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A64467 The reconciler of the Bible inlarged wherein above three thousand seeming contradictions throughout the Old and New Testament are fully and plainly reconciled ... / by J.T. and T.M. ... Thaddaeus, Joannes, fl. 1630.; T. M. 1662 (1662) Wing T831_VARIANT; ESTC R33916 334,239 278

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Apostles before me but I went into Arabia Acts 9.26 Paul after his return to Damascus came to Jerusalem Paul after his conversion went into Arabia from Damascus and coming back thence to Damascus in the third year persecution befel him who being in hazard of his life was let down in a basket and escaped and coming to Jerusalem when they were all afraid of him he was brought to the Apostles by Barnabas ver 27. * 1369. Gal. 3.1 O foolish Galathians Mat. 5.22 Call no man fool Christ condemns not the word so as the manner of speaking the word when it is spoken with virulency and rayling especially proceeding from causeless anger St. Paul did not call them foolish out of passion but discretion to let them see their carriage and behaviour in the affairs of the Gospel * 1370. Gal. 4.4 Christ was born of a woman Mat. 11.11 John Baptist was the greatest of those who were born of a woman John was preferred before any of the Prophets or others that went before him but not before any that succeeded him However John was not to be compared with him who was not begot by man but by the Holy Ghost himself as Christ was * 1371. Gal. 4.6 And because you are sons God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son Jo. 11.50 51. Caiphas prophesied It is one thing to have the Spirit of grace another the gifts of the Spirit a wicked man may speak from the gifts of the Spirit yet not have the graces of the Spirit Caiphas beside he spake this extraordinarily not ordinarily 1372. Gal. 4.11 I am afraid of you lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain 1 Cor. 15.58 Be ye stedfast knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. In the first place the Apostle feared of the success of his labour by reason of schism amongst the Galatians Isa 65.23 who sought their salvation more from the Law than from Christ in the latter he hopes well of the Corinthians that his labour shall not be lost 1373. Gal. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the Spirit Eph. 6.12 We wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against powers Flesh is taken in the first place for our corrupt nature in the latter for men whose nature is frail and weak nor is our chief conflict with those but with spiritual powers which use many deceits and make many incursions upon the faithful 1374. Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections Eph. 5.29 No man ever yet hated his own flesh The first place is not concerning the nature of the flesh but the desire of the regenerate man who cares not for the affections of the flesh will not serve his belly his pleasures the world or worldly delights The latter is concerning self-love natural to us all and the Apostle speaking of the wife useth the name of flesh because they are both made one flesh 1375. Gal. 6.2 Bear ye one anothers burdens Ver. 5. Every man shall bear his own burden In the first place is spoken of the faults and infirmities of our brethren which are indeed a burden to us yet we must bear them by sympathy and the rule of charity will have it so that all of us help our brethren and tolerate their infirmities to lift up such as are down to hide their faults so much as may be and is fitting Theod. Thou hast this fault and not that another man hath another fault do thou bear his fault let him bear thine and so fulfil the law of charity be not curious in other mens faults for every man shall give account of his own 1376. Gal. 6.4 Let every man prove his works 1 Cor. 3.13 The fire shall try every mans work In the first place is intimated what is our duty to make our works approved to God in the latter place the fire signifies either the Holy Ghost or afflictions by which we are tried The Epistle of St. PAUL to the EPHESIANS HE commemorates the benefits of God which are part and recites our Election Redemption Sanctification Vocation into the Church Justification by faith our future inheritance of eternal life and our duties in general of us all in special of married people and unmarried of Parents of Children of Masters and of Servants It was written from Rome in the Year of Christ 59. and sent by Tychicus 1377. EPH. 1.7 In whom we have redemption Rom. 8.18 We wait for future glory and the redemption of our bodies 1. We have redemption in Christ from the guilt of sin by our justification we expect a full redemption from inherent sins in our glorification 2. For Christ shall transform our mortal bodies that he may make them like to his glorious body that as we are one with him here in soul and body by grace so we may be also in glory * 1378. Eph. 2.19 You are no more strangers and forreigners 1 Pet. 2.11 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims No more strangers to God and Christ but friends and sons no more strangers to heaven but fellow Citizens but you are strangers and pilgrims in and to the world and worldly courses 1379. Eph. 3.5 The mystery of Christs incarnation was in other ages unknown to men Col. 1.5 You have heard before in the Word of the truth of the Gospel It was unknown to the Fathers under the Law in respect of fulness and clearness of knowledge revealed since Christ came and it was made manifest to the whole world by the Ministry of the Apostles * 1380. Eph. 3.5 6. It was not made known in other ages That the Gentiles should be fellow heirs of the same body Gen. 12.5 In thy seed shall all Nations be blessed He meaneth not that none knew the Calling of the Gentiles before but because very few in comparison knew of it and they that did know of it had it revealed to them darkly and for the most part under Figures in general confusedly It was revealed but not so distinctly and particularly as now it is 1381. Eph. 3.15 All paternity is named from God the Father Joh. 8.44 The devil is the father of lies God is the Father of heavenly and earthly paternity the devil is excluded from these for he bath no such paternity but as he is the Author his called the Father of a lie 1382. Eph. 4.19 The Gentiles gave themselves over to lasciviousness to work all uncleanness Rom. 1.28 God gave them over to a reprobate mind The Gentiles gave themselves over in regard of their sins God gave them over in regard of punishment * 1383. Eph. 4.26 Be angry and sin not Mat. 5.22 But whosoever is angry with his brother c. The former place commands anger but not as it is a sin the latter forbids it as it is a sin The former would have us rather angry with the sin the latter not with the person as a person The former rather respects the wrong done to God for which
speaks of the will of his secret purpose 1146. Acts 20.35 It is more blessed to give than to receive Paul saith that these were the words of the Lord Jesus which are not found in the Evangelists Though the words be not found there in the same letters yet the sense of them is found in the words of Christ Lend looking for nothing again Give and it shall be given to you for all Christs words and deeds are not set down but only those which suffice for true faith and our salvation 1147. Acts 21.4 The Disciples said to Paul that he should not go up to Ierusalem Chap. 20.22 Now behold I go bound in the spirit to Ierusalem saith Paul The Disciples by suggestion of the Spirit warned him of bonds and afflictons using also some perswasions of their own as they were moved with brotherly affection being ignorant that it was the will of God that Paul should go up thither which he had revealed to him after a singular manner 1148. Acts 21.9 Philip had four daughters Virgins which did prophesie 1 Cor. 14.34 Let your women keep silence in the Churches The first place is concerning private and extraordinary gifts the latter of the publike Ministry and that which is ordinarily used from which women are excluded 1149. Acts 23.3 Paul reviled Ananias the High Priest 1 Cor. 6.10 Revilers shall not inherit the Kingdom of God Reviling is either lawful which riseth from zeal to Justice and hath the observation of the Law for its object that is just and honest so Peter reviled Ananias Simon Magus Paul Bar Jesus or Elymas and God all wicked men Or unlawful which proceeds from a wicked desire and mind of revenge that Paul had not Acts 5.8 c. 13.10 * Acts 23.3 with 1 Cor. 6.10 The words in the former place are by some not words of reviling but a Prediction of the destruction of the Legal Priesthood being figurative The true High Priest being come he was but a shadow and whited wall Or else it was a free and confident denouncing of Judgment by a kind of Apostolical authority Or else he did it in passion and repented in the following words Revilers in the latter place is meant of such as practice it not such as repent of it and seldom use it Acts 23.3 Sittest thou to judge me after the Law c. 2 Cor. 11.10 For ye suffer c. It is one thing to plead the equity of their cause another thing after the pleading of their cause to bear their sufferings patiently Pauls pleading here against the High Priests unjust proceedings doth not imply that he was impatient in his sufferings 1150. Acts 23.6 Paul cryed out in the council Men and brethren I am a Pharisee 1 Cor. 1.12 He reproves and condemns denominations from men Paul amongst those that disagreed admits the denomination only for distinction sake and so thinking with the Pharisees he distinguisheth himself from the Sadduces So the faithful Professors of the Gospel are called Christians but when the persons agree in Doctrine he forbids to prefer one before the other * Acts 23.6 with 1 Cor. 1.12 Paul calls not himself a Pharisee as if by that name he would abet names to make sects among Christians or those of the same body who agree in substantials but he useth a name which was generally known to hold forth such and such an opinion as that of the Resurrection from the dead I am of Paul c. That shews names to distinguish Christians from Christians as it was corruptly used They all agreed in the main and substance only one gloried he was for Paul another for Apollo c. as they were Teachers one excelling another in the manner of delivery not in the matter delivered 1151. Acts 25.10 Paul will be judged at Caesars Judgement seat 1 Cor. 6.1 Dare any of you go to Law before the unjust Civil Judicatures are to be had in honour the abuse of them is condemned and he admonisheth Christians that they should avoid contentions before unjust Judges lest so contending concerning small matters they should prostitute their sacred Religion * Acts 25.10 with 1 Cor. 6.1 It is one thing for one Christian to implead another another thing for an Heathen to implead a Christian It is lawful for a Christian being impleaded by an Heathen before Heathens to appeal from one Heathen Judicature to another though it be unlawful for two Christians contending which may have the conclusion made by Christians to fly and appeal to Heathens which is the thing the Apostle condemns in the Corinthians * 1152. Acts 25.15 Agrippa and Bernice came down to Caesarea Chap. 12. He was eaten with worms This Agryppa was the son of Herod Agryppa who was eaten to death the brother of Drusilla nor was he King in Judea but in Trachonitis * 1153. Acts 27.12 We came to Phaenice to winter in the Port of Crete Phaenicia is a Province of Syria Phaenice is either a Province which is not here meant or a City and Port in the Island of Crete which Crete is at this day called Candy and subject to the Venetians * 1154. Acts 27.33 The fourteenth day fasting Which cannot naturally be in regard no man in his health can live without meat above seven daie● taking nothing by way of set meal or a full refection only now and then a little to keep them alive 1155. Acts 28.28 Be it known therefore unto you that the salvation of God is sent unto the Gentiles Mat. 15.24 I am not sent but to the l●st sheep of the house of Israel The Gospel ought to be preached by the Apostles first to the Jews they not believing it came to the Gentiles So Christ preached to the Israelites before he gave command to his Disciples Go and teach all Nations Mat. 28.19 St. PAULS Epistle to the ROMANS IT may be said to be the Method of the holy Scripture in this are contained that which convinceth all both Jews and Gentiles of their sins it demonstrates Justification from sin by the Grace of God by Redemption of Jesus Christ which we apprehend by faith and testifie by good Works as the fruits of our faith It was written in the year of Christ 55. and sent from Corinth 1156. ROM 1.1 Paul a servant of Jesus Christ Joh. 15.15 I will not call you servants There are servants of sin and servants of Righteousness Christ speaks of servants of sin the Apostle was an Apostle of Righteousness either in respect of the common condition that he was freed by Christ from the power of Satan or of his Apostolical office being placed in the sacred Ministry by a singular manner 1157. Rom. 1.2 The Gospel of God which he had promised before by his Prophets in the holy Scriptures Chap. 16.25 The Gospel was kept secret since the world began but is now manifested The Gospel is taken either largely as it signifies the doctrine of Glory concerning Christ revealed in the Word or strictly properly for
love to us but Judas delivered Christ out of covetousness The Father for us and for our salvation Judas for thirty pieces of silver to his own destruction 1183. Rom. 3.28 We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the Law Jam. 2.24 You see that by works a man is justified and nat by faith only Paul doth not separate as to existency works from faith which works by love but the object of Justification before God Gal. 5.6 James rejects faith which wants good works that is a dead faith of the devil v. 17 19. and attributes to works the declaration of Iustification v. 21. yet he confirms a lively faith v. 22. by the example of Abraham Augustine saith that when the Apostle saith a man is justified by fa●● he doth it not that works should be despised because they follow the man justified they do not go before Justification * Rom. 3.28 with Jam. 2.24 St. Paul tells us a man is justified by faith in opposition to that justification which the Jews expected by the deeds of the Law St. James tells us a man is justified by works in opposition to a pretence of faith or such a faith as men say they have while they pretend to believe in Christ and yet do nothing that Christ commands St. Paul tells us it is a faith alone that justifies but not such a faith as is alone for that faith which justifies though it justifie as alone yet it alwaies is accompanied with good works St. James saith a man is justified by works or a faith which is working St. Paul speaks of faith as it justifies in foro divino before God St. James of works as they justifie in foro conscientiae vel humano as they justifie us to our selves or to others Faith justifies our Persons Works justifie our Faith 1184. Rom. 3.31 Do we then make void the Law through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Heb. 7.18 There is a disanulling of the Commandment going before through the weakness thereof The first place is of the Moral Law which faith confirmeth because Christ came to fulfil it and not to destroy it and the end of the Law is to bring us to Christ The latter place is concerning the Ceremonial Law which is abrogated because the shadow was to give place to the substance * 1185. Rom. 4.3 Abraham believed God and it was counted unto him for righteousness Psal 106.31 And Phinehas executed judgment and it was counted unto him for righteousness Abraham was not justified merito fidei by the merit and worthiness of his faith Abraham was justified by faith not materialiter materially as it was an act but relate objective as it hath relation unto the Object the Justice of Christ and Organice instrumentally as it applyeth the righteousness of Christ Abraham believed the Promise of God to be his shield and to give him an heir of his own body and to multiply his numerous Posterity of whom Christ was the chief and by whom all Nations were to be blessed As for Phinehas God accounted his Act as a righteous Act though men might count it an an Act of rash Zeal So that the Act did not Justifie the Person but the Person doing that Act sincerely was justified as to that Action * 1186. Rom. 4.5 God justifieth the ungodly 1 Kin. 8.31 Condemning the wicked to bring his way upon his head and justifying the righteous God justifieth the ungodly not as he is ungodly but as he is penitent and turning from his ungodliness He is said to justifie the ungodly as those who were so in themselves and are cloathed in Christ and so are esteemed godly * 1187. Rom. 4.5 But to him that worketh not but believeth Lu. 10.28 This do and thou shalt live The former place saith He who is not able to fulfil the condition of works not grounding himself thereon taking the way to be saved by believing to him is the reward reckoned The latter place shews us a man who sought Eternal life by the works of the Law which he could not fulfil whom Christ referred to the Law to shew him his sin knowing that would be a means to bring him to Christ or leave him inexcusable and so they intend the same thing 1188. Rom. 4.7 Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered Mat. 5.2 Blessed are the poor in spirit the clean in heart the merciful In the first place is spoken of the cause of blessedness namely remission of sins and imputation of righteosness In the latter place of vertues which are the way to blessedness 1189. Rom. 4.15 Chap. 5.20 Where there is no Law there is no transgression Chap. 2.12 As many as sin in the Law shall be judged by the Law In the former place the Law is taken generally without which there can be no transgression In the latter place he speaks of the natural Law for even the Gentiles shall perish for violating of it * 1190. Rom. 4.17 Even God who quickneth the dead 2 Kings 4.35 Elias raised the dead c. God only and of his own power raised the dead the Prophets and Apostles raised the dead by power of God and not by their own power They as Instruments God as the Cause 1191. Rom. 4.18 Abraham against hope Ver. 18. Believed in hope He believed contrary to humane hope by his hope in God having confidence contrary to the reason of the flesh the force of nature for all these would have weakned hope would make him doubt and despair also yet he overcame all those difficulties by firm hope he hoped in things desperate distrusting himself but trusting in God * 1192. Rom. 4.20 He staggered not at the Promise Gen. 17.17 Abraham fell upon his face and laughed This laughing is of admiration at Gods favour nor at distrust of his power though he had hitherto found an indisposition in his body to beget a Child and having been so long without he could not but entertain the Promise by way of wonder and rejoycing and in this rejoycing his faith might reach as far as the joy of the Messiah Luk. 2.10 Joh. 8.56 1193. Rom. 4.25 God raised Jesus Christ our Lord from the dead Joh. 10.18 I have power to lay down my life and I have power to take it up The Resurrection is ascribed to God the Father because the works of the Trinity ad extra are indivisible to the Son because he hath the same power with the Father who willingly underwent death and therefore the Resurrection is to be ascribed to his free will 1194. Rom. 5.2 By faith we stand and rejoyce 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed least he fall We stand founded on Gods grace whilst we are kept by the power of God by faith unto salvation by sin we fall when we think we stand 1195. Rom. 5.4 Patience worketh experience Jam. 1.3 Experience worketh patience Probation in the first place is taken
of Antichrist defection from the Gospel He exhorts them to good words and works These two Epistles were written from Athens 1407. 1 THES 1.3 Remembring your work of faith and labour Rom. 3.28 Gal. 3.10 Faith is opposed to works Faith is a work but not ours or proceeding from our own strength Joh. 6.29 for then it would not justifie us but it is the work of God and a quality in us respecting the merits of Christ therefore the Apostle calls not Faith it self so much a work as he doth that which proceeds from faith * 1 Thes 1.3 with Gal. 3.10 Faith is a work and brings forth works is a work of the Spirit and brings forth works of righteousness in us yet this hinders not but that Faith may be opposed to Works in the matter of Justification Faith as it justifies is not considered as it brings forth Works but as it brings home Christ Faith yet which brings home Christ is not without Works which Works do shew themselves immediately upon Justification though I cannot say in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Justification 1408. 1 Thes 2.20 For you are our glory 1 Cor. 1.31 He that glorieth let him glory in the Lord. Our glorying hath its foundation in God in the mean while if any thing be done amongst the auditory by the work of the Ministry we must say with the Apostle It is not I that laboured 1 Cor. 15.10 but the grace of God which was with me 1409. 1 Thes 4.17 Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord. 2 Tim. 4.6 I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand In the first place is spoken of the company of the faithful by reason of the most near communion and uniting of the body of Christ for we are all one spiritual body so many as believe in Christ so that what happens to one member may seem to happen to all the rest * 1410. 1 Thes 4.17 And so we shall be ever with the Lord. Rev. 20.6 They shall be Priests of God and of Christ and shall reign with him a thousand years We shall be ever after our Translation with the Lord. The latter place speaks of a thousand years but probably this may be in this world before our translation and so it nothing hinders but that after our translation we may be with the Lord for ever Whether these thousand years are to be meant litterally for so many years or else figuratively as the rest of the verse must be viz. Kings and Priests interpreted it is not to the purpose in hand 1411. 1 Thes 5.5 Ye are all children of the light and of the day not of the night Rom. 8.19 For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the Sons of God We are here with Paul children of light and the day in grace nor yet in glory The Apostle expected not to be made the Son of God because he was so already actually but only to be revealed to be so for it appears not so yet what we shall be for though we be heirs we do not yet actually possess the Kingdom we must therefore distinguish Sonhood acquired here by grace from that which shall be in our Country by glory 1412. 2 Thes 1.5 The persecutions and tribulations which you endure are a manifest token of the righteous judgment of God that ye may be counted worthy of the Kingdom of God for which you also suffer Eph. 2.8 You are saved through faith and not of your selves it is the gift of God The faithful are worthy not by their own worthiness but Christs also the word worthy is the same here with convenient Col. 1.13 1413. 2 Thes 2.2 The day of Christ is at hand 1 Joh. 2.18 It is the last time To be at hand and to draw near do differ the Apostle denieth that the day is at hand but he denieth not that it draweth near it is called the last time in respect of former time and because in the last time the day of judgment draweth nigh it is called the last hour in respect of God because our daies compared to Eternity are but one moment and a thousand years in Gods sight as yesterday when it is past also all things are present with God 1414. 2 Thes 3.10 If any would not work neither should he eat 1 Cor. 9.6 Have we not power to forbear working In the first place Works are either of the head or of the brain flesh and idleness are condemned in the latter labour is commended which is wrought not with the hand alone but with the head also the Ministers of the Church are not to get their living by the labour of their hands being they are not Mechanicks The Apostle had a singular gift from God to preach extemporary 2 Cor. 1.11 and yet had he means from the Churches Two Epistles of St. PAUL to TIMOTHY THE first is a pattern for Pastors to shew them what they ought to be in Doctrine and Prayers and in Life with their families and laies down the way how to instruct all men of what state age or condition soever It was written from Laodicea in the Year of Christ 52. The second confirms Timothy that he should not be cast down in his mind by reason of the tempests of persecutions and warns him that in preaching the Gospel he should avoid false doctrine that he should be diligent and come unto him It was written from Rome when he was in prison in the year of Christ seventy * 1415. 1 TIM 1.19 20. Some having put away scil a good conscience concerning faith have made shipwrack Joh. 3.36 He that believeth hath life eternal Doubt He that believes in Christ is as sure of salvation as if he were already in an actual and real possession of Christ which cannot be if a man may fall from faith Answ Hymeneus and Alexander made shipwrack not so much of faith it self as of the object of faith that they believed the doctrine of faith which they once professed and afterward deserted falling into heretical blasphemies and blasphemous heresies 2 Tim. 2.17 18. which place clearly explicates the other it shews that they fell from some fundamental truth formerly professed as in the point of the Resurrection or the like The Apostle adds immediately Ver. 19. Nevertheless the foundation of the Lord abideth sure c. q.d. though some professors fall away yet such as do indeed belong unto Christ and are his are firm and stable Or secondly they gave reins to a licentious life against the dictates of their own conscience which God punished by taking away the light of the Spirit from them that so in the midst of their course they should lose their most spiritual Merchandize Yet this shews not that ever these fell from true saving faith or ever had it they that have it once cannot finally
Christs Resurrection and he was more confirmed after his admission communicating with them those things that he had learned by revelalation from Christ * 1440. Heb. 6.4 It is impossible to restore such Ezek. 18. But if the wicked will turn c. he shall surely live It is impossible in regard of Gods Wisdom and Justice giving them up to an impenitent heart to restore those which sin so sadly as is mentioned before in the Chapter The second place tells us if the wicked but it doth not tell us that the wicked that is such wicked men as the other place mentions shall turn suppositions are not positions He that saith If the wicked doth not say that the wicked shal This latter place speaks of wicked men which have not sinned the sin against the Holy Ghost the former doth as I think speak of that sin but I submit to better Judgments 1441. Heb. 7.29 The Law made nothing perfect Jam. 1.15 The perfect Law of liberty The first place is concerning the Ceremonial Law which the Jews abused separating the Law from Grace and the Spirit of Christ and opposing the Law to the Gospel The latter place is concerning the whole Doctrine divinely revealed acomprehended in Gods Word which contains not only in writing Moral Precepts but also Promises concerning Christ of all which Christ is the soul recreating out souls by his Spirit and enlightning our eyes * 1442. Heb. 9.27 It is appointed unto men once to die c. Heb. 11.5 Enoch was translated that he should not see death It was appointed by God that men should once i. e. according to the common or ordinary course of nature though there be some extraordinary examples to die Though Enoch was not subject to a separation of soul and body yet he had a translation which was equivalent to death However this particular breaks not a general rule But probably by death is meant a change and translation out of this life as multitudes at the day of Christs second coming to judgment must be we shall not all die but all be changed * 1443. Heb. 10.14 By once offering or by one offering he hath for ever perfected them which are sanctified Lev. 16.34 And this shall be an everlasting statute unto you to make an attonement Christ once offering hath really and effectually purged us from our sins and reconciled us to God The word Everlasting or for ever used in the latter place is though used for time without end yet otherwhere for a long time as Prov. 29.14 Dan. 3.9 as till the year of Jubilee c. till the end of that generation or world and so Sacrifices reached till Christ when there was an end of that World or Generation there being now all things new 1444. Heb. 11.6 He that cometh to God must believe that he is Rom. 2.6 God shall render to every man according to his deeds We must believe because faith is the means and the instrument of our Justification God shall render to every one according to his works because works are the outward testimonial and mark of our Faith and Justification before God 1445. Heb. 11.13 The Patriarchs all died not having received the promises Ver. 33. Obtained promises Acts 2.39 The promise is made unto you The Promise made to the Fathers was temporal concerning the possession of the Land of Canaan Acts 7.5 which Abraham Isaac and Jacob obtained not by themselves but by their successours but the Promise was spiritual concerning Christ to be sent Joh. 8.56 and that by faith in him they should obtain eternal life so the Fathers obtained the promises because they saw Christ afar off and rejoyced that Christ should come they did not obtain the promises because he came not in their daies yet they believed he should come * 1446. Heb. 11.23 By faith Moses when he was born was hid Ver. 23. They hid him because they saw he was a proper child Divers causes of the same thing may agree together Faith was the principle beauty or properness the less principle and probably the outward features of his body might be an inducement to the more confirming them of Gods goodness towards that child * 1447. Heb. 11.23 Hid three months of his Parents Exod. 2.3 His Mother kept him The mother was the chief doer and the Father though not so active yet gave his consent at the least Now Consent is a kind of action whether in good or evil things as Acts 7.58 with Acts 22.20 * 1448. Heb. 11.23 They were not affraid of the Kings Commandment Why then did they hide him and why did they expose him to the water These words they did not fear must not be understood absolutely and simply but with limitation for many places of Scripture are spoken simply which must be understood with respect as Mat. 11.18 John came neither eating nor drinking that is not eating nothing at all but eating little and so Mat. 10.34 He came not to bring peace but the sword that is as Luke expounds it Luk. 12.51 rather debate than peace And so in this place Moses Parents feared not the Kings Commandment that is they did not fear it overmuch or wholly or only or so much as others did in the like case * 1449. Heb. 11.27 By faith he forsook Egypt not fearing the wrath of the King Exod. 2.14 Then Moses feared and said c. Moses left Aegypt twice The first time he feared the King but the second time when he brought the Israelites thence he feared not Pharoahs anger at all as Exod. 10.29 Besides if we understand it of his first departure Moses fled not for any fear in respect of himself but lest that his Calling by this means should be hindered and he withdraweth himself not so much of fear as to reserve himself for a better opportunity Nor doth he fear as distrusting his Calling but because he lost this opportunity The Reason of this fear is expressed in the Text Then Moses feared and said certainly this thing is known He feared lest he should be hindred in this business of the deliverance of the people * 1450. Heb. 11.33 with 39. They received the benefit and accomplishment of those particular Promises which were made unto them Yet they received not the Promise Christ in the flesh and the happy and glorious estate of the Church under him 1451. Heb. 12.17 Esau found no place for repentance though he sought it carefully with tears Acts 2.38 Repent for the remission of your sins Repentance if it be taken passively is referred to Esau's father whose mind could not be changed with his prayers that so he might revoke the blessing conferred upon Jacob but take it actively Gen. 27.33 Ver. 45. concerning Esau's repentance and that was not serious but hypocritical who intended to kill his brother * 1452. Heb. 12.26 Yet once more I shake not the earth only but heaven Ver. 28. We receiving a Kingdom which cannot be moved The former place speaks
of the Divine word is proved to be uniforme to the honour and love whereof all that doubt of the consent of the same are modestly invited Some man perhaps will object that some things are borrowed by me from others which I deny not for in compiling this Synopsis I thought it more safe and discreet to follow the steps of the most approved Interpreters than without the authority of famous men in this most corrupt age which is full of Error and Heresie to invert any thing of my own brain and to publish it to the world And I hope that the Courteuos Reader and the equall censurer are not ignorant that in the study of Divinity nothing can be said now that was not said before And it is most profitable Eccles 1.10 Aug. tom 3. de Trin l. 1. c. 3. that many Books should be made by many men of the same things in a divers style but not in a different faith And he shall find that I have compendiously gathered together in this Concordance that which the greater works of learned Men contained more at large so that here he may as it were at a single view comprehend the matter Let those famous men have the praise who have set forth large handfulls in this harvest I would not that any one should derogate from their Orthodox labours but let them have it rather than my self Yet I doubt not but that he who was and is effectuall in their large and learned Commentaries will supply me with his grace and be present to these gleanings If any one condemn my brevity and rudeness●●f my style I sought to be brief but not obscure because brevity is profitable and is accounted most acceptable alwayes by this there is nothing lost in the substance My religious mind bad me stop this little body with solid meat not with lofty and windy words if there be any thing found in it that is not as it should be I crave pardon what is not spoken religiously enough let it pass as not spoken far be it from me that I should arrogate to my self as though I had exactly written without error D. Mart. Luth. in Praef. for I am not he of whom it may be said He made it in the perfect tense but I stand in the last rank who scarce dare say I would have made it yet in great maters it is sufficient to be willing Wherefore I being much solicited by some like my self that is of the meaner sort and by the most pious desire of my intimate friends by this little Book of mine first intended for private use I would nay I am obliged to do them good but not them who suppose they better understand these things For who is sufficient for these things Christian Reader I do patiently and willingly beg of thee that according to thy Piety and Candor thou wouldst sincerely interpret of this my study and duty performed in collecting these Concordances of the Bible and wouldest look upon it with the same mind that I writ it that is with a single and good eye 1 Cor. 1.30 Our Lord Jesus Christ who of God is made unto us wisdome and righteousness and sanctification and redemption in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Sanctifie reconcile and enlighten us by his holy Spirit that being reconciled in him we may remain for ever to the praise of his Divine grace and our own salvation Which is the desire and prayer of Your daily Orator at the Throne of Grace J. T. RECONCILIATIONS Of the Places of the Old Testament THE sacred Scripture of the Old Testament is the Word of God brought down from Heaven from the beginning of the World unto the comming of the Messias preached by the Prophets almost 4000 years written in Hebrew except some few things in Chalde Esdras 4 5 6. Dan. 2 to 8. Ezek. 10.11 called by the Jews Esirmve arba that is Luke 24.27 twenty four divided by Christ into the Books of Moses the Prophets and the Psalms The Books of Moses THe Pentateuch that is the five Books Also the Ocean of Divinity the Hebrews call the 1. Bereschit that is in the beginning 2. Velle Semoth These are the names 3. Vajer He called The 4. Vajed daber And he spake 5. Elle hadebarim These are the words both in Greek and Latine 1. Genesis 2. Exodus 3. Leviticus 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Numbers 5. Deuteronomy GENESIS THE Generation of the World is so called because of the Creation before the flood and the restoring of it after the flood and the administration of it by the Patriarchs unto the birth of Moses it contains the history of 2310 years The Places that are seemingly contradictory * 1. Gen. 1.1 Elohim Almighties Gen. 1.1 2. Bara created The noun singular the verb plural To shew that not one only person but the Trinity of Persons in the unity of essence three in one and one in three created the world the Father works and I work others say Hoc subtile potius quam solidum and that its only an Idiotism of the Hebrew tongue * 2. Gen. 1.1 with Gen. 1.8 God created the Heaven c. And God called the firmament Heaven and the evening and the morning were the second day Moses in the first Verse useth two words to comprize the whole Fabrick of the Creation but afterwards he descends to the parts of the Creation and so distinguisheth the Heaven or Firmament from other parts Or 2. By Heaven is meant in the first Verse by a Metonymy Continens pro re contenta the invisible or glorious habitation of Angels with the Angels themselves and afterward by Heaven is meant the visible Heaven 3. Gen. 1.22 And on the seaventh day God ended his worke Chap. 2.4 All things were created in the day that the Lord God made the Heavens and the Earth Reconciling God created the world and all things therein contained in six dais and not in one day altogether The first place therefore is meant of certain naturall and artificiall dayes The latter contains indefinitely the time of the creation of things Psal 95.7 Heb. 3.13 So this day is put for the time of grace 4. Gen. 1.2 And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters John 7.39 The Holy Ghost was not yet given In the first place the treaty is concerning the person and existence of the holy Ghost in the latter concerning the gifts of the holy Ghost and the miraculous powring forth thereof in the day of Pentecost after the resurrection of Christ 5. Gen. 1.5 God called the light day before the Sun was Ecclus. 43.2 The Sun when it appeareth declareth the day The light which first made the day was not an other light from the light of the Sun but that light which God had dispersed through the hemisphere which he collected afterwards into the body of the Sun * 6. Gen. 1.27 In the Image of God Psalm 89.8 Who is
The right of living is one thing the possession another Abraham had the right to the land and he had the possession but it was in his seed and posterity 69. Gen. 13.16 I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth 2 Sam. 24.9 And Joab gave up the summe of the number of the people unto the King The posterity of Abraham which were and are before the numbring David made cannot be numbred nor had David the compleat number of the people from Joab who gave the King a lesse number of the people than they were * 70. Gen. 14.13 And these were confederate with Abraham 2 Chron. 19. Shouldest thou help the ungodly and love them that help the Lord. The Law of God forbids leagues with Infidels and wicked men but not all leagues those are condemned only which are against true Religion Marriages or joyning in armes except in the case of publick necessity as Asa with Benadab Josaphat with Achab c. but such leagues as are concerning the defending of their Countrey preserving neighbourhood of not making inroads of pr●serving the publick peace or mutuall commerce where Religion is not hurt are not forbidden but are adjudged lawfull and necessary such a league was this of Abraham with the neighbouring Cananites * 71. Gen. 15.6 Whereby shall I know this Matth. 12.39 An evill and adulterous generation seeks after a sign It is one thing to ask a sing for the confirmation of temporall promises where the thing was obscure and altogether hid another thing to ask a sign to demonstrate a thing which might otherwise be known Abraham seeking a sign was a speciall motion of Gods Spirit which Christ condemns not for it hath been permitted to some by a peculiar favour as to Gideon and Hezekiah which they did not so much out of incredulity as out of a desire to be forfeited against humane infirmity or he asked this Question not so much doubting of the thing promised as desiring to know somewhat more particularly of the manner of performance Abraham might well seek a sign in a thing which he had no promise on before nor no footstep of the manner of the comming of it discovered there being many difficulties to encounter withall before it could be effected The Jews they might have sought the Scriptures and found so clear evidences that Jesus was the Christ that they need not seek any signes concerning him 72. Gen. 15.6 Abraham believed God and he counted it unto him for righteousnesse James 2.21 Abraham was justified by works Abraham before God was justified by faith and was declared to be just by his works before men offering up his son Isaac upon the Altar 73. Gen. 15.13 Thy seed shall be a stranger in a Land that is not theirs and shall serve them 400 years Exod. 12.40 Now the sojourning of the children of Israel who dwelt in Aegypt was 430 years In the Scripture the years are not alwayes precisely numbred the lesser number is omitted and here under the greater round number the lesse is comprehended * Gen. 15.13 with Exod. 12.40 In a great summe so small a number comes under no particular account as the 72 Interpreters are called the 70 and this account is not to begin lower than the giving of the promise to Abraham to the deliverance of the Israelites out of Aegypt and the giving of the Law were 430 years Exod. 12.40 Gal. 3.13 of which neither 405 nor 400 nor 430 was spent under the Egyptian persecution for though the account end with their parting thence it did not begin with their coming thither but so much of the time was run before Jacob's coming thither and so much after that peaceably passed on untill the death of Joseph so as some account the time of their rigid servitude to an 140 some to a 121 at the most the summe of 430 equally divided the one half spent before their going into Aegypt the other half in their abiding there 215 before their going into Aegypt reckoned thus from the promise given to Abraham to the birth of Isaac 25 from the birth of Isaac to the birth of Jacob 60 years from thence to their coming into Aegypt 130 in all 215 the other 215 thus 94 before the death of Levi 121 betwixt his death and their deliverance out of Aegypt Chrys hom 36. in Gen. 74. Gen. 15.15 Thou shalt go to thy Fathers in peace Joshua 24.2 Terah and his fathers served other Gods To go to his Fathers that is to die it is an Hebrew phrase Also by the name of Fathers here may be understood Adam Abel Noah c. to whom he went by faith * 75. Gen. 15.16 But in the fourth generation they shall come hither again 1 Chro. There are reckoned six in the Tribe of Judah from Abraham Isaac Jacob Judah Phares Hezron Chaleb so in the Tribe of Levi from Abraham to Moses are reckoned six from Abraham Isaac Jacob Levi Cahath Amram Moses Answ In the fourth generation that is in the 400 year 100 year to a generation or somewhat about this which for evennesse and rotundity is not reckoned Or Secondly By the fourth generation is meant the fourth geniture or birth of the Father and the Son so the fourth generation is to be reckoned from the descent of the sonnes of Jacob into Aegypt to their entrance into Canaan as in the Tribe of Judah from Judah to Phares from Phares to Hesron from Hesron to Caleb so in Levi Levi Cahath Amram Moses Thirdly It is one thing to begin the reckoning of four generations from the day that God made this promise to Abraham at which time Abraham had none at all and another thing to begin their account from the time that their servitude in a strange Nation which God foretold should determine before ever God promised the returning of any fourth generations he told Abraham they must first fojourne in a strange Land then in the fourth generation of them whom God brings out thence they shall return to this Land which account Moses set down Exod. 6.16 reckoning from Levi whose first generation was Coath the second was Amram the third Aaron the fourth Eliazar who divided the Land at the time God had foretold Abraham 76. Gen. 16.9 The Angel of the Lord said unto Hagar Return to thy Mistress Chap. 21.12 God commands Abraham to send Hagar away First Hagar flying of her own accord was commanded to return to her Mistresse Gal. 4.22 Chap. 31. then being thrust out by force she staid in the desert the Apostle expounds that figure and applies it to the Old and New Testament 77. Gen. 17.12 God appointed circumcision 1 Cor. 7.19 Circumcision is nothing Circumcision by divine institution in the Old Testament was a sacrament to the coming of Christ but in the New Testament it is nothing nor is profitable to our salvation we must therefore distinguish the times of the Old and New Testament 78. Gen. 18.25 Thou shalt not kill the righteous with the
our sinnes and detest evill justly and as we should so God is daily angry with us for our sinnes But damnable anger and unlawfull is joyned with the sin of those who for every light offence do maintain their anger reckoning more of what is committed against them than against God 461. Psal 9.8 God shall judge the world in righteousnesse 1 Cor. 6.2 Know ye not that the Saints shall judg the world The manner of judging of the world is either by authority so the whole Trinity will judge or of subordinate authourity so Christ as Mediator and man will judge or of assertion so the Apostles will judge the world or of approbation so all the Saints and Angels shall allow of the sentence pronounced by the supreme judge Chrysostome the Saints shall judge the world by exemplary judgement because by example of their faith the infidelity of the world shall be condemned 462. Psal 14.1 The fool said in his heart There is no God Psal 19.1 The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work Wicked men if not in words yet in their deed and actions they deny God and as much as in them is they wish there were no God and no Hell 463. Psal 18.42 They cryed unto the Lord and he heard them not Jer. 29.12 Ye shall call upon me and I will hearken unto you God doth not hear the prayers of hypocrites but he hears the prayers of penitents 464. Psal 19.4 Their line went out into the ends of the earth Rom. 10.18 Their sound went out into the whole world Paul interprets the Psalme concerning the Doctrine of the Gospell and saith that it is the Canon of the holy Ghost and rule of faith and manners of Christians appointed by God by the sound and voice of the prophets of Christ and his Apostles in which the will of God is revealed and therefore it is called the Canonicall Scripture * Psal 19.4 with Rom. 10.18 To fetch an allusion from a place is one thing to allude to a place only is another He that alludes to a place only is not bound to recite the words further than that allusion requires The Apostle was shewing that the Gospell spread much in the world even as David said the light of the Sunne did * 465. Psal 19.7 The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul Rom. 6.23 The Law is the ministration of death The former place speaks of the Morall Law and also of the Gospell-Doctrine of Christ as it was held forth in the Scripture before Davids time The latter place of the Morall Law alone which though it be a perfect rule of righteousnesse yet in regard of us so unable to performe it and transgressors of it we can have nothing but death by the Law for cursed is he that doth not continue in all that the Law requires The Law is a killing Letter and a ministry of death not of it self but to us so sinfull and wretched 466. Psal 19.8 The Statutes of the Lord are right rejoycing the heart 2 Cor. 3.7 The Law is the ministration of death engraven in stones In this Psalme by the Law is understood all the will of God revealed from above The Apostle speaks only of the Morall Law not as it is in it self for so it is the perfect Law of righteousnesse and brings life but in respect of us who are transgressors of the Law and obtained nothing but death by it 467. Psal 19.11 And in keeping of thy Commandements there is great reward Luke 17.10 When you have done all ye were commanded ye shall say We are profitable servant we have done nothing but what we are obliged to do David commendeth the Law of God and that there is great reward in the keeping of it In which the goodnesse of God is commended who may of right require obedience from us yet he freely gives a reward unto us which he oweth not Christ sheweth that we and all that we have are due unto God therefore we can aske nothing for a reward and it is presumption to think that we can deserve any thing at Gods hands * Psal 19.11 with Luke 17.10 There is great reward of mercy not of merit neither of congruity nor condignity for when we have done all we ought we cannot profi● he Lord. It s one thing what God g●●es to us as sonnes another thing what we expect as wages for our work 468. Psal 22.1 My God my God wherefore hast thou forsaken me Joh. 14.10 Chap. 16.32 I am not alone for the Father is with me In the first place is signified the sense of Gods wrath and the effect thereof in Christ who taking upon him our person is made sinne for us though he complained that he was forsaken as man yet he was not forsaken as the Sonne of God nor was the divine nature separated from the humane nature but supported it In the latter place when Christ saith I am not alone he hath respect to the flight of the Apostles and fortifieth himself against it by the presence of his Father 469. Psal 22.3 My God I cryed by day and thou heardest not John 11.42 I knew because thou hearest me alwayes Christ was not heard in his passion because he was to dye In the latter place he speaks of his prayer for believers he gives thanks to his Father that he was alwayes heard 470. Psal 24.1 The earth is the Lords and the fullness thereof Luk. 4.6 I will give to thee saith Satan unto Christ all this power and glory Satan being the spirit and father of lying Joh. 8.4 Matth. 28. Psal 22 8. doth falsly appropriate to himself the power of the world Christ being appointed by his father King of Kings to whom was given all power in Heaven and Earth he rules in Heaven and Earth from sea to sea from the Rivers unto the ends of the earth 471. Psal 24.2 The Lord hath founded the earth upon the seas Exod. 20.4 The waters are under the earth The earth hath its stability from the first Creation the foundation thereof is the power of God which is the center of the whole and it doth as it were move upon the waters above and beneath it hath the waters on the sides so that the Sea is higher than the earth it is therefore the wonderfull work of God that he preserveth mankind from drowning in the midst of the waters 472. Psal 26.2 Prove me O Lord. 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man prove himself God because he proves our thoughts words and deeds therefore we must prove our selves that we may make our selves approved to God * 473. Psal 2.9 Turn not thy face far from me Psal 51.9 Turn thy face from my sins It is one thing to turn away his face from Davids sinne another thing to turn away his face from Davids person David prayed that God would not withdraw his favour from him but that he in favour would hide away his face from his
sinne because sin would displease him 474. Psal 32.3 When I kept silence my bones waxed old Vers 3. Through my roaring all the day long Silence respects the suppression of sins Crying the complaints and lamentations for grief of mind 475. Psal 32.10 Many sorrowes shall be to the wicked 73.5 The righteous are punished more than the wicked Punishments internall and sempiternall are for the wicked but externall and temporary are understood by the last place 476. Psal 34.5 They lookt unto him and were lightned 1 Tim. 6.16 He dwels in a light that no man can approach unto God is said to dwell in light not properly but metaphorically for by this his glory and manifest presence is understood 477. Psal 34.10 There is no lack to them that fear God 2. Tim. 3.12 All that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution The Godly suffer no want in spirituall good but in corporall and temporall good yet their persecutions are good for them and are rewarded with eternall life 478 Psal 34.22 None that trust in the Lord shall be desolate Rom. 3.23 All have sinned and come short of the glory of God In the first place is understood delinquency to death and eternall destruction but they that believe in Christ their faults shall not be imputed to them unto death 479. Psal 35.6 Let their way be made slippery and dark and let the Angell of the Lord persecute them Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies In the first place are meant the incorrigible and obdurate enemies of Christ and his Gospell In the latter place those of whose conversion we have hope 480. Psal 36.8 Thou shalt preserve both man and beast O Lord. 1 Cor. 9.9 Doth God take care for Oxen Under the generall care of God are comprehended all creatures but under his speciall care Men for whose sake God hath made the beasts Ambrose saith God cares nor for beasts for themselves but for our sake for which he created all things and therefore his principall care is for us * 481. Psal 36.25 I never saw c. But many good men have perished by hunger Lazarus and Martyrs Res When God laid on the temporall punishment he supplied it with spirituall comforts and food Secondly David speaks of himself I have not seen if it happened it happened the seldomer 482. Psal 37.21 The wicked borrowes and payeth not again Luke 6.35 Lend looking for nothing again If the Debter be fallen into extreme want that he cannot pay we must not kill him or forsake him in his utmost necessity 483. Psal 37.25 I have been young and now am old yet saw I never the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging their bread Luke 16.20 Lazarus a beggar desired to be satisfied with the crumbs which fell from the rich mans Table Beggery is a punishment to the wicked but to the godly a fatherly punishment and it is found in the unlawfull begging of Monks sturdy obstinate and idle people which refuse to work but the lawfull begging is for the Members of Christ which are brought to extream poverty by banishment war fire water sickness c. * 484. Psal 37.25 with Luke 16.20 The former Text saith I never saw the righteous forsaken his seed begging It wants Nor in the Originall And it may as well be rendred The righteous forsaken and his seed i. e. both the righteous and his seed One may be forsaken as Lazarus but not both the righteous and the seed of that righteous person forsaken 485. Psal 40.7 Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not 1 Pet. 2.5 Ye as living stones are built up a spirituall house an holy Priesthood to offer up spirituall sacrifices unto God by Jesus Christ God would none of the sacrifices of the Jews which were offered without faith The Apostle speaks of the spirituall sacrifices of Christians as the oblation of our body a contrite heart giving of thanks works of charity which are acceptable sacrifices to God * 486. Psal 40.7 Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire Lev. 16. The Lord commanded c. God would not have sacrifice 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as they came from prophane persons without faith and charity Yet God desires sacrifice in respect of their end and institution as they prefigured Christ to come not as the Jews gloried in them and abused them to resist Christ nor as they were to remain in the Jewes opinion after Christ or as they might be conjoyned with Christ nor yet as they might imagine that he was to be served with the outward act and not having the inward power joyned with that outward act 487. Psal 40.9 Lo I come in the volume of the book it is written of me that I might do thy will O God Matth. 26.39 Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me yet not as I will but as thou wilt Christ that he might fulfill the will of his Father in redeeming mankind offered himself freely and though in the act he was sorrowfull as men are and would if it had been possible have escaped death without the detriment of mans salvation yet he submitted himselfe to his Fathers will * 488. Psal 43.1 Judg me O Lord. Psal 143.2 Enter not into Judgement with thy servant O Lord. Juding of a mans persons is one thing of a mans cause is another David desires God to manifest himself whether the cause which he was disputing with his enemies were just and whether his heart was upright in that matter in relation to them But when David comes to consider the difference betwixt God and him occasioned by his sinnes then he finds himself so faulty that he praies God to pardon him and not judg him for his sins were many 489. Psal 44.23 Awake why sleepest thou O Lord rise 121.4 The keeper of Israel sleepeth not So the godly being grievously afflicted speake after the manner of men not as if God slept or took no care of them but they crave of God that he would shew himself by his works of justice and mercy and would help them * Psal 44.23 with 121.4 In the former place he spake out of a sense of divine displeasure In the latter he spake out of a sense of Gods providence Affection makes Gods children think that to be which is not think that God sleeps when he doth not every moment in mesery being apprehended as the absence of a years mercy * Psal 44.23 with Psal 121.4 Sleeping is attributed to God by a Metaphor from men when they are on sleep they help not nor regard the danger of other And when God regarded not or helped not David as he apprehended he seemed to be as on sleep to him and his affaires though he did not apprehend God to be on sleep in himself or to others for if he had he could not have imagined so small a cry as his on earth could have raised him in Heaven 491. Psal 45.2 Thou art fairer than the children of men Isaiah 53.2 There was no comlinesse
though for a time Gods people may want the possession of the earth yet in regard of their posterity or of having that which is equivalent to it for themselves they do not want it 771. Mat. 5.10 Blessed are they that suffer persecution for righteousness sake Ver. 12. Because great is their reward in heaven 1 Pet. 2.10 c. 4.14 Rom. 8.18 The afflictions of this world are not worthy of the glory hereafter which shall be revealed in us The reward here hath no relation to any merit of ours but to the free love of God who promiseth for Christs sake a reward of his grace to them that ask him and crowns his gifts in us Nor do the afflictions and sufferings of this life merit the free rewards of eternal life * 772. Mat. 5.12 with Rom. 8.18 The Former place tels us that those who are persecuted for the Gospels cause may rejoyce because they have a great reward in heaven not that this persecution did merit Heaven but because God would freely give it to such a person as was so qualified it is a reward not a desert it is of grace not of merit The latter place shews that all we can do cannot deserve heaven Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies 1 Joh. 5.16 There is a sin unto death I do not say you shall pray for it The former place gives a general rule the latter tels us of a particular exception Love your enemies so as to pray for them unless they be such enemies as sin a sin unto death Love your private enemies I do not say the enemies of the Church pray for them till you be clearly convinced that they have sinned the sin unto death 773. Mat. 5.12 Great is your reward in heaven Eph. 2.8 By grace you are saved through faith it is the gift of God Our salvation properly is not a reward but the gift of God Rom. 5.6 c. 3.28 Phil. 2.13 1 Tim. 4.8 in respect of acquiring it and application conservation and perfection 774. Mat. 5.14 You are the light of the world Joh. 8.12 I saith Christ am the light of this world All Doctors of the Church and all Christians enlightned by Christ are light not of themselves but from Christ of whom they receive their splendor and divine light or Christ is of himself the true original light who enlightens every man that comes into the world * Mat. 5.14 with Ioh. 8.12 There be several kinds of Lights Original and derived the first as the Sun the other as the Stars Original is that which is the cause of all light and so in the latter Text Christ is the Cause of all light and knowledge which is saving and in this sence Iohn Baptist Ioh. 1.8 is not the light nor any Disciple But there is a derived light which shineth forth but yet is received from another and so Iohn was a burning and shining light or lamp Ioh. 5.35 and so were the Disciples 2 Cor. 4.6 for they received their light from Christ and they testified of this light and they walked as in the light 775. Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works c. 6.1 Beware that you give not your alms before men All that are enlightned with the light of the Gospel must study to do good works Rom. 13.12 That by the works themselves the faith and godliness in our hearts may be known to men But in the latter place all works of ambition and boasting are forbidden by Christ for hypocrites they do so desiring to be praised and seen of men * Mat. 5.16 with 6.1 The former place speaks that Ministers must preach so as men may have occasion to glorifie God both by their life and Doctrine The latter place bids both Minister and people to avoid doing any thing for vain glory for that hinders the glory of God It is lawful to do good works before men to stir them up to do the like and to praise God but it is not lawful to do any work to have praise with men it is one thing to do a good work to evidence to men our faith when it is doubted and accounted by men to be hypocritical another thing to do a good work before men to make our hearts which are hypocritical to appear to be true * 776. Mat. 5.17 with Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law to every one that believeth The former place shews Christ as God and man came not to destroy that mandatory part of the Law viz. the moral part the mandatory part is Ceremonial Judicial and Moral He hath not destroyed this last though he hath fulfilled so much as concerned him the first second yea the third He came not to destroy that part of Gods Word concerning Righteousness and Justice which Moses penned by Gods Commandment or the Prophets i. e. That part of Gods Word which is contained in the writings of all the Prophets in the old Testament after Moses He came not either by his Doctrine or Practice to free men from the obedience thereof or to put an end to them so as they should be useless But he came to fulfil them First By his Doctrine 1. Restoring the proper meaning and true use 2. And by revealing the right way Secondly By his Person he fulfilleth the Law 1. By becoming accursed to the Law 2. And by perfect obedience unto the Law Thirdly He fulfilled the Law in the Elect by creating faith in Christ and by giving them the Spirit of God The second place tels us Christ is the end of the Law He ended the Ceremonial Law and legal Rites the Law Prophets being until John Mat. 11. He was the end of the Law but not directly for in general the Law was made to make man righteous but seeing that could not be done the Law brings us to Christ in whom we are righteous 3. Christ is the end and scope aimed at in the Old Testament all the Prophets gave testimony of him Christ he is the end because he perfectly fulfilled it the Ceremonial Law being the substance of it the Moral Law by his active and passive obedience Christ is the end of the Law as the Law is taken more largely for the whole Doctrine contained in Moses Joh. 5.46 Or secondly as the Law is taken more strictly for the Precepts of the Moral Law in three respects 1. Of his personal obedience which the Law required 2. In regard of satisfaction for the punishment due by the Law 3. In justifying us by Christ to whom the Law as a Schoolmaster brings us 777. Mat. 5.17 I came not to destroy the Law but to fulfil it Gal. 3.13 Christ came to redeem us from the curse of the law There is a difference between the Law and the Curse of it as Christ hath fulfilled the Law so must we walk in his Commandments and by applying Christs satisfaction to our selves we are said spiritually to fulfill the Law from the curse and
half of the words alledged in the Text are not in Isaiah at all but in Malachy So Mark might say the Prophets and yet sometime in the New Testament in Allegations from the Old do closely couch two several places together under one quotation as if they were but one yet maketh it sure that the first alwaies is the very place which it takes on it to cite though the second be another As Act. 7.7 a speech is alledged which was spoken at twice so that here Luke might say Isaiah * 913. Mar. 1.35 And in the morning rising up a great while before day he went out and departed into a solitary place and there prayed with Luk. 4.42 And when it was day he departed and went into a desart place and the people sought him c. with Mat. 8.18 Matthew observeth not the time when Peters wives mother was cured he bringing the History in when other circumstances of place or persons c. invited him thereto And whereas Mark saith it was before day and Luke when it was day both agree for it was in the twilight which is not yet clear day and yet it is so much light as to be called day And whereas Matthew saith Christ commanded the multitudes to depart to the other side which questionless they did and Christ he went into the Wilderness and the multitude came thither to seek him The meaning may be Christ commanded that they should depart to the other side not that which is opposite directly but to the other side in respect of the sinus of the sea of Galilee which was towards Capernaum So the multitude sayled over part of the Lake yet did not wholly leave Galilee Christ he came by Land to the place where the people sought him The History tells us what Christ commanded not what the people did 914. Mar. 2.7 Who can forgive sins but God only Joh. 20.23 Whose sins you remit they are remitted unto them God above remits sins by his own authority The Apostles and Pastors of the Churches only testifie in the Name of Christ that upon condition of faith they are remitted But God speaks to us by his Ministers that we should be sure of his grace and should have the Sacred Function in honour since it is confirmed in heaven what the Ministers declare on earth * Mar. 2.7 with Mat. 6. As we forgive our debts or trespasses In every trespass which any do to their Neighbours there be two offences one to God another to Man In the first respect as it is against God and his Commandments it is called a sin And that God only forgives In the other respect it is called only an injury or dammage and so man may forgive it When a man is robbed the Law is broken by stealing and the injury that is done is against a man that hath goods stollen this injury as it is an injury a man may forgive but as it is a sin he cannot but God only * Mar. 2.7 with Joh. 20.23 God forgives sin by authority Man ministerially God of himself alone Man only from God God absolutely Man with conditions and supposition God really and originally Man only declaratively 915. Mar. 5.20 The man that was possessed with the Devil published in Decapolis how great things Jesus had done for him Luk. 3.39 He went through the City publishing He published it first in the City of the Gadarenes and afterwards in other parts of Decapolis 916. Mar. 5.30 Vertue went forth of Christ to cure the woman Ver. 34. He said unto her Daughter thy faith hath made thee whole By vertue from Christ was the woman restored to her health which she applyed to her self by faith and so her issue of bloud staied 917. Mar. 6.5 Christ could do no mighty works in his own Country Mat. 28.18 All power is given to me in heaven and in earth Christ was not destitute of vertue but for their incredulity for faith is the hand that receives Christs benefits and to those that believe all things are possible that he could not is meant here he would not for that is Gods will to be able saith Tertullian 918. Mar. 9.2 After six daies Iesus taketh with him Peter Iames and Iohn Luk. 9.28 And it came to pass about eight daies The first place must be understood exclusively in respect of the day in which Christ speaks and was transformed The latter includes both those daies and he numbreth not precisely but about eight there were not so many whole daies 919. Mar. 9.35 And he sate down and called the twelve Mat. 18.1 The Disciples came unto him saying The Disciples on the way disputed who should be the greatest of them Christ therefore at home called the twelve and they being called came unto him 920. Mar. 10.19 Christ answereth him that asked of him about eternal life Thou knowest the Commandments Do not commit adultery do not kill do not steal Rom. 3.20 By the deeds of the Law shall no flesh be justified in the sight of God Gal. 2.16 c. 3.10 To him that asked What shall I do Christ answering this question that he might make him know his weakness he sends him back to the rule of Works or the Law of God and so would have him to seek salvation in Christ and not in his own works 921. Mar. 11.7 They brought the Colt to Iesus Mat. 21.7 They brought the Ass and the Colt Matthew is an eye witness that the Ass and the Colt were both brought according to the Prophesie Zac. 9 9. Fear not O Daughter of Sion behold thy King cometh sitting upon an Ass and the Foal of an Ass Some make this an emblem of the Iews and Gentiles by the Iew to be meant the Ass which our Saviour rid first on but because she went untowardly he left her and road on the Foal which was an embleme of the Gentiles who received the Gospel willingly which the Iews rejected * 922. Mar. 13.32 But of that day and of that hour knoweth no man no not the Angels that are in heaven no not the Son but the Father Col. 2.3 In Whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge Christ knew not the hour say some that is knew it not to teach us to know it but thus God himself he knows it not nor could Christ have said No not the Son but the Father Thus we may aequivoke in any thing I know it not because I will not tell you it Christ as Man knew not the time of Gods judging the world though as God he did and as Mediator he had the fulness of wisdom dwelling in him that is as the Divine Nature is there It is likely as Man he had not this Mystery discovevered to him till after his Ascension 923. Mar. 14.12 And the first day of unleavened bread when they killed the Passeover Joh. 13.1 Now before the Feast of the Passeover when Iesus knew that his hour was come The Iews began their day from the Evening
we may have society with him and it may be for our salvation * Ioh. 5.34 Christ receives not testimony from man originally My testimony is from heaven as in my Baptism This is my beloved Son and from the Scriptures They testifie of me Christians and Disciples do not so much give testimony to Christ that he is the Messias as they hold forth this testimony being formerly given by the Holy Ghost Iohn and the Apostles bore witness not so much to as of Christ to the people 999. Ioh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures Chap. 6.45 They shall be all taught of God Christ speaks first of the manner and outward means but afterwards of the internal means for God teacheth us by the Scripture as an ordinary means for he will have us to search his Will in and out of the Scriptures because he teacheth us by the Scriptures as he doth bring to pass other things by ordinary means * Ioh. 5.39 with 6.45 In the former place Christ tells us what is our duty if we would be taught of God The latter place tells us who will teach us the Spirit within by the Word without the one as the Efficient the other as the Instrument He that saith they shall all be taught of the Master himself saith not that they shall leave off reading but they shall read that the Master may teach them 1000. Ioh. 5.44 How can you believe who receive honour one of another and seek not the honour that cometh from God only Chap. 12.42 Among the Chief Rulers also many believed on him but because of the Pharisees they did not confess him lest they should be put out of the Synagogue The faith of the Rulers if it had been true and lively in Christ it would have shewed it self by confession and good works and would have brought forth good fruit It was therefore but an Historical or Temporary faith for they loved the glory of man more than the glory of God * 1001. Joh. 6.27 Labour not for the meat that perisheth 2 Thes 3.10 He that will not labour must not eat Labour not so much for outward meat as for spiritual and eternal Labour every one must in his outward Calling yet this outward labouring must not make us labour so earnestly as we do in our effectual and spiritual Calling He sets not aside outward labour but prefers spiritual 1002. Joh. 6.29 This is the work of God that you believe Rom. 3.28 We are justified by faith without the deeds of the Law Faith is called the work of God because it is the effect and gift of God and pleasing unto him The work of faith as it is a gift of God infused into us and is an inherent quality so faith in this sense doth not absolutely justifie us but relatively as it apprehends Christ with his benefits and applies them so we are justified by faith alone without works not for the inexistence inherence dignity or merit of faith but for the instrumental efficiency and application by it * Joh. 6.29 with Rom. 3.28 Though faith be considered as a work wrought in the soul yet it would not follow that we were justified by works but by a work which is a Sophism of the Papists or others to put the singular for the plural And yet Faith not as a work in or of the soul not as an act habit or quality justifies but faith is said to justifie in opposition to the external and internal performances of the Law It justifies instrumentally as the hand heals by applying that which heals * 1003. Ioh. 6.32 Moses gave you not that bread to eat from heaven with 1 Cor. 10.3 4. Did all eat the same spiritual meat and drink the same spiritual ●ock Christ Moses did not give that bread or rock which was really Christ but only significantly Christ They all eat that meat and dranke the same rock not litterally or substantially eat and dranke the rock for that could not be it being a rock and so not potable nor could there be a spiritual rock as spiritual is put for a substance without flesh and bones but figuratively a rock Though Moses gave the sign he could not give Christ himself which came after Moses time from heaven and took our nature upon him 1004. Joh. 6.37 And him that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out Rom. 9.16 It is not of him that willeth nor that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy To come to Christ that is to believe is not in our power but in the will of God because it is given from the Father so that it is not in mans will but in Gods mercy that we come to Christ and believe in him * 1005. Joh. 6.44 No man cometh to me but whom the Father draweth with Ezek. Turn you turn you why will you die The former place shews no man hath strength to turn The latter place shews us our duty we ought to turn The former place shews where strength is to be had that we may turn The latter place shews that in regard it is our duty to turn our selves and we cannot of our selves do this we must seek for help from the Lord that we may be turned The Master saies Every Boy is bound to con his Lesson perfectly and he saies moreover No Boy can do this of himself he must ask me He therefore fairly invites the Boys to ask him * Joh. 6.44 And him that cometh c. The former place tels us not who gives strength to come to Christ but assures us that who comes shall be entertained The latter tells us none can come but those to whom God gives mercy and draws by his mercy So as they seem both to speak thus much It is Gods mercy any comes and likewise it is his mercy that he will not refuse those which come 1006. Joh. 6.53 Except you eat of the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his bloud you have not life in you Heb. 10.1 The Fathers under the Law had shadows of future good things Christ speaks of the spiritual receiving of his body and bloud by faith as believers are made partakers of his benefits In the Old Testament under figures in the New Testament without figures yet so that the Fathers and we eat and drink the same spiritual meat and drink and we as they receive Christ by faith * Joh. 6.53 with Heb. 10.1 It is one thing to eat the wheat pure and winnowed from the chaff another thing to eat wheat with the chaff in or out of the Ear. The Jews eat Christ spiritually but in the chaff of Ceremonies and Types not so purely and spiritually as we who live in the daies of the Gospel and have the wheat winnowed from the chaff Christ from Ceremonies 1007. Joh. 6.54 He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud hath eternal life Ver. 63. The flesh profiteth nothing In the first place is understood the flesh of Christ which giveth life In the latter the flesh
the Father did more fully evidence himself than here Not as if Christ as God were not present on earth as well as in heaven but that he went from them in his Humane Nature into the heavens from whence he shall come to judge the world * 1017. Joh. 8.19 You neither know me Joh. 7.28 And you know me You know me not as to my Divinity you know me as to my Humanity 1018. Joh. 8.23 Ye are of this world Chap. 15.19 Ye are not of this world To be of the world is to be in darkness and to lead a wicked life Not to be of the world is to acknowledge Christ and to live godly The first place therefore respects the unbelieving Jews and carnal men the latter respects all the faithful the children of God and elected to salvation 1019. Joh. 8.26 I have many things to say and to judge of you Chap. 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already In the first place the present-tense is put for the future For we must all of us appear before Christs Tribunal Rom. 14.10 that every man may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5.10 * Joh. 8.26 with 3.18 The first place tells us that Christ had many things whereof he might judge them and accuse them but that at present was not his work he came to convince them by his Preaching and Miracles who he was and afterwards to die for them as for judging them it was at present his Fathers work who was true The second place that he that believeth not is in a condemned estate and his conscience upon a serious inquest will condemn him and the Law will judge him as condemned tho●gh the sentence of condemnation is not already solemnly pronounced against him as it will be at the last day 1020. Joh. 8.28 I do nothing of my self Chap. 10.18 I have power c. Christ of himself that is without the Father or against his Fathers authority did nothing 1021. Joh. 8.33 We be Abrahams seed Ver. 44. Ye are of your Father the devil There are sons carnal and sons spiritual the carnal Jews were the seed of Abraham in respect of corporal propagation Spiritual are such as are guided by a good or evil spirit sons by a good Spirit are all the faithful who are of the seed of Abraham by faith in Christ who gave to believing Abraham that he should be c●●led the Father of believers Christ saith the Jews were from an evil spirit who did not the works of Abraham but of the devil in respect of their malice imitation and he that doth the works of another may be called his son 1022. Joh. 8.35 The servant abideth not in the house for ever 1 Thes 4.17 We shall ever be with the Lord. In the first place is spoken of a servant of sin in the latter of the faithful who shall be delivered from all bondage being made free by the Son Joh. 8.36 * Joh. 8.35 with 1 Thes 4.17 The former place speaketh of the condition of a servant in general whether it be meant of a bodily service or otherwise He remains not alwaies in the Masters house but as soon as the daies of his servitude are past he goeth to live of himself And this place compares a son and a servant the one stayeth a time the other for ever They were not spiritually and really Sons though externally and carnally sons but really and spiritually servants The second place speaks of those who were not servants to sin or the Law but sons I call you no more servants but sons and so they may as the sons of God spiritually in Christ remain in the house for ever 1023. Joh. 8.36 Ye shall be free indeed Rom. 7.23 Paul was a captive under the law of sin The faithful are free from sin in respect of condemnation dominion and perfect liberty which they shall enjoy in the next life they are said to be captive under sin by reason of inherent sin which begets ill desires in them against their wills * 1024. Joh. 8.36 You are free indeed Rom. 7.16 I am sold under sin A Christian is free from the Ceremonies of the Law and from the damning power of the Moral Law as he is in Christ and he is free from the power of sin that is free from sins damnation and free from sins dominion i. e. when he begins to believe the Lord enables him more freely to resist sin than formerly and so dayly enlargeth his heart till in the conclusion this freedom is perfected and yet St. Paul might speak of his being in his own apprehension so troubled with sin as if he were sold under it though he were in part free and was going on to perfect freedom from sin It is one thing what Christ spake as to the right and portion of a Christian another thing what Paul speaks out of his hatred and detestation of the weight and lusting of sin within him A child of God takes the longing of his spirit after sins grievously and complains he is sold under sin when he finds sin strongly tempt him * 1025. Joh. 8.44 He was a murtherer from the beginning Joh. 1.1 In the beginning was the word This word beginning hath several considerations It is not to be taken from the first absolute beginning for then Satan had no being not from his own beginning For at his creation he was good as all things else were but so soon as ever Man was he resolved to destroy man and with reference to that intention he was a man-slayer or murderer of Man from the beginning of Man So that this place is meant of Mans beginning and the second place is meant simply the beginning of the world 1026. Joh. 8.46 Which of you convinvinceth me of sin Chap. 9.24 We know that this man is a sinner Christ speaks of firm proof that no man could convince him of sin The Jews for despight and calumny said falsely that he was a sinner * Joh. 8.46 with 9.24 The former place put by way of Question implies a Negative that none could justly convince him The latter place tells us not that they did convince him of sin but they behind his back would scandalize him to be a sinner in the general without implying any particular sin that he was guilty of Only they being ignorant of his birth and thinking him to be begot after the ordinary manner of men and consequently guilty of original sin do call him a sinner but this doth not in the least convince him of this or that sin 1027. Joh. 8.50 I seek not mine own glory Vers 12. I am the light of the world He means glory acquired from his Father not affected glory and he cals himself the Light of the world truly confessing what he is and not by hunting after vain-glory * Joh. 8.50 with 12. A man may speak what he is and what he hath without
going to some other place and so say We knew not and yet Christ might justly say You know you know if you will consider what you know and apply it to this present purpose 1063. Joh. 14.8 Shew us the Father Ver. 9. He that seeth m● seeth the Father The Apostles did not perfectly know Christ therefore he taxed them of ignorance for they ought to have seen and known the Father in him * 1064. Joh. 14.10 I am in the Father and the Father in me Psal 22. Why hast thou forsaken me I am in the Father by an essential union the Father in Christ as God being one and so in the first place In the second Christ was forsaken not in respect of Essential Union nor in respect of the personal Union the Godhead with the Humane Nature in the Mediator that which the Person of the Son took once upon him he never laid down But he was forsaken in respect of the sense of Divine aide in the time of his passion in his Humane Nature 1065. Joh. 14.12 He that believeth on me the works that I do shall he do also and greater Chap. 3.2 No man can do these Miracles that thou dost Christ means not works of divine Creation Redemption or Sanctification but of his mission such Miracles as he wrought in the world such and greater than they were wrought by the Apostles whose shadows cured sick men as they passed by after Christs Ascention and the wonderful conversion of the Gentiles followed * Joh. 14.12 with 3.2 The latter place saith no more than no man can do such Miracles as thou dost except he have power from God it saith not that no other man shall do such excluding all but no man can do them except he come from God The former place shews that power of him which gave not of him who brought forth the Miracles he which did greater Miracles than Christ did them not without but by Christs power whether by greater works greater works of conversion as Peters conversion of three thousand by one Sermon and the conversion of multitudes Or by greater works be meant the working Miracles as healing their sick by his shadow and handkerchiefs which was not done by Christ I shall not determine However if we interpret it thus we must restrain it to believers in the Primitive times not to all believers and that in all Ages 1066. Joh. 14.13 Chap. 16.24 Whatsoever you shall ask the Father in my Name that will I do Ask and you shall receive Jam. 4.3 Ye ask and receive not We ought to ask in Christs Name in ful confidence of his merits with true faith and without doubting spiritual or corporal blessings with exception of Gods Will and our own salvation in oll occasions and in all our prayers they that ask so receive and they that receive not ask amiss * 1067. Joh. 14.16 And he shall give you another Comforter 1 Cor. 12. No man can call Jesus Lord but by the Holy Ghost The latter place intends no man can do it truly and cordially but only fainedly acknowledging him in words but in deeds denying him By this word another is not meant any other than that Holy Ghost which formerly had wrought grace which now was to work comfort in them in another manner i. e. in a more large clear and spiritual manner than formerly and he is called another to shew the distinction of the Person of the Holy Ghost from the Son He is called another Comforter not as if it were another spirit which was to work now in them which did not before but whereas before they were comforted immediately and visibly by the presence and words of Christ so now they should be comforted immediately and invisibly by his influences within 1068. Joh. 14.23 If any man love me he will keep my words Ver. 23. The Word which ye hear is not mine The Word that Christ taught was his but not any invention of his but his Fathers Word which he was sent into the world to preach 1069. Joh. 14.23 And we will come unto him and make our abode with him Rom. 7.20 Sin dwelleth in me Ver. 14. I am sold under sin The first place is concerning the inhabitation of the Sacred Trinity in the spiritual part of a regenerate man The latter is of the dwelling of sin in our carnal members * Joh. 14.23 with Rom. 7.14 20. The former place speaks of the indwelling of the Trinity in the souls of believers not personally but powerfully and effectually The latter place speaks of the dwelling of sin but so as it is in all the faculties or parts of the soul Understanding Will Memory Not that these the Trinity and sin have different parts of the soul but that they both exercise their powers and Energies in the same Faculties as water which is luke-warm is both hot and cold all over so sin and grace is all over the soul and as we say fire is still in the hand which is burned when it is only the effect of fire So it is here God is in the soul when grace which is the effect of his presence is there and not God personally dwelling there * 1070. Joh. 14.28 The Father is greater than I. Joh. 17.21 The Father and I are one Eph. 2.6 The Father is greater than Christ as Mediator and in respect of his humanity but the Father and I are one in respect of his Divinity * 1071. Joh. 15.13 Christ laid down his life for his friend Rom. 5.10 When we were enemies c. He laid down his life for us as we were enemies that we might become his friends and he laid down his life for us as friends that we should continue so as we were enemies by the corruption of the flesh as we are friends as reconciled by the bloud of his Cross 1072. Joh. 15.15 I call you not servants but friends Mat. 25.21 Well done good servant The Disciples were Christs servants by right of Creation Redemption and Vocation friends by right of Adoption Communication and Patefaction Aug. tr 55. on John * Joh. 15.15 with Mat. 25.21 Christ calls us not servants in the former place to shew the great Union and happiness by that Union which a Christian should have with and in Christ He would not use them as servants in his dispensations and favours but rather as children with love and delight In the second place Christ cals them servants when he was to give them the reward of heaven which reward was so far beyond their deserts that our thoughts cannot imagine they being but servants and so owed all they did to God as duty and they might say they were unprofitable servants The former place tells us Christ calleth us not servants to shew that now we were free as friends The latter place is but a Parable and Parabolical speeches and words are not argumentative A man may be a son by Adoption and yet the servant of God by duty 1074. Joh. 15.15 All things
the Gospel promised or fulfilled Metonymically when the name of the thing is given to the instrument or it is taken for the Ministry 1158. Rom. 1.13 I oftentimes purposed to come unto you Ver. 13. But was let hitherto Paul purposing to go to Rome did not resist the will of God nor was it contrary but according to his will not absolutely but conditionally if God pleased the impediments he might have were Satan casting many hinderances in his way or sickness the planting of Churches or the like * 1159. Rom. 1.17 The just shall live by faith Hab. 2.4 The Just shall live by his faith The latter place tells us though wicked or carnal men may trust in externall security yet good souls shall be maintained in their spiritual life by faith in Christ And the former place shews us that man obtaineth life and salvation by the Gospel inasmuch as it offereth Christ the cause of life and likewise this Christ is to be embraced by a lively faith The one or both places tells of getting life if not of keeping and getting for in attributing the one to faith it doth the other consequently 1160. Rom. 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness Chap. 2.4 The goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance Justice doth not oppose the goodness of God punishing wicked men as they are wicked but goodness invites men to repentance deferring the punishments of the wicked not as they are wicked but as they are Gods creatures and he delights not in their destruction 1161. Rom. 1.26 He reckons up heathenish beastliness and Sodomy Eph. 5.3 Fornication and all uncleanness and filthiness let it not be once named among you The Apostle commemo●●tes the dissolute life of the Heathens to make us avoid it not to imitate it by disgracing it that so being terrified with that filthiness we may escape the anger of God * 1162. Rom. 1.26 God gave them up to vile affections c. 1. Joh. 2.16 Lust of the flesh is not of the Father God gave them up by permission or suffered them to give up themselves to vile affections or God gave them up out of Judgement by substracting his grace and this as his justice because of their former inordinate walking The latter place tells us that lust c. come not from God as the Author nor doth it deny that God for his own glory is the permitter of sin or that he may withdraw his grace 1163. Rom. 2.1 Inexcusable thou art O man whosoever thou art that judgest Chap. 13.1 There is no power but of God The power of the Office is distinguished from the faults of the Person though in the court of Conscience and before God we are sinners yet we are not in the Courts of Civil Justice and before men 1164. Rom. 2.6 God will render to every man according to his deeds Vers 16. God will judge the secrets according to my Gospel In the former place is treated of the effect of faith that goes before retribution in the latter of a necessary instrument God will condemn the wicked and Infidels according to the Law and acquit the believers according to the Gospel for he that believes shal be saved and both waies God will reward according to our works Mar. 16.16 as they were done well or ill from faith or infidelity 1165. Rom. 2.6 He shall render to every man according to his deeds Chap. 3.28 Chap. 8.3 We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the works of the Law To render is not only meant just retribution but free gift Rev. 22.12 Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me to give to every man according as his work shall be This doctrine takes not away justice but confirms it because it respects works for a mans faith and judgeth by the works as the effects of mens faith and life and condemns bad works for unbelief * 1166. Rom. 2.11 For there is no respect of persons with God Rom. 9.13 Jacob have I loved but Esau have I hated God doth not accept this person or refuse that because the one is of this Nation the other of that the one rich the other poor c. But in love he accepts whom he will from the ordinary or damnable condition of the wicked that he accepts any upon arguments taken from himself or his love is not in in justice to the rest but mercy to the Elect. Debitum si non reddis habes quod gratuleris si reddis non habes quod queraris If thou dost not pay thy debt which thou owest thou hast cause to be thankeful if thou dost thou hast no cause to complain Aug. * 1167. Rom. 2.12 He that sins without the Law c. Rom. 4.15 Where no Law is there is no transgression c. There are three kinds of Laws the written Law given to the Jews not to the Gentiles and of this Law speaketh the Apostle here that they sinned without the Law and so shall perish without Law that is the written Law of Moses There is beside the Law of Nature whereof the Apostle speaketh afterward Ver. 14. They having not the Law are a Law unto themselves Against this Law the Gentiles sinned and by this Law they shall be judged The third Law is that which was given unto Adam in Paradice by which not only he but all his Posterity are found to be Transgressors And in respect of this Law even Infants are found trespassers because of Original sin 1168. Rom. 2.13 The doers of the Law shall be justified Gal. 2.16 For by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified Justification is attributed to the Law and to Works not simply but by supposition if any man can perfectly fulfil the Works of the Law but no man can in this weakness perfectly fulfil the Law * 1169. Rom. 2.13 The doers of the Law are justified Rom. 3.28 We conclude a man justified by Faith without the Works of the Law The Law is fulfilled two waies One is in supposition that if a man could by his own strength keep the Law he should thereby be justified There is another fulfilling which is by the perfect obedience of Christ imputed to us by faith whereof the Apostle speaks Phil. 3.9 Of these the Apostle speaks here who endeavour themselves to live according to the Law and shew their faith by their works yet are saved by the obedience of Christ There are two kinds of Justification One is verily and indeed before God which is by faith in Christ Rom. 3.26 The other is in opinion of men Luk. 16.15 Of the former the Apostle speaks here 1170. Rom. 2.14 The Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law Chap. 8.7 The carnal mind is enmity to the Law of God for it is not subject to the Law of God The natural Law convinceth the Gentiles the written Law the Jews The Apostle doth not in the former place
or affliction but such as are incident to men such as usually befall men even Gods own children Though the devil do tempt yet he brought no unusual temptations upon the Corinthians though they not formerly have been acquainted with such temptations which might think them so strange yet they may assure themselves that those temptations under which they lie are no other than such as usually befals men * 1331. 1 Cor. 10.13 Who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able 2 Cor. 2.8 That we were pressed above measure above strength What we are able to bear through Gods goodness and grace is one thing and above this we cannot be tempted What we are able to bear by our own strength is another and thus Christians and men thus Paul were pressed above measure 1332. 1 Cor. 10.15 Judge ye your selves what I say Joh. 5.39 Search the Scriptures The Apostle makes all men judges of his cause if any could not judge it was not imbecility of the Law but the deed because all were bound to know things that concerned their faith for by the Word of God we may judge concerning things that belong to faith the knowledge whereof is necessary for all men and it is acquired by reading meditation invocation and searching the holy Scriptures 1333. 1 Cor. 10.15 I speak as to wise men Chap. 3.1 As to carnal and babes The Corinthians were wise in respect of their doctrine but carnal in their affections by reason of their strife and contentions for the most learned have their carnal desires nor were they all wise or carnal for often what belongs to some is imputed to all 1334. 1 Cor. 10.21 Ye cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of devils Chap. 11.29 He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh his own damnation The first place is of right and so they cannot not must not eat or drink though they do eat and drink the latter is understood of the fact whereby they take it 1335. 1 Cor. 10.24 Let no man seek his own but every man anothers wealth 1 Tim. 5.8 But if any man provide not for his own especially for his own house he hath denied the faith and is worse than an Infidel The first is to be understood with limitation that no man out of overmuch love of himself should do his own occasions boastingly which is far from Christian charity which teacheth that a man is not born for himself but to serve God and to do good to his neighbour Let no man seek his own principally and solely but thus let him seek Gods glory and after this and in reference to Gods glory let him seek his own * 1336. 1 Cor. 10. ult I please all men in all things Gal. 1.10 If I yet pleased men I should not be the servant of Christ Things are either indifferent in their own nature and so may be used or not used according to opportunities persons Or else they are such as are sinful in their own nature being forbidden of God S. Paul pleaseth all men in things that he lawfully might as in Ceremonies to observe or forbear them but in such things as were simply evil if by doing them he should please men he were not the servant of Christ but of men whom he intends by such actions to please while on the other side should he not wherein he lawfully might please all men to gain them to Christ he was not the servant of Christ * 1337. 1 Cor. 11.16 If any seem to be contentious we have no such custome Jude 3. Contend earnestly The Apostle would have no man contend against reason and authority presumptuously and yet we ought to contend earnestly where the authority of Scripture and the truth of reason is evident and makes it appear that the thing contended for is matter of faith and salvation 1338. 1 Cor. 11.24 Eat this is my Body Rom. 6.9 The body dieth no more In the Lords Supper the Body of Christ is not broken by a natural or carnal manner the Body and the Bloud the Bread and the Wine are received conjunctively in respect of the instrument but they are received disjunctively in respect of the manner for the Bread and Wine is received after one manner the Body and Bloud after another manner * 1 Cor. 11.24 This is my body Rom. 6.9 The body dieth no more This is in signification not in essence my body this is my body as the seven wheat ears were the seven dear years as Christ is a door this signifies my body Christs body died but once but it may be signified a thousand times to be dead 1339. 1 Cor. 11.24 Which is broken for you Luk. 22.19 Which is given The Apostle received from the Lord what he delivered to the Corinthians concerning the sacred Supper without doubt in the first institution the Lord used both the words and because the Evangelists make mention of the name of giving the Apostle adds the other * 1 Cor. 11.24 Luk. 22.19 So broken with cares within and with nails and wounds without as he might be said a man of sorrows so given as to be broken and so broken as to be given a broken Christ for a broken soul The Apostle had an eye to the substance and matter and may seem in this to interpret what is meant by giving as to the manner of the gift a broken gift or a bleeding Christ to make us have whole souls * 1340. 1 Cor. 11.28 Let a man examine himself Psal 26.1 Examine me O Lord. Our examinatiod of our selves hinders not our praying that God may examine us for when we have examined the most strictly yet we shall leave much unexamined but when God examines he examines every corner of our heart and sets our sins in order before us He finds our sins as he found Saul hid under the stuff The Psalmist would have God to examine him to see the justness of his heart in that cause 1341. 1 Cor. 12.3 No man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost Isa 29.13 Mat. 7.21 Mat. 7.21 Not every one that saith unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdom of heaven In the first place it is not only historically with outward lips to say that Jesus Christ is the Lord Tit. 1.16 but with faith to believe that he is the Lord which hypocrites and devils cannot do for though with their mouth they confess him yet with works they deny him also no man can say for his own salvation that Jesus is the Lord unless he have the Holy Ghost 1342. 1 Cor. 12.6 God worketh all in all Phil. 2.12 Work out your salvation God works all that we may work out our salvation God as the first cause works all good in all men we with God work out our salvation subordinately we are called by God moving and helping us freely and by his grace we co-operate * 1 Cor. 12.6 with Phil. 2.12
God works as the Author and we must work as the Instruments we must work because God works we must work but with Gods strength * 1343. 1 Cor. 12.7 But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal 2 Pet. 2.15 Balaam who loved the wages of unrighteousness The former place tells us that God hath given gifts unto men that his Church may profit by those gifts and the second place doth not tell that if God did give Balaam those gifts but he gave them for this purpose that he should have made Gods Church profit thereby now that he did not use those gifts so was his own failing Besides it is the opinion of most that Balaam was a Witch And so had not those gifts as Gods Children have them from God 1344. 1 Cor. 13.2 Though I have all faith so that I could remove mountains I am nothing Rom. 3.28 We are justified by faith without the works of the Law In the first place Mat. 17.20 by all faith is meant faith of working all manner of miracles so that it can extend it self so far as to remove mountains yet charity may be separated from such a faith 1 Joh. 3.23 but it can never be separated from a justifying faith to subsist without it * 1345. 1 Cor. 13.3 Bestow all my goods it profiteth me nothing Luk. 11.41 Give alms and all things shall be clean to you The Apostle supposeth that if a man which wants charity do such acts yet he would be no better by those acts as to obtaining of heaven Our Saviour speaks of giving alms out of charity and from a right principle 1346. 1 Cor. 13.9 We know in part 1 Joh. 2.20 Ye know all things In this life our knowledge is in part and imperfect but in the next life it shall be perfected the latter place is concerning necessary things to the knowledge of Antichrist that is done by the Holy Ghost leading us into all truth by degrees and parts 1347. 1 Cor. 13.12 We see now through a glass darkly but then face to face 2 Cor. 3.18 But we all as with open face beholding the glory of the Lord. The face in Scripture is taken for Gods Essence Exod. 33.23 for his general presence Deut. 31.17 for Gods grace Num. 6.25 for his revenge Rev. 6.16 for knowledge and internal vision Exod. 33.11 of this in the first place but in the latter is meant the sight of God in our Country that is in heaven as it is said through a glass and in riddle in respect of the Law for God is seen by us in part in the Word of God as he is * 1 Cor. 13.12 with 2 Cor. 3.18 There is as much difference betwixt the knowledge we have at present of God that we shall have in heaven of him as betwixt seeing a man thorough the window at distance and seeing him face to face As for the second place it doth not compare the knowledge we have with what we shall have in heaven as the former did but it compares the knowledge we have under the Gospel with that we or our Fathers had under the law for now we in comparison of them which were under the Law seem to see face to face and they as it were thorough a glass yet we in comparison of them that are in glory seem to see as thorough a glass and they face to face 1348. 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth faith hope and charity but the greatest of these is charity Gal. 5.6 Faith works by love Charity being the effect of faith is the inferiour for by faith we are justified Rom. 5.1 and Christ dwelleth in us and we please God we are the sons of God and obtain eternal life Charity is not the greatest vertue but because it shall remain in the next life in its operations * 1 Cor. 13.13 with Gal. 5.6 Charity If the Apostle speaks here not of justifying faith but of faith of Miracles of which Vers 2. then there can be no question but charity far exceeds that faith But because he joyns it with hope and Divines generally understand this of saving graces let it be understood of justifying faith and yet charity hath the greatest preheminence as 1. In respect of the Object Faith respects God only Charity God and our neighbour 2. In respect of the manner of working Faith works by receiving Christ and all his benefits Charity by giving and bestowing both our affections and goods it is better to give than receive 3. In respect of duration or continuance Faith and Hope shall cease in the life to come Charity shall remain in the life to come 4. In respect of the end Love is the end and scope of the other two graces yet upon another account Faith is the principal grace viz. of our Justification 1349. 1 Cor. 14.31 You may all prophesie one by one Heb. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called of God The Apostle understands all that are lawfully called to the Office of Prophesying Jer. 28 2. 1 Pet. 4.11 You all that are Prophets may prophesie one by one but this invites not others who are not to take this honour till they be called 1350. 1 Cor. 15.9 I am the least of the Apostles Ver. 10. I laboured more than they all He was the least in order because he was the last called to be an Apostle but he was greater in labouring Rom. 15.16 17. because the charge of all the Churches was committed unto him In the first place he speaks lowly of himself according to Christs commandment When you have done all those things which are commanded you say we are unprofitable servants we have done that which was our duty to do Luk. 17.10 In the latter place he speaks of those that strove with him by emulation to whom he compares himself not derogating from others but he magnifies his Apostleship from his faith and fruits of his works * 1351. 1 Cor. 15.22 In Christ shall be made alive Job 14.14 If a man die shall he live again All men shall rise to judgment Job speaks of a mans dying in the world and implies that he shall not live again in the world though he doth not exclude by this his belief that man shall live again in the next world for he said he knew his Redeemer lived c. * 1352. 1 Cor. 15.24 28. Shall deliver up the kingdom to his Father Hence the Socinians argue against the Eternal Deity of Christ to deliver up the Kingdom was not regnantis potestatem the power of the Ruler As if Christ should then cease to rule for Luk. 1.33 he was to rule to eternity By the Kingdom is to be understood the people or Church of Christ glorified and this place is to be interpreted by Eph. 4.27 To deliver the kingdom to the Father is to set the Church before the Father gloriously and therein is not the end of Christs ruling but an
end of the Oeconomy of Christs Mediation and God shall be all in all 1353. 1 Cor. 15.27 He hath put all things under his feet Ver. 28. The Son also shall be subject to the Father That subjection shall be effected in his members and Church which is his Body and by resignation of his Kingdom that now he administers at present by his Ministers in the midst of his enemies but not without battel also he shall declare his subjection to the Father answerable to that nature according to which all power is given to him in heaven and in earth * 1354. 1 Cor. 15.44 It is raised a spiritual body Job 19.21 I shall see him in my flesh A spiritual body not in respect of substance or beeing but by reason of those qualities which the glorified body shall partake of Or a spiritual body a body free from carnal desires being wholly subject to and ruled by the Spirit Job speaks of rising with the same body for substance but doth neither imply nor deny but the body may have more glorious qualities 1355. 1 Cor. 15.50 Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God Ver 53. This corruptible must put on incorruption Flesh and bloud here signifies the corrupt nature of man in the state of sin this as it is such cannot inherit the Kingdom of God but our nature purged from corruption shall put on incorruption 1356. 1 Cor. 16.15 The houshold of Stephanus addicted themselves to the ministry of the Saints Heb. 5.4 No man taketh this honour to himself but he that was called of God In the first place is meant the ministry of transparting the collections to the brethren and they did it by the sending of the Apostles by them in a most dangerous time 1357. 1 Cor. 16.22 If any man love not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Mat. 5.44 Love your enemies The Apostle doth not pronounce this Anathema out of his own private affection but being led by the Holy Ghost it is not lawful rashly to use private imprecations unless the glory of God require it in an especial manner and there be no hope left of their salvation Love our own enemies but not love Gods enemies he pronounceth a curse not against his but Christs enemies if they love not Christ 1358. 2 Cor. 1.1 Timothy with Paul wrote that Epistle 1 Tim. 1.3 He was left at Ephesus when Paul went into Macedonia Paul sayling from Corinth into Asia Acts 18.19 left Timothy at Ephesus together with Aquila and Priscilla but that they were with the Apostle at Corinth at that time the Inscription it self testifieth 1359. 2 Cor. 1.8 In Asia we were pressed out of measure above strength 1 Cor. 10.13 God will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able The first place is concerning temptation exceeding bare humane strength the second concerning faith and strength given to us by God which is our victory * 1360. 2 Cor. 2.5 But if any have caused grief he hath not grieved me but in part with Ver. 4. For out of much affliction and anguish of heart I wrote unto you If the incestuous person or any other have been the cause of your and my grief together I make no reckoning of the grief which I have received thereby in respect of that which my censures have brought upon you whereof he hath been the cause And yet my aim hath not been to afflict you as bearing you any ill will but rather to give you a certain proof of my charity by gaining your salvation through repentance 1361. 2 Cor. 5.2 In this we groan earnestly desiring to be cloathed upon with our house which is from heaven Ver. 4. We groan being burdened not that we would be uncloathed The first place is concerning the groaning by grace the second by nature for the Holy Ghost stirs up a desire of life eternal in the mind of the godly and it is natural to fear death because it destroys nature 1362. 2 Cor. 5.16 We know no man after the flesh Rom. 1.3 Christ of the seed of David according to the flesh Phil. 2.8 To know according to the flesh is to praise that which corrupt flesh delights in and to despise what it despiseth so we knew not Christ carnally but out of Gods Word we know him to be of the seed of David 1363. 2 Cor. 5.19 God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself Ver. 20. We pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God Reconciliation is ascribed to God as the principal cause to Christ as the meritorious cause or to the Ministry of the Word as to the Instrumental cause or to our selves apprehending it by faith and applying it for our salvation 1364. 2 Cor. 8.20 Avoiding this that no man should blame us in this abundance which is administred by us 1 Cor. 4.3 With me it is a very small thing that I should be judged of you The first place is of just dispraise wherein our hearts convince us the latter is concerning the unjust judgments of the world which proceed from mens depraved affections 1365. 2 Cor. 11.4 If he that cometh preacheth another Jesus whom we have not preached or receive another Gospel which ye have not accepted ye might well bear with him Gal. 1.8 Though we or an Angel from heaven preach any other Gospel unto you then that we have preached let him be accursed In the first place is meant by another Christ and another Gospel a better Doctrine than the Apostle taught but in the latter by another Gospel is meant false doctrine which overthroweth Gods grace and Christs merits 1366. 2 Cor. 11.17 That which I speak I speak it not after the Lord but foolishly 1 Pet. 4.11 If any man speak let him speak as the Oracles of God Paul being forced to it by the calumnies of false Apostles said somethings concerning his own labours and dangers which did not directly appertain to his Ministry Peter speaks of those things which directly appertain to the Ministry of the Word wherein the rule of our words must be the Oracles of God revealed in the Scriptures The Epistle of St. PAUL to the GALATIANS HE defends the Justice of faith against false Apostles that a man is justified not by the works of the Law but by faith in Christ and exhorts to good works that the fruits of faith must be sowed in Christian charity and liberty It was written from Rome in the Year of Christ 60. 1367. GAL. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Jesus Christ Chap. 2.2 I communicated unto them the Gospel which I preach among the Gentiles Ver. 6. Who seemed to be somewhat Paul came to Peter and the rest of the Apostles not that he might learn the Gospel from them but to have their testimony of his Doctrine that he preached nothing to the Gentiles but the Gospel of Jesus Christ 1368. Gal. 1.17 I went not up to Jerusalem to them which were
lose it 1416. 1 Tim. 2.4 God will have all men to be saved every one Acts 13.48 And as many as were ordained to eternal life believed All that believe in Christ God doth promote them to salvation and they by Gods Divine decree are pre-ordained to eternal life For Christ is the Saviour of all especially of those who believe * 1 Tim. 2.4 with Acts 13.48 All men Men of all sorts and Nations and conditions genera singularum not singula generum Secondly God by his will of Precept or signi would have all men to be saved not of purpose or bene placiti God by his will medii would have all men not by his will finis Remota hac dipretione quam divina scientia intra secretum justitia sua continet syncerissime credendum est c. August Setting apart the secret Will or Counsel of God it is sincerely to be believed that God would have all men to be saved That is offering to all the outward means of salvation as his Word and Sacraments 1417. 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus Rom. 8.26 The spirit makes intercession for us with groans which cannot be uttered Christ is our only Mediator of Redemption and Intercession the Holy Ghost is said to pray for us when he stirreth up our hearts to prayer and causeth us to groan when we call upon God 1418. 1 Tim. 2.12 But I suffer not a woman to teach Tit. 2.3 Let the aged women be teachers of good things Women must not teach publickly in the Church lest they should thereby take occasion of usurping authority over the men but let them be in subjection let the aged women teach the younger women modesty and prudence at home for that they are commanded to do 1419. 1 Tim. 2.15 Women shall be saved in child-bearing Joh. 3.16 Whosoever believeth in Christ shall not perish but shall have everlasting life The first place is concerning the state of women and by for and in are set down for their consolation lest being married they should fall from the hope of salvation but they must continue in faith love holiness and sobriety * 1 Tim. 2.15 with Joh. 3.16 Though painful child-bearing were part of the punishment inflicted upon Eve and her Sex for her first transgression yet she and all faithful women shall he saved by Maries bearing the holy Child Jesus 2. Notwithstanding by child-bearing and subjection to Man God hath imprinted on women the mark of Eves punishment and all other women whence might be conjectured that in regard of this Curse there was no hope of salvation for the married women yet the Apostle teacheth that this shall not hinder their salvation if they abide in the faith now child-bearing and breeding is an ordinary way by which or through which women may go to heaven 1420. 1 Tim. 3.1 If a man desireth the office of a Bishop he desireth a good work 1 Cor. 7.20 Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was called To desire a Bishops Office for that end that a man may serve God faithfully is not disallowed if a man have an honest vocation and continue in it he doth well 1521. 1 Tim. 3.15 The Church of the living God is the pillar and ground of Truth 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid even Christ Jesus The pillar and ground he saith that the Church is but not the foundation it doth not primarily support the spiritual building but the Church it self is supported by the foundation * 1 Tim. 3.15 with 1 Cor. 3.11 It is called a pillar and ground of truth not absolutely or substantially as though the truth should be measured by the Church but the Church is a pillar demonstratively because it professeth the truth and as a golden Candlestick holdeth out the light in the world which is not elsewhere to be found but in the Church and it is the pillar of truth as it is the house of God suffering it self to be ruled and guided by the Word of God 1422. 1 Tim. 4.16 Thou shalt both save thy self and them that hear thee Luk. 2.11 Christ the Lord is our Saviour The first place speaks of the instrument of our salvation in the Ministry of the Word whereby the faithful attain salvation the latter speaks of the meritorious cause and that is Christ 1423. 1 Tim. 5.20 Them that sin rebuke before all Mat. 18.15 If thy brother trespass against thee tell him his fault between him and thee alone In the first place he saith what the duty of Pastors is in rebuking sins which are committed publickly to the common-scandal in the second he speaks of the sins of private men committed privately against private persons 1424. 1 Tim. 6.10 The love of money is the root of all evil Eccles 10.9 Pride Pride and covetousness are almost alwaies joyned together He is proud who desireth to exceed his condition he is covetous that would have more than enough neither of them can be contented with God himself these two were in the sin of the first man the chief ingredients 1425. 1 Tim. 6.16 God only hath immortality Mat. 10.28 The souls of men are immortal God of himself and in himself is immortal only but Angels and men by the grace of God 1426. 1 Tim. 6.16 No man hath seen God 1 Joh. 3.2 We shall see him as he is God being by nature invisible cannot be seen with bodily eyes The faithful either see God by faith in this life or after a special manner in the life to come we shall see him as he is by a more perfect way than we do here by the participation of his glory * 1427. 1 Tim. 6.19 with Eccles 10.9 Covetousness is said to be the root of all evil not as if all evil proceeded from it as it is a distinct species of sin though as Covetousness signifies any desire or longing after this or that so it may signifie the root But yet the Apostle intended not probably further than to shew that as from the root proceed infinite branches so from Covetousness proceeds many branches of sin as Hatred Fraud c. 1428. 2 Tim. 2.10 I endure all things for the Elect sake that they may also obtain salvation 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ hath once suffered for our sins The Apostle sustained all things for the Elect sake not by satisfying for them but by his example edifying and confirming them that they might not refuse to suffer something When he saith that they obtain salvation by Christ he shuts out his own sufferings that they may not be reckoned for satisfactory 1429. 2 Tim. 2.21 If any man purge himself from these he shall be a vessel unto honour 1 Joh 1.7 The bloud of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all our sins Paul means purging from the corruptions of doctrine and manners Ver. 18. John shews a plenary redemption from our sins by Christ Jesus * 2
Tim. 2.21 with 1 Joh. 1.1 Purge him not efficiently but instrumentally Purge endeavour to purge i. e. to apply that which may purge us viz. the Bloud of Christ and to get the Spirit of God the one to take away the stain the other the ruling of sin within us The one to take away sin the other evil doctrine and corrupt opinions He that saith we may be cleansed from sin by Christ and that we must purge our selves doth but in the one tell where we may have the remedy and in the other who must use the remedy * 1430. 2 Tim. 3.12 Yea all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution Psal 34.12 The godly man is said to see good Persecution is either of the tongue or hand they that are godly shall be persecuted with the one or the other The godly see Good in their persecutions in that they see the comforts of the Spirit and the graces of Gods Spirit works in them Good is either Spiritual and Perpetual or Corporal and Temporary Godly men have the former not alwaies the latter for by persecutions they lose the latter yet obtain more of the former * 1431. 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness Eccles 9.1 No man knoweth either love or hatred The Apostle had an huge confidence or assurance of his salvation and that upon good grounds The Wise man tells us not that a man can by no waies or means know at all whether he be in favour with God but that it cannot be discerned by the outward chances and accidents of this life nor doth he hereby say hatred and love are impossible to be known but that the external passages of this life do not infallibly shew them The Epistle of St. PAUL to TITUS IT is the compendium of Christian Doctrine informing Teachers set in the Ecclesiastical State Political or Oeconomical what thay ought to do he exhorts all and every one to good works and to fly vain questions and heresies It was written from Nicopolis in the Year of Christ 54. 1432. TIT. 1.9 Able by sound Doctrine to convince gainsayers Chap. 3.9 Avoid foolish questions contentions and strivings about the Law In the first place he requires that Teachers by their Office shall rebuke those that are gainsayers with all long suffering and sobriety In the latter that they avoid janglings about words that is contentious clamorous unprofitable Disputations and verbal Discourse which tends not to edification either with Hereticks or others in the Church because they edifie none but rather confirm them in their sins 1433. Tit. 2.15 Rebuke with all authority 1 Tim. 3.3 A Bishop must be no striker Titus was gentle by nature therefore he is warned to rebuke with authority He inculcates to Timothy modesty and mildness that when he rebukes he should not strike but should rebuke diversly according to the diversity of mens faults offices ages degrees otherwise old men otherwise young men otherwise those that sin of malice otherwise those that sin of infirmity otherwise those that were ready to obey and otherwise those that were obstinate as there were in Cr●●e many despisers of the Ministry * 1434. Tit. 3.10 A man that is an heretick after the first and second admonition reject Deut. 13.5 And that Prophet or dreamer of dreams shall be put to death He that commands a lesser hinders not the inflicting the greater punishment While the Apostle bids reject he doth not disallow the putting to death of Hereticks Moses Moral Law is perpetually obliging The Apostle might have said kill if that could in his time have been done without prejudice Civil Magistrates being Heathens then but when the Church may do it without prejudice the Magistrates being Christian the former Law needs no suspension at all Omnes fere ex nostratibus hujus sunt sententiae quod Haeretici sint gladii puniendi Zanchy Almost all Protestants are of opinion that Hereticks may be punished with the Sword The Epistle of St. PAUL to PHILEMON HE intercedes for Onesimus who was run from his Master Philemon and would have his Master receive him again 1435. PHILEM v. 5. He had love and faith toward all the Saints Mat. 16.16 Joh. 3.16 Whosoever believeth in Christ shall be saved Philemon did testifie to all men by his works of love toward the Saints that he had a lively faith in Christ The Epistle to the HEBREVVS Is also thought to be St. PAULS but his Name was left out lest the Jews should be deterred from the reading of it HE describes the person of Christ according to his Divine and Humane Nature And he confirms his Offices Priestly Kingly and Prophetical and exhorts the Jews to Faith Constancy and good Works by the Example of the Fathers 1436. HEB. 1.3 Christ sate down at the right hand of the Majesty on high Acts. 7.55 Steven saw the Son of man standing at the right hand To sit at the right hand is to have all Glory Majesty Kingdom and Power both in heaven and in earth The Lamb standing at Gods right hand which was slain for us and intercedes as a Priest on our behalf stands as Aaron stood with his Censer of old betwixt the living and the dead to turn away the wrath of God * Heb. 1.3 with Acts 7.55 Sitting and standing are not properly but allegorically attributed to Christ in this place for God hath not properly and substantially a right hand but here sitting down the Apostle alludeth to the custome of Kings who place him at the right hand whom they put next in authority and power under them Hereby is denoted the supream and high dignity and power of Christ obtained by ascending into heaven He is said to stand to shew his readiness to intercede to God for us * 1437. Heb. 1.3 Who being the brightness of his glory c. Isa 53.2 He hath no form nor comliness The first is a Metaphorical speech God the Father is compared unto the lightsome body God the Son unto the beam or splendor sent down The second place speaks of Christ as the Jews esteemed him in his Humiliation It is one thing what Christ was in himself another thing what he appeared in our eyes * 1438. Heb. 1.11 The heavens and the earth shall perish Eccles 1.4 But the earth abideth for ever The Heavens and Earth perish according to their form and outward accidents some think that the substance shall remain However when Solomon saith the earth abideth for ever He speaks comparatively in relation to men One Generation passeth and another cometh but the earth abideth The earth is the same and shall be till the day of Judgment 1439. Heb. 2.3 The Gospel was confirmed unto us by those that heard Christ Gal. 1.12 I neither received it of man neither was I taught it but by the revelation of Jesus Christ In the first place it is spoken of the Apostles who were with the Lord into which number Paul was taken after
of the Earthquake which was at the giving of the Law and of Christs second coming when the Heaven and Earth shall be shaken The latter place speaks of the kingdom of Christs glory which we receive by Christ though the material heaven may be shaken yet the sedes beatorum or the place where the Saints glorified are shall not be shaken or the spiritual administration of this Kingdom shall not be shaken The Canonical Epistle of St. JAMES HE warns them who boasted of their faith without works that they should shew their faith by their works in the Divine Law and flee from sins that are forbidden and embrace vertues that are commanded 1453. JAM 1.5 If any man lack wisdom let him ask it of God 1 Cor. 3.18 If any man amongst you seemeth to be wise in this world let him become a fool that he may be wise The first place is concerning spiritual and heavenly wisdom the Author whereof is God The latter concerning vain earthly worldly wisdom and carnal which is foolishness with God 1454. Jam. 1.25 Chap. 2.12 The perfect Law of liberty Gal. 4.24 Which gendreth unto bondage In the former place not only the Moral Law according to which whosoever liveth is free but also the Doctrine of the Gospel whence true liberty results is to be understood In the latter in respect of us and by accident it is called the Law of bondage 1455. Jam. 2.24 A man is justified by works and not by faith only Rom. 3.28 We conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the Law The sayings of the Apostles Paul and James are not repugnant one to the other ● Aug. quest 76. the one saith that a man is justified by faith without works the other saith that faith is dead without works those works that go before faith are vain but he speaks of those works that follow faith Paul considers a man justified before God James a man justified before men Paul speaks of true internal faith which justifies in the sight of God James of the outward profession of faith historical knowledge and the effects and testimonies of it Two Epistles of the Apostle St. PETER THe former commemorates Gods benefits exhorts all men in general to the duties of piety and honesty toward God themselves and their neighbours but in particular in their Domestical Politique and Ecclesiastical condition c. The latter warns the faithful that they proceed in godliness and fly from false Teachers Deriders and such as deny the coming of Christ and the last Judgment 1456. 1 PET. 1.12 The Angels desire to look into Mat. 18.10 Their Angels behold the face of my Father The first place is concerning the mystery of Redemption which the Angels desire to look into because in that is the height and the depth and the length and the breadth of Gods mercy manifested so far that the very Angels cannot comprehend it all Angels are said to behold Gods face because as Servants they are in the presence of the King to go at his command These two places together seem to reprove that of the Papists that Saints and Angels can know by looking into Gods face what is said or done by men in several places For here are Angels beholding Gods face and yet ignorant of the mystery of our Redemption 1457. 1 Pet. 2.11 I beseech you as strangers and pilgrims Eph. 2.12 19. You are no more strangers and forreigners but fellow Citizens with the Saints The faithful are strangers and pilgrims in respect of the Kingdom of Glory but not of the Kingdom of Grace which St. Paul speaks of * 1458. 1 Pet. 2.18 Servants be subject to your Masters with all fear Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with fear Withal lawful fear with all that fear that is due to Creatures or Masters But yet serve the Lord with all the fear that is due to the Creator serve the Lord with fear to displease him and serve men with such fear as it may be known you fear the Lord. 1459. 1 Pet. 2.23 Christ when he was reviled reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not Joh. 8.44 He contended with the Jews Christ as a Priest in his sufferings threatned not and being reviled reviled not again but as a Prophet he threatned those that were refractory with hell fire * 1460. 1 Pet. 2.23 When he suffered he threatned not Joh. 8. and other places he threatned the Jews Christ threatned the Jews as a Prophet but not as a Priest for their injuring of him Their abusing him did not provoke him to threaten them but his love to save them made him threaten them or rather foretel such judgments as would destroy them and fall upon them 1461. 1 Pet. 3.21 Baptism saves us Psal 69.10 The Lord saves us Baptism did not ex opere operato save us but signifie to us that salvation was to be had by Christs dying and rising again represented in their going into and ascending out of the water the Lord saves us as the efficient cause principally necessary Baptism instrumentally nor yet so as if none could be saved without it or all that used it were saved * 1462. 1 Pet. 4.15 Or as a busie body in other mens matters Joh. 4.38 You have entered into other mens labours Let no man meddle with any other mens Calling or Affairs whether spiritual or temporal but where he is lawfully called to it The Apostles were lawfully called into the labour of the Prophets 1463. 1 Pet. 5.8 The devil as a roaring lion walketh about seeking whom he may devour Rom. 8.31 If God be for us who can be against us The devils malice can do nothing against us when God defends us 1464. 1 Pet. 5.9 Whom resist i. e. your adversary the devil Mat. 5.25 Agree with thy adversary We must agree with men that are our adversaries but not with the devil that is our adversary The latter place is meant agree with such adversaries as are not Gods adversaries as we in and about temporal things have made them our adversaries The former place is meant of our spiritual adversary 1465. 2 Pet. 1.19 The sacred Scripture is as a burning lamp in a dark place Chap. 3.16 In Pauls Epistles some things are hard to be understood In the Scriptures things are handled clearly and not obscurely though they may seem obscure to us yet that obscurity is not in respect of faith but of humane reason whence it is that many ignorant and unlearned people do foolishly wrest the Scriptures into a contrary sense * 2 Pet. 1.19 with 3.16 The Scripture is perspicuous to us not by our Nature of Grace we are illuminate The Law may be known even to wicked men ratione Materialitatis non finis they may know the matter of the Precept but not rightly the end of the Law that is to acknowledge and hate sin c. and yet they do not know the Scriptures perfectly ratione materialitatis for they know no more
that he is not far off and yet not so at hand as to make us cast off all labour plowing and sowing and to make us sit idely every hour expecting his coming * 1398. Phil. 4.12 Salute all the Saints Luk. 10.4 Salute no man by the way When our Saviour forbids his Disciples to salute it was only by the way and upon that extraordinary occasion he then sent them not that he did afterwards forbid salutations The Epistle of St. PAUL to the COLOSSIANS HE exhorts them to embrace the Doctrine of the Gospel and to fly from the teaching of false Apostles and he warns them to live godly putting off the old and putting on the new man that in Oeconomical Government the men old men and Masters should observe humanity and equity women children and servants should live in obedience that all should be watchful in prayer It was sent from Rome by Tychicus and Onesimus * 1399. COL 1.15 Christ is the Image of the invisible God Joh. 1.1 And the Word was God Now an Image is not of the same substance and excellency as the thing it self Christ is called the Image of God i. e. substantial Image not a vanishing or vain one as Images and forms and shapes are in our mind but God the Eternal Father knowing himself and beholding himself begot this enduring Image in his own Deity which Image is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Christ was the Image of God from Eternity a Word increate a perfect essential and invisible Image of his Father and thus in respect of his eternal birth 2. In respect of his being made man God the Father did in him and by him as a lively Image set forth before our eyes his glorious attributes of Wisdom Goodness Righteousness and Almightiness c. Now though Christ was God yet he might be in the Image of God for the word God is taken personally not essentially it designs the Father alone not the Divine Nature in genere Christ is the Image of the Father not of the Deity The Person of the Son bears the Image of the Person of the Father but the Divine Essence or Nature in the Son is the same with that in the Father Christ therefore cannot be the same in Person with him whose Image he bears yet he may be the same in Essence * 1400. Col. 1.15 The first born of every creature Hence the Arians imply that Christ is a Creature But the first born of every Creature is no more than that he was begotten before every Creature even from Eternity this is not so to be interpreted as if his ineffable generation as God had a beginning from the beginning of time so that first or first born implies when it is said of God not temporally it excludes a priority of other things 1401. Col. 1.24 I fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his body's sake which is the Church Heb. 10.14 For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Zac. 2.8 Mat. 25. 2 Tim. 3.12 The Passions of Christ as to merit and satisfaction are perfect for his Church the Apostles and Martyrs fill up in their flesh what is behind of the afflictions of Christ enduring miseries wherein Christ himself suffereth for they are his Members He that toucheth you toucheth the apple of mine eye What you do to any of these little ones you do it unto me It is added for the Church not to redeem the Chuch but to edifie and strenthen the Church by our example of constancy and patience * Col. 1.24 with Heb. 10.14 The afflictions or passions of Christ are twofold those which he suffered in his own body and so nothing remaineth to be fulfilled or filled up Or secondly for such afflictions which Christ suffers in his mystical body the Church and so there remains many things to be filled up personally i. e. in every man there must be an enduring and bearing of afflictions after the manner of Christ 1402. Col. 2.3 In Christ are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge Mat. 24.36 But of that day and hour knoweth no man no not the Angels in heaven but the Father only Christ in the state of exaltation hath a perfect knowledge of all things because all power in heaven and earth is given to him and he fits at the right hand of God In the state of humiliation he knew not when the last day should be not in respect of himself saith Augustine but in respect of us Christ hath in him the perfection of all wisdom and knowledge or else secondly all saving knowledge and true wisdom consists in a right knowledge of him 1403. Col. 2.9 In Christ dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Heb. 2.17 It behoved him to be like unto to us in all things sin excepted He is like to us in all things in respect of the Essence of Humane Nature not in respect of his subsistence in the person of the Word and of his Hypostatical Union Glory and Majesty 1404. Col. 3.2 Set your affections on things above and not on things on the earth Rom. 11.33 O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God To set our affections on things above is to elevate our minds to heaven above all earthly things unto our Country where we wait for our happiness yet so that we be not high-minded and desire to know that which God will not have us to know for some things are to be believed and soberly to be searched into but other things which exceed the measure of our faith must not be searched into Pro. 25 2. he is overwhelmed with Glory that seeks into Gods Majesty 1405. Col. 3.2 Set not your affections on earthly things 1 Tim. 5.8 He that provideth not for his own houshold is worse than an Infidel The first place forbids us to search after earthly things neglecting spiritual and heavenly things for so far must we take care for earthly things as they may serve to Gods glory and our use for our salvation * 1406. Col. 3.22 Servants obey in all things your Masters Deut. 10.12 To serve the Lord thy God with all thy heart c. Servants may and must obey in all things their Masters so be those all things exceed not the bounds of all things in the Lord Eph. 6.1 in all things warrantable for the Masters to command and the Servants to perform Subordinate obedience of Servants to their Masters is not contrary to an absolute obedience to God but rather the obedience Servants shew to their Masters being in reference to perform Gods command fulfils that command of serving God with all our heart Two Epistles of St. PAUL to the THESSALONIANS IN the first he commends their faith and constancy and exhorts them to an honest life and a serious expectation of Christs last coming In the second he comforts them against persecutions and foretels the last day the Kingdom