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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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Saints why what bodies you will say have they I answer glorious bodies no sooner shall the bodies of the Saints arise but they shall exceed with singular qualities 1 Cor. 15.42 43 44 They were sown in corruption but they are raised in incorruption they were sown in dishonour but raised in glory they were sown in weakness but raised in power they were sowen natural bodies but raised spiritual bodies The Sun in its shinings doth but shadow forth the glory of their bodies and this will in some measure torment Reprobates to see the difference of their bodies and the bodies of the Saints O will they say yond are they whom we despised and now are they honoured See a world of Suns rising at once out of all parts of the Earth sometimes we lived on Earth and we never saw but one Sun rising in the East but lo millions of Suns on East and West and North and South O those are the glorious Saints of Heaven see with what swift and agile bodies they are preparing to fly into the Air to meet their Lord and Saviour there whilst in the mean time we rise with such heavy dull and deformed bodies that we cannot mount O what will become of us why this is the day of resurrection The Angels have been here to unseal our graves to roll away the stones and at their shout and sound of the Trumpet our scattered dusts have met together and lo now we stand upon the Earth 4. No sooner the Saints raised and their souls and Bodies re-united with excellent Majesty but then shall all the elect of God from first to last be gathered together if you ask whence and whither I answer 1. To the question whence from the four winds from one end of Heaven to another i.e. From all parts of the world from East and West and North and South from one end of Heaven to another a Vulgar term in regard of our sight for in it self Heaven is round and hath no end the meaning is that not one Saint in all the world from Adam to the last man shall be concealed or lye hid from the most hidden inward secret bosom of the earth all shall be gathered howsoever their dusts may be scattered into a thousand thousand parts yet the power of Christ shall restore all those dusts and bring them together into their several compacted bodies 2. To the question whether they shall be gathered Some say to the Valley of Jehoshaphat Joel 3.12 from that Text Let the Heathen be weakened and come up to the Valley of Jehoshaphat for there will I sit to judge the Heathen round about but I believe this Text hath reference to a particular judgment of God upon Israels enemies which dwell round about Jerusalem and not to the general day of Judgment Others say Acts 1.11 12. to Mount-Olivet from that Text 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 then returned they unto Jerusalem from the Mount called Olivet But I believe this Text speaks onely of the manner how Christ shall come and not of the place to which he shall come Indeed 't is not probable that either the valley of Jehoshaphat or the Mount of Olivet can be sufficient places to contain all the men that ever were are and shall be and therefore if such a thing can be determined I should rather appeal to that Text 1 Thes 4.17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them that are raised in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air When Christ was askt this very question where Lord whither shall the Saints be gathered where shall the general Judgment be he answers wheresoever the body is thither will the Eagles be gathered together By the body Christ meant himself and by the Eagles Christ meant his Elect because their youth is renewed as the Eagles now the elect must resort to Christ wheresoever he is and the Apostle is express that Christ is in the air and in the clouds and therefore thither must the elect be gathered Luke 17.37 they shall be caught up by the holy Angels into the clouds to meet the Lord in the air Vse O my brethren what sights are these what changes wonders strange face of things will be this day how is it that we are not as frequent in the meditation of this Summons as Jerom was who as he thought heard dayly that sound Arise ye dead and come to Judgment methinks a sad and serious consideration of these passages might keep us close to Christ come try a little if in the hurryings of the day we are so distracted that we cannot reach the spiritual part of a meditation yet in the evening or morning when all is still or in the night-season when all is quiet then labour to prevent the day of doom so realize it as if then we saw Christ in the clouds sending his Angels on this errand Away and bring hither all the men and women in the world and in the first place gather my Saints together unto me Adam and Abraham those Fathers of the world and of the faithful let them see all their children and let all their children see them and bring them all to my Throne awaken the world let them who have slept in their graves some thousand of years be now rouzed and raised Imagine then as if we heard the Trumpet of God founded by the Angels of God and as the sound of it waxed louder and louder that we saw the Mountains skip like Rams and the little Hills like young Sheep That we saw all the graves in Churches or Church-yards in Fields or Plains or Seas fly open that we saw all the bodies of the dead beginning to stir and to stand upon their feet and presently the Angels coming and taking all the Saints upon their wings and so flying with them through the air till they came to the Throne and judgment-seat of Christ is it possible that such a meditation should pass without some tincture of it on our spirits if my ears shall hear that sound and if my eyes shall see these sights is it not time for me to lay these things to heart that I may be found faithful and well-doing as sure as I have this Book in my hand I must be one of those that shall hear the sound of the Trumpet and away I must from the mouth of my grave where ever I shall be buried to the cloud where Christ doth sit come then how would I rise as foul as a toad or as an Angel of God O my God! set this home on my soul O where 's my Lamp and where 's my oyl are all ready and am I ready furnished and prepared to meet the Lord in the Air Christians if we have any life in us let us act and realize this to the life O this would keep
the Spirit of our God As every man is so is he affected so he speaks and so he lives if thy life be supernatural so is thy affections so is thy words so is thy conversation Paul lived a life once of a bloody persecutor he breathed out threatenings against all the Professors of the Lord Jesus but now it is otherwise The life which I now live in the flesh Gal. 2.20 I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me O my soul Hast thou the old conversation the old affections the old discourse the old passions thou used to have What Is thy heart a den of lusts a cage of unclean imaginations Then fear thy self there cannot from a sweet fountain come forth bitter streams there cannot from a refined spirit as refined come forth corrupted actions or imaginations a Thorn cannot send forth Grapes saith Christ so neither can a Vine send forth Thornes say we I know there is in the best something of flesh as well as of the spirit but if thou art new born then thou canst not but strive against it and wilt endeavour to conquer it 1 Pet. 3.4 2 Pet. 1.4 Rom. 7.22 2 Cor. 5.17 3. Where this new birth is there is a new nature a new principle Peter calls it the hidden man of the heart the divine nature Paul calls it the inward man the new creature it is compared to a root to a fountain to a foundation and for want of this foundation we see now in these sad times so much inconstancy and unsetledness in some professors themselves many have gotten new and strange notions but they have not new natures new principles of grace if grace were but rooted in their hearts though the winds did blow and storms arise they would continue firm and stable as being founded upon a Rock Never tell me of profession shew outward action outward conversation outward duties of Religion all this may be and yet no new creature you have some bruits that can act many things like men but because they have not an humane nature they are still brutish so many things may be done in a way of holiness which yet come not from this inward principle of renovation and therefore it is but copper and not gold mistake not O my soul in this which is thy best and surest evidence though I call the new birth a new creature my meaning is not as if a new faculty were infused into him that is new born a man when he is regenerate hath no more faculties in his soul than he had before his regeneration only in the work of regeneration those ablities which the man had before are now improved and made spiritual and so they work now spiritually which before wrought naturally As in the resurrection from the dead our bodies shall have no more nor other parts and members than they had before only those parts and members which now are natural shall then by the power of God be made spiritual 1 Cor. 15.44 It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body there is a natural body and there is a spiritual body so the same faculties and the same abilities which before regeneration were but natural are now spiritual and work spiritually they are all brought under the government of the Spirit of Christ a lively resemblance of this change in the faculties of the soul we may discern in those natural and sensitive faculties which we have common with beasts as to live to move to desire to feel the beasts having no higher principle than sense use them sensually but a man enjoying the same faculties under the command of a reasonable soul he useth them rationally so is it in a regenerate man his understanding will and affections when they had no other command but reason he only used them rationally but now being under the guiding of the Spirit of Christ they work spiritually and he useth them spiritually and hence it is that a regenerate man is every where in Scripture Rom. 8.1 Gal. 5.18 25. said to Walk after the Spirit to be led by the Spirit to walk in the Spirit the Spirit by way of infusing or shedding gives power an ability a seed a principle of spiritual life which the soul had not before and from this principle of spiritual life planted in the Soul flows or springs those spiritual motions and operations as the Spirit leads them out according to the habit or principle of the new creature the divine nature the spiritual life infused Come then look to it O my soul What is thy principle within consider not so much the outward actions the outward duties of Religion as that root from whence they grow that principle from whence they come they are fixed ones setled ones by way of life in thee Clocks have their motions but they are not motions of life because they have no principles of life within Is there life within then art thou born again yea even unto thee a Child is born This is one evidence 2. From the latter words I lay down this position unto us a Son is given if we are Gods Sons The best way to know our Interest in the Son of God it is to know our selves to be Gods Sons by grace as Christ was Gods Son by nature Christians to whom Christ is given are coheirs with Christ only Christ is the first-born and hath the preheminence in all things our sonship is an effect of Christs sonship and a sure sign that unto us a Son is given Say then O my soul Art thou a Son of God Dost thou resemble God according to thy capacity being holy even as he is holy Why then Christ was incarnate for thee he was given to thee If thy sonship be not clear enough thou mayst try it further by these following Rules 1. The Sons of God Fear God If I be a Father Where is my Honour Mal. 1.6 saith God if I be a Master Where is my Fear If I be a Son of God there will be an holy Fear and Trembling upon me in all my approaches unto God I know there is a servile mercinary Fear and that is unworthy and unbeseeming the Son of God but there is a filial Fear and that is an excellent check and bridle to all our wantonness What Son will not Fear the frowns and anger of his loving Father 1 Pet. 1.17 I dare not do this will he say my Father will be offended and I whether shall I go Agreeable to this is the Apostles advice If ye call on the Father pass your sojourning here with Fear 2. The Sons of God Love God and Obey God out of a principle of Love Suppose there were no Heaven or Glory to bestow upon a regenerate person yet would he Obey God out of a principle of Love not that it is unlawful for the Child of God to have an Eye unto the recompence of reward Heb.
some Pastors and Teachers Three of these gifts are now gone and their date is out but in the same place we find Pastors and Teachers and them we have still Oh how may this teach us to think of such even of Pastors and Teachers as of the special gifts and favours of Jesus Christ if one special friend should but send us from a far Countrey one of his chief servants would we not welcome him Christ now is in Heaven and he sends us Ministers as the stewards of his house sure if we have any love to Christ The v●ry feet of them would be precious and beautifull Rom. 10.15 who bring us glad tydings of peace Again the Apostle tells us in another place that there are diversities of gifts but the same spirit and diversities of calling but the same Lord or Christ 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6 and diversities of works but the same God and Father worketh all in all Christs errand being done and he gone up on high the Spirit came down and in Christ's stead established order in the Church which order or establishment is here set down by gifts callings and works Here is first a Gift Secondly a Calling Thirdly a Work Gifts are ascribed to the Spirit Callings to Christ and Works to God even to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ where the Spirit ends Christ begins and where Christ ends God begins if no gift we must stay there and never meddle with the calling and if no calling we must stay there and never meddle with the Work first the Spirit comes and bestows the Gift and then Christ comes and bestows the Calling and then God the Father comes and sets us to the Work the gift is for the calling and the gift and calling are both for the Work And if this be the order established by the Spirit in his Church Oh what shall we say of them that either have no gifts yet step into the calling as if there were no need of the Holy Ghost or that have no calling and yet will fall upon the work utterly against the mind and rule of Jesus Christ Oh what the poor Church of Christ suffers at this time in these respects certainly these men have no commission from the holy spirit he was never sent to them that br●ak this order first gifts and then Calling and then the Work But why doth the Spirit endow men with gifts surely saith the Apostle to this end 1 Cor. 12.7 to profit withall Gifts are given for the good of others gifts are for edifying we should not contemn them gifts are a blessing of God and therefore we a●e to endeavour after them 1 Tim. 4.15 1 Cor. 12.31 Let thy profiting appear to all and covet earnestly the b●st gifts And yet sayes Paul I shew unto you a more excellent way and that was true grace of which he discourseth in the next Chapter and this brings in another reason of the Spirits mission 5. That the Holy Ghost might according to his Office endow men with graces In doing this he first gives the inward principle and habit of grace and then the fruit or actings of grace 1. He gives a Power an Habit a spiritual Ability a Seed a Spring a principle of Grace whatsoever we call it I cannot conceive it to be a n●w faculty added to those which are in men by nature A man when he is regenerate hath no more faculties in his soul than he had before he was regenerate only in the work of ●egeneration those abilities which the man had are Improved to work spiritually as before naturally as our Bodies in the resurrection from the dead shall have no more nor other parts than they have at present only those which are now natural shall th●n by the Power of God be made Spiritual 1 Cor. 15.44 Now this Principle is infused or poured in by the Spirit of God and hence he is called The spirit of sanctification 2. He gives the fruit or actings of Grace 2 Thes 2.13 Gal. 5.22.23 But the fruit of the Spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance Some call these the diversifications of the actings of that spiritual principle within us certainly the spirit doth not only at first infuse the principles of grace but he doth also enable us to act and improve those blessed principles Phil. 2.13 he doth not only give us power to Holy actions but he works also the Holy actions themselves God works in us not only to will but to do God hath a two-fold grace psal 119.88 initial and converting exciting and quickning in respect of this last David prayes Quicken me after thy loving kindness O Lord and so shall I keep thy testimonies This is the actuating grace that we need every hour and every moment and must pray for more earnestly than we would pray for our daily bread Two priviledges more especially flow from this Heb. 4.16 As 1. Hereby the soul will be kept from negligence and dulness from gross and soul sins the Apostle calls it grace to help in time of need Oh this is admirable when grace comes in the very nick of need it may be sometime or other thou wert even falling into such and such a sin it may be thou wert sometime or other drowning in such and such a wickedness and this exciting quickning grace came in and kept up thy head above the waters 2. Hereby the soul will be kept in a frame for every duty if the spirit come but with exciting quickning grace then it is ready to say My heart is prepared O Lord my heart is prepared I can now do and suffer thy Will sometimes the principle of grace lies still within us and begins to rust but then comes the Holy Ghost and breaths upon our souls and so it excites and quickens and commands faith patience zeal and other graces to be in exercise and this is as it were the file to take off the rust it s the whetting of the edge it s the stirring up of the coals into a mighty flame Christians have you not clear ●xperimental demonstrations of this truth sometimes you are on the wing of duty and sometimes you are dull and dead sometimes the least temptation the least snare is ready to make you fall and sometimes again though strong winds and tempests blow upon you yet you are able to stand like Mount Zion that cannot be removed Oh what 's the reason of the difference surely according to the incomes of the Spirit of God this difference comes not from our selves but from the Spirit as this exciting quickning grace is ready or a far off so is our condition you know what changes David usually found in his own heart sometimes he was able to trust in God and at other times he was so cast down as if he had no strength within him and whence all this but from the ebbings and flowings of exciting quickning
stands in competition with Jesus we have discussed before Many other Motives might be given but let this suffice I have done with the exhortation In the next place I shall lay open to you the particular way of this Duty which all this while I have been perswading to SECT VIII Vse of Direction Vse 3 IS inward experimental looking unto Jesus a choice or an high Gospel Ordinance why then some directions how we are to perform this Duty Practice is the end of all sound doctrin and duty is the end of all right faith now that you may do what you have heard in some good measure I shall prescribe the directions in the next part prescribed But first in the work observe those two parts of the Text the act and object the act is looking unto and the Object is Jesus 1. By looking unto we mean as you have heard an inward experimental knowing desiring hoping believing loving calling on Jesus and conforming to Jesus it is not a bare swiming knowledge of Christ it is not a bare thinking of Christ as Christ hath various excellencies in himself so hath he formed the soul with a power of diverse wayes apprehending that so we might be capable of enjoying those divers excellencies that are in Christ even as the creatures having their several uses God hath accordingly given us several senses that so we might enjoy the delights of them all what the better had we been for pleasant odoriferous Flowers or sweet perfumes if we had not possest the sense of smelling or what good would language or musick have done us if God had not given us the sense of hearing or what delight should we have found in meats or drinks or sweetest things if we had been deprived of the sense of tasting so what pleasure should we have had even in the goodness and perfection of God and Christ if we had been without the faculty and power of knowing desiring hoping believing loving joying and enjoying as the senses are to the body so are these spiritual senses powers affections to the soul the very way by which we must receive sweetness and strength from the Lord Jesus 2. By Jesus who is the Object of this Act we mean a Saviour carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last hence we shall follow this method to look on this Jesus as our Jesus in these several periods 1. In that Eternity before all time until the Creation 2. In the Creation the beginning of time until his coming 3. In his first coming the fulness of time until his coming again 4. In his coming again the very end of time to all Eternity In every of these Periods Oh what a blessed Object is before us Oh what wonders of love have we to look upon Before I direct you how to look on him in these respects I must in the first place propound the Object still we must lay the colours of this admirable beauty before your eyes and then tell you the art how you are to look upon them You may object the Apostle in this Text refers this look only to the passion and session of Christ Bp. Arde. But a worthy Interpreter tells you out of these words That Christ our blessed Saviour is to be looked on at all times and in all acts though indeed then in those Acts more especially Besides we are to look unto Jesus as the Author and finisher of our Faith and why as the Author and finisher of our Faith but to hint out to us that we are to stand still and to behold as with a stedfast eye what he is from first to last You have called us hither say they in Canticles to see your Shulamite What shall we s●e in him What saith the Spouse but as the company of two Armies that is many legions of good sights an Ocean of bottomless depths of manifold high perfections Or if these words be understood of the Spouse and not of Christ yet how many words do we find in Canticles expressing in him many goodly sights Myrrhe Aloes Cinamon all the Trees of Frankincense all the Powders of the Merchants are in him he is altogether lovely he is all every whit of him desirable he is not one single Star but a constellation there is in him a confluence a bundle an army of glorious sights all in one cluster meeting and growing upon one stalk There 's many glorious sights in Jesus I I shall not therefore limit my self to those two especial ones but take all those before me I have now propounded And now if ever stir up your hearts Say to all worldly business and thoughts as Christ to the Disciples Matth 2● 36 Sit you here while I go pray yonder Or as Abraham when he went to sacrifice Isaac left his Servants and Asse below the Mount saying Stay you here and I and the Lad will go yonder and Worship and come again to you so say to all worldly thoughts Abide you below while I go up to Christ and then I will return to you again Christians your selves may be welcom but such followers may not LOOKING UNTO JESUS The Second Book Revel 1.8 11. I am Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending saith the Lord which is and which was and which is to come the Almighty I am Alpha and Omega the first and the last and what thou seest write in a book and send it to the seven Churches CHAP. I. SECT I. Of the eternal Generation of our Jesus WE must Look unto Jesus the beginner and finisher of our faith we must behold Jesus as with a stedfast eye from first to last As he is Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending the first and the last so accordingly we must Look unto him 1. He is Alpha the beginner so it is in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginner the inceptor the first wheel of our faith Heb. 12.2 and of the end of our faith the salvation of our souls 2 Thes 2.13 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 Now Christ may be called a beginner in respect of the Decree or execution I shall begin with the Decree wherein he begun before the beginning of time to design our happiness for the praise of the glory of his Grace Ephes 1.6 Many depths are in this passage To this purpose we told you that Jesus is Gods Son and our Jesus eternally begotten before all worlds In this first period we shall look on him 1. In relation to God 2. In relation to us 1. In his relation to God who shall declare his generation Isa 53.8 He is Gods Son having his subsistence from the Father alone of which Father by communication of his essence he is begotten from all eternity For the opening of this eternal generation of our Jesus we shall consider 1. The thing begotten 2. The time 3. The manner of begetting 4. The mutual kindness and love of him that begets and of him
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
the inward manifestation The Apostle speaking of the Saints he adds Col. 1.27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles which is Christ in you the hope of glory O the Riches of the Glory of this mystery consider it Oh my soul God might have shut thee up in blindness with the world or he might only have given thee parts and gifts or at most he might hav enlightened thy reason to have taken in the outward notions of the Gospel but hath he revealed Christ in thee hath he let thee see into the wonders of his Glory hath he given thee the light of his Glory within Oh this argues the witness of Christs Spirit this only the experimental Christian feels Chrysostom sometimes speaking of the more hidden and choice principles of Christianity he useth this phrase Sciunt initiati quid dico those that are initiated or admitted into our mysteries know what I mean so may the Ministers of Christ Preaching of these inward Manifestations say Sciunt initiaty c. it is only the Spiritual man can know these things for they are spiritually discerned O my soul meditate on this untill thou feelest Gods Spirit working in thy Spirit these inward Gracious Glorious manifestations It is Christ in thee is the hope of Glory 5. Consider Christs whipping the buyers and sellers out of the Temple Sometimes O my soul thou art in secret and sometimes thou art in the Assemblies of Gods people and if thou art in duty wheresoever thou art consider the especial presence of Christ and what is that but the presence of his Spirit and the presence of his Angels 1. The presence of his Spirit this we know by his working in us certainly the Spirit doth not only hover over us but worketh in us How in us I answer by his quickning feeding cherishing healing mollifying melting comforting In this manner he works in us when we are in Ordinances Why now is he I hope riding with triumph in the midst of the Assembly now is he in his Chariot in his Throne in the hearts of his people and therefore away away with all buyers and sellers out of that Temple of the holy Ghost 2. The Presence of Christ is the presence of his Angels as a King is where his Court is so is Christ the King of Kings especially present where his blessed Angels pitch their Tents And the presence of Angels is worthy O my soul of thy consideration Certainly they are ministring Spirits that have a work to do upon thy inward man I grant the Spirit of Christ can only enlighten the understanding and determine the will effectually it is he only can bend and turn and form the mind which way soever he pleaseth but the Angels can speak also to thy spiritual parts and though the spirit only determine yet their speaking carries a Power with it By way of digression it is a fine skill to know how the Angels can speak to us and how we may know when they speak and how we may discern what is spoken by the immediate inspiration of the spirit and what by the mediation of the Angels 1. How do the Angels speak to us We must conceive if we understand this first that the Images or phantasms of things received by the outward senses are kept and preserved by the inward senses as the species of sounds of shapes or whatsoever else 2. That the images phantasms so kept may be so moved by our spirits or humours or some extrinsecal things as that they may move the fancy and provoke it to represent and conceive such things as neither appear nor are at that time perceived by any outward sence at all This appears 1. In our ordinary course as we can sit in the dark where we hear and see nothing and yet there we can multiply a fancy in infinitum by an act of our own Will 2. This appears in our dreams when though we hear or see nothing yet the humour can stir up the memory of things and provoke our fancies to the apprehension of this or that 3. This appears also in sickness which altering the body and the humours and so troubling the fancy it begets strange fancies and makes dreadful and fearfull representations unto us now this we must know that whatsoever an inferiour Power can do that a superiour Power can do much more whatsoever an act of our own Will or natural Dreams or preternatural sickness can do that the Angels can do most orderly and efficaciously they know exactly how the Spirits and humors must be moved that the images or phantasms may be applyed to such and such conceptions or apprehensions most accommodate and fitted for the knowledg of what truth they would suggest So that to me here is the difference between the converse of Men and Angels Men can speak to our understandings by the mediation of our external senses but Angels go a nearer way to work and speak to the internals first of all they do no more but come into the memory the treasurer of all our phantasms and imaginations and there make such and such compositions even as they please and then the understanding takes them off and reads what is written without more ado 2. How may we know when the Angels speak to us I confess it is an hard question and easily it cannot be solved only some conjecture we may have as in a case of evil thou art in a way of sin and near to fall into it it may be on a sudden thou hearest within thee some contrary whisperings which also are above the whisperings of a natural conscience common to the wicked or in case of good it may be on a sudden thou hearest within thee some independent supernatural perswasions and reasonings to this or that good or to this or that object which may more easily lead thee to chuse the good in these cases thou mayest conjecturally think that these whisperings or motions are of the Angels of God Bodin tells a story of one who desired of God a guidance and assistance of an Angel and accordingly he had sencible manifestations of a Spirit that assisted him and followed him till his death if in company he spake any unwary words he was sure to be advertised and reproved for it by a dream in the night or if he read any Book that was not good the Angel would strike upon the book to cause him to leave it 3. But how should we discern what is spoken by the immediate inspiration of the spirit and what by the mediation of the Angels here indeed we are at a stand and therefore my best resolution is that of Calvin That in such secrets we should keep one rule of modesty and sobriety and that we should neither speak nor think nor yet desire to know any other thing than such as hath been taught us by Gods Word I know not any great use there may be of this
man have a quarrel against any even as Christ forgave you so also do ye 1 Pet. 1.15 16. And as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation because it is written be ye holy for I am holy Against this some object how can we be holy as Christ is holy first the thing is impossible and secondly if we could there would be no nee● of Christ But I answer to the first the thing if rightly understood is not impossible we are commanded to be holy as Christ is holy not in respect of equality as if our holiness must be of the same compass with the holiness of Christ but in respect of quality our holiness must be of the same stamp and truth as the holiness of Christ as when the Apostle saith That we must love our neighbor as our self the meaning is Rom. 13.9 not that our love to our neighbor should be Mathematically equal to the love of our self for the Law doth allow of degrees in love accordingly to the degrees of relation in the thing beloved Rom. 12.9 Do good unto all men specially to those of the houshold of faith love to a friend may safely be greater than love to a stranger or love to a wife or child may safely be greater than to a friend yet in all our love to others it must be of the self same nature as true as real as cordial as sincere as solid as that to our selves We must love our neighbor as our selves i.e. unfeignedly and without dissimulation Again I answer to the second Christ is needful notwithstanding our utmost holiness in two respects 1. Because we cannot come to full and perfect holiness and so his grace is requisite to pardon and cover our failings 2. Because that which we do attain unto it is not of or from our selves and so his spirit is requisite to strengthen us unto his service We must be holy as Christ is holy yet still we must look at the holiness of Christ as the sun and root and fountain and that our holiness is but as a beam of that sun but as a branch of that root but as a stream of that fountain For the third how we must conform to this life I answer 1. Let us frame to our selves some Idea of Christ let us set before us the life of Christ in the whole and all the parts of it as we find it recorded in God's Book It would be a large picture if I should draw it to the full but for a taste I shall give it in few lines Now then setting aside the consideration of Christ as God or as Mediator or as Head of his Church 1. I look at the mind of Christ at his judgment will affections such as love joy delight and the rest and especially at the compassions of Jesus Christ O the dear affections and compassions which Christ had towards the sons of men this was his errand from Heaven and while he was upon the earth he was ever acting it I mean his pitifulness Luke 4.18 Psal 147.3 I mean his affections and compassion in healing broken hearts so the Psalmist He healeth the broken in heart and bindeth up their wounds it is spoken after the manner of a Chirurgion he had a tender heart towards all broken hearts he endeavoured to put all broken bones into their native place again nor speak I thus only of him in respect of his office but as he was man he had in him such a mind that he could not but compassionate all in misery O what bowels what stirrings and boylings and wrestlings of a pained heart touched with sorrow was ever upon occasion in Jesus Christ Matth. 14.1 Mark 6.34 peruse these texts and Jesus went forth and saw a great multitude and he was moved with compassion towards them and he healed their sick And Jesus when he came out saw much people and was moved with compassion towards them because they were as sheep not having a shepherd Mark 1.40 41. And there came a leper to him and kneeling down to him and saying to him if thou wilt thou canst make me clean and Jesus moved with compassion put forth his hand and touched him saying I will be thou clean Then Jesus called his disciples unto him Mat. 15.32 and said I have compassion on the multitude And for the two blind men that cried out Have mercy on us O Lord thou son of David Matth. 20.34 Luke 15.20 it is said that Jesus stood still and he had compassion on them and touched their eyes And the poor prodigal returning When he was yet a great way off his Father saw him and had compassion and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him How sweet is this last Instance that our sense of sinful weakness should be sorrow and pain to the bowels and heart of Jesus Christ you that are Parents of young Children let me put the case if some of you standing in the relation of a Father should see his Child sweat and wrestle under an over-load till his back were almost broken and that you should hear him cry Oh I am gone I faint I sinck I dye would not your bowels be moved to pity and would not your hands be stretched out to help or if some of you standing in the relation of a Mother should see your sucking Child fallen into a pit and wrestling with the water and crying for help would you not stir nor be moved in heart nor run to deliver the Child from being drowned Surely you would and yet all this pity and compassion of yours is but as a shadow of the compassions and dear affections that were and that are in the heart of Jesus Christ O he had a mind devoid of sin and therefore it could not but be full of pity mercy and tender bowels of compassion 2. I look at the grace in Christ O he was full of grace yea full of all the graces of the Spirit Cant. 1.13 14. A bundle of Mirrh is my well-beloved to me My Beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire in the vineyards of Engedi a bundle of Myrrh and a cluster of camphire denote all the graces of the Spirit as many flowers are bound together in a nosegay so the variety of the graces of the Spirit concenter'd in the heart of Jesus Christ ex gr Matth. 21.5 1. In him was meekness He cometh unto thee meek he had a sweet command and moderation of his anger Num. 12.3 he was meek as Moses nay though Moses was very meek and very meek above all the men that were upon the face of the earth yet Christ's meekness exceeded Mose's as the body doth exceed the shadow 2. In him was humility he saved not the world by his power but by his humility in his incarnation Christ would be humble and therefore he was born of a poor Virgin in a common Inn in his
do he had been nibling a great while at his heel no sooner he was born but he would have killed him and after he fell fiercely on him in the Wilderness but now all the Power and all the malice of hell conjoynes If we look on the Devil in respect of his evil nature he is compared to a roaring Lion not only is he a Lion but a roaring Lion his disposition to do mischief is alwayes wound up to the height and if we look on the Devil in respect of his Power there is no part of our souls or bodies that he cannot reach the Apostle discribing his Power he gives him names above the highest comparisons as Principalities Powers Rulers of the darkness of this World Spiritual wickedness above Devils are not only called Princes but Principalities not only mighty but Powers Eph. 6.12 not only Rulers of a part but of all the darkness of all this World not only wicked Spirits but spiritual wickedness not only about us but above us they hang over our heads continually you know what a disadvantage it is to have your enemy get the hill the upper ground and this they have naturally and alwayes Oh then what a combate must this be when all the Power and all the malice of all the Devils in hell should by the permission of God arm themselves against the Son of God Surely this was a bitter Ingredient in Christ's Cup. 6. The wrath of God himself this above all was the most bitter Dreg it lay in the bottom and Christ must drink it also Oh the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger God afflicts some in mercy and some in anger this was in his anger Lam. 1.12 and yet in his anger God is not like to all some he afflicts in his more gentle and mild others in his fierce anger this was in the very fierceness of his anger It is agreed upon by all Divines that now Christ saw himself bearing the sins of all Believers and standing before the judgment-seat of God to this end are those words John 12.31 Now is the judgment of this World and the Prince of this World shall be cast out Now is the judgment of this World q. d. Now I see God sitting in judgment upon the World and as a right Representative of all the World of Believers here I stand before his Tribunal ready to undergo all the punishments due to them for their sins why there is no other way to save their souls and to satisfie justice but that the fire of thy indignation should kindle against me Nahum 1.6 q. d. O I know it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Oh I know God is a consuming fire who can stand before his indignation and who can abide in the fierceness of his anger his fury is poured out like fire and the rocks are thrown down by him But for this end came I into the world O my Father I will drink this Cup lo here an open Breast come prepare the Armory of thy wrath and herein shoot all the Arrows of revenge And yet O my Father let me not be oppressed subverted or swallowed up by thy wrath let not thy displeasure continue longer than my patience or obedience can indure there is in me flesh and blood in respect of my humanity and my flesh trembleth for fear of thee I am afraid of thy judgments Oh if it be possible if it be possible let this Cup pass from me SECT V. Of the Dolours and Agonies that Christ there suffered 2. CHrist's Passion in the Garden was either before or at his apprehension his Passion before is declared 1. By his Sorrow 2. By his Sweat Mat. 26.37 Mar. 14.33 Luke 22.44 John 12.27 1. For his sorrow the Evangelists diversly relate it He began to be sorrowful and very heavy saith Matthew He began to be sore amazed and to be very heavy saith Mark And being in an Agony he prayed more earnestly saith Luke Now is my Soul troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour saith John All avow this sorrow to be great and so it is confessed by Christ himself Mat. 26.38 Then saith he unto them my soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death Ah Christians who can speak out this sorrow The Spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity Prov. 18.14 but a wounded Spirit who can bear Christ's soul is sorrowful or if that be too flat his soul is sorrowful exceeding sorrowful or if that language be too low his soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death not only extensively such as must continue for the space of seventeen or eighteen hours even until death it self should finish it but also intensively such and so great as that which is used to be at the very point of death and such as were able to bring death it self had not Christ been reserved to a greater and an heavier punishment Of this sorrow is that especially spoken consider and behold if ever there were sorrow like unto my sorrow Many a sad and sorrowful soul hath no question been in the world but the like sorrow to this was never since the Creation the very terms of the Evangelists speak no less he was sorrowful and heavy saith one amazed and very heavy saith another in an Agony saith a third in a soul trouble saith a fourth Surely the bodily torments of the Cross were inferiour to this agony of his soul the pain of the body is the body of pain Oh but the very soul of sorrow and pain is the soul's sorrow and the Souls's pain It was a sorrow unspeakable and therefore I must leave it as not being able to utter it Luke 22.44 2. For his Sweat Luke only relates it And his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground In the words I observe a Clymax 1. His sweat was as it were blood Ethymius and Theophilact interpret those words as only a similitude or figurative Hyperbole an usual kind of speech to call a vehement sweat a bloody sweat as he that weeps bitterly is said to weep tears of blood Augustine Jerome Epiphanius Athanasius Irenaeus and others from the beginning of the Church understand it in a litteral sense and believe it was truly and properly a bloody sweat nor is the Objection considerable that it was sicut guttae sanguinis as it were drops of blood for if the Holy Ghost had only intended that sicut for a similitude or Hyperbole he would rather have expressed it as it were drops of water than as it were drops of blood We all know sweat is more like to water than to blood Besides a sicut in Scripture-phrase doth not alwayes denote a similitude but sometimes the very thing it self John 1.14 Luke 24.11 according to the verity of it thus we beheld his Glory the Glory
the Lord Psal 32.5 and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin Selah It is no more than to ask thy Soul what are thy repentings kindled together hast thou seriously and sincerely repented thee of sin as sin hast thou turned from all sin unto God with constancy and delight Surely this is peculiar and proper to the Child of God by vertue of Christ's Death 3. If Christ's death be mine then am I engraffed into the likeness of Christ's death then am I made conformable to Christ in his death that I may know him and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable unto his death Phil. 3.10 The same that was done to Christ in a natural way is done and performed in the Believer in a spiritual way i.e. as Christ died so the Believer dies as Christ died for sin so the Believer dies to sin In that he died he died unto sin likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin Observe here the Analogy and proportion Rom. 6.10 11. and resemblance betwixt Christ and us both die unto sin Christ by way of expiation suffering and satisfying for the sins of others we by way of mortification killing and slaying and crucifying our own sins I look upon this sign as the very touchstone of a Christian and therefore I shall insist upon it Two questions I suppose needful to resolve the grounds of our Hope concerning our interest in the death of Christ 1. Whether indeed and in truth our sins are mortified 2. Whether we encrease or grow in our mortification For the first whether indeed and in truth our sins are mortified It is a skill worth our learning because of the many deceits that are within us sin may seem to be mortified when the occasion is removed or sin may seem to be mortified when it is not violent but quiet or sin may seem to be mortified when it is but removed from one sin unto another or sin may seem to be mortified when the sap and strength of sin is dead as the Lamp goes out when either the Oil is not supplied or taken away Now that in this scrutiny we may search to the bottoom and know the truth and certainty of our mortification it will appear by these Rules 1. True mortification springs from a root of Faith Every thing in the world proceeds from some cause or other and if the cause be good the effect must needs be good but if the cause be evil the effect must needs be evil A good Tree cannot bring forth evil Fruit and an evil Tree cannot bring forth good Fruit. Mat. 7.18 In this case therefore let us examine the cause if we can make out this truth that we belive in Christ that we roll our selves on the Lord Jesus Christ for life and for salvation and that now we begin to feel in us the decay of sin we may conclude from the cause or rise that this decay of sin is true mortification surely it hath received the deadly wound it is a blessed effect arising from a good and right and genuine cause 2. True mortification is general not only one sin but all sins are mortified in a true Believer As death is unto the Members of the body so is mortification unto the members of sin now death seized upon every member it leaves not life in any one member of the body so neither doth mortification leave life in any one member of sin my meaning is it takes away the commanding power of sin in every member Mortifie your members which are upon the earth saith the Apostle your members Col. 3.5 not one member and then he instanceth Fornication Vncleanness Inordinate Affections Evil Concupiscence and Covetousness which is Idolatry Christians that have their interest in Christ's death must not only leave Pride but Lust not only Uncleanness but Covetousness Sin must not only be slain in the understanding but in the will and affections mortification is general You will say this is an hard saying doth any man any Believer leave all sin yes in respect of ruling power he leaves all sin all gross sins and all other sins only with this difference all gross sins in practise and actions and all frailties and infirmities in allowance and affection It is good to observe the degrees of mortification the first is to forbear the practise of gross and scandalous sins in word and deed Jam. 3.2 If any man offend not in word the same is a perfect man and this perfection by the help of Grace a godly man may reach to in this life The second is to deny consent and will to all frailties and infirmities Rom. 7.19 The evil which I would not that do I Rom. 7.19 I may do evil and yet I would not do evil there is a denial of it in the will The third is to be free from any setled liking of any evil motion not only to deny consent and will but also to deny the very thought or imagination setledly and deliberately to delight in sin I know to be void of all evil motions arising from the flesh or of all sudden passions within or of all suduen delights in sin or of all deadness or backwardness to good things by reason of sin it is an higher pitch than any man can touch in this present world for whilst we live the Law of the members will be working and we shall find cause enough to complain of a body of death only if when these motions first arise we presently endeavour to quench them to reject them to detest them and to cast them away from us therein is true mortification and thus far we must look to it to leave all sin 3. True mortification is not without its present combats though at last it conquer many a time corruption may break out and lust may be strong and violent but th●s violent lust is only for the present whereas a lust unmortified ever reigneth It is with sin in a Believer as it is with a man that hath received his deadly wound from his enemy he will not presently flie away but rather he will run more violently upon him that hath wounded him yet be he never so violent in the middle of his action he sinks down because he hath received his deadly wound so it is with a Believer's sin and with a mortified lust it may rage in the heart and seem to bear sway for a time but the power and strength of sin is mortified it sinks down and wants ability to prevail by this sign may we know whether the corruptions and stirrings of our hearts proceed from a mortified or from an unmortified lust a lust though mortified may rage for a time but it cannot rule it may strive but it cannot totally prevail it may be in the heart as a thief in the house not to reside or dwell but to lodge for a night and be gone And that which is ever to be observed after
are not barely to consider the History of Christ's death but the aim of Christ in his death Many read the History and they are affected with it there is a principle of humanity in men which will stir up compassion and love and pity towards all in misery whilst Christ was suffering the women followed after him weeping but this weeping not being spiritual or rais'd enough he said to them Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves The way of Faith drawing virtue out of Christ's death it is especially to look to the scope and drift of Christ in his sufferings As God looks principally to the meaning of the Spirit by Prayer so doth faith look principally to the meaning of Christ in his sufferings mistake not my meaning is not that we should be ignorant of the History of Christ's death or of the manner of Christ's sufferings you see we have opened it largely and followed it close from first to last but we must not stick there we should above all look to the mind and heart of Christ in all this some observe that both in the Old and New Testament we find this Method first the History and then the Mystery first the Manner and then the Meaning of Christ's sufferings as in the Old Testament We have first the History in Psal 22. written by David and then the Mystery in Isa 52. written by Isaiah And in the New Testament we have first the manner of his sufferings written at large by all the Evangelists and then the meaning written by the Apostles in all their Epistles Now accordingly are the acts of Faith we must first look on Jesus as lifted up and then look at the end and meaning why was this Jesus thus lifted up Well but you may demand what was the end the plot the great design of Christ in this respect I answer some ends were remote and others were more immediate but omitting all those ends that are remote his Glory our Salvation c. I shall only answer in these Particulars 1. One design of Christ's death was to redeem us from the slavery of Death and Hell He hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us Gal. 3. as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Hence it is that we say that by his sufferings Christ hath redeemed us from Hell and by his doings Christ hath given us a right to heaven he was made under the Law Gal. 3.4 5. that he might redeem them that were under the Law Alas we were carnal sold under sin whereupon the Law seized on us lock'd us up as it were in a dungeon yea the sentence passed and we but waited for execution now to get us rid from this dismal damnable estate Christ himself is made under the Law that he might redeem us Redeem us how not by way of entreaty to step in and beg our pardon that would not serve the turn sold we were and bought we must be a price must be laid down for us it was a matter of Redemption but with what must we be redeemed surely with no easie price ah no it cost him dear and very dear Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and Gold 1 Pet. 1.18 but with the precious blood of Christ his precious blood was the price we stood him in which he paid when he gave his life a ransome for many Mat. 20.28 the case stood thus betwixt Christ and us in this point of Redemption we all like a crew or company of Malefactors were ready to suffer and to be executed now what said Christ to this Why I will come under the Law said Christ I will suffer that which they should suffer I will take upon me their execution upon condition I may redeem them now this he did at his death and this was the end why he died that by his death we might be redeemed from the slavery of Death and Hell 2. Another Design of Christ's death was to free us from sin not only would he remove the effect but he would take away the cause also Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation for the remission of sin Rom. 3.25 John 1.29 2 Cor. 5.21 Heb. 9.26 1 John 1.7 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Once hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself And the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin This was the plot which God by an ancient design aimed at in the suffering of Jesus Christ that he would take away sin And thus Faith must take it up and look upon it When Peter had set forth the hainousness of the Jews sin in killing Christ he tells them at last of that design of old All this was done said he Acts 2.2 by the determinate counsel of God His meaning was first to humble them and then to raise them up q. d. It was not so much they that wrought his death as the Decree of God and the agreement of God and Christ there was an ancient contrivement that Jesus Christ should die for sin and that all our sins should be laid on the back of Jesus Christ and therefore he seems to speak comfort to them in this that howsoever they designed it yet God and Christ designed a further end in it than they imagined even to remission of sins Who was delivered to death for our sins Rom. 4.25 and rose again for our justification The death of Christ as one observes was the greatest and strangest design that ever God undertook and therefore sure he had an end proportionable to it God that willeth not the death of a sinner would not for any inferior end will the death of his Son whom he loved more than all the world besides it must needs be some great matter for which God should contrive the death of his Son and indeed it could be no less than to remove that which he most hated and that was sin Here then is another end of Christ's death it was for the remission of sin one main part of our justification 3. Another design of Christ's death was to mortifie our members which are upon the earth Not only would he remit sin but he would destroy it kill it crucifie it he would not have it reign in our mortal bodies Rom. 6.11 1 Pet. 2.24 that we should obey it in the lusts thereof This Design the Apostle sets out in these words he bare our sins in his own body upon the Tree that we being dead unto sin should live unto righteousness Christ by his death had not only a design to deliver us from the guilt of sin but also from the power of sin God forbid that I should glory Gal. 6.14 save in the
Cross But hast thou taken the same course with the body of sin that the Jews did with the body of sin hast thou arraigned it accused it condemned it and fastened it to the Cross hast thou arraigned it at the Bar of God's judgment accused it by way of humble and hearty confession condemned it in passing the sentence of eternal condemnation upon thy self for it and fastned it to the Cross in beginning the execution of it in setting upon the mortification of it with a serious and unfeigned resolution to use all means for its mortifying and killing why then be not disheartned it may be thou feelest it stirring and strugling within thee and so will a crucified man do and yet in the eye of the Law and in the account of all men that see him he is a dead man surely so is the body of sin when it is thus crucified though it still move and stir yet upon a Gospel-account and in God's estimation it is no better than dead and it shall certainly die it shall decay and languish and die more and more is not the promise express He that hath begun the good work Phil. 1.6 he will perfect it to the day of Jesus Christ Of this Paul was confident in behalf of his Philippians and of this let all true Believers rest confident in respect of themselves Thus far we see wherein we must conform to Christ viz. in his Graces in his Sufferings and in his Death For the Query what is the cause of this conformity I answer The death of Christ is the cause of this conformity And that a fourfold cause Eph. 5.25 26 27. 1. It is a meritorious cause Christ's death was of so great a price that it deserved at God's hands our conformity to Christ Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it that by his death he might sanctifie it and cleanse it and present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish 1 Pet. 2.21 2. It is an exemplary cause He suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps he died for us leaving us an example that we should die to sin as he died for sin we may observe in many particulars besides those I have named a proportion analogy and likeness betwixt Christ's death and ours Christ died as a servant to note that sin should not rule or reign over us Christ died as a curse to note that we should look upon sin as a cursed thing Christ was fast nayled on the Cross to note that we should put sin out of case yea crucifie the whole body of sin Christ died not presently yet there he hung till he died to note that we should never give over subduing sin while it hath any life or working in us 3. It is an efficient cause it works this conformity by a secret virtue issuing from it Thus Christians are said to be engraffed with Christ in the likene●s of his death Rom. 6.5 Phil. 3.10 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of a passive signification importing not only a being like but a being made like and that by a power and vertue out of our selves so the Apostle elsewhere interprets That I may know him and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable unto his death Not conforming my self but being made conformable by a power out of my self But how then is the power of mortification attributed to men as Quest Col. 3.5 Gal. 5.24 Mortifie ye your members which are upon the earth And They which are Christ's have crucified the flesh I answer there is a twofold mortification the one habitual the other practical Answ the former consists in a change of the heart turning the bent and inclination of the heart from all manner of sin now this is the only and immediate work of the Spirit of Grace breathing and working where it will the latter consists in the exercise of putting forth of that inward grace in the acting of that principle in resisting temptations in suppressing inordinate Lusts in watching against sinful and inordinate acts now this is the work of a regenerate person himself co-operating with the Spirit of God as a rational instrument with the principal Agent and therefore the Apostle joins both together If ye through the Spirit do mortifie the Deeds of the Body Rom. 8.13 ye shall live 4. It is an impelling or a moving cause as all objects are for objects have an attractive power Achan saw the wedge of Gold and then coveted it David saw Bathsheba and then desired her As the brazen Serpent did heal those who were bitten by the fiery Serpent tanquam objectum fidei meerly by being looked upon so Christ crucified doth heal sin beget grace encourage to sufferings by being looked upon with the eyes of Faith Heb. 12.1 2. Wherefore seeing we are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience the race that is set before us looking u●to Jesus the Author and finisher of our Faith The Apostle was to encourage the Hebrews to hold on the well-begun profession of Faith in Christ and to that purpose he sets before them two fights to keep them from fainting 1. A cloud of witnesses the Saints in heaven on which cloud when he had staid their eyes a while and made them fit for a clearer Object he scatters the cloud and presents the Sun of Righteousness Christ himself and he wills them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to turn their eyes from it to him looking unto Jesus q. d. this sight is enough to make you run the race and not to faint why Jesus is gone before you and will you not follow him O look unto Jesus and the very sight of him will draw you after him Christ crucified hath an attractive power And I if I be lifted up John 12.32 will draw all men to me Thus of the causes of our conformity we see how it is wrought 3. For the last Query what are the means of this conformity as on our part I answer 1. Go to the Cross of Jesus Christ It is not all our purposes resolutions promises vows covenants endeavours without this that will effect our conformity to Christ in his sufferings and death no no this conformity is a fruit and effect of the death of Christ and therefore whosoever would have this work wrought in him let him first have recourse to Christ's Cross O go we more immediately to the Cross of Jesus 2. Look up to him that hangs upon it contemplate the death of Jesus Christ consider seriously and sadly his bitter shameful painful sufferings Much hath been said only here draw it into some Epitome As 1. Consider who he was 2. What he suffered 3. Why he suffered 4. For whom he
not here but risen Mat. 28.6 as they said Come see the place where the Lord lay Others think it was to do their office of duty and service to Christ Jesus to make way for his body to pass out of the grave without any penetration of other Bodies for my part I adhere to these though we need not to exclude the former for the stone might be removed both that Christ might come forth and that the women might be convinc'd that he was risen again But as for the opinion of them who think the stone was not removed till after the resurrection that the body of Christ went through the grave-stone when he rose again it is without all warrant the very order of nature will not permi● that one body should pass through another without corruption or alteration of either We say two bodies cannot be together and at once in one proper place no more than one body can be together and at once in an hundred or a thousand places now that Angelical argument is full for this he is not here for he is risen he is not in the grave Mat. 28.6 for he is risen out of the grave he could not be in the grave and out of the grave at one and the same time But I mean not to dwell on controversial Points Mat. 27.52 53. 5. That Christ rose again accompanied with others and the graves were opened and many bodies of Saints w●ich slept arose and came out of the graves after his resurrection and went into the holy City and appeared unto many It may be the graves were opened when Christ was laid down in his grave yet the spirits came not into the dead bodies till Christ's Resurrection the Text i● plain that they came not out of their graves till Christ was raised Christ is the beginning saith the Apostle the first-born from the dead Col. 1.18 how the first-born I answer both in time and efficacy 1. In time he rose to eternal life the first of all men This was the sum of Paul's preaching that Christ should suffer and that he should be the first that should rise from the dead It is true indeed Acts 26.2 3. that Lazarus and fundry others rose before Christ but they rose to live a mortal life and to die again Christ was the first of all that rose to eternal life never any in the world rose before Christ in this manner 2. In respect of efficacy Christ rose first that by his power all the rest might rise there is in Christ's resurrection a reviving and a quickning vertue and herein is a main difference betwixt the Resurrection of Christ and the Resurrection of any other man the Resurrection of Abraham availes nothing to the resurrection of Isa●c or of Jacob but the resurrection of Christ availes to the resurrection of all that have believed or that shall believe in him is not Christ called a quickning Spirit how then should he but quicken all his members 1 Cor. 15.45 when a man is cast into the Sea and all his body is under water there is nothing to be looked for but present death but if he carry his head above the water there is good hope then of a recovery now Christ is the head unto his Church and therefore he being raised all his members must follow in their time no sooner did Christ arise but many of the bodies of the Saints arose not all that were dead but only some to shew the resurrection of all to come the time for the whole Churches rising being not yet till the great resurrection day It is a question what became of those bodies which now arose Some think they died again but it is more probable that seeing they rose to manifest the quickning vertue of Christ's resurrection that they were also glorified with Christ and as they rose with Christ arising so they ascended up into heaven with Christ ascending 6. That Christ rose again with a true perfect incorruptible powerful spiritual agile and glorious body 1. He had a true body consisting of flesh and blood and bone so he told his Disciples when they supposed him a Spirit Handle me Luke 24.39 and see said he for a Spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have I know this body after his resurrection was comparatively a spiritual body yet for all that he never laid aside the essential properties of a true body as length and breadth and visibility and locality and the like he still keepeth these because they serve to the being of a true body 2. He had a perfect body however he was cut and bored and mangled before his death yet after his resurrection all was perfect Eusebius tells of one of the Children of the Machabees that were put to death for the profession of the Truth and when they cut off his members saies he I have received these from heaven and now I do give them unto the God of heaven and I hope I shall have them again Not a member of Christ was wanting not a bone out of joint but all was perfect 3. He had an incorruptible immortal body To this end saith the Apostle Christ both died and rose and revived and why revived but to shew that he rose never to die again The Apostle is yet more express Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Consonant hereunto is that of Christ I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Amen Rom. 14.9 Rom. 6.9 Rev. 1.18 And herein the body of Lazarus and the rest whom Christ raised differed from his for after they were raised they died again but Christ died no more 4. He had a powerful body Luther could say of the glorified Saints that they had a power so great as to toss the greatest mountains in the world like a Ball And Anselm hath an expression not much unlike that they have such a power Anselm lib. de simil cap. 52. as they are able to shake the whole earth at their pleasure How much more could Christ cause that great Earth-quake at the rising of his Body O it was powerful 5. He had a spiritual body it needed not to meat drink or refreshings as it did before it is true that the Disciples gave him a piece of a broiled fish Luk. 24.42 43 and of an honey-comb and he took it and did eat before them but this he did only to confirm their faith that he appeared solidly and not imaginarily he Ate out of power and not out of necessity even as the Sun sucks up th● water out of power but the earth out of want he Ate not as standing in need of food but to shew the truth of his being risen again as the Saints in heaven neither eat nor drink nor sleep nor have Magistrates nor Ministers but the Spirit of God is all in all to them so it was with
Christs absence we may Weep with them that weep so upon his return we may spring out in joy and rejoyce with them that rejoyce So much of the first Apparition SECT VI. Of Christ's Apparition to his ten Disciples ON this day some reckon five apparitions but of them five as we have seen the first so I shall now only take notice of the last Then the same day at evening being the first day of the week when the doors were shut Joh. 20.19 20. where the Disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews came Jesus and stood in the midst and saith unto them Peace be unto you and when he had so said he shewed unto them his hands and his feet In these words we have the apparition of Christ with all its circumstances As 1. When he appeared 2. Where he appeared 3. To whom he appeared 4. How he appeared So necessary was it to confirm this point that not a needfull circumstance must be wanting And first is layd down the time then the same day at evening being the first day of the week How exact is the Evangelist in this circumstance of time it was the same day the same day at evening and yet lest the day might be mistaken it was the same day at evening being the first day of the week 1. It was the same day i.e. the very day of rising he could not endure to keep them in long suspence the Sun must not down before the Sun of Righteousness would appear The same day that he appeared to Peter to the two Disciples going to Emmaus to the woman coming to the sepulchre and to Mary Magdalen as we have heard the very same day he appears to the ten Oh what a blessed day was this it was the day of his resurrection and the day of these several apparitions 2. It was the same day at evening Both at morn noon and evening Christ shewed himself alive by many infallible proofs Early in the morning he appeared to Mary and presently after to the three Maries who touched his feet and worshiped him About noon he appeared to Simon Peter in the afternoon he travelled with two of his Disciples almost eight miles to the Castle of Emmaus and in the evening of the same day he returned invisible from Emmans to Jerusalem At all times of the day Christ is prepared and preparing grace for his people 3. It was the same day at evening being the first day of the week 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is in one of the Sabbaths but the Greek words are an Hebraism and the Hebrews use often by one to signifie the first as in Gen. 1.5 the evening and the morning were one day i.e. the first day And whereas the Greeks found one of the Sabbaths 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must be understood either properly for Sabbaths or else figuratively signifying the whole week and this acception was usually with the Jews so the Evangelist brings in the Pharisee speaking Luke 18.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I fast twice in the Sabbath i.e. in the week for it is impossible to fast twice in one day and hence the translatour renders it thus primo die h●bdomadis on the first day of the week In which is a discovery of his mercy Christ took no long day to shew himself to his Apostles nay he took no day at all but the very first day When Joseph shewed himself unto his brethren he would not do it at first and yet he dealt kindly and very kindly with them O but Christ's kindness is far above Joseph's for on the first day of the week the very same day that he arose from the dead he appears unto them Thus for the time 2. For the place it is laid down in this passage where the Disciples were assembled Now if we would know where that was the Evangelist Luke speaks expresly it was in Jerusalem Luke 24.33 but in what house of Jerusalem it is unknown only some conjecture that it was in the house of some Disciple wherein was an upper room This upper room according to the manner of their buildings at that time was the most large and capacious of any other Mede Churches and the most retired and free from disturbance and next to heaven as having no room above it Mede tells us expresly this was the same room wherein Christ celebrated the passover and instituted the Lords supper and whereon the day of his resurrection he came and stood in the midst of his Disciples the doors being shut and where eight dayes after the Disciples being within he appeared again to satisfie the incredulity of Thomas Joh. 20.26 Act. 1.12 13. and where the Apostles met after Christ was ascended Then returned they unto Jerusalem from the Mount called Olivet and when they were come in they went up into an upper room where abode both Peter and James and John and the rest If this be true it should seem that this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this upper room first consecrated by Christ at his institution and celebration of the Lords supper Nicephor l. 8. Et. hist cap 30 Psal 87.2 Jeron in Epitaphio Paulae Epist 27. was thenceforth devoted to be a place of prayer and holy assemblies and for certain the place of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was afterwards inclosed with a goodly Church known by the name of the Church of Syon to which Jerome made bold to apply that of the Psalm The Lord loveth the gates of Syon more than all the dwellings of Jacob. Now of this upper room the doors are said to be shut and the reason by way of adjunct is for fear of the Jews they were shut up as men invironed and beleaguered with enemies and here a question is raised whether Christ could enter the doors being shut the text is plain that he came in suddenly and because of his sudden presence the doors being shut they were terrifyed Luke 24.37 Aug. Serm. 59. and afrighted and supposed that they had seen a spirit The ancients speaking of it tell us that he entered while the doors were shut and yet he was no phantasme but he had a true body consisting of flesh and bones Now Aug. in Serm. Pasch Just quest 17. Qui intravit per ostia clausa non erat phantasma c. Cryst how such a body consisting of crass parts should enter into the room and no place at all open is a great question but 't is generally answered that it was by miracle As by miracle he walked on the sea Mat. 10.25 and as by miracle he vanished out of their sight Luke 24.31 so by miracle he came in the doors being shut I know it is against the nature of a body that one should pass through another both bodies remaining entire and it is an axiome in Phylosophy that penetration of bodyes is meerly impossible yet for my part I shall not dispute the power of the Allmighty this answer is
that was against us and nailed to his cross now he spoiled Principalities and Powers and carried the keys of death and hell at his own girdle now he came out of the grave as a mighty Conqueror saying as Dehorah did in her song O my soul Judg. 5.21 thou hast trodden down strength thou hast marched valiantly Again was it not to become the first-fruits of them that sleep Christ was the first that rose again from the grave to dye no more and by vertue of his resurrection as being the first-fruits all the Elect must rise again As in Adam all dye even so in Christ shall all be made alive 1 Cor. 15.22 23. but every man in his own order Christ the first-fruits and afterwards they that are Christ's at his coming Some may wonder can the resurrection of one a thousand six hundred years ago be the cause of our rising yes as well as the death of one five thousand six hundred years ago is the cause of our dying Adam and Christ were two heads two roots two first-fruits either of them in reference to his company whom they stand for And now O my soul thou mayst say with Job I know that my Redeemer liveth Job 19.25 and that I shall see him at the last day not with other but with these same eyes If Christ live then must I live also if he be risen then though after my skin worms shall destroy this body Ver. 26. yet in my flesh I shall see God Again was it not that he might be declared to be the Son of God was it not that he might be exalted and glorified this is the main reason of all the rest see thou to this O give him the glory and praise of his resurrection so muse and meditate and consider on this transaction as to ascribe to his Name all honour and glory what is he risen from the dead Hath God highly exalted him Psal 2.11 and given him a name above every name O then let every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father 3. Consider of the manner of Christ's resurrection he rose as a common person in which respect his resurrection concerns us no less than himself We must not think that when Christ was raised it was no more than when Lazarus was raised his resurrection was the resurrection of us all it was in the name of us all and had in it a seed-like vertue to work the resurrection of us all O the priviledge of this communion with Christ's resurrection if I believe this truly I cannot but believe the resurrection of my body and the life everlasting why Jesus Christ hath led the dance and though of my self I have no right to Heaven or Glory yet in Christ my Head I have as good right to it as any heir apparent to his lands 2. He rose by his own power and so did none but Jesus Christ from the beginning of the world it was never heard that any dead man raised himself Indeed one Instance we have that a dead mans Corps should raise up another dead man They cast the man into the Sepulchre of Elisha 2 King 13.21 and when the man was let down and touched the bones of Elisha he revived and stood up on his feet dead Elisha raised up a dead man from the grave but dead Elisha could not raise up himself from the grave only Christ arose himself and at the same time he raised many others and here was the argument of his God-head John 10.18 I have power to lay down my life and I have power to take it up again how should we but trust him with our life who is the resurrection and the life He that believeth in him though he were dead yet shall he live O my soul he was able to raise himself much more is he able to raise thee up only believe and live for ever 3. He rose with an earthquake O the power of Christ in every passage what ayled thee O earth to skip like a Ram was not the new Tomb hewn out of a Rock and was not a great stone rolled to the door of the Sepulchre the ground wherein he lay was firm and solid Job 18.4 Psal 99.1 and shall the rock be removed out of his place O yes the Lord reigneth and therefore the earth is moved Oh what a rocky heart is this of mine how much harder is it than that rock that moves not melts not at the presence of God at the presence of the God of Jacob the Sun they say danced that morning at Christ's resurrection the earth I am sure then trembled and yet my heart is no way affected with this news I feel it neither dance for joy nor tremble for fear O my soul be serious in this meditation consider what a posture wouldst thou have been in if thou hadst been with those Souldiers that watched Christ so reallize this Earthquake as if thou now felt it trembling under thee 4. An Angel ministred to him at his resurrection An Angel came Mat. 28.2 and rolled back the stone from the door and sate upon it Angels were the first Ministers of the Gospel the first Preachers of Christ's resurrection they preached more of Christ than all the Prophets did they first told the woman that Christ was risen Luke 24.6 and they did the first service to Christ at his resurrection in rolling the stone from the doors mouth O my soul that thou wert but like these blessed Angels how is it that they are so forward in God's Service and thou art so backward One day thou expectest to be equal with the Angels and art thou now so far behind them What! to be equal in Reward and behind them in Service Here 's a Meditation able to check thy Sloath and to spur thee on to thy Duty 5. Many of the Bodies of the Saints arose out of their Graves at His Resurrection as the Angels ministred so the Saints waited on Him In this Meditation trouble not thy self whether David Moses Job Abraham Isaac and Jacob were some of those Saints as some conjecture upon some Grounds It is a better Consideration to look upon them as the Fruit of Christ's Resurrection and as an Earnest of thy Own The Vertue of Christ's Resurrection appears immediately and it will more appear at the general Resurrection Day As sure as these Saints arose with Him and went into the Holy City and appeared unto many so sure shall thy Body rise again at the Last Day and if thou art but a Saint it shall go with Him into the Heavenly Jerusalem and appear before God and His Son Jesus Christ in Glory 6. Christ rose again with a true and perfect Body with an Incorruptible and Powerful Body with a Spiritual and an Agile Body with a Glorious Body brighter than the Sun in his utmost Glory On these things may the Soul expatiate O it is a worthy blessed
Ascension he triumphed now it was that he led sin death and devil in triumph at his Chariot wheels And this is the meaning of the Psalmist and of the Apostle Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive He vanquished and triumphed over all our enemies he overcame the world he bound the devil he spoiled hell he weakened sin he destroyed death and now he makes a publick triumphal shew of them in his own Person he led the captives bound to his chariot-wheels as the manner of the Roman triumphs was Col. 2.15 when the conqueror went up to the Capitol It is to the same purpose that the Apostle speaks else-where Having spoiled Principalities and Powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself it is a manifest allusion to the manner of triumphs after victories amongst the Romans first they spoiled the enemy upon the place ere they stirred off the field and this was done by Christ on the Cross and then they made a publick triumphal shew they rid through the streets in the greatest state and had all their spoils carried before them and the Kings and Nobles whom they had taken they tied to their chariots and led them as captives and this did Christ at his Ascension Then he openly triumphed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in himself i.e. in his own Power and strength other Conquerors do not thus they conquer not in themselves and by themselves but Jesus Christ conquer●d 〈◊〉 himself and therefore he triumphed in himself And yet though he triumphed in himself and by himself it was not for himself only but for us which made the Apostle to triumph in his triumph 1 Cor. 15.55 56 57. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory the sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law but thanks be to God which giveth us victory through our Lord Jesus Christ If I may speak out what I think was this victory of Christ I believe it was that honour given to him after his Resurrection by the conversion of enemies by the amazements of the world by the admiration of Angels and especially by his sitting down at the right hand of Majesty on high for therein is contained both his exaltation and his triumph over all his enemies to the utmost 2. That he might lead us the way and open to us the doors of glory It is a question whether ever those doors of Heaven were opened to any before Christs Ascension Christ tells us John 14.2 3. In my Fathers house are many mansions if it were not so I would have told you but I go to prepare a place for you and if I go and prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto my self that where I am ye may be also Some infer hence as if there should be many outer courts and many different places or states in glory and yet there is one place whither the Saints should arrive at last which was not then ready for them and was not to be entred into until the entrance of our Lord had made the preparation Again the Apostle tells us that the Fathers received not the promises Heb. 11.40 God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect Whence some infer that their conditions after death was a state of imperfection and that they were placed in an outer court on this side Heaven called Paradise or Abraham's bosome and thither also Christ went when he dyed and was attended with the blessed Thief For my part I shall not joyn with such who think all souls of Saints shall go to paradise where they must remain till the day of judgment and then and not till then must enter into that heaven called the third heaven or the Kingdom of Heaven Indeed some of the ancients make heaven and the immediate receptacles of souls to be destinct places both blessed but hugely differing in degrees And a modern writer is very confident Dr. Tayl. great Exemplar Multas dicit non varias aut dispares sed quae pluribus sufficiant acsi diceret non sibi uni sed omnibus etiam discipulis locum illic esse Calvin i. loc Heb. 6.20 That no soul could enter into glory before our Lord entred by whom we hope to have access and to that purpose he cites those texts John 14.2 3. Heb. 11.40 But I see no ground why the souls of Saints should be excluded heaven either before or after Christ As for that text of John 14.2 Christ saith In my Fathers house are many mansions not many outer courts nor many different states and as for the Fathers mentioned Heb. 11.40 Surely they without us shall not be made perfect and we without them shall not be made perfect in some sense until the day of judgment But our Perfection is not in respect of a more glorious place but in respect of that perfection whereof all the faithfull shall be made partakers as well in body as in soul at the resurrection of the just Thus far I grant that no soul ever entred into Heaven but by the vertue and power of Christ's Ascention and that no soul and body joyntly ever ascended except Christs types before Christ himself opened those doors and lead the way and in this respect he is called The forerunner of his People 3. That he might assure us that now he had run through all those Offices which he was to perform here on earth for our redemption He that hath entred into his rest Heb. 4.10 hath also ceased from his own works as God did from his He was first to execute his Office and then to enter into his rest Though he were a Son Heb. 5.8 9. and so the inheritance were his own yet he was to learn Obedience by the things which he suffered before he was made perfect and so to become the Author of eternal Salvation unto all them that obey him This was the argument which Christ used when he prayed to be glorified again with his Father I have glorified thee on the earth John 17.4 5. I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie thou me with thy own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was This was the order of the dispensation of Christ's Offices his first work was a work of ministry and Service in the Office of obedience and suffering for his Church and this next work was the work of power and majesty in the protection and exaltation of his Church and there was a necessity in this order 1. In respect of God's Decree who had so fore-appointed it Acts 2.23 24. 2. In respect of God's justice which must first be satisfied by obedience before any entrance into glory Luke 24.26 3. In respect of Christ's infinite Person which being equal with God could not possibly be
exalted without some preceding decent and humiliation Ephes 49. That he ascended saith the Apostle what is it but that he descended first into the lower parts of the earth 4. In respect of our evidence and assurance this is the sign that Christ hath finished the work of our redemption upon the earth first he was to act as our Surety and then he was to ascend as our Head our Advocate as the first-fruits the Captain the Prince of life the Author of salvation the forerunner of his people 4. That he might throughly convince the world of believers of their perfect righteousness The Spirit when he comes saith Christ shall convince the world of sin and righteousness and of judgment of sin because they believe not on me of of righteousness because I go to my Father and ye see me no more John 16.8 9 10. If Christ had not fulfilled all righteousness there had been no going to heaven for him nor remaining there certainly God would have sent him down again to have done the rest and the disciples should have seen him with shame sent back again but his ascension to heaven proclaims openly 1. That he hath compleatly finished the work he had to do for us here that no more was to be done in this world for us that the satisfactory work to justice was in it self finished 2. That God was well pleased with Jesus Christ and with what he had done and suffered for us yea God was so infinitely taken with him and his oblation after his sufferings as that he thinks it not fit to let him stay above forty days longer in this world he cannot be without him in heaven but he takes him up into glory and gives him a name above every name 3. That we have our share in heaven with him he went not up as a single person but vertually or mystically he carried up all the Elect with him into glory or otherwise how should the Spirit convince the world by his ascension of their righteousness or otherwise how should the Son of God convince his Father by his Ascension of his righteousness I look upon Jesus Christ going into Heaven as a confident Debtor after payment going into a Court and saying Who hath any thing to lay to his charge all is paid let the law take his course when Christ entred into heaven he seemed thus to challenge Justice Make room here for me and mine who should hinder hath the law any thing to say to these poor souls for whom I dyed if any in heaven can make objection Rev. 8.1 here I am to answer in their behalf Methinks I imagine a silence in heaven as John speaks at this speech only Mercy smiles and Justice gives in the Acquittance and God sets Christ down at his right hand 4. That he hath a new design to be acted in heaven for us he is taken up into glory that he may act gloriously the second part of out righteousness I mean that he might apply it and send down his Spirit to convince us of it He acted one part in the flesh in the habit of a beggar cloathed with rags but now he is gone to act the person of a Prince in robes of glory and all this to manage our salvation in the richest way that may be Three great things Christ acts for us now in glory First he is in place of an advocate for us He liveth to intercede for us Heb. 7.25 He is always begging of favour and love for us he lyes there to stop whatever plea may be brought in against us by the devil or Law yea he is there to get our fresh pardons for new sins Secondly he is the great provider and caterer for us John 14.2 he is laying in a great stock and store of glory for us against we come there In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you Jesus Christ went before to take up God's heart for us and now he is drawing out the riches of love from God his Father and laying them in bank for us Phil. 4.19 which made the Apostle say My God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus Thirdly he sends down his Spirit to convince us that Christs righteousness is ours indeed the means of procuring this was the life and death of Christ but the means of applying this righteousness are those following acts of Christ's Resurrection Ascension Session Intercession c. By his death he obtained righteousness for us but by his Ascension he applies righteousness to us now it is that in especial manner he convinceth us of righteousness Because he is gone to his Father and we shall see him no more 5. That he might receive his Kingdom over us in the place appointed for it look as Kings are crowned in the chief Cities of their Kingdoms and keep their residence in their palaces near unto them so it was decent that our Saviour should be Crowned in Heaven and there sit down at Gods right hand which immediatly follows after his Ascension to which we now come SECT IV. Of God's right hand and of Christ's Session there 2. FOr the Session of Christ at God's right hand which is a consequent following after his ascension into Heaven I shall examine 1. What is God's right hand 2. What is it to sit there 3. According to what nature doth Christ sit there 4. Why is it that he sits at the right hand of God his Father in Glory 1. What is this right hand of God I answer 1. Negatively it is not any Corporal right hand of God if we speak properly God hath neither right hand nor left hand for God is not a body but a spirit or spiritual substance 2. Positively the right hand of God is the Majesty Dignity Dominion Power and ●l●●y of God The right hand of the Lord is exalted Psal 118.15 Exod. 15.6 Psal 89.13 Isa 48.13 the right hand of the Lord doth valianity Thy right hand O Lord is become glorious in Power thy right hand O Lord hath dashed in pieces the enemy Thou hast a mighty arm Strong is thy hand and high i● thy right hand Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the Heavens I know some of our Divines make this right hand of God something inferior to God's own power but others speak of it as every way equal and I know no absurdity to follow on it 2. What is it to sit at the right hand of God I answer it is not any corporal Session at Gods right hand as some picture him with a crown of gold on his head sitting on a Throne as if he had no other gesture in Heaven but sitting still which Stephen contradicts Acts 7.56 saying I see the heavens opened and the Son of man standing on th● right hand of God The words sitting or standing are both metaphorical and borrowed
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
in his Kingly but now he must be fully honoured in his Kingly office Rev. 11.15 now especially The Kingdoms of this world must become the Kingdoms of the Lord and of his Christ and so he shall reign for ever and ever Certainly there is a difference betwixt Christ's reign before and his present reign at the day of judgment Christ hath a double Throne wherein he sits and reigns Rev. 3.21 To him that overcomes will I give to sit with me in my throne as I also overcame and am set down with my Father in his throne That Kingly rule that Christ hath from his ascension is upon his Fathers Throne but the Kingdom that Christ shall have at the day of judgment and ever after it is the joynt reign of him with the Father he shall have a Throne himself and the Saints shall sit with him in his own Throne And now saith the Father John 5.22 Sit thou at my right hand q. d. sit on thy own Throne by me go on to judge the Nations I will not judge them but only in thee and by thee Lo I have committed all judgment unto the Son and do thou judge them until thou hast rewarded thy friends and made thine enemies thy footstool Mark He hath committed all judgment unto the Son the Father gives the Son a Commission wherein is written as it were these words My Son now is the time or season which I had put in my own power and my pleasure is 2 Pet. 3.10 13. that all the world shall be set on fire these heavens under thee shall pass away with a great noise and the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up and I will have new heavens and a new earth wherein shall dwell righteousness go too then put on thy robes appear in thy glory empty thi● heaven of all those glorious spirits that are therein and let them wait on thee to thy judgment seat go pass thy doom upon all flesh and send reprobates to hell and bring up hither all thy Saints that they may live with thee and here behold thy glory for ever and ever Lo here is thy commission be gone and return no more hither until it be accomplished Christians I cannot but wonder at this joy and exultation in Heaven Vse and that we have so little or none of this on earth we say with cold lips and frozen hearts Thy Kingdom come thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven but if our prayers were real and fervent if we could but imitate those heavenly Citizens what longings would be in our hearts after Christ's coming how should we rejoyce at the very thoughts hereof Christ comforting his Disciples in respect hereof he speaks these words Luke 21.28 When these things begin to come to pass then look up said he and lift up your heads for your redemption draweth nigh The fulness of our redemption is a ground of consolation all the spirits above are sensible of this God and Christ and the Angels and Saints rejoyce Rev. 12.19 Ver. 20. and again rejoyce The Spirit and the Bride say come and Christ himself saith Surely I come quickly O let us say Amen to it Even so come Lord Jesus SECT II. Of Christ coming to judgment 2. FOr Christ's coming to judgment no sooner Christ prepared and all in readiness but down he descends from his Imperial throne to the Judgment-seat In this passage I shall observe these particulars 1. He descends with his Train He comes with his Royal Attendants out of Heaven This is the glory of a Prince that hath so many Nobles waiting on him and this is the glory of Jesus Christ that when he comes to judge the world he shall have his Saints and Angels the glory of the creation to be his Attendants in that work Behold the Lord comes with mighty Angels 2 Thes 1.7 Jude 14. Behold the Lord comes with ten thousands of his Saints to execute judgment upon all Certainly a numberless number shall wait upon him Daniel tells us of a thousand thousand that this day Minister unto Christ A thousand thousands ministred unto him Dan. 7.10 and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him or if Heaven have more I believe Heaven will empty it self of all the Saints and all the Angels not one Spirit whether Saint or Angel shall stay behind when Christ descends Matth. 25.31 The Son of man shall come in his glory and all the holy Angels with him Oh what a glorious day will this be if one Sun make the morning Sky so glorious what a bright shining and glorious morning will that be when so many thousands of Suns shall shine over all our heads the glorious Body of our Christ surpassing them all in splendor and glory here 's a new Heaven of Sun and Stars such as this nether-world never saw Lo yond the Sun of righteousness with all his Morning-stars singing and shouting for joy Heaven now empties it self of all its created Citizens and cleaves asunder to make way for Christ and all his Train Matth. 24.29 2. In his descent through the Heavens he shakes the Heavens And the powers of the heaven shall be shaken The whole frame of Heaven most strong and immutable in its being and motion or the mighty bodies thereof most mighty in their substance lastingness motion and operation shall be shaken I know by the powers of heaven some mean the Angels who at this wonderful descent of Christ shall admire and move but I rather think the Heavens themselves are meant hereby whose very nature shall be moved Job 26.11 and shaken at that day At his nod the pillars of heaven tremble and are astonished As yet they are Subject to vanity and therefore 't is no wonder if at the coming of Christ they tremble and are moved In this moving or shaking the Evangelists adds that the glorious lights of Heaven shall be altered Matth. 24.29 The Sun shall be darkened and the Moon shall not give her light Adventum Christi tantam lucem allaturam ut ea solis lunae splendor obscuretur Aretius in loc Certissimum autem diem judicii magna majestate sore ut rede sol luna dicantur obscurandi Aretius in loc Psal 50.3 and the Stars shall fall Many interpretations are given of this I am not for Allegories but rather conceive these things are real the very coming of Christ shall bring with him such a light that the splendor of the Sun and Moon shall be obscured this is most certain saith Aretius that both Sun and Moon shall really be darkened at that day it is the glory of his Majesty that will dazle those Candles 3. As he passes through the Elementary world a fire doth usher him Our God shall come and shall not keep silence a fire shall devour before him and it shall be very
so he shall descend with the voice of the Archangel or he shall scend his Angels with a great sound Matth 24.3 That there are seven principal Angels Master Mede affirms and that there is one which yet eminently is called the Archangel some others affirm as among Devils there is one chief Devil Mat. 25.41 called the Prince of Devils and therefore the fire is said to be prepared for the Devil and his Angels so from this Text of 1 Thess 4.16 and of Dan. 10.13 and of Jude v. 9. Some probably conclude that the good Angels have a Prince even Michael whom Jude calls the Archangel But of this no more the Lord keep me from intruding into those things which I have not seen Collos 2.18 The day it self will discover it and so I leave it as having said enough to satisfie the sober minded For the second what is this voice of the Archangel I conceive that thereby we are to understand thunder here is as we have said a manifest allusion to the proceedings at the giving of the Law now the voice there mentioned besides the voice of God Exod. 19.16 20.18 Heb. 2.2 and the voice of a trumpet is the voice of Thunder And it came to pass on the third day in the morning there were thunders In this sense some expound these words of the Apostle where the Law is said to be spoken by Angels because the Angels did raise up those extraordinary thunders which happily were the matters of the articulate voice in which the Lord spake to Israel or if the Law was spoken by Christ as I have delivered my opinion elsewhere he being the Angel of the Covenant Book 3. ch 1. Sect. 4. Mal. 3 1 And the Angel of his presence Isa 63.9 Yet this hinders not but that created Angels might speak the Law too if not in respect of the articulate voyce yet in respect of the voyce of thunders which attended on it thus thunder is often called the voyce of God and the voyce of his excellency Job 37.4 5. Psalm 29.3 4 5 6 7 8 9. 3. The Lord shall descend with the trumpet of God Such a voyce was used also at the giving of the Law Exod. 19.16 and Exod. 20.18 and so it will be now when men are called to account for the keeping or breaking of it For the understanding of this our last translation tells us Mat. 24.31 that Christ shall send his Angels with the great sound of a trumpet but in four Greek copies as Beza confesseth as also in the Hebrew Gospel of Matthew and in the Vulgar and in the margent of our last translation it is read that Christ shall send his Angels with a trumpet and a great voyce And so the latter words are exegetical q. d. with a trumpet that is with a great voyce like the voice of a trumpet so that this reading very provably proves that the last trumpet is to be taken metaphorically For the more full confirmation whereof I argue thus when any thing is ascribed to the Angels which is not suitable to their spiritual nature and which they have no need of for the work they are about is it to be taken metaphorically unless the context or some other Scripture force us to a proper acceptation but a material trumpet of Silver Brass or the like metal is not suitable to the spiritual nature of the Angels neither have they need of such a trumpet for producing a great sound in the Air it is evident that without a trumpet they can make a great sound like the noise of a trumpet and there is nothing at all in the Scriptures that will force us or probably lead us to a proper acceptation of the word add yet to what hath been said that sometimes a great voice is set out by the similitude of a Trumpet I heard behind me a great voice as of a trumpet Rev. 1.10 and the first voyce which I heard was as it were of a trumpet Rev. 4.1 But why is this sound as of a trumpet called the trumpet of God I answer for the greatness of it for its usual in the Hebrew Language for the setting forth of greatness excellency or superlativeness of a thing to add the Name of God to the word whereby the thing is signified as Gen. 23.6 A Prince of God i.e. a Mighty Prince Gen. 30.8 With the wrestlings of God i.e. with great wrestlings Psal 36.6 Mountains of God i.e. Great mountains Psal 80.10 Cedars of God i.e. very high Cedars So here the trump of God i.e. A very great sound like the sound of a trumpet It is said in the Law there were thunders and lightnings Exod. 19.16 and a thick cloud upon the mount and the voyce of the trumpet exceeding loud so that all the people that was in the camp trembled and if there was trembling at the giving of the Law oh what trembling will be at the general Assize when sinners shall be condemned for breaking of it 3. No sooner the shout made but the Saints arise it is true the Saints that are alive need no resurrection but upon them will this trumpet have its effect Somthing like death shall ceaze upon them and they shall be changed The order of this is given in by the Apostle from the Lord This we say unto you by the Word of our Lord 1 Thes 4.15.16 17. that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep for the Lord himself shall descend from Heaven with a shout with the voyce of the Archangel and with the Trump of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them into the clouds The first that shall be called are the Saints that sleep and then the Saints that are alive shall be immediatly changed Oh what a day will this be what a strange sight to see all the dead ever since the beginning of the World rise out of their graves for the wicked I believe they shall rise like Toads from their holes in a black swarthy ugly colour A question is amongst the Schools whether Reprobates shall rise again with all their deformities which they had in this life as some of them being blind halt lame maimed deaf dum c. Whether now they shall rise in the self-same condition for my part I conceive that whereas God the author of nature will at that day restore humane nature that therefore there shall be no defects of natural parts certainly nothing shall be wanting in the damned which may impede the sense of torment in any part now a defect of any member would hinder these universal torments that must ceaze on every part of the bodies of the damned in Hell their bodies therefore shall be whole onely the bodies of such shall be foul ugly heavy lumpish bodies as opposed to the glorious qualities of the bodies of