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

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the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith Vers. 3. Are ye so foolish having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh HEre is an Inference from the former Verse That seing their beginning in the way of Christianity was spirituall the Doctrine of Justification by Faith having communicated the Spirit of Regeneration and other Graces to them as ver 2. it should be an act of extream folly and madnesse in them to quit that Doctrine and to imbrace the Doctrine of Justification by Works as if they could be perfected by it seing it is but a fleshly dead Doctrine and therefore is here called flesh because flesh and corrupt nature do plead and stand for it Rom. 10. 3. and because it doth produce no spiritual effect but rather the contrary in the soul who doth imbrace it Rom. 7. 5. Doct. 1. The Text speaketh nothing against the Doctrine of Perseverance as if those who were once renewed and truly spiritual might lose the Spirit of God altogether and turn fleshly For besides first that the Apostle doth not positively assert that they were changed already but only by way of question holdeth out the hazard which should follow upon their change Secondly he speaketh not of a change of qualities or dispositions from good to bad but in their judgment from the Doctrine of Faith here called the Spirit to the Doctrine of Justification by Works here called flesh Thirdly though he did imply a change of qualities and disposition from Spirit to flesh and from holinesse to sin as a consequence of this change of judgment and opinion Yet there is nothing here importing that any total or final change of that kind either had fallen or could fall upon those who were truly gracious 2. The Doctrine maintained by the Papists now That Faith in Jesus Christ doth begin our Justification in so far as it disposeth us unto good works and that by those our Justification is compleated is no new error but that which hath been held of old by these Hereticks who had seduced the Galatians and whom Paul here refuteth for he supposeth that in answer to the present argument they might readily affirm that though the Doctrine of Faith here called the Spirit as 2 Cor. 3. 6. did begin the work yet the Doctrine of Works here called flesh did perfect it Having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh 3. The fore-mentioned Doctrine hath so many absurdities following upon it That the imbracing of it doth argue no lesse than folly and madnesse for Justification by Faith and Works cannot consist Rom. 11. 6. much lesse can the former take its perfection from the latter the more noble from that which is more base hence Paul condemneth it of folly Are ye so foolish saith he having begun c. 4. Our after-after-carriage and walking in the things of God and religious matters ought to be conform to our good beginnings which we once had in those and the contrary hereof is incomparable folly and madness for he saith Are ye so foolish having begun in the Spirit are ye now made perfect by the flesh Vers. 4. Have ye suffered so many things in vain if it be yet in vain HE cleareth what he said of the folly and madnesse which is in following the way presently spoken of by shewing if they should hold on to seek Justification by Works or partly by Faith and partly by Works they would lose all the fruit of their former constancy and sufferings sustained by them for that Truth which he did now preach this he speaketh not positively but as it were doubtingly and suspending its certainty upon the hopes he had of their amendment Doct. 1. It is the lot of those who professe Truth to suffer many things in the defence of it See chap. 1. ver 13. doct 6. The Galatians found the truth of this Have ye suffered so many things 2. They may suffer many things for Truth who afterwards will make foul defection from it for as the example of others particular interest wrapt up in the publick and the general applause which sufferers for Truth do receive from the lovers of Truth will make even Hypocrites suffer much so continued sufferings will make even the godly faint for a time yea the best being left to themselves in an hour of tentation will turn their back upon Truth so that no engagements by a profession no experience or remembrance of that joy and sweetnesse which they have found in the way of Truth nor yet their former sufferings for Truth will make them adhere unto it for these Galatians had suffered many things for the Doctrine of Justification by Faith yea and had found much sweetnesse and satisfaction in it chap. 4. 15. and yet now they have made defection from it Have ye suffered so many things in vain 3. Afflictions and sufferings for the Truth are very useful and profitable to the sufferers though not to satisfie God's justice for sin neither in its guilt nor punishment neither eternal nor temporal for these are fully done away in Christ Isa. 53. 5. Yet for other ends as for the trial of their Faith 1 Pet. 1. 7. for conforming them to Christ their head Philip. 3. 10. who was a man of sorrows Isa. 53. 3. for making them die to the world chap. 6. 14. and to fit them for Heaven afflictions and crosses being the beaten way which leadeth to it Act. 14. 22. for while he saith Have ye suffered so many things in vain he importeth their sufferings would have been usefull for them if they themselves had not hindered it 4. Whatever have been the sufferings of a people or person for Truth they are all in vain lost and to no purpose as to any thing which can be expected from God to the party who hath suffered if so he make defection from and turn his back upon Truth afterwards for Paul insinuateth this as an undoubted Truth while he saith Have ye suffered so many things in vain 5. Though these who have suffered much for Truth should afterward make defection from it we are neverthelesse to keep charity towards them as hoping God will give them repentance and reclaim them Yea all our sharpnesse towards them whether in aggreging their sin or in holding out the terrible consequences which are deserved by and probably will follow upon their sin ought to be wisely tempered by expressing those charitable thoughts which we have of them for so doth the Apostle here while speaking of these Galatians who had formerly suffered much for Truth and threatning them for their present defection with the losse of all those advantages which they might have expected from their sufferings the suspendeth the certainty of the threatning upon their hoped-for repentance If it be yet in 〈◊〉 saith he Vers. 5. He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit 〈◊〉 worketh miracles among you doth He it by the works of the Law or by
beloved Christians let me exhort you all and especially you to whom the Lord hath carved out such a lot in things worldly that ye have abundance of time and leasure from your other imployments Give more of your time to the searching of Scripture and labour to understand the mind of God concerning your Salvation revealed therein Hereby shall you be preserved from being led aside by Satans emissaries who do erre not knowing the Scriptures Matth. 22. 29. Hereby ye shall be made wise unto Salvation and rendered victorious over your strongest lusts and throughly fitted for the most difficult duties while the Lord by His Spirit shall make the Scriptures profitable unto you for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and thereby make you perfect throughly furnished unto all good works 2 Tim 3. 16 17. Only in order to the gaining of those rich advantages by reading Scripture ye would read not superficially but conscientiously attentivly and devoutly and do not slight to take what helps ye can get from the Labours of others for attaining to the increase of solid knowledge and sanctifying grace What humane frailties you discerne in this piece of mine which doubtlesse are not a few pitie them and so much the more pray for me that I may discern and amend them and if any will be so faithfull and free as to advertise me either immediately or by causing others to acquaint me with them I shall God willing be humbly thankfull and endeavour to make the best use I can of their freedom knowing that such reproofs will not break my head but be as a precious ointment The great and gracious God blesse all your endeavours for advancing your selves and your relations in knowledge and grace So prayeth Kilwinning Nov. 12. 1658. Your servant in the Lord JAMES FERGUSSON ERRATA Page Line Read 6 11 subscribe 10 24 5. 13 28 had deserted 1● 28 their 20 7 believing ●1 6 their 24 15 dele to 36 9 wickednesse 37 15 32. 39 16 22. 40 23 went not up 52 5 our 53 23 acquired 54 28 2. 61 24 composing ibid 35 9. 19. 84 13 dele who 102 10 affections 131 10 inflicted 136 24 worth 163 20 doth succeed 166 3 ver 7. 171 7 17. 180 12 us sons 239 23 11. 283 11 may have 298 23 15. 315 7 sin and A brief Exposition of the Epistle of Paul to the Galatians The ARGUMENT PAul having planted several Churches in Galatia Act. 16. 6. and 18. 23. a region of Asia the lesse and being now as it seemeth a prisoner at Rome chap. 6. 17. some false Apostles had seduced these Churches from the sincere doctrine of the Gospel preached by Paul chap. 1. 6. perswading them that the observation of the Levitical Ceremonies now abolished was necessary chap. 6. 13. and that justification and salvation were partly from faith in Christ and partly also from their own works chap. 3. 2. and 4. 21. and that Paul was no lawful Apostle no wayes to be compared with the other Apostles who had seen Christ in the flesh as may be gathered from chap. 2. 6 9. and therefore his doctrine was but false Upon which occasion the Apostle writeth unto them this Epistle wherein his scope is to convince those Galatians of their Errors to reduce them to the right way to confirm them in the Truth and to presse upon them the duties of an holy life chap. 3 and 4 c. which he laboureth to effectuate after prefacing to ver 6. chap. 1. First by asserting the truth of the Gospel preached by him and the Authority of his own Apostleship to ver 15. of chap. 2. Secondly by vindicating the true doctrine of justification by faith and of the temporary use and abrogation of the Levitical Law and of the whole legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace to the end of chap. 4. Thirdly by instructing them in the right use of Christian Liberty having exhorted them to stand to it and pointing out and pressing upon them the exercise of several Christian Vertues to ver 11. of chap. 6. From whence he concludeth the Epistle to the end of chap. 6. CHAP. I. IN the first part of this Chapter is the preface to the whole Epistle containing the party who did write it ver 1 2 the party to whom it was written ver 2. the salutation ver 3. a description of Jesus Christ from the work of Redemption ver 4. and a thanksgiving to God for this work ver 5. In the second part he reproveth the Galatians for their defection from the Gospel ver 6. to Errors which did overturn it ver 7. In the third part that he may justifie this reproof he asserteth the divine authority of the Gospel preached by him First by cursing those who should hold out another Gospel differing from it ver 8 9. Secondly from the scope of his doctrine and his aim in preaching it ver 10. Thirdly because both the first saving knowledge which he had of the Gospel and his office to preach it were immediatly from God and not from men whether Apostles or any other ver 11 12. whereof he giveth several evidences As first that ever untill the instant of his conversion he was a learned but persecuting Pharisee ver 13 14. Secondly that being miraculously converted and called he went presently with no small pains and hazard to discharge his Apostolick Office without instruction or authority received from any Apostle ver 15 16 17. Thirdly that after three years he went to Peter but not to be informed by him or to receive ordination from him or from any other Apostle ver 18 19. The truth of all which history he confirmeth by an oath ver 20. Fourthly that he preached as an Apostle in Syria and Cilicia with the approbation of the Christian Jews whom formerly he had persecuted ver 21 22 23 24. Vers. 1. PAUL an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised Him from the dead 2. And all the Brethren which are with me unto the Churches of Galatia IN these two Verses is the Inscription of the Epistle holding forth 1. Who did write it to wit Paul described from his Office and his Call to that Office which were both wholly divine as being immediately from God ver 1. And the Brethren with him such were eminent Professors but especially publick Preachers who then were with Paul and did give their testimony to those Truths contained in this Epistle though they were not the immediate Pen-men of the holy Ghost in it as Paul was 2. To whom the Epistle was written ver 2. From ver 1. Learn 1. Free-grace doth often light upon the most unworthy not only by giving grace and salvation to themselves but also making them sometimes instrumental for the Kingdom of Christ and for bringing about the salvation of others for Paul once a wicked persecutor 1 Tim. 1. 13 is now made an eminent Apostle Paul an
which follow after and flow from the working of God's Spirit in us even those Works are imperfect Isa. 64. 6. and so cannot make us compleatly righteous and we do owe them to God in the mean time Luke 17. 10. and so they cannot satisfie divine Justice for the failings of the bypast time They are the work of God's Spirit in us Philip. 2. 13. and so we can merit nothing at God's hand by them for He excludeth the Works of the Law in general now the good Works of the Regenerate are such as are commanded by the Law and done in obedience to the Law besides that those false Apostles did admit a mixture of Faith and Works in Justification so that if the Apostle had not excluded even Works which flow from Faith they might have quickly agreed upon the point Man is not justified by the Works of the Law Fourthly That through vertue whereof we are thus justified and absolved by God is the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ performed by Himself while He was here on Earth both in doing what we should have done Mat. 3. 15. and suffering what we ought to have suffered Gal. 3. 13. which righteousnesse is not inherent in us but imputed to us Rom. 5. 17 18 19. as the sum of Money paid by the Cautioner standeth good in Law for the principal Debtor So we are said to be justified by the Faith of Christ or Faith in Jesus Christ as laying hold upon His righteousnesse which is imputed to us as said is and by which only we are made righteous Fifthly Though Faith be not alone in the person justified but is ever accompanied with all other saving graces for it worketh by Love chap. 5. 7. Yet Faith is that only grace which hath influence in our Justification for all other Works even those that flow from Grace are excluded and only Faith admitted to have hand in this businesse A man is not justified by the Works of the Law but by the Faith of Jesus Christ and that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law Sixthly Faith hath influence upon our justification not as it is a Work or because of any worth which is in it self more than in other graces or as if the act of believing whether it alone or joyntly with other graces were imputed unto us for righteousnesse but only as it layeth hold on Jesus Christ and giveth us a right to His Righteousnesse through the merit whereof alone we are justified for it is by the Faith of Jesus Christ or Faith receiving Joh. 1. 12. and resting on Jesus Christ Isa. 26. 3 4. that we are justified besides that all Works of the Law or commanded by the Law are here excluded and by consequence Faith it self as it is a work is excluded also Seventhly This way of Justification by Free-grace accepting of us for the Righteousnesse of Jesus Christ and not because of our own worth is common to all who ever were are or shall be justified whether good or bad the most eminent and best of men must quit the conceipt of their own righteousnesse and rely upon Him who justifieth the ungodly by Faith for even those who were Jews by nature Paul and the other Apostles betook themselves to this way Even we saith he have believed in Jesus Christ and the Scripture cited by Paul speaketh universally of all For by the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Eightly Before man be justified through vertue of this imputed Righteousnesse he must first be convinced of his own utter inability to satisfie divine Justice and so to be justified by any thing which himself can do So natural is it to seek for a righteousnesse of our own and in our selves that we will never seek in earnest to the Righteousnesse of Christ until we be made to despair of our selves Rom. 10. 3. for the Apostle sheweth that this conviction went before their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified by the Works of the Law Next he must be convinced also of a worth in Christ's Merit to satisfie divine Justice and that this Merit of Christ's is offered to all who shall lay hold on it by Faith so as that it shall stand good in Law for them in order to their Absolution as if they had given an equivalent satisfaction to God's Justice themselves for none will venture his immortal soul upon that the worth whereof he doth not know Hence the Apostle sheweth that the knowledge of this also did preceed their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified but by the Faith of Jesus Christ. And lastly being thus convinced he must by Faith receive and rest upon Jesus Christ and that most perfect Righteousnesse of His by making his soul adhere and cleave to the Word of Promise wherein Christ is offered Act. 2. 39 41. whereupon followeth the real Justification and Absolution of the man who so doth for Paul marketh this as a third thing going before their Justification Even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified Doct. 4. The former practices of ancient Believers eminent for parts priviledges and graces who have quit their own righteousnesse and ventured their soul wholly upon this imputed Righteousnesse of Christ laying hold upon it by Faith ought to be looked on as a strong argument inforcing us to do the like for the Apostle's scope is to prevail with those Galatians by this argument We who are Jews by nature saith he have believed in Jesus Christ that we might bejustified 5. Though the approved practices of eminent godly persons may have their own weight in order to our encouragement to deny our selves and lay hold on Christ Yet it is the Word of the Lord which can only quiet a man's conscience in this matter and make his mind fully aquiesce to it for the Apostle unto their example subjoyneth a Scripture-confirmation of the Truth in hand By the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Vers. 17. But if while we seek to be justified by Christ we our selves also are found sinners is therefore Christ the minister of sin God forbid HE preoccupieth an Objection which might have been framed against the present Doctrine thus If the Doctrine of Justification by Christ doth suppose that even the Jews themselves who are sanctified from the womb are equally sinners with the Gentiles and that being unable to attain to Justification by the Works of the Law they must only rely on Christ by Faith as Paul had but presently affirmed ver 16. Then it would seem to follow that Christ were the minister of sin or that the Doctrine of the Gospel did make men sinners both by taking away that Righteousnesse of the Law which the Jews thought they had and were warranted as they conceived by the Scriptures of the Old Testament so to think as also by furnishing both Jew and Gentile with an occasion to cast-by all care of Holinesse and
of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me HEre is a third Reason to the same purpose with the former shewing more fully that justified persons are most strictly tyed to mortify sin and lead an holy life if so they walk according to the prescript of the Doctrine of Justification which was taught by Paul for he and by consequence all real Believers were crucified with Christ to wit the old man of their indwelling corruption Rom. 6. 6. it did receive the stroke of death by His death He having by death redeemed them from the slavery of it Tit. 2. 14. which crucifixion with Christ doth not destroy the natural life of Believers for so Paul sheweth he did live only the old man of corruption doth not live in them so as to act them in what they do but Jesus Christ doth live in them He being united to them as the root to the branches or head to the members and furnishing them with spiritual life and motion whereby the very natural life which they live and those things which concern that life are ordered and gone about by vertue of strength drawn from Christ by Faith in Him and the consideration of Christ's love to them and His dying for them because he loved them is a great inducement unto justified persons so to live Now this being true in Paul and in some measure in all Believers and seing the principles of the Doctrine of Justification did bind all to this It is evident that to affirm this Doctrine did tend to foster sin is but a foulforged calumny Doct. 1. As Jesus Christ did die a most shameful painful and cursed death upon the crosse Gal. 3. 13. so in His dying He did stand not as a private but as a publick person in the room and place of all the Elect for He was their surety Heb. 7. 22. and died for them Job 11. 50. so that when they lay hold upon Him by Faith and thereby are made one with Him Eph. 3. 17 the crosse and passion of Christ as to all those benefits which were purchased by it whether in order to the removal of the guilt of sin Mat. 26. 28. or to the subduing of its strength and quickning of them in the way of holinesse 2 Cor. 5. 15. or to the purchasing of life eternal for them Joh. 3. 16. is as verily made theirs as if they had been crucified in their own persons for Paul saith of himself as an instance of all Believers I am crucified with Christ. 2. The former confideration of the Believer's right to Christ's purchase in order to the subduing of sin layeth a strong engagement on him and giveth a great encouragement unto him to oppose resist and set about the mortification of sin in himself for Paul maketh this an argument to prove that the Doctrine of Justification in its own nature is no friend to sin because according to the principles thereof the justified person is crucified with Christ. 3. God's infinit wisdom hath found out the way whereby the threatning of death Gen. 2. 17. is fulfilled in the Elect so that they die and yet their lives are spared they die and yet they live for they are reckoned in Law to have died when Christ their Surety died for them so that He was taken and they go free Joh. 18. 8. thus is that riddle solved which is here propounded by Paul I am crucified with Christ yet I live 4. Though notwithstanding of fulfilling the threatning of death upon the Elect they do live yet upon their believing in Jesus Christ the old man of corruption and power of sin is so far weakened in them that it doth not bear the chief sway in their heart to command execute and order all their actions as formerly it did Gen. 6. 5. for thus is that other riddle solved which is here propounded Nevertheless I live yet not I to wit the old I the body of death and corruption did not live in him but was mortified and the dominion thereof removed Rom. 6. 14. Dost 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace revealed in the Gospel layeth on strong obligations upon the justified person to set about the whole duties of Sanctification not only those which relate to the mortifying of sin but also to his quickning in the way of grace both those must go together and the justified man is obliged to both and furnished with help and encouragement from the Doctrine of Justification to set about both for Paul sheweth they were both conjoyned in himself the first while he saith Not I live the second while he saith Christ liveth in me whereby is meant his following the motions of Christ's Spirit as the guide of his life Rom. 8. 1. and this he speaketh of himself as a thing that he was obliged unto and furnished for by the Doctrine of Justification which he taught otherwise he should not have refuted the calumny of his adversaries 6. That Christians may live the spiritual life of grace they must 1. be united to Christ and have Christ dwelling in them by Faith Eph. 3. 17. for speaking of the spiritual life which he lived he supposeth Christ to be in him But Christ liveth in me 2. Besides this union with Christ there must be a communication of influence from the Spirit of Christ to excite them unto Cant. 5. 2. enable them for John 15. 5. make them persevere Philip. 1. 6. and effectually to order and direct them in Philip. 4. 13. the practice of every thing that is spiritually good for this is to have Christ living in them to wit as the head in the members or root in the branches which do furnish the members and branches with all things necessary for life and growth and Christ's quickning of Believers in the way of grace is frequently see forth by similitudes drawn from those Col. 2. 19. Joh. 15. 5. 3. The Believer if so he would live this spiritual life must not only have the habit of Faith in his heart but also must keep it in daily exercise so as first thereby to try what he is to do if so it be warranted by the Word of Truth and how it is to be circumstantiated Rom. 14. 23. Secondly thereby to draw furniture from the Spirit of Christ for exciting enabling and directing him in the way of duty 2 Cor. 3. 5. And thirdly to apply pardoning mercy for covering the defects of duty when he hath gone about it and for removing the guilt of all his other sins Mat. 6. 11. for this is to live by the Faith of the Son of God or in the Son of God which Paul speaketh of as a necessary ingredient in this spiritual life 4. This spiritual life and life of Faith must be extended not only to spiritual duties and of God's immediate Worship but also to all the actions of our natural and temporal life in so far as they fall under a Command even to our eating and drinking 1 Cor.
the hearing of Faith HE again returneth to the Argument for Justification by Faith set down ver 2. and enlargeth it thus That the Lord had not only accompanied that Doctrine among them with the fruits of the Spirit of Regeneration and saving Graces wrought by it but also with other extraordinary gifts of the Spirit such as the working of miracles speaking with strange tongues curing of diseases which were so many confirmations that the Doctrine was of God Doct. 1. Though the saving Graces of God's Spirit are conveyed to the hearts of hearers by the preaching of the Gospel Yet God is the author and worker of them and the Gospel only a mean by which He worketh for having spoken of their receiving the Spirit when he first propounded this Argument ver 2. he doth here in the resuming of it explain how they received it to wit by God's bestowing of it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit 2. When the Doctrine of the Gospel as it is now dispensed under the New Testament did first break up the Lord to confirm the Truth thereof did accompany the preaching of it with the working of miracles which properly are works above natures strength and so could be wrought by none but God and this that hereby the truth of the Doctrine might be confirmed which being once sufficiently done there is no further use for miracles now for the Apostle sheweth that miracles were wrought among the Galatians by the hearing of Faith and that this was one Argument of the divinity of that Doctrine while he saith He that worketh miracles among you doth He it by the works of the Law or by the hearing of Faith 3. So strong and provalent is the spirit of Error where it is letten loose and so weak are the best in themselves to resist it that for love to Error they will quit Truth though formerly never so much confirmed and sealed unto them by the saving fruits of God's Spirit in their hearts accompanying it for though these Galatians had the Doctrine of Justification plainly preached ver 1. and sealed to them by the saving Graces of God's Spirit and by many miracles wrought among them yet they make defection from it He therefore that ministreth to you the Spirit and worketh miracles among you c. Vers. 6. Even as Abraham believed God and it was accounted to him for righteousness 7. Know ye therefore that they which are of Faith the same are the children of Abraham HAving put a close to that Argument which he brought from their own experience proving that we are justified by Faith and not by Works he addeth another from a Scripture-example of Abraham to confirm the same Truth who though he did abound in many vertues and good works yet he was not justified by these but by Faith only which he proveth by the testimony of Moses Gen. 15. 6. where it is affirmed that Abraham believed in the Lord to wit not only by giving assent unto the Promise spoken of immediately before about the multiplication of his seed and giving unto them the Land of Canaan Gen. 15. 5 7. but by assenting unto and imbracing of the prime Promise of the Covenant made by God with him that in the Messias who was to come of him he himself and the Nations were to be blessed Gen. 12. 3. of which Promise this of the multiplication of his seed was but a dependent and the means to effectuate it which Faith of Abraham's or the thing believed and laid hold upon by Abraham's Faith to wit the obedience of the Mediator the blessed Seed was imputed unto him for righteousnesse or accepted of God as his obedience for his Justification ver 6. from which he inferreth or rather the matter being so evident he exciteth themselves to infer the conclusion which he intendeth to prove That only they who are of the Faith or seek after Justification by Faith are children of Abraham by following of his steps and succeeding to him in the inheritance of that blessing of free-gifted Righteousnesse and Justification thereby which he enjoyed for an equivalent phrase to this here is that which is ver 9. They are blessed with faithfull Abraham ver 7. Doct. 1. Though saving Faith hath for its general object the whole Word of God consisting of Histories Threatnings Commands and Promises both of temporal and eternal blessings for Faith giveth firm assent unto the whole Word because of that divine Authority which revealeth it Act. 24. -14. yet the principal object of justifying Faith is the Word of Promise holding forth Christ and His Righteousnesse as the meritorious cause of the Believers Salvation for this Promise which Abraham did believe and the Faith wherof was imputed to him for righteousnes had Jesus Christ in its bosom it being a Promise of giving unto Abraham a numerous seed Gen. 15. 4 5. and so a Promise of Jesus Christ to come of him in whom all the Nations Act. 3. 25. and Abraham himself ver 9. were to be blessed Even as Abraham believed God 2. That it may go well with a soul and be accepted in God's sight who can endure no unclean thing Hab. 1. 13 it is necessary that it be cloathed with some righteousnesse of one sort or other for Faith was accounted unto Abraham for righteousnesse 3. It being wholly impossible for fallen man to attain unto that personal perfect righteousnesse which the Law requireth Rom. 3. 10 c. the Wisdom of God hath found out another way of making him righteous to wit that whereby Faith is imputed reckoned or accounted unto him for righteousnesse for Abraham's Faith was accounted unto him to wit by God for righteousnesse 4. Faith is not in a proper sense imputed to the Believer for righteousnesse as if the work of Faith it self were imputed to us and accepted of God whether freely or because of the merit of Christ for our total and perfect righteousnesse but it 's imputed in a figurative sense with respect had to that which Faith apprehendeth and layeth hold upon to wit the obedience and sufferings of Jesus Christ these being laid hold on by Faith become our righteousnesse Rom. 5. 19. and 10. 4. for the Apostle all alongst this Chapter opposeth Faith and Works now his Arguments would be of no force if Faith did justifie as a work and for any worth in it self It was accounted to him for righteousness 5. In the matter of Justification Faith is opposed not only to those Works which go before Conversion but to those also which follow after it and are the real fruits of God's Spirit in the Believer all Works whether of the one sort or other are excluded for even to Abraham many years after his Conversion when he had abounded in good Works and many gracious Vertues Gen. 12 13 14 chapters his Faith was accounted for righteousnesse 6. As there is a second and reiterated Justification of one and the same person in this sense that upon our renewed
and that Paul and such as Paul was being cryed down they alone might be doted upon with a blind kind of zeal and affection ver 17. but lest by condemning their false zeal he should have seemed to cry down all zeal therefore he discovereth what true and praise-worthy zeal is and this as it seemeth with an eye to his own practice whose zeal towards those Galatians first was so ordered that the thing whereunto his zeal for them did carry him was in it self good and for their good and edification Secondly it was constant so that distance of place which occasioned an alteration in them towards him had not made him to alter towards them ver 18. Doct. 1. See chap. 1. ver 7. doct 5. concerning his suppressing the name of the false Apostles whereby he sheweth more of indignation towards them nor he could have done by giving them any designation though never so base They zealously affect you 2. Hereticall Preachers and Seducers will be exceedingly fervent and zealous for their erroneous opinions and pretend much love and affection to the People of God while they are about to make them imbrace their Errors for saith he They to wit the false Apostles zealously affect you 3. Every thing which goeth under the name of zeal or which truly hath much of zeal and fervency in it whether for opinions or persons is not to be approven there being so much of sinfull zeal which an hypocrite may have and therefore is not to be valued or regarded So doth the Apostle speak of their zeal They zealously affect you but not well 4. There is a renting zeal which carrieth the person wherein it is with a violent fervor to rent the Church of Christ and to create prejudices in the minds of people against their faithfull Pastors while they extenuate their good 2 Cor. 10. 10. and above measure aggrege their sins and infirmities all such zeal is sinfull and unworthy to be taken notice of for the Apostle proveth that their zeal was not good from this that it carried them to rent those Galatians from Paul and the Body of the Christian Church They would exclude you 5. There is a self-seeking zeal when men pretending much love to God and to the good of souls are really hunting after the breath of applause to themselves and that they alone may have greatest weight in peoples affections all such zeal is also sinfull for he condemneth the zeal of the false Apostles because their great design in what they did was to make those Galatians zealously to affect them 6. As the great design of false Teachers and the upshot of all their most zealous and fervent endeavours is to gain credit among the people to their opinions and persons So the usual method whereby they walk for attaining this end is first to alienate the minds of people from their own Pastors that so they themselves may be looked upon as only worthy to have room in peoples affections for this was the method of the false Apostles They would exclude you to wit from us that you might affect them saith he 7. The Ministers of Christ would so condemn the counterfeit of saving graces which may be found in hypocrites as that they do not in the least measure reflect upon the real graces of God's Spirit which are found only in true Believers for Paul having condemned their false zeal falleth immediately upon the commendation of true zeal But it is good to be zealously affected alwayes in a good thing 8. It is not enough that the thing which we do be in it self good except our affections be somewhat warmed with love to the duty and stirred up with an holy indignation and revenge against any thing which would divert us from it for this is that zeal which is here commended It is good to be zealously affected saith he 9. It is required in godly and approven zeal first that it be orderly neither making nor upholding rents or schisms in the Church and betwixt the People of God and those who are over them in the Lord for the false ungodly zeal of the false Apostles is condemned from this that they would have excluded those Galatians from Paul Secondly that it be sincere as aiming not at base and selfish but approved ends such as God's glory 2 Cor. 11. 2. our own Rev. 3. 19. and our neighbours salvation Col. 4. 13. for their zeal is condemned from this that their great design in all they did was to make the Galatians affect them Thirdly that it be according to knowledge Rom. 10. 2. as chusing right and approven means for bringing about the proposed end and not putting forth it self indifferently upon every thing good or bad without choice for saith he It is good to be zealously affected in a good thing Fourthly that it be constant not intending or remitting according as more of prosperity or adversity doth attend the making conscience of our duty Joh. 6. 26. but alwayes one and the same notwithstanding of any extrinsecal change of that kind for saith he It is good to be zealously affected alwayes Doct. 10. A Minister would labour to have his conversation so christian that if need require he may give his own practice for an instance or example of any duty which he presseth upon others as Paul doth here for having required constancy in zeal he hinteth at his own practice who was zealous for their good alwayes and not only when he was present with them Vers. 19. My little children of whom I travel in birth again until Christ be formed in you 20. I desire to be present with you now and to change my voice for I stand in doubt of you HE doth yet further pursue the intended scope which is to perswade them of his affection to them by making it yet more appear that his zeal for them was of the right stamp and not like that of the false Apostles In that first he was at great trouble and pains for their good such as are the pains of a woman in travel Secondly his design in all his labour and pains was not so much to make them affect him which was all that his adversaries sought after as to get the image of Christ which being once wrought in them by the means of his Ministry was now marred by their defection again repared in them and its lively lienaments drawn upon them which expressions of his intire affection are much sweetned by the affectionate stile of little children given unto them So that his whole discourse doth breath out no lesse affection than that of a tender mother towards her dear childe under some languishing disease or consumption ver 19. And thirdly that he desired vehemently to be with them face to face which was no great evidence of any hatred to them especially considering the end of his desire to wit that being more fully acquainted with their case he might accommodate himself in his speaking to them whether in
remainder of corruption yet unmortified whereby his whole mind will and affections are partly spiritual partly carnal both flesh and Spirit are in him For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit saith he 3. None of those powers or principles in the regenerate man are dead dull or meerly passive but both of them are working and active for the flesh lusteth and the Spirit lusteth whereby is meaned that both of them do sway and incline the whole man to work in a way congruous to their respective natures the one to good and the other to evil 4. The activity of these two active principles is in a flat opposition the one to the other so that in one and the same man and while he is about one and the same action there is a conflict and battel betwixt these two contrary parties Rom. 7. 19 21. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh 5. As there is a mixture of both these principles in all the powers and faculties of the regenerate man So there is a mixture of their respective influence and efficacy in every action of his whereby though there be a prevalency of the one above the other in some actions yet there is not one action to which both of them do not contribute somewhat if not by a causal influence yet by some measure of active resistance For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh 6. Hence it followeth that as the actions of the regenerate are not perfect and free from a sinful mixture So there is some difference betwixt his worst actions and those same actions as gone about by the unregenerate man even this that the flesh doth not advance with a full gale but meeteth with the contrary tyde of resistance from the Spirit in some degree for as the flesh lusteth against the Spirit so the Spirit lusteth against the flesh and ye cannot do the thing that ye would saith he 7. Though unregenerate men may have somewhat like to this spiritual combat even a conflict sometimes betwixt the natural conscience and rebellious affections Rom. 2. 1. yet they have not this same very combat here spoken of wherein one faculty is not carried against the other but every faculty as it is flesh is carried against it self as it is spirit now that this combat is not in the unregenerate man appeareth from this that he is wholly flesh Gen. 6. 5. and not at all spirit And this combat is betwixt flesh and spirit for the flesh lusteth against the spirit 8. The mutual resistance and opposition of those two parties flesh and spirit in the regenerate man as it beginneth at the very first rise of every action in the understanding will or affections So it continueth and waxeth alwayes more fierce as the action is carried-on towards its full accomplish ment by the executive faculties for saith he Ye cannot do the things that ye would importing that our willing of good or evil is more free from this opposition though not altogether free than our actual doing or accomplishing of it being so willed See Rom. 7. -18. Vers. 18. But if ye be led by the Spirit ye are not under the Law HE proveth the same conclusion secondly shewing that they who are led and guided by the regenerate part or an inward principle of grace within which it all one with walking in the Spirit spoken of ver 16. are not under the Law whereby is not meaned that they are not under the Law as a rule and guide of new obedience for both the Word and the Spirit do guide as shall appear from the first Doctrine but they are not under the condemning Rom. 8. 1. nor yet the irritating power of the Law whereby the more that unregenerate men are urged unto rigid obedience by the Law the more doth their corrupt nature spurn and rebell as being desp 〈…〉 to get all done which the Law enjoyneth This irritating power of the Law is spoken of Rom. 7. 5. Now they who are led by the Spirit are not thus under the Law because unto such a fountain of Grace is opened-up for enabling them in some measure to do what the Law enjoyneth Phil. 4. 13. and for pardoning them wherein they fall short 1 Job 2. 1 2. So that corruption in them is not so much irritated by the Law as in the unregenerate and by consequence the lusts of the flesh are not fulfilled as was expressed ver 16. Doct. 1. The regenerate part or new man of Grace performeth the office of guide and leader to the godly in all their actions which are truly spiritual In so far as first it self is ruled by the Word and to be tryed by the Word Isa. 8. 20. which Word alone is the external light and lanthorn to direct our steps Psal. 119. 105. as the light of the Sun or candle is to the eye Secondly the work of Grace it self as the understanding is thereby illightned is the internal light whereby the regenerate man doth spiritually understand the things of God revealed in Scripture 1 Cor. 2. 12. as by the internal light of the eye we discern those things which are made conspicuous by the external light of the Sun or candle Thirdly the same work of Grace as the will and affections are thereby renewed being actuated by the continual supply of exciting grace from the Spirit of the Lord is a strengthening guide to all spiritual actions by whose influence alone the regenerate man who as to any principle of nature and free-will within himself is not sufficient to think any thing 2 Cor. 3. 5. is rendred able and made actually to walk in the wayes of God Philip. 2. 13. for while he saith If ye be led by the Spirit he supposeth the office of the Spirit and regenerate part is to guide and lead 2. The natural man so long as he remaineth in that state is so much a slave to his sinful lusts That those things which are appointed of God to curb and make them weaker are so far from bringing about the end proposed that his lusts are thereby inraged and made more violent for the Apostle being to prove that those who are led by the Spirit do not fulfill the lusts of the flesh which is laid down to be proved ver 16. saith such are not under the Law to wit the strict and rigid exaction of the Law importing that the rigidity of the Law which of its own nature tendeth to restrain sin and to make it weaker is turned by the unregenerate man unto an occasion for the fulfilling of his lusts Vers. 19. Now the works of the flesh are manifest which are these Adultery fornication uncleannesse lasciviousnesse 20. Idolatry witchcraft hatred variance emulations wrath strife seditious heresies 21. Envyings murders drunkennesse revellings and such like of the which I tell you before as I have also told you in time past that they which do such things shall not inherit the
understood not so much justifying faith and faith towards God which is the root and fountain of all those fruits ver -6. as faith and fidelity towards men whereby from a renewed heart and for God's glory we speak nothing but truth Eph. 4. 25. and make conscience to perform whatsoever is undertaken by us Psal. 15. -4. Eightly Meeknesse a vertue whereby we moderate anger so as that we are not provoked but for just causes and not more or longer provoked than the Word of God alloweth whereby also we do speedily restrain and suppresse anger when it hath transgressed the just bounds Eph. 4. 26. Ninthly Temperance or continency whereby our fleshly appetite is kept within bounds in seeking after honour meat drink pleasure or riches Lastly The Apostle having made this enumeration that he may excite the Galatians to the practice of those vertues he commendeth them from this That the Law was not made against them or the practisers of them either to condemn or accuse them In which words by a figure or flowr of speech more is to be understood than is spoken as Psal. 51. -17. even that the Moral Law concerning the standing whereof as to its directing power there was no controversie betwixt Paul and his adversaries doth expresly command and commend them which could not be said of those ceremonial abstinences or performances so much urged by the false Apostles Doct. 1. There is no way for gracious vertues or the fruits of the Spirit to grow and thrive in our heart unlesse the works of the flesh be set against and in some measure mortified these thistles and weeds must be plucked up else they draw the sap and strength of the heart from the good grain The Apostle's method pointeth at so much while he engageth them to mortifie the works of the flesh in the first place and next commendeth unto them the fruits of the Spirit But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace c. 2. It is not sufficient that we set about the work of mortification and curbing of sin and vice but must also endeavour to have the heart replenished with the contrary gracious vertues otherwise sin being as it were over-powered may lurk for a season but will afterwards revive and take strength Mat. 12. 44 45. for the Apostle having engaged them to mortifie the works of the flesh doth now excite them to the exercise of gracious vertues But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace c. 3. There is no vertue truly saving and acceptable to God but that which floweth from the grace of regeneration The vertues of the Heathen how excellent soever they seemed to be were but shadows of saving vertues as not coming from a clean fountain a gracious root in the heart Jo● 14. 4. nor yet levelling at the right end God's glory in the chief place Col. 3. 17. but some other thing inferior to that Act. 24. 26. Besides they were not done in faith and so could not be acceptable to God Heb. 11. 6. for the Apostle calleth all those which are vertues indeed the fruits and effects of the Spirit But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace saith he 4. If we compare the graces of God's Spirit with the works of the flesh there will appear such a beauty in the one such deformity in the other such solid satisfaction and contentment in the one and such disquietnesse and vexation of spirit in the other that laying aside the difference which is betwixt them by reason of their original and event those other considerations may serve abundantly to make us fall in love with the graces of God's Spirit and abominate the works of the flesh for the works of the flesh are Adultery witchcraft hatred strife envyings murders but the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace long-suffering c. 5. We are to judge of persons and practices by thinking well of them or otherwise not according to the common esteem in which they are among men 1 Cor. 4. 3. but according to the esteem that God hath of them and according to what the Word of God which is the absolute rule of right and wrong Truth and Error doth pronounce concerning them for Paul judgeth it sufficient to commend the practice of those vertues from this that the Law of God did commend them and approved of those who made conscience of them Against such there is no Law saith he Vers. 24. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts THe Apostle in this Verse addeth a new Argument to inforce the practice of that first Rule given ver 13. and cleared ver 19 20 21. to wit that they should not give occasion to or fulfill the lusts of the flesh because those who are Christs as they all professed themselves to be have by vertue of Christ's death crucified and put to death their fleshly corruption with all its sinfull motions whether they be sinfull affections and passions such as those whereby the mans mind doth suffer is troubled and afflicted as malice envie anger and the like or whether they be sinful lusts such as these which are stirred up by fleshly carnal baits and pleasures as motions to intemperance uncleannesse and such like Now those who are Christ's are said to have crucified all those because every one who professeth the Name of Christ hath engaged himself by his profession and covenant sealed in Baptism so to do Rom. 6. 3 4. and the truly Regenerate besides this engagement by profession have actually begun this work so that though this body of corrupt flesh be in them yet by His Spirit Rom. 8. 13. and by imitating His Crosse Rom. 6. 6. they are upon the work of mortifying it suppressing the endeavours and smothering the effects of it Rom. 6. 12. Doct. 1. All they who are led by and walk in the Spirit or who are truly regenerate and who are actually engaged in the work of mortifying their corrupt nature are Christ's in a peculiar manner to wit by right of donation from the Father Joh. 6. 37. by right of emption or redemption 1 Cor. 6. 20. and by right of resignation all such having actually resigned themselves unto Christ as a mansion for Him to dwell and walk in 1 Cor. 6. 19. and in every thing to be guided by Him Act. 9. 6. for the Apostle useth those expressions indifferently as being of equal extent Walk in the Spirit ver 16. and if ye be led by the Spirit ver 18. and in this verse they who are Christs have crucified the flesh 2. The work of mortification striketh at all sin and spareth none aswell pleasant sins whereby fleshly lusts are satisfied as other more vexatious evils whereby the mind doth in a kind suffer and is afflicted for speaking of this work he saith They that are Christs have crucified the flesh that is the root of corruption and then they have crucified all its branches not only affections
or vexing passions but also desirable lusts 3. There is not any argument more moving or effectually exciting unto the work of mortification with a sincere Christian than that which is taken from his engagement to it by profession and the first beginnings thereof wrought in him already by the Spirit of God for this is the Apostles scope that they would not walk in or fulfill the lusts of the flesh because all of them were engaged by profession to crucifie the flesh and some had actually begun to do so already They that are Christs have crucified the flesh saith he Vers. 25. If we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit HE inforceth also the remedy prescribed against fleshly lusts ver 16. and cleared ver 22 23. even that they would walk after the Spirit because they who live in the Spirit or are made partakers of that new life of grace in Regeneration Joh. 3. 5 6. according as they all professed themselves to be must of necessity walk in the Spirit by following in their life and conversation the motions and directions of the new-man of grace in the heart The force of which consequence lyeth in this that as the principle of life is within whether flesh or spirit so must the actions fruits and effects flowing from that principle be Doct. 1. The Minister of Jesus Christ is not to bind heavy burdens upon the Lords People without so much as touching them with one of his little fingers himself Mat. 23. 4. but ought to lay the edg of every necessary exhortation unto his own heart with the first and thereby to evidence that as he doth not look on himself as free from the yoke of duty no more than others So he sincerely intendeth by his own practice to hold forth a real copie of that which he presseth upon others 1 Tim. 4. 12. for Paul directeth this exhortation to himself as well as to them If we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit saith he 2. The Lord's method in bestowing grace upon gracelesse sinners is first to infuse the principles of a new life or gracious habits and powers in the soul and next to actuate these powers making them actually to do those works which are spiritually good Spiritual motion and action presupposeth a principle of a spiritual life as a thing previous unto and different from it for saith he If we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit 3. To walk in the Spirit or to follow the conduct of God's Spirit and of His gracious work in us is a far other thing than to cast by the rule of the Word and to follow only whatever motions or impressions are set home with any forcible impulse upon our spirits as if those were the motions of the Spirit of God which may haply be motions of our own corrupt flesh or suggestions from Satan 2 Thess. 2. 11. This walking in the Spirit here exhorted unto is walking orderly and by rule even by the rule of God's Word Isa. 8. 20. for so much doth the word in the Original import which signifieth to walk orderly by rule by line by measure as Souldiers do march into the battel Let us walk in the Spirit saith he 4. Though a man cannot passe sentence upon his state before God whether it be good or bad by some moe or fewer particular acts of his life 1 King 8. 46. yet he may and ought to passe sentence upon it according to his way and the ordinary strain of his life and conversation A godlesse conversation argueth a carnal heart destitute of all spiritual life and a pious conversation doth argue a renewed heart and a principle of spiritual life within for so much will the Apostle's reasoning bear If we live in the Spirit let us also walk in the Spirit Vers. 26. Let us not be desirous of vain glory provoking one another envying one another THe Apostle having hitherto prosecuted and inforced the use-making of that first rule given ver 13. for directing them in the right use of Christian liberty returneth now to prosecute the other rule By love serve one another And in this Verse dehorteth them from some vices which do wholly impede this service of love especially from ambition or an itching desire after vain glory estimation and applause which vice is usually attended with other two first provoking of others chiefly inferiors by reproaching and doing of real injuries to them as being nothing in the vain-glorious mans esteem he esteemeth so much of himself Secondly envying of others chiefly superiors and equals in so far as any thing in them doth seem to eclipse that glory and esteem of which the vain-glorious man is so much desirous Doct. 1. Though a man may lawfully carry a due regard unto and have a care of his own good name and estimation among others in its own place Rom. 12. -17. especially that hereby he may be kept in a better capacity to do good unto those with whom he doth converse Mat. 5. 16. Yet desire of applause and approbation from men is sinfull and to be eschewed when we seek after and are satisfied with applause or esteem for those things which are not in us 2 King 10. 16 or which are not worthy of so much esteem as we do seek for Amos 6. 13. or are not praise-worthy at all as not being commended of God Philip. 3. 19. or when we seek after applause from men even for things praise-worthy not in subordination to but equally with or more than the honour of God Mat. 6. 2. or to be approven of Him Joh. 12. 43. for this is the desire of vain glory from which the Apostle dehorteth Let us not be desirous of vain glory saith he 2. How this desire of vain glory impedeth love and peace and how all glory of this kind is but vain or empty glory See Philip. 2. Vers. 3. Doct. 2 3. Doct. 3. This lust and desire of vain glory is so subtil as taking its rise sometimes from those things in us which are good 2 Cor. 12. 7. and so desirable as tending to make others prostrate themselves before the idol of those apprehended or real excellencies in us which we our selves do so much adore that the best of men and those who are endued with excellent graces gifts and priviledges have need to guard and watch lest even they be overtaken with it for therefore as one reason doth Paul include himself in this exhortation Let us not be desirous of vain glory 4. Though it be lawful and praise-worthy to provoke and excite one another to love and good works Heb. 10. 24. chiefly by our good example and forwardnesse in every commanded duty 2 Cor. 9. 2. yet when by doing of real injuries unto others we provoke and excite corruption in them to take some sinfull course for their own ease or redresse 1 Sam. 25. 33 34. we are herein guilty and that not only of
works of that kind So it is lawfull for Christians to have an eye to this reward as a motive whereby to work up their backward hearts unto a willing complyance with expensive duties of that sort providing first it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by their good works Rom. 6. 23. Nor secondly as the only or chief motive 2 Cor. 5. 14. for the Apostle by this similitude doth minde them of the promised reward as an argument exciting them unto beneficence Whatsoever a man soweth that shall be also reap Vers. 8. For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting VVHat the Apostle spoke generally concerning that proportion which shall be betwixt a man's future reward and his present work he doth now following the same metaphor of sowing and reaping make it more clear by distinguishing several sorts of sowers seeds grounds and several sorts of harvests answerable to each of those The plain meaning whereof is 1. That carnal and unregenerate men who take no other care but to spend their wit strength time and particularly their means upon the service of their own fleshly lusts such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 19 20. they shall at last reap no fruit thereby but corruption that is eternal perdition for corruption is here opposed unto eternal life and this they shall reap from the flesh that is their own inbred corruption which with the sinfull effects thereof is the true seed of death and perdition And secondly that renewed and spirituall men who imploy their whole life study and labour and particularly their worldly substance for advancing the works of the Spirit whether in themselves or others such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 22. and particularly for upholding the Gospel and a painful Ministry they shall receive the reward of eternal life and this from the Spirit that is the grace of God in them which is the true seed of eternity not by way of merit as destruction and corruption follow upon the flesh but from God's mercy and free gift as the Apostle doth in plain and proper terms put the difference Rom. 6. 23. according to which this metaphorick allegory must be expounded and may not be set in opposition to it Doct. 1. The whole world are comprized in one of two ranks they are either sowing to the flesh living in their unregenerate state and in slavery to their lusts whose end shall be perdition or they are sowing to the Spirit truly regenerate and imploying themselves for the advancing of things spiritual whose end shall be eternal life There is no neutral or midstate for Paul distinguisheth all in these two He that soweth to his flesh and he that soweth to the Spirit 2. It may be frequently observed that they who have not an heart to part with any thing of their temporall goods for God and pious uses but plead present poverty necessity and fear of future want when God doth call them to any thing of that kind are notwithstanding most profuse and lavish in spending their means to make provision for the flesh and to uphold the beastly lusts thereof for he that soweth not to the Spirit soweth to his flesh 3. Though carnal men do think their own way the only wisest while they spend their wit and substance for attaining present profit pleasure and preferment and do judge the way of the Godly but meer folly while they imploy their strength and means for things spiritual and such as God's honour is mainly concerned in and are not attended with an income of worldly advantage but rather of losse and detriment yet the end shall prove that those who thought themselves only wise men and gainers have been but meer fools and greatest losers and that those others whom they looked upon as mad-men and bad managers of their worldly affairs have been the greatest gainers and wisest adventurers for he that soweth to his flesh shall reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall reap life everlasting 4. The state of the wicked after death is a state of corruption wherein though the substance of their soul and body shall not be annihilated but shall be upheld unto all eternity by the mighty power of God in the midst of unutterable torments Mark 9. 44. yet all their glory pleasure and gain wherein they placed their happinesse and for attaining whereof only they spent their time and strength Psal. 49. 11. shall then be consumed 2 Pet. 3. 10. and they themselves made to languish and pine away under the wrath of an highly provoked and then unreconciliable God 2 Thess. 1. 9. for saith he The wicked shall reap corruption meaning their state after death 5. The state of the Godly after death shall be a state of life the life of Grace being then swallowed up and perfected in the life of Glory which consisteth in perfect freedom from sin and misery Eph. 5. 27. in unconceivable joys Psal. 16. 11. and the full enjoying of God 1 Joh. 3. 2. which happy state of theirs shall be eternal they shall never weary nor yet be deprived of it for saith he the Godly shall reap life everlasting 6. Whatever sin a man committeth it is most properly his own work as flowing from the root of his own corrupt flesh but the good which he doth is not so properly his own as Gods in so far as it floweth from the Spirit of God and habits of Grace which were wrought in him by the self-same Spirit Philip. 2. 13. Col. 3. 10. for speaking of the flesh he setteth it forth by the appropriating Pronoun his He that soweth to his flesh but not so while he speaketh of the Spirit He that soweth to The Spirit not to his spirit Vers. 9. And let us not be weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not THe Apostle from what he hath presently spoken of the reward of eternal life attending those who sow in the Spirit inferreth the former exhortation propounded ver 6. and enlargeth it by recommending unto them according to the sense given of the former similitude the study of good works and especially of beneficency in the general under the name of well-doing whereby he meaneth not only the outward work but also the doing of it in a right manner Mat. 6. 1. c. and that they would persevere to the end in that study notwithstanding of all contrary discouragements without base and cowardly ceding unto them and inforceth the exhortation by putting it above all question that they shall gather the fruit which God had promised though not presently yet in the due time that is the time which God doth judge most convenient but withall he addeth a condition of reaping in due time required on their part to wit if they continued constant in well-doing even the same unto which he had exhorted them in the former part
work here called sealing did serve to evidence the truth and reality of somewhat which might otherwise have been questioned and particularly with relation to the Apostle's present scope it did serve to evidence the reality of their right to the glorious inheritance the truths of the Gospel and the sincerity of their closing with and believing of the Gospel now the work of God's Spirit which maketh all this evident and therefore hath the name of sealing is mainly His renewing and sanctifying work and especially His carrying-on of that work whereby He imprinteth the image of Himself which is holinesse Eph. 4. 24. upon Believers as an impression of the draughts and lineaments of the Seal are by sealing put upon the thing sealed so 2 Tim. 2. -19. the grace of sanctification and departing from evil is called a Seal though those other works of God's Spirit in Believers whereby He giveth them sense of His presence comfort and joy unspeakable flowing from it and full assurance may be looked upon as lesse principal parts of this Seal Fourthly ver 14. by the metaphor of an earnest which is used among Merchants for ratifying of their bargains he sheweth a use for which the bestowing of the holy Spirit upon them and His sealing of them by His sanctifying grace did serve even to be an earnest of the heavenly inheritance the full possession whereof being delayed until the last day God gave unto them His holy Spirit with His saving graces as an earnest or some small beginnings and a part of that glory which shall then be revealed that hereby He might assure them of their obtaining the whole in due season Fifthly he sheweth the date and time how long they were to content themselves with the earnest even untill the redemption of the purchased possession that is untill the day of judgment at which time those who are purchased by the bloud of Christ and are His possession and peculiar people shall obtain compleat redemption and full delivery from sin and misery In which sense redemption is taken Rom. 8. 23. And sixthly he sheweth the end which God purposed unto Himself in all this even the same which he mentioned formerly ver 12 to wit the praise of His Glory From the benefit which those Gentiles received besides what is marked upon the parallel place ver 11 Learn 1. Though it was the prerogative of the Jews above the Gentiles that Christ was first preached unto them and accordingly some of them did first trust in Him See ver -12. yet God hath made both Jew and Gentile equally to partake of all other things aswell of those which concern salvation it self as of the means and way of attaining to it for the same Christ the same free-gifted inheritance through Christ and the same Gospel which was bestowed upon the Jews are also bestowed upon the believing Gentiles In whom ye also have obtained an inheritance saith he 2. It is a thing highly observable and much to be taken notice of that the Gentiles who were profane dogs Mat. 15. 26. not a people Deut. 32. 21. without God chap. 2. ver -12. should be set down at the childrens table and have full accesse to free-grace and salvation and all spiritual blessings tending to salvation equally with the Jews who were God's only People separated to Him above all People Exod. 19. 5. to whom did pertain the Adoption Glory Covenants c. Rom. 9. 4. for Paul cannot speak of this without an also which is a note of exaggeration and heightneth the purpose as a thing very observable In whom ye also have obtained an inheritance From the mean whereby they attained this excellent benefit Learn 1. The hearing of the Gospel which supposeth the publick preaching of it Rom. 10. 14. is the ordinary mean whereby faith is wrought and consequently a right is conveyed unto the heavenly inheritance in so far as the Gospel so preached doth not only propound and make known to the understanding the object of saving faith which was before hid but the Lord also at or after the hearing of this Gospel preached doth work the grace of faith in the hearts of the Elect Act. 16. 14. for saith he Ye obtained an inheritance after that ye heard the Word of Truth the Gospel 2. The Gospel is the Word of Truth not only because it containeth nothing but truth for so the whole Scripture is the Word of Truth Psal. 19. 9 but also the Truths of the Gospel are most excellent Truths as being most remote from ordinary knowledge Mat. 16. 17. most profitable to lost sinners Tit. 2. 11. and do manifest the praise of God's glorious Attributes Luke 2. 14. more than any other Truths besides the Gospel doth clearly hold forth the truth and substance of all these dark and legal shadows Joh. 1. 17. for by the Word of Truth he meaneth the Gospel as he presently cleareth After ye heard the Word of Truth the Gospel of your salvation 3. As the doctrine of Salvation is the doctrine of the Gospel or glad-tydings to lost sinners for the word rendred Gospel signifieth a glad or good message So the doctrine of the Gospel is a doctrine of Salvation as not only revealing Salvation and a possible way for attaining to it which the Law doth not Gal. 3. 21. but also being the power of God to Salvation Rom. 1. 16 and the mean which God doth blesse for making us imbrace by faith the offer of Salvation Rom. 10. 14 15. and for working all other saving graces in the Elect Col. 1. 6. for the Apostle calleth this doctrine the Gospel or glad tydings of Salvation 4. It is not sufficient to know that the Gospel is a doctrine of Salvation in general or unto others only but every one would labour by the due application of the promises of the Gospel unto themselves to find it a doctrine of Salvation to them in particular for Paul hinteth at so much while he saith not simply the Gospel of Salvation but of your Salvation From the Spirit 's work of sealing following upon believing Learn 1. As the Gospel preached and heard doth not profit unto Salvation except it be believed so the Truths of the Gospel and Jesus Christ that good thing offered in those Truths is that in the whole Word of God which saving faith doth chiefly close with and rely upon and is fully satisfied with It findeth death in threatnings a burden of work in precepts but in Christ and the Gospel it findeth the way to Heaven made patent even a way how the sinner may be saved and divine justice not wronged for the Apostle having spoken before of their hearing the Gospel doth adde In whom to wit Christ the words may also read In which to wit the Gospel ye believed 2. Though none can actually believe before the Spirit of God come to dwell in them bringing alongs His royal train of habituall graces and the habit of faith amongst the rest unto the heart with Him
also the words rendred the spirit which worketh may relate either to his nature as being spiritual or to his way of working while he tempteth to wit by way of inspiration and a kind of breathing the words may be so constructed as to bear either though the first be mainly intended The spirit that now worketh or his spirit now working 10. Though there have been and yet are some fair flourishes of prais-worthy vertues and actions seemingly good in men unrenewed Rom. 2. 14. yet every unrenewed man and chiefly those who are come to age and understanding are very slaves to sin and so addicted to the actual service though not of all and every sin in particular for that were impossible yet of some one idol or other whether of their pleasure profit or credit that they cannot but go on in the service of it without all possibility of being reclaimed by any created strength for so much is implyed while unregenerate men are called children of disobedience that is men addicted and given over to disobedience so that they cannot be perswaded to relinquish it 11. Satan's way of working in and with obstinate godlesse sinners is most efficacious and powerfull he cannot indeed work any change upon the will by creating new principles or habits in it which before were not as God doth Jer. 31. 33. but he can not only tempt to sin by propounding aluring baits and objects to the outward senses or inward fansie which he may do to any man whether good or bad 2 Sam. 11. 2. but also when God judicially giveth over a sinner unto Satan withdrawing even His restraining grace from him Then doth Satan multiply his temptations without any intermission useth the utmost of created endeavours whereby and through God's up-giving the sinner formerly mentioned and because of the seed and root of all sin which is in the sinner by nature there is no sort of wickednesse unto the acting whereof Satan will not get him willingly driven and carried for saith he The spirit which now that is even in the mean time constantly and without intermitting the shortest moment or now worketh in the children of disobedience the word doth signifie to work with pith and efficacy 12. Though even the godly are not free from being tempted by Satan yea nor yet from yeelding sometimes to his temptations 1 Chron. 21. 1 2. yet he doth not work efficaciously in them and so as is described in the former Doctrine for he astricteth this way of Satans working to unregenerate men The spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience Vers. 3. Among whom also we had all our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath even as others THe Apostle doth now apply this Doctrine to the Jews of whom he himself was one and therefore he designeth them by the pronoun We and affirmeth them to have been before conversion equally miserable with the Gentiles In doing whereof and that he may more fully explain this Doctrine of man's misery he sheweth first That even they had their conversation among those children of disobedience as being no lesse obstinately rebellious against God than the disobedient Gentiles following the lusts or the first motions and sudden flashes of their inbred corruption here called flesh which flowing from Adams first sin hath infected his whole posterity Christ alone excepted 2 Cor. 5-21 and seated it self in all the powers and faculties of their souls and bodies even the understanding and will not being excepted Rom. 8. 7. Col. 2. -18. for so is the word flesh usually taken in the New Testament Joh. 3. 6. Gal. 5. 13 16. Now all corruption and sin even that which is in the mind is called flesh because it is conveyed by fleshly generation Joh. 3. 6. the fleshly members of the body are the instruments whereby all is executed Rom. 6. 19. and every sin draweth the man from God to things earthly and fleshly Secondly he subdivideth this inbred corruption of their natures into two heads first the flesh particularly so called whereby as it is distinguished from flesh before mentioned and opposed to the mind spoken of afterwards must be meaned that corruption which is seated in the inferiour part of the soul to wit the sensual appetite and next the mind whereby is meaned the most noble faculties of the soul to wit the will and understanding in so far as they are also corrupted Concerning both which he affirmeth that even the Jews in their unconverted state were fulfilling their wills and desires by which desires of the flesh as they are distinguished from the lusts of the flesh formerly mentioned are meaned their deliberate and fixed resolution to follow those lusts and suggestions of corrupt flesh which accordingly he sheweth they did fulfill and accomplish to the utmost And thirdly he pointeth at the root and fountain-cause of this their miserable slavery and subjection to sin in the lusts and desires therof even their natural sin and misery whereby they were from nature that is from their very cradle birth and conception children of wrath as being by reason of their original sin lyable to the stroke of God's eternal wrath and as much lyable to it as the Gentiles were Doct. 1. There is not any piece of a Minister's task wherein he hath more need of a spirit of wisdom and impartiality than when he is about the reproof of sin and the discovery of peoples vilenesse by reason of their wickednesse lest if herein he respect persons those whom he reflects upon most be irritate as conceiving themselves to be unequally dealt with and lest others to whom he doth apply that convincing doctrine neither so directly nor with such an edge and vehemencie be puft up in their own conceit above others for the Apostle holdeth-forth the rest of what he hath to speak upon this subject of mans misery by nature in the person of the Jews lest either the Gentiles had been irritated or the Jews puffed up Among whom we all also bad our conversation 2. Whatever differences may be among unregenerate men as to things civil externals in Religion or the particular sins unto which they are inslaved yet all of them are alike vile in God's sight children of disobedience in whom Satan ruleth and worketh in so far as they are all walking in the lusts of the flesh following inbred corruption as their guide and obeying it in some one or other of its lusts for though there was neither civil commerce nor religious fellowship betwixt the Jews and Gentiles Joh. 4. 9. though the Jews had many external religious priviledges which the Gentiles did want Rom. 9. 4 5. and though some both of Jews and Gentiles were not enslaved to such vile and fleshly lusts as others were Phil. 3. -6. yet Paul pronounces of himself and all of them that they were children of disobedience because one way
have compleat salvation in right and title 1 Corinth 3. 21 22. and in the earnest of it Eph. 1. 14. So the whole work of their salvation from its first step in regeneration unto its last step in their glorification doth intirely flow from Gods free grace and from none of their worth for he saith ye are saved in the time bypast and ascribeth it to grace by grace ye are saved 4. The maintaining of the interest of free grace in our salvation as being the alone impulsive cause thereof in opposition to our worth is a thing that the Spirit of the Lord is very carefull of the glory of His free grace being all which He seeketh after in our salvation chap. 1. 6. and a thing which men do naturally encline to intrench upon and to rob Him of either in whole or in part Rom. 10. 3. for therefore doth the Apostle so frequently shew the dependance which salvation hath upon Gods mercy love and free grace ver 4. -5. and here by grace are ye saved 5. Free grace and faith do well agree in the bringing about our salvation neither is salvation the lesse of free grace that it is also of faith seing faith is not only a fruit of Gods grace in us Phil. 1. 29. but also and mainly because faith doth not justifie or save us for any worth in it self or as it is a work for all works are excluded ver 9. but for the worth of its object Jesus Christ and of His righteousnesse Rom. 5. -19. which faith apprehendeth Philip. 3. 9. for the Apostle ascribeth their salvation both to grace and faith ye are saved by grace through faith 6. Though Gods free grace favour and goodwill doth freely bestow that salvation upon the Elect which Christ by His merit hath purchased yet the Wisdom of God hath thought it fitting that this salvation shall not be actually bestowed untill the person to be saved do lay hold by faith upon the offer of salvation in the Gospel and of Christs righteousnesse whereby salvation is acquired that so the heirs of glory may not only have a right to heaven by faith before they come to the actuall possession of it Joh. 3. 16. but also be made meet to partake of that heavenly inheritance Col. 1. 12. their natures being renewed when the habit of faith is wrought in them by God 2 Corinth 5. 17. and their hearts also being purified by the exercise of that grace Acts 15. 9. for saith he by grace are ye saved through faith 7. The ascribing of salvation to Gods free grace though it doth not exclude Christs merit and the act of faith as imbracing the righteousnesse of Christ See Doct. 5. Yet it excludeth all things in our selves whether dignity of our natures the enjoyment of civil or ecclesiastick priviledges nobility of discent all our common or more speciall gifts and induements whether of nature or grace from having any meritorious or causall influence in bestowing either a right to salvation or the possession of it for Paul opposeth these two by grace are ye saved and that not of your selves 8. As heaven and salvation are Gods gift so they are such a gift as is freely given by God who is not induced thereto by any thing in the person to whom it is given whether sense of benefit already received or hope of any benefit to be received from Him in time coming which occasioneth the bestowing of gifts among men salvation is indeed a gift but not such a gift for it is a gift without all rise from any thing in our selves And that not of your selves it is the gift of God saith he Vers. 9. Not of works lest any man should boast HE further explaineth in what sense their salvation did come from free grace and proveth it by other two arguments which do also confirm the two former The first taken from the removeall of those things in particular from having any meritorious or causall influence upon their salvation which all men have a kind of naturall propension to rely upon for salvation to wit their works and those even their good works for so doth he explain himself ver 10. whence it followeth that they were saved of grace and not of themselves The second is taken from the end aimed at by God in contriving the plot of lost mans salvation to wit that all ground of gloriation might be taken away from man as being in the meanest respect a saviour to himself and that all the glory might be ascribed compleatly unto God in Christ See 1 Cor. 1. 30 31. which end could not have been obtained except they had been saved by grace and not of themselves Doct. 1. Though the word grace in Scripture be somtimes taken for the saving graces of Gods Spirit in us 2 Pet. 3. 18. yet when salvation is ascribed unto Gods grace we are alwayes to understand grace in God that is His free favour and goodwill and not grace inherent in us or good works the exercise of that grace for the Apostle establisheth grace ascribing our salvation to it and excludeth grace inherent and good works which were inconsistent if they were the self same thing Not of works saith he 2. The salvation of Believers doth so much flow from free grace as that all works of theirs even their good works are thereby excluded from having any meritorious influence upon it for even our best works are imperfect Isa. 64. 6-they are a debt which we owe unto God Luk. 17. 10. the power and activity whereby we do them is given of God Phil. 2. 13. and therefore we can merit nothing and least of all salvation by them at Gods hand Thus the Apostle explaineth how we are saved by grace even so as to exclude all works Not of works saith he 3. Though a man may boast and glory of the good things which God hath given him in some respects See upon Gal. 6. ver 4. doct 5. Yet the way wherein salvation is conveyed unto sinners is so contrived that no ground is left for man to boast in himself for any thing which his wisdom goodnesse power or worth do contribute for bringing of his own salvation about either in part or in whole From the first step thereof election unto the last his glorification man and his worth are still depressed and God and His free grace alwayes exalted for the Apostle sheweth this was the end God did aim at even least any man should boast 4. In so far as works even good works have place in the matter of mans salvation so far hath man mater of boasting and ascribing the glory of his salvation to himself and holding back the glory of it from God for although good works do come wholly from the Spirit of God in so far as they are good yet they are our works in so far as they are wrought by us being now renewed and enabled to work by influence from God and therefore heaven and salvation
should in that case be given unto us for the vertue and worth of somewhat which is ours for Paul affirmeth that works even good works which we are created unto in Christ Jesus ver 10. are excluded from having any causall influence upon salvation lest any man should boast implying if works were not excluded man should have ground of boasting See Rom. 3. 27. Vers. 10. For we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them LEst the Apostle by commending grace and excluding works from being the cause of their salvation should have seemed to justle out works and an holy life as altogether unnecessary Therefore in this verse he sheweth that the study of good works is of absolute necessity required in those who are to be saved because all such whether Jew or Gentile for he speaketh in the first person including himself and the believing Jews are Gods workmanship that is renewed and made over again by Gods createing power through the interveening mediation of Christ Jesus and this of purpose that they may make conscience of good works yea and further God who had predestinated them to heaven had also decreed and prepared good works for them as the way wherein they behoved of necessity to walk in their journey to heaven which as it proveth the undeniable necessity of good works so it also confirmeth that they neither were nor could be saved by works because the power whereby they did good works did follow upon their regeneration and was given them freely by God As also God had prepared good works that they should walk towards heaven in them but not to merit heaven by them Doct. 1. Believers are Gods workmanship not only by naturall creation but supernaturall renovation they are not only once made but made over again not by having the substance of their soul and naturall powers thereof destroyed and new ones substantially different from those substituted in their place but by having the vitious qualities which were in those subdued and weakened and contrary graces and vertues implanted in their stead Eph. 4. 22 23 24. for saith Paul we are His workmanship the word signifieth a thing of His making whereby he meaneth not Gods first making of them as men but His making of them over again as renewed men which appeareth from what followeth His creating them in Christ and unto good works 2. As the making of sinners over again and new creatures is only Gods work So the power whereby He so maketh us is no lesse than creating power much like unto that power whereby in the beginning He made some things of nothing and some things of pre-existing matter but such as was wholly unfit and indisposed for those things to be made of it Gen. 2. 7. 22. considering that in this great and mighty work of God He maketh those who were wholly indisposed to good and averse from it Psal. 81. 11. yea perverse resisters of all motions towards that which is godly and holy Job 21. 14. to be true lovers of it and walkers in its for this much is implyed while he saith we are His workmanship created c. 3. Christ behoved to strike in as Mediator betwixt God and us before we could be made this new workmanship the life which we have by this new creation being purchased by His death 1 Joh. 4. 9. and applied unto us by His power after He is now arisen from death Act. 5. 31. The furniture whereupon the actions of this life are performed coming also from Him Joh 15. -5. for saith he we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus 4. Believers are made new creatures not to live idlely or to work wickedly but that they may in the whole course of their life make conscience of good works which are not only works of charity or duties of immediate worship but every duty whether of worship Act. 10. -2. or of our callings Act. 9. 36. 39. whether to God or man or to our selves Tit. 2. 12. which is warranted in the Word as lawfull or commanded as necessary Mic. 6. 8. gone about by a man regenerate and in Christ Mat. 7. 17 18. by vertue of influence from the Spirit of Christ Phil. 2. 13. for Gods glory as the main end of the worker 1 Cor. 10. 31. and with due respect had to all necessary circumstances Psal. 1 -3 every duty of that kind so gone about is a good work which Paul saith they were created unto in Christ Jesus even unto good works 5. Though many actions of unregenerate men are materially good and very usefull both for themselves and others Rom. 2. 14. yet no unregenerate man can do any work which is spiritually good and acceptable to God even their good works are but shining sins as being destitute of a great part of these necessary requisites unto a good work mentioned in the former Doctrine for Paul sheweth that a man must be a new creature and Gods workmanship before he can do a good work for we are saith he Gods workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works 6. Though good works be not necessary to merit or purchase salvation yet are they necessary unto those who are justified and saved in severall respects not only as they are the necessary fruit and end of regeneration and as they are the way which leadeth to heaven their necessity in both which respects is grounded upon the present Scripture but they are necessary also as evidences of our right to salvation 1 Joh. 3. 14. as a guard to preserve peace with our own consciences 2 Cor. 1. 12. as evidences of our thankfulnesse to God and Christ who hath freely saved us 1 Pet. 2. 9. and for the edification of others Matth. 5. 16. for the Apostle's scope is to prove that as we are not saved by works so that good works are necessary in other respects We are created unto good works which He hath fore-ordained that we should walk in them 7. Christians are like unto those who walk in a journey from one place unto another through a streight and beaten way which lyeth betwixt in so far as they advance from sin Ezek. 18. 31. to heaven Phil. 3. 14. in the way of holinesse and good works for the word rendered to walk whereby he expresseth what should be the daily exercise of a renewed man is a metaphore taken from those who travell in a journey and he maketh the way wherein they walk to be good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them 8. The Lord hath prepared and made ready good works as a beaten path wherein His renewed people may walk without any discourageing or perplexing difficulty in so far as He not only hath ordained in His eternall and unchangeable decree that they shall make conscience of good works which seemeth to be mainly meaned by His fore-ordaining of good works here spoken of but He doth also hold forth
Church of Christ is a thing which ought to be prized by us highly and sought after earnestly and so much as there is nothing in our power which we ought not to bestow upon it and dispense with for the acquiring and maintaining of it for so much was it prized by Christ that He gave his own life to procure it and did beat down all His own Ordinances which stood in the way of it He even abolished in His flesh the Law of Commandments contained in Ordinances for to make of twain one new man 2. There are no divisions more hardly curable than those which are about the Religion and Worship of God in so far as they engage not only the credit but also the consciences of the divided parties hence one party so engaged doth pursue what they maintain as that wherein Gods honour and their own salvation are most nearly concerned and doth look upon the other party as an adversary in so far at least to both of those for the Apostle speaking of Christs uniting the Jew and Gentile in one Church and Religion maketh use of a word which sheweth this was a task of no small difficulty even such that no lesse than creating power was required to it while he saith for to make in Himself the word signifieth to creat in Himself of twain one new man 3. So strict and near is that conjunction and union which is especially among true believers in the Church that all of them how far soever dispersed through the world do yet make up but one man and one body as being all whatever be their other differences most strictly united as members unto one head Christ 1 Cor. 12. 27. and animated as to the inward man by the same Spirit of God residing and acting in them Rom. 8. 9. for the Apostle sheweth that all of them whether Jew or Gentile were made not only one people one nation one family but one new man For to make of twain one new man 4. As the essentiall unity of the invisible Church without which the Church could not be a Church doth of necessity depend upon and flow from that union which every particular member hath with Christ as Head seing the grace of love whereby they are knit one to another Col. 3. 14 doth flow from faith Gal. 5. -6. whereby they are united to Him Eph. 3. 17. So the more our union with Christ is improved unto the keeping of constant communion and fellowship with Him the more will be attained unto of harmonious walking among our selves suitable unto that essentiall union which is in the Church of Christ for the Apostle maketh the conjunction of Jews and Gentiles in one Church to depend upon Christ's uniting of them to himself For to make in Himself of twain one new man saith he 5. The peace which ought to be and which Christ calleth for in His Church is not a simple cessation from open strife which may take place even when there remaineth a root of bitternesse in peoples spirits Psal. 55. 21. but it is such an harmonious walking together in all things as floweth from the nearest conjunction of hearts and the total removal of all former bitternesse of spirits for the peace which Christ did make betwixt Jew and Gentile did follow upon His abolishing the enmity and making them one man so making peace saith he From Vers. 16. Learn 1. Union and peace with men even with good men is to little purpose except there be peace and friendship with God also for the Apostle sheweth that Christ in abolishing the ceremonial Law did design not only the conjunction of the Church among themselves but their reconciliation with God also and the former in subordination to the latter And that He might reconcile both unto God in one body 2. As all mankind have fallen from that state of friendship with God wherein they once were before the fall Eccles. 7. 29. So the repairing of this wofull breach and making up of friendship betwixt God and the Elect was Christ's great businesse in the world for effectuating whereof whatever He did or suffered was in some one way or other subservient for the Apostle sheweth He suffered in the flesh abolished the ceremonial Law united the two Nations that He might reconcile both unto God in one body The word rendred reconcile signifieth the making up of old friendship 3. Though the believing Jews under the Old Testament were reconciled unto God even while the ceremonial Law stood in force Psal. 32. 4. Yet the price by vertue whereof they were reconciled could not be actually payed to wit Christ's death and sufferings except the ceremonial Law had presently evanished See Ver. 15 Doct. 4. neither could Jew and Gentile be united together in one body and so reconciled to God while that Law was in force and binding See Vers. 14. Doct. 5. Therefore and in those respects it was necessary for Christ to abolish the ceremonial Law that He might reconcile both Jew and Gentile unto God for so saith Paul He abolished the Law of Commandments in Ordinances that He might reconcile both unto God in one body 4. There can be no reconciliation betwixt God and us except we be united by faith to Christ and to the body of all Believers in Him So that none can be one with God who are not of the mysticall body of His Church yea and in so far will the sense and sweet effects of reconciliation with God be interrupted and obstructed as persons reconciled do give way unto divisions rents and strifes among themselves for the Gentiles and Jews being in one body with Christ and His Church come to be reconciled unto God That He might reconcile both unto God in one body that is being united among themselves in one body under Christ the head as is affirmed vers 15. 5. As Jesus Christ did interpose as mediator and peace-maker to reconcile God and us So He behoved in order unto this end to bear the chastisment of our peace and to lay down His life by a shamefull painfull and cursed death that so the justice of God being fully satisfied for our wrong we might enjoy God's peace and favour with life for he sheweth the mean of their reconciliation was the crosse of Christ not the material tree or matter of the crosse but Christ's sufferings and death upon the crosse That He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the crosse 6. Christ in suffering Himself to be overcome by death did fully destroy sin death the ceremonial Law and every other thing which could impede the reconciliation of the Elect with God He having thereby brought-in the substance of all those legal shadows Col. 3. 17. satisfied the justice of God and purchased grace and strength which afterwards He was to convey unto all Believers for mortifying and subduing the body of sin and death in them Act. 5. 31. for saith Paul He hath slain the enmity thereby that is by the
in dispensing grace and salvation now in a way diverse from what He did formerly any should suspect that therefore God had altered His purpose he sheweth here all this had come to passe according to His eternal purpose 4. As it is but small comfort unto a Minister that he is intrusted to carry unto others an excellent message and glad tydings of the plot and draught of mans salvation surely grounded upon Gods purpose and infallibly executed by Christ in all its steps except he make application and take a share of those glad tydings unto himself So the way for either Pastor or People to apply the Gospel and all those rich treasures of spiritual blessings contained in it unto themselves is by taking hold upon Christ and pleading a well-grounded interest in Him as theirs for if Christ be ours all things are ours Rom 8. 32. Hence is it that Paul having magnified his Ministery and Message doth make application of those precious things which he was intrusted with unto himself by pleading an interest in Christ as his while he calleth Him Jesus Christ our Lord. Vers. 12. In whom we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence by the faith of Him HE doth magnifie his Office eighthly from three excellent priviledges whereof Believers among them some in a greater some in a lesser measure some at one time some at another did partake by the means of his Ministery as being thereby brought to Christ in whom they enjoyed all these 1. Boldnesse or liberty to speak all their mind freely as the original word doth bear whereby as it is distinguished from the other two is meaned that holy freedom and boldnesse which is in reconciled souls to speak their whole heart to God both in the duty of prayer and thanksgiving and is opposed to misbelief terror of conscience or to whatsoever doth straiten the heart or stop the mouth in discharging these duties 2. Accesse to wit unto God See chap. 2. 18. which is larger than the former as comprehending freedom and liberty of spirit in reconciled souls to exercise all their saving graces in the exercise whereof communion with God doth consist 3. Confidence or a well-grounded perswasion that both our persons and performances are accepted of God All which priviledges he sheweth were enjoyed by them by vertue of their being in Christ of whom he spoke ver 11. and by the exercise of faith relying upon Him Doct. 1. Whatsoever worldly disadvantage may follow upon the preaching of the Gospel unto a People Matth. 10. 34 35. yet those excellent and spiritual priviledges which are conveyed thereby unto them who receive the Gospel may and ought sufficiently commend the Ministery of it unto all for Paul doth here commend his Office from these spiritual fruits which were enjoyed by it as their being in Christ in whom they had boldnesse and accesse with confidence 2. And more particularly liberty and freedom to speak our heart to God in all our concernments and accesse to God or fellowship with Him in the exercise of all our graces all obstructions arising either from the apprehension of Gods terror and our own guiltinesse or from our inability backwardnesse of spirit to good or from those impediments which the devil the world or our own hearts do create and cast in our way being removed Those I say together with confidence and a well-grounded perswasion that both our persons and duties are accepted of by God may and will abundantly serve to commend the Ministery of the Gospel unto those who have found it accompanied with such effects to their own hearts whatever other troubles they may be under for their receiving of it for the Apostle commendeth his Ministery from their enjoying of those priviledges in particular by the means thereof In whom we have boldnesse c. 3. The more a Christian doth find his heart enlarged and his tongue loosed to speak unto God in the duties of prayer and praise he will find the more of accesse unto and of fellowship with God in the exercise of all His saving graces and the more a man be restrained of liberty in those duties he will readily find himself the more restrained from the exercise of faith hope patience humility meeknesse or any other of His saving graces for the Apostle conjoyneth boldnesse or liberty in prayer and praises with accesse or freedom of spirit to approach unto God in the exercise of saving graces In whom we have boldness and access 4. A well-grounded perswasion of our acceptation with God both as to our persons and actions doth serve exceedingly to furnish the heart with boldnesse in prayer and with familiar accesse unto and fellowship with God in so far as a great many of those obstructions which 〈◊〉 boldnesse and accesse do arise from diffidence misbelieving doubts or ignorance whether God accepteth of us or not Rom. 10. 14. for the Apostle speaketh of confidence or of this well-grounded perswasion as having some influence upon the other two while he saith boldnesse and accesse with confidence 5. Those excellent priviledges of boldnesse accesse and confidence are not only purchased and conveyed unto sinners by Christ as was explained in the point of accesse chap. 2. ver 18. doct 2. but also they are enjoyed by none but such as are in Christ and united to Him by a lively and saving faith and all who are not so in Christ are estranged from spirituall liberty and boldnesse in prayer though they be never so much flowing in eloquence and discourse They are estranged also from accesse unto God being banished from His favour and presence Psal. 58. 3. and have no well-grounded confidence that God doth accept either of their persons or actions seing He is well-pleased only in Him Matth. 3. 17. for he saith In whom meaning Christ we have boldnesse and accesse with confidence They were first in Him 6. Faith in Jesus Christ whereby we receive Joh. 1. 12. and rest upon Him for salvation Isa. 50. 10. is one thing and confidence or perswasion of our acceptation with God is another the former being the cause root and fountain of the latter For Paul sheweth that confidence floweth from faith while he saith with confidence by the faith of Him or faith in Him See Gal. 2. 20. 7. As faith in Jesus Christ is that grace which uniteth us to Him So it not only goeth before our boldnesse accesse and confidence but also maketh way for and is the cause of those and therefore the more that faith is keeped in exercise there will be the more of liberty and boldnesse the more of accesse to God and nearnesse and the more of a well-grounded perswasion of our acceptation by God and confidence for he ascribeth their being in Christ their accesse boldnesse and confidence unto faith while he saith by the faith of Him Vers. 13. Wherefore I desire that ye faint not at my tribulations for you which is your glory THe Apostle having now sufficiently magnified
who honour Him 1 Sam. 2. 30. and giveth grace unto the humble Iam. 4. -6. for Paul did evidence such a frame of heart by bowing his knees when he prayed 7. Deep reverence of heart towards the sacred majesty of God in prayer may well consist with faith and confident approaching unto God as a reconciled father Both of them ought to be joyned together in prayer yea and both when they are sincere and not counterfeit do mutually strengthen and intend one another so that the more we put our trust in Him the more will our hearts fear and adore Him Psal. 130. 4. for the Apostle exercised not only reverence in his prayer as is already shown but also confidence while he taketh up God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and of the whole family of Believers through Him 8. See further concerning this title given to God with relation to Christ upon chap. 1. ver 3. in the exposition and doct 2. and ver 17. doct 3 5 6. unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. As there is but one Church universal comprehending all the Elect in all times and places whether in heaven or earth So all within the Church are of one kinred and linage descending of one common father for he designeth the Church to be one whole family in heaven and earth the word signifieth such a family as is the linage of one man 2. As this one Church is Gods family and houshold See chap. 2. ver 19. doct 8. So all the members of His Church and family are comprehended either in heaven or earth Scripture knoweth nothing of a purgatory or third place different from these for the Apostle sheweth this whole family is in heaven and earth and named of God 3. Those near relations under which God doth stand towards His Church are founded upon Jesus Christ and all the benefits flowing from such relations are conveyed unto the Church through Him without whom God is a consuming fire to sinners and in whom He is a reconciled father unto Believers for the Apostle looketh upon God first as He is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and next as He is the Father of all the Elect Of whom the whole family is named to wit His children Joh. 1. 12. and domesticks Eph. 2. 19. 4. The near relation which God hath to His Church and His Church to Him is sufficient ground and warrant for faith to rest upon Him and plead with Him for supply and furniture of all grace and of every thing needfull for shall not He provide for His own children who hath pronounced those among men to be worse than infidels who provide not for theirs 1 Tim. 5. 8. Hence the Apostle maketh this a ground of his confidence to be answered by God in what he sought in behalf of those Ephesians even Gods fatherly interest in them Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named Vers. 16. That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man THe Apostle doth secondly particularize those petitions which he put up to God in his prayer and they are four The first whereof is in this verse to wit That God from the fountain of that in-exhaustible treasure of His divine attributes called His glory Exod. 33. 18. with 34. 6 7. and especially of His mercy and power which are set forth by the name and epithet of His glory or glorious Eph. 1. 6. Col. 1. 11. would furnish them with a daily increase of spirituall strength whereby they might resist the devil and all spirituall adversaries in their Christian course Chap. 6. 12. which strength was to be wrought by the holy Spirit in their inward man whereby as 2 Corinth 4. 16. is meaned the soul not simply in it self but as living the life of grace and those things which relate to that spiritual life as the outward man doth comprehend all those things belonging to a man's outward estate So in a word he prayeth that they may be strong and flourish in all things which relate to the spirituall estate of their eternal souls Doct. 1. From the Apostle his being able to give an after-account of what he prayed for see chap. 1. ver 17. doct 2. that he would grant unto you 2. Whatever strength or natural parts of body or mind men naturally have to compasse their effairs of this world Gen. 4. 20 21 22. yet they are wholly destitute of all spiritual strength and activity for compassing heaven and happinesse and for walking in the way of holinesse which leadeth to it for the Apostle findeth an inlack of this strength even in the converted Ephesians and therefore doth seek it from God unto them Much more must it be wholly wanting in those who are not yet converted That he would grant unto you to be strengthened in the inward man 3. Though there be a new principle of spirituall strength wrought in those who are renewed at their first conversion Jer. 31. 33. whereby the renewed heart being wrought upon by the Spirit of God doth really work that which is spiritually good Philip. 4. 13. Yet a constantly-renewed supply of grace and strength from the Spirit of God is necessary even to the renewed man whereby those seeds of grace already wrought in him may be upheld in their being Jer. 32. -40. preserved against the furious assaults of raging tentations Luk 22. 32. a 〈…〉 d and made to do that which is truely good Philip. 2. 13. and much more that hereby grace begun in conversion may be made to grow and advance towards perfection Philip. 1. 6. for the Apostle prayeth even for those converted Ephesians that they may be strengthened with might in the inward man 4. Such is the vanity lightnesse and inconstancie of our hearts in good Psal. 39. -5. our impotencie to resist tentations Matth. 26. 34. our pronenesse to turn from the wayes of God Gal. 5. 7. So strong so subtile so assiduous are our spirituall adversaries Eph. 6. 12. So many are those difficulties discouragements diversions and hinderances which we have to wrestle with and overcome in the way to heaven Act. 14. -22. that except we be underpropped and strengthened by Gods almighty power we cannot stand one moment and much lesse advance in our Christian course for therefore doth Paul pray that they might be strengthened with might in the inward man 5. Even the regenerate children of God in seeking increase of strength and of more grace from God must not if so they would obtain their suit plead from their merit or any good use they have made of their former grace seing upon a strict account it will be found that grace hath not been so improven by the best as it ought Isa. 64. 6 But they must seek what they so expect as a gift from God's free grace without any respect had to their own worth for the
Apostle while he seeketh increase of spirituall strength unto those converted Ephesians he prayeth that God would grant or give it as a gift for the word signifieth so much and that from the inexhaustible fountain of His glorious grace That He would grant unto you according to the riches of His glory not according to your worth 6. As all the attributes of God and especially His mercy and power are not onely altogether glorious because the glory of God is manifested unto the creatures in their severall wonderfull effects Psal. 19. 1 c. but are also infinite and without measure as being indefatigable in working wholly insuperable by any impediment or opposition whatsoever and inexhaustible by supplying any want in the creature So in making our approaches unto God for seeking any good and especially saving good it is most necessary that we lift our eyes above any thing that is ours whether our good or our evil and fasten them by faith upon that inexhaustible fountain of mercy and power in God whereby he is not only willing as mercifull but also able as omnipotent to bestow what ever we shall ask according to his will for the Apostle in seeking spirituall strength for those Ephesians doth look to the inexhaustible riches of Gods mercy and power called here His glory that He would grant according to the riches of His grace 7. It is the Spirit of God the third person in the blessed Trinity who taking up His place of abode in the truly regenerate 1 Joh. 4. 13. doth make it His work to renew their strength by upholding and actuating their graces and making them advance from strength to strength in despite of all imaginable difficulties neither is there any other strength or might whether naturall or acquired which can sufficiently furnish us to rancounter all those difficulties which are incident in our Christian course but that whereof the Spirit of God residing in us is the author and giver for he prayeth they may be strengthened with might in the inner man from the spirit 8. Though Christians are not to neglect their outward and bodily concernments 1 Tim. 5. 8. 23. yet the spirituall estate of their eternall souls is to be cared for most and so much as if it go well with that and if the soul be strengthened with might for carrying on the concernments thereof their outward concernments may trouble them the lesse and especially the care of Ministers should be employed about the inward and spirituall estate of their flock for Paul prayeth they may be strengthened in the inner man his care did run most upon that Vers. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts by faith HEre is the second petition of the Apostle's prayer wherein he seeketh that which is the cause of strengthning and corroboration by the Spirit spoken of ver 16. even that Jesus Christ by vertue of a continued act of lively faith in Him might be perpetually present in His Vertue Grace and Spirit working not only in their tougnes and brains but also and mainly in their hearts Doct. 1. That we may partake of any saving benefit purchased by Christ and particularly that we may be strengthened with might by the Spirit in the inner man for doing any thing that is spiritually good it is most necessary that we partake first of Christ Himself being most strictly united to Him and even as the members are to the head from which they receive sense and motion Christ giveth nothing of His purchase unto any but to whom He giveth Himself first 1 Joh. 5. 11 12. and to whomsoever He giveth Himself upon those He bestoweth all things Christ in us being the hope of glory Col. 1. 27. the fountain of life Gal. 2. 20. and of all things needfull 1 Job 4. 4. for Paul having prayed that they may be strengthened with might in the inner man subjoyneth the way and manner how this strength was to be conveyed unto them even by Christ's dwelling in their hearts by faith 2. There is a strict conjunction and near familiarity between Christ and Believers even such in some sort as is between an indweller and the house wherein he dwelleth whereby Jesus Christ God and Man in one person is present with the Believer not in His substance only as He is God for so He is every where Jer. 23. 24. nor in His substance at all as He is Man for so the heavens do contain Him Act. 3. 21. but by His gracious operation and speciall influence upon them whereby He quickeneth them Rom. 8. 10. ruleth them Act. 9. 6. and liveth in them Gal. 2. 20. for he prayeth that Christ may dwell in their hearts which petition is granted in behalf of all Believers seing he prayed in faith 3 Though Christ doth thus familiarly communicate Himself unto all Believers so as to dwell in them by His gracious presence yet not unto all alike but unto some in a larger measure than unto others according as He worketh more and more effectually in some than in others for though Christ did already dwell in those converted Ephesians chap. 2. 22. yet Paul doth pray that Christ may dwell in them which therefore must be understood of a greater measure and degree of His indwelling presence than formerly they had 4. Where Jesus Christ doth once take up His abode and dwelling in the heart there He remaineth constantly and flitteth not in so far as though sometimes He withholdeth that gracious influence of His which is necessary only to the wel-being flourishing and vigorous thriving of grace in the heart Cant. 5. 6. yet He never withdraweth that influence which is necessary to the being of grace and without which grace would utterly die and perish Psal. 73. 23. for the word rendered to dwell signifieth to take up a fixed and immovable habitation and differeth from another word very like unto it which signifieth to sojourn in a place only for a season 1 Pet. 1. 17. That Christ may dwell in your hearts 5. Though even the bodies of Believers be temples of the holy Ghost and consequently of Jesus Christ for Christ dwelleth in them by His Spirit 1 Cor. 6. 19. yet the heart will and affections of man are the chief place of His habitation wherein He resideth as in His strong citadel from which He commandeth the other faculties and members And without His presence there He cannot have any habitation in any part of the man elsewhere the tongue cannot receive Him by speaking nor the understanding by knowing nor the hand by external working except He be received in the heart from which proceed the issues of life Pro. 4. 23. for he prayeth that Christ may dwell in their hearts 6. Though Jesus Christ doth make His first entry unto and dwelleth in Believers by His Spirit 1 Joh. 4. 13. whereby He uniteth them to Himself quickeneth and ruleth them yea and worketh the grace of faith in them Joh. 6. 44. yet faith being so wrought the
union and communion to wit the Spirit on Christs part and faith and love on ours or of externall union to wit the Word Sacraments and those functions and offices which Christ hath appointed in His house yea and also all naturall and civil relations when they are sanctified and they are all called joynts of subministration or supply for the words read better so than as they are rendered by that which every joynt supplyeth to shew that those do serve not only to conjoyn us with Christ and among our selves but also for channels and instruments of communication by which spiritual nourishment and matter of growth is conveyed both unto our selves and others He sheweth thirdly that the whole members and every one of them being thus conjoyned do not only themselves by vertue of that furniture and spirituall nourishment communicate from Christ by the means of those joynts or bonds make encrease and grow but also make the whole body thus conjoyned to grow and this according to the effectual working of the holy Ghost whereby those joynts or means of conveying spiritual nourishment are blessed and made effectuall to the effect mentioned which effectuall working and blessing of encrease and nourishment following upon it is not communicated unto the members or parts without measure as it was to Christ the Head Joh. 3. 34. or unto all alike but in the measure of every part or member that is such a measure as Christ judgeth sufficient and most convenient to every member according to the place and function which they hold in the body and the use which he is to make of them for the good of the body And lastly he sheweth the end of the growth and encrease of the whole body in all its members to be not so much the good and advantage of the particular members as the advancement and edification of the body it self and of the particular members only in so far as their edification and growth is carried alongs in and contributeth for the edification of the body and that this floweth from the force and power of the grace of love in all the members which doth not look to it self only 1 Cor. 13. 5 but maketh every part contribute all what it is and can do for the benefit of others and common good of the whole Hence Learn 1. As Christ and Believers make up one mysticall body whereof He is head and they members See upon chap. 1. 22 23. So all things requisit unto Believers to make them a body do flow from Christ their union order bonds of union spirituall nourishment and instruments of communication whereby it is conveyed their growth and measure of their growth and all is from Him as the Apostle doth here fully teach from whom the whole body c. 2. As there is a most orderly and firm union of all the members of this body with their head and among themselves so this union is necessary in order to their receiving spirituall nourishment and making encrease thereby even as it is in the natural body a member cut off or separated from the rest cannot be nourished for he saith the whole body fitly joyned and compacted doth make encrease The first word fitly joyned doth expresse the orderly frame and proportion of all the members in this union The second compacted expresseth the firmnesse of this union 3. As there are joynts and bonds both of the internall and externall union of this body to wit such as are held forth in the exposition even the Spirit of God with His speciall graces and common gifts so that God doth make use of all those both as bonds of union and instruments of communication whereby He conveyeth spirituall nourishment unto the respective members is a strong argument to scare us from dividing or renting upon these or because of the diversity of those in the severall members for he saith the whole body is compacted by every joynt and he calleth them joynts of supply whereby furniture is conveyed his general scope wherein is to inforce the study of unity notwithstanding of diversity of graces gifts and offices compacted by that which every joynt supplyeth or every joynt of supply 4. There is no true member of this body either dead or idle or living and working only to it self but what life or nourishment it hath received from the head that it doth endeavour to communicate unto others for he saith there is an effectuall working from the Lord in every member according to which it maketh increase not only of it self but of the body 5. As there is no member of this body which receiveth the essentiall operation and gifts or graces of the holy Spirit without measure and as all receive some measure lesse or more So it is the duty of all and every one to contribute for the good of others and especially for the advantage of the whole body not by extending themselves beyond their measure but according to it that being all which God requireth for he saith the whole body or all the several members of the body do make increase of the body according to the effectuall working in the measure of every part 6. As it is not our improving of our measure of gifts and graces received which of it self and without the effectuall operation and blessing of Gods Spirit will bring about the spirituall good and advantage either of our selves or others so we ought not on this pretence to ly-by doing nothing but are to make use of our measure received and depend upon the effectuall operation of Gods Spirit for a blessing to our so doing for he saith increase is made of the body according to both those the Spirits effectuall operation and the activity of every part or member according to its measure even according to the effectuall working in the measure of every part 7. As all the lively members of this body do make increase and grow in gifts and graces so that is only true growth and a growth whereof Christ the head is fountain and author which addeth somewhat to the whole body and bringeth advantage to the Church in common but not that growth which seemeth to bring some benefit to a few with the disadvantage of the rest for the whole body or every member of the body maketh increase not only of it self but also of the body saith he 8. As there is no such degree of growth attained here neither by the Church in generall nor its lively members in particular but there are degrees yet wanting of their full and just stature So the measure of growth and increase already received should be improved by us for attaining a further degree of growth and advantage not only to our selves but also to others chiefly to the edification of the whole body for he saith every member maketh increase of the body to the edifying of it self so that the increase received is to be improven for attaining more even further edification 9. The more a man
ye kind one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you HEre is the sixth precept enjoyning the exercise of some vertues which are opposite unto and remedies against those vices presently mentioned The first whereof is mutuall kindnesse a vertue whereby from a sweet and loving disposition of heart towards all Rom. 12. 10. we labour to be affable easie to be entreated for the good of others Iam. 3. 17 and of a sweet and amiable carriage towards those with whom we converse Rom. 12. 18. and it is opposite both to pride of spirit evidenced in a lofty carriage Psal. 10. 2. 5. and to morosity or uncivil austerity 2 Sam. 25. 17. The second is tender-heartednesse commiseration or mercy whereby we are most inwardly and in the very bowels as the word signifieth touched and affected with compassion towards the miseries and infirmities of others so far would he have them from thirsting after revenge And thirdly he recommendeth unto them to give evidence of their kindnesse and tender-heartednesse in an hearty free and pleasant pardoning of mutuall wrongs as the word signifieth And lastly he inforceth this dutie of mutuall forgivenesse from Gods example in forgiving us all our offences for Christs sake Concerning which duty of forgiving and pardoning one another here enjoyned know first that as to the wrong to be forgiven in so far as it is alwayes an offence against God and sometimes against the publick laws of the land we have not power to forgive it Isa. 43. 25. nor to meddle with it further than by prayer to God Iam. 5. 14 15. and in some cases by intercession with the Magistrate but in so far only as it is a wrong done to us we are to forgive it Know secondly that this forgivenesse implyeth a removall of all inward grudge and endeavour after private revenge Lev. 19. 18. together with a readinesse to do all duties of love and kindnesse to him who hath done the wrong as God doth minister occasion and ability Exod. 23. 4 5. Which yet thirdly doth not bind us up from having recourse to the Magistrate for attaining restauration to our right and reparation of our wrongs providing we go not to law for trifles 1 Cor. 6. 7. nor yet before all amicable means be privately essayed for taking away the occasion of strife 1 Cor. 6. 5. See further upon Col. 3. ver 13. doct 3. Hence Learn 1. The exercise of kindnesse in a sweet and amicable carriage is a singular remedy against sinfull anger and all its branches in so far as thereby we not only give no occasion of anger unto others but also do give place unto wrath Rom. 12. 19. whereby it slayeth it self and we do overcome evil with good for as a remedy against all the branches of sinfull anger formerly mentioned he enjoyneth And be ye kind one to another 2. The exercise of mercy and tender-heartednesse is another soveraign remedy against sinfull anger and all its branches in so far as thereby we are inabled to look upon the fooleries infirmities yea and other greater injuries done by our neighbour with pity and compassion which otherwise would provoke our anger and passion for he enjoyneth this as another remedy against all the branches of sinfull anger Be ye tender-hearted 3. Then and not while then may a man conclude that wrath and anger are sufficiently mortified when he is not only in a readinesse to discharge all duties of kindnesse and love to the party who hath injured him but doth also look upon him for so doing as one who is an object of compassion and pity rather than of passion and anger for in stead of bitternesse wrath anger and malice against those who had injured them he injoyneth And be ye kind one to another and tender-hearted 4. The exercise of kindnesse and tender-heartednesse ought and will go together where there is a suitable object for both to work upon so that kindnesse will not be broken off because of the miseries and infirmities of those to whom we owe kindnesse but rather heightened and helped by an addition of tender-heartednesse and bowels of compassion for he commandeth not only be ye kind one to another which respecteth our neighbour under either state whether of prosperity or adversity but also be tender-hearted which respecteth him under misery 5. Those graces of kindnesse and mercy are to be exercised especially in the case of wrongs and injuries yea the reality of those graces are best tried not by our exercising them to such as do us no hurt but in bearing with and pardoning of those who have given just cause of provocation by real injuries for the Apostle will have kindnesse and tender-heartednesse exercised in forgiving one another which supponeth a wrong done 6. Even those who have gotten a heart from God to forgive wrongs done to themselves by others are not so free of infirmities but they will be sometimes doing reall injuries unto others and therfore stand in need of forgivenesse themselves for so much is implyed while he calleth for mutual performance of this duty even forgiving one another 7. Only those whom God hath forgiven for Christs sake can freely pleasantly and from the fountain of true love in the heart forgive those wrongs which are done to them by others and the more a man hath attained to know that God hath pardoned himself he will be the more inclinable to shew forgivenesse unto others for he maketh their forgiving of others a consequence of Gods forgiving them And therefore when the Scripture commandeth us to forgive that we may be forgiven Mark 11. 25. it doth not mean that our forgiving others doth go before Gods pardoning of us but is an immediate effect of it or at the most an antecedent to our sensible perceiving of it Forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you 8. That Gods practice in forgiving us is an effectuall argument for exciting us to forgive and pardon one another see upon Col. 3. 13. doct 7. 9. The example of God in forgiving us is not only an argument exciting us to forgive one another but also a pattern which we are to resemble in the manner of our forgivenesse not that our forgivenesse can match His in equality or perfection but in similitude and likenesse which consisteth chiefly in this that we forgive sincerely not hypocritically freely and not unwillingly fully and not by halfes irrevocably and not for a time only as He doth Matth. 18. 35. Mica 7. 18. Col. 2. 13. Jer. 31. 34 for he saith Forgiving one another even as God hath forgiven you 10. Though God hath freely forgiven us yet He hath seen to the satisfaction of His provoked justice for the wrong done antecedently to His forgiving of us which satisfaction is not exacted of us but of Christ who was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. And therefore though we are to imitate God in remitting the private injury
without any reserve or limitation and the practice of any other is to be followed but so far as their example is conincident with Gods Word and practice See 1 Cor. 11. 1. where Paul commandeth them to follow him with an expresse limitation to wit as he was a follower of Christ but here his command is absolute and unlimitted Be ye followers of God 5. The Lord doth enter into most intimate friendship with and taketh on most neer relations unto those whose sins He pardoneth So that He doth not only free them from deserved wrath but placeth them among the children and maketh them adopted sons and daughters unto Himself for here he calleth them God's dear children of whom He said chap. 4. 32. that God had forgiven them for Christs sake 6. All those who are dear children to God by adoption should look upon their highest priviledges as strongest engagements to duty and particularly set themselves to imitate Him in the exercise of mercy kindnesse forgivenesse and of such other duties as He hath made lovely and amiable by His own example for Paul maketh their priviledges an engagement to duty and to imitate God in particular Be ye followers of God as dear children 7. It is not sufficient that we set our selves to imitate God except we do it as dear children that is first humbly Matth. 18. 2. 3. and next with a kind of naturall affection and propension for so do children affect to imitate and by imitation to please their parents and not as servants and slaves by compulsion Hence he saith as dear children pointing not only at the reason why but the manner how they should follow Him Vers. 2. And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour HE doth next illustrate yet further that precept given chap. 4. ver 32. and joyntly sheweth wherein they were to imitate God to wit not only in forgiving but also in loving one another and so as they should walk in love whereby is meaned that all their actions towards their neighbour ought not only to be good in themselves but also flow from a principle of love to his good and edification which duty or constant task of walking in love is inforced by a new argument taken from Christ's example who loved us and did evidence His love by giving Himself freely and of His own accord Job 10. 18 even unto death for us or for our sins Gal. 1. 4. which action of Christ is illustrated first from the end for which He did give Himself even to be a propitiatory sacrifice unto God for expiating all the sins of the Elect as was fore-signified and typified by all those expiatory levitical sacrifices under the Old Testament whether those which were generally called by the name of offering under which were comprehended all sacrifices both of living beasts and of things destitute of life as flowre oyle frankincense and such-like or those which were more strictly called by the name of sacrifice and were of living beasts and therefore conjoyned with shedding of bloud as the word in the original implyeth which cometh from a root signifying to kill and slay hence it is that our crucified Lord doth here get the name both of an offering and sacrifice This action of Christ is illustrated next from its fruit and efficacy to wit the rendering of God well-pleased with Christ His offering up Himself and with the persons and performances of true Believers for His sake as sweet smelling odours by reason of their likenesse unto and agreement with our spirits are well-pleasing and satisfying unto such as find them Doct. 1. Whatever duties of mercy and kindnesse we do discharge unto our neighbour we do not sufficiently imitate God therein neither perform service acceptable to Him if they flow not from a principle of love to our neighbours good and edification and be not directed thereunto as the great end of our work next to the glory of God and therefore a man may do many externall duties of love and yet not be accepted of God when his great aim is to be seen of men Matth. 6. 2. or to merit heaven by his good works Rom. 9. 31 32. without any inward compassion or affection to his neighbour or a sincere aim towards his good for the Apostle sheweth we do only then rightly imitate God in the duties of kindnesse and love when all we do floweth from the inward affection of love and is from love to our neighbour directed to his good while he saith walk in love 2. Our walking in love to our neighbour as it is formerly explained and when it floweth from the fountain of love to God is an evidence of adoption and of one who is a dear childe to God for having spoken of their near relation to God as being His dear children he presently enjoyneth them to make so much evident by their walking in love 3. That God the Father doth pardon the sins of the Elect having given His Son unto death to purchase pardon for them doth speak His love unto those whom He doth pardon and that Jesus Christ did willingly give Himself to death for them doth no lesse speak His unspeakable love unto them also So that they are equally loved both by the Father and the Son for he saith as Christ also hath loved us the particle also relateth to the love of the Father in pardoning for Christs sake whereof he presently spoke 4. So necessary is love among Christians together with those many duties which flow from it So many are the snares and difficulties which Satan our own corrupt natures and our mutual infirmities do create in our way to keep us from it that God seeth it necessary to propose the love both of the Father and the Son as two most powerfull adamants to draw our backward hearts up towards it for saith he Walk in love as Christ also hath loved us 5. As Christs love to lost sinners being firmly believed is a strong argument constraining those whom He hath so loved to walk in love towards others that being one of the great things required by Him from those whom He loveth Joh. 15. 12. So this love of Christ to us ought to be a pattern and copy to which we are to be conformed in our love towards others and therefore our love ought to be free for so was His Job 15. 16 It ought to be fruitfull for so was His Gal. 1. 4. it ought to be constant for so was His Job 13. 1. it ought to be discreet not encouraging or humouring the person beloved in sin for so was His Matth. 16. 23. And walk in love as Christ hath loved us saith he 6. Then do we consider the love of Christ aright and so as to be effectually incited to our duty from the consideration of it when we look upon it in those effects which flowed from it and especially
was as not to question far lesse deny but confidently avow what he now by grace is and that because not only the joynt consideration of both maketh them shine forth more clearly in their own colours but also our fixing our eye upon the former without avowing the latter doth breed discouragement unthankfulnesse and in progresse of time heartlesse dispare of an outgate from the wofull state wherein we apprehend our selves yet to be for the Apostle representeth to their view both those joyntly Ye were sometimes darknesse but now ye are light 3. Believers can never attain to read the happinesse of their present state through grace so long as they fix their eye only upon what they are in themselves nor yet untill they consider what they are in Christ and by vertue of that fulnesse of perfections in Him which not only floweth forth to them in the streams according to their measure Joh. 1. 16. but also is imputed to them in the fountain 1 Cor. 5. 21. and therefore may be looked upon by them as their own for although he calleth them darknesse absolutely and in themselves yet they are light not in themselves but in the Lord Christ. 4. Our former darknesse of ignorance and profanity wherein we have for a long time lived is so far from being an argument to make us continue in our former wofull course that on the contrary we ought from the consideration thereof be incited to take up our selves and live more tenderly for the time to come seing the time past of our life may suffice usto have walked in a godlesse course 1 Pet. 4. 3. for Paul maketh this an argument why they should not any longer partake with obstinate sinners in their godlesse course for saith he ye were sometimes darknesse 5. Neither long continuance in sin already even to wearinesse nor yet any conviction of the shame and dammage which do attend it are sufficient to make a man abandon and quit it throughly except there be a gracious change wrought in him chiefly as to his inward state from that which he sometimes was for he mentioneth this gracious change of their inward state as that wherein the strength of the present argument doth ly whereby he would disswade them from being partakers with them for ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord. 6. As all spirituall priviledges in generall are bestowed upon us that we may improve them both for our comfort and also for enabling and inciting to duty So the more we enjoy of light whether external light in preaching of the Word or the internal light of knowledge in the mind we ought to improve it the more by walking according to that light else our condemnation shall be greater Joh. 3. 18. for from their priviledge of being light in the Lord he inferreth walk as children of light Vers. 9. For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth THe Apostle in way of parenthesis doth give a reason of the former consequence or why their being now light in the Lord did bind them to walk as children of light and consequently not to partake with obstinate sinners in their sin and withall sheweth wherein that walking doth consist The reason is taken from the new creature and habits of grace in the heart called here the Spirit as Rom. 7. 25. Gal. 5. 22. and are the same with the light of grace by the Spirit of God spoken of ver 8. Now he sheweth the fruit of this light or of those gracious habits consisteth in the exercise of all Christian vertues which are here summed up in three 1. Goodnesse whereby we are inclined to communicate what good is in us for the advantage of our neighbour both in his spirituall 1 Pet. 4. 10. and bodily Gal. 6. 10. estate 2. Righteousnesse whereby we deal righteously in all our transactions with others And 3. Truth whereby we carry our selves sincerely being free from error hypocrisie or dissimulation whether towards God or men So the force of the argument cometh to this Such a walking as he did enjoyn was the native fruit and result of their being made light in the Lord by the Spirit of God and therefore they were obliged to it Doct. 1. It is the duty of Christs Ministers not only to presse upon the Lords people the practice of holinesse in generall but also to condescend upon and accordingly to presse the exercise of those particular vertues both to God and men wherein holinesse doth consist otherwise people will readily place most of holinesse in those things wherein it consisteth least Matth. 23. 23. for Paul having exhorted them to walk as children of the light doth here shew wherein that walking doth consist even in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth 2. None can walk as a childe of light or practise those duties wherein such a walk consisteth in a way acceptable to God but he who is a childe of light truely regenerate and acteth from a principle of grace in the heart Whatever floweth from an unrenewed heart how specious soever is but a shadow and imperfect imitation of the childe of light in this christian walk as an ape would imitate a man or a violent motion doth resemble that which is natural and floweth from an inward principle for he sheweth the exercise of goodnesse righteousnesse and truth wherein our walking as a childe of light consisteth is the fruit of the Spirit or of the root of grace in the heart wrought by the Spirit of God For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness c. 3. As it concerneth Christians to walk suitably unto their state and priviledges So they would seriously consider in order to their walking thus that holinesse of life is the native fruit and result of their being in a gracious state or of the work of grace in the heart and therefore that they are not only obliged to lead an holy life in way of duty and gratitude but a necessity also doth ly upon them to it if so they be renewed and as they would not evidence themselves to be yet in their unrenewed state for having exhorted them to walk as children of light or suitably to the state of grace he inforceth the exhortation by shewing that such a walking is the native fruit and necessary result of being in such a state For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse c. 4. A facility and easinesse to communicate what is in us for our neighbours good and advantage doth well consist with the exercise of righteousnesse whereby we give every man his due and do require of him what is our due from him for he conjoyneth the exercise of those two while he saith the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse 5. As the grace of sincerity and freedom from dissimulation and hypocrisie is a necessary ingredient in the exercise of all other vertues So our walking answerably unto
7. It maketh a man forget his former miseries Job 11. 16. it enlargeth his heart louseth his tongue and maketh him eloquent in setting forth the Lords praises Luk. 1. 67. 68. for he recommendeth unto them to be filled with the spirit as a remedy against their filling themselves with wine and calleth the one a filling or ebriety and drunkennesse to wit in a spiritual sense as well as the other in a bodily sense because of the likenesse of effects betwixt them Vers. 19. Speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymnes and spirituall songs singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord. THis last precept is illustrated and the duty enjoyned thereby recommended from two things wherein this fill of the spirit and of spirituall joy flowing from it should and will vent it self which he proponeth also in way of precept His scope wherein mainly is to teach them and us in them how we ought to carry our selves in our times of mirth and gladnesse The first of those two things is in this verse to wit melodious and artificiall singing of praises unto God where he expresseth first the act of singing in three words speaking singing and making melody By all which is meaned an intelligible artificiall and melodious tuning of the voice together with an answerable orderly motion of the understanding and affections within going along with the matter which is sung Secondly An inferiour and subordinate end to be aimed at in singing even our mutuall edification while he saith Speaking to your selves or one to another for it is the same word which is chap. 4. 32. and Col. 3. 16. Thirdly He expresseth the matter to be sung in three words the very titles which are given to David's Psalms and other scriptural Songs and though there be some difference among Interpreters about the kind of Songs which are expressed by every one of those in particular yet the most received and probable opinion is that by Psalms are meaned all holy Songs in generall of whatsoever argument whether they contain prayers praises complaints deprecations prophesie history or a purpose mixt of all those and by Hymnes are meaned speciall songs of praise to God and by songs a certain kind of Hymnes expressing the praises of God for some of His noble acts great and wonderfull beyond others And those Songs he calleth spirituall which epithet is to be extended to the Psalms and Hymnes also as being framed by the Spirit of God containing spirituall and heavenly purpose and requiring the assistance of God's Spirit and a spiritual frame of heart for singing them aright and this in opposition to the obscene filthy and fleshly songs of carnall men and drunkards And fourthly he sheweth the chief thing to be made use of and employed as an instrument in singing to wit not so much the lips tongue and outward voice though those be also necessary in singing Act. 16. 25. as the heart which then is made use of in singing when our heart goeth along with the voice so as we understand 1 Cor. 14. 15. and be intent upon the purpose Psal. 57. 7. and our affections be stirred and suitably affected with it Psal. 98. 4. And lastly he sheweth the great end to which all our songs ought to be directed even to the Lord the glorifying and praising of Him being not only the remote scope of singing as it is of all other ordinances and ought to be of all our actions 1 Cor. 10. 31. but its proper and immediate scope so that the heart in singing ought to be actually taken up with the thoughts of praise of God arising from the consideration of the purpose which we sing Besides what I have already observed upon a parallel place Col. 3. -16. Learn hence 1. The duty of singing Psalms and spirituall Songs is not astricted and limited to only one in the Congregation or to some certain orders of men the rest being silent but is enjoyned to all the Lords people even all the members of the Church for Paul maketh the command to sing of equal extent with that other of being filled with the spirit ver 18. Speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymnes c. saith he 2. That we may go about this worship of singing praises to God acceptably it is necessary that we be filled with the Spirit and have a rich and copious measure of His presence and assistance though not to compose new songs for he pointeth at scripturall Songs as the most fitting purpose to be sung under the titles of Psalms Hymnes and spirituall songs yet that we may be enabled to choose the fittest songs for the present occasion and sing them with such a spirituall elevated frame of heart as such a divine and heavenly piece of worship requireth for he saith be filled with the spirit speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymnes and spiritual songs 3. As even the children of God when they have gotten a full draught of joy peace and other sweet fruits of the Spirit of God are not above the hazard of venting their joy by falling out in fits of carnall lightnesse So there is nothing which the childe of God ought more to advert unto than how to carry aright when his cup is full according to his hearts wish and in order hereto would expresse his joy in the praises of God lest by doing otherwise and giving way to lightnesse of carriage or expressions in that case he provoke the Spirit of God to withdraw from him Eph. 4. 30. for therefore doth he command them being filled with the Spirit to vent their joy by speaking to one another in Psalms and Hymnes and spiritual songs 4. As the Lord hath provided Songs and Psalms to be sung by us of diverse arguments containing purpose suitable for every condition we can readily fall under So we ought to make such use of that variety as to make choice of those Psalms for our present singing which are most fit for the present occasion for as is said the titles here given do relate to the severall purposes which are set forth in spiritual songs all of which are to be sung as God by His present dealing with His Church or our selves shall require Speaking in Psalms and Hymnes and spirituall songs 5. In singing of Psalms to God there must be an inward harmony and musicall melody in the soul and heart as well as in the tongue yea the chief melody which soundeth most sweetly unto God is that of the soul and heart and therefore the outward delighting of the ears is to be taken no further notice of than it serveth to make the purpose we sing work the more effectually upon the heart for he saith singing and making melody in the heart what this melody of the heart is was shown in the exposition Vers. 20. Giving thanks alwayes for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. HEre is the second thing wherein our being filled with the Spirit should
and will vent it self even in giving of thanks or in a sensible acknowledgement of favours received and in expressing our sense of them whether by word or work to the praise of the bestower Which duty is amplified 1. from the time when it ought to be discharged alwayes and at all times not as if we were to be alwayes and without intermission in the actuall exercise of this duty of formall and direct thanksgiving seing there are other necessary duties which sometimes must divert us from it but because our whole life ought to be according to the will of God and consequently a reall expression of our thankfulnesse to Him and because we are not to omit any occasion when it offereth of formal and direct thanksgiving to God expressed in words flowing from the inward sense and feeling of our hearts as they are said to do a thing alwayes who do it upon all due occasions See 2 Sam. 9. 13. Secondly from the matter for which we are to give thanks for all things whether spirituall or temporall prosperous or adverse for God maketh all things even those which are adverse work together for the good of such as love Him Rom. 8. 28. yea He punisheth lesse than our iniquities deserve Ezra 9. 13. and maketh saddest corrections to afford most necessary and profitable instructions Psal. 94. 12. and 119. 71. so that there is ground of thanksgiving even for those Thirdly from the party to whom this duty is to be discharged unto God and the Father See upon Col. 3. ver 17. doct 3. And fourthly from the party through whom Jesus Christ by the vertue of whose merit and satisfaction which are His name whereby He is known we are not only inabled to go about our duty Philip. 4. 13. but also all our spiritual performances whether of prayer or thanksgiving are acceptable and well-pleasing unto God Eph. 1. 6. Doct. 1. The more a man doth find his heart disposed to give thanks to God at all times and for all things even for those things wherein divine dispensation goeth crosse to his own affections he may the more certainly conclude that he hath the saving work of Gods Spirit in him in a copious measure and the more apt we are to mistake repine and murmure at Gods dealing and so to wast our spirits in heartlesse complaints there is the lesse evidence of a gracious work of Gods Spirit in us at least in any great measure for he maketh giving of thanks alwayes for all things an effect of being filled with the Spirit 2. So firm so calm and composed is that man's state and inward frame of heart who hath his soul replenished with a rich measure of the saving work of Gods Spirit that nothing can fall out so crosse unto him but he may see the hand of God working for good to him in it and consequently be kept in perfect peace and a joyful frame of heart expressing it self in giving of thanks to God notwithstanding of it yea and for it for he sheweth the man filled with the Spirit may attain to this fixed frame of heart even to be giving thanks alwayes for all things unto God 3. Spiritual exercises especially that of giving thanks are such that being rightly gone about frequency in them doth not beget satiety and loathing but rather a greater delight to continue in them so that the more we are acquainted with them the more we love them for otherwise this command of giving thanks alwayes should never receive obedience 4. So steadable and usefull is a cheery and thankful frame of heart unto a Christian that it bringeth meat out of the eater encouragement from matter of discouragement and taketh occasion to lift it self up in the praises of God even from these things which are matter of down-casting and heartlesse drouping unto others for a thankful heart will give thanks alwayes and for all things even for adverse and crosse dispensations 5. Though we are bound to give thanks unto men for favours received as unto instruments of Gods good providence towards us Col. 3. -15. yet religious thanksgiving is only due unto God as implying an eying of Him to whom we give thanks as the supream fountain and author of the favour received having sufficiency in Himself and receiving nothing from any other 1 Chron. 29. 14. and implying also a religious subjection of the whole man both in soul and body unto his benefactour in evidence of a thankfull heart 1 Cor. 6. 20. for the Apostle speaking of this religious thanksgiving will have it ascribed to God only Giving thanks unto God and the Father 6. That we may imploy Jesus Christ aright whether for furniture and through-bearing in duty or for acceptation of our performances by God it is most conducing and necessary that we so take Him up as He is made known by the Word in His Person Nature and Offices and accordingly close with Him by faith as ours whereby our faith being acted in Him with relation to our state and persons upon undoubted grounds we may find more easie work to act faith in Him for furniture to such a particular duty or for acceptation to it when it is performed for Paul seemeth to imply so much while teaching them to act faith in Christ for through-bearing and acceptation in this duty of thanksgiving he doth hold Him forth not only under His titles of Lord and Jesus and Christ which do imply His distinct Natures with the unity of His Person and His threefold Office to which He was anoynted See upon chap. 1. ver 17. doct 6. but also maketh mention of His Name which expresseth whatever other thing is revealed of Him and whereby especially He is made known and withall appropriateth Christ unto himself teaching them to do the like upon grounds of knowledge of what He is while he saith in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Vers. 21. Submitting your selves one to another in the fear of God THe Apostle having from chap. 4. ver 1. exhorted unto such duties as belong to all Christians in general of whatsoever rank or station doth now in the second part of this Chapter exhort to those duties which belong to Christians as they are members of families And first in this verse to make way from the former purpose to that which followeth he doth premit a general exhortation unto all whether superiors or inferiors to be mutually subject one to another where submission or subjection is taken not strictly for that which is the root of obedience in inferiors towards superiors as ver 22. but generally for that service of love which every one oweth to another for their mutuall good and advantage in their severall stations See upon Gal. 5. ver 13. And it is called submission to our neighbour because it is not sufficient that we simply do the commanded dutie unto him except our so doing flow from a principle of love to him and that we actually intend therein his
good and advantage and because it must be done with condescendency of spirit and stouping seing our proud and lofty spirits do look upon every duty towards our neighbour as below them And he addeth in the fear of God which containeth 1. a motive to the duty this mutuall submission and stouping unto all those duties which we owe one to another being an evidence of a man's fearing God Gen. 42. 18. and 2. the right fountain from whence this submission should flow for then do we our duty towards others acceptably and as we ought when our so doing floweth from the fear and awe of God Col. 3. -22 and 3. the rule and measure of this submission there being none bound to submit himself to please his neighbour further than is consisting with that subjection and obedience which he oweth unto God Act. 5. 29. Doct. 1. We are not under pretence of going about the duties of Gods immediate worship to neglect those other duties of our particular callings and which we owe to man in our several stations God alloweth time for both we are to take time for both and conscientious regard of the one and of the other are most consistent for the Apostle enjoyneth both the former and latter sort of duties as it were with one breath which is clear from the grammatical construction of the words Giving thanks alwayes submitting your selvet one to another Yea secondly The consciencious discharging of those duties which we owe to our neighbour in our several stations in a way acceptable to God doth call for and argue a copious measure of the saving work of Gods Spirit in the heart no lesse than those other duties of Gods worship and service for this verse dependeth upon and is constructed with ver 18. Be filled with the Spirit submitting your selves 3. There are none living whom God alloweth to live only to themselves but all are bound to lay out themselves in their respective imployments for the good and behoof of others even superiors for the good of inferiors for this command is given to all without exception Submitting your selves one to another 4. As God hath tyed us not to live to our selves only but also to others whose good we are to aim at in our place and station So for a recompence and that there may be a kind of equality He hath tyed those others to live also unto us and one way or other to be forth-coming for our good and advantage for the command and obligation founded upon it is reciprocal Submitting your selves one to another 5. Where the fear of God is rooted in the heart it will make a man conscientiously carefull and tender of his duty towards man so that he will not only do his duty but also do it from a right principle and motive and so do as he will not overdo by displeasing God while he goeth about to please men for he holdeth forth the fear of God as the fountain motive and rule of that submission which is here enjoyned Submitting one to another in the fear of God Vers. 22. Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands as unto the Lord. THe Apostle cometh now to presse those particular duties which are incumbent to every member of a compleet Family And being to begin with the duties of husbands and wives he doth in the first place exhort wives to their dutie to wit that part of it which is peculiar to them passing-by those other duties which are common to them with their husbands as love Tit. 2. 4. Col. 3. 19. communion of body and goods 1 Cor. 7. 4. dwelling together 1 Pet. 3. 7 bearing mutually with one anothers infirmities Gal. 6. 2. These duties then peculiar to the wives are here briefly summed up in this one word of submission properly and strictly so called and it supposeth somewhat in the wife to wit a reverend esteem of her husband as the root of this submission spoken of ver 33. to be evidenced in her respective speaking to him and of him 1 Pet. 3. 6. and it expresseth somewhat to wit the obedience of the wife to her husband in things lawfull flowing from reverence and submission of mind 1 Pet. 3. 5 6. It implyeth also somewhat as consequentiall to that state of subjection wherein the wife is placed even the exercise of several vertues as that she be a keeper at home Tit. 2. 5. an active promotter of her husband's and her own affairs especially within doors Prov. 31. 13 c. that she evidence shamefastnesse sobriety and submission in her moderate speech in her grave and affable deportment and in rendering her self teachable in those things wherein she shall be instructed by her husband 1 Tim. 2. 9 10 11 12. Now this submission of the wives is explained first from the party to whom they owe it to wit their own husbands even though they should come short of others in knowledge wisdom and every other thing which doth deserve it 1 Sam. 25. 17. And 2. from the manner motive and rule of their submissive obedience while he saith as unto the Lord to wit Christ expresly spoken of ver 23. For 1. It must not be constrained and feigned but willing and sincere resembling so far at least that subjection which they owe to the Lord Christ for though the comparative particle as doth not hold forth an equality in all things yet it pointeth at a similitude and likenesse in some things 2. It must not flow from a natural principle only of law custome or desire of preventing domestick broyles but from conscience of duty to the Lord Christ and from respect to His ordinance who hath so appointed And thirdly it must be only in things lawfull and no wayes contrary to that submissive obedience which they owe to Him Doct. 1. As the right ordering of Families doth conduce much to the advancing of Religion and Policy combination in Families being the foundation of all other societies So the good and orderly conversation of husband and wife is of great concernment for advancing piety and godlinesse among all the other members of the Family for as the Apostle presseth much those duties which belong to Christians as they are members of Families so he doth begin with the duties of husband and wife Wives submit your selves 2. When we are to deal with persons of several estates and conditions and to inform and presse upon them their respective duties we are to begin with the inferiours rather than the superiours because their duty through the subjection which is in it is more difficile and being made conscience of is a strong motive unto the Superiour to go about his dutie in like manner for therefore the Apostle in pressing duties upon those three pairs which are in every compleat Family doth alwayes begin with the inferiour first as here Wives submit your selves 3. The great and main duty which a wife as a wife ought to learn and so learn as to practise it is to be
so far as the strict union which is between married parties is there alluded unto Upon all which causes or rather one and the same cause expressed in all those places that law doth declare first That the man is to leave father and mother to wit not by casting off naturall affection to his parents Gen. 44. 34. or by refusing to help them in their strait 1. Tim. 5. 4. but by loving his wife more than them and by leaving his fathers family if he his wife and they cannot live all together and by joyning in a new family with his wife Gen. 28. 5. as is further cleared by the second thing here declared to wit that he ought to be joyned inseperably to his wife and that both in affection Prov. 5. 19. and cohabitation dwelling with her 1 Pet. 3. 7. The word in the original doth signifie such a joyning as that of two boards of timber firmly glued together not as if a man were to reside constantly at home for the Merchant the Lawyer and men of other imployments also must some times go abroad Prov. 7. 19 20. But his fixed dwelling should be with her and his presence also so far as his necessary calling shall permit so that he is not without necessity to be absent from his own home Prov. 5. -19. And thirdly this law declareth that they two shall be one flesh which implyeth first a most strict union so that they cannot be separated except in the case of adultery Matth. 19. 9 and wilfull desertion of the one party persisted in after all meanes used to the contrary 1 Cor. 7. 15 more than a piece of a mans body may be cut off from the rest And secondly a most intimate communion whereby they have common goods common friends yea and all things common as if they were but one person And thirdly the lawfull and sanctified use of the marriage-bed allowed unto them of God which out of the case of marriage is sinfull and damnable 1 Cor. 6. 16. Heb. 13. 4. But for further clearing of the words know that beside their literal and historical sense God intended that the purpose contained in them concerning the carnal marriage of man and woman should represent and shadow forth somewhat of Christ and of that spirituall marriage between Christ and the Church as appeareth from the situation of the words immediatly after ver 30. which doth evidently speak of Christ as is already shown and before verse 32. where he declareth that the purpose in hand is a mysterie and to be understood of Christ and the Church now the purpose here expressed doth hold in Christ by analogie and proportion in so far as Christ did leave His Father by laying aside the glory which He had with Him Joh. 16. 28. and taking on the form of a servant Philip. 2. 8. and did leave His mother Mary also and her house and family Luke 2. 49. that He might purchase a bride unto Himself See ver 25. 26. to whom He doth cleave inseparably Rom. 8. 35. and with most tender affection Heb. 4. 15. by vertue of which spiritual marriage Christ and Believers become though not one flesh yet one spirit 1 Cor. 6. 17. being most strictly tyed together by His Spirit and the grace of faith from which conjunction Believers so espoused become fruitfull in good works and do bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7. 4. From the literal sense of this verse Learn 1. The love of married parties ought to be very great and second to no love else but that which we owe to God for even the love we owe to parents from whom we have our being ought to give place unto it A man shall leave father and mother saith he and be joyned unto his wife 2. It is lawfull and allowed of God unto all persons of all ranks being come to mature age 1 Cor. 7. 36 and especially to those who have not the gift of continency 1 Cor. 7. 9. to enter the married state of life only if they marry in the Lord 1 Cor. 7. -39. and therefore the doctrine forbidding marriage to all those who bear office in the Church is the doctrine of devils 1 Tim. 4. 1 3. for the text speaketh of all men indifferently A man shall leave father and mother and be joyned to his wife 3. Divine commands are alwayes founded upon most just reasons which would be eyed by us that so our obedience may be more willing and chearfull yea a piece of reasonable service unto God Rom. 12. 1. for this command given here unto husbands to cleave unto their wives is not nakedly propounded but with a strong reason annexed for inforcing the duty enjoyned by it For this cause saith he shall a man be joyned unto his wife 4. As children are not to remain alwayes childish but being come to age and understanding ought to bestir themselves in providing things necessary and honest according as the station wherein they are placed by God shall require So parents ought to remit somewhat of their fatherly authority over their children as they grow in age and understanding not expecting nor requiring that children now come to age should absolutely and in all things as formerly depend upon the counsell and direction of parents or give themselves wholly to minde their concernments neglecting every other thing else which may concern themselves for this Law supponeth a state of childehood wherein children are to be wholly under the authority of parents minding their concernments and at their direction and that their coming to age and entering the married state of life doth give them more liberty to follow their own direction and to do for themselves a man shall leave father and mother and be joyned to his wife 5. Whatever hath been the corrupt custome of men to the contrary Gen. 4. 19. Yet according to the first institution of marriage only two one man and one woman and not moe either of the one sexe or the other may be lawfully married together at once for the law saith a man shall be joyned to his wife not to his wives and they two not they three or four shall be one flesh From the mysticall application of the words and of the purpose comprehended in them Learn 1. So great a depth is Scripture that in some parcels thereof which do appear most plain and easie to be understood many dark and hid mysteries do lye undiscovered for under this plain history of the marriage of our first parents that great mysterie of the spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church was also held forth as the Apostle doth here make clear For this cause shall a man leave father and mother See further to this purpose upon Gal. 4. ver 24. doct 1 2. Doct. 2. So holy and honourable is the ordinance of marriage in it self and so highly ought it to be esteemed of by us that God maketh use of it to shadow forth that blessed union and most holy communion
which is betwixt Christ and His Church for what was spoken historically of marriage is here applied mystically to Christ For this cause shall a man leave c. 3. As the Church of true Believers is the Bride the Lambs wife espoused already to Christ So never any man did more to purchase a Bride to himself than Christ hath done for His. He laid aside the glory which He had with the Father and became of no reputation as was mystically foretold in this history of the first marriage A man shall leave his father and mother 4. The great travel and trouble which Christ was put to for purchasing a Bride unto Himself doth not make Him regard her the lesse now when He hath her for He doth inseparably cleave unto her with most ardent and exemplary affection as was also mystically foretold And shall be joyned to his wife Vers. 32. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church THe Apostle concludeth this purpose concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church here made use of to illustrate that near conjunction betwixt husband and wife with an observable acclamation that it is a great mysterie which word as it is usually taken in Scripture doth signifie a thing secret not obvious to every understanding and hid either in it self or in its cause and reason whether it be held out in plain terms or under the vail of some external sign or figure to represent it See 1 Tim. 3. 16. Eph. 3. 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. Rom. 11. 25. 2 Thess. 2. 7. And lest by reason of his speaking all alongs of the bodily marriage betwixt husband and wife any had so far mistaken him as to think he called that a mysterie therefore he explaineth himself by shewing he was to be understood not of the bodily marriage but of the spiritual or that strict union or conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church Now he calleth this union a great mysterie because it is a thing hid in it self before it be revealed 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. yea and after it remaineth unsearchable by the light of reason how Christ now glorified in heaven can be one with us on earth and can only be acknowledged by faith Heb. 11. 1. Beside the bonds of this blessed union and conjunction are not naturall or bodily but spirituall even the Spirit of Christ Eph. 2. 18. and the grace of faith Eph. 3. 17. and therefore though the conjunction following upon these bonds be real Joh. 17. 21. operative Joh. 15. 5. and indissoluble Joh. 10. 28 29. yet the way of it is wholly spirituall and heavenly and consequently not so much to be searched into by reason what or how it is as to be believed that it is and improved for attaining and finding in our selves those blessed effects which do attend it where it is Doct. 1. That Papists have not ground from this place to make marriage a Sacrament properly so called is clear from the Apostle's own commentary whereby he sheweth by the mysterie here spoken of he doth not understand the bodily marriage but the spiritual beside that the word mysterie as we shew in the use of Scripture doth signifie a sacred secret not obvious to ordinary capacity and therefore every mysterie is not a Sacrament See 2 Thess. 2. 7. Rom. 11. 25. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church 2. The more a man doth attain to know of this mysterie of the mystical union and conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church the more he will be ravished with admiration at the unsearchable deepnesse and profundity of it so far will he be from thinking himself able sufficiently to comprehend it for even Paul who saw as far in this mysterie as any other Eph. 3. 4. doth stand admire and cry This is a great mysterie 3. As Ministers are bound to set forth to the Lords People that most near and blessed union betwixt Christ and believing souls and to presse upon them the study of the knowledge of it So both Pastors and People have need of much sobriety of spirit in diving into this subject not trusting to the quicknesse of their own wit nor judging of it by natural reason but resting upon what God hath revealed and made known concerning it and choosing rather to remain ignorant where he hath not revealed than curiously to search and pry further than is revealed for Paul while he is instructing them in this subject seeth it necessary to minde them of the profoundnesse of it this is a great mysterie 4. As we are ready through ignorance or inadvertence to mistake the right meaning and sense of Scripture So the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath carefully guarded against all such mistakes while he doth clear the right and genuine sense of a doubt some and dark Scripture by Scripture it self either in the same place or another for so doth Paul here while to obviate a possible mistake he saith But I speak concerning Christ and the Church Vers. 33. Neverthelesse let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself and the wife see that she reverence her husband HE doth here by way of diversion from dipping further at this time in that spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church exhort both husband and wife to learn from that forementioned law of marriage a short sum of their respective duties and first that every husband without exception or admitting any excuse would love his wife as himself that is seing she is a piece of himself as ver 28. otherwise if the particle as were only a note of similitude comparing different things and making a mans love unto himself the rule of his love unto his wife Then every man's neighbours should be equally loved with his wife for every man is to love his neighbour as himself in that sense Gal. 5. 14. And secondly he enjoyneth the wife that she reverence or as the word signifieth from love do fear her husband the meaning whereof is that she inwardly acknowledge that degree of honour which God hath put upon him 1 Cor. 11. 3. and give evident testimony of her inward esteem in words 1 Pet. 3. 6. actions and whole carriage and especially in her loathnesse to offend him 1 Pet. 3. 2. Doct. 1. Though there be some latent mysteries intended by the Spirit of God to be set forth by some plain histories recorded in Scripture besides their historicall and literall sense yet we are not upon that pretence to turn the whole Scripture into an allegory as if no more were intended in those Scriptures by the Spirit of God but only to set forth the spirituall mysterie We ought to look upon the historicall and literall sense of them also and mainly and make such use of them as being so taken they will afford for Paul having shown the mystical and allegorical use of Adam's words doth divert from that
thing hoped for being put for hope as the Apostle explaineth himself 1 Thes. 5. 8. which hope is a grace whereby we patiently expect salvation both temporal Psal. 62. 1. and eternal Titus 1. 2. but chiefly the latter according to the promise apprehended by faith and it answereth the part of the bodily armour called the helmet or head-piece which being the highest piece of all the rest did defend the head and face and was so composed as to make the souldier of dreadfull appearance unto his enemies In like manner this grace of wel-grounded hope doth lift the heart upwards Psal. 16. 9. keepeth the head safe and above water so that the Christian sinketh not 2 Cor. 4. 16. Rom. 5. 3. 4. and bringeth him to so high a pitch of Christian courage as maketh him formidable to his adversary 1 Sam. 17. 45 46. The sixth piece of armour is the written Word of God which answereth that part of the bodily armour called the sword whereby the souldier useth both to defend himself and wound the enemy In like manner the Word of God laid up in the heart and made use of pertinently by the Christian souldier hath somewhat in it to ward off the blow of every tentation Matth. 4. 4 7 10. and maketh Satan retire as one ashamed and wounded Matth. 4. 10 11. and it is here called the sword of the Spirit because the Spirit of God hath revealed this Word 2 Pet. 1. 21 it worketh powerfully upon the spirits of men Heb. 4. 12. and its efficacy in working dependeth on the Spirit 2 Cor. 10. 4. Doct. 1. Though believers have heaven and salvation already in right and by promise Joh. 3. 36 yet the Lord for good and wise reasons seeth it necessary to delay the performance and not to give them present possession upon their right for if there were present possession given there would be no need of this grace of hope wherby the believer doth patiently expect salvation promised and take the helmet of salvation or of the hope of salvation 2 The sincere believer during the time of the not performance of promised salvation may cast his accompt to meet with many sore assaults and sad stroaks from manifold tentations upon all hands for what need of an helmet if there be not appearance of blows and take the helmet of salvation 3. A wel-grounded hope of salvation according to the promise is another necessary piece of the Christians armour without the which he is deprived of one strong motive and encouragement to the work of sanctification in generall 1 Joh. 3. 3. exposed and laid open to several deadly blows and dangerous tentations from Satan and more especially to immoderate grief for the death of near relations 1 Thes. 4. 13. to the evil of covetousness and of placeing our portion and happiness in this life as knowing nothing of a better Psal. 17. 14. with 15. to the evils of fainting discouragement and dispaire arising from delayed performance of what is promised Prov. 13. 12. from hard sufferings and persecutions for the Gospel 2 Cor. 4. 16. with 18. and from the fear of approaching death the king of terrours Prov. 14. 32. for the Apostle commandeth the Christian souldier to arm himself with this grace of hope and take the helmet of salvation 4. Though this saving grace of hope be stronger and weaker in several Christians according as it hath more or less of a mixture of contrary diffidence Rom. 4. 18. and though the meanest degree of hope doth serve for good purpose to defend the Christian in some measure against the forementioned tentations Rom. 5. 5 yet it is the Christian souldier 's duty in order to his better guarding against those deadly blows to aim at no less than a full assurance of hope even such as maketh him no less diffident to obtain salvation promised than if he had it in hand for it seemeth the Apostle expresseth the grace of hope by salvation the object of it to shew their hope should be as much fixed as if they had salvation it self already in possession and take the helmet of salvation 5. The Christian souldier is not alwayes and only to be upon the defending hand nor to think it enough to keep his sinfull evils from prevailing further and growing stronger but he must also endeavour to pursue them weaken them and not to think himself exonered untill he fully subdue them for the Spirit of God injoyneth the Christian souldier to make use not only of defensive armour to guard himself but of offensive also to pursue and kill the enemy of which sort is the sword in bodily wars and the sword of the Spirit 6. Acquaintance with the Lords written Word together with a dexterous usemaking of it is another necessary piece of the Christian his armour without the which he cannot choose but he exposed to several dangerous blows and deadly tentations seing he can neither know sin to be sin Rom. 7. 7. nor the right way of resisting sin or of discharging duty Psal. 119. 9. and bearing afflictions with Christian courage and patience Matth. 5. 39. but by the word besides that the timous calling to mind of a word in Scripture forbidding and threatening such an evil pressing the practice of such a duty and speaking incouragement and comfort to the soul exercised with such a cross is often blessed of God to break the strength of the tentation which inciteth to it Matth. 4. 10 11. to furnish the heart with resolution and strength for duty Psal. 119. 50. and with Christian courage under the cross Psal. 119. 92. for he commandeth the Christian souldier to arm himself with the knowledge of and acquaintance with the Word of God and the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God 7. As it is the only vertue and power of Gods Spirit which enliveneth the Word and maketh it effectual So it is only the Word of God and no humane inventions or magical charmes with which the Spirit of God doth joyn His power and efficacy to resist and drive away the devil for therefore he calleth the Word the sword of the Spirit and expoundeth it to be no other word but the Word of God Verse 18. Praying alwayes with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints HEre is a seventh piece of this armour or rather a duty the practizing whereof is injoyned by God as a mean for obtaining all those forementioned pieces of the spiritual armour from Him together with the right use-making of them against the enemy and the Lords successfull blessing thereupon This mean is the duty of prayer whereby we offer up our desires to God Psal 62. 8. for things agreeable to His will 1 Joh. 5. 14. in the name of Christ Joh. 16. 23. with confession of our sins Psal. 32. 5. 6. and thankfull acknowledgement of His mercies Philip. 4. 6. Which duty is injoyned not simply
mankind to shew his falling in sin is rather to be pitied than made a wonder of and withall transferreth the guilt of the sin in a great measure from the person himself to the subtilty of Satan and violence of the tentation by which he was surprized and overtaken every one whereof doth doth serve as a motive unto that pity and meeknesse unto which he exhorteth Brethren if a man be overtaken in a fault saith he 4. Though those who are so maliciously obstinate in sin that lenity and meeknesse prevaileth nothing in order to their reclaiming are to be used with more severity and rigor 1 Cor. 4. 21. Yet others concerning whom we have not ground in charity so to judge but rather that they are surprized by the violence of some prevalent tentation ought to be more gently dealt with for they are only such whom the Apostle will have to be used with a spirit of meeknesse If a man be overtaken in a fault restore such an one c. 5. So subtil and assiduous is Satan in tempting 1 Pet. 5. 8. So ready is corruption in us to close with a tentation so soon as it is presented Eph. 2. 2. that if the childe of God be not all the more circumspect and diligent Mat. 26. 41. he cannot choose but be surprized as it were unawares by some one sin or other and be thereby made to dishonour God and to lay a stumbling-block before others for Paul supposeth it as a thing incident unto all men to be thus surprized while he saith If a man be overtaken in a fault 6. Though it be the duty of all men to endeavour the reclaiming of those who are lying under un-repented guiltinesse for the Command is given unto all Lev. 19. 17. yet the more holy men are and the further they have advanced in the wayes of piety they are the more obliged to go about this duty chiefly because they are in a better capacity to discharge it as being lesse tainted with sin than others and so having more freedom to reprove as also being more knowing how to go wisely about that difficile duty and more willing to perform it than others whose knowledge and love to God's glory and their neighbours good cometh short of theirs for the Apostle directeth this exhortation mainly to such as had received a greater measure of grace than others Ye which are spiritual restore such an one 7. The greater store of graces and gifts a man hath received he standeth the more obliged to lay out himself and all his receipts for the spiritual good and edification of others providing alwayes he move in his own sphere and transgress not the bounds of his calling Heb. 5. 4. for Paul layeth this task of restoring the backsliden Christian chiefly upon those who had received a greater measure of grace and spiritual enduements than others Ye which are spiritual restore such an one 8. As scandalous sins and erroneous opinions being fallen into by a childe of God do mar that orderly frame of the inward man which he did before enjoy wasting the conscience and eating out the edge of all his former tendernesse 1 Pet. 2. -11. So the person who hath fallen in such sins doth ordinarily prove backward to be reclaimed and very ticklish to be medled with by others for that end as a man who hath a bone dis-joynted can hardly endure to have it touched The word rendred restore such an one doth bear so much as signifying to set in joynt the dislocated members of the body So that sin putteth the soul as it were out of joynt 9. As it is the duty of all and especially of those who are spiritual to endeavour the reclaiming of any who are so fallen by admonition Mat. 18. 15. reproof Lev. 19. 17. prayer to God on their behalf Iam. 5. 14 15. all which and other means in order to the same end are to be gone about by private Christians by vertue of that ty which christian charity and their mutual relation one to another arising from their being members of one body do lay on and by publick Ministers and Church-guides by vertue of that authority wherewith Christ the King of the Church hath invested them Eph. 4. 11 12. So in the use of all these means every one is to carry himself with much skill and tendernesse if he would attain the proposed end for saith he Ye who are spiritual restore such an one or set him in joynt again It is a phrase borrowed from Chirurgians who being to deal with a dis-joynted bone will handle the same with skill and tendernesse 10. The grace of meeknesse whereby we moderate inordinate anger and speedily represse revengeful passions before they come to any great height Eph. 4 26. as it is the work of Gods Spirit in us so the exercise of it is most necessary towards those who are fallen and that all the means we use in order to their reclaiming be seasoned therewith as being in nothing transported with the fury of rage and passion but only acted with zeal to God love to the person fallen and with sanctified reason for thereby we evidence we are seeking the recovery of our brother and not insulting over him we are labouring to help him and not seeking to disgrace him for saith he Restore such an one in the spirit of meeknesse or in meeknesse whereof God's Spirit is the author 11. There is no man no not the most spiritual who can promise unto himself immunity from being set upon with strong tentations unto grosse and scandalous evils or that he shall stand when he is tempted if he be left of God under the tentation for he biddeth even the spiritual man consider himself lest he also be tempted whereby he holdeth forth not only a possibility that the spiritual man may be tempted but also of his yeelding to the tentation when it should be presented otherwise the argument had not been of such strength to inforce upon him the exercise of meeknesse towards those who are overtaken in a fault 12. As those who do most rigidly and uncharitably censure the faults of others are usually greatest strangers to their own hearts and very little sensible of their own infirmities So the serious consideration of our own weaknesse and how the root of our neighbours sin and of all other sin is in us Rom. 3. v. 10 to 20. how we stand by grace Psal. 94. 18. and how if God would suffer the tempter to break loose upon us we should so much exceed the sins of others as they exceed ours The serious consideration I say of all those though it should not bind us wholly up from reproving sin in others yet it should cause us exceedingly to mix and temper our severity towards their sin with the exercise of meeknesse pity and compassion towards their person for the Apostle to inforce the former exhortation of restoring their fallen brother in the spirit of meeknesse doth enjoyn consider thy self
lest thou also be tempted 13. So prone are we to entertain good thoughts of our selves that it is a matter of no small difficulty to make a man reflect upon himself and enter upon a serious consideration of his own frailty and weaknesse and of every other thing which may keep him low in his own eyes without insulting over or despising of others as appeareth from Paul's changing of the number for having said Ye who are spiritual restore c. in the plural number here he saith considering thy self lest thou also c. in the singular which he doth to give the greater force and sharper edge to his admonition as knowing he was pressing a duty which very hardly and not without difficulty would be obeyed Vers. 2. Bear ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ. THe Apostle first enlargeth the former exhortation both as to the persons exhorted for now he exhorteth not only those who are spiritual but all of them And also as to the duty exhorted unto which is extended not only to an endeavour of reclaiming those who were overtaken in a fault but also to the tolerating and bearing patiently with the sins and infirmities of others untill they be amended and the sinner reclaimed which sins are designed by the name of a burden partly because some such sins are a burden and weight to the sinner himself either by reason of his grief and sorrow for them if he be a penitent Act. 2. 37. or by reason of that vexation and trouble which some sins as wrath malice and envie do bring to the natural spirits even of the impenitent sinner Job 5. 2. Prov. 14. 30. And partly because some such sins though not felt by the sinner himself are yet heavy burdens unto those who converse with him as his curiosity back-biting self-seeking and such like Prov. 16. 28. Secondly he inforceth the exhortation thus enlarged by a second argument to wit That hereby they did fulfill the Law or command of mutual love which he calleth the Law of Christ not as if love to our neighbour had not been enjoyned before Christ came in the flesh for it is a prime piece of the Law of Nature imprinted upon the heart of man at the Creation and was renewed again by God Himself upon mount Sinai 1 Joh. 2. 7. But because first Christ did renew this Command not only by freeing it from the false glosses and interpretations of Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 5. 23 c. but also by pressing it in its spiritual beauty and nature having laid aside and abolished the external cover of Mosaical Ceremonies Eph. 2. 15. under which it was vailed 1 Cor. 9. 9 10. In which respect mainly it is here called the Law of Christ in opposition to the false Apostles who pressed so much the Mosaical Law of Ceremonies And secondly because Christ did presse this Law so renewed in a singular manner upon His followers as a mark of true faith in Him Joh. 13. 35. And thirdly because Christ did fulfill this Law in His own person and thereby left an example of it unto us 1 Joh. 3. 16. Doct. 1. As there are none free of sinful infirmities which are burdensom sometimes to themselves and frequently unto others So we ought not to break the bond of common society which we are otherwayes tyed unto because of those but are to persist in it patiently bearing those infirmities which we cannot otherwayes help for saith he Bear ye one anothers burdens 2. This duty of bearing with the infirmities of others doth well consist with the use of such lawfull means as God hath prescribed whether to the Magistrate for restraining sin by punishing those who do evil Rom. 13. -4. or to Ministers and private Christians in order to the sinner's reclaiming by admonition reproof and such like for this duty of bearing one anothers burdens must agree with and cannot be contrary unto that other duty prescribed v. 1. which is to restore the sinner unto that state wherein he was so far must we be from giving him countenance or partaking with him in his sins 3. A compassionate frame of spirit made evident by our meek and patient deportment towards those who are overtaken in a fault without neglecting any duty we owe unto them doth afford the guilty sinner no small ease under his weighty exercise and tendeth much both to his preservation from fainting under heartlesse discouragement if his conscience be touched with the sense of his guilt and to carry on the work of his conviction and amendment if he be yet going on securely in his sin for the Apostle having exhorted to such a meek and patient deportment towards those who are overtaken in a fault he calleth it here a bearing of their burden or an affording of help to them under it Bear ye one anothers burdens 4. There is no such evidence of love to our neighbour as when it kytheth in our serious endeavours for bringing about his spiritual good and in taking the most effectual condescending and affectionate way in order to his reclaiming from sin together with our supporting of him and sympathizing with him under his spirituall weights for the Apostle calleth this a fulfilling of the Law of Christ or of mutual love as if that Law did call for this only And so fulfill the Law of Christ saith he 5. In what sense and measure the childe of God doth attain to evidence his love to his fallen brother by his serious endeavours to restore him unto the enjoyment of God's favour and to an holy and blamelesse conversation and by his bearing with him under his infirmities in order to his recovery in that same sense and measure he attaineth to fulfill the Law whence it followeth because he is not able to do the former perfectly and so as to come short in nothing for matter or manner Iam. 3. 2. but only sincerely and without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. therefore neither can he keep the Law perfectly but only in sincerity and in his honest aim and endeavour Psal. 119. 6. for saith he Bear ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ. Vers. 3. For if a man think himself to be something when he is nothing he deceiveth himself THe Apostle in further prosecution of the former exhortation doth fall upon the sin of self-conceit and arrogancy which causeth men contemn others and carry themselves with a kind of supercilious disdain towards such as are overtaken in a fault contrary to what he had exhorted them unto ver 1 2. And first he tacitly dehorteth them from this vice by shewing the man who is puffed up with a conceit of his own enduements above others and to the despising of others being compared with himself doth deceive himself and maketh his own mind to erre in passing judgment of himself as the word doth signifie and giveth a reason of this assertion because every man even the best is nothing as having no good