting Covenant which contains all the promises even the sure Mercies of David As in marriage the woman first consents to have the man and then all the benefits that necessarily follow so the soul by faith first pitcheth upon Christ himself and then on the priviledges that flow from Christ Say Soul dost thou want any temporal Blessing suppose it be the payment of Debts thy dayly Bread Health c. Why look now through the Scripture for promises of these things and let thy faith act thus If God hath given me Christ the greatest blessing then certainly he will give me all these things so far as they may be for my good in the twenty thirst Psalm we find a bundle of promises but he begins thus The Lord is my Shepherd saith David and what then Therefore I shall not want the believing Patriarchs through faith subdued Kingdoms wrought righteousness obtained promises stoped the mouths of Lyons did wonders in the world but what did they chiefly look to in this their Faith Surely to the promise to come and to that better thing Christ himself and therefore the Apostle concludes having such a cloud of witnesses that thus lived and died by faith let us look unto Jesus the Author and finisher of our Faith 2. Faith must directly go to Christ as God in our flesh some think it a carnal apprehension of Jesus Christ to know him as in flesh I confess to know him only so and absolutely so to consider Jesus no other way but as having flesh and going up and down in weakness it is no better than a carnal apprehension but to consider Christ as God in flesh and to consider that flesh as acted by God and filled with God it is not a carnal but a true and spiritual apprehension of Jesus Christ and hither is faith to be directed immediately and in the first place suppose a case of danger by some enemies and I find a promise of protection from my enemies I look on that but in the first place thus I argue if the Lord hath given me Christ God in the flesh to save me from Hell then much more will he save me from these fleshly enemies Thus Juda had a promise that Syria should not prevail against Judah they doubted of this Isa 7.14 but how doth the Lord seek to assure them why thus a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and his name shall be Immanuel this seems a strong reason to flesh and blood I knew one turn Infidel and to deny Jesus Christ upon this very argument Ah thought he what a grand imposture is this that Christ's conception and Christ's birth many years after should be a present sign of ruin of Rezin King of Aram and of the preservation of Ahaz King of Judah alas poor soul he was not acquainted with this art of living by faith he might have seen the very same reason elsewhere the yoke of their burthen Isa 9.4 6. and the stuff of their shoulder and the rod of their oppressor shall be broken for unto us a child is born and unto us a Son is given if their faith had not first respected Christ incarnate they could never have expected any temporal deliverance by that promise of deliverance first laid down But in this way they might and so may we You will say what 's this to us they looked for Christ to come in the flesh but now he is come and that time and design is gone and past many a year since I answer no the time is gone but the design is not Christ remains God in the flesh to this very day he came not as once to manifest himself in flesh to satisfie Gods justice in the flesh for sin and so to lay it down again that flesh remains and shall remain nor is it without use for all the spirit and life which the
saw thee in danger of death through thy own unbelief for except thou sawest in his hands the print of the nails and put thy finger into the print of the nails except thou hadst clear manifestations of Christ even to thine own sense thou wouldest not believe he condescends so far to succour thy weakness as to manifest himself by several witnesses three in heaven and three on earth yea he multiplies his three on earth to thousands of thousands so many were the signes witnessing Christ that the Disciple which testified of them John 21.25 could say If they should be written every one the world could not contain the Books that should be written 4. When he saw the buying and selling in the Temple yea making Merchandize of the Temple it self I mean of thy Soul which is the Temple of the holy Ghost he steps in to whip out those Buyers and Sellers those Lusts and Corruptions O cries he will you sell away your souls for Trash O what is a man profitted though he gain the whole world and lose his own Soul Prov. 30.2 3. 5. When he saw thee like the horse and mule more brutish than any man not having the understanding of a man thou neither learnedst wisdom nor hadst the knowledge of the most holy he came with his instructions adding line unto line and precept on precept teaching and preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom and sealing his truths with many Miracles Mat. 4.23 that thou maist believe and in believing thou mightest have life through his Name and Oh! what is this but to make thee wise unto salvation 6. When he saw thee a sinner of the Gentiles a stranger from the common-wealth of Israel and without God in the world he sent his Apostles and Messengers abroad and bad them preach the Gospel to thee q. d. Go to such a one in the dark corner of the world an Isle at such a distance from the Nation of the Jews and set up my Throne amongst that people open the most precious Cabinet of my Love there and amongst that People tell such a Soul that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom he is one O admirable Love 7. When he saw thee cast down in thy self and refusing thy own Mercy crying and saying what is it possible that Jesus Christ should send a Message to such a dead Dog as I am why the Apostles Commission seems otherwise Go not into the way of the Gentiles Mat. 10.5 6. or into any City of the Samaritans enter ye not but go rather to the lost sheep of the House of Israel O I am a lost sheep but not being of the House of Israel what hope is there that ever I should be found He then appeared and even then he spred his arms wide to receive thy soul he satisfied thee then of another Commission given to his Apostles Go teach all Nations And he cried even then Come unto me thou that art weary and heavy laden with sin and I will receive thee into my bosom Mat. 28.19 and give thee rest there 8. When he saw thee in suspence and heard thy complaint But if I come shall I find sweet welcome I have heard that his ways are narrow and straight Oh it is an hard passage and an high ascent up to heaven Many seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.24 Oh! what shall become of my poor Soul why then he told thee otherwise Prov. 3.17 that all his ways were ways of pleasantness and all his paths peace he would give thee his Spirit that should bear the weight and make all light he would sweeten the ways of Christianity to thee that thou shouldest find by experience that his yoke was easie Mat. 11.29 and his burden was light 9. When he saw the wretchedness of thy Nature and original pollution he took upon him thy Nature and by this means took away thy original sin O here is the lovely Object What is it but the absolute holiness and perfect purity of the Nature of Christ This is the fairest Beauty that ever eye beheld this is that compendium of all Glories now if Love be a motion and union of the Appetite to what is lovely how shouldst thou flame forth in loves upon the Lord Jesus Christ this is rendered as the reason of those sparklings Thou art fairer than the children of men Psal 45.2 10. When he saw thee actually unclean a transgressor of the Law in thought word Heb. 10.9 and deed then he said Lo I come to do thy will O God and wherefore would he do Gods will but meerly on thy behalf O my Soul canst thou read over all these passages of Love and dost thou not yet cry out O stay me comfort me for I am sick of Love Can a man stand by an hot and fiery furnace and never be warmed Oh for an heart in some measure answerable to these Loves Surely even good natures hate to be in debt for love and is therein thee O my soul neither grace nor yet good nature O God forbid awake awake thy ardent love towards the Lord Jesus Christ why thou art rock and not flesh if thou beest not wounded with these heavenly darts Christ loves thee is not that enough fervent affection is apt to draw love where is little or no beauty and excellent beauty is apt to draw the heart where there is no answer of affection at all but when these two meet together what breast can hold against them See O my soul here is the sum of all the particulars thou hast heard Christ loves thee and Christ is lovely his heart is set upon thee who is a thousand times fairer than all the children of men doth not this double consideration like a mighty loadstone snatch thy heart unto it and almost draw it forth of thy very breast O sweet Saviour thou couldst say even of thy poor Church though labouring under many imperfections Thou hast ravished my Heart Cant. 4.9 10. my Sister my Spouse thou hast ravished mine heart with one of thine eyes with one chain of thy neck how fair is thy love my Sister my Spouse how much better is thy love than wine and the smell of thy oyntments than all Spices Couldst thou O blessed Saviour be so taken with the incurious and homely features of the Church and shall not I much more be enamoured with thy absolute and divine Beauty It pleased thee my Lord out of thy sweet ravishments of thy heavenly love to say to thy poor Church Turn away thine Eyes from me for they have overcome me but Oh let me say to thee Turn thine eyes to me that they may overcome me my Lord Cant. 6.5 I would be thus ravished I would be overcome I would be thus out of my self that I might be all in thee Thus is the Language of true love to Christ but alas how dully and flatly do I speak
from the custome of Kings who place those they honour an● to whom they commit the Power of government at their right hand more particularly this sitting at Gods right hand implies two things 1. his glorious exaltation 2. The actual administration of his Kingdom Phil. 2.9 1. Christ is exalted Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow this Session is the supreme dignity and glory given by the Father unto Christ after his Ascension this Session is the peerless exaltation of the Mediator in his Kingdom of glory But how was Christ exalted I answer 1. In regard of his divine nature not really or in it self Impossible it was that the divine nature should receive any intrinsecal improvement or glory because all fulness of glory essentially belonged unto it but declaratory or by way of manifestation so it was that his D●vinity during the time of his humiliation lay hidden and overshadowed as the light of a candle is hidden in a dark and close lanthorn but now in his Session that Divinity and Glory which he had alwayes with his Father was shewed forth and declared Rom. 1.4 He was declared to be the Son of God with Power both at his resurrection and at his Session 2 I● regard of his humane nature and ye● that must be understood soberly for I cannot think that Christs humane nature was at all exalted in regard of the grace of Pers●nal union or in regard of the habitual perfections of his humane soul because he possessed all these from the beginning but in regard of those interceptions of the beams of the Godhead and Divine glory and in respect of the restraints of that sense and sweetness and feeling opperations of the beatifical Vision during his humiliation in these respects Christ was exalted in his humane nature and had all the glory from the Diety communicated to it which possibly in any way it was capable of There was a time when the Office which Christ undertook for us made him a man of sorrows but when he had finished that dispensation then he was filled with unmatchable glory which before his Session he enjoyed not there was a time when the natural consequence and flowings of Christ's glory from that personal union was stayed and hindred by special dispensation for the working of our salvation but when that miraculous stay was once removed and the work of our redemption fully finished then he was exalted beyond the capacity or comprehension of all the Angels of heaven Heb. 1.13 To which of the Angels said he at any time sit at my right hand in this respect it is said that God highly exalted him exalted he was in his Resurrection Ascension but never so high as at his Session in his Resurrection he was exalted with Jonah from the lower parts to the upper parts of the earth in his Ascension he was exalted with Elijah above the Clouds above the Stars above the Heavens but in his Session he was exalted to the highest place in Heaven even to the right hand of God Far above all Heavens that he might fill all things Eph. 4.10 2. Christ reigns or actually administers his glorious Kingdom and this is the principal part of Christ's sitting at God's right hand So the Psalmist Psal 110.1 2. The Lord said unto my Lord sit thou at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy foot-stool the Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion rule thou in the midst of thy enemies The Apostle is yet more large God set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places Eph. 1.20 21 22 23. far above all principallity and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be the head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Some describe this Session at Gods right hand to be all one with his reigning in equal power and glory with the Father but the Son hath alwayes so reigned and the holy Ghost hath alwayes so reigned who yet is not said in Scripture to sit at the right hand of the Father I believe therefore there is something in this Session or Reign of Christ which doth difference it from that reigning Power and Glory of the Father and of the Son as only God and of the holy Ghost and if we would know what that is I would call it an actual administration of his Kingdom or an immediate executing of his Power and Glory over every creature as Mediator There is a natural and a dispensatory Kingdom of Jesus Christ for the first the Father reigns immediatly by the Son but by the holy Ghost the Father doth not reign immediatly but through the Son the same order is to be kept in their power which is in the Persons the Father reigns not by himself but of himself because he is of none the Son reigneth by himself not of himself because he is begotten of the Father the holy Ghost reigneth by himself but from the Father and the Son from whom he doth proceed And as in the natural so in the dispensatory Kingdom the Father reigns immediatly by the Son as Mediator and hence it is that the Son as Mediator is only said to sit at Gods right hand because the right of actual administration or immediate execution of the Sovereign power is appropriate and peculiar to the Son as Mediator betwixt God and man And this made Christ to say The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment unto the Son John 5.22 as Mediator You may object Christ was Mediator immediately after his incarnation but he did not actually administer his Kingdom then I Answer it is true Christ for a time did by a voluntary dispensation empty himself and laid aside the right of actual administration of his Kingdom but immediatly after his Ascension the Father by voluntary dispensation resigned it to the Son again Come now saith the Father and take thou power over every creature till the time that all things shall be subdued under thee This right the one relinquished in the time of that humiliation of himself and this right the other conferred at the time of the exaltation of his Son SECT V. Of the two Natures wherein Christ sits at God's right hand 3. ACcording to what Nature is Christ said to sit at the right hand of God I answer according to both Natures first he sits at God's right hand as God hereby his Divinity was declared and his Kingdom is such that none that is a pure creature can possibly execute Psal 110.1 The Lord said to my Lord saith David sit thou on my right hand The Lord said to my Lord i.e. God said to Christ now
Christ was not David's Lord meerly as man but as God And 2. He sits at God's right hand as man too hereby his Humanity was exalted and a Power is give to Christ as man He hath given hiw power to execute judgment John 5.27 in as much as he is the Son of man In the administration of his Kingdom the man-hood of Christ doth concur as an Instrument working with his God-head Hence this Session at God's right hand is truly and properly attributed to Christ as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and not only to the one nature of Christ whether Divine or Humane Or it is attributed to Christ as Mediator in which respect he is called an high Priest Heb. 8.1 We have such an high Priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the heavens And in which respect he is called a Prince Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour Now Christ is not a Priest and a Prince meerly according to one Nature whether Divine or Humane I deny not but Christ had a natural Kingdom with his Father as God before the foundation of the world but this Kingdom as God-man Christ had not before his Asension into heaven So then Christ sitteth at the right hand of God by a mediatory action which he executeth according to both natures the word working what pertaineth to the word and the flesh what appertaineth to the flesh Christ is Mediator as God and man and glory hath redounded unto him as God and man and living in this glory he ruleth and governeth his Church as God and man he ascended indeed into heaven in his humanity only but he sitteth at the right hand of God as Mediator in respect of both natures The Lutherans attribute this Session at God's right hand only to the humane nature of Christ they say this Session is nothing else but the elevating of his humane nature to the full and free use of some of the divine properties as of omnipotency omniscience omnipresence the ground of this error is that they suppose upon the union of the two Natures in Christ a real communication of the divine properties to follow so that the humane nature is made truly omnipotent omniscient omnipresent not by any confusion of properties nor yet by any bare communion and concourse of it to the same effect each nature working that which belongeth to it with commuion of the other for this we grant but by a real donation by which the divine properties so become the properties of the humane nature that the humane nature may work with them no less than the Divine nature it self for the perfecting of it self Against this opinion we have these Reasons 1. The union cannot cause the humane nature to partake more in the properties of the Divine than it causeth the Divine to partake in the properties of the humane 2. If a true and real communication did follow of the Divine Attributes it must needs be of all the Attributes as of eternity and infiniteness seeing these are the Divine Essence which can no way be divided 3. Infinite perfections cannot perfect finate natures no more than reasonable perfections can make perfect unreasonable creatures 4. To what end should created gifts serve which Christ hath received above measure if now more noble properties should enter and be conferred on Jesus Christ other reasons are given in but I willingly decline all controversal points SECT VI. Of the Reasons why Christ doth sit on God's right hand 4. WHy doth Christ sit at the right hand of God his Father in glory I answer 1. On Christ's part that He might receive power and dominion over all the creatures Math. 28.18 All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth he speaks of it as done because it was immediatly to be performed Christ at his Session received a power imperial over every Creature that he hath Power over the Angels is plain both by the reverence they do him and by their obedience towards him at the name of Jesus every knee must bow good Angels and evil Angels must yield signs of subjection to Jesus Christ if the Saints shall judge the Angels how much more shall Christ Oh what Power hath Christ himself this way and as for the excellencies on earth they all receive their power from Christ and are at his dispose it is Jesus Christ that is Crowned with Glory and Honour and all things are put under his feet Heb. 27.8 And hence it is that when the Apostle speaks of Christs session at the right hand of God he tells us he is far above all Principalities and Powers on earth Eph. 1.21 and Mights and Dominions in Heaven yea that Angels and Authorities 1 Pet. 3.22 and Powers are made subject unto him 2. On our part many reasons may be given As 1. That he might be the Head of his Church I mean not head in a large sense for one who is in any kind before another for so Christ is the head of Angels and God is the head of Christ and to this we have spoken before But in a strict sense for one that is in a near and communicative sort conjoyned with another as the Head is conjoyned with the Body and Members and so is Christ the head of his Church Look as the King hath a more intimate and amiable Superiority over the Queen then over any other of his Subjects so is it here in Christ our King he is more amiably tempered and more nearly affected to his Spouse and Queen the Church of God then to any other whomsoever And to this purpose he sits at Gods right hand that having now fulness of Grace and Glory in himself he might be ready to communicate the same to his Church who are as the members of his body that he might give them Grace here and Glory hereafter when he shall deliver up his Kingdom to his Father and be all in all 2. That he might be the object of divine adoration then especially it was said and accomplished Let all the Angels of God Worship him Heb. 1.6 and let all men Honour the Son as they Honour the Father After Christ's Session John 5 23. Stephen looken up into Heaven and saw the Glory of God and Jesus standing on the right hand of God and then he Worshipped and called upon God saying Lord Jesus receive my Spirit It is true Acts 7.59 that the ground of this divine adoration is the Union of the two natures of Christ and therefore the Magi worshipped him at his Birth and as soon as ever he came into the World the Angels of God Worshipped him but because by his Session at God's right hand the Divine Nature was manifested Heb. 1.6 and the Humane Nature was exalted to that dignity and glory which it never had before therefore now especially and from this time was the honour and
exceeding profitable Only concerning the manner of the indwelling of this spirit in us it is most difficult to conceive Certainly it dwells not in us as in Christ viz. bodily Col. 2.9 unmeasurably Joh. 3.34 Originally 2 Cor. 3.17 the spirit is in Christ as light in the sun but the spirit is in us as light in the air In Christo ut lux in sole in nobis ut lumen in aere Ezek. 36.27 37.14 neither dare I affirm that the spirit is in us more essentially than in any other men or creatures for the essence thereof is indivisible and omnipresent But this I say that the spirit is in the faithful above all others 1. In respect of Covenant the Saints have the spirit by God's free Grace and Covenant I will put my spirit within you saith God in the Covenant which is not only to be understood of the gifts and graces of the spirit but also of the spirit it self 2. In respect of intimate familiarity and near acquaintance the spirit is in the faithful like an inmate or coinhabitant comforting directing ruling strengthning and cherishing them in which respect they are said to be his houses and Temples in which he dwelleth whereas contrariwise worldlings and infidels to all these purposes are meer strangers unto him the world cannot receive him saith Christ because it seeth him not neither knoweth him John 14.17 but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you 3. In respect of vertue and efficacy the spirit works efficaciously in his Saints he chooseth them for his own people he possesseth them as of his own right he rules in their hearts as in the chief seat of his Kingdom he purgeth and purifieth them from their sins he replenisheth and filleth them with his saving graces he guides and directs them in the way of holiness and never leaves them till he brings them to his Kingdom 4. In respect of union it was an old errour of the heathens that the soul remaineth in the body after Death which opinion of theirs though false because it contradicts the Word yet the thing it self is possible and doth not contradict reason for the soul may have its local being in the body and yet not give life to the body for it is not the souls being in the body but its being united to the body which makes the body live so it is not the Spirits being locally with the soul but being mystically united to the soul that gives it spiritual life Now in all these respects the spirit is in the faithful above all others I know the objections As 1. If the Spirit be united to a believers soul and so made one with him then may a believer say I am the spirit or I am equal with God in respect of the spirit in me though not as Peter Thomas c. But I answer this follows not for though the spirit be really united to a believers spirit so that he may say with the Apostle 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit or hath one spirit yet first this union is a voluntary act and not a natural act and in that respect the Spirit may unite himself to the soul so far as he pleaseth and no further And certainly thus far he is not pleased to unite himself to a believer as that a believer should say properly I am the Spirit or I am equal with God in respect of the spirit for then a believer might be worshipped with Divine worship 2. This union is by way of application and not by way of mixture if an heap of Wheat and a stone should be joyned together there is an union they make both one heap but the Wheat cannot say I am a stone nor can the stone say I am wheat because this union is only by way of Application but if Wine and Water should be joyned together then every part may say I am Water and I am Wine because this union is not only by application but by way of mixture Certainly there is a great union betwixt the Spirit and a believers soul yet cannot the believer say properly I am the Spirit or I am equal with God because their union is only by way of application and not by way of mixture 2. Object No more was the union of Christ as God with our nature as man any union by way of mixture ye● could he say I am God and I am man But I answer Christ's union was not only spiritual or mystical but hypostatical or personal and in that respect though there was no mixture yet there was such an union as cannot be parallel'd in all the world Our souls union with the spirit of Christ goes very far and indeed so far as we cannot express it though we had the tongues and heads and hearts of men and Angels yet comes it short of that union betwixt the second person in the Trinity and the soul and body of Christ his union was personal but so is not ours a believer is a person before he is united to the spirit of Christ but now Christ's soul and body were not a person before united to the person of the Godhead Go we therefore as far as we can and I shall easily yeild that our union with the spirit is a true real essential substantial spiritual invisible mystical intimate union yet is it not a personal or hypostatical union the spirit doth not assume the soul or body of a believer as the second person assumed the soul and body of Christ Away away with these cavils and blasphemies wherewith too many unstable souls are now infected I have done with this Reason 4. That the holy Ghost might according to his Office endow men with gifts no sooner he bestows his person but immediatly he fills us with his train Now the gifts of the Spirit are of these two sorts some are common to good and bad others are proper to the Elect only Those gifts which are common are again two-fold for some of them are given but to certain men and at certain times as the gift of Miracles of Tongues of Prophesies and these were necessary for the Apostles and the Primitive Church when the Gospel was first to be dispersed others are given to all the members of the Church and at all times as the gifts of Interpretation Sciences Arts Prudence Learning Knowledg Eloquence and such like the former gifts we have not but these latter are now given to every member of the Church according to the measure of Christ's gift as the calling and vocation of every member needeth As for those gifts and saving graces which are proper to the godly I shall speak of them anon Now here is another reason of the spirits mission Eph. 4.8 that he might give gifts unto men if you ask what are those gifts the Apostle tells you in one place He gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists v. 11. and