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A48431 The works of the Reverend and learned John Lightfoot D. D., late Master of Katherine Hall in Cambridge such as were, and such as never before were printed : in two volumes : with the authors life and large and useful tables to each volume : also three maps : one of the temple drawn by the author himself, the others of Jervsalem and the Holy Land drawn according to the author's chorography, with a description collected out of his writings.; Works. 1684 Lightfoot, John, 1602-1675.; G. B. (George Bright), d. 1696.; Strype, John, 1643-1737. 1684 (1684) Wing L2051; ESTC R16617 4,059,437 2,607

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the first Chap. 1. 17. That in the Gospel is revealed the Righteousness of God justifying as in the Law was revealed his righteousness or justice condemning and that from faith of immediate innixion upon God as was Adams before his fall and as was that which the Jews owned in God to faith in the righteousness of another namely Christ. This way of justification he proveth first by shewing how far all men both by nature and action are from possibility of being justified of or by themselves which he cleareth by the horrid sinfulness of the Heathen Chap. 1. a large proof of which might be read at Rome at that very instant and little less sinfulness of the Jews though they had the Law Chap. 2. 3. and therefore concludeth Chap. 3. 30. that God justifieth the circumcision by faith and not by works as they stood upon it and the uncircumcision through faith for all their works that had been so abominable and that seemed so contrary to justification In Chap. 4. he taketh up the example of Abraham whom the Jews reputed most highly justified by his works for they had this saying of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Abraham performed all the Law every whit but he proveth that he found nothing by his own works but by believing he found all In Chap. 5. he proves the imputation of Christs righteousness for Justification by the parallel of the imputation of Adams sin for condemnation Not at all intending to assert that as many as were condemned by Adam were freed from that condemnation by the death of Christ but purposely and only to prove the one imputation by the other It was a strange doctrine in the ears of a Jew to hear of being justified by the righteousness of another therefore he proves it by the like mens being condemned for and by the unrighteousness of another Two close couched passages clear what he aimeth at The first is in ver 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Wherefore as by one man sin entred into the World c. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As properly requireth a So to follow it as you may observe it doth in ver 15. 18 19. but here there is no such thing expressed therefore it is so to be understood and the Apostles words to be construed to this sense Wherefore it is or the case is here as it was in Adam as by one man sin entred into the World c. there imputation so here The second is ver 18. in the Original verbatim thus As by the transgression of one upon all men to condemnation so by the righteousness of one upon all men to justification of life What upon all men Our Translation hath added some words to clear the sense but the shortness of the Apostles style doth better clear his intent namely to intimate imputation as speaking to this purpose As by the transgression of one there was that that redounded to all to condemnation so by the righteousness of one there is that that redoundeth to all to justification of life And to clear that he meaneth not that all that were condemned by Adams Fall were redeemed by Christ he at once sheweth the descent of Original sin and the descent of it for all the death and righteousness of Christ Quae tamen profuerunt antequam fuerunt Ver. 13. For till the Law sin was in the World but sin is not imputed where there is no Law Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses By what Law was sin sin and did death reign when the Law was not yet given Namely by that Law that was given to Adam and he brake the guilt of which violation descends to all Having to the end of the fifth Chapter stated and proved Justification by faith in Chap 6 7 8. he speaks of the state of persons justified which though they be not without sin yet their state compared with Adams even whilst he was sinless it is far better then his He invested in a created finite changeable humane righteousness they in the righteousness of God uncreate infinite unchangeable He having the principles of his holiness and righteousness in his own nature they theirs conveyed from Christ He having neither Christ nor the Spirit but left to himself and his natural purity they having both See Chap. 8. 1 2 9 10 c. At the nineteenth verse of Chap. 8. he begins upon the second mystery that he hath to treat upon the calling of the Gentiles whom he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The whole Creation or Every Creature by which title they also are called Mark 16. 15. Colos. 1. 23. and he shews how they were subject to vanity of Idolatry and the delusions of the devil but must in time be delivered from this bondage for which deliverance they now groaned and not they only but they of the Jews also which had received the first-fruits of the Spirit longed for their coming in waiting for the adoption that is the redemption of their whole body for the Church of the Jews was but the child-like body and accordingly their Ordinances were according to child-like age of the Church but the stature of the fulness of Christs mystical Body was in the bringing in of the Gentiles Being to handle this great point of the Calling of the Gentiles and Rejection of the jews he begins at the bottom at the great doctrine of Predestination which he handles from ver 29. of Chap. 8. to Chap. 9. 24. and then he falls upon the other That Israel stumbled at Messias and fell seeking indeed after righteousness but not his but their own and that they are cast away but not all A remnant to be saved that belonged to the Election of Grace As it was in the time when the World was Heathen some of them that belonged to the Election came in and were proselyted to the worship of the true God so some of these while all the rest of their Nation lie in unbelief And in this unbelief must they lie till the fulness of the Gentiles be come in and then all Gods Israel is compleated The most that he salutes in the last Chapter appear to have been of the Jewish Nation and the most of them though now at Rome yet some time to have been of Pauls company and acquaintance in some other place The expulsion of the Jews out of Rome by Claudius Decree might very well bring many of them into his converse as well as it did Priscilla and Aquila whom he names first among them Epenetus was one of his own converts of Achaia Mary had bestowed much labour on him yet he hitherto had never been near Rome He that would dispute the point of the first planter of the Gospel at Rome might do well to make the first muster of his thoughts here And whereas the Apostle speaks of the faith of the Roman Church as spoken of throughout the World Chap. 1. ver 8. it is very questionable whether he
went thither he saith not at all And now to take up what we have to observe upon these things that have been spoken 1. It is true indeed as Tacitus witnesseth that Pallas the brother of Felix who had been Claudius his great favorite and so Nero's also in Claudius time did wane and decrease somewhat in his favour in a very short time after his entrance into his reign but he was not utterly laid flat and out at all till after Poppaea came into favour and amorousness who forwarded the death of Agrippina and the bringing down of those that were of her party as Pallas was Therefore the power of Pallas with the Emperour seemeth to be expired in Nero's fifth year in which Agrippina was slain And by this account we cannot extend Felix his escape for his brother Pallas his sake beyond Nero's fourth Year For considering Poppaeas prevalency with the Emperour when once she became his Paramour and considering her detestation of Agrippina and her faction of which Pallas was the chief we cannot cast Felix his discharge for Pallas his sake beyond Nero's fourth 2. Paul lay two years prisoner at Caesarea under Felix Acts 24. 27. After two years Portius Festus came into Felix room Many are the conjectures about these two years Baronius saith it was Expleto biennio Neronis Magister Historiae Scholasticae saith it was Biennium ab accusatione Felicis a Judaeis A Lapide cares not to think that Biennium hoc inchoandum a praefectura Felicis in Judaea nam ante illud praefuerat Trachonitidi Batanaeae Gaulonitidi c. But it is most proper to hold that these two years mean the time of Pauls being a prisoner under Felix from the time of his apprehension under Lysias the chief Captain till Felix his going out of his Government and so it is held by Beda Beza Salmeron Onuphrius and others And this is so proper and suitable to the intent and discourse of Luke that it needeth no illustration or proof of it and it is most agreeable to the Scriptures manner of accounting in all other places These two things then being thus concluded on it will follow that Pauls apprehension was in Nero's second and Felix went out of Office in Nero's fourth before Poppaea was yet got into her potency And the accounting of Pauls two years imprisonment under Felix to be thus At Pentecost in Nero's second he is apprehended and at Pentecost in Nero's third he had been a year prisoner and at Pentecost in Nero's fourth his two years are up and that spring it was that Felix went out of Office and went to Rome to make his answer and Pallas his brother not yet utterly out of favour makes his peace And now let us draw up the Chronology of Nero's time to the full according to these evidences and as referreth to our occasion CHRIST 55 NERO. 1 Paul at Ephesus Goeth to Macedonia Creete Greece to Macedonia again and wintreth in Nicopolis CHRIST 56 NERO. 2 Paul at Macedonia till Easter then goeth up to Jerusalem and is apprehended at Pentecost and from that time till the year go out is a prisoner CHRIST 57 NERO. 3 Paul a prisoner all this year under Felix CHRIST 58 NERO. 4 Felix removed Festus cometh in Paul shipped towards Rome but wintreth by the way Poppaea in Nero's eye and becomes his Minion CHRIST 59 NERO. 5 Festus Governour of Judea Paul after wintering in his journey cometh to Rome and this is the first year of his imprisonment there Nero killeth his Mother Agrippina CHRIST 60 NERO. 6 Festus Governour of Judea Pauls second years imprisonment at Rome CHRIST 61 NERO. 7 Festus Governour of Judea CHRIST 62 NERO. 8 Festus Governour of Judea Nero marrieth Poppaea CHRIST 63 NERO. 9 Festus Governour It may be Albinus came in sometime this year and then was James the less slain this year CHRIST 64 NERO. 10 Albinus Governour of Judea CHRIST 65 NERO. 11 Florus Governour of Judea CHRIST 66 NERO. 12 CHRIST 67 NERO. 13 Florus Governour of Judea The Wars begin CHRIST 68 NERO. 14 Nero dieth having reigned 13. years and 8. months ACTS Chap. XXI from Ver 17. to the end of the Chapter PAUL cometh to Jerusalem at the feast of Pentecost when the City was now full of conconflux to that festival He resorteth instantly to James the residentiary Apostle of the Circumcision for holding correspondency sake and there he shews him the manner and fruit of his Ministry among the Gentiles Which both by James and the Elders that were with him is well approved of as to the thing it self but they certifie him of what complaints they heard from the Jews against him for crying down the rites of Moses especially Circumcision That thou teachest all the Jews which are among the Gentiles to forsake Moses saying that they ought not to circumcise their Children ver 21. Now because thousands of the Jews which believed were yet zealous of the Law this gave much offence But did Paul teach thus or not No doubt he did and it behoved him so to do nor does nor can James except against the Doctrine for though it is true that he and Paul and the other Apostles permitted compliance with some of the Jewish rites for peace sake for a while as there is an example in this very place yea Paul himself circumcised Timothy upon that reason yet the use of Circumcision as these that stood upon it used it was utterly inconsistent with the Gospel Hear this Apostles Doctrine Behold I Paul say unto you that if you be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing For I testifie again to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law Gal. 5. 2. A converted Jew would have his Son circumcised Paul asks him a reason what can he answer but it looks after some justification by it as their own Authors speak their thoughts He that is circumcised is perfect And He that is circumcised shall not go to Gehinnom And I said unto thee in thy blood live Ezek. 16. 6. This is the blood of Circumcision c. Tanchum in Gen. 17. 18 c. They looked indeed upon Circumcision as an admission into the Covenant and thereupon the Father of the Child at his Circumcision constantly used these words Blessed be thou O Lord our God who hast sanctified us by his Commandments and commanded us to bring the Child into the Covenant of our Father Abraham And they that stood by said As thou hast brought him into the Covenant so bring him into the Law and into the Bridechamber Jerus in Beracoth fol. 13. col 1. But withall they looked upon this Covenant as a Covenant of works for as we observed before they reputed Abraham himself so justified Good cause therefore had Paul to stand out against the convert Jews Circumcising their Children as whereby the Doctrine of Justification by faith was utterly enervated and made of no effect And here by the way let us conceive we
virulency and multitudes of those that had embraced it apostatizing from it and becoming its bitter enemies This double fruit of gall and wormwood proceeded from one and the same root of bitterness viz. Their doting upon Judaism the word taken in a Civil sence as they accounted it a privilegial excellence to be a Jew or in a Religious sence as they expected to be justified by their Judaical works So that the very season and present juncture of affairs might very well give occasion unto the Apostle to handle the two Themes that faced these two great delusions so copiously in this Epistle above all other places viz. The casting off the Jews and coming in of the Gentiles to decry their boasting of being Jews and Justification by Faith to face their dangerous principle of Justification by their Works How he prosecutes his Discourse upon the point of Justification by Faith from the beginning of his Epistle hither any one may see plainly first confuting the opinion concerning Justification by Works and then proving that it is by Faith As to the former in Chap. I. he speaks of the works of the Heathen most abominable and clean contrary to justifying in Chap. II. of the works of the Jews most failing and infinitely short of justifying and yet concludes as to the second head he handles that the Believers of the one Nation and the other are justified Chap. III. 30. as well the circumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by faith and not by works as the uncircumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 through faith though it had been of so contrary works In Chap. IV. he instanceth in Abraham as serving to both his purposes shewing that he was not justified by his Works but by believing and that the rather because it was a common opinion and saying among the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That Abraham performed all the Law to a little and consequently that he was justified by that performance He sheweth that he believed and was justified by his faith before he received circumcision in which they placed so much of justification and that he received Circumcision 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a seal of the righteousness of faith which he had being yet uncircumcised and a seal of the righteousness of faith which should be in the uncircumcision or Gentiles that should come to believe as those words will also bear that he might be the Father of all that believe though they be not circumcised that righteousness might be imputed to them also vers 11. In this verse before as he begins to apply the Doctrine he had cleared and the word Therefore infers no less Upon which I shall not insist to examine whether by it he infers only the first clause of the Text as proved already That Justification is by Faith or the second also as proved likewise or now added to be proved That being Justified by Faith we have peace with God Nor shall I insist upon the connexion but take the words as they lie singly before us and methinks they are as Ephraim and Manasseh before Jacob both clauses so excellent that we may be at a stand on which to lay the right hand so great the mystery of Justification and so incomparable the happiness of having Peace that on which shall we fix to discourse in this hour I may not pass the former but in a word or two by the way hint something of the great mystery of Justification I. It is a mystery and wonder that I may say with that Apostle even the Angels desire to look into and that men have cause with amazement to look upon that ever a sinful wretch a condemned person should be justified before God But so it was in the Law he that was unclean with the deepest died legal uncleanness that could be if purified with the Purification of the Sanctuary he became clean II. It is a mystery that a sinner should be justified and yet whiles he lives in this world he is sinful still But so likewise it was in the Law the Leper was cleansed yet he was a Leper still Levit. XIII 13. In a case there mentioned the Priest was to pronounce him clean His condition was changed as to his restoring to the publick Worship and to the Congregation but his inherent distemper was not wholly removed III. It is a mystery that a sinner should be justified by Gods justice the property of which is to condemn sin and to punish sinners For we are justified not only by the grace and mercy of God but by the very justice of God And methinks the very word Justification speaks no less I am sure the Apostle speaks so in Chap. I. 17. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith In the Law was revealed the righteousness or justice of God condemning and in the Gospel the righteousness or justice of God justifying IV. It is a mystery that mans believing should justifie it being an Act of man and so infinitely unadaequate to Gods justifying But as in the Law he that would have his attonement made at the Altar and have his acceptance there must of necessity take the Priest in his thoughts and in his way to do it for him so Faith doth inevitably include also Christ the object of believing and his merit So that you cannot define this Gospel faith but with this comprehension that it is a trusting in the grace and promise of God through Christ. V. It is a mystery that a sinner should be justified or made righteous by the righteousness of another This is strange to the ears of the Jews who expected to be justified every one by his own righteousness Whereas they might have learned at the Temple that even the holiest things there were not holy of themselves but made holy by something else the Sacrifice by the Altar the Priest by his garments And this is that Faith that the Apostle speaks of in the place mentioned before The righteousness of God revealed from Faith to Faith I. Rom. 17. i. e. a righteousness beyond that that the Jew expected by Faith in God who immediately trusted in God upon the account of his own righteousness whereas This is a Faith or trusting in God upon the righteousness of Christ. VI. It is a mystery that whereas Faith is not the same for degree and measure in all that believe yet justification is the same in all that believe though their belief be in different measures and degrees So once in the Wilderness all gathered not Manna in the same measure yet when all came to measure they had all alike none above an Omer none under Sanctification indeed receiveth magis minus and one hath a greater degree or less of holiness than other but Justification is not so For all are justified alike the truth of faith justifying not the measure So actual sinfulness recipit magis minus and so some are greater sinners some less but origine sui 't is not so
take what thou wilt and have Lord let me have the righteousness which is of God by faith All things in the World are but dung to it His great Master had taught him and teacheth us all that this is the thing so desirable and to be longed after Matth. V. 6. Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness How shall I speak upon this subject A theme fit to be discoursed on by the Tongue of an Angel or by the Tongue of a Saint in glory If a Lazarus should come out of Heaven to preach on Earth as the rich man would have had him in that parable how would he upon his own experience of the excellency of it magnifie this righteousness Nay if a Dives could return from Hell to preach to his brethren and advise them that they should not come into the place of torment he would tell them that all things in the world are but dung and there is but unum necessarium to get that righteousness which is of God by faith Lazarus how camest thou to Heaven Why I was justified Rom. VIII 30. Whom he justified them he also glorified Dives how camest thou to be damned Because I was not justified I shall not enter into any of the various and nice disputes about Justification I shall only speak something of the incomparable excellency of it that if it may be I may warm your hearts a little in the desire and longing after it which is so desirable and to be longed after And this I shall do by considering the nature of it and the effects and I need to look no further It s like the Ark of the Covenant overlaid with gold within and without T is all glorious within in its own nature and all glorious without in its fruits and effects For the first the nature of justification How shall I define or describe it As the Apostle doth Faith Heb. XI 1. Faith is the substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen not so exactly desining it to speak out its whole nature but as best applicable to his present discourse So I of this to speak of it according to the theme proposed as it is desirable and to be longed after let me say Justification is a mans being interessed in all Christs righteousness and if any thing be to be longed after sure that is To be interessed in all Christs righteousness Laban spake high when he said All these things thou seest are mine these Children are my Children c. XXXI Gen. 43. But how high and glorious is that that may be said of a justified person All thou hearest of Christ is thine his life is thine his death is thine his obedience merit righteous spirit all is thine The Jews speak much when they say all the six hundred and thirteen precepts are comprehended in Justus ex fide vivet The just shall live by faith But they are far from construing the thing aright when they look for justification by their own works and it is a monster of Doctrine in their ears that men are to be justified by the righteousness of another and by the obedience of another But the Gospel as the Apostle tells us Reveals that great mystery For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith Rom. I. 17. Here are two scruples 1. Did not the Law reveal the righteousness of God How then is it ascribed to the Gospel that it reveals it And 2. How doth it reveal it from faith to faith True indeed the Law revealed Gods condemning righteousness but the Gospel his justifying righteousness the righteousness of God in a more singular excellency Glorious is the righteousness of God in all its actings his condemning justice his rewarding justice but most singularly glorious is his justifying justice and this most especially is exalted in Scripture as the righteousness of God of the choicest eminency And secondly this Righteousness is revealed in the Gospel from faith to faith How is that I cannot take it only from one degree of faith to another but from one kind of faith to another The Jews that expected justifying by their own works yet had they a faith in God they believed in him looked for good from him but they knew not what faith in God through Christ was they looked for justifying from God and had a faith or belief they should observe it but were utter strangers to justifying through faith in Christ this therefore the Gospel reveals as the great mystery of salvation The righteousness of God justifying a sinner and this from immediate believing in God to believing in him through Christ Jesus and expecting justifying from by our own righteousness to expecting justifying by the righteousness of Christ. The Apostle in Rom. V. from vers 12. forward confirms that that I propose that justification is by imputation of Christs righteousness and the comparison that he there useth clears the matter fully He to open that great point of justification by the righteousness of Christ takes a parallel from the imputation of Adams sin and you may see how all along he sets the one against the other let us speak a little to that parallel 1. Does not the matter of imputation in his discourse there and in deed in it self argue some descending relation as I may tell it Imputation is upon relation of descention He speaks of Adams sin imputed to whom To them that are in relation to him in descent all his posterity The Angels sin is not imputed to him nor his to Angels nor Angels to Angels but Adams to all his posterity because of their relation to him The sin in violating the command given him is imputed to all his posterity because his posterity for they all were in him and inclosed in the Covenant for it was made not with Adam as one man but with all humane nature included in him and so his guilt descended to them upon that relation So the righteousness of Christ is imputed to whom To those that are related to him his seed such as are born of him The comparison of the Apostle must run parallel Adams sin imputed to his seed Christs righteousness to his 2. All the seed of Adam are made sinful alike by his sin so all the seed of Christ are justified a like by his obedience Original sin hath not magis minus but all originally sinful alike though all not actually sinful alike So Justification hath not magis minus but all that are justified are justified alike Sanctification hath its degrees Adams righteousness and holiness were equally perfect but the righteousness and holiness of Saints not so for they are justified by an infinite righteousness but they are not sanctified by an infinite holiness 3. All the righteousness of Christ is imputed to him Not one Saint one part another another but every one all As anima tota in toto tota in qualibet parte So all the righteousness
no small induction to him of the writing of this Epistle and sheweth the desperate danger of it Chap. 6. 4 5 c. and Chap. 10. 26 27 c. In which his touching of it we may see how far some had gone in the Gospel and yet so miserably far fallen from it as that some of them had had the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Ghost and yet now sinned willingly and wilfully against it In describing their guilt one of his passages that he useth is but harshly applied by some Chap. 10. 29. Hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the blood of the Covenant wherewith he was sanctified an unholy thing when they say that this horrid Apostate wretch that treads Christ under foot was once sanctified by the blood of Christ whereas the words mean Christs being sanctified by the blood of the Covenant according to the same sense that Christ is said to be brought again from the dead by the blood of the Covenant in this same Epistle Chap. 13. 20. And the Apostle doth set forth the horrid impiety of accounting the blood of the Covenant a common thing by this because even the Son of God himself was sanctified by it or set apart as Mediator And so should I understand the words He hath trodden under-foot that Son of God and counted the blood of the Covenant by which he the Son of God was sanctified an unholy thing He magnifieth faith against those works that they stood upon and sought to be justified by and sheweth that this was the all in all with all the holy men both before the Law and under it When he gives them caution Lest there be any fornicator or profane person as Esau c. Chap. 12. 16. he doth not only speak according to the common tenet of the Nation that Esau was a fornicator as see Targ. Jerus in Gen. 25. but he seemeth to have his eye upon the Nicolaitan doctrine that was now rise that taught fornication to which he seemeth also to refer in those words Chap. 13. 4. Marriage is honourable c. And now henceforward you have no more story of this Apostle what became of him after the writing of this Epistle it is impossible to find out by any light that the Scripture holdeth out in this matter The two last verses but one of this Epistle trace him as far forward as we can any way else see him and that is but a little way neither Know ye that our brother Timothy is set at liberty with whom if he come shortly I will see you By which words these things may be conjectured 1. That after his inlargement out of bonds he left Rome and preached in Italy He mentioneth in his Epistle to the Romans his desire and intent to go preach in Spain Rom. 15. 24. but that was so long ago that he had now found some just cause so much time intervening to steer his course another way For 2. It appears that when he wrote this Epistle to the Hebrews he intended very shortly to set for Judea if so be he sent the Epistle to the Jews of Judea as hath been shewed most probable he did So that trace him in his intentions and hopes and you find him purposing to go to Philippi Phil. 2. 23 24. Nay yet further to Colosse Philem. ver 22. Nay yet further into Judea It is like that the Apostacy and wavering that he heard of in the Eastern Churches shewed him more need to hasten thither then to go westward 3. He waited a little to see whether Timothy now inlarged would come to him in that place of Italy where he now was which if he did he intended to bring him along with him but whether they met and travelled together or what further became of either of them we shall not go about to trace lest seeking after them we lose our selves CHRIST LXIII NERO. IX IT hath been observed before how probable it is that Albinus came into the Government of Judea in Festus room in this ninth year of Nero. And if so then was James the Apostle who was called James the less martyred this year Josephus gives the story of this Antiq. lib. 20. cap. 8. Caesar saith he understanding the death of Festus sendeth Albinus governour into Iudea And the King Agrippa put Ioseph from the High-priesthood and conferred it upon Ananus the son of Ananus Now this Ananus junior was extreme bold and daring and he was of the sect of the Saduces which in judging are most cruel of any of the Iews Ananus therefore being such a one and thinking he had got a sit opportunity because Festus was dead and Albinus was not yet come he gets together a Council and bringing before it Iames the brother of Iesus who was called Christ and some others as transgressors he delivered them up to be stoned But those in the City that were more moderate and best skilled in the Laws took this ill and sent to the King privately beseeching him to charge Ananus that he should do so no more And some of them met Albinus as he came from Alexandria and shewed him how it was not lawful for Ananus to call a Council without his consent Whereupon he writeth a threatning Letter to Ananus And King Agrippa for this fact put him from the Highpriesthood when he had held it but three months and placed Iesus the son of Damneas in his room THE EPISTLE OF JAMES Although therefore the certain time of his writing this Epistle cannot be discovered yet since he died in the year that we are upon we may not unproperly look upon it as written not very long before his death And that the rather because by an expression or two he intimates the vengeance of Jerusalem drawing very near Chap. 5. 8 9. The coming of the Lord draweth nigh and Behold the Judge standeth before the door He being the Apostle residentiary of the Circumcision in Judea could not but of all others be chiefly in the eyes of those that maliced the Gospel there and the Ministers of it So it could not but be in his eye to observe those tokens growing on apace that his Master had spoken of as the forerunners and forewarners of that destruction coming False Prophets Iniquity abounding Love waxing cold betraying and undoing one another that he could not but very surely conclude that the Judge and judgment was not far from the door Among other things that our Saviour foretelleth should precede that destruction this was one Matth. 24. 14. This Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness unto all Nations and then shall the end come And so did the Gospel reach all the twelve Tribes as well as other Nations even the ten Tribes as well as the other two Therefore James a Minister of the Circumcision doth properly direct this Epistle to all the twelve Tribes scattered abroad The whole Nation was at this time some at the
into the state of Grace must be born of the Spirit Baptism is Gods Ordinance for the former purpose and it is necessary for that end ratione praecepti and we must obey God in it The Spirit is Gods operation for the latter purpose and it is necessary ratione medii and we must attend on him in his way for it Vers. 6. That which is born of the flesh is flesh Christ in the former words had declared the manner of the New birth and here he speaks of its dignity comparing it with the birth-priviledge of descent from Abraham For though as to outward honour and prerogative that had something and that not a little in it yet that birth was but according to the flesh and what conduced it towards entring into the Kingdom of Heaven which was spiritual But he that is born of the Spirit is spiritual c. And thus he is still winding up Nicodemus higher from his gross and carnal apprehensions concerning the Kingdom of God and days of Messias Vers. 8. The wind bloweth where it listeth c. For the clearing of our Saviours argumentation here which is somewhat obscure we are to observe these things 1. That by this comparison he goeth about both to confirm the truth of the doctrine of the New birth which he had delivered and also something to clear the manner of its being or coming to pass 2. The comparison seemeth not made between the wind and the new birth but between the wind and one anew born for observe the application So is not the birth of the Spirit but every one that is born of the Spirit yet is the application to that work it self not to be excluded The comparison therefore runneth thus As the wind blowing at its own liberty thou hearest the sound of it and so art sensible of the stirring of such a thing but knowest not how it blows or what becomes of it even so is every one that is born of the Spirit the Spirit worketh this product of the new birth in whom and when it pleaseth and he upon whom the thing is wrought findeth by the change and effects in himself that such a thing is done but he cannot tell how it is come to pass and actuated and to what progress and efficiency it will grow And so doth Christ explain to the sensual and gross understanding of Nicodemus the truth of the things that he had spoken in as plain notions as they could be uttered First He asserteth the truth and reality of the New birth a thing to be as well perceived by the fruits and consequences of it as the wind by the sound 2. That the Spirit doth work this by as free an agency and unlimited activity as the wind doth blow at its own liberty without confinement or restraining 3. That this work is inscrutable and past the fadoming of humane reason as is the way of the wind where it begins and where it terminates Vers. 10. Art thou a Teacher of Israel c. Talmud Torah or the teaching of the Law in Israel was in so high esteem amongst them and that most deservedly had they gone the right way to work that they prized nothing at a higher value nay nothing of an equal dignity with it They esteemed it the most precious of all the three Crowns that the Lord had bestowed upon Israel The Crown of the Kingdom the Crown of the Law and the Crown of the Priesthood They weighed it against any one of the Commandments nay against all the Commandments and it out weighed them all For they had this received position 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amongst all the Commandments there is not one Commandment that is parallel to the learning and teaching of the Law but that is equal to all the Commandments put together Maym. in Talm. torah per. 3. Now there were four sorts of Teachers and teaching of the Law among them 1. In every City and Town there was a School where Children were taught to read the Law and if there were any Town where there was not such a School the men of the place stood excommunicate till such a one was erected 2. There were the publick Preachers and Teachers of the Law in their Synagogues Act. 15. 21. most commonly the fixed and setled Ministers and Angeli Ecclesiae and sometime learned men that came in occasionally as Act. 13. 14. 3. There were those that had their Midrashoth or kept Divinity Schools in which they expounded the Law to their Scholars or Disciples of which there is exceeding frequent mention among the Jewish writers especially of the Schools of Hillel and Shammai Such a Divinity professor was Gamaliel Act. 22. 3. 4. And lastly The whole Sanhedrin in its Sessions was as the great School of the Nation as well as the great Judicatory For it set the sense of the Law especially in matters practical and expounded Moses with such authority that their gloss and determination was an ipse dixit a positive exposition and rule that might not be questioned or gainsaid Of this company of the great Doctors and Teachers of the Sanhedrin Nicodemus was one and it may very well be conceived that he kept a Divinity School as other of the great Doctors did and so he was doubly a Teacher of Israel and yet knew not these first principles of Religion But whether he kept a Divinity School or no as he was a member of the Sanhedrin he was in place of the highest Teachers of the Nation and this retortion that our Saviour puts upon him is parallel to that that the Apostle useth Rom. 2. 21. Thou that teachest others teachest thou not thy self §. And knowest not these things The Divinity of the Jews which they taught and heard in their Schools was as far out of the rode of such doctrine as Christ teacheth here as it is from England to Jerusalem For though some of them stuck not to say that the Law might be expounded 72 ways yet in all their Expositions the Doctrine of Regeneration and the work of Grace was little thought on or looked after To omit their manner of expounding by Rashe sophe tebhoth Gematria Notericon Atbash Kabbalah and such wild kind of commenting as was ordinary among them the best Divinity that was to be had with them was but to instruct them in carnal rites and to heighten their Spirits to Legal performances They would speak and teach indeed concerning repentance and mortification and such kind of Doctrines but all was to promote their own Legal righteousness in such things and actions the more Their Divinity that they taught and learned was generally to this tenour To build upon their birth priviledge from Abraham Mar. 3. 9. To rest in the Law Rom. 2. 17. To rely upon their own works Mark 19. 20. Luke 18. 11. Gal. 4. 21. 5. 4. To care for no other faith but historical Jam. 2. 19. To patter over prayers as efficacious ex opere operato Maym. In
Religion because himself is the way the truth and the life in a sense much more proper and more sublime than the Law could be said to be It had been happier for the Jew if he could have discerned more judiciously concerning the Law if he could have distinguished between coming to God in the Law and coming to God by the Law as also between living in the Law and living by the Law It is beyond all doubt there is no way of coming to God but in his Law for what Out-law or one that still wanders out of the paths of God's Commandments can come unto him So also it is impossible that any one should have life but in the Law of God For who is it can have life that doth not walk according to the rule of his Laws But to obtain admission to the favour of God by the Law and to have life by the Law that is to be justified by the works of the Law this sounds quite another thing For it is by Christ only that we live and are justified by him alone that we have access to God These are the fictions of the Rabins There was one shewed a certain Rabbin the place where Corah and his Company were swallowed up and listen saith he what they say So they heard them saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moses and his Law are the truth Upon the Calends b Bava bathra fol. 74. 1. Bemidb. rabb fol 271. 1. of every Month Hell rolls them about as flesh rolls in the Cauldron Hell still saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Moses and his Law are truth a It is indeed a great truth what is uttered in this most false and ridiculous legend that the Law of Moses is truth But the Jews might if they would attain to a much more sound way of judging concerning the truth of it and consider that the Law is not the summ and ultimate of all truth but that Christ is the very truth of the truth of Moses Joh. I. 17. The Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ. VERS VII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. If ye had known me c. IT was a very difficult thing to spell out the knowledge of the Messiah from the Law and the Prophets under the first Temple but it was doubly more difficult under the second For under the first Temple Moses had only his own veil over him and the Prophets only their own proper and original obscurity but under the second Temple the obscurity is doubled by the darkness and smoke of Traditions which had not only beclouded the true Doctrines of Faith and Religon but had also brought in other Doctrines diametrically contrary to the chief and principal Articles of Faith those for instance concerning Justification the Person Reign and Office of the Messiah c. What measures of darkness these mists of Tradition had covered the minds of the Apostles with it is both difficult and might be presumptuous to determine They did indeed own Jesus for the true Messiah Joh. I. 41. Matth. XVI 16. But if in some things they judged amiss concerning his Office undertaking and government we must put it upon the score of that epidemical distemper of the whole Nation which they still did in some measure labour under And to this may this clause have some reference If ye had known me and had judged aright concerning the Office undertaking and Authority of the Messiah ye would in all these things which I teach and do have known the Will Command and Authority of the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And from henceforth ye know him We may render it Henceforward therefore know him Henceforward acknowledge the Father in all that I have done brought in and am to introduce still and set your hearts at rest in it believing that you see the Father in me and in the things that I do VERS VIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shew us the Father and it sufficeth us WHEN the Law was given to Moses the Israelites saw God in his glory do thou therefore now that thou art bringing in a new Law and Oeconomy amongst us do thou shew us the Father and his glory and it will suffice us so that we will have no more doubt about it VERS XVI 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He shall give you another comforter ALthough the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in frequent use amongst the Jews to signifie an Advocate and that very sense may be allowed to the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this place yet may it seem more fit and proper to render it by comforter at present For I. Amongst all the names and titles given to the Messiah in the Jewish Writers that of Menahem or the Comforter hath chiefly obtained and the days of the Messiah amongst them are stiled the days of Consolation c c c c c c Bab. Sanhedr fol. 98. 2. The names of Messiah are reckoned up viz. Shiloh Jinnon Chaninah Menahem And in Jerusalem Beracoth d d d d d d Fol. 5. 1. we are told how the Messiah had been born in Bethlehem under the name of Menahem Luke II. 25. Waiting for the consolation of Israel Targumist upon Jerem. XXXI 6. Those that desire or long for the years of consolation to come This they were wont to swear by viz. the desire they had of seeing this Consolation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So let me see the Consolation Now therefore bring these words of our Saviour to what hath been said q. d. You expect with the rest of this Nation the Consolation in the Messiah and in his presence Well I must depart and withdraw my presence from you but I will send you in my stead another Comforter II. The minds of the Disciples at present were greatly distressed and troubled so that the promise of a Comforter seems more suitable than that of an Advocate to their present state and circumstances VERS XVII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of truth LET us but observe how the whole world at this time lay in falsehood and error the Gentiles under a Spirit of delusion the Jews under the cheat and imposture of Traditions and then the reason of this title of the Spirit of truth will appear as also how seasonable and necessary a thing it was that such a spirit should be sent into the world VERS XXVI 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He shall teach you all things SO Chap. XVI 13. He shall lead you into all truth Here it might be very fitly enquired whether any ever beside the Apostles themselves were taught all things or led into all truth It is no question but that every believer is led into all truth necessary for himself and his own happiness but it was the Apostles lot only to be led into all truth necessary both for themselves and the whole Church VERS XXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Prince of this world cometh SEEING this
spoken in Scripture of this righteousness of God and indeed never enough My righteousness is never to be revealed To bring in everlasting righteousness New Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousness c. Never enough spoken never enough conceived of this Righteousness the most mysterious acting of Heaven the wonder of wonders among men the Justice of God in justifying a sinner A Divine Justice that exceeds divine Justice Divine Justice turned into Mercy You may think I speak strangely if I do it I am something excusable with Peter ravished with the Transfiguration I am upon a subject that may swallow up all minds with amazement but I clear my meaning In Rom. I. 17. It is said Therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith Revealed in the Gospel not in the Law Was there no revelation of Justice till the Gospel came Yes the Law revealed Justice but it was condemning Justice as that Text speaks From faith to faith so from righteousness to righteousness Gods Justice was most divine that appeared in the Law to condemn but that Justice exceeded in the Gospel to justifie Where are they that talk of being justified by their own works Then must they have a righteousness of their own that must out-vy Gods condemning justice which is infinitely just But his own justifying justice doth out-vy it As it is said Where sin abounded Grace did superabound So where condemning Justice was glorious justifying Justice was much more glorious I said Justice was turned into mercy I say the greatest Justice into the greatest mercy How are we justified and saved By Mercy True and yet by Justice become mercy not ceasing to be Justice what it was but becoming Mercy what it was not Here is a lively Copy before you God so loveth so acteth justice that he will satisfie it upon his own Son that he might glorifie it by way of mercy on all justified His greatest mercy appeareth in this acting of his justice and you are the greatest Mercy to a people when you do them the most Justice A third and last Copy that I would set before you all that hear me this day is fairly yet seems strangly written with Gods own hand in the Gospel In divers places of the New Testament where mention is made of the Law and where you would think it meant both the Tables it comes off only with mention of the Second Matth. XIX 17. If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandments You would look for all the Ten but look forward and he pitcheth only upon the second Table So Rom. XIII 8. He that loveth another hath fulfilled the Law You would look for the whole Law to be mentioned there but look forward in vers 9. and only the second Table is mentioned So Jam. II. 8. If you fulfil the Royal Law according to the Scripture c. you would look for the whole Law but he concludes all under this Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self Why where are the Duties of the first Table See how God put even all religion in the second Table As it is said Behold how he saved Lazarus so Behold how God loveth honest upright charitable dealing 'twixt man and man I shall not insist to shew you the reason of this strange passage I might tell you it is because whatsoever men pretend of Religion towards the Commands of the first Table it is nothing if it appear not in our obedience to the second I might tell you God puts you to that that is more in your own power as to obey the second Table is more so than the first But I leave the Copy in your own hands to read and comment on And when you have studied it the most you will find this to be the result how God requires how God delights in our righteous upright charitable dealings one with another A SERMON PREACHED AT HERTFORD Assise March 13. 1663. JUDG XX. 27 28. And the Children of Israel enquired of the Lord. For the ark of the Covenant of the Lord was there in those days And Phinehas the son of Eleazar the son of Aaron stood before it in those days AND it was time to enquire of the Lord considering their present condition and exigent and it was well they had the Ark in those days to enquire at considering the evil of those days and their exceeding wickedness And it was strange that Phinehas was then there considering the time of the story when he is thus brought in The three clauses in the Text that hint their inquiring and the manner of their inquiring and the Person by whom they inquired of the Lord and they inquired at the Ark of the Covenant and they inquired by Phinehas require each one a serious explication and each one explicated it may be will afford something of information that every one hath not observed before I. They enquired of the Lord. And it was time to enquire indeed when business went so crosly with them that though the Lord himself had encouraged them to that war yet they lose so many thousands in the battel At their first mustering they ask counsel of God and he allows their quarrel and appoints their Captain vers 18. And the Children of Israel arose and went up to the house of God and asked counsel of God and said which of us shall go up first to the battle against the Children of Benjamin And the Lord said Judah shall go up first And yet when they come to fight they lose two and twenty thousand men vers 21. They ask counsel of God again and he bids them go up and yet when they come to fight again they lose eighteen thousand men more And now after the loss of forty thousand men they inquire again and indeed it was very full time But what was it they inquired about If why they thus fell when God himself had encouraged them to the War which was a very just Quaere Had I or you been there we might have resolved them without an Oracle There is an accursed thing in the midst of thee O Israel and a very strange accursed thing that it is not strange that thou canst not stand but fallest thus before thine enemies In the Chapter before a Levites Concubine plays the whore and runs from him and as he fetches her again she is paid in her kind and whored with at Gibeah till it cost her her life Hereupon all Israel musters in arms as one man and solemnly vows and resolves to avenge her quarrel But in the Chapter before that Idolatry is publickly set up in the Tribe of Dan. And in the Chapter before that it is publickly enough set up in the Town of Micah and yet not one man that stands up or stirs in the quarrel of the Lord. Oh Israel that art thus zealous in the quarrel of a Whore and hast been no whit zealous in the cause of the Lord it is no wonder if thou fall and fall
Law to be laid upon man that it requires it the more because in that he is not looked upon only as a Creature to serve his Creator but as a Creature that is to enjoy his Creator Accordingly when God created Adam he wrote a Law in his Heart and made a Covenant with him upon the full terms of the Law for perfect obedience and this is commonly called his Covenant of Works with Adam The short Draught of that Covenant is this If thou performest perfect obedience according to the tenor of this Law To love the Lord with all thy heart c. thou shalt be blessed and enjoy God for ever if not then thou shalt be cursed and perish for ever Now observe the two contrary parts of this Proposal of God which we cannot but conceive to have been the tenor of the Covenant of Works with him First The Promissory part If thou performest perfect obedience thou shalt be saved There is mercy that God promiseth Salvation as well as Justice that he requires obedience For Adams obedience was due from him as a Creature though there had been no Salvation for him But in the Threatning part there was nothing but Justice If thou performest not perfect obedience thou shalt perish and all the equity in the World in it For as such obedience was due from him to God so was he then able to perform it and deserved perdition if he did not But Adam fell and that Covenant of Grace came in and then what became of the equity of that Law Did the Covenant of Grace extinguish Gods just claim of mans obedience Nay of mans perfect obedience No for God must not lose one tittle of his right and due but that Grace that made the Covenant did contrive that Christ must pay the perfect obedience and the believer the best obedience he can As he under the Law that could not reach a Lamb c. his sacrifice was not remitted but that sacrifice abated and he was to bring what he could two Turtles So man is now grown poor and cannot perform perfect obedience yet the Covenant of Grace doth not remit his obedience but abates the execution takes perfect obedience in his behalf from Christ but requires the perfectest he can perform from him too So that a sinner though he cannot perform obedience is not therefore acquitted from the Laws challenge of obedience nor a Believer though Christ has paid perfect nay infinite obedience for him yet he is not acquitted from obeying the best he can And the reason is because nothing can disannul Gods just claim of obedience from his creature So that this Law of obedience being founded in Gods being God and in our being his creatures it is impossible that God should make a Covenant with man for Grace and Salvation and this not be included Now though in the Covenant of Grace it stands not as in Adams Covenant of Works as by the performance of which to be justified yet doth it so stand in it as without Works performed there is no participation of God nay without which the Covenant is no Covenant What is said of the Sacramental Elements the like may be said in this case Elementum adde verbum sit Sacramentum Here are the Elements add the word of institution and it becomes a Sacrament So hoc est promissum adde legem fit foedus Here is the promise add the Law and it is a Covenant For though Promise and Covenant be sometimes convertible yet the Promise barely considered is not the Covenant without the Conditions of the Law affixed to it And under this notion in Gods own Language the Commandments of God are the Covenant of God Psal. CIII 18. To those that keep his Covenant which is explained in the next clause which remember his Commandments to do them They that keep his Covenant One would think it should be To those to whom he keeps his Covenant But herein the main stress of the matter ●●es if they keep his Commandments there is no doubt of the God of Truth performing his promise As the stress of Gods reconciliation to man is laid mainly in Scripture upon mans being reconciled to God II Cor. V. 19. God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself Col. I. 20. To reconcile all things to himself Not so much himself to the World as the World to himself not so much himself to all things as all things to himself for here is the great business to get man reconciled unto God and then no doubt of Gods being reconciled to man So there is no doubt of Gods performing his promise of Grace and Salvation but the great business is mans performing his part and keeping his Law And thus having spoken to that Question which in our enumeration came the second Why the Ark is called the Ark of the Covenant It hath made some way to answer the first How may Christians inquire of God in their doubtings as Israel did here and elsewhere in theirs I must answer briefly and that in the Words of Gods himself Esa. VIII 29. To the Law and to the Testament To the written Word of God Search the Scriptures As you might appeal to Balaam to bear witness concerning the blessedness of Israel whereas he was called forth to curse them So for the proof of this matter viz. That there is now no other way to enquire of God but only from his Word you may appeal to those very Scriptures that they produce that would maintain that there are Revelations and Inspirations still and that God doth still very often answer his People by them They produce that That they shall all be taught of God that is say they All the Saints shall be taught by the Spirit but that passage aims a clean other way as relating to the Gentiles as it doth in Esa. LIV. 13. hence it is quoted It means that whereas they in their Heathen blindness had been taught of the Devil by his Oracles Prophets Pythonesses and the like God would bring in the Gospel among them and so they now should be taught of God Or as relating to the Jews as Christ applies it Joh. VI. 45. the meaning is that whereas they had been taught by men either by Scribes and Pharisees which were evil men or by holy Priests and Prophets which were but men they should in time be taught and now were of God himself Christ Preaching among them as the Apostle observes Heb. I. 1. They produce that Heb. VIII 11. And they shall not teach every one his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for all shall know me from the least to the greatest from Jer. XXXI whereas the meaning is but this that by the Word of the Gospel should come in so clear light and so great means of knowledge that none but might know God if they would seek to know him And to the very same sence and tenor speaks that strange expression Esa. LXV 20. There
turned into Glory Faith into fruition Sanctification into impeccability and there will be no need of the Spirit in our sense any more So that Having the Spirit is understood of man considered only under the Fall II. Having the Spirit speaks of having it for mans Recovery The Spirit is given for his Recovery viz. what God will have recovered Let us look back to the Creation That lesson is divine and pertinent Eccles. XII 1. Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth There is more in it than every one observes It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thy Creators in the plural and teaches two things That as the first lesson Youth is to learn is to know his Creator so therewith to learn to know the Mystery of the Trinity that created him God created all things and man an Epitomy of all by the Word and Spirit Son and Holy Ghost XXXIII Psal. 6. By the word of the Lord were the Heavens made and all the host of them by the breath of his Mouth Joh. I. 3. All things were made by him and without him was not any made that was made Job XXXIII 4. The Spirit of God hath made me and the breath of the Almighty hath given me life Now when Gods creation in man was spoiled by Son and Spirit it is repaired So that as Christ saith of himself I come to seek and to save that which was lost so the Spirit came to restore and repair what was decayed This is the meaning of the new creature 2 Cor. V. 17. If any man be in Christ Jesus he is a new creature Eph. II. 10. For we are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works Who works this Christ and the Spirit Something Christ doth by his blood viz. restores righteousness the rest by his Spirit viz. recovers holiness Nay I may add the Spirit is given only for mans Recovery The Spirit created man so perfect to try him Spiritus movens the Spirit moving is to try man outward administrations are to try him but when sanctification comes it hath a further purpose Compare man in innocency with man after the fall His state in which he then was was to try him But will the Spirit alway have his work of so uncertain issue Will he never act but for trial and leave the issue to the will of man God when he intended not innocency for the way of Salvation left man to himself Doth the Spirit the like in a way intended for Salvation Who then could be saved Spiritus movens the Spirit moving I said was given to try inhabitans inhabiting only and undoubtedly to Recover III. Having the Spirit presupposeth having of Christ vers 9. If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of Christs contra If any have the Spirit he hath Christ. These terms are convertible He that hath Christ hath the Spirit and vice versa he that hath the Spirit hath Christ. As He that hath the Father hath the Son and he that hath the Son hath the Father also As Son and Spirit cooperated in mans creation so in his renovation Personal works are distinct but never separate Christ to Justifie the Spirit to Sanctifie but never one without the other The Spirit is called the Spirit of Christ is it possible then to have the Spirit absque Christo without having Christ And he is called his Spirit not only quia procedit a filio because he proceeded from the Son but because he gives him and is a purchase of his blood As the Spirit moved on the Waters so he moves on the blood of Christ he comes swimming in that and it is ex merito sanguinis from the merit of his blood whosoever hath him See Gods way of cleansing the Leper which is an Emblem of cleansing a sinner XIV Levit. 14 15 17. And the Priest shall take some of the blood of the trespass offering and the Priest shall put it upon the tip of the right ear of him that is to be cleansed c. And the Priest shall take some of the Log of oyl c. And the Priest shall put it upon the tip of the right ear c. First Blood and then Oyl On whom is the unction of the Spirit on him is first the unction of blood As the person is accepted before his Service Gen IV. 4. The Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering So the person is first Justified before Sanctified God doth not new-create a person whom he accepts not IV. He that hath the Spirit hath a twofold work of the Spirit common grace and sanctifying grace We may consider the Spirit as Creator and Sanctifier and thirdly acting in a Work between both When he teacheth man arts indues him with intellectual abilities he then works as Creator in bonum Universi for the good of the Universe When he sanctifieth he doth it for the recovery of the Soul Now there is a work between both that is more than he doth as Creator and less than as Sanctifier but in tendency to the latter but as yet it is not it viz. Common grace Such is Illumination to see ones Condition Conviction with feeling Conscience active thoughts of Soul This is called grace because more than nature Common because wicked men have it sometimes as appears by Heb. VI. 4. And you read of Felix his trembling at S. Pauls Sermon Now the Spirit never worketh sanctifying grace but first useth this to make way He plows the heart by common grace and so prepares it for sanctifying grace In this Chapter at vers 15. There was the Spirit of fear before that of adoption As the Law was given first so the work of the Law is first Rom. VII 9. When the Commandment came sin revived and I died As Moses delivered the people of Israel into the hand of Joshua so the Law when it hath sufficiently disciplined us commits us into the hand of Grace As in Gal. III. 17. The Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law c. cannot disannul that it should make the promise of none effect The Law is subservient to the promise so this work of the Law to Grace Is a meer work of the Law sanctifying Grace True the work of the Law goes along with grace hence many a gracious heart is under terrors But is the first work of the Law Grace No it is to fit the heart to receive Grace Many now a days say I have the Spirit How came they by it If they have it it is an unnatural birth not bred and born after Gods ordinary way To day debauched to morrow turn Sectary and then have the Spirit That was a wonder in the Prophet speaking of one that before she travailed was delivered such a wonder is this if it be so No God causeth this work of Common Grace to prepare and fit us for the reception of the Holy Spirit V. The Spirit worketh both these by the
condemnation The ceremonial Law was given by Moses a ministration of types and shadows but truth came by Jesus Christ substantiating and resolving all III. Look into the Gospel it self It is the greatest and most Divine truth that can be given And as the Devil when he brought in the Heathen Religion brought in the greatest lie that could be imposed upon men So when God brought in the Gospel he brought in the greatest Truth that could be received by men And should I exceed my bounds if I said The greatest Truth that could be revealed by God For what could God reveal to mortal men more than he hath done in it himself his Son his Spirit his Grace his Salvation More than what is revealed in the Gospel shall never be revealed to men on this side Heaven And is not Heaven it self revealed very plainly in it And yet there are men in the Text and men in the World that make it their work to resist this Truth This light to lighten Gentiles they would put out This glory of the people Israel they would corrupt and this great and Divine Oracle of God they would silence and stop its mouth Very fitly resembled in the Emblem where the candle being lighted and set up the Devil the Turk the Pope and a company of Hereticks and Persecutors set with all their earnestness and indeavour to blow it out More than an Emblem of such an indeavour was the great plot and design of this day from the stroke of which we are here met to render our acknowledgment and thanksgiving An indeavour to have blown up and blown out the Truth of God and the purity and power of the Gospel out of this nation for ever In the words before us you plainly see two things an Act and the Agents resisting of the Truth and the men that resisted it But do you not also observe one out of sight or behind the vail viz. the providence of God looking on and permitting such a thing to be done A mystery of iniquity in the cursed acting of the persons and a mystery of providence and dispensing in suffering them so to act I. Concerning the persons and their acting The Truth might take up the complaint and expostulation of David It was not an open enemy that did me this evil for then I should have born it neither was it an open adversary that magnified himself against me for then peradventure I might have hid my self from him but it was thou my companion and familiar which took counsel with me together and we walked to the House of God as friends He that eateth at my table hath lift up his heel against me These men and the Truth or Gospel had been old acquaintance they had conversed and been familiar together they had taken counsel together and gone to Church too as friends but now they become her enemies because she is Truth They had approved the Gospel been initiated into it profest it and it may be some of them had preached it but now they become its enemy because she is Truth They had once received the knowledge of the Truth but now they wilfully sin against it Heb. X. 26. They had once known the way of Righteousness but now were utterly turned away from it 2 Pet. II. 21. They had once run well as Gal. III. but now they run clear counter to what they had done and seek to destroy the Gospel which they had once professed and resist the Truth with as much nay more fervency and earnestness than ever they owned it It was Pauls honour and comfort that He now preached the Gospel which he once destroyed Gal. I. 22. but it was these wretches dread and condemnation that they destroyed the Gospel which they once preached That general Apostasie or revolting from Truth that was then in the Church brought forth twins of a clear contrary complexion as different as Jacob and Esau if I may use Jacobs name with such persons when both of them are of the manners and conditions of Esau and you could hardly tell which of them was the worse For some Apostatized to pure Judaisme some to meer or worse than Heathenism some to dote upon the rites of Moses and to look to be justified by the works of the Law and to betake themselves to a Pharisaical austerity hoping thereby to be justified Others revolted to all loosness of life and Atheism abusing the liberty of the Gospel to libertinism and turning the grace of God into wantonness and accounting all things lawful that might content the flesh and please a carnal mind Now the Apostles give intimation of both these and sadly complain and invey against them I need not to particularize he that runs may read it more especially in the Epistle to the Galatians concerning the former and in 2 Pet. II. and Jude concerning the latter I might speak how these wretches did resist the Gospel or what instruments or machinations they used for the opposing of it As 1. Venting damnable Heresies and Doctrines of Devils as our two Apostles tell us 1 Tim. III. 1. 2 Pet. II. 2. Using the trade of Jannes and Jambres conjuration and sorcery and lying miracles as our Law had foretold Matth. XXIV 24. That they should shew signs and wonders to deceive the very elect if it were possible And the Apostle tells it was so as our Saviour had foretold 2 Thes. II. 9. That the coming of this mystery of iniquity was according to the working of Satan in all power and signs and lying wonders 3. They used the trade that the Roman Emperors afterward used of bitter sharp and cruel persecution Of which you have several memorials in the Epistles ravening Wolves breaking into the Church in sheeps clothing and making sad havock of the flock all before them This was the judgment that begun at the house of God 1 Pet. IV. 17. The hour of temptation that came upon all the Earth Rev. III. 10. I might by the way observe How far a man may fall from the true profession of the Gospel viz. so far as to become the worst of men and the Gospels most bitter enemy And that the bitterest enemies of the Gospel have ever been some that have pretended to the Gospel Persecution never did that mischief in the Church that Heresie hath done And the sorest wounds that the Gospel ever received were like his in Zach. in the house of her friends but this I shall not insist on You see Jannes and Jambres have here met with their match but is there any match to be found for these men that have matched them Yes look at Rome and you find them there As many Protestants and Papists by the last days do indeed understand the last days of the World So many Protestant Divines do attribute all the characters of those wretched men to the Papacy And indeed they are so like that it is no wonder if they be not clearly discerned asunder Though the Papacy would
change places with a Heathen or Pagan that never heard of the Law and Commandments of God Dost thou not think it an infinite mercy that God hath revealed them to thee and laid them before thee In that very thing he shews that he would not that thou shouldst perish without the knowledge of his Law but that thou mightest know and keep his Commandments and live His Commandments are not bonds of iron and fetters of brass but they are the cords of men and the bonds of Love God gives them in mercy that we might know what he would have us to do and that we may do it and be blessed in the deed and this may be a second reason to urge our keeping of Gods Commandments viz. II. Because God gave them that we might keep them He gave them in mercy that we might keep them for our own good God gave them with this intent that men should keep them and that keeping them it might be well with them both here and ever He speaks this once and again himself Exek XX. 11. I gave them my statutes and shewed them my judgments which if a man do he shall ever live in them And Deut. XXX 15. I set before thee this day in giving thee my Commandments life and death blessing and cursing that thou mayest obtain the one and escape the other And observe his pathetical and affectionate expression to this purpose Deut. V. 29. O that there were such a heart in this people that they would fear me and keep my commandments always that it might be well with them and with their children for ever So that these two things are observable concerning the Law and Commandments of God First That the Commandments of the Law were given for a Gospel end that though the Law be the ministration of death and condemnation 2 Cor. III. yet the direct end of it was for life and salvation Gal. III. 24. It was our School master to bring us to Christ that we might be justified by faith The Antinomians sure little consider what injuriousness they offer to God when they say the Law to Israel was a Covenant of works as if God had given them a Covenant which should do them no good For by the Law how little could they be justified True indeed the Law is called his Covenant the two Tables the Tables of his Covenant but he means his Covenant of grace to which the Law aimed and directed And the Law was not a Covenant of works but a noble part of the administration of the Covenant of grace T is true that the Law killeth curseth condemneth but that is the first end of it not the last neither did God ordain it that it should only condemn and there end but by condemning it might drive men on to seek salvation Secondly That though the performing of the Law in one sense is impossible yet the keeping of the Law in another is not impossible It is impossible to perform the Law so exactly as to be justified by it yet t is not so impossible to keep the Law as to be saved in it Now what is it to keep the Law When a man makes it only and intirely his rule to walk by and as near as he can keeps from declining from it either to the right hand or left God never gave his Law to fallen man with intention that he should perfectly perform it when Adam did not who had power to have done it But he gave his Law to fallen man that he should make it his Law and that he should not walk lawless or after his own will but that the Law of God should be his Law and Rule And he that makes the commandments and Law of God his rule whereby he walks and keeps as close to that as he can this man keeps the Law of God though no man be able to perform it to justification Here then is a second inforcement to keep the Commandments of God because they were given us for that very purpose and there is a blessing and happiness in keeping them III. I might speak of the authority wherewith they were given and of the terror in which they were given fire and thunder c. Both of which speak the reason and obligation for our obeying them God commanded them and he requires obedience and he gave them in terror as intimating what must follow upon disobedience to them But I shall speak only to what the Text especially speaks viz. of his giving his Law and Commandments by the disposition of Angels i. e. Prophets and Ministers men like our selves You may remember that in Exod. XX. that when the people had heard God speak from Sinai in such dreadful terror they trembled and quaked and stood afar off And we are not able say they to hear this terrible voice of God any more if we do we shall die Take thou speaking to Moses the words from the mouth of God and speak thou to us Be thou the Angel or messenger of the Lord to us to tell us what his mind and commandment is and we can hear it but if the Lord himself speak thus to us any more we are but dead men And the Lord did accordingly first giving his Laws to Moses that he might give them to the people and afterwards raising up Prophets and Ministers among them that they might instruct them in his Laws and Commands And so in all succeeding generations So that his Commandments come now to us not in fire and thunder but in a still voice by men like unto our selves Thus God draweth near to men in mildness and softness that if it might be he might win upon them We Ambassadors of God beseech you in Christs stead that you would receive the Commandments of God and be saved IV. Lastly The reasonableness of Gods Commandments is reason strong enough to enforce our keeping of his Commandments and obedience to them for the keeping them Some of the Commands that God gave Israel in the Ceremonial Law were such as the reason of them was not so readily to be found out For why may not I wear linsey woolsey might a Jew say as well as other people Why may not I plow with an Ox and an Asse as well as other Nations do Why may not I eat such and such things good for diet as other countries do The reason of these commands and prohibitions lay deep and were not so easie to be discovered But God hath laid no such Commands upon us but whose very equity is not only a bond upon us to keep them but is a reason plain and apparent why they were given What more reasonable thing in the World than that we should all love God and our neighbour And what greater equity in the World than that we should believe in Christ deny the World mortifie corruption live holily and glorifie God and seek to save our own Souls Do we need to go to Heaven to fetch thence a reason