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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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which follow after and flow from the working of God's Spirit in us even those Works are imperfect Isa. 64. 6. and so cannot make us compleatly righteous and we do owe them to God in the mean time Luke 17. 10. and so they cannot satisfie divine Justice for the failings of the bypast time They are the work of God's Spirit in us Philip. 2. 13. and so we can merit nothing at God's hand by them for He excludeth the Works of the Law in general now the good Works of the Regenerate are such as are commanded by the Law and done in obedience to the Law besides that those false Apostles did admit a mixture of Faith and Works in Justification so that if the Apostle had not excluded even Works which flow from Faith they might have quickly agreed upon the point Man is not justified by the Works of the Law Fourthly That through vertue whereof we are thus justified and absolved by God is the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ performed by Himself while He was here on Earth both in doing what we should have done Mat. 3. 15. and suffering what we ought to have suffered Gal. 3. 13. which righteousnesse is not inherent in us but imputed to us Rom. 5. 17 18 19. as the sum of Money paid by the Cautioner standeth good in Law for the principal Debtor So we are said to be justified by the Faith of Christ or Faith in Jesus Christ as laying hold upon His righteousnesse which is imputed to us as said is and by which only we are made righteous Fifthly Though Faith be not alone in the person justified but is ever accompanied with all other saving graces for it worketh by Love chap. 5. 7. Yet Faith is that only grace which hath influence in our Justification for all other Works even those that flow from Grace are excluded and only Faith admitted to have hand in this businesse A man is not justified by the Works of the Law but by the Faith of Jesus Christ and that we might be justified by the Faith of Christ and not by the Works of the Law Sixthly Faith hath influence upon our justification not as it is a Work or because of any worth which is in it self more than in other graces or as if the act of believing whether it alone or joyntly with other graces were imputed unto us for righteousnesse but only as it layeth hold on Jesus Christ and giveth us a right to His Righteousnesse through the merit whereof alone we are justified for it is by the Faith of Jesus Christ or Faith receiving Joh. 1. 12. and resting on Jesus Christ Isa. 26. 3 4. that we are justified besides that all Works of the Law or commanded by the Law are here excluded and by consequence Faith it self as it is a work is excluded also Seventhly This way of Justification by Free-grace accepting of us for the Righteousnesse of Jesus Christ and not because of our own worth is common to all who ever were are or shall be justified whether good or bad the most eminent and best of men must quit the conceipt of their own righteousnesse and rely upon Him who justifieth the ungodly by Faith for even those who were Jews by nature Paul and the other Apostles betook themselves to this way Even we saith he have believed in Jesus Christ and the Scripture cited by Paul speaketh universally of all For by the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Eightly Before man be justified through vertue of this imputed Righteousnesse he must first be convinced of his own utter inability to satisfie divine Justice and so to be justified by any thing which himself can do So natural is it to seek for a righteousnesse of our own and in our selves that we will never seek in earnest to the Righteousnesse of Christ until we be made to despair of our selves Rom. 10. 3. for the Apostle sheweth that this conviction went before their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified by the Works of the Law Next he must be convinced also of a worth in Christ's Merit to satisfie divine Justice and that this Merit of Christ's is offered to all who shall lay hold on it by Faith so as that it shall stand good in Law for them in order to their Absolution as if they had given an equivalent satisfaction to God's Justice themselves for none will venture his immortal soul upon that the worth whereof he doth not know Hence the Apostle sheweth that the knowledge of this also did preceed their Justification Knowing that a man is not justified but by the Faith of Jesus Christ. And lastly being thus convinced he must by Faith receive and rest upon Jesus Christ and that most perfect Righteousnesse of His by making his soul adhere and cleave to the Word of Promise wherein Christ is offered Act. 2. 39 41. whereupon followeth the real Justification and Absolution of the man who so doth for Paul marketh this as a third thing going before their Justification Even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified Doct. 4. The former practices of ancient Believers eminent for parts priviledges and graces who have quit their own righteousnesse and ventured their soul wholly upon this imputed Righteousnesse of Christ laying hold upon it by Faith ought to be looked on as a strong argument inforcing us to do the like for the Apostle's scope is to prevail with those Galatians by this argument We who are Jews by nature saith he have believed in Jesus Christ that we might bejustified 5. Though the approved practices of eminent godly persons may have their own weight in order to our encouragement to deny our selves and lay hold on Christ Yet it is the Word of the Lord which can only quiet a man's conscience in this matter and make his mind fully aquiesce to it for the Apostle unto their example subjoyneth a Scripture-confirmation of the Truth in hand By the Works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Vers. 17. But if while we seek to be justified by Christ we our selves also are found sinners is therefore Christ the minister of sin God forbid HE preoccupieth an Objection which might have been framed against the present Doctrine thus If the Doctrine of Justification by Christ doth suppose that even the Jews themselves who are sanctified from the womb are equally sinners with the Gentiles and that being unable to attain to Justification by the Works of the Law they must only rely on Christ by Faith as Paul had but presently affirmed ver 16. Then it would seem to follow that Christ were the minister of sin or that the Doctrine of the Gospel did make men sinners both by taking away that Righteousnesse of the Law which the Jews thought they had and were warranted as they conceived by the Scriptures of the Old Testament so to think as also by furnishing both Jew and Gentile with an occasion to cast-by all care of Holinesse and
And therefore is He called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4. 13 yet upon the actual exercising of the grace of Faith the Spirit of God doth more fully manifest Himself to be dwelling in Believers by His carrying-on the work of sanctification in them for their greater comfort and further strengthning of their faith for saith he After ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit 3. Whoever have rightly closed with the Gospel and Christ in the Gospel by believing will have the grace of sanctification and holinesse of life following upon their so doing as also sometimes some measure of joy peace and sensible comfort for as I cleared by the seal is meaned those graces And after ye believed ye were sealed saith he 4. Even real Believers have need of confirmation and sealing as being oftimes exercised and tossed with several doubts and scruples both concerning the truth of the Gospel and promise in general Mark 9. 24. and the reality of their own closing with and interest in the Promise Psal. 88. 14. for therefore is it that after those Ephesians had believed they were sealed hereby to evidence the truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their believing the Gospel After ye believed ye were sealed 5. The Lord hath provided and accordingly doth bestow sufficient means upon Believers whereby all their fore-mentioned doubts may be solved and they abundantly satisfied for besides the writing of the Promise upon their hearts and the outward seals of the Covenant of Grace or Sacraments which are visibly dispensed by Christ's Ministers there is an inward seal to wit the saving Graces of God's Spirit together with growth and increase in those imprinted by the Spirit of God upon the hearts of Believers in order to their confirmation although they sometimes cannot perfectly discern nor exactly take up the draughts and lineaments of it After ye believed ye were sealed 6. The saving graces of God's Spirit wrought in a Believer and exercised by him in all sorts of holy duties and especially growth in grace is a most convincing evidence not only that the Word of the Gospel by which holinesse is wrought is the undoubted Truth of God for this is the witnesse by water spoken of 1 Joh. 5. 8. there being no other thing but the Truth of God able to produce such strange and supernatural effects as those but also it serveth to evidence the reality of the man's interest in the promise and of his right to the heavenly inheritance in whom those saving graces and the fruits of holinesse are seing holinesse of life is the inseparable effect of saving faith and interest in the promise Act. 15. 9. for by the Seal is meaned mainly the graces of sanctification and as was shewn they get that name because as Seals do confirm publick Writs and make them appear to be authentick so the saving and sanctifying graces of the Spirit do confirm to those in whom they are the Truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their faith in Christ In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 7. Our doubts and scruples whether concerning the truth of the Promise in general or our own particular interest in the Promise ought not in reason make us suspend our believing in Christ and the Promise untill we first be sealed and sanctified and so receive sufficient confirmation but on the contrary we are first to set our Seal to God's Truth by believing and venturing our salvation upon it and then we may expect next to have God setting His Seal upon our heart in order to our confirmation for that is the order here set down In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 8. The sanctifying of our natures and adorning of our hearts with saving graces together with any confirmation in the truth of the Promise or of particular interest in the Promise which Believers receive from these is the work of God's Spirit only for it is ascribed to Him here and with relation thereto He is called the holy Spirit not only because He is essentially holy and very holinesse it self but also the author of sanctification and of all saving graces in Believers Gal. 5. 22. and the Spirit of promise not only because He was promised to be abundantly poured-out upon Believers under the New Testament Act. 2. 16. but also His office is to seal and confirm by His gracious operations the Promises of the Gospel to Believers Rom. 8. 16. Ye were sealed saith he with the holy Spirit From that use for which the holy Spirit with his saving graces was bestowed upon them Learn 1. As the Spirit of God is a person subsisting and not a created gift or grace so this holy Spirit doth not only bestow His gifts and graces upon Believers but also cometh Himself unto them and dwelleth in them In so far as though He be not personally united with them as the divine nature is with the humane in Christ yet He is not only with them in his essence and being as He is present every-where Jer. 23. 24. nor yet in respect of His working by a general providence only as He is present even with wicked men for in Him they live move and have their being Act. 17. 28. but He resideth in them as in his own Temple by his special and saving operations whereby He not only bestoweth upon them the habits of all saving graces at their first conversion Ezek. 36. 25 26. but doth also by his immediate strong and special influence daily preserve those graces in life Joh. 10. 28 29. actuate them Philip. 2. 13. and ordinarily maketh them to grow Hos. 14. 5. for whereas the word Spirit in the former verse is in the neuter gender● he repeats it here by a masculine relative which would be better rendred who than which to shew that the Spirit is a person subsisting Which Spirit he saith is given us for an earnest of our inheritance 2. Heaven and glory is the only portion and inheritance of Believers all their enjoyments earthly though never so great being but mean fading in themselves and lyable to spoyling and vastation from others so that this inheritance which is incorruptible fadeth not away and is reserved in the heavens 1 Pet. 1. 4. is only worthy to be looked upon as their inheritance for the Apostle calleth it our inheritance by way of excellency Which is the earnest of our inheritance 3. As the right unto this inheritance is made-over unto Believers upon their resigning themselves to God by faith in way of covenant and paction Isa. 55. 3. So the Lord hath thought it convenient not to give them the possession of it presently upon their right but to delay it for a season that in the mean time they may exercise their hope in longing after it Philip. 1. 23. And God may get glory from the heirs of heaven here upon earth and among earthly men by being the means of salvation unto some Mat. 5. 16. and of conviction and just
of free-men and masters And that this argument may have the more force with them he appealeth to their own conscience and knowledge for the truth of it if it was not so as he had affirmed Doct. 1. Then and then only may a man reckon himself to do good or a good work acceptable to God when the thing he doth is warranted by Gods will revealed in His Word when he doth it in singlenesse of heart from an inward principle of love and good-will within in the heart and in obedience to Gods command or as service unto Him for the obedience required from servants was to be so qualified ver 5 6 7. and he doth here call it a doing good Whatsoever good thing a man doth 2. Even the basest drudgery of servants being so qualified is a doing of good and cometh within the compasse of good works which the Lord will take notice of as such for it is with an eye to the imployment of servants mainly that he here speaketh Whatsoever good thing a man doth the same shall be receive 3. As it is lawfull to eye the promised reward for our encouragement in the way of duty So it is the mind of God that every one should in the due and right order make particular application unto themselves of such promises as are in Scripture held forth unto all in general for he holdeth forth the promise of a reward which is made unto all who do good in general to be made use of by Christian servants for their encouragement in particular Whatsoever good a man doth the same shall be receive of the Lord. 4. Promises have no influence to excite unto duty except the truth of them be known and believed so that ignorance and misbelief of divine truths are a great cause of abounding profanity and neglect of duty in all ranks for he layeth the weight of their encouragement to duty from this promise upon the knowledge and faith which they had of it knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall be receive of the Lord. 5. The Lord in dispensing rewards looketh not to the externall beauty splendour or greatnesse of the work but to the honesty and sincerity of it how mean or inconsiderable soever it be otherwise for the promise of a reward is to the outwardly mean and base works of poor servants if so they be honest and sincere aswell as to the more splendid honourable and expensive works of their rich masters The same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free Vers. 9. And ye masters do the same things unto them forbearing threatning knowing that your master also is in heaven neither is their respect of persons with him HE doth here in the first place set down the duties of masters towards their servants 1. positively while he enjoyneth them to do the same things which is to be understood not of the duties themselves which are much different from the duties of servants See them briefly summed up upon Col. 4. ver 1. doct 1 2. but of those properties and conditions which are common to the duties of both so that the master is bound to discharge his duty towards his servant in singlenesse of heart as service to Christ in obedience to the will and command of God from his heart with love and good-will even as the servant is bound to minde those qualifications in his duty towards his master Next negatively while he forbiddeth threatning or rather commandeth to relax and moderate threatning as the word doth signifie and so the thing forbidden is excesse in threatning and boasts when they are alway menacing oftentimes for light occasions and sometimes for none And by proportion all fierce and inhumane way of dealing with servants by masters whether in words or deeds is here forbidden also In the second place he inforceth this duty by minding them of that which they did know at least ought to have known even that they also aswell as their servants had a master above them to call them to an accompt to wit God who to make the argument more pungent is described 1. from His magnificent and stately Palace where His glory shineth to wit the Heaven not as if He were only there and nowhere else Jer. 23. 24. but to set forth His absolute dominion 2 Chron. 20. 6. His omniscience Psal. 11. 4. His holinesse Isa. 57. 15. and His omnipotency Psal. 115. 3. so that their sin could not be hid from Him His holy Nature did hate it He had both right and power to punish it 2. From His impartiality and justice in judging so that He respecteth not persons nor faces outward shew and appearance as the word signifieth and therefore by persons is not meaned the substance or personal subsistence of men but their outward state and condition even that which is conspicuous in man and doth commonly make him more or lesse esteemed among men as country state of life riches poverty wisdom learning c. and consequently to respect persons is to wrest judgement from a sinfull respect to the outward state condition of parties and such other things which are wholly extrinsick to the cause in hand which vice the Lord is free of as being the righteous Judge of the world who cannot be byassed by fear love pitty or any other inordinate affection as man is and consequently the outward dignity power or wealth of masters would not make Him spare them if they made not conscience of their duty Hence Learn 1. Though masters are freed from subjection and giving obedience unto their servants yet not from doing duty unto them Neither is there any power among men so absolute no not that of Kings and supream Rulers Rom. 13. 3. -4. -6. but it implyeth an obligation through vertue of Gods Ordinance upon those who are invested with it to make conscience of several duties towards their inferiours and subjects for he saith And ye masters do the same things unto them 2. It concerneth masters in their place as much as servants in theirs not only to go about their duty but also to advert to the manner wherein they do it even that it be done in sincerity cordially chearfully taking God for their party more than men for he saith Ye masters do the same things unto them 3. It is not only lawfull but in some cases necessary for masters sometimes to threaten boast cast down their countenance upon negligent lazy disobedient and chiefly upon profane servants providing they do it moderatly and keep off excesse for the Apostle doth not simply forbid all manner of threatning but only prescribeth a moderation thereof Forbearing or moderating threatning 4. The Servants of Christ in the reproof of sin ought mainly to guard against such evils as those to whom they speak through custom perverse inclination or a deluded mind are most ready to fall into and so ought people set mainly against such sins in themselves and thereby defend the wall
are so soon removed from Him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another Gospel IN the second part of the Chapter that the Apostle may reclaim those Galatians from their Errors he falleth upon them with a sad though most gentle reproof wherein by way of admiration at their unconstancy he chargeth them with the sin of suffering themselves to be so easily and so soon seduced by their false Teachers from the Truth which they had once imbraced whereof he mentioneth three dangerous consequences first That hereby they had made defection from God who called them and consequently were ungratefull as walking unworthy of their heavenly calling Eph. 4. 1. Secondly That herein they had the doctrine of Free-grace through Jesus Christ without which they could not be saved Eph. 2. 8. And thirdly They had imbraced another Gospel and way of Salvation held forth by the false Apostles concerning which he declareth his judgment in the following Verse Doct. 1. It is the duty of Christ's Ministers not only to hold out the pure and sincere truth of the Gospel unto the People of their Charge Act. 20. 27. But also to defend it by convincing of gainsayers and by reproving those sadly who are carried away with contrary errors for so doth the Apostle here reprove those Galatians I marvel that ye are so soon removed 2. The Ministers of Jesus Christ are in all their reproofs chiefly against such who are carried away with the spirit of error and are not incorrigible in their error to use much moderation and meeknesse eschewing all sharpnesse of speech at least until pains be taken to inform their judgment and this left the evil which they intend to cure be otherwise made worse for although Paul intend afterwards chap. 3. ver 1. having once confirmed his Doctrine from Scripture to rebuke them most sharply yet he doth not here at the first entry in an upbraiding way shame them but using much moderation and meeknesse with admiration and grief maketh mention of their levity unto them and this because many of them at least were not yet incorrigible chap. 5. 10. I marvel c. saith he 3. They are also in all their reproofs to use much warinesse and circumspection not omitting any circumstance which may justly extenuate the sin reproved or furnish with any ground of hope concerning the amendment of him who is reproved for hereby the bitter potion of a medicinal reproof is much sweetned the guilty patient alluted to the more thorow-receiving of it Paul useth this circumspection while he saith not ye of your selves do remove to another Gospel but ye are removed passively thereby laying the chief part of the blame upon others and while he speaketh of them in the present time not that they were already removed but as being in the act of removing so that their case was not desperate I marvel that ye are removed In the Original it is a word of the present time 4. The most quick-sighted of Christ's Ministers may be much deceived and disappointed in their expectation of good things from some eminent Professors for in charity they are obliged to hope the best of all 1 Cor. 13. 7. in whom the contrary doth not appear Tit. 1. 16. and so may readily fall short of their hope as Paul sheweth he did while he saith I marvel that ye are removed importing that their defection had fallen forth beyond his expectation for at such things men use to marvel Mark 15. 44. Doct. 5. The Servants of Jesus Christ are not under the pretence of warinesse and circumspection in reproving to omit any circumstance which may deservedly aggrege the sin reproved whereby the guilt may be charged home with greater weight upon the sinners conscience 2 Sam. 12. 7. prudence and faithful freedom may well consist Mat. 10. 16. Thus Paul heapeth together several things whereby their apostasie was aggreged as that it was sudden a turning from God and to another Gospel I marvel that ye are so soon removed c. 6. How great need have they who stand to take heed lest they fall 1 Cor. 10. 12. seing such is mans inconstancy especially in the matter of Religion that they who are flourishing Professors of saving Truths now may upon a sudden and with very little ado be carried away to soul-destroying Errors before it be long for such were those Errors unto which the Galatians were removed chap. 5. 2. and that so soon either after their first conversion or after the time when they were first assaulted by the false Apostles which doth not militate against the doctrine of perseverance seing Paul speaketh to the whole visible Church among whom some had never saving grace and for the few truly gracious which were among them there is nothing here to prove that their falling away was either total or final 7. This aggregeth the sin of any person not a little when he doth suddenly without difficulty or resistance and with ease succumbe and yeeld unto the tentation for hereby is their defection aggreged even that they were so soon removed they did not long resist the ●●ntation 8. Though active seducers of others from Truth be more inexcusable than simple creatures that are seduced by them Rom. 16. 18. Yet even those of the latter sort are not altogether free of guilt when the blind do lead the blind both fall together in the ditch for herein were these Galatians guilty that they did suffer themselves to be seduced or so soon removed from Him that called them 9. As the dangerous consequences which follow upon Error ought to be presented unto People that thereby they may be made the more to flie from it So there are some Errors in Doctrine which do no lesse separate the person erring from God and interest in free-grace than profanity of life doth of which Errors this is one the maintaining of Justification by works for Paul sheweth that by this Error they were removed from God who had called them and from the grace of Christ. 10. As the inward effectual calling of sinners from the state of nature unto grace is the work of God which He bringeth about by the preaching of His Word 1 Cor. 1. 21. Yea and the external calling of men from Idols to be Members of the visible Church which is attended with professed subjection upon his part who is called unto God's Laws and Ordinances is his work also though in an inferiour degree and respect So it is no small aggravation of sin or error in any person when it is evidently inconsistent with or reflecting upon that state unto which he is called for Paul describeth God here as elswhere chap. 5. 8. from His calling of them and chooseth to describe Him so while he is speaking of their defection that hereby he may aggrege it as reflecting so much upon their calling From Him that called you 11. The Gospel is a Doctrine which holdeth forth much of Christ's free-grace and good-will to
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
being by Christ's death joyned in one did enjoy the Promise of the Spirit or the spiritual Promise as being now denuded of these earthly and external Ceremonies wherewith it was vailed formerly and set forth in its native and spiritual beauty and lustre both which fruits of Christ's death he sheweth are conveyed unto and enjoyed by both Jews and Gentiles only by Faith So that the Apostle in these two Verses doth not only prove the main Conclusion That Faith laying hold on Christ is that which delivereth from the Law 's curse and which conveyeth Abraham's blessing together with the Covenant-promise unto us and so doth justifie us but also indirectly and as it were at the by hinteth at two other Truths tending also to clear the main controversie between him and his adversaries which therefore he is to assert more directly afterwards to wit first That now after Christ's death the Gentiles being called by the Gospel were to be joyned in one body with the Jews and both of them to make up one seed to Abraham and equally to partake of Abraham's blessing whereof free Justification through Faith spoken of ver 9. was a main part And secondly that the Covenant-promise that God would be a God to Abraham and to his seed Gen. 17. 7. was now after Christ's death to be held forth more clearly and spiritually the types and shadows of earthly Ceremonies and of that legal Dispensation under which it was formerly hid being laid aside From Vers. 13. Learn 1. The threatnings of the Law denouncing a curse against those who yeeld not personal obedience to it did not exclude or forbid a Surety to come in the sinners room and to undergo the curse due unto Him for though it be clear from ver 10. that the Law doth curse all yet this impeded not but Christ might come to redeem us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 2. Every man by nature the Elect not excepted Eph. 2. -3. are under the sentence of the Law 's curse whereby in God's justice they are under the power of darknesse Col. 1. 13. slavery and bondage to sin and Satan Eph. 2. -2. so to remain until they be cast in utter darknesse Jude 13. except delivery and redemption do interveen for while it is said Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law it is supposed that by nature we are under it 3. There is no delivery of enslaved man from this wofull bondage but by giving satisfaction and by paying of a price for the wrong done to Divine Justice either by himself or by some surety in his stead God's fidelity Gen. 2. 17. His righteous nature Psal. 11. 6 7. and the inward desert of sin Rom. 1. 32. do call for it for Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law the word signifieth to deliver by giving a price 4. It is not in the power of fallen man to acquire a ransom for himself by any thing he can either do or suffer whereby Justice may be satisfied and he delivered from this state of slavery and bondage The redemption of the soul is precious and ceaseth for ever to wit among men Psal. 49. 8. for if man could redeem himself Christ had not been put to it to redeem us from the curse of the Law 5. Jesus Christ the second Person of the blessed Trinity hath undertaken this great work of redeeming captive-man from his slavery and bondage and accordingly hath accomplished it The work was indeed undertaken at the appointment of all the Persons Luke 1. 68. to whom also the price was paid Eph. 5. 2. only the execution of this work was by that wise design of sending the second Person in the flesh to become man that so he might not only have right as our near kinsman Ruth 3. 12 13. but also be fitted to redeem as having a price to lay down for our ransom Heb. 10. 5. Christ hath redeemed us 1. Our Redeemer Jesus Christ is true God who being man's Creator and having entred a Covenant of friendship with man at the beginning by vertue whereof He had interest in man not only as His creature but as one in state of friendship with Himself from which blessed state man did fall Eccles. 7. 29. and so brought himself and all his posterity 1 Cor. 15. 21 to this state of bondage wherein he now is for so much is imported while Christ is said to redeem Redemption being properly of those things which once were our own but for the time are lost Christ hath redeemed us saith he 7. This work of man's Redemption undertaken and accomplished by Christ was a Redemption properly so called our freedom and delivery being obtained not by power or strong hand meerly nor yet coming from the sole condescension and pity of the injured party without seeking reparation for former injuries but by the payment of a sufficient price and by giving a just satisfaction to a provoked God as appeareth not only from the word rendred redeem which as said is signifieth to buy with a price but also from this that the price is condescended upon to wit Christ's undergoing the curse of the Law due to us and this He did for us that is not only for our good but also in our room and stead for by His undergoing this curse we are freed from it so that although to buy or redeem be sometimes taken improperly and doth signifie to obtain a thing without any price Isa. 52. 3. yet what is presently said and other circumstances do evince that in this work of Redemption performed by Christ the word must be taken properly for a delivery obtained by a payment of a just price Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us 8. The price paid by Christ in order to our redemption was no lesse than His undergoing that curse of the Law which was due to us whence it followeth that Christ's sufferings by way of satisfaction were not only in His body but also in His soul He did not only wrestle with the fear of death Heb. 5. -7. but was also deprived of that joy and comfort or the sense and feeling of God's favour and help which He formerly enjoyed and had His own sad conflicts and agonies arising in His Soul hereupon Mat. 27. 46. which though in us they would necessarily produce sin yet in Christ they did not Heb. 4. -15. because of His most pure nature Heb. 7. 26. for He was made the curse of the Law for us Now the curse of the Law did reach to the terrors of the soul as well as to the pains of the body 9. Though Jesus Christ as considered in His own Person was altogether holy and innocent Isa. 53. -9. and alwayes even when He was made a curse most beloved of the Father Mat. 3. 17. yet being considered as our Surety Heb. 7. 22. and sustaining our person He was the object of sin-pursuing justice
the Promises made He saith not And to seeds as of many but as of one And to thy seed which is Christ. 17. And this I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after cannot disanul that it should make the Promise of none effect 18. For if the inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise but God gave it to Abraham by Promise THe Apostle having confirmed the truth of his Doctrine by several Arguments doth in the second part of the Chapter answer some Objections and joyntly herewith refuteth the other Error maintained by his adversaries about the necessity of observing the Ceremonial Law shewing that however the Law or the legal way of dispensing the Covenant of Grace prescribed unto Moses upon mount Sinai was for good use so long as by God's appointment it was to stand in force yet Christ being now come in the flesh the date prefixed for its continuance was now expired and so the Christian Church of Jews and Gentiles wholly freed from the observation of it The first Objection as may be gathered by his Answer was to this purpose That granting what the Apostle had said concerning Justification by Faith in the Promise and not by Works did hold true before the Law was given by Moses yet afterwards that way of Justification seemeth to have been altered and Justification by Works established according to the tenour of the Law given by God on mount Sinai seing that latter Acts and constitutions do not only stand in force but also abrogate the former in so far at least as they are inconsistent with the latter The Apostle answereth by a comparison which he sheweth is taken from humane affairs and first setteth down the similitude to this purpose That a Covenant or Paction made among men for preserving mutual peace and friendship being once confirmed by Oath and other usual solemnities cannot without imputation of levity or injustice be disannulled and quite broken neither can any condition destructive to the former be added to it ver 15. And secondly That he may apply this similitude with greater evidence and force he first sheweth the nature of that Covenant made by God with Abraham did consist in Promises wherein the blessing promised is given freely and not for the merit and worth of our obedience and works as the word rendred Promise doth signifie and next he sheweth that all Abraham's seed not only those who lived before the giving of the Law but those also who lived after and not only the Jews but also the Gentiles were comprehended in the Covenant and to partake of the promised Blessing according to the tenour of it which he proveth from the formal words of the Covenant-tender which express all those who were to partake of the covenanted Blessing by the name of Abraham and of his Seed in the singular number to shew that it is under one and the same consideration that they all are his seed and do partake of his promised Blessing otherwise if it had been Gods purpose to convey the heavenly Inheritance unto some upon their Faith in the Promise and unto others for the merit of their Works Then the Promise should have been made unto his Seeds in the plural number as pointing at the different grounds of this their spiritual relation unto Abraham and not unto his Seed in the singular which seed of Abraham is here called Christ to wit Christ mystical which comprehendeth Christ the Head and all Believers whether before the Law or after whether Jew or Gentile as the Members of that Body whereof Christ is the Head all of which are designed by the name of Christ as 1 Cor. 12. -12. Col. 1. 24. and so here to shew that not Moses not the Law not Works but Christ the Promise and faith in Christ and the Promise is the bond and ty of this Union pleaded-for in Abrahams seed ver 16. Thirdly He applyeth the similitude taken from the unchangeablnesse of humane Covenants and inferreth that much lesse can that Covenant which was made with Abraham and his seed be abrogated or any condition destructive be added to it by the Law which was given four hundred and thirty years after which consequence is inforced by four Considerations 1. It was a Covenant made with Abraham not by a man like himself but by God 2. It was not only made but long before ratified and confirmed both by the Oath of God Heb. 6. 14. and other more than ordinary solemnities Gen. 15. 9 10 c. And 3. a Covenant not only made and confirmed but a Covenant confirmed in Christ or as the Original will bear looking toward Christ as Him alone upon whom the fulfilling of that Covenant did depend Gen. 22. 18. So that if this Covenant had been abrogated whether by the Law or any other thing there had been no necessity of sending Christ. And 4. because this Covenant upon Gods part was a free absolute Promise the performance whereof did not depend upon the works of the other party and so their unworthinesse could be no pretence for the abrogation of it this inference from the comparison is ver 17. And fourthly Because some in following forth the present Objection might have urged that though the giving of the Law did not fully abrogate the way of Justification by Faith in the Promise Yet this much behoved to be granted that the Law and Works were to be conjoyned at least with the Promise and Faith in the point of Justification Therefore the Apostle answereth ver 18. that even this much cannot be granted and that because Works and Faith Law and Promise are inconsistent as to the point of conveying a right to the covenanted Inheritance so that if the works of the Law have any influence upon our Justification and right to Heaven the free-gifted Promise made of God to Abraham and Faith in that Promise can have none and thus the confirmed Covenant should yet be abrogated the absurdity whereof he hath already shewen to wit ver 17. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. Though the Servants of Jesus Christ will be necessitated sometimes to use some more than ordinary sharpness of speech in their reproofs toward the People of God committed to their charge yet they are carefully to guard lest their affections be imbittered against them and would alwayes keep love and affection toward them yea and testifie their love to them even when they do most sharply reprove them for the Apostle though he upbraided these Galatians with folly ver 1. Yet here he testifieth that neverthelesse he loved them while he calleth them Brethren Brethren I speak after the manner of men 2. It is not only lawful but also exceedingly conducing for the edification of hearers that Ministers make use of similitudes and examples taken from things natural 1 Cor. 15. 38 c. artificial Iam. 3. 7. or from common custom among men for clearing or
Rom. 10. 14 15. for the Apostle having already spoken of God's bestowing all saving grace upon them doth here condescend upon the mean made use of by him in that work Having made known unto us the mysterie of his will 4. There is nothing which moveth God to reveal his Gospel unto one people and not to another or more obscurely to one and more clearly unto another but only his own good will and pleasure so to do neither doth the Lord any thing contrary to justice hereby seing he is not obliged to send the Gospel unto any Rom. 11. 35. and all have more knowledge of God by nature than they make good use of Rom. 1. 21. for this alone is here given as the reason of his making known the mysterie of his will even according to his good pleasure 5. So carefull is God to maintain the interest of his free-grace in our salvation as being the only supream and fountain-cause thereof that he thinketh it not sufficient once to assert in the general that salvation and all the means and steps tending towards it do flow from his free-grace but that this be again and again inculcated and all the particular steps which lead to salvation being condescended upon that his free-grace favour and good will be held out as the fountain of each step in particular for the Apostle doth so and that by an heavenly and divine artifice sliding down from one step to another from Election to Redemption and from Redemption to effectual calling and from effectual calling unto God's bestowing the outward mean of salvation the Gospel not only ascribing all to God's free-grace but making grace the mid-link of the chain whereby he joyneth the several parts of his discourse together so ver 8. Wherein he abounded and here According to the good pleasure of his will and which he purposed in himself as having no cause without himself to set him on work 6. As the decrees of God are firm fixed and unchangeable So he doth nothing in the matter of man's salvation even to the least circumstance but what he hath decreed to do which as will appear from ver 11. doth hold in all other things which God doth for by God's purpose is meaned his eternal decree with respect had to its stability and unchangeablenesse there being neither want of fore-sight nor of power in God to occasion the alteration of his purpose which are the causes why men are frequently necessitated to alter theirs and this purpose and decree is spoken of here as the rule according to which God of his good pleasure did make known the mysterie of his will unto those Ephesians in order to their salvation Which he had purposed in himself saith he Vers. 10. That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him HEre is the intended effect which God did aim at in His gracious purpose of making fully known the mystery of the Gospel both to Jew and Gentile to wit That at the full time and season which God had dispensed measured out and pitched upon as most fitting for the businesse in hand to wit the time of Christ's incarnation and sufferings Gal. 4. 4. He might gather together in Christ all His own Elect whether already glorified or yet upon earth who before were separated from God and one from another and might make them one with God being united with Christ their head by faith Eph. 3. 17 and one among themselves being united by love Col. 3. 14. Now the Apostle affirmeth this gathering of all the Elect was to be in the fulnesse of times for though many of them were already actually gathered and glorified to wit the things in Heaven before that time yet the exhibition of that by vertue whereof they were gathered was at and not before that time to wit the time of Christ's incarnation obedience and sufferings Heb. 9. 15. Doct. 1. All mankind by nature and being considered in themselves are under a fearfull dissipation and scattering Sin hath rent and separated them from God from man and from the blessed Angels for gathering presupposeth a foregoing scattering and the word rendred gather together in one being taken from a word which signifieth the head of a natural body or a short sum of a sparse discourse and so signifying here to gather together under one head to wit Christ and unto one sum and body amongst themselves it supposeth that they are separated from God from Christ one from another and from the Angels also for they were to be gathered into one body with those That he might gather together in one c. 2. The Lord hath not left all mankind in this wofull separation and scattered condition but as He hath firmly purposed and decreed from all eternity so in time He setteth about to gather together some of scattered mankind and to unite them to Himself one to another and to the blessed Angels for the word rendred to gather implyeth a gathering unto all these as is said And he hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 3. The gathering together of the scattered Elect and making of them one with God and among themselves doth not depend upon the choice of their own free-will which could do no other but refuse to be gathered Mat. 23. 37. and so Christ should not have seen of the travel of His soul and been satisfied contrary to what is promised Isa. 53. 11. But upon the fixed and unchangeable purpose of God which engageth His Omnipotency to make them willing to be gathered Psal. 110. 3. and therefore they shall be infallibly gathered for the Apostle as appears from the context maketh this gathering depend on Gods purpose He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 4. It is only God who by His omnipotent power doth gather together the scattered Elect and maketh them one with Himself and with one another in Himself We do so much love to wander Jer. 14. 10. that we would live and die estranged from God if the Lord by strong-hand did not reclaim us from our wandrings for saith Paul He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 5. The preaching of the Gospel and making known that blessed mysterie is the mean which God maketh use of in this work of gathering the scattered Elect because though our actuall gathering be an act of Gods omnipotent power yet He dealeth with us as with rational creatures by giving us an offer of His friendship commanding us to accept of it as it is offered and in the mean time sending forth his power with the command whereby He maketh us to accept Act. 16. 14. for as is clear from the connexion God's end intended in making known the mysterie of his will is That he might gather together in one 6. As God is the great Master of his
this ground any thing savouring of imperfection as if He did consult or deliberate concerning things to be done as men do from ignorance or doubtfulnesse of what is most convenient and therefore do first consult and advise about the best expedient and then make choice accordingly There is no such doubtfull inquisition or previous deliberation in God in order to his working His will alone is in stead of all counsel and deliberation seing his most holy will hath all equity wisdom and righteousnesse joyned with it so that there is nothing more required to make an action be well wisely and advisedly done than that it be willed of God for the Apostle saith not He worketh all things according to the will of his counsel as if counsel and deliberation went before and the choice of the will followed after but after the counsel of his will shewing that His willing of a thing to be done is in place of all further consultation about it From Vers. 12. Learn 1. As God's giving grace unto gracelesse sinners His drawing them out of nature to the state of grace and bestowing the heavenly inheritance upon them is a work which setteth forth the glory of God's most excellent Attributes of mercy goodnesse justice power and beneficence and giveth occasions unto beholders to set forth his praise in all those though the man himself upon whom this work is wrought were silent the very work should speak for it self So it is the duty of those especially whom God hath so dealt with to take occasion from his gracious work in them to set forth the praises of Him who hath called them out of darknesse to his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. -9. They are not alwayes to dwell upon complaints of themselves but sometimes would mount up in the high thoughts of His commendation and praises for this is the end designed by God in calling them to obtain this inheritance even that we should be to the praise of his glory which words may be taken both passively the praise of His glory was to be manifested in them and actively they themselves were to set forth His praises 2. The more early a man doth close with Christ and imbrace Him by faith as He is offered in the Gospel the lesse he doth protract and delay his so doing the more of praise to God's glorious Attributes is manifested in him and the more of obligation doth ly upon him to set forth God's praises who hath so early broken the yoke of his slavery to sin and Satan for their trusting and first trusting in Christ before others is spoken of as a mean conducing to His praise and engaging them to it That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. 3. That any do believe in Christ at all and that some do believe in Him sooner and others later dependeth not upon any difference in the persons themselves but upon God's purpose counsel and good pleasure for their trusting and first trusting before others is subservient to the end which was proposed by God to wit the praise of His glory Now the necessary means and the end intended do depend upon one and the same purpose so that if God have decreed the end He must also have decreed the means tending to that end That we might be to his praise who first trusted in Christ. 4. The Gospel when it is preached to a People though never so godlesse and obdured will not want its own saving fruits among some of those to whom it is preached God useth not to send His Gospel unto a People of purpose to harden all and to make them inexcusable but because there are some belonging unto the election of grace who are to be converted by it for as the Gospel was to be preached first to the Jews because of the promise made to the fathers Rom. 15. 8. So when it was preached it wanted not fruits among them though they were a People to be cast off enemies unto all good had crucified the Lord Jesus 1 Thess. 2. 15 16. for they were of those Jews who first trusted in Christ. 5. It is no small priviledge for any wether person or people to be trusters in Christ before others it is a matter of their commendation Rom. 16. -5. it glorifieth God in so far as their example and experience may prove an encouraging motive unto others 1 Tim. 1. 16. it carryeth with it several advantages for the sooner a man doth close with Christ he will get that work done the more easily he is the sooner freed from slavery to Satan and his own lusts he is the sooner capacitated to do the more service to God and his great concernments are the sooner out of hazards for Paul maketh it a prerogative and priviledge which the Jews had beyond the Gentiles even that they first trusted or hoped in Christ. Vers. 13. In whom ye also trusted after that ye heard the Word of Truth the Gospel of your salvation in whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise 14. Which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of His glory THe Aposte applyeth the former doctrine in the second place to the believing Gentiles in the person of those Ephesians That hereby he may shew they were as much in the debt of God's free-grace for salvation as the believing Jews In order to which he holdeth forth first the benefit which they had received from Christ even the same which he shew was bestowed upon the believing Jews to wit the heavenly inheritance and all those other spiritual blessings which lead to it for as it is necessary that some word be added to the beginning of this verse for making good sense so it seemeth the word trusted taken from the close of ver 12. cannot be it for the word rendred there first trusted is but one in the Original and cannot be applyed unto the Gentiles as not being the first who trusted in Christ And therefore it is safer and more apposit also unto the Apostle's scope to repeat that word which is v. 11. have obtained an inheritance especially seing he is applying here to the Gentiles what he had applyed there to the Jews the principal part whereof and that upon which all the rest spoken of there doth depend is their obtaining an inheritance Secondly he setteth forth the mean whereby they obtained this excellent benefit even their hearing of the doctrine of the Gospel which he describeth from its excellent nature as being the Word of Truth and from that great good which it revealeth and offereth even salvation Thirdly he mentioneth a work of God's holy Spirit upon their hearts after they had believed which is here called sealing by a metaphor taken from the use of Seals and Signets among men which are chiefly used for putting a difference betwixt true Writs and those which are counterfeit so that this
also the words rendred the spirit which worketh may relate either to his nature as being spiritual or to his way of working while he tempteth to wit by way of inspiration and a kind of breathing the words may be so constructed as to bear either though the first be mainly intended The spirit that now worketh or his spirit now working 10. Though there have been and yet are some fair flourishes of prais-worthy vertues and actions seemingly good in men unrenewed Rom. 2. 14. yet every unrenewed man and chiefly those who are come to age and understanding are very slaves to sin and so addicted to the actual service though not of all and every sin in particular for that were impossible yet of some one idol or other whether of their pleasure profit or credit that they cannot but go on in the service of it without all possibility of being reclaimed by any created strength for so much is implyed while unregenerate men are called children of disobedience that is men addicted and given over to disobedience so that they cannot be perswaded to relinquish it 11. Satan's way of working in and with obstinate godlesse sinners is most efficacious and powerfull he cannot indeed work any change upon the will by creating new principles or habits in it which before were not as God doth Jer. 31. 33. but he can not only tempt to sin by propounding aluring baits and objects to the outward senses or inward fansie which he may do to any man whether good or bad 2 Sam. 11. 2. but also when God judicially giveth over a sinner unto Satan withdrawing even His restraining grace from him Then doth Satan multiply his temptations without any intermission useth the utmost of created endeavours whereby and through God's up-giving the sinner formerly mentioned and because of the seed and root of all sin which is in the sinner by nature there is no sort of wickednesse unto the acting whereof Satan will not get him willingly driven and carried for saith he The spirit which now that is even in the mean time constantly and without intermitting the shortest moment or now worketh in the children of disobedience the word doth signifie to work with pith and efficacy 12. Though even the godly are not free from being tempted by Satan yea nor yet from yeelding sometimes to his temptations 1 Chron. 21. 1 2. yet he doth not work efficaciously in them and so as is described in the former Doctrine for he astricteth this way of Satans working to unregenerate men The spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience Vers. 3. Among whom also we had all our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath even as others THe Apostle doth now apply this Doctrine to the Jews of whom he himself was one and therefore he designeth them by the pronoun We and affirmeth them to have been before conversion equally miserable with the Gentiles In doing whereof and that he may more fully explain this Doctrine of man's misery he sheweth first That even they had their conversation among those children of disobedience as being no lesse obstinately rebellious against God than the disobedient Gentiles following the lusts or the first motions and sudden flashes of their inbred corruption here called flesh which flowing from Adams first sin hath infected his whole posterity Christ alone excepted 2 Cor. 5-21 and seated it self in all the powers and faculties of their souls and bodies even the understanding and will not being excepted Rom. 8. 7. Col. 2. -18. for so is the word flesh usually taken in the New Testament Joh. 3. 6. Gal. 5. 13 16. Now all corruption and sin even that which is in the mind is called flesh because it is conveyed by fleshly generation Joh. 3. 6. the fleshly members of the body are the instruments whereby all is executed Rom. 6. 19. and every sin draweth the man from God to things earthly and fleshly Secondly he subdivideth this inbred corruption of their natures into two heads first the flesh particularly so called whereby as it is distinguished from flesh before mentioned and opposed to the mind spoken of afterwards must be meaned that corruption which is seated in the inferiour part of the soul to wit the sensual appetite and next the mind whereby is meaned the most noble faculties of the soul to wit the will and understanding in so far as they are also corrupted Concerning both which he affirmeth that even the Jews in their unconverted state were fulfilling their wills and desires by which desires of the flesh as they are distinguished from the lusts of the flesh formerly mentioned are meaned their deliberate and fixed resolution to follow those lusts and suggestions of corrupt flesh which accordingly he sheweth they did fulfill and accomplish to the utmost And thirdly he pointeth at the root and fountain-cause of this their miserable slavery and subjection to sin in the lusts and desires therof even their natural sin and misery whereby they were from nature that is from their very cradle birth and conception children of wrath as being by reason of their original sin lyable to the stroke of God's eternal wrath and as much lyable to it as the Gentiles were Doct. 1. There is not any piece of a Minister's task wherein he hath more need of a spirit of wisdom and impartiality than when he is about the reproof of sin and the discovery of peoples vilenesse by reason of their wickednesse lest if herein he respect persons those whom he reflects upon most be irritate as conceiving themselves to be unequally dealt with and lest others to whom he doth apply that convincing doctrine neither so directly nor with such an edge and vehemencie be puft up in their own conceit above others for the Apostle holdeth-forth the rest of what he hath to speak upon this subject of mans misery by nature in the person of the Jews lest either the Gentiles had been irritated or the Jews puffed up Among whom we all also bad our conversation 2. Whatever differences may be among unregenerate men as to things civil externals in Religion or the particular sins unto which they are inslaved yet all of them are alike vile in God's sight children of disobedience in whom Satan ruleth and worketh in so far as they are all walking in the lusts of the flesh following inbred corruption as their guide and obeying it in some one or other of its lusts for though there was neither civil commerce nor religious fellowship betwixt the Jews and Gentiles Joh. 4. 9. though the Jews had many external religious priviledges which the Gentiles did want Rom. 9. 4 5. and though some both of Jews and Gentiles were not enslaved to such vile and fleshly lusts as others were Phil. 3. -6. yet Paul pronounces of himself and all of them that they were children of disobedience because one way
it is called the middle wall of partition or of a hedge and stone-wall for the Original signifieth both with an eye questionlesse to to the wall which was in Solomons Temple between the court of the People and of the Gentiles which hindered all manner of passage sight or communication betwixt them Ezek. 42. 20. So the meaning is that in order to this union He did abolish the legall ceremonies whereby the Jews were distinguished from the Gentiles as two houses by a mid-wall going betwixt them or as an inclosed Garden is separated from an out-field by an hedge or dyke of rough stones ver 14. Secondly He did abolish the enmity by which enmity is meaned the same ceremoniall Law and that chiefly because it was the occasion of a perpetuall standing strife betwixt Jew and Gentile while the Jew reproached the Gentile with uncircumcision and neglect of Gods worship Act. 10. 28. the Gentile again reproached the Jew with circumcision and the rest of these Legall rites which they judged unreasonable irreligious and absurd Esth. 3. 8. although those ceremoniall rites may be also called enmity with relation to God in so far as the practising of them by the Jews was a real testimony and confession of their own guilt and the enmity which was betwixt them and God See Collos. 2. 14. And His withholding them from the Gentiles was an evidence of His displeasure and enmity against them Ps. 147. 20. and here the Apostle expresseth the way how Christ did abolish that enmity or these ceremoniall rites to wit in His own flesh that is by His death which He suffered in His flesh or humane nature 1 Pet. 3. 18 Thirdly he expoundeth what he meant by the mid-wall and the enmity which Christ abolished even the Law of Commandments in ordinances The first of which words is more general to wit the Law as comprehending according to the custom of the Hebrew language all Doctrine revealed to the Church Psal. 19. 7. and this is astricted by the second word which is more speciall to wit Commandments signifying that Doctrine only which commandeth what should be done and forbiddeth what should not be done and both those are astricted by the third which is yet more special to wit Ordinances whereby are meaned those Commandments only which did relate to Gods externall worship and were prescribed by God as so many types and shadows of Christ to come and of those good things which were purchased by Him Heb. 9. 9 10. So that the Law and Commandments were only abolished as to that part of them which was contained in those Ordinances ver 15 From ver 14. Learn 1. Every man by nature in himself and without Christ is at war and enmity with God with His Church and chiefly those in the Church who are truely regenerate he cannot be subject unto the Law of God Rom. 8. 7. And as therefore he hateth the Law-giver and those who yeeld obedience to His Laws So he is under the Law-givers curse Gal. 3. 10. for while the Apostle speaketh of making those Ephesians nigh to God and His Church by Christ he saith Christ was their peace which implyeth that their distance from those consisted in hatred of and enimity against them for he is our peace saith he 2. This enmity chiefly which is between God and fallen man was irreconciliable and impossible to be removed except Jesus Christ that great high Priest and Prince of Peace had shed His bloud and suffered death by the merit whereof as He hath given satisfaction to a provoked God Eph. 5. 2. So by the efficacy and vertue thereof He subdueth that rebellious disposition against God which naturally is in us Rom. 6. 6. and maketh us accept the offer of friendship and reconciliation with God and yeeld our selves servants to righteousnesse unto holinesse Acts 5. 31. and so upon both hands He maketh peace for saith he He is our peace to wit by His bloud spoken of in the preceeding verse 3. The uniting of both Jew and Gentile in one Church is a branch of that peace which Christ hath purchased with His bloud And that not only because their actuall union was according as God in His wise counsel had decreed to follow upon Christs death and not to go before it See upon Gal. 3. vers 14. Doct. 4. but also in order to this union the Law of ceremonies behoved to be abolished See Doct. 5. and this called for Christs death See vers 15. Doct. 4. for the Apostle having asserted that Christ was their peace by His bloud he giveth this as an instance or effect of His so being Who hath made both one 4. From the Apostles designing the ceremoniall Law by a metaphor taken from houses divided by a mid-wall or from an orchard garden or inclosure separated from the out-field by a dyke or wall of rough stones We learn several things relating to the nature use and duration of the ceremoniall Law which are the grounds of the similitude And first as a wall is builded by the owner of the inclosure So the ceremonial Law was of Gods own appointment who only had power to choose what part of the world He thought fit to be an inclosure for Himself Deut. 32. 8. and to appoint these means and ordinances whereby He would have them inclosed and separated from others Exod. 25. 40. Secondly as a rough wall is made up of so many hard unpolished stones not covered over with lime or plaister So the ceremoniall Law consisted of many Ordinances Heb. 9. 10. and those very difficult to be obeyed and an untolerable yoke Act. 15. 10. Thirdly as a wall or hedge incloseth a peece of ground for the owners special use which therefore is more painfully manured and separateth that inclosure from the out-field which lyeth about it So the ceremoniall Law did serve to inclose the people of Israel as the Lords own garden and vineyard for bringing forth fruit unto Himself Isa. 5. 7. and to separate them from all the world besides Deut. 4. 7 8. as being a worship wholly different from and contrary unto the superstitious rites and worship used among the Gentiles Deut. 12. 2. and containing strict injunctions unto the Jews to avoid all conformity with the Gentiles in their garments Num. 15. 38. cutting of their hair Lev. 19 27. and such like Fourthly as a rough wall is but weak and ruinous as not being built with cement or morter to make it strong and therefore but to endure for a season untill the owner think fit to enlarge his inclosure and take-in more of the open field So the ceremoniall Law was not to last for ever but only for a time untill Christ should come in the flesh and take in the Gentiles within the inclosure of His Church who were before an open field not possessed nor manured by Him after which there was no further use of the mid-wall And hath broken down the mid-wall of partition between us saith he meaning
Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner-stone IN the third similitude he compareth the Church unto an edifice or stately building and sheweth that those Ephesians were a part of it Which similitude doth hold forth a further degree of nearnesse to and communion with God and His Church than the former in so far as the stones of an edifice are most strictly joyned together both with the foundation and amongst themselves and herein he doth doubtlesse allude to Solomons Temple which did prefigure the Church of the truly Regenerate And first that he may with greater clearnesse set forth this their happy condition he doth describe this spiritual stately and in several things admirable edifice from four things First in this verse from its foundation or that which doth support the weight of the building which he calleth the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles whereby is not meaned that the Prophets and Apostles in their own persons are the foundation of the Church for they are built as lively stones with the rest of the Elect upon the foundation Philip. 3. 8 9. And therefore we must hereby understand the foundation which was laid by them as wise master-builders under God 1 Cor. 3. 9. 10. to wit the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles or rather Jesus Christ the sum and scope of their Doctrine Rom. 10. 4. 1 Cor. 2. 2. as the Apostle expoundeth himself 1 Cor. 3. 11. and is clear from Isa. 28. 16. to which place he doth here allude and which is also more plainly set forth in the close of this same verse where the Apostle proveth that they were built upon that foundation because Christ is that corner-stone spoken of Isa. 28. 16. and Psal. 118. 22. So that the foundation and corner-stone must be both one in this place seing he inferreth the one from the other only with this difference that Christ is not only the lowest corner-stone which lyeth under the whole building and is a part of the foundation to which corner-stone He is compared Isa. 28. 16. but He is also the highest to which He is compared Psal. 118. 22. Yea and such a corner-stone as reacheth all alongs the angle from the foundation to the top of the building binding the two walls of the Church together which are the two Nations of Jews and Gentiles for the word in the Originall signifieth the extream corner-stone that is both the highest and the lowest and consequently compriseth all which ly between those two extreams neither doth the word imply that there are any other subordinate or secundary foundations or corner-stones seing the word is better rendered extream corner than chief Doct. 1. Those excellent priviledges bestowed upon Believers consisting in and flowing from union and communion with Christ and His Church are of such a spirituall sublime and divine nature and we are so carnall dull and slow of understanding that there are no proper significant words whereby to expresse them so as we may understand them for therefore is it that the Spirit of God doth speak of them to us in our own language and taketh similitudes from things earthly to set them forth that so we may at least understand somewhat of them as here he maketh use of a similitude taken from a stately building for that end And are built upon the foundation 2. So excellent and full are those priviledges and so compleat is that happinesse which is enjoyed by Believers that not any one similitude taken from earthly things can fully or in any measure satisfyingly set them forth for therefore is it that the Spirit of God doth multiply similitudes to this purpose that what is wanting in one may be supplied by another as here having set forth the happy state of Believers from the similitude first of a city next of a family ver 19. he doth in this verse add a third similitude taken from an edifice And are built upon the foundation saith he 3. So steadable is Jesus Christ unto Believers and of such universal use in order to their being built up in one temple unto God that there is not any one piece of a building by which His steadable usefulnesse can be sufficiently represented He is not only the foundation-stone who being the first stone which was laid in the building Rev. 13. 8. doth support this whole spirituall edifice Matth. 16. 18. who was brought so low by His sufferings and dayly in the preaching of the Gospel that the meanest Believer may be rolled upon Him Matth. 11. 28. and upon whom the weights of all Believers great and small do hing Isa. 22. 24. but He is also the corner-stone who reacheth from the foundation to the top of this spirituall edifice and joyneth Jew and Gentile the two walls of the Church together in one see ver 15. yea and all particular Believers are united in Him Joh. 17. -22 23. who breaketh the violent blasts of all those storms which would otherwise overthrow the edifice Isa. 25. 4. and use to beat most violently upon the corners of buildings Job 1. 19. who also is the choice of the stones of the building as corner-stones use to be Jer. 51. 26. as being of more durable substance even the great and mighty God Isa. 9. 6. and is in His humane nature adorned and polished with a variety and fulnesse of created graces above His fellows Psal. 45. 7. as corner-stones are more curiously ingraven and wrought than the rest of the building Psal. 144. 12. in whose stability and strength the strength of the whole spirituall edifice Matth. 16. 18. and of every lively stone thereof doth consist Joh. 10. 28. as the strength of an artificiall building consisteth in the goodnesse of the foundation and corners Matth. 7. 24 25. for the Apostle speaking of this spirituall edifice giveth unto Christ the place both of foundation and corner while he saith Ye are built upon the foundation of the Prophets Jesus Christ himself being the chief or extream corner-stone 4. That any man be a part of this spirituall edifice and do partake of all those glorious priviledges which flow from union and communion with God and His Church and are enjoyed by all the lively stones of this building he must be built upon Christ the foundation taking band upon Him by the cement of lively faith for the Apostle shewing that those Ephesians were a part of this spirituall building saith they were built on Christ And are built upon the foundation 5. There is no closing with taking band upon Christ aright as a foundation-stone or rock for salvation except He be conceived and accepted of as He is revealed and offered in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament for He is called the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles to wit whom they set forth and placed as a foundation in the Church by their Doctrine and Writings 6. Though God Himself be the principall author and builder of this spirituall edifice Isa. 28. 16. 1 Corinth 3.
together with the dammage both here and hereafter which followeth upon it and lay aside the consideration of those pleasant deceitfull baits which Satan doth busk it with to make it more taking that so we may be the more deterred from it for Paul giveth sin a name implying all those and much more that the very name given to it may scare them from it while he calleth it the unfruitful works of darknesse 4. Though the command enjoyning to reprove the sins of others be an affirmative precept and therefore not binding unto all with relation to all persons at all times and in all cases and Christ Himself forbiddeth to cast the pearl of precious reproof before dogs or swine Matth. 7. 6. that is such who mock the word of admonition or prove more inraged by it whom we are to reprove not so much by conversing with them or by speaking to them as by fleeing from them yet as to others our not reproving of their sin when occasion offereth and Gods glory with their edification seemeth to call for it is a sinfull partaking with them in their sin for having discharged them to have fellowship with the works of darknesse he subjoyneth but rather reprove them implying that otherwise they would have fellowship with them 5. Though this duty of labouring to reclaim others from sin by convincing reproofs whether in words or in the contrary work ought mainly to be discharged unto such as have nearest relation to us Eph. 6. -4. or whom we have a more speciall charge of 1 Thess. 5. 12. or whom we are most intimate with in spirituall bonds and fellowship 1 Thessal 5. 14. yet we are not to neglect this duty towards others who stand not under such near relations to us no not to those concerning whom we have strong grounds to fear that they are yet unrenewed and enemies in their hearts to Jesus Christ so long at least as all hopes of prevailing with them by that mean are not cut off 1 Cor. 7. 16. for he commandeth them here to reprove the sins even of unrenewed Pagans called therefore the unfruitfull works of darknesse but rather reprove them saith he Vers. 12. For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret HE doth now confirm the precept thus explained and first he inforceth the disswasive from having fellowship with the unfruitfull works of darknesse by an argument taken from the abominable filthinesse of those sins which the wicked Pagans committed in secret that they might eschew publick shame which was such that it was a shame even to speak of them or to hear them spoken of leaving them to gather it was much more shamefull to act them or to be any wayes accessory unto the acting of them Doct. 1. There should be such an holy bashfulnesse in converted Christians as to think shame in speech to utter at least without detestation those things which godlesse sinners are not so much ashamed to practise and especially Ministers in their publick preachings would be very modest and sparing in the deciphering of filthy sins lest they thereby defile their own tongues offend the ears of some and do teach others how to commit that sin which they pretend to reprove for Paul giveth this as a reason not only why they should not communicate with the unfruitfull works of darknesse but also why he did not make expresse mention of those works in particular for it is a shame even to speak of those things saith he 2. As all conscience of right and wrong together with fear and shame following upon doing wrong be not fully extinct in the unrenewed man So those small remainders are not effectuall to restrain them from what is wrong but being over-powered with prevalent Atheism do give them full liberty to act abominable wickednesse if so they can hide it from the eyes of men without any effectuall restraint from the all-seeing eye of God for conscience of the dishonesty which was in those unfruitfull works of darknesse made them eschew the eyes of men but notwithstanding they committed them in secret for it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret 3. As secrecy and solitarinesse are most obnoxious to foulest tentations especially to those which tend to satisfie the lust of uncleannesse Gen. 39. 11. 12. and therefore would be eschewed by all 1 Thess. 5. 22. much lesse sought after by any Prov. 7. ver 8 9 10. So when men do not seek the vail of secrecy to cover their sins but do glory in their shame and dare with Absolom 2 Sam. 16. 22. commit those sins openly and before the sun which very common honesty and a naturall instinct would seek to cover it speaketh a man more corrupt than the very grossest of Pagans who hath put out-the very common principles of naturall honesty and made his own conscience dead and senslesse so that he knoweth not shame Zeph. 3. 〈◊〉 for even the Pagans whose sin he doth here aggreage did take the benefit of secrecy to cover their villanies which are done of them in secret saith he Vers. 13. But all things that are reproved are made manifest by the light for whatsoever doth make manifest is light HE doth next enforce the exhortation to reprove those works of darknesse first by an argument taken from one excellent use of admonition and reproof while he sheweth that those secret sins of wicked most being reproved are by the light whether of Gods Word in the mouth of the reprover or of his holy life made manifest in their black and ugly colours to wit not so much unto others as unto the actors and authors of them See 1 Cor. 14. 24. Next by proving that the light of reproof attaineth this end from the nature of light which is to make all things that are within its reach manifest and conspicuous for the words in the Originall do read better thus for light is that which manifesteth all things Doct. 1. The discovery and conviction of sin in its vilenesse is of necessary and profitable use unto the sinner as being the first step towards contrition Act. 2. 36. with 37. and consequently to faith in Jesus Christ and repentance unto life Act. 2. 37. with 38. for he maketh this an excellent use of reproof and that which should be aimed at by the reprover even that sin be made manifest in its vilenesse to the sinner for all things that are reproved are made manifest 2. It is not a naked sight and knowledge that sin is sin and in some measure shamefull which is of any great use to the sinner but a sight of it in its vilest colours as it is a breach of Gods most holy Law enmity against the great God and a bringer down of Gods eternall wrath for those heathens had some knowledge of sin and of the shame was in it and therefore they did run to secret with it and yet he
of Christs body are by nature lost and gone even dead in sin and children of wrath Eph. 2. 1. -3. So there was no way for their recovery but by Jesus Christ His becoming man and suffering death and uniting Himself being now risen from death unto them as their head that so He may bestow the influences of spirituall life with a right to heaven upon them here and at last take them to Himself in glory hereafter for he sheweth that Christ is become the Churches head that He might be a Saviour of his lost body 6. The dominion and power which husbands have over their wives is not tyrannicall rigid or soveraign but loving gentle warm and amiable and such as the wife may look upon as a mercy to her self as well as a dignity unto her husband for it is compared here unto that sweet and naturall power which the head exerciseth over the body and Christ over His Church who maketh His people willing in the day of His power and it ought to be employed wholly for the good and safety of his wife as Christ is the Saviour of the body Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be to their own husbands in every thing THe Apostle secondly repeateth the exhortation as a conclusion from the former argument that wives should subject themselves unto their own husbands and addeth two things 1. The manner of this subjection to wit such as it may resemble the subjection of the Church unto Christ which is to be understood not in all things for wives are not to subject their souls and consciences to their husbands as Believers do to Christ trusting in Him for life and salvation but in some things only to wit so as they may subject themselves willingly chearfully lovingly chastly and dutifully unto their husbands for so doth the Church subject herself unto Christ. He addeth secondly the extent of this subjection and obedience even to all things which is not to be understood of all things absolutly and without exception Acts 5. 29 but all things lawfull godly honest and which are not forbidden in the Word of God even though they crosse the humour of the wives and argue little discretion in the husband who commandeth them Numb 5. 14 15. c. for nothing is excepted here but what is contrary to that subjection which is due to Him who hath commanded this subjection of wives to their husbands as Paul commenteth upon an expression like to this 1 Cor. 15. 27. Doct. 1. As subjection in wives unto their husbands is a most necessary duty So considering the inbred pride arrogance and self-willednesse which is in all the sons and daughters of Adam by nature it is a work of no small difficulty to get wives peswaded to give that hearty chearfull loving and dutifull respect and obedience unto their husbands which both the Law of nature and the written Word of God do require from them for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be unto their own husbands 2. Though there be much unmortified corruption in the Church of true Believers and a law in their members rebelling against the law of their mind Rom. 7. 23. yet God doth look upon them as true and loyall subjects to Christ in so far as with the Spirit and better part according to which God doth reckon with them they serve the Law of God Rom. 7. 25. and do groan after and long for the time when they shall be fully freed from the body of death and throughly subjected unto the will of God Phil. 1. 23. for while he saith as the Church is subject unto Christ it is supponed that the Church is subject unto Him and looked upon by God as such 3. The servants of Christ in pressing duties ought mainly to guard against that extremity which people naturally are most prone to fall into especially seing all the guards which can be used will have sufficient work to keep the heart from breaking over upon that hand for though there be some things excepted from coming under that obedience which wives do owe to their husbands as was cleared in the exposition yet because wives are more inclined to multiplie exceptions in this purpose than to diminish them Therefore he extendeth this obedience expresly to all things leaving them only to gather from the circumstances of the Text and other places of Scripture those few things which are excepted that thereby he may with one word cut off all unscriptural exceptions limitations and restrictions which imperious aspiring spirits impatient of the yoke are ready to bound and straiten this submission and obedience by Let them be subject in every thing saith he Vers. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave Himself for it THe Apostle doth now exhort husbands to their duty which he first proponeth summarily under the name of love to their wives whereby the heart and inmost affections of the husband ought to be so inclined and disposed towards his wife as that not only he do wish her good but also endeavour unto his utmost to bring it about which is not to be so understood as if the wife were not bound to love her husband also Tit. 2. 4. But he presseth love upon the husband in particular because he is most ready to fail in this duty of love and to abuse that superiority which God hath given him over his wife by proving rigorous and bitter against her Col. 3. -19. Now this love enjoyned to husbands is not that common Christian love which is extended unto all Christians of both sexes as unto brethren and sisters in Christ Joh. 13. 34. but a speciall and conjugall love which ought to be extended unto none but unto a mans own wife and it includeth cohabitation with his wife and contentation with her love only Prov. 5. 18 19. a patient bearing with her infirmities and frailties 1 Pet. 3. 7. with a fatherly care to defend her 1 Sam. 30. 5 c. to provide for her in all things according to his power which either her necessity or dignity of her rank doth require 1 Tim. 5. 8. lovingly to govern direct and instruct her 1 Cor. 14. 35. yea and to cherish her ver 29. Next he inforceth this duty by two arguments The first whereof is proponed in this verse to wit Christ's example who loved His Church and from love gave Himself for it See upon ver 2. Which example of Christ's love doth not only inforce the duty as an argument but also point forth the right manner of the duty as a pattern In so far as the husbands love ought to resemble Christs to wit in the chastity of His love who loveth none to His Church Joh. 17. 9. the sincerity of His love who loveth the Church not for His but
10. 16. but also to confirm the grant of them to us if we believe Rom. 4. 11 yea and to exhibit a greater measure of those saving graces unto us upon our right using of them 1 Cor. 11. 24. therefore is it that the thing signified is ascribed unto the sign and seal Now the Apostle doth mention Baptism only and not the Lords Supper either because there is the same reason for both and therefore it was sufficient to expresse the one or because Baptism is the first and leading Sacrament and sealeth up our regeneration and new birth in a peculiar manner Tit. 3. 5. and therefore it is most appositly mentioned here where he speaketh of God's work in bringing sinners out of nature unto the state of grace The second mean and instrument which God maketh use of is the Word to wit the Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel and preached by sent Ministers Rom. 10. 15. which the Lord doth blesse for conveying grace to gracelesse sinners and so for sanctifying and cleansing them not by any vertue in the sound syllabs or sentences of this Word but by the effectuall working of His own Spirit Acts 16. 14. whereby He doth accompany His Word when and where He pleaseth Joh. 3. 8. Doct. 1. The love which an husband carrieth unto his wife ought to make it self evident not only in these things which tend to her welbeing in things temporall but also and chiefly in his sincere endeavours to bring about her spiritual and eternall good by labouring to instruct her in the saving knowledge of God in Christ 1 Pet. 3. 7. lovingly to admonish her for her faults Job 2. 10. and to pray with her and for her 1 Pet. 3. -7. for the example of Christs love to His Church which he is to imitate doth teach so much seing He from love gave Himself for the Church that He might sanctifie and cleanse her 2. As Gods Image was lost and forfeited by Adam's fall unto all his posterity so there was not any possible way for our recovering of it except a price and no lesse price than the bloud of Christ had been first payed to provoked justice for it for Christ behoved to give Himself and thereby purchase sanctification for us that so He might sanctifie and cleanse the Church 3. Our dying Lord had an actuall intention in due time to sanctifie and accordingly doth regenerate justifie and sanctifie yea and bring unto glory all those for whom he died and gave Himself a sacrifice and offering unto God for His intentions cannot be frustrated but He must see the travell of His soul Isa. 53. 11. Now that He intended to sanctifie all such is clear For He gave Himself for it that He might sanctifie and cleanse it 4. As all those for whom Christ our Lord did from love give Himself and whom by His death He intended to sanctifie were in themselves polluted and unclean lying in their bloud defiled both with the guilt of sin already committed and with the filthy vilenesse of sin yet indwelling Eph. 2. 1 -3. So such was the fervency of love in Christ to lost sinners and such was the vertue of His merit that no uncleannesse of this kind did make Him loath them or despare of getting them made clean For that He gave Himself for the Church to cleanse it supponeth that they were unclean and yet He loveth them and from love setteth about to cleanse them 5. The stain and blot of sin both in its filth and guilt hath so much sunk down in and polluted the whole man in soul and body that no liquor under heaven can wash it out or cleanse the soul from it but only the washing cleansing vertue of Christs most precious bloud For He gave Himself for the Church that He might cleanse it 6. This precious liquor of Christs bloud did not cleanse and sanctifie all those for whom He gave Himself so soon as it was shed upon the crosse no there neither was nor can be any cleansing of any by the bloud of Christ untill it be effectually applied unto the filthy soul for he mentioneth the Word and Sacraments as the means whereby Christ applieth the vertue of His death and ascribeth therefore this effect of cleansing unto them He gave Himself that He might cleanse it by the washing of water by the word 7. As this work and duty of applying the cleansing vertue of Christs death by a lively faith Act. 15. 9. is of all the other most difficult So the goodnesse of God hath provided many means by the help whereof we may be carried on towards it the chief whereof are the Word preached and the Sacraments administrated the former containing the charter or grant of Christ and of all His benefits from God unto every one who will receive Him Job 3. 16. The latter being the great seal of heaven annexed to this grant Rom. 4. 11. that thereby we may be more and more confirmed in the faith of it for His providing these means doth point at both the difficultie of applying Christ and his care to have us brought up to it That He might cleanse it by the washing of water and by the word 8. The Spirit of God prescribeth means unto Himself by which He bringeth about the work of grace in gracelesse sinners not to ty Himself absolutely and in all cases to such means but that we may be tyed to depend on Him in the use of them His ordinary way being to convey grace by these for though He may sanctifie some from the womb before they hear the Word or receive any Sacrament Jer. 1. 5. yet He holdeth these forth as the ordinary means by which He cleanseth even the washing of water by the word Vers. 27. That he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing but that it should be holy and without blemish HEre is the second end of Christs giving Himself for His Church as also of His sanctifying it which end is not attained untill the life to come for besides that he hath spoken of the Churches state of grace ver 26 the words here used are so comprehensive and large that they cannot be well understood to have their full accomplishment untill Believers be brought by Christ unto that full perfection in grace which shall be attained in glory Which state of perfection is here set forth by that most perfect union and conjunction which the Church shall have with Christ being presented to Him as the Bride to the Bridegroom for the through accomplishing of the marriage by vertue of which most perfect union the Church shall be glorious that is perfectly holy and happy as he after explaineth shewing all evil whether of sin or misery shall be removed even the least spot of sin or wrinkle through old age or misery not excepted and that all contrary good shall be bestowed both perfect holinesse and happinesse in such a measure that
duty For understanding of which promise know that though it was to be understood even in the most plain and obvious sense of the words as it was held forth to the ancient Church to whom God used to promise and bestow things carnall and earthly as an earnest and shadow of things heavenly 1 Cor. 10. 11. Yet even then there was a tacite condition implied to wit in so far as the thing promised should serve for Gods glory 2 Chron. 35. 24. and the good of those to whom the promise was made 1 King 14. 13. But now under the New Testament though this promise even in the letter be doubtlesse fulfilled unto many Yet it is chiefly to be understood in a sprituall sense in so far as the godly obedient childe whether he live long or short doth alwayes live well because he liveth in Gods favour Psal. 63. 3. and cometh to a full and ripe age as having reached the prize and mark for attaining whereof life is given even the salvation of the soul Isa. 65. 20. Hence Learn 1. Though our first and chief motive unto duty ought to be the equity and righteousnesse which is in the thing it self as being commanded by God Yet we may eye the promised reward whether temporall or eternall as a secondary motive and encouragement providing it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by our obedience Luk. 17. 10. for as ver 1. he inforced this duty of obedience from the equity of it in the first place So here from the advantage which should redound unto children by it in the second place That it may be well with thee 2. So merciful is God to man that He hath injoyned only those things as equitably righteous and conducing to His own glory which tend also and no lesse to our own profit and advantage so that we need not to separate our own well-being from His glory but are alwayes to seek the former as a mean of and in subordination to the latter for the Apostle sheweth that this duty of obedience in children as it tendeth to glorifie God in the first place it being a doing of what is right according to His command So it tendeth to the advantage of children in the next That it may be well with thee 3. To live well and long upon the earth is in it self not to be despised or under-valued in so far as though the godly man the longer he liveth he is the longer keeped out of heaven yet he findeth the moe proofs and experiences of Gods goodnesse here on earth 1 Joh. 3. 13. and hath the larger opportunity of a fair seed-time of glorifying God here and consequently shall of free grace reap a more plentifull harvest of comfort at death and of glory hereafter 2 Cor. 9. 6. for he promiseth this as a blessing to the obedient childe that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth which as we shew is accomplished sometimes in the very letter 4. Then do we rightly apply unto our selves under the New Testament those things which were spoken to the Jews under the Old when passing-by what was in such things typical or astricted to the infant-state of the Church which then was we look upon what was substantial moral or of common equity as belonging unto us yet for so much doth the Apostle teach while citing the promise annexed to the fifth command he saith only that thou mayest live long upon the earth and omitteth the last clause of that promise to wit which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. whereby that promise was in a peculiar manner astricted to the Jews and to the land of Canaan which He did give them to inherit 5. The best way to thrive even in things worldly and to attain prosperity health wealth and length of dayes so far at least as shall serve for Gods glory and our own good is to live a godly life by taking heed thereto according to Gods Word and especially by giving due reverence and obedience to our natural parents and consequently to all our lawfull superiours because of the Command of God for unto the Command ver 2. Honour thy father and mother this promise is subjoyned that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth Verse 4. And ye fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. HE doth here in a word set forth the duty of parents And because they are apt to abuse their parentall authority and chiefly the fathers therefore he enjoyneth to them and by consequence to the mothers to beware of provoking their children to wrath or of imbittering their spirits which is done either by denying them that which is their due in food r●iment or meanes of education Lam. 4. 3. or by commanding things in themselves unjust 1 Sam. 20. 31. or by unjust and rigorous commands about things in their own nature indifferent 1 Sam. 14. 29. or inveighing with bitter words against them chiefly when there is no cause 1 Sam. 20. 30. and lastly by beating them either unjustly when there is no fault 1 Sam. 20. 33. or immoderatly unseasonably or basely when there is a fault Next he doth guard them against the other extremity of too much indulgence to their children while he exhorts them first to bring them up or as it is in the original to nourish them which comprehendeth not only their giving unto them present maintenance from the womb Gen. 21. 7. but also their providing for them against the future 2 Cor. 12. 14. and training them up in any lawfull imployment whereby they may be able under God to sustain themselves and theirs Gen. 4. 2. And secondly to joyn nurture and admonition with their education by the former whereof is meaned the timous seasonable and compassionate correction of children which parents are bound to dispense Prov. 13. 24. and by the latter is meaned the information of their judgement how they ought to carry themselves towards God in things religious Gen. 18. 19. and how towards man in righteousnesse civility and good manners which is also a great piece of the duty of parents towards children Prov. 31. 1 8 9. And lastly he addeth that their education must be in the admonition of the Lord Christ that is such as becometh Christians and by which young ones are instructed chiefly in the knowledge of Gods Word of Jesus Christ and of the way of salvation held forth by Him Hence Learn 1. Such is the prevalencie and interest of sin in the soul of man now fallen that in some it wholy extinguisheth or much weakeneth the most intense of our natural affections and maketh them run in a channel quite contrary unto what they ought for the Apostle supponeth that even naturall affection in some parents to their own children will be so far weakened as by their unnatural carriage to provoke and imbitter them
here spoken of as their chief adversary and the name here given unto him doth in the Original signifie a calumniator and slanderer That ye may stand against the wiles of the devil 6. As Satan is most witty and subtile so he imployeth all his skill and subtilty for carrying on this battell against the Saints while he most cunningly contriveth and with no lesse subtilty conveyeth such ensnaring tentations as he knoweth all things being considered will be most taking with the person tempted for here he speaketh of Satans wiles the word signifieth methodick witty stratagems 7. However Satan doth sometimes transform himself into an angel of light 2 Cor. 11. 14. and covereth his foul designs with most plausible pretences to zeal for God Luke 9. 54 55. to pity and natural affection Mat. 16. 22. or generally to something which is in it self commendable yet his great design in all his tentations even when he speaketh fairest is to drive the party tempted from his station either by making him turn the back as a coward Neh. 6. 10 11. or driving him beyond the bounds of his calling Matth. 26. 51. or presently to render up his arms and become captive to some one prevalent lust or other Gen. 39. 12. for while he saith that ye may able to stand against his wiles he implyeth that Satans aim is to drive us from our station 8. The great work of a Christian in relation to those wiles of Satan is not to imitate him by bending our wits to ensnare others to a sinfull course as he doth Matth. 16. 22 23. nor yet so much to know his wiles to lay open the subtilty and deceit that is in them for the use of others Matth. 7. 22. as to guard against them and to keep our station notwithstanding of them even when we are assaulted by them for saith Paul that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil 9. It is by the alone vertue of this armour of God that is the saving graces of God's Spirit and the carefull exercise of those graces that Christians are enabled to stand out against Satans wit and wiles A piece of natural courage and fixt resolutions together with the deep engagement of credit and interest may do much to make a man stand out against his avowed force and violence put forth by cruell persecuters but there is no sence in flesh and bloud against his wiles for he biddeth put on the whole armour of God that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil Vers. 12. For we wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknesse of this world against spiritual wickednesse in high places THe Apostle having thus propounded the duty doth next enforce it from the nature of this warfare as being a wrestling which is a close combate betwixt two hand to hand each exerting their whole force strength against one another And from the terror and greatness of those adversaries whom we are to fight against described 1. negatively or comparatively that they were not flesh and bloud that is any bodily or humane power to wit only or principally for the Believer doth fight against those also Joh. 16. 33. only they are but Satans auxiliary forces whom he stirreth up and imployeth Next positively the devils and damned angels described first from their magnifick titles principalities powers rulers of the darkness of this world whereby is set forth their great naturall power and strength together with their prince-like authority and government which by Gods permission they exerce in the world and upon wicked men in it by reason of their profanity and ignorance here called darknesse as chap. 5. ver 8. Secondly from their nature as being for their essence spiritual immaterial and without a body and for quality most wicked and here called wickednesse it self in the abstract thereby to aggreage their wickednesse as being wholly destitute of all moral goodnesse Thirdly from the place of their abode the high air whereof Satan is prince chap. 2. 2. Or rather by this particle in high places as many Interpreters conceive he setteth forth somewhat more of the nature of this warfare to wit the main matter about which the quarrel is even high and heavenly things which tend to the honour of God and the eternal good of our souls for the word in the original is in the heavenly without the substantive places and it may be as well supplied heavenly things as it is Heb. 8. 5. and 9. 23. and so it readeth well in or because of heavenly things for this particle rendered in is sometimes causall and rendered because See Matth. 26. 31. Hence Learn 1. The Lord doth deal ingenuously with all whom He calleth to fight this spiritual conflict by letting them know the power strength and subtilty of the enemy and the height of those difficulties which ly in their way to heaven before they engage So that none may have occasion to say they were deceived and made to meet with harder work than they were told of at the first for he setteth forth the nature of this warfare and terror of the adversary to the utmost of what could be said by any We wrestle against principalities and powers c. 2. So apt are men to dream of the way to heaven as easie and to trouble themselves but little for attaining to it Matth. 7. 21. that nothing lesse is required to make us shake off security and minde the work of walking to heaven in earnest than to set before us all those dreadfull dangers insuperable difficulties and terrible opposition which of necessity we are to meet with in our way to it for that they may be excited to shake off lazinesse and be serious in this work he seeth it necessary to set before them what dreadfull enemies they had to fight against as appeareth from the causal particle for which coupleth this verse with the former Put on the whole armour of God for we wrestle against principalities and powers 3. The malice of Satan our spiritual adversarie is bent not only against the Saints in general but also against every one in particular each of whom he setteth upon with so much fury force and eagernesse as if he had none to deal with but one alone for the Christians conflict with Satan is here called a wrestling which is a close combat betwixt two hand to hand and the original word signifieth such a strife as maketh the body shake again We wrestle saith he 4. Every Saint and real Believer is this one whom Satan so assaulteth he forbeareth none but setteth upon all the strongest are not a terrour to him nor yet the meanest are so far undervalued by him as not to think them worthy of his wrath and therefore all must fight and wrestle for the Apostle of purpose changeth the pronoun ye in the former verse into we in this to shew that neither he
from his twofold relation to Christ as being the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ for the particle and in this place is not copulative of things different but exegetick of one and the same thing as Psal. 18. 46. And first He is a God to Christ chiefly because of the Covenant of Redemption betwixt God and Christ as Mediator the mutual conditions of which Covenant are Is. 53. 10 11. Joh. 6. 39 40. And secondly He is the Father of Christ to wit not only as Christ is God by an eternal and unspeakable generation Psal. 2. 7. but also as Christ is Man God is His Father by vertue of the personal union of the two natures in Christ Luke 1. 32 The reason of which his thanksgiving to God he sheweth to be Gods bestowing of real blessings upon Believers and those not common or temporal only but special and spiritual blessings which tend to a spiritual and supernaturalend and those not sparingly but fully and with an open hand even all blessings and this in heavenly places that is from Heaven His glorious Throne or because those spiritual blessings shall not be consummated and fully perfected until Believers be in Heaven all which blessings he sheweth are bestowed upon Believers in Christ He as our Head Atturney and Advocate 1 Joh. 2. 1. having received those blessings in our name and for our behoof Eph. 2. 6. by whose merit also they are purchased Isa. 53. 5. In whom and by vertue of our union with Him and right to Him we have a right to such of those blessings as we have not yet actually received 1 Joh. 5. 12. and do come to the possession of these which we already enjoy Joh. 1. 16. Doct. 1. Though we cannot blesse the Lord as He blesseth us by bestowing real blessings and favours upon us which before we wanted Gen. 24. 35. there being such a fulnesse of blessednesse in God as nothing can be superadded Joh 22. 2. Yet it is our duty to blesse Him so as that being convinced of that blessednesse of those excellencies which are in Him and favours which are bestowed upon us by Him we do not only esteem highly of Him because of those Luke 1. 46. but also expresse this our high esteem and that not only in words whether by speaking to God Himself in the duty of prayer and praise Psal. 104. 1. or by speaking of Him and to His commendation unto others Psal. 34. 3 4 c. but also and mainly in our life and actions 1 Cor. 10. 31. for Paul doth here blesse the Lord Blessed be God saith he 2. It is a looking to God with respect had to Jesus Christ which inflameth the heart with such a mixture of love and admiration at His excellencies and worth that it must of necessity break forth in blessing of Him God considered without Christ being a consuming fire to whom there can be no confident approaching by sinfull creatures neither in the duties of prayer nor of praise but the vail of Christ's flesh doth break the beams of His terror so that we may stedfastly behold His attributes and excellencies rejoycing in them and blessing Him for them for Paul while he blesseth God doth look upon Him through this vail Blessed be God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. 3. A holy soul truly sensible of his lost condition by nature and of God's mercy in his delivery from that wofull state cannot seriously think or speak of that subject but his heart must be inflamed with love to God yea and break forth in praises and thanksgiving to Him when occasion offereth for so doth Paul Blessed be God who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings 4. Though we are bound to blesse the Lord even for temporal favours and things necessary for the life which now is Psal. 107. 8. yet a renewed heart is most taken up with and blesseth God most for spiritual blessings and such as concern our eternal welbeing those being not only most durable Job 6. 27. but also most discriminating betwixt the regenerate and unregenerate Eccles. 9. 1. 1 Joh. 3. 14. for Paul blesseth God for these blessings Who bath blessed us with all spiritual blessings 5. God is the author and worker of all spiritual blessings in a special manner in so far as He produceth them not by a general providence actuating and concurring with natural principles and powers for producing of such and such effects as He is the author even of common blessings health riches honour and such like Psal. 75. 6 7. but by his special grace whereby He createth in the heart by nature dead in sins and trespasses Eph. 2. 1. a power to do good Ezek 36. 26. and actuateth that power making it to work Phil. 2. 13. for the Apostle ascribeth the production of all spiritual blessings to God while speaking of God he saith Who hath blessed us with all spirituall blessings 6. Though God considered as Creator and merciful upholder of His own creatures doth bestow temporal blessings upon the world even upon those who never heard of Christ Psal. 17. 14. yet spiritual blessings such as the saving graces of faith hope and love come from God being considered not as Creator but in and with relation to Jesus Christ who behoved to purchase those blessings of new before fallen man could acquire either a right unto them or possession of them for saith Paul it is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings and again He hath blessed as in Christ. 7. Spiritual blessings to wit those of them which are absolutely necessary to salvation and eternal blessednesse are linked together and cannot be separated where God bestoweth one of those He bestoweth all there being a necessary concatenation among them all Rom. 8. 29 30. so that they either co-exist or at least in God's due time do follow one upon another Philip 1. 6. for saith Paul He hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings 8. Though there be some spiritual blessings such as perfection in holinesse and the full enjoying of God in glory the possession whereof is not attained unto by Believers so long as they are here on earth 1 Cor. 13. 12. yet because of the Believer's undoubted right unto those blessings 1 Cor. 3. 21 22. and God's unchangeable purpose to bestow them Psal. 84. 11. and because of the first fruits and earnest of those blessings already bestowed upon the Believer See ver 14. and of Christ's having taken possession of those in the Believer's name chap. 2. 6. he may be as much assured of his full enjoying of them as if he had them already in hand for saith Paul He hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings as if all none being excepted were already enjoyed 9. Spirituall blessings are of an heavenly rise and nature there being no second cause upon earth or among things created which doth concur with God in bringing them to passe
as in the production of other natural effects for as the word is well rendred in beavenly places and better than in heavenly things so it seemeth the bestowing of those spiritual blessings is ascribed to God in heavenly places mainly because their original is only from Heaven and not from earth With all spiritual blessings in heavenly places Vers. 4. According as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love THe Apostle in the second place treateth of those spiritual blessings more particularly and so doth branch forth at large that reason of his thanksgiving to God presently mentioned and this in pursuance of the former scope which is to shew that salvation with all its causes do flow only from God's free grace in Christ that so the Ephesians might be firmly rooted and confirmed in the faith of this Truth And first he speaketh of those blessings as they were prepared and appointed for Believers in God's eternal decree of Election and Predestination to ver 7. In this verse he sheweth first That these spiritual blessings are bestowed upon Believers in time not by chance or rashly not from any worth in the receiver but according as God had fore-ordained in His decree of Election whereby before the foundation of the world that is from all eternity See Joh. 17. 24 He did choose some of mankind to eternal life Mat. 25. 34. passing by others and did choose them in Christ not as if Christ's death had moved God to love and elect for His electing love did move Him to give Christ for sinners Job 3. 16. Neither did He choose them in Christ as if they had been considered by God as already in Christ by faith and that because of their faith thus foreseen they had been elected by Him for so faith should not be a fruit flowing from election but a condition pre-required in the person to be elected which doth contradict this same very Scripture affirming that all spiritual blessings whereof faith is one do flow from and are bestowed according to the decree of Election He did therefore choose them in Christ as in Him whom He did in one and the self-same decree choose to be the Head of the Elect and chief foundation-stone of all that precious building His own House and Church 1 Pet. 2. 6. and by whom that glory and all things tending to that glory unto which He did choose them were to be purchased that so without doing injury to provoked justice they might be applied unto and actually bestowed upon the Elect for so is this purpose more clearly expressed 1 Thess. 5. 9. Secondly he illustrateth this decree of Election from the nearest end which God did design to be brought about by it even the sanctification of the persons elected whereby they should be rendred blameless before men and sincere and upright before God and that in love to wit in the duties of love to their neighbour flowing from love to God Mat. 22. 37 39 by which love as a touchstone the soundnesse of their sanctification should be tried Doct. 1. As God from all eternity hath chosen some of mankind and firmly decreed to bestow upon them eternal life Luke 12. 32. so there are others whom He decreed not to save but to condemn In which latter decree and much more in the former God hath done nothing unjustly seing as soveraign Lord over all the creatures He hath absolute dominion to dispose of them as He pleaseth Rom. 9. 19 20 21. and though sin in the reprobate was not the cause of God's decree of reprobation Rom. 9. 11 12 13. yet it is the cause of the reprobates condemnation so that his condemnation is just for saith he He hath chosen us which implyeth some were not chosen seing where all is taken there is no choice 2. Though no man except he who hath sinned that unpardonable sin Mat. 12. -32. can certainly know he is a reprobate there being no marks except that alone set down in Scripture by which reprobation can be certainly known Yet the Elect may attain to the assured knowledge of their own election seing God hath set down in Scripture the marks and evidences of election Joh. 6. 37. and hath promised to give His Spirit unto His own whereby they may infallibly discern these marks at least at sometimes in themselves 1 Cor. 2 12. for although the Apostle doth pronounce those Ephesians to be elected according to the judgement of charity only which believeth the best of others where nothing appears to the countrary 1 Cor. 13. 7. yet he behoved to have some undoubted perswasion of his own election before he could warrantably conclude himself to be elected seing not charity but certain knowledge is the principle from which a man ought to judge of himself 2 Cor. 13. 5. As He hath chosen us in Him saith he 3. Though the doctrine of Election and Reprobation be such as the unlearned and unstable are apt to wrest and stumble at to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3. 16. yet it is not wholly to be suppressed and locked up in silence from the Lord's People but would be soberly and prudently sometimes propounded unto them and that because of the many and great advantages which may be reaped not only by the doctrine of election such as the assurance of salvation Rom. 8. 29 30. strong incitements unto holinesse 2 Pet. 1. 10. and courage under crosses of all sorts Rom. 8. 38 39. but also by the doctrine of reprobation as contributing much to promove the salvation of the Elect by making them hate sin more Psal. 119. 119 120. and prize the kindnesse and good will of God more which made choice of them passing by others as good as they Rom. 9. 22 23. for the Apostle propoundeth this doctrine to the whole Church and insisteth upon it According as He hath chosen us in Him c. 4. As electing love in God is of an old standing even from all eternity and therefore most free there being nothing in the Elect before they had a being which might draw His love towards them So the Lord can and usually doth keep His purposes and thoughts for good to a people or person for a long time hid before He do discover them and make them known for He had set His love upon these believing Ephesians from all eternity which yet lay hid from the beginning of the world and did not kyth untill their effectual calling He hath chosen us before the foundation of the world 5. The Lord bestoweth spiritual blessings in time according to what He hath inacted in that His eternal decree of election before time So that every elect soul shall most undoubtedly enjoy those blessings And all of them even Faith it self not being excepted do flow from Election and are bestowed upon the Elect because they are elected unto them for saith he God hath blessed us with all spiritual