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

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means on the right hand in prosperity on the left hand in adversity and in every change and vicissitude of things hee did remain constant lest hee should either by enticements or by terrours turn out of the right way Vers. 8. By honour and dishonour by evil report and good report as deceivers and yet true 9. As unknown and yet well known as dying and behold wee live as chastened and not killed 10. As sorrowful yet alway rejoycing as poor yet making many rich as having nothing yet possessing all things In the first part hee boasts that hee hath alwayes continued in a right way whether ignominy or infamy whether glory or fame followed For when hee was counted as an Impostor hee declared himself one that spake truth When hee was accounted as ignoble and contemptible hee did manifest himself by his deeds that they who had eyes might acknowledge him to bee the Servant of the most High God Hee seemed even as dead and in the midst of death hee triumphed notwithstanding that hee performed his duty as being alive yea chastened with many stripes even to death hee was kept by God lest hee should die by reason of those evils which pressed him sometimes under a pretence hee was sad but by the Spirit in God hee did alwayes rejoyce Hee was counted poor but through the Gospel by the manifold love of God hee did enrich many not only by shewing the manner of contentation in the Gospel but also instructing men to virtue and piety which is profitable for all things Hee wanted possessions and revenues and yet contented with his lot hee did rejoyce as much as was fitting in the use of all things The Second Part. Vers. 11. O yee Corinthians our mouth is open unto you our heart is enlarged The second part of the Chapter follows in which the second exhortation of Paul to the Corinthians is that they would love again that Apostle viz. of Christ who had undergone so many labours in the Ministery for their good To this Exhortation hee premises five Arguments Argum. 1. Plainly and ingenuously that I may use liberty of speech with friends most freely with an heart enlarged and with an open mouth publishing what good will inwardly I have towards you why therefore do ye not require mee in like manner Vers. 12. Ye are not straightned in us but ye are straightned in your own bowels 13. Now for a recompence in the same I speak as unto my children bee yee also enlarged Argum. 2. There is nothing in mee why you should no apprehend my love but through the straightness of your own hearts who do not believe that thy good will is so great towards you Yee are not straightned Argu. 3. Yee are bound to love mee again who so exceedingly love you Therefore as out of equity requite mee by loving mee and perswading your selves that you are beloved of mee As unto dear children Argum. 4. I am your Father and you my Sons Therefore as my Sons love mee as your Father For a recompence Argum. 5. Now I require a debt from you Therefore bee yee enlarged i. e. admit yee with an enlarged heart the perswasion of my lovingness and my parental admonitions proceeding out of lovingness and likewise love yee mee again The Third Part. Vers. 14. Bee yee not unequally yoaked together with unbelievers for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness and what communion hath light with darkness 15. And what concord hath Christ with Belial or what part hath hee that believeth with an infidel The third exhortation that they abstain from all unlawful society with unbelievers by whom they may bee hindered lest they should serve God or bee alienated from the true Religion or any wayes polluted of this kind of society is matrimony by which men easily or women may bee wrapped in a consent to wickedness by Idolaters because of all kind of society this is nearest That which hee seems to tax first of all is the society or communion of the faithful Corinthians with their unbelieving companions in external Idolatry wherewith they polluted themselves eating together with those Idolatrous Sacrifices in the Idols Temple as it appears in the former Epistle Chap. 8. In which Idolatry or in any other sin hee forbids to draw with them in the same yoke of impiety The arguments of the Exhortation are four For what Argum. 1. Your condition and profession of Christians on the one part and the sins of Idolatry which are openly professed on the other part They are no less opposed by one another than righteousness and iniquity Light and Darkness Christ and the Devil Faith and Infidelity the Temple of God and Idols amongst which there can bee no communion Therefore no communion with you Christians ought to bee with unbelievers in Idolatry or in any other sins which unbelievers openly profess or in any other necessity out of which may arise an unsuperable danger of communicating with their sins Hee did not forbid them to inhabit in the same City with them neither to negotiate nor eat meat if they should bee invited to dinner or supper Vers. 16. And what agreement hath the Temple of God with Idols for yee are the Temple of the living God as God hath said I will dwell in them and walk in them and I will bee their God and they shall bee my people Argum. 2. Yee are the holy Temple of God which hee proveth by the testimony of Moses Lev. 26.12 and Ezek. 37.27 Therefore it is not lawful for you to pollute your selves by society with unbelievers chiefly in that in which are the Temple of Idols professedly Vers. 17. Wherefore come out from among them and bee yee separate saith the Lord and touch not the unclean thing and I will receive you 18. And will bee a father unto you and yee shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord Almighty Argum. 3. God commandeth you to separate from Idolaters and the pollutions of the World and not to touch them Therefore you ought to beware of them I will receive Argum. 4. From the Promises which God hath made to those who keep themselves pure from the defilements of the world nor participate with other mens sins God will bee a Father to them i. e. in a recompence of all hurt and full consolation against all evils which they looking to themselves may suffer from other mens sins God will communicate himself to them and will manifest his paternal affection towards them really CHAP. VII Vers. 1. HAving therefore these Promises dearly Beloved let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God The first verse of this Chapter belongeth to the precedent Chapter wherein from the former Promises hee draws an Exhortation that they do not onely beware of Idolatry and its outward appearance but also from all defilements of spirit and body i. e. from sins which either pollute the soul within or defile the soul
contrary hee is condemned In the second verse a reason of this is subjoyned because the judgement of God is just and according to the merit of the deed condemns every sinner both him that judgeth and him that is judged Therefore hee which according to the judgement of God condemns another to death for sin condemns himself doing the like things Vers. 3. And thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape the judgement of God This Argument in the following part of the Chapter is confirmed removing the four pretended Objections whereby men may evade the force of the Argument Object 1. Hee securely contemns the judgement of God who because God hath hitherto spared him promiseth himself impunity or freedome from punishment when hee judgeth others I am not afraid saith hee of the judgement of God The Apostle refutes this Objection and proves it null by six Reasons Reas. 1. That such an imagination is vain and foolish for Thinkest thou c. which is the same as if hee had said In vain doest thou think to escape the judgement of God Vers. 4. Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Despisest Reas. 2. Such an imagination puts contempt and abuse upon the riches of the bounty forbearance and gentleness of God when any one because God hath spared hitherto goes on in sin and conceives hopes to go unpunished Bounty Reas. 3. That the bounty of God ought to invite and move to repentance not to go on in sin out of hopes to go unpunished Vers. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God Hardness Reas. 4. That such a thought is the hardening of our hearts in sin and a sealing of them up that wee cannot repent Treasure Reas. 5. That hee who securely contemns the judgement of God heaps up unto himself a kinde of treasure of punishments from divine justice to the time of that last and terrible judgement wherein that whole treasure of punishments in the most righteous anger of God shall bee openly poured out upon him Vers. 6. Who will render to every man according to his deeds 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life 8. But unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness indignation and wrath 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Jew first and also of the Gentile 10. But glory honour and peace to every man that worketh good to the Jew first and also to the Gentile Reas. 6. God will give to every man in the day of Judgement according to his works good or evil his rewards of grace or punishments of his justice To wit eternal life to them that persevere in obedience to the truth hoping for a reward vers 6 7. And besides the signs of wrath in this life eternal death also after this life as it is just for an angry God to inflict upon the adversaries of the truth and the servants of unrighteousness verse 8. Hee confirms this reason in that God will have no respect to any Nation or outward Priviledges in the inflicting of his punishments But the Jews which had the chiefest favours of God should bee first in their punishments and that hee would inflict upon the soul and body of the Heathens or Gentiles their deserved torments verse 9. And to the same manner in his rewards without difference of Nations hee will glorifie i. e. with all gifts that may externally accomplish a man such as Glory and Honour and inwardly which is signified by Peace and will heap upon the pious and honest Jew according to all the priviledges which hee hath vouchsafed to that Nation and will crown the pious and honest Gentile in his place with eternal life verse 10. from whence it follows that hee is deceived who indulges hopes of impunity because God hath hitherto spared him Vers. 11. For there is no respect of persons with God Hee confirms the former reason from the equity of God in that hee is no respecter of persons and hee meets with the second Objection propounded verse 2. against the severe judgement of God against sinners Some might object In the executing of Judgement respect is to bee had as well of the Heathen who lives out of the Church without the knowledge of the Law or the doctrine of God as also of the Jew which is a Disciple of God and an hearer of the Law God forbid that either of them should perish for both seems unjust although they are sinners Hee refutes this Objection and proves it just that every sinner should perish by five Reasons Reas. 1. Because there is no respect of persons with God that hee should exempt from condemnation those that persevere in sin whether Jews or Gentiles for any reason which appertains to the person not the cause And here it is to bee observed that God looks with an equal eye upon the Jew and Gentile out of Christ not in the degrees of punishment but in the guilt of eternal death which all sinners are worthy of although not in the like degree Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without Law do by nature the things contained in the Law those having not the Law shall be judged by the Law Reas. 2. This confirms and unfolds the other because they that have sinned without the Law scil written Against the Law written upon their hearts by nature even by the same Law within them shall perish without the written Law by the sentence of Justice And whoever have sinned in the Law or in the knowledge of the Law written shall bee condemned even by the sentence of the written Law Vers. 13. For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified Reas. 3. Especially intended against the Jews who according to the rule of Righteousness cannot bee accounted for Righteous before God even they that are hearers of the Law unless they perform perfect obedidience to the Law which because neither Jew nor Gentile can do by consequence neither can they bee exempted from deserved condemnation but on the contrary especially the Jews which are hearers of the Law and do not keep it are most worthy of judgement Vers. 14. For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves 15. Which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another Reas. 4. Especially intended against the Gentiles which though they have not the written Law yet they have a Law within
endeavour after holiness Vers. 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might bee destroyed that henceforth wee should not serve sin Argum. 6. From that judicial union which wee have with Christ crucified The force of which Argument that it may bee seen four things are to bee maintained 1. That Christ hanging upon the Cross as our Surety sustained our persons before Gods Tribunal 2. That hee under-went the punishment due to our corrupt nature or the old man so called because the evil of nature in those that are regenerated waxeth old and hastens to destruction 3. That hee took upon him to slay the old man in us 4. In that hee took upon him to represent our persons wee are thereby obliged to labour after mortification of sin by his Spirit that after Justification wee should no longer serve sin From hence the Argument wee know or believe that our old man is crucified judicially with Christ to this end that in us who are justified by Faith might bee weakned the body of death so that filthiness of habitual corruption compacted as it were into one monstrous body prepared with all its members to actual sinning that wee should no more after wee are justified serve sin Therefore wee ought to endeavour the mortification of sin unless wee will cast away the Faith of our judicial union with Christ hanging upon the Cross. Vers. 7. For hee that is dead is freed from sin Argum. 7. From the fruit of this union with Christ dying on the Cross whosoever is dead to his old Lord sin is justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that hee might not serve it any longer nor obey the commands of it You may assume But wee are justified by Faith in Christ dying for sin upon the Cross wee are dead to ●our old Master Sin therefore wee are justified and freed from the yoke and dominion of sin that wee should not any longer obey its commands for what service can sin further exact from us whom Christ in his death upon the Cross hath slain as it were Vers. 8. Now if wee bee dead with Christ wee believe that wee shall also live with him Argum. 8. If wee die with Christ i. e. are united to him dying in his power endeavouring to mortifie sin wee need not doubt but wee shall live a spiritual new and heavenly life with him therefore it behoves us to endeavour the mortifying of sin Vers. 9. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him Argum. 9. Confirming the former Wee believe that Christ rose to an immortal life neither is hee for ever hereafter lyable unto death but alwayes living hee both will and is able to perpetuate in us a new life that death may no more have dominion over us Therefore as wee do not believe in vain that by his power wee shall live a new and eternal life so ought wee to labour that the new life to which wee have risen with Christ may bee continued not to suffer sin should any more prevail or have dominion over us Vers. 10. For in that hee died hee died unto sin once but in that hee liveth hee liveth unto God 11. Likewise reckon yee also your selves to bee dead indeed unto sin but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. Argum. 10. As Christ died but once to wash away and abolish sin and rising from the dead hee lives for ever to the glory of God so you that are justified by arguments of Faith gather and reckon your selves in the death of Christ to bee once dead nor to bee obliged to dye for sin any more that yee were once dead by the dethroneing of sin neither are yee bound to serve sin any longer that yee were once dead to the destroying of sin nor can yee bee destitute of the strength of Christ to mortifie sin but in his resurrection yee are bound to live unto God or the glory of God and that yee might so live yee have strength and help enough by Jesus Christ our Lord. Therefore the Doctrine of free Justification by Faith is so far from opening a door of liberty to sin that on the contrary nothing is more effectual and conducible to the promoting of Sanctity and Holiness Second Part. Vers. 12. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies that you should obey it in the lusts thereof The second part of the Chapter follows wherein the Apostle infers out of what went before an exhortation to all that are justified by Faith that they follow after Holiness The Proposition to bee proved is the same with the former viz. They that are justified ought not to continue in sin but labour after Holiness Hee produceth thirteen Arguments whereof the three former are included in the following Exhortation The branches of this Exhortation are three and the Arguments as many couched in the Exhortation to the confirming of the Proposition The first branch of the Exhortation is that they would not obey sin by indulging the sinful lusts of the body Argum. 1. The first Argument is this To obey the sinful lusts of the body is to suffer in your mortal body the reign of sin or of the Devil from whence yee are freed which they that are justified should tremble at Therefore being now justified you ought not to follow after sin but holiness Vers. 13. Neither yeeld you your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin but yeeld your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God The second branch of the Exhortation is that they would not fight for this Tyrant viz. sin making use of the faculties of their souls or bodies as servants to contend for it wherein is the second Argument To serve sin is to yeeld the faculties of the Soul and members of the body as weapons of iniquity to fight for sin and the Devil against God and our own Salvation which all that are justified ought to abhor Therefore they that are justified ought not to serve sin Yeeld The third member of the Exhortation that they would yeeld themselves Souldiers and Servants unto God who hath freed them from death wherein is the third Argument God hath called you back from death in sin and Eternal Perdition unto Life that you might bee Servants unto righteousness and might contend for God against his enemies therefore ought you to labour after Holiness Vers. 14. For sin shall not have dominion over you for yee arae not under the Law but under Grace Argum. 4. If you contend and fight against sin the Tyrant shall not recover his dominion over you which hee hath lost neither shall sin reign over you but you shall become Conquerours through Christ therefore ought you to labour after Holiness For you are not Argum. 5. Confirming the former you are not under the Law under the Covenant of works wherein
you Vers. 10. And if Christ bee in you the body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is Life because of righteousness Reas. 3. Seeing that Christ is in you though your bodie indeed in respect to the remnants of sin not to bee abolished but by death is destined to death and shall certainly dye Yet the Spirit of Regeneration which is given to you is eternal life it self in you or begun in your souls because of the Righteousness of Christ imputed unto you Therefore there is no condemnation unto you Vers. 11. But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you hee that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you Reas. 4. The Spirit of Christ dwelling in you will never forsake his habitation but will render you to himself a glorious and immortal receptacle To which end God will no less certainly and powerfully raise even your mortal bodies to life immortal as hee hath raised the body of Christ from the dead Therefore to you there is no condemnation Vers. 12. Therefore Brethren wee are debtors not to the fl●sh to live after the flesh The Consolation which hee had applied to the Romans from their immunity from condemnation bee draws into use exhorting them to the study of holiness by which they should strengthen their consolation The Arguments of his exhortation are six The first Argument Wee are bound by all means to obey the Holy Ghost continually minding us of our duty both inwardly and by the Word But wee ●re no debtors to the flesh or to serve the lusts of our nature because wee are nothing indebted to that besides hatred and all means of mortification Therefore ought wee to follow after holiness Vers. 13. For if yee live after the flesh yee shall dye but if you through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body yee shall live Argum. 2. If you set up the lusts of the flesh and corrupt Nature for a Rule that you may order your lives according to that yee shall eternally dye Therefore as you would not perish follow after holiness Argum. 3. If you obey the Holy Ghost using onely those means prescribed by it and make use of that power communicated by the Spirit to you that beleeve in Christ for the mortifying the corrupt affections and deeds of your bodies without doubt you shall obtain Eternal Life through the grace of God Therefore ought you to follow after holiness Vers. 14. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God are the Sons of God Argum. 4. Confirming the former All that follow the command and guidance of the Holy Spirit testifie themselves to bee the Children of God by virtue of the regenerating Spirit Therefore that you may prove your selves the Sons of God obeying the Spirit of God follow after holiness Vers. 15. For yee have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but yee have received the spirit of adoption whereby wee cry Abba Father Argum. 5. Further confirming that they are the Sons of God Because after they fled to Christ and embraced the Covenant of Grace being set free by Faith from the servile fear of condemnation which the Spirit strikes all those with who seek Life from the Covenant of Works and are indued with the Spirit of Adoption from hence the Argument After yee have imbraced the Covenant of Grace by Faith in Christ a servile fear of Condemnation according to the tenor of the Gospel is no more given unto you but the Spirit of Adoption that you may most familiarly call upon God the Father with the people of God every one in his own tongue Therefore you are both the Sons of God and also it becomes you to behave your selves as the Sons of God in following after holiness Vers. 16. The Spirit it self beareth witness with our spirit that wee are the Children of God Argum. 6. The Spirit of God seals up in our hearts and witnesses together with our spirits or consciences that wee are the Children of God Wee are therefore bound as it becomes the Sons of God to follow after holiness The second Part. Vers. 17. And if Children then Heirs Heirs of God and Joynt-heirs with Christ if so bee that wee suffer with him that wee may bee also glorified together The second part of the Chapter comprehends the consolations of justified persons by Faith against the sharpness of afflictions in this life Hee premises a Conclusion drawn from what was said before wherein hee proves that they who are justified by Faith are not onely Heirs of God and have right to all his good things but also co-heirs with Christ and brought by Adoption into communion with the onely begotten Son and into the inheritance with him being the Sons of God This is the right of those that are justified to the inheritance which inheritance that they might bee brought into the possession of hee subjoyns the condition of suffering with Christ. And this affords thirteen Arguments of consolation The first Argument of Comfort Communion with Christ in the Kingdome of Heaven and the possession of the glorious inheritance will follow our communion with him in his sufferings Therefore let us comfort our selves in our afflictions Vers. 18. For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to bee compared with the glory which shall bee revealed in us Argum. 2. This is no hard condition because casting up the account I finde that whatever wee suffer in this life for righteousness sake is unworthy to bee compared with the glory that shall hereafter bee revealed and at length bee bestowed upon us whether wee respect the quality of the things or the duration of time Therefore let us comfort our selves in our tribulations Vers. 19. For the earnest expectation of the Creature waiteth for the manifestation of the Sons of God Argum. 3. Figurately propounded the whole frame of the world in its kind suffering together with us sustains it self in the hope of the glory of God to bee revealed in the day of judgement and very earnestly as it were with the head stretched out expects that wished-for time Therefore wee also with this hope ought to support our selves Vers. 20. For the Creature was made subject to vanity not willingly but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope Hee explicates this Argument shewing first that created things are subject to vanity i. e. a corruptible condition and to the abuse of the vainest men who abuse the Creature to all manner of sin and prostitute it to their service to the fulfilling of their vainest lusts Secondly That the Creature is not subject to this vanity willingly or of its natural propensity or its natural use to which it was created of God but for the will and pleasure or the judgement of God which hath subjected the Creature to this curse with sinful man for whose sake the
God Another is That wee seek no further than is revealed touching the Counsels of God but even in things revealed wee bee wise to sobriety because the Counsels of God exceed our capacity and are indeed unsearchable glorifying God in all Vers. 34. For who hath known the mind of the Lord or who hath been his Counsellour Three Reasons hee adds of both those deductions Reason 1. No creature hath pierced into the mind of God none was ever of his Counsel Therefore the Counsels of God are past finding out wee ought not to search after them but admire and magnifie the riches of his Wisdome Vers. 35. Or who hath first given to him and it shall bee recompenced to him again Reason 2. God is in no mans debt or can bee no man merits at his hand no man can come forth and say that hee hath obliged God by any act of goodness in himself Therefore they cannot boast any of the Elect as if God was bound to them by any Law that hee should appoint them unto life neither can any of the Reprobates complain as though hee paid not what hee ought seeing hee is a debter to no man Vers. 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom bee glory for ever Amen Reason 3. Confirming the former All things are of God as the first Author All things are upheld by him as the Preserver All things tend to him as the ultimate end Therefore when it seems good to him to promote his own glory in the rejection of the Jews or calling of the Gentiles in the Election of some and Reprobation of others all honor and glory ought to bee ascribed unto him by all men for ever Amen CHAP. XII WEE have had the first part of the Epistle of the way to Iustification the latter follows concerning the right ordering the life of those that are justified There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee exhorts to Sanctity in general to ver 3. In the second hee instructs Ministers of the Church particularly concerning the right use of gifts to ver 9. In the third hee gives common precepts concerning Christian virtues Vers. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that you present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service By an allusion made to the typical manner of sacrificing under the Levitical Law hee most friendly exhorts them to shew forth the fruit of free Justification granted to them by Christ. There are three branches of the Exhortation First That wee would present our bodies to God that is offer and consecrate our selves wholly not onely our souls but bodies also to God as a Sacrifice of thankfulness The reasons of the exhortation are five which also contain the properties of this sacrifice The first reason is contained in a vehement entreaty because the mercies of God before rehearsed to wit Election of his Mercy Redemption of his Mercy Calling of his Mercy and Justification of his Grace and Mercy require of you this gratitude and thankfulness Living Reason 2. Because this is a living Sacrifice wherein nothing is to bee slain but sin and you your selves shall live consecrated unto God and shall bee preserved unto eternal life Holy Reason 3. This Sacrifice is truly holy in the daily offering up whereof Holiness it self consists Acceptable Reason 4. Because this Sacrifice will not bee rejected of God as those many legal shadows offered up by hypocrites but accepted of God Reasonable Reason 5. Because the act whereby you offer up this Sacrifice to God is your reasonable or spiritual service pre-figured by that typical worship and so much above that as spiritual things are above carnal and the bodies of Saints to bee preferr'd before the carkasses of brute beasts Vers. 2. And bee not conformed to this world but bee yee transformed by the renewing of your mind that yee may prove what is that good that acceptable and perfect Will of God The second branch of the Exhortation That wee take heed in life and conversation that wee do not make the pleasure and manners of worldly men our Rule to which wee conform our selves This exhortation contains a Reason in it self because men of the world onely savour the honours pleasures and profits of this present world Bee yee transformed The third branch of the Exhortation That wee endeavour the transforming of our carnal mind into that which is spiritual by the daily renewing of our understanding and will Two Reasons hee gives of this Exhortation Discern yee Reason 1. Because the Law of God or his Will revealed in the Word is the Rule to which wee ought to conform 1. Good teaching and leading us to those things which are good and making us good 2. It is acceptable to God who accepts no obedience but what is prescribed in the Word 3. It is perfect comprehending all things which appertain to the worship of God and our salvation Therefore indeavour after renewing your minds Discern yee Reason 2. Because without a renewed mind and spiritual wee cannot discern the proper sense of the divine Will revealed in the Word and knowing it wee cannot approve and approving it wee can have no experimental knowledge how good acceptable to God and perfect it is in it srlf Therefore ought wee to endeavour after renovation of mind The second Part. Vers. 3. For I say through the Grace given unto mee to every man that is among you not to think of himself more highly than hee ought to think but to think soberly according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of Grace The second part of the Chapter follows wherein according to his Apostolical authority which hee calls Grace because granted to him out of ineffable Grace hee charges every one that was among them in any publick office or any excellency of gift that hee would not think of himself above his fellows or above the value of his talent or the measure of his knowledge but that hee would carry himself soberly and moderately in all things towards all The Reasons of this Exhortation are five Reas. 1. God hath distributed to every one not a fulness but a measure of Faith Therefore it is fitting that every one should modestly contain himself within that measure Vers. 4. For as wee have many members in one body and all members have not the same office Reas. 2. As in the natural body divers members are deputed to divers operations So in the Ecclesiastical body of Beleevers or the society of the Officers of the Church divers functions are designed to divers imployments Therefore it is fitting that each contain himself modestly in his office Vers. 5. So wee being many are one body in Christ and every one members one of another Reas. 3. Included in the same similitude as in the natural body many members constitute one body so in the Ecclesiastical body all the faithful in particular all Church-Officers
defiled with fornication Vers. 15. Know you not that your bodies are the members of Christ Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot God forbid Argum. 3. The Faithful which are members of Christ are not by fornication to bee made the members of an Harlot which argument hee sharpens with an Interrogation Therefore c. Vers. 16. What Know yee not that hee that is joyned to an Harlot is one body For two saith hee shall bee one flesh That hee may confirm this argument hee proves from the Analogy of Marriage that fornication with an harlot makes the fornicators one flesh and by consequence the fornicator is made the member of an harlot Therefore fornication is unlawful Vers. 17. But hee that is joyned unto the Lord is one spirit Further hee proves that Believers are members of Christ because joyned by Faith and are one Mystical Body with Christ one Spiritual Body or one Spirit Vers. 18. Flee fornication every sin that a man doth is without the body but hee that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body Hee turns the Position into a Dehortation and adds the fourth Argum by way of comparison with other sins other sins abuse the object without chiefly and principally but fornication abuses its own body and more dishonors the body than any other sin Therefore it is unlawful Vers. 19. What know yee not that your own body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which yee have of God and you are not your own 20. For yee are bought with a price therefore glorifie God in your body and in your spirit which are Gods Argum. 5. Our bodies are the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in us given us of God Therefore they are not to bee polluted with fornication Neither are yee Argum. 6. The Faithful are not their own but purchased with the Blood of Christ Therefore they ought to take heed that they defile not themselves with fornication but rather endeavour by an holy conversation both of body and soul to glorifie God their Redeemer whose they are CHAP. VII THE FIFTH ARTICLE OF CASES TOUCHING MARRIAGE THe Apostle being enquired of by the Corinthians concerning Marriage-Cases in this Chapter hee answers five of their demands Vers. 1. Now concerning the things whereof yee wrote unto me it is good for a man not to touch a woman 2. Nevertheless to avoid fornication let every man have his own wife and let every woman have her own husband The first enquiry is of men unmarried who lived a single life whether it were best for them to marry The reasons of this demand were two the fear of troubles and the fear of defilement in Marriage That which belongs to the first reason wee are to remember that the Corinthians had been a long time in danger of persecution although now they lived prosperously and the most part feared nothing The Apostle answers those that are in such a case if no necessity lyes upon them to marry it is good and profitable not to marry but where there is danger of sinning by incontinence wee are rather to eschew fornication and sin than the danger of troubles in Marriage Vers. 3. Let the husband render to the wife due benevolence and likewise also the wife unto the husband That which concerns the scruple le●t any one should think his conscience by Matrimonial Society defiled hee declares not only the conjugal bed to bee undefiled but also the right of the Marriage-bed ought to bee granted to him that seeks a wife whereto hee subjoyns four reasons Due Reason 1. Because that benevolence is due by the Law of Marriage Vers. 4. The wife hath not power of her own body but the husband and likewise also the husband hath no power of his own body but the wife Reason 2. Because by conjugal agreement the husband hath power over the wives body and the wife over the husbands chiefly to avoid fornication Vers. 5. Defraud you not one another except it bee with consent for a time that you may give your selves to fasting and prayer and come together again that Satan tempt you not for your incontinency Reason 3. Because otherwise there would fall out an unjust defrauding of each others part if commerce should bee denied without reason That you may give your selves Hee limits what hee had said with a special exception unless it bee agreed by consent on both parts that for a time they might give themselves to fasting and prayer Le●t Satan tempt Reason 4. Because after the set time if benevolence desired bee denied it is dangerous lest Satan tempts the party defrauded for his incontinency to commit adultery Vers. 6. But I speak this by permission and not of commandment 7. For I would that all men were even as I my self but every man hath his proper gift of God one after this manner another after that Hee explains this his opinion touching contracting Marriage and using conjugal society that it is not an universal precept as if here commanded Marriage to all but that the granting or permission is universal only in case of incontinency for plainly if by the will of God it might bee the Apostle could with the Corinthians who moved the question both continence and the advantages of single life which God had bestowed upon him but because the gift of Continence is not given to every one hee saith that hee spake this by permission which hee hath granted Vers. 8. I say therefore to the unmarried and widows it is good for them if they abide even as I. 9. But if they cannot contain let them marry for it is better to marry than to burn From hence hee gathers up the sum of what hee had said that hee might plainly answer those who lived unmarried or Widows it was convenient that they should abide in that state if they could contain if not that they marry For it is better Hee gives a reason because it behoved them rather to beware of burning lusts which defile the conscience with sin than of the troubles of Marriage even those troubles which accompany a married state in times of persecution Vers. 10. And unto the married I command yet not I but the Lord let not the wife depart from her husband The second thing they enquire of is concerning Divorce the parts whereof are two The first is concerning both being Believers whether it is lawful for married Christians to make a Divorce unless the case bee for adultery Hee answers that it is not lawful which answer that hee may confirm hee denies that hee commanded any thing new or from special revelation but that hee repeats an old command by the authority of the Lord who in the Institution of Marriage established that the married should bee one flesh whereupon that separation and divorce is unlawful Vers. 11. But if shee depart let her remain unmarried or bee reconciled to her husband and let not the husband
hee forbids those that are married to put away their Wives so hee saith it is more convenient that they that are single should continue unmarried viz. if they have the gift as hee said before of continency Vers. 28. But and if thou marry thou hast not sinned and if a Virgin marry shee hath not sinned nevertheless such shall have trouble in the flesh The other part of the answer follows wherein hee teacheth that to marry is not sinful but incident to several troubles concerning which hee will not any further treat lest hee should seem to disswade them from marriage more than was safe Vers. 29. But this I say Brethren the time is short it remaineth that both they that have Wives bee as though they had none 30. And they that weep as though they wept not and they that rejoyce as though they rejoyced not and they that buy as though they possessed not The third part of the answer follows wherein hee commands that whether they married or not they should take heed to themselves that they bee not much moved with the advantages or disadvantages the pleasures or troubles of this short life but moderately bearing prosperity and adversity they should provide for the life which is to come alwaies prepared to suffer sorrowful things and to leave a joyful condition according to the Will of God for this is as much as if they had not Wives as if they wept not c. whilst they using a marriage-state are not hindred in their race to the Kingdome of Heaven but they go forward with all expedition through sorrow and joy through the conveniences and inconveniences of this life all occasions all changes Vers. 31. And they that use this world as not abusing it for the fashion of this world passeth away The reason of this is laid down Because the good and evil things of this life as a shadow pass away Therefore ought wee to use the things of this life as it were in our passage that they hinder us not in our race Vers. 32. But I would have you without carefulness hee that is unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord how hee may please the Lord 33. But hee that is married careth for the things that are of the world how hee may please his Wife Hee laies down two Reasons of his counsel about the keeping themselves unmarried First That they might bee freed from trouble which the fear of persecution and of the present condition might cast those that are married into Reason 2. Because hee that is unmarried more conveniently is at leisure for divine imployments or to attend upon the exercises of Religion and more immediately to please God But hee that is married is forced by his Calling to lay out much of his time about earthly businesses and houshold-cares and so in lawful things to please his Wife which care although it may bee obedience where it is performed in the fear of God yet it is not so immediate obedience and so near to God as that which is placed in the exercises of Religion Vers. 34. There is difference also between a Wife and a Virgin the unmarried Woman careth for the things of the Lord that shee may bee holy both in body and in spirit but shee that is married careth for the things of the world how she may please her Husband Hee shews the same difference to bee betwixt the condition of Virgins and Women that are married That a Virgin may with fewer avocations and less difficulty more holily both in body and soul attend to holy imployments because shee hath no family to take care of This is called Holiness not as it is opposite to sin but as opposed to Civil or Common So the Ministery of the Gospel may bee called more holy than any civil Calling But a Wife is usually incumbred with houshold-cares and an indeavour to please her Husband nor can shee so freely have leisure for holy exercises Vers. 35. And this I speak for your own profit not that I may cast a snare upon you but for that which is comely and that you may attend upon the Lord without distraction The Apostle expounds all this his advice that it tends onely to this that they may more conveniently and fitly bee composed to attend upon God without distraction in the exercises of Religion if they have the gift of continency not that hee might cast upon them a snare of necessity to abstain from marriage if they had not the gift of continency Vers. 36. But if any man think that hee behaveth himself uncomely towards his Virgin if shee pass the flower of her age and need so require let him do what hee will hee sinneth not let them marry The Fourth matter that is inquired of is Concerning the duty of Parents in whose power are Daughters marriagable whether advisedly they may give their Virgin Daughters to marriage or not The Answer hath two parts The first upon a threefold supposition 1. If any one is suspected to detain his Daughter from Marriage longer than is expedient 2. If his Daughter have passed the flower of her age i. e. hath attained to the twentieth year of her age and begins to bee more than of ripe years 3. If hee see the mind of the Virgin inclinable to Marriage let him follow the will of the Virgin and his own Let the Daughter and the Son in Law whom the Father shall chuse bee joyned in Marriage the Parent sins not in it Vers. 37. Nevertheless hee that standeth stedfast in his heart having no necessity but hath power over his own will and hath so decreed in his heart that hee will keep his Virgin doth well The other part of the Answer also upon a threefold supposition 1. If the Parent bee perswaded that hee wrongs not his Daughter if hee with-hold her from Marriage 2. If his Daughter have the gift of continence and out of no necessity the Father is moved to seek an Husband for her so that the Parent may determine of his Daughter as hee please 3. If hee purpose to keep his Virgin unmarried hee hath done well saith hee for the advantage of his Daughter Vers. 38. So then hee that giveth her in Marriage doth well but hee that giveth her not in Marriage doth better Whereupon hee concludes in the first case that the Parent does well or for the benefit of his Daughter And in the other case that the Parent does better or that hee more consults the benefit of his Daughter in the mean time hee asserts that there is sin in neither Vers. 39. The Wife is bound by the Law as long as her Husband liveth but if her Husband bee dead shee is at liberty to bee married to whom shee will onely in the Lord. The fifth thing that is inquired of is this Whether second Marriages of Widows are lawful or not The Answer hath two parts 1. Hee saith it is lawful with a limitation if so bee they
the dead Argum. 13. That there is a future Resurrection hee proves after this manner Unless there bee a Resurrection of the Dead what benefit will accrew to those that are tossed with the waves of Persecution for some that are dead i. e. for Christ and the Saints that are dead whose Resurrection while they defend they profess and assert the Resurrection of Christ past and of the Saints hereafter for so the word To bee baptized is taken Mar. 10.38 and the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies for Act. 9.16 And it is absurd that they who suffer Martyrdome for defending the Resurrection of the Dead should bee disappointed of their hope Therefore there shall bee a Resurrection Vers. 30. And why stand wee in jeopardy every hour Argum. 14. Hee confirms in this the sense of his former Argument If it seem not absurd that other Martyrs should lose their labour all Christians will at least think it absurd that wee Apostles should lose our labour who Preaching and hoping for the Resurrection of the Dead are in continual dangers Therefore there shall bee a Resurrection Vers. 31. I protest by your rejoycing which I have in Christ Iesus our Lord I die daily This Argument hee confirms by the testimony of his own experience seriously affirming how certainly hee gloried with the Corinthians in Christ so certainly did hee dayly undergo one death after another for the Gospel being every day cast into new dangers of his life Vers. 32. If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus what advantageth it mee if the dead rise not Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee die 33. Bee not deceived evil communications corrupt good manners In particular hee gives instance of a notable danger in fighting with beasts at Ephesus in a plain sense and as men ordinarily understand this phrase for to condemn to the beasts was an usual kind of death which Christians were allotted to as Histories make mention What need the Apostle undergo this danger To what purpose had this been unless a Resurrection had been to bee hoped and defended Let us eat Argum. 15. If the dead arise not the gluttonous Religion of Epicures was best Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee shall die as some amongst them like hogs began to grunt But this is absurd Therefore the dead shall rise Instead of the Assumption hee forbids that they attend not to these rotten kind of speeches which might infect them either with false doctrine or vicious manners Vers. 34. Awake to righteousness and sin not for some have not the knowledge of God I speak this to your shame Further intimating that the Authors and Fomenters of this Error amongst them were sleeping in their ignorance of God in both bodily and spiritual intemperance of this world drunk with pleasures hee therefore exhorts them that they would awake to righteousness i. e. That they which minded their own matters pleasing themselves in their own wit would shake off slothfulness and imploy their wit about good and holy matters rather upbraiding all of them as a shameful thing to suffer those Atheists the Authors of this error Vers. 35. But some men will say how are the dead raised up and with what body do they come The third part of the Chapter follows wherein hee answers three Objections of the Adversaries The first is this It seems impossible that the dead should arise for how should it bee Object 2. No man can describe with what bodies they shall arise Object 3. Vers. 51. What shall become of those that are alive at the coming of the Lord they therefore because they die not cannot rise again Vers. 36. Thou fool that which thou sowest is not quickned except it die Hee answers to the first Objection It is not impossible that the dead should arise because the seed dies yearly and rises again as it were Vers. 37. And that which thou sowest thou sowest not that body that shall bee but bare grain it may chance of Wheat or of some other grain 38. But God giveth it a body as it hath pleased him and to every seed it s own body Hee answers the second Objection That our bodies the same in substance but diverse in quality shall rise again This hee confirms four waies First By the example of Grains of Corn as a bare Grain dry and hard c. It is raised in substance and kind the same but diverse in quality so our bodies the same in substance but of most different qualities shall arise Vers. 39. All flesh is not the same flesh but there is one kind of flesh of men another flesh of beasts another of fishes and another of birds Secondly From the like example of flesh As God can and daily doth produce not onely divers seeds but also divers kinds of flesh for all flesh is not of the same kind so hee can raise the same flesh of the self same man changing his qualities 40. Vers. There are also celestial bodies and bodies terrestrial But the glory of the terrestrial is one and the glory of the celestial is another 41. There is one glory of the Sun another of the Moon and another glory of the Starrs for one Starre differeth from another Starre in glory 42. So also is the resurrection of the dead it is sown in corruption it is raised in incorruption 43. It is sown in dishonour it is raised in glory it is sown in weakness it is raised in power 44. It is sown a natural body it is raised a spiritual body There is a natural body and there is a spiritual body Thirdly From the like difference betwixt Stars and terrestrial bodies As God hath beautified celestial bodies with a celestial and terrestrial bodies with a terrestrial glory and hath distinguished celestial bodies amongst themselves with a different glory as is to bee seen in the Sun Moon and Stars So also the body in the resurrection when it is raised it shall differ from it self falling into the grave as that which is incorruptible from that which is corruptible as that which is comely from that which is filthy powerful from that which is weak spiritual from that which is natural That is called a natural body which is quickened by the soul after the manner of living Creatures by means of meats elements c. And that is a spiritual body which retaining the soul is supported by the Spirit of God without means as the Angels Vers. 45. And so it is written The first man Adam was made a living soul the last Adam was made a quickning Spirit Hee explains this last difference betwixt a natural and a spiritual body and proves it because the phrase might seem somewhat harsh by leading us to the first Adam as to the Original of our first State in a natural body and to CHRIST the second Adam as to the Original of our second State in a spiritual body and compares these two in a three-fold
manner The first comparison is in the opposite state of a natural and a spiritual body The first Adam was made a living soul not giving life which had a life indeed but supported as other creatures are with meat and drink c. And not such as could continue life to the body without nourishment But Christ the last Adam is made a quickning Spirit who could communicate virtue to those that were his by his Spirit that without nourishments of the body the most blessed union of body and soul may bee preserved Vers. 46. Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual but that which is natural and afterward that which is spiritual The second comparison in respect to Order The first Adam had the precedency in the natural state of the body The second Adam was latter in the spiritual state of the body for the imperfect state ought to precede so God is wont to proceed to the highest perfection Hee saith not simply that Adam was before Christ but that the Natural state of the first Adam is first in time in Adam in Christ and in us And our Spiritual state which is from Christ is latter Vers. 47. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from Heaven The third comparison in the order and dignity of the person The first-Man meer man is of the earth earthy whose body rose out of the earth and is resolved again into earth upon the substraction of food whereupon hee could communicate unto us nothing but a terrene life But the second Adam is both man and God from Heaven who although hee hath a body from the earth yet because hee is God from Heaven and therefore is called heavenly as hee could support his body that it should not see corruption though in its own nature terrene and resoluble into dust and as it being raised out of the grave hee could make it every way glorious immortal and heavenly not needing earthly supports So in like manner can hee make our bodies such Vers. 48. As is the earthy such are they that are earthy and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly From these hee proves the future mutation of the qualities of the body from earthly to heavenly from natural to spiritual by four Arguments Argum. 1. Such as was the earthly Adam the head of our stock after the fleshly propagation such it became us to bee born viz. mortal Therefore as the heavenly Adam our head in respect to regeneration and glorification is after his resurrection viz. Spiritual glorious incorruptible immortal such shall wee bee that are born again of him after our resurrection Vers. 49. And as wee have born the image of the earthy wee shall also bear the image of the heavenly Argum. 2. From its future certainty As sure as wee bear the image of the first Adam in the qualities of our substance being made conform to him in soul and body so sure shall wee bear the image of the second Adam in the glorious qualities of our substance Vers. 50. Now this I say Brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption Argum. 3. The promises of glorifying our bodies or of bringing us into the glorious Kingdome of God ought to bee fulfilled But flesh and blood i. e. our bodies as now they are corruptible cannot enter into the Kingdome of God unless they bee fitted for that glorious state Therefore our bodies shall bee made meet by the mutation of their qualities to enter into the Kingdome of Glory Corruption By way of confirmation to this reason hee adds Argum. 4. Corruption cannot inherit incorruption Therefore necessary it is that our bodies bee changed in their qualities from corruptibility to incorruptibility Vers. 51. Behold I shew you a mystery wee shall not all sleep but wee shall all bee changed Objection 3. What shall become of those that are alive at the comming of our Lord How shall they arise which shall not dye but bee found alive by the Judge at his comming Hee answers by opening the mystery viz. that all shall not die nor rise again but they shall bee taken that remain alive at the comming of our Lord and changed into an eternal state of immortality either in glory or torments which change shall bee in stead of death and a resurrection Vers. 52. In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall bee raised incorruptible and wee shall be changed Hee shews the manner of this change that it shall bee in the twinckling of an eye i. e. in a moment all that are alive and dead shall be summoned by a fearful alarum to the judgement of God Vers. 53. For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality Hee gives two Reasons of this change First Mortality must bee swallowed up of immortality and this mortal body must put on immortality Therefore they shall bee changed that are found alive at the comming of our Lord. Vers. 54. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal shall have put on immortality then shall bee brought to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up of victory 55. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Reason 2. The Prophecie of Hosea ought to bee fulfilled chap. 13. v. 14. who fore-told our full victory over death and the grave Therefore they that are alive shall bee changed at the comming of the Lord which shall bee in stead of death Vers. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law That this victory may appear the greater hee intimates the victory wee shall have over sin and the Law without which the grave cannot prevail any thing over us for unless satisfaction bee given to the Law sin wrath and death remain in full power But after satisfaction is made to the Law for us sin and wrath are taken away wherewith death is armed as with a sting which being disarmed is abolished and triumphed over Vers. 57. But thanks bee to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Hee shews a twofold use of this victory The first is that thanks may bee given to God who hath given us through Christ victory over death sin and the Law yea verily hee hath imputed the victory of Christ to us and hath made it ours for hee hath died for us and by his resurrection hath obtained for us victory over death that hee might make us conquerours Vers. 58. Therefore my beloved Brethren bee yee stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Another use of this doctrine is this That under hope of the free gift at the day of resurrection wee would persevere constantly in the Faith of the Gospel
Conversion and Salvation of so many men should bee ascribed to the virtue of the Apostle that it should bee wholly ascribed unto God for by so much the more the Power of God is conspicuous in great works by how much the weakness of the Instrument more evidently appeareth Vers. 8. Wee are troubled ●n every side yet not distressed wee are perplexed but not in dispair 9. Persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed Hee answers 3. That all his afflictions are moderated and hee himself is upheld by God in all things that hee is not destitute of the help of God doth not sink under his burthen that hee doth not forsake God nor dispair is not forsaken of God not left or lost Therefore it matters nothing how weak he is in himself Wee are afflicted hee saith yet not distressed i. e. on every side wee are troubled with adversity but wee are not brought into such streights as to bee over-whelmed but wee are preserved by the help of God in the midst of afflictions Wee are perplexed but not in despair i. e. wee doubt sometimes what may bee done in the dangers of this life but wee are not so destitute that wee are void of all counsel Wee are persecuted but not forsaken i. e. God permits us to bee vexed and evil intreated by the enemies of the Gospel but hee neither permits us to bee slain before the time by him determined neither doth hee withdraw his consolations from us Wee are cast down but not destroyed that is wee sometimes seem presently ready to perish but God helping us wee are kept from perishing Vers. 10. Alwayes bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Iesus that the life also of Iesus might bee made manifest in our body Hee answers 4. That his afflictions make for the glory of Christ because the Image of Christ suffering and dying may bee seen in them and that the virtue and strength of Christ living may appear in supporting him under so many afflictions Therefore it matters not how weak hee may bee in himself Vers. 11. For wee which live are alway delivered unto death for Iesus sake that the Life also of Iesus might bee manifest in our mortal flesh Hee confirms this from hence that the Apostles who lived in the midst of troubles by the strength of Christs Spirit for the cause of Christ daily undergo danger that the quickning Virtue of Christ may more and more appear in sustaining their fleshly infirmities obnoxious to that miserable condition Vers. 12. So then death worketh in us but life in you Object 2. But not necessarily because thou art the Servant of Christ therefore thou shouldest bee also miserable and contemned For wee Corinthians are Christians and yet wee live more prosperously Hee answers four manner of wayes 1. By granting it to bee so yet by the Wisdome of God it comes to pass that in some stronger Christians as the Apostles the Image of Christ dying might rather appear at least to the world But in others as the weaker Corinthians the efficacy of Christs Life supporting them under extreme afflictions might bee more apparent to the world Vers. 13. Wee having the same spirit of Faith according as it is written I believed and therefore have I spoken wee also believe and therefore speak 14. Knowing that hee which raised up the Lord Iesus shall raise up us also by Iesus and present us with you Hee answers 2. Although the Apostles may bee afflicted more than the Corinthians yet there is the same Spirit of Faith both in them and in the Corinthians by which Faith believing with David Psalm 116. ver 10. The Apostle dare promise to himself together with the Corinthians a glorious Resurrection although now hee is more pressed under the Cross than they Vers. 15. For all things are for your sake that the abundant grace might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the glory of God Hee answers 3. That hee was afflicted for their consolation and confirmation as also that from his afflictions and deliverances occasion of praying and suffering together with the Apostles might not onely bee given to the Corinthians But also occasion of thanksgiving with them for their eminent deliverances from trouble which God forthwith granted to him with the rest of the Apostles and was about to grant Vers. 16. For which cause wee faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day Hee answers 4. That hee was not tyred nor wearied by his afflictions whereof hee subjoyns three Reasons Reason 1. Because as much as was diminished of those goods that made for the maintaining the State of this present life so much was added to his holiness for the increasing of his spiritual life Vers. 17. For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory Reason 2. Because it did procure an unspeakable weight of glory to the promoting of which afflictions help as instruments and means both of mortification and glorification so that no afflictions are to bee accounted of yea truly the lightness of afflictions which is but for a moment clearly vanisheth and becomes as nothing in comparison with future glory Vers. 18. While wee look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Reason 3. Why hee doth not wax faint is Because saith hee by Faith I look at things eternal and invisible by reason of which I despise all temporal and visible i. e. both Riches Honours and Profits c. I do not look at because those are onely durable for a time but I have my mind intent upon those good and eternal things which God hath promised Therefore I do not weigh the loss of temporal things by all which the Apostle confirmeth the Corinthians lest they should bee offended at his afflictions CHAP. V. HEE goes on to shew more fully his faithfulness in the Ministery by mentioning seven impellent causes whereby hee was moved to faithfulness in the discharge of his duty Vers. 1. For wee know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved wee have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens The first impellent cause to faithfulness in the Ministery is his certain confidence of a blessed immortality which after death remains for him and all the rest of the faithful Ministers of Christ of which felicity also the body shall bee partaker in the Resurrection I am perswaded saith hee that after the dissolution of this my frail body I shall continually injoy felicity of soul and the glorious immortality of a raised body why should not I therefore bee faithful so long as I dwell in this mortal body Vers. 2. For in this wee groan earnestly desiring to bee cloathed upon with our house which is from Heaven
parents if hee would glory in the Nobility of his Race hee sprung from the more Noble Israelites because from the Tribe of Benjamin Benjamin was the Son of Rachel a woman free-born but some Tribes had their original from bond-maids If they strived for the Antiquity of Religion that they remained in the Covenant as true Abrahamites here also hee was equal to any one of them Vers. 23. Are they Ministers of Christ I speak as a fool I am more in labours more abundant in stripes above measure in prisons more frequent in deaths oft Sign 3. If they had striven for the dignity of office herein modestly as one compelled hee prefers himself before them in respect of his Apostleship and office granted to him extraordinarily I am greater saies hee because I am an Apostle In labours The fourth Sign of his dignity is sincerity in the administration of his office Of this his sincerity hee produces nine Testimonies First His labours or his diligence Secondly His sufferings in general which belonged to his health and bodily liberty and the dangers of his life Vers. 24. Of the Iews five times received I forty stripes save one Thirdly Hee produces his special sufferings from the Jews that hee was whipped by them five times according to the number of stripes inflicted upon malefactors by the Law for the Jews although they are cruel yet they would seem to contain themselves within the Law Deut. 25.3 Vers. 25. Thrice was I beaten with Rods once was I stoned thrice I suffered shipwrack a night and a day I have been in the deep Fourthly His sufferings from the Gentiles bear testimony that by their Lictours or Sergeants hee was beaten thrice with clubs and whips and once stoned Fifthly That hee thrice suffered shipwrack in one whereof after hee was twenty four hours tossed by the waters in the deep Sea hee was freed by the powerful hand of God Vers. 26. In journying often in perils of waters in perils of robbers in perils by mine own Country-men in perils by the heathen in perils in the City in perils in the Wilderness in perils in the Sea in perils amongst false Brethren The Sixth Testimony of his sincerity comprehends the labours of his journying and eight kinds of dangers which hee found in sundry places and from divers kinds of men Vers. 27. In weariness and painfulness in watchings often in hunger und thirst in fastings often in cold and nakedness The seventh hath five sorts of troubles with which while hee fulfilled the work of the Ministery hee was very often exercised wherein being wearied hee was instead of rest forced to take in hand new labours Vers. 28. Besides those things which are without that which commeth upon mee daily the care of all the Churches Eighthly His unconquerable patience in daily publick businesses a solicitous mind for all the Churches of Christ. Vers. 29. Who is weak and am I not weak who is offended and I burn not The ninth Testimony of his Sincerity is his sympathy with all that are afflicted and offended by any scandal Vers. 30. If I must needs glory I will glory of the things which concern my infirmities Hee retorts the Objection of his adversaries But all these things have made thee a contemptible and miserable man Hee answers that hee purposely determined to glory in these as the things which did more commend his sincerity than the prosperous affairs of the false Apostle adorned them Vers. 31. The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which is blessed for ever more knoweth that I lye not 32. In Damascus the Governour under Are●as the King kept the City with a Garison desirous to appreh●nd mee 33. And thorough a window in a basket was I let down by the wall and escaped his hands Lastly Because these things which hee had mentioned may seem incredible viz. that one should bee able to bear so many afflictions premising an oath touching the truth as well of those things that were said already as of those that were to bee spoken hee mentions the special danger of his life out of which there was no apparent escape unless God had kept him safe for the good of the Church and opened a way by his special providence for his escape concerning which Act. 9.23 CHAP. XII HEE proceeds in his holy glorying There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee explains the heavenly vision presented to him together with the events of the same To vers 11. In the second hee proves that the Corinthians ought to have freed him from this necessity of glorying or defended him To vers 19. In the third hee produces the causes of his troubles Vers. 1. It is not expedient for mee doubtless to glory I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. The Preface being Premised that hee doth not glory for his own sake because that was not expedient for him For this is here somewhat emphatical for mee but for the Corinthians and the Churches sake whom it concerned to preserve the authority of the Apostle intire hee commeth to extraordinary revelations one of which hee begins historically to declare Vers. 2. I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years ago whether in the body I cannot tell or whether out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth such an one caught up to the third heaven I knew a man Hee discovers the excellency of this revelation and his modesty by nine Arguments Argum. 1. That hee scarcely dare publish his name in this business but lest hee may seem to arrogate much to himself hee is compelled to speak of himself in a third person In Christ Argum. 2. That although this revelation may seem to extol him above the common condition of men yet hee doth not affect any other excellence than to bee in Christ or in the number of Beleevers who have renounced themselves that they may glory in Christ alone Fourteen Argum. 3. That silently with himself hee had suppressed the mention of this glorious revelation whole fourteen years never intending to recite it unless hee was compelled by the importunity of his Emulators who endeavoured to diminish his Apostolical authority to the damage of the Gospel and the Church Caught up Argum. 4. That hee was caught up to the upper heaven above all the Stars to the place of the blessed Spirits where God chiefly manifests his glory Whether in the body Argum. 5. That hee is ignorant whether hee was caught up by the local translation of his body into Heaven or whether his soul extraordinarily was separated for that time and lifted up into Heaven concerning the other notwithstanding I am certain Vers. 3. And I knew such a man whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth 4. Hee was caught up into paradise and heard unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter Into Paradise Argum. 6. That hee certainly knew the matter done and that hee was caught up
earth The Writer is Paul the Apostle who according to the Will of God by Christ speaking from heaven was sent as an extraordinary Embassador to the Church which should afterwards bee gathered to Christ here is authority enough Those to whom hee writes are the Saints and Faithful in Christ at Ephesus who being planted into Christ by Faith were consecrated to the service of God here 's praise enough Vers. 2. Grace bee to you and Peace from God our Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ. In the Salutation is contained an Apostolical Benediction in which 1 Hee wisheth the Ephesians Grace that is all heavenly good things which are necessary to Sanctification and Salvation 2 Hee wishes them the special fruit of this Grace to wit Peace or all things which might conduce to their happiness but especially quietness of mind arising from the redemption of Christ which Redemption applied to them by the Word and the Spirit of God would assure them of reconciliation with God and assure them of freedome from evil 3 Hee opens to them the fountain and chanel of this Grace and Peace wished to them viz. God from whom and Christ the Mediatour by whom and for whose sake this Grace and Peace is conferred upon us Here 's good will enough towards the Ephesians And Arguments also sufficient to prepare their minds to receive the following Doctrine with that submission and willingness of mind which became them Vers. 3. Blessed bee the God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ. After the Preface follows the Thanksgiving containing a Proposition to bee proved in the first part of this Chapter which is this That the Grace of God in Christ ought to bee celebrated with an acknowledgement of Gods blessing towards us in the whole business of the Salvation of Beleevers For our blessing as it hath relation to God is nothing else but an acknowledgement that God is every way the Author of all blessing or Grace towards us In this Proposition hee puts a difference between God the Father and Jesus Christ the Mediator God-man that the person and office of the Mediatour might more manifestly appear And hee calls God the Father the God of Christ 1 Because of that Grace whereby the humane nature of Christ was predestinated to the personal union with the Word his Son 2 Because of the Covenant of Redemption made between God and Christ the Mediatour And then hee calls him the Father of Jesus Christ 1 Because of the eternal Generation of the Son by which the Father hath from all eternity communicated to him his whole infinite essence 2 Because of the personal union of the assumed humane Nature by which the Son of man is made the Son of God The chief Arguments to prove the aforesaid Proposition are Thirteen Hath blessed Arg. 1. The God and Father of Christ hath blessed us beleevers or hath graciously hea●t upon us all spiritual and heavenly blessings in Christ. Therefore he is to be blessed or his grace is to bee celebrated by us To this purpose that the grace of God might appear and bee celebrated all the words of this Argument tend every one whereof breathes ou● grace For 1. The giver of these benefits is called God and the Father of Jesus Christ and by consequence the God and Father of all us which are in Christ and that from the Covenant made between the Father and Christ concerning us and consequently our Father who with a fatherly affection gives us all things Hath blessed 2. The giving of these benefits is actively called the blessing of God that is the actual or effectual demonstration of Gods grace according to his word in deed towards us Hath blessed us 3. And here is grace For we whom God blesseth are by nature the sons of wrath and liable to the curse of God in whom there is nothing nor can be any thing which can deserve any good With all blessing 4. The nature and matter of the benefits themselves includes grace for a blessing taken passively is nothing else but a benefit taking its rise from meer grace Spiritual blessings 5 Here is grace also For the benefits which are bestowed on us before others are spiritual such as have reference to the eternal salvation of the spirit or soul which do far exceed all measure of proportion to any earthly and temporal works which wee can perform in this body and therefore they are of grace All blessing 6. This tends to grace too Because every spiritual gift which pertains to the salvation of souls is bestowed upon us of which gifts there is none which flows not from the fountain of grace and blessing and is freely given to us without any merit of ours or respect to our works whether they bee knowledge of God or acknowledgement of our sin or repentance or faith or any effect of faith or any good work or intention of a good work all this is freely given by him who blesseth us with all spiritual blessing Therefore they are of grace In heaven Hear is a beam of grace too because these benefits with which wee above others are blessed are heavenly that is they are such as take their original from heaven are conversant in heaven and shall bee compleated in heaven nor do they any wayes savour any thing of our flesh but yet do season to us our condition on earth In Christ Here the whole ocean of grace is opened for all these benefits are ours in Christ who himself is ours and all these are made ours in him as in the root and fountain as in our head and common parent before they come to us that so they may bee derived on us by him in whom as wee are united together wee possess those things wee have and in whom wee have right to those things which as yet wee have not and by whom wee shall hereafter receive those things which remain and as hee hath obtained all things for us so hee keeps both them in himself for our use and us that wee may use and enjoy them From all and every one of which it follows that all our spiritual benefits are free and gracious or effects of meer grace and therefore wee ought to celebrate the grace of God as the fountain and cause of them Vers. 4. According as hee hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world that wee should bee holy and without blame before him in love Argum. 1. Confirming the former God actually in time freely bestows all these spiritual blessings upon us in Christ even as before time hee of his grace chose us in him that at length wee might obain these benefits Therefore wee ought to bles● him All the wo●ds of this Argument also are proofs of his free and gracious election For 1. Our election was of God unto life before others our companions who were in the same condition whom God leaving and
serve our neighbours Vers. 22. Wives submit your selves unto your own Husbands as unto the Lord. Now follow the oeconomical Precepts 1 That Wives should bee in subjection to their own Husbands chastly sincerely and in lawful things The reasons whereof are four As unto the Lord Reason 1. Because Christ commanded that the Wife should bee subject to her Husband and accounts of that subjection as if shee yeelded obedience to himself and in like manner looks upon the Wives rebellion against her Husband as rebellion against himself Vers. 23. For the Husband is the Head of the Wife even as Christ is the Head of the Church and hee is the Saviour of the body Reas. 2. Because the Husband is in honour and authority over the Wife as the head is over the body Therefore it is meet that the Wife ●●ould bee in subjection to him As Christ Reas. 3. Because 〈◊〉 will have the Husbands authority over the Wife to ●ee a similitude of Christs authority over the Church And hee is Reas. 4. The same similitude is illustrated As Christ is the Head of the Church for its good so the Husband is the Head of the Wife for her good whom hee ought in all things to defend ch●rish and comfort And as it is expedient for the Church to bee obedient to Christ so it is for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the Wives bee to their own Husbands in every thing From these reasons hee inferrs the conclusion that it is necessary for the Wife to bee obedient to her Husband in all things which hinder not her due subjection unto God and Christ. Vers. 25. Husbands love your Wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it Prec 2. Which is given to men that they should love their Wives the reasons thereof are five As Reas. 1. From the example of Christs love towards the Church which love the Apostle commends from these four marks 1 That Christ out of his love offered himself for the Church which was then lost Vers. 26. That hee might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word 2 That hee loved his Church and offered himself for it to the end that hee might sanctifie it or of a prophane and impure Church make it a holy one Washing 3 That Christ doth effectually cleanse his Church by virtue of his blood and of his free promise which hee applies to us by the ordinary means of Baptism and of the Word as by instruments of his Spirit ordained for the confirmation of Faith and the communication of virtue Vers. 27. That hee might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinckle nor any such thing but that it should bee holy and without blemish 4 That hee hath loved his Church for this end that hee might at length present it glorious in Heaven without any mark or token either of sin or misery and hee will ever prosecute this his work till hee hath brought it to pass Vers. 28. So ought men to love their Wives as their own bodies hee that loveth his Wife loveth himself Reas. 2. Of the Precept given to men touching loving their Wives Because Wives are the bodies of their own Husbands according to that Law of God They two shall bee one flesh Hee that loveth Reas. 3. Because hee which loveth his Wife loveth himself and performs the office of love unto himself for that love of a mans own Wife doth every way redound to the Husbands good Vers. 29. For no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it even as the Lord the Church Reas. 4. Because it is as unnatural to a Wife and good Husband not to love his Wife as it is to hate his own flesh and it is as agreeable to reason to favour and make much of his Wife as it is to regard his own flesh As Hee confirms and illustrates this reason by the example of Christ which hee wills us alwaies to have in our eye as the most perfect example of love Vers. 30. For wee are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Hee proves that Christ loved us as his own flesh and that it was not possible for him to hate us but hee was as it were constrained out of love to maintain and cherish us because wee are members of his body flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone that is wee are as nearly joyned to him as Eve was to Adam for what Eve owed to Adam in the flesh wee owe to Christ in the regeneration of our spirit and much more In the forming of Eve Adam lost onely one rib but in the reforming of the Church Christ lost his life Onely the matter of Eve was from Adam but the Church hath from Christ its natural formation and spiritual reformation in respect of both the body and soul of every member Vers. 31. For this cause shall a man leave his Father and Mother and shall bee joyned unto his Wife and they two shall bee one flesh Reas. 5. Where hee proves both that the Church owes its beginning to Christ and that Husbands ought to love their Wives even from the institution of marriage which requires that by reason of the streight knot between Husband and Wife a man shall leave Father and Mother and bee joyned to his Wife and they two shall bee united into one flesh by the bond of wedlock by which they now have a mutual right to and power over one another the words of this institution have a typical sense for God in that saying Gen. 2.23 Thou art flesh of my flesh and bone of my bone intended to represent the union of Christ and the Church and to shew that wee are bone of Christs bone and flesh of Christs flesh that is that wee are most nearly united to Christ because in the speech of Adam to Eve it was prefigured that Christ as hee was one flesh with us and made us one flesh with himself by a spiritual wedlock did as it were leave his own Father laying aside after a manner that glory which hee had with the Father abasing himself when hee was in the form of God and taking upon him the form of a servant Also it was prefigured that Christ should leave Mary his Mother that by dying hee might buy the Church to bee his Spouse with which hee would bee one flesh Vers. 32. This is a great mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church The Apostle viewing this last thing not the carnal wedlock but the union of Christ with the Church calls it a great mystery and lest any one should otherwise understand his saying hee signifies in express words that hee doth not speak this of the mystery touching the carnal marriage of Husband and Wife but concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and the Church which is made by virtue of
that hee did in himself cease to bee what hee was but that hee laid aside the manifestation of his Glory and Majesty and so hid it under the form of a servant as if hee had had none or as if hee had so left it off that it could not bee perceived by the world nay nor by his servants that were eye-witnesses unless it were so much of it through the chinks of his Words and Works as was requisite for the dispensation of the Work of Redemption The degrees or parts of this voluntary humiliation or exinanition are five 1. That hee took or assumed the form of a servant or the true humane nature such as is found in the vilest servants or in men of the lowest rank and united the humane nature to himself by a personal union thus hee debased himself from Heaven to Earth 2 That in the humane Nature hee debased himself below the condition of free men to an external condition most reproachful among men which is servile for hee took upon him the form of a servant The likeness Hee shews the truth of his incarnation in that hee was made like to us as one of us in the essential parts of humane nature body and soul like in the natural properties of the humane nature and in all the affections like in the common infirmities which follow man-kind Lastly that hee is like to us in all things sin onely excepted Being found in fashion Hee confirms the truth of his incarnation that hee was found in fashion as a man for all that were conversant with him both good and bad by all waies whereby a man is known to bee a man observed and found that hee was true man and they did certainly know it from the true shape and substance of his humane body from the true actions of humane life and from the true properties of one truly man and from every fashion that any man is found in Hee humbled himself 3 That being now made man though hee was not obliged but by his voluntary Covenant because hee was not meerly man though truly man but God in the flesh whose flesh was the flesh of God and therefore being Lord of the Law hee was not subject to it to stay in the earth or to undergo the yoak of the Law imposed upon those that are meerly men yet hee humbled himself or by his voluntary disposition and order hee made himself in the state of humiliation less than his Father for in respect of the Divine Nature which is the same in both Father and Son hee could not bee less and took upon him the yoak of the Law appointed for meer men and not onely so but hee also absolutely submitted himself to perform all things which the Father should command for the perfecting the redemption of men Became obedient unto 4 That hee did all his life-time patiently bear the yoak hee took upon him fulfilling his Fathers commands in all things even unto death or the laying down his humane life for his sheep according to his Fathers command Of the Cross 5 That hee was obedient to the violent cursed most dishonourable death of the Cross. Vers. 9. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name 10. That at the name of Iesus every knee should bow of things in Heaven and things in Earth and things under the Earth 11. And that every tongue should confess that Iesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father Here in these three verses wee have Christs reward according to his humane Nature for his being humbled for us which is by his exaltation and that for us too Whence wee may gather Argument 8. to this purpose As Christ after hee had humbled himself to reconcile men unto God and to procure the confirmation of peace betwixt the parties was exalted by God and crowned with glory so you may expect exaltation if you humble your selves that yee may maintain the Churches concord Therefore if yee will keep the true way to glory you must imitate Christ and humble your selves for the preservation of unity Wherefore The meaning is this Because Christ of his own accord hath humbled himself for our sakes in our flesh being made obedient even unto death God hath for our sakes and in our flesh also advanced him to the highest honour For having raised Christ from the dead to a glorious and immortal life hee lifted him up to the highest Heaven and placed him at his own right hand in dignity and authority above all creatures hee hath according to his gracious will and the gracious dispensation of the business of our salvation given him a name above every name glorifying him with that glory which hee had from the beginning with the Father to wit by manifesting the glory of the deity which before was obscured and by making known the hypostatical union of the humane Nature commanding and causing that Christ crucified should bee preached rule bee adored bee called upon every where as true God and the onely begotten Son of God At the name The Apostle shews how the efficacy and effect of this exaltation of Christ doth follow viz. That every creature shall at length bee subject unto Christ so that unless it willingly submit it shall at last bee compelled to acknowledge his name or his power authority and dominion which is expressed by a Metonymy of bending the knee As to heavenly things there is no doubt but Angels and the spirits of just men shall bow the knee that is submit to him for spirits properly have no knees As to earthly things all men shall at last if not willingly at least unwillingly and compelled confess Christ crucified to bee the Judge the Lord and the Son of God And lastly for things under the earth by which name are understood the Devils and the spirits of the damned who are in prison All those unclean spirits shall appear before his tribunal whether they will or no and shall yeeld to the sentence of the Judge with acknowledgement of his dominion and Majesty And thus all his enemies whoever they bee that now oppose him shall bow the knee unto him And every tongue Lastly lest all acknowledgement of the name and power of Christ should wholly seem to bee deferred till the last judgement hee shews that it shall come to pass that every tongue or that of every Country and Nation Christ shall receive glory either in the voluntary confession and profession of the converted Gentiles that Christ is the Lord and that to the glory of the Father who will bee honoured in the glorifying of his onely begotten Son or seeing that many shall not bee converted it shall come to pass at last in the judgement of God that the dominion of Christ shall bee clearly and fully manifested when all creatures in Heaven in Earth and Hell shall acknowledge him to bee the Lord. Vers. 12. Wherefore my Beloved as yee have alwayes obeyed not
to a right knowledge and profession of the truth For the Apostle doth not declare any thing concerning the total loss of faith in Christ but on the contrary hopes for their repentance and their possible salvation hereafter CHAP II. IN this Chapter hee delivers four Precepts wherein all the faithful are to bee instructed how they ought decently to behave themselves in their publick Assemblies both men and women Vers. 1. I exhort therefore that first of all supplications prayers intercessions and giving of thanks bee made for all men Precept 1. That prayers in the publick Assembly especially might not bee neglected but that supplications ought to bee made for the turning of evils away and prayers for the obtaining of good things intercessions for other men and thanksgiving for benefits received in publick prayers which the whole Church the Pastor going before ought to conceive and that for all sorts of men bee they of what condition they will Vers. 2. For Kings and for all that are in authority that wee may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty Hee expounds the special Precept and in particular commands them to pray for Kings and all Magistrates in great places who because they sit at the helm of the Commonwealth ought to bee most dear to us and upon that account ought they to bee mentioned by us in the prayers of the Church Peaceable The Reasons of the Precept are nine Reas. 1. From the profitable end because the Magistrates being safe and managing their offices in peace the faithful may lead a quiet and peaceable life In godliness or obedience to the first Table And honesty or obedience to the second Table Therefore must wee pray for them Vers. 3. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour Reas. 2. To pray for Kings and all orders of men is good or acceptable unto God Therefore ought wee to pray for them God is said to bee our Saviour because although Christ is our Saviour by special office yet in the effecting and execution of his office hee doth not actually save us but with the Father and the Holy Spirit Vers. 4. Who will have all men to bee saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth Reas. 3. Confirming the former God will have all sorts of men therefore some amongst Kings and Magistrates and all orders of men to bee saved and come to the Faith of the Gospel Therefore hee wills that wee pray for all sorts or men and by name for Kings and those in authority concerning whom wee are obliged to hope well Vers. 5. For there is one God and one Mediatour between God and men the man Christ Iesus Reas. 4. Although men are distinguished several waies amongst themselves and there are divers orders whereof many are strangers to the Faith and many enemies yet it is enough to engage our prayers for all because God is one under whose power and dominion all are comprehended and that God is the God of the Jews as well as the Gentiles without acception of persons Therefore ought wee to pray for all sorts of men And one Mediatour Reas. 5. What ever distances there are amongst men by which they may bee distinguished from each others it is enough notwithstanding to ingage us to pray for all because to all Nations and all conditions of men there is one Mediatour appointed betwixt God and men by whom an access is open to all that come unto him Therefore ought wee to pray for all The man Reas. 6. Wee have reason to pray for all men inasmuch as that One Mediatour of all men is Man By the incarnation of the Word by the common bond of humane nature hee is united to all m●n viz. Jesus Christ who intercedes for all i. e. for his sheep collected out of all sorts of men Therefore wee ought to pray for all Vers. 6. Who gave himself a ransome for all to bee testified in due time Reas. 7. Christ gave himself a full and sufficient price of Redemption for men of all kinds Therefore ought wee to pray for all sorts of men A Testimony Reas. 8. The Gospel or Testimony of Christs redeeming all sorts of men which God had designed in due time to reveal is now made manifest Therefore in making prayers for all men the testimony of this truth is to bee produced in Christian Churches Vers. 7. Whereunto I am ordained a Preacher and an Apostle I speak the truth in Christ and lye no● a Teacher of the Gentiles in faith and verity Reas. 9. The preaching of this Testimony or Gospel and the Doctrine of the price of Redemption paid for all sorts of men by Christ is in special manner committed unto mee that I might bee also a Teacher of the Gentiles to instruct them in the Faith and all Truth which leads to eternal life seeing therefore I know that many of the Gentiles are to bee saved and now I publickly teach you this prayers ought publickly to bee made in all Christian Churches for all sorts of men In the mean time because hee knew that some amongst the Jews would take ill the mentioning of his Apostleship and his embassage to the Gentiles hee confirms that expression of his being sen● to the Gentiles with a grave asseveration lest any one should doubt Vers. 8. I will therefore that men pray every where lifting up holy hands without wrath and doubting Those things that follow belong to the circumstances of publick worship Therefore the second Precept follows touching persons fit for conceiving publick prayers in the Church Also concerning the place and dispositions both of the soul and body accommodated to that matter As for the persons Hee commands the men onely not women to speak in the Church and to precede the people in their prayers In every place As to the place hee shews according to that prediction of Christ Ioh. 4. that all difference of places which was in the Old Testament when they were thrice a year to meet at the Temple in Ierusalem and their face was to bee turned to the Sanctuary whether they were near or afar off from the Temple is taken away and that now liberty is granted that Christians in every place may honestly and decently celebrate their Assemblies Lifting up As to the body hee requires that the gesture should bee such as may testifie reverence to the divine Majesty and may enkindle our devotion which kind of gesture is the lifting up of the hands whether they bee spread abroad or closed together Purely As for the whole man and chiefly the soul hee requires first Integrity and innocency of life which h●e means by purity of hands 2 That wrath bee laid aside strifes and all evil affections that they all bee of one accord 3 That they make no doubt whether God will hear or grant those things which wee who come to him by Jesus Christ ask of him according to his revealed will Vers. 9. In like
and hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel Reas. 5. Proving the position shewing also that all the favours which are bestowed upon us are from Grace Because the abolishing of death life and immortality and the rest which concern our salvation were unknown to us till revealed by Christ and brought to light being all acted and finished by him Therefore considering this Grace conferred upon us wee ought not to be ashamed of his Gospel Vers. 11. Whereunto I am appointed a Preacher and an Apostle and a teacher of the Gentiles Reas. 6. God so much esteems the Testimony of the Gospel that hee appointed Paul an Apostle to declare it to the whole world and specially to the Gentiles Therefore let not Timothy bee ashamed or any other of this Gospel or of Paul a Minister of it although afflicted for the Testimony of the Gospel Vers. 12. For the which cause I also suffer these things nevertheless I am not ashamed for I know whom I have beleeved and I am perswaded that hee is able to keep that which I have committed unto him against that day Reas. 7. From the example of the Apostle I my self suffer bonds for the Gospel and yet I am not ashamed Therefore in like manner ought Timothy to bee of good courage and not bee ashamed in the cause of the Gospel I know Reas. 8. Also from Pauls example confirming the former I Paul have committed my body and soul to God who is faithful and powerful to keep what I have betrusted him with to the day of judgement And I am perswaded that I shall bee kept Therefore neither ought I to bee ashamed nor thou O Timothy whatever befalls us for the Testimony of the Gospel Vers. 13. Hold fast the form of sound words which thou hast heard of mee in faith and love which is in Christ Iesus Admon 3. That hee retain and follow that same way of teaching both as to Doctrine and the manner of teaching which hee had learnt from Paul and that hee set it forth as near as hee can to the quick Hee adds in faith and love which is in Christ Iesus that hee may set forth the Summary of Doctrine which may bee wholly reduced to Faith and Love flowing from the knowledge of Christ. Vers. 14. That good thing which was committed unto thee keep by the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in us Admon 4. More general That hee faithfully preserve both the sincerity of the Christian Doctrine and the gifts of the Spirit in his Ministry lest by his slothfulness or ●imorousness any prejudice might accrue to it but that hee should secure it against the snares and force of the enemies of the Gospel The Arguments of the Exhortation are five all which prove that the form of sound Doctrine is to bee held fast Argum. 1. This form is that which is deposited or that which God hath committed to thy trust who will take an account of thee for what hee hath committed to thee Therefore this form of Doctrine is to bee held fast By the Holy Ghost Argum. 2. Although thy own strength should fail thee in the defence of thy Doctrine yet the assistance of the Holy Ghost dwelling in thee will bee at hand for the upholding of his sincere servant if thou implore his aid Therefore this form of sound Doctrine is to bee held fast Vers. 15. This thou knowest that all they which are in Asia bee turned away from mee of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes Arg. 4. On this hand temptations are in readiness by which thou mayest bee drawn away unawares from the defence and profession of the Gospel as thou hast been taught by the example of the brethren of Asia by name Phygellus and Hermogenes by whose example thou and all other the Ministers of the Gospel being warned shouldest bee watchful Therefore c. Vers. 16. The Lord give mercy unto the house of Onesiphorus for hee oft refreshed mee and was not ashamed of my chain Arg. 5. On the other side the Spirit and grace of God is so prevalent in thee and others that are faithful to constancy in trialls that if yee bee watchful yee need not fear the losing of sound Doctrine Therefore yee ought to endeavour the holding fast the form of sound Doctrine Vers. 17. But when hee was in Rome hee sought mee out very diligently and found mee 18. The Lord grant unto him that hee may finde mercy of the Lord in that day and in how many things hee ministred unto mee at Ephesus thou knowest very well Hee propounds and confirms this Argument in Onesiphorus who saith hee boldly professed the faith and was not ashamed of my chains nor did hee fear bonds himself but at Ephesus and Rome shewed himself the same in the profession of the Gospel For whom I pray God that hee may finde mercy both hee and his whole houshold in the day of the Lord Hee wills Timothy to take courage by this mans example as also all Teachers to constancy in the profession of the faith and the keeping that good thing which is committed unto them and the defence of the Doctrine of the Gospel That which the Apostle draws from hence in the beginning of the Chapter following CHAP. II. IN this Chapter hee proceeds to instruct Timothy in the due management of his Ministry adding four Admonitions more to them that hee had laid down in his former Discourse Vers. 1. Thou there fore my son bee strong in the grace that is in Christ Iesus Admon 1. That hee endeavour the propagation of the Gospel not onely by himself but also by others that were to succeed him in the Ministry standing upon no pains that were requisite for the promoting of it There are three branches of this Admonition Branch 1. That hee arm himself with strength to the work of the Ministry and put on courage and address himself to manage his affairs well Hee insinuates two Arguments Son Arg. 1. Because it becomes Pauls Son to put on courage and bee valiant In the grace Arg. 2. Because the grace which is in Jesus Christ alone will not bee wanting to thee when thou preparest thy self for thy work Vers. 2. And the things that thou hast heard of mee among many witnesses the same commit thou to faithful men who shall bee able to teach others also Branch 2. That hee teach not the people only Sermon-wise but also Scholastically instruct the Candidates in Divinity or those that are designed for the Ministerial function by opening the Apostolical Doctrine and betrusting it as it were with faithful Depositaries which may teach others the same Doctrine that so the Doctrine of the Gospel may bee delivered and propagated from hand to hand Hee adds an Argument from his own example who had instructed Timothy and many others his fellow-disciples in this Doctrine not onely teaching them publickly together with the people but also instructing them Scholastically apart from the people Vers. 3. Thou therefore indure
bee shut out of his rest on the contrary swears that beleevers shall bee admitted into his rest Therefore beleeving Gods Oath let us hasten more and more to enter into his rest The works Hee explains the force of this Argument vers 10. three wayes First by shewing that Gods rest expressed in his Oath Psal. 95.11 is not the rest of the seventh day wherin God rested from the works of Creation because those works being finished from the beginning of the world vers 3. the rest of the seventh day was celebrated as it appears Gen. 2. and so that rest of God is past vers 4. But in Psal. 95.11 David makes mention of another rest Therefore here is not meant that first rest of God celebrated upon the Sabbatism of the seventh day vers 5. Vers. 6. Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter therein and they to whom it was first preached entred not in because of unbeleef Secondly Hee explains the Argument by declaring the consequence which follows from this that unbeleevers are excluded because of unbeleef from entring into rest It remains necessarily to bee gathered saith hee that some i. e. the faithful enter into it For either beleevers or unbeleevers shall enter into the Kingdome of God But unbeleevers shall not enter but are excluded by the Oath of God It remains that some i. e. the faithful enter in Vers. 7. Again hee limiteth a certain day saying in David to day after so long a time as it is said To day if yee will hear his voyce harden not your hearts Thirdly By shewing that the rest of God expressed in his Oath Psal. 95.11 is not that typical rest in the Land of Canaan which hee proves because David Psal. 95.7 8. defines a certain day To day so long a time after the rest of the seventh day and after the peoples entrance into the Land of Canaan viz. the day of Gods patience so long viz. as wee hear the voyce of God so long as wee are admonished not to harden our hearts so long as God offers to men that hear his voice entrance into his rest unless through unbeleef they harden their hearts Therefore by Gods rest the Prophet David doth not understand the typical rest of the Land of Canaan Vers. 8. For if Iesus had given them rest then would hee not afterward have spoken of another day 9. There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God Whereof hee gives a reason because if Ioshua or typical Jesus had settled the people in Gods rest which David promises then David in no wise would have spoken in the Psalm of another day afterwards but vers 8. hee speaks of it Therefore some rest remains to the people of God promised by David besides that typical rest of the Land of Canaan Vers. 10. For hee that is entred into this rest hee also hath ceased from his own works as God did from his 11. Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest lest any man fall after the same example of unbeleef Arg. 6. Gods rest is the ceasing from our labour as God rested from his works or it is a ceasing from sin troubles vexing cares and all our miseries Therefore let us make haste to enter by faith into that rest lest any of us with the rebellious Israelites bee excluded from Gods rest Vers. 12. For the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharper than any two-edged sword peircing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit and of the joynts and marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart Arg. 7. Confirming the former after this manner The word of God which calls us to his rest with threatning of wrath except wee obey hath now no less efficacy to save beleevers and to destroy the unbeleevers than it had long ago let us therefore make haste by faith to enter into that rest lest wee perish as heretofore the unbeleever There are three Epithites of the word 1 It is quick because it doth not lose its efficacy with the Prophets that are mortal who preach it but retains its perpetual force and vertue to all ages Zach. 1.5 6. 2 It is powerful because it is the Power and Arm of God to effect whatever it saith whether for consolation or terror 3 More peircing than any two-edged sword because as a two-edged sword peirceth into the most inward hidden and hardest parts of the body so the word of God by the perfect manifestation of light pierceth into the most intimate secrets of the heart which are meant by the marrow in the bones and into all the most inward faculties of the soul that it may discover the plottings of the sensitive soul and of the intellective what it intends and what it pretends what every one lusts after and by what means it endeavours the attainment of what it intends The word of God I say passes through all the faculties of the humane soul that it may manifest to every one if there bee any hypocrisie or if there bee any root of bitterness or unbeleef lying hid and that it may propose to every one according to the Rule not only what is within in the thought of his heart but also with what intention he thinks and wills so that they who inwardly think of Apostatizing or indulge the seeds of Apostacy within them they cannot avoid the force of the Divine Word or decline its stroak by any Arts o● Sophistry Vers. 13. Neither is there any Creature that is not manifest in his sight but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with whom wee have to do Argum. 8. Confirming the former God with whom wee have to deal when wee have to do with his Word sees all things and what infidelity lurks within us under the vizor of an outward profession because all things even the inward secrets of the heart are naked and open in his sight as when a beast is so divided by the neck and marrow of the back that all its bowels appear Therefore ought wee to endeavour to ente● into his rest by sincere Faith no● think yee to avoid the power of his threatnings if you do otherwise Vers. 14. Seeing then that wee have a great High Priest that is passed into the Heavens Iesus the Son of God let us hold fast our Profession Argum. 9. Wee have Jesus Christ the Son of God the great High Priest who hath now peirced the Heavens and is entred into his Kingdome that hee may open a passage unto us Therefore holding fast the Profession of our Faith let us endeavour to enter in Vers. 15. For we have not an High Priest which can not be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as wee are yet without sin Argum. 10. By way of prevention of an Objection Although the Majesty of Christ may strike us with amazement that wee unworthy sinners aspire not to that heavenly rest where his
the sufferings in his body and in his soul how hard a matter it was to expiate our sins taught by experience what a difficult thing it was to perform expiatory obedience even to the death of the Cross for the appeasing of his Fathers wrath and the satisfaction of Justice Christ is therefore far more exellent than the Levitical Priests Vers. 9. And being made perfect hee became the Author of eternal salvation unto all them that obey him Argum. 6. Christ the Chief Priest was every way compleat and perfect in whom there was not the least thing wanting which is requisite in a Priest For being now sanctified or offered up for a Propitiatory Sacrifice to the Father hee compleated the whole price of Redemption or what remained hee perfected in his last sufferings of which price no part was paid by the Levitical Priests Therefore hee is far more excellent than those Levitical Priests The Author Argum. 7. Christ having fully paid the price of our Redemption by his efficacious merit became and was declared the Author Lord Giver and Finisher of eternal life to all that beleeve in him and give up themselves to his instruction Therefore Christ is far more excellent c. Vers. 10. Called of God an High Priest after the order of Melchisedec Argum. 8. Confirming the former Christ is called of God whose word is effectual a Priest after the order of Melchisedec which order is far more excellent than that of Levi Therefore Christ is the Chief Priest far more excellent than the Levitical Priests Vers. 11. Of whom wee have many things to say and hard to bee uttered seeing yee are dull of hearing Argum. 9. The Doctrine of the excellency of Christs Priest-hood especially as it is represented in the type of Melchisedec is more ample and high than the Apostle can well declare to their capacity Therefore hee is far more excellent than the Levitical Priests The Second Part. The second part of the Chapter follows wherein from the Excellency of Christs Priest-hood hee taxes the Hebrews with ignorance and slowness of understanding in learning the mysteries of the Gospel The Proposition containing this reproof is this You Hebrews are to bee reproved for your slothfulness in not apprehending the mysteries of the Gospel such as the Priest-hood of Christ is Vers. 12. For when for the time yee ought to bee Teachers yee have need that one teach you again which hee the first Principles of the Oracles of God and are become such as have need of Milk and not of strong meat Hee gives four Reasons of his reproof Reas. 1. Because you have need of an Elementary Catechetical and Childish kind of Doctrine even now after that for the time which you have enjoyed the light of the Gospel you might have learned many things and have been able to instruct others Become Reas. 2. Confirming the former Because yee are Children and Infants in the knowledge of the Gospel who have need of Milk or to bee instructed in the Principles of Doctrine rather than of solid meat or perfection of Doctrine Vers. 13. For every one that useth Milk is unskilful in the Word of Righteousness For hee is a Babe Reas. 3. Proving the former Because yee are unskilful in the Word of Righteousness or yee do not well understand the Doctrine of Justification by Faith in Christ but are ready to conjoyn the Ceremonies of the Law with the Faith of Christ Therefore are yee babes and to bee reproved for your ignorance Vers. 14. But strong meat belongeth to them that are of full age even those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil Reas. 4. Explaining the latter part of the second Reason Because you want the property of those that are at full age for men grown up delight in strong meat or love the Doctrine which is more perfect 2 They delight in frequent exercise 3 By frequent exercise of themselves in the Doctrine of the Gospel they have contracted an habit of saving Doctrine not easily changeable and they have their senses or the faculties of their mind more ready to judge of the Truth and falsehood of the Doctrine propounded of the benefit of Truth and the danger of errour that they may follow that which is good and avoid that which is evil Such are not you Hebrews although for the time since your profession of the Faith you might have been such Therefore are you to bee reproved CHAP. VI. FRom the former Reprehension of their slot●fulness an Exhortation is drawn to perseverance and making progress in the Faith of the Gospel Vers. 1. Therefore leaving the Principles of the Doctrine of Christ let us go on unto perfection not laying again the foundation of Repentance from dead works and of Faith towards God The Proposition is contained in the first words Yee ought to persevere and make progress in the Faith of the Gospel For to leave Catechetical Principles which enters those that are unskilful in the Doctrine of Christ is to presuppose and grant that they are acquainted with those rudiments already in some measure Therefore hee that writes to them need not stay in these things but leaving Principles perswade them to perfection i. e. to persevere and make progress in the Faith The Arguments of this Exhortation are fifteen Argum. 1. As the foundation of an House so also of Religion is not to bee laid twice but being once laid wee must proceed in raising up the building Therefore ought yee to persevere in the Faith of the Gospel Hee reckons up six fundamental or Catechetical Doctrines 1 Repentance from dead works or from sins This foundation comprehends the first Doctrine touching the Law of God of the knowledge of sin and the deserved condemnation following of grief for sin and the desire of being freed from sin and death 2 Faith towards God which contains the Doctrine of Redemption by Christ and life obtained by him and of Faith in him to salvation Vers. 2. Of the Doctrine of Baptismes and of laying on of hands and of Resurrection of the dead and of eternal judgement 3 The Doctrine of Baptisms containing the ground of confirming faith by the Sacrament of Baptism and the Doctrine of Sanctification and Affliction or of bearing the Cross for the defence of the Gospel which Doctrine is signified by Baptism 4 The Doctrine of laying on of hands which was anciently done in the bestowing the gifts of the Holy Ghost for the confirmation of the Divine truth of the Gospel after an extraordinary manner in the Primitive Church now in an ordinary manner it is done in the Ordination of the Ministers of the Church of whose Authority and Office as anciently it belonged to all the Catechumeni so now it appertains to all the faithful to see that they be rightly ordained that they may the more cheerfully submit themselves in obedience to Ecclesiastical Discipline 5 The Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead at the last
Sarah by Faith leaning upon the truth of the Promise of God that is faithful and Almighty though shee was barren and aged and above the powers of nature shee is made fit to conceive Seed and to bring forth Isaac from Abraham already in respect to children as it were dead and so the Promise of God concerning his innumerable Off-spring took effect Hence Argum. 9. By Faith wee are fitted for the performance of those things which far exceed humane strength and to receive the accomplishment of Promises incredible to carnal reason as is apparent by the experience of Sarah Therefore c. Vers. 13. These all died in Faith not having received the Promises but having seen them afar off and were perswaded of them and imbraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth Argum. 10. All these last recited viz. Abraham with Sarah his Wife and Isaac and Iacob persevered in the Faith even till death neither did they enjoy the good things in this life which God promised only by Faith they saw the certainty of the things promised and perswaded of them saluted the good promises afar off and stretching out as it were the Arms of Faith imbraced them thinking it enough that they should enjoy them after this life professing themselves in the mean time while they lived that they were pilgrims and strangers in the earth Therefore ought you to persevere in the Faith and to live by Faith Vers. 14. For they that say such things declare plainly that they seek a Country 15. And truly if they had been mindful of that Country from whence they came out they might have had opportunity to have returned 16. But now they desire a better Country that is an heavenly wherefore God is not ashamed to bee called their God for hee hath prepared for them a City Hee proves that while they lived upon earth they did not obtain the promises by two Reasons Reason 1. Because professing themselves strangers in the earth they plainly shewed that they sought a Country ver 14. but not an earthly country because they had opportunity of returning to it if they had sought it ver 15. Therefore they sought an heavenly Country promised of God Wherefore Reas. 2. God is not ashamed to bee called their God whence hee gives us to understand that hee had a City prepared for them i. e. Heaven and determined to raise them from the dead that both in body and soul they might possess that desired Country for as their God hee had prepared that City for them so hee would bee called by them Their God that all may understand that these Saints were not to bee separated from the society of God which they sought Vers. 17. By Faith Abraham when hee was tried offered up Isaac and hee that ●ad received the Promises offered up his only begotten Son 18. Of whom it was said that in Isaac shall thy seed bee called 19. Accounting that God was able to raise him up even from the dead from whence also hee received him in a figure The Arguments have been handled which were drawn from the common effect of the Faith of the Patriarchs The Arguments follow which are drawn from the proper effects of the Faith of each of them First hee commends the Faith of Abraham that when God tryed him whether hee would beleeve the Promises and also whether hee would in all things obey hee forthwith offered up Isaac for a burnt-offering though his onely Son although Abraham had immediate promises of multiplying his seed in this very Isaac vers 17. Although it was expresly said to him of this very Son that the blessed seed in whom all Nations were to be blessed should come of him vers 18. For by Faith Abraham reasoned that God who had brought forth Isaac from Parents past children was able to raise him also out of the Ashes And thus hee received Isaac snatched from the jaws of death in a similitude as it were raised from the dead vers 19. Hence Argum. 11. By Faith all impediments are conquered in temptations which may any waies hinder the performance of our obedience unto God and that with most happy success as is manifest by the experience of Abraham Therefore c. Vers. 20. By Faith Isaac blessed Jacob and Esau concerning things to come 21. By Faith Jacob when hee was a dying blessed both the Sons of Joseph and worshiped leaning upon the top of his staff The example of Iacob follows who when hee was a dying by Faith comforted himself and his Sons concerning the blessings which according to the Promise of God should come upon his Nephews and their posterity and that with so much perswasion that for joy hee worshiped God leaning upon his staffe by reason of the weakness of his body Hence Argum. 13. That by Faith they that are a dying may take comfort and not onely comfort themselves but also others concerning the blessings promised as may be seen in the example of dying Iacob Therefore c. Vers. 22. By Faith Joseph when hee dyed made mention of the departing of the children of Israel and gave commandement concerning his bones Ioseph is named the last of the Patriarchs whom neither his power nor the abundance of good things which hee enjoyed in Egypt could make unmindful or negligent of the Promises of God but being perswaded of the children of Israels going out of Egypt and of the bringing them into the Land promised to the Fathers although many years after hee commanded that his bones should be carried out also in testimony of his preferring the thing signified by the promised Land before all earthly things From whence Argum. 14. Faith overcomes length of time before the accomplishment of the Promise comming between together with the commodities of this life the corruption of death and the grave and looks for a resurrection with the Saints as wee see in the example of Ioseph dying Therefore c. Vers. 23. By Faith Moses when hee was born was hid three months of his Parents because they saw hee was a proper child and they not afraid of the Kings commandement The third rank or classis of examples follows from the times near the children of Israels departing out of Egypt to the times of the Iudges The first Example is of the Parents of Moses who gathering from the beauty of the child Moses that God had designed him for some eminent imployment by Faith hid him three months all that time not fearing the Kings command they preserved him alive whom the King hee being a male-child commanded to be cast into the river Whence Argum. 15. By Faith fear is overcome which Tyrants by their unjust commands bring upon the faithful as is manifest in the example of Moses Parents Therefore c. Vers. 24. By Faith Moses when hee was come to years refused to bee called the Son of Pharaohs Daughter 25. Chusing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the
with joy received it Mat. 13.20 21 22. 8. Lastly hee may taste of the power of the World to come that is in contemplation of the Blessedness promised to the Saints in Heaven be taken with admiration of it yea and have a natural desire of it as Baalam did when upon such a speculation hee did wish to dye the death of the Righteous and to have his last end as his and yet love the wages of Iniquity so well as hee forsook not his covetousness for all his wish of Heaven In a word It is possible that a man impenitent and unrenewed in his heart may be a glorious Professor for his outward behaviour and have fair gifts and yet make Apostasie from the Truth when hee getteth a fit Temptation or else how should it be possible that the Devil should make glorious Professors and Church-men in all Ages Apostates Persecuters Betrayers of the Truth to the Adversary Underminers of the Church of Christ Except they under all their show did lodge in their heart the love of Mony and worldly Riches more than the love of Heaven the love of the praise of men rather than Gods Approbation the lust of their fleshly ease and pleasure more than the pleasure of God the fleshly fear of those that can kill the Body more than of God Who can cast both Soul and Body into Hell And therefore no wonder if for satisfaction of their Ambition Avarice Lusts and earthly Affections they become ready to sell Christ and His Truth and His Church and their Country and All when they finde their Merchant and the beloved Price offered unto them 4 Observe here How glorious soever these Illuminations and Gifts and Tastings seem yet there is no further here granted but Tastings to such rotten Professors That which they get is either onely in the Brain by Knowledge or if there bee any Feelings they are but fleeting motions flowing from temporary grounds which proceed not from any Spiritual life in the man nor from a root in himself that is not from the Spirit dwelling in him Such feelings do neither foster nor strenghthen him for any Spiritual Obedience but vanish without changing the heart It is true all that the godly get in comparison of what hee shall get is but Tastings Yet in comparison of these fruitless tastings of the unsound Professors that which hee getteth is true Eating and Drinking a real Feeding holding his soul in life and enabling him to work the works of God to mortifie his lusts and serve God in his Spirit 5. Observe That here hee doth not challenge those who have felt these tastings for unsound nor threaten them if they hold on and make progress Then 1. The having of illumination and spiritual gifts and tastings of heavenly things is not to be lightly esteemed of but accounted as steps and degrees unto a further progress wherefore as it is possible for some to fall away so is it a peece of advancement to encourage men to go on that they fall not away 2. There is no danger in having this Illumination or these light tastings But all the hazard is to rest upon them and not to tend towards perfection or to fall away after receiving so much encouragement 3. And therefore wee must not rest on Illumination or common gifts how glorious soever nor tastings and feelings how sweet soever but seek still into a more near communion with Christ and still more to mortifie our lusts and still to abound in the fruits of love to Christ and his Church Vers. 6. If they shall fall away to renew them again unto Repentance seeing they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame 1. Hee saith not It is impossible they should bee saved but that they shall bee renewed by Repentance Then Apostates salvation is not impossible but because their repentance is impossible and where repentance is there is no impossibility of salvation but a certainty of salvation rather For hee that giveth the repentance hee declareth his purpose to give remission also 2. Hee giveth a Reason why they cannot get repentance because they maliciously renounce Christ and crucifie him afresh unto themselves That is draw on the guiltiness of his enemies who crucified him did lye under by Apostacy allowing their crucifying of him Then 1 An Apostate from Christs doctrin doth Christ as open shame as he can and saith in effect of Christ that his doctrin is false and not to be maintained 2 An Apostate alloweth Iudas and the Iews for crucifying of Christ and accounteth Christ no more worthy than so to bee dealt withall 3. Renouncing of Christ maketh repentance impossible For hee is a Prince to give repentance unto Israel And therefore hee who will not quit Christ nor his true Doctrine is not debarred from having Repentance nor from Salvation Vers. 7. For the Earth which drinketh in the Rain that commeth oft upon it and bringeth forth Herbs meet for them by whom it is dressed receiveth blessing from God Vers. 8. But that which beareth Thorns and Bryers is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned Hee giveth a reason of the punishment of Apostates from the less to the more under a similitude from land-labouring thus As God blesseth such men who after pains taken on them bring forth the fruits of good works So doth hee curse those who after pains taken on them do bring forth but evil works And if it be ●ut equity that God curse Professors who bring forth but evil fruits in their life Much more equity hee should curse Apostates who profess open hostility against him The Similitude sheweth 1. That men are like unmanured Land before they bee brought within the Church but after they are made partakers of the Gospel then are they like manured Land within hedges Gods Husbandry 2. That such as begin to bring forth fruits worthy of repentance God blesseth and maketh more fruitful 3. That the means of Grace under the Gospel are to our souls as Rain and labouring and other Husbandry is to the ground Vers. 8. But that which beareth Thorns and Bryers is rejected and is nigh unto cursing whose end is to be burned 2. The Similitude sheweth 1. That a man may perish for not bringing forth the fruits of the Gospel albeit hee fall not into the sin against the Holy Ghost 2. That there is a great reason why God should cast away a man who amendeth not his life by the Gospel as that an Husbandman should give over labouring of a peece of evil ground 3. And by this means also sheweth that Gods most severe judgements have all of them most equitable reasons 4. That there is a necessity of bringing forth the fruits of well-doing if a man would bee free of the curse either of Apostates or of the barren land Vers. 9. But beloved wee are perswaded better things of you and things that accompany salvation though wee thus speak
For 1. As the Symboles of Gods presence was in the typical Tabernacle so the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily in Christ. 2. As the typical Tabernacle had inclosed in it all the holy things the Candlestick Table of Shew-bread Laver Altar c. So hath the humanity of Christ or Christ the Man all holiness and perfection the fulness of all good and all holy things in him Light Food Washing and Reconciliation and all in himself that out of his fulness we may all receive Grace for Grace 3. As the Tabernacle in the outmost Coverings seemed but base yet had better stuff within so our Lord when he dwelt in the Tabernacle of his flesh amongst us was found in form as a man and in the shape of a servant but inwardly was full of Grace and Truth 4. In calling Christs Body The true Tabernacle which God builded and not man he teacheth us To make use of Christ in truth as the Church of old made use of the Tabernacle in the Type that is in him seek God Towards him turn the eye of our soul when we seem to our selves to be far removed to the end of the earth in him offer all our spiritual sacrifices in him seek our Washing our Food our Light our Comfort in him as his Priests make our Abode and daily Dwelling In him let us live and breathe 5. In so calling Christ hee appropriateth the sacrificing of his Body to himself in his own person as the personal and proper act of his Priesthood for the offering of the which Sacrifice once and never after as Heb. 7.27 sheweth he keepeth still the stile of the onely Minister of the true Tabernacle as his own incommunicable Prerogative And therefore whosoever presumeth to offer his Body presumeth also to take his place Vers. 3. For every High-Priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer He proveth That Christ is the Minister of the Tabernacle of his own Body by offering it up because it behoved him seeing he is a Priest to offer up something either the typical Oblations or else his own Body represented by them But the typical Oblations he could not offer according to the Law not being a Levite Therefore he behooved to offer up himself represented by the typical Oblations Then the Apostle acknowledgeth no Priest but either the Levitical Priest or the Priest that offereth up his own Body And whosoever pretendeth to have the Office of a Priest now usurpeth either the office of the Levite or Christs Office Vers. 4. For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law 1. He proveth That Christ cannot offer up the typical Oblations because he cannot be a Priest on earth albeit he were on earth because Priesthood on earth is proper to the Levites onely For they are the onely Priests by Law on earth and have prescribed to them by Law what they should offer Quest. You will ask me here Was not Chriest a Priest when he was on earth I answer Yes Quest. How then saith the Apostle here If he were on earth he should not be a Priest I answer Because albeit he began his Priesthood upon earth yet he could not brook his Office of Priesthood upon earth For as the High-Priest who was the Type carried the Sacrifice once a year through the Court and before the Sanctuary killed the sacrifice and then took the blood thereof in unto the Holiest of all and presented himself there before the Lord with the blood to intercede for the people and there remained during the time of Intercession appointed to him So Christ carrying his sacrifice out of the City offered up his Body on the Altar of his Godhead to his Father and by his own blood entred into the heavenly Sanctuary and sate down on the right hand of the Majestie on high and there he liveth for ever to intercede for us having then ended his sacrifice as this Apostle proveth Chap. 7.27 and Chap. 9.25 26. And having no sacrifice now to offer on earth it is with reason that the Apostle saith If he were on earth he should not be a Priest Whence we learn 1. That Christ is not now on the earth not in any place thereof and therefore if any man say to us Lo here he is Lo there he is we must not beleeve him it is a false Christ he sheweth us and not the true as Christ himself forewarneth Mat. 24.23 2. That it is impossible that Christ should now be on the earth for then should he lose his Priesthood which is impossible For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest saith the Apostle here 3. That Christs Priesthood is onely discharged now in heaven seeing he cannot be a Priest on earth 2. His Reason is They are Priests which offer Gifts according to the Law Then Every Priest who brooketh his Priesthood on earth must offer Gifts according to the Law as the Apostle here reasoneth And such Priests as those Christ hath abolished having changed the Priesthood and the Law also Therefore there can be no Priest by Office on earth at all with Gods allowance Vers. 5. Who serve unto the Example and Shadow of Heavenly things as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith He that thou make all things according to the Pattern shewed unto thee in the Mount He describeth the proper use of the Levitical Priests to serve unto the Example of heavenly Things Then 1. The Incarnation of Christ his Death and the Benefits thereof signified by Levitical Shadows are heavenly things in regard of their heavenly Fruits and Effects and other heavenly respects and are with an heavenly minde to be looked upon 2. The Ceremonies of the Law were not idle Rites but Examples and Figures of Christ and his Graces by the which men were led then as by the hand to Christ who was to come 2. From Exod. 25.40 he proveth they were Shadows of heavenly things because the Pattern in the Mount represented the heavenly things and Moses Tabernacle represented the Pattern in the Mount Therefore it represented heavenly things And unto this Pattern was Moses tyed Then 1. God would not no not in the time of Types suffer any device of man to come in for representing any thing heavenly Much less will he now 2. Those which himself ordaineth he will have observed and none omitted Vers. 6. But now hath Hee obtained a more excellent Ministery by how much also Hee is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better Promises 1. The offering of the Typical Oblations hee hath made proper to the Levites Now the offering of the true Sacrifices and service belonging thereunto hee appropriateth to Christ and calleth it A more excellent Ministery Then 1. The offering of the thing signified by the Levitical
maintain the Truth against all fear of men Vers. 26. For if wee sin wilfully after that wee have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sins Another Motive to constancy in the Truth of Religion taken from the fearful case of wilful Apostates who sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost are secluded for ever from Mercy I say the sin against the Holy Ghost because wee shall finde the sin here described not to be any particular sin against the Law but against the Gospel Not a sin against some point of Truth but against Christs whole Doctrine Not of infirmity but wilfulness Not of rashness but of deliberation wittingly and willingly Not of ignorance but after Illumination and Profession Such as Iews turned Christians revolting from Christianity back again to their former hostility against Christ did commit It is true many who commit lesser sins get never grace to repent and many who make defection in some point of their profession may be secluded from mercy thereafter but this sin here described is a wilful rejecting of Christ and the Benefit of his Sacrifice after Illumination and Profession of the Faith of Christ. Then 1. As Apostacy from the true Religion lyeth nearest unto this sin so they who desire to be freed of this sin must be the more careful to be constant in the profession of every point of the Truth of the Gospel 2. If a man reject the Benefit of that once offered Sacrifice of Christ there is no other Sacrifice for sin after that nor any other mean to help him But if a man seek unto Jesus Christ and will not quit Him whatsoever hee may think of the hainousness of his own sins the Sacrifice which Jesus offered for sins remaineth whereby hee may be saved Vers. 27. But a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversaries Having secluded the Apostate from Mercy hee goeth on in these words to shew his miserable estate Whereof wee gather 1. That the wilful Apostate from the Faith of Christ is also a wilful Adversary to Christ of the highest sort Partaker of Satans sin and Satans Profession 2. That every Apostate of this sort is destitute of Gods Peace self-condemned desperate of salvation hopeless of Relief without all purpose of Repentance or using means of help stricken with the fore-sight of the Wrath coming upon him and made to expect it although hee should dissemble it never so much 3. The Apostates fear shall come upon him judgement answerable to his sin the indignation and wrath of God yea fiery indignation the most terrible that can be thought upon which hee shall not escape but it shall devoute him swallow him up and feed upon his body and soul even for ever 2. In that hee maketh this the judgement of Christs Adversaries Wee learn That the soul which loveth Christ and cannot qui● Him cannot endure to think of a separation will not quit the true Religion nor any known point of Christs Truth and is using the means to get Gods Peace albeit it might seem to it self because of the present sense of wrath to be in the self-same estate that is here described yet it is ●ree as yet of the sin against the Holy Ghost and not to be reckoned amongst adversaries but amongst the friends and lovers of Christ how vehemently soever Satans suggestions bear in the contrary 3. In that by setting before them the fearful estate of Apostates from the known Truth of the true Religion hee Laboureth to strengthen them against the fear of persecution Whence wee learn That if Apostates before they make Apostasie from the true Religion did fore-see their own danger as after Apostasie they are made to fore-see their own condemnation all the terrour of all the torment which man could put them unto and all the allurements which this world could give them would not move them to quit the least point of the Truth of true Religion Vers. 28. Hee that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses 29. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall hee be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Blood of the Covenant wherewith hee was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace 1. Hee proveth the equity of their judgement by the proportion of their punishment who despised the Law of Moses Then As sins are greater so must the punishment be greater and the conscience being posed as here cannot but subscribe to the proportion 2. To make the sin appear the better hee pointeth out some particular sins involved within this great sin For clearing whereof it may be asked How can the Apostates tread the Blood of the Son of God under foot c. I answer They cannot indeed by physical action but by doing the equivalent sin they are accounted of God to do it by judicial interpretation Their Apostasie importeth their agreeing to do Christ as much indignity as if they did offer Him this personal violence Their deeds shew that they have this base estimation of Christ and His Blood and no better For what saith the Apostate of Christ by his deed but That Hee is not worthy to be professed or avowed or followed And what is this in effect but to tread Him under all these base things which the Apostate preferreth before Him And so is to be understood of the Blood of Christ and His Spirit Quest. But how can the Reprobate be said to be sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant I answer There is a sanctification to the purifying of the flesh and a sanctification to the purifying of the conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.13 14. The sanctification external to the purifying of the flesh consisteth in the mans separation from the world and dedication unto Gods service by Calling and Covenant common to all the members of the visible Church and it is forcible thus far as to bring a man into credit estimation as a Saint before men and unto the common Priviledges of the Church whereupon as Men so God also speaketh unto him and of him as one of His People and dealeth with him in his external dispensation as with one of His own People In this sense all the Congregation of Israel and every one of them is called holy yea Core also and his followers Num. 16.3 The Sanctification internal by renovation consisteth in a mans separation from the state of Nature to the state of grace from his old conditions to be a new creature indeed By this latter sort a Reprobate cannot be called Sanctified but by the former hee may be called Sanctified and that by virtue of the Blood of the Covenant albeit hee should not get any further good thereby For as the Blood of CHRIST hath virtue to cleanse the conscience and renew the soul which commeth unto it truly and spiritually so it
earthly affections mortified 3. Their encouragement and cause of joy was the sensible feeling within themselves of the comfort of eternal Riches in Heaven keeping for them Then 1. It is the assurance of our heavenly inheritance which must make us ready to quit our earthly moveables 2. Who so getteth a heart to quit any thing on earth for Christ shall have better in heaven than he can lose here 3. GOD useth to give earnest of what he is to give in sensible feeling of spiritual Riches to such as believe in him 4. When men can esteem of things heavenly as they are that is enduring goods and of things earthly as they are that is perishing moveables then shall they readily quit the earthly in hope of the heavenly Vers. 35. Cast not away therefore your confidence which hath great recompence of reward Now he exhorteth them to go on in this ●old avowing of Christ For this Confidence in the Original is such as hath with it a full and free profession of all their faith Then confidence and bold avowing of the truth is required A plain and full testimony must we give to Christs truth our confidence in profession is in part casten when our testimony is sparing 2. The encouragement he giveth is The hope of a reward Then 1. Constancy in avowing of Christ shall be well rewarded although not of deserving yet of Gods grace 2. He that quiteth his profession renounceth the reward promised to the constant Quest. But doth not this exhortation import the elects unsettledness and uncertainty of perseverance I answer Not but onely his weakness of himself and need of such exhortations to further his constancy 2. The danger of dishonoring God in some particular slip or fall is ground sufficient for this exhortation and this is the most of necessity it can import 3. Exhortation being given to the common Body of the visible professors teacheth them properly and not the elect formally Vers. 36. For ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise He giveth a reason Because they have need of patience therefore they must not cast away their confidence Then 1. The reward will not be given till a time intervene 2. And troubles will lie on in the mean while to make the time seem the longer 3. Patience is needful as a mean to fit us to attend 4. Confidence of the truth must support our patience 2. The time of their Patience he setteth as long as God thinketh good to employ them and after that the reward cometh Then 1. The time of patience is as long as God hath any thing to do with us in this world 2. Patience must not be joyned with idleness but with active obedience of Gods will as he requireth it 3. After that employment is ended the promised reward is given Vers. 37. For yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry He encourageth them to Patience by promise of the Lords coming to relieve them shortly Then 1. The tearm of patience is until the Lord come to deliver 2. The patient attender on his coming shall not be disappointed For he will come and will not tarry beyond the due time of our necessity 3. It should strengthen us unto Patience that the time is short and the delivery certain Vers. 8. Now the just shall live by Faith but if any man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him How shall they send in the mean time He answereth from Habak 2.4 The just shall live by Faith That is The man who will be found righteous must not look to present sense but sustain his soul with the word of Promise Then 1. In the midst of troubles and Gods felt absence Faith will content it self with the onely promises of GOD. 2. Looking to Gods word by faith is able to keep a soul in life and patience 2. He threatneth the misbelieving Apostate that chuseth to draw back and not live by faith The words of the Prophet are He whose soul is lifted up in him is not upright The Apostle betaketh him to the meaning which being compared with the Prophets words doth teach us 1. That he who refuseth to live by faith is lifted up with the false confidence of some other thing than God He hath some strong hold within himself wherein he doth trust 2. He that lifteth up himself in his vain confidence will draw back from beleeving in Gods word in the time of tryal 3. Hee that draweth back in the time of tryal bewrayeth the want of this sincerity 4. A back-slider from the profession of the Truth is loathsome both to God and to his Saints Vers. 39. But wee are not of them who draw back unto perdition but of them that beleeve to the saving of the soul. Hee mitigateth the threatning lest hee should seem to suspect them of inconstancy Then 1. Such Threatnings and Exhortations as have been given here do not import the uncertainty of their perseverance who are threatned but standeth with the assurance of the contrary 2. Hee who threatneth should be as wary to weaken his hearers Faith as his own 3. Hearers must understand that the right use of threatning is to rowse men out of security and not to discourage them 2. Wee are not of them saith hee who draw back unto perdition Then 1. They who draw back from constant avowing of the Faith draw near unto perdition Hee that forsaketh the Cross runneth himself on the Rock of his own destruction which is worse 2. The Elect are not of that kind or sort of men who fall into Apostasie unto perdition They may fall for a time but are not of them that draw back unto perdition 3. Wee are of them saith hee who beleeve to the salvation of the soul. Then 1. True Beleevers are of that kind of whom all do persevere 2. Persevering in the Faith is going on to Salvation The Summe of Chap. XI NOw that you may know the better how to live by Faith consider that Faith apprehendeth things to come as present and subsisting by holding them in their original Fountain which is the word of Promise and beholding in the Mirrour of the Word the clear certainty of things as yet not seen to sense vers 1. For so were the Elect Beholders and Partakers of Christ before hee came and were justified vers 2. And so have wee certainty of the Creation of the World of nothing vers 3. By it was Abels person and sacrifice accepted and preferred before his elder Brother vers 4. By it was Enoch made ready for Heaven vers 5 6. And Noah by it saved both in body and soul vers 7. Faith made Abraham leave his Country in hope of Heaven vers 8 9 10. By it Sarah being old got strength above the course of Nature to become a fruitful Mother vers 11 12. All these unto their dying day were contented with the fore-sight of
it 3. That this felicity could not be attained unto but by flitting and removing out of this life 4. That the body is a partner with the Soul of Life eternal 5. That howsoever it be appointed for all men once to dye yet God can make when he pleaseth Translation or a Change to stand in room of death 3. Before Enoch was translated he had this testimony That he pleased God Then whosoever desireth to be blessed with God after they are removed from this life must first learn to please God before they depart hence Vers. 6. But without Faith it is impossible to please him For he that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him He proveth that Enochs Translation and pleasing of God was by Faith because pleasing of God cannot be without Faith He nameth no other of Gods graces in him but Faith onely because it onely of all other graces strippeth a man naked of the worth of any thing in him and sendeth him to Gods mercy in the Mediator Then 1. Whatsoever glorious Vertues he found in Gods children yet it is not by any of these that they are justified or acceptable to God but onely by their Faith For it is by Faith that it may be by Grace And if it be by Grace it is not by worthiness of works 2. In the matter of Justification and acceptation with God to be justified by Faith or accepted not without Faith is all one to be justified and accepted by vertue of nothing in a man beside Faith else the Apostles reasoning were not strong 3. Except a man have this commended Faith in Gods Mercy he cannot please God Let him do else what you can name without this faith it is impossible to please God 2. He expoundeth what the Faith is of which he meaneth To wit A coming to God All-sufficient and merciful Then 1. God is Self-sufficient and All-sufficient 2. God is so gracious as none can seek unto him by that way which he hath revealed but he will give them that which they seek 3. Except a man believe Gods All-sufficiency and merciful Bountifulness he cannot come unto him to seek supply of wants or relief from evil 3. From these words also we may observe the nature of Faith 1. It maketh a man sensible of his indigence and misery else it could not send him a begging 2. It maketh him to acknowledge his natural alienation and farness from God else it could not set him on work to seek God and to come unto him 3. It emptieth him of the confidence in his own and all the creatures help else it could not send the man away from all these to God 4. It pointeth out God both able and willing to help else it could not encourage to take course for relief in him 5. It setteth a man on work to use the appointed means to finde God 6. It certifieth a man of Gods impartiality towards every one that seeketh to him and maketh him to hold on the way seeking diligently and never to give over And so it bringeth a man to deny himself and to have communion with God Vers. 7. By Faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an Ark to the saving of his house by the which he condemned the world and became heir of the Righteousness which is by Faith In Noahs example observe 1. He believeth the Deluge is coming and feareth and prepareth the Ark. Then 1. Faith apprehendeth Judgements threatned in the Word as well as Mercies in the Promises 2. Faith apprehending the Threatning moveth to fear 3. That is right Fear which setteth a man on work to prevent the danger 2. By his diligence he condemned the world Then The pains which the Godly take to eschew wrath condemneth careless beholders of their diligence 3. By this he became heir of the Righteousness which is by Faith that is came evidently to be such Then 1. There is a Righteousness which is onely by Faith 2. That Righteousness is Heirship to all true Believers 3. Some special point of Faith may bring this heirship unto light and give evidence of a mans Right thereunto Vers. 8. By Faith Abraham when he was called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance obeyed and he went out not knowing whither he went Abrahams following of Gods calling and leaving of his Countrey is counted a work of Faith From Abrahams example then let us learn 1. That Faith in God will cause a man quit his Countrey and Parents and every dearest thing at Gods calling 2. Faith counteth Gods Promises better than present possessions and is content to quit the one for the other 3. Yea it is content with a Promise of better in general and for the special manner of performance standeth not to be blinde 4. Faith is willing to obey as soon as it seeth a Warrant Vers. 9. By Faith he sojourned in the land of Promise as in a strange Countrey dwelling in Tabernacles with Isaac and Iacob the heirs with him of the same promise Abrahams sojourning in Canaan is counted another work of his Faith Wherein we learn 1. That Faith can for a while suffer to be a stranger even from that whereunto it hath best Right 2. When Faith hath certainty of an heavenly inheritance it can be content with a small portion of things earthly 3. A man who sojourneth amongst Idolaters should be sure of a calling thereunto and being amongst them ought to behave himself as a Stranger and Sojourner 4. Yes where he hath best Right on earth hee ought to have a Pilgrims mind Vers. 10. For hee looked for a City which hath Foundations whose builder and maker is God That which moved Abraham to behave himself as a Sojourney on earth was the hope of a setled during place with God in the society of the Saints in Heaven Then 1. Heaven is a setled commodious and safe-dwelling Place All places here are but moveable Tabernacles 2. The Fathers under the Law looked for entry into their eternal rest in the Kingdome of Heaven after the ending of their Pilgrimage here 3. The hope of Heaven is able to make a man content with Pilgrims Fare and Lodging here-away Vers. 11. Through Faith also Sarah her self received strength to conceive Seed and was delivered of a Childe when she was past age because she judged Him faithful wh● had promised Sarah is reckoned in the Catalogue of Beleevers and her laughing through unbeleef is not remembred but her victory over her mis-beleef is commended Then 1. Even Women are made Patterns of beleeving and wisely walking with God worthy to be imitated of Men. 2. God marketh not the defects of Faith but the soundness thereof how small soever it be what good is in His Children and not what sins they are cloged with 2. When shee is past age by Faith shee getteth strength to conceive
The most assiduous and painful setting not of the body onely but the spirit on work because it is a charge of Watching 3. The most dangerous of all Charges because the account of lost souls within the Church shall be craved at their hands whether they have 〈…〉 that which became them to do to save them or not 4. The weightiness of their Charge should affect their people and move them to concur for their parts as they are able for their encouragement 3. Another motive is That they may do their work with joy and not with grief for that is unprofitable unto you saith he Then 1. Church-mens chief joy should be their peoples obedience unto Gods directions in their mouth and their chief grief if it be otherwise 2. Whether they will get joy or grief from their people they must do their work and follow their Charge 3. The less comfortable people be unto their Leaders their Teachers and Rulers the less profit shall they have by their Ministery Vers. 18. Pray for us For we trust wee have a good conscience in all things willing to live honestly His craving the benefit of their Prayers for him Teacheth us 1. That albeit the Scripture giveth no warrant to seek the benefit of the Prayer of Saints departed or of Angels yet it giveth warrant for seeking of the mutual concurrence in Prayer of those that are living together and militant here on Earth together 2. That the greatest Apostle hath need of the prayers of the meanest Christian and may be helped thereby 2. He giveth a Reason answering all the calumnies which were spread of him by his Adversaries that they might with greater freedom pray for him as for an honest man Then 1. They who are unjustly reported of must comfort themselves in the Testimony of a good Conscience 2. An honest heart may expect the better fruit of their own prayers and others 3. And such as we know are sincerely set to serve God we may with the better courage pray for them 3. He expoundeth what he calleth a good Conscience by saying that he was willing to live honestly Then the purpose desire and endeavour to live honestly is the evidence of a good Conscience and the ground also of the good Testimony because such a disposition escheweth to do evil and is careful to do good Vers. 19. But I beseech you the rather to do this that I may be restored to you the sooner He joyneth a Reason for their own good to pray for him that the impediments of his coming unto them being removed by their prayers he might come the sooner Then 1. When our own good is joyned with the good of such as call for our prayers we have the more inducements to set us on work 2. Many hinderances of our good and comfort do stand in the way which by Prayer might be removed Vers. 20. Now the God of Peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Iesus that great Shepherd of the sheep through the 〈◊〉 of the Everlasting Covenant Now he prayeth for them whom he had in the former words requested to pray for him Then 1. Prayer is a mutual duty and ought to be made by us for such as we desire to pray for us 2. He stileth God to whom he prayeth first the God of Peace To teach us That Peace proceeded from God and is preserved by him in his Church and that it doth please him well that his children should be in peace and should study thereunto 3. Again he describeth God by the great work of Christs Resurrection wrought by him Then 1. As Christs Resurrection is the work of his own power Iohn 10.18 So also is it the work of God the Father in this place For Iohn 10.30 the Father and Christ in power are one 4. The Props of his faith in prayer are first the office of Iesus who is the Great Shepherd of the sheep Then 1. Those who come under the reckoning of Christs sheep are the onely people of whom he by special Office professeth to take charge 2. Howsoever he imploy the Ministery of men to feed his flock under him yet doth he keep the place and stile of Arch-pastor or Great Shepherd to himself 3. People howsoever they be furnished by Ministers yet they have the Great Shepherd to acknowledge and relie upon of whose care and fidelity for their feeding and preservation they may be confident 5. The next Prop of this Prayer is The power of God who brought again from the dead the Great Shepherd Then 1. The sheep must not think to be above the Shepherd but must resolve for bearing witness to the truth to be put to death as he was if God please 2. Nor need they fear to be used so seeing he is risen again because he that raised the Shepherd for the sheeps cause can raise the sheep from death also for the Shepherds cause 6. The third Prop of Confidence for obtaining this Prayer is The blood of the Everlasting Covenant through which he seeketh his petition to be granted Then 1. It is Christs Blood which hath ratified the Covenant and established our Reconciliation to endure for ever because the vertue of that blood is perpetual 2. It is through that Blood that everything is purchased for which we can pray It is the price of the purchase of Sanctification unto us as well as Salvation Vers. 21. Make you perfect in every good work to do his will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom be glory for ever and ever Amen That which he prayeth for here is That they may be made perfect in every good work to do the will of God Then 1. Onely the doing of Gods will and what he hath commanded is to be reckoned for a good work 2. It is not enough to be given to some sort of good work but we must endeavour our selves to work every sort of good work having a due respect unto all Gods Commandments 3. Whatsoever measure we have attained unto we must not stand there but perfection must be aimed at which is still before us until we come to Heaven 2. The way how this may be done he sheweth to be By Gods working in us that which is well-pleasing in his sight even through Jesus Christ. Then 1. It is not by any strength of our own whereby good works are wrought but even by the power of God working in us graciously 2. It is through Jesus Christ that this working is procured conveyed unto us and made acceptable unto God 3. He closeth his prayer with ascribing of Glory unto Iesus for ever Amen Then 1. Christ Jesus is true God worthy of Divine Glory for ever 2. The Prayer and Praises which we offer unto God must come from so advised a minde as we may seal the same with Faith and hearty Affection imported in AMEN Vers. 22 And I beseech you brethren suffer the word of Exhortation for I have
conscience which in every condition can inwardly give you a good testimony Therefore ought yee to follow after these virtues They may bee ashamed Argum. 8. By the following after these virtues yee will stop the mouthes of the enemies of the Gospel who lye in wait to defame you and speak ill of you as of evil doers Vers. 17. For it is better if the will of God be so that yee suffer for well doing than for evil doing Argum. 9. For it is far better that yee following after these virtues should be afflicted for well doing if the will of God be so than for doing evil For from hence ar●s●s praise and commendation from the other judgement and disgrace Therefore yee ought to follow these virtues Ve●s 18. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that hee might bring us to God being put to death in the flesh but quickened by the Spirit Argum. 10. Christ hath once suffered for the expiating of sins Therefore yee Beleevers being exempted from the punishment of sins are obliged if God will so have it to suffer troubles for the following of these virtues Iust Argum. 11. Christ being just and innocent hath suffered for us being unjust Therefore wee being beleevers who are not altogether innocent are bound for righteousness sake not to refuse the suffering of what God will have us suffer That he might bring us Argum. 12. Christ the just one hath suffered that hee might confirm us being justified and suffering afflictions to himself and bring us to God Therefore beleevers are bound to follow him in the pursute of virtue and patience of afflictions for weldoing Quickened Argum. 13. Seeing that the issue of Christs sufferings was happy because although he is dead by reason of the infirmity of our flesh yet he rose from the dead by the virtue and power of his Spirit or Deity ye beleevers suffering afflictions for Christ and his righteousness without doubt shall also obtain a joyfull issue out of your sufferings and death it self Therefore ye ought to follow after these virtues although for that cause yee bee afflicted Vers. 19. By which also hee went and preached unto the Spirits in prison 20. Which sometimes were disobedient when once the long suffering of God waited in the days of Noah while the Ark was a preparing wherein few that is eight souls were saved by water 21. The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us not the putting away of the filth of the flesh but the answer of a good conscience toward God by the resurrection of Iesus Christ. Argum. 14. The spirits or soules of those unbeleeving and disobedient men are now in prison or hell to which Christ by his spirit in times past by Noah the preacher of righteousness came and preached repentance and following after righteousness because in times past to wit in the time of Noah they were disobedient abusing Gods long suffering towards them whilst the Ark was preparing Therefore it is expedient for you Hebrews to obey this exhortation to the study of virtue lest yee bee involved in the same punishment Few Argum. 15. As those few soules which were in the Ark were saved in the deluge of waters by the Ark So all beleevers being baptized are preserved that they perish not in any afflictions by baptism which answers to the Type of the Ark Therefore yee that follow after righteousness ought to fear nothing although yee suffer for righteousness sake Not the filth of the flesh Hee explains this argument shewing that hee doth not understand the outward baptism which consists in the washing away of the filth of the body but the inward baptism which consists in the washing away of sins or the filthiness of the soul the sign and proper effect whereof is the engagement of a good conscience towards God or that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ. Hee also adds Argum. 16. Now yee are endued with that confidence which a good conscience purged by Faith hath towards God by and through the resurrection of Christ Therefore there is no cause that for the following after the Scriptures yee should fear afflictions Hee adds by the resurrection of Christ partly because in Christs resurrection was declared the sentence of God absolving us in Christ from sinne and death partly because Christ being raised from the dead hath powerfully perfected those things in and for beleevers which by his death hee merited and obtained for them Vers. 22. Who is gone into Heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him Argum. 17. Confirming the former and also the exhortation to the following after virtue although for that cause afflictions were born Christ the Author of our salvation is lifted up into Heaven to the highest glory of ruling over all things and obtain supream and everlasting power over all Creatures not any of the Angels excepted Therefore yee Beleevers ought strongly to prosecute the study of virtue against all dangers and terrours being assured of your salvation because you have such a Saviour in Heaven CHAP. IV. HEE here prosecutes the same Argument which hee handled in the former Chapter There are two parts of the Chapter in the first are contained Exhortations to holiness to vers 12. The other is consolatory against persecutions to the end The exhortations to holiness are six The first is more general to vers 7. the rest more especial Vers. 1. Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh arm your selves likewise with the same mind for hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin The Arguments to holiness in general are seven which that they may be the better conceived wee must maintain that Christ hanging on the Cross hath after four manner of waies acted in our behalf First That hee judicially representing us and bearing our person did bear the guilt of our sins and punishment due to them 2. That hee being a Surety for us did take upon himself the mortifying or crucifying of our old man by the virtue of his crucifixion 3. Hee set forth himself an efficacious example to us whereto wee might conform our selves in the denying our selves and renouncing all things which might hinder us in our progress towards Heaven 4. As a Surety Advocate Patron Father Husband Head and common person hee did binde us with many bonds to deaden us to sin and to use all means whereby that might be effected These presupposed the following Arguments more strongly binde Argum. 2. Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh and publickly acted in our behalf after those foresaid waies Therefore yee beleeving Hebrews ought to arm your selves with this meditation of Faith against all temptations that yee may dye to the lusts of the corrupt flesh Who hath suffered Argum. 2. Confirming the former from the judicial uniting of Beleevers