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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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acquaintance or such like This being Satan's aim herein that their sufferings may have so much the more of bitter gall and wormwood in them as they are inflicted by such from whom better things in reason might have been expected Psal. 55. 12 13. for Isaac is persecuted by his brother Ishmael But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him who was born after the Spirit 3. Amongst those other persecutions which the Godly must endure the scourge of tongues is one and not the least especially when godlesse men taking occasion from their low condition do mock at their interest in God and labour to shame them from their confidence as if the Promise of God were of none effect for Ishmael's mocking of Isaac being yet a childe spoken of Gen. 21. 9. wherewith was doubtlesse joyned his mocking of the Promise made to Isaac is here called persecution He that was born after the flesh persecuted c. 4. Whatever wicked men may pretend yet the true rise of all their malice and opposition to those who are truly godly is their inward antipathy to the work of Grace in the Godly which they themselves want for so much is hinted at by the description here given of Ishmael the persecuter he was born after the flesh he had no more than what the power of nature did carry him to and of persecuted Isaac he was born after the Spirit or by the power of the Spirit of God wherby he did prefigure those who are truly regenerate which are born not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1. 13. Doct. 5. This may furnish with no small encouragement and comfort under hardest sufferings that nothing befalleth us but what is common to men and hath been the Churche's ordinary lot in former ages for this is Paul's scope even to comfort Christians under their present sufferings because Isaac did indure persecution as well as they But as then even so it is now saith he Vers. 30. Neverthelesse what saith the Scripture Cast out the bond-woman and her son for the son of the bond-woman shall not be heir with the son of the free-woman HE comforteth them secondly from this That the Jewish Synagogue and those who adhered thereto prefigured by Agar and Ishmael should be cast out of the Church of God from the society of the Saints and from the inheritance of life everlasting according as was shadowed forth by the like sentence of ejection from Abraham's family past upon Hagar and Ishmael at first by Sarab Gen. 21. 10. and authorized afterwards by God Himself Gen. 21. 12. Doct. 1. The Childe of God can have no solid comfort against nor yet be sufficiently guarded from stumbling at the outwardly prosperous state of the wicked or the afflicted state of the godly untill he consider what is God's mind revealed in Scripture either of the one or the other for the Apostle to comfort them against the wicked their prosperity and persecution flowing from it doth lead them to Gods mind in Scripture Neverthelesse saith he what saith the Scripture 2. Though God be slow to anger and is not easily provoked wholly to dissolve and cast off a Church or People who were once named by His Name even when they turn persecuting apostates yet if they be not gained by His long-suffering patience but notwithstanding go on to persecute truth and to maintain their damnable heresies He will quit them at the last by suffering them to make total apostasie from Him for the Jewish Synagogue though persecuting Truth and maintaining Justification by Works and several other Errors was not yet cast off by God but was to be rejected shortly after this as is not obscurely hinted at by the Apostle while he citeth this Scripture leaving the application of it unto themselves Cast out the bond-woman and her son c. 3. As it is no small disadvantage to Truth and to those who do maintain it when their persecuting adversaries do lurk under the mask of God's true Church and are generally taken for such So it is no lesse comfort when God taketh off that mask and maketh it appear unto the world that they are not the Church of God but the Synagogue of Satan for the Apostle's scope is to comfort the Christian Church that the Jewish Synagogue who for the time gave out her self and was generally taken for the true Church and thereby procured no small authority to her erroneous doctrine and way should shortly be cast out and not have so much as the face of a Church What saith the Scripture Cast out the bond-woman 4. There is no Salvation nor any hope of Salvation unto any who are without the true Church for the Jewish Synagogue being once un-churched her children and those who adhered in all things to her were debarred from the heavenly inheritance as Agar and Ishmael once being cast out of Abrahams family Ishmael was thereby debarred from having any part in the promised Land Cast out the bond-woman and her son for the son of the bond-woman shall not be heir c. 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Works when it 's not only doctrinally maintained but also practically walked in doth exclude the maintainer of it from having any part in the Kingdom of Heaven for so much was prefigured by the son of the bond-woman against whom a sentence is passed that he shall not be heir with the son of the free-woman Vers. 31. So then Brethren we are not children of the bond-woman but of the free HE comforteth them thirdly from this That they who for the time were persecuted by the Jewish Synagogue were not children of the bond-woman or members of that company and society which was prefigured by Hagar and so in no hazard from the former terrible sentence but being children of the free-woman or members of that Church which was prefigured by Sarah they had right to the heavenly inheritance whereby as by all which he hath formerly said he doth indirectly exhort those Galatians to quit their present error of seeking after Justification by Works and their tenacious adherance to that ancient Pedagogie of Moses as they would not exclude themselves from the heavenly inheritance Doct. 1. As a Minister must sometimes denounce most terrible judgments against the obstinate and godlesse So he ought most carefully to guard such denunciations as those lest they to whom they do not appertain make application of them and be discouraged by them for Paul doth guard the former denunciation while he saith So then we are not children of the bond-woman 2. The heavie denunciation of fearfull judgments to come upon any are speaking warnings unto us to flee from that way wherein those have walked who are so threatned for having shewn that the bond-woman with her son were to be cast out he inferreth So then we are not children of the bond-woman but of the free which hath the force of an indirect
then was the yoke of judicial Gen. 49. 10. and ceremonial duties Act. 15. 10. to be taken off the vail of shadows and dark prophecies whereby Christ and free-grace were hid and covered to be laid aside 2 Cor. 3. 11 12. And though the duties of the Moral Law are yet to be pressed Col. 3. 18 c. and the curse of the Law to be denounced against all who are in their natural estate Col. 3. 6. yet covenanted grace and furniture for duty Joh. 1. 17. and Christ's becoming a curse for us to redeem us from the curse of the Law are more clearly held forth now in the dayes of the Gospel ver 13. than they were formerly for saith he It was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the Promise was made 4. The Gospel is so to be commended and preferred unto the Law as nothing of that honour and respect which is due unto the Law be taken from it and the Doctrine of the Law and Gospel are to be so bounded as neither may encroach upon the other for left Paul in setting limits between the Law and the Gospel should seem to vilisie the Law he commendeth it from this That it was ordained by Angels in the hand or by the ministry and service of a Mediator 5. Though Moses was the Mediator here spoken of Deut. 5. 5. yet it followeth not that Angels and Saints are Mediators in Heaven for Moses was present with the people and ordained a Mediator by God for this one act which was to relate and report the Law from God to the people now it can carry no shew of reason from this to conclude that therefore the Saints who are absent in Heaven and so are ignorant of us Isa. 63. 16. or that either Saint or Angel should be constituted Mediators to report our prayers and the secrets of our hearts unto God especially seing no Scripture doth prove that any such office is put upon them by God It was ordained in the hand of a Mediator From Vers. 20. Learn 1. Conscience of guilt presenteth God as terrible and taketh away all confidence from the guilty sinner to approach in a friendly manner by himself to a provoked God for no entercourse can be between God and His people when they are not one but differ by reason of His peoples sin A Mediator is not of one saith he there was a disagreement through sin which called for a Mediator 2. The Covenant of Works entred with Adam in the state of innocency was immediate no Mediator interveening to make them one wherein it differeth from the Covenant of Grace Heb. 8. 6. for God and man before the fall were one and no disagreement betwixt them because of sin and so there was no use for a Mediator in the Covenant that was then made for A Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith Paul 3. No man can attain to Heaven or reap any advantage by a Covenant of Works except he were perfectly holy and as free of sin as Adam was before his fall for the Apostle proving that God made no Covenant of Works with them upon mount Sinal and that they could have reaped no benefit by such a Covenant thinketh it sufficient to evince that they were then a sinfull people which he evinceth from this that they stood in need of a Mids-man betwixt God and them Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith he 4. The Lord in all His dispensations is alwayes one and like to Himself without any shadow of turning Iam. 1. -17. His work and way of dealing may and hath changed even His way of dispensing the Covenant of Grace to His Church Heb. 8. 8 9. but He remaineth unchangeable there being no change of that kind which He hath not fore-ordained by His unchangeable decree Eph. 1. -11. Thus he saith God is one that is with relation to the present scope If any plead a right to Heaven for the merit of their works God will abate nothing of what He Himself did once prescribe and require of man in the Covenant of Works Vers. 21. Is the Law then against the Promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily Righteousness should have been by the Law 22. But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the Promise by Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe FOlloweth the third Objection to wit If the Law be given to discover and condemn for transgressions as is affirmed ver 19. Then it is contrary to the Covenant-promise which doth cover and pardon sin quicken and justifie the sinner He answereth 1. by denying and rejecting the consequence as absurd and abominable 2. By retorting the Argument against the Adversaries themselves for if the Law or if our works done in obedience to the Law could procure eternal life as they affirmed Then our righteousnesse before God should consist in Works or the Law should justifie leaving them to gather that this would suppose the former Covenant by promise to be abolished and quite destroyed by the Law so that according to their Doctrine the Law was both contrary unto and destructive of the Promise ver 21. 3. He answereth directly shewing the Law called here the Scripture or that Scripture as it is in the Original while it convinceth accuseth and condemneth all mankind for sin and so concludeth and incloseth all men under sin and the curse due to sin as the Judge doth the malefactor in prison is not contrary but subordinate and subservient to the Promise in so far as that hereby the guilty sinner being made to lay aside all confidence in his own righteousnesse Rom. 7. 9. doth flee by Faith in Jesus Christ for a refuge to the Promise and so the thing promised to wit Righteousnesse and Salvation becometh the sinner's and is conveyed upto him to wit upon his believing From Vers. 21. Learn 1. It is the way of Hereticks to set Scripture against Scripture and to make one Scripture seem to contradict another except their erroneous sense and interpretation of Scripture be received as intended by the Spirit of God for these false Apostles did affirm if so the Law did not give life but did only discover and accuse for transgressions then God's mind in the Law should have been contrary to His mind revealed in the Promise Hence Paul propoundeth this question unto himself to answer Is the Law then against the Promises of God 2. However Hereticks may labour to fasten such absurdities upon Truth as if it were contrary to some other parts of God's mind revealed in Scripture yet their bold allegations will be found alwayes false and Truth to be ever most consonant and never contrary to it self for so the Apostle sheweth of the Truth in hand God forbid saith he 3. There are some sins chiefly those that do most directly reflect upon any divine perfection or attribute of God the
incarnate and cloathed with our flesh untill then having hid His divine glory so that very little of it did appear under the infirmities of the humane nature from His incarnation untill then Philip. 2. 7 8. but then He did manifest His divine glory absolute power and authority in a way incomprehensible by us in and through the vail of His glorified flesh for the Apostle sheweth those things were done in this order while he saith When He raised Him from the dead and set Him at His own right hand 5. Although the divine and humane nature in Christ are not confounded but remain distinct both in their essence and operations each nature doing that which is proper unto it self Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. yet so near and strict is that personall union of the two natures in Christ that those things which are proper only unto the one nature are ascribed unto and spoken of the whole person for here though this high honour and trust put upon Christ was in some things verified only in the divine nature in so far as it speaketh His manifestation of His divine glory and exercising His divine authority as God incarnate in and through the humane nature And though in some things it was verified only in the humane nature in so far as it speaketh His obtaining of glory and power from the Father which before He had not yet the whole of it is ascribed unto the whole person of Christ God-man while he saith And made Him to sit at His own right hand 6. Though Christ as Mediator be exalted to such high honour and authority as no meer creature is capable of yet so far is His humane nature from being made hereby omnipotent omnipresent and consequently equal with God That even whole Christ considered as Mediator is inferior and lesse than the Father Joh. 14. -28. as having received all this honour and authority from the Father Matth. 28. 18. and administrating His Kingdom in the Father's Name Joh. 5. 22. which He is also to render up unto the Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. for not only do the Scriptures cited but also the phrase here used prove so much seing those whom the King setteth at his right hand do hold their dignity and trust from him and must be comptable unto him And set Him at His own right hand Vers. 21. Far above all principality 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 22. And hath put all things under His feet THe Apostle in the second place insisteth upon that second effect of God's mighty power and explaineth what he meaned by the Father's setting of Christ at His own right hand even that which we formerly shewed to wit that transcendent glory and dignity with full power and soveraignity which was put upon Him And first he speaketh of that general power and eminency which He hath over and above all the creatures by shewing that He is exalted in glory not only above but far above the glory of all creatures whatsoever whether principality power might or dominion under which is comprehended every thing that is excellent among the creatures whether in Heaven Earth or Hell for sometimes good Angels are expressed by those titles Eph. 3. 10. sometimes bad Angels Eph. 6. 12. and sometimes Civil powers Tit. 3. 1. And lest any might apprehend some dignity besides not comprehended under any of these four he addeth a general clause comprising every name that is all things excellent or famous and worthy to be so named as famous men are called men of Name So that he hereby sheweth no creature can enter in competition with Christ in glory dignity and worth and withall he extendeth this glory put upon Christ in its duration not only unto this world but that which is to come and shall never have an end ver 21. And that he may exalt Christ yet further he sheweth that He is not only above all creatures in glory but also in dominion and soveraignity the Father having placed all the creatures in a state of lowest subjection unto Him even under His feet to be disposed of as He seeth fit From Vers. 21. Learn 1. The glory and splendor of things created hath some aptnesse in it if it be not rightly looked on or rather we are apt to take occasion from it to hide and undervalue the glory and excellency of Jesus Christ for otherwise the Apostle would not labour so much to set Him high up above them and His glory above theirs Far above all principality and power 2. Though Scripture give some ground to affirm that there are different degrees and dignities among the Angels Dan. 10. 13. and 12. 1. yet what are their different orders offices and dignities Scripture doth nowhere determine neither is there any ground for us to determine from this place for as we shew the Apostle's scope is under those titles and the general clause subjoyned to lay aside not only Angels but all civil powers and all created dignity whatsoever from competing with Christ in the point of power excellency and worth Far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named 3. Even the humane nature of Christ and His glorified body by vertue of that unspeakable union which is betwixt the two natures of Christ in one person is lifted up so high in glory that the glory of Kings and Emperors of Sun Moon and Stars of the souls of just men made perfect yea and of glorious Angels is nothing to it and lesse than the light of a candle being compared with the Sun in his brightnesse for he is speaking here of that glory which Christ hath by sitting at the right hand of God which as to some pieces of it doth belong to Christ as man and of it he affirmeth that it is far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named 4. As we do then only think aright of that high glory put upon Christ when we look on it as matchlesse and not only above but far and infinitly far above all that glory which can be found in all or any of the creatures So the holding forth of Christ in his glory by the Lord's Servants is a point of great concernment for the good of God's People to make all created glory wax dim and bulklesse Dan. 3. 16 17 18. to draw their hearts up after and towards Him Joh. 4. 10. to hearten them against those discouragements they usually meet with in doing service to Him Act. 7. 55 56. and to make them more reverent in their approaches to Him Heb. 12. 25. for therefore doth Paul so much labour as he cannot well satisfie himself in setting forth that high glory wherein Christ is while he saith He is above and far above and then enumerateth four comprehensive particulars and addeth a general clause comprising all
called Ministers by God to hold forth unto the Lords People than the doctrine of Salvation through free grace the greatest of all trusts So whatever is committed or given by God unto them is not for themselves alone but for the good of those also unto whom they are sent and therefore God doth usually deal the better with Ministers for the Peoples sake for the relative which doth relate to the antecedent grace and Paul saith This grace or the doctrine of the Gospel is given me to you-ward Vers. 3. How that by revelation he made known unto me the mysterie as I wrote afore in few words 4 Whereby when ye read ye may understand my knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. THe Apostle being in the second branch of the first part of the Chapter to ver 13. more largely to illustrate what he did but briefly assert ver 2. to wit that the Apostolick office of dispensing the Gospel to the Gentiles was committed unto him doth first shew to ver 7. that he was sufficiently furnished by God with knowledge and insight in the Doctrine of the Gospel concredited to him And in those two verses he declareth not only the nature of this Doctrine that it is a mysterie or sacred secret but also that it was made known unto him by God together with the manner how he came to the knowledge of it to wit by extraordinary revelation from God and not by ordinary means as is more clearly expressed Gal. 1. 12. and for proof of his knowledge and insight in this mysterie he referreth them to what he hath written succinctly of it in the two former Chapters in which he hath by a most divine and ravishing strain set forth the grounds causes and means of salvation and made application of all both to Jew and Gentile which is the very comprehensive sum of this mysterie ver 3. from which two preceeding Chapters being diligently perpended and read by them he doubteth not but they should find he had not arrogantly and without ground ascribed to himself a great measure of knowledge and insight in that mysterie which he calleth the mysterie of Christ because Christ is the chief subject of the Gospel 1 Cor. 2. 2. and the very mysterie of that mysterie 1 Tim. 3. 16. This is contained ver 4. From ver 3. Learn 1. Whoever are called by God to undergo any office in His house they are in somemeasure greater or lesser competently furnished and fitted by Him for that imployment And therfore giftlesse Ministers were never sent by God for Paul having shown that the Apostolick Office was committed unto him by God ver 2. he now declareth how God had furnished him for it How that by revelation He made known unto me the mysterie 2. That the Gospel is a mysterie and in what respects it is so see chap. 1. ver 9. doct 1. He made known unto me the mysterie 3. The Lord doth usually manifest Himself more or lesse unto His Servants according to the nature weight and difficulty of those imployments unto which He doth call them for He maketh Himself manifest to Paul by extraordinary revelation because he was to serve Him in an extraordidary embassage as an Apostle How that by revelation He made known unto me 4. As Christ's Ministers may sometimes in sobriety speak to the commendation of their own knowledge and of their other ministerial abilities to wit when they are necessitated to assert and avow their calling from God So it is most safe to speak no further to that purpose than they have formerly given some proof of in discharge of their calling to which they may appeal as an undeniable confirmation of what they affirm lest otherwise their bare assertion be taken for vain vaunting and arrogant boasting for Paul being called to speak of his own knowledge and abilities as an evidence of his calling from God referreth them to that proof which he had given thereof in his former writings while he saith As I wrote afore in few words 5. The Doctrine of salvation revealed unto and Preached by the Apostles is contained in their writings and therefore there is no necessity of unwritten traditions for the Apostle proving that this mysterie was revealed to him he doth not refer them to what he had preached unto them for the space of two years Acts 19. 10. but to his writings which had been no adequate proof except he had written the sum of all which was revealed unto him at least of so much as was necessary for them to know As I wrote afore in few words 6. The Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath comprised large and comprehensive purpose even the whole plot of mans salvation and the sum of mans duty in a small bulk and few words as knowing that reading much would be but wearisomenesse to the flesh Eccles. 12. -12. and intending that the gift of interpretation and exponing Scripture should have place in the Church 1 Corinth 12. 8. for Paul the pen-man of the Spirit of God giveth a comprehensive sum of the whole Gospel in the two first Chapters with relation to which he saith here I wrote afore in few words From ver 4. Learn 1. The brevity of Scripture and comprehensive largenesse of the purpose contained in it do not occasion any such obscurity in Scripture but by diligent reading the mind of God therein may be found out and understood for notwithstanding Paul hath shown he had comprehended that whole mysterie in few words yet saith he Whereby when you read ye may understand 2. The Word of God therefore ought to be frequently read and diligently perused by all the Lords people this being one mean and second to none except publick preaching Rom. 10. 14 15. which the Lord doth blesse as for other ends So for attaining to know and understand the purpose and subject-matter contained in the Word for Paul supponeth it was their duty to read what he had written and sheweth by reading they should understand his knowledge in the mysterie 3. Even private Christians through diligent reading of Scripture may attain to such a measure of knowledge and understanding as may enable them to judge of the abilities gifts and doctrine of Ministers for Paul speaking even to private Christians amongst those Ephesians saith Wherby when ye read ye may understand my knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. 4. Though private Christians are not to sist themselves as publick judges of the doctrine of Ministers 1 Cor. 14. 32. neither should they delight much in venting their private judgement especially their carping censures Iam. 1. 19 yet they are not as stupid blocks without triall and examination to receive what-ever the Minister saith but ought to passe a private judgment of discretion upon what they hear whether it be truth or error right or wrong in so far at least as may regulate their own practice in choosing or refusing what they hear 1 Thess. 5. 21. for Paul alloweth unto those Ephesians
captivity captive and gave gifts unto men THe Apostle secondly in this first branch of the second generall argument for union from the diversity of gifts doth confirm from Psal. 68. 18. what he presently said that Christ is the author and bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures In which place of the Psalm David doth look through the ark a type and shadow to Christ the substance and in a prophetical way speaking of things to come as already past to point-out the certainty of their performance he doth foretell that Christ should in a triumphant manner ascend up on high or unto the heighest heavens See ver 10. and that at and by vertue of His ascension He should first lead captivity captive that is as he had upon the crosse foiled His many enemies and begun to triumph over them Col. 2. 15. So in His ascension He should continue the triumph evidently declaring that He had given a totall rout to all the spiritual enemies of His Church and Kingdom The expression used to set forth this purpose hath in it an allusion to conquerors who in their triumphing solemnities used to drive their captive enemies before their own triumphant chariots See this expression used in the same sense Judg. 5. 12. And secondly following the same allusion to triumphing conquerors who used to divide and scatter the spoil and other magnificent gifts among the applauding Citizens and Souldiers he sheweth that Christ should at and by vertue of His ascension pour-forth and distribute a large measure of gifts and graces upon His Church and severall members thereof which prophesie the Apostle citing the place with some variation of the words but keeping close to the sense and purpose doth shew was now fulfilled by Christ and consequently that Christ is the bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures as was affirmed ver 7. Doct. 1. Ministers ought to hold forth nothing for truth or presse nothing as duty upon the Lords people but what they may confirm and prove to be such from the authority of God speaking in Scripture yea and it is their duty sometimes to bring forward their proof by making expresse mention of it for thus doth Paul confirm what he spake ver 7. by a testimony cited from the Psalms Wherefore he saith that is David or the Spirit of God speaking by David saith 2. As there was much of Christ revealed in the Scriptures of the Old Testament though but darkly and under a vail of types and ceremonial shadows So He was revealed and spoken-of in those Scriptures as true God and Jehovah for that which is said Psal. 68. was spoken of God even Jehovah as appeareth from ver 4. and all alongst which Paul sheweth here was fulfilled in Christ Wherefore be saith he hath ascended c. 3. Though the very words and phrase of Scripture are much to be thought of and closely adhered unto so far as is possible lest by our unnecessary casting of Scripture-purpose in an affected strain of words unknown to Scripture we lose at length the purpose with the words 2 Tim. 1. 13. Yet the sense and meaning of Scripture is mainly to be sought-after and kept in remembrance so that though we do not call to mind the very words of such a Scripture but only the sense meaning and purpose of it we may draw comfort or information from it or make use of it otherwayes for the Apostle here as oft elsewhere doth not so much adhere to the precise words as to the sense of that Scripture which he cites in so far as where in the Psalm it is said Thou hast ascended and received gifts for men to wit He received them to be given to men it is here When He ascended and gave gifts unto men 4. Our Lord Jesus Christ having finished the work which was given Him to do on earth Joh. 17. 4. did locally ascend unto heaven carrying His humane nature up thither Act. 1. 9. 10. that so He might be exalted in that glory which He had before the world was Joh. 17. 5. and take possession of heaven in our name Eph. 2. 6. and there prepare a place for us Joh. 14. 2. for saith he When He ascended up on high 5. As Christ did engage in a warfare on our behalf with many strong and potent enemies to wit the devil the world sin death and hell So He hath carried the day of all and gained an absolute compleat victory over all in so far as though the Godly must have a battel with these Eph. 6. 12. yet Christ the Head of Believers is now above the reach of hazard from enemies and consequently Believers in their Head yea and they themselves are above all hazard also in so far as all their enemies cannot mar their salvation Rom. 8. 35 c. Sin and Satan doth not reign in them Rom. 6. 12 14. death hath lost its sting towards them 1 Cor. 15. 55. and become a passage unto life Philip. 1. 23. for by this captivity which Christ led captive is meaned not those whom He delivered from captivity but whom He fought against brought in captivity and triumphed over even all His and our spiritual enemies He led captivity or a multitude of captives captive 6. The constant opposition which Satan raiseth against the Church and Kingdom of Christ doth not so much flow from any principle of hope in him to prevail in that wofull work as from his inveterate blinded malice against the salvation of sinners so that he cannot but malign and oppose it though he know he cannot mar it for at Christs ascension he could not but know that by all his malicious cruel actings against Christ he had effectuate nothing but his own eternal shame and confusion seing that Christ did thereby openly declare He had led captivity captive 7. As those for whom Christ did purchase any good or advantage by His death and did manifest His purchasing good for them by His ascension were men and not devils So not only saving graces which are given to the Elect only but also common gifts are a part of His purchase which are given sometimes to reprobates for the good and edification of His Church Matth. 7. 22 23. for both these are comprehended here under gifts which being purchased by His death He did at His ascension in a larger measure than formerly give unto men and to men indefinitly even to rebels Psal. 68. -18. Vers. 9. Now that he ascended what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth THe Apostle doth thirdly comment upon and apply the cited testimony And first he sheweth what Christs ascending unto heaven to wit by His own divine power otherwise the Apostle's inference in this place should not hold did presuppose as necessarily foregoing even His previous humiliation and abasement in all its steps expressed by His descending to the lowerparts of the earth where the lower parts are to be