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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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meaning from that which we gave of almost the same words chap. 5. ver 6. because his scope there is somewhat different from what it is here Vers. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God HE addeth a second reason whereby he commendeth not only that glorying in the sufferings and satisfaction of Christ as the only sure ground to build our Faith for salvation upon spoken of ver 14. but also the study of piety and of becoming a new creature whereof ver 15. as the only rule according to which all ought to walk in their several imployments And secondly doth excite all men to walk according to this rule by a most sure prediction and promise of a double fruit to be reaped thereby even Peace that is peace with God peace with their own conscience and so much of peace one with another and of sanctified prosperity which also goeth under the name of peace Gen. 28. 21 as God should see convenient for them Psal. 84. -11. and Mercy that is God's favour the fountain of the former peace which should furnish them with a timous remedy to all their evils and misery And thirdly because the false Apostles did glory much themselves and boulstered up their followers much with this That they were the only true Israelites as being joyned to the People of God by Circumcision to whom those promises did belong he sheweth that they who followed this rule though they were not Israel according to the flesh Rom. 2. 28. yet they were the Israel of God the only true Israelites Joh. 1. 47. as being the children of Abraham by faith chap. 3. 7. for the particle and in this place must be exegetick of one and the same thing as Eph. 1. 3. and not copulative of diverse Doct. 1. The rule of a Christian man's walk whether in relation to faith or manners is not left indifferent for every man so as he may choose what rule pleaseth him best neither is it left arbitrary unto any man to impose a rule of walking upon others but there is a fixt determinate rule condescended upon by God for all which no man may either add to or take from for saith he As many as walk according to this rule meaning a determinate fixed rule The word in the original is borrowed from Architectors who try their work by rule and square now whatever is defective and requireth addition or superfluous and requireth diminution is not a perfect and just measure or rule 2. Though this rule and canon of faith and manners be the whole Word of God contained in Scripture 2 Pet. 1. 19 20 21. Yet the grace of Faith in Jesus Christ and repentance unto life are a doctrinal sum of this rule if we mean the Doctrine of Faith and Repentance or a practical sum if we mean the graces themselves there being no point of Truth taught and no duty pressed in the whole Scripture which one way or other relateth not to one of these two for while he saith As many as walk according to this rule it is all one upon the matter whether by the rule he mean the Doctrine contained in the whole Epistle which is one and the same in substance with the rest of Scripture or the graces of Faith in Christ called ver 14. glorying in the crosse of Christ and of repentance unto life called ver 15. the new creature although it be more probable he mean the latter 3. This rule of faith and manners contained in the Scripture is unchangeable and ever to remain as that to which all men in all ages to the end of the world ought to make themselves conform for the word rendred walk in the original is in the future tense as relating to all time As many as shall walk according to this rule 4. So accurate and orderly is this rule in it self Psal. 119. 96. So ignorant are we of it in many particulars relating both to faith and manners Psal. 119. 18. And so many and subtil are those tentations which Satan setteth on foot to make us transgresse and flight this rule Eph. 6. -11. that there is great necessity of circumspection accuracy and attention unto those who would rightly walk according to this rule for the word rendred walk signifieth to walk orderly attentively as Souldiers when they keep rank As many as walk according to this rule 5 Even those who walk according to this rule are not so much freed from sin and misery but they stand in need of mercy yea all their receipts do come in the way not of merit but of undeserved mercy for mercy relateth to sin misery and to them that walk according to this rule there is a promise not only of peace but also of mercy and of peace flowing from mercy Peace shall be upon them and mercy saith he 6. As tender walkers according to this rule may expect sufficient encouragement and reward even in this life and such as may counterballance all contrary discouragements and hardships which usually occur in that way So their encouragements are not from the world but from above descending from Heaven and therefore such as cannot be hindred by the malice of men for peace shall be upon them and mercy saith he the word rendred upon them is emphatick and importeth that those blessings fall down upon them from above 7. It is not sufficient for a Minister of Christ who would comfort and incourage weak Christians who are otherwise apt to be discouraged through multitude of tentations in their Christian course Heb. 12. 12. that he find out and apply such precious Promises as are pertinent to their case but he must also endeavour their satisfaction in this that they are in the number of those to whom such promises do belong and who with God's allowance may lay hold upon them and draw out that comfort which is contained in them otherwise the discouraged person will look upon it as presumption to apply any of those precious Promises Psal. 77. -2. though otherwise he most gladly would for the Apostle sheweth that those who walk according to this rule and to whom he promiseth peace and mercy are the Israel of God to whom such Promises were made and do appertain And upon the Israel of God saith he Vers. 17. From henceforth let no man trouble me for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus THe Apostle having now sufficiently vindicated his Doctrine and justified his practice especially from those calumnies which were spread of him as if he had preached Circumcision chap. 5. 11. doth here by his Apostolical Authority discharge any whomsoever to occasion further trouble to him or unnecessary diversions from the great work of the Gospel whether by speaking against his Doctrine or by spreading or entertaining calumnies and slanders of him especially that formerly spoken of and this because the manifold sufferings which he had endured from the Jews
heard and obeyed as the false Apostles who did alwayes inculcate the Authority of men upon the hearers that hereby they might gain credit to their Doctrine but the drift of his Doctrine was to draw men to God perswading God that is to be heard and obeyed that so the faith of the hearers might rely only upon the Authority of God and not of men partly from the scope of the preacher Paul himself which was not to hunt after the favour of men as the false Apostles did presse the Legal Ceremonies that they might hereby gain the applause of and decline persecution from the Jews Gal. 6. 12. but his aim was singly to approve himself to God however men should esteem of him 1 Cor. 4. 3. and withall giveth a reason inducing him to be thus single and sincere to wit if he should set himself to hunt after the favour of men as he did when he was a Pharisee he could not be an approven Servant of Christ but of those whose favour he studied to gain Doct. 1. The faithfull Servants of Jesus Christ beside their many other sufferings must resolve to suffer somewhat sometimes in their credit and estimation from those who being set on by a spirit of spight and malice will spread sinistrous reports in secret of honest Ministers the truth whereof they dare not avow or publickly stand to when they are put to it and have fair opportunity to do it if they could for it appeareth Paul's adversaries had been secretly whispering as if the scope of his Doctrine had been to set up his own Authority and Testimony in the Points controverted not only above the other Apostles to whom they falsly boasted of to have favoured them as is collected from chap. 2. 6. but also above the Authority of God speaking in the Old Testament and that he was not constant to himself sometimes disproving Circumcision and sometimes approving it chap. 5. 11. as he might best please the humours of men with whom he had to do and Paul wipeth off these calumnies not by a positive denial of any Truth to be in them but by interrogations and questions which as they serve for strong negations of the things questioned according to the use of Scripture 1 Sam. 12. 3. So they in a manner provoke the adversary to assert the thing questioned for truth if he be able for do I now perswade men or God or do I seek to please men 2. Though the Minister of Jesus Christ may make use of humane Authority as a secondary proof and testimony unto the Truth already proved to be Truth from the Word of God and chiefly towards those with whom the testimony of such will have most weight Act. 17. 28 Yet the Authority and Writings of men or of any man whatsoever are not to be rested upon as the first and main proof of any religious Truth neither are they especially in preaching to be alwayes inculcated and promiscously unto every sort of hearers lest thereby the faith of people be brought to rely on the Authority of men for this is to perswade men to wit to be chiefly heard as the supream Judges of religious Truths which Paul denieth to have been his practice Do I now perswade men 3. That Doctrine only the truth whereof is grounded upon Divine Testimony and Thus saith the Lord is to be received in the Church as that which men may safely venture their eternal well-being on 1 Cor. 3. 12 15. and which God will own for His Act. 15. 24. for Paul proveth that the Doctrine preached by him was the only true Gospel of Jesus Christ because thereby he did perswade God to wit to be heard and obeyed and His Authority only to be stood to as appeareth by the causal particle for For do I now perswade men or God The first part of the question hath the force of a denial the second of a vehement affirmation as if he had said I do not perswade men but God 4. It is not enough that a Minister preach nothing to people but that which is the Truth of God he must also preach Truth sincerely not concealing any part of necessary Truth or misapplying Truth so as that thereby he may please the sinfull affections humours and dispositions of men but aiming singly to approve himself to God in doing of his duty 2 Cor. 2. 17. Thus Paul denieth that his aim in preaching was to please men Or do I seek to please men 5. As true conversion doth work a real change in a man from what he once was in his unconverted state 2 Cor. 5. 17. so particularly in this that where before he did prostitute his gifts and parts yea his very conscience to the slavery of mens sinfull humours whom he conversed with and by pleasing of whom he did expect any profit credit or contentment Joh. 5. 44. he will not now abase himself or dishonour God by doing so any more thus was it with Paul For if I yet pleased men where he insinuateth that formerly and while he was a Pharisee he did please men but he would do so no more 6. Though the Minister of Jesus Christ ought not to set himself of purpose and without necessity to displease men or by his imprudent disobliging carriage to irritate and stir up their corruptions for hereby the Word in his mouth should be made unsavory unto them and though he ought to endeavour the pleasing of all men by eschewing any thing which may be just ground of offence to them 2 Cor. 7. 2. by retrenching or inlarging himself in the use of his christian liberty in things indifferent as he may be least offensive unto them 1 Cor. 10. 32 33. and as he may gain most upon them 1 Cor. 9. 20 21 22. and by accommodating himself in his publick preaching to the case capacity and state of all by assigning unto every one what is competent 1 Joh 2. 13 13. and so is to please men for their good to edification Rom. 15. 2. Yet there is a way of pleasing men most sinfull and base especially in a Minister and which is inconsistent with fidelity in Christ's service to wit when he concealeth any necessary Truth which he is otherwise called to deliver lest he displease men 1 King 22. 13 14. when his highest aim is to gain applause from men 2 Cor. 4 5 and generally when he is so timerously disposed as to venture rather upon the displeasure of God by omitting any part of His duty than to irritate and displease the sinfull humours of men by faithfulnesse in the discharge of his Calling Act. 4. 10. A Minister who setteth himself so to please men and who resolveth not in these respects to meet with the displeasure of some men cannot be a faithful Servant to Jesus Christ for a man cannot serve two masters Mat. 6. 24. If I yet pleased men I should not be the Servant of Christ. 7. A faithfull Servant of Jesus Christ will prize his
receive a proof of God's fidelity in bearing them through all hazards which they may meet with in following of His Call 2 Cor. 1. 10. Thus was it with Moses Exod. 2. 10 c. so was it with Jeremiah Jer. 1. 19. and so here with Paul whose first work after God had called him to be an Apostle was to preach the Gospel among the wicked and savage Arabians I went to Arabia 4. The Apostles by their Office were not fixed or tied unto any certain Charge as ordinary Ministers now are Rev. 2. 1 8. but their Charge being the whole World Mat. 28. 19. they went from place to place as the necessities of People required Rom. 1. 11. rules of Providence Rom. 15. 20. or God by His Spirit did immediatly direct Act. 16. 9 10. Thus Paul went unto Arabia and returned again to Damascus near to which he was converted Act. 9. 3. at which time of his return did fall out that hazard wherein he was from the Jews mentioned Act. 9. 23 c. for the history sheweth it was many dayes after his conversion and that immediately after his delivery from it he went to Jerusalem and conversed familiarly with the Apostles and therefore it could not have been before his journey to Arabia else that history should contradict Paul himself affirming here that he went up to Jerusalem to them who were Apostles before him Vers. 18. Then after three years I went up to Jerusalem to see Peter and abode with him fifteen dayes 19. But other of the Apostles saw I none save James the Lord's Brother HEre is a third Evidence to wit that three years after his conversion he went to Jerusalem to give a familiar serious and friendly visit to Peter in token of mutual consent and agreement to one and the self-same Truth which was preached by them both but not that he might learn the knowledge of the Gospel from Peter as his adversaries alleaged for his abode with Peter was but for fifteen dayes only ver 18. And lest any should object that he had been taught at that time by some other Apostle he sheweth he saw no other Apostle there but James and that he did see him only as it were upon the by which James was not the son of Zebedeus who was beheaded by Herod Act. 12. 2. but the son of Alpheus Mat. 10. 3. who either himself or his wife hath been of kinred with Mary the mother of Jesus Hence James their son is here called the Lord's Brother according to the custom of the Hebrews who called men of the same kinred and bloud Brethren Gen. 13. 8. Doct. 1. That nothing of Peter's supposed supremacy over Paul and the rest of the Apostles can be gathered from this place as the Papists do alleage appeareth from this that Paul went first to his Work before he came to Peter at all and that his businesse with Peter was not to receive ordination from him or to evidence his subjection to him but from the respect and reverence he carried to him to give him a friendly visit Besides that it is the Apostle's scope in a great part of this Epistle to shew that he was nothing inferiour to Peter or to any other of the Apostles 2. We ought so to spend our time for diligence and faithfulnesse in our stations that we may be able to give a good account how time hath been spent both for dayes and years Paul giveth such an account while he sheweth he preached three years in Arabia and Damascus and after stayed in Jerusalem fifteen dayes Then after three years I went up and abode fifteen dayes 3. It ought to be the endeavour of Christ's Ministers to entertain love and familiarity one with another as also to make their so doing evident unto others it being most unseemly for those who preach the Gospel of Peace unto others to live in discord among themselves for Paul went up to Jerusalem to see Peter as for other reasons so that hereby he might evidence that love and harmony which was between them 4. The Lord doth so direct the steps of those who do acknowledge Him in all their wayes Prov. 3. 6. that His glory and their good is sometimes eminently brought about by some of the ordinary passages of their life even beyond their own intention or purpose as here Paul's deferring to go to Jerusalem for the space of three years his abode there only fifteen dayes and his seeing none of the Apostles there save Peter and James do serve as an evidence to refute that calumny of his adversaries against his Doctrine and Office and hath been ordered so of God for that end although Paul in the mean time knew not so much being then ignorant that ever he should meet with such a calumny 5. As Ministers may and ought to meet sometimes together to evidence and entertain mutual love and concord and because of that mutual inspection which they ought to have one of another So their meetings ought neither to be so frequent or of so long continuance as that thereby their Flocks may suffer prejudice for the word importeth that this was a serious visit and about serious things made by Paul to Peter and yet he remained with him but a short time untill he returned to his Charge again He went to see Peter and abode with him fifteen dayes Vers. 20. Now the things which I write unto you behold before God I lie not THe Apostle having to do with adversaries and some also amongst the seduced Galatians who gave not much credit to his Word asserteth the truth of all he hath said and is to say in matter of fact through the whole Epistle and confirmeth it by an oath where according to the use of Scripture els-where he expresseth but one principal part of an oath to wit a confession of God's presence and power to witnesse and judge the Truth and includeth the other parts such as our invocation of God to bear witnesse that we speak the truth 2 Cor. 1. 23. and imprecation that God would be a Judge to take revenge upon us if we lie Ruth 1. 17. Doct. 1. The Spirit of God in Scripture hath not left us destitute of sufficient evidences to be found in Scripture it self from whence the truth of it may be made out and all atheistical doubtings to the contrary removed among which this is one the solemn Oath of those who write it being men otherwise godly and worthy of trust attesting the truth thereof and taking God to witnesse against their own soul if they did lie in what they wrote Behold before God I lie not 2. The choicest Servants of Christ may be looked upon as liars and unworthy to be trusted even by those to whom they are sent and yet they must not give over to preach as knowing the Word spoken by them doth still get credit from some 2 Cor. 2. 15. and will beget trust to it self from others whom God hath ordained to be
understood not so much justifying faith and faith towards God which is the root and fountain of all those fruits ver -6. as faith and fidelity towards men whereby from a renewed heart and for God's glory we speak nothing but truth Eph. 4. 25. and make conscience to perform whatsoever is undertaken by us Psal. 15. -4. Eightly Meeknesse a vertue whereby we moderate anger so as that we are not provoked but for just causes and not more or longer provoked than the Word of God alloweth whereby also we do speedily restrain and suppresse anger when it hath transgressed the just bounds Eph. 4. 26. Ninthly Temperance or continency whereby our fleshly appetite is kept within bounds in seeking after honour meat drink pleasure or riches Lastly The Apostle having made this enumeration that he may excite the Galatians to the practice of those vertues he commendeth them from this That the Law was not made against them or the practisers of them either to condemn or accuse them In which words by a figure or flowr of speech more is to be understood than is spoken as Psal. 51. -17. even that the Moral Law concerning the standing whereof as to its directing power there was no controversie betwixt Paul and his adversaries doth expresly command and commend them which could not be said of those ceremonial abstinences or performances so much urged by the false Apostles Doct. 1. There is no way for gracious vertues or the fruits of the Spirit to grow and thrive in our heart unlesse the works of the flesh be set against and in some measure mortified these thistles and weeds must be plucked up else they draw the sap and strength of the heart from the good grain The Apostle's method pointeth at so much while he engageth them to mortifie the works of the flesh in the first place and next commendeth unto them the fruits of the Spirit But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace c. 2. It is not sufficient that we set about the work of mortification and curbing of sin and vice but must also endeavour to have the heart replenished with the contrary gracious vertues otherwise sin being as it were over-powered may lurk for a season but will afterwards revive and take strength Mat. 12. 44 45. for the Apostle having engaged them to mortifie the works of the flesh doth now excite them to the exercise of gracious vertues But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace c. 3. There is no vertue truly saving and acceptable to God but that which floweth from the grace of regeneration The vertues of the Heathen how excellent soever they seemed to be were but shadows of saving vertues as not coming from a clean fountain a gracious root in the heart Jo● 14. 4. nor yet levelling at the right end God's glory in the chief place Col. 3. 17. but some other thing inferior to that Act. 24. 26. Besides they were not done in faith and so could not be acceptable to God Heb. 11. 6. for the Apostle calleth all those which are vertues indeed the fruits and effects of the Spirit But the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace saith he 4. If we compare the graces of God's Spirit with the works of the flesh there will appear such a beauty in the one such deformity in the other such solid satisfaction and contentment in the one and such disquietnesse and vexation of spirit in the other that laying aside the difference which is betwixt them by reason of their original and event those other considerations may serve abundantly to make us fall in love with the graces of God's Spirit and abominate the works of the flesh for the works of the flesh are Adultery witchcraft hatred strife envyings murders but the fruit of the Spirit is Love joy peace long-suffering c. 5. We are to judge of persons and practices by thinking well of them or otherwise not according to the common esteem in which they are among men 1 Cor. 4. 3. but according to the esteem that God hath of them and according to what the Word of God which is the absolute rule of right and wrong Truth and Error doth pronounce concerning them for Paul judgeth it sufficient to commend the practice of those vertues from this that the Law of God did commend them and approved of those who made conscience of them Against such there is no Law saith he Vers. 24. And they that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts THe Apostle in this Verse addeth a new Argument to inforce the practice of that first Rule given ver 13. and cleared ver 19 20 21. to wit that they should not give occasion to or fulfill the lusts of the flesh because those who are Christs as they all professed themselves to be have by vertue of Christ's death crucified and put to death their fleshly corruption with all its sinfull motions whether they be sinfull affections and passions such as those whereby the mans mind doth suffer is troubled and afflicted as malice envie anger and the like or whether they be sinful lusts such as these which are stirred up by fleshly carnal baits and pleasures as motions to intemperance uncleannesse and such like Now those who are Christ's are said to have crucified all those because every one who professeth the Name of Christ hath engaged himself by his profession and covenant sealed in Baptism so to do Rom. 6. 3 4. and the truly Regenerate besides this engagement by profession have actually begun this work so that though this body of corrupt flesh be in them yet by His Spirit Rom. 8. 13. and by imitating His Crosse Rom. 6. 6. they are upon the work of mortifying it suppressing the endeavours and smothering the effects of it Rom. 6. 12. Doct. 1. All they who are led by and walk in the Spirit or who are truly regenerate and who are actually engaged in the work of mortifying their corrupt nature are Christ's in a peculiar manner to wit by right of donation from the Father Joh. 6. 37. by right of emption or redemption 1 Cor. 6. 20. and by right of resignation all such having actually resigned themselves unto Christ as a mansion for Him to dwell and walk in 1 Cor. 6. 19. and in every thing to be guided by Him Act. 9. 6. for the Apostle useth those expressions indifferently as being of equal extent Walk in the Spirit ver 16. and if ye be led by the Spirit ver 18. and in this verse they who are Christs have crucified the flesh 2. The work of mortification striketh at all sin and spareth none aswell pleasant sins whereby fleshly lusts are satisfied as other more vexatious evils whereby the mind doth in a kind suffer and is afflicted for speaking of this work he saith They that are Christs have crucified the flesh that is the root of corruption and then they have crucified all its branches not only affections
Christian courage under variety of afflictions your tractable disposition to receive wholsome counsels your willingnesse to be instructed in the way to life and in order to that end to attend publick duties beyond many of your equals your strengthening my hands in the work of my Ministery as by other means so especially by your good example amongst the People of my charge I should judge my self very unanswerable to God and exceeding much blame-worthy if I did not encourage your Honour to make progresse in that good way wherein ye are already engaged And if my present essay upon this Piece of sacred Truth do contribute any thing to this end it shall be matter of thanksgiving from me unto the Lord who alone doth teach His People to profit And finally I do professe unto you all Right Honourable and most dearly beloved in our Lord that those words 2 Pet. 1. 12 13 14 15. sound much in mine ears and do sometimes work upon my heart if so I may in some measure follow the example of that blessed Apostle who wrote them Wherefore saith he I will not be negligent to put you alwayes in remembrance of those things though ye know them and be established in the present Truth Yea I think it meet as long as I am in this tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance Knowing that ere long or not knowing how soon I must put off this tabernacle Moreover I will endeavour that you may be able after my decease to have these things alwayes in remembrance Now it is the Lord alone who blesseth the endeavours of His Servants and giveth increase both to our planting and watering To whose rich and saving grace I commend your Honours most heartily and shall ever pray for all manner of blessings on you and all your rising posterity as is the duty of Your Honours obliged Servant who beggeth grace to approve himself your faithfull Pastor JAMES FERGUSSON To the Reader Christian Reader I Do here present thee with an Exposition of two of Paul's Epistles after the pattern so far as my weaknesse could reach held forth by those two Reverend Brethren Mr. David Dickson and Mr. George Hutcheson in their late Pieces of this kind upon other parcels of holy Scripture The Reasons of my undertaking besides what is held forth in the former Epistle were not any confidence I had to come up to my copie wherein I doubt not but as I my self am very conscious so the intelligent Reader will easily perceive that I come far short and that the superstructure by me is much unanswerable as to fulnesse of purpose accuracie and stile of language to the foundation laid by them But first an apprehension I had that as the compleating of such a work as this upon the whole Scripture is much wished for by many and would prove acceptable and profitable to the Church of Christ So many of greater abilities and fitnesse than I for such a task who did lie-by might be strongly induced to contribute their endeavours towards it if any essay of mine should be accepted Wherein I blesse the Lord I have not been in a mistake as may appear by what is sent abroad to the world since the publishing of my former Piece by a Reverend Brother my nearest fellow-labourer in the work of the Ministery upon the two Epistles of PETER And secondly I was one of those who some ten years ago without my knowledge were pitched upon by some Reverend Brethren of the Ministery for carrying-on this Work at which time I almost perfected the whole task then allotted for me but through some sad accident in those times of trouble all the Papers I had written upon that subject were destroyed and lost and so a great part of my time and life in a manner lost with them which notwithstanding did not so discourage me but the remembrance of what sweetnesse I tasted in that study and of the manifold advantage wherewith it did recompense my pains did make me full seven years after more easie to be wrought upon and perswaded by the earnest desires of others to make a new essay as being confident from former experience I my self at least should be no loser by it If any shall think this present Piece to be of greater length than my former and some others of this kind are I hope they will for satisfaction consider that seing the Apostle doth discusse a great and needfull controversie in the Epistle to the Galatians it requireth time and enlargement to find and follow the threed of an intricate dispute and to explain those excellent Truths which the Apostle doth so much labour to assert And as for the Epistle to the Ephesians it is well known to be so comprehensive as containing the whole substance of Christian Religion in so little bulk that hardly can any man at least not I satisfie either himself or his Reader without inlarging himself somewhat in opening up such a rich treasure and excellent subject I know there may be much coincidencie of Doctrines which do nativly arise from those Epistles and from those others to the Philippians and Colossians But the Reader may for his satisfaction consider that besides I have frequently referred him to those places where such Doctrines were formerly raised seing the Spirit of God hath thought it necessary to assert necessary truths oftner than once in severall Scriptures for our further confirmation it should not be thought an idle repetition in a Writer to draw out the same conclusions from the same truths when they occurr for hereby is given a proof of the sufficiency and fruitfulnesse of Scripture as furnishing many arguments to establish one and the same necessary truth To write the same things to you to me indeed is not grievous but for you it is safe saith our Apostle Philip. 3. 1. I trust it shall not offend that in some places I do not only hold forth the doctrine and conclusion which flow naturally from the text but also couch-in some explanations cautions reasons and somtimes some short uses for those serve to obviate mistakes about the truth in hand and to leave some impression of it upon the heart and affections If any take exception that Scriptures are too frequently cited and think they are hereby retarded from making progresse in reading the treatise They may be pleased to consider that I cite no Scriptures to confirm the Doctrines themselves which as I conceive are sufficiently grounded upon and confirmed from the text but only the cautions reasons and uses of those Doctrines which not being grounded upon the present Scripture I desired none to take off my hand upon trust However if any understand the purpose to be truth and grounded upon Scripture he needeth not stand to seek the particular passage which is brought to prove it except he please and judge it convenient that he may have some further ground of meditation upon the truth in hand thereby afforded And now
havock of it ver 13. together with the great measure of knowledge he had in that Religion which he did then professe and of abilities to defend it beyond many of these who were equal in age with him and his zeal and servour for his Religion and the worst part of it to wit unwritten Traditions received from their fathers without any ground in the written Word of God Mat. 15. 3 9. All which he speaketh as of a thing publickly known ver 14. leaving them to gather hence that his so sudden change from being so zealous so deeply engaged and every way so able a persecutor ●o imbrace the Christian Religion could not flow from humane perswasion or any ordinary means but immediately from God Doct. 1. It is a matter of no small difficulty yea and in an ordinary way almost impossible for a man deeply engaged in a course of error having kythed active for it and endued with ability to defend it to be reclaimed from his error to imbrace the way of Truth for Paul maketh his so deep engagements to the Pharisaical Errors an evidence that his sudden change to Christianity did not flow from any ordinary mean but was wrought immediately by God For ye have heard c. 2. A sincere Convert will not shun to make an open and ingenuous confession of his wicked life not omitting any thing which may tend to the just aggravation of it and this not in a boasting or a rejoycing manner Iam. 4. 16. but that here by the freedom of God's grace may be commended 1 Tim. 1. 13 14. and that other vile sinners in their own eyes lost may have encouragement from God's dealing with him to belie●● on Christ for life everlasting 1 Tim. 1. 16. and that Gods honour one way or other may be thereby brought about for Paul doth ingenuously confesse here that in time p 〈…〉 he had persecuted the Church of God extreamly and wasted it that he may thereby make evident that his conversion flowed from the immediate and extraordinary work of God and so stopt the mouth of those who were adversaries to Truth 3. That the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament were endited by the Spirit of God and that the Pen-men thereof were not acted with humane policy but immediately inspired by that unerring Spirit appeareth from this joyntly with other evidences held forth in Scripture it self that they concealed not their own faults but blazed them to the world when the glory of God did so require as Paul doth here Beyond measure I persecuted the Church of God saith he 4. This open and ingenuous confession of our bypast wicked life is to be extended only unto sins already known that hereby the publick offence may be removed but not to the making notour of such evils as have been keeped secret from the knowledge of others the divulging whereof would but multiply scandals and stumbling-blocks Rom. 2. 24. for Paul confesseth only what they had already heard Ye have heard of my conversation in time past 5. There is no particular Church on earth though never so famous for and orthodox in the point of Religion who may not so far degenerate from what they once were as that Religion both for Doctrine and Worship may be wholly corrupt from which those who would be saved must deliver themselves quickly and which God will not own for His as not being prescribed by Him but will father it on those who do professe it as their Religion and as invented by them thus the Jews once right in the point of Religion Hos. 11. 12. had now in Paul's time so far corrupted Religion in the doctrine of Justification Rom. 10. 3. of the Trinity Joh. 8. 9. of Manners or of the Moral Law as if it required nothing but external obedience Mat. 5 6 7. chapters in asserting the authority of unwritten Traditions and in worshiping God according to those Mat. 15. 3 9. and rejecting Jesus Christ the promised Messias 1 Thess. 2. 15. that Paul seeth a necessity to quit that Religion calling it theirs not God's My conversation in times past in the Jews Religion 6. Crosses afflictions and persecutions from wicked men are the ordinary lot of God's Church and People and this by reason of that enimity which is betwixt the seed of the Woman and the seed of the Serpent Gen. 3. 15 together with Satan's malice against the Church Gen. 3. 15. and his prevalent power over wicked men whereby he inciteth and draweth them on by such inducements as he knoweth will be most prevalent with the different tempers of those who are acted by him Joh. 12. 6. compared with Mat. 26. 15. to be executioners of that his rage and malice Rev. 20. 7 8. and because of God's tolerance and permission that thereby His Church may be tried Rev. 2. 10. every one whether good or bad being made to appear what really they are Dan. 11. 32. and that by the sufferings of His People the way of Truth may be made more lovely further spread and more imbraced by others Act. 8. 4 5 6 c. and that they may be also corrected for their bypast sins as abused peace and prosperity Judg. 10. 6 7. and that hereby also they may be restrained from many sins in time coming Isa. 27. 9. and this either by removing the opportunity of such sins through the rod Hos. 2. 6. or by renewing the hearts of many through sanctifying grace a greater measure whereof is bestowed usually by God upon His People under persecution and affliction Hos. 2. 14 15. than at another time thus Paul persecuted the Church of God extreamly 7. Though the Church of God as to the inward estate thereof which standeth in Election and the fruits of saving Grace flowing therefrom cannot be utterly wasted Joh. 10. 28 29 neither can the outward state of the visible Church be so far decayed as that the visible Church should altogether cease to be at least in all places Mat. 16. -18. Yet the Lord may so far give way to the rage of persecutors for the reasons mentioned in the former Doctrine as that thereby the outward face and beauty of the visible Church shall be totally marred the Members thereof being partly killed Joh. 16. 2. partly scattered Act. 8. 3 4. the publick Ordinances of divine Worship being altogether for a time suppressed and the publick Assemblies of the Church interrupted Dan. 11. 31. Thus Paul wasted the Church the word signifieth the vastation of Lands burning of Houses and utter depopulation of Countries which use to be accomplished by an inraged prevalent enemy I wasted it 8. The Church of God may expect to meet with persecution and sufferings not only from men avowedly wicked and openly flagitious but also from others whose carriage is smooth free from scandal and in all things according to that false way of Religion which they professe blamelesse Satan laboureth most to have such engaged and such being once engaged are most
bitter and implacable persecutors as having some respect to conscience in other things and being acted in this from the principles of a deluded conscience Joh. 16. 2. which of all other ties doth most strictly bind and most effectually drive forward to fulfill its dictates especially in things of religious concernment Act. 13. 50. for Paul who profited in the Jews Religion above his equals and was exceedingly zealous did persecute the Church 9. The life and way of some who are engaged in a false Religion may be so blamelesse and according to the dictates of their deluded conscience so strict as that it may be a copie unto those who professe the true Religion and a reproof to many such for their palpable negligence so was Paul's way while he was a Pharisee even such as may serve for a copie unto Christians to walk by in several things as first to be active in spreading the true Religion in our places and stations and bearing down of contrary Errors as he was in persecuting the Christian Church because it was opposite to the Jewish Religion professed by him Secondly that what we do in Religion or for God we do it not negligently but with all our might Eccl. 9. 10. and to the uttermost of what our power can reach as he did persecute the Church not lazily but above measure or extreamly Thirdly that we labour to profit advance and grow in Religion both as to the knowledge of Truth contained in it Heb. 6. 1. and practise according to those Truths 2 Pet. 1. 5. as he profited in the Jewish Religion Fourthly that in the matter of growth there be an holy emulation and strife with others that we may outstrip them as he profited above many of his equal● Fiftly that we be zealous for our Religion as having love to it and to the honouring of God whether by our selves or others according to it Act. 15. 3. together with grief and anger when God is dishonoured and Religion wronged Joh. 2. 15 16 17. as Paul was zealous of the Traditions of his fathers for zeal hath in it a mixture of love and anger Doct. 10. As love to the honour of God may engage a man sometimes to speak to his own commendation So there would be that modesty and sobriety of spirit as it may appear he doth not speak from arrogancy or pride and that he seeketh not his own commendation in speaking for Paul commendeth his own diligence and abilities that thereby he may commend Free-grace which delivered him out of that state but with great modesty for he saith not he profited more than all but more than many and not more than his superiours but more than his equals to wit for time and age and those not in all the world but of his own nation 11. As our affections of joy love hatred anger and grief are by nature so corrupt Eph. 2. 3. that even the choicest of them if they be not brought in subjection to the Word by the Spirit of God will lay forth themselves rather upon forbidden and unlawfull objects than that which is warrantable and commanded by the Lord So our zeal and fervency of spirit in particular will bend it self more toward the maintenance of Error than of Truth for Error is the birth of our own invention Gal. 5. 20. and hath the rise from some unmortified lust within which it doth gratifie 2 Tim. 4. 3. so is not Truth Thus Paul sheweth that his zeal tended more to maintain that part of the Jewish Religion which was unwarrantable to wit the unwritten Traditions than all the rest of it And was much more zealous of the Traditions of my fathers saith he Vers. 15. But when it pleased God who separated me from my mothers womb and called me by his grace 16. To reveal his Son in me that I might preach Him among the Heathen immediately I conferred not with flesh and bloud 17. Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were Apostles before me but I went into Arabia and returned again unto Damoscus HEre is a second Evidence of the truth of what he formerly asserted ver 11. and 12. to wit that as God in His providence had been making way both in Paul's birth and education for that which He had purposed to imploy him in so when it pleased God at the time of his gracious and effectual calling ver 15. to make Christ and the doctrine of Redemption by Christ known unto him by extraordinary and immediate revelation Act. 9. 4. that as an Apostle immediately called by God ver 1. he might publish the knowledge of Christ among the Gentiles he was so much perswaded of his immediate Call from God that he did not debate the matter neither with himself nor others who might have disswaded him from giving obedience to it ver 16 but immediately went about the discharging of his Apostolick Office not without great hazard and pains to himself in Arabia and Damascus without so much as once visiting any of the Apostles ver 17. far lesse went he to be instructed in the knowledge of the Gospel by them or to receive Ordination unto the Ministerial Office from them as his adversaries did falsly alleage of him the falshood whereof he is here making evident From Vers. 15. Learn 1. Such is the power of God's good pleasure whereby He doth whatsoever He willeth in Heaven and Earth Ps. 135. 6. that the will of man though never so deeply engaged in the course of sin and wickednesse cannot resist it but most willingly doth yeeld unto it whenever the Lord thinketh fit to let forth that His good pleasure in its gracious and powerfull effects of drawing a sinner out of Nature to the state of Grace as it appeareth from the adversative particle But whereby the Apostle opposeth Gods pleasure to his own former weaknesse as prevailing over it But when it pleased God c. 2. The fountain-cause of man's salvation and of all things tending to it especially of his effectual calling and of that whereby he is made first to differ from another is God's good-pleasure and nothing present Eph. 2. 1. or foreseen to be Rom. 9. 11. in the person who is called for the Apostle ascribeth all of that kind in himself to the pleasure of God But when it pleased God to reveal His Son in me 3. The disposing of events or of things which shall fall out together with the time when they shall fall out are wholly ordered by God's will and pleasure for this pleasure of His circumscribeth even the time of Paul's calling But when it pleased God then and neither sooner nor later was Christ revealed to him 4. The Lord by His working in us and particular acts of providence towards us is often making way for some hid design and purpose of His about us which for the time we are ignorant of but when it appeareth by the event a wonderfull contexture of providences making way for it and
that not only the weak and infirm but even those who are strong and richly endued both with grace and parts will sometimes be corrupted by it It is usual for us unawares to esteem of such as of somewhat more than men and being once that far engaged in our esteem of them we do not so narrowly examine their actions as we would of other men Hence all is taken for current that cometh from them thus not only the vulgar Jews but even Barnabas himself an eminent Apostle Act. 13. 1 2. was carried away with Peter's bad example And the other Jews dissembled likewise with him insomuch that Barnabas was carried away with their dissimulati●n and ver 14. his example had a kind of compulsion in it towards the Gentiles to make them do as he did Why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews 7. A speat and inundation of evil examples though even held forth by private Christians especially if they be otherwise pious is so impetuous and of such force to carry others along in their practice with it that even the very best of men can very hardly stand out against it for Barnabas his dissimulation is ascribed not only to Peter's bad example but also if not mainly to that influence which the evil example of these other Jews had upon him And the other Jews dissembled likewise insomuch that Barnabas was carried away with their dissimulation 8. It is of great concernment unto all Superiours and chiefly those who are eminent for piety and parts to take diligent heed left they give bad example unto others and this not only because of what is partly expressed in the two former Doctrines but also because the sins of others which are occasioned by the evil example of any will be justly charged upon him whose bad example they do follow for the dissimulation of the Jews and Barnabas is mentioned as an aggravation of Peter's sin which had such dreadfull consequences And the other Jews dissembled likewise Vers. 14. But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of the Gospel I said unto Peter before them all If thou being a Jew livest after the manner of the Gentiles and not as do the Jews why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews SEcondly The Apostle enlargeth what he said ver 11. of his withstanding Peter shewing that when he had perceived they walked not uprightly or with 〈◊〉 streight foot according to the sincere Doctrine of the Gospel without more ado he did openly fall upon Peter whose example had given the occasion of that 〈◊〉 unto all the rest and the fault which he chargeth hi● with and that which did aggrege his sin most was th 〈…〉 by his example he did constrain the Gentiles as they would not have been cast out of Peter's fellowship and of the Church to observe the Ceremonial Law of Moses as the Jews did the iniquity whereof he shewe 〈…〉 in this that Peter himself who was a Jew and so mo 〈…〉 bound to observe the Ceremonial Law which was giv 〈…〉 not to the Gentiles but to the Jews had cast off th 〈…〉 yoke and lived after the manner of the Gentiles as 〈◊〉 clear from ver 12. and therefore there was no reason 〈◊〉 it that he should inforce that yoke upon others Doct. 1. The multitude of those who swerve from Truth should not make Truth the lesse lovely unto or blunt the edge of others in the defence of it against Error Though Truth should be deserted by all except one only it is worthy to be owned stood to and defended by that one and this against all who do oppose it for though Peter the other Jews Barnabas and all did dissemble and halt from the Truth Yet Paul alone doth stand for it And when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the Truth I said unto Peter c. 2. It is the duty of all professors to walk so both in the matter of opinion and practice as is suitable unto and well-agreeing with the sincere Truth of God held out in the Gospel even so as that in opinion they hold nothing which is though but indirectly contrary to that Truth or in practice act nothing which may reflect upon that Truth and when they halt or walk not with a streight foot in either of those they are blame-worthy for the fault of Peter and the rest for which they are here reproved was That they walked not uprightly or with a streight foot according to the truth of the Gospel Their practice and their opinion concerning the lawfulnesse of gratifying the Jews in the present businesse did indirectly at least contradict and reflect upon that great Gospel-truth about the abrogation of the Ceremonial Law 3. When many are guilty of one and the same sin the Minister of Jesus Christ ought to reprove wisely and without respect of persons making the weight of the reproof light upon them as they have been more or lesse accessory to the sin for because Peter's example had been the occasion of sin to all the rest Paul directeth the reproof to him by name and this before the rest that they might see themselves indirectly at least reproved also for following this bad example I said unto Peter before them all 4. Though private sins which have not broken forth to a publick scandal of many are to be rebuked in private Mat. 18. 15. Yet publick sins are to receive publick rebukes that hereby the publick scandal may be removed and others may be scared from taking encouragement from those sins to do the like 1 Tim. 5. 20. Thus because Peter did sin publickly before all Paul by way of reproof said unto Peter before them all 5. Though the binding power of the Ceremonial Law was abrogated at Christ's death and the practice thereof in some things at least left as a thing lawful and in it self indifferent unto all for a time after that See ver 4. doct 1. Yet the observation thereof even for that time was dispensed with more for the Jews sake and was more tolerable in them who were born and educated under the binding power of that yoke than in the Gentiles to whom that Law was never given and so were to observe it or any part of it only in case of scandalizing the weak Jews by their neglecting of it Rom. 14. 20 21. This difference betwixt Jew and Gentile as to the practice of the Ceremonial Law is gathered from the Apostle's way of arguing with Peter from the lesse to the more If thou being a Jew livest not as do the Jews to wit in observing the Ceremonial Law why compellest thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews Whereby he implyeth that the observation of these Ceremonies was more to be comported with in the Jews than in the Gentiles 6. It is a piece of unreasonable absurdity in a Minister for which he can give no accompt neither to God nor man to
Which Argument is further urged ver 3 4. and enlarged unto their receiving these other miraculous Gifts of the Spirit by the means of that Doctrine and as confirmations of it ver 5. Secondly Abraham was justified by Faith ver 6. From which he inferreth that Believers are Abraham's children ver 7. and that all of them whether Jew or Gentile must be justified by Faith also ver 8 9. Thirdly Those who seek to be justified by the Law are under the curse of the Law and therefore not justified ver 10. Fourthly Scripture testifieth that men shall be justified by Faith ver 11. Whence he inferreth and proveth his Inference that therefore they cannot be justified by the Law ver 12. Fifthly Christ's redeeming of us from the curse of the Law and all the fruits following upon His Death are received by Faith ver 13 14. In the second part of the Chapter he answereth some Objections and joyntly sheweth the date prescribed by God for keeping the Ceremonial Law was now past Object 1. It seemeth the way of Justification by Faith in the Promise made to Abraham was changed by the Law given upon Mount Sinai He answereth by a similitude taken from humane Covenants ver 15. that the Covenant of Grace made and ratified by God with Abraham in Christ could not be altered nor abrogated by the Law which was given so long after ver 16 17 18. Object 2. The Law seemeth to be given in vain and to no purpose if it do not justifie He answereth by shewing another end for which the Law was given to wit for the discovery and restraint of sin and that God's design was not that people should be thereby justified ver 19 20. Object 3. The Law seemeth then to be contrary to the Covenant-promise if the one discover sin and the other forgive and cover it He answereth first retorting the Objection against the Propounders to wit that by their way the Law would be contrary to and destructive of the Promise ver 21. Secondly shewing the Law in discovering sin and condemning for it was subservient to the Promise while it did necessitate guilty sinners to believe and apply the Promise ver 22. Object 4. It seemeth the Ceremonial Law and the whole ancient dispensation ought to be observed under the Gospel for the same use and end at least He answereth shewing the Law was for good use to the ancient Church ver 23. which he illustrateth by comparing the Law to a Schoolmaster ver 24. but denieth that therfore it should be observed now because the Church was come to perfect age and so could not be any longer keeped under a Schoolmaster ver 25 26. Object 5. It seemeth Circumcision at least ought to be observed seing it was not added upon Mount Sinai but instituted long before He answereth shewing that Baptism doth serve for all those spiritual uses now which Circumcision did serve for then and consequently that Circumcision was not to be any longer practised ver 27 28 29. Vers. 1. O Foolish Galatians who hath hewitched you that you should not ohey the Truth before whose eyes Jesus Christ hath been evidently set forth crucified among you THe Apostle being to insist further upon the former dispute lest their assertions had been thereby rendred dead and dull quickeneth them a little by inserting a sharp reproof wherein he chargeth them with folly in that they had suffered themselves to be seduced by a sort of spiritual sorcery or witchcraft unto disobedience to the Doctrine of the Gospel which disobedience he aggregeth from the perspicuity and plainnesse in which that Doctrine was preached unto them even such as if Christ together with His bloudy passion had been drawn and painted upon a board before them Doct. 1. The Minister of Jesus Christ when he is called to insist upon the clearing-up of Truths unto the understanding whether positively by shewing what is revealed in Scripture concerning them or controversally by refuting contrary Errors would mix his discourse with an occasional word of Exhortation Reproof or somewhat of that kind which may tend more immediately and directly to excite and quicken the affections of hearers lest they otherwise wax dull and languish for Paul casteth-in a sharp reproof in the midst of his dispute O foolish Galatians c. 2. Where the precious Truths of the Gospel are preached and disobeyed People neither labouring to be perswaded of the Truth in their understandings Act. 17. 32. nor to prize it in their heart and affections Matth. 11. 17. nor to practise it in their life and conversation Matth. 7. 26. this is a sin the evil whereof cannot be sufficiently aggreged or spoken against as being a sin against the remedy of sin Heb. 2. 3. for this is the fault for which the Apostle doth so sharply reprove those Galatians even that they did not obey the Truth the word signifieth the not believing of and disobedience to the Truth when it is believed 3. Hereticks who by fair words deceive the simple Rom. 16. -18. are a kind of spiritual Sorcerers and Heresie and Error is spiritual Witchcraft For first as Sorcerers by deluding the senses make people apprehend that they see what they see not So Hereticks and erring spirits by casting a mist of seeming reason before the understanding do delude it and make the deluded person beleive that to be Truth which is not chap. 1. 6 7. And secondly as Sorcerers in what they do of that kind are in a singular manner assisted beyond the reach of their own ability and skill by the Devil who really doth the thing upon the Sorcerers practising of some Satanical ceremonies which are prescribed unto them by the Devil as a watchword whereat he is ready to answer So heretical spirits are often more than ordinarily assisted in drawing of multitudes after them and this by Satan's concurring with them 2 Thess. 2. 9. Thus the Apostle speaking of that influence which false Teachers had upon them in drawing them from the Truth he saith Who hath bewitched you It 's a word borrowed from the practice of Witches and Sorcerers who being assisted by the Devil use to cast mist before the eyes to dazle and so delude them 4. For a people to have the Gospel among them and not to make use of it but to reject it and make defection from it argueth them to be fools indeed whatever be their wisedom otherwise in things relating to this present life for the Doctrine of the Gospel containeth saying Wisdom which maketh wise unto Salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. which Wisdom they reject Thus Paul calleth them foolish Galatians because they obeyed not the Truth 5. Though neither Ministers nor any other ought to charge men with folly with a mind to reproach them or in way of private revenge Mat. 5. 22. Yet the Minister of Jesus Christ or any other who hath a Call to it may upbraid a man with folly if first the party reproved be guilty of folly as
who transgresseth in one thing 5. There is no person whether rich or poor noble or ignoble learned or unlearned whose sin deserveth not the forementioned curse The consideration indeed of the person of some sinners doth aggrege their sin beyond the sin of others Rom. 2. 17. to 25 but no consideration of the person of any can so far extenuate his sin as to make it not deserving of God's wrath and curse for saith he Cursed is every one without exception who continueth not 6. Not only sins of commission or doing of that which the Law forbiddeth but also sins of omission or the leaving undone of what the Law commandeth do deserve the curse for saith he Cursed is every one not only who doth what the Law forbiddeth but who continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them 7. It is not the bare knowledge of our duty nor yet a fair profession of love and respect to our duty so known which cometh up to that exact righteousnesse that the Law requireth under hazard of the curse there must be practice also according to that knowledge for Cursed is every one who continueth not to do them 8. This real obedience and practice that the Law of God requireth under hazard of the curse is universal extending it self to the conscience-making of all duties commanded together with the way wherein they are commanded Mat. 15. 8. and to the abstaining from all sins forbidden together with their occasions Job 31. 1. for Cursed is every one who continueth not in All things he saith not in some things only 9. This obedience required is also constant from the first minute of a man's life to the hour of his death so that though he should but once sin he is under the curse for Cursed is every one who coutinueth not to do them 10. It is altogether impossible for any one of fallen mankind either of himself Joh. 15. -5. or by any grace received in this life 1 Joh. 1. 8. to keep the Law perfectly or to attain to that exact measure of righteousnesse that the Law requireth which appeareth not only from what the Law requireth as it hath been formerly cleared but also from this Paul takes it here for a confessed and granted conclusion for if any could keep the Law then every man who seeketh to be justified by the works of the Law should not be cursed providing they did what they could as Paul here affirmeth seing the Law doth curse none but those who do not keep the Law For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written c. 11. Though every man doth break the Law and so deserveth that curse which is pronounced against sin by the Law Yet all are not left to perish under this curse some are delivered from it to wit those that are of Faith or who by Faith lay hold on Jesus Christ for righteousnesse who was made a curse for them ver 13. such having fled from the sentence and curse of the Law and laid hold on the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel shall be judged not by the Law but the Gospel which admitteth of the Righteousnesse of a Cautioner imputed Philip. 3. 9. instead of an exact personall righteousnesse required by the Law for saith the Apostle As many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse and so not they who are of Faith 12. Those who do not betake themselves to the Covenant of Grace must stand and fall according to the sentence of the Law or Covenant of Works and therefore seing the Law doth curse them as not having come up to the exact righteousnesse required in it cursed are they and cursed shall they be for saith he They who are of the Law or seek Justification by the Law are cursed because the Law seeketh more than they can perform Vers. 11. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for The Just shall live by Faith 12. And the Law is not of Faith but the man that doth them shall live in them IN these Verses is the fourth Argument to prove the negative part of the main Conclusion to wit That no man is justified in God's sight who judgeth not according to outward appearence but according to Truth 1 Sam. 16. -7. by his personal obedience to the Law and that because righteousnesse and life cometh from Faith as he proveth from Habbak 2. -4. and therefore not from the Law ver 11. The force of which consequence as the Apostle declareth doth ly in this that the Law is not of Faith that is the way of Justification which the Law prescribeth to wit the Law as strictly taken for the meer precepts legal promises and threatmings of the Law See chap. 2. ver 15. doth not consist with the way of Justification by Faith because the Law promiseth life to him only who observeth what the Law prescribeth and so hath a perfect inherent righteousnesse as he proveth from Lev. 18. 5. but Faith conveyeth life to him who is destitute of that righteousnesse if he believe on Him that justifieth the ungodly by Faith as he hath cleared frequently before See Rom. 4. 5. and so doth not expresse it now ver 12. Doct. 1. There is a twofould Justification of a sinner one which is in the sight of God and is here expressed whereby he is reputed and standeth righteous and just in the estimation of God the Judge whose judgment is unerring and alwayes according to Truth Jer. 11. 20. Another which is before men and is here implyed whereby the sinner is reputed and standeth righteous in the estimation of men whose judgment as flowing from charity 1 Cor. 13. 7. and grounded upon outward appearance 2 Sam. 16. -7. may frequently erre and be deceived But that no man is justified in the sight of God 2. Though God do not justifie any or esteem of him as righteous for any works done in obedience to the Law Yet that a man may be justified in man's sight because of his works is not here denied by the Apostle for Justification before men is nothing else but a charitable judgment past upon the person that God hath justified him by Faith which judgment is grounded upon the evidences of the person's faith manifested in the fruits of good works Iam. 2. -18. But that no man is justified by the Law in Gods sight c. 3. The spirit of Error being once given way to doth so far blind the understanding Isa. 44. 20. that it cannot see and so far engage the will and affections to the maintaining of it 2 Tim. 4. 3. that the person erring will not see what Scripture saith against that Error though it be never so evident to an indifferent eye for though the maintainers of Justification by Works would not or could not see it yet the Scriptures even of the Old Testament
did give clear testimony against that Error and for the contrary Truth It is evident saith Paul for the Just shall live 4. The Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works is no new-fangled opinion the Scriptures even of the Old Testament give testimony to it as the only way of Justification before God which then was for Paul proveth that none are justified by the Law from an Old Testament-Scripture cited out of Hab. 2. -4. The Just shall live by Faith 5. The Scripture cited teacheth first That the way of justifying a sinner or of making him righteous under the Old Testament and under the New is the same and therefore we may safely draw arguments from the one to the other for so doth the Apostle here It is evident for The Just shall live by faith Secondly Faith in God and His Promises especially these wherein Jesus Christ and His Righteousnesse are offered is that which maketh a sinner just and righteous in God's sight for the words may be rendred thus The Just by Faith shall live so that they shew what that is which makes a man just and righteous Thirdly The man who is thus just by Faith is recovered from that state of death wherein every man by nature lyeth Eph. 2. 1. and doth live which life of his doth also flow from faith for both righteousnesse and life are here ascribed to faith The Just shall live by Faith Fourthly This life by Faith which the Believer doth enjoy is such as furnisheth him with comfortable through-bearing in the midst of hardest dispensations without apostasie and fainting in so far as he doth not walk by present sense but taketh up God as reconciled to him in Christ 2 Cor. 4. 18. and looketh upon his present crosse as an evidence of God's fatherly love Heb. 12. 6. and knoweth it will have a blessed event to him in God's way and time Rom. 8. 28. and that his life is hid with God in Christ Col. 3. 3. far above the reach of any trouble for this is the Prophet's scope from whom this place is cited even to shew that the Just shall so live by Faith as to ride out the storm arising from the present trouble which was to overwhelm others See Hab. 2. 4. The Just shall live by Faith Fifthly This life of the Believer which he enjoyeth by Faith though it be begun here in the knowledge of God and Jesus Christ Joh. 17. 3. and in freedom from the deserved sentence of death Rom. 8. 1. whereupon followeth a right to eternal life Joh. 3. 3. and in the lively practice of all commanded duties to which the Believer is enabled by drawing life and vertue out of Christ through Faith Philip. 4. 13. Yet this life is not circumscribed with the present time it 's to be perfected afterward in Glory so that the life flowing from Faith is a lasting never-ending ever-continuing and eternal life for the Promise is extended unto all imaginable future duration without any restriction The Just shall live by Faith From Vers. 12. Learn 1. Though the Law and Faith or the Gospel which is the Doctrine of Faith be not contrary each to other both of them being the Truths of God but are mutually subservient one to another in many things the Law making sin known Rom. 3. -20. the Gospel holding forth the remedy of sin Joh. 1. 29. the Law pointing forth our need of Christ Rom. 10. 4. and the Gospel giving us an offer of Christ for life and righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. The Law again holding forth those duties wherein the man made righteous by Faith ought to walk and to testifie his thankfulnesse Eph. 5. 1 2. and the Gospel or Faith in Jesus Christ offered in the Gospel furnishing him with spirituall strength to walk in these duties which the Law prescribeth 2 Cor. 3. -6. Yet the Law and Faith are mutually inconsistent in the point of Justification so that if Justification be sought by the works of the Law it cannot be had by Faith and if it be had by Faith it cannot be attained by the works of the Law there can be no mixture of Law and Gospel Faith and Works in this matter for in this sense the Apostle affirmeth The Law is not of Faith 2. The Law doth offer life to none upon easier terms than perfect obedience and the constant and universal practice of whatsoever the Law prescribeth for the voice of the Law is The man that doth them to wit those things that the Law enjoyneth shall live in them or attain eternal life by his so doing 3. The way of Justification by Faith doth wholly exclude our doing and works and those of every sort from having influence as causes or conditions either in part or in whole upon our Justification before God for the Apostle proveth the inconsistency of the Law and Faith in the point of Justification from this that the Law suspendeth our right to life upon the condition of doing and works and therefore the way of Justification by Faith must wholly exclude Works else the Apostle should not cogently have proved the thing intended to wit That the Law is inconsistent with Faith from this That he who doth them shall live in them Vers. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us for it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree 14. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through Faith HE addeth a fifth Argument to prove the affirmative part of the main Conclusion to wit That we are justified by Faith and withall sheweth how Faith doth justifie not for any merit or worth in it self but as it receiveth Jesus Christ whereby all the blessings purchased by Him are applied to Believers for the Apostle obviating an objection which he foresaw might arise from ver 10. to wit If the Law do curse all men how then are any freed from the curse sheweth that Jesus Christ hath delivered us from God's wrath or the sentence of the Law 's curse by taking upon Himself the curse due to us while He was obedient to death even the death of the crosse Philip. 2. 8. Which kind of death was pronounced to be accursed as he proveth from Deut. 21. -23. This is contained ver 13. And hence he shewes a double fruit did flow the first to the Gentiles the blessing of Church-priviledges divine Ordinances and of Reconciliation Adoption Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to the Nations in Abraham Gen. 22. 18. being now purchased by Christ and residing in Him as the Head and Fountain did come through Him to the unrighteous Gentiles who before the time of Christ's death were strangers to Christ and to Abraham's blessing purchased by Christ Eph. 2. 12. The second fruit of Christ's death did accresse to the Jews among whom he reckoneth himself joyntly with the Gentiles who
and no more spared than if we our selves who sinned had been in His place for the Text saith He was not only accursed but made a curse in the abstract to shew how greatly he was accursed in death neither was this execration only in respect of man who indeed did judge Him execrable Isa. 53. 3 4. but also in respect of God as appeareth by the testimony alleaged out of Deut. 21. 23. for though the Apostle intending the sense only and not the words omitteth the mentioning of God Yet in the place cited we have it thus He that is hanged is accursed of God 10. The malefactor among the Jews who was adjudged to end his life by hanging on a tree was pronounced by God to be a curse or accursed not as if every one who died that death even notwithstanding of their repentance had been rejected of God and condemned Luke 23. 39 43. but partly because that was a most odious and infamous death in it self as being aflicted only for atrocious and heinous crimes and partly because it was fore-ordained of God that Christ our Surety should end His life by that kind of death in order to our redemption and delivery from the Law 's deserved curse for which cause mainly God was pleased to pronounce that kind of death accursed above any other as appeareth from the Apostle's alleaging this Scripture to clear that Christ was made a curse for us It is written saith he Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree From Vers. 14. Learn 1. So wonderfull is God in working especially in that great work of our Redemption that He bringeth about one contrary by another He giveth life by death and the blessing by the curse and frequently in His way of working our choicest mercies do come through greatest miseries for Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 2. The blessing promised to Abraham and to the Nations in Abraham or rather in Christ Abraham's seed Gen. 22. 18. was not of temporall things only as of Corn and Wine of a fat and rich soile these were only the shell but the kernell of that Promise were blessings of another sort even spiritual such as Grace here and Glory hereafter which appeareth from this that before this blessing could be conveyed to Abrahams believing seed a price of infinite value behoved to be paid for it a price too precious to purchase any temporal blessing by for even Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 3. The spiritual blessing of Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to and in Abraham as it was purchased by Christ at a dear rate so it resideth and is exstant in Him who is as it were the storehouse wherin the blessing is laid up Col. 2. 3. and the dispenser of it unto Abraham's seed Act. 5. 31. in whom Believers are truly blessed Gen. 22. 18. and from whose fulnesse we do all receive and Grace for Grace Joh. 1. 16. for saith the Text That the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles through Jesus Christ or as it is in the Original in Jesus Christ So that this blessing is still in Him as the fountain and dispenser of it 4. Though Jesus Christ was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. -8. in so far as remission of sins and life eternal were bestowed upon Believers under the Old Testament through the merit of His death even before He actually died Rom. 3. 25. it being sufficient in order to these effects that it was transacted between the Father and the Son that He should die Isa. 53. 10. and that it was certainly known by God that He would die Act. 15. 18. Yet there were some effects of His death and those of great advantage to the Church both of Jews and Gentiles which were keeped in store and in Gods wise dispensation not to be actually bestowed untill the time of His death As first in relation to the Gentiles the real making-over of Abraham's blessing unto them whereby they were made one actual seed unto Abraham with the believing Jews was to follow upon Christ's death God having so provided and not to go before it for Christ was first made a curse by being hanged on a tree before the blessing of Abraham did come upon the Gentiles Secondly in relation to both Jew and Gentile the Covenant-promise made to Abraham and his seed Gen. 17. 7. which before Christ's death was vailed over with many carnal Ceremonies and lay hid under the many reiterated Promises of temporal blessings and an earthly Canaan Gen. 15. 7 c. was after Christs death to be made more clear the vail of Ceremonies and earthly blessings to be removed and the promised blessings of Righteousness and life everlasting to be held forth in their spiritual beauty and lustre for upon Christ's being made a curse he saith We to wit not only the Gentiles but the Jews also of whom Paul was one do receive the promise of the Spirit that is after the manner of speaking used by the Hebrews the spiritual promise in opposition to those external rites and shadows under which it did formerly lurk Doct. 5. Though by the grace of saving Faith a Christian believeth to be true whatever he knoweth to be revealed in the Word Act. 24. -14. and is in some measure especially when Faith is lively affected and doth practise according to what each Truth calleth for yeelding obedience to the Commands Rom. 16. 26. trembling at threatnings Isa. 66. -2. and imbracing the Promises of God for this life Psal. 23. 1. and that which is to come Heb. 11. 13. Yet the principal acts of Faith as it is saving and justifying are the accepting and receiving of the Promise and of Christ's satisfaction to the Father's justice held forth in the Promise for Paul speaking of Faiths part in Justification setteth forth the exercise of it thus That we might receive the promise by Faith 6. Faith doth justifie and make us blessed not for any worth in it self as if the work and merit of Faith were reckoned to us for righteousnesse but because it is the instrument and as it were the hand of the soul whereby we receive the Promise and Christ in the Promise whose satisfaction alone is our only righteousnesse before God Rom 5. -19. for that Paul is to be understood thus all alongs this dispute appeareth from these two Verses wherein he ascribeth our delivery from the curse and partaking of Abraham's blessing to Christ's merit or to His being made a curse for us giving unto Faith only the receeiving and imbracing of that satisfaction as it is offered in the Promise That we might receive the Promise through Faith saith he Vers. 15. Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto 16. Now to Abraham and his seed were
then was the yoke of judicial Gen. 49. 10. and ceremonial duties Act. 15. 10. to be taken off the vail of shadows and dark prophecies whereby Christ and free-grace were hid and covered to be laid aside 2 Cor. 3. 11 12. And though the duties of the Moral Law are yet to be pressed Col. 3. 18 c. and the curse of the Law to be denounced against all who are in their natural estate Col. 3. 6. yet covenanted grace and furniture for duty Joh. 1. 17. and Christ's becoming a curse for us to redeem us from the curse of the Law are more clearly held forth now in the dayes of the Gospel ver 13. than they were formerly for saith he It was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the Promise was made 4. The Gospel is so to be commended and preferred unto the Law as nothing of that honour and respect which is due unto the Law be taken from it and the Doctrine of the Law and Gospel are to be so bounded as neither may encroach upon the other for left Paul in setting limits between the Law and the Gospel should seem to vilisie the Law he commendeth it from this That it was ordained by Angels in the hand or by the ministry and service of a Mediator 5. Though Moses was the Mediator here spoken of Deut. 5. 5. yet it followeth not that Angels and Saints are Mediators in Heaven for Moses was present with the people and ordained a Mediator by God for this one act which was to relate and report the Law from God to the people now it can carry no shew of reason from this to conclude that therefore the Saints who are absent in Heaven and so are ignorant of us Isa. 63. 16. or that either Saint or Angel should be constituted Mediators to report our prayers and the secrets of our hearts unto God especially seing no Scripture doth prove that any such office is put upon them by God It was ordained in the hand of a Mediator From Vers. 20. Learn 1. Conscience of guilt presenteth God as terrible and taketh away all confidence from the guilty sinner to approach in a friendly manner by himself to a provoked God for no entercourse can be between God and His people when they are not one but differ by reason of His peoples sin A Mediator is not of one saith he there was a disagreement through sin which called for a Mediator 2. The Covenant of Works entred with Adam in the state of innocency was immediate no Mediator interveening to make them one wherein it differeth from the Covenant of Grace Heb. 8. 6. for God and man before the fall were one and no disagreement betwixt them because of sin and so there was no use for a Mediator in the Covenant that was then made for A Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith Paul 3. No man can attain to Heaven or reap any advantage by a Covenant of Works except he were perfectly holy and as free of sin as Adam was before his fall for the Apostle proving that God made no Covenant of Works with them upon mount Sinal and that they could have reaped no benefit by such a Covenant thinketh it sufficient to evince that they were then a sinfull people which he evinceth from this that they stood in need of a Mids-man betwixt God and them Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith he 4. The Lord in all His dispensations is alwayes one and like to Himself without any shadow of turning Iam. 1. -17. His work and way of dealing may and hath changed even His way of dispensing the Covenant of Grace to His Church Heb. 8. 8 9. but He remaineth unchangeable there being no change of that kind which He hath not fore-ordained by His unchangeable decree Eph. 1. -11. Thus he saith God is one that is with relation to the present scope If any plead a right to Heaven for the merit of their works God will abate nothing of what He Himself did once prescribe and require of man in the Covenant of Works Vers. 21. Is the Law then against the Promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily Righteousness should have been by the Law 22. But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the Promise by Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe FOlloweth the third Objection to wit If the Law be given to discover and condemn for transgressions as is affirmed ver 19. Then it is contrary to the Covenant-promise which doth cover and pardon sin quicken and justifie the sinner He answereth 1. by denying and rejecting the consequence as absurd and abominable 2. By retorting the Argument against the Adversaries themselves for if the Law or if our works done in obedience to the Law could procure eternal life as they affirmed Then our righteousnesse before God should consist in Works or the Law should justifie leaving them to gather that this would suppose the former Covenant by promise to be abolished and quite destroyed by the Law so that according to their Doctrine the Law was both contrary unto and destructive of the Promise ver 21. 3. He answereth directly shewing the Law called here the Scripture or that Scripture as it is in the Original while it convinceth accuseth and condemneth all mankind for sin and so concludeth and incloseth all men under sin and the curse due to sin as the Judge doth the malefactor in prison is not contrary but subordinate and subservient to the Promise in so far as that hereby the guilty sinner being made to lay aside all confidence in his own righteousnesse Rom. 7. 9. doth flee by Faith in Jesus Christ for a refuge to the Promise and so the thing promised to wit Righteousnesse and Salvation becometh the sinner's and is conveyed upto him to wit upon his believing From Vers. 21. Learn 1. It is the way of Hereticks to set Scripture against Scripture and to make one Scripture seem to contradict another except their erroneous sense and interpretation of Scripture be received as intended by the Spirit of God for these false Apostles did affirm if so the Law did not give life but did only discover and accuse for transgressions then God's mind in the Law should have been contrary to His mind revealed in the Promise Hence Paul propoundeth this question unto himself to answer Is the Law then against the Promises of God 2. However Hereticks may labour to fasten such absurdities upon Truth as if it were contrary to some other parts of God's mind revealed in Scripture yet their bold allegations will be found alwayes false and Truth to be ever most consonant and never contrary to it self for so the Apostle sheweth of the Truth in hand God forbid saith he 3. There are some sins chiefly those that do most directly reflect upon any divine perfection or attribute of God the
history ver 22 23. Thirdly he expoundeth the mystery of the two Covenants prefigured by the history ver 24. 25 26. Fourthly he confirmeth the truth of this mystery from Scripture ver 27. Fifthly he maketh application of the whole purpose first for information of the way to attain the heavenly inheritance ver 28. Secondly for consolation against present persecutions to the end Vers. 1. NOw I say that the ●eir as long as he is a childe differeth nothing from a servan● though he be lord of all 2. But is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father THe Apostle being yet further to clear the Churches freedom from that legal external policy of the ancient Church whereof he spake so much chap. 3. ver 19 c. doth use another similitude taken from a pupil and his tutors and curators And first having made a transition usual to him when he is more fully to explicate any former purpose See chap. 5. 16. 1 Cor. 15. 50. he setteth down the similitude in these verses to this purpose That a childe though he be heir and owner of all his fathers inheritance in hope and as to right yet so long as he is a minor and under age he differeth nothing from a servant in point of subjection and as to free government and enjoyment of his rights and goods ver 1. and this because he himself is ruled and his estate managed by tutors and curators the continuance of which subjection the Apostle sheweth is ordinarily limited unto the time prescribed by the father longer than which the heir is not to remain in that state of subjection to his tutors ver 2. There are indeed other limits of childrens minority prefixed by the Law besides the Will of the father but he mentioneth this because it only doth quadrate to the present purpose for which the similitude is made use of From this usual custom among men approved of here by the Spirit of God being considered in it self and without respect had to that spiritual purpose unto which it is applied afterwards Learn 1. So licentious is youth where there is no restraint and so foolish as being destitute of experience and more ruled by the inundation of impetuous passions than force of reason That it is much conducing both for a man's self and for the publick good of the society among whom he liveth he be first subjected unto others and made to obey as a servant whereby in progresse of time he may attain some wisdom and experience before he have absolute power to dispose of his own estate and obtain dominion over others otherwise it could not be so generally agreed unto by all parents and in all nations that the heir as long as he is a childe should differ nothing from a servant which the Apostle speaketh of as an approven custom and excepted against by none 2. It is the duty of parents as to provide a competent portion for their children whereupon they may live when they themselves are dead and gone so to do what in them lyeth to secure their portion for them lest it be delapidated by their childrens folly or any other way rendred uselesse unto them for unto this end are tutors and curators provided by the father unto the childe But he is under tutors and governors 3. Though parents are not to give unto their children just cause of irritation Col. 3. 21. yet they ought not to please them to their hurt but in some things must crosse their humour to wit especially when their so doing tendeth evidently to their childrens good for though the heir even when he is a childe would affect liberty and absolute dominion over his own estate yet the wise parent must keep him under subjection to tutors and governors 4. It is no small mercy unto children when God doth prolong the life of parents untill they themselves attain to so much age and experience as may enable them to manage their own affairs seing otherwise their person and estate must come under the tuition government and reverence of others who possibly may prove their unfriends for they must even be under tutors and governors 5. Parents would labour to carry themselves with so much equity wisdom and streightnesse in providing a worldly portion for their children to live upon as they do not disoblige those with whom they have commerce that so they may with some measure of confidence commit the tuition of their children and means to the care and oversight of others even those whom they shall be necessitated to appoint for tutors and governors 6. It is the wisdom of parents to place no such trust of their children and means upon any though otherwise never so much trust-worthy but that they be limited in and at a set time be obliged to give an account of their trust Power and trust is a thing so dangerous that if it be at the intrusted partie 's option there are but few who willingly do part with it Therefore as for one reason it is marked here as a part of the father's providence to prescribe a time longer than which his childe is not to be under tutors and governors Until the time appointed by the father saith he Vers. 3. Even so we when we were children were in bondage under the elements of the world HEre he applyeth the similitude shewing the Church when she was in her infant-state under the Old Testament was kept in bondage and subjection under that rigid and strict administration or outward policy which then was and served for an A B C or a rough Rudiment whereby the ancient Church was instructed for the most part by resemblances taken from earthly and wordly things The first Doctrine which ariseth from his use-making of an earthly similitude to clear a spiritual Truth is already marked chap. 3. ver 15. doct 2. Learn 2. The Church of God under the Old Testament was in a state of nonage and as an infant or childe first for quantity as being contained in narrow bounds once of one family Gen. 4. 3 4. and at most but of one nation Psal. 147. 19 20. Secondly in understanding for although some persons were then endued with more excellent gifts of wisdom and knowledge than any now such as Abraham David c. And though many even under the New Testament are but in understanding children and babes Heb. 5. 12. yet considering the more clear revelation of the Gospel which now is 2 Cor. 3. 18. we not only have an opportunity of attaining to much more knowledge now than they had then Matt. 13. 7. but also the generality of Christians are much more knowing of Gospel-mysteries than the body of the Jewish Church was Mat. 11. 11. Yea and those of them who excelled most in knowledge did see but afar off Deut. 18. 18. and through a cloud of many dark Ceremonies Heb. 9. 9. which now are removed for speaking of the Jewish Church before Christ came of which himself
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
acquaintance or such like This being Satan's aim herein that their sufferings may have so much the more of bitter gall and wormwood in them as they are inflicted by such from whom better things in reason might have been expected Psal. 55. 12 13. for Isaac is persecuted by his brother Ishmael But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him who was born after the Spirit 3. Amongst those other persecutions which the Godly must endure the scourge of tongues is one and not the least especially when godlesse men taking occasion from their low condition do mock at their interest in God and labour to shame them from their confidence as if the Promise of God were of none effect for Ishmael's mocking of Isaac being yet a childe spoken of Gen. 21. 9. wherewith was doubtlesse joyned his mocking of the Promise made to Isaac is here called persecution He that was born after the flesh persecuted c. 4. Whatever wicked men may pretend yet the true rise of all their malice and opposition to those who are truly godly is their inward antipathy to the work of Grace in the Godly which they themselves want for so much is hinted at by the description here given of Ishmael the persecuter he was born after the flesh he had no more than what the power of nature did carry him to and of persecuted Isaac he was born after the Spirit or by the power of the Spirit of God wherby he did prefigure those who are truly regenerate which are born not of bloud nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Joh. 1. 13. Doct. 5. This may furnish with no small encouragement and comfort under hardest sufferings that nothing befalleth us but what is common to men and hath been the Churche's ordinary lot in former ages for this is Paul's scope even to comfort Christians under their present sufferings because Isaac did indure persecution as well as they But as then even so it is now saith he Vers. 30. Neverthelesse what saith the Scripture Cast out the bond-woman and her son for the son of the bond-woman shall not be heir with the son of the free-woman HE comforteth them secondly from this That the Jewish Synagogue and those who adhered thereto prefigured by Agar and Ishmael should be cast out of the Church of God from the society of the Saints and from the inheritance of life everlasting according as was shadowed forth by the like sentence of ejection from Abraham's family past upon Hagar and Ishmael at first by Sarab Gen. 21. 10. and authorized afterwards by God Himself Gen. 21. 12. Doct. 1. The Childe of God can have no solid comfort against nor yet be sufficiently guarded from stumbling at the outwardly prosperous state of the wicked or the afflicted state of the godly untill he consider what is God's mind revealed in Scripture either of the one or the other for the Apostle to comfort them against the wicked their prosperity and persecution flowing from it doth lead them to Gods mind in Scripture Neverthelesse saith he what saith the Scripture 2. Though God be slow to anger and is not easily provoked wholly to dissolve and cast off a Church or People who were once named by His Name even when they turn persecuting apostates yet if they be not gained by His long-suffering patience but notwithstanding go on to persecute truth and to maintain their damnable heresies He will quit them at the last by suffering them to make total apostasie from Him for the Jewish Synagogue though persecuting Truth and maintaining Justification by Works and several other Errors was not yet cast off by God but was to be rejected shortly after this as is not obscurely hinted at by the Apostle while he citeth this Scripture leaving the application of it unto themselves Cast out the bond-woman and her son c. 3. As it is no small disadvantage to Truth and to those who do maintain it when their persecuting adversaries do lurk under the mask of God's true Church and are generally taken for such So it is no lesse comfort when God taketh off that mask and maketh it appear unto the world that they are not the Church of God but the Synagogue of Satan for the Apostle's scope is to comfort the Christian Church that the Jewish Synagogue who for the time gave out her self and was generally taken for the true Church and thereby procured no small authority to her erroneous doctrine and way should shortly be cast out and not have so much as the face of a Church What saith the Scripture Cast out the bond-woman 4. There is no Salvation nor any hope of Salvation unto any who are without the true Church for the Jewish Synagogue being once un-churched her children and those who adhered in all things to her were debarred from the heavenly inheritance as Agar and Ishmael once being cast out of Abrahams family Ishmael was thereby debarred from having any part in the promised Land Cast out the bond-woman and her son for the son of the bond-woman shall not be heir c. 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Works when it 's not only doctrinally maintained but also practically walked in doth exclude the maintainer of it from having any part in the Kingdom of Heaven for so much was prefigured by the son of the bond-woman against whom a sentence is passed that he shall not be heir with the son of the free-woman Vers. 31. So then Brethren we are not children of the bond-woman but of the free HE comforteth them thirdly from this That they who for the time were persecuted by the Jewish Synagogue were not children of the bond-woman or members of that company and society which was prefigured by Hagar and so in no hazard from the former terrible sentence but being children of the free-woman or members of that Church which was prefigured by Sarah they had right to the heavenly inheritance whereby as by all which he hath formerly said he doth indirectly exhort those Galatians to quit their present error of seeking after Justification by Works and their tenacious adherance to that ancient Pedagogie of Moses as they would not exclude themselves from the heavenly inheritance Doct. 1. As a Minister must sometimes denounce most terrible judgments against the obstinate and godlesse So he ought most carefully to guard such denunciations as those lest they to whom they do not appertain make application of them and be discouraged by them for Paul doth guard the former denunciation while he saith So then we are not children of the bond-woman 2. The heavie denunciation of fearfull judgments to come upon any are speaking warnings unto us to flee from that way wherein those have walked who are so threatned for having shewn that the bond-woman with her son were to be cast out he inferreth So then we are not children of the bond-woman but of the free which hath the force of an indirect
he doth partly reprove and partly guard against was mutual and of both parties If ye bite and devour one another saith he 4. When schism in a Church is not only maintained on the one hand with fleshly passion strife reproaches and other real injuries but when it is also oppugned upon the other hand not so much with the sword of the Spirit the Word of Truth as with the same fleshly and sinfull means Then especially is schism the fore-runner and procuring cause of desolation and ruine to both parties and to the whole Church and this not only because of that hemous guilt which is in it but also that stumbling-blocks are thereby multiplied which cannot but prevail mightily to make men doubt of all Truth and in end prove nulli-fidians for the Apostle holdeth this forth as the consequence of their biting and devouring one another Take heed saith he lest ye be destroyed one of another 5. As it is a matter of great difficulty to make men of credit and parts being once engaged in their contentious debates to project the consequences of their so doing further than the hoped-for victory against their contrary party Act. 15. 37 c. So it were no small wisdom before folk meddle with strife so as to engage their fleshly passions in it however they may be otherwise provoked seriously to project and consider what wofull sad and dangerous effects may follow thereupon to the Church of God for saith he Take heed lest ye be destroyed one of another Vers. 16. This I say then Walk in the Spirit and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh HE returneth to the first Rule given ver 13. to w●● That they would not use their liberty for an occasion 〈◊〉 the flesh by a transition usuall unto him when he is further to insist upon any thing formerly spoken See chap. 4. ver 1. and furnisheth them with an help for reducing that Rule unto practice to wit Walking in the Spirit or following the motions and directions of the renewed part or new-man of Grace in the heart for which the word Spirit when it is opposed to flesh is usually taken See Joh. 3. 6. the fruit of their walking thus he sheweth should be their mortifying and keeping at under the flesh or their corrupt and unrenewed part in so far as though the lusts or first inordinate motions of inbred corruption for so is lust taken in the tenth Commandment wo●● not be totally suppressed yet they should not be fulfilled or brought unto the compleat act with deliberation and consent which doth more fully speak that which is ver 13. concerning their not using liberty for an occasion to the flesh Doct. 1. There is not any possibility of getting the power of inbred corruption subdued or the lusts of finfull flesh curbed to any saving purpose by a natural man or by any man without a work of saving Grace wrought in his heart by the Spirit of God for he prescribeth unto them walking in the Spirit as the only remedy against fulfilling the lusts of the flesh which supposeth that the Spirit or the work of saving Grace and Regeneration wrought by the Spirit must be first in them 2. The prevailing of corruption over Christians even to the accomplishing of the outward acts thereof after deliberation which sometimes hath come to passe as in David and others doth not prove that they never had a work of Grace or that they have totally fallen from it but only that they walk not in the Spirit the motions and directions of the renewed part are not obeyed but quenched the power whereof wherewith the renewed faculties are endued is not exercised and hereby God is provoked to withdraw His actuating Grace so that our lusts once in part mortified cannot but gather strength and range abroad in the soul without any effectual resistance for Paul saith not if ye have the Spirit but if ye walk in the Spirit ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh 3. The sin of lust and covetousnesse as it speaketh the first motions of corruption whether in our understanding will or sensual appetite towards unlawfull and forbidden objects namely such motions as are sudden and run before our deliberate consent they cannot be wholly abandoned by the childe of God in this life no not though he use the utmost of diligence and watchfulnesse for upon their walking in the Spirit he doth not promise that those lusts shall not be in them only they shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh 4. It is a Minister's duty to insist so far upon any point of necessary Truth untill he make it so far as he is able sufficiently plain according to the capacity of the hearers as also if the Truth in hand contain a practical duty the practice whereof is attended with many difficulties he is to insist upon it until he furnish the hearers with some pertinent helps and motives unto that duty for so doth Paul insist upon that Truth delivered ver 13. This I say then and by insisting doth explain it ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh and furnisheth them with an help how it shall be practised Walk in the Spirit saith he Vers. 17. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and these are contrary the one to the other so that ye cannot do the things that ye would HE proveth that their following the motions of the renewed part should keep the unrenewed part at under by two arguments first Because the renewed and unrenewed part or Spirit and Flesh do lust against uncessantly oppose and labour to suppresse one another by reason of that great contrariety which is betwixt those two principles as being of a different original Job 3. 6. and supported and assisted with contrary powers ver 19. and 22. whence he sheweth it doth follow that we cannot compleatly effectuate neither the good nor the evil which we would the flesh alwayes opposing that which we would according to the direction of the Spirit the Spirit again opposing what we would according to the direction of the flesh which latter is the conclusion he doth here prove as it is expressed ver 16. Doct. 1. As a Minister ought to point at some helps unto the People for their better discharging of any difficult duty So he ought to make it appear that those are helps indeed and how they contribute for the more easie practising of the duty pressed otherwise they receive no encouragement thereby neither to set about the duty nor to make use of those helps in order to the duty for the Apostle having prescribed an help for keeping the flesh at under doth here demonstrate clearly that the thing prescribed doth really help as appeareth from the scope 2. As the regenerate man hath a renewed principle of Grace in all the faculties and powers of the soul wrought in him by the Spirit of God So he hath in all those some
Kingdom of God FOr the better understanding and observing of the rule delivered ver 13. use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh he maketh a Catalogue of some works of the flesh which were best known to those Galatians And first he declareth the nature condition of those works that though the inward root of concupiscence from whence they flow be hid and therefore it is not easie to convince a man that he is led by it yet those effects and works of the flesh are evident and patent so that a man may passe judgment upon the prevalency of flesh and concupiscence in his heart when those its effects do break out in his life Secondly he maketh a particular enumeration of seventeen of those works expresly shewing that there are several other works of the flesh besides these only he thinketh it sufficient to have instanced these and these rather than others because probably they have been too commonly practised among the Galatians which works of the flesh here enumerated are First Adultery or the sin of filthynesse betwixt parties whereof one at least is married Secondly Fornication or the sin of filthinesse betwixt parties both free from the yoke of marriage Thirdly Uncleannesse under which are usually comprehended all other sorts of filthy lusts and particularly that against nature Rom. 1. 24. Fourthly Lasciviousnesse or wantonnesse whereby is meaned all petulant and wanton behaviour tending to excite the lust of filthinesse whether in our selves or others These are ver 19. Fifthly Idolatry a sin whereby religious worship due to God only Mat. 4. 10. is given unto those which by nature are no gods chap. 4. 9. or whereby the true God is worshiped in or before Images Exod. 32. 4 5. The former idolatry is forbidden in the first Command the latter in the second Sixthly Witchcraft or a devilish art whereby certain men or women having under some violent fit of a tentation entred a covenant either expresse or implicite with the Devil are enabled by the Devil's assistance upon their using certain rites and ceremonies prescribed by him to work things strange and wonderfull so far as God permitteth Seventhly Hatred or as the word signifieth enimity and hatred in the heart towards our neighbour joyned with a rooted desire to do him hurt whether for apprehended or real injuries Eightly Variance or contention and strife by disgraceful and opprobrious words arising from the fore-mentioned enimity and alienation of hearts Ninthly Emulations not that good emulation whereby we strive to excell others in that which is good not for love of applause or other by-respects but meerly from the love which we carry unto that which is good this is commanded 1 Cor. 14. 12. but carnal emulations whereby we are grieved at the good which is in others not so much from hatred to their good as because it overshadoweth us and therefore is joyned with a desire to outstrip them in that good which we are grieved for wherein it differeth from envy Tenthly Wrath whereby according to the force of the word in the original is meaned that sudden passionate commotion and perturbation of the affections through apprehension of an injury offered transforming a man to a very beast and thrusting him forward to act some mischief Luke 4. 28 29. Eleventhly Strife which as it differeth from the eight work of the flesh formerly mentioned doth signifie a certain kind of litigious striving probably about civil rights and interests which when it is for trifling matters or in defence of unrighteousnesse 1 Cor. 6. 8. or separated from a spirit of Christian meeknesse and condescendence 1 Cor. 6. 7. is a work of the flesh here condemned Twelfthly Seaitions or renting of those into divers factions who ought to be joyned in one common society for so much the word in the Original doth hint at which renting work when it falleth out in the State is called by the name of sedition and in the Church by the name of schism especially when there is a rent not only in opinion but also in affection and design or endeavour each party labouring to countermine the other Thirteenthly Heresies which are somewhat more than simple schism and faction 1 Cor. 11. 18 19. even grosse and dangerous errors voluntarily held Tit. 3. 11. and factiously maintained by some person or persons within the visible Church Act. 20. 30. in opposition to some chief or substantial Truths grounded upon and drawn from the holy Scripture as the places cited and the notation of the word in the Original will in a good part bear These are ver 20. Fourteenthly Envyings which are those base passions whereby we grieve at the good and prosperity of others without any endeavour to attain unto that good our selves Fifteenthly Murders or slaughters which frequently follow upon the for 〈…〉 whereby is not meaned the execution of publick justice upon malefactors for that is commanded Lev. 24. 21. but the satisfaction of private revenge by shedding of bloud and the taking away of our neighbour's life unjustly though under pretence of publick justice 1 King 21. 13. Sixteenthly Drunkennesse when men do drink wine or strong drink excessively and beyond that measure which fitteth them both in soul and body for the service of God and duties of their calling Seventeenthly Revellings The word doth usually signifie excesse of belly-chear in riotous feasts joyned with all sorts of lascivious behaviour The Apostle having made this enumeration that he might terrifie them from the practice of those evils giveth them timous warning now by Letter as he had done formerly by Preaching when he was with them that impenitent persisters in these and such like sins should never inherite the Kingdom of Heaven and by consequence should be eternally damned Mat. 25. 41. I say impenitent persisters for this and all such threatnings are to be understood with the exception of repentance Jer. 18. 7 8. Doct. 1. It is not sufficient that a Minister having divided his hearers in two ranks to wit spiritual and carnal or renewed and unrenewed denounce eternal wrath to the latter and promise God's favour and life eternal to the former but it is also necessary that he give evident and discriminating marks of both and of the one from the other whereby every one may be in some measure enabled without mistake to judge of his own inward estate and so to know whether the judgment denounced or mercy promised be his allotted portion for the Apostle giveth such discriminating marks of flesh and Spirit from their respective effects The works of the flesh are manifest saith he and ver 22. the fruit of the Spirit is love 2. As it is not sufficient for a Minister to condemn and reprove sin in the general without condescending upon some particular instances and examples because general doctrine is not so well understood and especially in the reproof of sin it is looked upon almost by every hearer as if he himself were not concerned in it So in
of the verse Doct. 1. As all men by nature are exceedingly backward from entring the course of well-doing and especially of exercising beneficency towards those whom God hath ordained to be objects of it Mark 10. 21 22 23. So considering the many discouragements which occur to a man while he is in this course of beneficency what from his own corruption what from the unworthinesse ingratitude and multitude of objects and what from the coldrife disposition and bad example of others who are equally if not more able there is no small propensnesse in all to sit up in that course and to give it over immediately or soon after they have entred it for Paul supposeth such a propensity and guardeth against it while he saith Let us not be weary of well-doing 2. It is not enough that men do so far subject themselves to the authority of God speaking in His Word as once to enter the way of obedience and to endure for a season Mark 4. 17 until possibly they attain to a name for piety Rev. 3. -1. or meet with some unexpected discouragement or tentation Mark 4. -17. But they must also persist in their begun course so long as they have any being Psal. 104. 33. for saith he Let us not be weary in well doing 3. That Christians may eye the promised reward and with what provisions they may have their eye upon it as a motive to obedience and peseverance See ver 7. doct 8. for the Spirit of God doth encourage them from this that in due time they should reap 4. Though God hath promised a rich reward from free-grace unto His Peoples sincere and willing obedience yet He hath reserved the date and time for the actual bestowing of that reward unto Himself So that though it be long delayed yet they have not ground to challenge Him for breach of promise as sometimes even His dearest Saints under a violent tentation have gone very near to do Psal. 77. -8. for saith he Ye shall reap but when not presently but in the due and proper time to wit that which God doth judge to be such 5. Though God as said is doth not limit himself to a determinate time when He will make His People enjoy the wished-for fruits and comfort of their laborious expensive and long persisted-in obedience yet the time made choice of by Him for His so doing whether in this life or immediatly after death is alwayes the due and proper time and hath a fitnesse in it in some respects all circumstances being well considered for the bestowing of that mercy beyond any other time for he saith Ye shall reap in due or proper time the word rendred time signifieth properly an opportune time the very article or point of time which determineth the fittest opportunity for doing any businesse and the epithet added doth intend the signification as if he had said an opportune opportune time or most opportùne time 6. That a man may upon just grounds and with confidence expect the good thing offered and contained in a conditional promise he must of necessity come up in his practice to that condition and qualification which is called-for in the promise Hence the Apostle exhorteth them not to weary because the promise of a reward includeth their not wearying as a condition Ye shall reap if ye faint not where by fainting we must not understand every slackning and remitting somewhat in our course for this befalleth sometimes the choicest Saints of God Psal. 73 2 c. but such a fainting as maketh the fainter totally and finally abandon the wayes of God which is not incident to the real childe of God Mat. 24. 24. Vers. 10. As we have therefore opportunity let us do good unto all men especially unto them who are of the houshold of faith HE doth yet again repeat and so closeth the former exhortation unto beneficency as a conclusion drawn from the former arguments And first he presseth the use-making of the present opportunity which they had of exercising this grace which relateth 1. mainly to the whole time of this life as that which being ended all opportunity of doing good by those who did ever untill then neglect to do good doth end with it And 2. to some parts of that time in which there is more ready accesse unto duties of that kind than at other times And secondly he sheweth the persons unto whom they should do good first to all men whomsoever next and especially unto those who being conjoyned by the ty of one common Confession of Faith in Jesus Christ are Members of His Church which is as it were His Houshold 1 Tim. 3. 14. Doct. 1. The Minister of Christ who would speak pertinently and edifyingly unto his hearers must not hand-over-head deliver every Truth as it cometh to his mind without any method or dependance of purposes but having such a scope proposed unto himself to aim at whether the illustration and confirmation of a truth or the inforcing of a duty or the reproving of sin or confutation of error he would digest in his mind and accordingly deliver in preaching all his other purpose so as it may be best subservient unto that scope whether as illustrations confirmations from Scripture and Reason or as motives helps cautions or arguments c. Yea and for the better help of peoples memory and better carrying along of their attention with the threed of his whole discourse he would frequently inculcate and re-assume that which is principally intended by him in his discourse and to which all the other pieces of it are subservient for so doth the Apostle propose ver 6. the inforcing of beneficency as the scope he aimeth at making all he hath said in the following verses one way or other subservient unto it and doth frequently reiterate the exhortation it self ver 6. ver 9. and here As we have opportunity let us do good 2. The servants of Jesus Christ should so presse the duties of beneficency upon others as not to exoner and keep themselves free from that duty who ought to be examples unto the Lord's People as in every duty so chiefly in those of beneficency 1 Tim. 4. 12. because People being more averse from such expensive duties than from any other do more readily snatch at every thing which may excuse their neglect and will judge no excuse more plausible than that even their Ministers do neglect all duties of that kind therefore the Apostle both in the former verse and in this includeth himself in the exhortation Let us not weary and let us do good saith he 3. As there are some fit opportunities offered unto us by the providence of God for doing our duty in any kind and especially for this duty of beneficency such as our meeting with convenient objects whose necessity calls for our help Isa. 58. 7. and our being fitted with abilities to do them good 2 Cor. 8. 14. So because those opportunities are in passing and being
yet the ceremonial Law the keeping whereof they urged so much upon others but did usually and without challenge neglect it among themselves and where they knew none were to publish it abroad Mat. 23. 4. Secondly he mentioneth the third principle from which they were acted in their so vehement urging of Circumcision upon others even their ambition and desire of vain-glory that they might have whereof to glory and boast in the multitude of Proselytes among the Gentiles who received Circumcision in their flesh at their instigation and thereby did evidence that they were converted or rather perverted unto Judaism Doct. 1. As we would not lightly and without evident cause charge any with hypocrisie dissimulation and pretending of zeal for God and respect to conscience when there is no such thing in reality and truth So this is ground sufficient for any to susspect and for those who are otherwise called unto it to affirm That they who give little o 〈…〉 o evidence of zeal to God or respect to conscience in the ordinary strain of their conversation are not acted from zeal and conscience in those particulars wherein they would seem most zealous and conscientious and more especially when Ministers do make bold without challenge to neglect those things the practice whereof they presse most vehemently upon others it cryeth aloud that they are men destitute of conscience and that they speak and preach not because they believe but for other base ends for Paul having charged his adversaries with hypocrisie in their so much urging of Circumcision ver 12 he giveth a reason for his so doing to wit their godlesse conversation and carelesse neglect of those things which they so much pressed upon others For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law 2. The Word of God in the mouthes of His Servants is quick and powerfull and sharper than any two-edged sword so as it entreth in upon a man's very soul and spirit and maketh that difference appear which is betwixt his false though fair pretences and his real though foul intentions the latter whereof lay lurking under the former but this searching Word taketh off the visard and maketh them appear in their foulest colours for the Word of God in Paul's mouth discovereth the secret foul intent even of the very hearts of his adversaries having laid aside their fair pretexts They desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh saith he 3. Where the spirit of schism and Church-renting hath once possessed a soul it causeth the man in whom it is to refuse no pains trouble or toil for gaining of many followers and to look upon those whom he so gaineth as so many trophees of his victory and speaking proofs of his unparalleled abilities and parts wherewith he is so much taken up himself that he cannot dissemble his earnest desire to have all others taken up with admirationat them also for those schismatick Church-renters chap. 4. ver 17. did desire yea ver 12. constrained men to be circumcised that they might glory in their flesh Vers. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the crosse of our Lord Jesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world THirdly in the Conclusion the Apostle doth oppose his own truly christian and apostolick conversation and carriage to those sins of hypocrisie carnal policy and vain-glory which he hath shown to be in the false Apostles And first in opposition to their vain-glory mentioned ver -13. he declareth that the matter of his gloriation and boasting was only in the crosse of Christ that is the all sufficient expiatory and satisfactory sacrifice of Christ upon the Crosse with the whole work of our Redemption which is also hereby synecdochically understood and rejecteth all other sorts of boasting as a thing abominable for so much doth his usual expression God forbid import Rom. 3. 4 6 31. and 6. 2. Secondly he sheweth in opposition to their hypocrisie and desire to make a fair shew in the flesh that by Christ or by His Crosse for the article in the Greek language may relate to either the world was crucified to him that is all that is in the world and in so far as it is opposed to the Kingdom of Christ as honour riches pomp pleasure the favour fear wrath praise or dispraise of men all were undervalued and despised by him to wit in comparison of Christ and the excellency and worth of His sufferings Philip. 3. 8. and hereby also he was crucified unto the world that is undervalued and despised by the men of this world for to be crucified in both sentences signifieth the same thing even to be contemptible and undervalued as those were who died by that ignominions and cursed death upon the Crosse Deut. 21. 23. Doct. 1. It is praise-worthy in a Minister and advanceth much the conviction of those whose sins he reproveth when his own carriage is so exemplary as the holding forth of it may point out their duty and wherein they come short of their duty for the Apostle having mentioned the sins of his adversaries ver 12 13. doth here hold forth his own practice wherein as in a glasse they and others might see their duty in opposition to those sins But God forbid saith he that I should glory c. 2. Though the goodnesse or badnesse of men who maintain and labour to propagate opinions are not sufficient arguments to prove either the truth or falshood of what they maintain seing even the Godly may erre and men otherwise carnal may discern what is Truth or Error right or wrong in some particulars better than they 2 Sam. 24. 2 3. yet when Truth is already demonstrated to be Truth and Error to be Error by sound and solid arguments from Scripture and Reason then is it lawfull and opportune to compare the pious conversation of those who are for Truth with the impiety pride and vain-glory of those who are for Error that hereby some taking weight may be added unto those former arguments especially in the minds of those who are prejudged against the Truth for the Apostle in the body of the Epistle having confirmed his own Doctrine and refuted the Error of his adversaries by solid and nervous reasons doth now in the conclusion compare his own life with theirs and opposeth his christian ingenuity and freedom from vain-glory to their hypocrisie basenesse and vanity and this to make his former arguments weigh more with those prejudicate Galatians as appeareth by comparing the two former verses with this and those which follow But God forbid that I should glory c. 3. Though it be lawfull in some cases for men to glory in the good things of God bestowed upon them See ver 4. doct 5. yet it is altogether unlawfull yea no lesse than abominable to glory in any thing so as that we place our confidence in it for making us accepted to and righteous before God but
his country-men and others for his sincere preaching of the Gospel without any mixture of Jewish Ceremonies 2 Cor. 11. 24 the marks skars or prints whereof which were yet visible and to be seen in his body did sufficiently witnesse and seal the truth of his Doctrine and especially did abundantly refute that former calumny for if he had preached Circumcision he should not have been so persecuted chap. 5. 11. and hereby also he opposeth his own practice and courage to the pusillanimity of his adversaries and their base desire of eschewing a crosse for the speaking of truth ver -12. Doct. 1. Though it be the duty of Ministers to contend for Truth against Error Jude v. -3. and to wipe off that disgrace which adversaries intend by unjust imputations and calumnies to fasten on their persons Rom. 3. 8. yet the spending of much time in those eristick debates may create no small trouble and heart-breaking vexation to their spirits as diverting them exceedingly from that far sweeter and in some respects far more profitable work both to themselves and others even of preaching the positive and practicall Truths of the Gospel unto their hearers and of feeding by meditation upon those Truths themselves for Paul speaking of their contradiction to Truth and calumnies against his person saith From hence forth let no man trouble me importing his wrestling with those did by way of unpleasant diversion trouble him and so as they consumed his strength for so much doth the word rendred trouble signifie 2. When the mouthes of hereticks and slanderers cannot be stopped with reason and fair perswasions but rather they prove more insolent it is the duty of those who have authority wisely to make use of it for putting them to silence for so doth Paul having used abundance of reasons and perswasions already by his Apostolick Authority command From henceforth let no man trouble me 3. As it is the lot of Christ's most eminent Servants to meet with base and disgracefull usage from raging persecuters as if they were the basest of slaves malefactors and the verie off-scourings of men So whatever hard measure His Servants do receive from such the Lord Christ will look on it as done to Himself He will own their sufferings wounds and akars of those wounds as His own and alloweth His suffering Martyrs to look so upon them also that because they are inflicted for the profession of His Name 1 Pet. 4. 14. and because of that strict union which is betwixt Christ and Believers whereby He and they are only one mystical Christ Eph. 1. 23. for Paul had received stripes and wounds the marks whereof did afterwards remain in his flesh the word signifieth the prints and marks of such stripes as slaves and malefactors used to be beaten with and those he calleth the marks of Christ I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus 4. Though men of this world do but judge basely of those who suffer for Christ and of their sufferings together with the prints and memorials of their sufferings as they do judge of the stripes and skars of those who are justly beaten for their faults Act. 24. 5. yet the person who hath suffered will not be ashamed of but rather in a holy manner will glory in the very prints and marks of those stripes and wounds which he hath received for the name of Christ yea it is the duty of all to think the more honourably of that person seing those are the marks of Christ for Paul doth in a manner boast of those his marks which were imprinted by his persecuters of purpose to disgrace him I do bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus 5. Though wicked hereticks may suffer much before they renounce their erroneous opinions So that a man's suffering for his opinion will not presently prove his opinion to be truth yet when other strong arguments from Scripture and Reason are already made use of by a Preacher to confirm the truth of his Doctrine this may adde weight to all his other arguments and argue his sincererity and uprightnesse in the defence of his Doctrine even that with courage and constancy and that frequently he hath sealed the truth of it by his sufferings for the Apostle having already spoken sufficiently in reason for the defence of his Doctrine against his adversaries doth now make mention of his sufferings for the Truth as an additional argument to stop the mouths of those who did oppose his Doctrine and question his sincerity in the defence of it From henceforth let no man trouble me saith he for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus Vers. 18. Brethren the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit Amen FOurthly the Apostle concludeth the Epistle with his ordinary farewell-wish wherein having designed them by the name of Brethren he wisheth that God's grace and favour with all spiritual benefits flowing from it and purchased and conveyed to them through Jesus Christ therefore called the grace of Jesus Christ might reside both in the effects and sense of it in their spirits and whole soul and affixeth his Amen as an evidence of fervency and confidence in his wish and as a confirmation of the whole Doctrine delivered by him in this Epistle Besides what is already observed upon the like farewell-wish in the close of the Epistles to the Philippians and Colossians Hence Learn 1. The more of prejudice a Minister doth apprehend to be in a people or person against himself and his doctrine he ought to endeavour the more by affectionate insinuations and by frequent and seasonable reiterating of loving compellations the rooting out of those prejudices for besides all the insinuations which he hath used towards and lovely compellations which he hath given to those Galatians so much possessed with prejudice against him chap. 4. 16. he designeth them by the name of Brethren in his farewell-wish which he doth to no other Church except to that of Corinth 2 Cor. 13. 11. who at that time had deep prejudice against him also Brethren the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. 2. The main thing in people for which Ministers ought to care and which should be most adverted unto by people themselves is the spirit and inward man as that for which God doth mainly call Prov. 23. 26. and being keeped right will command the outward man and keep it right also Prov. 4. 23. and without the concurrence whereof all that is done in the service of God is nothing but detestable hypocrisie Mat. 15. 8. for the Apostle wisheth the grace of God to be with their spirits by seating it self there that it may command the body and all the members thereof from thence The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit saith he FINIS A brief Exposition of the Epistle of Paul to the Ephesians The ARGUMENT PAul having planted a famous Church at Ephesus Act. 19. 1 10 c a prime City
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
as the sum and compend of saving wisdom while he saith In the knowledge of Him to wit of Christ or in the acknowledgement of Him as it is in the Original 11. It is not sufficient for attaining this grace of wisdom or saving knowledge of divine truths that those truths be plainly revealed by the Spirit of God in Scripture there must be also a removal of that natural darknesse and blindnesse which is in our understandings whereby we may be enabled to take up that which is revealed even as to the beholding of colours by the outward sense there must not only be an outward light to make the object conspicuous but also the faculty of seeing in the eye a blind man cannot see at noon-day nor yet the sharpest-sighted at midnight Thus for the taking up of things heavenly the Apostle prayeth both for a Spirit of revelation to make those truths conspicuous and for a new power of discerning in the understanding that they might be able to take up the truth so revealed The eyes of your understanding being enlightened 12. The natural faculties of the soul are not destroyed in conversion so as if from that time forward the renewed man did nothing and the Spirit of God residing in him did all things no they are only renewed by the implanting of new gracious habits and dispositions in them so that our wit will and affections being renewed quickened and wrought upon by the Spirit of God do also themselves work Philip. 2. -12. for Paul prayeth not that their understanding might be destroyed but enlightened The eyes of your understanding being enlightened Vers. 18. That ye may know what is the hope of His calling and what the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the Saints HEre is one of those ends for attaining whereof the Apostle would have this wisdom bestowed upon them even that they might know those good things which they were to partake of in Heaven which are first summarly propounded under the name of hope taken here for the object of hope or things hoped-for as Rom. 8. 24 Col. 1. 5. and the hope of their calling because at their conversion they were called to the participation of those things next more fully explained while they are called an inheritance which is most excellent as being both rich and glorious and appertaineth only to the Saints and those who are renewed by the Spirit of God for the particle rendered in the Saints doth signifie in or amongst and is so read Act. 26. 18. Doct. 1. As effectuall inward calling whereby we are made a willing people in the day of God's power Psal. 110. 3. is only Christ's work by His Spirit upon the hearts of the Elect making them to give hearty obedience to the outward call by the mouth of His Ministers So by this work he openeth unto them a large door of hope and calleth them who were before without hope to partake of an excellent and glorious inheritance which is here called hope or the thing hoped-for and the hope of calling they being called to the enjoyment of it which calling is also called His to wit God's or Christ's because it is His work What is the hope of His calling 2. Though those who are effectually called do receive some part of that happinesse unto which they are called presently and in hand to wit those excellent benefits of justification adoption and sanctification and such others as do either accompany or flow from those in this life 1 Cor. 6. 11. yet the great and chief part of it is not given then in present possession but reserved in the heavens for them 1 Pet. 1. 4. so that they have it only in hope for therefore is it called the hope of their calling a thing only hoped-for 3. Though those excellent things which are not yet possessed but only hoped-for by Believers are known in part and in general 1 Joh. 3. -2. even so far as the knowledge which we have of them is sufficient to terminate our hope otherwise if they were wholly unknown they could not be hoped-for yet so excellent are those things in themselves and therefore remote from our knowledge and so much are we taken up with trifles and childish toyes that even true Believers and they who know most and have their thoughts most exercised about them are in a great part ignorant of them they neither know them fully nor particularly Isa. 64. 4. So that heaven and glory will be found another kind of thing than ever entred in the heart of man to think upon or look after 1 Cor. 2. 9. for he prayeth that even the called Ephesians might know what is the hope of His calling implying that they were yet in a great part ignorant of it 4. That measure of knowledge which may be attained here of those excellent things hoped-for should be carefully endeavoured and diligently sought after by Believers as being of great concernment to make them seek after these things being so known Philip. 3. 14. to sweeten the bitternesse of their crosse Rom. 8. 18. furnish them with matter for sweet meditation upon heaven and things heavenly Philip. 3. 20. and to make them more vehemently long and desire after the actual possession of those things Philip. 1. 23. for Paul's praying for wisdom that they may know the hope of His calling implyeth that much more themselves ought to seek after the knowledge of it 5. As those excellent things which are now hoped-for and really to be enjoyed in the other life are of the nature of an inheritance which is not purchased by us but freely bestowed upon us so they are properly Christ's inheritance who hath proper right to it as being the natural Son of God and by vertue of His own purchase but the right which we have is communicated to us through Him In whom we have received the adoption of children and so are made heirs and co-heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. for the Apostle explaining what those things hoped-for are calleth them an inhe●●ritance and His inheritance And what the riches of the glory of His inheritance 6. This heavenly inheritance is a rich inheritance as wanting nothing to make the state of those who enjoy it compleatly happy and giving full satisfaction and contentment Psal. 17. 15. and therefore it is called the riches of his inheritance that is after the manner of speech much used among the Hebrew● A rich inheritance 7. It is also a glorious inheritance there being nothing there but what is glorious The sight shall be glorious for we shall see God as we are seen 1 Cor. 13. 12. the place shall be glorious 2 Cor. 12. 4. the company glorious all the glorified Saints and Angels Heb. 12. 22 23. our souls and bodies shall be glorious Philip. 3. 21. and our daily exercise shall be glorious even to give glory unto God for ever and ever Rev. 7. 9 10. for therefore it is called the glory of his inheritance or
6. Yet He imployeth His called Ministers and Servants as instruments under Him for carrying on this work among whom He did make speciall use of the Prophets and Apostles for laying the foundation in so far as they first did reveal and preach Jesus Christ and commit to writing such truths concerning Him as are necessary for salvation Joh. 20. 31. while other ordinary Ministers are imployed in the preaching of Jesus Christ as He is revealed in Scripture to build up the Elect upon the foundation which was laid by them 2 Tim. 2. 2. for he calleth Christ the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles that is whom they placed in the Church by their Doctrine and Writings by which He maketh them to differ from ordinary Ministers And are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles 7. There is a sweet harmony and full agreement between the Doctrine and Writings of the Prophets and Apostles as in all other things so especially in holding forth Jesus Christ for a foundation and rock of salvation unto Believers the latter having taught and written nothing but what was partly prefigured in types and partly foretold in prophesies by the former Acts 26. 22 23. for Paul affirmeth that the same foundation Christ was laid by both while he saith Built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles 8. How little ground the Papists have from this or any other Scripture blasphemously to teach that the Pope is the foundation of the universal Church visible in whose voice and sentence the faith of all Believers ought to be determined and built appeareth not only from the meaning of the words asserted in the exposition but also from this that all the Apostles are spoken of as having equal influence upon this foundation so that Peter whose successor the Pope doth plead himself to be had no privilege in this above the rest for he saith Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles 9. Though men are easily moved to combine together in ill Psal. 83. 3. as being naturally inclined to it Gen. 6. 5. yet such is the antipathy of every man by nature unto that which is truely good Rom. 3. 12. and unto all other men in that which is good that nothing lesse was required for uniting all the Elect among themselves so as to make them joyntly endeavour the bringing about of Gods glory in their own salvation than that Jesus Christ should interpose as an arbiter with power causing the parties at variance to be at peace and become a center wherein all those scattered lines might meet and a corner wherein the severall walls and stones of the building are conjoyned for saith Paul it was necessary in order to this union that Jesus Christ himself should be the extream corner-stone Vers. 21. In whom all the building fitly framed together ' groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord. THis stately edifice is described secondly from the artificiall and altogether divine structure and joyning together of all its parts which is the beauty of any building This orderly frame and curious structure of the Church consisteth in these two First That the whole edifice and all its parts are firmly joyned in him that is in Christ the foundation to wit by faith their life being framed according to His prescript and example Matth. 11. 29. and their faith imbracing Him according as He is held forth in the Word without addition or diminution Col. 2. 6. even as the whole frame of a materiall building is made conform to the foundation Next That all the parts of this edifice are strongly joyned together among themselves by the grace of love Col. 3. 14. and orderly situate every one acting towards the good of another in their severall stations 1 Corinth 12. 25. 26. in so far as they are regenerate and consequently are parts of this building 1 Corinth 12. 5 even as all the parts of a materiall building have a commodious correspondency one to another and thereby are fitly framed together This edifice is described thirdly from its perpetuall increase and growth flowing also from Christ the foundation which growth is to be understood not only with respect to the whole body of the Church which groweth by the addition of new converts Isa. 54. 3. but also and mainly to every member in particular which do increase and grow in gifts and graces 2 Pet. 3. 18. And lastly it is described from the end intended in rearing up this stately growing edifice even to be an holy temple unto God wherein He may manifest His presence and be perpetually served and glorified as it was in Solomons temple Psal. 132. 13. Doct. 1. Jesus Christ doth differ from the foundation of all other buildings in this that the whole building and every stone of it doth take immediate band upon the foundation all Believers being most intimately joyned to Him by faith and not by the interveening mediation of others as it is in materiall buildings for the Apostle sheweth that all the building no part thereof being excepted is in Him while he saith In whom all the building 2. As there is a strict conjunction and a kind of proportion between Believers and Christ as also among themselves even such as is branched forth in the exposition of this verse so a great part of the strength and beauty of the Church and of all its parts consisteth in this conjunction and proportion and nothing is more uncomely than for a Believer to be disproportioned unto Christ either in his faith or practice and to other Believers in his coldrife affection to them or his not acting orderly in his station for their good for the Apostle describeth this spirituall edifice from its divine structure and curious joyning of all its parts as that wherein a great part of its beauty and strength doth consist In whom all the building fitly framed together 3. As this spirituall edifice doth differ from other buildings that not only the whole edifice but also all the parts of it 1 Pet. 2. 5. are indued with life a life which is wholly spirituall and floweth from their union with Christ the foundation So this life of theirs is for the time but imperfect their spiritual graces having not as yet attained that fulnesse and strength which is required for the Apostle while he ascribeth a spiritual growth to all the building doth imply both those seing growth supponeth life and want of just stature and perfection In whom all the building groweth 4. As growth in grace is a priviledge which appertaineth to all the parts of this spirituall building who are yet on earth so this growth of theirs doth flow from their union and communion with Christ and the more their union with Him be improved to the dayly extracting of a renewed influence from Him they cannot choose but thrive the better in this their spiritual growth for the Apostle ascribeth growth to all this building and growth from their being in
glory and therefore desireth them not to faint Vers. 14. For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 15. Of whom the whole familie in heaven and earth is named THe Apostle doth now follow forth the second part of the Chapter which was begun ver 1. and interrupted by a digression untill this verse for such reason as was given ver 2. And in this part of the Chapter while he giveth a sum of his fervent prayers to God for them that they might persevere and grow in the faith and experimentall knowledge of the Doctrine of Salvation delivered by them he doth not only give an evident testimony of his sincere affection and endeavour after their salvation but also laboureth hereby to beget the like ardency of affection in them and so doth indirectly at least though most pithily by the example of his prayers excite them to persevere and make progresse in the experimentall knowledge of and communion with Jesus Christ. In this prayer there is first a preface in those verses wherein he doth 1. repeat the occasion of his prayer which was mentioned ver 1 and doth relate as I there shew unto the close of chap. 2. even because they were already builded by faith upon Christ. 2. He denominateth his prayer from the outward gesture he used therein bowing of the knee thereby expressing the humble reverent frame of his heart in prayer And 3. he sheweth unto whom he did pray to wit God the Father described first from His relation to Jesus Christ as chap. 1. ver 17 This is the sum of verse 14. Secondly from his relation to His Church as being the Father by Adoption of the whole Church of the truly regenerate whether triumphant in heaven or militant upon earth whether Jew or Gentile which is here called a family and said to have its name from God as being His Familie Children Domesticks of His houshold and that both in name and thing the one whereof is not to be separated from the other seing God bestoweth not empty names and titles upon any Now God is thus described with relation to the purpose in hand for hereby the Apostle breaketh down the arrogance of the Jews who would have had the whole Church denominated from and contained within the Jewish Nation excluding the Gentiles whom therefore Paul doth upon all occasions make equal sharers of an interest in God through Christ with the Jews and thereby sheweth his warrand to pray for perseverance and growth in grace from God even to them From Vers. 14. Learn 1. It is the duty of Christs Ministers as to teach and admonish the People of God committed to their charge 2 Tim. 4. 2. So also to pray to God for them And that not only in publick with them as being the mouth of the People unto God Joel 2. 17. but also in private to the Lord for them seing their own pains cannot profit without the Lord's blessing 1 Cor. 3. 6. which Ministers ought fervently to seek from God by prayer else they have not ground to expect it Ezek. 36. 37. for Paul as he taught these Ephesians so he prayed for them and that not only in publick but also in private as he here sheweth For this cause I bow my knees 2. It is of no small advantage unto the Lords People to have such a Minister as is able to pray and accordingly doth pray pertinently spiritually and fervently with them and for them By whom as by their mouth they may have their severall cases made known unto God more distinctly than can be expressed by many of themselves Joel 2. 17. and they themselves are edified and instructed how to pray with the like affection and fervency 1 Cor. 14. 19. By whose affectionate prayers unto God for them a blessing is drawn down from heaven to make the Word preached effectual in them Iam. 5. -16. and they themselves incited and rouzed up to seek after those good things prayed for unto them hereby also they are comforted and encouraged as knowing their Minister is speaking to God for them when he is absent from them and cannot speak unto them Philip. 1. 4. and when they through some one distemper or other cannot deal with God for themselves at least in any measure satisfactory to themselves Iam. 5. 14 15. for as Paul's exhortation and doctrine was advantagious unto these Ephesians So also were his fervent prayers in order to their being kept from fainting and to their up-stirring to endeavour after those good things which he sought from God unto them and therefore doth he mention his praying for them in this place For this cause I bow my knees 3. From the Apostle's scope in making known unto them what and how he prayed for them See a further note chap. 1. ver 17. doct 1. I bow my knees 4. Our prayers unto God for others especially the prayers of a Minister for his Flock should take their rise not only from their wants afflictions and sinfull infirmities Iam. 5. 14 15. but also from the grace and good things of God already received by them that they may persevere and grow in them and be preserved from abusing them seing the graces of the best are but imperfect 1 Cor. 13. 9. subject to decay Rev. 3. 2 and may be abused 2 Cor. 12. 7. for the Apostle taketh occasion to pray for these Ephesians from the good already received by them even their being builded already upon Christ mentioned chap. 2. ver 22. unto which the words for this cause do relate 5. Though we be not tied by a divine precept or Scripture-example unto any one gesture in prayer seing the Saints have used several gestures according to the present frame of their heart thereby expressed 1 King 8. 22. 2 Sam. 12. 16. Luke 18. 13. 2 Sam. 7. 18. and though God be a Spirit who will be worshipped in spirit and in truth Joh. 4. 24. and careth not for the outward man alone Matth. 15. 7 8. yet seing God craveth service both from the soul and body as having created and redeemed both 1 Cor. 6. 20. and seing an outward reverend gesture of the body in prayer doth not only expresse and natively flow from a reverend frame of spirit within from which the body is acted in other things but also serveth to stir up the affections in prayer as being a man's remembrancer what his heart ought to do if he would not play the grosse hypocrite with God therefore it is a thing needfull and convenient if we be not otherwise restrained Nehem. 2. 4. to use some reverend gesture of the body while we are about the duty of prayer for Paul did kneel in prayer I bow my knees saith he 6. We ought especially in prayer to draw near to God with deep reverence unto and high esteem of the majesty of God being joyned with low and mean thoughts of our selves because of our basenesse and unworthinesse seing God honoureth them
and all the members thereof are but one body is a strong argument inforcing the duty of keeping peace and unity it being no lesse absurd and prodigious for Christians to bite and devour one another than if the members of one and the self-same natural body should rise up against tear and destroy one another for he inforceth the study of unity from this That there is one body 2. That any be a member of this one body it is necessary he have the Spirit of God residing in him whereby he may be quickened and acted either by the saving operations of that one Spirit otherwise he cannot be a member of the invisible body Rom. 8. 9 10. Or by His common gifts and operations otherwise a man come to age and understanding cannot be a member no not of the visible body 1 Cor. 12. ●1 for he maketh this one body and one Spirit of equal extent There is one body and one Spirit 3. That the whole Church and all the members thereof are animated and acted by one and the self-same Spirit of God is a strong motive to incite to the study of peace and unity seing divid lusts and practices are among those sins which grieve the Spirit See ver 30. 31. and that the difference of gifts and graces wrought in us by that one Spirit are given of purpose to make each member either usefull to another by that wherein it excelleth or indigent of the help of others in that wherein it cometh short and so to have the same care one of another 1 Cor. 12. from vers 14. to the end for he presseth unity from this that there is one Spirit 4. As an external call by the ministery of the Word and professed obedience thereto is sufficient to make a man a member of the visible body and to partake of the common operations of the Spirit So that any be of this mysticall invisible body and quickened and acted by the saving operations of this one Spirit it is necessary they be effectually called and actually translated out of their natural state to the state of grace for he maketh their being of this one body and having this one Spirit to be necessarily joyned with their calling to wit their being of the visible body and having the common operations of the Spirit with the external calling and their being of the invisible body and having the saving operations of the Spirit with the inward and effectuall calling Even as ye are called 5. Though effectual calling be a work of Gods Spirit there being none who comes to Christ except the Father draw him Joh. 6. 44. yet none is compleatly called untill he yeeld obedience to Gods call and being wrought upon by God doth actually work and concur with God for that end for what he called chap. 1. ver 18. Gods calling is here expressed to be their calling because then only are we called when we obey the call of God In one hope of your calling saith he 6. As those who are yet in nature not effectually called are in a hopelesse state having no right to heaven and happinesse and consequently no ground to hope for it how big soever they be otherwayes in their vain and groundlesse hopes Deut. 29. 19 20. So effectual calling doth open to the person'called a large door of well-grounded hope that whatever be his misery here yet he shall be perfectly blessed in the full enjoying of God for evermore hereafter for the called man only hath right to those rich promises 2 Pet. 1. 3 4. and God by calling him doth engage Himself to perform all that is promised to the called man according to his hope 1 Thess. 5. 23. with 24. for therefore are those glorious things hoped-for called the hope of our calling 7. The consideration of this that called Saints are all of them aiming at one and the self-same prize of their high calling and shall live together in glory should be a strong argument to make them live in peace and concord while they are here Their joynt aiming at one mark should make them of one mind and heart especially seing there is that in glory which will suffice all and their seeking of one thing needeth be no occasion of strife and emulation but rather of unity in heart mind and affection for why should they strive together who not only are brethren Gen. 13. 8. but also are heirs together of the grace of life 1 Pet. 3. 7. yea heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and shall one day reign together in glory for he presseth their keeping unity from this that they were effectually called and heaven and glory hoped-for would suffice all and be enjoyed by all Even as ye are called in one hope of your calling Vers. 5. One Lord one faith one baptism IN this verse are other three of these unities which are also so many bonds of and incitements to that unity exhorted unto ver 3. First there is but one Lord which title though it belong to all the three Persons in the blessed Trinity by right of creation and accordingly is given to God under the name of Master Mal. 1. 6. yet seing the unity of the Spirit is spoken to ver 4. and of God the Father ver 6. therefore it ought in this place to be astricted to Christ the second Person to whom it is in a peculiar manner due by right of Redemption in so far as He hath redeemed the Elect from their naturall slavery and bondage under sin Satan and Gods wrath to be a peculiar people unto Himself 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. and hereby hath purchased a right to rule over them as Mediator Lord-depute and Administrator under the Father Philip. 2. 9 10 11. And He is said to be but one Lord there being none to whom either as partner or substitute He will communicate this His glory of dominion and lordship over His Church either in whole or in part 1 Pet. 5. 3. Secondly there is but one faith where by faith may be meaned the grace of faith for that is also one in respect of the author God Col. 2. 12. of the object which it apprehendeth the whole Word of God Act. 24. 14. and especially Christ and the promises Philip. 3. 9 Yet by faith is mainly here meaned the Doctrine of faith proponed by God to be believed as Gal. 1. 23. and this Doctrine is but one because though in the severall ages of the Church it was proponed diverse wayes and with considerable variation in some weighty circumstances Eph. 2. 14 15. yet in substance it hath been is and ever shall be the same Act. 15. 11. Heb. 13. 8. and from Christs coming in the flesh even to the end of the world it is to remain the same both for substance and circumstance Heb. 12. 27 28. and though there be different opinions in the Church about divine Truths revealed in the Scripture which occasioneth different faiths See ver 13. Yet there is only this one
faith allowed by Christ neither is there any other faith but this one in true Believers if we look to those Truths which are of absolute necessity to salvation there is an agreement in those and one and the same faith of those in all whatever may be their differences about other inferiour Truths Act. 4. 12. Thirdly there is but one Baptism whereby is meaned neither the Baptism of affliction Mat. 20. 22. nor of the extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost Acts 1. 5. but the ordinary Sacrament of Baptism the practice whereof is enjoyned by Christ under the Gospel Matth. 28. 19. And it is said to be one not in respect of the persons administrating or receiving this Ordinance but of its nature and substance as having the same author Christ Matth. 28. 19. the same outward element for kind Act. 8. 36. the same way of administration enjoyned Matth. 28. 19. the same ends and uses towards those who are baptized Rom. 6. 3. 4. Doct. 1. All these who are of this one body animated and acted by this one Spirit and have well-grounded hope of glory they must and do subject themselves to Christ as Lord in so far as they are ruled by His Laws Acts 9. 6. and patiently submit to His corrections and chastisements Heb. 12. 6 7. for He maketh their being of one body having one spirit and one hope and their subjection to this one Lord of equal extent one Lord saith he 2. The consideration of this that the whole Church and all the Members thereof are subject to the dominion of one Lord and Master Christ Jesus is a strong argument for inforcing this duty of keeping unity and peace among themselves this being a duty which not only he did presse most vehemently upon His followers when He was about to leave the world and depart from them Joh. 13. 34 35. but also did most earnestly intreat the Father for even that they might be all made one in Him Joh. 17. 21 22. Besides what a shame is it for the Servants of one Master to fall at odds among themselves and thereby neglect their Masters work committed to them for he presseth the study of unity from this that there is one Lord. 3. The Law by which the Lord Christ will have His subjects ruled and governed is not searched out and known by sense or naturall reason but being revealed in the Word it is laid hold upon by faith and credit given to it because of His authority who hath revealed it for so much may be gathered from his making mention of faith or the Doctrine of faith immediately after he had spoken of the Lord Christ one Lord one faith saith he 4. The consideration of this that the whole Church and all the true and lively Members thereof do professe one and the same fundamentall Truths revealed in Scripture as the only object of saving faith and way to salvation ought to be a strong motive for keeping concord and unity in all other things which otherwise might occasion dissention and strife This agreement in the main in the journeys end and the necessary way which leadeth to it should make them ashamed to fall at odds and strife about other things of lesse importance and moment for he presseth unity from this that there is one faith 5. The wise Lord hath judged it fitting to add the Sacraments as seals unto the Doctrine of faith and salvation contained in Scripture that hereby we may be the more enabled to take up and understand that Doctrine and be the more affected with it as having the purpose of it not only exhibited and represented to our ear in the Word but to our eye also in the Sacrament and that we may be the more confirmed in the truth of that Doctrine as having not only His word and writ for it but also His seal and pledge for after mention made of the Doctrine of faith he presently addeth there is one Baptism 6. The Lord hath added Sacraments to the doctrine of faith not only for the reasons mentioned but also for engaging the party receiver unto such duties as the Doctrine of faith doth presse upon him a Sacrament being as a military oath whereby we bind our selves to fight under the Lords banner and in all things to be for Him for he doth presse them to duty even to keep unity from this that they were partakers of this one Baptism 7. The consideration of this that the Church and all the Members thereof are dedicate to God in one and the same Sacrament of Baptism unto the receiving whereof all do accord is a strong motive to make them keep peace and unity in other things seing this onenesse in Baptism doth imply our communion in all other things which are signified and sealed unto us by that Sacrament which are all those things wherein our salvation is most nearly concerned and that by Baptism we are solemnly engaged to go about our Master's work Rom. 6. 4. and so to eschew all renting and falling out among our selves by which His work is much retarded for he maketh this another argument to enforce unity that they did all partake of one Baptism Only know that though we are not to re-baptize those who are baptized by schismaticall and hereticall Churches even though they err in some fundamentall truths so long as the substantiall parts of Baptism are preserved though mixed with much of their own superstitious trash and therefore in some respect we may be said to have one common Baptism with them yet it doth not follow hence that we are tied to keep unity with them simply and in all respects We are only hereby tied to seek union with them not by joyning in their schism or damnable heresies but by labouring to reclaim them from those and if they be one in all the other essentiall ties and bonds of union here mentioned as of having one Lord one faith c. this onenesse of Baptism doth engage to be willing and endeavour for our part to keep the bond of peace with them in other things for those seven unities or bonds and arguments are not to be taken separately but joyntly as to the pressing of unity yea and though they be not one in all the rest yet it engageth us to own them in those things wherein they are right and owned by God providing always we touch no unclean thing 2 Cor. 6. 17. In these respects and with those limitations we deny not but unity should be keeped with hereticall Churches even the Church of Rome her self Vers. 6. One God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all HEre is the seventh unity which is the last bond or ty of the Churches essentiall unity and serveth also for an argument perswading to keep peace and unity in other lesser differences which argument is first propounded to wit all Believers have one common God and Father for though God as Creator is the God and Father
captivity captive and gave gifts unto men THe Apostle secondly in this first branch of the second generall argument for union from the diversity of gifts doth confirm from Psal. 68. 18. what he presently said that Christ is the author and bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures In which place of the Psalm David doth look through the ark a type and shadow to Christ the substance and in a prophetical way speaking of things to come as already past to point-out the certainty of their performance he doth foretell that Christ should in a triumphant manner ascend up on high or unto the heighest heavens See ver 10. and that at and by vertue of His ascension He should first lead captivity captive that is as he had upon the crosse foiled His many enemies and begun to triumph over them Col. 2. 15. So in His ascension He should continue the triumph evidently declaring that He had given a totall rout to all the spiritual enemies of His Church and Kingdom The expression used to set forth this purpose hath in it an allusion to conquerors who in their triumphing solemnities used to drive their captive enemies before their own triumphant chariots See this expression used in the same sense Judg. 5. 12. And secondly following the same allusion to triumphing conquerors who used to divide and scatter the spoil and other magnificent gifts among the applauding Citizens and Souldiers he sheweth that Christ should at and by vertue of His ascension pour-forth and distribute a large measure of gifts and graces upon His Church and severall members thereof which prophesie the Apostle citing the place with some variation of the words but keeping close to the sense and purpose doth shew was now fulfilled by Christ and consequently that Christ is the bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures as was affirmed ver 7. Doct. 1. Ministers ought to hold forth nothing for truth or presse nothing as duty upon the Lords people but what they may confirm and prove to be such from the authority of God speaking in Scripture yea and it is their duty sometimes to bring forward their proof by making expresse mention of it for thus doth Paul confirm what he spake ver 7. by a testimony cited from the Psalms Wherefore he saith that is David or the Spirit of God speaking by David saith 2. As there was much of Christ revealed in the Scriptures of the Old Testament though but darkly and under a vail of types and ceremonial shadows So He was revealed and spoken-of in those Scriptures as true God and Jehovah for that which is said Psal. 68. was spoken of God even Jehovah as appeareth from ver 4. and all alongst which Paul sheweth here was fulfilled in Christ Wherefore be saith he hath ascended c. 3. Though the very words and phrase of Scripture are much to be thought of and closely adhered unto so far as is possible lest by our unnecessary casting of Scripture-purpose in an affected strain of words unknown to Scripture we lose at length the purpose with the words 2 Tim. 1. 13. Yet the sense and meaning of Scripture is mainly to be sought-after and kept in remembrance so that though we do not call to mind the very words of such a Scripture but only the sense meaning and purpose of it we may draw comfort or information from it or make use of it otherwayes for the Apostle here as oft elsewhere doth not so much adhere to the precise words as to the sense of that Scripture which he cites in so far as where in the Psalm it is said Thou hast ascended and received gifts for men to wit He received them to be given to men it is here When He ascended and gave gifts unto men 4. Our Lord Jesus Christ having finished the work which was given Him to do on earth Joh. 17. 4. did locally ascend unto heaven carrying His humane nature up thither Act. 1. 9. 10. that so He might be exalted in that glory which He had before the world was Joh. 17. 5. and take possession of heaven in our name Eph. 2. 6. and there prepare a place for us Joh. 14. 2. for saith he When He ascended up on high 5. As Christ did engage in a warfare on our behalf with many strong and potent enemies to wit the devil the world sin death and hell So He hath carried the day of all and gained an absolute compleat victory over all in so far as though the Godly must have a battel with these Eph. 6. 12. yet Christ the Head of Believers is now above the reach of hazard from enemies and consequently Believers in their Head yea and they themselves are above all hazard also in so far as all their enemies cannot mar their salvation Rom. 8. 35 c. Sin and Satan doth not reign in them Rom. 6. 12 14. death hath lost its sting towards them 1 Cor. 15. 55. and become a passage unto life Philip. 1. 23. for by this captivity which Christ led captive is meaned not those whom He delivered from captivity but whom He fought against brought in captivity and triumphed over even all His and our spiritual enemies He led captivity or a multitude of captives captive 6. The constant opposition which Satan raiseth against the Church and Kingdom of Christ doth not so much flow from any principle of hope in him to prevail in that wofull work as from his inveterate blinded malice against the salvation of sinners so that he cannot but malign and oppose it though he know he cannot mar it for at Christs ascension he could not but know that by all his malicious cruel actings against Christ he had effectuate nothing but his own eternal shame and confusion seing that Christ did thereby openly declare He had led captivity captive 7. As those for whom Christ did purchase any good or advantage by His death and did manifest His purchasing good for them by His ascension were men and not devils So not only saving graces which are given to the Elect only but also common gifts are a part of His purchase which are given sometimes to reprobates for the good and edification of His Church Matth. 7. 22 23. for both these are comprehended here under gifts which being purchased by His death He did at His ascension in a larger measure than formerly give unto men and to men indefinitly even to rebels Psal. 68. -18. Vers. 9. Now that he ascended what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth THe Apostle doth thirdly comment upon and apply the cited testimony And first he sheweth what Christs ascending unto heaven to wit by His own divine power otherwise the Apostle's inference in this place should not hold did presuppose as necessarily foregoing even His previous humiliation and abasement in all its steps expressed by His descending to the lowerparts of the earth where the lower parts are to be
understood by comparing not the parts of the earth among themselves but earth with heaven the earth being the lowest part of the world and particularly it pointeth either at His conception in the womb of the Virgin See conception so expressed Psal. 139. 15. or at His burial expressed by a like phrase Matth. 12. 40. wherein the Apostle's scope is not only to prove that the former testimony is pertinently cited and applyed to Christ but also to presse humility in order to unity and peace from Christs example as Phil. 2. 7. Now Christ is said to have descended not properly and locally as man for before His incarnation He was not man but as God and therefore not properly by changing place but improperly and with respect had to His state by taking on the humane nature upon earth under the infirmities whereof He did for a time hide His divine glory so that very little of it did appear and to some few only Isa. 53. 12. Doct. 1. Sacred Scripture is a great depth containing much more than what is obvious at the first view and therefore we are to advert not only to that which is expresly said in Scripture but what may be drawn from it by direct and just consequence for Paul doth so look on this testimony of Christs ascension as finding another great Truth concerning His previous humiliation lurking under it and by just consequence deducible from it while he saith Now that He ascended what is it but that He first descended 2. It is not enough for Ministers to cite Scriptures for confirmation of those Truths which they hold forth to the Lords People except the Scriptures cited be pertinent and the pertinency of them be also made clear and obvious for Paul having cited a Scripture to confirm somewhat which he said of Christ doth prove the Scripture cited doth speak of Christ because it implyeth previous descending and humiliation in the partie spoken of which can agree to none other of the Persons of the blessed Trinity but to Christ only Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 3. Such was the love of Christ to lost sinners Joh. 15. 13. and to the glory of His own and his Fathers mercy to be manifested in their salvation Joh. 17. 4. that He did willingly lay aside His glory which He had with His Father before the world was Joh. 17. 5. by assuming the nature of man to Himself and suffering therein the utmost of misery and grief which the malice of men and devils could inflict and which seemed good unto the Father in order to the satisfaction of provoked justice to inflict Heb 10. 7. for all this is implyed in His descending and saith Paul Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 4. Then do we study and know Christs exaltation aright when we do also seriously consider and think upon His previous humiliation and abasement for therein we may see not only how low He stooped for our good but also that He hath fully accomplished whatever He undertook and is now absolved Joh. 17. 4 5. and that the Lords usuall way is with His own as it was with Christ to make their deep humiliation and lowlinesse of mind go before their highest exaltation and honour Prov. 15. 33. for Paul doth read previous humiliation in Christs exaltation and thinks upon both joyntly Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 5. Then do we think upon Christs humiliation and abasement aright when we consider it in its greatest depth and lowest step unto which He demitted Himself even to the lowest parts of the earth for therein we may see the greatnesse of His love the depth of our misery and the full sufficiency of the price paid by Christ in the state of His humiliation in order to our delivery He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth by which is not meaned the place of the damned nor any place near to that where the souls of the Patriarchs were before Christs death as the Papists affirm this being contrary to Scripture affirming that Christs soul was after death to be in heaven Luk. 23. 43. and that the souls of the Patriarchs were there also Luke 16. 22 23 25 26. but hereby as I shew in the exposition is meaned His conception and buriall with all the other steps of His humiliation interveening Vers. 10. He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that He might fill all things THe Apostle in the explication and application of the cited testimony doth next shew what it expresly holdeth forth to wit Christs ascension and illustrates it from this that the person who ascended though now made man was the same with him who descended to take on the nature of man 2. That He ascended to the highest heavens the seat of eternall glory far above those visible heavens not only in situation but also in duration and glory and are called the heaven of heavens 1 King 8. 27. the third heavens 2 Cor. 12. 3. 4. and sometime simply by the name of heavens Act. 3. 21. And thirdly from the end of His ascending even to fill all things not all places with His bodily presence for Him must the heavens contain Act. 3. 21. but that He might fulfill all prophesies concerning Himself and all those parts of His mediatory Office which were yet to be performed in heaven and particularly that He might fill His Church and all the members thereof which are His all even His whole body Joh. 6. 45. with a large and plentifull measure of the gifts and graces of His spirit Joh. 7. 39. according as was foretold in the cited testimony Doct 1. The distinction of natures in Christ after His incarnation doth not infer a distinction of persons in Him He remaineth one person still for the Apostle speaketh of Him after incarnation as of one He that descended is the same also that ascended 2. Jesus Christ remaineth one and the same person after His assuming the humane nature unto Himself with that which He was before so that neither is the person of God-man Mediator any third thing made up or compounded of both those natures neither did the humane nature add any thing before wanting to make up perfect or work any alteration in the personall substance of the Son of God only the humanity of Christ being destitute of any personal subsistance of its own is as it were ingrafted in the second person of the God-head the Son of God and doth subsist in Him for Paul sheweth that He who ascended being now God-man is the same with Him who descended before His incarnation He that descended is the same also that ascended 3. By vertue of this personall union betwixt the divine and humane nature of Christ there ariseth such a communion of the distinct properties of each nature that those things which are proper only to the one nature are ascribed to the whole
whether it be so for Paul having ver 20. professed his charitable judgement of them that they had not so learned Christ he giveth a limitation here whereby they might try if it was so if so be ye have heard him 3. That learning of Christ and knowledge of Him which is the only remedy against the power of inherent corruption is begotten in us by the ordinary mean of hearing Him preached and set forth in the publick Ministery of the Gospel Rom 10. 14 15. for this is one piece of that condition which is required to the learning of Christ thus even if so ye have heard him 4. The hearing of Christ preached by sent Ministers is not alone sufficient in order to this effectuall learning of Him but Christ Himself must teach us inwardly and effectually by His Spirit else we cannot so learn Him for this is another piece and the main piece of that condition required antecedently to their learning of Christ thus if so ye have been taught by him 5. Then do we rightly and savingly learn truth when the knowledge of truth attained by our learning is such as Christs knowledge was to wit not theoretick and speculative only but practicall and operative for so was His knowledge of truth Psal. 40. 8. and they were to be taught by Him as the truth is in Jesus else they had not so learned Christ. Vers. 22. That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts HE doth next shew what it is to be taught by Christ as the truth is in him and thereby confirmeth what he said ver 20. that the saving knowledge of Christ is inconsistent with a licentious life in so far as this effectuall learning of Christ and knowledge of Him requireth from and effectually worketh in the person so instructed three things The first whereof is in this verse to wit a daily study to put off and mortifie the old man whereby is not meaned the substance of a mans soul and body nor yet the naturall and essentiall faculties of the soul for those of necessity do alwayes remain untill the man cease to be but that naturall and inbred corruption which hath infected and polluted all those which inbred corruption he sheweth had manifested it self in their former godlesse conversation and doth grow daily worse and more corrupt yea and by little and little bringeth corruption and destruction upon the whole man both in soul and body where it is given way to in its deceitfull lusts for so much doth he intend while he saith it is corrupt according or by deceitfull lusts Now this inbred corruption is here called the old man and the mortifying of it is called a putting of it off by a metaphor taken from the laying aside and casting off of old garments See the reasons for both upon Col. 3. -9. doct 1. Hence Learn 1. So much may we reckon our selves to know of Christ and to be taught by Christ as we do practise according to what we know Those only are best scholers in Christs school who are most tender walkers for Paul sheweth that to learn Christ and to be taught by Him is in a word to practise all the duties of an holy life even that ye put off the old man c. saith he 2. Then do we set about the duties of sanctification in the right order when we begin at the work of mortification in the first place and thence proceed to the positive duties of a new life the plants of righteousnesse will not thrive in an unhumbled proud impenitent heart Joh. 5. 44. for Paul sheweth the first part of this lesson is to put off concerning the former conversation the old man 3. Then do we carry on the work of mortification right and to good purpose when we single not out some one sin passing by others but do strike at all sin and do not content our selves to lop the branches but strike at the very root of sin for Paul describeth this work to be a putting off the old man that is the bitter root of inbred corruption in its full latitude and extent That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man 4. Though we must begin to strike at the root of sin within yet we are not to rest there but must set against sin in all its branches and whoever setteth upon sin at the root and in the heart he cannot choose but set against the breaking forth of sin in his hand and outward conversation also yea the reality of his fighting against his inward corruptions will make it self manifest in an outward change in his conversation from what it formerly was for so much is imported while he sheweth they were to put off the old man as to the former conversation not as if sins of the outward man and conversation only were to be put off but because those are also to be mortified and the inward work of mortification doth kyth by our putting off of those 5. The work of putting off and mortifying this old man of inbred corruption is to be entered timously in so far as the longer that corruption is spared it groweth worse and posteth the person in whom it is more swiftly to ruine and destruction for Paul doth indirectly at least presse this duty of putting off the old man from this that it is corrupt or groweth worse and worse by its deceitfull lusts 6. This inbred root of naturall coruption doth vent it self in multitudes and swarmes of inordinate lusts and sinfull desires by venting whereof it doth alwayes acquire the more strength and secureth its interest more firmly both in soul and body for he sheweth that this old man hath lusts and is corrupted or made worse and more deeply rooted by those lusts which is corrupted by deceitfull lusts 7. Sinfull lusts are entising and deceitfull lusts in so far as they promise what they never perform 2 Pet. 2. 19. and do often cover themselves under the mask of some laudable vertue Col. 2. 18. and thus do by subtilty carry the sinner captive to their slavery Prov. 7. 21 22. for he calleth them deceitfull lusts or as it is in the Originall lusts of deceit Vers. 23. And be renewed in the spirit of your mind HEre is the second thing which the effectual learning of Christ doth require from and work in the person so taught even a serious endeavour to have his mind and understanding more and more renewed or made new by getting a new quality of divine and supernatural light implanted in it and he calleth the understanding or rational part of the soul the spirit of their mind that is the most spiritual part of the soul or by an Hebraism their spiritual mind so called because the mind or understanding is lesse subject to be wrought upon by the temper and disposition of the body than the will and affections Doct. 1. The principal part of the soul the very
was as not to question far lesse deny but confidently avow what he now by grace is and that because not only the joynt consideration of both maketh them shine forth more clearly in their own colours but also our fixing our eye upon the former without avowing the latter doth breed discouragement unthankfulnesse and in progresse of time heartlesse dispare of an outgate from the wofull state wherein we apprehend our selves yet to be for the Apostle representeth to their view both those joyntly Ye were sometimes darknesse but now ye are light 3. Believers can never attain to read the happinesse of their present state through grace so long as they fix their eye only upon what they are in themselves nor yet untill they consider what they are in Christ and by vertue of that fulnesse of perfections in Him which not only floweth forth to them in the streams according to their measure Joh. 1. 16. but also is imputed to them in the fountain 1 Cor. 5. 21. and therefore may be looked upon by them as their own for although he calleth them darknesse absolutely and in themselves yet they are light not in themselves but in the Lord Christ. 4. Our former darknesse of ignorance and profanity wherein we have for a long time lived is so far from being an argument to make us continue in our former wofull course that on the contrary we ought from the consideration thereof be incited to take up our selves and live more tenderly for the time to come seing the time past of our life may suffice usto have walked in a godlesse course 1 Pet. 4. 3. for Paul maketh this an argument why they should not any longer partake with obstinate sinners in their godlesse course for saith he ye were sometimes darknesse 5. Neither long continuance in sin already even to wearinesse nor yet any conviction of the shame and dammage which do attend it are sufficient to make a man abandon and quit it throughly except there be a gracious change wrought in him chiefly as to his inward state from that which he sometimes was for he mentioneth this gracious change of their inward state as that wherein the strength of the present argument doth ly whereby he would disswade them from being partakers with them for ye were sometimes darknesse but now are ye light in the Lord. 6. As all spirituall priviledges in generall are bestowed upon us that we may improve them both for our comfort and also for enabling and inciting to duty So the more we enjoy of light whether external light in preaching of the Word or the internal light of knowledge in the mind we ought to improve it the more by walking according to that light else our condemnation shall be greater Joh. 3. 18. for from their priviledge of being light in the Lord he inferreth walk as children of light Vers. 9. For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth THe Apostle in way of parenthesis doth give a reason of the former consequence or why their being now light in the Lord did bind them to walk as children of light and consequently not to partake with obstinate sinners in their sin and withall sheweth wherein that walking doth consist The reason is taken from the new creature and habits of grace in the heart called here the Spirit as Rom. 7. 25. Gal. 5. 22. and are the same with the light of grace by the Spirit of God spoken of ver 8. Now he sheweth the fruit of this light or of those gracious habits consisteth in the exercise of all Christian vertues which are here summed up in three 1. Goodnesse whereby we are inclined to communicate what good is in us for the advantage of our neighbour both in his spirituall 1 Pet. 4. 10. and bodily Gal. 6. 10. estate 2. Righteousnesse whereby we deal righteously in all our transactions with others And 3. Truth whereby we carry our selves sincerely being free from error hypocrisie or dissimulation whether towards God or men So the force of the argument cometh to this Such a walking as he did enjoyn was the native fruit and result of their being made light in the Lord by the Spirit of God and therefore they were obliged to it Doct. 1. It is the duty of Christs Ministers not only to presse upon the Lords people the practice of holinesse in generall but also to condescend upon and accordingly to presse the exercise of those particular vertues both to God and men wherein holinesse doth consist otherwise people will readily place most of holinesse in those things wherein it consisteth least Matth. 23. 23. for Paul having exhorted them to walk as children of the light doth here shew wherein that walking doth consist even in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth 2. None can walk as a childe of light or practise those duties wherein such a walk consisteth in a way acceptable to God but he who is a childe of light truely regenerate and acteth from a principle of grace in the heart Whatever floweth from an unrenewed heart how specious soever is but a shadow and imperfect imitation of the childe of light in this christian walk as an ape would imitate a man or a violent motion doth resemble that which is natural and floweth from an inward principle for he sheweth the exercise of goodnesse righteousnesse and truth wherein our walking as a childe of light consisteth is the fruit of the Spirit or of the root of grace in the heart wrought by the Spirit of God For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness c. 3. As it concerneth Christians to walk suitably unto their state and priviledges So they would seriously consider in order to their walking thus that holinesse of life is the native fruit and result of their being in a gracious state or of the work of grace in the heart and therefore that they are not only obliged to lead an holy life in way of duty and gratitude but a necessity also doth ly upon them to it if so they be renewed and as they would not evidence themselves to be yet in their unrenewed state for having exhorted them to walk as children of light or suitably to the state of grace he inforceth the exhortation by shewing that such a walking is the native fruit and necessary result of being in such a state For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse c. 4. A facility and easinesse to communicate what is in us for our neighbours good and advantage doth well consist with the exercise of righteousnesse whereby we give every man his due and do require of him what is our due from him for he conjoyneth the exercise of those two while he saith the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse 5. As the grace of sincerity and freedom from dissimulation and hypocrisie is a necessary ingredient in the exercise of all other vertues So our walking answerably unto
that state of light unto which we are called must be extended unto duties of all sorts not only to duties of goodnesse and righteousnesse towards our neighbour but also to duties towards God so as we imbrace those Truths which He holdeth forth in Scripture without all mixture of Error yea and take Him for our party in every duty as being the only judge of our sincerity for he saith The fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth Vers. 10. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. BEfore the Apostle use any moe arguments to inforce the former precept he doth first resume and explain the precept it self And first he explaineth the affirmative part thereof by giving one direction necessary to be practised by those who would walk as children of light even that by diligent search and enquiry they prove and try according to God's will revealed in His Word Isa. 8. 20. what is acceptable and well pleasing unto Him in every step of their way Doct. 1. There is no walking as a childe of light or suitably unto that gracious state to which we are called except we conform our selves not unto this world Rom. 12. 2. or to what may bring about our own advantage and so gratifie our lusts Matth. 5. 29. but unto what is acceptable to God and prescribed unto us as the rule of duty in His Word for this proving of what is acceptable unto Him is required not for it self or to rest thereon but to regulate our practice accordingly See ver 11. doct 1. and is called-for as a necessary concomitant of walking like children of light as is clear from the grammatical construction according to which this verse is to be joyned with the close of the eighth so that it runneth thus Walk as children of the light proving what is acceptable 2. We cannot conform our selves unto what is acceptable to the Lord and consequently cannot walk as children of light except we make a serious search and enquiry into the rule of duty and acceptation revealed in the Word yea and do what we do that we may come up to that rule and therefore we walk not acceptably when either we do things rashly without deliberation Prov. 19. 2. or doubtingly after deliberation Rom. 14. 23. yea nor when the thing done is in it self right and acceptable but we do it not from that ground but to gratifie our own lusts Matth. 6. 2. or the lusts of others Gal. 1. 10. for in order to this walking he requireth them to prove what is acceptable to the Lord as the rule by which they were to walk 3. It is not sufficient to make this inquiry in order to some few and weighty actions of our life but in order to all whether of greater or lesser concernment whether advantage or losse may probably follow upon our conforming of our selves unto this rule for the direction is indefinit without any limitation or restriction unto this action or that and therefore it ought to be extended unto all Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. 4. The finding out of what is acceptable unto the Lord especially in some intricate cases is not easily attained there must be an accurate search together with an excercising our selves in the practice of those things which we already know to be acceptable that so we may experimentally know them to be such and get our knowledge bettered in those things whereof we are yet ignorant Joh. 7. 17. for the word rendred proving signifieth an accurate proof not so much by argument as by trial and experience as gold is tried in the fire Iam. 1. 12. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. Vers. 11. And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse but rather reprove them HE explaineth next the negative part of the former precept as it was expressed ver 7. First by discharging them to be accessory any of those wayes mentioned ver 7. doct 3. to the sins of wicked men called here works of darknesse because they flow usually from the darknesse of ignorance Act. 3. 17. and are the works of unrenewed men who are nothing but darknesse See ver 8. are contrary to the light of Gods revealed will Joh. 3. 20. and are usually committed in the dark the very actors being ashamed to do them openly 1 Thess. 5. 7. and because they bring those who live and die in them without repentance unto utter darknesse Matth. 25. 30. They are also called unfruitfull works because they not only bring no advantage unto those who do commit them Rom. 6. 21. but also much hurt and dammage even the wages of sin which is death Rom. 6. 23. Next by commanding them to reprove convincingly those works of darknesse and the parties guilty of them and this though chiefly by their contrary good works Heb. 11. 7. yet not only by those but also by the word of admonition and reproof Eccles. 7. 5. as occasion should offer and Gods glory with the edification of their neighbour should seem unto spiritual prudence to call for it Besides what is already observed from a parallel place ver 7. doct 1. hence Learn 1. Then do we make an approven search and enquiry into what is acceptable unto the Lord when we do not satisfie our selves with the naked knowledge of what He approveth Rom. 2. 18. nor yet do only labour to defend by force of reason or sufferings what we find to be truth after search against gain-sayers 1 Cor. 13. 2 3. but do also make it the rule of practice by practising or for bearing accordingly for the Apostle having commanded them ver 10. to prove what is acceptable unto the Lord doth here enjoyn them to abstain from that which they could not but by searching find to be displeasing to Him while he saith and have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse 2. Though we are not simply and in all cases to abstain from the fellowship of wicked men but may freely converse with such of them as we are bound unto either by the law of necessity Psal. 120. 5 6. or by any civil 1 Pet. 2. 18. religious 1 Cor. 7. 12. or natural bond Eph. 6. 1 2. yet no ty of that kind doth give us warrant to partake with them in their sins and therefore we are to eschew all unnecessary and voluntary fellowship and familiarity with them Psal. 26. 4. lest thereby we be drawn to walk in their wayes Prov. 22. 24 25. and they be hardened in their evil course and kept from being ashamed 2 Thess. 3. 14. for he forbiddeth absolutely all fellowship with them in their sins and consequently whatever may bring us under that hazard if so it can be eschewed without the neglect of any other duty And have no fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse 3. We ought to look upon sin in its blackest colours of shame digrace losse of our time strength and of all other expence consumed upon it
speaketh here of a further discovery and manifestation of it by the light of reproof which was usefull and necessary All things that are reproved are made manifest 3. The Lord doth sometimes blesse not only publick preaching but also the word of reproof in the mouth of private Christians and the example of their holy life for making godlesse sinners take occasion thence to reflect upon themselves and therein as in a glasse to see the filthy vilenesse of their beloved sins and to judge themselves for them for he saith All things that are reproved are made manifest by the light to wit the light of verball or reall reproof held forth even by private Christians for he doth not speak here to Ministers only 4. The probable good which God may bring about to the party reproved by the means of our reproof should have more of weight to incite us towards the making conscience of this duty than the feared inconvenience to our selves arising from the parties displeasure should have to scare us from it for Paul will have us to set upon this dutie because of our neighbour's good which probably will be brought about by it reprove them saith he For all things that are reproved are made manifest by the light 5. As there is no duty of the successe whereof we use to be more diffident than that of reproving the sins of others So there is not any duty the successe whereof we have better ground to be perswaded of even than of this that discovery of sin to the sinners conscience either to his conversion or further obduration shall follow upon a timeous and well-guided reproof for he proveth that this effect shall follow upon reproof as natively as the discovery of things dark and hid doth follow upon light for that is light saith he which discovereth all things Vers. 14. Wherefore he saith Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee light HEre is a second argument to enforce the duty of reproving those unfruitfull works of darknesse which also confirmeth the former to wit that by reproving them they should be made manifest The argument is taken from Gods own example who in His Word doth reprove the world of sin and thereby conveyeth the light of Jesus Christ unto them as the Apostle proveth by shewing what is Gods great work and design through His whole Word whereof this verse is a short sum though it seemeth more particularly to relate unto Isa. 60. ver 1. 2. from which this place is thought to be cited with some variation in the words but none in the purpose Which design is threefold The first branch whereof is here implyed even to convince all unrenewed men especially how wofull and dangerous their present case is and that it is a spirituall sleep and death 1. A sleep because the carnall man hath all his spirituall senses bound up Isa. 43. 8. having no spirituall fellowship with those who live a new life Ephes. 4. 18. doth dream and fancy that he seeth heareth and converseth with them Rev. 3. 17. which he will after find to be but a meer fancy when his conscience doth rouze him up Rom. 7. 9. neither hath he power over himself but is exposed as a prey to Satan or any who mindeth his spirituall hurt 2 Tim. 2. 26. for such is the case of those naturally who are in a naturall sleep And secondly a death because the naturall man hath not only his senses bound up as in a sleep but there is no spirituall power or faculty remaining in him to do any thing which is truly good Rom. 8. 7. as a dead man hath no principle of life or vitall action The second branch of this great design is here expressed which is to point out unto all such what is their duty in that case even to awake and rise from the dead that is in a word to turn to God to break off their sins by repentance and to set about all the duties of holinesse flowing from the principle of a new life Which duty is here and elsewhere enjoyned by God unto dead sinners not that it is in their power Jer. 13. 23. but because it is their duty so to do yea and such a duty as must be gone about otherwise they cannot be saved Luk. 13. 3. and because by such exhortations and commands as by an outward mean the Spirit of God doth effectually work that in them which He requireth from them Rom. 10. 17. The third branch of this great design is to encourage them unto this duty from the promise of a greater measure of the light of knowledge holinesse and comfort here all which are comprehended under the name of light See upon ver 8. and of glory hereafter called also light Col. 1. 12. to be given unto them by Christ upon their so doing Doct. 1. The pains which God doth take upon godlesse sinners yet in nature to awake them from the sleep of sin and to draw them unto Christ is a strong argument binding us to commiserate the case of such and from pity towards them to endeavour in our stations to bring them out of that wofull state wherein they are Our obligation to help them is greater than His besides that we are bound to work with God and to further His design for he inforceth upon them the duty of reproving those godlesse Atheists in order to their conviction and amendment from Gods example who doth the like Wherefore he saith Awake thou that sleepest 2. That God hath appointed reproof of sin to be the ordinary mean of awakning dead sinners and of bringing them to Christ and that He maketh use of this mean Himself all alongs His Word in order to this end should encourage us as we have accesse in our stations to make use of that mean towards those with whom we converse as knowing God may and when He pleaseth will blesse the mean appointed by Himself whatever unliklyhood there be otherwise of successe for he exciteth them to practise this duty from this that God maketh use of reproof as the ordinary mean of bringing souls to Christ Wherefore he saith Awake thou that sleepest 3. Scripture doth not consist so much in the formall words as in the sense and meaning of those words and therefore though we cannot keep in memory the very formall words of Scripture yet if we remember the sum of the purpose contained in those words we may make use of it as of the Word of God whether for confirmation of truth refutation of errour exhortation to duty or reproof of sin and vice 2 Tim. 3. 16. for the Apostle being to presse this duty of reproving upon them from Scripture doth not cite the very formall words of Scripture but giveth the generall drift of all Scripture in few words or the sense and meaning of one particular Scripture to wit of Isa. 60. 1 2. from which this verse seemeth to be cited Wherefore he saith Awake
known unto His People the whole counsel of God Act. 20. 27. there being no truth revealed in Scripture the knowledge whereof is not usefull either for the being or well-being for the necessary food or ornament of a Christian 2 Tim. 3. 16 17. yet they are most to inculcate and presse upon peoples consciences the knowledge and practice of most necessary and weighty truths chiefly those which are fundamental and of daily use and practice for the Apostle in pressing the use of the spiritual armour doth wisely recommend one piece of special and daily use above all the rest while he saith Above all taking the shield of faith 2. The grace of faith is another necessary piece of a Christians armour without the which we are destitute of Christs imputed righteousnesse Philip. 3. 9. and so exposed to the dint of sin-pursuing justice Joh. 3. -36. and to all the bitter accusations and challenges of the devil our adversary Rom. 8. 33. We are destitute also of Christs covenanted strength which is communicated and engaged for our through-bearing in all our spiritual conflicts only when it is laid hold upon by an act of faith Joh. 15. 4 5. and consequently without the exercise of that grace we are exposed as a prey to every tentation and especially to Satans fiery darts here spoken of in the text seing in that case we have no strength to resist them but our own which indeed is none Joh. 15. 5. for the Apostle commandeth the Christian souldier to arm himself with this grace Above all taking the shield of faith 3. This grace of faith is the most excellent and necessary piece of all the Christians armour in so far as faith though weak and imperfect in it self Luke 17. 5. yet laying hold on the promise it engageth the almighty power of God and Christ to be for us Matth. 15. 28. it giveth life being and vigour to the other pieces of this armour even to all the sanctifying graces of Gods Spirit Acts 15. 9. 1 Tim. 1. 5. it maketh up all imperfections by covering them with Christs most perfect righteousnesse Philip. 3. 9. and so defendeth them against the furious or subtil assaults of Satan whereby he endeavoureth to make us question their reality and throw them away as counterfeit hypocritical and uselesse Lam. 3. 18. it bringeth a fresh supply of strength to the rest from Jesus Christ when they are weakened wounded and almost rendred unprofitable Isa. 40. 31. yea it alone doth sometimes keep the Believer from total fainting and quitting all when the rest are shattered brangled disappear and for the time are uselesse Job 13. 15. for the Apostle recommendeth this piece above all the rest while he saith Above all take the shield of faith 4. As Satans great design is to wrest and wring this piece of our armour from us and that because of its excellency and usefulnesse yea and often doth prevail to mar our use-making of it So it would be our chiefest care to keep this grace of faith in daily exercise and without delay to return to the exercise of it when we have fallen from it for the word rendred taking signifieth to take again that which we have lost or let go Above all taking the shield of faith 5. It is the Christian's duty to study the excellency and usefulness of any grace and especially of faith that thereby he may be incited to seek after it and to make use of it we must first put a price upon grace before we be at any pains for it for that he may incite them to make use of faith he informeth them of its excellency and usefulnesse while he saith wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts 6. Though the devils and fallen angels be many See ver 12. yet so united are they in wickednesse and in carrying-on their wofull work under one chief head and prince Matth. 12. 24 26. as if they were but only one for therefore doth he speak of the devil as of one the fiery darts of the wicked 7. As Satan that wicked one his great work and businesse is to draw and drive others to sin and wickednesse So he hath several sorts of tentations which he maketh use of for that end according to the diversity of sins to which he tempteth and the different tempers and dispositions of those whom he tempteth he hath not only subtil wiles and strategems spoken of ver 11. but also fiery darts whether of violent boyling lusts or raging despair which he throweth afar off and indiscernably with great force and violence wherein they resemble darts All the fiery darts of the wicked 8. Among all the tentations which Satan maketh use of to carryon his wofull work his fiery darts are most hard to be resisted and where given way to most dangerous in so far as they give a double hurt and dammage even as materiall fiery darts do both wound and burn so those tentations being entertained do not only defile the soul with guilt but also disturb and disquiet it with their force and violence Hos. 7. 4. or vex perplex and put it to pain with that anxiety and horrour which they breed in it Gen. 4. 13. for he commendeth faith above all the rest from its quenching those tentations which implyeth that they are both hardly resistible and most dangerous wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked 9. The grace of faith though never so well exercised cannot hinder Satan to throw those fiery piercing tentations nor yet doth it alwayes repel them but sometimes they pierce even the Believers soul where finding suitable fewel they raise a burning flame and make great vastation and havock for while he saith faith doth quench them it is implyed they will be sometimes boyling and burning within ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts 10. The grace of faith not only supplyeth the place of armour to ward off blows but is also medicinall to cure those dangerous wounds which the soul receiveth in this spiritual conflict through the prevalency of tentations and the negligent use-making of our other graces it is both defending and healing armour for thereby we are able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked 11. There is no spirituall disease or wound so desperate no sin so prevalent in the soul but the grace of faith rightly made use of in laying hold on the merit and vertue of Christs death is sufficient to cure it and destroy it yea and to cure not only one disease but many for he attributeth a vertue to it to quench fiery darts and all the fiery darts of the wicked Verse 17. And take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit which is the word of God IN this verse are contained the fifth and sixth pieces of the spiritual armour which he will have them to take and make use of The fifth is salvation or the hope of salvation the
beloved Christians let me exhort you all and especially you to whom the Lord hath carved out such a lot in things worldly that ye have abundance of time and leasure from your other imployments Give more of your time to the searching of Scripture and labour to understand the mind of God concerning your Salvation revealed therein Hereby shall you be preserved from being led aside by Satans emissaries who do erre not knowing the Scriptures Matth. 22. 29. Hereby ye shall be made wise unto Salvation and rendered victorious over your strongest lusts and throughly fitted for the most difficult duties while the Lord by His Spirit shall make the Scriptures profitable unto you for doctrine for reproof for correction for instruction in righteousnesse and thereby make you perfect throughly furnished unto all good works 2 Tim 3. 16 17. Only in order to the gaining of those rich advantages by reading Scripture ye would read not superficially but conscientiously attentivly and devoutly and do not slight to take what helps ye can get from the Labours of others for attaining to the increase of solid knowledge and sanctifying grace What humane frailties you discerne in this piece of mine which doubtlesse are not a few pitie them and so much the more pray for me that I may discern and amend them and if any will be so faithfull and free as to advertise me either immediately or by causing others to acquaint me with them I shall God willing be humbly thankfull and endeavour to make the best use I can of their freedom knowing that such reproofs will not break my head but be as a precious ointment The great and gracious God blesse all your endeavours for advancing your selves and your relations in knowledge and grace So prayeth Kilwinning Nov. 12. 1658. Your servant in the Lord JAMES FERGUSSON ERRATA Page Line Read 6 11 subscribe 10 24 5. 13 28 had deserted 1● 28 their 20 7 believing ●1 6 their 24 15 dele to 36 9 wickednesse 37 15 32. 39 16 22. 40 23 went not up 52 5 our 53 23 acquired 54 28 2. 61 24 composing ibid 35 9. 19. 84 13 dele who 102 10 affections 131 10 inflicted 136 24 worth 163 20 doth succeed 166 3 ver 7. 171 7 17. 180 12 us sons 239 23 11. 283 11 may have 298 23 15. 315 7 sin and A brief Exposition of the Epistle of Paul to the Galatians The ARGUMENT PAul having planted several Churches in Galatia Act. 16. 6. and 18. 23. a region of Asia the lesse and being now as it seemeth a prisoner at Rome chap. 6. 17. some false Apostles had seduced these Churches from the sincere doctrine of the Gospel preached by Paul chap. 1. 6. perswading them that the observation of the Levitical Ceremonies now abolished was necessary chap. 6. 13. and that justification and salvation were partly from faith in Christ and partly also from their own works chap. 3. 2. and 4. 21. and that Paul was no lawful Apostle no wayes to be compared with the other Apostles who had seen Christ in the flesh as may be gathered from chap. 2. 6 9. and therefore his doctrine was but false Upon which occasion the Apostle writeth unto them this Epistle wherein his scope is to convince those Galatians of their Errors to reduce them to the right way to confirm them in the Truth and to presse upon them the duties of an holy life chap. 3 and 4 c. which he laboureth to effectuate after prefacing to ver 6. chap. 1. First by asserting the truth of the Gospel preached by him and the Authority of his own Apostleship to ver 15. of chap. 2. Secondly by vindicating the true doctrine of justification by faith and of the temporary use and abrogation of the Levitical Law and of the whole legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace to the end of chap. 4. Thirdly by instructing them in the right use of Christian Liberty having exhorted them to stand to it and pointing out and pressing upon them the exercise of several Christian Vertues to ver 11. of chap. 6. From whence he concludeth the Epistle to the end of chap. 6. CHAP. I. IN the first part of this Chapter is the preface to the whole Epistle containing the party who did write it ver 1 2 the party to whom it was written ver 2. the salutation ver 3. a description of Jesus Christ from the work of Redemption ver 4. and a thanksgiving to God for this work ver 5. In the second part he reproveth the Galatians for their defection from the Gospel ver 6. to Errors which did overturn it ver 7. In the third part that he may justifie this reproof he asserteth the divine authority of the Gospel preached by him First by cursing those who should hold out another Gospel differing from it ver 8 9. Secondly from the scope of his doctrine and his aim in preaching it ver 10. Thirdly because both the first saving knowledge which he had of the Gospel and his office to preach it were immediatly from God and not from men whether Apostles or any other ver 11 12. whereof he giveth several evidences As first that ever untill the instant of his conversion he was a learned but persecuting Pharisee ver 13 14. Secondly that being miraculously converted and called he went presently with no small pains and hazard to discharge his Apostolick Office without instruction or authority received from any Apostle ver 15 16 17. Thirdly that after three years he went to Peter but not to be informed by him or to receive ordination from him or from any other Apostle ver 18 19. The truth of all which history he confirmeth by an oath ver 20. Fourthly that he preached as an Apostle in Syria and Cilicia with the approbation of the Christian Jews whom formerly he had persecuted ver 21 22 23 24. Vers. 1. PAUL an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised Him from the dead 2. And all the Brethren which are with me unto the Churches of Galatia IN these two Verses is the Inscription of the Epistle holding forth 1. Who did write it to wit Paul described from his Office and his Call to that Office which were both wholly divine as being immediately from God ver 1. And the Brethren with him such were eminent Professors but especially publick Preachers who then were with Paul and did give their testimony to those Truths contained in this Epistle though they were not the immediate Pen-men of the holy Ghost in it as Paul was 2. To whom the Epistle was written ver 2. From ver 1. Learn 1. Free-grace doth often light upon the most unworthy not only by giving grace and salvation to themselves but also making them sometimes instrumental for the Kingdom of Christ and for bringing about the salvation of others for Paul once a wicked persecutor 1 Tim. 1. 13 is now made an eminent Apostle Paul an
Apostle 2. Faithful and called Ministers of Jesus Christ are to be so far from cowardly ceding or heartlesse fainting under the bold bitter and unjust aspersions of those who would labour to question their Calling and thereby weaken their Authority and render the truth of their Doctrine doubtsom Mat. 21. 23. that they ought so much the more for the credit of their Office Rom. 11. 13. and for the Truth 's sake which they preach 1 Cor. 7. 25. avow their Calling against all who do question it Thus Paul writing to these Galatians amongst whom by means of the false Apostles his Authority was questioned more than in any other Church chap. 2. 6 9 c. expresseth himself more largely in avowing his Call to the Apostolick Office than in any other Epistle not only affirming that he was called by Jesus Christ and God the Father but also denying that he was an Apostle of men or by man 3. The Apostolick Office had this common to it with all other Church-offices whether ordinary or extraordinary Eph. 4. 11. that it was not the invention of man or founded upon authority meerly humane but was instituted by Jesus Christ to whom only it appertaineth to appoint Office-bearers in His House 1 Cor. 12. 28. for which respect Paul affirmeth he was an Apostle not of man as the Ambassadors and Officers of Princes and States are Ministers are Ambassadors for Christ representing Him and having their Authority from Him 2 Cor. 5. 20. 4. The Office of an Apostle had this peculiar unto it self that the designation of the person to undergo that Office was not mediately by the election and suffrages of men as it is in the calling of ordinary Office-bearers Act. 14. 23. but immediately from God so that the Function of the Apostles ceased with them and did not passe by succession to a Pope or any other for in this respect Paul affirmeth he was an Apostle not by man to wit meer man but by Jesus Christ and God the Father He was called immediately by God Act. 9. 15. Doct. 5. That Jesus Christ is not meer man but God also appeareth from this that the Apostle here opposeth Christ to man and so He behoved to be more than man and this was not an Angel Heb. 2. 16. and therefore He was also God Neither by man saith he to wit meer man but by Jesus Christ. 6. When Scripture ascribeth an action to the Father the first Person of the blessed Trinity as done by Him it is not to be so understood as if the Son and holy Ghost were excluded from having hand in that action but that they are rather included in the Father as persons of the same Godhead for the calling of the Ministers of the Gospel which is ascribed to God the Father is ascribed to the holy Ghost Act. 20. 28. and Paul who is here said to be called by God the Father is by the holy Ghost separated and sent forth unto a particular imployment in his Calling Act. 13. 2 4. and the raising of Christ from the dead in like manner ascribed to God the Father here is ascribed to Christ also Joh. 10. 18. and to the holy Ghost Rom. 8. 11. And God the Father who raised Him from the dead All the external actions of the Godhead towards the creatures are common to the whole Trinity Joh. 5. 19. So that the ascribing of some actions to the Father is not as if any of the rest were not concurring But because of the order of working which is among the Three Persons the Father being the first fountain of working as doing all things from Himself 1 Cor. 8. 6. by the Son 1 Cor. 8. 6. and holy Ghost 1 Cor. 12. 6 8. because of this order those actions which are common to the whole Trinity are frequently ascribed unto the Father 7. As Jesus Christ who hath life in Himself Job 5. 26. and is the fountain of life unto others Joh. 6. 33. was once among the dead so He was raised again by the power of the Father from death unto life and is alive for evermore Amen Rev. 1. 18. it being impossible that He should be holden by death Act. 2. 24. and Divine Justice having received full satisfaction from Him for all which He undertook to do or suffer as our Cautioner Joh. 16. 10. Who raised Him from the dead saith he 8. So blinded are men usually with preposterous zeal towards their erroneous opinions that frequently they do alleage those things for to uphold them which of all other things are most contrary unto them Thus the false Apostles that they might shake the Truth preached by Paul and establish their own contrary Error did alleage that he was no lawful Apostle as for other reasons so it would seem mainly for this Because he had not seen Christ in the flesh 1 Cor. 9. 1. nor yet was called before His death and that therefore his Doctrine was not to be much regarded Which reason Paul doth here refute by shewing he was called by Christ after He was raised from the dead and had taken possession of His glorious Kingdom leaving unto them to gather that therefore his Call●ng had at least no lesse dignity and glory in it than if he had been called by Christ when He was here upon the Earth in the dayes of His flesh And God the Father who raised Him from the dead From vers 2. Learn 1. The moc they are whom God maketh use of to hold out the beauty of Truth and Holinesse unto us that we may imbrace and follow it or the deformity and danger of Error and Vice that we may fly from hate and abhor it We are the more to take heed how we reject or imbrace dispise or obey what is so pressed upon us as knowing there will be the moe to bear witnesse of our guilt and seek to the equity of God's judgment against us if we obey not Luke 9. 5. for Paul doth joyn the consent of all the Brethren who were with him unto what he writeth that so his Doctrine and Reproofs might have the more weight And all the Brethren which are with me 2. Though the sins of a Church whether in Doctrine or Manners are not to be reputed as no sins by us because they are connived at or pleaded for by a Church Jer. 5. 31. and though the sins of Churches are to be pleaded against by private Christians in their places and stations Hos. 2. 2. So far are they to be from following of a multitude to do evil Exod. 23. 2. Yet we are not so to stumble at the many sinful failings yea grosse enormities which may be in Churches relating either to Faith or Manners as presently to unchurch them by denying them to be a Church or to separate from them by refusing to keep communion with them in lawful and commanded Ordinances being purely administrated according to the prescript of God's Word chiefly if their Error be not contrary to fundamental
Truths or at least if they erre of humane frailty and not obstinately or avowedly for the Churches of Galatia had made a grievous revolt even from a fundamental Truth ver 6. and chap. 3. 1. and yet because they were rather through frailty seduced by others than active seducers of others therefore he useth much meeknesse and moderation towards them allowing them the name of Churches and exercising his Apostolick care towards them as a part of his charge and thereby keeping communion with them as with Churches which were sickly and under cure Unto the Churches of Galatia which Truth makes nothing against our separation from the Church of Rome as being after much pains taken in order to their reclaiming and not untill we were driven to it by persecution besides that the Romish Church had erred in the foundation obstinately and avowedly Vers. 3. Grace be to you and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ. HEre is the Salutation wherein he wisheth unto them God's gracious favour and good-will whereby He is well-pleased with the Elect in and for Christ Rom. 3. 24. and Peace that is first Peace of conscience and with God Rom. 5. 1. Secondly peace with the creatures as with the Angels Col. 1. 20. with the Godly Isa. 11. 9. with our selves all within us being conform to the rule of the renewed mind Rom. 8. ●1 and in some respect with our enemies Prov. 16. 7. and with the beasts of the field Hos. 2. 18. Thirdly Prosperity and good successe Psal. 122. 7. All which he seeketh from God the Father as the fountain of Grace and from Jesus Christ as the conduit or pipe to convey Grace from the Father unto us Job 1. 16. Doct. 1. God's gracious favour and good-will is to be sought by us in the first place whether for our selves Psal. 4. 6. or others that being a most discriminating mercy betwixt the Godly and the wicked Ephes. 1. 6. and a mercy which of any other bringeth maniest mercies alongst with it Psal. 84. 11. Yea all things are mercy to a man who hath obtained that mercy Rom. 8. 28. for the Apostle wisheth for Grace unto them first Grace and peace 2. Peace also is to be sought even Peace with God Peace with the creatures together with prosperity and good success but withall Peace is to be sought after Grace and not to be expected before it Peace without Grace is no Peace there can be no peace with God no sanctified peace with the creatures nor sanctified prosperity or successe to our undertakings except through Jesus Christ we lay hold on God's favour and grace Yea there is no peace to the wicked saith my God Isa. 57. 21. Thus the Apostle wisheth unto them also Peace but so as it flow from Grace Grace and Peace 3. Grace and Peace are such as we cannot acquire unto our selves by our own industry or pains they come from God are to be sought from Him and His blessing is more to be depended upon for attaining of any thing which cometh under the compasse of Grace and Peace than our own wisdom industry or diligence So Paul seeketh Grace and Peace from God the Father 4. Whatever favour we seek from God we are to seek it also from Jesus Christ as Mediator for He hath purchased it Eph. 1. 7. He is appointed Lord of His own purchase to bestow all Act. 5. 31. and there is no coming to or trysting with the Father but in Him Joh. 14. 6. Thus Paul seeketh Grace and peace from our Lord Jesus Christ. 5. They to whom Grace and Peace belong are such as acknowledge Christ for their Lord to command and rule them and do yeeld subjection to Him in their heart and life for while the Apostle wisheth Grace and Peace to them he doth lead them to thoughts of Christ's Soveraignity he himself taking Him up as Lord and holding Him forth so unto others From our Lord Jesus Christ. Vers. 4. Who gave Himself for our sins that He might deliver us from this present evil world according to the will of God and our Father THe Apostle having but mentioned Christ ver 3 that he may in the very entry draw the minds of these Galatians from off their errors and superstitions to imbrace Him as one in whom is fulnesse of sufficiency for the redemption and justification of lost sinners doth describe Him from one eminent action of His whereby as the great High-priest over the House of God Heb. 10. 21. He did offer up Himself Soul Isa. 55. 10. and Body Heb. 2. 14. by death upon the Crosse Joh. 19. 17 18. that He might expiate and take away Joh. 1. 29. the sins of the Elect Joh. 17. 9. and that hereby He might deliver them from this present evil world or from the sin misery and cruelty of wicked men in the world who get the name of world 1 Joh. 5. 19. and all this He did in obedience to His Father's will who had fore-ordained this to be the only way of bringing lost sinners to Heaven Heb. 10. 8 9. Doct. 1. The lively impression of Christ's worth and excellency doth ordinarily so fill the hearts of those who know Him and have tasted how gracious He is as there will be a readinesse upon any occasion of mentioning Him to breakforth in His commendation for such is the constraining power of love on Paul's heart that usually he doth not so much as make mention of Him but presently he must extoll and at large commend Him so doth he in this verse Who gave himself c. which his attainment should be our aim and his practice our copie 1 Cor. 11. 1. 2. The well-grounded knowledge of what Christ is to us and hath done for us together with the frequent remembrance of it is a soveraign Antidote against all those Errors and Superstitions which tend to draw us from Christ either in part or in whole and that both to prevent them and to purge us from them He is that Sun of righteousnesse Mal. 4. 2. the arising whereof doth easily dispel and scatter all those fogs and mists Act. 19. 18 19 20. for Paul in order to this end doth in the very entry hold forth what Christ had done for them Who gave himself c. saith he 3. So deep and deadly was the guilt of sin Gal. 13. 10. So exact was the justice of God and so unalterable was His faithfulnesse in executing the judgment which was denounced for sin Gen. 2. 17. that there was no delivery to the Elect from it without the payment of a ransom and satisfaction for the wrong done by sin to the provoked justice of God for Christ gave himself for our sins that is a propitiation for them 1 Joh. 2. 2. and to cleanse us from them 1 Joh. 1. 7. 4. Nothing lesse could be a satisfying ransom to the Father's justice than the offering-up of Jesus Christ the holy harmlesse and spotlesse Lamb of God both in Soul