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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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and spoken of the whole Person for to be made of a woman which agreeth only to the humane nature is ascribed to the Person of the Son God sent forth His Son made of a woman 11. Jesus Christ being thus incarnate was in respect of His humane nature while in the state of humiliation truly subjected to the Law and accordingly conformed Himself unto it whatsoever Law it was whether general or moral which all men are obliged unto Luke 2. 5● or more special positive and ceremoniall which the Jews and children of Abraham were bound to obey Mat. 3. 15. or yet more particular of a Redeemer and Saviour which He Himself only was obliged unto even to die for us Psal. 40. 6 7 8. for saith the Apostle He was made under the Law 12. Though Christ as He was a creature whose will cannot be the supream Law was thus bound to subject Himself to the Law yet it doth not follow hence that therefore He did not fulfill the Law for us but for Himself only because this obligation did flow from His taking-on the humane nature which He did freely and for our good for upon His being made of a woman He was also made under the Law otherwayes He was free from the Law From Vers. 5. besides what is marked upon chap. 3. ver 13. Learn 1. Not only Christ's death and sufferings which commonly go under the name of His passive obedience but also His active obedience to the Law in all those things and those things only wherein we were obliged is imputed unto us as our righteousness price whereby we are redeemed from the Law 's curse for He was made under the Law that He might redeem them that were under the Law So that the price of our Redemption and His subjection to the Law are of equal extent 2. As all men by nature are under the curse Eph. 2. 3. and irritating power of the Law Rom. 7. 5. and the Jewish Church were under that ancient rigid dispensation of the Law binding them chiefly to the observation of many costly and burdensom ceremonies See ver 3. so no lesse was required in order to a Redemption whether from the one or the other than the incarnation of the Son of God and His obedience both by doing and suffering to the whole Law of God only with this difference the Elect were redeemed under the Old Testament from the curse and irritating power of the Law by vertue of Christ's obedience while it was yet to be actually performed for though it be otherwise in natural causes yet a moral cause not present in being but only supposed as future may have its effect but the Redemption of the Jewish Church from that rigid dispensation of the Law was not effectuate before Christ was actually incarnate and did give real obedience to the Law God having so ordered that those legal shadows should not evanish until Christ the substance of them did come for it is with relation to this as a main part of his present scope that the Apostle saith God sent forth His Son to redeem them that were under the Law 3. The outward administration of the Covenant of Grace under the Old Testament had some infl●ence upon the ancient Church even as to the inward state of particular Believers in so far that though the Godly then did partake of the same spiritual blessings whereof we partake now yea and some particular persons were endued with greater gifts of the Spirit than many now are Yet greater plenty and abundance of Grace is bestowed upon the Church in the time of the Gospel if we respect the body of the Church and Faithfull in general than was bestowed before Christ came for the Apostle putting a difference betwixt those two times speaketh of receiving the adoption of sons as a thing proper to the dayes of the Gospel not as if the Spirit of Adoption had been altogether withholden from the ancient Church but because it was then tempered with the spirit of servitude the way to Heaven not as yet clearly manifested Heb. 9. 8. and is now bestowed in a more ample clear and plentifull measure for it is not unusual in Scripture that this should be affirmed of one and as it were tacitly denyed of another which is more illustrious in one than in another though it be common to both Mat. 15. 24. according to which rule the following sixth verse must be expounded Vers. 6. And because ye are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts crying Abba Father HE giveth an evidence of their having received the adoption of sons in a more clear and plentifull measure under the New Testament to wit God's sending forth the holy Spirit the third Person in the blessed Trinity and making Him manifest His presence by His special and supernatural gifts in the hearts of Believers whereby they were enabled like little children to own and incall upon God as their Father and this without any distinction of Jew or Gentile which seemeth to be hinted at by the two epithets given to God both signifying the same thing the one Abba a Syriack word which language was then commonly spoken among the Jews the other a Greek word rendred Father which was most commonly used among the Gentiles Now this of God's sending forth His Spirit under the New Testament is not to be so understood as if He had not been sent forth into the hearts of Believers under the Old Testament but that He is now poured-out in a greater measure Joel 2. 28. Doct. 1. There are three Persons in the blessed Trinity the Father the Son and the Spirit all spoken of here God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son 2. The Spirit here spoken of is not a naked quality or operation and work only but a person subsisting of Himself as appeareth from this that He is said to be sent forth which agreeth only to persons God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son 3. He is a divine Person and no meer creature for He dwelleth in the hearts of all Believers which can be said of no person but God God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts 4. The holy Spirit proceedeth both from the Father and the Son for He is sent by the Father and is the Spirit of His Son and is so called here because the Apostle is to evidence their sonship by the operation of this Spirit which sonship of theirs is grounded upon Christ Rom. 8. 17. Doct. 5. Whoever have this high dignity of Adoption conferred upon them must also have the Spirit of God given to reside not in their brain only to fill them with the gifts of knowledge as He may be in Hypocrites Mat. 7. 22. but in their hearts also by making a gracious change there Eph. 4. 23. to be diffused from thence as from the first principle of life Prov. 4. 23. through all the faculties of the soul and members
Christ and vertue coming from Him In whom all the building groweth and in the Lord which words it seemeth are added to shew that not only the first beginnings but also the continued progresse and increase of grace do flow from the Lord Christ. 5. As growth of grace in every particular Believer So the increase of the Church in generall by the addition of new converts doth flow not from created might or power Zech. 4. 6. but from the vertue of Jesus Christ who having the nations given Him for an inheritance Psal. 2. 8. will in despight of all opposition inlarge the bounds of His dominion untill He attain the full possession of all to whom He hath a right for this growth is to be understood also with respect to the whole body by the addition of new members In which respect also the Apostle here saith It groweth in the Lord. 6. As all Believers joyntly and each Believer a part 1 Cor. 6. 19. are a temple for the Lord wherein He doth manifest His speciall presence and wherein He will be worshipped by offering up spirituall sacrifices of prayer praises and all the duties of new obedience 1 Pet. 2. 9. So that they may be a temple indeed for this holy God they must be much in the study of holinesse as in that which becometh His house Psal. 93. 5. for the Apostle sheweth that this whole building groweth up to be a temple for God and an holy temple All the building groweth unto an holy temple 7. The more that Believers do endeavour to grow in grace without resting upon any measure they may expect the more of Gods speciall presence to be manifested in them as in His own temple for it is the growing of this building mainly which maketh it fit to be a temple for God All the building groweth unto an holy temple Vers. 22. In whom you also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit THe Apostle doth now in the next and last place apply what he hath said of this spirituall edifice and of the Churches happy estate under that similitude unto those believing Ephesians in particular by shewing that even they were built up together with all other sincere Believers upon Jesus Christ the foundation and for this end that they might be a place of habitation where God might dwell as manifesting His speciall presence in them by the saving operations of His holy Spirit Doct. 1. That our faith may be saving and our comfort solid it is necessary not only that we know and believe those excellent priviledges which belong to the Church of God in generall But we must also observing the due order make application of them unto our selves in particular for Paul teacheth so much while having set forth the happy estate of all Believers in generall he maketh application thereof unto those Ephesians in particular In whom also you are builded together saith he 2. That this particular application may be made in due order it is necessary that in the first place we make application of Christ unto our selves laying hold upon Him by faith that so being in Him we may have right unto all those saving priviledges which are purchased by Him for the Apostle sheweth this was the order wherein those priviledges were applied unto the believing Ephesians they were first united to Christ and so had accesse unto all the rest which follow In whom also you are builded together for an habitation of God 3. That we may rightly apply Christ unto our selves it is necessary that we lay hold upon Him in order to all those ends for which He is offered in the Gospel even to those which imply an obligation upon us of duty both unto other Believers and unto God for those Ephesians were so united to Christ by faith that as a consequence thereof they were also united one to another and to all Believers by love and made an habitation for God In whom you are builded together for an habitation of God 4. Jesus Christ doth differ from the foundations of other buildings in this that every particular Believer is not only laid upon Him and supported by Him as it is in materiall buildings but they are also indented in Him and hid as it were in the clifts of that rock by saving faith so that the foundation covereth the whole building and serveth for a refuge from the storm and a shaddow from the heat Isa. 25. 4. for he saith not upon whom but in whom you also are builded 5. As all Believers how far so ever removed by large distance are yet most strictly tied and joyned together So by taking band with Christ the foundation they are fastened one to another even as the stones of a building for he saith In whom you are builded together union among themselves did follow upon their being in Him 6. The more deeply engaged that any have been before conversion in Sathan's service and the slavery of their lusts their after conversion and being builded upon Christ for an habitation to God is the rarer priviledge the more to be admired and highly esteemed of for he saith not simply in whom you are builded but in whom you also which highteneth the purpose as a thing wonderfull and hardly credible the apostle having an eye doubtlesse to their former slavery unto Satan and their own lusts spoken of ver 2 3. 7. So inseparable is that union and connexion among the Persons of the blessed Trinity that the presence and indwelling of one is sufficient to prove the indwelling of all for they are an habitation to God the Father and Son because the Spirit did dwell in them and sanctifie them An habitation of God through the Spirit 8. Though all the external actions of the God-head do belong to all the Persons of the blessed Trinity Yet some of those actions are usually ascribed unto one more than the rest according as they carry some proportion and likenesse to the personall properties of each person for the sanctification of Believers in regard of which effect God is said to dwell in Believers seing He thereby doth manifest His speciall presence in them is here ascribed unto the Spirit while those Ephesians are said to be an habitation unto God through the Spirit CHAP. III. IN the first part of this Chapter which beginneth ver 2. the Apostle setteth forth the dignity of his Apostolick Office towards the Gentiles with his calling to it and qualifications for it And first he propoundeth the matter briefly that this office was committed to him vers 2. Next he doth more largely illustrate it First by shewing his qualification and furniture for this Office to wit his knowledge and insight in the mysterie of the Gospel which He was to preach for proof whereof he appealeth to what he had written in the two former Chapters ver 3 4. and having called the Gospel a Mysterie he sheweth the reason why he did so to wit because it was not so known
to passe such a judgement upon his own doctrine and abilities Ye may understand my knowledge in the mysterie of Christ. Vers. 5. Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit THe Apostle giveth a reason why he called the Gospel the knowledge whereof was revealed unto him a mysterie and thereby doth also prove that there was a necessity of extraordinary revelation for bringing him to the knowledge of it to wit because this Doctrine of salvation through free grace by Christ and more especially the calling of the Gentiles to partake of this salvation in all respects equally with the Jews which is chiefly intended by the mysterie here spoken of as is clear from ver 6. was not so fully and clearly made known in the former ages of the world unto any of the sons of men whether without or within the Church as it was now under the Gospel revealed immediately by the Spirit of God unto the holy Apostles who these were see upon Col. 1. ver 1. doct 2. and the Prophets of the New Testament spoken of Act. 15. 32. 21. 8 9 10. Eph. 4. 11. who being extraordinarily assisted by the Spirit of God did not only open up the prophetical Scriptures of the Old Testament confirming and proving the Doctrine of the Gospel from these but also did foretell things to come Doct. 1. The children of men are naturally ignorant of Gospel-truths and know no further of them than God is pleased to reveal and make known unto them for the Apostle sheweth that the sons of men were passive as to the measure of light which was attained unto of those truths Which in other ages was not made known unto the sons of men as it is now revealed 2. The Lord in bestowing grace and the saving knowledge of Himself doth act as a most free agent not constrained by any necessity so that He dispenseth grace to whom He will Rom. 9. 18. to some more sparingly and to others more liberally whether we compare times with times or persons with persons in one and the same time Rom. 12. -3. for He hath revealed the saving knowledg of this mysterie now under the Gospel in a greater measure than he did formerly Which in other ages was not made known as is now revealed saith he 3. Neither the Doctrine of salvation through free grace by Christ nor Gods purpose to call the Gentiles to partake of this salvation equally with the Jews was altogether unknown to the ancient Church before Christ came there being severall manifestations of the former in the Covenant of Grace as it was first revealed unto Adam Gen. 3. 15. and after renewed with Abraham Gen. 17. 7. David 2 Sam. 23. 5. and commented upon by the Prophets Isa. 53. 3 c. and many full prophesies also of the latter which the Apostles themselves did make use of to confirm the calling of the Gentiles as Act. 13. 47. cited from Isa. 49. 6. and Act. 15. 15. cited from Amos 9. 11 for the Apostle doth not simply deny that the former ages had any knowledge of this mysterie at all but comparatively It was not in other ages made known as it is now revealed But fourthly neither the Doctrine of salvation nor yet the calling of the Gentiles were so fully or clearly revealed under the Old Testament as they are now under the New both of them being but sparingly spoken to then Mat. 13. 17. and what was spoken for the most part wrapped up in a vail of types and shadowes so that they could not stedfastly look to the end of that which is abolished 2 Cor. 3. 13. The latter to wit the calling of the Gentiles being only then fore-told and prophesied of and therefore could not be so distinctly solidly and satisfyingly known as now when it is accomplished Besides that the time when and the manner how it was to be accomplished and particularly that the Gentiles should have accesse unto the Church without an entrance by the door of circumcision Those I say were either not at all or but very sparingly revealed so that even the Apostles themselves after Christs ascension did doubt and hesitate much about the truth of this mysterie untill it was more fully revealed Act. 10. 10 c. for saith Paul Which in other ages was not made known as it is now revealed 5. As Christs servants may be sometimes necessitated to speak unto the commendation of their own receipts from God So Christian sobriety will teach them to be so far from disparaging or undervaluing the receipts of others to render themselves thereby the more esteemed of That they will endeavour to have others who are equally deserving to partake with them in that deserved esteem which they challenge unto themselves for Paul having begun to speak ver 3. of that knowledge of this mysterie which was revealed unto himself doth here affirm the same of all the Apostles and Prophets As it is now revealed unto the Apostles and Prophets 6. Though God might easily communicate the knowledge of Himself unto all whom he intendeth to save in a way extraordinary immediately and without the help of second means Act. 2. ver 3 4. yet He hath rather chosen to communicate His mind so unto some few only who have some of them at least at His appointment 2 Pet. 1. -21. set down in sacred Writ what they themselves did immediately receive from God 1 Job 1. 1. by which means the knowledge of God may in an ordinary way be conveyed unto others Job 20. 31. The Lord hereby preventing Satans designe who would otherwise have obtruded upon people his own delusions in place of immediate revelations from God 2 Chron. 18. 21. and trying the obedience of His people if they will subject themselves unto His will and word in the mouth of His Servants Matth. 10. 40. as also gently sparing their infirmity and weaknesse who could not one among a thousand carry aright those extraordinary manifestations of God unto their spirits 2 Cor. 12. 7. for saith Paul this mysterie was revealed by the Spirit to wit immediately not unto all but to His holy Apostles and Prophets 7. As all the Lords Ministers ought to be inherently holy not only because of the precept enjoyning so much in a speciall manner unto Ministers Tit. 1. 8. but also for the more successefull discharging of their office seing the secret of the Lord is with them who fear Him Psal. 25. 14. and the lips of the righteous feed many Prov. 10. 21. and as all the extraordinary Office-bearers for what is revealed Judas alone excepted and Pen-men of holy Scripture were really sanctified and holy So inherent holinesse without a peculiar illumination of the Spirit of God superadded for that end is not sufficient for giving clear light and insight in Gospel-mysteries for He giveth the Apostles and Prophets the epithet of boly to shew they themselves were so
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
that which is good 5. It is the duty not only of Ministers but of private Christians also keeping themselves within the bounds of their calling Heb. 5. 4. to endeavour the edification of those with whom they converse while they labour either to beget or carry on the work of grace in them and this not only by their good example but by their edifying discourse and communication for he speaketh to all indifferently while he saith Let no communication come out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying 5. We are not left to run at random in our ordinary discourses as if we might speak what we please providing we speak not evil but are tied only to speak edifying purpose and this at all times and with all persons Col. 4. 6. whether we be speaking of things religious or which appertain to our particular calling or recreations for as it is lawfull and necessary for Christians sometimes to speak of those things so there is such a way to speak of them as the hearers may be bettered by our speech But that which is good to the use of edifying 6. As godly discourse and conference ought to be heard and entertained by those who are present So although the Word preached be the ordinary mean of converting sinners Rom. 10. 14 15. yet the Lord is sometimes pleased to blesse the familiar and secret discourses of private Christians being spoken with grace and seasoned with the salt of divine wisdom by making them a mean of conveying grace unto others even to some whom no publick preaching of the Word could ever move or work upon 1 Pet. 3. 1. for the end of speaking good to the use of edifying here proponed is attainable else it had been no strong motive to the duty That it may minister grace unto the hearers Vers. 30. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption HE doth here inforce the former disswasive by a strong reason set down in form of precept the force whereof is first propounded that by their obscene unprofitable and unedifying discourse they would grieve the holy Spirit of God who is called holy because He is holy in Himself Isa. 6. 3. and the cause of all holinesse in us Rom. 15. 16. And we are are said to grieve Him not as if He who is God could be grieved properly for the passions of grief anger sorrow c. as implying some defect or imperfection are not in God Numb 23. 19. But improperly and in so far as we do that which in it self is apt to grieve Him if He were capable of grief Rom. 14. -15. and which provoketh the Spirit of God to do that which grieved persons do even to withdraw from the soul to shew His dislike and to return grief for grief This reason is next inforced from one work of the holy Spirit in the hearts of Believers which is here called sealing by a metaphor taken from that use of seals and signets among men whereby publick writs are confirmed and made authentick or the wares of merchands are marked and set apart for their own use In like manner the Spirit of God by renewing and sanctifying Believers imprinteth the draughts and lineaments of His own image upon them whereby they are not only set apart and sealed as His own peculiar goods but themselves also may be assured that they are His and shall be safely keeped under that seal untill the day of judgement called here the day of redemption See upon chapter 1. ver 13. and therefore by grieving the Spirit they did hazard the removall of this seal at least darken it much and consequently mar their own comfort exceedingly Doct. 1. The holy Ghost the third person of the blessed Trinity is graciously pleased to become in a singular manner familiar with the truely regenerate taking up a place of abode in their spirits and furnishing them with sweet and necessary counsel and advice from time to time 1 Joh. 2. 27. for as we shew His being grieved doth speak His withdrawing from them and a ceasing from being so friendly and familiar with them as a stranger will do from an inne wherein he hath received some affront which implieth that He was once present and familiar with them And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 2. How friendly and familiar soever the holy Spirit of God be with the believing soul yet so holy and pure is His Nature that he can behold no iniquity Hab. 1. 13. but when those that are dearest to Him give any way to known sin He must shew Himself displeasd with it and with them for it for so much is supponed while the Apostle disswading them from sin sheweth this holy Spirit of God will be grieved by it And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 3. However many by their obscene and putrid discourse intend no further than to make themselves or others joviall and glad Hos. 7. 3. yet hereby and by such other sins of the like stamp as being against the motions light and direction of the Spirit this holy Spirit of God is much displeased and so much as persons grived use to be and therefore will withdraw His gracious and conforting presence with all those other tokens of His respect and favour from the person by whom He hath been grieved Isa. 57. -17. leaving him to be guided for a time by his own spirit and the spirit of Satan Psal. 81. 12. and giving him over to a kind of desperate grief and hellish horrour Psal. 32. 3 4. or senslesse stupidity Isa. 63. 17. as a just reward for grieving the holy Spirit of God for Paul sheweth that by their putrid communication they would grieve the Spirit of God and make Him do what grieved persons use to do while he saith And grieve not the holy Spirit of God 4. As those spirituall plagues inflicted upon our spirits for grieving of the Spirit of God and following upon His withdrawing from us are most terrible so the childe of God not only may but ought to skare at and abstain from sin even that he may be preserved from those spirituall plagues and judgements though neither love to duty nor fear of an other correction do constrain him for the Apostle laboureth to deter them from the sin of loose speaking by this consideration as being of greatest force even lest thereby they should grieve the Spirit And grieve not the holy Spirit of God saith he 5. Though the redemption of Gods children be perfected in regard of the price payed by Christ Joh. 19. 30. yet in regard of the application of it unto us it is but begun in this world and perfected in the next for he speaketh of our compleat redemption as yet to come Whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption 6. Those whom God will compleatly redeem from all sin and misery both in soul and body and from whose eyes He will wipe away
A BRIEF EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLES of Paul TO THE GALATIANS AND EPHESIANS BY JAMES FERGUSSON Minister at Kilwinning Isa. 28. 10. For precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little Col. 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another c. LONDON Printed for the Company of STATIONERS Anno Dom. 1659. To the Right Honourable and noble Lords Alexander Earl of Eglintoun c. AND Hugh Lord Montgomery his Son And to the Right Honourable noble Lady The Lady Mary Lesley Lady Montgomery RIGHT HONOURABLE IT is decreed in Heaven That we must through much tribulation enter the Kingdom of God Act. 14. -22. God only wise hath so resolved that by means of sanctified trouble the Heirs of glory may be weaned from earth and learn to place their chief contentment and happinesse not upon their enjoyments below which are uncertain empty and perishing but upon things above an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for them How hard were it to make even those who are born of God long to be dissolved and bid adieu to all their sublunary contentments except the Lord in mercy did place a prick in every one of those roses and make their most promising earthly comforts within a little to prove as streams of brooks that passe away Job 6. 15 And how should this conciliate love to a sad and suffering lot and make the Lord's People who are strangers and pilgrims delight in the way which leadeth to such an home as Heaven is It is indeed our unacquaintance with Scripture and with what the Word of Truth holdeth forth to be the mind of God while He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth which doth occasion so much proud rising of spirit or base dejectedness of mind when the Lord doth not carve us out such a satisfying lot in all things as we would How often do we mistake our way and little lesse than quarrel with God only because He hedgeth us in with thorns of affliction that we cannot find out our lovers and therefore that man is truly blessed whom the Lord doth not only chastise but also instruct out of His Law Ps. 94. 12. and thereby make him understand and hear the voice of the rod and of Him who hath appointed it Mica 6. 9. And herein indeed the Lord doth greatly manifest His marvellous loving kindnesse and in wrath remembreth mercy that He joyneth instruction with correction and doth furnish His afflicted People with abundant means by which they may take up the mind of God for good unto them under His saddest dispensations even that the fruit of affliction is to take away their sin Isa. 27. 9 that He doth punish them seven times more and yet seven times more untill their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they accept of the punishment of their iniquity Levit. 26. 24 28 41. that though He visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Nevertheless His loving kindnesse will He not utterly take from him Psal. 89. 32 33. and that when they are judged they are chastened of the Lord that they should not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. All this and much more to this purpose hath the Lord made known by His Word and doth daily inculcate and make more and more known by His sent Ministers who according to their Commission do open up and apply the rich treasure of holy Scripture unto the Lords People of their charge And as if all this were not sufficient He hath besides stirred up the spirits of many of His Servants in every age to 〈…〉 mit their Labours upon Scripture unto writing for the more publick use of the Church of God not only in the present but also the succeeding generations As for my self I ingenuously professe that being conscious of mine own weaknesse I did much incline to rest satisfied with expressing my Commission by word only in preaching to and conferring with my Flock and those of my charge But being earnestly requested and in a manner commanded by some Reverend Brethren whom I honour and reverence in the Lord to draw up briefly in writ a plain Analysis a short and sound Exposition of and the chief Observations grounded upon such Scriptures as I had either largely preached upon or more briefly opened-up to the Lords People of my charge I shewed them some of my weak endeavours of that kind to be disposed upon at their pleasure which when they were pleased to publish and to call for more work of the same nature expressing their confidence that what I had already done was acceptable to all that love the Truth and would be edifying to the present and after-ages and being thereunto also encouraged by diverse faithfull and understanding persons I have in obedience to their desires given-out this other Piece to be disposed of by them as they should see good And seing they have advised the publishing of it To whom could I with more confidence and conscience of duty dedicate these my mean labours than to your Honours considering that God hath appointed me to watch for your souls as one who must g 〈…〉 n account and that your Honours have endeavoured for your parts to encourage me to go about all the parts of my Ministery with joy and not with grief My Lords when I called to remembrance how long each of you was detained these years by-past from enjoying the benefit of my publick Ministery by your necessitated abode elsewhere I thought the best way to give you an account and to make you reap some fruit of my labours in your absence was to present these my weak endeavours to your Honours and what you have heard from me upon these Scriptures in publick when you were permitted to be my hearers I hope this little piece shall conduce to bring it to your remembrance and the Lord Himself convey it into your hearts there to remain to make your Honours more and more wise to salvation that in the day of the Lord Jesus ye may be matter of joy and a crown of rejoycing to those who have laboured among you and spoken the Word of God unto you And for you Madam who hath had liberty to be my hearer more frequently and constantly than my noble Lords as I trust your Honour will observe there is a good harmony betwixt that which I taught in the Congregation and which I now publish to the world and that this little piece shall according to your usuall diligence in searching Scripture and in keeping fellowship with God in the practice of all commanded duties be improved by your Honour for your further edification and encouragment to walk worthy of the Lord unto all well-pleasing So when I consider how refreshfull it hath been often unto me to behold your sweet submission under the Lord's hand your truly
good Works seing that thereby they were not to be justified but by Faith in Christ only See the like Objection propounded Rom. 3. 31. Which Objection the Apostle answereth first by repelling the Inference as absurd and blasphemous in this verse and next by confuting it in the following Doct. 1. The Ministers of Jesus Christ in holding forth Truth would carefully foresee and prudently take off what atheistical loose or erring spirits do usually object against it to make it odious so doth Paul here But if while we seek c. 2. It is too usual for people to conceit too much of their external Church-priviledges as if by having them they had saving Grace and stood not in so much need of Christ's imputed Righteousnesse as others for this is that which the adversaries did stumble at that the Jews by nature who enjoyed so many rich priviledges should be found sinners and as unable to be saved by their own works as others For if while we seek to be justified by Christ we our selves are found also sinners 3. Whatever be a mans priviledges otherwise he must if so he would be justified by Christ take his confidence off them and reckon himself equal to the most vile and worthlesse sinners in the point of unability to merit any thing from God by his own Works for this is supposed as that whereon their Objection is grounded and Paul doth passe it as granted and speaketh only against their Inference from it But if while wee seek to be justified by Christ we our selves are found also sinners 4. It is no new prejudice though a most unjust one whereby the Doctrine of Justification by Faith alone and not by Works hath been unjustly loaded that of its own nature it doth tend to foster people in sin The Papists do object so now and the false Apostles did so of old Is therefore Christ the minister of sin say they or the Doctrine preached by Christ the occasion of sin 5. To take occasion from Free-grace or the Doctrine of it to live in sin is so much as in us lyeth to make Christ the minister of sin and therefore a thing which all christian hearts should sk●●ner at and abominate for in the place of saying the Doctrine of the Gospel doth occasion sin it is said Is Christ the minister of sin And Paul doth abominate the very thought of it rejecting it as most blasphemous and absurd God forbid saith he it is a deniall joyned with a detestation of the thing denied So chap. 3. 21. and 1 Cor. 6. 15. Rom. 9. 14. Vers. 18. For if I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressor THe Apostle refuteth the former Inference next by some reasons taken from that indissoluble tye which is betwixt Justification and Sanctification which he holdeth forth in his own person that he may hereby propose himself an example unto others The first is that Paul in preaching the Doctrine of Justification had joyntly with it prest the ruine and destruction of sin as necessarily flowing from that Doctrine and therefore if he should again build up sin by giving way to the practice of it he should contradict himself in what he had preached not walking according to the Doctrine of the Gospel but contrary to it and so himself should be the transgressor and the Gospel free from giving him any occasion so to be Doct. 1. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace cannot be rightly preached except the Doctrine of Mortification and destroying of sin be joyntly preached with it for the same Faith which layeth hold on Christ for Righteousnesse doth rest upon Him also for grace and strength to subdue corruption and sin Act. 15. 9. and if He be not imployed for the latter He will not bestow the former thus sin and corruption were those things which Paul destroyed in so far as he did hold forth the most solid and ready way how to get them destroyed while he taught the Doctrine of Justification If I build again the things which I destroyed 2. From this it followeth that the untender lives of those who professe this Doctrine do not reflect upon the Doctrine as if in it self it did give occasion or encouragement unto them so to live but upon themselves who do not make the right use of that Doctrine but abuse it and walk quite contrary to what is prescribed by it for so doth Paul infer For if I build again the things which I destroyed I make my self a transgressor or the fault is not in the Doctrine but in my self Vers. 19. For I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God HEre is a second Reason by preoccupation of an Objection for they might say The Doctrine of Justification as taught by Paul did free Believers from the Law Rom. 7. 4. and therefore did give them encouragement to sin The Apostle answereth by granting they were freed from the Law but denyeth that inference deduced from it upon two reasons and his Answer doth furnish us with three Doctrines which will further clear the meaning of the words First Paul and all Believers are dead indeed to the Law that is so as they put no confidence in their obedience to it for their Justification Philip. 3. 9. so as they are freed from the condemning power of it Chap. 3. 13. and as by its rigorous exaction of perfect obedience under hazard of the curse which we were not able to perform it did make us desperate and carelesse and so did occasionally provoke and stir-up corruption in the heart Rom. 7. 5 6. I am dead to the Law Secondly It is the Law it self which maketh them thus dead to the Law the curse of the Law putting them so hard to it that they are made to despair of getting Heaven and Salvation by their obedience to it Rom. 3. 20 21. and are forced to fly unto Christ by being in whom they are freed from condemnation Rom. 8. 1. and get their corruption so far mortified as that it taketh not occasion to sin the more from the Law 's discharging of sin as it was wont Rom. 6. 14. For I through the Law am dead to the Law And thirdly Though Believers are delivered from the Law in the former respects Yet not as it is the rule of an holy life for the very end of their freedom is That being so delivered they might by vertue of the Spirit of Christ dwelling in them live righteously and holily to the glory of God for saith he I am dead to the Law that I might live unto God By all which it doth evidently appear That the Doctrine of Justification in it self doth give no encouragement to sin which answereth the Objection and refuteth the blasphemous Inference which is made ver 17. Vers. 20. I am crucified with Christ. Nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the Faith
of the body 1 Thess. 5. 23. for saith he Because ye are sons He hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts 6. According as Beleivers do attain to a larger insight in this excellent benefit of Adoption and a greater measure of the fruits of it there will be a proportionable measure of the Spirit 's in-dwelling and manifesting of Himself in His gracious operations especially in His assisting and furnishing for the duty of Prayer for he proveth they had received a clear insight in this priviledge of Adoption and the more free use and fruition of it because the Spirit was more plentifully bestowed to dwell in their hearts And because ye are sons saith he God hath sent forth c. 7. Though the exercise of Faith Love Hope and other graces in the duty of Prayer and at other occasions doth flow from the renewed soul as the proper inward and vital cause of those actions so that properly we and not the Spirit of God are said to believe repent pray c. Rom. 10. 10. Yet because the Spirit doth not only create and preserve those gracious habits in the soul Ezek. 36. 26. but also exciteth the soul to act and assisteth it in acting according to them Philip. 2. 13. without which actuating exciting and assisting grace habitual grace in us could do nothing Joh. 15. 5. Therefore is it that the exercise of those graces is ascribed to the Spirit of God as the external efficient cause thereof for which reason our affectionate and believing Prayers are ascribed here unto Him God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son crying Abba 8. There is an holy vehemency and fervor required in Prayer opposit to carelesse formality and deadnesse for praying is here called crying which is an usual evidence of fervency and earnestnesse and the doubling of the word Father maketh for the same purpose Crying Abba Father or Father Father 9. This holy vehemency and fervor consisteth not so much in the lifting up of the externall voice as in the inward bensal and serious frame of the spirit it is a cry not of the mouth but of the heart Into your hearts crying 10. Besides this fervency and earnestnesse requisit in Prayer there would be also a confident familiar owning of God joyned with reverence to Him as a Father for the Spirit maketh them to call upon Him by the name of Abba Father Vers. 7. Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God through Christ. HEre he concludeth from what is said first That under the New Testament we are no more servants as being redeemed from that legal yoke of bondage under which the ancient Church was And secondly That we are sons and by consequence heirs of God which is verified mainly in real Believers under the New Testament in so far as they are sons come to age and heirs past tutory actually partaking of their father's inheritance in a larger measure than Believers did under the Old Testament as was explained ver 5. All which priviledges are bestowed upon us through Christ and through vertue of His coming unto the flesh Doct. 1. It is a safe way of reasoning upon the observation of the saving effects of God's Spirit in our selves to conclude that we are in a state of grace even the adopted Children of God for the Spirit of God by the Apostle doth so reason in this place Because He hath sent forth His Spirit into your hearts wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son 2. The rare priviledges which are bestowed upon Believers chiefly under the New Testament as they do exceed in some degrees those which the generality of Believers enjoyed under the Old so they are many and all of them so linked together as in one golden chain that where one of them is the rest are also and it is our duty having attained to know our enjoying of any one of them thence to gather that we have all the rest for the Apostle reckoneth a number of such priviledges which as to the degree wherein they are bestowed are proper to the dayes of the Gospel and doth alwayes from the former infer the latter Wherefore thou art no more a servant but a son and if a son then an heir of God 3. Though the natural Son of God be only one even Jesus Christ the only begotten of the Father Joh. 1. 14. yet every man who hath the Spirit of God dwelling in his heart is His son by grace and adoption even they who by nature are children of wrath Eph. 2. 3. for from God's sending forth His Spirit into their hearts he concludeth Wherefore thou art a son 4. Our right to the heavenly inheritance as also the possession of it whether that which is begun here in the Kingdom of Grace or which shall be compleated hereafter in the Kingdom of Glory doth follow upon our sonship and adoption so that God of rebels doth first make up sons and then none can challenge Him of injustice for bestowing upon us the inheritance of children And if a son then an heir of God saith he 5. As none since the fall ever was or shall be lifted up to that high dignity of being sons and daughters to the Lord Almighty or could lay any just claim to Heaven and Glory as his inheritance but by vertue of Christ's obedience and death whereby all those high and precious priviledges being formerly forfeited and lost were again recovered So the actual exhibition of Christ in the flesh and the real payment of the price by Christ did bring with it God having so appointed a larger measure and higher degree of those priviledges to be bestowed upon Believers after that time than was ordinarily enjoyed by Believers formerly for he is speaking here mainly of that higher degree of freedom and of that more evident and clear fight of and right to the inheritance together with the fuller measure of its possession in the Graces of God's Spirit which is proper to the dayes of the Gospel and sheweth all this cometh through Christ to wit His actual incarnation obedience and death Vers. 8. Howbeit then when ye knew not God ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods 9. But now after that ye have known God or rather are known of God how turn ye again to the weak and beggerly elements whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage THe Apostle having now sufficiently confirmed by Scripture and Reason the Churche's freedom from that ancient legal dispensation and more especially from the Ceremonial Law doth now in the second part of the chapter labour upon their affections to work them up towards the imbracing of this Truth both by sharp reproofs and most affectionate insinuations And first that he may fasten a reproof upon them for their begun defection the more convincingly he sheweth when that legal dispensation was in force they to wit the Galatians who were of
of all hope of any inheritance in the Land of promise Gen. 21. 9 10. So the Law of Moses or the Covenant given by God upon mount Sinai while it was rightly used as a Pedagogue leading to Christ it did bring forth children to God heirs of the heavenly inheritance such were all sincere Believers under the Old Testament but when it was abused and set up as a Covenant of Works in opposition to the Covenant of Grace it did then bring forth children unto bondage and those who did so adhere unto it were detained under damnable slavery and cut-off from Christ Gal. 5. 2. for the Apostle shewing that this Covenant was prefigured by Agar doth hint at one reason which leadeth us to seek after moe Which Covenant saith he is Agar for Agar is mount Sinai in Arabia 7. No Church or People hath Religion so firmly established which in progresse of time may not make such apostasie from it as that there will be a vast difference betwixt what they once were and what they now are for such a Church was Jerusalem once Psal. 76. 1. 2. but now her case was much altered Therefore saith he this Covenant doth answer or keepeth concord with Jerusalem not which once was but now is importing there was a foul change to the worse And is in bondage with her children Vers. 26. But Jerusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all THe Apostle having shewen that Hagar did prefigure the first or old Covenant doth now briefly describe that second or new Covenant which was prefigured in Sarah First by declaring where that Covenant did reside or who adhered to it to wit Jerusalem which is above whereby is not meaned the Church triumphant in Heaven for it is clear he speaketh of a Church whereof Believers upon earth are members even the Militant Church especially of the truly regenerate claiming to life according to the tenour of the Covenant of Grace although the Catholick Church-visible be not excluded seing it is a Church begetting children to God by the use of Ordinances and is here called Jerusalem because that City was a type of the true Church for her compactnesse and order Psal. 122. 3. beauty Psal. 48. 2. and divine protection which did attend her Isa. 31. 5. and this Church is said to be above because her original is from Heaven Iam. 1. 17. and the lively members thereof have their conversation in Heaven Philip. 3. 20. Secondly by shewing the state wherein those who adhere to this Covenant are a state of freedom from sin Rom. 6. 18. the curse of the Law Rom. 8. 1. and the yoke of that ancient legal dispensation Ephes. 2. 15. Thirdly by declaring who are the children of this Covenant or members of the true Church adhering to this Covenant even all sincere Believers whether Jews or Gentiles Doct. 1. The Lord doth never so far give way to the spirit of error and rage of persecution but even in the worst of times He hath some who do keep their garments clean and hold up a banner for Truth notwithstanding of all contrary endeavours for the utter extirpation of it for though Jerusalem the usual place of Gods abode was at this time in bondage with her children a very receptacle of Christ's enemies Act. 8. 1. and chief head of all that opposition which was against the Gospel Act. 9. 2. yet God wanted not a Church even Jerusalem which is above 2. As freedom from God's wrath and curse may be attained and enjoyed under bodily bondage and oppression so being attained it maketh the attainer truly free so that all his other bondage is not to be valued much for the true Church though for the time heavily oppressed in her members ver -29. of whom some were also in a state of bodily servitude Col. 3. 22. yet because of her freedom from God's wrath and curse she is said to be free as if this bondage being removed there had been none remaining Jerusalem which is above is free 3. Though those who are regenerate do owe their new birth to God their Father only in so far as the vertue and power whereby they are brought from death to life is only His Eph. 1. 19. and neither Church-Ministry nor any created power whatsoever can by any proper efficiency reach this so divine and supernatural an effect yet the Church is the mother of all the Regenerate in so far as she is gifted with Ministers 1 Cor. 12. 28 whose office is to dispense the Word which Word being blessed of God is both the seed of this new birth 1 Pet. 1. 23. as also the food and milk 1 Pet. 2. 2. whereby the new-born children are nourished for in this sense the Apostle saith Jerusalem is the mother of us all 4. Though no Church no not the Church universall which is most properly our mother ought to be heard and obeyed further than her Commands do agree with the Commands of God our Father Act. 4. 19. yet we are still to give her respect and reverence as also to employ our parts and graces and all that is ours for the defence and advancement of her just interest in our places and stations and that because she is the mother of us all Vers. 27. For it is written Rejoyce thou barren that bearest not break forth and cry thou that travellest not for the desolate hath many moe children than she which hath an husband THe Apostle in the fourth place confirmeth the truth of the former mysterie by a Scripture taken out of Isa. 54. 1. where the Prophet doth direct his speech to the Christian Church under the Gospel as she was to be in her beginnings and about the time of Christ's incarnation and sufferings whereof he had most clearly prophesied chap. 53. and having designed her by the name of a barren woman that beareth not and travelleth not because of the paucity of Converts to the Christian Faith at that time and of a seemingly desolate woman without an husband because of the crosse and persecution which she was then to be under he exhorteth her to rejoyce and to expresse her joy against all contrary discouragements and that because her state should be changed and she made a more fruitfull mother by a numerous accession of converts to the Christian Faith from among the Gentiles than the Jewish Synagogue her self who formerly had enjoyed God's grace and presence and at that time should seem to be more owned of God because of the great prosperity multitude of followers and outward beauty attending her beyond the Christian Church Doct. 1. The supream Judge by whom all controversies of Religion are to be determined and in whose sentence we are to rest is the holy Spirit speaking in Scripture for Paul in this present controversie appealeth to Scripture For it is written saith he 2. It is not the Churche's lot to be alwayes alike fruitfull in bringing forth children to God she hath her barren times wherein
Circumcision upon them as a thing whithout the which they could not be saved whereby they laid upon them a kind of necessity and constrained them to be circumcised and sheweth three principles from which they did herein act two whereof are in this verse first from hypocrisie or a desire to make a fair outward shew of Religion by observing those fleshly and carnal rites such as Circumcifion difference of meats legal purifications and the like injoyned by the ceremonial Law Secondly from pusillanimity or a politick design to eschew persecution from their Country-men the Jews and from the Civil Power at the instigation of the Jews Act. 18. 12 13. for preaching the sincere doctrine of the Gospel concerning Christ crucified which is here called the Crosse of Christ See chap. 5. ver 11. the fury of which persecuters was much abated towards such Christians as did observe the ceremonial Law of Moses the preaching down whereof of any other thing did inrage them most chap. 5. 11. Doct. 1. Though an external profession of Religion Rom. 10. -10. and the practice of such external rites 1 Cor. 11. 24. and other ordinances of divine worship as God hath commanded Col. 3. 16. are to be made conscience of yet when the practice of those external things is opposed to the inward substantial duties of Religion the former being rested upon without the latter Mat. 15. 8. or when the practiser affecteth a vain shew and to be reputed religious because of those things much more than to be religious really and indeed Mat. 6. 16. this is the sin of hypocrisie loathsom both to God and man and that especially when people affect a shew from the practice of those rites which are not commanded of God for this is condemned here in the false Apostles that they desired to seem exceedingly religious and to make a fair outward shew of Religion by observing such carnal rites as God had now abolished under the Gospel As many as make a fair shew in the flesh saith he It is ordinarily observed that the zeal of those who are carried away with the spirit of error themselves and whose great work is to seduce others doth most run out upon the externals of Religion thereby affecting a fair shew and to be reputed as men singular for piety and devotion that so they may deceive the simple who take all for gold that glistreth Rom. 16. -18. So those Apostles desired to make a fair shew in the flesh 3. An erring conscience is of great force and mightily prevalent with erring persons to make them follow the dictates thereof It being usual for such to pretend conscience as a reason why they cannot subject themselves to Truth God in His holy Justice doth give them over to a spirit of delusion 2 Thess. 2. 11. and maketh conscience to be their snare when it imbraceth darknesse for light Isa. 5. 20. and uncessantly vexeth them untill they execute its most unreasonable irreligious unnatural and sometimes most blasphemous commands Joh. 16. 2. Jer. 32. 35. for the false Apostles did constrain them to be circumcised mainly because by teaching the absolute necessity of Circumcision to Salvation Act. 15. 2. they possessed their consciences with that erroneous opinion and their consciences so misled did constrain them to follow its dictates 4. As persecution doth ordinarily follow upon the sincere preaching of the Gospel So when persecution for the Gospel waxeth hot there are usually many found who to decline a suffering lot do tamper with the persecuters of Truth though not by total apostasie from Truth yet by coming a great length in making shipwrack of faith and a good conscience only to gratifie those who persecute the truth and to break the edge of their rage and fury against themselves who notwithstanding will labour to keep up their credit in the Church of God as if they were acted from no such politick design but from a principle of light and conscience for so those false Apostles constrained others to be circumcised pretending conscience for their so doing when their design was only lest they should suffer persecution for the crosse of Christ. 5. Though Hereticks and every one who are carried away with a spirit of error pretend to conscience as that which they desire to follow and dare not contradict in what they hold yet very frequently such especially they who are seducers of others do but make a pretext and shelter of conscience to cover their pride politick designs love to ease in a troublesome time pusillanimity of spirit fear of persecution and a desire of vain glory by which they are acted more than from any principle of conscience for those false Apostles pretended to light and conscience as the rule of what they did Act. 15. 2. and yet they did it only saith Paul lest they should suffer persecution for the crosse of Christ and ver 13. That they may glory in your flesh 6. However they who persecute others for Truth do also pretend to conscience Isa. 66. 5. yet they are often found to be men destitute of conscience and more politick than conscientious even in those things wherein they pretend most to conscience in so far as they do dispense with some professors of Truth if so they come but a little towards them and comply with them in some things only though not in all things as intending hereby to work them up to a greater length in progresse of time for so the persecuting Jews did not molest those Christians who were circumcised though they did otherwise professe faith in the Messiah already come whom the Jews had crucified as is clear from this They constrain you to be circumcised only lest they should suffer persecution for the crosse of Christ. 7. As a desire to eschew a suffering lot and persecution even for Truth by all lawful means is no wayes sinful but commanded Mat. 10. 23. and commendable Prov. 22. 3. So to dispense with the least jot of Truth and to imbrace the smallest of Errors contrary to Truth that hereby the greatest of sufferings might be eschewed is blame-worthy and extreamly sinfull seing the least of sins hath more of evil in it than the greatest of sufferings Those are our affliction but not our sin for the Apostle condemneth his adversaries not that simply they had laboured to eschew persecution but that they constrained others to be circumcised only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross of Christ. Vers. 13. For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law but desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh THe Apostle first maketh good his former charge against his adversaries to wit That they urged Circumcision not from zeal to the Law of God and from conscience but from a politick base design because they made no conscience to keep the Law themselves that is neither the moral Law which they transgressed daily by their wicked and licentious lives Philip. 3. 18 19. nor
blessings according as He hath chosen us in Him 6. God did not choose or elect us because we were holy or because He did foresee we would be holy but that we might be holy so that neither fore-seen holinesse good-works nor fore-seen faith were the causes of Election but effects and fruits flowing from it for saith he God hath chosen us that we should be holy 7. God hath elected none to enjoy everlasting glory after this but such as He hath chosen to be holy here And therefore a man may safely and certainly conclude he hath been elected from all eternity if he be sanctified and renewed by the Spirit of holinesse in time and whatever assurance of Election is pretended unto by any who lead an unholy life it is but a strong delusion a vain presumption and no well-grounded perswasion for He hath chosen us as to Heaven and glory so also that we should be holy 8. This real and saving holinesse from which a man may conclude his own Election is joyned with an honest endeavour after such a conversation as is blamelesse and obnoxious unto no just reproof from men It is not only inward and in the heart but outward also and in the hand and tongue for saith he He hath chosen us that we should be holy and without blame to wit from men as the word is taken Luke 1. 6. 1 Tim. 3 2. Doct. 9. Where this real and saving holinesse the fruit of electing love is there will not only be a blamelesse conversation before men but also sincerity of heart before God which doth not imply perfection in holinesse for none should then be holy before Him in this life 1 King 8. 46 but ingenuity and singlenesse of spirit opposit to a double heart and hypocrisie even such ingenuity as a man dare appeal to God to judge of his honest endeavour after that in reality and in deed which he pretendeth unto in the wayes of God for those words before Him expresse such sincerity of heart See 2 King 20. 3. Psal. 18. 23. we should be holy before Him 10. Sound holinesse and sincerity of heart are most manifested in the duties of love to our neighbour flowing from our love to God for external duties of Religion may be diligently followed even by hypocrites Isa. 1. 11. And the inward substantial duties thereof are not so easily discerned neither by others nor yet by our selves as when they are accompanied with the painfull and conscientious practice of those duties which love to our neighbour doth enjoyn for therefore doth the Apostle give an instance of this holinesse in love rather than in any other duty And without blame before Him in love Vers. 5. Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself according to the good pleasure of His will IN this Verse the Apostle doth first expresse Gods eternal decree of Election formerly mentioned by another word to wit Predestination which setteth forth the same decree and purpose together with its eternity and extent not only to the end proposed by God but to the whole progresse of convenient means by which the end intended was infallibly to be brought about Secondly he further describeth this decree of Election and Predestination from another end which God designed to be brought about by it even the Adoption of children by Jesus Christ to be bestowed upon the Elect whereby is meaned not only that begun Adoption which Believers possesse here Joh. 1. 12. and whereby they have a right to the heavenly inheritance Rom. 8. 17. but also and mainly that compleat and perfect Adoption whereof the Elect shall partake hereafter even the actual possession of their glorious inheritance See the word so taken Rom. 8. 23. He describeth it also from the causes moving God to elect any or one more than another which are set down first more briefly to himself it is better rendred in himself whereby are excluded all causes moving God to this act without Himself Secondly more largely and expresly to wit God's absolute and soveraign will swayed with favour and goodwill towards those whom He did choose Doct. 1. God hath not only decreed to set forth the glory of His mercy by bestowing Heaven and Glory upon some of mankind Luke 12. 32. but in that same wise and eternal counsel of His He hath forecasten and accordingly decreed by what means and helps the person so elected may come to Heaven and shall undoubtedly obtain it And therefore none can warrantably expect that this decree of Predestination will bring them to Salvation if they live in the prophane neglect and contempt of those means which do lead unto it for the force and usual acception of the word predestinated is extended to the means aswell as to the end Having predestinated us 2. No not the Elect themselves are children to God by nature they are not born sons but made to be sons by grace and adoption who before were heirs of hell and children of wrath Eph. 2. -3. for a childe by adoption is opposed to a childe by nature men are not said to adopt their own children but strangers Exodus 2. 10. Now God hath predestinated the Elect unto the adoption of children 3. God is graciously pleased in time not only to call and justifie those whom he did choose for Himself before all time Rom. 8. 30. but also to make them partakers of the grace of adoption whereby a further dignity is put upon them than formerly was even that being already drawn out of nature to grace in their effectual calling and reconciled to God in their justification they are now advanced to the dignity of sons and children to the most High and have a right to all the priviledges of sons as the Spirit of Adoption whereby they cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15. fatherly pity from God under their infirmities Psal. 103. 13. protection from the rage of enemies Prov. 14. 26. provision and furniture for their straits and necessities Mat. 6. 30 32. necessary chastisment from God as their Father Heb. 12. 6. and a right to the inheritance of life eternal Heb. 1. 14. not only as they are friends with God and clothed with a perfect righteousnesse which they have by justification but as God's own sons and heirs which inheritance being once possessed their adoption which is now but begun shall be full and compleat Rom. 8. 23. for saith the Apostle He hath predestinated us unto the adoption of children 4. Besides those other differences which are betwixt God's adopting of the Elect to be His own Children and one man's adopting of another to be his son and heir this is one Men do adopt children because they have none of their own but God doth not adopt the Elect from any such indigence or want as having a natural Son of His own even Jesus Christ the only begotten of the Father for the Apostle having spoken of the Adoption of the Elect doth presently make mention of
this ground any thing savouring of imperfection as if He did consult or deliberate concerning things to be done as men do from ignorance or doubtfulnesse of what is most convenient and therefore do first consult and advise about the best expedient and then make choice accordingly There is no such doubtfull inquisition or previous deliberation in God in order to his working His will alone is in stead of all counsel and deliberation seing his most holy will hath all equity wisdom and righteousnesse joyned with it so that there is nothing more required to make an action be well wisely and advisedly done than that it be willed of God for the Apostle saith not He worketh all things according to the will of his counsel as if counsel and deliberation went before and the choice of the will followed after but after the counsel of his will shewing that His willing of a thing to be done is in place of all further consultation about it From Vers. 12. Learn 1. As God's giving grace unto gracelesse sinners His drawing them out of nature to the state of grace and bestowing the heavenly inheritance upon them is a work which setteth forth the glory of God's most excellent Attributes of mercy goodnesse justice power and beneficence and giveth occasions unto beholders to set forth his praise in all those though the man himself upon whom this work is wrought were silent the very work should speak for it self So it is the duty of those especially whom God hath so dealt with to take occasion from his gracious work in them to set forth the praises of Him who hath called them out of darknesse to his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. -9. They are not alwayes to dwell upon complaints of themselves but sometimes would mount up in the high thoughts of His commendation and praises for this is the end designed by God in calling them to obtain this inheritance even that we should be to the praise of his glory which words may be taken both passively the praise of His glory was to be manifested in them and actively they themselves were to set forth His praises 2. The more early a man doth close with Christ and imbrace Him by faith as He is offered in the Gospel the lesse he doth protract and delay his so doing the more of praise to God's glorious Attributes is manifested in him and the more of obligation doth ly upon him to set forth God's praises who hath so early broken the yoke of his slavery to sin and Satan for their trusting and first trusting in Christ before others is spoken of as a mean conducing to His praise and engaging them to it That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. 3. That any do believe in Christ at all and that some do believe in Him sooner and others later dependeth not upon any difference in the persons themselves but upon God's purpose counsel and good pleasure for their trusting and first trusting before others is subservient to the end which was proposed by God to wit the praise of His glory Now the necessary means and the end intended do depend upon one and the same purpose so that if God have decreed the end He must also have decreed the means tending to that end That we might be to his praise who first trusted in Christ. 4. The Gospel when it is preached to a People though never so godlesse and obdured will not want its own saving fruits among some of those to whom it is preached God useth not to send His Gospel unto a People of purpose to harden all and to make them inexcusable but because there are some belonging unto the election of grace who are to be converted by it for as the Gospel was to be preached first to the Jews because of the promise made to the fathers Rom. 15. 8. So when it was preached it wanted not fruits among them though they were a People to be cast off enemies unto all good had crucified the Lord Jesus 1 Thess. 2. 15 16. for they were of those Jews who first trusted in Christ. 5. It is no small priviledge for any wether person or people to be trusters in Christ before others it is a matter of their commendation Rom. 16. -5. it glorifieth God in so far as their example and experience may prove an encouraging motive unto others 1 Tim. 1. 16. it carryeth with it several advantages for the sooner a man doth close with Christ he will get that work done the more easily he is the sooner freed from slavery to Satan and his own lusts he is the sooner capacitated to do the more service to God and his great concernments are the sooner out of hazards for Paul maketh it a prerogative and priviledge which the Jews had beyond the Gentiles even that they first trusted or hoped in Christ. Vers. 13. In whom ye also trusted after that ye heard the Word of Truth the Gospel of your salvation in whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise 14. Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of His glory THe Aposte applyeth the former doctrine in the second place to the believing Gentiles in the person of those Ephesians That hereby he may shew they were as much in the debt of God's free-grace for salvation as the believing Jews In order to which he holdeth forth first the benefit which they had received from Christ even the same which he shew was bestowed upon the believing Jews to wit the heavenly inheritance and all those other spiritual blessings which lead to it for as it is necessary that some word be added to the beginning of this verse for making good sense so it seemeth the word trusted taken from the close of ver 12. cannot be it for the word rendred there first trusted is but one in the Original and cannot be applyed unto the Gentiles as not being the first who trusted in Christ And therefore it is safer and more apposit also unto the Apostle's scope to repeat that word which is v. 11. have obtained an inheritance especially seing he is applying here to the Gentiles what he had applyed there to the Jews the principal part whereof and that upon which all the rest spoken of there doth depend is their obtaining an inheritance Secondly he setteth forth the mean whereby they obtained this excellent benefit even their hearing of the doctrine of the Gospel which he describeth from its excellent nature as being the Word of Truth and from that great good which it revealeth and offereth even salvation Thirdly he mentioneth a work of God's holy Spirit upon their hearts after they had believed which is here called sealing by a metaphor taken from the use of Seals and Signets among men which are chiefly used for putting a difference betwixt true Writs and those which are counterfeit so that this
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
And therefore is He called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4. 13 yet upon the actual exercising of the grace of Faith the Spirit of God doth more fully manifest Himself to be dwelling in Believers by His carrying-on the work of sanctification in them for their greater comfort and further strengthning of their faith for saith he After ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit 3. Whoever have rightly closed with the Gospel and Christ in the Gospel by believing will have the grace of sanctification and holinesse of life following upon their so doing as also sometimes some measure of joy peace and sensible comfort for as I cleared by the seal is meaned those graces And after ye believed ye were sealed saith he 4. Even real Believers have need of confirmation and sealing as being oftimes exercised and tossed with several doubts and scruples both concerning the truth of the Gospel and promise in general Mark 9. 24. and the reality of their own closing with and interest in the Promise Psal. 88. 14. for therefore is it that after those Ephesians had believed they were sealed hereby to evidence the truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their believing the Gospel After ye believed ye were sealed 5. The Lord hath provided and accordingly doth bestow sufficient means upon Believers whereby all their fore-mentioned doubts may be solved and they abundantly satisfied for besides the writing of the Promise upon their hearts and the outward seals of the Covenant of Grace or Sacraments which are visibly dispensed by Christ's Ministers there is an inward seal to wit the saving Graces of God's Spirit together with growth and increase in those imprinted by the Spirit of God upon the hearts of Believers in order to their confirmation although they sometimes cannot perfectly discern nor exactly take up the draughts and lineaments of it After ye believed ye were sealed 6. The saving graces of God's Spirit wrought in a Believer and exercised by him in all sorts of holy duties and especially growth in grace is a most convincing evidence not only that the Word of the Gospel by which holinesse is wrought is the undoubted Truth of God for this is the witnesse by water spoken of 1 Joh. 5. 8. there being no other thing but the Truth of God able to produce such strange and supernatural effects as those but also it serveth to evidence the reality of the man's interest in the promise and of his right to the heavenly inheritance in whom those saving graces and the fruits of holinesse are seing holinesse of life is the inseparable effect of saving faith and interest in the promise Act. 15. 9. for by the Seal is meaned mainly the graces of sanctification and as was shewn they get that name because as Seals do confirm publick Writs and make them appear to be authentick so the saving and sanctifying graces of the Spirit do confirm to those in whom they are the Truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their faith in Christ In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 7. Our doubts and scruples whether concerning the truth of the Promise in general or our own particular interest in the Promise ought not in reason make us suspend our believing in Christ and the Promise untill we first be sealed and sanctified and so receive sufficient confirmation but on the contrary we are first to set our Seal to God's Truth by believing and venturing our salvation upon it and then we may expect next to have God setting His Seal upon our heart in order to our confirmation for that is the order here set down In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 8. The sanctifying of our natures and adorning of our hearts with saving graces together with any confirmation in the truth of the Promise or of particular interest in the Promise which Believers receive from these is the work of God's Spirit only for it is ascribed to Him here and with relation thereto He is called the holy Spirit not only because He is essentially holy and very holinesse it self but also the author of sanctification and of all saving graces in Believers Gal. 5. 22. and the Spirit of promise not only because He was promised to be abundantly poured-out upon Believers under the New Testament Act. 2. 16. but also His office is to seal and confirm by His gracious operations the Promises of the Gospel to Believers Rom. 8. 16. Ye were sealed saith he with the holy Spirit From that use for which the holy Spirit with his saving graces was bestowed upon them Learn 1. As the Spirit of God is a person subsisting and not a created gift or grace so this holy Spirit doth not only bestow His gifts and graces upon Believers but also cometh Himself unto them and dwelleth in them In so far as though He be not personally united with them as the divine nature is with the humane in Christ yet He is not only with them in his essence and being as He is present every-where Jer. 23. 24. nor yet in respect of His working by a general providence only as He is present even with wicked men for in Him they live move and have their being Act. 17. 28. but He resideth in them as in his own Temple by his special and saving operations whereby He not only bestoweth upon them the habits of all saving graces at their first conversion Ezek. 36. 25 26. but doth also by his immediate strong and special influence daily preserve those graces in life Joh. 10. 28 29. actuate them Philip. 2. 13. and ordinarily maketh them to grow Hos. 14. 5. for whereas the word Spirit in the former verse is in the neuter gender● he repeats it here by a masculine relative which would be better rendred who than which to shew that the Spirit is a person subsisting Which Spirit he saith is given us for an earnest of our inheritance 2. Heaven and glory is the only portion and inheritance of Believers all their enjoyments earthly though never so great being but mean fading in themselves and lyable to spoyling and vastation from others so that this inheritance which is incorruptible fadeth not away and is reserved in the heavens 1 Pet. 1. 4. is only worthy to be looked upon as their inheritance for the Apostle calleth it our inheritance by way of excellency Which is the earnest of our inheritance 3. As the right unto this inheritance is made-over unto Believers upon their resigning themselves to God by faith in way of covenant and paction Isa. 55. 3. So the Lord hath thought it convenient not to give them the possession of it presently upon their right but to delay it for a season that in the mean time they may exercise their hope in longing after it Philip. 1. 23. And God may get glory from the heirs of heaven here upon earth and among earthly men by being the means of salvation unto some Mat. 5. 16. and of conviction and just
condemnation unto others Heb. 11. 7. for the metaphor of an earnest used among Merchants when the sum covenanted is not presently given doth bear so much Who is the earnest of our inheritance 4. As even Believers are apt to doubt if ever the covenanted inheritance shall be bestowed and actually enjoyed by them So the Lord is most willing to do all which in reason can be required for removing all doubts of that kind and more particularly He giveth them an earnest or a part of this covenanted inheritance in hand to assure them of his purpose to bestow the whole in due time for the metaphor of an earnest doth bear this also the end of giving an earnest being to assure the receiver of the giver's honest purpose to perform all that he hath promised which otherwise might be called in question Who is the earnest of our inheritance 5. The Spirit of the Lord sealing Believers and those saving graces of the Spirit which he worketh in sealing do serve for the same uses in relation to the Covenant of Grace wherein heaven and glory is promised to Believers for which an earnest doth serve in a civil bargain for as the earnest is a part of the sum and usually but a small part and yet may assure the receiver of his obtaining the whole So the Spirit and His work of grace received here is begun glory Joh. 17. 3. and though but a small part of it 1 Cor. 13. 12 13. yet the smallest measure of grace may assure the man who hath it of his obtaining the full possession of glory in the day of the Lord Jesus Philip. 1. 6. hence the Apostle calleth the Spirit with his graces this earnest Who is the earnest of our inheritance From the time how long the use of this earnest was to continue Learn 1. As real Believers are Christs possession in whom He dwelleth Eph. 3. 17. and whom He manureth and maketh fruitfull Joh. 15. -2. So He hath purchased them to wit by paying a price to provoked justice 1 Cor. 6. 20. and by force from Satan their old possessor and master Heb. 2. 14 15. and purchased them for this end that He might possesse them for speaking of Believers he calleth them a purchased possession 2. Though the redemption and delivery of Believers be already begun and their bonds loosed in part Col. 1. 13. yet their compleat redemption is but to come to wit from sin at death Heb. 12. -23. and from misery not untill the last day then and not while then shall their bodies be raised up in glory and their redemption be full and compleat Rom. 8. 23. for the Apostle speaketh of their redemption as of a thing yet to come Untill the redemption of the purchased possession 3. As this earnest even the holy Spirit with His graces being once given cannot totally be lost So if this day of redemption were once come there shall be no further use of an earnest the covenanted inheritance will then be fully possessed and consequently no place left for fears or doubts about the obtaining of it for he saith the Spirit was to be an earnest untill the redemption and so He must continue with them untill then but was not to serve for an earnest any longer Who is the earnest untill the redemption of the purchased possession From the end proposed see what is already observed upon ver 6. and ver 12. Vers. 15. Wherefore I also after I heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus and love unto all the Saints 16. Cease not to give thanks for you making mention of you in my prayers THe Apostle in the second part of the Chapter taking occasion from what he heard of those Ephesians breaketh forth in thanksgiving and prayer to God for them whereby he prosecuteth his main scope in so far as that by every sentence and word almost he doth breath forth the high esteem which he had of God's free grace in Christ and thereby doth confirm their faith besides that while he prayeth for their perseverance and growth in the faith and knowledge of saving truths he doth indirectly at least excite them to persevere and make progresse in the same And first having shewn the good report which was brought unto him of those spiritual graces which were eminent in them whereof he instanceth two which are the sum and compend of all the rest and doth illustrate them from their principal object faith in Jesus Christ and love to all the Saints ver 15. he maketh known unto them what was his exercise upon their behalf even that being incited by the consideration of these spiritual blessings bestowed by God upon them and mentioned ver 13 14. and by the report which he had of them ver 15. he made conscience to continue in the duties of thanksgiving and prayer to God for them ver 16. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. It is not sufficient that Christs Ministers do presse duties upon the Lords People having convincedly cleared unto their consciences the equity which is in those duties but they must also hold forth unto them a copie of that obedience which they so much presse by their own example and practice for so the Apostle having abundantly cleared ver 13 14. that the Lord 's converting and sealing of those Ephesians did call upon them to praise the glory of His grace he himself doth here put hand to this work Wherefore saith he I cease not to give thanks for you 2. It is a great encouragement to blesse the Lord and to pray unto Him in behalf of those who are making conscience of these duties for themselves for while he saith I also give thanks he supposeth they were doing the like and that he was encouraged from thence 3. Grace is like a precious oyntment whose savour cannot be hid the report of it where it is in life will spread and make his name who hath it savoury unto such as are truly gracious themselves for Paul though at a great distance being now at Rome heard of their faith in Jesus Christ and love to all the Saints 4. It is the duty of Christians to be joyfully reporting and speaking of the grace of God and good which is in others providing it be wisely done that is first sparingly and so as not to place all our own Religion in speaking of the Religion of others Secondly not rashly or without such grounds in the person whom we commend as charity at least may rest upon Thirdly impartially and not factiously crying up some and decrying others who are equally deserving Jude -16. for Paul's hearing of their faith and love implyeth that some had reported to him of that good which was in them 5. Even in the best Churches in those primitive times who were most commended by the Apostles every one had not faith and so is it yet All are not Israel who are of Israel Rom. 9. 6. for the word rendred their faith in the Original is the faith which
region of the air he doth exercise it also in the earth and hell 1 Pet. 5. 8. and therefore these must not be here excluded but rather included as being below the region of the air It is described also from the subjects of his kingdom to wit those who are not only so obstinate in evil that they cannot be perswaded by any means to relinquish it as the word in the Original rendred disobedience implyeth but also are judicially given over to disobedience and fully under the power of it which is expressed while they are called children of disobedience according to the custom of the holy language whereby those who are fully given over and under the power of any vice are said to be the children of that vice Hos. 2. 4. concerning which obstinat sinners the Apostle affirmeth that the spirit of Satan did uncessantly and without intermission work most powerfully in them by driving them unto all manner of evil without any stay or hinderance See Joh. 8. 41 44. Doct. 1. The depth of man's naturall misery is so great that even the renewed Children of God cannot reach it at one view nor be sufficiently convinced of it until the Word of the Lord do frequently inculcate and lay it forth in its wofull parcels yea and bear-in upon them the truth of it by most convincing reasons taken from their own sense and experience for the Apostle speaking to the converted Ephesians seeth a necessity not only to declare in the general that they had been dead in sins and trespasses but also to prove it was so and to point-forth that wofull death at large in this verse Wherein in time past ye walked c. 2. Though even the Regenerate have a body of sin and death dwelling in them Rom. 7. 24. and do sometimes actually fall in sin yea even very grosse sins 2 Sam. 11. 4. and 12. 9. yet they do not walk in sin that is sin is not to the Child of God as the way to the travellor so as to make it his daily trade and imployment Psal. 1. 1. or to sin without any reluctancy flowing from a spirituall principle against that which he knoweth to be sin Gal. 5. 17. And so as to walk after sin by making sin and suggestions to sin his guide whom he doth willingly follow Rom. 8. -1. although sin may conquer and carry him as an unwilling captive Rom. 7. -14. c. for Paul maketh their walking in sin an argument to prove that they were dead in sin and therefore it cannot fall upon the Regenerate Wherein in time past ye walked 3. Such is the power of converting grace that it causes men change their former way and course though they have been never so much rooted in it and habituated to it for while he saith Wherein in time past ye walked he implyeth there was a change wrought and that they did not so walk in the time present 4. While Scripture affirmeth that Christ hath taken away the sins of the world Job 1. -29. and is a propitiation for the sins of the whole world 1 Joh. 2. 2. it is no cogent argument to prove that Christ hath died for all and every one in the world seing the word world doth not alwayes when mentioned in Scripture comprize all who are in the world but must be astricted to the universality of some certain kind of people in the world as the nature of the purpose in hand will bear for here the world whose course the unconverted Ephesians did follow must be the world of unrenewed men only and cannot be extended so as to comprehend the godly and renewed who were also in the world Ye walked according to the course of this world 5. The Lord is so far from being moved with the merit or worth of those whom He doth convert to bestow converting grace upon them rather than on others whom He leaveth in their unconverted state that He maketh this grace of His to fall upon such as are in no respect better than those whom He passeth by for those Ephesians before conversion walked according to the course of this world that is they were behind with none in sin and wickednesse 6. As the generall corrupt custom and example of those with whom we live or who have lived in the former ages of the world before us is a strong incitement and sufficient excuse in the minds of many to follow the multitude in doing evil without further enquiry So it argueth a man to be yet in an unrenewed estate when he maketh the example of others the highest rule according to which he walketh and laboureth to conform himself unto it more than to the will of God for the Apostle sheweth the general custom and course of the world was the rule by which they walked and an encouragement to them in their walk and maketh this an argument to prove they were then dead in sins and trespasses Wherein saith he in time past ye walked according to the course of this world 7. All men in their unrenewed state are very slaves to Satan whose wofull motions and suggestions they follow and whom they resemble and imitate in their sin and wickednesse for so much is implyed while he saith They walked according to the prince of the power of the air that is the Devil 8. Though the Devils and fallen Angels have alwayes an hell horror and torment in their conscience where-ever they are 2 Pet. 2. 4. yet they are not alwayes in hell that place of torment which is prepared for Devils and Reprobates Mat. 25. 41. they are also present in the earth and air and there through divine permission have no small power even so great as they are able to move the elements bring down fire upon earth Job 1. 16. raise storms Job 1. 19. to smite mens bodies with several diseases Job 2. 7. yea and to take away the lives of men Job 1. 19. and beasts Mark 5. 13. which power of theirs in its exercise is alwayes over-ruled and limited by God Job 1. 12. and 2. 6. in so far as His most holy and over-ruling providence doth thereby bring about His own design and purpose which is either to execute deserved judgment upon the wicked Mark 5. 13 17. or to exercise and try the godly Job 1. 12 c. for Satan is called Prince of the power of the air that is who hath power in the air 9. As the Devils are of a spiritual nature and substance and cannot be seen by bodily eyes but when they appear cloathed with bodies which belong not naturally unto them but for a time are assumed by them 1 Sam. 28. 14. So the way by which Satan doth impart his temptations unto us is not alwayes sensible but often unperceivable by the outward senses he doth most certainly tempt to sin and yet the tempted sinner perceiveth him not for as this spiritual and unperceivable way of tempting doth follow upon his spirituall and immateriall substance So
do enjoy communion with God and especially in the confident bold and reverent exercising of their faith both as to the change of their state in justification Rom. 5. 2. and as to their sanctification and all the duties thereof Philip. 4. 13. which accesse to God is chiefly attained in the duties of prayer and praise as having God for their direct and immediate object This is that accesse which in some measure floweth from peace and reconciliation with God and is an evidence of it for the Apostle proveth that the Gospel was effectually preached in order to their peace and reconciliation because they had accesse to God We both have accesse to the Father 2. There can be no accesse or familiar approaching unto God by sinners who are not in Jesus Christ and come not to God through Him seing God is a consuming fire unto such Heb. 12. 29. Their sins having divided betwixt Him and them Isa. 59. 2. and so closed up all accesse unto God untill Jesus Christ do apply unto them the merit of His death whereby He blotteth out their sin Rom. 3. 25. and bringeth them unto a state of favour with God and so maketh a patent door for accesse unto Him Rom. 5. 1 2. and keepeth it alwayes patent by His continued intercession Heb. 7. -25. which their renewed provocations would otherwise dayly and hourly close and obstruct 1 Joh. 2. 1. for saith he through Him that is Christ we both have an accesse to the father 3. Christ is the only Mediator betwixt God and man by whom alone we have accesse and liberty to approach unto God in the exercise of our graces whether in the duty of prayer or any other way and not by the mediation of Saints or Angels for saith he through him we have an access or manuduction to the father 4. This accesse and approaching unto God is not locall by passing from one place to another especially seing there is no place wherein accesse to God may not be had Joh. 4. 21. 23. but it is spirituall consisting in the motion of the heart towards God in the exercise of saving and spirituall graces for so much is implied while this accesse is ascribed unto the Spirit as the efficient thereof We have an accesse by the spirit 5. It is not sufficient in order to our accesse unto God that obstructions be removed and a door made patent by Christs merit and intercession through which we may enter but such is partly our impotency Joh. 15. -5. and partly our aversnesse from making use of the offered opportunity Luk. 14. 17 18 c. that except the Spirit of God do cause us enter by creating spirituall graces in us Ezek. 36. 26. by actuating and exciting those graces Cant. 4. 16. and especially by helping our infirmities in prayer and stirring up a vehement flame of holy and ardent affections which may serve as wings to elevate our spirits to God Rom. 8. 26. Except I say the Spirit of the Lord did thus we could not otherwise have any accesse unto God for he saith through him we have an accesse by one spirit 6. As it is one and the self same Spirit of God who breatheth upon the graces of Gods people Cant. 4. 16. and thereby giveth them accesse unto God So it concerneth us much as we would find accesse and liberty of approaching unto God to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace there being nothing that marreth accesse to God and fellowship with Him more than imbittered spirits and division of heart among the people of God 2 Corinth 13. 11. for therefore doth the Apostle mention the one Spirit of God to shew that the Spirit doth unite those among themselves upon whom this rich blessing of accesse is bestowed We both have an accesse by one Spirit 7. As there are three distinct persons in the Godhead the Father Son and Spirit So the enjoying of the Father is the highest happinesse which can be attained and in which the soul doth rest content when it is attained the Son again is the way by which we come to the Father and the Spirit our guide which causeth us enter this way and go alongs in it all which is clearly hinted at here through Him that is Christ we have an accesse by one Spirit to the Father Vers. 19. Now therefore ye are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow-citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God HEre beginneth the fourth branch of the second part of this Chapter where by way of a conclusion drawn from what is said in the six former Verses the Apostle setteth forth that excellent and blessed state wherein the Ephesians now were which though in some respects and in some things at least by proportion it may be applied to the state of the visible Church to wit in so far as the members thereof had all those priviledges here spoken of in their offer upon the terms held forth in the Gospel and were under the drop of those means which the Lord doth ordinarily blesse and make effectuall for working a saving interest in and right unto all those yea and had a present actuall right to the external part of those priviledges even the visible Church being in some respects Gods City Houshold and Temple at least the suburbs utter-court and porch thereof and having her own answerable priviledges which are in some measure proportionall to those of the invisible Church yet seing as was shewed formerly upon the exposition of ver 13. those excellent things here spoken of are not fully and to their outmost perfection verified in any but in the invisible Church and the truly regenerate the members thereof Therefore I shal open up the mind of the Spirit of God as aiming mainly at those and give the meaning of those excellent things here mentioned as they appertain chiefly to such in the mean time leaving it unto the judicious Reader to gather from what is said how and in what respects they are applicable unto the visible Church And so that we may enter the exposition of the words The Apostle setteth forth their present happy condition first negatively by shewing what they were not neither strangers nor forreigners whereby with allusion to those who are not free-men of an Incorporation or City but either strangers that is such who have neither the freedom of the City nor a place of habitation in it but have their residence far from it or forreigners that is such who though they have their residence in the City yet are not free-men but sojourners for a season he sheweth that the second branch of their former misery spoken of ver 12. which includeth all the rest even their being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel deprived of all union and communion either with the invisible or visible Church was now removed Secondly he setteth forth their present blessed condition positively under three similitudes whereof two are in this verse In the first
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
the exercise of meeknesse and long-suffering those only being able to moderate anger and to restrain the inundations of their impetuous passions when stirred and provoked by real injuries who being conscious of their own infirmities do judge but meanly of themselves and therefore not too good to have by the Lords wise and gracious dispensation a suffering lot from the wicked and injurious carriage of others 2 Sam. 16. 10. for he presseth humility in the first place as the foundation of and enterance unto all the rest With all lowlinesse and meeknesse with long-suffering 4. There is an all-nesse or universality which ought to be in the grace of lowlinesse first with respect to the subject it ought to extend it self to the whole man as being seated in the heart Philip. 2. 3 and kything in the outward carriage Luk. 14. 8. Secondly with respect to all objects There must be humility towards God Acts 20. 19. and humility also towards men Philip. 2. 3. and towards all sorts of men not only superiours Levit. 19. 32 but inferiours also Job 31. 13. Thirdly with respect to the grace it self as being without any mixture of the contrary vice so far as is possible Psal. 131. 1 2. and daily growing up towards perfection 2 Corinth 7. 1. Fourthly with respect to all cases so as it be exercised in prosperity Ezek. 16. 49. as well as adversity for saith he with all lowlinesse which note of universality is oft made use of by the Apostle when he would expresse a great measure and degree of any gift or grace See 1 Cor. 1. 5. Philip. 1. -9. Doct. 5. Meeknesse and long-suffering as they differ but little in substance and are commendable graces in themselves so they are notable means and helps to fit men for the duty of mutuall forbearance in order to unity in so far as they do render him who is endued with them gentle affable and easie to be conversed with and do moderate anger which is ready to blow the bellows of contention and to stir up strife Prov. 15. 18. for he exhorteth unto meéknesse and long-suffering in order to forbearance and unity With meeknesse long-suffering forbearing one another endeavouring to keep unity 6. The best of men have their own infirmities mistakes and failings mutually justling and rubbing upon each other whereby they prove often unpleasant and burdensome one to another for this is supposed while they are commanded to forbear one another 7. It is the duty of Christians mutually to tolerate and forbear one another even when there are real grounds of displeasure for hereby a man overcometh himself and his own corrupt nature which thirsteth after revenge Prov. 16. 32. hereby he overcometh and shameth his party who did him wrong 1 Sam. 24. 17. and keepeth Gods way in overcoming of him Rom. 12. 17 21. and hereby a man also in some comfortable measure doth entertain peace with others which otherwise upon every occasion would blow up and evanish for he enjoyneth this mutuall forbearance as a remedy against the clashing of mutuall infirmities and for entertaining of unity and peace forbearing one another endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit 8. This duty of forbearance is to be exercised to the person of our brother rather than his faults we are so to bear with his person as to endeavour the bearing down of his sin by admonition 2 Thess. 3. 15. reproof Levit. 19. 17. or correction Prov. 13. 24. as we have otherwise accesse and yet we are so to meddle with his faults as in the mean time we may give due respect to his person not irritating or provoking his corruptions while we intend to cure them for saith he forbearing one another which relateth to persons rather than to faults 9. This duty of forbearance ought to be mutuall and cannot in reason be expected by any from others to themselves who are not ready themselves to repay it unto others seing there is no man who wanteth his own infirmities which call for forbearance Iam. 3. 2. and that every man is obliged to do as he would be done to by others Matth. 7. 12. for saith he forbearing one another 10. Love to our neighbour whereby our heart and inmost affections are inclined and disposed towards him for his good as they ought as it is the great root and fountain of all duties towards others without which they are but counterfeit shadows and not real and sincere 1 Cor. 13. 3. So it doth in a speciall manner dispose and fit us for this duty of mutuall forbearance love covereth a multitude of sins 1 Pet. 4. 8. and maketh us bear with many things in the person loved 1 Cor. 13. 4 7. which otherwise flesh and bloud would not digest 2 Cor. 12. 15. for he holdeth out love as the fountain of all the rest and especially of mutuall forbearance With all lowlinesse forbearing one another in love 11. Whence it followeth that this duty of mutuall forbearance ought to flow from a principle of love and therefore though we forbear from necessity because we dare not do otherwise or from policie untill we get opportunity to right our selves or from respect to our own ease only lest by resenting injuries and miscarriages we create trouble to ourselves or if we tolerate connive at and foster the sins of others under a pretence of forbearing them which is inconsistent with love to them Lev. 19. 17. In all those cases our forbearance is not acceptable service to God nor yet in any case but when it is performed in love and from a principle thereof for the forbearance he enjoyneth is forbearing one another in love Vers. 3. Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace HE doth now fall upon the main scope of this first part of the Chapter exhorting them by all possible endeavours to keep the union of all the members of the Church being united together by the holy Ghost even in heart and especially in things spiritual all which are implyed in this unity of the spirit and that in order to this unity they would be of a peaceable disposition and deportment to wit so as not to make unnecessary ruptures and breaches upon every difference whereby they should be firmly knit together as the members of one body by its several ligaments and sinnews Doct. 〈◊〉 As there are several sorts of union in the Church and more particularly besides that union which is amongst the members of the invisible Church the bond whereof is the saving graces of Gods Spirit all of them being united to Christ the head by faith Eph. 3. 17. and one to another by love Col. 3. 14. There is an union also of the visible Church and the members thereof amongst themselves and this is twofold the one necessary to the being of a Church and being of a Church-member so that a Church cannot be a Church nor a man a member of the visible Church without it the ty of
which union is Gods Covenant with the visible Church and the Churches professed imbracing and laying hold upon that Covenant when offered in the Gospel Psal. 50. 5. the other necessary to the welbeing of the Church which is entertained by unity in judgement 1 Cor. 1. 10. in heart and affection Act. 4. 32. by concurrance in purposes and actings Philip. 1. -27. So all those sorts of union and union in all those respects is to be sought after and entertained in the Church for the Apostle speaketh indefinitly Endeavouring to keep the union of the Spirit 2. The union which God requireth among His People is not an union in sin or error Isa. 8. 12. nor yet a civil union only in things worldly upon politick and civil interests Act. 12. 20. nor yet a meer outside agreement or living together only Psal. 55. 21. but an union in heart and spirit in things spiritual and such an union whereof the Spirit of God is author for therefore is it called the unity of the Spirit Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit 3. The study of keeping peace and unity in the Church is a most necessary duty as being one prime instance of walking worthy of our vocation spoken of ver 1. and yet such is the restlesnesse of some and the prevalency of pride passion love to self-interest and such like dividing lusts in others that it is a duty most difficile to be practised as being the result of all those graces mentioned ver 2. and not attainable even by those who are endued with those graces except they apply themselves wholly to it and use the utmost of their serious endeavours for that end as is clear from the connexion of this verse with the two preceeding and from the word in the original rendered endeavouring implying study diligence and solicitude 4. Neither fair pretences for peace and union in the Church not seconded but rather contradicted by practice nor yet some carelesse endeavours which are easily broken by appearing difficulties are that which God will accept of at our hands as the duty required for preserving unity in the Church where it is or for restoring unity where it is already lost there is no lesse called-for than the utmost of our serious endeavours for that end so as we not only carefully eschew what may on our part give cause of renting 1 Cor. 8. 13. but also that we be not easily provoked when a cause of renting is given by others 1 Cor. 13. 5. and that when a rent is made we spare no pains nor stand upon any thing which properly is our own for having it removed Gen. 13. 8 9. and that we do not-weary of those endeavours under small appearances of present successe 2 Cor. 12. 15. for he biddeth them seriously endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit 5. So many are the temptations arising from the corruptions of those among whom we live to make us neglect this duty of keeping the union of the Spirit that except we be of such peaceable dispositions as to digest many things one in another which otherwise our corruptions would make much stir about we cannot choose but fall at ods rent assunder as so many disjoynted legs and arms and upon every occasion involve our selves and the Church of Christ in several sad and dangerous broils and ruptures for he calleth peace that is a peaceable disposition kything in all our deportment the bond or ligament whereby the members of the Church are knit together in the bond of peace saith he 6. Whatever differences may fall out among the members of the Church in the matter of opinion and judgment yet they are not presently to break the bond of peaceable walking one with another by counteractings and factious sidings but ought to study unanimous and joynt practice in those things wherein there is agreement and where this peaceable deportment flowing from a peaceable frame of spirit is it tendeth much to preserve what remaineth of this spiritual unity and to regain what is already lost for peace with man which is the peace here spoken of doth especially consist in our harmonious walking together flowing from a peaceable frame of spirit and is here enjoyned as a special mean for keeping the unity of the Spirit even in the bond of peace Vers. 4. There is but one body and one Spirit even as ye are called in one hope of your calling HE doth now inforce the former exhortation to unity and peace first from an argument taken from those many things which are one and the same in the Church and all the true members thereof and for this end doth reckon forth seven unities which may be looked upon as so many bonds and tyes of the essential unity especially of the invisible Church and as so many arguments also that therefore all professing Christ should not only labour to be one in all those as they would evidence themselves to be sincere Believers and members of that blessed society but also improve their unity in these for keeping unity and peace in lesser differences There are three of these unities which are so many bonds and arguments in this verse The first is that the whole Church is but one body to wit the invisible Church of real Believers is one mystical body knit by faith to Christ their head Eph. 3. 17. and by the bond of love among themselves Joh. 13. 35. And the visible Church is one politick body 1 Cor. 12. 27. conjoyned with Christ their head and among themselves by external covenanting Psal. 50. 5. and their serious professing of saving truths Act. 8. 12 13 with 23. and this body is but one the invisible Church without all doubt is so and the Catholick visible Church made up of all Christians and true Churches in the world is also one because they have the same King Laws Word Sacraments of admission and nutrition which they visibly subject themselves to and receive and have a grant of the same common priviledges from God in the Gospel and therefore they are all one visible Church 2. There is but one Spirit to wit the third Person in the blessed Trinity who residing in Christ the head Isa. 61. 1. and in all the members Rom. 8. -9. as the soul in the natural body doth by His gifts and graces animate move and govern the Church the body presently spoken of 3. As the Church is one in these two so their hope following upon effectuall calling is also one Where by hope is not so much meaned the grace of hope as the object of that grace or good things hoped for as Col. 1. 5 especially heaven and glory the common inheritance of the Saints Col. 1. 12. which they get not in hand but only do possesse it in hope Rom. 8. 24 25. And this hope is said to be one to wit for kind and substance though there will be different degrees in glory Dan. 12. 2 3. Doct. 1. That the whole Church
of all the creatures Act. 17. 28 29. yet seing the Apostle is speaking of the union of the Church and of all the members thereof for urging whereof this consideration of one God and Father of all is used as an argument therefore it seemeth He is called God and Father with respect to those and chiefly to real Believers in the Church to whom He is God and Father in a peculiar way He is their God by entering a gracious Covenant with them whereof this is one article that He shall be their God Jer. 31. 33. that is all in Him shall be forthcoming for their good He is their Father also by receiving them into the number and by giving them a right unto all the priviledges of the sons of God Joh. 1. 12. Now though this may be meaned of all the Persons of the blessed Trinity not only the first but also the second and the third being the God and Father of Believers Joh. 20. 28. Act. 5. 3 4. yea all of them being one and the same God 1 Joh. 5. 7. Yet seing the Son and holy Ghost are spoken of before ver 4 5. the first Person is mainly to be understood here who is called one God not secluding the Son and holy Ghost who are one and the same God in essence with the Father but in opposition to idols who are no gods 1 Cor. 8. 6. This argument or bond of unity is next enlarged in a description of this one God 1. From His eminencie and dominion above all His creatures 2. From His presence and powerfull providence whereby he runneth through all the creatures upholding them in their being Heb. 1. 3. directing disposing and governing all of them Dan. 4. 34. and all their actions Psal. 135. 6. Thirdly from His special presence by the gracious operations of His holy Spirit with the truly Regenerate whereby He is said to be in all to point-out the intimacy and nearnesse of His presence in this respect above the former and not simply in all as formerly but in you all meaning the believing Ephesians and such as they were Doct. 1. As our strongest union is to be one in God and our greatest happinesse to have interest in this one God So by making use of Christ as He is held forth in the Doctrine of faith and sealed to us in the Sacrament we may come up to plead interest in God for as he placeth this unity of having one God in the last place because it is most considerable so he doth subjoyn it immediately to what he spake of one Lord one faith one baptism There is one God and Father saith he 2. The unity of the God-head in the Trinity of the Persons ought to be a strong motive to stir us up to unity among our selves seing there is nothing wherein we can resemble God more Joh. 17. 21 22 23. for the Apostle inforceth the study of unity from this that there is one God 3. This motive for keeping unity is so much the stronger and more moving when we consider that this God hath graciously become the common Father of all Believers through Jesus Christ whereby they are all the sons and daughters of one Father 2 Cor. 6. 18. and so a matter full of shame for them to strive and contend among themselves Gen. 13. 8. for he strengthneth this argument for unity from this that this one God is the Father of all to wit of all Believers 4. Whatever be the other differences among Believers and their discouragements arising hence as that some are strong some are weak some rich some poor c. yet this is a priviledge common to all which may counterballance all their other inequality even that they have all equal interest in one God and that this one God is their common Father and therefore will have a fatherly affection Matth. 7. 11. pity Psal. 103. 13. and care of all Matth. 6. 25 c. for saith he there is one God and Father of all 5. It is the duty of Ministers when they are pressing duty to God upon people and of people when they would charge sense of duty to God upon themselves to set forth and be much taken up with Gods excellency and greatnesse this being a singular mean to engage the heart unto high esteem of Him and from esteem to serve and honour Him Mal. 1. 6. for the Apostle pressing upon these Ephesians the duty of unity doth hold Him forth in His glory and greatnesse Who is above all and through all 6. Gods soveraignity and greatnesse doth not mar His low condiscendency to supply the emptinesse and necessities of His creatures for though he be above all in dignity yet He is through all upholding and over-ruling all by His powerfull providence 7. Whatever God is by His common providence unto all His creatures He is all that and much more to His own called people and real Believers for He is through all by His common providence but besides that saith he He is in you all to wit by the presence of His Spirit and speciall grace 8. From all those seven unities joyntly considered and the Apostles scope in all Learn 1. The essential unity of the Church which cannot be broken the Church remaining a true Church and the many things wherein there is of necessity an agreement that way is a strong argument to enforce the study of unity and peace in other things of lesse concernment for the Apostle doth here presse unity by reckoning seven unities wherein they did agree as if he had said what a shame is it for you who are so many wayes one to rent in pieces for those things which comparatively are just nought 2. So near and intimate is that conjunction of true Believers so many strong and indissoluble are these spirituall bonds by which they are knit together among themselves that if they were duely pondered the hearts of those who fear the Lord could not choose but be mutually inlarged and their affections inflamed one to another as to their dearest friends yea the most strict of civil carnall and naturall bonds should not bind so firmly as those Matth. 12. 48 c. for they are one body one spirit have one hope one Lord one faith one baptism and one God And what conjunction or union can be so firm as what is grounded upon all those Vers. 7. But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ. HItherto the Apostle hath inforced the study of unity by an argument taken from those things that are one and the same in the Church and all the true members thereof Now followeth the second argument from those things which are not one in all but diverse almost in every one to wit the diversity of gifts and graces bestowed by God upon the severall members of the Church which diversity also he sheweth doth tend to union because first all those several gifts and their diverse measures do
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
seat of reason the mind and understanding in all men is by nature infected and polluted by this old man of inbred corruption for otherwise there were no need that we should be renewed in the spirit of our mind 2. It is not sufficient in order to our effectual learning of Christ and being taught by Him that we cease to do evill and labour to mortifie our inbred corruption with the several branches thereof but we must also learn to do well and endeavour to have the whole man adorned with the several graces of Gods Spirit making conscience of all the positive duties of an holy life for the Apostle sheweth their being taught of Christ consisted not only in the putting off the old man but in being renewed in the spirit of their mind and ver 24. in putting on that new man 3. See three doctrines implyed in the notation of the word renewed which signifieth to restore a thing deformed and antiquated to its ancient form and beauty upon Col. 3. vet 10. doct 4 5 6. Doct. 4. Right information of the mind and judgement and the knowledge of truth and duty flowing therefrom are most necessary to be sought after by Christians if so they would lead an holy life An erring mind will of necessity at least in so far make a crooked heart and an irregular hand for Paul sheweth that in particular it is necessary to be renewed in the spirit of the mind Vers. 24. And that ye put on the new man which after God is created in righteousnesse and true holinesse REsteth the third thing which the effectual learning of Christ doth require from and work in those who are so taught even that it be their daily task to put on the new man that is to be more and more endued and adorned with new and spirituall qualities whereby their mind may not only be renewed as was mentioned ver 23. but also their will affections and actions Which renewing work he sheweth is carried-on by Gods creating power after the pattern of His own Image which consisteth in perfect conformity to Gods Law as well in the second Table set forth here by righteousnesse as in the first set forth by true holinesse or holinesse of truth to wit that which is wrought by truth Joh. 17. 17. and is not counterfeit but sincere true and reall which epithet doth also agree to righteousnesse Now those gracious and spiritual qualities are called the new man and said to be put on as new garments See the reasons for both upon Col. 3. ver 9 10. doct 3. Hence Learn 〈◊〉 Where there is saving knowledge wrought in the mind sanctified practice in all the duties of an holy life will follow for unto the renewing of the mind ver 23. is here subjoyned the putting on the new man in righteousnesse and holinesse 2. So dead and indisposed are we by nature to holinesse and grace that no lesse than creating power is required to work it in us It is neither implanted by nature Psal. 51. 5. nor attainable by any industry or pains of ours Rom. 9. 16. but is a work of Gods omnipotency though He make use of means for that end 2 Tim. 4. 2. for he saith this new man is created 3. Only those who are renewed in knowledge and have their souls adorned with gracious and spirituall qualities of righteousnesse and holinesse are like to God and such as are most so are most like unto Him for Paul speaking of being renewed in the mind and of putting on the new man saith that it is after God or as it is more plainly Col. 3. 10. after the Image of God Which after God is created saith he 4. The Image of God consisteth not so much in the natural substance or faculties of the soul or the abilities of it for those are in a wicked man as in spiritual gifts and graces even conformity with God in true knowledge righteousnesse and holinesse for the Apostle speaking of the renovation of the mind by knowledge and putting on the new man in righteousnesse and holinesse saith That this is after God or after His Image 5. This new man of grace created after Gods Image as it consisteth not in things external Rom. 14. 17. but in the inward and substantial graces of Gods Spirit so it comprehendeth all spiritual habits and vertues and the exercise of all those graces in all the duties of universal obedience prescribed in both the Tables of the moral Law for he sheweth this new man consisteth in righteousnesse and holinesse which include a conformity to the Law of God in both its Tables Which is created in righteousnesse and holinesse 6. No performance of any one or of all commanded duties whatsoever is a sufficient proof of a renewed mind or the new creature but when it carrieth alongs with it that necessary ingredient of sincerity and truth which maketh the performer of any duty take God for his party Gen. 17. 1. bring up his heart to every duty Jer. 3. 10. and level at Gods glory as his main scope in all duties 1 Cor. 10. 31. and make conscience not only of one but of every duty Luke 1. 6. for he giveth this epithet of truth and sincerity to that righteousnesse and holinesse wherein this new man of grace created after Gods Image doth consist in righteousnesse and true holinesse or in righteousnesse and holinesse of truth Vers. 25. Wherefore putting away lying speak every man truth with his neighbour for we are members one of another THe Apostle being in the third part of the Chapter to presse upon them the exercise of some particular vertues which do belong to all Christians of whatsoever rank or station equally aswell as those formerly spoken of all of which are injoyned in the second Table of the Commands exhorteth them first from what he spake of putting off the old man and putting on the new to lay aside and mortifie the sin of lying forbidden in the ninth Command whereby a man doth speak what he knoweth or conceiveth to be untruth with an intention and purpose to deceive He exhorteth them also to speak the truth every man with his neighbour that is to speak as they think and to think of what they speak as it really is so that our speech may be conform both to the thing it self and to our conceptions of the thing Which exhortation in both its branches is inforced from this that they were not only members of one body but one of another every member of this mysticall body being bound to contribute all its endeavours as for the good of the whole body in the first place so of every particular member in the next and therefore it had been alike unnaturall and monstrous for them by lying and deceiving to circumveen one another as it were for the eye in the naturall body to deceive the hand or for any one member to contrive and carry on the ruine of another Doct. 1. It is not sufficient for
all tears at the last day are only such upon whom the Spirit of God doth imprint the draughts of His own image in righteousnesse and holinesse as the impression of the draughts and lineaments of a seal or by sealing put upon the thing sealed for he saith by whom meaning the holy Spirit we are sealed unto the day of redemption 7. Upon whomsoever the Spirit of God doth imprint this seal and stamp of true holinesse and of joy peace and comfort flowing therefrom all such shall be securely keeped and preserved as Gods own peculiar treasure by the power of God unto salvation to be fully manifested and compleatly bestowed at the last day for they are sealed unto the day of redemption a metaphor as we shew from merchands who leaving their wares behind them do put their mark and seal upon them untill such a day wherein they will come and own them 8. By vertue of this sealing and stamp of sanctification peace and joy imprinted by the Spirit of God upon the hearts of Believers even they themselves may attain to know assuredly that they are in the state of grace and shall be preserved in it untill the great day for as this sealing of them by imprinting the draughts of Gods image upon them is a discriminating mark betwixt them and others so it serveth not so much to make it known to God that they are His who knoweth who are His from all eternity and antecedentally to their effectual calling 2 Tim. 2. -19 or to make it known unto others who cannot infallibly discern the grace of God in any but themselves 1 King 8. -39. as unto themselves otherwise the Apostle would not have used a forcible argument not to grieve the Spirit from His sealing of them if it were a thing which could not be certainly known but guessed at by them Grieve not the Spirit by whom ye are sealed unto the day of redemption 9. So far is the work of grace in Believers or their assurance of being in a state of grace flowing herefrom and wrought in them by the Spirit of God from breeding security and loosnesse of life that by the contrary there can be no such prevailing argument to make them abhor sin entertain and follow the motions of the Spirit of God and consequently to lead an holy life Not only ingenuity and gratitude for the favour received will bind them to it but also holy fear and circumspection lest otherwise they mar and darken the seal so as they cannot discern the draughts of it and consequently lose though not the seal it self 1 Joh. 3. 9. yet the comfort and assurance which they had by it Psal. 30. -7. for the Apostle useth this as an argument to keep them from grieving the Spirit by sin even because they were thereby sealed unto the day of redemption Vers. 31. Let all bitternesse and wrath and anger and clamour and evil-speaking be put away from you with all malice HEre is a fifth precept containing an amplification and illustration of the second given ver 25. concerning the restraining of anger and he doth illustrate it by forbidding the several branches degrees and effects of that evil as first all bitternesse whereby must be understood here the lowest degree of sinfull anger even all secret smothered displeasure and alienation of affection which hath more of discontent and grudge than of revenge in it Psal. 37. 1. Secondly wrath or fiercenesse which is an impetuous rage and passionate commotion of the heart and affections upon the sense of an apprehended or reall injurie preventing and obstructing the use of reason which being soon up is as soon allayed 1 Sam. 25. 21 22. with 32. Thirdly anger which as it is distinguished from the rest is an eager desire of revenge and a fixed resolution after deliberation to have that desire satisfied Act. 23. 12. Fourthly clamour whereby is meaned boisterous words loud menaces and other inordinate speaches which are the black smoke whereby the fire of anger and wrath kindled within doth first manifest it self Act. 15. 39. Fifthly evil speaking or blasphemie as the word signifieth a further fruit of wrath and anger to wit disgracefull and contumelious speeches by which the party incensed doth endeavour to stain the reputation of him who either really or to his apprehension only hath done him wrong 1 Sam. 20. 30. And sixthly malice which is rooted anger and continuing wrath making the person in whom it is daily intent upon all occasions of revenge and wholly implacable untill he get his vindictive humour satisfied Rom 〈◊〉 31 Doct. 1. Bitternesse wrath anger clamour evil-speaking and malice do grieve the holy Spirit of God and darken much the work of grace in the heart whereby he sealeth Believers there being no sins more opposit to the fruits of the Spirit mentioned Gal. 5. 22. than those are so that where such sins are given way to grace must be upon the decaying hand for the Apostle unto that command grieve not the Spirit immediately subjoyneth this let all bitternesse and wrath and anger be put away implying that otherwise they would grieve the Spirit 2. So subtile is sin and so impotent and unskilfull are we to resist it where it once getteth entry that one degree of sin doth still make way for a further and so goeth on from evil to worse and therefore the wisest course is to oppose it betimes lest by forbearance it gather strength for the Apostle doth here set down severall degrees of sinfull anger the former whereof doth still make way for the latter and the latter is alwayes worse and a step nearer to the height than the former Let all bitternesse wrath and anger c. 3. It is not enough for Christians to refrain from the venting of their passions in their inordinate expressions and actions but they must also and in order to their refraining from those set about the rectifying of their inward affections and most secret distempers of their spirit otherwise if the flame of anger and wrath doth burn within it will most readily send up a black smoke of clamour and evil speaking to the offence of others for Paul forbiddeth not only clamour and evil-speaking but also all bitternesse wrath and anger 4. Sins of the tongue and outward man are to be put away and mortified as well as sins of the heart they being in some respect more dangerous Matth. 18. 7. because more scandalous and alwayes implying a defiled heart from which they flow Matth. 15. 19. and which they render worse than formerly it was Let all clamour and evil-speaking be put away saith he 5. It is not sufficient to suppresse keep at under and weaken our corruptions we ought to aim at and rest satisfied with nothing lesse than the totall subduing through removall and plucking of them up by the very roots for he saith Let all bitternesse c. he put away the word signifieth Let it be lifted up and so destroyed Vers. 32. And be
enjoyned ver 2. but the latter is here forbidden But fornication and all uncleannesse or covetousnesse c. 2. The generall prevalency of any sin ought neither to make people give more way to it nor Ministers speak lesse against it but rather because the more common any sin is God getteth the more dishonour by it therefore the zeal of publick Ministers and private Christians ought to be so much the more intended against it for because fornication was so common among the Gentiles that it was hereby looked upon as no sin therefore doth Paul almost in all his Epistles to the Churches of the Gentiles fall upon it as he doth also here But fornication and all uncleannesse c. 3. So violent is the lust of filthinesse that if it be not all the more carefully guarded against there is no state of life wherein it will not break forth even although the ordinary mean of marriage appointed by God to prevent it 1 Cor. 7. 2. be used for he will have them to guard not only against fornication which is the sin of filthinesse between parties unmarried but also against all uncleannesse that is all other sorts of filthy lusts whereof filthinesse between married parties is one 4. There is a great affinity and sibnesse between the lusts of filthinesse and covetousnesse in so far as the former given way to doth necessitate the lascivious wretch to thirst after and by indirect means to purchase worldly goods that so he may have wherewith to uphold as his other lusts Iam. 4. 3. so in a speciall manner this lust of uncleannesse for therefore doth he forbid those two lusts joyntly But fornication and all uncleannesse or covetousnesse 5. It is not sufficient for Saints to abstain from the outward practice of grosse evils except their outward abstinence do flow from inward detestation of them otherwise outward abstinence may well make a good Civilian but not a sincere Christian for Paul will have them abstaining from the formentioned evils so as not to name them with delight and without detestation Let it not be once named among you 6. Not only the outward act of filthinesse but also lascivious filthy discourse is to be refrained from as that which is an evidence of inward love to that sin Matth. 12. 34. and maketh way for the outward committing of it not only by our selves while the inward flame of lust is blown up by the bellows of filthy speeches Iam. 3. 6. but also by others who are easily infected by the pestilentious breath of evil communications 1 Cor. 15. 33. for he will not have those evils so much as spoken of among them with delight and without detestation Let it not be once named among you 7. The only life beseeming Saints is to keep themselves pure in heart in tongue in hand from the pollutions of fleshly lusts and the immoderate love of worldly goods and in so far as those are given way to by professed Saints they walk unworthy of their high and heavenly calling do stain their profession and declare themselves unworthy of the name of Saints for he sheweth that not practising those evils and inward detestation of them made evident by their not speaking of them was such a carriage as becometh Saints Vers. 4. Neither filthinesse nor foolish talking nor jesting which are not convenient but rather giving of thanks IN this verse he forbiddeth other three vices which belong mainly to the tongue 1. Filthinesse whereby is meaned in general whatsoever is contrary to decency and Christian gravity or modesty whether in deeds words or outward gesture and adorning of the body for so the word is used 1 Cor. 11. 6. But here because this sin and the rest are opposed to giving of thanks it seemeth to be restricted to filthy speaking or speaking of those things which belong to the lust of uncleannesse 2. Foolish talking which as being contradistinct to the vice which goeth before and to that which followeth after doth comprehend all impertinent superfluous rash and roving discourse which doth rather bewray the speakers folly and indiscretion than any way edifie the hearers though it be neither filthy speaking nor satyrick jesting 3. Jesting the word in the originall is somtimes taken in a good sense and so it signifieth a dexterity in allaying when it is necessary so to do the too much severity of countenance and discourse with a quick and honest sport for begetting honest recreation and moderate laughter that thereby the mind may be the more fitted to go about serious things in a serious manner Eccles. 3. 4. Such honest and sometimes piercing Ironies we find used by holy men in Scripture 1 King 18. 27. Phil. 3. -2. But here it is taken in an evil sense for scurrility when men do make it their exercise to shew the sharpnesse of their wit in jesting and to beget not moderate recreation of spirit in order to their fitting for a more serious purpose but immoderate laughter and carnall mirth in the hearers and especially when in order to this end they spare not offensive jests by tart reflections upon the way gesture yea and personall imperfections of others nor yet profane and impious jests by wresting Scripture to expresse the conceptions of their light and wanton wits now the Apostle forbiddeth all those three because they are not convenient or beseeming to Saints so that this reason is coincident with the former ver 3. And in opposition to all those he recommendeth unto them for their mutuall cheering and edifying one another by discourse when they should meet rather to recount what favours they had received from God and to blesse Him for them Doct. 1. As there are many wayes by which a man may transgresse with his tongue so we ought to guard against all transgressions of that kind not only those which naturall reason would blush to patronize but others also which are pleaded-for by many and defended as laudable strains of a quick wit for he forbiddeth not only filthinesse but also foolish talking and jesting 2. Satan and corrupt nature do take advantage of mens naturall temper and inclination even of that which in it self is not sinfull thereby to stir them to sinfull courses to get their inclination satisfied for from this sociable temper and inclination in men to entertain one another by discourse he taketh advantage to put them upon those sins of filthy speaking foolish talking and jesting 3. It is a task of no small difficulty to keep within the bounds of lawfull and allowed mirth and recreation especially in recreating our spirits by pleasant and delightfull discourse so that we exceed not either in matter or manner considering that what is inoffensive at one time and place and to some persons may be irritating and offensive at and to others for therefore it seemeth the Apostle designeth this vice in speech by that name which as I shew agreeth also to that which is lawfull and allowed implying that in this particular