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A53696 Exercitations on the Epistle to the Hebrews also concerning the Messiah wherein the promises concerning him to be a spiritual redeemer of mankind are explained and vindicated, his coming and accomplishment of his work according to the promises is proved and confirmed, the person, or who he is, is declared, the whole oeconomy of the mosaical law, rites, worship, and sacrifice is explained : and in all the doctrine of the person, office, and work of the Messiah is opened, the nature and demerit of the first sin is unfolded, the opinions and traditions of the antient and modern Jews are examined, their objections against the Lord Christ and the Gospel are answered, the time of the coming of the Messiah is stated, and the great fundamental truths of the Gospel vindicated : with an exposition and discourses on the two first chapters of the said epistle to the Hebrews / by J. Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1668 (1668) Wing O753; ESTC R18100 1,091,989 640

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almost all the eminent kinds of Revelation whereby themselves would distinguish the Spirit of Prophesie from the Inspiration of the Holy Ghost Neither have they any Reason for this distribution but finding the general division before mentioned to have been received in the Church of old they have disposed of the particular Books into their orders at their pleasure casting Daniel as is probable into their last order because so many of his Visions and Prophesies relate unto other Nations besides their own The Law or the Books of Moses they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Pentateuch from the number of the Books or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fives or the five parts of the Law whereunto Hierom in his Epistle to Paulinus wrests those words of the Apostle 1 Cor. 14.19 I had rather speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 five words in the Church as if he had respect to the Law of Moses These five Books they divide into Paraschae or Sections whereof they read one each Sabbath day in their Synagogues Genesis into twelve Exodus into eleven Leviticus into ten Numbers into ten Deuteronomy into ten which all make fifty-three whereby reading one each day and two in one day they read through the whole in the course of a year beginning at the Feast of Tabernacles And this they did of old as James testifies Acts 15.21 For Moses of Old time hath in every City them that preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day Some of them make fifty four of these Sections dividing the last of Genesis into two beginning the latter at Chap. 47. v. 18. constituting the following Chapter in a distinct Section though it have not the usual note of them prefixed unto it but only one single Samech to note as they say its being absolutely closed or shut up on the account of the Prophesie of the coming of the Messiah Chap. 49. whose season is unknown to them They also divide it into lesser Sections and those of two sorts open and close which § 3 have their distinct marks in their Bibles and many superstitious Observations they have about the beginning and ending of them Of the first sort there are in Gen. 43. of the latter 48. In Exodus of the first sort 69. of the latter 95. In Leviticus of the first sort 52. of the Latter 46. In Numbers of the first 92. of the latter 66. Deuteronomy of the first sort 34. of the latter 379. in all 669. Besides they observe the number of the Verses at the end of every Book as also that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Levit. 11.42 is the middle letter of the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lev. 10 16. the middle word Levit. 13.33 the middle Verse the number of all which through the Law is 23206. Moreover they divide the Law or five Books of Moses into 153. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sedarim or Distinctions whereof Genesis contains 42. Exodus 29. Leviticus 23. Numbers 32. Deuteronomy 27. which kind of Distinctions they also observe throughout the Scripture assigning unto Joshuah 14. Judges 14. Samuel 34. Kings 35. Isaiah 26. Jeremiah 31. Ezekiel 29. the Lesser Prophets 21. Psalms 19. Job 8. Proverbs 8. Ecclesiastes 4. Canticles and Lamentations are not divided Daniel 7. Ester 7. Ezra and Nehemiah 10. Chronicles 25. Besides they distribute the Prophets into Sections called Haphters that answer the Sections which are read every Sabbath day in their Synagogues And this Division of the Prophets they affirm to have been made in the dayes of Antiochus Epiphanes whom they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that wicked one when the reading of the Law was prohibited unto them All which things are handled at large by others Having for a long season lost the Promise of the Spirit and therewith all saving § 4 spiritual Knowledge of the mind and will of God in the Scripture the best of their employment about it hath been in reference to the Words and Letters of it wherein their diligence hath been of use in the preservation of the Copies of it entire and free from corruption For after that the Canon of the Old Testament was compleated in the dayes of Ezra and Points or Vowels added to the Letters to preserve the Knowledge of the Tongue and facilitate the right Reading and Learning of it it is incredible what industry diligence and curiosity they have used in and about the Letter of the whole Scripture The collection of their pains and Observations to this purpose is called the Massora or Messara consisting in Criticall Observations upon the words and letters of the Scripture begun to be collected of old even it may be from the dayes of Ezra and continued untill the time of Composing the Talmud with some additional Observations since annexed unto it The Writers Composers and Gatherers of this work they call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whose principal Observations were gathered and published by Rabbi Jacob Chaiim and annexed to the Venetian Bibles whereas before the Massora was written in other Books innumerable In this their Critical Doctrine they give us the number of the Verses of the Scripture as also how often every Word is used in the whole and with what variety as to Letters and Vowels what is the whole number of all the Letters in the Bible and how often each Letter is severally used with innumerable other useful Observations the summ whereof is gathered by Buxtorfe in his excellent Treatise on that subject And herein is the knowledge of their Masters bounded they go not beyond the Letter but are more blind than Moles in the Spiritual sense of it And thus they continue an example of the righteous Judgement of God in giving them up to the Counsells of their own hearts and an evident instance how unable the Letter of the Scripture is to furnish men with the saving knowledge of the Will of God who enjoy not the Spirit promised in the same Covenant to the Church of the Elect Isa 59.21 § 5 Unto that ignorance of the mind of God in the Scripture which is spread over them they have added another prejudice against the Truth in a strange Figment of an Orall Law which they make equall unto yea in many things prefer before that which is written The Scripture becoming a lifeless Letter unto them the true understanding of the mind of God being utterly departed and hid from them it was impossible that they should rest therein or content themselves with what is revealed by it For as the word whilest it is enjoyed and used according to the mind of God and is accompanied with that Spirit which is promised to lead them that believe into all Truth is full of sweetness and life to the souls of men a perfect Rule of walking before God and that which satiates them with wisdom and knowledge so when it is enjoyed meerly on an outward account as such a writing without any dispensation of suitable Light
reproved l. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 256. l. 31. large Discourses p. 260. l. 16. also r. after l. 10. à fine commission r. omission p. 275. l. 2. r. Judicial p. 276. l. 16. Sanction r. Section p. 290. l. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 308. l. 5. who thought l. 26. and other p. 311. l. 17. laying r. flaying p. 315. l. 4. serebrito r. seretrio There are sundry other mistakes in pointings changes and transpositions of letters in the Hebrew and English which a diligent and Candid Reader will easily observe and amend And it is not worth the while to collect them for those who are otherwise Exercitatio I. The Canonical authority of the Epistle to the Hebrews Notation of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kaneh a measuring reed The beam of a ballance Thence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the same signification Metaphorically a moral rule Rectum and Canon how far the same The Scripture a rule Canonical The Antiquity of that Appellation The Canon of the Scripture What required to render a book Canonical All books of the holy Scripture equall as to their divine Original Jews distinction of the books of the old Testament as to the manner of their writing disproved All equally Canonical No book Canonical of a second sort or degree The Epistle to the Hebrews Canonical Opposed by Hereticks of old Not received into the Latin Church untill the dayes of Hierome Proved against Baronius Not rejected by any of that Church only not publiquely approved The Church of Rome not the sole proposer of books Canonical Occasion of its n●n-admittance at Rome Boldness of some in rejecting and corrupting the Scripture By whom this Epistle opposed of late The objection of the uncertainty of the Pen-man Answered Citations out of the old Testament not found therein Answer Citations not to his purpose Answer Countenance to old Heresies Answer General heads of Arguments to prove its Canonical Authority Characters to discover between books of divine inspiration and others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The General Arguments of books truly Canonical Subject Matter Design Style Of the style of the Sacred writings Mistakes of many about it The nature of Eloquence Excellency of Scripture Style Energie Efficacy Tradition concerning the Authority of this Epistle not justly lyable to any exceptions from the Author Circumstances Subject Matter Style Testimonyes Conclusion THe Canonical Authority of the Epistle unto the Hebrews having § 1 been by some called into Question we must in our entrance declare both what it is which we intend thereby as also the clear interest of this Epistle therein for this is the foundation of all those ensuing discourses from it and that exposition of it which we intend The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which gives rise unto that term Canonical § 2 seems to be derived from the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kaneh and this as it sometimes denotes an Aromatical cane that contained spices in it used in the worship of God as Isai. 43. v. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou hast bought me no sweet Cane with silver for this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 precious Cane growing not in their own Countrey was bought from a far off Jer. 6.20 so in general it signifies any reed whatever 1 Kings 14.15 Isai. 42.3 whence a multitude of fierce and wicked men compared to the devouring Crocodile whose lurking place is in the canes or reeds are termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beast of the reed Psal. 68.30 Particularly it signifies a reed made into an instrument wherewith they measured their buildings containing six Cubits in length Ezek. 40.7 Chap. 42.16 And hence indefinitely it is taken for a Rule or a Measure Besides it signifies the jugum or scapus or beam with the tongue of a ballance keeping the poyse of the scales equal and discovering the rectitude or declensions thereof Isai. 46.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they weighed silver on the Cane that is saith the Targum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the ballance the supporter and director of the scales being put for the whole The Rabbins call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the reed of the scales that which tryes and weighs and gives every thing its just moment § 3 And this also is the first and proper signification of the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Canon So the Scholiast on that of Aristophanes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tells us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly that which is over the scales bringing them and the things weighed in them to equality The very same with the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from which it is derived So Varinus tells us that it is properly the tongue in the ballance and in use 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thus Aristotle sayes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by that which is right we know its self and that which is crooked for the Canon is judge of both where he useth the word for any kind of rule or measure answering unto the other signification of Kaneh in the Hebrew Rectum and Canon that which is right and the rule are one and the same the one expression denoting the nature of any thing the other its Use and Application § 4 From this original proper importance of the word is its metaphorical use deduced which is most Common and therein it signifi●s a moral Rule or a measure for direction tryall and judgement Hence the Philosopher calls the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rule of the administration or government of the Common-wealth that whereby all the parts of it ar● disposed into their proper places whereby they are regulated and all things done in it are tryed and judged And in this sense it is applyed by St. Paul unto divine Revelation Gal. 6.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as many as proceed orderly that is in a direct way for so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes according to this rule or Canon And to the same purpose he useth again the sam● expression Phil. 3.16 For as the words of the Scripture are in themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 words of Truth so the writing it self is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a right writing or as the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is written in uprightness to be a rule and Judge unto all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Genitivus adjuncti not materiae declaring the property of the writing not the subject matter that is it is Canonical for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is right and a rule we have shewed to be the same And from hence it is that the Scripture or written Word of God being in it self every way absolutely right and perfect and appointed by him to be the Rule or Canon of the Churches faith and obedience requiring trying regulating judging wholly and absolutely of them is become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
by Eusebius That he was the most eminently learned and knowing person of the Roman or Latine Church in those dayes will I suppose not be greatly questioned Now to suppose that he knew not the customes opinions and practice of that Church but would suffer himself to be imposed on by a stranger destitute of those advantages which he had to come unto an unquestionable certainty in it is a very fond thing Besides he doth not any where speak as one that reported the words and Judgement of another but in three or four places expresly affirms it as of his own knowledge when at the same time in opposition thereunto he contends that it was received by all other Churches in the world and all Writers from the dayes of the Apostles § 15 Neither yet doth it appear from any thing delivered by Caius Hippolitus Eusebius or Hierome that the Latine Church did ever reject this Epistle Yea we shall find that many amongst them even in those dayes reckoned it unto the Canon of the Scripture and owned St. Paul as the Penman of it Eusebius himself acknowledges that Clemens useth sundry Testimonies out of it in his Epistle ad Corinthios And others also there were concurring with his judgement therein But these two things I allow on the testimonies insisted on 1. That sundry particular persons of note and esteem in the Roman Church owned not the Canonical authority of this Epistle as not esteeming it written by St. Paul 2. The Church it self had not before the dayes of Hierome made any publick Judgement about the Author or Authority of this Epistle nor given any Testimony unto them For it seems utterly impossible that if any such Judgement had passed or testimony been given that Hierome living in the midst of that Church should know nothing of it but so often affirm the contrary without haesitation And this undenyably evinceth the injustice of some mens pretensions that the Roman Church is the only proposer of Canonical Scripture and that upon the Authority of her proposal alone it is to be received Four hundred years were passed before she her self publickly received this Epistle or read it in her Assemblies so far was she from having proposed it unto others And yet all this while was it admitted and received by all other Churches in the world as Hierom testifies and that from the dayes of the Apostles whose judgement the Roman Church it self at length submitted unto No impeachment then of the Authority of this Epistle can be taken from this defect and inadvertency of the Roman Church it being convinced to be so by the concurrent suffrage and Testimony of all other Churches in the world from the dayes of the Apostle as we shall afterwards more fully declare Neither are the occasions of this haesitation of the Western Church obscure The Epistle was written it may be in Rome at least it was in some part of Italy Chap. 13.24 There no doubt it was seen and it may be Copied out before its sending by some who used to accompany the Apostle as Clemens who as we have shewed not long after mentioned divers things contained in it The Originall was without question speedily sent into Judea unto the Hebrews to whom it was written and directed as were all others of the Epistles of the same Apostle unto those Churches that were immediately intended and concerned in them That Copies of it were by them also communicated unto their Brethren in the East equally concerned in it with themselves cannot be doubted unless we will suppose them grosly negligent in their duty towards God and man which we have no reason to do But the Churches of the Hebrews living at that time and for some while after if not in a seperation yet in a distinction by reason of some peculiar observances from the Churches of the Gentiles especially those of the West they were not it may be very forward in communicating this Epistle unto them being written as they supposed about an especial concernment of their own By this means this Epistle seems to have been kept much within the Compass of the Churches of the Jews untill after the destruction of the Temple when by their dispersion and coalescency with other Churches in the East it came to be generally received amongst them and non solum ab Ecclesiis orientis sed ab omnibus retro Ecclesiis Graeci sermonis Scriptoribus as Hierom speaks But the Latin Church having lost that advantage of receiving it upon its first writing it may be also upon the consideration of the removall of its peculiar Argument upon the finall destruction of the whole Judaical Church and Worship was somewhat slow in their inquiry after it Those that succeeded in that Church it is not unlikely had their scruples increased because they found it not in common use amongst their Predecessors like to the rest of St. Pauls Epistles not considering the occasion thereof Add hereunto that by that time it had gradually made its progress in its return into the West where it was first written and attended with the Suffrage of all the Eastern Churches began to evince its own Authority sundry persons who were wrangling about peculiar opinions and practices of their own began to seek advantages from some expressions in it So did in particular the Novatians and the Donatists This might possibly increase the scruple amongst the Orthodox and make them wary in their admission of that Authority which they found pleaded against them And well was it for them that their opinions about which they disagreed with their Adversaries were according unto truth seeing it may justly be feared that some then would have made them their Rule and Standard in their reception or rejection of this Epistle for it was no new thing for the Orthodox themselves to make bold sometime with the Scripture if they supposed it to run cross unto their conceptions So Epiphanius informs us in Ancorat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And also he wept for so it is read in the uncorrected Copies of the Gospell according to Luke and St. Irenaeus useth this Testimony in his Book against Heresies for their confutation who affirmed that Christ took flesh only in appearance but the Orthodox or Catholicks being afraid of the importance of that expression took away that word out of the Copies not understanding its use and sense So also Sixtus Sinensis after he hath informed us out of Hilary that many Orthodox persons denyed the story of our Saviours Agony and bloody Sweat adds of his own Suspicor à Catholicis sublatam esse pio sed simplici zelo quod favere videbatur Arianis I suspect that the Story was taken out of the Copies by some Catholicks out of a godly but simple zeal because it seemed to favour the Arians So great is the power of prejudice and so little occasions have men taken whom others have esteemed Orthodox and pious to make bold with that word whereby both we
the Targumist in this Prophesie Chap. 4. v. 7. Chap. 6. v. 12. Chap. 10. v. 4. In all which places he is certainly designed by the Holy Ghost There are also many of them who acknowledge him to be intended Chap. 9. v. 9. Chap. 11. v. 12 13. Chap. 12. v. 10. where he is not mentioned in the Targum I have not insisted on these Places as though they were all the Testimonies that to the same purpose might be taken out of the Prophets seeing they are a very small portion of the Praedictions concerning the Person Grace and Kingdom of the Messiah and not all those which are most eminent in that kind but because they are such as wherein we have either the consent of all the Jews with us in their application from whence some advantage may be taken for their conviction or we have the suffrage of the more antient and authentick Masters to reprove the Perversness of the Modern Rabbins withall § 50 And this is He whom we enquire after One who was promised from the Foundation of the world to relieve mankind from under that state of Sin and Misery whereinto they were cast by their Apostasy from God This is he who from the first Promise of him or intimation of Relief by him was the Hope Desire Comfort and Expectation of all that aimed at Reconciliation and Peace with God Upon whom all their Religion Faith and Worship was founded and in whom it centered He for whose sake or for the bringing of whom into the world Abraham and the Hebrews his Posterity were separated to be a peculiar people distinct from all the Nations of the Earth In the faith of whom the whole Church in and from the Dayes of Adam that of the Jews in especial celebrated its Mystical Worship endured Persecution and Martyrdom waiting and praying continually for his Appearance He whom all the Prophets taught Preached Promised and raised up the Hearts of Believers unto a desire and expectation of describing before hand his sufferings with the Glory that was to ensue He of whose coming a Catholick Tradition was spread over the world which the old Serpent with all his subtility was never able to obliterate Exercitatio X. Ends of the Promises and Prophesies concerning the Messiah Other wayes of his Revelation Of his Oblation by Sacrifices Of his Divine Person by Visions What meant in the Targums by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of God The Expression first used Gen. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what or who 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apprehensions of the Antient Jews about the Word of God Of the Philosophers Application of the Expression 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Son by John Expressions of Philo. Among the Mahumetans Christ called the Word of God Intention of the Targumists vindicated How the Voice walked Aben Ezra refuted and R. Jona The appearance of the second Person unto our first Parents Gen. 18.1 2 3. Gods appearance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Suddenness of it Who appeared The occasion of it Reflection of Aben Ezra on some Christian Expositors retorted A Trinity of Persons not proved from this place Distinct Persons proved No created Angel representing the Person of God called Jehovah Chap. 19.24 from the Lord. Exceptions of Aben Ezra and Jarchi removed Appearance of the second Person Gen. 32.24 26 27 28 29 30. Occasion of this Vision The Person in appearance a man in Office an Angel in nature God Gen. 48.16 Hos. 12.3 4 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what Who it was that appeared Exod. 3.2 3 4 5 6 14. God that appeared Exod. 19.20 21 22. Who gave the Law Not a created Angel The Ministery of Angels how used therein Exod. 23.20 21 22 23. Chap. 33.2 3 4 13 14. Different Angels promised The Angel of Gods presence who Josh. 5.13 14 15. Captain of the Lords h●st described Sense of the Antient Church concerning th●se Appearances Of the Jews Opinion of Nachmanides Tanchuma Talmud Fiction of the Angell rejected by Moses accepted by Joshua Sense of it Metatron Wh● Derivation of the Name WEE have seen how plentifully God instructed the Church of old by his § 1 Prophets in the knowledge of the Person Office and work of the Messiah And this He did partly that nothing might be wanting unto the Faith and Consolation of Believers in a suitableness and proportion unto that condition of Light and Grace wherein it was his good pleasure to keep them before his actual coming and partly that his Righteous Judgements in the rejection and ruine of those who obstinately refused him might from the means of their conviction be justified and rendered glorious Neither were these Promises and Predictions alone the means whereby God would manifest and reveal him unto their faith There are two things concerning the Messiah which are the Pillars and Foundation of the Church The One is his Divine Nature and the other his Work of Mediation in the Att●nement for sin which he was to make by his suffering or the Sacrifice of himself For the Declaration of these unto them who according unto the Promise looked for his coming there were two especial wayes or means graciously designed of God The latter of these wayes was that Worship which he instituted and the various Sacrifices which he appointed to be observed in the Church as Types and Representations of that one Perfect Oblation which he was to offer in the Fulness of time The unfolding and particular application of this way of Instruction is the principal design and scope of the Apostle in his Epistle unto the Hebrews Whereas therefore that must be at large insisted on in our Exposition of that Epistle I shall not anticipate what is to be spoken concerning it in these previous Discourses which are all intended in a subserviency thereunto The other way which concerns his Divine Person was by those Visions and Appearances of the Son of God as the Head of the Church which were granted unto the Fathers under the Old Testament And these as they are directly suited unto our Purpose in our enquiry after the Pro●nosti●●s of the Advent of the Messiah so are they eminently usefull for the conviction of the Jews For in them we shall manifest that a Revelation was made of a di●tinct P●rson in the Deity who in a peculiar manner did mannage all the concernments of the Church after the entrance of sin And herein also according unto our proposed Method we shall enquire what Light concerning this Truth hath been received by any of the Jewish Masters as also manifest what confusions they are driven unto when they seek to evade the Evidence that is in the Testimonies to this Purpose § 2 There is frequent mention in the Targumists of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Word of the Lord. And it first occurs in them on the first appearance of a Divine Person after the Sin and Fall of Adam Gen. 3. v. 8. The words of the Original Text are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
the wisest among them turn every stone to retain this interpretation of the words and yet to avoid the force of the Testimony insisted on from them This then we have from this testimony obtained namely that the Political Rule § 33 and National Government should not absolutely and Irrecoverably be removed and taken away from the Tribe of Judah untill the promised seed should be exhibited untill the Messiah should come It remaineth that we also evidence that all Rule Government and Polity is long since taken away from and ceased in Judah and that for many Generations there hath been no such thing as a Tribe of Judah in any National or Political Condition or Constitution in the world And had we not here to do with men obstinate and impudent there would need very few words in this matter But they must have that proved unto them which all the world sees and knows and takes care to make good and which themselves as occasion serves confess and bewail Is it not known to all the world that for these sixteen hundred years last past they have been scattered over the face of the earth leading a precarious Life under the Power of Kings Princes Common-wealths as their several lots in their dispersion have fallen sine Deo sine homine rege cast out of Gods especial care they wander up and down without Law Government or Authority of their own or amongst themselves And this as I said themselves also confess as they have occasion To this purpose see Kimchi on Hosea 3.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And these are the dayes of Captivity wherein we are at this day for we have neither King nor Priest of Israel But we are in the power of the Gentiles and under the Power of their Kings and Princes doth this man think that Scepter and Law-giver are departed from Judah or no And the Targum of Jonathan on that place is considerable for saith he The children of Israel shall abide many dayes without a King of the house of David and without a Ruler in Israel afterwards the children of Israel shall repent and seek the Worship of the Lord their God and shall obey the Messiah the Son of David the King So also are the words of Abarbinel on Isa. 53. he tells us that in their Captivity and Banishment part of their misery is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that in Israel there is neither Kingdom nor Rule nor Scepter of Judgement that is plainly Scepter and Law-giver are departed And therefore if there be any truth in this Prophesie the Messiah is long since come In like manner Maimonides from the time that we have left our own Land we have no power of making Laws and they jointly confess in the Talmud Tract Saned that sometime before the destruction of the Temple all power of Judging both as unto life and death and as unto pecuniary punishments was taken from them So that if there be a certainty in any thing in this world it is certain that Scepter and Law-giver are long since departed from Judah There are not many things wherein the present Jews do more betray the desperateness § 34 of their cause then in their endeavour to obscure this open and known truth in matter of fact That which they principally insist upon is a story out of the Itinerary of Benjamin Tudelensis This Benjamin was a Jew who about 500. years ago passed out of Europe into the Eastern parts of the world in a disquisition of his Countrey-men and their state and condition whereof he hath given an account in his Itinerary after the manner of vulgar Travellers Among other things which he relates fide Rabbinica he tells us of a Jew that hath or then had a principality at Bagdat whom his Countreymen called the Son of David there being a thousand of them living there all in subjection unto him This honour was allowed him by the Caliph who in those dayes ruled there so that when he passeth in the streets they cry before him make way for the Son of David Fagius long since returned a proper Answer to this Story in a Proverb of their own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that hath a mind to lye let him place his Witnesses at distance enough When Benjamin passed over those Eastern parts of the world they were greatly unknown to Europaeans and he had thence advantage to feign what he pleased for the reputation of his Nation which he was not wanting to the improvement of Time hath now brought truth to light The people of Europe especially the English and Hollanders have some while since discovered the state of things in those parts and can hear no tidings of Benjamins principality nor his Son of David nor could the Jews ever since get any one to confirm his relation Besides if all that he averrs should be granted to be true as in the main it is undoubtedly false what would it amount unto as to the matter in hand Is this the Scepter and Law-giver promised unto Judah as the great priviledge above his Brethren It seems an obscure unknown person in Bagdat in Captivity by the permission of a Tyrant whose Slave and Vassal he is hath a pre-eminence among a thousand Jews all slaves to the same Tyrant And this is all they pretend unto in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the forty second story where they give us an account of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prince or Head of the Captivity as they would have him esteemed A rich Jew they would make him to be chosen unto a Presidentship by the Heads or Rectors of the Schools of Bagdat Sora and Pombeditha And they confess that for many Ages they have chosen no such President because the Saracens killed the last that was so chosen Is this I say the continuance of the Tribe and Scepter of Judah Judah must be a Nation a People in a Political Sense and State dwelling in his own Land and have Rule and Dominion exercised therein according to its own Law or the Scepter and Law-giver are departed from it and this they evidently are sixteen hundred years ago and therefore the Shilo the promised Messiah is long since come which is the Truth whose Confirmation from this Testimony was intended Exercitatio XIII Other Testimonies proving the Messiah to be come Hagg. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. Mal. 3.1 2. State of the People at the building of the Second Temple In the dayes of Darius Hystaspes not Nothus The House treated of by Haggai the second House Proved against Abarbinel The Glory promised to this House Brief summary of the Glory of Solomons Temple It s Projection Magnificence Treasure spent about it Number of Workmen employed in it Ornaments Worship Second Temple compared with it Pretensions of the Rabbins about its Greatness and Duration removed What was the Glory promised to the second House Opinion of the Jews The Promise of it not conditional The meaning of
as the signal Epocha of the time here limited and determined § 18 The great Scaliger who would date the weeks from this Decree of Darius knowing that the time would not suit with the reign of Darius Hystaspes contends that it was Nothus who succeeded Longimanus that was the Author of it and extends the whole time or space of four hundred and ninety years to the destruction of the City and Temple that space of time according to his computation being elapsed from the second year of Darius But the truth is as may be seen from our former account from the second year of Darius Nothus to the destruction of the City was but four hundred and eighty years short of the whole summ Besides we have before proved from the Text that the time determined was to expire in the death of the Messiah And there are sundry other circumstances which plainly evince the inconsistency of this computation for from the first of Cyrus when the first command went forth for the building of the Temple whereupon the work of it was begun unto the second year of Nothus are fully an hundred and eight years And it is not credible that the work of building of the Temple should so long be hindered and then come to perfection by them who first began it For on this supposition Zerubba●●● and Joshua must live at Jerusalem after their return above an hundred years and then take in hand again the work which they had so long deserted And this is yet more incredible upon his own opinion that Xerxes was the Husband of Hester about fifty years before the Reign of Nothus When it is not likely but the Jews would have attempted and not have been denied their liberty of going on with their work Neither is it consistent with the Prophecy of Jeremiah that the Temple should lye waste so long a space that is about a hundred and seventy years Again Haggai doth plainly declare that when the work of the Temple was carrying on in the second year of Darius that many were yet alive who had seen the first Temple cap. 2.3 As multitudes were upon the laying of its foundation in the dayes of Cyrus Ezra 3.12 And this was impossible had it been in the dayes of Nothus an hundred and sixty or an hundred and seventy years after it was destroyed And Scaliger doth plainly wrest the words of the Text when he would have them pronounced by way of supposition if any were then alive who saw the first house in its glory for Haggai doth plainly relate unto the distemper of the people upon the laying of the foundation of the house mentioned in the forenamed place of Ezra and the words themselves will bear no other sense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who is among you that is left that saw this house in her glory He speaks of them who were yet left and remaining and spake to them to remove and take away their complaint and repinings Moreover that Artaxerxes in whose daies Ezra and Nehemiah went up to Jerusalem was Longimanus who reigned before Nothus and not Memor who succeeded him as will afterwards appear Now this Artaxerxes was long after that Darius upon whose warranty the building of the Temple was finished Ezra 7.1 Which certainly could not be Nothus who was his successor It appears then that Darius Nothus was not the Author of the Decree mentioned as § 19 also that the times of the Weeks cannot be dated from the second year of Darius Hystaspes who was the Author of it After this there is mention made of two other Commands or Decrees relating to the § 20 Temple and People both granted by the same Artaxerxes one in the seventh year of his Reign unto Ezra chap. 7.7 The other in the twentieth year of his Reign unto Nehemiah chap. 2.1 And from one of these must the account enquired after be dated Now supposing that one of these Decrees must be intended it is evident that it was Longimanus and not Memor who was the Author of them For from the seventh year of Memor which was the second of the ninety fifth Olympiad unto the eighteenth year of Tiberius Caesar wherein our Saviour suffered being the third year of the two hundred and second Olympiad are only four hundred twenty eight years sixty two years short of the whole or four hundred and ninety Now these sixty two years added to the beginning of the account from the seventh of Memor fall in exactly on the seventh of Longimanus from the seventh of Longimanus then to the seventh of Memor are sixty two years and from the seventh of Memor to the eighteenth of Tiberius are four hundred twenty eight years in the whole four hundred and ninety The whole number enquired after It was then this Decree of Longimanus that was intended by the Angel Gabriel for § 21 from the seventh year wherein he sent Ezra unto Jerusalem and unto that work which he afterwards commissionated Nehemiah to carry on and perfect unto the cutting off of the Messiah are exactly seventy Weeks or four hundred and ninety years as may appear from the accounts formerly insisted on and declared From the first of Cyrus supposing him to reign but three years over the whole Empire unto the death of Christ there was as we have proved five hundred sixty two years From the first of the same Cyrus unto the seventh of Longimanus were seventy two years which being deducted from the whole of five hundred sixty two years the remainder is four hundred and ninety which space of time how it was apportioned between the Persian Graecian Hasmonaean Herodian and Roman Rule we have before declared And there wants not reason to induce us to fix on this Decree rather than any other § 22 being indeed the most famous and most useful to the people of all the rest By what means it was obtained is not recorded Evident it is that Ezra had great favour with the King and that he had convinced him of the greatness and power of that God whom he served chap. 8.22 Besides it was not a meer proclamation of liberty like that of Cyrus which was renewed by Darius but a Decree a Law made by the King and his seven Counsellors chap. 7.14 The highest and most irrefragable Legislative Power amongst the Medes and Persians Moreover with the Decree he had a formal Commission where he is said not only to have leave to go but to be sent by the King and his Council Besides the former Decrees barely respected the Temple and it seems that in the execution of them the people had done little more then built the bare fabrick all things as to the true order of the Worship of God remaining in great confusion and the civil state utterly neglected But now in this Commission of Ezra he is not only directed to set the whole Worship of God in order at the charge of the King chap. 7.16 17 18 19 20 21
where it treats of these things in the least giving countenance thereunto or let him shew how this procedure is suitable unto the Justice of God either unto the general notion that we have of it or as unto any other instance recorded of it in the Scripture But if these men may fain what they please there is no doubt but they will justifie themselves and maintain their own cause Secondly Why did none of the latter Prophets whom God granted unto the people after their return from Captivity as Haggai Zechariah and Malachi let the people know that this was the condition of their return into their Land but only require of them to walk answerable unto the mercies they had then received Thirdly As the very nature of the dispensation did declare that God having purged out the Rebels of the people and destroyed them with his sore judgements had forgiven their sins and was returned unto them in a way of mercy and grace never to call over their forepast iniquities any more so the Prophets that treated concerning that dispensation of God do in places innumerable assert the same and plainly contradict this imagination Fourthly God punisheth not the sins of the Fathers upon their children unless the Children continue in the sins of their Fathers This he declareth at large Ezek. 18. Now what were the sins of this people under the first Temple before their captivity our Author reckons Adultery Murder and Idolatry It is no doubt but many of them were Adulterers and that sin among others was charged on them by the Prophets but it is evident that their principal ruining sins were their Idolatry and persecution or killing of the Prophets And God by Ezekiel declares that in and by their Captivity he would punish and take away all their Idolatry and Adulteries ev●n from the Land of Aegypt or their beginning to be his people Chap. 23.11 27. Now were the Jews that is the body of the people guilty of these sins under the second House it is known that from all Idolatry they preserved themselves which was that sin that in an especial manner was their ruine before and for killing the Pophets they acknowledge that after Malachi they had none so that none could be persecuted by them but those whom they will not own to be Prophets But Fifthly Suppose that all those under the second House continued in the sins of their fore-fathers which yet is false and denyed by themselves as occasion requires yet what have the Jews done for sixteen hundred years since the destruction of that House they plead themselves to be holy and in application of the Prophecy Isa. 53. unto themselves proclaim themselves innocent and righteous at least they would not have us to think that the generality of them are Adulterers Murderers and Idolaters whence is it then that the punishment of their Fathers sins lyes so long on them What Rule of Justice is observed herein What instance of the like dispensation can they produce for our parts we affirm that they continue unto this day in the same sin for which their fore-fathers under the second House were rejected and destroyed and so know the righteousness of God in their present captivities and miseries Besides Sixthly They say they abhor the sins of their fore-fathers repent of them and do obtain Remission of sins through their observation of the Law of Moses Wherein then is the faithfulness of God in his prom●ses unto them Why are they not delivered out of captivity Why not restored to their Land according to express Testimonies of the Covenant made with them unto that purpose There is no colour of truth nor reason therefore in this evasion which they invented to countenance themselves in their obstinate blindness and unbelief But our Author yet adds an Instance whereby he hopes to reinforce and confirm § 13 his former answer saith he Deus per manus Salamanassani decem tribus in captivitatem passus est abduci in regiones nobis incognitas sexcentis fere annis ante destructionem Templi secundi hoc ●●t ante presentem hanc nostram captivitatem n●cdum in hodiernam hanc diem in terram si●am reversae aut dominio suo restitutae sunt quae omnia speciali Dei Providentia nobis ita ev●nerunt ne quis causam hujus nostrae captivitatis speciali alicui peccato sub secunda domo commisso imputaret Cum decem tribus qui tum absuerunt captivitatem pati debent sexcent●s annis longiorem God suffered the ten Tribes to be carried captive by Salamanasser into Countreys unknown to us six hundred years before the destruction of the second Temple and our present captivity neither are they yet returned to their own Land or restored to their former rule all which things have happened unto us by the especial Providence of God That n●ne might impute the cause of the captivity unto any sin committed under the second Temple seeing the ten Tribes that were then absent must endure a captivity six hundred years longer Neither will this instance yield them the least relief For 1. It was before granted that the sins under the second Temple were even greater then those under the first whence the punishment of them was revived which is here denyed manif●sting that this is an evasion invented to serve the present turn 2. What ever is pretended no impartial man that owns the special relation of that people unto God and his Covenant with them can but grant that their present rejection is for some outragious sins breaking the Covenant under the second Temple and continued in by themselves unto this day 3. The case of the t●n Tribes after they had publickly reject●d all that Worship of God and all that Government of the people which was appointed to Type out and to continue unto the bringing of the ●●ssiah is different from that of the oth●r Tribes to whom the Promises w●re appropriated in Judah and in the house of David so that their rejection implies no disannulling of the Covenant 4. As all of the two Tribes came not up to Jerusalem at the return from the captivity of Babylon so very great numbers of the ten Tribes appear so to have done which b●ing added to those multitudes of them which before that had fallen away to Judah partly upon the account of the Worship of God partly upon the account of outward peace when their own Land was wasted makes the condition of the body of the people to be one and the same and these men committed and their posterity continue in the sins on which we charge their present dispersion and captivity 5. The remant of that people dispersed amongst strange Nations seems voluntarily to have embraced their manners and customs and utterly to have forgotten their own Land whereas those with whom we have to do daily expect desire and endeavour a return thereunto so that neither doth this evasion yield our present Jews any relief and we may return to
particular exceptions of the Jews and then their opposition to our Thesis in general is to be removed referring an Answer unto their special Objections unto another Dissertation § 2 That we may the more orderly annex our present Discourse unto that foregoing our first Argument shall be taken from that which is proved and confirmed therein namely the time limited and determined for the coming of the Messiah Two wayes there are whereby the time fore-appointed of God for the coming of the Messiah is signified and made known First By certain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or evident tokens taken from the Judaical Church with the state and condition of the whole people of the Jews This we have insisted on from Gen. 49.10 Hagg. 2.8 Mal. 3.1 2. Secondly By a computation of the time its self as to its duration from a certain fixed date unto its expiration This way we have unfolded and vindicated at large from Dan. 9.24 25 26 27. And although herein we have evidenced the truth and exactness of the computation insisted on by us as far as any Chronological accounts of times past are capable of being demonstrated Yet we have also manifested that our Argument depends not on the precise bounding of the time limited But lying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is of equal force however the computation be calculated the whole time limited being undeniably expired before or at the destruction of the City and Temple Hence is the foundation of our first Argument Before or at the expiration of that time the promised Messiah was to come Before or at that time as denoted and described by the general 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or evident tokens before mentioned and limited by the computation insisted on came Jesus and no other that the Jews can or do pretend to have been the Messiah and therefore he was the true promised Messiah § 3 The foundation of this Argument namely that the Messiah was to come within the time limited prefixed and foretold cannot be shaken without calling into question the Truth of all promises and pre●ictions in the Old T●stament and consequently the faithf●ln●ss and power of God T●e great design whose lines are drawn in the face and whose substance lyes in the bowels of the Old Testament and which is the Spirit that enlivens the whole Doctrine and story of it the bond of union wherein all the parts of it do center withou● which they would be loose scattered and deformed heaps is the bringing forth of the Messiah the Saviour of the world Without an apprehension of this design and faith therein neither can a letter of it be understood nor can a rational man discover any important Excellency in it Him it promiseth Him it typifieth Him it teacheth and prophesieth about Him it calls all men to desire and expect When it hath done thus in several places it expresly limits foretells and declares the time wherein He shall be sent and exhibited If there be a failure herein seeing it is done to give evidence to all other things that are spoken concerning him by which they are to be tryed and to stand or fall as they receive approbation or discountenance from thence To what end should any man trouble himself about that which is cast as a fancy and empty imagination by its own verdict If then the Messiah came not within the time limited all Expectation from the Scripture of the Old Testament must come to nought which these with whom at present we contend will not grant Nor can the Jews on such a supposition in any measure defend the truth of it against an Infidel For unto his enquiry where is the promised Messiah if they shall plead their usual pretences It is easie for him to reply that these things b●ing no where mentioned nor intimated in the Books themselves They are only such subterfuges as any man may palliate the most open untruths withal And indeed the ridiculous figment of his being born at the time appointed but kept hid to this day they know not where is not to be pleaded when they deal with men not bereft of their senses or Judicially blinded by God For besides that the whole of it is a childish toyish fiction inconsistant with the nature and being of their Messiah whom th●y make to be a meer man subject to mortality in his whole person like all the other sons of Adam it suits not at all unto the difficulty intended to be assoyled by it For it is not his being born only but also his accomplishment of his Work and Office at the time determined which is foretold Nor is there any one jot more of probability in their other pretence about their own sins and unworthiness For as we have declared this is nothing but in plain terms to assert that God hath violated his faith and promise and that in a matter wherein the great Concernments of his own Glory and the welfare of all mankind doth consist upon the account of their miscarriages which as they either cannot or will not remedy so he himself hath not though he might have so done provided any relief against This then stands upon equal evidence with the whole Authority of the Old Testament namely that the promised Messiah was to come within the time prefixed for his coming and foretold We ask them then If Jesus of Nazareth be not the Messiah where is he or who is he that came in answer to the Prophecies insisted on Two things then remain to be proved First That our Lord Jesus Christ came lived and dyed within the time limited for the coming of the Messiah Secondly That no other came within that season that either pretended with any colour of probability unto that dignity or was ever as such owned or esteemed by the Jews themselves First then that Jesus came and lived in the time limited unto the coming of the § 4 Messiah some short space of time before the departure of Scepter and Scribe from Judah the ceasing of the daily Sacrifice and final desolation of the second Temple we have all the evidence that a matter of fact so long passed is capable of as good as that the world was of old by God created The Stories of the Church are express that he was born during the Empire of Augustus Caesar in the latter end of the Reign of Herod over Judaea when Cyrenius was Governour over Syria that he lived unto the time wherein Pontius Pilate was Governour of Judaea under Tiberius about thirty six or thirty seven years before the destruction of the Nation City and Temple by Titus This the stories written by Divine inspiration and committed unto the care of the Church expresly affirm neither have the Jews any thing to object against the truth of the relation what ever thoughts they have of his Person who he was or what he did That he lived and dyed then and there is left testified on Records beyond controll And if they should deny it
of old spoken unto the Fathers in the Prophets hath in these last dayes spoken unto us in the Son whom he hath appointed heir of all by whom also he made the worlds THe Apostle intending a comparison between the Mosaical Law and the Gospel referreth it unto two Heads First Their Revelation and Institution whence the Obligation to the Observance of the one and the other did arise and Secondly Their whole Nature Vse and Efficacy The First he enters upon in these words and premising that wherein they did agree distinctly layes down the severals wherein the difference between them doth consist both which were necessary to compleat the comparison intended That wherein they agree is the Principal Efficient Cause of their Revelation or the Prime Author from whom they were This is God He was the Author of the Law and Gospel He spake of old in the Prophets he spake in the last dayes in the Son Neither of them were from Men not one from one Principle and the other from an other both have the same Divine Original See 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.16 17 18 19 20 21. Herein they both agree Their difference in this respect namely of their Revelation he refers to four Heads all distinctly expressed saving that some branches of the Antithesis on the part of the Gospel are only included in the opposite expressions that relate unto the Law Their difference First Respects the manner of their Revelation and that in two particulars 1. The Revelation of the Will of God under the Law was given out by divers parts that under the Gospel at once or in one dispensation of Grace and Truth 2. That in diverse manners this one way only by the Spirit dwelling in the Lord Christ in his fulness and by him communicated unto his Apostles Secondly The Times and Seasons of their Revelation that of the Law was made of Old formerly in Times past This of the Gospel in these last dayes Thirdly The Persons to whom the Revelation of them was made That was to the Fathers this to us Fourthly And principally the Persons by whom these Revelations were made That was by the Prophets this by the Son God spake then in the Prophets now he hath spoken in the Son The whole stress of the Apostles Argument lying on this last instance omitting the prosecution of all the other particulars he enters upon the further description of this immediate Revealer of the Gospel in whom God spake the Son and layes down in general 1. The Authority committed unto him God made him Heir of all 2. The Ground and Equity of committing that great Power and trust unto him in those words by whom also he made the worlds whereby he opens his way to the farther declaration of his Divine and incomparable Excellencies wherein he is exalted far above all or any that were employed in the Revelation or Administration of the Law of Moses and the holy Worship instituted thereby All these particulars must be opened severally that we may see the intendment of the Apostle and the force of his Argument in the whole and some of them must necessarily be somewhat largely insisted on because of their influence into the ensuing Discourse I. That wherein the Law and Gospel do both agree is that God was the Author of them both About this there was no difference as to the most of them with whom the Apostle treated This he takes for granted For the Professing Jews did not adhere to Mosaical Institutions because God was their Author not so of the Gospel but because they were given from God by Moses in such a manner as never to be changed or abrogated This the Apostle layes down as an acknowledged Principle with the most that both Law and Gospel received their Original from God himself proving also as we shall see in the progress of our Discourse to the conviction of others that such a Revelation as that of the Gospel was foretold and expected and that this was it in particular which was preached unto them Now God being here spoken of ●n distinction from the Son expresly and from the Holy Ghost by evident implication it being He by whom he spake in the Prophets that name is not taken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 substantially to denote primarily the Essence or being of the Deity and each person as partaking in the same nature but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denoting primarily one certain Person and the divine nature only as subsisting in that Person This is the Person of the Father as elsewhere the Person of the Son is so signified by that name Acts 20.28 John 1.1 2. Rom. 9.5 1 Tim. 3.16 1 John 3.16 Chap. 5.20 As also the Person of the Holy Spirit Acts 5.3 4. 1 Cor. 12.7 11. Col. 2.2 So that God even the Father by the way of eminency was the peculiar Author of both Law and Gospel of which afterwards And this observation is made necessary from hence even because he immediately assigns Divine Properties and Excellencies unto another Person evidently distinguished from him whom he intends to denote by the name God in this place which he could not do did that name primarily express as here used by him the divine nature absolutely but only as it is subsisting in the Person of the Father From this head of their Agreement the Apostle proceeds to the instances of the difference that was between the Law and the Gospel as to their Revelation from God of which a little inverting the order of the words we shall First consider that which concerns the Times of their giving out sundry of the other instances being regulated thereby For the First or the Revelation of the Will of God under the Old Testament it was of old God spake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 formerly or of old Some space of time is denoted in this word which had then received both its beginning and end both which we may enquire after Take the word absolutely and it comprizes the whole space of time from the giving out of the first Promise unto that End which was put unto all Revelations of publick use under the Old Testament Take it as relating to the Jews and the rise of the time expressed in it is the giving of the Law by Moses in the Wilderness And this is that which the Apostle hath respect unto He had no contest with the Jews about the first Promise and the service of God in the world built thereon nor about their Priviledge as they were the Sons of Abraham but only about their then present Church Priviledge and claim by Moses Law The proper date then and bound of this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of old is from the giving out of Moses Law and therein the constitution of the Judaical Church and Worship unto the close of publick Prophecie in the dayes of Malachi From thence to the dayes of John Baptist God granted no extraordinary Revelation of his Will as to the standing
as accompanied the nature and manner of the Revelation made unto him 1. They arise from the infinite Excellency of his Person above theirs This is that which the Apostle from the close of this verse insists upon to the very end of the Chapter making his discourse upon it the basis of ensuing his exhortations I shall therefore remit the consideration of it unto its proper place 2. There were sundry Excellencies that attended the very Revelation it self made unto him or his Prophecie as such For 1. Not receiving the Spirit by measure Joh. 3.34 as they all did he had given unto him altogether a comprehension of the whole will and mind of God as to what ever he would have revealed of himself with the mystery of our salvation and all that obedience and worship which in this world he would require of his Church It pleased the Father that in him all fulness should dwell Col. 1.19 that is of Grace and Truth Joh. 1.17 not granting him a transient irradiation by them but a permanency and constant abode of them with him in their fulness all treasures of wisdom and knowledge being hid in him Col. 2.3 as their home and proper abiding place which made him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord Isa. 11.3 All the Mysteries of the counsel between the Father and the Eternal Word for the salvation of the Elect with all the ways whereby it was to be accomplished through his own blood were known unto him as also were all the bounds the whole extent of that Worship which his Church was to render unto God with the assistance of the Spirit that was to be afforded unto them for that end and purpose Hence the only reason why he did not at once reveal unto his Disciples the whole counsel of God was not because all the treasures of it were not committed unto him but because they could bear no other but that gradual communication of it which he used towards them Joh. 16.12 But he himself dwelt in the midst of those treasures seeing to the bottom of them All other Prophets even Moses himself receiving their revelation by transient irradiations of their minds had no treasure of truth dwelling in them but apprehended only that particular wherein they were enlightned and that not clearly neither in its fulness and perfection but in a measure of light accommodated unto the Age wherein they lived 1 Pet. 1.11 12. Hence the Spirit is said to rest on him Isa. 11.2 3. and to abide on him Matth. 3.16 who did only in a transient act affect the minds of other Prophets and by an actual motion which had not an habitual spring in themselves cause them to speak or write the will of God as an instrument of Musick gives forth a sound according to the skill of him that strikes it and that only when it is so stricken or used Hence 2. The Prophets receiving their Revelations as it were by number and tale from the holy Ghost when they had spoken or written what in particular at any season they had received from him could not adde one word or syllable of the same infallibility and authority with what they had so received But the Lord Christ having all the treasures of Wisdom Knowledge and Truth hid and laid up in him did at all times in all places with equal infallibility and authority give forth the mind and will of God even as he would what he so spake having its whole Authority from his speaking of it and not from its consonancy unto any thing otherwise revealed 3. The Prophets of old were so barely instrumental in receiving and revealing the will of God being only servants in the house Heb. 3.4 for the good of others 1 Pet. 1.11 that they saw not to the bottom of the things by themselves revealed and did therefore both diligently read and study the books of them that wrote before their time Dan. 9.2 and meditated upon the things which the Spirit uttered by themselves to obtain an understanding in them 1 Pet. 1.10 11 12. But the Lord Jesus the Lord over his own house had an absolutely perfect comprehension of all the mysteries revealed to him and by him by that divine Wisdom which always dwelt in him 4. The Difference was no less between them in respect of the Revelations themselves made to them and by them For although the substance of the will and mind of God concerning salvation by the Messiah was made known unto them all yet it was done so obscurely to Moses and the Prophets that ensued that they came all short in the light of that Mystery to John the Baptist who did not rise up in a clear and distinct apprehension of it unto the least of the true Disciples of Christ Matth. 11.11 whence the giving of the Law by Moses to instruct the Church in that Mystery by its types and shadows is opposed to that Grace and Truth which were brought by Jesus Christ Joh. 1.17 18. See Ephes. 3.8 9 10 11. Col. 1.26 27. Tit. 2.11 2 Tim. 1.10 In these and sundry other things of the like importance had the Fathers speaking in the Son the preheminence above his speaking in Moses and the Prophets for which cause the Apostle placeth this consideration in the head of his Reasonings and Arguments for attendance unto and observation of the things revealed by him For even all these things have influence into his present Argument though the main stress of it be laid on the excellency of his Person of which at large afterwards 6. We must yet further observe that the Jews with whom the Apostle had to do had all of them an expectation of a new signal and final Revelation of the will of God to be made by the Messias in the last days that is of their Church state and not as they now fondly imagine of the world Some of them indeed imagined that great Prophet promised Deut. 18. to have been one distinct from the Messias Joh. 1.21 but the general expectation of the Church for the full Revelation of the will of God was upon the Messias Joh. 4.25 Of the same mind were their more antient Doctors that retained any thing of the tradition of their Fathers asserting that the Law of Moses was alterable by the Messias and that in some things it should be so Maimonides is the leader in the opinion of the eternity of the Law whose Arguments are answered by the Author of Sepher Ikkarim lib. 3. cap. 13. and some of them by Nachmanides Hence it is laid down as a Principle in Neve shalom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Messias the King shall be exalted above Abraham be high above Moses yea and the ministring Angels And it is for the excellency of the Revelation made by him that he is so exalted above Moses Whence Maimonides himself acknowledgeth Tractat. de Regibus that at the coming of the Messiah 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hidden and deep things i. e. of
are too large and comprehensive to be here spoken unto in this brief delineation of his Kingdom which we undertook in this digression 2. His Lordship and Dominion extends to the other sort of men also namely Reprobates and men finally impenitent They are not exempted from that all flesh which he hath power over Joh. 17.2 nor from those quick and dead over whom he is Lord Rom. 14.9 nor from that World which he shall judge Acts 17.31 And there are two especial grounds that are peculiar to them of this Grant and Power and Authority over them 1. His interposition upon the entrance of Sin against the immediate Execution of the Curse due unto it as befell the Angels This fixed the World under a Dispensation of 1. Forbearance and Patience Rom. 2.4 5. Acts 17.30 Rom. 9.22 Psal. 75.3 2. Goodness and Mercy Acts 14.16 17. That God who spared not the Angels when they sinned but immediately cast them into chains of darkness should place sinners of the Race of Adam under a dispensation of Forbearance and Goodness that he should spare them with much Long-suffering dureing their Pilgrimage on the earth and fill their hearts with food and gladness with all those fruits of kindness which the womb of his Providence is still bringing forth for their benefit and advantage is thus far on the account of the Lord Christ that though these things as relating unto Reprobates are no part of his especial purchase as Mediator of the Everlasting Covenant of Grace yet they are a necessary consequent of his Interposition against the immediate Execution of the whole Curse up●●●he first entrance of sin and of his undertaking for his Elect. 2. He makes a Conquest over them It was promised that he should do so Gen. 3.15 and though the work it self prove long and irksome though the wayes of accomplishing it be unto us obscure and oftentimes invisible yet he hath undertaken it and will not give it over untill they are every one brought to be his Footstool Psalm 110.1 1 Cor. 15.25 And the Dominion granted him on these Grounds is 1. Soveraign and Absolute His enemies are his Footstool Psal. 110.2 Mat. 22.44 Mark 12.36 Luke 20.24 Acts 2.34 1 Cor. 15.25 Heb. 1.13 They are in his hand as the Aegyptians were in Joseph's when he had purchased both their persons and their Estates to be at arbitrary disposal And he deals with them as Joseph did with those so far as any of the Ends of his Rule and Lordship are concerned in them And 2. Judiciary Joh. 5.22 23. As he hath power over their Persons so he hath regard unto their sins Rom. 14.9 Acts 17.32 Matth. 25.31 And this power he variously exerciseth over them even in this World before he gloriously exerts it in their Eternal Ruine For 1. He enlightens them by those heavenly sparks of Truth and Reason which he leaves unextinguished in their own minds John 1.9 2. Strives with them by his Spirit Gen. 6.3 secretly exciting their consciences to rebuke bridle yoke afflict and cruciate them Rom. 2.14 15. And 3. On some of them he acts by the Power and Authority of his Word whereby he quickens their Consciences galls their Minds and Affections restrains their Lusts bounds their Conversations aggravates their sins hard●ns their Hearts and judges their souls Psal. 45. Isa. 6. 4. He exerciseth Rule and Dominion over them in Providential Dispensations Rev. 6.15 16. Isa. 63.1 2 3 4. Rev. 19.13 By all which he makes way for the Glory of his final Judgement of them Acts. 1.17 32. Matth. 25.31 Revel 19.20 Chap. 20.10 11 12 13 14 15. And all this will he do unto the Ends 1. Of his own Glory 2. His Churches good exercise and safety And this is the second instance of the first Head of the Dominion of Christ in this World he is Lord over Persons Angels and Men. II. The Second part of the Heirship and Dominion of Christ consisteth in his Lordship over all Things besides which added to the former comprize the whole Creation of God In the distribution of these premised the first that occur are Spiritual things which also are of two sorts 1. Temporal or such as in this life we are made partakers of and 2. Eternal the things that are reserved for them that believe in the State of Glory The former may be reduced unto two heads for they are all of them either Grace or Gifts and Christ is Lord of them all 1. All that which comes under the name of Grace in Scripture which flowing from the free and special Love of God tends directly to the Spiritual and Eternal Good of them on whom it is bestowed may be referred unto four heads For as the fountain of all these or the gracious free purposes of the Will of God from whence they all do flow being Antecedent to the Mission of Christ the Mediator and Immanent in God it can be no otherwise granted unto him but in respect of its Effects which we shall shew that it is Now these are 1. Pardon of sin and the free Acceptation of the Persons of sinners in a way of mercy This is Grace Ephes. 2.8 Tit. 3.5 7. And a saving Effect and fruit of the Covenant Jer. 31.31 32 33 34. Heb. 8.12 2. The Regenerating of the Person of a dead sinner with the purifying and sanctifying of his Nature in a way of Spiritual power This also is Grace and promised in the Covenant and there are three parts of it 1. The Infusion of a quickning Principle into the soul of a dead sinner Rom. 8.2 Tit. 3.5 Joh. 3.6 Ephes. 2.16 2. The Habitual furnishment of a spiritually quickned soul with abiding radical principles of Light Love and Power fitting it for Spiritual Obedience Gal. 5.17 3. Actual Assistance in a Communication of supplies of strength for every Duty and Work Phil. 1.13 John 15.3 3. Preservation in a Condition of Acceptation with God and holy Obedience unto him unto the End is also of Especial Grace It is the Grace of Perseverance and eminently included in the Covenant as we have elsewhere shewed at large 4. Adoption as a Priviledge with all the Priviledges that flow from it is also Grace Ephes. 1.5 6. All these with all those admirable and inexpressible mercies that they branch themselves into giving deliverance unto sinners from evil temporal and eternal raising them to Communion with God here and to the Enjoyment of him for ever hereafter are called Grace and do belong to the Lordship of Christ as he is Heir Lord and Possessor of them all All the stores of this Grace and Mercy that are in Heaven for sinners are given into his hand and resigned up to his Soveraign disposal as we shall intimate in general and particular 1. In General Col. 1.19 It pleased the Father that in him all fulness should dwell There is a fourfold fulness in Christ 1. Of the Deity in his Divine Nature Rom. 9.5 2. Of Vnion in his Person Col.
and to be wise to sobriety And the Rule of that Sobriety is given us for ever Deut. 29.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Secret things belong to the Lord our God but revealed things to us and our Children Divine Revelation is the Rule and measure of our knowledge in these things and that bounds and determines our sobriety And hence the Apostle condemning the Curiosity of men in this very subject about Angels makes the nature of their sin to consist in exceeding these bounds by an enquiry into things unrevealed and the rise of that evil to lye in Pride Vanity and Fleshliness and the tendency of it to be unto false Worship Superstition and Idolatry Col. 2.18 Neither is there any thing more averse from Right Reason nor more condemned by wise men of former times than a curious humour of prying into those things wherein we are not concerned and for whose investigation we have no certain honest lawful Rule or medium And this evil is encreased where God himself hath given bounds to our enquiries as in this case he hath 2. This alone will bring us unto any Certainty and Truth Whilest men indulge to their own imaginations and fancies as too many in this matter have been apt to do it is sad to consider how they have wandered up and down and with what fond Conceits they have deceived themselves and others The world hath been filled with monstrous Opinions and Doctrines about Angels their Nature Offices and Employments some have Worshipped them others pretended I know not what Communion and entercourse with them in all which conceits there hath been little of Truth and nothing at all of Certainty Whereas if men according to the Example of the Apostle would keep themselves to the word of God as they would know enough in this matter for the discharging of their own Duty so they would have Assurance and Evidence of Truth in their conceptions without which pretended high and raised notions are but a shadow of a dream worse then professed ignorance II. We may hence observe That the Glory Honour and Exaltation of Angels lyes in their subserviency to the Povidence of God It lyes not so much in their Nature as in their work and service The intention of the Apostle is to shew the Glory of Angels and their Exaltation which he doth by the induction of this Testimony reporting their serviceableness in the works wherein of God they are employed God hath endowed the Angels with a very Excellent Nature furnished them with many eminent properties of Wisdom Power Agility Perpetuity but yet what is hereby glorious and honourable herein consists not meerly in their nature it self and its Essential Properties all which abide in the horridest and most to be detested Part of the whole Creation namely the Devils but in their conformity and answerableness unto the Mind and Will of God that is in their moral not meerly natural Endowments These make them amiable glorious excellent Unto this their Readiness for and compliance with the will of God that God having made them for his service and employing them in his work their discharge of their Duty therein with Cheerfulness Alacrity Readiness and Ability is that which renders them truly honourable and glorious Their Readiness and Ability to serve the Providence of God is their Glory For 1. The greatest Glory that any Creature can be made partaker of is to serve the Will and set forth the Praise of its Creator That is its Order and Tendency towards its Principal End in which two all true Honour consists It is glorious even in the Angels to serve the God of Glory what is there above this for a creature to aspire unto what that its nature is capable of Those among the Angels who as it seems attempted somewhat farther somewhat higher attained nothing but an endless Ruine in shame and misery Men are ready to fancy strange things about the Glory of Angels and do little consider that all the difference in Glory that is in any parts of Gods Creation lyes meerly in Willingness Ability and Readiness to serve God their Creator 2. The works wherein God employes them in a subservience unto his Providence are in an especial manner glorious works For the service of Angels as it is intimated unto us in the Scripture it may be reduced unto two Heads For they are employed either in the communication of Protection and Blessings to the Church or in the Execution of the Vengeance and Judgements of God against his Enemies Instances to both these purposes may be multiplyed but they are commonly known Now these are glorious works God in them eminently exalts his Mercy and Justice the two properties of his Nature in the Execution whereof he is most eminently exalted and from these works ariseth all that Revenue of Glory and Praise which God is pleased to reserve to himself from the world so that it must needs be very honourable to be employed in these works 3. They perform their Duty in their service in a very glorious manner with great Power Wisdom and uncontroulable Efficacy Thus one of them flew 145000. of the Enemies of God in a night Another set fire on Sodom and Gomorrah from Heaven of the like Power and Expedition are they in all their services in all things to the utmost capacity of creatures answering the Will of God God himself it is true sees that in them and their Works which keeps them short of absolute Purity and Perfection which are his own Properties but as to the capacity of meer Creatures and for their state and condition there is a perfection in their Obedience and that is their Glory Now if this be the great Glory of Angels and we poor worms of the earth are invited as we are into a Participation with them therein what unspeakable folly will it be in us if we be found negligent in labouring to attain thereunto Our future Glory consists in this that we shall be made like unto Angels and our Way towards it is to do the Will of our Father on Earth as it is done by them in Heaven Oh in how many Vanities doth vain man place his Glory nothing so shamefull that one or other hath not gloried in whilest the true and only glory of doing the will of God is neglected by almost all But we must treat again of these things upon the last Verse of this Chapter Verse VIII IX HAving given an Account of what the Scripture teacheth and testifieth concerning Angels in the following Verses He sheweth how much other things and far more glorious are spoken to and of the Son by whom God revealed his will in the Gospel Ver. 8 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But unto the Son Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but of the Son he saith which is necessarily supplyed as to the Apostles design In the Psalm the words are spoken by way of Apostrophe to the Son and they are recited by
Wherefore he watcheth over them to succour them that are tempted Heb. 2 18. and to give out help unto them all in time of need Chap. 4.16 and hence they who have no might no sufficiency can do all things through Christ that strengtheneth them Phil. 4.13 Nothing is too hard for them nothing can prevail against them because of the constant supplyes of Grace which the Captain of their salvation communicates unto the● And this makes the Wayes of the Gospel marvellous both to the World and to Believers themselves Their Life is hid with God in Christ Col. 3. And they have a new name that no man knoweth Rev. 2. The World seeing poor mean weak contemptible Creatures willing ready and able to suffer endure and dye for the name of Christ stand astonished not knowing where their great strength lyes as the Philistins did at the might of Sampson whom they saw with their eyes to be like other men Let them in the height of their Pride and Rage of their madness pretend what they please they cannot but be they really are amazed to see poor Creatures whom otherwise they exceedingly despise constant unto the Truth and Profession of the Gospel against all their Allurements and Affrightments They know not they consider not the constant supplyes of the Strength and Grace which they receive from their Leader He gives them the Spirit of Truth which the world neither sees nor knows John 14.17 And therefore wonder from whence they have their Ability and Constancy They cry What will nothing turn these poor foolish creatures out of their way They by them one way and then another add one weight of Affliction and Oppression unto another and think surely this will effect their design but they find themselves deceived and know not whence it is The Wayes of O●edience are hence also marvellous unto Believers themselves When they consider their own frailty and weakness how ready they are to faint how often they are surprized and withal take a prospect of what Opposition lyes against them from indwelling sin Satan and the World which they are acquainted with in several instances of their Power and Prevalency they neither know how they have abode so long in their course as they have done nor how they shall continue it unto the end But they are relieved when they come to the Promise of the Gospel There they see whence their Preservation doth proceed They see this Captain of their Salvation in whom is the fulness of the Spirit and to whom are committed all the stores of Grace giving out daily and hourly unto them as the matter doth require As the Captain in an Army doth not at once give out unto his Souldiers the whole provision that is needful for their way and undertaking which if he should the most of them would instantly waste it and so quickly perish for want but he keeps provision for them all in his stores and gives out unto them according to their daily necessities So God gave the people Manna for their daily food in the Wilderness even so deals this great Leader with the Sons of God He keeps the stores of Grace and spiritual strength in his own hand and from thence imparts unto them according as they stand in need Fourthly He subdues their enemies And this belongs unto his Office as the Captain of their salvation in an especial manner Many Enemies they have and unless they are conquered and subdued they can never enter into Glory Satan the World Death and Sin are the chief or heads of them and all these are subdued by Christ and that two wayes First In his own Person For they all attempted him and failed in their enterprize John 14.30 He bruised the Serpents head Gen. 3.15 and destroyed him that had the power of death that is the Devil v. 14. of this Chapter destroyed his Power in a glorious and triumphant manner Col. 2.15 He spoyled principalities and powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Cross adding the utmost complement unto his Victory in a Triumph And he overcome the world John 16.33 Be of good chear saith he I have overcome the world Both it and the Prince of it were put under his feet Death also was subdued by him He swallowed it up in victory 1 Cor. 15.54 He plucked out its sting broke its Power disannulled its peremptory Law when he shook it off from him and rose from under it Acts 2.24 Sin also set upon him in his Temptations but was utterly foiled as all sin is destroyed in its very being where it is not obeyed And all this was for the Advantage of the Sons of God For 1. He hath given them encouragement in shewing them that their Enemies are not invincible their Power is not uncontrollable their Law not peremptory or eternal but that having been once conquered they may the more easily be dealt withal 2. They know also that all these Enemies set upon his Person in their quarrel and as he was the great Defender of the faithful So that although they were not conquered by their Persons yet they were conquered in their Cause and they are called in to be sharers in the Victory although they were not engaged in the Battle 3. That he subdued them by Gods Ordinance and Appointment as their Representative declaring in his Person who is the Head what should be accomplished in every one of his members And 4. That by his Personal Conquest over them He hath left them weak maimed disarmed and utterly deprived of that power they had to hurt and destroy before he engaged with them For he hath thereby deprived them 1. Of all their Right and Title to exercise their Enmity against or Dominion over the Sons of God Before his dealing with them they had all Right to the utmost over mankind Satan to rule the World to vex Sin to enslave Death to destroy and give up unto Hell And all this Right was enrolled in the Law and hand-writing of Ordinances which was against us This was cancelled by Christ nailed to the Cross never to be pleaded more Col. 2.14 And when any have lost their Right or Title unto any thing what ever their strength be they are greatly weakned But he hath herein 2. Deprived them of their strength also He took away the strength of sin as a Law and the sting of death in sin the arms of the world in the curse and the power of Satan in his works and strong-holds But this is not all He not only subdues these Enemies for them but also in them and by them For though they have neit●●r Title nor Arms yet they will try the remainder of their Power against them also But thanks be to God saith the Apostle who giveth us the victory by Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15.57 He enables us in our own Persons to conquer all these enemies Nay saith he in all these things we are more than conquerors Rom. 8.37 Because we