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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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without blood which hee offered for himself and for the errours of the people Hee proceeds in describing the anniversary rites which were of this sort 1 The High Priest alone without any companion 2 Once a year not oftener 3 Never without the offering the blood of a Calf and an Hee-Goat in a basin 4 This blood hee offered for his own sins great and small and for the sins of the people All these outward worldly and shadowy things were in no wise efficacious in themselves For they prefigured the entring of Christ into Heaven by his own blood the true Propitiatory This is the first Argument of the earthly imperfection in the Levitical Priesthood Vers. 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Argum. 2. Propounded by way of exposition of the next mystery In the time of the Levitical Priesthood while it obtained a standing Tabernacle and that Ceremonial worship about the Sanctuary the way to Heaven or the true Sanctuary was not manifestly declared as it is now under the Priesthood of Christ That which the Holy Ghost taught by excluding the Priests from the inward Sanctuary by admitting the High Priest once a year the Sanctuary remaining shut all the year after Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 9. Which was a figure for the time then present in which were offered both gifts and Sacrifices that could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the conscience Argum. 3. The rites of the foresaid expiatory and the other such exercises of the Levitical High Priest were typical and parabolical and a meer pattern of those things which were to bee performed by Christ Therefore the excellency of the Levitical Priesthood is no waies to bee equallized with the Priesthood of Christ. For the time Argum. 4. The things which were done by the High Priest and the Levitical Priests served onely for the time present of the Law institution viz. in the infancy and beginning of the Church wherein gifts and typical Sacrifices were offered Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is far inferiour to the Priesthood of Christ. Could not Argum. 5. The gifts and sacrifices which were offered by the Levitical Priesthood could not sanctifie the conscience of him that worshiped or take away the evil conscience of sins committed Therefore the Levitical Priesthood c. Vers. 10. Which stood onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal ordinances imposed on them until the time of reformation Argum. 6. Confirming the former Those things which were offered by the Levitical Priest consisted onely in meats and drinks and divers washings and carnal rites which did not commend a man to God 1 Cor. 8.2 but onely they did these things as sanctified in the flesh ceremonially they might bee accounted pure worshipers Therefore the Levitical Priesthood is nothing being compared to the Priesthood of Christ. Until Argum. 7. These gifts and sacrifices and the other offices of the Levitical Priests were imposed as a yoak and burden onely till the time of Reformation i. e. till the comming of Christ who would reform the imperfect sacrifices and gifts of the old Priesthood and they being abolished hee would introduce a more perfect gift and sacrifice Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more perfect c. Vers. 11. But Christ being come an High Priest of good things to come by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands that is to say not of this building Argum. 8. Christ is the High Priest not of types but of spiritual good things of Justification Sanctification and Salvation which were figured by the types Therefore c. By a greater Argum. 9. Christ had a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands not of a common structure viz. the Tabernacle of his body which was formed in the womb of the Virgin by the Holy Ghost after a special manner without the spot of Original sin in which Tabernacle the fulness of the Godhead dwels Therefore his Priesthood is far more excellent than c. Vers. 12. Neither by the blood of Goats and Calves but by his own blood hee entred in once into the holy place having obtained eternal redemption for us Argum. 10. Christ offered not the blood of Bulls or Goats as the Levitical Priests but his own blood and the same is made the Priest and the Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood c. Once Argum. 11. Christ hath once entred into the true holy place i. e. Heaven and there abides not often as the Levitical Priests into the typical holy place Therefore his Priesthood c. Eternal Argum. 12. Christ hath purchased eternal Redemption with his own blood which was impossible for the Levitical Priests Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than c. Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of 〈◊〉 Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience from dead works to serve the Living God Shall purge Argum. 13. Confirming the former The blood of Christ purges the conscience partly as the conscience seeing full satisfaction made in the death of Christ to divine Justice for it self closeth with its perfect discharge and rests therein partly as the power of sanctifying the heart to the service of God flowes from him For if Hee confirms this Argument a minori The blood of Bulls and other types performed what they were appointed to viz. Ecclesiastical purification of the outward man that hee might be sanctified to the works of external worship how much more shall the blood of Christ the Antitype perform that which is signified by the types viz. The purifying of the conscience from sins to the service of God Sins are called dead works because they deserve death and make sinners guilty of death By the Spirit Argum. 14. In the Sacrifice of Christ the Eternal Spirit or Christ as God acted the chief parts of the Priest and offered up himself as a man without spot for a Sacrifice Therefore his Priesthood is so much the more excellent than the Levitical as God is more excellent than man and his holy humanity than a beast Vers. 15. And for this cause hee is the Mediatour of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Argum. 15. Under the Old Covenant neither Remission of sin nor the Inheritance of Eternal Life was given to them that were called but for the sake of Christs death interceding under the New Covenant to which end hee being now the Mediatour of the New Covenant is ordained for all them that are called Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent
repeated But Christs entry into Heaven to be perfect because but once not to be repeated 3. The Levitical Priests entred by the blood of Goats and Calves But Christ entred by his own blood 1. And if Christ entred but once into Heaven after his Suffering Then Wee must not think that his Body is any where else but in Heaven onely wherein it is once onely entred 2. If the blood whereby Christ entred into Heaven was his own blood Then 1. Verily Christs Body was like ours in substance having blood in it as ours and wee must not conceive otherwise of his body than to be of the same substance and substantial properties with ours 2. The blood belonged to the same person to whom the properties of God belongeth so often in this Epistle attributed unto Christ. His Blood was the blood of God Act. 20.28 That is the same Jesus was God and man with flesh and blood in one person 3. The Fruit of Christs bloody Sacrifice hee maketh The Eternal Redemption of those for whom hee offered it And to the typical Sacrifice hee ascribeth no redemption at all in the comparison Thereby giving us to understand 1. That from the worlds beginning to the end thereof salvation of sinners is by way of Christs Redemption That is by his loosing them through payment of a price 2. That the Redemption was manifested to have force when after his bloody Sacrifice hee entred into Heaven 3. That such as are once redeemed by Christ are Eternally Redeemed not for a time to fall away again but eternally to be saved most certainly Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Vers. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God To prove that eternal Redemption is the fruit of Christs Sacrifice he reasoneth thus If the Typical Sacrifices and Rites of old were able to work that for which they were ordained that is external Sanctification Much more shall Christs true Sacrifice be able to work that for which it was appointed that is Eternal Remission of sins and inward Sanctification unto eternal life Then there are two sorts of Sanctification One external of the flesh which maketh a man holy to the Church whatsoever he be within Another internal of the conscience and inner man which maketh a man holy before God 2. The purifying of the flesh he maketh to be by the exercise of such and such Ordinances of Divine Service for the time Then External or Church-holiness of the outward man is procured by such and such exercises of Divine Ordinances in the Church as serve to make a man to be reputed and holden for clean before men and so to be received for a member of the Church as is to be seen Numb 19. 3. From his form of reasoning we learn That whatsoever liberty and access of coming to the Church was made to the Jew of old by these ceremonies of the Law as much and more liberty is made to the Christian to come in to God by the blood of Christ. 4. In describing Christs Sacrifice he saith Christ through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Then 1. Christ is both the Sacrifice and the Priest in one person He offered himself as man through the Eternal Spirit that is by the vertue and power of his own Godhead by which he preached before his Incarnation to sinners 1 Pet. 3.19 2. His sacrifice was without spot He was that spotless Lamb in whom was no sin nor imperfection nor defect of any thing that the sacrifice required 3. The vertue of the sacrifice which made it to purchase Eternal Redemption unto us floweth from the infinite worth of his Eternal Godhead 4. Albeit Christs two natures have their distinct respects in the actions of his Office yet Christ is one and undivided in the execution of his Office 5. The fruit and force of the sacrifice is set down in this that this Blood shall purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God That is shall both absolve a man from his foregon sin and also enable him to serve God for time to come Then 1. Sins are but dead works flowing from nature dead in sin and not onely deserving but also drawing on death upon the sinner 2. The conscience lieth polluted with the filthiness of dead works till the vertue of the blood of Jesus applied bring intimation of absolution 3. Christs blood doth not purge the Conscience from dead works that a man should go wallow in them again but that he may serve the living God more acceptably 4. The purging vertue of Christs blood is joyned with the sanctifying and renewing of the absolved sinner and what God hath conjoyned let no man put asunder Vers. 15. And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions which were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Now lest any man should stumble at Christs death he sheweth a necessity thereof in respect of his office of Mediation and the purchase to be made by his Redemption The force of the reason is this Remission of sins could not have been given under the Law except the Mediator had been to pay the price of the same under the Gospel Nor could the faithful and called ones either then or now obtain eternal life for an inheritance otherwise than by the Mediators death Therefore it behoved the true Mediator by means of death to pay the promised price of the purchase of remission of sins and eternal life Then 1. The remission of transgressions and the inheritance of eternal life are both fruits of Christs Passion 2. The fruits of his Passion extended themselves unto them who were under the Old Testament as well as unto us under the New 3. The way of purchase of these benefits was by Redemption that is to say by lawful purchase such as might satisfie justice 4. The way in special was by means of the Mediators death His life was laid down to redeem ours His one life as good as all ours 5. For this cause Christ took the office of a Mediator unto himself that he might have right and interest by death to make this purchase 6. And therefore except he had really died the purchase could not have been lawfully made Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator Another reason to prove the necessity of Christs death from the force of the word Covenant which signifieth also a Testament The force of the reason is this Christ Jer. 31.31 promised to make a New Covenant and therefore also a New Testament i● to make a New Testament then also he promised
maintain the Truth against all fear of men Vers. 26. For if wee sin wilfully after that wee have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sins Another Motive to constancy in the Truth of Religion taken from the fearful case of wilful Apostates who sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost are secluded for ever from Mercy I say the sin against the Holy Ghost because wee shall finde the sin here described not to be any particular sin against the Law but against the Gospel Not a sin against some point of Truth but against Christs whole Doctrine Not of infirmity but wilfulness Not of rashness but of deliberation wittingly and willingly Not of ignorance but after Illumination and Profession Such as Iews turned Christians revolting from Christianity back again to their former hostility against Christ did commit It is true many who commit lesser sins get never grace to repent and many who make defection in some point of their profession may be secluded from mercy thereafter but this sin here described is a wilful rejecting of Christ and the Benefit of his Sacrifice after Illumination and Profession of the Faith of Christ. Then 1. As Apostacy from the true Religion lyeth nearest unto this sin so they who desire to be freed of this sin must be the more careful to be constant in the profession of every point of the Truth of the Gospel 2. If a man reject the Benefit of that once offered Sacrifice of Christ there is no other Sacrifice for sin after that nor any other mean to help him But if a man seek unto Jesus Christ and will not quit Him whatsoever hee may think of the hainousness of his own sins the Sacrifice which Jesus offered for sins remaineth whereby hee may be saved Vers. 27. But a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversaries Having secluded the Apostate from Mercy hee goeth on in these words to shew his miserable estate Whereof wee gather 1. That the wilful Apostate from the Faith of Christ is also a wilful Adversary to Christ of the highest sort Partaker of Satans sin and Satans Profession 2. That every Apostate of this sort is destitute of Gods Peace self-condemned desperate of salvation hopeless of Relief without all purpose of Repentance or using means of help stricken with the fore-sight of the Wrath coming upon him and made to expect it although hee should dissemble it never so much 3. The Apostates fear shall come upon him judgement answerable to his sin the indignation and wrath of God yea fiery indignation the most terrible that can be thought upon which hee shall not escape but it shall devoute him swallow him up and feed upon his body and soul even for ever 2. In that hee maketh this the judgement of Christs Adversaries Wee learn That the soul which loveth Christ and cannot qui● Him cannot endure to think of a separation will not quit the true Religion nor any known point of Christs Truth and is using the means to get Gods Peace albeit it might seem to it self because of the present sense of wrath to be in the self-same estate that is here described yet it is ●ree as yet of the sin against the Holy Ghost and not to be reckoned amongst adversaries but amongst the friends and lovers of Christ how vehemently soever Satans suggestions bear in the contrary 3. In that by setting before them the fearful estate of Apostates from the known Truth of the true Religion hee Laboureth to strengthen them against the fear of persecution Whence wee learn That if Apostates before they make Apostasie from the true Religion did fore-see their own danger as after Apostasie they are made to fore-see their own condemnation all the terrour of all the torment which man could put them unto and all the allurements which this world could give them would not move them to quit the least point of the Truth of true Religion Vers. 28. Hee that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses 29. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall hee be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Blood of the Covenant wherewith hee was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace 1. Hee proveth the equity of their judgement by the proportion of their punishment who despised the Law of Moses Then As sins are greater so must the punishment be greater and the conscience being posed as here cannot but subscribe to the proportion 2. To make the sin appear the better hee pointeth out some particular sins involved within this great sin For clearing whereof it may be asked How can the Apostates tread the Blood of the Son of God under foot c. I answer They cannot indeed by physical action but by doing the equivalent sin they are accounted of God to do it by judicial interpretation Their Apostasie importeth their agreeing to do Christ as much indignity as if they did offer Him this personal violence Their deeds shew that they have this base estimation of Christ and His Blood and no better For what saith the Apostate of Christ by his deed but That Hee is not worthy to be professed or avowed or followed And what is this in effect but to tread Him under all these base things which the Apostate preferreth before Him And so is to be understood of the Blood of Christ and His Spirit Quest. But how can the Reprobate be said to be sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant I answer There is a sanctification to the purifying of the flesh and a sanctification to the purifying of the conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.13 14. The sanctification external to the purifying of the flesh consisteth in the mans separation from the world and dedication unto Gods service by Calling and Covenant common to all the members of the visible Church and it is forcible thus far as to bring a man into credit estimation as a Saint before men and unto the common Priviledges of the Church whereupon as Men so God also speaketh unto him and of him as one of His People and dealeth with him in his external dispensation as with one of His own People In this sense all the Congregation of Israel and every one of them is called holy yea Core also and his followers Num. 16.3 The Sanctification internal by renovation consisteth in a mans separation from the state of Nature to the state of grace from his old conditions to be a new creature indeed By this latter sort a Reprobate cannot be called Sanctified but by the former hee may be called Sanctified and that by virtue of the Blood of the Covenant albeit hee should not get any further good thereby For as the Blood of CHRIST hath virtue to cleanse the conscience and renew the soul which commeth unto it truly and spiritually so it
towards your poor and afflicted Brethren yee shall have judgement it is to be feared without mercy Therefore avoid respect of persons Rejoyceth Argum. 10. If yee exercise mercy especially towards your poor afflicted Brethren as the Gospel requires yee have no reason to fear wrath or judgement without mercy but yee may by this be certified of Gods mercy whereupon relying yee may rejoyce against the severity of Judgement meerly as from which yee are delivered through the mercy of God Therefore unless yee would renounce mercy and make your selves obnoxious to judgement yee ought to avoid this respect of persons which is joyned with cruelty The Second Part. Vers. 14. What doth it profit my Brethren though a man say hee hath Faith and have not works can Faith save him The other Admonition for avoiding the vanity of boasting touching a vain and idle Faith The Proposition is determined in the first words That the Profession of Faith is unprofitable and vain which is destitute of works Hee proves this by nine Arguments Argum. 1. Because such Faith which is void of fruits cannot save him that boasts of his vain Faith Therefore his profession is vain Vers. 15. If a Brother or Sister be naked and destitute of daily food 16. And one of you say unto them Depart in peace bee you warmed and filled notwithstanding yee give them not those things which are needful to the body what doth it profit Argum. 2. Verbal profession of empty charity is vain and unprofitable both to him that professes it and to the hungry to whom words are given in stead of meat Therefore also the meer Profession of Faith is vain Vers. 17. Even so Faith if it hath not works is dead being alone Argum. 3. Charity which consists onely in an outward profession is dead Therefore also Faith which consists in an outward profession without works is dead and vain Vers. 18. Yea a man may say Thou hast Faith and I have works Shew mee thy Faith without thy works and I will shew thee my Faith by my works Argum. 4. Such a profession of Faith is apparently vain when it shall come to the tryal as it appears in the supposition of the Dialogue set down betwixt the true beleever who can shew his Faith by his Works and the boasting hypocrite who cannot demonstrate his Faith by his life and works Therefore that boasting of Faith is vain and unprofitable Vers. 19. Thou beleevest that there is one God thou dost well the Devils also beleeve and tremble Argum. 5. Faith which is called Historical whereby wee beleeve the Truth of the Articles of Faith touching the unity of God and such like although this bee good yet it is not sufficient to salvation it is not saving Faith Because the Devils beleeve the Truth of the Divine Word and tremble Therefore much less doth the vain profession of Faith destitute of works profit to salvation Vers. 20. But wilt thou know O vain man that Faith without works is dead Argum. 6. Propounded by way of Dialogue Hee that glorieth and resteth upon such Faith that is without works not knowing it to be dead is a vain and empty man as a vessel the more empty it is the more it sounds and hence hee proceeds to the seventh Argument Vers. 21. Was not Abraham our Father justified by works when hee had offered Isaac his Son upon the Altar Argum. 7. Proving that faith without works is dead and consequently the profession of faith which wanteth works to be vain from the example of Abraham who in the foresaid matter touching the demonstration of his faith whether it were alive or dead is found and declared just by his works and here by an interrogation he urges the conscience of the hypocrite Abraham the Father of the faithful is justified before the whole world because his faith was not dead but alive by his works when he had offered Isaac his son upon the Altar in testimony of the sincerity of his faith or that he by a lively faith believed in God and pleased not himself in the vain profession of an idle or dead faith as many do Therefore faith which is without works is dead and vain And so Iames very well agreeth with ●aul For Paul argues thus Rom. 4.2 If Abraham was justified by works he hath whereof to glory but not before God therefore he is not justified before God by works But Iames argues thus Abraham is justified by works before men who might say to him Shew me thy faith by thy works or demonstrate to me that thy faith is not dead but alive From which antecedent it doth not onely follow Therefore faith without works is dead but also the conclusion agreeing with Pauls conclusion Therefore Abraham is justified before God not by that dead faith and void of works but by a lively faith and efficacious in works and so the Apostles agree very well Vers. 22. Seest thou how faith wrought with his works and by works was faith made perfect He shews that this is the minde of Iames by convincing the boasting hypocrite glorying of a dead faith from this that the faith of Abraham together with the profession of faith had works joyned with it so that his faith is declared to be perfected by works and not found vain or dead Vers. 23. And the Scripture was fulfilled which saith Abraham believed God and it was imputed unto him for righteousness and he was called the friend of God From hence also he infers an exposition of that Scripture which Paul cites in the matter of Justification by faith and so he fully demonstrates his consent with Paul Seeing that Abrahams faith is perfectly declared by his wo●ks or the fruits thereof then it is declared plainly that the Scripture hath spoken true He believed c. And so when it is said that faith was imputed to Abraham for righteousness it is manifest that it is to be understood of faith not dead but lively and operative by works And Iames here sheweth that this exposition of the Scripture is the fulfilling and the full sense of it He saith that Abraham was called the friend of God that we may understand that sincere reconciliation with God is wrought by faith and true friendship is demonstrated by the manifestation of faith in works of obedience Vers. 24. Ye see then how that by works a man is justified and not by faith onely The conclusion follows from these premises against the boasting of hypocrites touching their vain faith that all pro●●ssing faith before men are justified by their works and not onely by the profession of their faith or by a dead and vain faith which you hypocrites boast of Vers. 25. Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot justified by works when she had received the Messengers and had sent them out another way Argum. 8. Rahab the Harlot was justified before Israel viz. that she truly believed in God and was truly converted by works when she had received the
with Christ by Faith follows our judicial union with Christ from this union imputation is made of the obedience and righteousness of Christ to us and at length the application of all his gifts even to perfect felicity which being considered what can bee said more efficaciously to stir all of us up that our enmities being acknowledged and our necessities wee may imbrace reconciliation offered in Christ. The sum therefore of these three verses is That the Apostle when hee had weighed the dispensation of mans Redemption and the reason of bringing the Elect to Reconciliation and Salvation hee could not but imploy himself strongly and faithfully in his Ministery For when hee knew by the Covenant concerning the Redemption of the Elect between God and his Son the second person of the Trinity invested with the office of a Mediator and a Surety God being so abundantly satisfied hee now becomes gracious to the world of the redeemed or Elect concurring with Christ the Mediator for the applying of Reconciliation obtained for all the Redeemed and hee importunes them by Christ and by the Servants of Christ the Ministers of the Gospel no less seriously than the Redeemer himself and prayes them that now hee himself being reconciled they would bee reconciled When I say the Apostle knew these things and that there was a charge committed to him that hee should promote this reconciliation what wonder then if hee earnestly strived that men might be turned to God And when hee knew that by Covenant Christ had took upon himself all the sins of all the Redeemed and was made a Propitiatory Sacrifice for the expiating of their sins imputed to him under this condition that the Redeemed such all the faithful shew themselves to bee clothed with the Righteousness of God or the Righteousness of Christ should bee accounted most righteous in the mind of God and at length should bee fully renewed by the Holy Spirit what wonder then if hee confidently and constantly prosecuted the business of reconciliation and shewed himself faithful in executing his Ministery CHAP. VI. THat as yet further hee may commend the exercise of his Ministery more fully to the consciences of the Corinthians putting before their eyes a Minister faithful in work and example hee draws a three-fold exhortation from the premises that they may bring forth the fruit of his Ministery There are three parts of the Chapter of which the first is an exhortation seriously to receive the grace offered by him to vers 11. The second is an exhortation to receive him for the Apostle of Christ to vers 14. And the third is an exhortation to shun the contagion of Idolatry to the end Vers. 1. Wee then as workers together with him beseech you also that yee receive not the Grace of God in vain The first Exhortation is that they would receive the Grace of Reconciliation more seriously and with fruit and suffer not the Grace of God offered in the Gospel by their fault to want its full fruit in them that they may obtain Righteousness Peace Life and all things which Christ hath obtained for them The Proposition hee urges is this Yee ought not to receive the Grace of God in vain i. e. in outward profession onely without its internal virtue this hee proves by three Arguments Argum. 1. Wee Ministers of God being co-workers that his work may bee promoted in you granted from him to you by free gift promising our endeavour for the promoting of your salvation earnestly desired that of you Therefore yee ought not to receive the Grace of God in vain Vers. 2. For hee saith I have heard thee in a time accepted and in a day of salvation have I succoured thee Behold now is the accepted time behold now is the day of salvation Argum. 2. In a Parenthesis Because now the time is acceptable in which by the intercession of Christ the Grace of God is efficacious to the producing of fruit in all those that receive the Gospel with serious affection of heart and desire to bring forth fruit which hee proves out of Isa. 49.8 where the Father speaketh to the Mediatour interceding for them and by his Spirit breathing in them Therefore you must beware lest this opportunity of Grace bee in vain offered to you Vers. 3. Giving no offence in any thing that the Ministery bee not blamed Argum. 3. Ioyned with the first verse Wee Ministers which exhort you and I by name Paul wee are approved by all manner of waies and wee are found faithful in the Ministery of the Gospel not hindering you but that you may profit by our Ministery that so yee may pretend nothing but that yee may persevere in the Grace of the Gospel Therefore yee ought not to receive the Grace of the Gospel in vain but to contend for the receiving of and expressing the virtue of the Gospel Hee confirms the Antecedent by an induction of the virtues which prove Ministers faithful with which hee was first of all by the Grace of God adorned There are five parts of the induction In the first part hee removes from himself those vices whereby idle Teachers were wont to create offences to the Gospel demolishing more by their manners in the edifice of God than by their Doctrine they edifie and yeelding occasion to the wicked of speaking ill of his Ministery or of the office of Ministers Vers. 4. But in all things approving our selves as the Ministers of God in much patience in afflictions in necessities in distresses 5. In stripes in imprisonments in tumults in labours in watchings in fastings In the second part hee recites divers kinds of virtues with which his Ministery is adorned but namely hee mentions his patience exercised in nine kinds of evils in all which without murmuring hee patiently executed the offices of his Ministery for hee strongly endured the troubles of his journies with want and dangers the snares of his persecutors prison and ●umults stirred up against him and in preaching his labour watchings fastings neither did hee wax faint in the work of the Lord. Vers. 6. By pureness by knowledge by long-suffering by kindness by the Holy Ghost by love unfeigned In the third part hee adds other six virtues of his patience of which the first is his freedome from the pollutions of the world whilst hee conversed amongst those of the world 2 His discretion in handling his auditors 3 His forbearance in provocations 4 His gentleness in his commerce with more difficult things 5. His spiritual disposition in all things 6. His sincere love towards all Vers. 7. By the word of truth by the Power of God by the Armour of Righteousness on the right hand and on the left In the fourth part hee reckons the virtues which did belong to the discharge of his duty 1. Hee preached nothing besides the truth of God 2. Hee demonstrated the power of the Spirit in his speech 3. Hee contended against all his enemies with spiritual weapons i. e. with lawful
defile themselves The Reasons hereof are eight The first went before lest they bee made partakers of the future wrath hanging over the disobedient Vers. 8. For yee were sometimes darkness but now are yee light in the Lord Walk as children of light Reas. 2. From their changed condition because before your conversion to faith you were slaves and bond-men to ignorance and wickedness but now in Christ yee are beautified with the light of wisdome and holiness that yee should commend this light to others where hee gives a hint of the same Precept affirmatively viz. That they should not walk as the sons of darkness but as the sons of light obeying the word of God which affords light to the right ordering of our lives therefore you should not bee companions of the obstinate Vers. 9. For the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness righteousness and truth Reas. 3. Because the fruit of the Holy Ghost by whom yee are translated from darkness to light consists in goodness righteousness and truth Therefore yee should bring forth these fruits and not bee companions of the obstinate in the fruits of the flesh Vers. 10. Proving what is acceptable unto the Lord. Reas. 4. In which hee explains the Precept touching walking in the light Because endeavouring to walk as Sons of the Light yee may experimentally know and certainly try what is acceptable to God what not Therefore bee not yee by walking in darkness of the fellowship of the disobedient Vers. 11. And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but rather reprove them Reas. 5. Here also the Precept is repeated and explained Because walking as the Sons of Light yee will not onely not partake of the sins of others but by the example of your holy life you will condemn the sins of others Bee not yee therefore their companions but rather abhor their manners Vers. 12. For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret Reas. 6. Because the works of darkness which the rest of the unconverted Heathens secretly commit for their filthiness are not worthy of a Christians ear Therefore you ought not to have any intercourse with their sins but rather reprove them as the Sons of Light Vers. 13. But all things that are reproved are made manifest by the Light for whatsoever doth make manifest is Light Reas. 7. Because the rebuke of secret sins which is given by your openly-declared holy life doth prick the consciences of the wicked and doth manifest that their works are evil and this doth very much conduce to their conversion for thus it brings them to the knowledge of themselves Is Light Hee confirms this reason and proves that an holy life is Light Because it hath the property of Light so far as it manifests to the wicked that their works are evil Vers. 14. Wherefore hee saith Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead and Christ shall give thee Light Reas. 8. Confirming the former Because the voice of the Holy Ghost in the Scriptures or the Prophetical and Apostolical Doctrine both taken together have this tendency and drift that those that sleep and are dead in sins should bee raised to repentance and come unto Christ by Faith that so they may bee enlightened and saved by the Light of Christs Grace Therefore all the Sons of Light ought both in words and deeds to commend this Doctrine to others and propagate it to the salvation of others shunning in the mean while all intercourse with sinners Vers. 15. See then that yee walk circumspectly not as fools but as wise Prec 6. Making for the observation of the former That they should take care to walk accurately as becomes those who are indued with the Wisdome of God revealed in the Gospel and not being deceived decline from the way as those who are ignorant of Gods Will. Vers. 16. Redeeming the time because the daies are evil Prec 7. Having the same drift That they should not suffer their time to bee spent in idleness and pleasures and to pass unfruitfully but with the loss of pleasures or of sluggish idleness or unprofitable business they should take hold of and as it were redeem opportunities of well doing Hee gives the reason Because the times are full of dangers through the malice of men who no one knows how soon may take away their liberty goods yea life it self and deprive them of all opportunity of doing good Vers. 17. Wherefore bee yee not unwise but understand what the Will of the Lord is From this reason hee inferrs a conclusion Therefore saith hee bee wise and not fools observing what God requires of you that yee should perform it diligently without delay while time is afforded Vers. 18. And bee not drunk with Wine wherein is excess but bee filled with the Spirit Prec 8. Forbidding them to bee drunk with Wine or any other drink The reason is because in this drunkenness is the destruction of estates credit body and soul. Bee filled Prec 9. This is delivered by way of Antithesis that rather they should bee filled and exhilerate themselves with the saving water of the Holy Ghost that is they should strive to abound in the experience of joy which is from Gods Spirit in which fulness there is no excess Vers. 19. Speaking to your selves in Psalms and Hymns and spiritual Songs singing and making melody in your heart to the Lord The reason of the Precept is from those better fruits which spiritual joy produceth such are all sorts of spiritual Songs especially those which are in the holy Scriptures with which they should mutually edifie one another and glorifie God from their heart or spiritual affection A Psalm is a sacred song in general especially that which is by playing on the harp A Hymn properly contains Gods praise An Ode or Song is a common name Vers. 20. Giving thanks alwaies for all things unto God and the Father in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ Hee shews the special use and end of Christian Songs that wee should alwaies in what condition soever wee are through Jesus Christ give thanks to God our Father for all his benefits The Second Part. Vers. 21. Submitting your selves one to another in the fear of God The second part of this Chapter follows wherein that hee may descend to oeconomical Precepts hee premises an exhortation touching submission to one another in general that still keeping that order which God had placed them in they should each one in his office help one another for where-ever there is love there will bee care to serve one another Hee adds in the fear of God because it is requisite that from this fountain should flow sincere obedience of this Precept from the heart to the glory of God for is is onely the fear of Christ which can bring our fierceness into subjection that wee should not refuse the yoak and can bring down our pride that wee should not bee ashamed to
and by baptism sealed to you so that there is no need to seek any thing out of Christ that belongs to the full paying the price of Redemption Therefore wee must not depart from him Yee are risen Argum. 7. Yee beleevers by baptism are brought into the communion of Christs Resurrection or his victory that hee gained over death and sin by which yee are not onely risen to newness of life in holiness but also yee shall rise in respect of your bodies to a glorious and immortal life so that nothing as to holiness and eternal life is to bee desired out of Christ Therefore yee must not at all depart from him Through the faith But yet lest too much be attributed to external baptisme from the work as they say done hee requires the faith of God efficaciously working in those that are baptized i. e. That wee beleeve that God who powerfully raised Christ from the dead according to his promises will also effectually raise us according to his promise to all manner of newness of life For by how much the nearer wee imbrace the power of God that raised Christ our head from the dead by so much the more wee shall make progress in newness of life Vers. 13. And you being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath hee quickned together with him having forgiven you all trespasses Argum. 8. God hath made you Colossians in times past dead in sins and lying in the uncircumcision of irregenerate nature partakers of the holy and immortal life of Christ as to right and an inchoate possession all your sins by grace being forgiven therefore as to a plenary remission of sins and to an holy and immortal life nothing is to bee sought out of Christ. This benefit is called a quickning together with Christ although Christ had risen some years before they were converted because in what moment soever any one is by faith united to Christ in the same moment is hee united to him now reigning in heaven yea in his dying burial and rising again after a judicial or forinsical manner so that in all things in which hee hath or doth sustain our person it is no less than if wee had in a Physical manner been present and consented to every act of his in our behalf Vers. 14. Blotting out the hand-writing of Ordinances that was against us which was contrary to us and took it out of the way nayling it to his Cross. Argum. 9. In which also hee explains how Christ obtained remission of sins for us viz. by taking away the hand-writing in this sense The Covenant of works is an hand-writing established partly in threatnings partly in appointed positive Ceremonials excluding the Gentiles from the Church was against us and contrary to us But Christ hath blotted out this hand-writing taking it out of the way and nailing it to his Cross Therefore you must not look back to the legal Covenant or ceremonial appointments in them to seek for any thing neither must yee depart in the least from the death of Christ by which yee are delivered from that hand-writing Hee compares this Covenant of works with its appurtenances to an hand-writing by which any one bindes himself for the paying of a debt for whosoever are convicted of sin by the light of nature are also by the force of the Covenant of Works obnoxious to wrath and as often as wee are convinced of sin so often also by nature wee confirm the punishment of sin or the condition of the legal Covenant by the judgement of our consciences against our selves as by an hand-writing The conscience of every one performs this much more which hath received the written Law and daily bears the punishment of the Law for the breaking of it But chiefly all justiciaries are compelled to subscribe to this hand-writing who acknowledge no righteousness besides inherent or that which is by works Of which number were those that Judaized and observeers of Ceremonies who adhered to this Covenant seeking Righteousness by works and the appointed Ceremonies For by how much they did indeavour by this means more manifestly to establish their own Righteousness by so much the more openly they did derive the punishment of the Law broken by the force of the Covenant upon themselves For no man enters a Covenant but hee also admits all the conditions of the Covenant The hand-writing is said to bee in Ordinances or rather subscribed to Ordinances so far as they took upon them those commands or Legal Ordinances that they might bee perfected in themselves they did withall oblige themselves to bear the punishment of the breach of those commands Hee calls it the hand-writing against us or contrary to us partly because it separated the Jews from the Gentiles and the Gentiles from the Jews Partly because it was a yoak which neither they nor their Fathers could bear Partly because as often as they did any work of the Law either moral or ceremonial to bee justified thereby so often by the imperfection of their work and the profession of their imperfection in the use of the Levitical Ceremonies they did argue themselves guilty or rather did acknowledge themselves guilty of death As for example when they offered Sacrifices and did repeat them they not onely acknowledged themselves sinners against the Moral Law but did also really confess that their frequent Sacrifices could not purge their consciences from sin and so the hand-writing of the Covenant of works was alwaies contrary to them But Christ hath blotted out this hand-writing and took it out of the way nailing it to his Cross insomuch as hee for the sake of them that were his hath paid for the redeemed the penalty due upon the hand-writing by the death of his Cross and hath compleated and abolished the positive Ordinances concerning those vanishing Ceremonies by the real Sacrifice of his own body once offered Vers. 15. And having spoiled principalities and powers hee made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it Argum. 10. Christ hath brought all the Devils who exercise their power and tyranny upon the Elect overthrown by the price of Redemption paid upon the Cross and gloriously triumpheth over them openly in the sight of God Angels and men whose eyes are open unto their own disgrace and our deliverance Therefore it remains that nothing is to bee sought out of Christ. The Devils are called Principalities and Powers 1 Because in the world they potently exercise authority over all the reprobate children of disobedience and all the unregenerate which do nothing else but execute the will of the Devil 2 Because they are Sergeants executing the judgement of God holding those captive that are not reconciled to God in Christ. 3 Because they fight against Christ the Redeemer neither do they dismiss the redeemed and reconciled from the prison of darkness unless compelled by the stronger power of Christ. They are said to bee spoiled by Christ on the Cross 1 Inasmuch as
presence of God whilst others fiercely strive amongst themselves only because they are ashamed to bee overcome or to bee accounted unlearned Lastly imploying himself in preaching not in mincing of words whilest the substance is neglected but in a prudent dividing and distribution of their plain meaning and applying them to the advantage of the hearers in faith and obedience to the truth Vers. 16. But shun prophane and vain bablings for they will increase unto more ungodliness Branch 3. That hee decline the lofty and sophistical manner of speech new unusual and prophane phrases Hee subjoyns three Reasons of this Branch Prophane Reas. 1. Because as those insolent speeches proceed from the prophaneness and impiety of the mind so they foster and increase ungodliness in others Vers. 17. And their word will eat as doth a canker of whom is Hymeneus and Philetus R. 2. Because the manner of teaching and the Doctrine of Sophisters will eat up the Church as a Gangrene consumes the body which as Physicians teach unless it bee very suddenly cured it invades the contiguous parts seizes upon the very bones and till the man is extinct it proceeds without ceasing Vers. 18. Who concerning the truth have erred saying That the Resurrection is past already and overthrow the Faith of some R. 3. Because experience hath demonstrated this evil in the persons of two Hereticks whom he names to their disgrace that they may be avoided as Rocks Who onely acknowledge an Allegorical Resurrection erring from the Doctrine of Truth overthrow the Faith of some and while they insinuated their perverse opinion into others gave occasion to some not well setled in the Faith to renounce the profession of the Christian Religion Vers. 19. Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure having this seal the Lord knoweth them that are his and let every one that nameth the name of Christ depart from iniquity Admonition 3. Of holding fast the Doctrine of perseverance of true Beleevers although the Faith of some was overthrown which admonition is propounded by way of consolation and confirmation of Faith against the scandal of Apostates especially of the famous Doctors whose levity and perfidiousness ought indeed to stir up all to watchfulness but it ought not in any wise to weaken the assurance of Faith in the Saints The Doctrine to bee maintained by Timothy in this Although the Faith of some bee overthrown yet the building of the salvation of the Elect or true Beleevers abides firm or The perseverance of the Saints is certain This hee proves by six Arguments Sure Argum. 1. By way of comparison from a building The building of the Faith and salvation of the Elect hath a sure foundation laid by God which stands unmoveable and this it is The free Election of God the constancy and stability whereof hee compares to a foundation laid upon a Rock Therefore the perseverance of the Saints is certain Seal Argum. 2. By way of comparison from a Seal to this sense The salvation of the Elect is kept in the secret custody of God as with a signet so that though it appear not to the world who they are that are elected yet it is certain that they were not of us or the number of true Beleevers who went out from us that truly beleeved or revolted from our society Therefore the perseverance of the Saints is certain Knows Argum. 3. Those are known unto God who in a special manner are his or belong to him as his peculiar ones hee knows them and their names and number and embraceth them with his special favour that hee will not suffer them to bee pulled from him To know them as his own is to acquiesce in them by his special love as his peculiar ones Therefore the perseverance of the Saints is certain Seal Argum. 4. As another seal God hath given this Precept to bee read of all men which hee makes effectual in all his Elect Let every one that names the name of Christ depart from iniquity i. e. Let him hold fast the Faith with the profession of Iesus Christ let him also depart from the waies of sin by repentance and holiness of life Therefore the Saints those whom God hath sealed for his own as it were with this Seal and in whom hee works effectual obedience to this Precept they shall not perish in their Apostacy but persevere and end their lives in the Faith and Obedience of Christ. Vers. 20. But in a great house there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth and some to Honour and some to Dishonour Argum. 5. As in a well-furnished and great house there are some vessels more precious for decent uses some baser vessels for dishonourable uses so in the Church some are reprobate who onely lye in their filthiness by whom the Church is corrupted they shall depart from the Church by Apostacy Some are elected and sanctified of God who shall persevere in the Faith and Obedience of Christ to the glory of God and their own commendation Therefore the perseverance of the Saints is certain Vers. 21. If a man therefore purge himself from these hee shall bee a vessel unto honour sanctified and meet for the Masters use and prepared unto every good work Argum. 6. It is not onely certain that the Elect shall persevere but it is also to bee affirmed that they may bee assured of their election and perseverance For if any one by the Grace of God shall endeavour to purge himself from the manners of Hypocrites and the defilements of sinners with which the vessels designed to shame are filled hee shall openly manifest to himself and others that hee is of the number of those precious vessels prepared to sanctification and glory Therefore the perseverance of the Saints is certain Vers. 22. Flee also youthful lusts but follow Righteousness Faith Charity Peace with them that call on the Lord with a pure heart Admonition 4. To moderation of mind and to avoid all youthly affections and whatsoever may stir up contentions or provoke the minds of others There are three branches of the Admonition 1 That hee avoid all youthful lusts or affections not onely pleasures but also headiness contention pride desire of vain-glory and the like evil affections which young men use to bee infected with who have taken upon them the office of teaching or disputing Follow 2 That on the other side hee follow 1 Righteousness which offends none 2 Faith which without disputation receives chearfully the mysteries revealed from God 3 Charity which is not envious not puffed up is not ambitious seeks not her own but even those things which conduce to the good of others 4 Peace with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart i. e. with the true worshipers of God Vers. 23. But foolish and unlearned questions avoid knowing that they do gender strifes 3 That hee shun Questions by which no man comes to true wisdome and Christian edification The
in the faith Reas. 3. Because a severe reproof of this kinde of Teachers and the Cretian Disciples cleaving to them was very conduceable to the procuring and maintaining of their soundness in the faith Therefore they were severely to bee reproved Vers. 14. Not giving heed to Iewish fables and commandements of men that turn from the Truth Reas. 4. Lest otherwise the Cretians should attend to fabulous traditions and Jewish fictions touching Legal Ceremonies and the Precepts of these kind of men who could not beat the pure Doctrine of Christ but indeavoured to corrupt it with their leaven Vers. 15. Unto the pure all things are pure but unto them that are defiled and unbeleeving is nothing pure but even their mind and conscience is defiled Reas. 5. Because the truth of Christianity hath determined contrary to the Precepts of these Judaizing Teachers asserting That to the pure all things are pure i. e. to Christians purged from their sins by Faith in Christ all meats and other creatures which were unclean by the Ceremonial Law were now lawful after Christ was exhibited that the faithful may use them with a good conscience Defiled Reas. 6. Because the same 〈…〉 that nothing can bee used purely by them who are not justified by Faith in Christ but that their minds and consciences which falsely acquit them being not renewed are polluted and so hee convinces them of vanity who from the observation of Ceremonies endeavour to attain to holiness Vers. 16. They profess that they know God but in works they deny him being abominable and disobedient and to every good work reprobate Reas. 7. Because although those Teachers did profess themselves worshipers of God yet in works they denied him because they were enemies to the Righteousness which is by Faith and to the fruits of the Spirit wherefore they were abominable hypocrites rebells against the Truth of God and unmeet for the performance of any good work From which reasons it is manifest that those false Teachers are to bee restrained that they teach neither in publick nor private CHAP. II. IN this Chapter is handled the inforcing of sound Doctrine upon all according to the age sex and condition of every one in the Family and by which they are to compose their lives unto holiness to vers 11. And whereby their Faith may bee stablished in the Grace of God from whence as from a fountain hee will have the fruits of their obedience flow forth in their conversation to the end Vers. 1. But speak thou the things which become sound Doctrine That hee may really oppose himself to the vanity of these Teachers hee commands in general that Titus inculcate the Doctrine which makes for holiness and salvation Vers. 2. That the aged men bee sober grave temperate sound in Faith in Charity in Patience Hee commands five things in particular First Concerning old men that hee instruct them about these four things 1 That they adorn their old age with virtues befitting their age viz. That they bee sober taking heed of drunkenness 2 That they bee grave and reverend and free from youthful wantonness 3 That they bee temperate prudent i. e. that in every action they demean themselves temperately 4 That they bee sound and no waies counterfeit in Faith Charity Hope manifested by Patience Vers. 3. The aged women likewise that they bee in behaviour as becometh holiness not false accusers not given to much Wine teachers of good things Secondly Concerning aged women hee commands that hee teach the Matrons these five duties 1 That in their cloathing and behaviour and the whole deportment of their bodies they observe comeliness 2 That they bee not false accusers injuring the reputation of others by their falshoods 3 That they bee not given to drinking 4 That they teach the younger women not old wives fables but those things that are good and honest Vers. 4. That they may teach the young women to bee sober to love their Husbands to love their Children 5. To bee discreet chaste keepers at home good obedient to their own Husbands that the Word of God bee not blasphemed 5 That they teach the younger women to whom they may have more free access than Ministers can prudence and modesty and that they love their own Husbands and Children with a Regular and Christian love And that they bee discreet chaste keepers at home not wandring out of their families courteous obedient to their own Husbands that the Christian Doctrine bee not evil spoken of for their sakes Vers. 6. Young men likewise exhort to bee sober-minded Thirdly Hee gives Titus charge about young men that hee exhort them to bee prudent or sober-minded Vers. 7. In all things shewing thy self a pattern of good works in Doctrine shewing incorruptness gravity sincerity 8. Sound speech that cannot bee condemned that hee that is of the contrary part may bee ashamed having no evil thing to say of you Fourthly Concerning Pastors in the person of Titus to this end that their Doctrine might the better take place hee commands that Titus shew himself an example for others to imitate in every good work but especially that in Doctrine hee shew forth uncorruptness of the sound Truth gravity of authority and his manner of speech fitted to the edification of his Auditors that the Adversary may have nothing justly to c●rpat Vers. 9. Exhort servants to bee obedient unto their own Masters and to please them well in all things not answering again 10. Not purloyning but shewing all good fidelity that they may adorn the Doctrine of God our Saviour in all things Fifthly Concerning servants hee gives command That hee instruct servants about their duties 1 That they bee obedient to their own Masters though Infidels observing all their lawful commands 2 That servants indeavour to please their own Masters and answer not again when they command them hard services or reprove them more severely than is fitting 3 Lastly That they steal nothing from their Masters but shew themselves faithful in all things whereof hee gives the reason that the Doctrine of the Gospel may bee adorned by them in all things and may bee acknowledged for Divine as that which is so effectual that it makes men under the hardest tearms of servitude patient in their condition and in their calling honest and faithful The Second Part. Vers. 11. For the Grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men The second part of the Chapter touching the Doctrine of Faith follows which hee subjoyns as the fountain from whence virtue is fetched for the performance of the foresaid duties For they cannot bee Christian duties except grace to perform them bee derived from Christ by Faith For in this the works of regenerate and unregenerate men materially good do differ That the works of these are done by the enemies of God from the corrupt strength of free will for carnal ends without any respect to the glory of God But the works of regenerate men are done by the
Grace of God into prophane licentiousness which is the same with the Apostles conclusion inferred vers 25. See that yee refuse not him that is Christ that speaketh c. The force of the Argument is this If now seeing that not fear but love not Justice but Grace not the Law but Gospel offers it self to bee your leader in your way to Heaven ye shall fail of Grace or abuse it to prophaneness it shall come to pass that yee will be found to refuse and reject Christ speaking from Heaven and most gently inviting you to the communion with himself and his Saints which yee ought to have a care of As for the Covenants of works or the Law hee sets down the terrible manner wherein the Law was delivered of which description there are eight Branches 1 In the Covenant of works or Legal Covenant there was a Mountain that might bee touched or earthly whereto Heaven is opposed or the heavenly Mount Zion the Throne of Grace as if hee had said After yee beleeved in Christ yee came not unto the Mount that might not be touched and that which is earthly the very sight whereof did affright thereby the throne of Justice was represented wherein God sitteth when hee deals with the unregnerate man that putteth confidence in his own strength shining in the merit of his own works 2 In making that Covenant the Mount burned with fire whereby the anger of the Judge armed and ready to consume sinners trusting in their merits or works or dealing with him from the Covenant of works 3 In making that Covenant there was a whirlewind darkness and a tempest whereby was represented the perplexed condition amazement and horrour of the mind whereby the soul of the sinner is repressed when the Judge shews to him out of the Law or Covenant of works his justice and anger according to the condition of the violated Covenant 4 In giving the Law there was the sound of a Trumpet whereby was signified that all who are guilty of violating the Covenant of works shall be cited and of necessity appear before the Tribunal of God the supream Judge and none escape 5 In making that Covenant there was a voice of words by which was represented the Letter of the Law reciting the duties wee were bound to but not at all conferring strength for the performing of the things commanded 6 In making that Covenant they who had heard the voice of words intreated that the word should not bee spoken to them any more whereby was signified the intolerable weight of multiplied guilt contracted by the violation of the Law as also despair touching the future performance of the Law incumbent upon the conscience when God deals with the sinner out of the Covenant of works That which the Apostle here intimates when hee saies For they could not endure that which was commanded 7 In making that Covenant if so much as a beast had touched the Mountain it was to bee stoned or thrust through with a dart whereby was signified First That the sinner is excluded from all access to God neither is it lawful that any sinner should approach to him from the condition of this Covenant Secondly That both the sinner and all things that belong unto him his Oxen and Cattel are an abomination unto God Thirdly That the sinner is to perish miserably by this Covenant i. e. with contempt and ignominy as with stones and darts shot at his cursed and abominable head 8 In making that Covenant so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly fear and quake and confessed his horrour whereby was also signified that the most holy or just men could not bee able to stand before God if they should be dealt with according to the Covenant of works as Psal. 143. v. 2. It is said In thy sight shall no flesh living bee justified This is the former part of the Argument the summe whereof is this God hath delivered you from the Covenant of works and the terrours thereof Vers. 22. But yee are come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the Living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels 23. To the general assembly and Church of the first-born which are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect 24. And to Iesus the Mediatour of the New Covenant and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things than that of Abel Now follows the second part of the Argument touching the Covenant of Grace which God hath made with all the faithful beleeving in Christ but the condition and happiness of man beleeving in Christ and under the Covenant of Grace is described as it were by its own parts 1 After that yee beleeved in Christ being set at liberty from Mount Sinai and from the Throne of Justice yee came to Mount Sion whereby was represented the Throne of Grace wherein God shews himself propitious to all that come unto Christ. 2 After that yee beleeved in Christ being recalled again from exilement and errours in the desert of this world yee are gathered again to your Head Christ and to the City of refuge to the possession of a quiet condition in Christ yee being freed from anger and death and reconciled to God are made free of the City of the Living God being delivered from the terrors of a just Judge yee are admitted into Ierusalem i. e. the Church of God wherein yee see the visions of peace being delivered from Hell yee are also delivered from Levitical Ceremonies which the inferiour and terrestrial Ierusalem now together with its children observes and are admitted to the priviledges of the heavenly Ierusalem the Church of the faithful and to the Kingdome of Heaven 3 After that yee beleeved in Christ being delivered from the society of Devils obnoxious to sin and torments yee are admitted into the society of an innumerable company of blessed Angels 4 After that yee beleeved in Christ being called and separated from the society of Reprobates wicked and banished men or men secluded from the inheritance of eternal life yee are come and are admitted into the society of the Catholick Church to the general Assembly and Church of the Elect who are restored to the right and priviledges of the first-born that yee may bee Priests to God and the portion of God select from amongst men 5 Yee that in times past did live amongst worldly men whose portion is in this life and whose names are written in the earth now yee are found to be of the number of the Elect and of those that were in times past written in Heaven in the book of life amongst the Elect and those that are predestinated to the obtaining of glory and grace 6 Yee that were without God in the world enemies to him and in times past hee was your angry Judge now being reconciled to him hee is your merciful Judge who absolves you and powerfully destroies your
in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Artic. 2. Wherein premising the Arguments of his confidence that hee should be heard the Apostle praies for the Hebrews that God would fully sanctifie them i. e. joyn them together perfect compose them as members of one body and make them compleat in every good work to do his will Whereby hee intimates that wee are unfit for every good work Because wee as members out of joynt can neither do that which is our duty to do nor concur with others to do or promote any good until God draw us near unto himself and joyns himself to us unless hee moves our will and incites us to will good working in us both to will and to do or to perform that which hee himself commands to be done by his preceptive will Which the Apostle more fully explains by adding the manner whereby God perfects them Working saith hee in you that which is well pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ i. e. working efficaciously in you by his Grace and through you works that are pleasing to himself and working every good work whereby yee may please him under which good necessarily are contained the principles of good actions and namely the very assent of the will and its co-working And hee adds through Iesus 1 Because all those good works are purchased for us by the desert of Christs death 2 They are derived to us through him as through a chanel 3 Those good works are effected by him 4 They are purged by him and made acceptable Therefore glory is attributed to God and Christ for ever Amen Hee useth four Arguments of his confidence in praying vers 20. The God of Peace Argum. 1. With relation to the peace of the Church God is the God of Peace Therefore yee must confidently ask of God that hee give you to endeavour after Peace amongst your selves and towards God in following after holines● Who hath brought again Argum. 2. God hath brought again Christ from the dead Therefore hee both can and will perfect you his sheep and members of his body in every good work for which Christ is both dead and risen The great Shepheard Argum. 3. Christ is that good Shepheard and chief Pastor of his Sheep Therefore it is to be expected from him that hee sanctifie and fully perfect you his Sheep Through the blood Argum. 4. The everlasting Covenant is made touching the Redemption of the sheep i. e. touching the perfecting of their holiness and salvation and that is established by the blood of Christ Therefore yee shall be perfected in every good work by the Covenant Vers. 22. And I beseech you Brethren suffer the word of Exhortation for I have written a Letter unto you in few words Artic. 3. In which hee praies for the Hebrews that they not onely take in good part whatsoever may seem sharp in this hortatory Epistle but also that they suffer and take well the word of Exhortation wherein their ordinary Pastors were more especially to bring and apply those things to them For in few The Reason of this Petition is Because those things were more briefly written by the Apostle without any allay which might mollifie his reproofs and they want explication larger handling a more ample and quick application from their ordinary Pastors Vers. 23. Know yee that our Brother Timothy is set at liberty with whom if hee come shortly I will see you Artic. 4. Is joyful news of the setting Timothy at liberty being his daily companion which hee knew was acceptable for whom when they had heard that hee was in bonds they grieved and knowing that hee is at liberty they may be refreshed For the same end hee hopes that hee with Timothy shall come unto them Vers. 24. Salute all them that have the rule over you and all the Saints They of Italy salute you Artic. 5. Wherein are contained salutations For first hee sends salutation to all the Pastors and Governours of the Churches in Iudea As also to other Beleevers that they may know hee loves them all alike In the third place hee salutes in the name of the Saints all the beleeving Hebrews in Italy Vers. 25. Grace be with you all Amen Artic. 6. Wherein Paul after his accustomed seal 2 Thes. 2.17 concludes the Epistle wishing Grace to all i. e. all saving gifts or whatsoever was necessarily requisite to their perfection from the fountain of Gods free goodness As for the subscription after the Epistle there is no credit to be given to it For it is manifest out of this Chapter vers 23. that Timothy was absent when this Epistle was writ Therefore the subscription seems to be added from some unskilful Scribe And therefore wee omit them all THE EPISTLE OF PAUL TO THE HEBREWS WITH OBSERVATIONS gathered from the TEXT By DAVID DICKSON Professor of Divinity in the University of Glascow LONDON Printed by R. Ibbitson for Francis Eglesfield and are to bee sold at the Marygold in Pauls Church-yard 1659. TO THE READER Christian Reader BEfore the time that something of mine did pass the Press without my knowledge or allowance I did not minde to come abroad in this Learned Age wherein many more able Men than I am do keep silence my Furniture being fitter for my present Charge than for more publick Edification in my judgement and my Employments so frequent as my spare time is little for farther extent of what the Lord hath bestowed upon mee But since that time my just fears from apparent grounds that numbers of my Sermons which were rudely and popularly delivered as thrice or four times preaching a week might yeeld and taken from my Mouth as it was possible to overtake the current of running speech the judicious Writer making what hee had overtaken to cohere the best hee could and Copies going from him to many with numbers of faults and mistakings of the Transcribers I being unable to revise for straightness of time any thing which was written by them first or last My just Fears I say that these should Come to thy Hands rude and faulty as they are made mee willing rather when God should grant mee leasure hereafter to draw up in short the points of Doctrine delivered by mee in these Sermons that thou mightest have a twenty or thirty of them or m●e possible in the bounds and price of one at large With this passage of Gods providence another hath concurred to draw forth this piece unto thy view in the mean time which is this When I considered how largely God hath provided Helps for understanding of holy Scripture by large Commentaries and sweet Sermons especially from His Church in England whereby encrease of Knowledge is given to the Learned and such whose means to buy and leasure from their calling to read and victory over their own lasiness for taking pains doth concur with their capacity for making use of this the Lords Liberality I have often requested the
follow by consequence that Beleevers do enter in This latter part is not expressed in the Text but left unto us to gather by consequence Whence wee learn 1 That God alloweth us to draw consequences from his Scripture 2 Yea traineth us on by his own example to draw them forth by reason 3 Yea hee will of necessity force us to draw consequences from his words or else not let us understand his meaning by leaving something not expressed to be collected by us Vers. 7 Again hee limiteth a certain da● saying in David To day after so long a time as it is said To day if yee will hear his voice harden not your hearts In that he reasoneth from the circumstance of t●me when David uttered these words he teacheth us That oftentimes there is matter of great moment imported in the least circumstances of the scrip●●res writing and therefore that the circumstances of time place and person who speaketh and to whom and at what time c. should not be passed over in our consideration of a Text but diligently bee marked Vers. 8. For if Iesus had given them rest then would hee not afterwards have spoken of another day 9. There remaineth therefore rest to the people of God 10. For hee that is entred into his Rest hee also hath ceased from his own works as God did from his 1. This reasoning from the time of Davids speaking sheweth How infallibly th●● were led that wrote the Scriptusre that they could not fail in setting down a word nor speak one word that could cross any othe● word poken by any other Prophet before or after 2. David taught of the Spiritual Rest in his time and so did Moses Then 1. The old Church was not straightned with earthly promises so but that they had heavenly and spiritual promises given them also as signified by the earthly and typical promises 2. Their types had some star-light of interpretation and they were taught to look through the veil of Ceremonies and Types 3. Hee saith Hee that is entred into his Rest ceaseth from his own works Then 1. Before a man bee reconciled to God by Faith in Christ hee is working his own works doing his own will and not Gods 2. Hee is working without ceasing his own unrest and his own torment which hee procureth by working his own will 3. The man that thinketh hee is entred into Gods Rest must be Gods Workman and no more work what pleaseth himself but what pleaseth God ceasing from sinful works and doing what is lawful and good in way of obedience unto him Vers. 11. Let us labour therefore to enter into that Rest lest any man fall after the same example of unbeleef 1. In the third verse hee said The Beleevers entred into Gods Rest here bee exhorteth the Beleever to labour to enter into it Then 1. The Rest of God is entred into by degrees 2. They who have entred must study to en●er yet more going on from Faith to Faith and from obedience to further obedience and from grace to grace till they have gone all the way that leadeth unto glory 2. Hee requireth labour and diligence to enter in Then 1. Gods rest is no rest to the flesh but rest to the soul as Mat. 11.29 Christ promiseth 2. Without care and diligence a man cannot promise to himself to enter in For the way is called Straight which leadeth unto Heaven 3. Hee requireth this diligence lest a man fall as the Israelites did Then as some of the Israelites fell in a temporal mis-beleef and drew on temporal judgements upon themselves as Moses and Aaron so many Professors now also do even Elect. Again as some fell in unbeleef with hardened hearts yea in obstinate misbeleef and perished in their sin so yet amongst Professors some may fall into obstinate mis-beleef and perish except they give diligence to make progress towards their Rest. Vers. 12. For the Word of God is quick and powerful and sharpe● than any two-edged sword peircing even to the dividing asunder of Soul and Spirit and of the Ioynts and Marrow and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the Heart 1. Le●t any one should shift off this threatning as expired with those to whom it was first spoken or cloak and dissemble their sins and purpose of defection when they should see th●ir time hee letteth them know the power of the Word and of God their adversary Then the use extent and nature of Gods Word must bee well studied lest through mistaking or ignorance hereof a man should mis-apply or mis-regard it 2. The first property of the Word it is Quick that is dieth not when those die to whom first it was directed but endureth speaking on with that same authority to all that hear it in all times after Then the Word is not a dead Letter nor expired with former Ages but the same to us that it was before to others fit for operation and working the work for which it is sent for convincing or converting the hearer alway 3. Again It is Powerful That is not fit to work onely but active and operative in effect actually binding the conscience to obedience or judgement make the sinner what opposition hee will Yea it falleth a working on the hearer if hee beleeve it presently to clear his mind rectifie his will and reform his life and to bring about his good and safety If a man beleeve it not it falleth a working also presently to binde him guilty unto judgement and to augment his natural blindness and his hearts hardness and to bring on some degree of the deserved punishment upon himself albeit not of its own nature but by the disposition of the object whereupon it worketh Then 1. The Word wanteth not the own effect whensoever it is preached but alwaies helpeth or hurteth the hearer as hee yeeldeth to it or rejecteth or neglecteth it 2. Wee shall do well to observe what sort of operation it hath upon us seeing it must have some that wee may bee framed to the better by it 4. Another property of the Word It is sharper than any two-edged sword because it peirceth speedily through a brazen Brow and dissembling countenance and a lying mouth and thrusteth it self without suffering resistance into the conscience of the most obstinate with a secret blow and maketh him guilty within his own breast Then 1. Let not Preachers think their labour l●st when they have to do with obstinate sinners The stroke is given at the hearing of the Word which will bee found uncured after 2. Neither let dissemblers please themselves with a fair countenance put upon the matter as if the Word did not touch them but rather give glory to God in time when they are pricked at the heart For if they dissemble the wound received of this Sword the wound will prove deadly 5. Peircing even to the dividing asunder of the Soul and the Spirit That is those most secret devices and plots of the
Nation because God consecrated them to himself in purity of life A Peculiar people because God had redeemed and chosen them to himself for a treasure and inheritance Hath called Argum. 10. God hath called you out of the darkness of sin misery and unbelief to the knowledge of the Gospel of truth and participation of the glorious light of that truth that the wisdom goodness justice and other vertues of God might shine in you as in an image Therefore it becometh you to desire and suck in the milk of Evangelical Doctrine Vers. 10. Which in time past were not a people but are now the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy Argum. 11. Confirming the former the gathering in of the rejected Hebrew Nation and the Reconciliation prophesied of by Hosea Chap 2. vers 23. began to be fulfilled in you believing Hebrews and indeed out of Gods meer grace to you Therefore ye are bound diligently to obey the foresaid Exhortation Vers. 11. Dearly beloved I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul. The second Exhortation to holiness is twofold 1. That they abstain from all lusts of the flesh or of corrupt nature whether they shew forth themselves in soul or body 2. That they carry themselves honestly i. e. holily innocently and justly before men Pilgrims The reasons of the Exhortation are five which prove that they ought to abstain from fleshly lusts Reas. 1. Ye are Strangers or Pilgrims not onely because ye are banished from your Countrey but also because the sons of God wheresoever they live are strangers Therefore ye ought to abstain from fleshly lusts War Reas. 2. Ye cannot obey the lusts of the flesh but to your own hurt for the lusts of the corrupt old man are opposite to eternal salvation and war against the saving of your souls Therefore ye ought to abstain from them Vers. 12. Having your conversation honest among the Gentiles that whereas they speak against you as evil doers they may by your good works which they shall behold glorifie God in the day of visitation Reas. 3. Unless ye obey the Exhortation ye will give occasion to the unbelieving enemies of the Gospel as to evil doers who took all occasion of speaking evil of you Therefore ye ought to obey the Exhortation Good works Reas. 4. It is not sufficient that by your innocency ye take away from your enemies the occasion of evil speaking but they are also to be convinced by your good works and their mouthes to be stopped that they may not speak evil of you when they most desire it Therefore ye ought to obey this Exhortation Glorifie Reas. 5. This will be a fit and proper means for the conversion of unbeliever and for their giving glory to God when it shall please him by his grace to visit them and to draw them to believe in Christ Therefore ye ought to obey the Exhortation Vers. 13. Submit your selves to every ordinance of man for the Lords sake whether it be to the King as Supreme The third Exhortation drawn especially from the former is of obedience to the Magistrate which he calls an humane Ordinance because although all power in general is the Ordinance of God yet the particular manner of Government rather by a Monarchy than any other way or by Aristocrary or Democracy or any other Government mixed of these is not determined by God but it is left to be determined by every Commonwealth which when it is determined it is called the Ordinance of man which is ratified by God or his Ordinance For although in Ecclesiasticals and Spirituals Christ alone hath the Dominion and Authoritive power and retains it to himself nor doth he suffer any Dominion but a meer Ministration subordinate to himself in his spiritual Kingdom yet he hath in Civils constituted a subordinate Dominion and called men Gods although not absolutely Therefore whatsoever the form of Government be wherein a Kingdom or Commonwealth shall agree here the Apostle commands the believing Hebrews to yield themselves subjects both to the King as Supreme and to Governours who are sent of him For the Lords sake The reasons of the Exhortation are five 1. The Lord requireth this subjection viz. so far as they do not command any thing against the Lord For God hath given the power of ruling to men for and not against himself Therefore be ye subject Vers. 14. Or unto Governours as unto them that are sent by him for the pun●shment of evill doers and for the praise of them that do well For Reas. 2. The end of an Ordinance is for the repressing of the wicked and preserving and cherishing the good Therefore for this end ye ought to be subject Vers. 15 For so is the will of God that with well-doing ye may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men Reas. 3. God will by subjection of believers given to Magistrates silence as with a muzzle brutish men who unreasonably rage against the people of God as if they were enemies to Magistrates Therefore be ye subject Vers. 16. As free and not using your liberty for a clo●k of maliciousnesse but as the servants of God Reas. 4. Preventing an objection God doth not permit any man to use Christian liberty for a cloak to his maliciousness or rebellion as if Christian liberty exempted any one from the duty 〈◊〉 Civil subjection but being freed from sin ye freely serve the promoting of the justice of God whereof the Magistrate is a Minister Therefore ye ought to be subject to Magistrates and to observe civil order Vers. 17. Honour all men Love the Brotherhood Fear God Honour the King Reas. 5. These four Christian duties are conjoyned 1. To despise no man but to esteem all according to the station wherein God hath placed them 2. Intimately to love those which are of the houshold of faith 3. To 〈◊〉 God 4. To give the honour and obedience 〈◊〉 is due to the Magistrate so that he which hath not performed the latter of these duties is not to be thought to have performed the other sincerely Therefore be ye subject to the Magistrate Vers. 18. Servants be ye subject to your masters with all fear not onely to the good and gentle but also to the froward The fourth Exhortation is to Christian Servants That they not onely reverence their Masters that are more milde and courteous but also those that are severe and froward Vers. 19. For this is thank-worthy if a man for conscience toward God endure grief suffering wrongfully There are twelve Arguments of the Exhortation which prove that servants ought to bear the wrongs that are inflicted upon them by their Masters Argum. 1. This is a grace or the glorious work of Gods special grace working in man above the strength of nature if any one by that account that he may please God doth patiently suffer injuries done to him Therefore Servants ought to suffer
Christ. The Arguments of the Exhortation are fourteen all which prove that wee ought to endeavour after these virtues joyntly Argum. 1. If you have obeyed the Exhortation endeavouring both to have these virtues and to abou●d in them yee will prove that your Faith or the knowledge of Christ in you is not idle or unfruitful but efficacious which makes you ready to every good work Therefore yee ought to obey Vers. 9. But hee that lacketh these things is blind and cannot see far off and hath forgotten that hee was purged from his old sins Argum. 2. If yee were destitute of these virtues you will declare that you see nothing afarre off but that you are onely intent upon the things of this world but blind in divine and spiritual things and unthankful towards God by whom yee confess your former sins are pardoned Therefore yee ought to endeavour after these virtues Vers. 10. Wherefore the rather Brethren give diligence to make your calling and election sure for if you do these things yee shall never fall Argum. 3. With the Exhortation repeated By endeavouring after these virtues yee will prove your selves to be effectually called and elected and will solidly confirm your selves in this perswasion Therefore follow after these virtues For these Argum. 4. If you follow after these virtues yee shall be preserved from Apostacy or falling back neither will yee yeeld to temptations Therefore yee ought to follow after these Vers. 11. For so an entrance shall be ministred unto you abundantly into the everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ. Argum. 5. So a more abundant entrance into the eternal Kingdome of Christ shall be administred unto you i. e. happiness and that life eternal shall more largely open and unfold it self to you that yee may more freely and abundantly peirce into the inward parts of his Kingdome and enjoy the sense of that life in a more abundant measure Therefore follow after these virtues Vers. 12. Wherefore I will not be negligent to put you alwaies in remembrance of these things though yee know them and be stablished in the present Truth Argum. 6. Preventing an Objection Although yee are established in the present Truth yet I being an Apostle have now thought out of a desire of your proficiency it necessary to exhort you which yee should in no wise reject Therefore c. Vers. 13. Yea I think it meet as long as I am in this Tabernacle to stir you up by putting you in remembrance Argum. 7. Justice it self by reason of my Apostolical office requires that I excite you to holiness by exhortations and admonitions of this sort so long as I live Therefore be yee obedient Vers. 14. Knowing that shortly I must put off this my Tabernacle even as our Lord Iesus Christ hath shewed mee Argum. 8. As the Lord hath foretold I expect after a short time to end my life by a glorious Martyrdome Therefore as it lyes upon mee to exhort you to these virtues so it lies upon you to hearken to my Exhortation Vers. 15. Moreover I will indeavour that you may be able after my decease to have these things alwaies in remembrance Argum. 9. This Exhortation which I have written to you will be profitable to minde you of your duties even after my death Therefore hearken you to my admonitions Vers. 16. For wee have not followed cunningly devised fables when wee made known unto you the power and coming of our Lord Iesus Christ but were eye-witnesses of his Majesty Argum. 10. Those things which I have taught you as touching Christs incarnation or his first coming to execute the office of a Redeemer and as touching his divine nature power sufficiency and efficacy to save the people of God are not fables artificially feigned which may be despised or negligently without use and benefit past by but they are serious and certain things Therefore yee ought to hearken to these my admonitions But as those Argum. 11. Yee have been taught by us Apostles both eye and ear-witnesses of the Truth of Christ already demonstrated so that the certainty of this Gospel was so much as were possible to be concerning things done and past For wee Apostles have perceived by our senses the Majesty of Christ to be so great that wee cannot chuse but at the sight bee rap● up in an extasie as it is in the history Matthew 17. conconcerning Christs transfiguration Therefore obey my Exhortations Vers. 17. For hee received from God the Father honour and glory when there came such a voice to him from the excellent glory This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Argum. 12. Christ in whose Faith and Obedience wee exhort you to persevere hath by the audible voice of his Father speaking from Heaven received a glorious testimony from the excellent glory of the Father that hee is the Son of God wherein as in a Mediatour and Surety for his redeemed people God is well pleased satisfying himself abundantly in his Mediation and purchase Therefore obey yee diligently this Exhortation Vers. 18. And this voice which came from Heaven we heard when we were with him in the holy Mount Argum. 13. Those things are so holy which appertain to the Kingdome of Christ that the place it self wherein those things were declared which are preached by us was after a manner made holy viz. Because of Gods extraordinary voice and the divine glory of Christ there manifested Therefore with greater reverence yee ought to hearken to our Exhortations Vers. 19. Wee have also a more sure word of Prophecie whereunto yee do well that yee take heed us unto a light that shineth in a dark place until the day dawn and the day-star arise in your hearts Argum. 14. The Doctrine concerning Christ in whose Faith and Obedience wee exhort you to persevere is confirmed by the testimony of Scripture or a most firm prophetical word Therefore yee ought studiously to obey my Exhortations Hee staies upon this Exhortation confirming the certainty of prophetical Scripture by seven Reasons More sure Reas. 1. Because compared with other waies of revelation it is a most firm medium without and above exceptions whereto other means of revelation no less clear and true are obnoxious But this reason most especially did prevail with the Hebrews who examined visions and revelations made to the Apostles by the Scripture of the Old Testament For the divine authority of the old Scripture was confirmed in their minds some ages before Of Prophecie Reas. 2. That the testimony of foreseeing future Truth hath more evidence in it self of divine operation than the testimony of him who testifies that which hee hath seen or heard being present For no man could foresee this Truth but a Prophet every Beleever could see the Truth fulfilled Which Reas. 3. Because the word of Prophecy is worthy to be attended to by Beleevers into the sense whereof they might enquire to which truth and authority they might subject their consciences
store reserved unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men Argum. 4. The Heavens which now are and the Earth which now is are by the same word and his efficacious will reserved unto the fire of the last judgement when the wicked and especially the scoffers at the coming of Christ shall be condemned and perish Vers. 8. But Beloved be not ignorant of this one thing that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day Hee takes away an Objection The wicked might say why doth hee defer his coming The answer is threefold First Although the Lord seems to defer his coming yet his deferring ought not to be an offence to any because this delay ought not to be estimated by our sense but out of Gods eternity to whom that space of time which seems to us to be very long is but as one day and with whom one day and a thousand years do not differ as to the proportion of measure Vers. 9. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance Answ. 2. This delaying doth not proceed from slackness as some Judge but from the patience of God towards us to wit the Elect whereas many as yet are not converted and whereof God will have none perish but all in his time to come to repentance which cannot be unless the coming of Christ should be deferred to a season For if God should anticipate the time of judgement decreed by himself some of them which hee hath chosen to salvation from eternity should perish Vers. 10. But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night in the which the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up Answ. 3. And Argum. 5. Reproving scoffers from the manner of Christs coming which is described in three things 1. It shall be unawares to men as thieves use to come at such a time when they know they are least expected 2. It shall be with the greatest change of the whole universe 3. With the disanulling of all things wherein the Atheists sought their felicity in the world for the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works therein shall be burnt up so that all ought to be sollicitous in preparing themselves rather than to enquire curiously about the manner or time of his coming or to complain of his slackness The Second Part. Vers. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought yee to be in all holy conversation and godliness The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee draws this Doctrine into use by an Exhortation to follow after godliness and to perseverance in it The Arguments of the Exhortation are eight Argum. 1. By requiring a testimony from their consciences All these visible works especially which are in the earth are to be dissolved Therefore wee ought to follow after holiness Vers. 12. Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Argum. 2. Because so it becomes you who expect with hope and hasten with desire to meet the Lord at his coming i. e. it behoves you hoping for the coming of Christ to labour patiently in your vocation and to endeavour after holiness Wherein Argum. 3. Because the coming of the Lord to judgement will be so terrible that the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Vers. 13. Nevertheless wee according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness 14. Wherefore Beloved seeing that yee look for such things be diligent that yee may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless Argum. 4. Because according to the promises of God Isa 65.17 and 66.22 wee expect new Heavens and a new Earth wherein the just alone shall dwell Therefore wee ought to endeavour after holiness and righteousness who have this hope Hee calls both the Heavens and the Earth the habitation of the just because the world shall be the Possession Palace and Kingdome of the Elect who shall accompany Christ wheresoever hee shall go Be diligent Hee adds Argum. 5. With a repetition of his Exhortation to holiness Being diligent that being without spot and blameless yee may be found of Christ in peace i. e. being reconciled to God and be accounted the friends of Christ by him when hee shall come to judgement Vers. 15. And account that the long-suffering of our Lord is salvation even as our beloved Brother Paul also according to the wisdome given unto him hath written unto you Argum. 6. With preventing an Objection yee ought to be so far from being overcome with weariness because Christ seems to defer his coming that on the contrary yee ought to account it a sign of salvation given to all of you that this is not delay but rather the forbearance of the Lord and slowness to wrath Even as Argum. 7. Paul in his Epistle written to you Hebrews according to the abundant measure of wisdome given to him diligently exhorts you to follow after holiness and patience under the hope of Christs coming as in many places so especially in the end of Chap. 10.36 verse Therefore ought yee to follow after holiness and patience Vers. 16 As also in all his Epistles speaking in them of these things in which are some things hard to be understood which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest as they do also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction Hee takes occasion from the mention hee made of the Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews of commending the rest of Pauls Epistles for Canonical and to take away the offence upon the difficulty of some places in his Epistles from this that neither the sayings of Paul nor any other Scriptures are wrested unless by those that are unlearned and unstable or perverse men and that to the destruction of them that pervert them Vers. 17. Yee therefore Beloved seeing yee know these things before beware lest yee also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness 18. But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ to him be glory both now and for ever Amen Argum. 8. Propounded by way of Exhortation to shake off the idleness of the flesh Being fore-admonished concerning the errours of false Teachers by which they seduce their Disciples from the way of Truth and Holiness yee ought so much the more not onely to beware lest yee fall from your own stedfastness i. e. from the Faith and Obedience
contrary hee is condemned In the second verse a reason of this is subjoyned because the judgement of God is just and according to the merit of the deed condemns every sinner both him that judgeth and him that is judged Therefore hee which according to the judgement of God condemns another to death for sin condemns himself doing the like things Vers. 3. And thinkest thou this O man that judgest them which do such things and doest the same that thou shalt escape the judgement of God This Argument in the following part of the Chapter is confirmed removing the four pretended Objections whereby men may evade the force of the Argument Object 1. Hee securely contemns the judgement of God who because God hath hitherto spared him promiseth himself impunity or freedome from punishment when hee judgeth others I am not afraid saith hee of the judgement of God The Apostle refutes this Objection and proves it null by six Reasons Reas. 1. That such an imagination is vain and foolish for Thinkest thou c. which is the same as if hee had said In vain doest thou think to escape the judgement of God Vers. 4. Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness and forbearance and long-suffering not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Despisest Reas. 2. Such an imagination puts contempt and abuse upon the riches of the bounty forbearance and gentleness of God when any one because God hath spared hitherto goes on in sin and conceives hopes to go unpunished Bounty Reas. 3. That the bounty of God ought to invite and move to repentance not to go on in sin out of hopes to go unpunished Vers. 5. But after thy hardness and impenitent heart treasurest up unto thy self wrath against the day of wrath and revelation of the righteous judgement of God Hardness Reas. 4. That such a thought is the hardening of our hearts in sin and a sealing of them up that wee cannot repent Treasure Reas. 5. That hee who securely contemns the judgement of God heaps up unto himself a kinde of treasure of punishments from divine justice to the time of that last and terrible judgement wherein that whole treasure of punishments in the most righteous anger of God shall bee openly poured out upon him Vers. 6. Who will render to every man according to his deeds 7. To them who by patient continuance in well-doing seek for glory and honour and immortality eternal life 8. But unto them that are contentious and do not obey the truth but obey unrighteousness indignation and wrath 9. Tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil of the Jew first and also of the Gentile 10. But glory honour and peace to every man that worketh good to the Jew first and also to the Gentile Reas. 6. God will give to every man in the day of Judgement according to his works good or evil his rewards of grace or punishments of his justice To wit eternal life to them that persevere in obedience to the truth hoping for a reward vers 6 7. And besides the signs of wrath in this life eternal death also after this life as it is just for an angry God to inflict upon the adversaries of the truth and the servants of unrighteousness verse 8. Hee confirms this reason in that God will have no respect to any Nation or outward Priviledges in the inflicting of his punishments But the Jews which had the chiefest favours of God should bee first in their punishments and that hee would inflict upon the soul and body of the Heathens or Gentiles their deserved torments verse 9. And to the same manner in his rewards without difference of Nations hee will glorifie i. e. with all gifts that may externally accomplish a man such as Glory and Honour and inwardly which is signified by Peace and will heap upon the pious and honest Jew according to all the priviledges which hee hath vouchsafed to that Nation and will crown the pious and honest Gentile in his place with eternal life verse 10. from whence it follows that hee is deceived who indulges hopes of impunity because God hath hitherto spared him Vers. 11. For there is no respect of persons with God Hee confirms the former reason from the equity of God in that hee is no respecter of persons and hee meets with the second Objection propounded verse 2. against the severe judgement of God against sinners Some might object In the executing of Judgement respect is to bee had as well of the Heathen who lives out of the Church without the knowledge of the Law or the doctrine of God as also of the Jew which is a Disciple of God and an hearer of the Law God forbid that either of them should perish for both seems unjust although they are sinners Hee refutes this Objection and proves it just that every sinner should perish by five Reasons Reas. 1. Because there is no respect of persons with God that hee should exempt from condemnation those that persevere in sin whether Jews or Gentiles for any reason which appertains to the person not the cause And here it is to bee observed that God looks with an equal eye upon the Jew and Gentile out of Christ not in the degrees of punishment but in the guilt of eternal death which all sinners are worthy of although not in the like degree Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without Law do by nature the things contained in the Law those having not the Law shall be judged by the Law Reas. 2. This confirms and unfolds the other because they that have sinned without the Law scil written Against the Law written upon their hearts by nature even by the same Law within them shall perish without the written Law by the sentence of Justice And whoever have sinned in the Law or in the knowledge of the Law written shall bee condemned even by the sentence of the written Law Vers. 13. For not the hearers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified Reas. 3. Especially intended against the Jews who according to the rule of Righteousness cannot bee accounted for Righteous before God even they that are hearers of the Law unless they perform perfect obedidience to the Law which because neither Jew nor Gentile can do by consequence neither can they bee exempted from deserved condemnation but on the contrary especially the Jews which are hearers of the Law and do not keep it are most worthy of judgement Vers. 14. For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves 15. Which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another Reas. 4. Especially intended against the Gentiles which though they have not the written Law yet they have a Law within
them and by nature do some external works of the Law although they have not the written Law yet that Law within them is a Law and that really and indeed written upon their hearts as their consciences witness accusing them when they do ill and excusing them when they do well Therefore they have nothing to pretend why they should not undergo deserved condemnation when they sin much less the Jews Vers. 16. In the day when God shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel Reas. 5. Because in the day of judgement God will bring forth the secrets of the heart and according to this my doctrine in the Gospel will pronounce the condemnation of sinners to bee just whether Jews or Gentiles Therefore they cannot bee excused who sin but perish by their own just desert Vers. 17. Behold thou art called a Jew and restest in the Law and makest thy boast of God 18. And knowest his will and approvest the things that are more excellent being instructed out of the Law 19. And art confident that thou thy self art a guide of the blind a light of them which are in darkn●ss 20. An instructer of the foolish a teacher of babes which hath the form of knowledge and of the truth in the Law The third Objection But something must bee allowed to the priviledges of the Jews that they come not into the like condemnation with the Gentiles And here hee seems to conflict with some principal teacher of the Law and Patron of Righteousness by works and brings forth seven props of his vain confidence by way of concession granting all 1 The first that hee grants is the external honour of a worshiper of God Thou art called a Jew which was a name not of Nation only but of a confessor of the true Religion 2 A submission of mind to the doctrine of the Law Thou restest in the Law and thou applaudest thy self in this as an eminent benefit 3 Thou makest thy boast in God viz. that thou art of that people chosen above all other Nations in Covenant with God vers 17. 4 The knowledge of Gods will taken out of the Law 5 The discerning of good and evil and of things that differ and controversies by the benefit of the same Law verse 18. 6 The confidence of such abundant knowledge and certainty that they could teach others 7 That they had a systeme and collection of that knowledge which was here and there contained in the Law and that all the rest besides this our Rabbi are infants and foolish verse 19 20. Vers. 21. Thou therefore that teachest another teachest thou not thy self Thou that preachest a man should not steal doest thou steal 22. Thou that sayest a man should not commit adultery doest thou commit adultery Thou that abhorrest idols doest thou commit sacriledge 23. Thou that makest thy boast of the Law through breaking the Law dishonourest thou God The Apostle answers the Objection and all these being granted hee shews them insufficient to righteousness by two Reasons Reas. 1. Because thou doest not teach thy self i. e. thou dost not shew forth thy doctrine by thy deeds but either pollutest thy self with those vices or the like which thou forbiddest in others Therefore those things suffice not to free thee from condemnation Vers. 24. For the Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you as it is written Reas. 2. Confirming the former Because through your fault the Gentiles speak evil of God as if hee had or could bear prophane worshipers Therefore the forecited priviledges make nothing to Righteousness This reason hee confirmes by the testimony of Ezekiel 36.22 who complains of the Hypocrites of his time boasting in the same priviledges Vers. 25. For Circumcision verily profiteth ●f thou keep the Law but if thou be a breaker of the Law thy Circumcision is made uncircumcision The fourth Objection But because of the Covenant of God the sign whereof is Circumcision I shall not perish who am circumcised saith the Jew confiding in the outward Ceremony The Apostle answers and proves that Circumcision does not exempt us from condemnation or death by four Reasons Reas. 1. Because Circumcision if it bee joyned with perfect obedience to all the rest of the commandements if it could bee it would profit as a part of that obedience to justification by works for which the Jew did contend but if the transgression of the Law bee found in him that is circumcised as touching justification by works circumcision and uncircumcision will bee the same Therefore circumcision exempts not from condemnation Vers. 26. Therefore if the uncircumcision keep the righteousness of the Law shall not this uncircumcision be counted for circumcision Reas. 2. Because the Gentiles uncircumcision joyned with perfect obedience to the Law if it could bee shall bee of the same account with the Jews circumcision If so bee God require to justification by works nothing but a perfect observation of the Moral Law Therefore circumcision frees not from condemnation Vers. 27. And shall not uncircumcision which is by nature if it fulfil the Law judge thee who ●y the letter and circumcision dost transgress the Law Reas. 3. Because the Gentile being by nature uncircumcised if it was possible that hee could keep the Moral Law compared with thee who are outwardly circumcised and yet transgressest the Law by thy own judgement hee shall argue thee worthy of condemnation Therefore circumcision doth not free from condemnation Vers. 28. But he is not a Jew which is one outwardly neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh 29. But hee is a Jew which is one inwardly and circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and no● in the letter whose praise is not of men but of God Reas. 4. Because neither the outward profession of the true Religion long ago erected among the Jewes by God himself is to be accounted for a true profession of the true Religion nor outward Circumcision of the flesh is to bee reckoned for true Circumcision ver 28. But hee is a true Professor of the true Religion who is such an one in the Spirit and that is true Circumcision which is of the heart spiritual in the inward soul and not that which is outwardly in the body or the letter which is commonly called Circumcision He that is a Jew indeed and that which is true and spiritual Circumcision hath commendation and praise not only among men who only see things that are open and manifest but with God who looks into the heart Therefore outward Circumcision perfects not our righteousness nor frees any man from condemnation ver 29. CHAP. III. THere are two parts of this Chapter in the FIRST he answers five objections against the foresaid Doctrine to ver 9. In the SECOND part he proceeds to prove the POSITION touching JUSTIFICATION NOT BY WORKS BVT BY FAITH Ver. 1. What advantage then hath the Iew or what profit is there of