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A42584 Gell's remaines, or, Several select scriptures of the New Testament opened and explained wherein Jesus Christ, as yesterday, to day, and the same for ever, is illustrated, in sundry pious and learned notes and observations thereupon, in two volumes / by the learned and judicious Dr. Robert Gell ; collected and set in order by R. Bacon. Gell, Robert, 1595-1665.; Bacon, Robert, b. 1611 or 12. 1676 (1676) Wing G472; ESTC R17300 2,657,678 1,606

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should put his Cup in the sack of the youngest of his Brethen Gen. 44.2 The young Disciples are most ambitious of sitting at the right hand and the left hand of Christ in his Kingdom and therefore the Cup of his sufferings must be put into Benjamins sack But remember it is but a Cup a small measure and for a season 1 Pet. 1.6 and 5.10 And it is the Cup which Joseph himself drinketh of Gen. 44.5 yea it is the same Cup which all Joseph's brethren drink of 1 Pet. 5.9 10. Exhort Drink of that Cup which our Lord hath drunk of be baptized with the baptism that he is baptized with He himself begins to us and shall we not pledge him what was said of Joseph Gen. 44.5 Is not this the Cup in which my Lord drinketh Is not this the Cup which the Lord Jesus drinketh the true Joseph To suffer with him is a gift yea a greater gift than faith it self Phil. 1. It 's not left unto us as a thing indifferent so as if we do suffer it s well if we do not no harm comes of it O no there is a necessity lies upon us We have drunk in iniquity like water we have taken upon our selves a sinful life a death rather than a life in which its impossible to inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6. Gal. 5. The drinking of this Cup of Christs passion the baptizing into this death enstates us in the Eternal Life and Salvation If we die with him we shall live with him if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him 2 Cor. 1. One of the Hebrew Fathers tells us a man is tryed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 especially by three things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Purse his Cup his Anger Sign 1. Try thy self by thy Purse by thy Money Ecclus. 31.6.10 Amaziah c. See Notes on Heb. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. In his Cup whether thou be sober and temperate or no Wine is a mocker And there is the same reason of meat Prov. 23.1 2. If thou be Lord of thine appetite if thou canst rule thy self as Coverdale turns it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. In his anger how canst thou bear despiciency reproach contempt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the object of anger Our Lord whose Disciple thou callest thy self he could bear this and all contradiction of sinners against himself Heb. 12. when the Jews Joh. 8.48 propounded this question to him Say we not well that thou art a Samaritan and hast a Devil See his answer vers 49. I have not a Devil but I honour my Father and ye do dishonour me Have we learned this of our Master Mat. 5.11 Can we reserve our anger for another object Can we be angry and sin not Eph. 4. angry with our selves our corrupt hearts When the Lord hath tryed us in all these and found us worthy or meet for himself whether can we then give the praise of all this to our God or no in whose strength we drink this Cup and have been baptized with this baptism Prov. 27.21 Can we after all this appeal to the searcher of our hearts whether we have drunk this Cup yea or no Psal 139.23.24 Do we not know that this is the Cup by which the true Joseph Divines And do we not know that such a one as he can certainly Divine Gen. 44.5.15 Wisd 3.5 6 7 8. 4. The Lord promiseth James and John that they shall drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism where we might enquire 1. Why Christ called his Passion his Cup 2. How James and John may be said to drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism 1. Christ calls his Passion his Cup because his Father gave it him to drink Joh. 18.11 and the same suffering is his baptism I have a baptism how am I straitned till it be accomplished Luk. 12.56 As a potion administred to the patients head is for the cure of the whole body and letting blood at the arm hath the like common effect for he is the Head of the Church and the Saviour of his body the Church And he is the Arm of the Lord that must reign for him Esay 40.10 and 51.5 But although James indeed suffered martyrdom and death yet we read not that John suffered a violent death one indeed of the Ancients saith so but all more ancient than he deny it And how then shall our Lords words be true ye shall indeed drink of my Cup It is not necessary that either James or John or any followers of the Lord Jesus suffer a violent death for Christ unless in special manner he be called thereunto as James and other the Apostles and the primitive Martyrs were But that common Cup whereof all must drink is that fellowship of Christ's Passions and Sufferings and the configuration and conformity unto his death Phil. 3.10 This the Apostle teacheth expresly 1 Pet. 4.1 2. So that although John suffered not a violent death as James did yet he drank of the Lords Cup and was baptized with his baptism in that he was made conformable unto the death of Jesus Christ by dying unto sin and obtained communion and fellowship with the Father and the Son 1 Joh. 1.1 James and John may be said to drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism when they suffer the like sufferings which he also suffered 2 Cor. 1. and those outwardly and inwardly outwardly reproach c. all which are suffered within inwardly When we suffer the assaults and temptations unto sin without yielding thereunto when we die from what was before our life Col. 1.24 I fill up how otherwise can we understand what is behind or wanting of the sufferings of Christ in my flesh St. Peter speaks plainly 1 Pet. 4.13 where he saith That they who are tryed by the fiery tryal are partakers of the sufferings of Christ so that it is not ever a proper duty of or to James and John but common to all Believers and Followers of the Lord Jesus Christ to drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism for so Mat. 26.27 drink ye all of it Obser 1. This is promised to James and John as a special Grace that they shall drink of Christs Cup and be baptized with his baptism And was it not a special Grace a notable good or gift Vnto you it is given in behalf of Christ not only to believe but also to suffer c. Phil. 1.29 A greater gift than Faith as it appears by the comparison à minori and martyrdom which alone is reckoned a special Grace Obser 2. Whence we learn a great difference between the Grace exhibited unto those men of God under the Law and that given unto the Disciples of Christ When the holy men of God in the time of the Law had the Cup whence we read of such passages as these the blood of Abel cryeth c. Let me see thy vengeance on them The Lord look
weakness we rest not but are moved until we find help Esay 7.2 which sometime we seek where it is not to be found Jerem. 14.10 yea when men are sensible of a spiritual hunger they wander from Sea to Sea to seek the word of the Lord and shall not find it The Lord whose name is the Counsellor Esay 9.6 He invites 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the weary wandering soul Matth. 11. unto himself in whom she may find rest help and deliverance from her weakness which is no where to be found but in Jesus Christ he turns our sorrows into joy John 16. Therefore his third daughter is called Hoglah turning about yea he turns our bondage into liberty and freedom and makes us Kings and Priests unto God the Father Revel 1.6 Therefore Zelophehad's fourth daughter is called Milcah i. e. a Queen This Queen is brought unto the King Christ in her ornaments her raiment of needle-work even the embroidery of all graces Psalm 45.14 And so he presents her unto himself a glorious Church without spot and wrinkle Eph. 5.27 And the King Christ greatly desires her beauty Psalm 45.11 Therefore Zelophehad's fifth Daughter is called Tirzah i. e. desireable and well pleasing as the Lord Jesus saith of his Church that she is beautiful as Tirzah Cant. 6.4 O Beloved if we look inwardly and seek and find all these yea or any of these in our souls how can we but love the Lord Jesus Christ our strong Redeemer and Deliverer c. Exhort To love the Lord Jesus Christ the strong Redeemer and Deliverer who delivers us from the Spirit of bondage and brings us into the glorious liberty of the children of God He among the Romans who was emancipated and made free by his Master from his slavery was yet ever after bound to be thankful to him and serviceable to him for making him a Free-man so that he was called Libertus the freed man of such or such a man and his master was called Patronus the Patron and defender of such or such an one insomuch as if any servant were ingratus Patrono unthankful to his Patron he was ever after bound by the Laws to return to his service again and since he knew not how to use the liberty vouchsafed him he was made to know his slavery again O Beloved if this were thought equal among that people in regard of their outward deliverance from an outward bondage how equal how just is it that all and every one whom our master in Heaven whom our Lord Jesus Christ hath made free should be thankful and more and more serviceable unto him our master ever to acknowledge our selves his Liberti freed by him to acknowledge him our Patron our Deliverer Defender c. Otherwise most worthy we are to return to our bondage and servitude S. Paul was very zealous in this respect 1 Cor. 16.22 He that loves not the Lord Jesus Christ let him be Anathema Maran-atha He who loves not the Lord Jesus Christ so loves him not as not to acknowledge him his Lord by all Service and Obedience let him be accursed until the Lord come that 's Maran-atha until the Lord come to avenge himself of his unthankful servant and ye read wherefore he comes Jude vers 14.15 The Lord comes with his holy ten thousands his holy Myriads to execute judgment upon all and convince all that are ungodly c. who say They will not have this man to rule over them Luke 19. O therefore Beloved if the Lord have delivered us from this bondage from fear of death let us serve the Lord out of love and due thankfulness It was the Prophets resolution 1 Sam. 12.10 and let it be ours and it is the end of the Lords Redemption Luke 1.74 That being redeemed out of the hand of our enemies death and fear of death and bondage c. we serve him without fear in holiness and righteousness all the days of our lives Observ Christ's deliverance is not of all but of those who through fear of death are subject to bondage c. he makes a great change in the man Here must be understood what is the true liberty Then I shall walk at liberty when I keep the Commandments Observ Those whom Christ redeems and delivers from the slavery of sin and Satan and from the fear of death those he ascertains and assures of the eternal life and this is the only assurance that 's true There is a kind of false perswasion whereby many suffer themselves to be deceived whereby men assure themselves of their salvation while yet they live in their sins yea before the fear of death hath fallen upon them Psal Beloved This perswasion comes not of him that calls us Christ by his death makes expiation for sin and by his spirit mortifies our sins and by the unction of the spirit of adoption the spirit of fear and bondage is removed Isa 10.24 where the deliverance from fear and bondage is compared to that out of Assyria out of Aegypt and out of the slavery of Midian Observ 1. Christ is our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is the Deliverer the Saviour the Redeemer this is inferred from his act in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is his Name given him by the Angel before his birth Matth. 1.21 Isa 19.20 Act. 5.31 Rom. 11.26 Observ 2. The Lord Jesus delivers from death and fear of death and bondage indeed from all evils and the dangers and fears of them for in that he saves from sin Matth. 1.21 In that he turns ungodliness from Jacob Rom. 11.26 By the same reason he delivers us from wrath for sin is the incentive cause of wrath judgement hell and death therefore we are to wait on 1 Thess 1.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not who hath delivered us but who doth deliver us that is a concurrent act as he delivers from sin so from fear and wrath Observ 3. The Lord delivers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not those but these i. e. the children so he saves his people he turns away ungodliness from Jacob i. e. from the weak Church as Israel signifieth the strong Church from Jacob that struggles and contends with the iniquity that wrestles with the earthly man as Jacob did with Esau Note hence who may be said to be delivered from the fear of death even they and they only who were before subject unto bondage through the fear of death The Lord Jesus delivers such and only such these are only sensible of their thraldom who have been under the yoke of bondage such as have been wearied and heavy laden Christ invites unto himself who else but these are able and fit to prize their liberty and deliverance Observ 4. We learn then from hence what a change the Lord Jesus makes in these children whom he delivers from the fear of death we shall be able to discern of this if we consider 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what the terms are from which and unto which they
his way toward Christ the Sun of Righteousness by beholding that supernatural Eclipse of the Sun at the Passion of Christ as he brought these Astronomers by a Star And this I take to be one principal Reason why Christ himself his Kingdom and his Word the Ministers of it and all means of salvation are represented unto us by so many Metaphors God graciously condescends to come home unto us to take us at our trades at our professions of life and all to bring us as he brought the Wise-men here by a Star to Christ 3. God calls not men per saltum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all at once extempore but by degrees Nature is a guide to Grace The Shepherds had an Angel to preach the Gospel unto them which is the immediate outward means of salvation These Wise-men had a Star which was a means but more remote The Shepherds lived in the Church and were well prepared These Wise-men were strangers to it yet utraque lingua de Coelo erat Stellae Angelorum God preached from Heaven both by Star and Angels 4. These had a Star and but a Star We have seen his Star say they and we are come to worship O the listlesness and slothfulness of most men in these dayes who call themselves Christians The Gospel of Christ hath been preached unto us now all our dayes yet how few alas how few obey the Gospel of Christ God gives us his word and great is the Company of the Preachers Psal 68.11 and a great deal of preaching we have and a great deal of learning and reading and talking but how few alas how few come unto Christ as these Wise-men did Unto whom God gave neither Preacher nor Word a tradition they had and only they saw a Star and came a long Journey unto Christ Beloved I would not be mistaken I blame not now our want of diligence in coming to Church though I might nor in seeking Christ any other way abroad and without us This is the Age of which Daniel prophesied Men should run to and fro and knowledge should be much encreased All these things we may do and good means they are and yet not come to Christ We must not alwayes be learning but come to the knowledge of the truth Mark I pray you what our Saviour saith to the Jews John 5.39 40. Ye search the Scriptures for so the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rather indicatively than imperatively there to be understood as the Text will appear to any judicious man that well considers it Ye search saith he the Scriptures for in them ye think to have eternal life and they are they which testifie of me but ye will not come unto me that ye may have life Why Where were they They were near him enough and they searched the Scriptures enough they knew how often any one letter was used in the whole Old Testament But they believed not on him they came not to him to conform themselves unto him in his death that they might live the life of God as St. Paul speaks Ephes 4. And therefore they were absent from him how near soever otherwayes they drew unto him This this is to come unto Christ Matth. 11.28 29. This is to draw near unto God James 4.8 So that I fear yea I much fear it that the most of us have not thus as yet found Christ but that we are yet at a loss If we follow these Wise-men they no doubt will lead us to him I 'le use no other method than they did We must heed the Law that is our Schoolmaster unto Christ Gal. 3. And in this sence no man comes unto Christ except the Father draw him John 6. for this purpose we must make use of the least helps that God hath given us to use our senses and our understanding to the searching of him out in the Creatures The Heavens declare his Glory Praesentémque refert quaelibet herba Deum When we seek him thus with all our heart God the Father reveales the like Star unto us that he did unto these Wise-men even the illumination of faith so St. Anselme and Rhabanus and the Gloss tells us the Star is to be understood for faith is the evidence of things not seen Hebr. 11.1 Conf. Durand in Festo Epiph. And we are shut up under the Law unto this light of faith to be revealed Gal. 3.23 And by the guidance of this faith we must leave our Country as they did and as their and our Father Abraham did Gen. 12. who followed this very Star saith the Apostle Hebr. 11.8 By faith Abraham when he was called to go out into a place which he should afterward receive for an Inheritance obeyed and went out not knowing whither he went Whither ever we go we must go out of our selves and we must walk in the steps of that faith of our Father Abraham Rom. 4.12 The Covetous man he must forsake his Covetousness that 's his Country The unclean person his lasciviousness and uncleanness that 's his Country The Drunkard the angry the envious the contentious persons their drunkenness their wrath their envy their strife these are their Countries This is the true forsaking of our Country which many brain-sick men understand not and therefore run as far out of the Land as they were out of their wits before That 's the first means of finding Christ after the example of the Wise-men But we must not follow them too close They went up to Jerusalem out of their humane judgment they thought it was most likely they should find the King of the Jews in the Royal City that they should learn where he was of the learned Scribes and Pharisees But humanum flagitantes consilium divinum amisere ducatum saith St. Bernard while they sought the counsel of men they lost the guidance of God Dum divertunt ad Judaeos stellam amittunt quia dum à pravis hominibus ac Diabolo aliquod consilium quaerunt veram illuminationem amittunt Anselm Thus did Samuel when he was but a Child God called him and he ran to Ely But when God revealed his Son in me saith St. Paul I consulted not with flesh and blood Gal. 1. nor must we for should not a people seek to their God But there are learned Scribes taught unto the Kingdom of God and salvation saith our Saviour is of the Jews these inward Jews And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a dual there are good and bad together The Scribes they tell us he is to be found in Bethlehem that 's the house of bread Very fitly was the bread of life born in the house of bread Whose house are ye saith St. Paul unto the Saints there Christ is born Thither let us go and offer our best gifts as they did Do we thus seek him Or seek we him rather for our own advantage As they sought him for the loaves John 6. This is to seek Christ in Bethlehem the house
of the Law for them and apply his righteousness unto themselves and imagine that thereby their iniquities which yet are in them are hid and covered They are arrant hypocrits I say not that such are Pharisees or Pharisaical men for the Pharisees performed an outward righteousness and gave outward obedience unto the Law So that he who knew no better way of fulfilling the Law and acted according to his knowledge he was accepted and approved of So our Lord is said to have loved the Pharisaical young man Marke 10 17-21 But they who boast of Christ's fulfilling of the Law for them when yet by breaking the Law even outwardly they dishonour God These are worse hypocrits than the Scribes and Pharisees were Obs 4. The Lord Jesus came not to destroy but to fulfil This sentence what a world of men lay hold on and hence conclude that Jesus Christ hath done and suffered all things already to our hand c. Vide Not. in James 1.22 Repreh 1. Those Opinionists who think that Christ came to destroy the Law that the Law belongs not to them because they are Christians or imagine themselves to be so Dub. What reason is there that although our God hath so clearly manifested his will in his Law and Prophets and hath not spared his only begotten Son but yielded him up to death for us all yea hath raised him from the dead All which is come to pass that all men through the Son of God should be justified freed and saved from their sins And although the Son hath done all and bought men with a price that they being redeemed from their sins death devil and hell might live in righteousness and holiness before him all the dayes of their life Though the Father hath done all this though the Son hath done all this and suffered all this yet neither Law nor Prophets are fulfilled but sin and iniquity is fulfilled the will and lust of the Devil are fulfilled Answ I answer all what God and Christ hath done and suffered for men is made known unto them and why That they might believe on the Son and obey him and so be saved O how plentiful is the Scripture in Testimonies of this kind John 3.16.36 and 12.25 26. Matth. 16.24 1 Pet. 2.21 22 23 24. and 4.1 2. But though the God of truth so abundantly testifieth this in his Word yet alas how few are there in the World who believe him How few are there who believe in the light the wisdom of God the way the truth and the life which is Jesus Christ himself Yea do not most men believe contrary to the Scriptures Do they not believe and love the darkness more than the light the foolishness of the flesh rather than the wisdom of the Spirit Do they not obey the calling and drawing of the Father of lies unto their eternal destruction rather than the calling and the drawing of the God of truth to their everlasting salvation Thus did their Fathers before them Jer. 2.7 8.13 19.5 They follow their own choosing their own opinion not the Law of the Lord and his sure word of Prophesie 2 Pet. Wherefore they long not at all to be loosed and set free from their sins nor know nor consider that they are faln from the true light of life and the true belief of their Salvation and give heed to Spirits of errour and manifold false faiths and manifold chosen holinesses nor do they consider that they love the sin more than the righteousness the darkness rather than the light the falshood and lie more than the truth it self Yet even in this false faith which they have made choice of they boast themselves as if they were now free from the Law justified from their sins and become very good Christians They think and believe that the Abaddon and Apollion is stronger than Christ the Saviour That the Abaddon hath power enough to destroy the Law and fulfil all unrighteousness c. But they believe not that Christ is strong enough to destroy all unrighteousness Esay 53.1 Lord who hath believed our report To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed c. And therefore according to their faith or unbelief so it befals them Job 15.21 22. A dreadful sound is in his ears c. Repreh 1. Those who think and hold opinion that Christ came not to fulfil the Law Repreh 2. Those who condemn obedient men who fulfil the Law for phansies Exhort Since the Lord Jesus Christ came not to destroy the Law and the Prophets let not us who profess our selves his Disciples his Followers Christians let not us destroy them nor let us think that he came for any such end but since the Law is holy and just and good and our Lord Jesus Christ is holy just and good yea goodness it self Hos 3.5 Let us agree with the Law and consent unto it that it is holy just and good and become such And since there is an emptiness in the Law and Prophets until they be fulfilled by obedience since the narrow way of God's Commandments is forlorn and forsaken Even in the dayes of Shamgar that noble Stranger in the dayes of Christ in the flesh and in the dayes of Jael the dayes of the Church of Christ in the Spirit O let us turn us from the broad wayes and crooked wayes And as Hebers house though they had formerly made Covenant with Jabin and Sisara while they walked in the way of Cain So though formerly we have consented to the false knowledge of the subtle Serpent Though formerly we have walked in the way of Cain Jude v. 11. Yet let us with Jael sever our selves from Cain and walk in the narrow way of God's Commandments which leads unto the everlasting life Let us follow the Wise man's Counsel c. Vide Not. in James 4.14 in Supplement NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW V. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Ye have heard that it hath been said by them of old time that thou shalt not kill for whosoever killeth shall be in danger of the Judgment c. OUr Lord having made a special Preface to his Sermons v. 17 18 19. He now begins the Sermon it self And here we meet with a different Translation and understanding of these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was said by them of old time so the Text or to them of old time so the Margin And the Greek words will indeed bear both sences Wherefore let us enquire whether of the two is the more probable They will say by them of old time as we read it in the Text they understood the Rabbins and Teachers of old as if our Lord should say ye have heard that the Rabbins of old have taught the people this Law and this penalty for breach of it But I say thus c. And this sense they rather incline unto because they conceive it our Lord 's main drift in this Sermon to confute the false Glosses and Expositions
Question touching the good to be done and the life thereby to be obtained If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandments The Master excepts against his Disciples Compellation Why callest thou me good And is not the Masters exception liable also to an exception for is not the Master good is he not his Fathers Goodness Hos 3.5 And why then doth he except against his Disciple who calls him good This seems to be the reason of our Lords exception viz. That he might elevate and raise the thoughts of that Pharisaical young man to some higher thing than he saw or acknowledged in the person of Christ that he might insinuate his Deity and God-head Our Master Christ gives us all a good Example of modesty His Disciple calls him Good Master And he points him from himself to his Father as the Fountain of Goodness His Disciples had learned this lesson of their Master Act. 3.12 Why marvel ye at this and why look ye at us as if by our power or holiness we had made this man to walk No not they The God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob hath glorified his Son Jesus Therefore c. Act. 14.15 Our Master excepts against his Disciples Question for so I find it in a very ancient reading 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Why dost thou ask me concerning good So the Vul. Lat. constantly read it Quid me interrogas de bono and the most ancient Translation in English What askest thou me of good things And thus the ancient Fathers Hierom Augustine read these words Our Lord therefore here excepting against his Disciples Question as imperfect intimates thus much unto him That it is not sufficient that he tell him what good is to be done unless God himself who alone is good enlighten his understanding and give him strength to perform that good 3. Our Master gives reason of his exception There is none good but one that is God The old reading of these words was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is one good unto which the Syriack added a Supplement and Interpretation that is God The reason then of our Lords Exception is to discover that leaven of the Pharisees wherewithal this young man had been leavened An Opinion that if he knew what was to be done he was able of himself to do it Hence we learn that there are not two Fountains of Goodness but one only which is God alone from whom descends every good and perfect gift Jam. 1. God therefore is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the essential Good whence all who may be called Good participate of his Goodness Deut. 6.4 where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 have their Letters extraordinary great not only to intimate that we ought to give great attention thereunto but because ע is 70. and 74. the four parts of the world whereunto Abraham was to look Gen. 13. and the 70 Nations therein should worship this one God the Father Jehovah our God God with us the Son and Jehovah one the Holy Ghost God in Unity and Trinity which the Apostle explains 1 Joh. 5.7 Whence the Septuagint Translators of the Bible into Greek being questioned by Ptolemy King of Aegypt concerning the right ordering of a mans life and happy administration of a Kingdom though the Questions are so many and different as the persons yet every one refers every particular Good to God 4. Our Lord resolves the Disciples Question touching the Good to be done and the life thereby to be obtained If thou wilt enter into Life keep the Commandments wherein we must enquire 1. what 's here meant by Life 2. by entring into Life 3. what by keeping the Commandments 4. how and why he who will enter into Life must keep the Commandments 1. Life is here to be understood as Eternal Life in the former verse 2. Eternal Life is here decyphered as a place whereinto one goes or enters as the like phrase imports to enter into the Lords Rest his Peace his Righteousness and to enter into the Lords Joy The same is meant by entring into the Kingdom of God all which we may understand from the figure of them all the Holy Land which was a type of Gods Kingdom of his Rest his Joy of the Eternal Life 3. By keeping the Commandments is here understood the Observation of the Precepts of the Moral Law the Decalogue or Ten Words as Solomon exhorts his Son or Disciple Prov. 7.1 2. My Son keep my Words and lay up my Commandments and live and my Law as the apple of thine eye Obser 1. Life which our Lord here speaks of and the Eternal Life which the Young man inquires after are all one viz. that Life of God from which we have been alienated yea the Kingdom of God and his Righteousness his Peace his Joy his Rest yea God himself For he is our life and the length of our dayes Deut. 30.2 Obser 2. The Young man inquires how he may have Eternal Life and our Lord answers him If thou wilt enter into life keep the Commandments we then have Eternal Life when we enter into Eternal Life and not till then So Joh. 3.3 with the 5. so that a man neither hath nor knows Eternal Life unless he be in it which is well worthy their observation who will needs have assurance of Eternal Life not but that I know good assurance may be had of it but withal I find that men are extreme deceitful in this very argument they would be sure of their Salvation and of Life Eternal that they might go about some thing else and take no more thought or care for Eternal Life and Salvation A man hath then Eternal Life when he enters into it and is an actual possessor of it Obser 3. The Commandments are to be kept by him who will enter into Life The reason See Notes on Jam. 1.22 confer Notes on Exod. 20.3 6. Against this doctrine all the subtilty of the Serpent and all the sophistry of men have devised arguments See Notes as above Some would elude this distinguishing Salvation and Eternal Life for why say they the young man did not ask Christ by what means must I be saved for then our Lord had said by Faith Believe and thou shalt be saved but he dreamed of merit of works I answer to be saved and to inherit Eternal Life is one and the same thing for Salvation imports two terms as to be delivered from sin and to be preserved unto Gods Everlasting Kingdom And what else is meant by 2 Tim. 1.10 Having abolished death he hath brought Life and Immortality to Light by the Gospel Hence it appears that the Commandments of God may be kept Our Lord requires no other Condition to the entrance into Life Eternal than the keeping of Gods Commandments Now if this Condition were impossible to be fulfilled it were then all one with a Negative or an exclusion out of Eternal Life why Conditio impossibilis aequipollet negativae And so
or satisfied with his own ways For as the wise are never satisfied with the Oyl of the Spirit until they be filled with the Spirit and with all the fulness of God Eph. 3. so neither do the foolish say enough until they be filled with all unrighteousness Rom. 1.29 Here the poor disconsolate and misgiving soul complains alas I find not that livving word that lamp of life in me what a joy and comfort was it to the Prophet Jer. 15.16 Thy words were found by me and I did eat them and thy Word was unto me the joy and the rejoycing of mine heart for thy Name is called upon me O Lord God of Hosts O what Consolation must there needs be unto those Daughters of Sion Whose filth the Lord hath washed away and whose blood he hath purged by the spirit of judgement and by the spirit of burning Esay 4.4 what burning what shining lights are these holy Job recounts how it had been with him in former time Job 29.1 2. When his candle shined upon my head He calls this speech a Parable and therefore we are to esteem it like the Text his Candle his Living Word i. e. the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2. ult according to his light he walked upon the darkness as the light or lamp upon the head casts the darkness underfoot as the Lord is described in the 18th Psal vers 19. Darkness was under his feet So again the Rock was poured out with me rivers of oyl there are who would have these words hyperbolical where by the Rock He may allude to Arabia Petrea where he lived but the word is rendred Petra the Rock as Christ is called 1 Cor. 10. which was resolved into rivers of oyl or rather distributions as the Hebrew word signifies and not the divisions Heb. 2.4 Spiritûs sancti distributionibus so the Syriack hath the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If such shining lamps doubt whether they have oyl enough for themselves and have none to spare what shall become of me who am as the widow with a little oyl in her cruise be not a fool cast it not away though it be but a little oyl the least quantity of oyl is oyl as they say of what is Homogenial Minima pars auri est aurum The Spirit of God is Homogenial every part of the Divine Spirit is Spiritual and to every one is given Grace give the first fruits of thine oyl to Elijah as the Widow did the Lord owned him for the Lord the Spirit hast thou a little Faith cast not away thy small measure of Faith cast not away thy shield of Faith whereby thou wilt lye open to the temptations of the Evil One Hebr. 10.23 Hold fast the profession of thy Faith without wavering Hast thou Chastity keep thereby thy vessel in holiness and honour if thou cast that away thou wilt be more and more corrupted Chastity may be likened to a new garment kept clean and brush'd so laid up till it has got a stain and then you care not where you lay it Hast thou a little strength enfeeble it not the weak heart commits many abominations hast thou but little strength be faithful in that little he that neglects small things shall fall by little and little Let us be exhorted from hence to increase and abound with the oyl of the Spirit to set our selves no stints lest there be not enough for us 1 Tim. 6.18 19. Let us be rich in good works ready to distribute willing to communicate laying up in store for our selves a good foundation against the time to come that we may lay hold on Eternal Life which treasure saves from death 1 Pet. 4.3 there is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an excess enough of sin how little soever Josh 22.17 Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us from which we are not yet cleansed until this day Ezek. 44.6 For thus saith the Lord let it suffice you of all your abominations 2. Be we exhorted to covet Spiritual Gifts that 's a good kind of covetousness as there is an evil kind of it an evil covetousness as of the evil there is none worse so of the good none better in Wine is excess no excess in the Spirit Drink O my Friends drink O my well Beloved Now follows the second Corollary of this Ironical Answer in these words Go rather to them that sell and buy for your selves which is the Positive and Ironical Answer of the wise Virgins unto the request of the foolish divers there are who misunderstand this positive Answer of the wise Virgins such is the nature of an Irony that under the shew of friendly words as giving good counsel here men deride and mock such as are worthy to be so used by reason of their folly And thus the wise Virgins send the foolish to buy oyl of those that sell what oyl is this and who are they that sell it the oyl is the false unction or anointing for oyl in Scriptur● as likewise water so also fire c. are taken both in a good and an ill sence which oyl is vended and sold by a great trade of Antichrists Does not St. John tell us there are many Antichrists For as the oyl which the wise Virgin Souls have in their Lamps is a figure of the good spirit of God according to St. Luke 4.18 and other places So the oyl which the foolish Virgings are sent to buy is a figure of the Evil Spirit for so Vnum contrarium oppositum est suo contrario to the foolish or wicked one the curse is like oyl entering into his bones The reason of this Ironical Answer to the foolish Virgins may appear partly in regard of their improvidence and folly they neglected the oyl that true unction from above which they might have received from the Holy One 1 Joh. 2. and they give heed to lying Spirits false unctions and doctrines of Devils they abuse the patience and long-suffering of God which might have been salvation unto them And therefore it is just with God to give up such men who render themselves incorrigible to the exprobration and scorn of his Saints and People it is just also for the wise Virgins who have the same mind with God to rejoyce at the last and great vengeance of God which he executeth upon impenitent men Psal 58.10 The righteous shall rejoyce when he seeth the vengeance and shall deride Psal 52.6 they shall laugh for wisdom hath been ever accounted folly in the world and hath been derided and scoffed at by the foolish world as such Wisd 5.3 4. This is he whom we sometimes had in derision and a proverb of reproach we fools counted his life madness and his end to be without honour And the Apostle 1 Cor. 4.10 We are fools saith he for Christ's sake but ye are wise therefore it is just for it is written 1 Cor. 1.19 20 I will destroy the wisdom of the wise and will bring to nothing the
Jews kept the Feast of Weeks in memory of the Law given at the same time in Mount Sinai And the Christians remember the giving of the Holy Spirit and the Law of the Spirit of Life to be written in our hearts How injurious then are they who oppose the memory of the Law given by the Lord and the fiery Law in cloven tongues For hereby they extinguish the Law of God given in Mount Sinai as not belonging unto them or if belonging to them yet impossible by any power of God imparted unto them in this life to be fulfilled And hereby they frustrate the end of Christ's Ascension and damp the hope of obtaining the Spirit of Christ in this life contrary to what the Text holds forth unto us He who descended is the same also that ascended that he might fill and fulfill all things NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON ACTS II. 37 38. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men and Brethren what shall we do Then Peter said unto them Repent THe Lord had now poured forth his Spirit to make a New Creation Act. 2.4 and that Spirit moved upon the waters as People are interpreted Revel 17.15 many people so that the waters were much moved and troubled They wondered vers 6 7 12. when St. Peter now became an expert fisher of men knowing it was best fishing in troubled waters casts forth his hooks and le ts down his net at the Lords Word in the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost and catches a multitude of men about three thousand souls vers 41. His Net wherein he took them was a Sermon consisting of two parts 1. A refutation of an Errour 2. A confirmation of the Truth 1. He begins with refutation of their Errour and that most fitly they had charged the Apostles that they were drunk vers 13. ye may observe it in all Ages the Prophet and Spiritual man is alwayes accounted mad or drunk for there being but a sober man among a company of drunkards they thought themselves sober and him drunk though the contrary in both is most true so it was here The Apostle takes occasion from that kind of drunkenness to tell them of another they supposed that they were drunk with wine wherein is excess Ephes 5.18 No they were drunk indeed but with the Spirit as Cant. 5.1 They were filled with the Spirit so ye may understand the words that the Apostle denies not that they were drunk but the kind of drunkenness they are not drunk as ye suppose in that kind of drunkenness but as the Prophet Joel had foretold vers 16 21. This effusion of the Spirit he refers to the Author of it vers 22. Jesus of Nazareth the righteous branch approved of God by miracles wonders and signs such as never man wrought such as God wrought by him yea and approved by you too sometime ye your selves knew him to have been such an one yet which is your greater condemnation if ye repent not even him ye have apprehended and with wicked hands have crucified and slain him 'T is true this was not without the determination counsel and foreknowledge of God yet that no way diminisheth your sin it was not your purpose to fulfill Gods counsel but your own malice and revenge nor was it without Christs own counsel passus est quia voluit Isai 53. which erects them that they sink not into the gulf of despair as Joseph comforted his brethren Gen. 45.8 Where he prevents an objection If he had been approved of God he would have delivered him let him deliver him if he will have him This was not out of impotency or want of love in the Father for he hath shewn grea●●r power in raising him from the dead loosing the pains or as the Syriack the bands and cords of death because it was not possible that he the essential life the power of God should be held by them vers 25 26 27 28. Nor is this any new thing but prophesied of old Object But this David spake of himself Resp No that vers 27. Thou wilt not suffer thine Holy One to see corruption can belong to none but to the Holy of Holies Christ Jesus for vers 29 30 31. He reassumes the conclusion and proves it by another testimony Psal 110.1 which our Saviour also cites and puts his adversaries to silence Matth. 22. Thus having confirmed his Doctrine touching the Passion Resurrection Ascension and Session of Christ at the right hand of God with his effusion of the Holy Spirit he makes application of it unto his Auditory vers 36. by way of Reprehension See then what a great sin ye have committed ye have crucified the Lord of Glory an elegant Aposiopesis ye have crucified him to whom God the Father hath given all power in heaven and earth Matth. 28. Lest they should grow desperate by such a Reproof he tempers with it a tacite and secret Consolation in that he saith God hath made that same Jesus both Lord and Christ He is the Saviour Jesus and the anointed of God the Christ as he speaks Acts 5.31 A Prince and a Saviour to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins and this is St. Peters Sermon Now behold a rare effect of this Sermon in the Auditors wrought both 1. Inwardly they were pricked in their hearts and 2. Outwardly they said unto Peter c. Men and brethren what shall we do 1. The inward effect is compunction and that twofold 1. Doloris of grief tantùm non desperationis almost of desperation they had crucified the Lord 2. Amoris of love they had crucified Christ their Saviour and Redeemer who deserved better of them O that consideration melts the Soul from these Two kinds of compunction proceeds a twofold sence of these words of the Text Men and brethren what shall we do 1. The effect of the first compunction Men and brethren what shall we do we have crucified Christ who came to seek and to save and to redeem us what shall we now do 2. We are willing and ready to do any thing there 's the effect of the second compunction O the wonderful power and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ whether shall we admire rather 1. His power pricking and breaking their stony hearts and turning them into flesh making them relent and grieve begetting in them a godly sorrow that worketh repentance 2. His mercy and clemency suppling them and melting them into love making them willing and ready to obey They said unto Peter c. Men and brethren This phrase wants opening Men Brethren It 's an Hebraism or property of the Hebrew tongue to add man or men to some other word going before thus 1 Sam. 31.3 The Archers hit him in the Margin ye have according to the Original the shooters Men with bows hit him where the word Men may be left out as the same story being related 1 Chron. 10.3 it s said only The shooters with their bows hit him
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is in regard of all his contrary thoughts and opinions and conceivings in regard of his high mind and great pride of his knowledge as the Apostle confesseth Rom. 7.9 I was alive without the Law once He thought he lived the life of God and that all had been well with him but when the Commandment came sin revived and I died The Church of Laodicea thought her self rich Rev. 3.17 O how seasonable is this admonition in regard of the present evil world for the world was never so wise in their own eyes We know that we have all knowledge 1 Cor. 8. yet indeed never were men more foolish the world was never more secure of their own salvation never more safe in their own opinion never more at rest in their own spirits when yet indeed they were never in more peril and jeopardy for when they say peace then suddain destruction comes upon them 1. This therefore justly reproves all those who flatter themselves into an imaginary happiness See Notes on Heb. 2.2 3. 2. Who believe not the Gospel of Salvation remission of sins and justification from all things through faith in Jesus Christ. This we read often blamed in the Jews ib. 3. Who neglect and despise the great Grace of God ibidem 4. Who despise and neglect the great Grace of God for a toy and trifle c. ibid. God works a work in our dayes So here I work a work in your dayes What work is that The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth sometimes a work sometimes the reward or wages for the work done Job 7.2 The work here understood is a work of judgement as appears Habbak 1. which is the reward of disobedience This work God works per se by himself or per alium by another 1. By himself withdrawing his presence from disobedient and unbelieving men and women and departing from them in everlasting displeasure as Hos 9.12 Wo also unto them when I depart from them 2. God works his work of judgement per alium by another for quod quisque per alium facit id ipse facit Now this other by whom God works is either the sinner himself as when he gives men over unto a reprobate mind and to their own hearts lusts as Psal 81.12 2. That other is Satan himself and wicked men his agents and instruments Now Satan renders them either absolute beasts and makes them wallow as brute beasts in the mire of voluptuousness and sensuality whose God is their belly Phil. 3. or renders them like himself in pride or envy for as God is love so the Devil is envy Acts 13. O thou enemy of all righteousness child of the Devil or else he makes them arrant earth-worms who mind earthly things Phil. 3. Observ 1. What we have according to the Greek Interpreters I work a work in your dayes Hierom reads Quia factum est in diebus vestris out of Symmachus Opus fiet in diebus vestris and the Hebrew Text will bear both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This variety of reading proves that of the Wise Man to be true Eccles 1.9 10. The thing that hath been it is that which shall be and 3.15 That which hath been is now and that which is to be hath already been and God requireth that which is past for so the different Translations import all the parts of time our Translation I work a work Hierom factum est Symmachus fiet Observ 2. This also implies that our God is not prone to works of wrath and judgement fiet and factum the which hath been done and shall be done without mention who doth it and therefore when he proceeds to judgement it 's called indeed his Act but his strange Act Isa 28.21 implying that he doth not afflict 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 willingly or with his heart Lam. 3.33 Yet Observ 3. God is not all Mercy Nor doth he work only his work of Mercy among the Children of Men in that greatest display of his goodness Exod. Observ 4. The space and continuance of Mans life is described not by Ages or Years but only by Dayes c. See Notes on Heb. 1. Observ 5. Every man hath his share his part of these dayes Observ 6. Gods work of judgement goes on throughout all Ages and is present with them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I work a work Observ 7. All punishment of unbelief and contempt of the Gospel is not wholly deferred until the life to come although then there be the accomplishment of endless misery to disobedient souls where the worm dieth not and the fire it not quenched But as the eternal life and happiness is begun and in good measure befalls believers and obedient ones within the compass of this life so the eternal death and misery in great measure and some fearful kinds of it are executed on men even in this life also Accordingly our Lord tells the Jews Joh. 8. Ye shall see me no more but die in your sins Thus ye read the Lord departing from his Temple Ezech. 8.10 and so he departs from the unbelieving and disobedient soul and leaves it in an hell upon earth O the distress that comes upon such a soul when a man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-tormenter and as God departs from him he sinks deeper into sin and the Devil gets farther hold of them and makes them his children as our Lord saith to the Jews Joh. 8. Ye are of your father the devil if such they be at the first how much more at the last when he makes them seven times more the children of hell than before and finisheth his work upon them and makes them up compleat vessels of wrath and eternal destruction 1. The reason is considerable from the demerit and sin of unbelieving and disobedient men as it is implyed in Psal 81.11 12. Rom. 1.28 2. The justice and constancy of God in his works of providence for whatsoever God doth is for ever 3. From the justice of God upon the unbelief and disobedience of men for as men believe not the commands of God and the great Grace of remission of sins and justification so it is just with God that they should not believe the punishment of their unbelief and disobedience Axiom 6. That work many will not believe although a man declare it unto them Reason From self-love and a strong inclination in the will unto sin for as men are strongly inclined to any iniquity so have they a strong perswasion that no evil will come upon it quae nolumus difficulter credimus Thus on the contrary belief proceeds from the will for when men are well perswaded and affected to the truth of the Gospel and what it requires of them they are apt to believe the promises of help and reward that are made thereunto Observ 1. Unbelief of men proceeds not from meer want of warning from God but from their own hardening themselves against it for although it be
to understand such a man as is sincere and upright and hath not guile or deceit in his heart so it presently followeth and in whose spirit there is no guile otherwise this not imputation of sin is but imaginary as also the covering of it as the Prophet speaks Isa 30.1 Wo to the rebellious children that cover with a covering but not of my spirit that they may add sin to sin 2. Imputation of Righteousness which Christ by his death purchaseth for all believers who lay hold and apply it unto themselves by Faith and that Righteousness also both ceasing from evil and doing of good which the Spirit of Jesus Christ works in us and is indeed the righteousness of Christ this God imputes unto us as if it were our own whereas indeed it is his own and wrought in us by his Spirit Isa 26.12 But Sin enters by propagation I cannot say so of Righteousness that that enters into the world by propagation surely no for although it be true that by how much the more the parents subdue and mortifie their own corruptions by so much the more the sinful nature is tamed and subdued which they transmit and convey unto their Children as I shewed before in manifold Examples Yet there is not the same reason in transmitting Sin and Righteousness Righteousness is of another of an higher nature and not transmitted or conveyed by the Natural Parents unto their Children but by God the Father of his own will he begat us Jam. 1.18 And therefore our Lord teacheth the Master of Israel that he must be born again and by God the Son and his righteous Spirit Joh. 3.3 Who enlightens every man coming into the world Joh. 1.9 The garden brings forth weeds alone but if it bring forth wholesome herbs they must be sown the heart of man brings forth plants of the evil one alone but if it bring forth good plants it is by the vertue and power of our heavenly Fathers planting Doubt 2. How did Righteousness enter by one man as sin entred by one man As the first Adam may be considered 1. As one individual person or 2. As a common root So may the second Adam also be considered either 1. As one person or else 2. As radix communitatis Thus we read that God is One and Christ is One and that God is the Saviour of all especially of those that believe 1 Tim. 4.10 God prepares salvation before the face of all people Luk. 2.30 31. And that the Grace of God which brings salvation hath appeared to all men Tit. 2.11 or according to the Margin that bringeth salvation to all men hath appeared hence it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common salvation Jud. vers 3. namely to all men that have faith to receive it which Faith God offers unto all Act. 17.31 yea and Faith is called common faith Tit. 1.4 Observ 1. We learn then from hence that Original Sin is not as some would have it a meer carentia justitiae originalis a want or being without original righteousness which discovers their ignorance who yet think themselves wonderous wise and able to judge and condemn others for being of such a Sect whereof they are not guilty No nor is it only fomes as it were tinder ready to take the fiery darts of temptation as the Schoolmen would have it a proneness and propension unto sin Original Sin is more than a privation or disposition for righteousness and unrighteousness are not opposed as privatives but as adverse or positive contraries one to other Sin hath a positive being and that a foul one Nor can a meer privation be said to be washed away or purged or blotted out as the sin is said to be Observ 2. As Sin is in the world so Righteousness also is in the world so saith St. John of the Essential Righteousness 1.10 He was in the world He is that light that is come into the world Joh. 1.9 yea this is the ground of the worlds condemnation That life and light and righteousness is come into the world and men loved darkness and unrighteousness more than life light and righteousness Joh. 3.17 19. Observ 3. Righteousness is become a stranger to the world and is said to enter into it it was very well acquainted with it very intimate of old but by reason of Mans new acquaintance with sin Righteousness is grown out of knowledge He came among his own and his own received him not there is one in you whom ye know not This was figured by Shamgar the noble stranger the judge of Israel Judg. 3.30 Observ 4. See then how our fig-leaves our coverings which we have inherited from Adam are taken from us and our nakedness discovered Is Sin darkness Light is come into the world Are we weak and impotent and unable to every good work Stronger is he that is in us than he that is in the world Beloved the Lord sees us under the Fig-tree all these pretences which we make if real and true they declare plainly that Sin hath entred indeed into us by one man but Righteousness by one man hath not yet entred into us 2. Death by Sin Observ 1. Where Sin enters there Death will follow Gen. 4.7 If thou do not well sin lieth at the door And behold the judge standeth before the door Jam. 5.9 ready to send after Sin committed his Executioners for from commission of Sin the Angel of Death bath his power say the Jews And therefore we read Ezech. 9 2. Six men came c. why from the way toward the North See Chap. 8.5 6. Envy was in the entry and kept out the Lord out of his Sanctuary At what gate we keep out the Lord and admit envy the Devil there and Death enters Observ 2. Learn then the issue of temptation how pleasing soever it represent it self unto thee Jam. 1.14 15. ye have the progress of it from the first to the last Every man is tempted when he is drawn away by his own lusts c. The wise Solomon decyphered this under the Allegory of an Harlot Prov. 5.4 5. 7.10.27 Observ 3. See what inheritance the first Adam hath left his Children See Notes in 1 Cor. 15. Doth this similitude every way hold The gift of God is eternal life Rom. 6. Thou art merciful for thou rewardest every man according to his works Psal 62.12 The Ichneumon breaks the Crocodiles Eggs without any end of its own it eats not of them at all but as for the good and benefit of mankind endeavours to destroy the Crocodile Thus Eleazar slew the Elephant 1 Macch. 6.46 So Sampson the Philistines Judg. 16.30 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that by death he might destroy him who had the power of death i. e. the Devil 2. How did life enter in by righteousness The question is only de modo the answer is by Death Observ 1. See then the only way to life and happiness lies through the death of Christ and
and drink to do his Fathers will and shall it be ours to do our own will His will was resolved and emptied into his Fathers will his humanity was wholly without it self 't was instrumentum Dei divinitati conjunctum saith Lyra an instrument at hand for the Deity to work by Such an obedient mind hath been alwayes in the Servants of God mine heart is ready mine heart is ready saith holy David and our Apostle Lord what wilt thou have me to do nay rather what wilt thou do with me their will was so resolved into Gods will that they seemed to do nothing themselves but were without themselves like serviceable instruments to be acted by their Masters hand and ready for God to work by 't is St. Luke's ordinary phrase Paul and Barnabas rehearsed what God had done with them Act. 14.27 and 15.4 Such an obedient mind was in Christ and in all that are Christs and that not only in speaking and doing but also in suffering according to the Will of God which is the third step of our Lords Humiliation He was obedient unto death Rare and singular obedience for whereas obedience is alwayes the greater by how much the good is the greater which we undervalue for obedience sake what goods are greater than either those of name and honour but what contradiction of sinners did he suffer against himself they thought they said well when they said he was a Samaritan and had a Devil or those of fortune but he became poor and had not where to lay his head or those of body as beauty stature strength c. But he was weak and had neither form nor comliness or those of Soul and of all the rest the Will but not my Will but thy Will be done or those of the whole man as Liberty but he was captivated and led away like a sheep to the slaughter or that of all the rest which is the fountain of all the rest the Life but he became obedient even to the death he undervalued and parted with every desireable good only for obedience sake But the Son of Man must be killed saith he himself and he was delivered up to death by his Father it seems therefore his death was necessary yea constrained and violent for he was betrayed bought and sold by Judas and the Jews who procured his death and he himself was unwilling to die if therefore there were necessity from God if coaction from men if in him unwillingness to die surely there was no obedience unto death The Answer to this doubt may serve also for a fundamental reason of this third step or degree of our Lords humiliation for 't is most true the Father delivered up the Son unto death both by cloathing him with a mortal garment which he might put off and die and by inspiring a Will into him to die and by allowing his betrayers and murtherers power and opportunity to deliver him up unto death and by so disposing and ordering his death contrary to their malicious designs that by a conformable death he might repair the life of the world according to the speech of Joseph his type Ye thought evil against me but God intended it to good c. to save much people alive Yet did he not constrain his Son to die either immediately predetermining his Will by an antecedent peremptory decree or over-ruling it and taking away the liberty of it by constraint or mediately by giving any coactive power over him into his enemies hand which 't is manifest they had not and though they had the power they had from God yet not for any such end so that God cannot be said to be the cause of his death though he gave them power to kill him no more than he that lends his friend a knife may be said to be the cause of a murder committed with it so that here was no absolute necessity or compulsion either from God or Man only a necessity of consequence there was which as the learned know may consist with things contingent and free agents But he was unwilling to die how then obedient unto death he seemed indeed unwilling to die and that was lest he should seem not to be a man for what maw simply or absolutely was ever willing to die when he would shew in his flesh the weakness of our flesh saith Tertullian he said Father let this Cup pass from me but in order and submission to his Fathers Will he curb'd his own Will and complyed with his Father in eodem volito and was willing to die Read the story of his Passion and see if he be not so O my Father if it be possible let this Cup pass from me nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt Father save me from this hour but for this cause came I unto this hour Yea he was so thirsty after the Cup of his passion that he called Peter Satan for suggesting a contrary motion the Cup which my Father hath given me shall I not drink it The Father gave it him and he took it the Father delivered him up unto death and he delivered himself up unto death Ephes 5.25 both willingly as Zeno Veronensis speaks of Abraham and Isaac which figured out our Lords passion Ille gladium exerit iste cervicem eodem voto c. the one draws out his sword the wicked which is thy sword or a sword of thine saith David and the other puts forth his neck And surely great reason there was for this Joynt-will of the Father and Son touching the death of Christ whether we respect the Righteousness of God or the salvation of Men For whereas the Righteousness of God is either facti of deed whereby he doth all things befitting himself It became him to make the Captain of our salvation perfect through sufferings or dicti of Promise for those things which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his Prophets that Christ should suffer he hath so fulfilled And he suffered for our Salvation the general end which we confess in the Creed which salvation in respect of the term à quo is from sin from the wrath of God for sin from the curse of the Law for sin from eternal death the wages of sin from Satan who hath the power of death in sin Tit. 2.14 Rom. 5. Gal. 3.13 Hos 13.14 For Chrlst by his death put to death these enemies of our Salvation as Sampson his type by his death the Philistines In regard of the term ad quem as we confess in the Collect on Easter day by his death he opened unto us the gate of Everlasting Life that he might bring us unto God 1 Pet. 3.18 that he might bring us unto Glory that by means of death we might receive the promise of the Eternal Inheritance Hebr. 2. and generally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Gregory Nyssen nay summa voluntatis c. the whole summ of Gods will is the salvation of men saith Tertullian So willing
was the Father that Man should be saved that he spared not his only begotten Son and so willing was the Son that he spared not himself but became obedient to his Father even unto death and ought not we to be at least as willing as obedient and that for our own salvation It 's but our duty for hereunto are we called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 a principal duty which the Sacrament requires of us and which every one of us hath promised and vowed solemnly and stand engaged faithfully to perform For as from the death of Christ the Sacraments have their power and efficacy saith the School so their principal end is our conformity to the death of Christ for know ye not that so many of us as are baptized into Jesus Christ are baptized into his death Rom. 6.3 And to speak a word in season because the Church now generally addresses it self to the Holy Communion Know ye not that so often as ye eat that bread and drink that Cup of the Lord ye shew forth the Lords death till he come till his life appear in our mortal body As they relate of Artemesia that she drunk up her husbands ashes in wine and erected unto his memory a stately Monument So the Church the Spouse of Christ erects a monument in her self of Christs death by her conformity thereunto For the Cup of blessing which we bless is it not the communion of the blood of Christ and the bread which we break is it not the communion of the body of Christ 1 Cor. 10.16 But good God how few are there of that crowd of men who call themselves Christians that dare follow Christ down this third step of his Humiliation For do not most men believe that it 's enough that Christ died though they die not that this work is done already to their hand or if they think it their duty do they not put it off till hereafter Let us eat and drink for to morrow wee 'l die Or do they not think to commute this duty and turn it into vain jangling and conceive that it 's enough for them to dispute it out whether Christ died for all men or no But as for conformity to his death few words of that or if words yet but words Nay men are so averse from this duty that I make no question but many would rather part with all their estates than their sins as Rabanus Maurus spake by experience of some who had left large Revenues and Patrimonies that they might embrace a Monastick life and die to the world yet had not left their anger and covetousness but would quarrel for the value of a farthing Nay many would not doubt rather to dye a violent death skin for skin and yield their bodies to be burned in defence of some tenent which they have chosen to hold in Religion than die the spiritual death unto sin For since men of divers and contrary Religions have laid down their lives upon terms of contradiction it may hence be concluded that one of them at the least died in defence of his own will not that he might loose his own will and suffer according to the Will of God so that under their favour who think otherwise it 's no good argument this or that man dyed in defence of such or such a tenent therefore it 's a true tenent But if so few dare follow our Lord down this step to be obedient unto death Quid dicam in crucem tolli What shall I say of that lowest step of his Humiliation He became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross that painful that lingering that infamous that accursed death of the Cross So painful that crux is all one with a torment and cruciare to torment 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there being then in use no torment thought so exquisite But si grave breve no 't was a long a lingering death so that it might be thought a favour even to dye And ad damnum accedit infamia to so great so long a torment add the infamy of it 'T is the most shameful death in the judgement of all men Gentiles Jews and Christians whether we respect the quality of the Malefactors adjudged so to dye 't was the death only of servants and slaves and of those the basest and most notorious Homine libero indignum quamvis nocente saith Lactantius whence St. Paul was slain with the sword because a free-man the other Apostles crucified or put to other deaths because reputed servants Or whether we respect the place where 't was executed without the gate so base so infamous the Gentiles thought it Extra Portam dispersis manibus patibulum habebis saith the Comedian and the Jews account it the greatest reproach of Christans that they worship 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a crucified God Nay St. Paul acknowledges it a most shameful death by opposing Glory and the Cross had they known him they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory 1 Cor. 2.8 And shame and the cross are all one with him Heb. 13.13 and you 'l think no less if ye remember those who they are without the gate for without are dogs and Sorcerers and whore-mongers and murderers and idolaters and whosoever loveth and maketh a lye Apoc. 22. And among these they reckoned the God of Truth the Lord of Life Nay add but to the shame of men the curse of God that it was an execrable death for cursed is every one that is hanged upon a tree and 't will appear to be the worst of all deaths of all punishmens the worst Summo supplicio i. e. cruce afficiuntur saith the Lawyer O who hath done this wickedness this great wickedness and with so high a hand sinned against God! who but Judas and the Jews they contrived and plotted his death and Pilat he adjudged him so to dye though he himself confessed there was no cause of death in him Alas poor Pilat alas poor Jew you bear all the blame but we we Beloved we are the men who have crucified the Lord of Glory we we also have been his betrayers and murderers For 't is not the Plot of the Jews only but the conspiracy also of all ungodly men Morte turpissimâ condemnemus eum Nor were the Jews the only men that crucified him but all the Nations of the Earth Apoc. 1.7 and we among the rest he was crucified in the great City of the Devil as St. Austin understood it which is spiritually call'd Sodom and Egypt Apoc. 11.8 For what do the Priests else but mock when they preach Christ one way and live another what do they else but imprison him when they know the Truth and hold it in unrighteousness Nay what do they else but crucifie him For they who sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the truth they crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and
are spent on this Argument I shall therefore spend no more time in the proof of this point only I shall shew the Reasons of Christ's Resurrection and then make application of it unto our selves The Reasons of Christ's Resurrection are considerable In regard of 1. God who raiseth the dead 2. Christ who is risen from the dead 3. God's People Christian Men and Women who must be raised from the dead 1. All the wayes of the Lord are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mercy and Truth which meet us very oft together in Scripture and God hath engaged them both for the Resurrection of Christ 1. He engaged his Mercy when out of meer Grace and Favour to us He raised up our Lord Jesus Christ as St. Peter blesseth God for it 1 Pet. 1.3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who according to his abundant Mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 2. He engaged his Truth Psal 16. Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption This St. Peter interprets of our Saviour Act. 2.30 31 32. and averrs it to be fulfilled in him 3. He freeth both his engagements at once Act. 13.34 As concerning that he raised him from the dead now no more to return unto corruption He saith on this wise I will give you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sure mercies of David 2. In regard of Christ his Person and Office 1. Such was the dignity of his Person so great was his Power That it was impossible he should be detained by death Act. 2.24 God hath raised up Jesus having loosed the pains or as the Syriack word signifieth the cords of death which are more properly loosed than pains because it was not possible that he should be holden of it and therefore he loosed his bands as easily as Sampson his type brake his cords Destroy this Temple saith he and in three dayes I will raise it up and I have power to lay down my life and I have power to take it up again 2. In regard of his Office of Eternal King and Priest Mediator and Intercessor of his Church none of which could have been performed by him had he been still seized by death 3. In regard of Gods People for all the blessings of God and Christ are centred together in the Church He was delivered for our sins and raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 And this to be the main drift of the Law and Prophets and the summ of Pauls preachings Act. 26.22 23. I continue unto this day witnessing both to small and great saying none other things than those which the Prophets and Moses did say should come that Christ should suffer and that he should be the first that should rise from the dead and should shew light unto the People and to the Gentiles This point is usefull for 1. Instruction 2. Reprehension 3. Information Observe then a pledge and earnest of the Resurrection from the dead It is the Apostles Argument If Christ be risen how say some of you that there is no resurrection from the dead Christ is our Head and he is risen and therefore he must have a body conformable unto him Christ is the first fruits of them that sleep every one in his own order Christ the first fruits afterward those who are Christs 1 Cor. 15. Certain it is then raised we shall be but it concerns us neerly to look to it and provide betimes They that have done good shall come forth to the Resurrection of Life and they that have done evil unto the Resurrection of Condemnation Joh. 5.29 2. Observe how true and faithful our God is in the performance of his great Promise It is the use which St. Paul makes of Christ's Resurrection Act. 13.32 33. We declare unto you glad tydings how that the Promise which was made unto the Fathers God hath fulfilled the same unto us their children in that he hath raised up Jesus again He that is faithfull in little is faithfull also in much So our Lord reasons in regard of us Luk. 16.10 Thou hast been faithful in a few things Mat. 25.21 A rare vertue because commonly men are wont to neglect small things De minimis we say non curat Lex we mean the Humane Law not Divine But we may reason concerning God He who is faithful in much he is faithful also in little for he who hath given us his Son to die for us and to rise again how shall he not together with him freely give us all things For all things are less than he is Rom. 8.32 we depend upon him for eternal happiness and shall we not trust him for temporal blessings We may relie upon him for the salvation of our souls and shall we not relie on him for the support of our bodies If some great Rich Man were bound to pay us such a summ of money we would not doubt of it though he might prove false or break God who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God all-sufficient who can neither be deceived nor deceive hath promised all things necessary for us yea he hath performed one of his greatest promises The Resurrection of the Lord Jesus And shall we not trust him for the less God is true in performing his promises Let us be true and faithful to him to perform our promise at the Sacrament otherwise let us know that God is true also in his threatnings 3. Observe the Truth of Christ's Divinity He was declared to be the Son of God by the Resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 This is a sure guard of our Faith and of the whole Christian Religion 4. Observe the verifying of all those Types and Figures which foreshewed our Lords Death and Resurrection That of Jonas observed by our Saviour Matth. 12.40 That of Daniel delivered from the Den of Lyons and exalted to honour That of Joseph promoted from the Prison to the Throne and called Zaphne Paneanah the Saviour of the world But because his two estates were so different as death and life they were not possible to be figured in any one Creature But the Fathers have observed the like in Nature as that of the Palm-tree which being dead and consumed revives out of its own dust if we may believe the Philosophers or that of the Phaenix which dyes and returns to life out of its own ashes If we may credit Historians Philosophers and the Greek and Latin Fathers who make both these Emblemes of the Resurrection unless it be one and the same story 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek signifying both the Phaenix and the Palm-tree But we need not borrow Types from nature of the Fathers observation The Scripture it self is copious enough in examples more ordinary But that is a most fit one Joh. 12.24 Except a corn of wheat fall into the ground and dye it abideth alone but if it dye it bringeth
things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto Glory to make the Captain of our Salvation perfect through Sufferings Heb. 2.9 10. Wherefore Beloved in the Lord Let us lay aside every weight and the sin that easily besets us and let us run with patience the race that is set before us looking unto Jesus the Author and Finisher of our Faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of the Throne of God 2. The Colossians were raised with Christ For the unfolding of this we must first know what the Resurrection here mentioned is And then 2. How the Colossians may be said to be raised with Christ 1. The Resurrection here meant is that which St. John Apoc. 20.5 6. Calls the first resurrection which is nothing else but a change from the death of sin to the life of Righteousness 2. But how were the Colossians raised with Christ As Christ arose from death to life by inchoation Profession and Worship as ye have heard before so the Colossians and all the Faithful with them are raised from sin the true death of the soul unto righteousness which is the true life so much the Apostle teacheth us Rom. 6.4.5 We are buried saith he with him i. e. Christ by Baptism into Death that like as Christ was raised from the dead by the Glory of the Father even so we should walk in newness of life for if we have been planted with him in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection This Resurrection being in the nature of it a motion it is to be considered according to the terms or extremes of it or according to the tending way or passage from one term or extreme unto another The terms and extremes of it are two spiritual death and life 1. Spiritual death is a separation of God from the Soul as natural death is a separation of the Soul from the body Now as natural death may be considered either in it self or as proceeding from such or such a wound or disease even so spiritual death may be considered either 1. In it self as it is a privation of spiritual life and being dead in trespasses and sins Eph. 2.12 A being without God in the world Eph. 2.12 Or 2. As coming from this or that wound or malady of sin and thus so many several sins so many several deaths Thus Idol-worshipers are dead Hos 13.1 When Ephraim offended in Baal he died 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The wanton widow is dead whilest she lives 1 Tim. 5.6 And the prodigal Son was dead saith his Father of him when he spent his Substance with riotous living Luke 15.14 And so ye have a description of the first term or extreme of this spiritual Resurrection i. e. spiritual death 2. The opposite term is spiritual life the life of righteousness which accordingly may be considered either 1. In it self or 2. The causes of it 1. In it self And thus obedience and life are all one Deut. 32.47 Moses tells the Children of Israel that the observation of the Commandments is no vain thing because saith he it is your life godliness and life are all one 2 Pet. 1.3 His Divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain to life and godliness 2. This life may be considered in the causes of it So to know God is eternal life John 17.3 and to believe To obey is to believe John 20.31 to repent Acts 11.15 And the Prodigal Son returning i. e. the sinner repenting is alive again Luke 15. ult O that we considered aright that every act of obedience tends to eternal life And thus we have considered this spiritual Resurrection in the terms or extremes of it 2. This Resurrection being considered in the tending or way from one extreme unto another it is the passage from death unto life of which our Saviour speaks John 5.24 This passage from death to life may have reference to both extremes 1. From reference to the extreme or term from which i. e. spiritual death or sin This Resurrection is the crucifying of the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 6. The killing the deeds of the flesh by the Spirit Rom. 8.13 2. From reference to the other extreme or term to which this Resurrection is the bringing forth fruit worthy of amendment of life Matth. 3.8 i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 6.9 Such good works as accompany Salvation or are near unto it or touch or lay hold upon it as the word properly signifieth Such as are not far from the Kingdom of God Mark 12.34 And thus the Colossians are here said to be raised with Christ from the spiritual death of sin unto the spiritual life of righteousness Which because it is evident 1. by consequence Chap. 1. and 2. in so many words Chap. 2.12 let us rather enquire into the causes of this Spiritual Resurrection And these we may consider either 1. In Thesi as common to the Colossians with other Christians or else 2. In Hypothesi and in special belonging unto them 1. The common cause is God who raiseth the dead God the Father Son and Spirit for Man by his Fall is so deeply plunged and sunk in sin that not only he cannot rise alone but stands in need also of the whole Trinity to raise him Therefore the Lord raised up a witness in Jacob and a Law in Israel Psal 78.5 which because it is weak through the flesh Rom. 8. and made nothing perfect Hebr. 7.19 nor could give life Gal. 3.21 He raised up Jesus and together with him raiseth up the dead and quickens them And the Son quickens whom he will Joh. 5.21 and so doth the Holy Spirit also Joh. 6.63 But how doth God raise them by an outward or an inward Call for as in the last day the trump shall sound saith St. Paul and the dead shall rise so likewise in this spiritual rising from the dead the Preacher lifts up his Voice like a Trumpet and calls to every one Awake thou that sleepest and arise from the dead And unto this outward Call is annexed as the power and vertue of it the inward Call the voice of Christ speaking from him Hebr. 12.25 and lifting up his voice aloud unto us like a Cryer as to such as are dead as to Lazarus in the grave or as to such as are afar off Ephes 2.17 whereunto we assenting and believing arise from the dead and Christ giveth us life This lest any one should question Christ himself confirms it over and over with a double asseveration Verily verily I say unto you he that heareth my words and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life Verily verily I say unto you the hour is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they
that hear shall live But these causes of Spiritual Resurrection are common to the Colossians with other of Gods Saints who are risen from the death of sin There were two other causes more peculiar unto them whereof the one at home with them the other from abroad 1. That at home were Earth-quakes wherewithall the City of Colosse was often shaken by reason whereof Strabo reckons that City in his time among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the smaller towns of the lesser Phrygia which Xenophon almost four hundred years before him had called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a rich and great City which then as yet had not been defaced and in part ruined by Earthquakes as afterward it was These Earthquakes we may well assign as an instrumental cause and means which the Lord used for the Colossians Spiritual Resurrection for as when the earth did quake and the rocks rent many bodies arose out of their graves saith St. Matth. 27 51 52. So 't is more than probable that upon the like terrours and punishments of the Colossians whence that City is said to have the name Coloss from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth punishment many souls arose from custom in sin as from their graves unto the life of Righteousness the ruine and destruction of the City proving the raising edifying and building up of the Citizens in their most holy Faith Thus upon that great Earthquake of that great City Apoc. 11.13 wherein the tenth part of the City fell and seven thousand men were slain the remnant were affrighted and gave glory to the God of heaven The Prophet Isaiah speaks fitly to this purpose When the judgements of God are in the earth the inhabitants of the earth will learn Righteousness Isa 26.9 The Lord be mercifull unto us and grant us such Grace that his goodness may lead us to repentance but if judgements shall be needful he sanctifie them unto us and vouchsafe them a saving effect unto us as he did to these Colossians So ye have the first cause peculiar to the Colossians 2. The second cause of the Colossians Resurrection more peculiar unto them was the good neighbourhood of the Seven Churches of Asia Apoc. 2.3 For as there is alwayes aliquid mali propter vicinum malum some evil from an evil neighbour so on the contrary alwayes aliquid boni some good from a good neighbour Such were the seven Churches of Asia to the Church of Coloss all good neighbours to it and surely they are our best neighbours who are most advantageous unto our souls as these Churches were For as the Vine ariseth by the Elm the Hop by the Pole the Ivy by the Oak the smoak by the stock and generally the weak in all kinds are supported by the strong even so the Colossians were raised up and supported by their stronger neighbours especially the Ephesians Philadelphians and Laodiceans and these latter and the Colossians helped one the other to arise from Sin unto the Life of Righteousness by the Apostles appointment as appears Col. 4.16 When this Epistle is read amongst you cause that it be read also in the Church of the Laodiceans and that ye likewise read the Epistle to Laodicea An Epistle I have seen under that name but I question whether dictated by the same Spirit Now 't is the Apostles Doctrine to the Ephesians That so labouring we should support the weak Act. 20.35 And now these Colossians according to our Saviours charge to St. Peter Thou being converted strengthen thy brethren they being themselves raised up from the spiritual death in sin unto the life of Righteousness They may help to raise us up also if we lay hold on their Example and make use and application of it unto our selves Observe and admire with me I beseech ye the unspeakable goodness and mercy of our God who would not suffer us utterly to perish in sin and death but so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son to die and rise again for us That whosoever believeth on him should not perish in death but arise again with him unto the everlasting life If we examine the matter more accurately we shall find that our God had no motive without himself and that it was and is his meer Grace Goodness and Mercy that moved him to raise up the Colossians and us and all other faithful men and women from the death of Sin unto the life of Righteousness For although it be true that our God hath a prescience and foreknowledge of all those who are to be raised from the spiritual death and to be made conformable to the image of his Son in the Resurrection unto Life Rom. 8.29 contrary to their impious Opinion who conceive it altogether contingent yet lest he might be thought to see any thing in us deserving a Resurrection from the dead the Scripture saith expresly that we are then dead in trespasses and sins when this work is begun upon us and ascribes it wholly unto Gods Love Qui non invenit sed facit objectum suum it finds us not but makes us lovely as being then enemies when Christ died for the love of us But because it cannot be denied but that LOVE in the nature of it is carried as well to a deserving as an undeserving object though it is impossible that we should deserve any thing at Gods hand the Scripture therefore joyns to the Love of God his Mercy which represents not merit or desert but misery And both these motives ye have together Ephes 2.4 5 6. God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith he loved us even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us together with Christ by grace ye are saved see how purposely he excludes all merit and hath raised us up together with Christ 2. Observe what is the most fruitful way of meditating and handling as all other actions of our Saviour so especially this of his Resurrection Omnis Christi actio nostra est instructio all actions of Christ and so this of his Resurrection are instructions to us not that we shall speak much of it as it was of his own person alone for so it is so evident out of the Evangelists story of it that all professing Christianity easily yield unto it But as the Saints and Holy Ones of God have been or else now are or may be followers and partakers of it Thus St. Paul taught the Romans and us That like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the Glory of the Father even so they and we should arise and walk in newness of life That having been planted together according to the likeness of his death we should be also planted together according to the likeness of his Resurrection Rom. 5. and 6. Thus he taught the Corinthians and us That God hath both raised up the Lord Jesus and will also raise up us by his own power 1 Cor. 6.14 And he who raised up the Lord Jesus shall also
in misery adviseth them to supply their wants that 's well yet but he would not that they should be inwardly afflicted with their wants His Reason O it damps a noble Spirit This is counsel I am sure that savours not of a Christian spirit I hope none of our Gentlemen follow it though the book be in most mens hands This is to be cloathed with the lofty spirit and merciless bowels of the old man not with the tender bowels and compassions of the new Man He that is of this mind judgeth himself at least implicitly that he is no member of the Body of Christ That requires not only the drawing out of the purse but the drawing out of thy soul to the hungry and satisfying the afflicted soul Esay 58.10 That requires not only the outward clothing of mercy but the inward and largest bowels of it Yet well it were for poor and miserable men were there more of his mind as ye know St. Paul would have the Gospel preached upon any terms And the like we may say of putting on this outward coat of mercy for surely 't is a more comely habit than theirs who put on a gay outward coat of mercifulness yet have an inward cloak of unmercifulness Such hypocrites as do their alms and all their good works only to be seen of men Matth. 6.1 Who draw near unto God with their hands but their hearts are far from him These are like some Gallants I have heard of who make all the shifts they can to get a fair sute that they may be fine though they want a shirt under it I am sure we may say truly of this Garment of mercy that the worst piece is in the midst Yet I know not whether I should prefer these before such as have both inward and outward Garments of mercy yet they extend their bowels only unto some few and those only of their own Sect and Fraternity and are morose and churlish towards all others Would God this were not a moth fretting the garment even of religious profession O Beloved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A good man is a common good So Aquinas calls justice and mercy bona alterius I know Beloved there is a difference to be observed as I told you before for all men are not capable of the same mercy nor of mercy in the same degree especially spiritual of some have compassion Jud. 22 23. Yet mercy is to be shewn in some kinds unto all especially by the Saints of God who are to be lights in a crooked generation which give light though not so much yet light they give to those who are afar off And as when we look wishly upon some one thing which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used Act. 1.10 and 3.4 we look also upon all things about that one thing we behold so earnestly we must look with the eye of pity upon all afflicted though we look most wishly upon the houshold of Faith And in this sence as I conceive St. Peter bid us add unto brotherly love charity or love unto all men 2 Pet. 1. And our Saviour gives us a reason If ye love them saith he which love you what thank have ye Luk. 6.32 For sinners also love those that love them and if ye do good to them which do good to you what thank have ye For sinners also do even the same and if ye lend to them of whom ye hope to receive what thank have ye For sinners also lend to sinners and receive as much again But love ye your enemies and do good and lend hoping for nothing again and your reward shall be great and ye shall be the children of the highest for he is kind unto the unthankful and to the evil Be ye therefore merciful as your Father also is merciful We have many merciful as many Fathers and Mothers are who can afford all outward necessaries yea and superfluities unto their Children sometimes beyond their rank meerly to please their own eye pamper their Childrens bodies with dainty fair and fit them early for the entertainment of sensual lusts and make them proud betimes with gay clothes and like the old Ape spoil their Children with cockering them fat them like Sheep for the slaughter Such as can perhaps afford the poor also convenient supply of things necessary for the maintenance of their bodies as bread and meat that perisheth and yet mean time not care how miserable how poor how blind how naked their souls are How destitute of that food which endures unto everlasting life Joh. 6. These are evil mercies to pamper the body and starve the soul Beloved What know we whether a little good counsel given with our alms though never so small suppose two mites may convey sight to the blind hearing unto the deaf feet to the lame saving health unto the soul-sick man and to the dead in trespasses and sins eternal life Whether the Garment of mercy may save the soul from death and cover a multitude of sins Jam. 5.20 Thus thus to feed the poor 't is to give him Angels food to make him drink into one spirit with us Thus to cloth him 't is to array him with a robe of righteousness This is to supply his natural and spiritual wants his wants of body and soul both This is to be merciful as our Father which is in heaven is merciful But there are many counterfeits Hath not thy cruelty made them such saith St. Chrysostom There are many idle Then let them not eat I am not cruel in denying such their food Even the God of mercies who takes a special care of the poor of all other he commands that he that labours not should not eat Yet here is a difference to be made between those evils which move our pity whether they be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 troublesome or deadly If thus let us be merciful as our Father which is in heaven is merciful he would have no man perish Wherefore in this case we must not be too inquisitive as whether he fell into his poverty by idleness unthriftiness or lewdness or rather by casualty Whether he called for it or it came upon him unsent for like an armed man The house may be burnt down while we stand inquiring how the fire was kindled whether by chance or wilfully Rather let us like a good Physician as speedily as we can cure a dangerous disease than make enquiry whether the patient fell into it by his own fault or no All these though otherwise blame-worthy yet are merciful in some degree But others there are who have no bowels at all but think 't is mercy enough to have a velleity half a will to be merciful and fondly conceive that the merciful God accepts that will for the deed I pray God that there be not such a conceit among those who pretend Religion But let such know that God then only accepts the will for the deed when the deed cannot be done These
Axiom Lay hold on the Eternal Life Wherein two things must be explained 1. What the Eternal Life is 2. What it is to lay hold of it 1. Life is either 1. of Nature and that either Vegetative Sensitive or Rational 2. of Sin 3. of Grace one and the same man may live them all successively 2. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth either 1. to lay hold on that which is in danger to perish as Heb. 2.16 He layeth hold on the Seed of Abraham Or 2. To lay hold on that which may keep us from perishing and so the Seed of Abraham layeth hold on Christ And in this latter sence the word is here used and signifieth a further act of Faith a laying hold on the object of it Eternal Life for so Faith is carried to a double object 1. The Righteousness and life of God lost in us 2. The Power of God or Christ for the subduing of the sin intervening and coming beween us and God his Righteousness and the Eternal Life When therefore through the power of God we have fought the good fight of Faith and subdued the sin that 's the first act here commanded Then lay hold upon the Righteousness and Life of God and this here seems to be a Metaphor to lay hold on the Eternal Life is taken from Runners or such as strive in Games for the brabium the reward Observe This if well considered may set an high price upon the true Christian Life and may shame them who sleight and undervalue it Is it not the Life of God good Angels and good Men Is it not the Life that lasts for ever even the Eternal Life Exhort 1. To lay hold on this Life Exhort 2. To fight that good fight Motives 2. 1. Melchizedeck will help us 2. The Righteous are scarcely saved Sign Is Christ Jesus thy Lord No man can call Christ Jesus the Lord but by the Holy Ghost Means 1. Follow the Spirit Galat. 5.16 17. 2. Fighting is a necessary means for the obtaining of the prize Col. 1.24 2 Cor. 1.6 Rom. 6.8 3. If thou wilt enter into Life keep the Commandments 4. Pray to the Lord to restore thine hand dryed up like Jeroboams but perhaps he hath given thee strength already stretch out thine hand stretch it out to the poor and needy this is the means which the Apostle prescribes vers 18 19. Axiom 3. The obtaining of Eternal Life requires our utmost endeavour fighting laying hold running striving to enter From the dayes of John the Baptist the kingdom of heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force press forward unto the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Jesus Christ Observ 1. Here is a means for the lengthning our short life Lay hold upon the Eternal Life See Notes on James 4.14 Observ 2. The transcendent eminency of the life of God whereunto we are exhorted it 's the Eternal Life whatever other life is but short and temporal for what is your life saith St. James Jacob said of his dayes that they were few and evil What is your sinful life pleasures of sin for a season A lying tongue is but for a moment In Gods wayes is continuance Isa 64.16 The Prize is here the Image of God the Life of God the Divine Nature which consists in all righteousness in humility meekness patience c. all which are in the Living God the consequents whereof are the peace of conscience and ravishing and glorious joy in the Holy Ghost which accompany the Eternal Life where ever it is in God Angels or Men so far forth as they are capable of it or it communicable unto them Now that Eternal Life consists in these is proved Psal 24.3 Who shall ascend into the hill of God i. e. obtain Eternal Life vers 5. He shall receive the blessing and righteousness so that the blessing of Eternal Life is Righteousness Christ praying against his enemies saith Let them not enter into thy Righteousness Psal 69.27 Prov. 12.28 The way of Righteousness is life Prov. 21.21 He that followeth after Righteousness and Mercy shall find Life Righteousness and Honour Isa 46.13 I bring near my Righteousness and my Salvation shall not tarry So that Life Righteousness and Salvation are all one Isa 51.5 and 56.1 Joh. 1.4 In him was Life and that life was the Light of men that Light of men is Righteousness Goodness and Truth Ephes 5.8 9. Light in the 8th vers is so expounded v. 9. therefore the Light and Life of men is the blessed fruit of the Spirit in Righteousness Goodness and Truth Jam. 1.12 2 Tim. 4.8 A crown of Life is a crown of Righteousness 2 Pet. 1. According as his Divine Power hath given unto us all things pertaining to Life and Godliness which are the same and Glory and Virtue the same Object 1. Eternal Life is not to be enjoyed in this world but the life of Righteousness may be obtained Resp It may be enjoyed in some measure as we see in Zacheus Luk. 19.9 Prov. 11.31 The Righteous shall be recompensed in the earth not in outward blessings but inward and spiritual for 1 Cor. 15.19 If in this life we have only hope c. there is no hope in the other life for faith and hope cease 1 Cor. 13. 1 Joh. 3.14 We are passed from death to life and vers 15. No murderer hath Eternal Life abiding in him compare the first vers with the 14th you shall see that he that loves in truth hath Eternal Life abiding in him Object 2. We are in the way to not in the life Resp True as Childhood is a way to perfect age yet Righteousness c. are the true Eternal Life life in their measure as childhood is manhood in the nature of it Object 3. Eternal Life is a life of joy pleasure happiness Resp Not a Turkish happiness is here described but a Christian not in meats and drinks but in Righteousness Peace and Joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14.17 Object 4. Two Kingdoms there are one of Grace the other of Glory Resp The words of both are said to be the words of this life Act. 5.20 The Scripture speaks but of one Kingdom Repent for the kingdom of heaven is at hand 'T is true there are several degrees yet the lowest degree is a participation of the glorious life We are changed into the same Image from Glory to glory i. e. from one degree of Grace into another 2 Tim. 4.8 A crown of Righteousness is Jam. 1.12 a crown of Life and 1 Pet. 5.4 a crown of Glory to shew that Righteousness Life and Glory are one and the same thing so Peter confounds Godliness with Life and Glory with Virtue 2 Pet. 1.3 And lest we should cavil and say that Godliness is the way to Life and Virtue the way to Glory he puts them in an inverse order doubtless not without a Divine instinct All this proceeds from meer Grace from the beginning to the end
whereas there are two Adams the earthly and the heavenly where the earthly fails the heavenly makes supply what the earthly man polluted and defiled the heavenly man must purge and make clean 1 Joh. 2.1 2. If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father This is he who came from Edom Esay 63.1 with red garments from Bozrah Edom signifieth red and notes the earthly man of flesh and blood The Prophet their describes Christ's coming victoriously from his conquest of the earthly man subduing him unto himself He came from Bozrah from conquering the strong hold of Edom the earthly man So Bozrah signifieth a fortress or strong-hold that fortress which the strong man held until a stronger than he came Luk. 11. and took away his armour from him wherein he trusted So our Apostle the best interpreter of that place of Esay Heb. 2.14 15. For as much as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death i. e. the devil and deliver them who through the fear of death were all their life long subject unto bondage So the Lord exercised upon the Devil the legem talionis whereby he who did injury should suffer the like Levit. 24.20 Satan had ejected Christ out of his Kingdom bringing in Idolatry and Superstition into the world And therefore now is the judgement of this world saith our Saviour Joh. 12. i. e. the world shall now be set free from Satan so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth now the prince of this world shall be cast out And whereas Satan was the cause of Christ's death Christ avenged that of Satan which was to him instead of death Joh. 8.16 The prince of this world is judged Thus 1 Cor. 15.54 55 56 57. This purging Beloved we must not gaze upon as a thing done 1600 years since only and wrought to our hand The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is in the present Tense so likewise in the Latin here faciens and so it 's a continued act figured by Gods leading the people out of Egypt through the red Sea not that the Sea was red or the Sand in the bottom of it as many have thought but from Edom which signifieth red that Sea bordering upon the Land of Idumea o● Edoms land which the Poets call Eritheus or Erytheius Through this Sea the Lord leads his people continually and purgeth them by the spiritual waters of it from the power of the spiritual Pharaoh and the Egyptians which signifie our sins according to the interpretation of Micha 7.15 19. So that the Lord may say properly enough to every one of us whom he hath purged from his sins that in the Preface to the Commandments I am the Lord thy God who hath brought thee out of the land of Egypt It is also true in this sence that by his stripes we are healed Esay 53.5 by his active stripes Prov. 20.30 The blewness of a wound is a purging medicine cleansing away evil So do stripes the inward parts of the belly such stripes and correction of wisdom are never out of time saith the wise man Ecclus. 22.6 they are continued for the Lord scourgeth every son whom he receiveth Heb. 12.6 that he may make him partaker of his holiness vers 10. Reason 1. In regard of God the Father Hab. 3.13 He wills not the death of a sinner Ezeck 18. Rom. 3.25 26. God the Father hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through Faith in his blood God is pure 1 Joh. 3.3 He loves his own Image and the restauration of it in his creature and therefore works out whatever is contrary thereunto chastens him corrects him purgeth him that he may make him partaker of his holiness Heb. 12.10 He hates the sin of his creature and so desires that his creature should separate from it For this end he shut up all under unbelief and sin that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 11.32 Reason 2. In regard of 1. The Son of God and his ends why he came into the world to destroy and dissolve and purge out of us the works of the Devil Iniquity was bound up in the bearts of children by their first birth Prov. 22.15 Satan bound it up there And our Lord he came to dissolve and unloose that work of the Devil 1 Joh. 3.8 This was figured by our Saviours loosing the woman whom Satan had bound Luk. 13.16 2. He himself bare our sins in his own body on the tree that we being dead to sin should live unto righteousness 1 Pet. 2.24 3. Christ hath once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us unto God 1 Pet. 3.18 God creates us for his glory If we should be still polluted with sin we shall be to his dishonour As if a man had a special plaister for a sore and let it lye by him and made no use of it we have wounds and putrified sores c. and we let them fester it may cost us our lives Esay 1.5 6 7. he binds and makes application of the plaister vers 16.20 Prov. 16.6 by mercy and truth iniquity is purged and by the fear of the Lord men depart from evil Object 1. If we be purged from our sins how is it that we are as yet so polluted with our sins or since we are so polluted how are we purged Answ 1. We must distinguish between the impetration or obtaining redemption for us Heb. 9.12 and the Application which is by faith Act. 15.9 2. We must know that Christs purging of us is not only to be understood as an act passed but also as an act continued as I shewed before 1 Joh. 1.7.9 That fountain Zach. 13.1 Set open for Judah and Jerusalem to wash in cleanseth and purgeth the Generations of believers and runs along with them as that water is said to have done 1 Cor. 10.4 They drunk of that rock that followed them or went along with them For as a living Fountain whatever filth is cast into it it purgeth it out again contrary to a pool or standing water which cannot purge it self but becomes more and more putrified And as they who tread the Vintage go into the troughs with all their filth and nastiness but there is a vigour and life in the blood of the grape which purgeth all filth and works it out again even so the Blood and Spirit of Christ like a living Fountain where-ever it is purgeth and cleanseth out all filth contrary to it's spirit And as our Apostle reasons Heb. 9.13 14. If the blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ Object 2. If Christ hath wrought the purging of our sins why are we exhorted still to purge them Answ Christ and Believers are often in Scripture said to
wherein they are as S. Paul did 1 Cor. 9.20 Some are Professors i. e. Jews He who hath attained unto the true freedom to the Professors he becomes as a Professor some think they are bound by their own strength to be obedient unto the Law to become unto such as one of them to them who account themselves free from the Law and without as one without the Law What should a man be a Libertine Should he rant because others rant No the Apostle having said to them who are without the Law as without the Law adds though under the Law unto Christ There are some weak ones even as babes and children to them he became as weak So did the Apostle to the Galatians Gal. 4.19.20 They were children he speaks to them as unto children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I desire to be with you and change my voice as a Nurse doth to a child 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so 1 Cor. 3. to speak 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as mothers use diminutives to their little ones so the Lord calls Israel by the name of Jeshurun i. e. Rectule from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my little right one Esay 44.2 Observ 5. Take notice then how near the Lord Jesus is unto all those who are willing towards him and towards his righteousness That appears from the word in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he is a near neighbour to us Deut. 4.7 The word is near thee Rom. 10.8 9 10. Cant. 2.9 He dwells in our house of clay Job 19. appears in our flesh and blood as John 1.14 He looks through the windows His eyes are intentive upon us observing what we do and what we suffer Flourishing or blossoming Where-ever he takes part of flesh and blood he discovers himself in fruitfulness Through the Lattices He lets in light into our souls for such light belongs to the children as through a glass darkly 1 Cor. 13.12 Observ 6. Take notice what a mighty Divine power inhabits our humanity even the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the indwelling Divinity the Christ the power of God He lays hold of us if we be the Seed of Abraham see what a blameless holy sober just patient long-suffering humble meek obedient life he lived among wicked men in this world he gave us an example and pattern of the same life and if we be the Seed of Abraham Believers in him he is the principle of the same life in us also for know ye not that Christ Jesus is in you unless ye be cast-aways He is in us to impower us to the same holy sober righteous humble meek patient long-suffering obedient life the life of God Wherefore either acknowledge thy self an unbeliever and none of Abrahams Seed or apply thy self to the same principle of life in whom thou pretendest to abide and dwell in him and he in thee for he who saith he abideth in him ought himself so to walk as he walked 1 John 2.6 It is not enough that Christ so walked for he therefore so walked that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. Exhort The love of the children constrained the Lord Jesus to take upon him our nature O let the love of Christ constrain us to love him again and conform our selves unto him that as his love inclined him to partake of our nature which was meerly beneficial to us so much more may our love to him incline us to him that we may partake of his Divine nature having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lusts Among all these reasons whether from the impulsive causes or from the ends for which our Lord took flesh and blood we find not one wherein the Lord Jesus sought himself or any self interest that which among most men is commonly the first mover and the last end that finds no place at all in our Lords so great condescent all he aimed at was the Will of his Father and the good of his Children Joh. 10.15 18. But though he aimed not at any end of his own but at his brethrens good yet no end he aimed at was that we should live as we list but unto him 2 Cor. 5. That they who lived should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him that died for them and rose again More NOTES on HEBREWS II. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood c. Axioms 1. THe Devil hath the power of death 2. Christ took part of flesh and blood c. that he might destroy the devil 3. That he might deliver them that through the fear of death were all their life long subject to bondage In these words we have two Articles of the Christian Faith 1. That Christ was born of the Virgin Mary 2. That he suffered under Pontius Pilate 1. The Devil hath the power of death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hitherto we have heard some causes alledged and implyed why our Lord took part of flesh and blood 1. The Children were his brethren for the sanctifier and they who are sanctified are all of one His love to his brethren inclined him as our Apostle now shews us the ends why our Lord was partaker of flesh and blood and these are in order one to other he took part of flesh and blood 1. That he might die 2. He took part c. and died that by death he might destroy 3. He took part c. died and destroyed that he might deliver those 4. He took part died that by power of his death he might deliver that he might be in all things like unto his brethren that he might be a mercifull and faithful high Priest The first end is implyed and considered only as a means to the second He took part c. that by death c. wherein are two things 1. That the Devil hath the power of death 2. Christ took part 1. that he might destroy him that had it and 2. that he might deliver those who feared Quaere What are meant by 1. Death 2. the power of Death 3. the Devil 4. how the Devil may be understood to have the power of death 1. Death being generally a privation is best known by what is opposite thereunto which is Life Now Life is either 1. Natural as of Plants Animals or Rational Creatures or else 2. Spiritual that which by eminency is called the Life of God in all holiness and righteousness which God requireth And therefore Death opposite hereunto is either 1. Natural or 2. Spiritual both kinds of death may be here understood 1. The Natural Death for God having said in the day that thou eatest thereof moriendo morieris by eating thereof Man became liable to death which became natural to his posterity And 2. That not only a separation of the soul from the body but also an immersion or as it were imprisoning the Soul 1. In a more gross inert and sluggish body of the Elements than the Soul was at first
Christ himself they who say thus are worthy to take part with it Wisdom They consider not that they make the end of Christ's coming vain and frustrate which was Joh. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dissolve the works of the Devil yea they consider not that they act their adversaries part and establish purgatory by as strong an argument as any can be brought for it for if sin cannot be destroyed in this life then in reason there must be a time when it must be destroyed which is not they say in this life therefore in the other and that before we enter into the holy City for nothing that defiles enters thereinto Revel 21.27 nothing that defileth c. and what defileth ye read Matth. 15.19 20. Observ 4. Through death he destroyed him who hath the power of death Take notice of that great victory over all the inferiour powers sin death hell devil which received their deaths wound by the death of Christ in all believers Plutarch relates a story in his treatise concerning the defects of Oracles that a ship bound for Italy passing by the Island Pana a voice was heard from the Island calling the Master of the Ship thrice by his name Thamus This voice the Passengers and Marriners all heard And Thamus answering the voice was heard to say thus when thou passest by Palodes declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were all astonished at the voice and when the ship drew near to Palodes Thamus said as he was bidden to say Pan the great is dead he had scarce ended those few words when there was heard from the place a pittiful groaning and lamenting mixt with admiration and that not of one or a few but of many The news of this came to Rome and Thamus the Master of the Ship was sent for to come to Tiberius Caesar to testifie the truth of it I cannot determine what the intention of this voice might be but I relate the story the rather because it fell out in the time of Tiberius in whose reign the Lord Jesus suffered death under Pontius Pilat I say not nor is it fit to say Quicquid Graecia mendax Audet in historia But Orpheus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I call Pan that mighty God of all the world the whole Kingdom of heaven the sea the earth and fire Whatever he might mean assuredly the Lord Jesus is the Lord of all as I shewed before And he by his death destroyed him who had the power of death which happily might occasion that lamentable groaning of the evil Angels This is the rather to be taken notice of because the Apostle Col. 2.15 tells us that the Lord Jesus having spoiled principalities and powers c. which all understand of the Devil and his Angels This was meant by what we read in Joshuah concerning the King of Jericho King of Ai King of Jerusalem c. in all thirty one Kings reckoned up Jos 12.9 24. whereof some were crucified others slain with the sword By which the Ancients understand the infernal Principalities and Powers whereof St. Paul makes mention Col. 2. Of these mention is made expresly of the King of Ai whom Joshuah hang'd on a tree Josh 8.29 The Septuagint here have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hang'd him on a double or a twofold tree One of the pious Ancients gives a reason of it There is a twofold power of the Cross one whereon Christ suffers in the flesh on the other the Devil and his Angels are triumphed over Repreh 1. The unbelieving world which although the Lord Jesus become the great Light that enlightneth every man and hath brought life and immortality to light through the Gospel yet they believe not any such power imparted unto men Matth. 9.8 but love the darkness more than the light Joh. 3. they believe not to come out of darkness Job 15.22 Joh. 16.9 and 8.24 The spirit reproves the world of sin because they believe not in him I have overcome the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Repreh 2. Who highly commend and magnifie the Victories of Christ over sin death and him that hath the power of death but find no such victory in themselves but rather that the Devil with all his infernal spirits rules in them One praised Hercules who was asked quis vituperat Christ's Victory is exceeding worthy our praise But the Faith of these men looks backward at what they think is done to their hand quae volumus facilé credimus not forward whereas true Faith is progressive Heb. 11. But it 's much better to find the power of the Devil destroyed in our selves Exhort Forasmuch as Christ hath suffered in the flesh arm your selves also with the same mind 1 Pet. 4.1 It is the Lords main design Amos 9.8 Behold the eyes of the Lord are upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Regnum peccati to root it out and I will destroy it from of the face of the earth This is the end of Christ's coming in the flesh Joh. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sign He who hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin Mean Believe in the Lord Jesus NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON HEBREWS II. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And that he might deliver those who through the fear of death were all their life long subject to bondage THe translation of these words differs from the original Greek as I shall shew anon Mean time let us consider the words as we find them This is the second end of Christ's suffering death that he might deliver those who through fear of death were subject to bondage The first end is in order unto this for he therefore destroyed him who had the power of death that he might deliver those who through fear of death were all their life long subject unto bondage In the words are contained 1. The condition wherein Christ the Redeemer finds men 2. Their deliverance by Christ out of that condition 1. They who are not yet delivered by Christ are subject to bondage 2. They are subject to bondage by the fear of death 3. All their life Christ suffered death that he might deliver c. 1. Bondage 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bind whence bondage servitude and a bondman or from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 timidity it answers to the latin servitude servus a servant which is either a servando or serviendo 1. Servando because being taken captive in war they were saved from death or kept alive and sold The Apostle describes this Servando Rom. 7.23 24. Unto this bondage they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifieth obnoxious or liable unto So Vul. Latin Obnoxii erant servituti obnoxious or liable unto bondage so that it doth imminere So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth to hang over ones head to lay in wait for one as Mark 6.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Luk. 11.53 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Devil
was in them did signifie when it testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glories that should follow What time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth the particular season or opportunity which the Scripture calls the fulness of time when God sent his Son Gal. 4. What manner of time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This notes the coincidence and concurrence of things in the same time when Christ should appear and his Gospel be preached in the world As for the former what time the Prophet Daniel makes search and is taught by Gabriel Dan. 9.25 26. seventy weeks Jacob points at the time after the Scepter should depart from Judah Gen. 49.10 Malachy after the preaching of John Baptist Mal. 3.1 And the Prophet Esdras gives as clear a testimony of the time when the Messiah should appear as any of them all 2 Esd 7.28 My Son Jesus shall be reveiled with those that be with him and they that remain shall rejoyce within four hundred years 2. As for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manner of time that points at the very worst of times when the Messiah shall be cut off saith Gabriel Dan. 9. when my Son Christ shall die and not he only but all men also that have life 2 Esd 7.29 that notes the Primitive Persecutions of all those who had yet the life of God with them But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath respect also unto the latter times even those whereof our Lord speaks Matt. 24.12 When iniquity should abound and the love of many should wax cold Those times whereof St. Paul also speaks 2 Tim. 3.1 2. Then the sufferings of Christ or Christian sufferings must needs abound by reason of the abundance of iniquity when the daily sacrifice shall be taken away Reason The dignity and worth of those hidden things into which not only the Prophets and holy men of God but even the Angels also desired to look into them Object It seems then that the Holy Prophets were guilty of curiosity if they pryed and searched into these times of the Gospel surely no for they they searched not after vanities nor sought they after things too high for them nor were their searchings into speculations but practical truths the sufferings which lead unto Christ and follow Glories Nor did they follow the guidance of their own fancy and imagination but the guidance of the spirit of Christ Observ Hence appears the truth of that which our Lord testifieth That many Prophets and Kings have desired to see the things that his Disciples saw and had not seen them and to hear those things which they had heard c. Repreh 1. Those who pry and search into the word of God not by the Spirit of God and Christ but by their own Spirit The Prophet Ezechiel 13.3 denounceth a woe against such Wo unto the foolish Prophets that follow their own Spirit and have seen nothing These search not by the Spirit of Christ which is not in them but by the Spirit of Antichrist The old Serpent is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which hath his name from prying and searching into things that belong not to him Repreh 2. Those that search after though the great things of the Gospel yet not that they may live and practise them but only that they may know them Thus many abuse that place Joh. 5.39 40. Which words are Indicative not Imperative as if any shall look into them diligently he will easily find Thus many upon this and the like days set apart to hear the word of God there is much searching into the Scriptures but is it that we may learn our Duty and practise it that we may find what sufferings of Christ are required of us in hope of the following Glories Alas who knoweth not the common guise of most men to busie themselves on these days and turn their Bibles over but let them lye on the dusty shelf all the week after Exhort Let us suffer out those sufferings which lead us unto Christ After those sufferings follow the Glories Yea these sufferings work our Salvation 2 Cor. 1.6 They work for us an eternal weight of glory 2 Cor. I dare not make the way to life easier or broader than indeed it is It 's called by these terrible names death c. Vide Notes in Rom. 6.8 Exhort NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON I PETER II. 1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore laying aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envyings and evil speakings As new born babes desire the sincere milk of the word that ye may grow thereby THe Apostle having in the end of the former Chapter propounded unto us the lasting the everlasting spiritual food the living word of God vers 23.24.25 In the words I have read he 1. Removes what might hinder and dull our appetite laying aside all malice c. Then 2. He stirs up and quickens us thereunto The first words therefore vers 1. may be considered either 1. In themselves Or 2. With reference to the former and to those which follow vers 2. 1. In themselves they are an exhortation To lay aside all malice and all guile and hypocrisies and envyings and evil speakings so the Syriack turns the words hortatively of which something must be spoken 1. More generally as belonging to them all in common That 2. We may more presly and properly speak of every one of them in particular 1. Generally therefore the Apostle exhorts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render diversly in divers places as Ephes 4. 1. To put off the old man and so the word hath reference to a garment that is to be put off which is there called the old man Eph. 4.21 And thus malice guile hypocrisies envies and evil speakings are as the old man's corrupt rotten wardrobe which is to be put off 2. It 's rendred also Jam. 1.21 To lay apart and so we may understand the Apostle there according to his main drift c. Vide Notes in Jam. 1.21 And thus malice guile hypocrisies envies and evil speakings are as it were all weeds to be rooted out and removed that the incorruptible seed may thrive and grow up in us 3. But here as appears by vers 2 3. the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth so to lay aside as ill humours are removed which vitiate and distemper the Palate and thus malice c. are as corrupt and vicious humours Because the Metaphor is taken from things so different I shall not confine my self to any one of them but use them indifferently as they come in my way Doubt But doth the Apostle exhort those who were begotten again unto a living hope c. For so he saith 1 Pet. 1.3 Doth he exhort these to lay aside all malice c. Were not all these laid aside at their Baptism It is true at their Baptism they renounced all these as we do such was that ancient form
came that we might have life and that more abundantly Joh. 10.10 2 Pet. 1. That we become trees of Righteousness Isai 61.3 that we be full of the fruits of Righteousness which are in Christ Jesus to the praise and glory of God Phil. 1.11 Ezech. 37. The Lord sets the Prophet in the middest of a valley full of dry bones Beloved what are we by corrupt Nature but even dry bones void of the life of God and the Righteousness of Jesus Christ sensual having not the spirit until the Lord put his spirit of peace and unity into us The Preacher of Righteousness therefore must first enquire whether the son of peace be in the house bone comes unto its bone then come the sinews even power and strength to corroborate union and love among men to break the power of ungodliness What we turn trees of Righteousness is Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vul. Lat. fortes justitiae Isa 61.3 Then comes flesh upon him the tender flesh whereby he may commiserate and compassionate all the afflictions and miseries of others For therefore is the man clad with flesh that he might have a fellow-feeling of his brothers miseries his infirmities poverty sickness c. Hebr. universal Righteousness is preserved with Mercy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then the skin covers the flesh even the beauty and comliness of the outward Life and Righteousness but all this was done yet was there no breath in them vers 8. The Preacher therefore of Righteousness who is a Minister of the Spirit is here necessary who may pray for the Spirit of Holiness and Righteousness that the dead ones may live the life of God Untill this come to pass whatever and howsoever we have our natural gifts and parts as wit memory reason eloquence all this while the body is but dead and naked all is but barrenness c. untill the spirit of life and holiness be poured upon us from on high c. Isai 32.14 15. Then judgement shall dwell in the wilderness and righteousness remain in the fruitful field It is not the small measure of Righteousness that the Preacher of Righteousness requires of us namely that Righteousness of Will and Desire which many having attained unto think themselves as good men as Paul was Rom. 7. This is no more than the Righteousness and Holiness of the Child the same which the people had in the wilderness See Notes on Exod. 20.8 Cadesh barnea but that we be holy as he is holy merciful pure perfect When the Apostle Hebr. 13.18 had spoken largely of himself that he had a Conscience of all things willing to live honestly and having prayed as largely for them vers 21. he adds a request in the end which may imply that they might take offence at what he had said I beseech you brethren suffer the word of Exhortation c. Many cannot endure to be exhorted to the exactness and perfection of their duty though the Scripture evidently requires such exactness of us but are ready to impute this Doctrine to some Sect or other and to call the Preachers of this Righteousness by the name of one or other Sect because we hear not the same Doctrine ordinarily urged by others Beloved as heretofore I have in the presence of God and many present protested my disengagement unto any Sect in the Christian world So now howbeit in the great difference of Judgements that are now aflote in this time of the overflowing scourge I hope no man will be wanting to himself so far to neglect his own safety as to reject good counsel from whomsoever it comes Should a person of great Quality lie desperately sick and a Colledge of Physicians meet about him if some one plain man offer a precious and a soveraign Receipt and hath a probatum est that it never failed surely the Patient would not reject the counsel of that one man he would not ask him whether he had gratiam practicandi Prov. 10.2 Righteousness delivereth from death and 12.28 in the way of Righteousness is life Rom. 5.10 Or should you be in danger to suffer shipwrack and one come and help you would you ask him of what Opinion he is and if he did not think as you think would you refuse his help As concerning faith have suffered shipwrack 1 Tim. 1.16 or suppose your house on fire and one should come and offer his help to quench it would you first know what he holds concerning the controversies of the time and if he differ'd from you in Opinion would you none of his help Iniquity is a fire O beloved take good counsel from whencesoever it comes Dan. 4.27 Do away thy sins by Righteousness and thine iniquities by shewing mercy to the poor Repreh The world of the ungodly which pretend Religion holiness and piety yet really and truly are acted by their own perverse will they are constant and faithful to that See Notes on Jer. 23.5 Here is Soveraign Doctrine for all times for these times times when according to our Lords Prophecy iniquity abounds times when there is great danger of war times when all or the most are weary of war and desire peace times when iniquity abounds all manner of iniquity in high in low in rich in poor universal iniquity contrary to the universal righteousness Then is the Preacher of Righteousness most suitable It is even so for the times are such as in the dayes of Noah saith our Saviour Matth. 24. and what times are they all flesh had corrupted his way The spirit of God Gen. 6. names that which was then and I believe is now most common among all men intemperancy incontinency lasciviousness As for other sins they may be and I believe are very common also but more properly and usually found among some sorts of men as pride commonly followeth high places and men in Authority especially those who never were in Authority before Covetousness however it be too general so that Mammon is one of the great City Gods yet it 's thought to be most rise among Officers who very often are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 takers of bribes Envy though it be a sin now epidemical and hides it self under the name of Zeal yet it 's most usually found among men of Sciences and Faculties and so it is Academical and being once sought in hell was found in Monasteries and Colledges surely extortion and oppression however it be now general yet it more commonly harbours among Citizens Simony is between the Patron and the Priest Hypocrisie is among men Religious Deceit fraud circumvention among Merchants But intemperancy incontinency looseness voluptuousness and sensuality is common to all men the Subject as the Prince the learned as the ignorant the poor as the rich the wise as the foolish how needful then how useful how seasonable doctrine is universal Righteousness When danger of war to put on the whole armour of God armour of Righteousness on the right hand and the left 2 Cor. 6.7 When
face of the waters Gen. 7.18 The sufferings of Christ indeed abound but so likewise our consolation aboundeth by Christ 2 Cor. 1.5 O but this storm of temptation must be raised for some great sin of mine all thy waves are gone over me 'T is possible yet it 's not alwayes necessary for the winds blew down Job's house yet was not this for Job's sin for God gives him a most honourable Testimony of Integrity Job 1 and 2. but to make him an Example of patience unto all after Ages of the Church And when the Disciples asked our Saviour concerning the man that was born blind for whose sake that Calamity befell him he answers plainly neither hath this man sinned nor his Parents but that the works of God might be made manifest in him Joh. 9.3 And so was this tempest raised and so may thine be poor Soul But suppose it be not but that for a rebellious Jonah the storm may rise yet remember Christ is with thee in the ship as he was with the Disciples even then when the ship was covered with the waves Nec nocet tempestas eò quod presens sit Christus Bernard 1. Remember his Promise When thou goest through the waters I will be with thee and the floods shall not cover thee Esay 43. 2. Remember his Power who said to the Sea Hither shalt thou come and no further and here shall thy proud waves be stayed He will not suffer thee to be tempted aboue what thou art able 3. Remember he invites thee to call upon him in the day of trouble He heard Jonas in thy case or worse even out of the belly of hell Jon. 2. No case so desperate but he can but he will save all those who come unto him and awaken him which pray unto him as here the Disciples did Lord save us we perish But alas I have been often thus weather-beaten and the tempest hath prevailed against me But art thou willing to contend for victory against temptation Even the willingness makes thee acceptable pray thou unto Christ and he will hear thee and help thee Even the Children cryed Hosanna unto Christ i. e. save us we beseech thee Save us we perish This motive is considerable 1. In it self and 2. As an argument enforcing the Petition Quaere Whether this Petition be absolute yea or no I Answer if we understand the words literally and historically the Petition is not absolute but only conditional If we understand the words allegorically and spiritually The Petition is absolute And The Reason is there is no temporal evil so great so terrible but it may consist with the good will and favour of God Nor is there any temporal good so great so desirable but may consist with God's hatred and disfavour Eccles 9. No man knows either love or hatred by all that is before them 2. I consider this motive as inferring the Petition and so the Observation is this That the Disciples imminent danger of perishing is a powerful argument and motive unto Christ to save them In the handling of this I shall 1. Explain the meaning of some terms in it 2. Prove it 3. Shew the Reasons of it 4. Answer a Quaere or two and 5. Make Use of all unto our selves 1. By perishing here we are to understand the danger of ruine and perishing for had they perished and been utterly ruined and lost it had been too late to say so Now danger is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the approximation and nearness of an evil This evil is perishing which we may understand according to the history Temporally a wrack at Sea 2. According to the Mystery as all Expositors which I have yet seen understand it Spiritually and Eternally a drowning in destruction and perdition as the Apostle speaks a perishing in sin or for sin Now a danger is alwayes so much the greater by how much the evil is greater and by how much the evil is nearer And so this must needs be a great danger the evil being so great as none greater and so near that it was impossible to be nearer and not to be the Ship was covered with waves so that it was time to cry out Lord save us 2. To save is a Relative word and therefore hath reference to the 1. Terminus à quo all the evils before named Storms Temporal Spiritual and Eternal 2. Terminus ad quem a calm and quietness and rest and safety in the haven where we would be More largely Salvation is deliverance from sin wrath the power of Satan condemnation death hell and everlasting judgement 2. Salvation is preservation unto Righteousness the Favour of God the Divine Nature Eternal Life and the Kingdom of Heaven in which respect Christ hath his name of Jesus or Saviour and in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Quae vox latinè reddi non potest saith Tully Act. 4. in Verrem but another word Salvator and Salvificator used by Tertullian comprehends both extreams and the Apostle as largely 2 Tim. 4.18 The Lord shall deliver me from every evil work there 's Salvation from the term à quo And shall preserve me to his Heavenly Kingdom there 's Salvation or preservation to the term ad quem the Angel therefore gives our Lord the Name of Jesus 2. The truth of this will appear when we shall have shewn 1. That the Disciples and Saints of God have made use of this motive and argument 2. That it hath been used with good success upon tryal and use made of it this motive and argument hath proved effectual and prevailed with the Lord. 1. That the Disciples and Saints of God have made use of this motive and argument So the Prophet David Psal 71. Save me from them that persecute me Psal 22.21 Save me from the Lions mouth Psal 54.1 Save me O Lord vers 3. for strangers are risen up against me Psal 55.2 3. Attend unto me and hear me because of the voice of the enemy because of the oppression of the wicked Psal 56.1 Be merciful to me O God for man would swallow me up he is daily fighting and troubling me Psal 57.1 Be merciful unto me O Lord be merciful unto me in the shadow of thy wings will I make my refuge till this calamity be over-past Psal 59.1 Deliver me from mine enemies O God Defend me from them that rise up against me Psal 64.1 6.3 Perserve my life from fear of the enemy Psal 69. 1. Psal 107. 2. Observe we the success of this Prayer in extremity Psal 22.21 having prayed to be delivered from the Lions mouth v. 22 23 24. I will declare thy Name unto my Brethren He hath not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted neither hath he hid his face from him but when he cryed unto him he heard him Psal 54.1 2. Save me O God for strangers are risen up against me v. 7. He hath delivered me out of all trouble and mine eyes have seen my desire upon mine enemy Psal
commended These things saith he I write 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As there is no necessity so there is no impossibility of sin peradventure they have sinned Medium Neglect not sin as if not worthy to be feared which is and brings with it the greatest evil 2. Be not high minded presume not of thine own wit parts false rules false examples 3. Fear God Love thine own Soul 2. Because Job thought or said so therefore he did so he sent and sanctified his Sons The reason the good man knew well the foul nature of sin and God's extreme hatred of it That the least sin unrepented of offends God leaves a blot upon the Soul disposeth it to the committing of greater sins makes it liable to eternal death excludes it from the City of God into which no unclean thing shall enter Rev. 22. How much more a great sin and one of the greatest such is blasphemy and that the more aggravable from the blessings of God which a man partakes of at a feast in a greater measure and from his own profession that he received those blessings from the hand of the blessed God Another reason His love of God whom he studied alwayes to please and to appease him being provoked against himself or part of himself his children His love also toward his Sons constrained him of whose bliss and happiness he would be assured and therefore would not leave them under the danger of sin though an unknown sin For these reasons Job sanctifieth his Sons But was Job a Priest then that he offered Sacrifice Art not thou a Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath made us Kings and Priests to God He that offers is a Priest and must have somewhat to offer Obser 1. Behold in Job the pattern of a Religious Parent Whoever thou art Father of a Family or mayest be hereafter abi tu fac similiter consider his true love unto every one that he suffered not sin upon him his care and tenderness over his Children his bringing them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord Eph. 6.4 Mephibosheth had a fall out of his Nurses arms when he was but a Child and was lame all his life after If we let our nurslings fall out of our arms there 's the like yea a far greater danger Ye read how the unclean Spirit dealt with the young man Mark 9.19 the reason ye have v. 21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He was so from a child a secret reflexion on his Parents Obser 2. A Parents suspicion of sin and blasphemy in his Children ought not to break out into wrath and hatred but into a desire of amendment A Physician is not angry with his Patient nor hates him but studies to ease him and bring him to health again Obser 3. If Job were so careful to expiate uncertain sins how much rather ought every pious Parent to endeavour the expiation i. e. the mortifying and abolishing known and manifest sins to sanctifie his Children and endeavour to bring them to repentance Obser 4. Behold a certain character of one truly fearing God such an one as Job was he offers certain sacrifices for uncertain sins Repreh 1. Those who for certain ●●s return an uncertain repentance and mortification Let us eat and drink and to morrow we will die Alas what is so uncertain as the morrow this night before to morrow they may take away thy life and where then is thy repentance and mortification The door of Grace and Mercy stands now open but when the Master of the house shall rise up and shut the door where then is thy repentance and mortification Custome of sin will draw on a Callus an hardness and brawniness upon thy heart which yet may have some tenderness in it 't will cauterize thy conscience which yet hath some feeling in it the soyle of sin may be washed out but if neglected 't will incorporate and turn to nature and then the Blackamore will not be able to change his skin nor the Leopard his spots What then will become of thy repentance and mortification A reprobate mind Atheism c. will seise upon thee and then what will become of thy repentance and mortification Repr 2. What then shall we say of those who defend their former certain and manifest sins and justifie them by adding more and greater As it is said of Herod that he added to all his sins that he put John into prison and doest not thou the same put the Grace of God in thy prison hold his truths in unrighteousness yea reproach vilifie curse and injure those who earnestly endeavour to bring thee to repentance and amendment of life that thou mayest be saved Terrible is that touching Elie's Sons 1 Sam. 2.25 and that of the Prophet to Amaziah 2 Chron. 25.15 16. There is a rule for both Prov. 29.1 He that being often reproved hardneth his neck shall suddenly be destroyed and that without remedy of them that of St. Peter is verified whose judgement now of a long time lingreth not and their damnation slumbereth not 2 Pet. 2.3 Consolation I have been a Blasphemer All sins and blasphemies shall be forgiven unto thee And Peter himself cursed and Paul also blasphemed 1 Tim. 1.13 16. yet repented and believed and so mayest thou NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON MATTHEW XI 28 29 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden and I will give you rest Take my yoke upon you and learn of me for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest unto your souls For my yoke is easie and my burden is light THe true Jephtah sets us a work whoever are his followers to offer up Sacrifice and mortifie whatever sin proceeds from within us and defiles us and the end of the Sacrament and our vow therein renewed puts us upon the same duty A business full of labour and so burdensome that the Prophet complains Psal 38.4 Mine iniquities are gone over my head as an heavy burden they are too heavy for me And therefore our Lord in this Text propounds unto such labouring and burdened ones a seasonable instruction Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy burdened to let them know that their coming shall not be in vain he promiseth unto them the Rest I will give you Rest But lest men should think a bare coming enough whereby they might get that Rest he prescribes a means how that Rest may be obtained Take my yoke upon you yield your selves to my Discipline and Teaching learn of me learn especially these Graces which ye see eminent in me I am meek and lowly in heart learn meekness and humility And lest that yoke should seem rather an exchange of one burden for another by a Prolepsis he tells us My yoke is easie and my burden is light According to this resolution of the words ye have in them these Divine Truths
suffered for them fulfilled the Law and done all and left nothing for them to do but only to believe all 's done already to their hand But as in the dayes of Christ's flesh so now and ever the Revelation of God the Fathers Law and the Revelation of St. John's Doctrine of Repentance must precede and go before the plain and explicite Revelation of Christ For so Moses his Law leads us unto Christ the end of the Law whence our Saviour made entrance unto the Revelation of himself by the exposition of the Law Luk. 24.27 yet the Law leads not to Christ without the Doctrine of John We must first be Johannites or St. John's Disciples ere we can be Christians As St. Peter in the Text was Bar-johanna a Son or Disciple of St. John before he was Christs Disciple which appears undeniably out of Scripture and that both by predictions of the Old Testament as Esay 40.5 Mal. 3 and 4. beside other places and their accomplishments in the New Testament for so all the Evangelists bring in John before our Saviour in order both of time and doctrine So that St. Mark begins his Gospel thus The beginning of the Gospel of Jesus Christ as it is written in the Prophets behold I send my messenger before thy face Mar. 1.7 The beginning of the Gospel therefore is St. John the Baptist his doctrine is to precede Mat. 14.13 Thus John the Baptist sends his Disciples unto Christ Mar. 6.32 And John being put to death our Saviour sends forth his Twelve Apostles to preach repentance the doctrine of St. John in all places where he himself should come Luk. 9.10 Mar. 6.12 Luk. 10. The Apostles also in communicating the doctrine of Christ premise or prerequire the preaching of St. John Act. 3.37 38. So St. Peter begins his Sermon to Cornelius and St. Paul his to the Antiochians Act. 10 and 13. And it as neerly concerns us and all men as them For the same Grace of the Lord which brings salvation unto all men hath appeared teaching us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts and to live soberly righteously and godly in this present world looking for that blessed hope and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ And this is the Righteousness that goes before him even Christ saith holy David and then as the words following are he directs his people in the way which he doth by Precept Audible as the Word Example Visible as the Sacrament 1. The Precepts are the whole word of God not as many think the Gospel and nothing but the Gospel and therefore inure themselves only to the New Testament whereas our Saviour who knows best how to reveal himself saith The Scriptures that was the Old Testament only then they bear witness of him and he began as Moses Luk. 24.27 and all the Prophets and expounded in all the Sciptures the things which concerned himself And so ought we to do and to come unto Gods word abrasa tabula without prepossession of false Glosses our own or others and resolve with David I will hear quid loquitur in me Dominus what the Lord saith in me and standing in aequilibrio like the ballance trembling at Gods word and yielding that way he swayes us Not that we should be guided by our own fantastical Enthusiasms and fanatical imaginations without or contrary or beside the Analogie of Gods written word No no but to hear Moses and the Prophets the Preachers of Gods word for these God the Father commands to set their faces against Gog Ezech. 38. i. e. reveal the coverings of Ceremonies Types and Figures wherein Christ is hidden and remove the veil of false knowledge and opinions of Gods truth according to St. Hierom's interpretation of that place so saith St. Paul It pleased God to reveal his Son in me that I might teach him to the Gentiles But in reading and hearing the word of God Esau will strive to be born before Jacob Pharez before Zarah the natural before the Spiritual the earthly spirits and spirits of flesh and blood before the spirit of our Father which is in Heaven and Satan can transform himself into an Angel of light Here then is wisdom To try the spirits whether they be of God or no Our Saviour saith of the Prophets by their works ye shall know them whether true or false and we may say so of the spirits by their words their inward words ye shall discern them whether good or bad If good their message is of repentance amendment of life humility peace mercy gentleness meekness patience and all goodness withdrawing from all evil provoking and encreasing all good If evil contrary St. John gives us one mark hereby know ye the spirit of God every spirit that confesseth Jesus Christ come in the flesh is of God which is not to be understood of the History which all men indifferently good and bad born or not born of God may confess alike But the true real and thorough confession of the word made flesh which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dwells in us of Christ formed in us in us the hope of Glory for what shall it profit me Christum esse natum in carne nisi nascatur etiam in carne mea saith one of the pious Ancients Nor ought we having received the Fathers Revelation of his Son to consult with men Samuel was but a Child when God having spoken to him he ran to Eli. When it pleased God to reveal his Son in me saith St. Paul I conferr'd not with flesh and blood but he presently fell to practise what he knew and so must we continue in the things that we have learned that more may be given unto us Do we reveal the things we know that we may know the secret things we yet know not This this is the only Clavis Scripturae which opens Christ the door unto us 2. So do the Sacraments also both 1. that whereby we become the Sons of God being born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God And 2. That which presents unto us his body and blood for because the Children were partakers of flesh and blood he also took part of the same that through death he might overcome him who had the power of death i. e. the Devil And thus he guides us also by example unto himself So he suffered for us leaving us an example that we might also suffer with him that we might mortifie and kill the sinful flesh and blood that we may kill that Creature of our own and save Gods Creature alive That we may crucifie the ill thief and save the good Not as some do who pine their bodies and spare their lusts If thus we bear about in our body the dying of the Lord Jesus the life also of Jesus shall be revealed in our mortal flesh As at the death of Christ the veil was rent from the top to the bottom and the
thou the burthen of all this people upon me saith Moses Numb 11.11 18. Who is weak and I am not weak Who is offended and I burn not saith St. Paul 2 Cor 11.29 Repreh Their presumptuous and ambitious conceits who preposterously imagine to themselves Life and Salvation the Kingdom of Christ everlasting Glory without tasting of Christs cup without being baptized into his death without suffering with him This is one of Satans the Grand Deceivers stratagems In malis tollit finem à mediis He told our first Mother Ye shall not die though ye eat In bonis tollit media à fine Our Lords rule and order of obtaining his Kingdom is If ye suffer with him ye shall reign with him Satan perswades men they shall Reign with Christ without suffering with him These are the thieves that climb up into the Kingdom another way by some imagination 2. Our Lord asks whether they are able to drink of his cup and be baptized with his baptism which supposeth that he himself was to drink of a cup and to be baptized with a baptism The Cup notes a portion either of good or evil and here it signifieth our Lords passion as appears Mat. 26.39 And the following part of the Sentence the baptism that I am baptized with imports as much even baptisma sanguinis as is implyed Luk. 12.50 which yet was not extant in Ancient Copies Both these import our Lords sufferings of all kinds both those which are called by Divines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See Notes on Hebr. 2.18 Now as these words suppose our Lords drinking of his Cup and baptizing with his baptism so they enforce his Disciples participation of both which our Lord here asks them whether they were able to do Are ye able to drink of the Cup c. The Reason why doth our Lord ask this question The main and principal reason is That order which the God of Order hath set in things by which men must pass The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that which it often answers to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not here properly understood but figuratively and so we read sometimes of a Cup which the Disciples and followers of Christ drunk of sometimes of a Cup which the ungodly and wicked the Disciples of Antichrist Sin and Satan drink of both which Cups are sometimes distinguished as 1. Psal 11.6 God rains upon the ungodly snares fire and brimstone this is pars calicis eorum but Psal 16.5 The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance and of my Cup. 2 Sometimes the Cup is the same but Gods people begin to drink of it and ungodly men drink the dregs of it Psal 75.8 In the hand of the Lord there is a Cup and the wine is red The Cup whereof the Believes and followers of Christ drink is the Cup of his Passion or Compassion and suffering with Christ This is the same which is administred in the Holy Sacrament when we profess our suffering with the Lord Jesus and shewing forth his death until he come 1 Cor. 11. This hath the name of a Cup 1. In regard of the measurableness of the passion or suffering with Christ 2. In regard of the inward participation and drinking of it 3. In regard of the effect or operation which it works in those who drink of it as a medicinal potion works the cure of the sick patient Both the Cup and the Baptism suppose the Spirit and Life in good measure in those Believers who drink of it and are baptized with the baptism wherewith Christ is baptized for so we are made to drink into one Spirit which is as fire Mat. 3.11 And the Lord Jesus baptized with the Holy Ghost and with fire This Spirit of Christ is his true blood and life which is shed for many even for all Believers for the remission and cleansing of their sins And this he requires of us that feed of the Living Bread which is the true word and flesh of Christ which was given for us and for many that we become partakers of the good life of the word which is to drink the blood and life and spirit of Jesus Christ and through the deadning and burying of our sinful life to become wholly united and joyned to him in our inward man in a new life and spirit Hence proceed the sufferings of Christ and of those that are Christs even from the life He knew that for envy they had delivered him When the Sun was up the good Seed which began to thrive and grow up was scorched Mat. 13.5 6. i. e. as our Lord interprets it vers 21. If tribulation and persecution ariseth because of the word And they which in an honest and good heart having heard the word keep it and bring forth fruit with patience Luk. 8.15 Obser It is neither in our power by Nature nor in our choice to drink of the Cup which our Lord drinks of That strait and narrow way of mortification and suffering our Lord saith That many shall seek to enter into it and shall not be able Luk. 13.24 It is a gift of God to drink of the Cup which Christ drinks of Phil. 1.29 Vnto you it is given not only to believe but also to suffer Christ drinks of this Cup when he suffers contradiction of sinners against himself when he suffers death it self so he prayed Let this Cup pass by me This Cup of his passion he drinks for the propitiation and atonement of mankind as men take a potion for the serving of their bodies and the arm is let blood Christ is the arm Thus also baptism is understood being another metaphor whereby the same thing is meant The Lord makes tryal of us in our Conversion and turning unto him whether we be fit for the Kingdom of God yea or no He tryes our wills Luk. 9.23 He tryes our power and strength Prov. 17.3 Ecclus. 2.5 Thus Gideon tryed his Soldiers by their drinking water whether they were fit for him yea or no. And the Lord Jesus who is the true Gideon who treads under and breaks and cuts off the iniquity he tryes us by our drinking the Cup of his passion whether we be fit to tread upon Serpents and Scorpions c. The Eagle proves her young ones by looking on the Sun whether they be genuine or not And the Lord he tryes the Eagles which are gathered to the carcass to the Conformity of Christs death to feed on his flesh and drink his blood whether they be able to look on the Sun that 's tribulation and persecution as our Saviour expounds it Mat. 13. v. 6. with v. 21. whether they can drink of his Cup the Cup of his Sufferings whether they can be baptized into his death Consol To the younger Disciples of Christ who think it strange that they should be entertained into Christs School poculo salis 1 Pet. 4.12 Joseph gave order to him that was Overseer of his house That he
right hand without drinking of Christ's Cup without conformity unto his death whereas the true Predestination is to be made conformable to the Image of the Son of God Rom. 8.29 2. Observe hence the unavoidable necessity which lies upon all the Disciples of Christ which would be saved by him and sit at his right hand and his left in his Kingdom that they drink of his Cup. The Lord Jesus is the Author of Eternal Salvation but to those that obey him Heb. 5.9 And he is able to save to the uttermost but those who are able to drink of his Cup and be baptized with his baptism to those who come unto God by him Heb. 7.25 And there is no other name by which we can be saved Act. 4.12 Nor is there any other way but that living way Heb. 10.20 All Power and Authority in Heaven and Earth is given to him yet hath he no Authority no Power to give the Honours and Dignities of his Kingdom to any other than those who drink of his Cup and are baptized with his baptism The necessity of drinking this Cup Nonne haec oportuit Christum pati atque ità intrare in regnum suum Would God they who are too often in other Cups would seriously and sadly think of this Poculum Salutare this Cup of Salvation that they who strive for an outward baptism would as much or more endeavour after this Alas do they not know that whilst we are sinners Christ dies Rom. 5. Do we not know that the wisdom of God is crucified by our foolishness our errours our lies that the life of God is slain by our deadly sin That the Patience Goodness Mercy Love of God c. all which is Christs suffers from our iniquities Esay 53.4 5. So Arius Montanus and Tremellius Repreh Those who refuse to taste of Christs Cup to be conformable unto his death in dying to sin such as refuse to be baptized into his death This no doubt is the reason even because we refuse to suffer the death of the sin and drink of the Cup of Christs sufferings that the Lord hath given and is yet giving to all Nations the Cup of his fury to drink Thus ye read Jer. 25.15 where the Lord threatens his Judgments unto his own People and all the Nations round about for their disobedience unto the Law and Prophets That they turned not from their evil wayes and the evil of their doings which he signifieth under the metaphor of a Cup vers 15. This disobedience hath brought the Sword among us this continues it yet with us This Judgment Esay 66.14 15 16. applyes to the Nations under these Times of the Gospel as also Zach. 13.7 8 9. the same is the reason of all other Judgments of God as the manifold diseases among us Many of us have often professed to shew forth the Lords death by dying to sin and so have taken the Cup of Salvation and have called upon the Name of the Lord yet have we continued in our sins And therefore the Lord hath caused many to taste the Cup of his Judgment Thus he tells the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11. Therefore many are sick and weakly among you and many are fallen asleep i. e. die the death even because they have not died unto sin And to what other reason may we refer the present Judgment of God upon us even this immoderate and unseasonable drought what else may be the cause of this but because we refuse to be obedient unto the Law and Prophets we refuse to drink the Cup of Christs passion we refuse to be baptized into his death Say I this or saith not the Scriprure the very same The Astrologers refer our present drought unto the late Eclipse and it cannot be denied but that hath been Gods Instrument in second Causes whereby he hath brought this evil upon us as the like hath been observed in manifold other Eclipses of the Sun in former times But what is that that hath provoked the Lord to send this Cup of his fury unto us to Eclipse the light and beams of his countenance towards us What hath moved the Lord to stop the bottles of Heaven Job 38.37 that he hath not in their season emptied them upon the Earth Jer. 9.12 And doth not the Prophet Zachary refer the same Judgment unto the same cause under these times of the Gospel Zach. 14.16 17. What is it to come up to keep the feast of Tabernacles It cannot be meant literally for that among the rest of the Ceremonies is ceased What then is signified by a Tabernacle or Tent what else but our humane flesh and body 2 Cor. 5.1 4. 2 Pet. 1.13 14. To keep the Feast of Tabernacles then what is it but to have our Tabernacle our dwelling our house with Christ Joh. 1.14 The word was made flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and dwelt in us They therefore who refuse to suffer with Christ in the flesh to imitate his death to drink the Cup of his Passion and Suffering with him They shall have no rain of Blessing no rain of Gods Living Word which is compared to rain Deut. 32. Heb. 6.7 no outward rain for as that is one of Gods blessings upon the obedient Deut. 28.12 So is the want of it a Curse upon the disobedient vers 23 24. and for the sin of his People he shuts up Heaven 1 King 8.35 3. They say unto him we are able How able they were appeared soon after when being in company with our Lord when he was now to drink of his Cup they all forsook him and fled What boldness was this what presumption and confidence of their own strength But their confidence and presumption so much the more condemns the despair and unbelief of many of us James and John were yet Carnal they had not received the Spirit of God they knew Christ only according to the flesh As for many of us we perswade our selves that we are Spiritual and know Christ according to the Spirit and believe in his Mighty Power yet when the Cup comes to us when it 's offered to us to drink of it we cannot away with it we have no power no strength at all to drink of it while we are not yet tryed while the Cup is not yet come to us O how valiant we are the Elect the Chosen of God i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chosen men and Mighty men of valour But when now temptation comes either from the world hope of gain or fear of loss or desire of honour and reputation or from our own flesh or from the Devil what ever the temptation is what arrant cowards we are we lye down like great Lubbars and let Satan buffet us Repreh How justly doth this reprove the present Generation of men who look at Christs drinking the Cup of his Passion and Baptism as suffering his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his fore-suffering and his principal passion from the Jews and
unto outward enemies but unto inward our flesh our affections and lusts to be crucified by us What execution Josuah did upon the King of Ai i. e. Confusion Quaere Whether all that is laid upon the Cross be to be crucified all that 's on the Altar to be burned No Things to be laid upon the Cross are either 1. Simply good as Spiritual Joy Love c. these like Isaac must be saved these are like the gold cast into the fire 2. Simply evil as the evil Thief must suffer the Ram must be sacrificed the Canaanite must be slain Joseph was in Prison with two Malefactors one he restored unto his place and the other he hanged Gen. 41.13 It 's said he did this as implying the things signified the true Joseph Moses slew the Egyptian and saved the Israelite 3. Partly good and partly evil as he who is called the good Thief is said to be an Edomite figuring our humane Nature offending and to be purged by the Cross and Patience but saved The Gold must be purified The Butler must be imprisoned The Israelite must be rebuked but not slain as the Egyptian was Repreh 1. Those who confess sin is to be mortified and crucified but they wish 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an easie death unto sin with Lacretia Cecidisse decorè They dare not suffer the pangs of Death and pains of Hell they suffer not unto blood Heb. 12.4 We have lost the substance and quarrel for the shadow for the accident for the sign Sic veritas altercando amittitur O that we would descend into our own hearts and there seek for the true Cross the Patience of Jesus Christ wo unto them that have lost Patience Surely if we detest and loath the outward Cross wo be unto us if we have not the inward Those who crucifie some as Saul the Amalekites kill'd the little ones but saved the great ones alive others kill the great ones and save the little ones Parvuli Babylonis vide Notes in Heb. 1. Repreh 2. Those who are able and valiant for the subduing killing and crufying of outward foes but arrant cowards and impotent men unable to kill and crucifie their lusts Seneca observes it in Alexander the Great he overcame the Persians Hircanians Indians and all Nations Eastward to the Ocean Victor sit regum atque populorum irae tristitiaque succubuit id enim agebat ut omnia potiùs haberet in potestate quam affectus Poor impotent men He was angry sad an arrant drunkard and a murderer of his best friends in his drunkenness Ignarus quid sit illud ingens paratumque regnum imperare sibi maximum imperium est So Seneca and fitly like the Wise man Melior est patiens viro forti qui dominatur animo suo expugnatori urbium Prov. 16.32 This discovers the vanity and unprofitablenss of all outward things Altars and Crosses all bodily exercises being destitute of the inward Cross the Patience of Jesus Christ I know well what wonders the Ancient Fathers report of the Cross which yet was in use among them to shew both to the Gentiles and to the Jews who upbraided them the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that they were not ashamed of Christ Crucified Ephrem the Syrian Hoc signo conspecto adversariae potestates contemptae trementes Adverse powers or all powers of the Enemy all evil spirits are affrighted and tremble and fly away at the sign of the Cross But was there think you signum sine signato the sign without the thing signified the Cross without the patience of Jesus Christ Revel 1. Cyril Quando Daemones viderint crucem recordantur Crucifixi When the Devils behold the Cross they remember him who was Crucified When they see and feel the power of Christs patience Austin Omnia Daemonum machinamenta virtute Crucis ad nihilum redigi Mark it is virtute Crucis by the power of Christs Cross which is the patience of Jesus Christ all the stratagems and temptations of the Devils are brought to naught Antoninus Signum Crucis fides inexpugnabilis nobis manus est More I could add and 't is very true that they say The Devils are afraid of the Cross for in what soul soever the patience of Jesus Christ the true Altar with the living Fire upon it is erected in what soul soever the true Cross of Jesus Christ is set up there Christ spoils principalities and powers and makes shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Cross And so a most Ancient pious Father Origen saith it was in the Greek in his days Otherwise if the Devil seem to run away from the outward Cross only it is but one of his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is no other than a stratagem he doth but as he who would leap further runs back that he may take a greater leap One said to the Queen Elizabeth you and I will not fear all mine enemies Observe The Christians daily Exercise what the Fathers alluding unto the Christians name say Christianus Crucianus is most true though not in that sence which the World understands it The bearing of the Cross is the Christians daily practice his daily exercise for every true Christian man hath not always outward crosses and afflictions in the World as hath been shewn nor is every one a Christian man to whom outward afflictions or crosses as they call them are incident But as the bearing of the Cross is an inward thing so that which we bear off and crucifie upon the Cross it is some inward thing also Haec rectiùs transiguntur intus as he speaks 'T is true the objects themselves are without but they affect us within as whatsoever is formidable or terrible without stirs up fear within as your House-bells are rung from without but ye hear them within Here is then the patience of Saints that which affects them from without exerciseth their patience within whether it be with joy or sorrow or hope or fears if the affection be good lay it on the Cross 't will come off alive as Isaac which is Joy from off the Altar if a carnal joy 't will burn and consume as Abrahams Ram did upon the Altar Those who delight in Wine wherein is excess David takes up his Cross against drunkenness Psal 56. The Title is When the Philistines took him in Gath. See how he is exercised with patience and prayer vers 1. Be gracious unto me O God for sorry man the Philistine i. e. drunkenness would swallow me up as the Lord speaks Esay 28.7 They are swallowed up with wine Doth this Philistine go about to swallow thee up Bind thy self unto the Cross Do the lusts of thy flesh like thy bosom Dalilah press thee to give them satisfaction daily Take up the Cross and bind thy self unto it As they say of Vlysses that being tempted by the Syrens he caused himself to be bound to the Mast of his Ship Potiphar's Wife the lascivious woman tempted Joseph day by day Gen.
the patience of Jesus Christ that through faith and patience we may inherit the promise even the holy Spirit of Lord. 2. Take up the Cross daily this imports continuance in bearing the Cross there is yet somewhat more to be done the words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the day The reason may be 1. from sin by us contracted 2. from the object temptations which daily assail us 3. the duty our daily immitation of Christ our forerunner our example Observ 1. That the bearing of the Cross is the patient suffering of all things whatever that befalls us in this life whether inwardly or outwardly whether from Satan or from the Creatures yea the assaults and temptations of sin it self without consenting thereunto which is the true Catholick Doctrine it 's universal and that which concerns all men and every man The Lord said unto all If any man will come after me c. God would have all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of his truth and all have sinned and so fallen short of the glory of God and have added to the burden and matter for the Cross Observ 2. The spreading nature of sin and temptations unto sin it 's diffusive and extends it self like a common contagion and infection unto all hereditary diseases many times reach no further than to one family but sin infects us all 3. Note hence a Sovereign Catholicon and Universal Medicine a most precious remedy and as diffusing and spreading as the Malady The Apostle sets an emphasis upon it 1 Cor. 1.18 For the preaching of the Cross is foolishness to them that perish but unto us who are saved by it it is the power of God the Articles which declare the emphasis are neglected by our Translators 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that word that of the Cross 4. Mark here the wisdom and goodness of the great Physician of souls in reveiling this Sovereign Remedy so necessary for all men yet taken notice of I fear but by a very few in comparison of all whom it concerns In your patience saith the great Physician possess ye your souls do the lusts of the flesh press and assault thee daily to give them satisfaction deny thy self daily take up thy Cross mortifie these earthly members Great is the variety of Medicines for the Body how have these been made known to the Sons of men surely either by tradition or by communication of Angels but the preserver of Souls keeps the Sovereign soul-remedies and dispenses them himself and here we cannot but take up a common complaint of a general neglect of this so necessary a duty which concerns all men he said unto all Quod omnes curant id omnes negligunt Hitherto we have considered these two duties apart with the persons invited thereunto come we now to consider them joyntly and as they are a means to advance the end the following of Jesus Christ 3. Then if any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and follow me The invitation is propounded unto all and every man and brought home to his own bosom or door 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 if any man will come after me 't is a connex Axiom as we call it a conditional proposition wherein the antecedent preserves the consequent if any man will come after me c. The antecedent contains the end to be a follower of Christ the consequent contains the means self-denial and taking up the Cross I have spoken of the means in themselves considered let us now consider them in order to the end if we would obtain the end we must make use of the means 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come after or follow Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are words taken from travelling and wayfaring and because the life is called a way coming after or following some leading example is imitating the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is rendred to follow to accompany with one Plato would have it of α simul and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 via importing one who travels and follows another in the same way as here to follow the Lord Jesus Christ The coming after and following the Lord Jesus Christ is not in his Principles and Tenents only but in his life and practice also as for his Principles they are not speculative but to walk as he walked The reason may be if we rightly consider that beside the life of God breathed into us self-choosing is crept in and another life then God made in man Videt hanc visámque cupit potitúrque cupitâ Observ 1. To come after the Lord Jesus Christ to be his follower is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a thing desirable for it self the end is desirable for it self the means for the end and so they are both in the words if any man will come after me there is the end let him deny himself there 's the means The reason why the Lord requires his will to be obeyed to his own work may be even his justice and equity for we have suffered our wills and affections to run ryot to follow after vanity and so become vain and therefore it is just and reasonable that we withdraw them from their vain objects and return them to their proper centre so the Apostle reasons Rom. 6.19 For as ye have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity unto iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness unto holiness and hereunto is required Rom. 6.5 6. if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin if we suffer with him we believe also that we shall live with him Observ 2. Hence that though the means is most unpleasant and harsh yet it becomes most delightful because procuring the end we most desire who would not swallow down a most bitter potion to save his life who would not cut off his own right hand or foot or pluck out his right eye to save his whole body from perishing how much more are the most difficult and hardest things made possible and easie that we may enjoy the everlasting life Observ 3. See here the mercy and goodness of our gracious God who puts every man in a way to his own bliss and happiness if any man will come after me c. where I am there shall my servants be The Disciple is not above his Master but he that is perfect shall be as his master Luk. 6.40 Observ 4. Hence it may be made appear that the Lord Jesus Christ hath few very few followers for who so loves the divine wisdom as to reject and deny himself his own wisdom most young men are like him in the Gospel Mar. 14. they run away when they should bear the Cross Phil. 2.8 Observ 5. How self-love
object fear 1. He propounds to us the greatest evil that can befal us in this or rather at the end of this life and therefore by him who knew no greater evil it was acccounted absolutely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the greatest and most formidable and terrible evil 2. He propounds unto us the greatest evil that may befal us after the end of this life and that 's hell as I shewed before that whereas our Lord propounds three degrees of punishment this is the very greatest of all Object I know well any man may easily object against this and may use this Dilemma if we be the friends of Jesus Christ why then should we fear God Perfect love casteth out fear And if we fear how are we the friends of Jesus Christ fear hath torment 1 Joh. 4.18 I answer 'T is very true That perfect love casteth out fear but what fear is that but servile and base fear fear of punishment It casts out humane fear fear of them who kill the body It casts out worldly fear the fear of poverty disgrace and contempt Thus we serve him without fear servile fear in righteousness and holiness all the days of our life But filial fear holy chaste fear it casts not out The Apostles reason makes this answer good perfect love casts out fear Why because 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fear hath torment and punishment Take away the fear that hath torment and punishment and such fear may consist with perfect Love yea such fear must ever remain for the awful Majesty of the great God cannot be without reciprocal reverence and fear due unto it from Angels and Men for the Angels hide their face and their feet out of reverence of the Divine Majesty Isai 6. And though the Saints joy in the presence of God yet this rejoycing unto God must be with reverence Psal 2.11 And of this fear the Psalmist is to be understood when he saith Psal 19.9 The fear of the Lord is clean and endures for ever in seculum seculi So V. L. for ever and ever Be thou in the fear of the Lord all the day long Psal 23.17 True it is the needle first enters but unless it go out it draws not the thred it self unites not nor joyns the parts of the cloth together which we would sow but it brings after it the thred which unites them This is the initial fear that fear which is the beginning of wisdom and which prepares a place for the Love of God which unites and joyns the soul unto God 'T is true The servant abides not always in the house Joh. nor doth the servile or initial fear abide always but the Son abides always the filial the Son-like fear the chaste the holy fear that abides always such fear abides with the intimate degree of LOVE I say unto you my friends hear him All fear ariseth from love servile fear from self-love This fear ariseth from the Love of God not from self-love we may conceive it by comparing the fear of two Wives towards their Husband 1. The Adulteress fears lest her Husband may come and surprize her 2. The chaste Wife fears lest her loving Husband may depart from her Object But here our Lord propounds death and hell to be feared I answer our Lord herein declares his singular Wisdom in moving us to fear our God he stoops to our infirmity as yet subject to humane fears and therefore would drive out that with a greater fear yet lest we should be over terrified with that fear he calls us friends and saith not that he will cast into hell but that he hath power to cast into hell Observ 1. Observe an antidote against all humane fears The fear of God with this preservative the Prophet David expelled the poyson of all other fears as the theriaca or treacle expels the poyson of the Viper and Moses's Serpent devoured the Serpents of the Magicians Psal 16.8 I set the Lord alwayes before me for he is on my right hand I shall not be moved The Lord on the right hand assists so strongly that Satan on the left hand injecting the fear of men cannot annoy us No though I walk in the shadow of death though I go down to hell yet thou wilt not leave my soul in hell nor suffer thine holy one to see corruption The Prophet applyes the words to Jesus Christ and are true also of all those whom after the example of Jesus Christ the Lord sends down to hell and brings up again 1 Sam. 2.7 1. This reproves those who fear not God but the punishment rest themselves in a slavish fear they are not the friends of Jesus Christ love not him but love themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No man can truly say that these truly fear God and do righteousness because they do what they do only out of fear of punishment like a dog he is kept from his meat by fear of a whip A thief will not dare to break the house because the good man of the house watcheth and will not suffer his house to be broken up In a storm the Merchant casts his wares over-board for fear of a wrack Even thus many of us because we see and fear the neer approaching judgements of God like an horrible storm and tempest hanging over our heads and fear drowning in destruction and pardition 1 Tim. 6. we cast off the burden or sense of our sins yet we cannot call these the friends of Jesus Christ for no man will say that the dog is temperate because he is forced to abstain nor that the thief is just because he dares not break the house nor the merchant liberal because he throws his goods into the sea these actions are the brood of slavish fear the dog is as greedy as ever he was and the thief as mischievous and the merchant as covetous only their acts are suspended by an imminent danger 2. Behold the Preachers license other license the Preachers have had and many have but there 's none like this the fear of God we all desire to hear placentia Vae mihi quia tacui Isa 6. And therefore we have learned to sing placeto and to speak placentia such things as will please rather than profit the people The true Preachers who have obtained this license they are born of the word of Truth they study not to please men Gal. 1.10 No. Do I now perswade men or God i. e. do I preach man humane things as we may say we read and study men Do I pray and perswade men or God or Christ so he explains himself or do I seek to please men for their good to their edifying yet still in order unto God Rom. 15.2 'T is his counsel Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to edification and his practice 1 Cor. 10.33 I please all men in all things not seeking mine own profit but the profit of many that they may be saved This is in order to
16.5 6 7. commanded performed 2 Chron. 35.1 2. 10 11. by the Priests and Levites 2. In the evening Exod. 12.6 when Christ was sacrificed Matth. 27 46-50 Mar. 15.25.33 34-37 And Christ is known to be slain in the evening in the end of time Hebr. 1.2 1 Pet. 1.19 20. It must be eaten 1. Not raw or living Exod. 12.9 2. Not sodden at all 3. But rosted There is no Communion with his life unless before with his death Not sodden because the water mixeth it self with the flesh the Law teaching the simplicity that is in Christ 2 Cor. 11.3 Rosted with fire to which the Spirit is compared Matth. 3.11 through which he offered himself up unto God Hebr. 9.14 This is the fire of Gods wrath which he suffered being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 Jer. 4.4 4. He must be all eaten Exhort Let us keep the feast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How is that to be done what as Diogenes said with better cloaths and better food Shall we think that a Feast unto Christ is thus to be kept That God is pleased with mens eating of flesh by expression of outward joy and contentment in the flesh This Opinion and Practice hath brought all the Christian Festivals quite out of credit Nor do I urge the observation of dayes but lament the great mistake between many of them who stood for them and against them and truly I fear much they are both out The keeping of this Feast the Passover what is it but following of Chist in his sufferings imitation of his death and passion Therefore the Lamb must be rosted and it must have a sawce made for it of bitter herbs 1 Cor. 11.26 Phil. 3.10 2 Cor. 1.6 Col. 1.24 Rom. 6.3 Zach. 12.10 Revel 10.10 All was to be eaten up the head the legs and the purtenance thereof For our better understanding of this we must know 1. That Christ hath been crucified dead and buried in us Gal. 3.1 yet were they no Jews Hebr. 6.6 They crucifie to themselves the Son of God 2. Slain by entertaining Sin and Satan and chusing Barabbas before Christ These are Trees twice dead Jude vers 12. who have twice crucified the Life or Christ in them Revel 1.7 All Nations pierced him and vers 13. He was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Zach. 12.10 They pierced the Father and the Son Thus he was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5.21 Divine Knowledge Righteousness and Holiness hath been judged by the evil world unrighteousn●ss and errour by the learned and ungodly of the world 2 Thess 2.4 They said Christ was a deceiver one that had a devil so was Truth in Paul called Heresie We have called evil good and good evil c. Isai 5. Thus Isai 53. Christ hath suffered all this When we are exhorted to keep the Feast it is to suffer with him Thus the eating of his flesh c. it is shewing forth his death 1 Cor. 11. By repentance from dead works fighting against Sin and Satan suffering with Christ outward afflictions and inward grief and anguish in the leaving and crucifying of sin and coruption for we cannot part with any beloved thing without grief dying unto sin and crucifying the old Man Rom. 8.13 For as by the entrance and coming in of sin into us the life died in us so by the return and re-entrance of righteousness sin must die and be crucified in us Rom. 6. This is eating the passover with bitter herbs If we eat his flesh and drink his blood we dwell and live in him and he in us Joh. 6. NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON I CORINTHIANS IX 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sic currite ut comprehendatis so run that ye may obtain HOly things require holy preparations unto them and by how much the more holy by so much the greater preparation as therefore the Quadragesima and so the whole time of Lent was appointed by the Primitive Fathers as a preparation unto Easter as the Disciples prepared that they might eat the Passover with our Lord so Quinquagesima Sexagesima and this present Septuagesima are preparations unto that tempus Quadragesimale which we call Lent And the Epistle for this day out of which I have taken this Text presents us with a preparation most severe most laborious and most earnest such as is to be performed withall our might such as is the running of a race before the receiving of the prize such as is the striving for mastery and victory before the gaining of a Crown a wearisom and painful task For know ye not that they who run in a race run all but one receiveth the prize c. And every one that striveth far mastery is temperate in all things A painful a wearisom task yet no greater no heavier than our Apostle himself gives us example in himself of performing For I saith he so run not as uncertainly so fight I not as one that beateth the air yea and he shews us a means how we may perform it and that also in his own example for I keep under my body saith he and bring it into subjection c. Thus saith he I run and so run ye that ye may obtain So that ye perceive the Text is a continued Metaphor borrowed from the Olympick Games and exercises well known to the Corinthians to whom he wrote According to which in these words these Three points are contained 1. The Christian Life is a race 2. There is a Prize propounded to the runners of it 3. They who run it as they ought shall obtain the Prize The Two former shall make way to the third 1. Spiritual things have no name of their own but borrow their names from things obvious unto sense especially such as we see and hear Now of things obvious unto sense local motion or moving from place to place is the most common and best known whence it is as Aquinas observes that spiritual motions are most what signified by it The Spiritual life therefore consisting of manifold spiritual motions and actions is signified by this well known motion and action of running Wherein 1. Some things there are proportionable and answerable unto a race 2. Other things unlike and disproportionable unto it They both agree especially in these resemblances 1. A certain way and space was wont to be laid out and determined for those who ran a race which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 about a furlong That which answers to this in the Christian Life is the Law and Commandment of God for that is a way and the Saints run that race I will run the way of thy Commandments saith David the same race which Christ himself and his Apostles ran Psal 19 3-6 and at the seventh verse he tells us what that race is The law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul which Psal 18 he calls the perfect way vers 29. By thee I have run through a troop and by my God I have leaped over
must not grosly conceive any corporal or bodily participation of the one or the other as the Jews did Joh. 6.52 How can this fellow give us that flesh of his to eat But we are to understand it according to that Analogie which earthly and bodily things have to heavenly and spiritual Edere est credere to believe is to receive the body and blood of the Lord Jesus Thus we call Communicating receiving when we believe receive and partake of that Mystical and heavenly food But here we must say as the Deacon did Sursum corda The Deity stoops low when it condescends to our ordinary natural actions We must here conceive a mystical partaking of Christ for the more distinct understanding of this we may consider the mystical eating the Body and drinking the Blood of Christ both 1. In similitude And 2. Dissimilitude unto the partaking of earthly and bodily food 1. To eat it is to partake of the nourishment 1 Cor. 10.17 18. As for the similitude unto the participation of bodily food the Bread Flesh or Meat you know is first masticated or ground with the teeth whence it 's conveyed into the stomach where by the heat partly of it and of the neighbour parts it looseth it self and is turned into Chyle and thence after discretion or separation made of the good from the bad it 's transmitted into every part as every part hath need 2. As for the Wine or whatsoever liquor else we drink it goes down as we say without chewing and after a like change and distinction made in the stomach it accompanieth the more solid meat throughout the body Even thus the heavenly Manna is to be received that is believed Joh. 1. Col. 2. Thus it is to be chewed and ruminated and meditated upon as the Isralites said of their Mannah What is it And so transmitted into the judgement the stomach as it were of the Soul which destributes to every part and faculty supply of the heavenly food For the enlivening and convenience of this food The Spirit accompanieth it For it is the Spirit that quickens Joh. 6. and helps our weakness of concoction Rom. 8. as Wine helps to digest solid meat Thus far they agree and many more resemblances might be found between them But the dissimilitude is greater For 1. Although our corporal food be turned into our bodies and receives a life from them yet Christ the Spiritual food is not so to be transformed into our Souls nor does he receive life from them But contrariwise this heavenly nourishment transforms our Souls and Assimilates them unto it self as the Cion or Graft suppose of an Apple or a Pear is not changed into the Nature of the stock which parhaps is a Thorn or a Crab but it turns the stock into its own Nature So saith St. James Chap. 1.21 Receive with meekness saith he the engrafted word which is able to save your souls To this purpose is that of the Apostle By one Spirit saith he we are all baptized into one body c. And we have been all made to drink into one Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 2. Nor doth this nourishment receive life from us but gives life unto us for the case is different in this exceedingly Our bodies must first live before they can be nourished for a dead body cannot be nourished But except ye eat the flesh of the son of man and drink his blood ye have no life in you saith our Saviour Joh. 6.53 And the bread that I will give him is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world vers 51. And he that eateth me even he shall live by me vers 57. 3. A third dissimilitude is the Belly cleanseth Meats Mar. 7.19 But this Meat cleanseth us Bodies and Souls Joh. 13. 5. To shew forth the Lords death what is it but to be conformable thereunto as the Apostle speaks Phil. 3. It also seems to have respect unto that custom of the Jews in the Passover To reveil the Mysteries of it unto their Children which they called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Schindl in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But how by eating this Bread and drinking this Cup do we shew forth the Lords death The Analogie seems to be this The Bread we eat and Drink we drink looseth its own Nature and becomes of the same Nature with our Bodies to which they are adjoyned Even so by eating the Flesh of the Son of God and drinking his Blood we become one with him and he one with us and being thus joyned unto him we become conformable unto his death The cause of this why they who eat the Flesh of the Son of God and drink his Blood shew forth the Lords death till he come who can it be but God himself who as he alone can give the thing signified so also to him alone it belongeth to appoint the signs 1. Learn from hence who are the worthy Communicants The Text teacheth us who but they who shew forth the Lords death 2. What the Christian calling is which Christ invites us unto What else but the imitating of his death Joh. 12 23 24. Rom. 6.3 Phil. 3. 3. The Christian Profession is no easie Profession strait is the gate narrow is the way compared to the pangs of Child-bearing Joh. 16.21 4. Our Profession of Christ's death it must be made known shew forth the Lords death The like exhortation ye have elsewhere Let your light so shine before men Let your moderation be known unto all men By this shall all men know that ye are my Disciples if ye love one another Exhort Shew forth the Lords death The words may be read thus as others We may be moved thereunto by these Arguments 1. Argument It 's but Reason Rom. 12. 2. Argument It 's most necessary For if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him 3. Argument It 's an Argument that we love God no greater love than to dye for another 2. Till he come This imports continuation without interruption and extent until Christ come 1. Of the first speak these places Matth. 16. Thou must take up thy cross daily 1 Cor. 15.31 Dye daily proper te mortificamur toto Die Rom. 8. 2. Thou must always bear about in thy body the dying of the Lord Jesus We who live are always delivered unto death for Jesus sake 2 Cor. 4.2 Phil. 1.6 Gal. 4.19 1 Tim. 6.14 2 Pet. 1.19 Repreh 1. It reproves those who have quickly done shewing forth the Lords death They must remember it was the task laid upon us Moriendo morieris and Crucifixion is a long lingering death Far easier it is to dye so than to dye and dye eternally as otherwise we must Repreh 2. It reproves those who will needs be shewing forth the vertues of him that hath called them before they have shewn forth the death of Christ NOTES on 1 ROR. XI 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But let a man examine himself and so let him eat
crucified in the Galatians 2. Jesus Christ was evidently set forth crucified in the Galatians 3. The Galatians did not obey the truth 4. Some or other had bewitched them that they did not obey the Truth 5. The Apostle for this reason calls them foolish Galatians This is a hard saying who can bear it But That this may appear to you we must enquire 1. What crucifixion is And 2. How the Lord Jesus was crucified 3. How and whether he was crucified among the Galatians or in the Galatians Crucifixion is that painful that lingering that shameful and that a●cursed death of the Cross unto which Christ humbled himself and became obedient unto Philip. 2.8 This painful lingering shameful accursed death of the Cross the Text saith our Lord suffered among the Galatians How among them Our English word among is borrowed of our Neighbours the Low Dutch word gemengt that is mixt or mingled so that some where in that Region of Galatia this was done and accordingly Martin Luther turns the word unter inter sometimes between us or among us so Piscator so the Low Dutch but they put in the Margin or in you and the French Bible and the Italian and Spanish Bibles all our Latin Translations that of Erasmus that of Castellio that of Beza only the Vulg. Latin hath in vobis in you All our English Translations Tyndal Coverdale and three others except one English Manuscript which hath in you And what else I beseech you signifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek and in vobis in the Latin but in you in plain English But how do they make it good that Christ was crucified among the Galatians The Evangelists tell us He was Crucified in or near Jerusalem without the Gate and how then among the Galatians Galatia was a great way off Jerusalem It will make somewhat toward the opening of this Truth if we enquire what these Galatians were and where they dwelt They are said to have been a people which descended of the Gauls called therefore Gallograeci but first Gomoritae from Gomar the Son of Japhet saith Josephus lib. 1. They were Scituate in the Lesser Asia between Pamphilia on the South on the East Cappadocia on the North the Euxine Sea saith Ptolomy in his first Table of Asia These are the people among whom Christ was Crucified But how could this be that Christ should be Crucified at Jerusalem and yet among the Galatians Our Expositors have much ado to bring both together One and he no mean man answers thus Although Christ was Crucified at Jerusalem yet saith he Paul tells us then by my preaching his Passion Life and Cross He hath been so lively set forth that ye might even see him before your eyes as evidently as the Jews saw him on the Cross at Jerusalem among you saith he lately in your age as it were before your eyes and perhaps some of you at that very time were present at Jerusalem and beholding Christ on the Cross among you i. e. in your age in your time or in you saith he that is in vicina via near you in Judea almost among you and before your eyes Crucified I could weary you and my self too with the shifts that some both Ancient and Modern Expositors have found out to bring Galatia and Jerusalem together which are at least ten dayes journey one from other O Beloved how little hath Christ been known or yet is he known according to the Spirit how few of that multitude who repute themselves Christians can truly say with St. Paul Though I have known Jesus Christ according to the flesh yet now I know him so no more 2 Cor. 5. for is not Jesus Christ the wisdom of God and the power of God 1 Cor. 1. Is he not made unto us Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption Is not the Truth in Jesus the putting off the old Man and putting on the new Ephes 4. Know we therefore that Christ is crucified and slain divers wayes 1. In Adam when his innocent Nature in us is murdered Revel 13.8 and all that dwell upon the earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the Book of Life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world 2. Crucified in the flesh upon the Cross 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures 3. In the Spirit as often as his good motions are suppressed in us For such crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame Hebr. 8.6 So that it will be no hard matter to declare how Christ was Crucified in the Galatians nor will it be very difficult to find out yet even now where our Lord both was and is daily crucified and by whom alas poor Pilate was not the alone crucifier of Christ And first how can Christ be said to be crucified in the Galatians To which I answer when they yielded not unto the motions of his Spirit in themselves but withstood them resisted them when they withstood the holy inspirations of Christs Spirit striving with them when they grieved when they quenched the holy fire in themselves when they yielded unto the inward Antichrist usurping a power in them for both cannot live together Thus Vatablus explains the Vulg. Latin in vobis inter vobis spiritus sanctus c. Isai 53.5 He was wounded of our transgressions and bruised of our iniquities But can the true Christ of God be crucified and slain The Divine Image saith holy Bernard Non est deleta sed obruta it is not wholly wiped out but overwhelmed The sacred Emblem represents unto us in the Lion Rampant the Devil above and the Lamb below trodden under foot but looking up and expecting when he shall be owned and restored mean time as to them in whom he is crucified he lies as utterly dead for thus the Prophet Isa 59.14 tells us that Truth is fallen in the street what street is that Lata licentiosa carnalium vita saith Hierom that broad street and licentious way and life of carnal men which is that which St. John tells us of Revel 11.8 that the two witnesses the Law and the Prophets which witness of the Righteousness of God Rom. 3.21 They lye dead in the street of that great City which St. Austin understands to be the Devils City which is spiritually called Sodom and Aegypt where also our Lord was crucified Observ 1. Hence it follows that Christ is in all men either dead or alive either crucified or glorified Observ 2. Christ is and lives in Believers Col. 1.27 To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles which is Christ in you the hope of Glory So 2 Cor. 13.5 Examine your selves whether ye be in the faith prove your own selves know ye not your own selves how that Jesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates And indeed how can Christ be and live otherwhere than in his believers since
great and important duty may be done and is done by all those who are Christs for they crucifie the flesh The Apostles drift here is to put a distinction between those under the Law as the Galatians desired to be Gal. 4.21 And 2. those under the Gospel 1. They under the Law are liable to the works of the flesh whereof he propounds a Catalogue vers 19. and consequently to Condemnation But 2. They who are under the Gospel are led by the spirit of Christ and bring forth the fruits of the Spirit and crucifie the flesh with the affections and lusts 1. They crucifie the flesh that must be distinct from the effects of it which follow with the affections and lusts So that for our more distinct consideration of these words I shall take them asunder and propound unto you these three Divine Axioms 1. The Christians or Disciples of Christ are Christs and belong to Christ 2. They have crucified the flesh 3. They have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts 1. The Christians or Disciples of Christ are Christs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They are such as belong unto Christ This is needful to be explained because it is the subject and foundation on which the following Divine Truths are built with this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Disciples of Christ or Christians are described Who then are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they that are Christs They who are Christs are considerable either in themselves or as compared with others 1. In themselves they who belonged to Christ were called by diverse names See Notes in Act. 11.26 Reason 1. They are correspondent to their Pattern Reason 2. In regard of the Father Col. 1.12 and the Son Joh. 17. Observ 1. The transcendent dignity of Christians Jam. 2.7 Observ 2. Christians and Disciples of Christ they are not their own they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are Christs Observ 3 As these words are comparatively taken learn hence O Christian man in what estate thou art c. See Notes in Act. 11.26 But how is it true that they who are Christs have crucified the flesh This is with similitude to Christ who is made sin for us and said to be put to death in the flesh 1 Pet. 3.18 and to have suffered for us in the flesh Chap. 4.1 And therefore in conformity unto his Crucifixion the Old Man of sin is to be put to a like death Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our Old Man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin Thus the sinful flesh or flesh and body of sin answers to Christs flesh and our Patience unto his Cross whereby the body of sin is crucified The Reason why they who are Christs ought to crucifie the flesh See Notes in Luk. 9.23 Object But the Text seems not to impose this as a duty on us to be done but speaks of it as already supposed to be done They that are Christs have crucified the flesh c. Respon It 's well worth our notice that sometime Christ sometime they who are Christs are said to have done or suffered that which they are yet doing So 1. Christ is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he hath made the purging of our sins Heb. 1.3 When yet he continues to make the purging of them 1 Job 1. He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all our unrighteousness Thus Heb. 2.16 He took on him the seed of Abraham The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the present tense as being the daily work of his providence to lay hold upon the seed of Abraham the faithful ones and to keep them from falling 2. Thus when they who are Christ's are said to be dead and buried with Christ by baptism Rom. 6.2 3 4. The words are in the Aorist 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which note their continued act of dying spiritually being baptized and being buried with Christ Thus the Colossians are said to be risen with Christ yet vers 5. they are exhorted to mortifie the earthly members And the word here also is in the Aorist And thus in the words of the Text They that are Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have crucified the flesh c. they have so done it that they are still doing of it Observ 4. The subtilty of Satan who for preservation of his own Kingdom hath brought mis-interpretations upon the Cross c. See Notes on Phil. 2.8 They who are Christs have crucified the flesh We must here enquire 1. What 's meant by the flesh 2. What it is to crucifie the flesh 3. How it is true that they who are Christs have crucified the flesh 1. The flesh here signifieth the old man Rom. 6.6 2. The word we render a Cross is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which of old was nothing else but that the Latin calls palus or vallus a long spar of Timber sharpened at one end and driven into the ground it had the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the erecting and setting it up into the air saith Eustathius and was used first for defence many such stakes being fixed into the earth about ones dwelling But afterward they fastned a transverse piece of Wood to the top of it and made it a Cross and used it for the execution of Malefactors Hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to crucifie or to fasten a Malefactor to the Cross Thus the word is used Matth. 27. As for the kind of death it was very painful See Notes on Phil. 2.8 ad finem in additionibus 3. But what 's this to us And how is it true that they who are Christs have crucified the flesh Surely it 's a principal duty of Christianity See Notes on Psal 28. in addit It is not truly understood what is the true spiritual Cross which our Lord commands his Disciples to take up The most agree that by the Cross of Christ is to be understood all manner of afflictions and persecutions Omnis generis calamitates piorum presertim veritatis causâ toleratas saith Flace Illyricus c. We can be no otherwise Christ's Disciples Nisi ad multas aerumnas ferendas compositi simus saith one of greatest name And another not much inferiour to him Nequit absque Cruce persecutione praedicari in mundo regnum Dei I might name many more who interpret the Cross of Christ to be afflictions and persecutions But persecutions cannot be the Cross of Christ See Notes on Phil. 2.8 Besides persecutions and afflictions befal all men alike Eccles 9. Cruci suae non minus affixi sunt reprobi whereas the Cross is here directed to Christ's own Disciples Matth. 10.38 Luk. 9.23 Observ 1. Note here the Types and Figures of the old man crucified with his passions and lusts We read what a great execution there was done by Josuah soon after he came among the Malefactors in the Land of Canaan Chap. 8.29 He hang'd the
See Notes on Luk. 9.23 This Cross is the patience the Altar ibidem 1. Quaere Whether all be to be consumed that is laid on 2. Quaere Whether is the Cross or Patience alone sufficient against all temptations See Notes in Luk. 9.23 No reliques of sin must remain See Notes in Phil. 2.8 Observ 1. The Christians daily exercise See Notes in Luk. 9.23 Observ 2. It is no easie matter to be quit of our sins Observ 3. The vanity of all outward things being destitute of the inward Cross and Patience c. See Notes in Luk. 9.23 Observ 4. Hence we may easily discover what kind of Christians the present Christian world consists of the Apostle in the Text tells us what they ought to be They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the passions and lusts But 2 Tim. 3.1 2. he foretells us what manner of Christians in these last dayes they should be self-loving Christians whereas the true Christian begins with self-denial Luk. 9. covetous Christians contra to do good proud Christians whereas Christ teacheth his Disciples humility blaspheming Christians such as take his Name in vain by an hypocritical profession of him and cause his Name to be blasphemed whereas the true Christians do the quite contrary Do we not evidently see how true a Prophet St. Paul was and how this his prophecy is fulfilled in these our dayes But how can such as these be taken for Christians O they have a form of Godliness that hides all these faults they hear many Sermons they keep the Sabbath yea but doth not the Apostle say That they who are Christs have crucified the flesh True but that 's impossible they have no power to do that they have a form of Godliness but deny the power thereof yea such power is altogether needless for Christ himself bare the Cross for them and his Righteousness which he hath wrought in the flesh is imputed unto them So that if they be but joyned to the Godly Party as they call themselves or be congregated and gathered in a Church-way of fellowship they may then be lovers of themselves covetous boasters proud c. And all these things shall be reputed as infirmities frailties imperfections of the Saints and Christ's Righteousness imputed to them shall cover all their knavery What 's the ground of all this They know not the true Cross of Jesus Christ but take it to be Persecution or Affliction c. See Notes in Phil. 2.8 Addition Observ 5. Note here a great difference between the true Disciples of Christ who are the true Christians and those who are only in pretence and name such The true Christian is he who followeth the Lord Jesus Christ who hath the same mind in him which was also in Christ Jesus What mind was that 1. An humble mind He humbled himself 2. An obedient mind He became obedient and that to the death 3. And that the death of the Cross Phil. 2.8 The true Christians arm themselves with the same mind and suffer with Christ for he who hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin 1 Pet. 4.1 They have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts The Christians in pretence only are they who hold Opinions of Christ as whether he died for all men or no And these please themselves exceedingly in the name of Orthodox that they are of right Opinions As for the following of Christ in crucifying the flesh with the passions and lusts they know not what the true Cross of Christ is and how then can they crucifie the flesh with the passions and lusts on it Or if they preach it they are like the followers of the Philosophers of old who took up their Leaders Opinions and Tenents but as for practice of them therein they failed As it is said of the Athenians That they knew what Virtue was but they gave the Lacedemonians lieve to practise it Repreh 1. Who bear not the Cross c. See Notes in Luk. 9.23 Repreh 2. Those who mistake the Malefactor here to be crucified the Old Man the sinful flesh or flesh of sin and in lieu thereof crucifie their own natural flesh like him that aimed at the beast and killed the man Repreh 3. Who confess affections and lusts are to be crucified but they wish an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. See Notes in Luk. 9.23 Repreh 4. Who are able and valiant for destroying outward foes but not the inward ibid. Consol 1. Alas I am not able to follow the Lord Jesus I know him only according to the flesh See Notes in Luk. 9.29 Consol 2. Who follow Christ neither transported with a better condition nor dejected with a worse ibid. these are dead men See Notes in Phil. 2.8 Addition NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON EPHESIANS IV. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that he might fill or fulfil all things Syriack 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vt perficeret omnia vel pacificaret omnia THese words contain our Lords Journey from Heaven to the Earth and from the Earth to the Heavens and the end of that journey whereof he himself speaks Joh. 16.28 I came forth from the Father and come into the world Again I leave the world and go to the Father That we may the better understand what correspondence the Text holds with the neighbouring Verses let us examine the coherence which I conceive to be this The Apostle having exhorted the Ephesians unto Unity vers 1 2 3. endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace he enforceth his Exhortation from those great names vers 4 5 6. There is one Body and one Spirit even as ye are called in one Hope of your calling one Lord one Faith one Baptism one God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all And foreseeing that the variety of gifts might provoke the less to envy the greater and the greater to despise the less by a Prolepsis he prevents that great inconvenience which experience in all Ages proves makes the rent in the body of Christ He tells them that this variety both of gifts and their measures proceeds from one and the same Donor vers 7. To every one of us is given Grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ which he proves by testimony of the Prophet David Psal 68.18 When he ascended up on high he led Captivity captive which he understands and interprets to be meant of Christ vers 9 10. all which variety tends to unity vers 11.16 Of the Lords Ascension and our conformity thereunto I have formerly insisted I have made choice of this Text that I might consider the end of Christs Ascension In the words we have these points 1. Christ abased and humbled himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 de descended 2. Christ was exalted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he ascended 3. The same Christ who humbled himself was
put him to an open shame And when the people hear his word and call him their Lord and King yet do not that which he commands them what do they else but crown him with thorns and put a reed in his hand unless they make him a Lord of misrule that will allow them to do what they list And when they bow the knee and uncover their head at his name yet are wilfully disobedient what do they else but deride and mock him as the strangers did and trample under foot the Son of God We pitty St. Peter who denyed his Lord and we would not have done it had we heen in his case no not we but in our works we deny him which is far worse if our Apostle reason right Tit. 1. But to be a Judas to have betrayed our Lord with a kiss and made sale of him who among us that tenders his own reputation would not think it a better report to have had his end Yet what do we else but betray our Lord with a kiss when in praying and praising and singing and preaching we draw near unto him with our lips but our hearts are far from him And I appeal unto thee Merchant Tradesman or other when there stands but a lie between thee and a good commodity dost thou not think it a cheap penny-worth and dost thou not then sell thy Lord He is the Truth and that for a little gain perhaps for less than one of his thirty pieces a goodly price we value our Lord Truth at when we pass him away for a trifle when we transgress for a piece of bread as if the Truth were of all other the cheapest commodity that 's bought or sould And when we contemn the present Grace of Christ when we resist and oppose a known Truth what do we else but spit in Christ's face blindfold him and buffet him But what are these wounds in thine hands These are they wherewith I was wounded in the house of my friends Zach. 13. And who are they that monopolize the friendship of Christ but those weak ones in Religion who would be thought the strongest men and stoutest professors of it These these are his friends who pierce his hands i. e. enfeeble his power cornua in manibus ejus c. He had borns in his hands and there is the hidings of his power saith the Prophet Habakuck 3.4 These hands they pierce who have a form of godliness but deny the power of it 2 Tim. 3.5 And of all Sects in the Christian World these are the men who most of all upbraid others with this place yet are they the men who of all others most pretend infirmity and weakness and that in this day of Christ's Power Psal 110. And what do the rich and voluptuous but put to death the Author of Life Ye have lived in pleasure and been wanton saith St. James Jam. 6. ye have condemned and killed the just one i. e. the Lord Jesus saith venerable Bede Oecumenius and the interlineary Gloss and he mean time doth not resist you Thus he is oppressed and he is afflicted yet he opens not his mouth He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter as a sheep before the shearers is dumb so opened not he his mouth Esay 53. but even unto this death this painful tedious ignominious execrable death He became obedient even to the death of the cross If we desire a Reason more proper to this point 't was that he might shew us in how base esteem we have had the Truth the Wisdom and the Righteousness of God saith Lactantius Institut libr. 4. cap. 36. How we have accounted the life of Christ madness and the end of it without honour Such such hath been his repute always in the world He was dispised and rejected of men a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief and we hid as it were our faces from him He was despised and we esteemed him not yet 't was that he might sanctifie us that he suffered without the gate Heb. 13.12 That he might redeem us from the curse of the Law that he became a curse for us Gal. 3. 'T was that no man no not the basest of men should be excluded from the benefit of his death 'T was that he might draw all men unto him that he was thus lifted up The cause of these and all what ere he did and suffered is the Love the great Love of Christ wherewith he loved us and gave himself for us For so he seems really and in effect which is the truest word to speak to every one of us from off his Cross Behold O man what I suffer for thy sake Lo I have disrobed my self of mine Honour my Majesty and Glory and taken upon me thy flesh the rags of thine humanity and all the weaknesses and frailties of it all the basest conditions of it I have been apprehended like a thief accused spit on blind-folded buffeted derided stript scourged and all for thee I have been accounted a Worm and no Man the very shame of men and outcast of the people a mad man one that had a Devil not only sinful not only the worst of sinners but even sin it self for thy sake I have taken a body for this end that I might die for thee and which is yet worse than death I am suffering the torments of a painful tedious ignominious accursed death upon the Cross for thee Behold all that pass by and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow Yet is not the sorrow of my Passion which thou seest equall to that which thou seest not of my compassion for thee I am forsaken of my Friends of Angels of Men of my Disciples of my God and Father and left forlorn desolate and exposed unto the malice and temptation of the Devil and all wicked Spirits And all this as it proves for malicious and graceless men for mine enemies for an unthankful world which makes no other use of my sufferings but as of a cloke to cover their wiekedness withall and to hide themselves as they think from the eyes of Omnisciency Lo I am become a man of sorrows that I may lead thee through sorrow into joy I am exposed to the power of darkness that I may bring thee from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God I am now dying for thee that thou by a like death mayst enjoy the everlasting life yea I endure a shameful and accursed death for thee that I may lead thee from shame to glory from a curse unto a blessing I have left all and am left of all for thy sake and oughtest not thou to leave all for my sake I have left whatever is in this world good and delightful for thy sake And oughtest not thou to leave all whatever is evil however it seem to thee good and delightful for my sake yea for thy own sake shall I not see the travel of my soul Thus thus the Son of
away Devils I dispute not though sure I am the Ancient Holy Fathers of the Church affirm no less But without all question by the Cross it self the patience of the Saints the great Dragon the old Serpent called the Devil and Satan was cast out and his Angels with him And the Saints overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and the Word of the Testimony and they loved not their lives unto their death Apoc. 12.9 By this we tread upon Serpents and Scorpions and all the power of the enemy This this is the Christian Glory Gloriosum est sequi Dominum saith the Wise Man Ecclus. 18. we glory in afflictions saith St. Paul Nay God forbid saith he that I should glory in any thing save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ whereby the world is crucified to me and I unto the world Gal. 6.14 But go we so about to perswade men to follow our Lord down this lowest step of his Humiliation to the death of the Cross as if it were Arbitrary and left to our discretion O no beloved 't is our duty our bounden duty to which we are bound by a double necessity both Praecepti as that of our Saviour and frequently from our Saviour by his Apostles and Medii and this such that without it it 's impossible we ever attain unto the end For the obtaining of the Crown depends upon this bearing of the Cross He that endures temptations when he is tryed he shall receive the Crown of Life saith St. James Jam. 1. that life depends upon this death If we die with him we shall live with him The glory we hope for depends upon the enduring of this shame If we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him This is that furnace of humiliation wherein the gold is tryed and acceptable men come forth vessels of honour meet for their masters use This is the Altar whereon the sin-offering the body of sin is consumed the truth of that whose shadow we contend for This is the Purgatory through which all the Saints of God ever have and shall pass to heaven the truth of that which vain men have made a fable This is the narrow way between fire and water which leads unto the heavenly inheritance This is that strait gate through which we must crowd into life and like the Serpent leave the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the conversation of the old man behind 'T is the death of the Cross not the natural death that purges us from all uncleanness before we enter where no unclean thing enters In a word the Cross whereon our old Man is crucified with Christ Nor ought we to think the Cross to be a burden insupportable if we consider the reward how heavy soever it 's but short and light for our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our English comes short of the full expression a far more exceeding eternal weight of Glory 2 Cor. 4.17 St. Peter calls it modicum modicum passos and modicum we say non nocet no it hurts us not 't was the condition of Nahash 1 Sam. 11 2. of the Devil let me thrust out thy right eye Christs Spirit saith do thy self no harm Act. 16. No the Cross may it must kill us but it cannot hurt us for we neither suffer loss of any thing that 's good nor sense of pain Not loss for though we lay all our affections upon the Cross good and bad together the gold together with the dross the dross will be consumed the gold will not the Humanity of Christ might die the Divinity could not die If a Ram rank carnal joy be laid upon the Altar 't will be slain and burnt if Isaac if true spiritual joy it will come off alive Men look upon this death as if it were the only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the most terrible of all terribles whereas indeed there 's no hurt at all in it It 's like the casting out of the unclean Devil the Devil threw the man down that was possest but hurt him not saith St. Luk. 4. we are cast down saith our Apostle but not destroyed as dying and behold we live I am crucified with Christ yet I live yet not I but Christ lives in me no loss then I hope No nor is there sense of pain or what there is 't is ballanced with comfort so much water of affliction in the vessel so much wine of joy as the sufferings of Christ abound so doth the consolation also Nay all the pleasures of this world are not so delightful as the very pains of suffering with Christ Moses who had experience of both he of the two chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Aegypt Think it not strange saith St. Peter concerning the fiery tryal which is to try you as though some strange thing happened unto you but rejoyce inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christs sufferings that when his Glory shall be reveiled ye may be glad also with exceeding joy Nay the pains of this death are so swallowed up with hope of life that there 's no joy but this Count it all joy when ye fall into diverse temptations saith St. James Jam. 1. And what Patient now I pray except an arrant fool or stark mad or desperately sick would not swallow down a potion how bitter soever if assured he could not live except he drunk it how much more if sweetned and made most pleasant with certain hope of life And can we drink of the cup he drank of the cup of his passion or can we be baptized with the baptism he was baptized withall baptized into his death No doubt we can as the Sons of Zebedee answered our Saviour For Christ's Cross is commonly the first lesson we learn in Christ's School to believe that Christ was crucified for us and that we at all adventures are crucified with Christ For who hath not this or the like sentence in his mouth The life that I now live I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me O Beloved we are all of a very easie belief and soon brought off to credit any thing that God hath promised or Christ hath done or suffered for us But to believe that we must be obedient unto his death or bear his Cross after him suffer with him or be crucified with him Indeed to believe we must do any thing but believe here here we stick here the believer will be sure he will not make overmuch hast This was a short cut unto Salvation who ever it was first found it But we must know that the lively Faith which worthily we highly prize hath necessarily other Graces accompanying it and of these especially Charity and Patience for the faithful man can do nothing without Love nor suffer
Graces live and grow in us Does there not rather grow up instead of these anger wrath malice hatred envy pride covetousness ambition and such like briars and thorns and ill weeds which are not of our heavenly fathers planting Nay may it not be feared it may be said of some here which the Lord saith to his Prophet Ezechiel This people cometh and sits before thee as my people and they hear thy words the words of Christ patience but they will not do them for with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetousness Ezech. 33.31 'T is in their Shop in their Counting house in their Ware-house or perhaps at Sea Or may not that be feared which befel our Saviour while he was discoursing of his passion and who should betray him his Auditors reasoned among themselves who should be the greatest O Beloved are these the fruits of Christ's sufferings Is this the travel of his soul Is this to be dead to be crucified with Christ Is this to take up the cross daily and to follow him Nay is it not rather to tread under foot the Son of God Is it not rather to crucifie the Son of God afresh and put him to an open shame for the earth that drinks in the rain and brings forth such thorns and briars as these are is rejected and nigh unto a curse whose end is to be burned But Beloved we are perswaded better things of you and such as accompany salvation though we thus speak I hope we rather in humility obedience and self-denyal take up our cross daily and follow Christ our Lord down this lowest step of his humiliation Which that we may the better do let us count it all joy when we fall into manifold temptations as knowing that the tryal of our faith worketh patience and if patience have her perfect work we shall be perfect and entire wanting nothing For this end let us hearken to the word of Christ's patience that Word of Power which wind and sea obey which breaks all waves and billows of temptation Scriptum est silenced the Devil himself That word of the kingdom according to which if we suffer with him we shall reign with him 1 Cor. 1.24 Let us build upon this Word as upon a Rock and neither winds of lying spirits or false doctrines nor flouds of temptation shall ever be able to move us Let us bind our sacrifice our daily sacrifice with cords of holy purposes and strong settled resolutions unto the horns of the Altar unto the strength of Christ's Patience And let us now my Brethren take the Prophets and Apostles and all the holy men of God for an example of suffering affliction and patience and let us be followers of them who through faith and patience obtained the promises Ye have heard not only of the faith but also of the patience of faithful Abraham that after he had patiently endured he obtained the promises Ye have heard of the patience of Moses that he esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt Ye have heard of the patience of Job and seen the end or reward of the Lord. Ye have heard of the patience of Peter that he was a witness of the suffering of Christ and of the glory to be reveiled Ye have heard of the patience of St. Paul that he undervalued all things for the knowledge of Christ crucified for which he had suffered the loss of all things that he might know the fellowship of Christ's suffering and be made conformable unto his death Ye have heard of the patience of other Saints of God for the same afflictions saith St. Peter are accomplished in all our brethren that are in the world for they have all passed through the narrow way they have all entred into life through this strait gate they have all endured this fiery tryal they have all suffered these pangs of death they have all born the Cross and been crucified with Christ We have now heard of the humility obedience and patience of Jesus Christ who humbled himself and became obedient unto the death even the death of the cross We account them happy that have suffered saith St. James so 't is in the Greek the Latin and old English unhappy we if we do not suffer with them Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses let us lay aside every weight and the sin which doth so easily beset us and let us run with patience the race that is set before us looking unto Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross despised the shame and is set down at the right-hand of God Heb. 12.1 and 2. For consider him who endured such contradiction of sinners against himself lest ye be weary and faint in your mind In all our afflictions he is afflicted and in that he hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour us also that are tempted And let us pray as those have done who have been crucified with him Lord remember us now thou art come into thy Kingdom O Lord we beseech thee deliver our souls By the mystery of thy holy Incarnation by thy holy Nativity and Circumcision by thy Baptism Fasting and Temptation by thine Agony and Bloody sweat by thy Cross and Passion by thy precious Death and Burial good Lord deliver us Now the Lord direct your hearts into the Love of God and the patience of Jesus Christ and the God of patience and all grace who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Jesus Christ after that ye have suffered a while make you perfect stablish strengthen settle you To him be Glory and Dominion for ever and ever Amen NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON PHILIPPIANS IV. 8 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Finally brethren whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are pure whatsoever things are lovely whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue and if there be any praise think on these things Those things which ye have both learned and received and heard and seen in me do and the God of peace shall be with you THe words present us with the end of our meeting The humbling of our selves to seek God for the blessing of peace upon the Treaty to be had between the King and Parliament The God of peace shall be with you As also they discover unto us the only expedient the means only available to invite the God of peace to be present umpire all differences and vouchsafe his blessing of peace unto the Treaty Whatsover things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are pure whatsoever things are lovely whatsoever things are of good report if there be any vertue if there be any praise think on these things Those things which ye have both learned and heard and
in him they are circumcised c. vers 11. Burial and Baptism they are Arguments proper to special occasions nor shall I trouble you with them further than as they are serviceable to illustrate Christ's burial and resurrection and Christians Conformity thereunto In the words are expressed Christ's Humiliation and Exaltation and the Christians conformity thereunto In the former we have these Truths 1. Christ was buried 2. Christians are buried with him 3. By baptism In the latter 1. Christ is risen 2. Christians are risen with him 3. They are risen with him by Faith in the operation of God who raised up Christ from the dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render wherein referring it to baptism mentioned in the former words and indeed the Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may refer thereunto but all other English Translations turn it in whom and understand it of Christ as truly it may be And because there is a truth in both and who can tell whether the Holy Ghost in the Apostle intended rather we may according to the fulness of the Spirit understand both Observ 1. Hence it appears that as the Sacraments and Sacramental signs confirm and seal something to us when they are called signs and seals So likewise they require something of us If Christ be not risen ye are yet in your sins Object And why might not Faith in the operation of God stand but rather the operative power of God I Answer men are generally so full of their own interest that I vehemently suspect the Translators have rendered the word Operation out of design For whereas many men imagine themselves Just by that Righteousness which Christ himself wrought in the dayes of his flesh without any work of Righteousness wrought in their own hearts so why may they not imagine themselves risen by Faith in the operation of God although they be not risen unto a new life Yea the Marginal Gloss of the quarto Bible hath these words through Faith of the operation of God in believing that God by his power raised up Christ whereof we have a sure token in our Baptism There are who understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if it were referred to Faith Thus one of the old English translations Faith that is wrought by the operation of God But the Apostle understands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the power of God whereby he raised up Christ from the dead as is evident by comparing with the Text 1 Cor. 6.14 Ephes 1.19 20. Observ 2. There is a Power given to Believers to rise with Christ from the dead This power is testified by David Psal 71.18 Thy power to every one that is to come Observ 3. Faith is the receiving of the divine Power whereby we may arise from the dead Rom. 4.21 Gal. 2.20 Observ 4. By Christ's Resurrection faith is given to all Act. 17.31 1 Pet. 1.3 21. Observ 5. This discovers the imaginary Faith or presumption rather of thousands at this day who believe that what God or Christ hath done or suffered it is for them both done and suffered and that so assuredly theirs as if they themselves had done and suffered it As when Christ is born it is for them when he is said to suffer it is for them for them that he is crucified dead and buried and risen again That he is their Saviour and Redeemer And what ground have they for averring and affirming all this What else but their Faith they believe all this And therefore it is so And ought not men to believe all this Yes no doubt if they have good ground for their belief How otherwise is Christ born for them unless he be formed in them and born anew And how are his sufferings theirs unless they suffer with him unless the sufferings of Christ abound in them 2 Cor. 1. How is his Crucifixion theirs unless they be crucified with him Gal. 2. How is his death theirs unless they dye with him How can they appropriate his burial to themselves unless they be buried together with him How can their Faith in the operation of God be beneficial unto themselves unless they believe in the Operative power of God By being born with him suffering with him crucified with him dead with him raised from the dead with him his birth suffering crucifixion death and resurrection become ours and not other ways Having spoken of our Lords Humiliation unto death even to the death of the Cross I should have followed him to his Resurrection But being dead it 's necessary he first be buried before he rise Let us now proceed and follow our Lord into his grave the lowest dungeon of his Humiliation In the words we have our Lords burial and the Colossians burial with him and that by Baptism So that ye have three Points contained in the words 1. Christ was buried 2. The Colossians and all true followers of our Lord are also buried with him 3. They are buried with him by baptism 1. The burial of Christ may be considered 1. According to the History of it so shall I speak of it in the first Point 2. Or according to the mystery and so in the second 1. According to the History Howsoever the use of our Tongue hath put no distinction between burial and interment or puting the dead body into the grave or ground yet certainly among the Jews burial was one thing interment another For the ancient burial was by Embalming as Herodotus in Euterpe tells us of the Egyptians that they embalmed the bodies of the dead with Mirrh Aloes Cedromel Salt Wax and Rosin washed them wound them up in fine Linnen and so kept them in Coffins Thus Joseph commanded his servants the Physicians to embalm his father and the Physicians embalmed Israel Gen. 50.2 and 26. They embalmed Joseph and put him into a coffin in Egypt Thus our Lord saith of the woman In that she hath poured this oyntment on my body she did it for my burial Matth. 26.12 Accordingly we read of his burial Joh. 19.39 40. Nicodemus brought a mixture of mirrh and aloes about an hundred pound weight then took they the body of Jesus and wound it in linnen cloaths with the spices as the manner of the Jews is to bury There 's his burial Now in vers 41.42 we read of his Resurrection The Reason of Christ's Burial and Interment was the expiation of the curse whereof this was part Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt return For as our Lord by his death overcame death and him that hath the power of death So by his accursed death and burial he redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 For in Reason the Playster must be as large as the Sore and the Tent as large and deep as the wound Since that the venome of the Serpent reacheth even to the grave as Plutarch tells us of some dead men who turn to Serpents a monument of mans first poysoning by the
an Island made a dunghil by the wickedness of those who live in it Shame and bashfulness of old covered the walking graves they were afraid to discover their sins but sin through custom is grown bold and openeth the Sepulchre The Pharisees were Sepulchres but covered Yet will these men be accounted Christians and religious though he who bridleth not his tongue that mans religion is in vain Jam. Only men have learned to cover their Sepulchres with beautiful names as lascivious talk mirth rayling or slander zeal c. But if thou hear any belching out oaths lies slanders whatever he pretends doubt not to say of him his throat is an open sepulchre If the works be naught and the speech prophane no question but the heart is rotten That which comes out of the man desiles the man though Marshal saith Lasciva est nobis pagina vita proba est Our book is wanton but our life honest 'T is impossible Nothing comes out of the sack but was before in the sack saith the French Proverb and a more certain speech out of the mouth of truth it self Ex abundantia cordis os loquitur out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh Repreh 4. Those who crucifie Christ again and bury him again Truth is faln in the street and equity cannot enter mercy goodness love righteousness peaceableness long suffering c. where are they to be found above ground They are only names among us As for the things themselves they are dead and buried they are no otherwise than if an honest man were dead and buried he would leave a good name behind him and so do these For these things the Lord hath a controversie with the inhabitants of the land because there is no truth nor mercy nor knowledge of God in the land What no truth Veritas in profundo Truth lies hid as in a pit it lyes dead and buried saith Democritus 'T is buried under the gainful sin of lying Mercy is buried under oppression cruelty and blood-thirstiness The knowledge of our God that 's seen in doing judgement and justice judging the cause of the poor and needy in doing no violence to the stranger the fatherless and the widow Is not this to know me saith the Lord Jer. 22 Now if we make fartherless and make widows in the Land can we be said to have any knowledge of God in the Land O Beloved for these things the Lord hath a controversie with his people because there is no truth no mercy no knowledge of God in the land they are dead and buried By swearing and lying and killing and stealing and committing adultery they break out and blood toucheth blood c. Therefore shall the land mourn and every one that dwells therein shall languish Hos 4.12 13. Exhort Let us as Thomas saith to his fellow Disciples Let us go and dye with him so may I to you go and be buried with him 1 Sam. 22.1 2 3. We read that David went into the cave of Adullam and when his brethren and all his fathers house heard it they went down thither to him and every one that was in distress and every one that was in debt and every one that was disconsolated gathered themselves unto him and he became their Captain Thither the miserable men resort let us go to the true David into the Cave into the Sepulchre of the true David we are of his fathers house and he is not ashamed to call us brethren we are all qualified enough we are in distress we are in debt The Lord forgive us our debts and we are or may be bitter in soul O let us descend into our Saviours Grave and he 'l become our Captain the captain of our salvation By this means all our debts will be discharged and we shall be free-men being buried with him Our old man shall be crucified with him that the body of sin may be destroyed that henceforth we may not serve sin A Coffin taken up at Assos in Phrygia consumed the bodies of all put into it in forty days Plin. lib. 36. chap. 17. and such is our Lords grave if we be buried with him Consider what thy lusts are they are earthly they are carnal they are dust and to dust they must return they ought to be serpents food Esay And shall they be thy food wilt thou feed on carion or a dead carcase Thy meat and drink ought to be to do the will of thy father which is in heaven And dost thou prefer the swines husks before the plenty of thy fathers house Sign Art thou buried with Christ thou art not yet dead thou will say that Christ died for thee and gave himself for thee and the life that thou livest in the flesh thou livest by the faith of the Son of God who died for thee and gave himself for thee Gal. 2.20 Thou believest well if thou so believest as the Apostle did But Beloved we are all of a very easie belief and soon brought off to credit any thing that God hath promised or Christ hath done or suffered for us quae volumus facilè credimus but to believe that we must be obedient to his death die with him be crucified with him and be buried with him Indeed to believe we must do any thing but believe here here we stick here to be sure the believer will not make overmuch haste Thou hast not yet suffered unto blood striving against sin thou hast not let out the blood of the earthly life in the blood is the life thereof and poured it on the earth as dust thy sin must be first dead before thou bury it thou must not bury thy self alive or bury thy self by strong imagination Moses smote the Aegypitian and buried him in the sand Exod. 2. he smote not the Hebrew but only rebuked him it is not the killing or the burying of thy self but of thy sin that the Lord requires of thee If thou be dead and buried with Christ thou will bring forth fruit except a grain of wheat be cast into the earth and die it remaineth alone This was signified by the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifieth embalming and wheat lying dead and buried in the ground I doubt not but many there are and would be who would lay down their natural lives that they might be Christs Disciples But now the question is and I know not how they will answer it how can they be Christs Disciples when they are dead and have laid down their natural lives Luk. 14.26 Love covers the multitude of sins by it we cover other mens sins De mortuis non nisi bonum by it our own sins are covered Psal 32. and blessed are they whose sins are covered but then there they may be it 's presently added and in whose spirit there is no guile Many things are forgiven her for she loved much Christ was buried in a new Sepulchre The earnest desire of Jacob was bury me not in Aegypt Neither
have known some extremely austere and strict in keeping under their own bodies in Lent but when that is done they have let them loose all the year after But our Apostle hath taught us another Lesson 1 Cor. 15. where having largely proved our Lords Resurrection concludes and infers from thence in the last Verse of that long Chapter Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast and unmoveable always abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. And it is a godly Prayer which ye heard this day That Almighty God who through his only begotten Son Jesus Christ hath overcome death and opened unto us the gate of everlasting life He would grant that as by his special grace preventing us He puts in our minds good desires so by his continual help we may bring the same to good effect through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. Lastly This makes exceedingly for the consolation of the poor dejected soul which dyes with Christ that it may live with him Alas I am brought very low The sorrows of death compass me about and the powers of Hell get hold upon me I find trouble and sorrow Poor Soul 'T is true No chastisement for the present seems joyous but grievous Heb. 12.11 Nevertheless afterward it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them who are exercised thereby Wherefore know thine own happiness Blessed Soul Thou art now following thy Lord unto his Cross thou art now to be made conformable unto his death that thou mayst be made conformable unto his Resurrection thou art now passing through that narrow way entring and crowding through that strait gate enduring that fiery tryal Thou art now in thy labours and throws of child-bearing Thou art now suffering the pangs of death and the pains of hell But despair not it is our Lords comparison proper for his purpose Joh. 16.21 When the Disciples disputed of our Saviours speech Yet a little while c. A woman when she is in travel saith our Lord she hath sorrow because her hour is come but as soon as she is delivered of the child she remembreth no more the anguish for joy that a man is born into the world And ye now therefore have sorrow saith he But I will see you again and your heart shall rejoyce and your joy no man taketh from you This was long before prophesied of viz. that disconsolate and forlorn estate Jer. 30.5 We have heard a voice of trembling of fear and not of peace Ask ye now and see whether a man doth travel with child Wherefore do I see every man with his hands on his loyns as a woman in travel and all faces are turned into paleness Alas for that day is great so that none is like it It is even the time of Jacobs trouble but he shall be saved out of it for it shall come to pass that day that I will break his yoke from off thy neck and will burst thy bond and strangers shall no more serve themselves of him But they shall serve the Lord their God and David their king whom I will raise up unto them They shall obey the Messiah the Son of David their king whom God shall raise up unto them So the Chaldee Paraphrast So that the obtaining of this joy depends upon the bearing of his sorrow The obtaining of the Crown depends upon the bearing of the Cross He that endures temptations when he is tryed he shall receive the crown of life saith St. James that life depends upon this death If we dye with him we shall live with him The Glorious Resurrection which thou hopest for depends upon the enduring of thy present shame if we suffer with him we shall be glorified with him This is the Furnace of Humiliation wherein the Gold is tryed and acceptable men come forth vessels of Honour meet for their masters use O but my sins my manifold my mighty sins are a burden too heavy a burden for me to bear As thy sins deject thee and cast thee down so may the consideration of thy Lords Resurrection comfort thee and raise thee up again Hear what St. Paul saith Acts 13.32 We declare unto you Glad Tydings how that the promise that was made to the Fathers God hath fulfilled the same unto their children in that he hath raised up Jesus again c. verse 38. Be it known unto you therefore Brethren that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins and by him all that believe are justified from all things I have read in a most ancient Manuscript from all sins from which you could not be justified by the Law of Moses The like Col. 2.13 You being dead in your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh hath he quickened together with him having forgiven you all trespasses Hear what St. Peter saith Think it not strange concerning the fiery tryal which is to try you as if some strange thing happened unto you but rejoyce in as much as ye are partakers of Christs Sufferings that when his Glory shall be revealed ye may be glad with exceeding Glory And what if the pains of Hell get hold upon thee in this condition in this Hell there is neither poena damni nor sensûs neither punishment of loss nor of Sense in the Hell thou sufferest 1. Not loss for though the Gold together with the dross be cast into the fire the dross indeed will be consumed but the Gold will not the Humanity of Christ might die the Divinity could not die if a Ram rank carnal joy be laid upon the Altar 't will be slain and burned if Isaac if true spiritual joy so Isaac signifieth 't will come off alive No loss then I hope 2. No nor is there sense of pain or if there be 't is balanced with consolation so much water of affliction as there was in the Vessels John 2. so much wine of joy and as the Sufferings of Christ abound so doth the Consolation also Nay all the pleasures of this world are not so delightful as the very pains of suffering with Christ Moses who had experience of the two chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt Nay the pains of this death are so swallowed up with hope of life that there is no joy but this Count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptation saith St. James Jam. 1. This is the very same way wherein our Lord hath gone before us And hereunto are we called because Christ also suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2. And whither doth he lead us Whither but to a Glorious Resurrection We see Jesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with Glory and Honour for it became him for whom are all
things that are above Where then are these high things to be sought Where else but where they were lost If one should lose a piece of money in the house should he go and seek it in the street or in the fields Surely the good Woman knew she had lost her groat in the house and therefore she swept her house and sought diligently there till she found it Yea although a man should seek a piece of money lost and find such an one elsewhere yet it 's none of his but some others The high things are better than silver and gold saith the Wise Man and if thou seek them as silver and as fine gold and find them either in Heaven above or in the Earth beneath or in the Scriptures or in this or that Congregation in this or that Man yet if thou find them not in thy self in thine own heart in thine own Soul and Spirit there they were lost that 's certain if thou find them not there they are none of thine and what benefit is it unto thee to find them any where else if thou find them not in thine own house in thine own self therefore the Apostle directs thee 2 Cor. 13 5. Examine your selves prove your own selves know ye not your own selves that Christ Jesus is in you except ye be Reprobates they were lost in a proud heart and are to be found in an humble Blame not the Minister though thou understand him not he may use great plainness of speech yet mayest not thou understand him the fault is in thy self he speaks as he ought of spiritual things but thou art carnal Set not thine affections upon the things that are below upon the earth pray unto the Lord that thou mayest be spiritually minded and heavenly minded that thou mayest die unto Sin arise and live unto Righteousness and so thou shalt seek and find the things above Repreh 1. Those who imagine themselves risen with Christ if they can declaim against others who are not risen c. See Notes in Coloss 2.12 Repreh 2. Those who being fallen arise not Though I well know that all men are not of the same judgement concerning Festivals yet all rather incline to those which are observed in memory of our Saviour such as this is of his Resurrection yea although some there may be who condemn all Feasts as superstitious yet though that were so yet may we make a good use of them Our Saviour resorted to the Temple and taught there in the Feast of Dedication Joh. 10 22-20 a Feast which may be doubted whether lawfully Ordained or no. And whereas the people of Philippi were as yet ignorant of the true God and his Worship met together in a Proseucha or Prayer-house Act. 16. The Apostle layes hold of that opportunity and preacheth the Word unto them yea Act. 17. being at Athens and seeing the City wholly given to Idolatry he was present at their Devotions vers 23. and thence takes occasion to preach unto them Ecclus. 33.8 10. It is wont to be objected against Holy dayes and Festivals in memory of our Saviours Actions and Passions that as the day passeth so the Duty with it and is neglected all the year after whereas indeed although the day pass as our time doth too speedily yet the Duty should continue The best way to confute this Objection is by our life and practice that though by certain Solemn dayes appointed we keep in memory the actions of our Lord and Saviour yet the Duty of those dayes we observe continually Thus every day is a Christmass-day to him in whom Christ is born Every day is a Whitsunday to him who hath the Gifts and Graces of the Holy Spirit Every day a Passion a death to him who suffers with Christ Every day a Resurrection-day to him who riseth with Christ And therefore having in the first point of this Text propounded our Saviours pattern in his Resurrection I come now in the second to our imitation of it the Colossians rising with Christ If we enlarge our thoughts to comprehend the Antitype or thing signified by all these what is it but the Wisdom Power Goodness Mercy and Life of God the Divine Nature it self as it were in the dead heart of Man as dead in the world now to be raised again into Life in us as will appear in the second point NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON COLOSSIANS III. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Put on therefore as the Elect of God holy and beloved bowels of mercies kindness humbleness of mind meekness long-suffering THe Holy Apostle having taken away the filthy garments of the Old Man from the Colossians in vers 5 9. from thence to the 14th vers he opens the glorious Wardrobe of the New Man which first he shews us intire and whole vers 10. the several parts of it in this Text and so forward And as Ephes 6. he first exhorts them and us in them to arm our selves with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole armour of God and then the several parts of it So here he first exhorts the Colossians and us vers 10 11. for the Ancients understood those words hortatively to put on Christ the whole garment and then in this Text to put on the several parts of it as mercy kindness humbleness of mind meekness long-suffering What then is the garment of Christs Righteousness divided Surely in it self it is not divided unto those who have thoroughly put on Christ and therefore vers 11. There is neither Greek nor Jew Circumcision nor uncircumcision but Christ is all and in all things But we are divided who have not yet wholly put it on as Jacob when he saw Josephs particoloured Coat besmeared with the Goats blood said an evil beast hath devoured him Joseph is torn in pieces Gen. 37.33 Even so since we have defiled the holiness of our God and stained the garment of Christs Righteousness with our blood that is our sin Ezech. 16. which is the Goats blood Mat. 25. we may rightly judge that Josephs body is torn in pieces the body of Christ the Church is divided Since therefore the evil beast hath torn us in pieces the garment of Christs Righteousness was in a sort through Gods gracious condescent to be cut out and fitted to us and severally to be put on by us as the Prophet Ahijah when the Kingdom of Israel was to be divided he rent his new garment and gave ten pieces of it unto Jeroboam according to the number of the Ten Tribes divided and rent from Judah 1 King 11.30 Even so the Apostles of Christ because we are rent asunder in Schisms and Factions they distribute as it were piece-meal the new garment of Christs Righteousness unto us Some parts of it are contained in this Text as mercy kindness c. I intend to speak only of the first so the words are an Exhortation Put on the bowels of mercy and the reason of it as the Elect of God holy and
of their Country would willingly expose themselves to death If Humane Love could transport men so far as to neglect their own safety for their Countries how much farther will the Divine Love carry the Saints Moses Paul all the Apostles Yet all these though the rarest Examples of religious Love came infinitely short of our Lords love to us For I pray consider for whom became these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Godrus for his subjects the Athenians Curtius and the Decii for their Country men the Romans Moses for the Israelites his Subjects he was their King Deut. Paul for his brethren his kinsmen according to the flesh So that that of our Saviour is true of all these Joh. 15.13 Greater love than this hath no man that he should lay down his life for his friends But how much Gospel-love is this that one should dye for his enemies Christ became 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only the just for the unjust but even for his enemies Rom. 5.10 Most rare and singular love There is no parable no example like to it Great difference between Christ and many Christians 3. This is yet more exceeding love if we consider Christ the Ruler of all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet he condescended hereunto to purge delinquents when men get but a little power in their hand they purge not delinquents but make them such 4. So high our Lord was yet so lowly he condescended Phil. 2.3 4-10 Dominus Dominantium servus servorum the meanest officer in the house 5. This is a ground of love toward our Neighbour Eph. 5.1 2. 1 Joh. 4.9 10 11. If God loved us then should we love God No God requires first love to our Neighbour 1 Joh. 4.20 For he well knew if we should have the bestowing of our own love in our own order we would hate our brother Joh. 16.2 And that is now come for men hate one another not as their Neighbours but as the enemies of God But let me ask them are not they themselves the enemies of God Col. 1.21 They love one another who have suffered together The good Thief reproved the bad Dost thou not fear God sith thou art in the same condemnation What office then is there so mean that Christians ought not to condescend unto one in behalf of another Christ wash'd his Disciples feet to teach us this Lesson Joh. 13. How cautelous then how wary how fearful ought we to be of soiling and fouling our soul with the least sin It cost the Son of God his blood 1 Pet. 1.18 How careful were they under the Law lest they should be defiled The Apostle hath reference to it Col. 2.2 We lye still in the dust and cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord purge me Mean time we put not an hand towards the purging of our selves we would have God come to us we will not come unto him It reproves those who put off Christian duties to others Oftentimes the Father puts off Thanksgiving to his child who must lisp out a Grace This I believe is the common fault of all We cry out for a Reformation that the Church the Kingdom it self may be purged c. God send one and that a through one Mean time who is there goes about to reform his own life Every man thinks that work is done in his own heart and he would bring every man to the model of his own purging The dissolute and licentious man tells him that lives more strictly that he is an hypocrite He abstains from drunkenness upbraids the Drunkard as if that were the only sin c. We quarrel one with another about words and leave the main thing undone The good Wife bids her Maids sweep the House the one bids the other fetch a Broom she says it is a Besom They spend their time in pratle and leave the work undone so do men about purgatory c. But leave the business it self undone we pray that Gods will may be done yet who goes about to do it His will is our sanctification who hallows Gods name by being holy as he is holy We pray that God will forgive us as we forgive c. yet keep hatred and malice in our hearts c. that he would not lead us into temptation yet we rush into it that he would deliver us from the evil one yet deliver up our selves to be ruled by him Exhort Unto us all by exhortation reproof to imitate our Lord in this so far as we are able purge one another from our sins we little consider that every one of us is as it were the keeper of his brother Ecclus. 17.14 It was the speech of Cain am I my brothers keeper O Beloved Men say God hath put such an one into mine hand if I kill either a good or an evil man when they might as well say and argue God hath put him into my hand for his preservation The Laws of this land in case of robbery by the high way if the Malefactor be not found lay the charge upon the hundred and every man must bear his share and there 's equity for it every man should have taken care of his Neighbour Exhort one another while it is called to day the righteous shall scarcely saved Qui non vetat peccare quum possit jubet Object Have we not sins enough of our own that we must incur the guilt of other mens sins 1 Tim. 5.22 Charity commands this duty of us Levit. 19.17 Thou shalt not hate thy brother i. e. thou shalt not hate any man For whosoever hates his brother is a murderer 1 Joh. 3.15 Now whereby shall we discover our love unto our brother Thou shalt not hate thy brother in thy heart Thou shalt in any wise rebuke him and not bear sin for him He who rebukes not his brother when he sins hates him and shall bear the punishment both of his own hatred and his brothers sins we turn it Thou shalt not suffer sin upon him a most necessary duty which yet I fear few very few perform unto their neighbour What 's the reason we are loath to be reproved for our own sin and therefore afraid to reprove another Men make a tacite Covenant one with other not to touch one anothers sins much less to wash and purge one another from them which is a Covenant with Hell and Death He that turns a sinner from his evil way saves a soul from death and covers a multitude of sins Jam. 5.20 yet we let our brother go on in his sin and suffer sin upon him In matters of no moment O how loving we are tell him of a spot in his face and wipe away dust off his garment he hath spots many and those foul spots upon his soul thou sufferest them upon him neither wipes them off nor tells him of them thou takest care he should be pleasing to men not to God savest him from a little shame not his soul from death Our Saviours example and precept
the Lord Jesus hath taken part of flesh and blood he cannot be hid The night is far spent unto these and the day draws near c. Rom. 13.12 These are of the day The day will appear at a little hole even a child is known by his doing whether his work be perfect Prov. The light is the light of men As ye have heard of a new Christmas so of a New-years-day 1. A Christmas taking part of our flesh and blood giving us a suffering spirit an heart of flesh a suffering mind himself suffering of us and by us by reason of our sins rather suffering death in us than consent to the sin with us suffering with us in all our afflictions afflicted with us condoling with us Christ speaking in us delivering his Oracles in us Christ praying in us praising God in us Kiriath-Sepher smitten Debir appears yea the veil being rent the Holy of Holyes appears in all beauty and loveliness of the Christian life which appears and shines out of our mortal body which is his Temple and we members of his body of his flesh and bone of his bone this life is light unto others and as the day manifests it self and all things else 3. Forasmuch as the children were made partakers of flesh and blood he took part of the same This third point gives a reason of our Lords incarnation even a conformity unto the children because they were flesh and blood weak and frail he became weak and frail flesh and blood like unto them Because the children are made subject to flesh and blood so the Hebrew word answereth to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and implies an impotency c. Wisd 9.15 Amor transformat amantem in rem amatam He who loves another entirely will as much as may be assimilate and conform himself unto him whom he loves Whence the Poets tell of their Jupiter that according as he loved Jupiter in Taurum He changed himself into divers shapes according as they were whom he loved so Hosea 12.10 I have multiplied visions in manu prophetarum assimilatus sum I am resembled unto divers things in the hands of the Prophets The Love of the Lord Jesus inclined him and so far prevailed with him that he humbled himself to our nature and the weakness of it This reason is implied in the Text which faith Forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in similitudine unto them so the Syriac This reason is taken from the love of Christ unto the children 2. Another may be added in regard of his relation unto the children as they are his Brethren Esay 40.9 10. Where it is in the Margin Against the strong Luke 11.22 Exod. 2.11 12. The Lord hath raised up of our brethren one like unto Moses according as he promised Deut. 8.15 Who because his Brethren were burdened and oppressed with their sins he is come to visit his Brethren and invites unto himself the weary and heavy laden Matth. 11. Observ 1. Note here an argument as of mans abasement and humiliation so likewise of his honour and exaltation 1. Of his abasement and humiliation he was made flesh and blood weak frail mutable therefore one of mans names in the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a miserable poor weak afflicted man such was the Lord Jesus See Notes on Gen. 4. Enosh Plotinus a rare Philosopher in his time as Porphyrius records in his life seemed to be ashamed that his Soul was in such a frail weak mutable body and therefore he would be very hardly perswaded to tell any one of what stock he was nor would he yield by any means to sit that any Painter or Limner should take his Picture what saith he do ye not think it enough that a man bear this Image that nature hath cloathed him withal but will you take 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Image of an Image He is thought to have been a Christian and his works declare as much besides his familiarity with the most excellent learned and pious Christians of his time he knew the vanity of flesh and blood not worthy to be so doted upon or gloried in and therefore he refused to suffer an Image of his perishing Image to be taken by any Of the like resolution were two rare men one of them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the miracle of his age they well acknowledged how frail flesh and blood is and in how frail an Image he walketh Psal 39. Observ 2. But as much this makes for the exaltation of our weak and frail nature that the Son of God hath humbled himself and stooped to take it up and wear our mortal garment that God was manifest in the flesh hath vouchsafed to man us and all Believers with himself in all our afflictions to be afflicted with us to make us his living Temples yea to make us members of his body of his flesh and of his bones Eph. 5.30 This is an Honour whereunto the Son of God hath advanced our humane nature so that we may say with our Apostle Heb. 2. Thou hast made him little lower than the Angels to crown him with glory and honour yea he laid not hold of the Angels but took hold of the Seed of Abraham and what Even all the Believers Observ 3. The great and manifold wisdom and goodness of our only wise and only good God who since mans fall hath in all things accommodated himself unto him to raise him up again as Elisha to the dead child Man was wandered into manifold by-paths of error and many ways had strayed from his God and therefore according to his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he sent after the strayed man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the multitudes or multiplicities of his Law Hosea 8.12 as S. Peter wrote his Epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to those in the dispersion and thus Joseph visited his Brethren in Dotham i. e. in the Law so the true Joseph visits his Brethren Gen. 37.17 Even so we when we were children in bondage under the elements of the world In the fulness of time God sent his Son c. Gal. 4.3 6. We shall find that the Lord after the same manner raiseth us up from our fall as Elisha did the young child 2 Kings 4 29-35 He first sent his Servant with his Staff i. e. the Law but that could not give life Rom. Elisha God the Saviour comes himself and applies himself unto the child and raiseth it from the death of sin to the life of righteousness Observ 4. Here is a lesson for all the children of God that whereas for this reason because the children were partakers of flesh and blood he took part of the same for the same reason we also should even out of love condescend unto the necessities of our brethren S. John reasons so 1 John 4.10 11. If God so loved us we ought also to love one another So ought we to comply with them in the condition
doth imminere and is ready to take us captive 2 Tim. 2. ult and men are still in jeopardy and proper to our purpose in hand Gal. 5.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be not intangled be not obnoxious liable or subject to the yoke of bondage Confer Rom. 8.15 The Reason why they who are not yet delivered and redeemed by Christ are subject and liable to bondage is in the following words This comes to pass by the fear of Death Through fear of death they are subject to bondage What death is this Death is either 1. Natural Or 2. Spiritual See Notes on vers 14. The most that I have seen understand this to be meant of the natural death and take no notice at all of the spiritual howbeit both of them may be here understood which I shall shew anon Mean time let us enquire a little into the nature of fear what it is and how the fear of death makes those who are not redeemed and delivered by Christ subject to bondage There are four principal passions of the soul c. See Notes on Luk. 12. This fear being of the greatest natural and spiritual evil must needs be a great fear and that which brings men or is ready to bring them into bondage for whereas every man naturally loves his own preservation he consequently fears by nature whatever is destructive especially death natural if a natural man and spiritual if spiritually minded Now all fear induceth servitude and bondage or a servile condition because it is proper to servants to fear Rom. 8.15 The Spirit of bondage inclines to fear 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Qui metuens vivit liber mihi non erit unquam Observ 1. All natural men liable are to bondage through the fear of Death This enslaves those who might of all men be thought to be the most free-●en as Philosophers and Wise men as also Princes and great men They report of Aristotle who ●new the immortality of the soul that being ready to dye and anxious concerning his future estate he said I came naked into this world I have lived a wretched life in it and I am departing a doubtful man out of it as not knowing what shall become of me Tu verò ens entium causa causarum miserere mei Adrian the Emperour who knew the Heavens and Stars so well as no man better but neglected him that made them He now about to dye as the Historian reports in his life said thus Animula vagula blandula hospes comesque corporis quae nunc abibis in loca pallidula rigida nudula nec ut soles dabis jocos Observ 2. Note hence what the condition even of Gods children while but children is by corrupt nature what it is and how vile it is we are liable and subject to bondage we are liable to the slavery and vassalage of sin and Satan the basest and very worst of bondages while we are yet under the spirit of bondage we fear Sin and the Law and Death and Satan Doubt We find this to be otherwise for many there are who are not redeemed and delivered by Christ who yet fear not death neither natural nor spiritual and so are not liable unto bondage 1. They fear not the natural death for fear is of an evil shortly in danger to befal us but death howsoever it may be near and very near yet is it apprehended as a far off by most men and therefore it is not feared according to our common speech I thought as little of it as of my dying day 2. As for the spiritual and eternal Death neither is that generally feared for we find many fearless careless and presumptuous Jude vers 12. without fear they are past all fear many desperate and without feeling Eph. 4.19 Desperantes tradiderunt See Jerem. 2.25 I have loved strangers and after them will I go And Wisdom 2.2 We are born at all adventure 1 Tim. 4.2 Having their consciences feared with an hot iron These are in a far worse condition than the other for they are under the bondage and slavery of sin which the other only fear and are liable unto But truly here as in in many other places throughout the holy Seripture the mistake of the Translators hath occasioned great obscurity of the Text For the words are not of that general extent as our English seems to make them but are to be understood with a particular restriction unto the children of God and indeed they ought thus to be rendered Christ took part of flesh and blood that through death he might deliver not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 them but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 these children mentioned in the former verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not who but as many as all their life-time c. And so the Text rightly translated clears the doubt For whereas too many there are who fear neither natural nor spiritual death The children of God as yet ignorant and weak often falling into sin fear natural death and much more death in sin which are both threatned by the Law to the transgression of it and so are liable unto bondage under sin and under the law which forbids sin and denounceth temporal and eternal judgements against sinners yet gives them no power at all to resist sin much less to subdue it Under this fear the children live who differ nothing from servants And thus we understand what the Apostle speaks Gal. 4 1-6 Observ 3. Note here a true servile or slavish fear what it is It 's a principle of some good although it self can hardly be called good for a servant acts what he does not from himself but as outward from without But he who acts out of love doth it as from himself and from within as moved by his own proper inclination nor indeed can it be called good because the proper object of it is punishment which therefore as the greatest evil is most feared because what is contrary to it is by such an one most loved so that the best thing it loves is self-preservation And therefore such an one as doth good only for fear of punishment he is not yet in his heart departed from evil for yet he sins in that he would sin if he could sin with indemnity And the evil which in the Act he commits not he commits in his will and the evil will lives still and the work would follow but that he fears the punishment would follow the work so that although such an one do that which is good yet he doth it not well because that which seems to be done in the outward Act is not done inwardly in the heart Now this fear answers to the love of an hireling which is of the reward not of the work nor of him that sets a work yet is there some good in both these in that they both do good and decline evil the one for fear of punishment the other for hope of reward And therefore what good is in both is
to be like unto these his brethren Who are brethren how are the children of God Christs brethren 1. See Notes on Gen. 26.1 they who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. And do the will of the Father Matth. 12. ult Act. 2.37 2. The Spiritual Seed of Abraham are born of the same Father even of God so Hebr. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of one Confut. Those who hence infer an equality contrary to vers 11. hujus capitis 2. It became him to be like unto his brethren in all things wherein we have 1. Christ's similitude and likeness to his brethren 2. the extent of it 3. the reason of both 1. Similitude and likeness is not here to be understood in regard of quality but in regard of essence and nature that 's the main drift of the Apostle here to shew that because he took not on him the Angels or layeth not hold on the Angels but the Seed of Abraham therefore he must be like unto the Seed of Abraham which he took on him or layeth hold upon 2. The extent of this similitude and likeness is in all things i. e. in all things which were expedient for our Redemption and no way impeached or hindered his perfection He was therefore born like unto his brethren and like unto them brought up Esay 7.15 He was subject unto his Parents Luk. 2. He was like unto his brethren in all things which are incident unto their nature He was weary Joh. 4. he was hungry he eat he was thirsty he drank he wept Joh. 11. he dyed he is not said any where to have been sick for that is not universally incident unto the whole nature of man Many there have been who have dyed without precedent sickness Besides since all diseases proceed either from an imperfect forming of the body or from some fault in the seed or from intemperancy or ignorance whereby we know not how to distinguish what is wholesome for food The Body of our Lord Jesus was perfectly formed by the holy Ghost he himself was not intemperate and knew and avoided whatever was hurtful to the body He was without sin as Chap. 4. Our Apostle expresly limits the similitude For 1. That was not expedient for our redemption 2. Besides it would have hindered his perfection 1. It was not expedient for our redemption but opposite thereunto for therefore he was made manifest that he might take away our sins and in him was no sin 1 Joh. 3.5 Had there been sin in him he might have been disabled from taking away our sins yea he had had need of one to have taken away that sin 2. Sin would have hindered and diminished his perfection for whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law 1 Joh. 3.4 which directly opposeth his perfection who was to fulfil the law and so take away the sins of the world For like reason we read not that he was liable to errour ignorance or folly for these were no way expedient unto our Redemption but hinderances unto his perfection because they are defects and deprivations We read our Lord wept Joh. 11. but we read no where that our Lord laughed and the reason may be because he was given unto us as an example of mortification and so his weeping was expedient to our Redemption and no way hindered our Lords perfection But that he laughed not it was not that it was unlawful so to do for to what purpose did the Creator implant the power of laughing in our nature if it were utterly unlawful ever to exercise it But though the Lord Jesus be not reported any where to have laughed yet we find that Abraham and Sarah laughed and Isaac had his name from it And Elias derided Baals Priests yea among the times appointed for several actions The Wise man tells us there is a time to laugh Eccles 3. And good reason for nature at mea● and after it requires a chearfulness and ungirding of the mind because all spiritual exercises even joy it self calls the mind inward and in a sort oppresseth the body for the refreshing and recreating of which we receive meat and drink But this is understood always to be done in measure and moderation which is as it were the reign and bridle of the mind Otherwise Solomon saith rightly of laughter thou art mad and the Apostle reckons up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jeasting among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things that are unseemly and not convenient Eph. 5. Reason That 's implyed in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it became him The word here used is of like extent with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it notes a decency comliness and fitness See Notes on verse above 2. It implys an hypothetical debt So that if the Lord would redeem man he ought to be like unto the man whom he would redeem for that nature that was to be redeemed and delivered that was to be taken on and laid hold upon and the Lord was to be made like unto that nature in all things since therefore he determined for the reasons named before to redeem and deliver man he ought or it became him in all things to be made like unto man whence Phil. 2.7 Other reasons there are 1. God hath said In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Either Christ or the Children must suffer 2. He must be an example of suffering from the following words Object If he were like unto his brethren in all things then he was like unto them in their sins Respon That 's it wherein he was not like unto his brethren which is by name excepted Heb. 4.15 But it seems he was even herein like unto his brethren Rom. 8.3 God sent his Son in the similitude of sinful flesh Therefore he is like unto his brethren even in their sin This followeth not The Scripture it 's evident by the context is thus to be understood that God sent his Son to supply the defect and impotency of the Law and our flesh that he might take upon him mans flesh that which is like unto the sinful flesh of other men as that which was mortal and suffered the miseries and death its self due to sinful flesh Our Lord therefore is compared to the Brazen Serpent Numb 21.8 9. Joh. 3.14 as like unto it which seemed to have the venome and poyson of a Serpent in it but indeed had none And thus our Lord was like unto the sinful flesh but indeed had no sin 2. The old Hereticks abused this Scripture to confirm their opinion who said that our Lord had no true flesh but only a fantastick body But one of the pious Ancients hath long since answered them that it is not said that our Lord was made in the similitude of mans flesh but in the similitude of sinful flesh 3. But it 's further said that Christ was made in the likeness of man Phil. 2.7 Therefore he was only like to man not truly man
we fall into sundry temptations Jam. 1. Repreh Those who embrace the temptation under the pretense of following providence not considering that the Lord oftentimes administers occasion of offending him to try us whether we will embrace it yea or no or whether we love him c. yet many no doubt and that in these last times especially have mistaken grosly such occasions as if they were invitations from God Deut. 13. it 's there said expresly the Lord tempteth c. The Lord gives success to try thee whether thou wilt be obedient yea or no and thou refusest to be obedient thou will say the Lord so ordered by his providence that such an event should come to pass to confirm me c. The Lord ordered by his providence that it should be in David's power to kill Saul 1 Sam. 24. and 26. How can this be avoided Beloved God's providential will is to be explained by his preceptive will he hath given thee many Precepts to abolish Idolatry and all monuments of it it 's part of the eternal Law of God if any thing be offered to thee by God's providence that may seem to cross thee know it 's to try thee Nunc specimen specitur nunc certamen cernitur sisne necne ut esse oportet bonus malus cujus modi The Lord left many remnants of the seven nations to try Israel whether they would hearken to the voice of the Lord their God yea or no Judg. 3.1 2 3 4. and it is likely they took those very occasions of offending God as if it were offered them by providence for Vers 5 6 7. They lived among them and took their Daughters c. Repreh 2. Those who voluntarily rush upon temptations See Notes on Matth. 4. Repreh 3. And shame us who profess our selves the Brethren of Jesus Christ yet are so easily tempted and overcome in the temptation hope of gain or honour how it abaseth men to flatter and fawn and lye and deceive yea to yield and fall down to the Devil to enjoy their lusts the tempter had so high an esteem of the Lord Jesus his Holiness his faithfulness to God c. that he thought it impossible to move him to fall down and worship him unless he promised him all the Kingdoms of the world and the Glory of them But who sees not how easily men are brought off to serve the Devil in yielding Prov. 28.21 yea the practices of men evidently speak them that they will part with their God for ready money 3. Christ himself hath suffered being tempted wherein two things are comprehended 1. That Christ suffered 2. That he suffered being tempted 1. Christ suffered the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he suffered a short word but that which comprehends a multitude of sufferings that principally which crowns all the rest his suffering death the death of the Cross for the sufferings of Christ are either 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 preparations and fore-sufferings Or 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that great suffering of death it self and that by Crucifixion 1. His 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or sufferings where either in his body and estate or his Soul 1. In his body and estate which could not be few being born of a poor Virgin and himself poor not having where to lay his head Matth. 8.20 Besides his poverty he was exposed to manifold dangers of this life as banishment assoon as he was born when his life was sought and his Parents forced to flee with him into Egypt as he grew into years he grew into more and more dangers of his life when they who deadly hated one another as the Pharisees and Herodians Matth. 23.16 yet agreed well enough to entrap and endeavour to destroy him and generally the Jews John 7.1 Add to these the infirmities incident unto mans life as Hunger Matth. 4. Thirst and Weariness John 4. These and such as these the Lord Jesus suffered in his body he suffered also in his Soul John 12.27 Besides these he suffered reproaches and false accusations that he was a glutton and a Wine-bibber a friend of Publicans and Sinners Matth. 11.19 One that was a Samaritane and had a Devil John 8.48 and cast out Devils by Beelzebub Matth. 12.24 He suffered neglect and contempt Is not this the Carpenters Son He was in the world and the world was made by him and the world knew him not he came among his own and his own received him not John 1.2 Near his death he suffered without the City in the garden natural fear of death that agony of his Soul his bloody sweat he was betrayed taken bound forsaken by all lead away into the City to be judged by the Priests he is hurried from Annas to Caiaphas and by them delivered over to the secular powers where he was accused before Pilate where what he suffered in all kinds is delivered at large Matth. 26. and 27. He was at length condemned and adjudged to die and accordingly suffered without the Gate the shameful painful accursed death of the Cross 1. The Reason of Christ's sufferings are considerable in regard of God Acts 2.23 and 4.27 28. Esay 53.6 10. If we enquire into the Motives whereby the Lord should be inclined to give his Son up to suffer what other can we find but his love unto mankind John 3.16 1 John 4.10 2. In regard of Christ he conformed himself to his Fathers will this is evident Psalm 40.7 8 9. Esay 53.10 Thus the Lord Jesus proved himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Father calls him Zach. 13.7 His alter idem who is the express Image of his person who stands ready to do his will Matth. 20.28 He came not to be ministred unto but to minister and to give his Soul a ransom for many John 10.17 18. 2. Another reason was his love unto his Church Gal. 2.20 Eph. 5.2.25 Rev. 15. 3. In regard of the evil one who was to wound the heel of the womans seed Gen. 3.15 For the effecting of this he entred into Judas John 13.27 and stirred up the bloody minds of the Jews who were ready as his children to do his will John 8.41 44. The ends why our Lord suffered were 1. For the recovery of his Glory which he had from the beginning before the world was John 17.5 And therefore Christ must suffer that he might be so glorified for so he tells those who travelled with him Ought not Christ to suffer and so to enter into his Glory Luke 24. and that God might be glorified in him John 13.31 2. That he might leave us an example of like suffering 1 Pet. 2.21 3. That he might bring us unto God 1 Pet. 3.18 4. That he might be able to succour those who are tempted which is the end aimed at in the Text which belongs to the following point Thus of the sufferings of Christ generally laid down in this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he suffered and more especially that which above all the rest we
may call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the suffering viz. of that infamous painful and accursed death so ye have generally the reasons of his suffering Observ 1. Hereby may be reconciled a difference very hotly maintained of old concerning the Sufferings of Christ whether common to the Father with the Son yea or no They who defended the affirmative were called Patripassiani who said that the Father also suffered death c. It cannot be denyed them but that the Father was hated by the enemies of Christ John 15.23 24. Yea pierced by them Zach. 12.10 They shall look upon me whom they have pierced and mourn for him c. But as for the suffering of death it 's properly applied unto the Son Heb. 2.9 14. Observ 2. Take notice then of the Propitiation the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the price of our attonement the death of the Lord Jesus who suffered and died for us viz. all those who walk in the Light or Christ die with him and live with him such as these the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all their sin 1 John 1.6 7. Observ 3. Hence it follows that we ought highly to prize and esteem the great love of the Lord Jesus Christ who suffered for us what possible praises can we return unto him Psalm 116.12 13. which is one main end of receiving the Lords Supper even to remember his death 1 Cor. 11. Observ 4. A pattern of rare and singular obedience unto the will of his Father Observ 5. Whence we may observe the accomplishment of all types and figures of our Lord's Sufferings c. See Notes on Philip. 2.8 But thus we look only at Christ suffering without us c. See Notes on Phil. 2.8 Observ 6. Hence we have a pattern and example for our imitation Heb. 12.3 Consider him who endured such contradiction of sinners against himself the end of our Predestination is to be made conformable to the Image of his Son Rom. 8.29 Repreh 1. Those who perversly imitate and follow the Lord's Sufferings and are not obedient unto the death of sin that good that precious and laudable death but see Notes on Phil. 2.8 Repreh 2. Those who are contrarily minded unto the Lord Jesus so far from imitating his Sufferings that they cause him to suffer again as Apostates Heb. 6. and 10. James 5. Ye have condemned and killed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord Jesus and he hath not resisted you Consol To the Sufferers together with Christ those who are dead with him c. See Notes on Philip. 2.8 Exhort To suffer together with him See ubi supra Object If Christ hath suffered for us then need not we suffer It is true that Christ hath suffered all things for us Beloved would God we were well acquainted with our own hearts we should then find the deceitfulness of them how prone we are to easie ways of serving God Proclives sumus à labore ad libidinem and how averse we are from what ever is difficult and hard to be done and such without doubt is the way of life it begins with self-denyal and proceeds with taking up the Cross denying ungodliness and worldly lusts entring in at the strait gate and mortifying our earthly members c. When therefore we say that Christ hath suffered for us See Notes on James 1.22 Observ 7. If Christ hath suffered then must we also expect suffering 1 Pet. 2.21 and that by how much the more we become like unto Christ for as the Seed of God increaseth in us and thrives so doth Satans opposition increase whence it is in the Parable Matth. 13.26 When the blade sprung up and brought forth fruit then appeared the tares also therefore 23. c. Balaac desires curses against Jacob but against Israel curses and bannings over-cursings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 supermaledictiones but why doth Balaac inveigh and rage more against Israel than against Jacob were not Israel and Jacob one and the same people 'T is true they were so but different degrees of the same people in the name of Israel is understood a perfect man one who prevails with God and therefore how much the more strong and powerful he is by so much the more vehement and impetuous opposition he may expect while a man is only a Jacob employed in inferiour actions and as yet weak for so Jacob is a figure of the Church in its weakness as Israel in its strength while we are as Jacob yet weak by whom shall Jacob arise for he is small it's to be expected that we suffer opposition and cursing but when we grow up in strength and prevail as Israel we must then expect supermaledictiones cursings upon cursings increase of Graces is always accompanied with proportionable increase of opposition and contradiction of the adversary Numb 33.11 They removed from the Red sea and encamped in the wilderness of Sin c. The Red Sea or Edom's Sea for thence it had its name as I have shewn signifieth that suffering which is incident to flesh and blood or Edom the earthly man of which S. Paul speaks 1 Cor. 10.13 but Sin signifieth Bushes and Hatred when we proceed from our conquest of that temptation which is incident unto man we become hated of men who are as thorns in our sides Thence they went to Dophkah that is pulsatio knocking and smiting when the inward hatred breaks forth to knocks and blows and the like significations have the following places of the Israelites Journeys if well observed by comparing spiritual things with spiritual by how much we draw nearer to the Heavenly Canaan by so much the more hatred we must look for from our outward and inward enemies 2. He suffered being tempted What temptation and what suffering is I have already shewn it now remains that we enquire how the Lord suffered being tempted This will appear from the nature of temptation which brings with it or occasions something that 's pleasing unto him that 's tempted yet withal hath somewhat troublesome or pernicious and destructive if the temptation be embraced like a sweet bait on a hook James 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non recessit ab arte sua Piscator Unjust gain tempts a good man as gain pulsat animam it gives an assault unto the Soul as presenting somewhat that is convenient and so the Soul hath proneness to it as to embrace it but before any consent be given the unjustness appearing the pious Soul chuseth rather to die unto this desire than to enjoy the gain and so flyes it and abhorrs it so that there is a suffering from the temptation even when we overcome it and a joy a great joy when it is overcome Amaziah was none of the best Kings of Judah yet he was none of the worst 2 Chron. 25. He was forbidden by the Prophet to take into his Army a hundred thousand Ephraimites which he had already hired for a hundred thousand Talents of Silver the loss of so much money was
tediousness Aquila and Symmachus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apollinarius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I hated others yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I did abominate Austin and Bernard render the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by proximus fui in an ill sence I was near viz. in an evil sence as to visit punish revenge Thus the Lord threatens the Church of Ephesus Rev. 2.5 I will come unto them quickly All these different Translations may be reduced to that of our last Translation I was grieved Others render the word dissecari to be cut in pieces 1. As we are wont to express great grief when we say we are cut to the heart It repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth and it grieved him at the heart Gen. 6.6 Ratio All grief proceeds from either absence of good or the presence of what is inconvenient and contrary Now what is contrary unto God but sin and sinful men provoking and tempting God and hardening themselves against the good motions of his spirit striving with them when men walk contrary unto God Levit. 26. And both sin and sinners are here in the Text Wherefore i. e. for the sins cause I was grieved with this Generation of sinful men Doubt Can God be said to be grieved Is not grief a turbulent weakening yea a destructive passion By sorrow of heart the spirit is broken Prov. 15.13 and 17.22 A broken spirit drieth the bones yea sorrow hath killed many Ecclus. 30.22.23 Can these effects of grief be given to God Yea we see how men are over-swayed by passion to act things contrary to reason I answer Far be it from us to ascribe unto God such passions and turbulent affections as blind reason and precipitate men into actions unworthy of wise men how much more unworthy of the only wise God Yet where Almighty God is said to be grieved at his heart Gen. 6.6 And the like Esay 43.24 Thou hast made me to serve with thy sins and hast wearied me with thine iniquities Amos. 2.13 Eph. 4.30 These and such like Scriptures do not signifie nothing nor can they so be satisfied as if upon the matter a man should say God is not grieved For I beseech you consider is not sin 1. Most contrary to God's nature who is the most essential righteousness it self What agreement between righteousness and unrighteousness 2. Can any thing afflict us more than to be requited with evil for good and with hatred for our good will 3. Is it not a great condolium a rending of the heart of a loving and a tender Father to lose his child in destructive ways 4. And what more just cause can be alledged why God should eternally torment the souls of incorrigible sinners than that they have contrary to so great love and mercy patience and forbearance grieved his most righteous and gracious soul and that so many years as here this Generation of men grieved him forty years together Object But if God can be said to be grieved then may he who is most blessed be made miserable I answer none can be said to be miserable but he whose grief is unsufferable without intermission and everlasting and so far be it from us to think that he who is most happy yea happiness it self should be miserable But out of mercy and pity to his creature to be grieved and afterward to be comforted in his Justice doth not at all render him unblessed yea hence he appears the more truly blessed because he is so good so merciful so compassionate towards his creature Doubt But how can this grief be said to be in God I answer 1. Not properly in himself or out of the creature but in the creature and through the creature 2. Christ in all men takes a suffering flesh by which he suffers grief persecution death it self to redeem us from sorrow and death if we repent of our sins and suffer with him 3. Certain it is if God no way suffered by sinners he is so just that he would not make them thereby to suffer we may say of this as of many other Divine truths De re constat de modo non constat Observ 1. God grieves not for any act of his own no for where there is no evil there is no grief Observ 2. He rejoyceth in his works Esay 65.19 For as grief proceeds from evil present so joy from what is good since therefore all the works of God upon review of them are good Gen. it cannot but cause joy Observ 3. The Lord grieves at the evil actions of his creatures when therefore he is said To endure with much long-suffering the vessels of wrath fitted to destruction Rom. 9.22 It 's unreasonable to say that he should fit them to destruction for if he so fitted them how can he be said to endure them with much long-suffering Ohserv 4. God was grieved with the whole generation of Israel some few excepted who stood in the gap Observ 5. God was and is grieved with those who believe not in his power that he is able to bring men unto the rest by the mortification of their spiritual enemies Observ 6. Note hence what a God we Christians worship even such an one as grieves at and suffers long the sins of his people even forty years long How long hath he born thy sins and mine See Notes on Heb. 1.3 He spares us out of his meer mercy he could consume us in an instant as he saith to Moses and Aaron Separate your selves from this congregation that I may consume them in in a moment Numb 16.21 Thus he could do but the Omnipotent God is Omnipatient See Notes ut supra Observ 7. As the provoking and tempting God and hardening our hearts against his fear grieves our God so on the contrary the converting and turning from these sins and walking before the Lord to well-pleasing of him with a soft and tender heart ready to receive all Divine impressions from the holy Spirit of our God such a frame and disposition of heart rejoyceth our God Zeph. 3.13 Luk. 15. Observ 8. Grief may befall a wise man it befalls the only wise God The Stoicks are said to deny all passions to a wise man but their tenent is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 119.136 139. If our God be grieved at the sins of ungodly men surely we ought to be alike affected with him I beheld the transgressors and was grieved because they kept not thy Word saith David Psal 119.158 where we have the very same word I am grieved with those that rise up against thee Psal 139.21 Thus David was a man according to Gods heart and so was Paul Phil. 3.18 Exhort If others by hardness of heart grieve the Lord let us by our repentance return unto him and comfort him There is joy in heaven at the conversion of a sinner They who harden themselves and thereby grieve the Lord he will be comforted by their
the words we have these divine axioms or points of Doctrine 1. The Patriarchs and holy men of God inherit the promises 2. The Patriarchs through faith and patience inherit the promises 3. We ought to be followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises 4. We ought not to be slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises 5. And lastly the Apostle and the Saints with him intreat them in vers 11. that they be not slothful but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promses 1. The Patriarchs inherit the promises wherein we must enquire 1. What are the promises 2. Who they are who inherited them 1. The promises are sometime set down in types and figures as the holy Land is called the land of promise as also power and strength to overcome those who were inhabiters of the Land of promise Numb 14.7 8 9. Sometime they are propounded unto us in their truth and nakedness as 2 Pet. 1. Great and precious promises which are two 1. Participation of the divine nature 2. Escaping the corruption that is in the world through lusts 2. What is it to inherit these promises and what is an heir Haeres est qui defuncto succedit in jus universum Heb. 1. This description of an heir though it cannot fit Christ the Heir of all things in regard of God the Father who is the living immortal and everlasting God yet it may well befit all believers in regard of Christ by whom and with whom they are heirs for as he is heir of all things so he makes his believers heirs together with him for his name is Pater futuri seculi Isa 9. and he by his death makes a purchase of the eternal inheritance for all those who are heirs with him it is the qualification required Rom. 8.17 Heirs of God joynt-heirs with Christ if we suffer with him that we may be also glorified with him chap. 9.15 For this cause he is the Mediator of the new Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance See Notes on Hebr. 1. The reason why the Patriarchs and all holy men and women inherit the promises is the free Grace of God Rom. 4.16 This Inheritance is promised and obtained through Jesus Christ the heir of all things for for this cause He is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death believers may inherit the promises But here we seem to meet with a doubt the Apostle Hebr. 11.13 speaking of the Patriarchs All these saith he died in the faith having not received the promises it seems therefore that the Patriarchs have not received the promises To which I answer Abraham had not possession of the Holy Land nor the Kingdom nor the City promised God was not known to him by his name Jehovah the performer of his Promises Exod. 6.31 He knew they were to be fulfilled four hundred years after As for the spiritual promises the entrance into the highest heavens and possession of them figured by the Land of Canaan that was reserved for the honour of Christs resurrection and ascension The Apostle Hebr. 9.6 7 8. teacheth that the Holy Ghost thus figuring or signifying that the way into the Holiest of all was not yet made manifest while the first Tabernacle was standing and Chap. 10.19 20. Having therefore brethren boldness to enter into the Holiest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated or made new Marg. for us through the veil that is to say his flesh c. through this new and living way Abraham and the other holy Patriarchs entred into the Eternal Inheritance Observ 1. Hence it appears that the Eternal Inheritance was made known even from the beginning Observ 2. Whence we may note the goodness of God in all Ages exciting and stirring up all men even the ungodly to well-doing by the promise of the Eternal Inheritance If thou doest well shalt thou not be accepted Gen. 4. Observ 3. There have been in all Ages some who have inherited the promised Inheritance 4. Observe hence how great is the honour of the Saints of God they are Sons and Daughters of God they are heirs it's the Apostles gradation Gal. 4.7 No more a servant but a son an heir heirs according to the hope of eternal life Tit. 3.6 heirs of the kingdom Jam. 2.5 whence we may consider how great is Christ himself who is the heir of all things 5. Observe here how great is the goodness and condescent of the Lord Jesus who being heir of all things admits believers to be coheirs with him Rom. 8.16 17. Rev. 3.21 and 21.7 Axiom 2. The Patriarchs and holy men of God through faith and patience inherit the promises wherein we must enquire what is Faith and what is Patience Faith is an assent unto a testimony as here it is to be understood we may take the Apostles description of it Hebr. 11.1 Faith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the ground or confidence of things hoped for the evidence of things not seen This Faith is concrete and compounded with Hope and so as by Faith we credit and believe the Divine Testimony witnessing the truth goodness and love of God so Hope raiseth the soul to relie on the might and power of God for the obtaining of what we believe and hope for 2. Patience is sometime called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sometime 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as here they differ in degree for whereas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies bearing or enduring 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here adds continuance and perseverance unto patience and therefore it 's rendered long-suffering patience may be described the bearing of Christ's Cross Phil. 2.8 1. The reason why through Faith and Patience we must inherit the promises 1. The promises cannot be inherited unless that be removed which is opposite unto them the inheritance is an undefiled inheritance 1 Pet. and therefore no unclean thing can enter into it so that it 's of necessity the heart must be purified by faith Act. 15. 2. There is an end and finishing of our Faith and the will of the Lord is that patience should have her perfect work and both these are finished or perfected when the inheritance is obtained receiving the end of your faith the salvation of your souls 3. Reason The Promises were and are lost by unbelief and impatience and therefore they are to be recovered by faith and patience Observ 1. Hence is when we have done and suffered all whatever is to be suffered and done in order to eternal life it is an inheritance and given and received out of gift Donatio est liberalis datio the gift of God is eternal life When Joshuah and the Israelites had fought and subdued the inhabitants of the Land of Promise it was then given them out
1. Hence it followeth that the true Hebrews had in themselves the best kind of wealth even spiritual riches even the righteousness of God in them so much we read Prov. 8.18 Riches and honour are with me yea durable riches and righteousness They have in themselves that better and enduring substance I know thy poverty but thou art rich Rev. 2. Smyrna There is therefore in the true Hebrews a real inherent and inward Righteousness according to which they who have it may be truly called Righteous Observ 2. Note here the grounds of all those confident commands in Scripture be holy be merciful be wise be meek be patient be peaceable c. If thou be a true Hebrew if a believer thou hast the substance of all these in thee only thou art wanting to thy self that thou drawest not virtue from the true durable substance in thee by faith by prayer by perpetual dependence on him Repreh 1. The weak and silly pretences against this substance this wisdom power goodness and righteousess of God in us Object Some believe that if this precious substance were in us we should boast and therefore God keeps it in his own hand Resp It is in his hand though in us Eccles 9.1 Joh. 3.21 1 Cor. 16.14 He is able to keep us from falling These treasures lye dead and buried in thee and only want thy digging up 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 your life is hid with Christ in God Coloss 2. Repreh 2. Ye have in your selves the Apostle saith not ye have of your selves which justly reprehends those who think too highly of their own holiness See Notes on Rom. 7.12 Therefore the Lord hath put his treasure his precious substance in our earthen vessels that the Glory may be of God and not of us as if it were in their own power to get these riches treasures are in themselves not others for them not in their teachers not in Christ himself without them Christ in them the hope of Glory 5. The Hebrews knew that they had in themselves a better and more enduring substance Observ 1. It 's possible that men may have the better c. and not know it for the Divine Treasure is hid in the field of the mans heart Joh. 1.26 There is one in the midst of you whom ye know not then it 's a treasure at hand not in hand he hath not the possession or use of it but only a possibility but so nigh that within Rom. 10. Observ 2. It is an access to our happiness to know him to be the giver of it the things that are freely given us of God to know him that is true to know God and whom he hath sent Jesus Christ is Eternal Life 6. Because the Hebrews knew that they had in themselves a better c. therefore they took the spoiling of their goods with joy Observ 1. How little how inconsiderable is their loss who are spoiled of perishing and worldly things yet have the better which cannot perish Men may pretend sufficiency of worldly things as Esau I have enough Jacob could truly say he had all things especially when the greater is purchased by the less Exhort Make ye friends of the unrighteous Mammon Luk. 16. that when ye fail they may receive you Consol I find not that Joy As the passage to the eternal death and hell lies through some short and momentany pleasures and delights Hebr. 11.25 So likewise on the contrary the passage into the eternal life lies through some short and temporary sorrows and afflictions therefore the Apostle having blessed God for his abundant mercy that he hath begotten us again unto a lively hope or hope of life by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead to an inheritance c. 1 Pet. 1.3 4 5. Wherein saith he ye greatly rejoyce though now for a season if need be ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations Thus we may understand Isai 9.2 Thou hast multiplyed the nation and not increased the joy the Church is enlarged by addition of the Gentiles to the Jews But while as yet the Church is under the first dispensation under fear wherewith the Lord begins his work great fear was upon them all There is no increase of Joy See Notes on Gen. 13.7 8. Exhort Let us seek to obtain that better and enduring substance that we cannot be spoiled of we look not on the things that are seen c. Sign Hast thou this hidden substance how doth it appear Wisdom that is hid and treasure that is hoarded up what profit is in them both Ecclus. 20.30 treasure that 's hid c. for although wisdom be precious in it self yet whom doth it profit if it be not used This is that which the Lord teacheth in the Parable of the Talents if thou be learned if able to teach others why doest thou hide thy light under a bed of ease in the flesh if thou hast the wisdom in thee to whom doest thou impart it If people perish for want of food they who hoard up corn are the authors of their ruine And what punishment then deserve they who have in them the Bread of Life and break it not to the hungry soul especially when the Children cry for bread It was of this Corn principally that the Wise Man spake Prov. 11. He that hideth corn him shall the people curse No doubt the Father of lights from whom descends every good and perfect gift he imparts not any gift much less that great gift his substance or the character of his own substance unto any man but that it should be used for the good of others And these are riches which will not be diminished by use and communication but rather be increased and the more we give away the more of them remain with us Thus the poor man in outward things may make many rich 2 Cor. 6. Means See Notes on Coloss 3.1 fine Exhort Having obtained that better enduring substance in our selves let us bear it with all lowliness and meekness but here 's the great danger of spiritual pride when men know that they have that better and enduring substance in themselves and then reflect upon themselves and know that they know they have it and then not remember whence they have it See Notes on Phil. 2.8 To be contented in every estate to be thankful for so great treasures Every Son of David may say What am I and what was my Fathers house c. 2 Sam. 7. NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON HEBREWS XII 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. LEt it not I beseech you be tedious unto you that after so many discourses already upon this blessed Argument I return like Noah's Dove with an Olive-branch of Peace in my mouth In my choice of this Text my principal aim was at an Exhortation unto Peace The words contain an Exhortation 1. To follow peace with all men 2. To follow
as well as he raised Christ here hope and trust and expectation is required of thee to one in thy case the Prophet Esay speaks Esay 50.10 Yea thou hast need of patience also Rom. 8.24 25. Yea and faith and love 1 Pet. 1.8 If thou hast belief thou hast comfort to support thee Rom. 15.13 If thou hast hope there is joy accompanieth that hope Rom. 5.2 If thou hast faith and love then there 's joy unspeakable 1 Pet. 1.8 Yet it 's possible thou mayst not yet clearly see the Lord. Mean time let it suffice thee to see him in his Word in his Sacraments as in a glass darkly and so to see him as it were afar off as Moses saw the Land of Canaan and rest then upon the promise of thy God That thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty they shall hehold the land that is very far off Esay 33.17 That the pure in heart shall see God And pray unto the Lord Jesus Christ the Lamb of God that takes away sin the darkness that separates between thee and him to enlighten thine eyes that thou sleep not in death and doubt not but as the darkness shall be removed the light shall appear and thou shalt see the Lord Wherefore gird up the loins of thy mind and hope perfectly for the Grace that shall be brought unto thee at the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.13 When he shall appear then shalt thou also appear with him in glory Col. 3.4 For we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 And he that hath this hope purifieth himself even as he is pure The Relative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may be referred to the whole sentence as thus without which prosecution of peace and holiness no man shall see the Lord A fit proof of this we have Esay 59.8 9. Their feet run to evil they make haste to shed blood their thoughts are thoughts of iniquity wasting and destruction are in their paths the way of peace they have not known therefore is judgment far from us we wait for light but behold obscurity we grope for the wall like the blind we grope as if we had no eyes we stumble at noon day as in the night There is a pursuit of war and unpeaceableness there is a pursuit of unholiness and what followeth upon it but a spiritual blindness Therefore is judgment far from us 2 Pet. 3.14 Endeavour to be found of him in peace without spot and blameless The Reason is God is the God of all Grace and he requires as well the one as the other to be in us and therefore what we find particularly the Church exhorted unto in one place we find it generally invited unto in another Be ye perfect as your Father which is in Heaven is perfect In the sight of God consists the happiness of the man and therefore it cannot be attained unto without the most eager pursuit for so the blessedness is propounded under other notions it still requires the utmost endeavour sometimes life but that life requires a precedent death If we dye with him we shall live with him sometimes a Kingdom that pre-requires suffering If we suffer with him we shall reign with him sometimes a Crown which requires fighting I have fought a good fight henceforth a crown not that either suffering or fighting or pursuing or dying deserves this life or Kingdom or Crown or beatifical vision for all the sufferings are not worthy of the glory that is to be reveiled in us but the great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vouchsafes it to none who prize it not above all whatever is dear unto them 1. In regard of the object who on purpose hides himself and Divine Mysteries from eyes unfit and unworthy to behold them so Esay 45.15 Verily thou art a God that hidest thy self Matth. 11.25 26. Thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes the peaceable ones and the holy ones Ratio utrinque valet See the original of controversies Men on both sides bring forth their strong Reasons wherewith one party overthrows the other for Nihil est tam ratione firmum quin vi rationis infirmari potest yet both are but like such as strive in the dark like blind men about colours which they have not seen True it is their Reasons are very specious and have a fair shew of strength as it 's noted of blind men that they are ingenious and witty Neither of them sees or hath seen what they contend about for had either of them seen they would not contend If a blind man should tell me it were not yet day I should pity the blind man not contend with him This discovers the perversness of the blind untoward world which neglect that method and way which God hath prescribed as leading unto the sight and knowledge of himself and think to find out other new wayes and methods forsake the fountain of living waters and dig unto themselves cisterns which will hold no water These are the thieves and robbers which enter not in by the door Christs death but climb up another way by soaring contemplation This is the folly of self-wise men for whereas according to Gods method that light that ariseth upon all men Job 25.3 That Grace of God that appears to all men Tit. teacheth them to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts c. and so to look for the blessed hope of the glorious appearance of the Lord the great God c. They love ungodliness and their lusts too well and indeed by reason of long acquaintance with them they are too familiar with them Deny them nay 't is death to them to depart from them whereupon they resolve upon some other way of seeing the Lord and that 's a fruitless disobedient knowledge a knowledge without practice a knowledge without holiness of life the fruit of the forbidden tree The sowre fruit which our Parents have eaten and so have set their childrens teeth on edge for look I beseech ye whether ye find it otherwise in the world For what is the heart of man so earnestly set upon as knowledge we would know God his Nature his Will his Wayes his Works we would know our own duty too the nature of Faith Hope Love Repentance What ever the Lord requires of us we would know all what ever is knowable but as for the holy and obedient life which is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the effect or end of all this knowledge where alas where is that to be found in proportion to our knowledge Why would ye not have us know It 's such another question as this would you not have us eat our meat knowledge is the food of the soul as meat is the nourishment of the body And truly rectè facitis attendentes But would ye not blame those who did eat and eat and nothing but eat and yet thrived
his work-house But if the man assumeth this unto himself as if this were befel him for some notable worth in himself as he were soul and body c. he is now become spiritually proud And what house wisdom was building folly pull's down with her hands Prov. Like the flye sitting upon the Axel-tree of the Cart O quantam ego vim pulveris excito The Ass that carried the mysteries of Isis prided himself and pricked up his ears as if the people had worshipped him Such a silly Fly such a simple Ass is such an one as arrogates God's works to himself Yea this arrogancy and assuming somewhat to a mans self of the good the Lord doth in him and by him moves him off the centre of his Faith Joh. 5.44 Prov. 20.6 Observ Abraham believed and obeyed and so obeyed that he wrought that heroical work of obedience and that faith that obedience of faith was accounted to him for righteousness He first believed and obeyed and then that operative belief that obedience of faith was accounted unto him for righteousness We see that Abrahams obedience and perfecting of his Faith was in order before his being accounted Righteous his Faith was perfected by works and so the Scripture was fulfilled which said Abraham believed c. Therefore to place obedience and doing good works among the consequents of justification and salvation is to make obedience and the doing of good works arbitrary and then they are like to be well done indeed who will then do any if but gratuitous See Notes before on Jam. 1.22 And there is reason they should be remiss in their obedience and doing good works who conceive it arbitrary so to do for who will go about so difficult a business as obedience if he be already sure of the main by justification And therefore some will grant that good works are necessary but how not as causes but as means c. Vide ubi supra Repreh Who think to fulfil the Scripture by a complete and full justification but fulfil not perfect not their Faith by works of Sanctification And therefore they thank God for their Justification that 's sure and firm because they imagine it so And then thank God for their Sanctification in part They believe that can never be otherwise This is gross unbelief See Notes on Col. 2.12 Observ The reason of that abundance of iniquity which our Saviour fore-told should be in the last days the want of Faith in Jesus Christ And therefore Joh. 16.8.9 The spirit shall reprove the world of sin because they believe not in Christ who takes away the sin There is no belief in the Divine Power of Jesus Christ the Power of God Luk. 18.8 few there are that know him otherwise than according to the flesh Men have thoughts of his humanity and believe in him His enemies acknowledge him a powerful man so did they Matth 13.54 they acknowledged the wisdom and mighty works done by Christ But in that they believed not his Divine Power see what followeth vers 58. So did his friends as they Lvk. 24 19. Spake as much in honour of Christ as might be But vers 25. O fools and slow of heart to believe c. He that believeth in me as the Scripture hath said Joh. 7.38 Thus he is the Lamb passover door vine the fountain They glorified God in me Vnless ye believe that I am ye shall dye in your sin Joh. 8.24 Repreh 1. Their preposterous and imagining belief who boast of a Plerophory a fulness and perfection of Faith before they have the beginning of the true Faith Tantum absunt à perfectione maximorum operum uti ne fundamenta quidem jecerunt build Castles in the air before they have laid the foundation They are in heaven before they have passed by the gates of hell as the Jews would have a sign from heaven whom our Lord points to learn a sign from hell as he calls it Jonah 2. They offer up their Isaac before they come out of Vr they talk of perfection before they know they own imperfection they are familiar with God in the clouds on the top of the ladder before they have lyen down with Jacob at the foot of it Surely these begun their Faith and Religion at the wrong end These are thieves and robbers who enter in another way Joh. 10. Repreh 2. Who deny a possibility of perfecting either Faith or any other Grace Consol What consolation must this needs be to the misgiving soul fainting fearing and ready to despair Act. 16.31 It was the Roman Law that the Jaylor who let any prisoner escape should suffer the same punishment which he should have suffered And therefore he chose rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common effect of despair but a most foolish one stultum est ne moriare mori Do thy self no harm fear not despair not believe in the Lord Jesus It was no new doctrine to the Jaylor but the same which he had now sometime preached at Philippi the obedience of faith But alas I am dead in trespasses and sins Ephes and fear an eternal death stipendium peccati mors he that believes in me although he be dead yet shall he live Joh. 11.25 Psal 138.7 8. Vntil the day dawn c. 2 Pet. 1.19 Be not discouraged there are degrees of Faith there is a beginning of faith Heb. 3. and there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fulness of it nothing can be perfected 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all at once Art and Nature have their gradual increase Nihil simul inventum perfectum est saith Tully in his Publ. and it is true in Rhetorick that the first Orators had a more rugged stile which they of after ages polished and made more terse till at length they brought that Art unto perfection The first Painters nor knew nor used more than four colours which Art yet afterward was perfected by Apelles and others with great variety Et natura nihil magni voluit effici cito Quintil. The greater creatures stay longer in the womb and are born with greater difficulty And even so it is in the Divine Nature and the Divine Art of life Phil. 1.6 Repreh Those who rest in an imperfect faith They think low thoughts of God Herein Abraham and Sarah offended and it is the sin of their children while yet they are young Zachary the father of John for this cause was stricken dumb Can he give bread to his people This offended the great God so much Psal 78 20-30 It is a common sin that men rather propound to themselves the lowest condition of Faith in the believer yea almost the unbelief to be imitated than the highest The reason is there is little or no Faith nothing like love among us that believeth all things were there such a Faith we would believe that we should receive the Spirit of Jesus yea as Elisha did a double portion whatsoever ye ask believing ye shall obtain Matth. 21.23 3.
this word being plural in the singular number as Castellio here turns it gloriam Martin Luther Herligheit and after him the Low Dutch and also our printed English Translations Glory The Reason why the Spirit of God expresseth this Glory in the plural number is because in Scripture when divine things are signified in their fulness the words are put in the plural number thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 12.1 thus very often 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Righteousnesses are in the Hebrew which we express only in the singular number not without injury to the Hebrew Text Thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2. and the great promise of partaking of the Divine Nature is expressed in the plural number 2 Pet. 1. thus Glories in the Text import fulness of Glory Another reason there is from the word opposite hereunto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sufferings which is plural and therefore the holy spirit would counterpoise them with the like weight of Glory The Reason why these Glories must follow the sufferings is the justice of the Father 1. In regard of Christ who therefore highly exalted him Phil. 2. and therefore he is said to be crowned with glory and honour for the suffering of death Hebr. 2.9 ought not Christ to suffer and so enter into glory 2. In regard of those who are Christs the justice of God who hath promised is engaged unto them yet lest we should seem to stand upon terms of commutative justice the Lord who hath promised is just when he performs his promise but bountiful and gracious also when he doth so both because these Glories in worth infinitely exceed our sufferings 2 Cor. and because the promise of Glory was made out of Grace the Apostle therefore wisely joyns both together I have kept the faith c. henceforth is laid up for me a crown of Righteousness which God the righteous judge shall give me 3. Another Reason may be given for this more proper to the next point Observ 1. Note here in what method and order the holy spirit hath placed these things of greatest moment sufferings leading unto Christ and glory after these sufferings The like Scriptures we have if we suffer with him we shall reign with him if we die with him we shall also live with him Observ 2. This method of the spirit is notable and quite contrary to that wherein the world instructs her Children for men are taught first to believe that they shall reign with Christ inherit glory honour immortality and eternal life and then to follow Christ in his sufferings then to die with him then to cut off the offending foot and offending hand and pluck out the offending eye and all this in way of thankfulness Quanto rectius hic St. Peter puts the Passions first and the Glories after Observ 3. The God of Glory prescribes his Servants their work first to be done and promiseth them their reward afterward Prov. 3. first they are wise and humble then God gives them Grace and Glory first they die and then they live first they suffer and then they reign if we suffer with him that we may also be glorified with him Rom. 8.17 The God of this world proceeds with his servants in a quite contrary method he gives them their reward in hand that present good which they desire the Hypocrites seek for honour at the hands of men and that their Master gives them Matt. 6. They have their reward Luk. 16. My son saith Abraham remember that in thy life time thou received'st thy good things and Lazarus his evil things he therefore now is comforted and thou art tormented Thus he himself foretells his Apostles and Disciples sufferings lest they should be offended Joh. 16.1 2. Axiom 4. The spirit of Christ in the Prophets witnessed before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glories that should follow The spirit witnessed of the sufferings of Christ The sufferings of Christ testified by the spirit are either in the spirit or flesh 1. In the spirit thus in Adam when his innocent nature in us was murdered Rev. 13.8 Thus when the good motions and inspirations of the holy spirit are quenched Hebr. 6.6 of these the ceremonial services and types under the Law testified the Lambs in the daily sacrifice The Reason of this Testimony of the Prophets touching the suffering of Christ and the glories following may be for the prevention of scandal which the Lord in wisdom foresaw would follow the Cross and therefore these sufferings must be foretold Thus the Apostle tells us that Christ crucified was a stumbling-block to the Jews 1 Cor. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Whence our Lord sending answer to John Baptist's question whether he were the Christ or not saith The blind see the lame walk to the poor the Gospel is preached and blessed is he that is not offended in me Matt. 11. Observ 1. Hence appears the Antiquity of the Christian Doctrine touching salvation and the means conducing thereunto This the spirit testified unto the Prophets from the beginning of the world Observ 2. St. Peter here and the rest of the Apostles teach one and the same thing that the Prophets of old have done yea the Apostles in the New Testament required the very same Righteousness of God which was required before under the Old Testament even the righteousness of God by faith not imagined by fancy but such really and truly wrought in us by the spirit of Jesus Chrst Rom. 3.21 St. Peter useth the like method Acts 3.24 and 5.30 and 22.14 whereby they shew that the Law of Christ differs not from the Old Law but that both have the same founder and authour that the same God who gave the Law commanded also the Gospel to be preached yea St. Paul testifieth the same more largely Act. 26.22 23. Observ 3. Hence it appears as from manifold other Scriptures that the Doctrine concerning the Deity of the Son of God and holy spirit is no new Doctrine but that which was well known unto the holy Prophets Observ 4. Hence also it 's evident That the holy Prophets of Old spake not of themselves but by the dictate and instinct of the Holy Ghost so the Psalms which we say of David c. are indeed dictated by the spirit of God so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. are rendered by the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. therefore the Psalmist about to propound a parable saith I will incline mine ear unto a parable Psal 49.4 so that the doctrine of the Prophets as well as of the Apostles is the Testimony of the Holy Spirit That Spirit by which the Old Prophets spake and wrote was the spirit of Christ Thus we profess in the Nicene Creed that Christ spake by the Prophets The Scriptures or writings of the holy Prophets are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given by divine inspiration they are testimonies of Gods spirit 5. The Prophets searched what and what manner of time the spirit of Christ that
forth we hold and keep that Spiritual Love-feast which was wont and should for ever be a concomitant unto this Sacrament 1 Thess 5.11 3. What is the Committe of Examination Every mans own self judge your selves 1 Cor. 11.31 32. Let us examine our selves 2 Cor 3.5 Let every one prove his own work Gal. 6.4 4. Who is the Delinquent If we look for the Delinquent he is no other than every mans own self which is not to be understood only in regard of outward actions which may be left to the examinationn of another but the party to be examined is every mans own self according to that especially in himself which another cannot examine so well as he himself can as his inward actions The motions of his own heart and spirit So the Syriack here Let a man examine his own soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reason In regard of 1. The Duty it self Examination 2. The Examinate and Exminer 1. The Duty is a reflex act which returns upon it self which is proper only unto man and no other creature Therefore let a man examine himself 2. In regard of the Examinate every one of us is sufficiently delinquent and faulty enough if he will stand to the dictate of his own conscience 3. And therefore who so fit an Examiner as he who is privy to all the Examinates Delinquency For who knows the things of a man but the spirit of the man that is in him 1 Cor. 2.11 Object 1. But the heart is deceitful Jer. 17. who can know it The heart of the wicked man made deceitful by the Deceiver that is another mans heart because we are unable to judge of things by their surface and know not one anothers heart And whereas the heart would naturally discover the purposes and intentions of it by nakedness and simplicity The Art of seeming conceals all from us 2. But if by this every man 's own heart be understood It 's true that no man knows his own heart without the light of God's Law and his Spirit For so every mans spirit in him is the candle of the Lord Prov. 20.27 which the Lord lights Psal 18.28 by which are discovered unto him the hidden things that lay before in darkness Observ 1. No person unexamined is to Communicate c. Levit. 21. and 22. Commune with your own heart so did they qui redierunt ad cor who returned to their heart Object 2. But is there no cognizance to be had of other mens sins if so why may not one man examine another I Answer some mens sins and misdemeanours are manifestly known Gal. 5.19 others there are of which there goes a great and strong fame and happily not without vehement cause of suspicion 1 Tim. 5.24 1. The first prevent all judgement and need no examination 2. The latter sort may be examined by others yet so 1. That he who examines be such a spiritual man as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 2.15 16. See Notes in Job 12.12 Yea 2. Though there be such a spiritual man who judgeth all things yet it 's extreme necessary that the Examinate be also examiner himself Observ 2. No person rightly examined is to be debarred Repreh 1. Those who would come or do come without examination what else do they who come Drunkards and go as they come and continue as they are O what is this but to make the Supper of our Lord convivium cyclopicum a meal of murderers dogs swine wolves vipers c all coming to it without any reverence intending to cover their intended abominations with the holy flesh of Christ as if Christ were made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a cloak to cover our shame a servant of sin like to perverse Sardanapalical Epicurean swine but these works are manifest Repreh 2. Those that discern this unworthiness in others whoring stealing drunkenness c. and exclude such yet consider not that they exclude themselves from the true inward Supper of the Lord Rev. 3.20 while they live in open enmity with God spiritual thievery and fornication envy pride covetousness wrath revenge the Name of Christ is much blasphemed through these O how should Jews and Turks and Heathen become Christians when the professing Christians are more profane epicurean unchristian more Antichristian than the very Jews Turks and Heathen Repreh 3. Their over curiosity and censoriousness which pry into others and neglect their own examination of themselves Doubtless it 's a very great fault among us yet practised by very many who would gladly be prying and peeping into the Consciences of men yea judge them already are not these phrases heard among us a rotten hearted man c. Why dost thou condemn thy Brother We must all stand before the judgement seat of Christ Truly I know not what pretence or shew of reason many have who yet will be Godly when truly these are the Acts wherein they perversly follow God and indeed follow the Devil himself What is more peculiar unto God than revenge and knowing of the heart Vengeance is mine yet who takes not this from God I the Lord search the heart Thou alone knowest the hearts of the children of men 1 King 8. It 's the Devils part to take these from God he would dare to intrude into the Throne and judge of his secrets in the hearts of men Thus he began to charge God himself with lying We may know more by our selves than all the world can Paul the chief of sinners yet afterward having examined and purged himself he knew nothing by himself we must every one give account for himself How much greater is God than another mans Conscience Consol I have examined my self and I find so many sins that deter and affright me God is greater than thy Conscience greater in Mercy and plenteous in loving kindness 1 Joh. 3.20 The Judge when he hath examined he gives an impartial sentence yet when he hath so done the power of pardoning is yet in the Prince Every mans Conscience is an impartial Judge which condemns or acquits the Examinate but God is greater Mercy triumphs over Judgement when we have judged our selves then the Mercy of God is greater The good God pardon all these 2 Chron. 30.18 19. Exhort To this Duty to prepare our Accounts before we come to the great Examiners Office both concerning 1. Sins committed and 2. wants of good disposition hunger and thirst Sign 1. Whether have we examined our selves touching all those Objects forenamed 2. Whether by a right Rule many judge themselves by themselves and so are not wise many by the Opinions of those whom they prize Ne te quaesiveris extra seek not thy self without thy self What is so true a Rule as the Canon of God's Word 3. Whether effects follow upon due examination repentance conversion hunger thirst 4. Whether do we imitate the Lords death and burial 1. His death Ipsum pro nobis esse passum That he died for us Nos cum ipso debere compati
That we ought to suffer with him 1. Christ is the Lamb slain from the beginning Rev. 13. It is evident we are not able before Regeneration to think speak do any thing that is good when therefore we crucifie good thoughts purposes intentions before Regeneration what else do we but crucifie Christ himself in us 2. Frangendum corpus peccati The body of sin is to be broken Effundendus sanguis vitae pristinae The blood of our former life is to be poured out Mourn for the affliction of Joseph Amos 6.6 Consider 1 Sam. 22.1 2 3. What is the meaning of the Cave and who went into it after him but miserable men and men in debt and whom doth he invite else Matth. 11. There are two questions of great moment 1. What have I done the Prophet complains of this Jer. 8.6 2. What shall I do of this Paul Act. 9. the Jaylor Act. 16.30 the multitude Act. 2.37 Means Pray to the Lord to light our candle and set it on our head Job 29.3 Psal 18.28 2. To try us himself Psal 139.23 24. But let a man examine himself and so let him eat c. I have spoken heretofore of these words which as then I might have told you had a double consideration 1. Absolute Let a man examine himself 2. With a note of distinction or diversity in respect of the words before But let a man examine himself In the Verse before the Apostle had told the Corinthians the danger of unworthy Receiving which that it might not seem a discouragement in the words of the Text he prescribes a means for the due and worthy Receiving of it He that eats But let a man c. Observ 1. The nature of sin is here compared to dross that it 's incorporate with metals as elsewhere the Holy Ghost compares it to dust to stubble Psal 119.119 Prov. 25.4 See Notes on Jam. 1. Jer. 6.28 Ezech. 22.18 Observ 2. As there is dross in us to be consumed so is there something as precious yea more precious than Gold that is tryed 1 Pet. 6.7 See Notes in verba supra Therefore is Christ called the Remnant which is left after all unless the Lord of hosts had left us a Remnant a Seed Rom. 9. the Balsamum Naturale when all the chaff and husk is consumed that brings all to life again as Isai 1.25 26 27. that is thus is Jesus Christ our hope spes in ima pixidis hope in the bottom of the box Observ 3. Because the Sacrament is compared to meat and drink it 's often to be Received See Notes on 1 Cor. 10. Repreh 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so who quarrel about the way of trying some conceive that unless others try us we are not fit guests for the Lords Table The Mistriss of the house bid her Maids sweep the house Wisdom hath her maids Prov. 9. she knows that will not dwell in a body that is subject unto sin Repreh 2. Who measure and try themselves by themselves the Scripture saith such are not wise Repreh 3. Who try themselves by the Opinions of others it 's possible to deceive all Examiners Repreh 4. Who try themselves by Scripture but wrested to their own sense who examine themselves by the end of the Sacrament remembrance of Christ's death not the imitation of it Means of tryal the fire of the Spirit that which hath been tryed by the fire is approved 1. Such is the fire of the Spirit 2. The Word Psal 119.140 Let him eat of that bread Bread is either Natural Food 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Spiritual and that either 1. Good and wholesom such as strengthens the inward man Prov. 9.5 Or 2. Hurtful and destructive unto it Prov. 4.17 The outward and natural food is not here understood as all agree for since it is a Sacrament what is visible is representative and significative of some thing invisible as the outward and natural both bread and wine signifie something inward answering to both what those are all agree to be the body and blood of Christ Now what body that is which we eat what blood that is which we drink is a very great question in the Church of Christ and not determined only the most agree that the natural body of Christ which suffered on the Cross and the blood then shed is that which is here understood But how we eat that body and how we drink that blood the great Disputers of the world fall asunder into Three Parties according to their several Opinions 1. Some say that the outward Elements of Bread and Wine are really changed into the body and blood of Christ which we must believe to be so though we see the colours smell the scent taste the relish of the outward elements this they call Transubstantiation 2. Others say that in under with or together with the outward elements of Bread and Wine the body and blood of Christ is eaten and drunk and this is called Consubstantiation But this if well considered overthroweth the nature of a Sacrament 3. A third sort are they who understand as both the former do the natural body and blood of Christ but received both by Faith But the Question is not de Modo but de Objecto not touching the manner how the body and blood of Christ is received but concerning the body and blood it self whether natural or spiritual and mystical and such as is truly called spiritual meat and spiritual drink When our Lord Jesus had treated at large of his body and flesh and blood the eating of the one and drinking of the other and some said how can this man give us his flesh to eat Joh. 6.52 These three divided Parties answer that question 1. The first by Transubstantiation 2. The second by Consubstantiation 3. The other by Faith If the Natural Body of Christ Crucified be here understood then surely the Capernabites were in the right it was to be eaten bodily and his blood bodily drunk As spiritual things are spiritually received and not otherwise if therefore the Natural Body of Christ were here understood it must be received according to its nature bodily Therefore our Lord perceived the gross mistake of the Capernahites as elsewhere they understood him Joh. 2.19 and 3.4 that which all these three take for granted our Saviour expresly denies all these suppose the natural body to be that which is fed upon Our Lord tells them and us if we will believe him that the flesh profiteth nothing he speaks of his own flesh of which they made mention The words saith he which I speak they are Spirit and they are Life Doth the flesh profit nothing did not Christ suffer for us in the flesh did he not by his death pay an inestimable price for our Redemption from the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 Hebr. 9.27 28. Did he not by his holy Life in the flesh as also by his death leave us an example Is not the death of Christ necessary for the
thou chusest and causest to approach unto thee c. Before this can be done Verse 23. O thou that hearest Prayer unto thee shall all flesh come iniquities prevail against me as for our transgressions thou shalt purge them away and 79.9 O purge away our sins for thy names sake And this is reasonable for if the Lord Jesus was therefore born and dyed that he might make reconciliation for the sins of the people how can the people be reconciled while yet their sin is not purged 5. Christ himself is the propitiation for our sins 1 John 1.1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. the mercy-seat by which he was figured as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 3.25 which hath the name of covering for by him our sins against the Law are forgiven and covered Job 33.23 25. and from purging 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 See Notes on Gen. 5. Noah Repreh Those who pretend to magnifie the Love of Christ who dyed for us merited the pardon of sin for us satisfied the wrath of God for us made reconciliation for us c. mean time little notice is taken by them of his expiation purging and cleansing us from the sin Prayer is often made for the forgiveness and pardon of sin but not so often for the cleansing us from the sin the Apostle puts both together 1 John 1.9 Men pray that God would be reconciled unto us in his Son the propitiation for our sins but they heed not that God the Father prevents us with his love to us and so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believes in him should not perish but have everlasting life They consider not that the great fail and want of reconciliation lies on our part 2 Cor. 5.18 19 20. by all which it is evident that men love their sins but fear the punishment of them they would have God reconciled unto them but they take no care to be reconciled to God by the purging or cleansing from their sins Repreh Their naked barren and fruitless faith who believe their sins are pardoned and forgiven but they forget the purging of them they add not unto their faith vertue but believe that all this is done or will be done without any pains of their own he that lacks these things hath forgotten the purging of his old sins not that he was purged but he hath forgotten the purging he remembers not his Duty to purge himself from them c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.5 9. Observ Here then is one of our principal businesses in the Holy Sacrament to shew forth the great love of the Lord Jesus in dying for us the Jews called this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a manifestation predication or narration whereby they declared three things on that night wherein they kept that feast unto the Lord. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A memorial of the Lords passing over the houses of the Israelites when the first born of the Egyptians was slain when by vertue of the blood of the Lamb the Lord spares his true Israel 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The bitter herbs remembring them of their bitter servitude whereby the Egyptians made their lives bitter unto them even the slavery under the Egyptians which are our sins Mich. 7.15.19 and the bitterness of death in conformity unto the death of the Lamb. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The unleavened bread whereby they commemorated their deliverance out of Egypt and the sincerity and truth of those who undertake the journey out of the spiritual Egypt into the holy Land This is that which the Apostle either declares or commands 1 Cor. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ye shew forth or shew ye forth the Lords death until he come Declare his great love in dying for us and becoming our Passover the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the covering Declare our mortification or dying unto sin Declare our sincerity and truth in such a dayly conformity unto his death The Lord Jesus must be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things belonging unto God that he might make reconciliation for the sins of the people that he might out of his love and mercy lay down his life for us and conform us unto his death by purging us from our sins thus by his mercy and truth iniquity is purged Prov. 16.6 O let us imitate the Lord Jesus the great High Priest so many as he makes Priests unto God Revel 1. let us be merciful and faithful Priests Let not mercy and truth forsake us Prov. 3.3 Let us by his mercy and faithfulness for it 's his and none of ours let us by mercy and truth or faithfulness the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth both endeavour the purging of our sins Give Alms of what ye have and all things are clean unto you Luke 11.41 By these we become more and more like unto our God whence it is that there is a mutual attraction and drawing of God nearer unto us and us nearer unto our God as the strings of two Lutes or other musical Instruments affect each other being tuned harmoniously accordingly our Lord saith John 14. If a man love me he will keep my sayings and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him And as former iniquities are purged by mercy and truth So future iniquities are prevented by the fear of God for so Prov. 16.6 By mercy and truth iniquity is purged and by the fear of the Lord men depart from evil and return not again unto their former sin but ever after for the future walk before God in holiness and righteousness all the days of their life Luk. 1.75 NOTES AND OBSERVATIONS UPON HEBREWS II. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted THese words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendering a reason of the former vers 17. why it was needful for Christ to be like unto his brethren c. or a further illustration of it That he might make reconciliation for the sins of the people because since he could not make reconciliation for the sins of the people unless he had been like unto them in all things He therefore suffered being tempted that he might succour those who are tempted This 18. Verse hath two parts 1. What Christ hath passed through for his brethrens sake he hath suffered being tempted 2. What benefit accrues to him and his brethren He is able to succour those who are tempted 1. Christ's brethren are tempted 2. Christ himself hath been tempted 3. Christ himself hath suffered being tempted 4. Christ himself is able to succour those that are tempted 5. Christ in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour us 6. This is the fruit of Christs assimilation or being made like unto his brethren in all things even in sufferings of all sorts and death it self for in
that he hath suffered being tempted he is able also to succour those that are tempted 1. Christ's Brethren are tempted for of those the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to be understood as appears vers 17. Here only we must enquire what is meant by temptation The Brethren of Christ I have spoken of before they are such as do the will of the Father Matth. 12. The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 here used is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transeo to pass over as in passing a water of unknown depth the Marriner conto pertentat he trys the depth of it with a Pole whence percontor is to ask a question to sound a man of what depth he is or else from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth experiment or tryal so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to assay or make tryal of Heb. 11.29 which because its often done with intention to deceive the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth also deceit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And therefore Satan who deceives the whole world with his temptations or endeavours so to do is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the tempter Matth. 4.3 which is tentatio seductionis To try ones strength understanding will love or other affection This is Tentatio probationis As for the nature of temptation tentare est experimentalem notitiam alicujus rei in se vel in alio causare principaliter vel occasionaliter To make experiment or tryal in ones self or another principally or occasionally That knowledge therefore that is gotten by reason or by discourse is not gotten by proving or trying or tempting This tryal is made in ones self or another because when God tempts a man as he is said to have tempted Abraham he causeth no experiment or new knowledge in himself which is eternal but he causeth him who is tempted to know somewhat in himself which before he knew not I say this experiment is made in ones self or another principally or occasionally 1. Principally in regard of God Man or Satan for God Man and Satan therefore tempt or make tryal that they may know or cause something to be known 2. It is added occasionally in regard of the flesh or the world for the flesh is said to tempt by the lusts of it and the world by adversity assaulting us and by Prosperity alluring us whereby a man is made known to himself and others whether he be in a constant and setled estate or else mutable and changeable Why are the brethren of Christ tempted Reason there is in regard 1. Of Christ's brethen 2. Of God himself See Notes on Matth. 41.3 Of the Tempter who immediately or mediately tempts the Brethren of Christ by evil men or by other outward creatures in the world and by his lusts which he suggests unto them as they are called his lusts Joh. 8. And these Brethren of Christ rather than any other are tempted by Satan because ungodly men are already in his power and he hath them safe in his possession and such as these he takes captive at his will 2 Tim. 2. Luk. 11.12 But such as these who have revolted from him and given up their names to the Lord Jesus Christ as his Servants and Soldiers those are the men that Satan tempts these are they whom he desires to winnow as wheat Observ 1. Even the Brethren of Christ are exposed unto temptations The Tempter useth all his stratagems all his arts and deceits to seduce them and bring them into his snares Observ 2. There is no estate secure no condition exempted from temptation on this side the heavenly rest for our proficiency and growth is by our temptations otherwise how grow we stronger but by exercise of our gifts and graces which are tryed by temptation So was Job's patience by Satan and Josepbs chastity by his Mistress and Davids meekness by Saul by Shimei and others And how can any man know he hath such graces in him unless he be tryed and tempted Nor shall any one receive the Crown of Life unless first he hath overcome nor can any one be said to overcome unless first he strive nor can he overcome or strive unless he hath an enemy and that enemy tempt him Thus Militia est vita hominis Job nor will that warfare be accomplished until we can truly say with the Apostle 2 Tim. 4.7 8. I have fought a good fight I have finished my course I have kept the faith henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness c. The Spouse in the Canticles 4.16 therefore calls for not only the south wind but also the North wind to blow upon her garden she desires both at once And why not only the South wind For from the South blow fruitful breathings whereby we understand the inspiration of the holy Spirit and increase of Graces thereby Whereas ab aquilone panditur omne malum Jerem. The Spouse knew well that there is no increase of Graces to be hoped for without increase of opposition and contrariety And therefore by how much the sweet breathings of the spirit proceed from the South by so much the more vehement opposition must be expected from the North. The Apostles and Disciples of Christ found this by experience Act. 2. when they received the spirit and the mighty rushing wind Soluta est omnis congelata mentis frigiditas sicut torrens in austro saith Gilbertus Abbas Then the spices flowed they declared the wonderful works of God But what then did the North wind cease when the South wind blew No did not then the storm and tempest of persecutions arise more fiercely did not the hatred much increase While the Apostles and Disciples were yet but novices in Christ's School they suffered some accusations from the Pharisees as for plucking and rubbing the ears of corn for eating with unwashen hands c. but when they appeared full of the holy Ghost Good God! how the North wind arose what storms and tempests did it raise in the hearts of gain-sayers for as our God gives greater gifts unto his people so he permits greater oppositions against them and as their graces are greater so the greater are their sufferings ubi magnitudo gratiae ibi magnitudo discriminis Hierom. Observ 3. It is not an estate truly miserable to be tempted even the Brethren of Christ such as do the Will of their Father which is in heaven even they are tempted Observ 4. If the Brethren of Christ must pass thorough the fiery tryal of temptation What shall become of them who are Christs enemies if his brethren must endure the fire of Purgatory even that fiery tryal that is to try us in this our Pilgrimage what fire but that of hell remains for his incorrigible enemies if our Lord so thoroughly purge his floor and his corn which he carryeth into his barn what shall become of the chaff but that it be burnt up with unquenchable fire Repreh Those who pretend