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A55302 Christus in corde, or, The mystical union between Christ and believers considered in its resemblances, bonds, seals, priviledges and marks by Edward Polhil ..., Esq. Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694? 1680 (1680) Wing P2751; ESTC R3312 145,980 330

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might unite us to him being God-man in one Person that the same Spirit which sanctified his humane nature might sanctifie us members of him It may yet further be observed that that very Spirit which as St. Austin speaks Spiritus Sanctus ineffabilis est quaedam Patris Filiique communio Aust de Trin. lib. 5. cap. 11. Insinuatur nobis in Patre authoritas in Filio nativitas in Spiritu Sancto Patris Filiique communitas in tribus aequalitas quod ergò commune est Patri Filio per hoc nos voluerunt babere communionem inter nos secum per illud donum nos colligere in unun quod ambo habent unum hoc est per Spiritum Sanctum Deum Dei donum Aust de Verb. Domini in Math. Ser. 11. is the communion of the Father and the Son doth unite us to Christ If we put all together we shall see the Spirit to be a most excellent bond In the Trinity it is the communion of the Father and the Son in Christ it is that which united the two natures and sanctified the humane in us it is that which unites us to Christ This is the primary Bond between Christ and Believers Touching this bond it is first to be noted that in Scripture not only the graces of the Spirit but the Spirit it self is said to be communicated to Believers To quote some places for this The love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Rom. 5.5 He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you Rom. 8.11 As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sons of God verse 14. The spirit it self beareth witness with our spirit that we are the children of God verse 16. Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you 1 Cor. 6.19 God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 In these Texts two things may be observed The one is this the Spirit it self is meant it is the Spirit it self which sheds abroad the love of God in the heart which quickens the mortal body which leads the sons of God which beareth witness with our spirit the Text is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Spirit it self in express terms it is also the Spirit it self which hath a Temple in us which makes us cry Abba Father The other is this The Spirit it self is communicated it is given to us it dwelleth in us it leads and acts us it bears witness with our spirit it is in us as in its Temple it is sent forth into our hearts all which do import communication Also we may note as much in that Apostolical Prayer The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the Holy Ghost be with you all Amen 2 Cor. 13.14 Here are all the persons in the Sacred Trinity named here the Holy Ghost must needs be the Spirit it self none other but he is capable of being ranked with the Father and the Son yet there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a communication of him Also we may gather the same thing from the Promises of the Spirit made by our Saviour in the 14 15 16 Chapters of St. John there it is the Spirit it self which is promised it is the comforter the spirit of truth it is that spirit which proceedeth from the Father which teacheth all things and bringeth all things to remembrance which convinceth of sin and glorifies Christ which takes the things of Christ and shews them unto men all which shew that it is the Spirit it self Also there it is promised to be communicated it was to be sent to them to guide them into all truth to dwell in them to be in them to abide with them for ever all which do shew a communication of it When the Greeks erroneously held That the Spirit did proceed not from the Father and the Son but from the Father only one argument used against them was this If the Spirit was sent from the Father and the Son then it did proceed from both To this the Greeks replied That this sending meerly concerned the gifts of the Spirit not himself but this is directly contrary to the scope of those chapters in St. John if the Spirit be sent meerly because we have his gifts then the Father which we no where read may be said to be sent because we have his gifts when the Scripture saith that the Son was sent it was himself not meerly his benefits in like manner when it saith that the Spirit is sent it is himself not meerly his gifts I may here add somewhat out of the Fathers Ignatius tells them that they were blessed being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epist ad Ephes such as carried God the Spirit a Temple within them St. Ambrose saith that the Holy Spirit dwells in us as in his Temple Non quasi Minister De Spir. Sancto lib. 3.13 sed quasi Deus inhabitat he dwells in us not as a Minister but as a God St. Austin speaking of the gift of the Spirit saith De fide sym cap. 9. that God doth not give seipso inferius donum a gift less than himself And again Euch. cap. 37. that the Spirit is donum aequale donanti a gift equal to the giver And in another place That the Spirit seipsum dat sicut Deus De Trin. lib. 15. cap. 19. In Oct. Pasc Serm. 1. gives himself as God St. Bernard hath this passage Est enim Spiritus ipse indissolubile vinculum Trinitatis per quem sicut pater filius unum sunt sic nos unum sumus in ipsis the Spirit it self is that indissoluble bond by which as the Father and the Son are one so also are we one in them I might add much more out of the Schoolmen but this may suffice It seems by these things to be clear that the Spirit it self is communicated to Believers neverthelss it is a Quaere how or in what sense the Spirit it self is communicated to them In answer to this I shall first take notice of three memorable expressions in Scripture That is the sending of the Spirit the giving of the Spirit the dwelling or inhabiting of the Spirit in us The first expression is the sending of the Spirit It may seem strange that an Almighty Alwise Alpresent Spirit should be sent but this mission is not per imperium as from one more potent than himself commanding him he is as high in power and majesty as the other two persons are it is not per consilium as from one more wise than himself counselling him he is one of the Domus judicii as some Rabbins call the Trinity one of the Three who fit in counsel together in Heaven Here is no local motion which cannot be
poor weak creatures without are temptations within corruptions yet they stand there is but a little Oyl in the Cruse a small stock of grace in the heart yet it fails not they have many wants yet never become bankrupt This tells us that they are not alone but in union with Christ they are what Angels and Adam in innocency were not joyned to a Mediator mighty to save Weakness here is in conjunction with Power Power is made perfect in weakness there is in them one greater than he that is in the world nay than the corruption in the heart their little stock of grace depends upon infinite treasures their many wants are supplied out of infinite fulness this preservation declares union Again Believers are preserved as Temples of God and this shews Inhabitation they are in the midst of winds storms temptations corruptions wants weaknesses yet they fall not This tells us that God hath a Temple in them the Inhabitant bears them up he is in the midst of them they shall not be moved his eyes and his heart are upon them to protect them he will not suffer his habitation to be blown down in a storm or to be undermined by Sin and Satan or to run to ruine through want or weakness This preservation declares Inhabitation The last Operation of the Spirit in Believers is this He seals up Believers he witnesses their adoption he sheds abroad the Love of God in their hearts I instance in this not that it is so in all Believers but that it is so in some As touching this Operation these favours are afforded to Believers either as Members of Christ and this imports union or as Temples of the Holy Ghost and this imports Inhabitation These favours are afforded to them as Members of Christ and this imports union After that ye believed ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise Eph. 1.13 First there is Faith and then Sealing First men are Members of Christ and then they are irradiated with the beams of divine Favour there are great favours promised to Gods People he dwells in the humble he is seen in the pure heart his secret is with them that fear him his countenance doth behold the upright but all these favours are communicated to them as Members of Christ It 's true the Graces to which these promises are made are in their own nature and intrinsecal goodness grateful and acceptable unto God but because they are defective and dwelling under the same roof with inherent corruption which taints and soils them in their going forth into act therefore they are favoured and accepted in us as being members of Christ and having an interest in his glorious satisfaction which is able to cover all our spots and imperfections it is Christ that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Article is doubled that Son that beloved in whom the Father is infinitely pleased we are beloved only as parts of him Again These favours are afforded to them as Temples of the Holy Ghost and this imports Inhabitation In the outward Temple God did make himself known much more doth he do so in the inward Sanctuary I mean in a pure heart there he sheds abroad his Love and le ts out his Glory there he dwells and walks as in a place of pleasure and delight Thus much touching the other Bond of Union viz. the Holy Spirit To shut up this Chapter the order of things touching this union stands thus It was the great design of God to raise up a Church to himself out of the ruines of the fall his heart was more set upon this than upon all the world besides To promote this the Son of God leaves his Fathers bosom and comes down into our flesh in it he satisfied Justice and merited to have a body gathered in and anointed with that Holy Spirit which operated in the uniting and sanctifying of his own humane nature Upon account of this satisfaction and merit the Holy Spirit comes down and not only proposes the Gospel to men but operates in them first Faith the grace of Union and then in a second instant of nature all other graces which may make them meet Members of Christ and Temples of the Holy Ghost And after this is done he carries on the work by continual influences upon Believers quickning and preserving their Graces dwelling in them and manifesting himself to them CHAP. VII The Seals of the mystical Vnion are Baptism and the Lords Supper Baptism is a Seal of Vnion not to all but to Believers Some Infants are in their infancy in union with Christ some come to it afterwards some never attain to it The Lords Supper is a Seal to confirm and exhibit Christ to us The presence of Christ in the Eucharist is not a corporal one The Bread and Wine are not as the Papists say turned into his Body and Blood His Body and Blood are not as the Lutherans say in with and under the Bread and Wine The presence of Christ is Spiritual He is present objectively to our Faith and virtually in the communicated Spirit Also the eating of Christ is not oral but spiritual HAving treated of the bonds of this Union I now proceed to the Seals of it Baptism and the Lords Supper Baptism is the Sacrament of Initiation the Supper is the Sacrament of Nutrition Baptism is the first entrance into Gods Family the Supper is the spiritual Banquet unto which the baptized after washing pass to feed upon Christ there both of them are Seals of union with him Baptism is not as the Socinians would have it to be a nude rite but an obsignative one it is not a meer picture of spiritual Grace but a Seal of it Circumcision was a seal of the righteousness of Faith Baptism which succeeds in the room of it can be no less 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nazian In man there is a body and a soul to answer both there is in Baptism an outward part and an inward one the outward part is water which cleanses the body the inward part is Christ who by his Blood and Spirit cleanses the Soul in both cleansings union is requisite Water unless applied cleanses not the Body Christ unless applied cleanses not the Soul Where Baptism is in the right use there is a seal of union with Christ who communicates the spiritual cleansing to those who are in him as parts of his mystical body Hence are those Phrases in Scripture touching baptized persons they are baptized into Christ Rom. 6.3 So united to him as to be in him they are baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 So united to him as to be parts of his mystical body they have put on Christ Gal. 3.27 So united to him as a man is to a garment his satisfaction covers them his Spirit adorns them with holy Graces they are in Baptism buried with him and risen with him Col. 2.12 So united to him that they have the power of his death in mortification and the
are incorporated into him there is a kind of spiritual continuity between him and them that holy Spirit which resides in him falls down in a measure upon them The Scripture signally sets forth this Union He dwells in believers and they in him Joh. 6.56 He abides in them and they in him Joh. 15.4 He is in them the hope of Glory Col. 1.27 And they are in him that is true in Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 5.20 He lives in them and they live by the faith of him Gal. 2.20 He partakes with them Heb. 2.14 And they partake of him Heb. 3.14 Eternal life is in him and they having the Son have life 1 Joh. 5.11 12. He is one flesh with them and they are one spirit with him These things shew that there is a real union between them This real union which is what I aim at is by Divines stiled a mystical one and that upon very good reason the Holy Ghost in Scripture calls it a mystery that is it is a Divine Secret or holy Arcanam above humane reason and only conceivable by a supernatural light De Eccles visib 464. The Learned Whitaker saith of this union that it is mystica plane mirifica mystical and plainly wonderful The noble Sadeel calls it De spirit Mand. 226. magnum adorandum mysterium a mystery great and to be adored as being above nature and all humane bonds Life of Christ 462. Dr. Reynolds stiles it one of the deep things of God which are not discernable without the Spirit There are three admirable Unions the essential union of three persons in the Sacred Trinity These three are one 1 Joh. 5.7 That is one in essence The hypostatical Union of the Divine and Humane natures in the person of Christ Great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 The mystical union which is between Christ and his Church We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones this is a great mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church saith the Apostle Ephes 5.30 and 32. Touching these three unions * Christus habet in se Patrem cum quo est unâ substantia habet assumptum hominem cum quo est una persona habet adhaerentem sibifidelem animam cum quâ est spiritus unus Bern. de Verb. Psal 23. fol. 415. an Ancient hath observed That all three may be seen in Christ he hath a Father I may add and a Spirit with whom he is one substance he hath an humane nature with which he is one person he hath adhering Believers with whom he is one Spirit Unto this observation I shall add another the mystical Union which is the last of the three bears a respect to the two former Two or three things will manifest this First The mystical union depends upon the two former a hint of this we have in the words of our Saviour who speaking of himself as God-man and of giving his flesh for the life of the World saith As the living father hath sent me and I live by the father so he that eateth me even he shall live by me Joh. 6.57 Here are tres viveatis three livers one under another the Father who is fons Trinitatis the fountain of the Trinity lives of himself Christ lives by the Father as he is the Word he hath life from him by the eternal generation as he is man he hath it by the hypostatical union The believer who spiritually eats Christ lives by him Conjunction with the Father is that by which Christ lives conjunction with Christ is that by which the Believer lives were there no essential union there could be no hypostatical one which supposes that the second Person in the Trinity doth assume an humane nature made by all three Incarnation say the Schoolmen is effectivè belonging to the whole Trinity but terminativè it is peculiar to the Son who is the alone term unto which the humane nature is assumed were there no hypostatical union there could be no mystical one which imports that belivers are united unto God-man Were he only God how should we fallen creatures ever have an immediate approach unto him or if we could what use would there be of a Mediator It is through him as Mediator that we have access to the Father Eph. 2.18 The way into the holy of holies lies through the vail of his flesh Were he only man to what purpose should we be united to a meer creature or how should we dare to fix our faith on such an one To trust in a meer man is a curse to worship a meer creature a piece of Idolatry Believers therefore are united to God-man the mystical union depends upon the hypostatical and the hypostatical upon the essential Without a Sacred Trinity there would be no God-man without God-man there would be no fit person for Blievers to be united unto Again There is in the mystical union a shadow or dark resemblance of the two other unions There is a resemblance of the essential union This is hinted in our Saviours Prayer As thou father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Joh. 17.21 From which words St. Hilary concludes De Trinit Lib. 8. That the union between Christ and Believers is not meerly a moral union of will and affections for then our Saviour who is the eternal Word and knew how to speak would have prayed thus Pater sicut nos unum volumus ita illi unum velint unum per concordiam simus omnes Father as we will one and the same thing so let them also do and let us all be one by concord But instead thereof our Saviour prays thus As thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us The particle as notes some kind of similitude the words thou father art in me and I in thee note out the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or mutual inexistence of the Father and Son a resemblance of which we have in the mystical union which in Scripture is expressed by the mutual inexistence of Christ and Believers he is in them and they in him he dwells in them and they in him Very remarkable are the words of our Saviour I am in the father and you in me and I in you Joh. 14.20 We have here in one Text mentioned the high mystery of the Sacred Trinity and the mystical union together First The inexistence of the Son in the Father and which is implied and to be understood of the Father in the Son is signified and then immediately follows the mutual inexistence of Christ and Believers which shews that in this latter there is a resemblance of the former Again there is in the mystical union a resemblance of the hypostatical one this I gather from the likeness of those Scripture-phrases which express both the unions Christ was conceived of the Holy Ghost
this Believers are united to him who is God-man In some of them there is union without vital influence in this there is union with it in others of them there is an influence but it is only of a natural life and that only while a local conjunction between the things united is maintained But in this there is an influence of a spiritual and Divine life and this notwithstanding that the local distance between Christ and Believers be as vast as it is between Heaven and Earth In them there is nothing but plain Law or Love or Art or Nature but in this there is a secret a mystery of grace an admirable conjunction of Believers to Christ and by him to the Father I conclude with the excellent words of Zanchy De tribus Elok lib. 4. fol. 180. Hoc est mirabile hujusce unitatis mysterium quae constat Deo Patre Christo Mediatore Ecclesiâ vinculo Spiritûs Sancti cum Christo cum Patre conjuncta This is the admirable mystery of this Union which is made up of God the Father Christ the Mediator and the Church by the bond of the holy Spirit with Christ and with the Father conjoined These two things being laid down which are to be observed in all the after discourse touching these resemblances I proceed to consider the resemblances in particular in which much profitable matter will offer it self to us First The Union between Christ and Believers is set forth by that which is between a King and his Subject In government the humane instinct is gratified in society and a multitude is reduced to unity a King and his Subjects become politically one he protects them they are under his shadow he governs them they are in subjection to him protection as the Lawyers speak draws subjection and subjection draws protection His royal care over them is returned in their reverence towards him and their reverence towards him falls down upon themselves in the benefits of government Ar. Eth. lib. 5. c. 6. he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the keeper of right for them and they render him the honour due to his greatness Thus they are knit together for that common good which is the great center of Government In like manner Christ is King and Believers are his Subjects His Kingdom as it imports power is over all creatures but as it imports union it is only over Believers Tyrants saith the Philosopher rule over men against their wills but Kings rule over the willing The Emperor Justinus plainly told the great oppressors Spondan Ann. Anno. 568. Ego contumacibus imperare nolo I will not rule over the disobedient Our Lord Christ doth not own rebellious sinners while such as Subjects but look upon them as enemies Believers only are his Subjects he is their great Protector they are under the wings of his grace and power he rules and governs them they are obedient to him his care is over them their obedience is towards him he maintains their right they render him the honour of his government Thus they are knit together to promote the glory of Christ and the salvation of Believers It 's true in this resemblance the meer Analogy proves no more than a political Union but the excellency of that union which is between the spiritual King and Believers shews forth a mystery For the explaining of this I shall lay down several particulars 1st The more worthy and near in blood the persons united in government are the more excellent is the union David was an excellent one worth Ten thousand others those over whom he reigned were Gods own peculiar people the nearness was such that the people told him Behold we are thy bone and thy flesh 2 Sam. 5.1 In these circumstances the union between David and his people could not but be a very excellent one much more excellent is that between Christ and his Subjects what an one is He how admirably accomplished for government he is higher than the Kings of the earth it was not a little material oyl but the Holy Ghost which anointed him to his office His wisdom is incomparable no secret is hid from his eyes Solomon's large heart was but a little thing to the vast treasures of wisdom and knowledg in him His Wisdom is as much above a meer mans as the Fathers bosom from whence he came is above mans heart His power is exceeding great he can do every thing earthly Princes set upon their thrones here below he sits above at the right hand of Power Ahasuerus had power over an Hundred and seven and twenty Provinces but he hath all the power in Heaven and Earth None is so able to save to the uttermost as he his goodness and mercy are beyond parallel His Divine bowels were up very early in a design of grace towards fallen man his humane compassions far transcend all those in the creature Nay further he himself would suffer being tempted that he might have an experimental fitness to succour the tempted His clemency is such that he is very tender over those infirm ones who are as the bruised reed and have grace in desire only His justice is very illustrious he reigns in righteousness he doth nothing but what is right truth may as soon lie and rectitude it self decline as there can be any blot or jeofail in his goverment Such a King is Christ And what are his Subjects They are no common people but excellent ones their pure heart hath a kind of Oracle in it the secret of the Lord is with them they are wise in the greatest concernments strong in the hardest duties their hearts are melted in acts of love towards God and man their hands are ever doing that which is just and right and the reason of all is because some of the holy unction which anointed their Lord falls down upon them and puts a glory on them Such are the Subjects And what is the nearness between the King and them On the one hand he though the Son of God came down from Heaven and became partaker of flesh and blood with them on the the other they though naturally but the sons of fallen Adam became through grace the seed of Christ himself his blood runs in their consciences his Divine Spirit breathes in them his holy image appears in their hearts and lives the Subjects are all Sons and resemble their Governor Here is not a single relation but one relation upon another this is the nearness The result is this he being so incomparable a King they being such excellent Subjects the nearness between them being so great the union must needs be a very choice one Who would now live under the power of sin and not much rather join himself to the blessed kingdom A better Ruler or Society then there cannot be found 2dly The more right the Laws and Administrations of a Kingdom are the better is the Union There are two sorts of Laws there are Laws of
Believer in this posture is sure to hear of him he shall be more and more led into holy Truths his ear is opened and his mind in a readiness for further instruction The Spirit will make deeper impressions and seal divine Truths upon his heart The rich Mines of Precepts and Promises shall lye more open before his eyes Again Christ is a great King higher than the Kings of the Earth he was anointed with the Holy Ghost he hath all the power in Heaven and Earth his Laws are all rectitude and grace his Throne must be set up in the hearts and spirits of men Unto this Faith answers by that obediential temper which is in it It owns his Soveraignty it kisses his Scepter it chuses him as a Lord ●t loves to live in his Dominions if he come forth in his Royal Command it opens the everlasting doors that he may reign within This is a fit posture it is called receiving Christ Jesus the Lord Col. 2.6 Christ will own such as his Subjects he will more and more lift up his Throne in their hearts he will let them see more of his power and glory he will make them taste the fruits of his Government in protection and excellent rewards This is the second step of union between Christ and Believers There is that in Faith which answers to all his Offices there is satisfaction in him and recumbency in them instruction in him and docibleness in them Royalty in him and obedientialness in them 3ly There is by faith a right unto Christ God did not only send his Son in the flesh to satisfie and merit for us but he hath let down from Heaven a Charter of Promises that we might see upon what terms we may have a title to Christ By that Charter sealed with his blood the believer who also seals to it by faith hath a clear right unto him My beloved is mine saith the Church Cant. 2.16 Believers have a right to claim him as their own though he be an infinite person one who is a center of Perfections a treasury of merits having in himself enough to satisfie the heart of God and supply the wants of men yet may they claim him as their own His blood is theirs it is the blood of their Sponsor and Head it was shed on purpose to justifie them as to the Law to cleanse away their sins His Spirit is theirs it is upon him as an Head and Trustee accordingly it is to be communicated to them it is to flow in their hearts in rivers of living graces They have also a right to become the sons of God It 's true they are not as he is natural Sons but they are adopted ones In their adoptive Sonship there is as Aquinas observes a shadow of the Eternal One. He is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sum. 3. part q. 23. Ar. 2. or brightness of his Father and in them there is a splendor of grace resembling God in a measure at last they shall as sons enter into his joy and sit down with him in his Throne and there not only behold his glory but have a share in the blessed region and all this is made good by the Gospel one jot or tittle of which can no more fail than God can forfeit his truth and faithfulness This is another step there is by faith a true right unto Christ 4thly There is by faith more than a meer right to Christ there is an intimate union with him believers are built upon him as a foundation inserted into him as a Vine incorporated with him as an Head To understand which of a meer right is utterly to evacuate these Metaphors which were planted in Scripture on purpose to signifie a very near union with him It is said in Scripture That we are in him and he is in us We dwell in him and he dwells in us We abide in him and he abides in us To interpret these phrases of a meer right as if all the meaning were but this We have a right to him and he hath a right to us is to dispirit those expressions which do as Emphatically speak a very near union as any words can possibly do No man ever used such words to express a right no man can use higher to express an union In those phrases therefore we have an intimate union set forth unto us so also we have in that of the Apostle We are made partakers of Christ Heb. 3.14 Not meerly of his benefits but of himself When the same Apostle would set forth the Hypostatical union of our nature to Christ he saith That 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he did partake of our flesh and blood Heb. 2.14 When in this place he would set forth the Mystical union of believers to him he saith That we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 partakers of him we do in a sort possess him we partake of him as members do of their head His satisfaction reaches down to us to make us stand before God his Spirit is communicated to us to make us a fit Temple for himself By faith we come to be in intimate union with him and in a spiritual manner possessed of him Thus much touching Faith as a bond of union with Christ The other bond is the holy Spirit The Scripture speaks of it negatively and positively Negatively If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 The Spirit of Christ is that which just before is called the Spirit of God which quickens our mortal bodies ver 11. which leads the sons of God ver 14. which makes them cry Abba Father ver 15. which bears witness with their spirit ver 16. He that hath not this Spirit in such measure as is necessary to Salvation he is none of Christs he is not united to him as a member none of his members are void of the Spirit Positively He that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit 1 Cor. 6.17 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he is in us because he hath given us of his spirit 1 Joh. 4.13 The same holy Spirit which is upon Christ the Head falls down upon believers as members of him though Christ an infinite person assumed an humane nature though his humane nature was in the same person with his Divine yet which is admirable to consider the holy Spirit had a special hand in uniting the humane nature to his person and in sanctifying it the holy Spirit came upon the Virgin Luk. 1.35 The holy Spirit descended like a Dove and lighted upon him Mat. 3.16 His Divine Nature was alsufficient and near enough to the humane yet was he anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power Act. 10.38 The sanctifying of his humane nature is in a peculiar manner attributed to the holy Spirit The reason I take it is this God in his wise counsel would have it to be so that the same Spirit which united the two Natures in the Person of Christ
in an immense one but an excellent manifestation The Spirit as St. Austin observes De Trin. lib. 2. c. 5. illuc mittitur ubi erat is sent thither where it was but being sent he is there in such sort as he was not he is present there novo modo in a new manner where he was not so present he appears there in gracious operations where he did not so appear he is raising up a new creature or actuating the graces or letting out his glory in some supernatural work but this is not all that is in mission this may be in a coming the Father is said to come but never said to be sent there is therefore somewhat more in mission the Spirit doth not only operate but it operates secundum originem as he subsists from the Father and the Son so he operates from them as he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the manner of subsisting so he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the manner of operating He is therefore said to be sent by the Father and Son because he subsists and operates from them The second expression is the giving of the Spirit This in some respect differs from the former mission imports a procession of the person sent from the Sender giving imports the free bounty of the donor in communicating something The Spirit did not send himself for he did not proceed from himself but he may and doth give himself because he is sui juris and may communicate himself as he pleaseth In giving a thing is communicated ad utendum vel fruendum to be used or enjoyed The Spirit is communicated to Believers in his graces and in himself in his graces he is communicated to be used in himself he is communicated to be enjoyed he is now had as he was not before in knowledg and love by these the Believer doth in mind and heart possess him as an object able to make every one who hath him happy for ever The third expression is the dwelling or inhabiting of the Spirit he is in Believers as in his House or Temple he is there in the tokens of his special presence the love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance that is there shew him to be the inhabitant he hath not a more proper place here below than an heart furnished with those graces Also he is there as an object of inward Worship there is a mind which knows him a will which subjects to him a love which embraces him a fear which reverences him there without question is a Sanctuary an holy place for him there it is that his Honour dwelleth But I shall here add no more touching this inhabitation only it must be remembred that where the Spirit dwells there the Father and the Son dwell also the blessed Three are inseparable one of them cannot be separated from the other where the Spirit dwells there dwell also the Father and the Son with him Besides these three expressions there is one more that is the operation of the Spirit All these worketh one and the self-same spirit dividing to every man severally as he will 1 Cor. 12.11 Touching this I shall at present only observe that this operation doth in several respects fall in with the other three as it is the operation of the Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son so it falls in with mission as it concerns the using the Spirit in its graces or enjoying him in himself it falls in with giving as it relates to the tokens of his presence or the inward worship done to him it falls in with inhabitation Further In answer to the Quaere it is to be considered that there is a double presence of God one universal in all things another special in the Saints the first is in respect of his essence which is immense and every where the second is in respect of his operations which are peculiarly here and not there Those special operations are not every where where the essence is for the there could be no special presence but the essence is wherever those are else the universal presence would fail When Vorstius said That God was in the Saints per gratiosam praesentiam by a gracious presence Piscator notes That there is another ther presence namely a substantial one Operatio Dei a substantiâ divelli non potest the operation of God cannot be divided from his essence When Crellius saith that we live and move not in the Divine substance but in his virtue and efficacy the Learned Maresius answers him Inepta est oppositio inter virtutem substantiam illa hanc praesentem supponit Deus nusquam operatur visi essentialiter praesens It is a foolish thing to oppose the Virtue of God to his Substance that supposeth this present God no where operates unless he be essentially present Thus he To me it is plain that wherever there is a work of God there he is essentially present for his Immensity hath no stint we cannot say it goes hither and no further His Power which reaches every work is not distinct from his Essence nor can no more reach beyond it than a thing can exceed it self These things may give some light to the point in hand the Spirit is very God his special presence is not every where where his essential one is but his essential presence is every where where his special one is his essential presence is that without which there could be no special one at all his special presence is that in which the essential one appears in some excellent operation When the Spirit is communicated to Believers Est Spiritus Sanctus in regeneratis non tantùm ut in omnibus rebus Immensitate essentiae sed prasentiâ gratiae effectorum Par. in Rom. cap. 8. there is not meerly an essential presence but an essential presence and a special operation waiting on it such as He who is every where puts forth no where but in Believers there is not a meer simple presence but an actuous vigorous one such as discovers it self in excellent supernatural operations he is not here moving upon the waters to bring forth an outward sensible world but he is moving upon the heart to bring forth a spiritual one a glorious new creature in which more of himself appears than in all other things besides and when it is brought forth he sweetly presses in upon it by motions impulses and influences to actuate the holy principles to make the spicy graces flow out to quicken strengthen and enlarge the soul to every good work and all this against the bias and contradiction of the corrupt flesh which however cross and repugnant it be is potently overborn and overset by his excellent presence At last he seals up the Believer marks him out for his own irradiates him with the beams of his favour and sheds the sweetness of his incomparable love in his heart and which is much to be observed he doth in
all these glorious appearances operate intimately and immediately he penetrates into the inmost spirit and is more intimate to it than that is to it self he operates not only by an immediation of virtue but by an immediation of essence for his virtue is not distinct from his essence Thus there is a communication of the Spirit an excellent operative intimate presence with Believers as if he were a kind of soul to them to quicken them unto every good work But alas how short are our thoughts in this point how little a portion of it do we know The Master of the Sentences out of St. Chrysostom asserts That we cannot comprehend how God is every where much less can we comprehend how he who is every where is in a special manner in Believers I verily think that those Phrases of Scripture which express the Spirit to be communicated to them have in them a mystery much deeper than we can dive into I shall therefore make no further answer to the Quaere it is enough for me to say with Fulgentius That the inhabitation of the Holy Trinity in us De Pers Christ is non localis sed immensa non comprehensibilis cogitatione sed venerabilis fide not local but immense not comprehensible in thought but venerable in Faith I conclude with that of Zanchy De trib El. lib. 4. cap. 1. Spiritus Sanctus quia immensus est ideo ubique est maximè in omnibus fidelibus speciali quodam sed incomprehensibili modo The Holy Spirit because he is immense therefore he is every-where most of all he is in all the faithful after a certain special but incomprehensible manner The next thing which comes to be considered in this discourse is the Operations of the Spirit I touched upon this before but now I will speak a little more to it It 's true these Operations being among the opera ad extra are common to the whole Trinity yet in Scripture they are in a peculiar manner attributed to the Spirit the reason of which is because of that order which is among the persons in the Sacred Trinity the Father is of himself fons Deitatis the fountain of the Deity the Son is from the Father lumen de lumine light of light the Holy Spirit is from the Father and the Son he proceeds by an eternal spiration from both of them And as is the order of subsisting so is the order of operating the Father operates from himself the Son from the Father the Holy Spirit from both Hence in the three great Works of God Creation which is the first rise of things out of nothing is in a special manner attributed to the Father Redemption which helps up a poor fallen creature is in a special manner attributed to the Son Sanctification which perfects the redeemed is in a special manner attributed to the Holy Spirit Hence in the great Work of Salvation the Father laid the counsel and platform of it the Son carries on the work in a middle mediating way the Holy Spirit according to his place in order consummates it by working Faith and all other Graces But this is only by the way In treating of these Operations I shall note two things that is what is in them of respect to union with Christ and what is in them of respect to the Inhabitation of the Spirit or which is all one to the Inhabitation of the whole Sacred Trinity The first Operation of the Spirit in Believers is this He forms all holy Graces in them he draws the very Picture of Christ upon them in humility love meekness mercy goodness heavenliness patience this operation is requisite upon a double account One that Christ may have a seed the Father promised him a seed he himself merited one yet a seed he could not have unless the Spirit did work these Graces which make us to bear a resemblance of him Another that God might have a Temple under the Old Testament he had an outward Temple but even then he would have an inward one a Sanctuary in the heart under the New Testament he had a Temple in the humane nature of Christ but even in that he aimed to have a Tabernacle in men but this could not be unless the Spirit did come and turn the heart into an holy place for him As touching this Operation the holy Graces may be considered under a double notion either as they make us to have one common nature with Christ and thus they import union with him or else as they are tokens of the divine Presence and thus they import the Inhabitation of God in us These Graces make us to have one common nature with Christ and thus they import union with him there is as the learned Camero observes a double union one ab uno communi simpliciter from one common nature simply considered thus all men are united there being one humane nature in them another ab uno communicato from one nature communicated thus a Father and a Son are united the Son having the same nature communicated from the Father To apply this distinction First Believers have one common humane nature with Christ not only in that large sense in which all men have the same nature with him but in a more strict sense peculiar to believers only He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one Hebr. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one not of one God so Angels also are not of one Adam so wicked men also are but of one nature and condition Christ hath an humane nature sanctified by the Spirit and so have Believers this is one peculiar thing in which he and they meet there is no other holy flesh in all the world but what is in him and them This tells us that they are so united to him in one common nature as no other creature in Heaven or Earth is Angels are not so they are holy but not flesh unregenerate men are not so they are flesh but not holy Believers only have as Christ hath an humane nature sanctified by the Spirit Further which advances the Union they have this sanctified nature from him we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5.30 In this sanctified nature there are two things a carnal substance and an holy quality as to the carnal substance he is of our flesh and of our bones he did partake of flesh and blood with us As to the holy quality we are of his flesh and of his bones by him we are partakers of the divine nature Thus believers are joyned to him as to the Fountan of their Sanctity their holy Graces all hang upon him as beams upon the Sun If the Children of Reuben and Gad had been asked What part have you in the Lord they would have shewed the pattern of the Altar If Believers be asked What part have you in Christ they can shew forth their holy Graces These are Copies drawn after him
the great Samplar of Holiness nay they are drawn by him by the finger of his own Spirit Again These Graces are tokens of the divine Presence and so import the Inhabitation of God in us these are tokens of the divine Presence When nature exceeds it self and rises above its own level as the Sea did when the waters were as a Wall to Israel on both hands it is a sure sign that God is there When poor lapsed men are lifted up above their natural self and elevated into a divine Life as it always is when the holy Graces are wrought in them it is a sure sign that God is there of a truth Humane nature cannot of it self ascend into the sphere of Grace only a supernatural power can do such a thing These Graces are such tokens of Presence that where-ever they are there God doth inhabit In the old Temple there were divers tokens of Presence such as the Vrim and Thummim the Ark with the Tables in it the Lamps the fire from Heaven and the Holy of Holies were Hence it is said that God did dwell in it but in Believers there are better tokens of Presence than those if we look to the intrinsecal value of things the breast-plate of Faith and Love is before the Vrim and Thummim the Law in the heart exceeds the Tables in the Ark an illuminated mind is more excellent than outward Lamps an holy ardor of affections is more valuable than the fire from Heaven a pure heart is above any outward Oracle those tokens in the Temple were material things a-kin in the matter of them to this lower world the Sanctuary it self was but a worldly Sanctuary but these Graces are spiritual things their birth are as high as Heaven Believers in whom they are are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a spiritual house for God to dwell in those were typical tokens made such by meer institution without which they would be but as other parts of matter but these are real tokens in their own nature bearing the very image and resemblance of God himself where these are there God dwells in an eminent manner the Shechinah or habitation of God in the Saints is a middle thing between the hypostatical dwelling of the Godhead in Christ and the typical dwelling of it in the Temple it is much higher than all types and shadows and in excellency next unto God in the flesh The next Operation of the Spirit in Believers is this He actuates their holy Graces he moves the new Creature by divine Influences there is an effectual working in every part of it Love in the Spirit as it is said Col. 1.8 and other Graces in the Spirit all of them go forth in the power of that Spirit which formed them at first As touching this Operation the Spirit may be considered either as the principle and first mover that actuates these Graces and this speaks union with Christ or else as the terminus or ultimate object of these Graces actuated and this speaks the Inhabitation of God in us The Spirit is the principle or first mover that actuates these Graces and this speaks union with Christ the Spirit which is upon him falls down upon believers to actuate the Graces in them Believers are all one body and as one body they have one spirit in them from Christ the Head they are all one new man in Christ Eph. 2.15 Though the Apostle there speak of Jews and Gentiles yet he saith not one people but which is more emphatical one new man in Christ they are one new man because as one man they are acted by one spirit they are one new man in Christ because the Holy Spirit which is upon him is that one Spirit which acts them the Sons of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are acted and moved by the Spirit Rom. 8.14 That Spirit which anointed the humane nature of Christ the natural Son falls down upon the adopted ones to act and move them Actuation by one spirit proves that they are in intimate union with him that they are indeed mystical parts and members of him who acts and moves them by his own Spirit This may be illustrated by that in the first Chapter of Ezekiel when the wheels went as the living creatures did and were lifted up as they were it was plain that there were some invisible bands between them the spirit of the living creature was in the wheels vers 21. In like manner when believers shew forth the virtues of Christ and walk as he walked it is very plain that they are in near conjunction with him the Spirit doth act them in ways of conformity to him who as an Head is joyned unto them That phrase of walking in Christ Col. 2.6 points out a walking not meerly after his pattern and command but in his power and spirit as becomes those who have received him and are united to him Again The Spirit is the terminus or ultimate object of these graces actuated and this speaks the Inhabitation of God in us As these Graces come from God as the fountain so they terminate in him as the ultimate object Holy fear terminates in his Majesty and Greatness Faith terminates in his Truth and Mercy Love terminates in his Goodness and Excellency Every Grace moves to him as its great Center Where these Graces are actuated there an Honour an inward Worship is done to him where that is in truth there he hath a Temple in the heart and objectively dwells there as in an holy place Hence Aquinas saith that God is in the Saints sicut cognitum in cognoscente amatum in amante 1. Pars q. 43. Art 3. as an object known is in the knower and an object loved is in the lover by knowledg and love a man attingit ad ipsum Deum reaches to God himself his heart becomes a Sanctuary for the Holy One. This is that inward Temple which the Primitive Christians gloried in Nonne meliùs in nostrâ dedicandus est mente in nostro imo consecrandus est pectore litabilis hostia bonus animus pura mens sinceraconscientia Min. Fel. When Pagans objected against them that they had no Temples no Altars no Sacrifices they made this answer That they had all within in themselves in mental Consecrations in a pure mind and heart What was said of the Temple that may be said of a Pious soul There is Gods Name there he is consecrated and sanctified there he dwells as in a sanctuary or holy place The next Operation of the Spirit in believers is this He preserves believers in their spiritual being he bears up their graces by continual influences that they fail not in the way to Heaven As touching this Operation Believers are preserved either as Members of Christ and this shews union or as Temples of God and this shews Inhabitation Believers are preserved as Members of Christ and this shews union Adam fell Angels fell but Believers are preserved in themselves they are but
now lives to perfect the work to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 7.25 not by halves but altogether to give our Salvation its last act and complement he is a Priest for ever his Sacrifice but once offered up is in his Intercession virtually continued to perfect for ever them that are sanctified Here believers have a tree of life bearing as many excellent fruits as Christ paid for in his Death To instance in some of them Here 's a pardon for them He that on earth made satisfaction for sin in Heaven pleads for the pardon of it his Blood crys That the sin which is satisfied for in the head may not be charged upon the members If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 John 2.1 He pleads that righteousness which being put into the opposite ballance outweighs all the sins of his people Here 's the supply of the Holy Spirit given to them he that here below dyed to merit the communication of the Spirit lives and intercedes above to have it done I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever John 14.16 Our Saviour prays in the force of an infinite price therefore the Spirit is given to them he lives for ever and continues praying therefore the Spirit abides with them that which he by Prayer obtains for us by Power he confers upon us therefore as Dr. Reynolds observes in the Psalm he is said to receive gifts for men noting the fruit of his Intercession On the 110 Psalm fol. 438. Psal 68.18 And in the Apostle to give gifts to men noting the power and fulness of his Person Ephes 4.8 Having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which you now see and hear Acts 2.33 The Intercession of Christ never fails to communicate the Spirit to his members Here 's an access to God a free ingress for them unto the Mercy-seat whilest he is at Gods right hand none can bar them out from the divine Presence The Apostle tells us That we have a great High Priest passed into the Heavens one no less than the very Son of God and withal one as man touched with the feeling of our infirmities no less willing and compassionate than able to help us And from thence he concludes Let us therefore come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with boldness with a liberty to speak all our mind unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Hebr. 4.14 15 16. Believers need not fear to approach unto the great God his Glory will not swallow them up his Justice will not be a devouring fire to them they may freely open their wants before him their regular prayers shall surely speed in Heaven Christ intercedes there for them and which is the Eccho of that Intercession the Spirit makes intercession in their hearts the success therefore cannot fail though their prayers as they are in their bosoms have much weakness and imperfections yet as soon as they are put into the hand of Christ and perfumed with the sweet incense of his Merits they are glorified prayers and have power with God to procure the thing desired Another priviledg is Adoption All men in a sense are the off-spring of God the immortal Spirit in them had in the very make of it the natural Image of God which was a nobler print of the Deity than that which was upon all the material world besides Adam in Innocency was in an higher way the Son of God the holy Graces in him which made up the Moral Image had more of the divine Beauty shining in them than that which was to be found in the Essence of the Soul but Believers are the Sons of God in a more excellent manner To as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God John 1.12 By conjunction with Christ the natural Son they become adopted ones Adam was a Son only by Creation his Soul had in the Essence of it a natural Image of God and in the holy Graces of it a Moral one but Believers are sons by mystical union with Christ the natural Son neither is this a meer empty title but they are born of God they are of the seed-royal of Heaven the Blood of God runs in their consciences the divine Spirit which formed Christ in the womb doth by a supernatural overshadowing form him in their heart in their adoptive Sonship there is a shadow of the eternal one the splendor of grace in them resembling God in a measure is a little picture of Christ who is the brightness of his Fathers glory This priviledg as it is from God is a piece of admirable love Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God 1 John 3.1 The Apostle stands and wonders at it as an object of glorious and amazing Eminence Also as it is upon Believers it is a piece of incomparable Dignity such as doth far outshine all that lustre which is upon the Potentates of this world all the glory of earthly Princes is but fumus seculi the smoak of this lower Region their titles glitter only in carnal eyes but adoption is radius coeli a ray of heavenly glory making believers though but worms in themselves shine to the eyes of Angels who look upon them as mystical parts of Christ Touching this priviledg I shall only touch on two or three things Believers as Sons have an heavenly freedom in the ways of God They are not drag'd to holy things by the cords of Hell and Death they do not bring forth their duties meerly under the pressure of the Law-letter or in the power of fallen nature in a dead carnal servile manner no they are spirited for holy things the Law is in their hearts the rectitude of the commands attracts them the Love of Christ constrains them the great rewards in Heaven ravish them the Holy Spirit inspires obedience into them Holiness becomes natural to them Duties are brought forth in the easiness of the new creature they can walk run fly on in the pure ways towards eternal happiness this is a very choice priviledg indeed they are no longer in the straits of sin and earth but in a divine amplitude and liberty their hearts rest not in * Liber ab infinito ad infinitum super infinitum movetur finite things but go out to the infinite One their thoughts are upon the first Good their aims at the last End their liberty is joyned to its great fountain their motion is to the true center this is a right noble royal posture of Soul towards God in whom all our happiness is Believers as Sons live under the continual Indulgences of God in temptations he bears them up upon the wings of grace in a world of snares he plucks their
one would think there were no other world but an outward sensible one spiritual sensations are not from meer notion but from Christ the Head Further He influences motion into them Whether they be melting in repentant tears or burning in acts of holy zeal or drawing out their souls in charity or sweating in a lawful calling or bowing down under an afflicting providence all the motion is from the Head without him all their Graces would lye dormant in an habit and be as it were none at all It is the Head which awakens them and makes them go forth into act I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me saith the Apostle Phil. 4.13 The holy action is in Believers but the strength is in the Head only whatever good they do they must thank the Head for it which not by an outward command only but by an inward virtuous influence also bids them arise and do it The last thing is the way how the influence comes from Christ unto Believers We are not to think that the habits of Grace in Christs humane nature are transfused into us habits go not out of their subjects into another they produce acts in their own subjects but procreate not habits in foreign ones But this is the way Christ being full of all Grace did by his glorious satisfaction and merit procure that the same Holy Spirit which is upon himself the Head should fall down upon Believers the mystical parts and members of him Hence the Apostle saith that the Holy Spirit is shed on us richly through Jesus Christ our Saviour Tit. 3.6 Had not he atoned and merited for us the Holy Spirit would not have touched upon one fallen Son of Adam but in and through him there is as St. Chrysostom speaks In Ephes cap. 4. bom 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Spirit flowing from above which touches every member of his body After this sort he is an Head of influence to his Church communicating his Spirit to all his members to unite them one to another and all of them to himself the Head There is one body and one spirit Ephes 4.4 Were there not one Spirit in Believers they being as far distant from one another in time as the morning and evening of the world and in place as the parts and quarters of the earth could not possibly be one body were not the one Spirit from Christ he could not be an Head of influence to his Church or carry himself to it as his Body but there being one Spirit in Believers they are one Body and that one Spirit being from Christ he is an Head of influence to them Thus the Apostle saith That he is head over all things to the Church which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Ephes 1.22 23. Such an Head is he as filleth the Body his Church with his own Spirit It 's true the Church is his fulness in one respect though he hath all fulness in him and filleth all in all yet as he is an Head which he deigned to be to us he is not full without a body but he is the Churches fulness in a much higher resperct the Church is his outward fulness supplying him with members without which he is not compleat as an Head but is pleased to accoumt himself maimed but he is as I may so say the Churches inward fulness by his own Spirit moving and actuating it as his Body The Church is his fulness in respect of integrity of parts without which he would be as an Head without a Body but he is the Churches fulness in respect of virtue and the spirit without which the Church would not be a living Body depending on him as a living Head Thus he is an Head of influence to Believers communicating in a measure his own spirit to them Notable is that of Durandus Nullus actus vitae est in corpore qui non sit in capite In Sext. lib. 3. dist 13. quest 1 nullus actus gratiae est in totâ Ecclesiâ ad quam se non extendat gratia Christi There is no act of life in the Body which is not in the Head there is no act of Grace in the whole Church to which the Grace of Christ extendeth not it self It is further to be noted that Christ is an Head of incomparable excellency he is not only Head over all things but an Head above all other heads and for this I shall instance in two things The one is this The natural head cannot make membrum de non membro a member of that which was none before but Christ such is his excellent virtue can draw and gather men off from the old corrupt stock of Adam and transplant and incorporate them as members into himself the Head naturally they were lost but he seeks them dark but he inlightens them dead but he quickens them foul but he washes them black but he puts a beauty upon them all the members of him may admire infinite Grace and say we were not the people of God but now we are so we were not members of Christ but now we are so In Adam the first head all men were ruined but Christ the second Head hath power over all flesh Joh. 17.2 to draw and gather men into union with himself and in so doing to make his Power and Grace illustrious The other is this The natural Head hath virtue enough for its own members but Christ our Head hath virtue enough for a world did all the men on earth by Faith come into union with him there would be no defect but a supply of grace for them all his satisfaction and merit are of an immense value his Spirit is a fountain of Grace never to be drawn dry or exhausted There is in him as Bonaventure speaks not only plenitudo sufficienciae In Sent. lib. 3. dist 13. qu. 3. a fulness of sufficiency as in the Saints but plenitudo superabundantiae a fulness of superabundance enough to overflow a whole world of men in case they were by Faith united to him Oh! what an Head is Christ there is a famine of Grace in lapsed nature but in him there are stores and treasures for our supply there is a fulness of sin in us but in him there is a superabundance of Grace to overcome it in him we may see holiness not in the little Pictures of it as in the Saints but in the great Sampler and Origen thereof That beautiful thing Grace in him appears not in beams and drops but as in a Sun or Ocean Happy are those who are in union with him they live in the spring and universal principle of Grace in all the acts of spiritual life sense and motion they may feel the Power Virtue and Divine Efficacy of him the Head CHAP. V. The mystical union set forth by that between the food and the body Christ is the trùe food He strengthens against the cursing Law He
being compared with the Love and Friendship which is between Christ and Believers wonderful is his Love towards them As early as eternity it self his eyes and his heart were upon them he assumed flesh to espouse them to himself he shed his Blood to purchase them he dyed on a Cross to redeem them he draws his own Image upon them he loves and delights in them as the purchase of his Blood and the little pictures of himself he is indeed wonderfully taken and ravished in them as if they had unhearted him or carried away his heart In like manner Believers though not in equal degrees have a great Love to him they put off corrupt self for him their old earthly members are crucified with him their souls thirst and faint in holy desires after him so high a rate and value is set upon him that all other things are but as dross and dung in comparison such are the pleasures and complacencies which they have in him that they can joy in sufferings and glory in reproaches for him his Presence and Love sweetens every condition thus there is an union of Love between Christ and Believers But this is not all some of the ancient Fathers seem to hint somewhat more De Trinit lib. 8. in Joh. St. Hilary and St. Cyril of Alexandria contend that our union with Christ is not meerly per concordiam voluntatis by a Concord of will St. Chrysostome saith That we are not only united to Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a way of Love In Joh. Hom. 45. but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the thing it self To make it appear that our union with Christ is not meerly a moral one I shall offer some Considerations The conjugal union which is the highest pattern of Love here below is not meerly a Moral one In the first Marriage there was somewhat antecedent to Love Eve was taken out of the side of sleeping Adam Hence he said That she was bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh In the spiritual marriage there is somewhat antecedent to the Churches Love she was taken out of the side of Christ dying on the Cross Hence the Apostle after he hath compared the Love of Husbands and Wives with that which is between Christ and the Church doth in allusion to the Primitive Marriage tell us We are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Ephes 5.30 Flesh may be considered either as to its substance or as to its sanctity as to its substance Christ is of our flesh and bone but as to its sanctity we are of his flesh and bone all the holy flesh in the world is from Christ Again in common ordinary Marriages there is not meerly Love but Man and Wife become one flesh In the spiritual Marriage there is not meerly Love but Christ and Believers become one Spirit the same holy Spirit which is upon Christ the Head falls down on his Members there are continual influences of Grace coming down from him unto them Nothing in all the world is more apt or proper to shadow forth our union with Christ as Moral than the conjugal Union is though as I said but now there is more in it than meer Love yet is it the highest Samplar of Love on Earth and on that account very apt to set forth our Moral Union with Christ but though it be so yet the Holy Ghost doth not in shewing forth our union with Christ rest in that resemblance but goes on to shew it forth by others of a different tendency as by a Foundation a Vine or Head an Aliment whose proper genuine import is not love but support or vital influence or intimate conjunction The Holy Ghost in these resemblances speaks like it self aptly and truly though there be no propriety in the words yet there is an aptitude in the things to denote Heavenly Mysteries though the terms be metaphorical yet the truths are real there is a proportion and just Analogy between the earthly shadow and heavenly mystery there is that in Christ which answers to all the resemblances he is to his Church a foundation for support a root or head for vital influence an Aliment for nourishment and intimate conjunction Hence it appears that our union with Christ is not meerly a Moral one but such as corresponds to all the resemblances not only to the conjugal one in Love but to all the other in their several imports One Christian is united to another in Affection Love is the badg of Christianity The Primitive Christians were of one heart and one soul Acts 4.32 They were as it were but one Man the very Pagans pointed at this saying Tert. Ap. Vide ut se invicem diligant see how they love one another Love is the very bond of perfection Col. 3.14 it couples all Virtues together as in a chain it conjoins all Christians in the mystical body where Love is there are all other Virtues where one Christian is there are all the rest in heart and affection Love which is a sacred fire kindled upon the heart by the Holy Spirit first ascends up to God its primary object who is to be loved for himself and then it goes on to our neighbour its secondary object who is to be loved for Gods sake this is the way of Love if it ascend to God it will go out to our Brother if it go not out to our Brother it never ascended to God Hence St. John saith He that shutteth up his bowels from his brother how dwelleth the love of God in him 1 Joh. 3.17 The Love of God can no more be severed from the Love of our Brother than the first Table of the Law can be rent off from the second All true Christians are born of the same Father in Heaven washed in the blood of the same Saviour inspired by the influences of the same Holy Spirit interested in the same Charter of the Gospel and instated in the same Inheritance above Sic muto quod doletis amore diligimus quoniam odisse non novimus sic nos quod invidetis fratres vocamus ut unius Dei parentis homines ut consortes fidei ut spei coharedes Minuc Fel. in Oct. All of them therefore must needs be united together in Love nothing is more evident than that one Christian is united to another in Love but yet he is not so united to him as he is unto Christ Who where is the Saint that will or dare say to his fellow Christians I am the foundation ye are the building born up by me I am the vine ye the branches without me ye can do nothing I am the head ye are the members from me is all that effectual working which is in you Who can or may speak after such a rate such words are proper for Christ only we are to fix our Faith upon him not upon our fellow-Christians This is his Commandment that we should believe on the Name of
To a spiritual discerning there is requisite a due proportion between the object and the faculty such a proportion there is between Christ an object supernaturally revealed and a mind supernaturally inlightned there the Holy Spirit is on both hands I mean outwardly revealing the object in Scripture and inwardly inlightning the mind to make it fit for the object but between Christ a supernatural object and a natural mind there is not such a proportion the Holy Spirit is but on one hand revealing the object but on the other there is only the humane Spirit which without inward illumination doth not spiritually discern the things of God If a meer natural mind might spiritually discern them there would need no opening of eyes no renewing in the spirit of the mind the new Creature would be new but in part the old understanding though that faculty first erred in the fall might serve the turn Faith as far as it is in the Intellect would not be the Gift of God but of our selves the external proposal of the object which is what grace Pelagius allowed would be enough But such things as these being never to be admitted it is evident that spiritual discerning is not a thing common to Reason but proper to Faith which having a divine Light in it doth elevate the mind above it self and make it apt to discern spiritual things in a spiritual manner There being in Faith a spiritual discerning Christ is intellectually present with the Believer in an excellent manner he is in some sort intellectually present with a man of notion but with the Believer he is present in a more divine manner he appears in spiritual beauty the Spirit glorifies him in the heart Oh! what an one is our Immanuel how sweet is his Name how rich his Merits how full his treasures of Grace Every thing in him appears in a kind of ravishing glory he is no longer looked on as a meer matter of speculation but as an object to be for ever loved chosen embraced adored by us the notion of him doth not lie dead upon the heart but lives and warms the inner man into holy admirations and affections towards him we have not a light opinion but a firm perswasion touching him and his Sufferings we can certainly pronounce This is indeed the Christ the Saviour of the World This is the Blood of the Covenant which made an atonement for us we are as sure of it as if these things were before our corporeal eyes and senses nay we are more sure than so we see them in lumine veritatis primae in the light of the first Truth revealing himself in the Gospel This is the first step of Union Christ is spiritually discerned he is intellectually present with our minds in a very excellent manner 2dly Faith doth put the soul into an apt and fit posture for Christ it sets all ready and in order for him In general it doth this by making us poor in spirit A natural man though a fallen creature is very high in his own eyes he is as well as if he had had no bruise at all in the fall as rich as if nothing of mans Primitive excellency were lost he dreams and flatters himself as if his reason could span all Mysteries and his will teem out all Virtues he stands upon his own bottom and wraps up himself in his own false Righteousness he is every way full and wants nothing compleat in himself and knows no dependance And why should such an one go to Christ or seek Union with him or what may be done for such an one who hath all in himself This temper is not only at a vast distance from Christ but it carries in it an utter enmity to him when it speaks out it blasphemes in some such language as that Pagan did who cryed out Aust in Psal 31. Praef. Jam benè vivo quid mihi necessarius est Christus I live well of my self how is Christ necessary to me But as soon as Faith comes a man reflects and sees nothing in natural self but poverty emptiness impotency uncleanness perdition he looks up to Christ and sees all riches fulness power sanctity salvation to be in him he humbles himself as knowing his dependance he puts off his Ornaments that Christ may do somewhat for him he goes down into his own nothingness and desolate self-waiting to have some Communications of Grace from Christ this is the right posture of the soul Poverty here looks up to unsearchable riches Emptiness opens the heart for the effusions of grace Conscience cries out to be cooled with the blood of atonement Impotence waits for the arm of a Saviour to be revealed Nothingness calls for a new Creation to be erected upon the ruines of a lapsed nature All things are ready for Christ to shew forth his Glory in the Believer More particularly Faith puts the soul into an apt posture for Christ in that it hath that in it which answers to all his Offices he is an excellent Priest he offered up himself as a propitiating sacrifice for us he satisfied the Law and Justice of God he made a full and perfect compensation for the sin of the world Unto this Faith answers by its recumbency it ventures all upon Christ it runs under the wings of its Saviour it hides it self in his precious wounds it casts the Believer on him who bore the sin of a World it rolls the soul on his atoning blood and leaves it there for acceptance with God it commits the whole concern of Justification as to the Law to his Plenary satisfaction it hath no other bottom to stand upon but this no other answer to the Law no other plea to divine Justice no other refuge or hiding-place for the soul to repose it self in This is the right posture it is called receiving the atonement Rom. 5.11 because the Believer is in the very instant made partaker of Christs sacrifice His atoning blood is sprinkled on him the great satisfaction covers him as a mystical part of Christ that the Curse of the Law may not seize him or the wrath of God burn him up Again Christ is a great Prophet he brought the holy Mysteries out of his Fathers bosom he speaks outwardly by his Word and by his Spirit he is an inward Ecclesiastes who can enter into the heart and there express himself in words of Life and Power Unto this Faith answers by an humble docibleness it softens and meekens the heart it makes the Believer sit down at Christs feet and hear him in the hardest Lectures if Christ talk of a Cross the Believer is ready to take it up upon his back if of super-rational Mysteries he is ready to subscribe to them he becomes as a little child ruleable by every holy beam or motion he yeilds up himself to the Spirit and Word to be instructed by them this is the apt posture it is called an hearing of the Prophet Acts 3.22 The
Goodness every thing calls upon them to fall down and adore him who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Fountain and Principle of all things Further They know the right use of blessings they do not take Creature-comforts into their heart which is an holy place for God but bid them stand without and minister to the body they do not rest and center in them but as Pilgrims and Strangers march on to the heavenly Countrey in the fullest affluence of outward things still they cry out Dulcius ex ipso fonte a single God is sweeter than all they look upon them not as fuel to lust but as incentives to holy Love and Obedience they do not as absolute Proprietors ingross all to themselves but as faithful Stewards distribute to others they know they receive outward things not to have and to hold but to communicate Mercies in their hands are as blood in the Veins or water in the Conduit for publick use the goodness of God to them makes them good to others the open hand of the great Donor makes them ashamed to shut their own Also they are happy in times of adversity If a storm of persecution come their happiness is not diminished but increased they never had their Souls in such a posture they never had such appearances of God as at such a time they melt in fresh acts of repentance God draws their pardon afresh and more legible than ever they sigh and cry for the abominations in the Land God sets a mark and a seal of distinction upon them their hearts tremble for the Ark his bowels are moved for them their care is for his interest and great name his care is to make up his Jewels their Faith ascends up and fixes it self upon him his Power Wisdom Goodness Mercy come down and command Salvation for them they cry and wrestle with him in their prayers that that Gospel the glory may not depart away from them he hears them in one measure of grace or other the Gospel it may be shall not depart from the Land at least not from their hearts they are tossed in a Sea of troubles but there is a calm within and an Haven of rest to which every wave gives them a lift near at hand they may look to Heaven and sing as the Martyr Babylas did Return unto thy rest O my soul They are poor weak creatures but the power of Christ rests upon them that divine Power which bore up his humane nature in his Sufferings bears up them in theirs being in the true Immanuel they are sure to have God with them how heavy soever the Cross be his everlasting Arms are under them how bloody soever the Persecutor be his rich Mercies are towards them when great men leave them naked to their Enemies he covers them with his wings when outward comforts depart from them he will never never leave them no more than Christs Divinity did forsake his Humanity the joy of the Holy Ghost is their cordial in the greatest troubles the Love of God shed abroad in their hearts is able to sweeten Prisons and fiery Furnaces to them when they have least of Earth then they have most of Heaven there are some sparkles of glory let down into their hearts they taste some drops of the pure Rivers of pleasure which are above Valeat vita vileart faculltates inquit Julitta Mart. Cent. 4. Magdeb. This makes them able to bid farewel to life and all things here that they may go though through the greatest losses and sufferings to be with Christ Thus much touching the Priviledges of union with Christ It is a notable passage in Antoninus Every thing saith he is designed for some work Beasts and Plants and Sun and Stars 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and what are you for what is your great business It is a shame for a man much more for a Christian not to know the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great work he is to do Our Saviour tells us that it is Faith in himself John 6.29 St. Paul made it his chief business to be found in Christ Phil. 3.9 Sit down O Christian and consider where thy interest lies Is it not thy interest to be delivered from the wrath to come and to enjoy the blessed God in Heaven Do not the pangs in conscience and the sense of a Deity tell thee that it is so To be saved for ever must needs be a great thing and how canst thou be saved but by Christ the only Saviour or whom doth he save but those that are in conjunction with him Is it not thy interest to have such an Advocate as Christ to appear in the Presence of God and to plead for all good things for thee Art thou not at a vast distance from God and are not thy Righteousnesses as a filthy rag before him Sure it must be well for thee to have a Mediator to plead and intercede for thee that thou mayest have the returns of his Blood in Pardons and Graces And how can this be unless thou art joyned to him For whom doth he so intercede but for those that come unto God by him Is it not thy interest to be made a Son of God to have the Holy Spirit living and breathing in thee How desirable must Adoption be to a Child of wrath how much doth thy natural spirit want a better one to new-frame and actuate it and how canst thou be adopted unless thou art united to the natural Son or which way canst thou expect to have the Holy Spirit moving and dwelling in thee unless thou become a Member of Christ Is it not thy interest to have communion with the great God how excellent a thing is it to have thy Services answer to Gods call and his divine Communications answer to thy Services This is a little Heaven here below but without union with Christ it cannot be Is it not thy interest to be happy in every condition how admirable is it to have pure Mercies and comfortable Sufferings to have the love and gracious Presence of God in every estate This is a choice benefit but not to be attained but in and through Christ to have him is to have all things to want him is a misery worse than nothing Union with him therefore is the great work of all How earnest should our pursuits of it be how ardent our prayers for it how constant our endeavours after it how should we gad up and down from Ordinance to Ordinance seeking of Christ breathing after union with him running sweating striving with all our might to be joyned to him This is totum hominis the All of man a matter of that consequence that it infinitely out-ballances all things here below it being the only thing that raises up our nature to its utmost perfection Let us by no means suffer a vanity or a lust or indeed a world to stop us in our pursuit after it without it we cannot be happy with it we cannot
out unto God to increase their faith to help their unbelief they never think their faith strong enough nor their union with Christ near enough They would be more grounded and setled in faith they would be in more close and intimate conjunction with Christ This is the temper of those that are in him Also they have a tender respect to the holy Spirit the other bond of union It is the holy Spirit which first takes hold on them which works faith and other graces in them which is the very life of their souls and graces which makes them breathe in prayer melt in charity move in obedience act like mystical parts of Christ in conformity to him such operations as these endear the Spirit to them They would not grieve him for a world they will not wallow in sensual pleasures that they may be filled with him They put away all bitterness envy malice hatred out of their hearts that the good Spirit may dwell in them They will not suffer worldly things to throng and make a noise in their minds that the Holy One who hath a Temple there may not be disturbed They would do nothing to cause him to withdraw his Presence from them it being more tolerable in their eyes to have their own souls part from their bodies than to have him depart from their souls He cannot depart but their light life grace peace will be all gone It 's a grievous thing to them to quench him The light which he lets in is to them more precious than that of the Sun Moon and Stars The motions which he inspires are to them more dear than the breath in their nostrils The still voice which he utters is to them more sweet than all the charms of the world It is one of their great cares to walk in his light yield to his motions and obey his voice He comes velut imber sanctificationis as a shower of Sanctification from Christ their Head he comes to inlighten strengthen quicken actuate comfort guide them to the blessed region above and how welcome do they make him All the dews and distillations of grace find their hearts open every gale and inspiration meets with a compliance in them When they have most of him they still desire more of him that corruptions may be more subdued Ordinances more filled Truths more illustrated Holiness more imprinted Promises more sealed the love of God more shed abroad in their hearts They never think themselves to have enough of him This is the right temper of those that are in Christ Another mark of this Union is conformity to Christ A wicked man while such cannot be in union with him What communion hath light with darkness What concord hath Christ with Belial Can his blood save those that are void of his Spirit May his Promises comfort those that trample his Laws under their feet No surely such are indeed not members of Christ but of Satan not heirs of Salvation but children of wrath All that are in union with Christ are conformed to his Image Every branch in him answers to the root Every member suits to the Head in Heaven all that are in him do in a measure resemble him In this Conformity three things may be noted The first is this There is a Conformity in graces Beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord we are changed into the same image from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3.18 We have here the two bonds of Union faith set forth by a transformative view of Christ and the Spirit called the Spirit of the Lord. And withal we have here mention of a change into the Divine Image which ever accompanies the Union● and is a sure mark of it In this Conformity two things may be observed There is a conformity of their graces in the rise of them to the conception of Christ his humane nature was not brought forth generatione sed jussione not in an ordinary way by knowing a man but in an extrordinary by the power of the Highest and the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost i● conformity to this the new Creature with its graces is not born of blood nor of th● will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1.13 It is not by an humane but by a Divine power It is not fro● mans Spirit but from Gods overshadowin● the heart The same Spirit which forme Christ in the womb forms him in the hear All the graces of believers are produced like their Saviours flesh in a pure supernatural way Again there is a conformity of their graces in the kinds of them to the graces in Christ the same holy Spirit which anointed his humane nature in an Hypostatical union anoints believers in the Mystical one Of his fulness they receive grace for grace Joh. 1.16 Grace in a measure answering to the grace in him Was he meek and lowly they have a measure of those lovely graces Did he burn with zeal for the glory of God some of the same holy fire is in their hearts Was he full of love to God and man their love inflamed by his goes out towards both Was he holy in perfection they are so in sincerity Had he large bowels of mercy and compassion unto men in misery their hearts also melt with the same graces Was he perfectly obedient to his Fathers will they are upright and endeavour to do it their graces answer to those in him this is an infallible sign of union If a man would know whether he be in Christ or not he must look within and ask his own heart what is there hath the holy Spirit been there Is there any thing above nature wrought Are there any pieces of the new Creature or Divine Image What is there of humility zeal or holy love What of purity mercy or obedience See how it is within if a meer vacuum be there if the heart be void of these graces it is a vain presumption to think that he is in union with Christ that there should be humility in the Head and pride in the members zeal and love in the Head and coldness and hatred in the members purity mercy and obedience in the Head and uncleanness cruelty and rebellion in the members is a thing too absurd to be imagined by any considering man That Christ should be an Head and not communicate his Spirit or men should be members and not receive it that he should be Head and not rule his members or they should be members and of a contrary temper to the Head is utterly impossible The beams of the Sun may sooner be dark than the members of Christ be unlike him The streams of a sweet fountain may sooner be bitter than those that are united to the fountain of Grace can want it All that are in him have grace answering to his This is the first Conformity The second is this there is a conformity in sufferings they that are in Christ