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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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having shewen his charitable confidence towards the seduced people doth evidence how dangerous their error was notwithstanding by denouncing Gods judgment against their prime seducers But he that troubleth you shall bear bis judgment saith he 6. How the native and ordinary effect of error is to trouble the Churches peace See Chap. 1. Vers. 7. Doct. 3. But he that troubleth you 7. Though there were not a Christian Magistrate to inflict civil punishment upon seducers and those who by drawing disciples after them do trouble the Churches peace or though the Christian Magistrate do not make conscience of that which is his duty herein Rom. 13. -4. yet such evil doers as those may certainly expect their deserved judgment from God either here or hereafter to be inflicted either immediately by Himself Zech. 10. 7. or mediately by some one instrument or other Zech. 13. 3. for though there was now no Christian Magistrate to punish such yet Paul with much confidence affirmeth He that troubleth you shall bear his judgment 8. So just is God that when He maketh inquisition for bloud in His day of vengeance He will suffer no impenitent transgressor how subtil soever escape His most accurate search nor yet passe free from the dint of His avenging stroke who-ever he be for parts power or estimation for he speaketh in the singular number he that troubleth you to shew that every one and as it were apart and one by one should be taken notice of and shall bear his judgment whoever he be that is without exception of persons Vers. 11. And I Brethren if I yet preach Circumcision why do I yet suffer persecution then is the offence of the crosse ceased HE presseth the exhortation thirdly by refuting a calumny whereby as it seemeth his adversaries would have made people believe that Paul by circumcising Timothy to prevent the stumbling of the weak Jews Act. 16. 3. had declared himself to be of the same judgment with them in the present controversie And he answereth denying that he did urge Circumcision to be observed by the Gentiles at all Act. 21. 25. nor yet by the Jews in the sense of his adversaries and giveth two evidences of the truth of his denial First if he had preached Circumcision the Jews would not have persecuted him as they constantly did Secondly they would not have taken offence at the preaching of the Gospel or of Salvation through Christ crucified which is here called the Crosse or doctrine of the Crosse as 1 Cor. 1. 18. The truth of both which consequences lyeth in this that the great reason why the Jews did persecute the Apostle and were such enemies to his doctrine was his preaching down of Circumcision and the whole frame of that ancient legal administration under which they were born and educated Act. 21. 28. Doct. 1. It is the ordinary lot of faithfull Ministers to be subject unto slander and reproaches not only in respect of their lives Rom. 3. 8. but also in respect of their Ministry and Doctrine as if they were Hereticks for even Paul is reported of as a preacher of Circumcision which is supposed while he saith If I yet preach Circumcision 2. So active are heretical seducers as they leave no mean unessayed which may serve to confirm and establish their seduced followers if it were even to spread reports of their chiefest opposits that they are secretly and under-hand of the same opinion with themselves and that sometimes they declare their judgments to that purpose for so did they report of Paul as is here supposed If I yet preach Circumcision 3. The faithfull Minister of Jesus Christ though he be maliciously and basely reported of ought not to render evil for evil unto those who have invented or entertained such reports but to return love for their hatred and good for their evil labouring more to vindicate himself than to rub disgrace upon them whereby he shall heap coals of fire upon their head Rom. 12. 20. for so doth Paul while he laboureth only to clear himself to those Galatians among whom he was misreported of giving them the affectionate stile of Brethren And I Brethren if I yet preach Circumcision why do I yet suffer persecution 4. While we labour to clear our selves from false imputations or calumnies we had need to use much circumspection in declaring the matter of fact lest we fail in any one circumstance and so be found lyars while we go about to justifie our selves for Paul is thus circumspect while he denyeth not that he did circumcise any for he circumcised Timothy Act. 16. 3. or that he did ever preach Circumcision for he did so while he was a Pharisee Gal. 1. 13 14. but that he did preach the observing of it now as a thing necessary to salvation If I yet preach Circumcision saith he 5. A faithfull Minister neither ought nor will conceal any part of necessary Truth which he is otherwise called to preach though he certainly know he will incur hazard losse and persecution from men because of it for Paul knew he was persecuted by the Jews for his preaching against Circumcision and yet he preacheth Why do I yet suffer persecution 6. Neither is he to conceal any part of necessary Truth when the eminent hazard of peoples salvation call 〈…〉 for the preaching of it though imbittered enemies should take occasion from his preaching of that one Truth to reject all Truth for Paul preacheth down Circumcision though the Jews did take occasion from his so doing to reject the whole Gospel for saith he Then to wit if he had preached Circumcision the offence of the Crosse is ceased 7. If men once place Religion and Worship in rites ceremonies and such externall observances the most substantiall Truths of God and duties of Christianity will not bear so much weight with them in progresse of time as the meanest of those for though Paul did preach Christ sincerely 1 Cor. 1. 23. and urged obedience to all the duties of the Moral Law Rom. 13. 8 9. yet seing he did not preach Circumcision he was persecuted by the Jews who placed Religion in such external performances Yea they reject and stumble at the doctrine of Salvation preached by him because he would not preach Circumcision also Why do I yet suffer persecution then is the offence of the Crosse ceased which implyeth that his not preaching Circumcision was the cause why they persecuted his person and stumbled at his doctrine Vers. 12. I would they were even cut off which trouble you HE presseth the exhortation fourthly by a wish that their prime seducers who troubled their outward and inward peace were cut off from communion with the Church by the sword of Excommunication whereby he sheweth both that their sin deserved to be so censured and that the good of the Church if her present distemper could have born it did require that this censure had been inflicted Doct. 1. The Lord Christ King and Head of His Church
Gentiles 1 Cor. 16. 1. to supply the poor Jews who were turned Christians Rom. 15. 25. which they performed speedily and diligently See the places cited and 2 Cor. 8 and 9. chapters Doct. 1. It is frequently the lot of those who are rich in Grace to be poor in the things of a present life and who are heirs of a Kingdom Luke 12. 32. to be driven unto such straits as they are forced to live upon some charitable supply from others God seeing it convenient hereby to wean them from worldly contentments that Heaven may be the more longed after and more sweet when it cometh Thus the Christians in Judea for the most part were poor and such as needed supply from the Gentiles Only they would that we should remember the poor 2. Though those who are our own poor within the bounds where we live are chiefly to be relieved by us because of our nearer interest in such 1 Tim. 5. 8. Yet in cases of extremity even those poor who live remote from us because they are also of our own flesh Isa. 58. 7. and members of the same mystical body if Believers Gal. 6. 10. are also to be supplied by us for Paul was to stir up the Gentiles to contribute for the poor at Judea Only they would that we should remember the poor 3. The care of the poor and supply of the outward necessities of the Saints is an imployment not unworthy of the very chief Apostles and which Ministers and other Officers of the Church ought to make conscience of for the care of the poor was the last farewell of those Apostles Only they would that we should remember the poor which Paul also was forward to do 4. The Ministers of Jesus Christ ought to presse upon the People not only duties which are easie and cost them nought but also those that are burdensome and expensive especially that they would willingly give of those things which they enjoy for the supply of others which want and are to be as forward in pressing the one sort of duties as the other as being equally profitable to the Church and most evidencing of an inward work of Grace in the heart 1 Joh. 3. 17. Thus Paul was forward to presse upon the Gentiles to give some supply to the poor Jews The same which I was also forward to do or did speedily and diligently as the word signifieth Vers. 11. But when Peter was come to Antioch I withstood him to the face because he was to be blamed FRom this Verse to the 15. there is a further evidence of that Truth which he had formerly asserted concerning the authority of his Office and his divine Doctrine even in that point which was controverted betwixt him and his adversaries which he maketh appear from this That as an Apostle and by vertue of his Apostolick Office he did with Authority rebuke Peter one of the chief Apostles when in his practice at Antioch he declined from the Doctrine taught by him concerning the abrogation of the Ceremonial Law and that for any thing which appeareth to the contrary Peter in this debate did yeeld to Paul as having Truth for him This action of Paul's towards Peter is first summarly propounded in this Verse wherein Paul sheweth that boldly and freely he did oppose himself to Peter and that because his carriage as he doth clear more fully afterward was most blame-worthy Doct. 1. No band of friendship or confederacy which parties have entred no fear of occasioning the breaking-off of friendship whatever may be the consequences thereof ought to make those who are so conjoyned connive at others in a sinfull course or withhold a testimony against that which is sinfull in their friend when the hazard which may ensue from his sin to the Work and People of God doth call for it for though Paul had come to Jerusalem of purpose to purchase a good understanding betwixt him and Peter ver 1 2. and though they had given not long since mutual evidences of their harmony and agreement ver 9. and though their renting assunder was the thing which adversaries to Truth would have been most glad of as making much for the advantage of their bad cause Yet not long after this agreement was made when Peter falleth in a sin reproof-worthy which had dreadfull consequences to the People and Work of God as will appear afterward following upon it Paul doth freely and boldly give testimony against his sinful course But when Peter was come to Antioch I withstood him to the face 2. As the Ministers of Jesus Christ are bound to reprove sin and vice so they are to reprove it first with much boldnesse and resolution not faintly as if they were more feared for the offence of man than grieved for the dishonour of God so Paul in reproving Peter withstood him In the Original it is a military word and signifieth to stand against whether it be by force of arms or arguments it is a word of defiance and combating as it were hand to hand face to face and foot to foot not yeelding a hair breadth to the adversary Rom. 13. 2. Eph. 6. 13. Secondly with ingenuity and candor so as not to conceal the man's fault only from himself and in the mean time to speak of it broad and wide unto others for his prejudice Lev. 19. 16. But they are to declare his sin even-down to himself and rebuke him for it Thus Paul withstood Peter to the face for the word in the Original doth not import that he withstood him only in shew and for the fashion making the beholders think they were serious when they were not as some of the Ancients did alleage such dissimulation had been most base in those two eminent Apostles and Paul had not here spoken truly affirming that Peter was worthy to be blamed and that he walked not uprightly so the word must read as it is here rendred to the face or to his face as 2 Cor. 10. 1. Thirdly with certainty and knowledge of the deed reproved both for the truth of the fact and the vicious quality of it Paul before he reproved was assured of both these Because he was to be blamed saith he Doct. 3. The most eminent Saints on earth are not free of their own sinful and blame-worthy failings that hereby they may be keeped humble and from being lifted up with their gifts graces and other excellencies 2 Cor. 12. 7. and others may hereby learn not to think of them above what is written 1 Cor. 4. 6. for even the Apostles themselves and Penmen of Scripture though they could not erre in writing Scripture being therein guided by the infallible assistance of the Spirit 2 Pet. 1. 21. Yet in other things they had their own sinful failings as is evident in Peter Because he was to be blamed 4. It is the part of every man though never so eminent and esteemed of by others when he meeteth with a just and deserved reproof to stoop to
the labours of Christ's Ministers are attended with little successe and but very few are converted by their pains and this even somtimes when outward means are such as may be most promising of fruitfulnesse the Lord hereby inculcating this necessary Lesson That the great work of converting souls dependeth not upon most promising means 1 Cor. 3. 6. for the Prophet having an eye mainly as we shewed in the Exposition to the first beginnings of the Christian Church when Christ Himself was a Preacher Rom. 15. 8. calleth her by the name of barren that beareth not that travelleth not 3. The Lord will sometimes for good and necessary reasons expressed chap. 1. ver 13. doct 6. give His Church and People so far over to the rage of persecuters and own them as little under trouble to the view of the world as if He had no interest in them as their Lord and Husband for in this respect the Apostle calleth the Christian Church desolate that is without an husband in appearance For the desolate c. 4. A false declining yea an apostate Church may be to outward appearance much more owned of God as to the multitude of followers external beauty outward prosperity and freedom from the crosse than the true Church So that none of those things are infallible marks of a true Church for the Jewish Synagogue because of those things seemed to have an husband when the Christian Church was desolate Than she that hath an husband 5. The wise Lord hath thought it fit to make His Church and real Believers in the Church lyable as to their outward condition mainly to great variety and many changes it being almost impossible that we who are of such changeable tempers our selves should bear any one condition right for any long time together and not miscarry one way or other under it Psal. 55. -19. for the Church for that time barren and desolate was to have many children The desolate hath or as the words may also reade shall have many children 6. It is the duty of God's People to compose their affections especially those of joy and sorrow suitably to God's various way of dealing with them for the Church before barren and therefore sad is to change her sorrow into joy upon God's changing His way of dealing with her Rejoyce thou barren for the desolate hath many moe children 7. The enlargement of Christ's Kingdom and gaining of many sinners to God together with the weakning of Satan's interest in the world ought to be entertained with much joy for saith he Rejoyce break forth and cry for the desolate hath many moe children than she that hath an husband 8. So many are the discouragements of the Godly and so many causes of grief which are as heavy weights and strong bars to bear down and keep in their joy That this duty of rejoycing is not easily come at even when God in His gracious providence giveth reason for it Hence the command is inculcated in several words Rejoyce cry and break forth which last supposeth that many restraints from this duty are lying-on which must be broken-through before the heart can attain to it Vers. 28. Now we Brethren as Isaac was are the children of promise THe Apostle in the last place applieth this typical history and the scriptural confirmation of the mystery prefigured by it And first by asserting what himself really was and what in charity he yet conceived many of them at least to be he sheweth the only way of attaining the heavenly inheritance as children to be by vertue of the Covenant-promise in resemblance of Isaac who was so begotten ver -23. and tacitly implyeth that it is not attained by vertue of our own natural endeavours or fleshly priviledges whereof the Jewish Synagogue and her followers did boast chap. 6. ver 12 and wherein they were represented by the childe of the bond-woman Ishmael ver 23 Doct. 1. A Minister ought to prosecute general Doctrine so far untill it be brought home to the particular state and case of his hearers by pertinent and close application as that wherein the life and power of preaching doth mainly consist 1 Tim. 5. 20. for Paul resteth not untill he make application of the Doctrine in hand Now we Brethren as Isaac was c. 2. The humours of people are sometimes so ticklish that a Minister hath need to proceed to the work of applying general Truths unto them with that warinesse and circumspection as to point out their duty and what he would have them to be rather by shewing his charitable thoughts of them that they are so already than by any direct up-stirring of them to it for so doth Paul here point at their duty of quiting confidence in the flesh and of betaking themselves to Faith in the Promise by shewing he did in charity judge of them as those who had done so already Now we Brethren are children of the promise 3. That any of Adam's lost seed who are by nature children of wrath do become the children of God and heirs of eternal life is only by vertue of the gracious promises of the Covenant of Grace in so far as first they are begotten into a new and spiritual life not from any principle of natural strength and vigor Rom. 9. 16. but by the force of those Promises enlivened by the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 10. 4. And secondly their right to Heaven ariseth not from any works which they do Tit. 3. 5 but from Faith in the Promise Joh. 3. 16. for in this sense we are called children of the promise Vers. 29. But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now HE applyeth the present purpose in the second place for consolation to the true members of the Christian Church against those persecutions which they sustained from the false Apostles and such others as adhered to the Jewish Synagogue and to the doctrine of Justification by Works first by shewing that the like persecution did befall Isaac and was prefigured by those bitter mockings which Isaac who was begotten by the power of Gods Spirit according to the tenour of the Promise did suffer from Ishmael who was begotten by the ordinary strength of nature and boasted in his carnal outward priviledges See Gen. 21. 9. As it was then so it is now saith he Doct. 1. It hath been and yet is the ordinary lot of God's Children to suffer hard things from the men of this world the Lord having seen it most fitting that by the crosse they come to their Crown and through many tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven Act. 14. 22. for Paul speaketh of persecutions as a thing common to the Church in all ages But as then even so it is now saith he 2. The sorest persecutions and troubles which the Godly endure do frequently come from those who are otherwise tyed unto them by most strict and nearest relations of kinred
lest thou also be tempted 13. So prone are we to entertain good thoughts of our selves that it is a matter of no small difficulty to make a man reflect upon himself and enter upon a serious consideration of his own frailty and weaknesse and of every other thing which may keep him low in his own eyes without insulting over or despising of others as appeareth from Paul's changing of the number for having said Ye who are spiritual restore c. in the plural number here he saith considering thy self lest thou also c. in the singular which he doth to give the greater force and sharper edge to his admonition as knowing he was pressing a duty which very hardly and not without difficulty would be obeyed Vers. 2. Bear ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ. THe Apostle first enlargeth the former exhortation both as to the persons exhorted for now he exhorteth not only those who are spiritual but all of them And also as to the duty exhorted unto which is extended not only to an endeavour of reclaiming those who were overtaken in a fault but also to the tolerating and bearing patiently with the sins and infirmities of others untill they be amended and the sinner reclaimed which sins are designed by the name of a burden partly because some such sins are a burden and weight to the sinner himself either by reason of his grief and sorrow for them if he be a penitent Act. 2. 37. or by reason of that vexation and trouble which some sins as wrath malice and envie do bring to the natural spirits even of the impenitent sinner Job 5. 2. Prov. 14. 30. And partly because some such sins though not felt by the sinner himself are yet heavy burdens unto those who converse with him as his curiosity back-biting self-seeking and such like Prov. 16. 28. Secondly he inforceth the exhortation thus enlarged by a second argument to wit That hereby they did fulfill the Law or command of mutual love which he calleth the Law of Christ not as if love to our neighbour had not been enjoyned before Christ came in the flesh for it is a prime piece of the Law of Nature imprinted upon the heart of man at the Creation and was renewed again by God Himself upon mount Sinai 1 Joh. 2. 7. But because first Christ did renew this Command not only by freeing it from the false glosses and interpretations of Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 5. 23 c. but also by pressing it in its spiritual beauty and nature having laid aside and abolished the external cover of Mosaical Ceremonies Eph. 2. 15. under which it was vailed 1 Cor. 9. 9 10. In which respect mainly it is here called the Law of Christ in opposition to the false Apostles who pressed so much the Mosaical Law of Ceremonies And secondly because Christ did presse this Law so renewed in a singular manner upon His followers as a mark of true faith in Him Joh. 13. 35. And thirdly because Christ did fulfill this Law in His own person and thereby left an example of it unto us 1 Joh. 3. 16. Doct. 1. As there are none free of sinful infirmities which are burdensom sometimes to themselves and frequently unto others So we ought not to break the bond of common society which we are otherwayes tyed unto because of those but are to persist in it patiently bearing those infirmities which we cannot otherwayes help for saith he Bear ye one anothers burdens 2. This duty of bearing with the infirmities of others doth well consist with the use of such lawfull means as God hath prescribed whether to the Magistrate for restraining sin by punishing those who do evil Rom. 13. -4. or to Ministers and private Christians in order to the sinner's reclaiming by admonition reproof and such like for this duty of bearing one anothers burdens must agree with and cannot be contrary unto that other duty prescribed v. 1. which is to restore the sinner unto that state wherein he was so far must we be from giving him countenance or partaking with him in his sins 3. A compassionate frame of spirit made evident by our meek and patient deportment towards those who are overtaken in a fault without neglecting any duty we owe unto them doth afford the guilty sinner no small ease under his weighty exercise and tendeth much both to his preservation from fainting under heartlesse discouragement if his conscience be touched with the sense of his guilt and to carry on the work of his conviction and amendment if he be yet going on securely in his sin for the Apostle having exhorted to such a meek and patient deportment towards those who are overtaken in a fault he calleth it here a bearing of their burden or an affording of help to them under it Bear ye one anothers burdens 4. There is no such evidence of love to our neighbour as when it kytheth in our serious endeavours for bringing about his spiritual good and in taking the most effectual condescending and affectionate way in order to his reclaiming from sin together with our supporting of him and sympathizing with him under his spirituall weights for the Apostle calleth this a fulfilling of the Law of Christ or of mutual love as if that Law did call for this only And so fulfill the Law of Christ saith he 5. In what sense and measure the childe of God doth attain to evidence his love to his fallen brother by his serious endeavours to restore him unto the enjoyment of God's favour and to an holy and blamelesse conversation and by his bearing with him under his infirmities in order to his recovery in that same sense and measure he attaineth to fulfill the Law whence it followeth because he is not able to do the former perfectly and so as to come short in nothing for matter or manner Iam. 3. 2. but only sincerely and without dissimulation Rom. 12. 9. therefore neither can he keep the Law perfectly but only in sincerity and in his honest aim and endeavour Psal. 119. 6. for saith he Bear ye one anothers burdens and so fulfill the Law of Christ. Vers. 3. For if a man think himself to be something when he is nothing he deceiveth himself THe Apostle in further prosecution of the former exhortation doth fall upon the sin of self-conceit and arrogancy which causeth men contemn others and carry themselves with a kind of supercilious disdain towards such as are overtaken in a fault contrary to what he had exhorted them unto ver 1 2. And first he tacitly dehorteth them from this vice by shewing the man who is puffed up with a conceit of his own enduements above others and to the despising of others being compared with himself doth deceive himself and maketh his own mind to erre in passing judgment of himself as the word doth signifie and giveth a reason of this assertion because every man even the best is nothing as having no good
things and preferreth Christ unto all Far above all principality and power c. 5. As there is a world to come when this is gone wherein shall dwell righteousnesse 2 Pet. 3. 13. So though Christ's Kingdom shall cease at the last day and be delivered up by Him to the Father as to the way wherein He doth now administer it by ruling in the midst of His enemies Psal. 110. -2. whom He subdueth and destroyeth Psal. 2. 9. and gathering-in His Elect by the means of Word and Sacraments Matth. 28. 19 20. Yet this Kingdom of His shall never cease but be continued in that world which is to come without end as to the glory majestie absolute soveraignity and dominion over all the creatures which Jesus Christ Mediator and God manifested in the flesh shall enjoy for ever and ever for these words Not only in this world but in the world to come do shew the duration of Christ's kingly glory and are to be referred not to the word named immediatly preceeding but to God's action of setting Christ at His right hand far above all principality not only in this world c. From Vers. 22 Learn 1. The Lord hath all things at His disposal to do with them what He pleaseth for saith Paul He hath put all things under His feet which He could not have done except they had been at His disposall 2. Jesus Christ God-man Mediator is not only exalted unto high glory and dignity above all the creatures but also hath received absolute dominion and soveraign authority over them all So that all the creatures even the greatest are subjected to Him and that in the lowest degree of subjection to wit some willingly as the effectually called and chosen Psal. 110. 3 others by constraint and without or contrary to any purpose or intention of their own being lyable unto and made use of by His over-ruling power for bringing about His own glory and His Churches good Rom. 8. 28. Thus devils reprobates crosses tentations and all creatures are subjected to Him for it seemeth those all things which are under Christ's feet must be taken universally of all creatures whatsoever as being most agreeable not only to the verse preceeding where the comparison is made betwixt Christ and all creatures but also to Philip. 2. 10 11. which place is a commentary unto this He hath put all things under His feet Vers. 22. And gave Him to be the head over all things to the Church 23. Which is his body the fulness of Him that filleth all in all THe Apostle having spoken of Christ's glory and soveraignity in general over all the creatures doth next hold forth His special dominion and soveraignity over the Church by shewing that Christ over or above all that is in a special manner is given by the Father to be the Churches head which is a metaphor taken from the natural body to which he compareth Christ and his Church And first he sheweth that Christ doth answer to the head which implyeth an eminency in Him above the Church His Body Cant. 5. 10. together with authority and power over His Church to rule and govern her both visibly by His own Officers dispensing the Word and Censures 1 Cor. 5. 4 and inwardly by the powerfull operation of his Spirit Joh. 16. 13. 14. It implyeth also onenesse of nature betwixt Him and His Church Heb. 2. 14. and fulnesse of perfection enabling Him to do all the duties of an head to such a great necessirous and infirm body as His Church is Col. 2. 3. And it implyeth a strict union betwixt Him and His Church as is betwixt the head and members in the natural body the tye of which union as to the Church visible which is His visible political and ministerial body 1 Cor. 10. 16 17. is the bond of the Covenant of Grace wherein they are externally Psal. 50. 5. together with a profession of faith in Christ Act. 8. 37. But as to the invisible Church of real Believers they are as to the inward man animated and enlivened with that same Spirit which was poured-forth on Christ Rom. 8. 9. they have also faith in Him and love to Him wrought by His Spirit in them Col. 1. 4. Eph. 6. 24. and hereby they are united most strictly to Him And lastly the metaphor implyeth communication of influence from Christ to the Church to wit an influence of common gifts from His Spirit to the visible Church Eph. 4. 7 c. and an influence of spirituall life motion and of saving grace to the invisible Church of Believers Col. 2. 19. even as the head is above and ruleth the body is of the same nature with the body hath all the inward and outward senses with memory and understanding seated in it for guiding the body is united to the body and conveyeth influence for motion and sense unto the body And secondly ver 23. he sheweth that the Church answereth to the rest of the body under the head and is called Christ's body to wit not His natural but mystical body which implyeth not only the Churches union with Christ but union and order also among the members themselves together with diversity of gifts and functions as there are several members in the natural body 1 Cor. 12. It implyeth also their receiving influence for life and motion from Christ Eph. 4. 16. and the duty of subjection and obedience due unto Him as head Eph. 5. 24. He sheweth also the high honour which is put upon the Church by being Christ's body even that hereby they become Christ's fulnesse not as if Believers did adde any personal perfection to Him who is infinit in perfections unto whom nothing can be added Only they are members of that mystical body unto which He of grace hath undertaken the relation of head so that the Church is the fulnesse not of personall but of mystical Christ as both head and members of that mystical body are comprehended under that name Christ. See 1 Cor. 12. 12. and therefore lest any should think that this expression did imply any want of perfection in Christ to be supplyed by the Church the Apostle sheweth that Christ as God-man Mediator filleth the all of His body the Church for the purpose in hand requireth this all to be so astricted upon whom He bestoweth a fulnesse partly of gifts and partly of graces a fulnesse answerable to the present state of childhood and imperfection wherein we live here on earth as the Romans are said to be full of goodnesse and knowledge Rom. 15. 14 So that Christ is so far from borrowing any perfection from His Church that all her perfections are but drops falling from that Ocean and fulnesse of grace which is in Him Joh. 1. 16. Doct. 1. As Jesus Christ is the Father's gift unto the Church A gift which is offered unto all within the Church Job 3. 16. though not received by all Joh. 1. 11. but by real Believers who by receiving Him obtain
a right unto Him Job 3. 36. with 1 Joh. 5. 11 12. and to all those excellent saving priviledges which were purchased by Him Job 1. 12. So whoever would receive this gift aright must receive Him as their head to quicken them to rule them and to be reverenced by them for He gave Him to be head to the Church 2. The power and superiority which Christ hath over His Church chiefly the invisible Church of reall Believers as head is of another kind than that which He hath over all other creatures besides as being more intimate amiable and in a manner more native and natural and accompanied with willing subjection in His Church Psal. 110. 3 even as the superiority which the King's head hath over his own body or his royal consort being compared with that which he hath over his subjects or rather his subdued enemies for He gave Him to be head over all to the Church Over all that is in a singular and eminent manner above the domination which He hath over all other creatures 3. None in any sense can be an head to the Church unto whom the Church in that same sense is not a body so that if the Church be not the Pope's body the Pope cannot be the Churches head for there is a reciprocation betwixt the head and body in this purpose as Christ is the Churches head so the Church is His body He gave Him to be head to the Church which is His body 4. None can draw comfort from those sweet relations of head husband king c. which Christ hath taken upon Him towards His Church but they who stand under a correspondent relation towards Him as being His body spouse and subjects and who make conscience of such duties as each of these relations do bind unto for as Christ is an head to the Church so the Church is His body Which is His body saith he 5. As Christ by taking upon Himself those relations towards His Church which are found amongst men doth stand obliged unto those duties which men are bound to by vertue of such relations Psal. 23. 1 c. So the Lord's People are allowed and commanded to search unto the duties and priviledges following upon such relations among men and from thence to learn what to expect from Christ by vertue of that relation and what honour and priviledges they do enjoy by standing under that relation to Christ for from this that Christ and the Church stand under the relation of head and body the Apostle inferreth that the Church hath this priviledge of being Christ's fulnesse even as the shoulders arms breast belly legs and thighes are the fulnesse of the natural body so that mystical Christ made up of head and members is not compleat and full without the Church or the least Believer in the Church Which is His body the fulnesse of Him saith he 6. In searching forth the grounds of these similitudes or relations taken from amongst men whereby Christ setteth forth to our capacity what He himself is to His People we would carefully guard lest by pressing them too far we ascribe any thing to Christ which is not according to the analogie of Faith or in any measure dishonourable to Him for Paul having stretched-forth that similitude of the head and body so far as to infer thence that the Church is the fulnesse of mystical Christ he carefully guardeth against a mistake whereby people might think that then some perfection were wanting in Christ to be supplyed by His Church while he saith that Christ filleth all in all 7. As even Believers in themselves are empty creatures till they be filled being destitute of all good which they may call their own Rom. 7. 18. and unable to help themselves if it were but with one right thought 2 Cor. 3. 5. So there is a supply to the full of all their emptinesse in Christ who is made of God unto them wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption 1 Cor 1. 30. and communicateth largely and to the full of His own fulnesse unto such as are sensible of their own emptinesse Joh. 1. 16. Psal. 81. -10. for He filleth all in all 8. Before that Christ do thus supply our emptiness out of His own fulness He must first be in us and united to us by faith Eph. 3. 17. for He is in all whom He filleth He filleth all in all CHAP. II. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle doth commend the doctrine of salvation by free-grace first from the consideration of that misery under which not only the Ephesians and other Gentiles were before conversion as being spiritually dead ver 1 following the corrupt custom of the world and Satan's suggestions v. 2. but even the Jews also as being inslaved to their own corrupt lusts v. 3. Secondly from the consideration of that delivery from sin and misery which was common to them both And first he mentioneth the first fountain and internal impulsive cause of that delivery to wit God's free-grace ver 4. Secondly the several branches of it as their quickning in the way of grace ver 5. the resurrection of their bodies and their glorification in heaven ver 6. Thirdly the final cause of this delivery to wit the manifesting of God's rich grace ver 7. And fourthly he cleareth and proveth they were saved only by grace by removing all other things inconsistent with grace from having influence upon our salvation And that first generally ver 8. and then particularly their good works because first otherwise they should have had matter of gloriation in themselves as to this purpose the contrary whereof is intended by God ver 9. Secondly power to do good works was given them in regeneration So that though they be necessary yet they are not meritorious ver 10. In the second part of the Chapter he maketh a more particular application of the former purpose unto the Ephesians and in them to all the Gentiles And first he layeth forth that misery which was in a great part peculiar unto them as they were Gentiles and this both more generally ver 11. and more particularly in five several branches ver 12. Secondly he declareth their present happy estate of nearness to God and His Church through Christ briefly ver 13. and explaineth more fully that Christ was the peace-maker and in order to His making peace had abolished the ceremonial Law ver 14 15 and sheweth a twofold necessity of Christ's so doing both for uniting of Jew and Gentile in one Church ver -15. And for reconciling both of them to God ver 16. Thirdly he sheweth that this benefit of nearnesse was published and actually communicated unto them by the preaching of the Gospel ver 17 which he proveth from the accesse which both Jew and Gentile had to God ver 18. And lastly he concludeth from what is said that the Ephesians were now in a blessed state comparing the whole Church to a city a family ver 19. and
crosse and His death upon the crosse So that by being slain He slew the enmity betwixt God and us Vers. 17. And came and preached peace to you which were afar off and to them that were nigh IN this and the following verse is contained the third branch of the second part of the Chapter wherein the Apostle sheweth how that excellent benefit of union and communion with God 〈◊〉 His Church purchased by Christ for the Gentiles was published and actually communicated unto them equally with the Jews to wit by the preaching of the Gospel And first he declareth that Christ Himself did preach and publish the glad tydings of that peace and reconciliation which was purchased by Him on the crosse See ver 15 16. And secondly he sheweth to whom he did publish it first to the Gentiles who were far off See Act. 2. 39 being compared with the Jews as being without the bounds of the visible Church Now Christ preached to the Gentiles not immediately and in His own person Mat. 15. 24. except to some few who were first-fruits of the rest Mat. 8. 5 c. and 15. 28. but mediately and by the ministery of His Apostles and their successors the Ministers of the Gospel whom He sent unto them to preach Mat. 28 19 whose Ministery He doth alwayes accompany by His Spirit to the conviction of some and conversion of others and therefore He himself is said to preach in them 1 Pet. 3. 19. Next to the Jews who are said here to be nigh because they were within the visible Church and therefore though many of them being simply considered were far from God yet they were nigh being compared with the Gentiles as living under the drop of the means of grace and reconciliation Now he mentioneth the Gentiles first not as if the Gospel had been first preached unto them Act. 13. 46. but to shew that this priviledge of having the Gospel preached did now under the New Testament belong equally both to the Jews and Gentiles And therefore it was not of any moment which of them were mentioned first and which last Doct. 1. It is not sufficient in order to our reconciliation with God that a price was payed by Christ upon the crosse to satisfie divine justice but there must also an offer be made of this purchased friendship in the preaching of the Gospel that so we may imbrace and lay hold upon it by faith otherwise the friendship is not actually made Col. 1. 21. for the Apostle having shewed ver 16. that Christ had satisfied divine justice upon the crosse doth here declare how His so doing was published and actually communicated both to Jew and Gentile And came and preached peace 2. Though we did commit the wrong which occasioned the enmity betwixt God and us Col. 1. 21. yet not only the first motion but the full prosecution and through compleating of the friendship cometh from God through Christ in so far as Christ did not only upon the crosse satisfie for our wrong but also maketh an offer of friendship so purchased in the ministry of the Word yea and bringeth us to a closing with the terms upon which it is offered Joh. 6. 44. And came and preached peace 3. As the sum of the Gospel is peace there being nothing contained in it but a declaration that peace and reconciliation with God and His Church may be had and upon what sweet and easie tea●ms it may be had Rom. 5. 11. and earnest offers of that peace made unto all who would imbrace it upon those tearms 2 Cor. 5. 20. together with the duties of thankfulnesse which God doth call for from those who accept the offer Matth. 11. 29. and the fearfull judgements which do await on such who will not imbrace the offered friendship Heb. 2. 3. So the publishing of this doctrine of peace is the gladdest tydings which ever sounded in the ears of lost sinners for the Apostle speaking of Christs preaching of the Gospel saith He came and preached peace the word rendred preached doth signifie and accordingly is translated Rom. 10. 15. to bring glad tydings 4. When Christ doth send His called Ministers with an offer of peace and reconciliation unto a people it is all one as if He himself in His own person did come and make an offer of Him And therefore the word of reconciliation in their mouth should be received and accepted by those unto whom it is offered with the same readinesse confidence and reverence as they would receive it from Christ Himself Gal. 4 14. for though Christ preached immediately and in His own person only to the Jews Rom. 15. 8. yet the Apostle saith He preached also unto the Gentiles because He sent His Apostles and Ministers to preach unto them And came and preached peace to you which were afar off 5. They may be nigh to God as to their external and Church-state living under the drop of means and enjoying the priviledge of all divine Ordinances who are yet unreconciled to God and holding up the enmity which is betwixt the Lord and them for Christ behoved to preach peace even to those who were nigh to wit in the respects presently mentioned which implyeth they were not yet at peace with God And to them that were nigh 6. For whomsoever Christ hath purchased peace upon the crosse to those he maketh an offer of peace and reconciliation in the preaching of the Gospel And therefore He hath not died for all for the Apostle sheweth that as Christ purchased peace for both Jew and Gentile ver 16. so He came and preached peace to both even to you which were afar off and to them that were nigh Vers. 18. For through him we both have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father THe Apostle thirdly proveth that the Gentiles were effectually called by the preaching of the Gospel to partake of purchased peace and reconciliation equally with the Jews because they both had equal accesse and liberty to approach unto God in the practice of all commanded duties as unto their own reconciled God and Father for the word rendered accesse hath an allusion to the courts of Princes where petitioners are admitted unto accesse to their Prince even in the very presence-chamber Concerning which accesse he sheweth first that it is through Christ He having removed all those obstructions and impediments which might have marred it And secondly that it is by the one Spirit of God who doth create preserve quicken and actuate those graces in the exercise whereof they obtained accesse unto God Doct. 1. One main fruit and evidence of reconciliation is accesse unto God whereby reconciled souls have not only liberty to approach unto God in the enjoyment of all divine Ordinances which accesse is the priviledge of all within the visible Church whether they be reconciled or not Psal. 147. 19. but also freedom and liberty of spirit to approach unto God in the exercise of all their saving graces by which they
what they ask delay or disappointment being in that case much better for severall reasons than a present grant for saith Paul He is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think Now he speaketh not of His absolute power but as it is operative and working in and for Believers as appeareth from the instance given according to the power that worketh in us saith he 6. This superabundant work of Gods mighty power transcending the hopes and apprehensions of the most inlarged hearts is not reserved wholly to be manifested in the glorification of the Elect but is manifested already to every Believer in part in so far as the work of their conversion at the first of carrying on the work of grace in them afterwards of their through-bearing under and delivery from crosses and trials the timous and unexpected trysting of severall comfortable providences with their necessities are so many proofs and instances of Gods working above what they do ask or think for He is able to work so saith he according to the power that worketh in us 7. We ought to look upon the by past instances of Gods gracious and powerfull working in us as so many confirmations of our faith that He will work powerfully in us for the time to come yea and above what He hath already wrought according as our present state shall call for it for he maketh God's working powerfully in them at their conversion an argument to confirm them that God would work exceeding abundantly even to the fulfilling of all his petitions for them the accomplishment of some whereof to wit their being filled with the fulnesse of God was more than any thing already wrought in them according to the working of His mighty power saith he Vers. 21. Unto him be glory in the Church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages world without end Amen NExt there is the thanksgiving it self wherein the Apostle having his own heart doubtlesse duely affected and overcharged with high thoughts of Gods goodnesse mercy power justice and other attributes manifested chiefly in that admirable work of Redemption whereof he hath spoken at length from the beginning of this Epistle and having engaged his heart to set forth the glory and excellency of those praise-worthy attributes both in word and work doth further wish that this duty of glorifying God may and thereby also doth foreprophesie that it shall be gone about by Gods true Church to wit among visible professours members of the Church and chiefly sincere Believers even all such as should find the saving effects of Gods glorious attributes in their own experience and this in all ages and generations so long as the world should stand and to all eternity after time shall be ended and by Jesus Christ in whom all their sacrifices of prayers and praises or of any other performance are accepted of God Doct. 1. The subject matter of a Believers song of praise and glory to God is not only those things which God hath graciously done already but what He is yet to do together with the consideration of His power and goodwill to do them for the Apostle doth here ascribe glory to God even for what He was able to do above what they could ask or think as appeareth from the connexion of the two verses 2. As we ought to make conscience of praise and thanksgiving to God our selves So such is the weight of this duty in it self Psal. 106. 2. and so far short doth the best come in it Neh. 9. -5. so profitable is this duty unto those who do practise it Psal. 147. 1. that we would seriously wish and accordingly endeavour that many others would take a lift of it and joyn with us in this weighty task of giving glory to God for this is a part of Paul's giving glory to God even a wish that the Church may joyn with him in it Unto Him be glory in the Church 3. Though it be the duty of all reasonable creatures to set forth Gods glory yea and all do set it forth one way or other even damned men and devils in a passive way Rom. 9. 17. Yet only those are fit to go about this heavenly duty in a spiritual manner and only such will make conscience of it whom God hath separated from the world unto Himself and upon whom He doth manifest the gracious effects of His praise-worthy attributes for he enjoyneth this duty unto the Church and especially to real Believers in it because the Lord doth make His glorious attributes in their gracious effects manifest only to such Psal. 76. 1 2. Unto Him be glory in the Church 4. Praise and thanksgiving is a duty to be performed not only by Professors and Believers severally and apart but by all of them conjunctly in the assemblies of Gods people as being a part of that publick homage we owe to God Psal. 65. 1. and a 〈…〉 an of mutuall edification Col. 3. 16. for he saith unto Him be glory in the Church 5. Though the duty of thanksgiving and praise be all which God requireth from us for favours bestowed on us Psal. 50. 15. yet we cannot discharge even this duty of our selves and acceptably but by Jesus Christ through whom we have furniture and strength to do Philip. 4. 13. accesse unto God in doing Eph. 2. 18. and acceptation with God when we have done either this or any other duty Eph. 1. -6. for he saith unto Him be glory in the Church by Christ Jesus 6. As God shall never want glory from His Church So there shall alwayes be a Church through all ages to hold up this song of praise and glory to God against which the gates of hell shall not prevail Matth. 16. -18. neither shall the Church ever in any age want matter of praise the saddest times want not their own mercies Ezek. 9. 13 for as this is a wish so it is a prophesie that unto Him shall be glory in the Church through all ages 7. See further from the continuance of this song unto all eternity and from the Apostles Amen whereby he closeth the thanksgiving upon Gal. 1. ver 5. doct 3. and 4. World without end Amen CHAP. IIII. THe Apostle having in the three preceeding Chapters given a short sum of saving doctrine doth now to ver 21. chap. 6. exhort them to suitable practice And first being to presse upon them the practice of such duties as are more general and common to all as they are Christians to chap. 5. ver 22. He doth in the first part of this Chapter exhort them to unity and to make way for his so doing he first premitteth a general exhortation to walk worthy of their vocation ver 1. And next subjoyneth a more particular exhortation unto such graces as have a more special influence upon unity as humility c. ver 2. and so doth fall upon his intended scope which is to presse upon them the study of unity ver 3. Which he inforceth 1.
which union is Gods Covenant with the visible Church and the Churches professed imbracing and laying hold upon that Covenant when offered in the Gospel Psal. 50. 5. the other necessary to the welbeing of the Church which is entertained by unity in judgement 1 Cor. 1. 10. in heart and affection Act. 4. 32. by concurrance in purposes and actings Philip. 1. -27. So all those sorts of union and union in all those respects is to be sought after and entertained in the Church for the Apostle speaketh indefinitly Endeavouring to keep the union of the Spirit 2. The union which God requireth among His People is not an union in sin or error Isa. 8. 12. nor yet a civil union only in things worldly upon politick and civil interests Act. 12. 20. nor yet a meer outside agreement or living together only Psal. 55. 21. but an union in heart and spirit in things spiritual and such an union whereof the Spirit of God is author for therefore is it called the unity of the Spirit Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit 3. The study of keeping peace and unity in the Church is a most necessary duty as being one prime instance of walking worthy of our vocation spoken of ver 1. and yet such is the restlesnesse of some and the prevalency of pride passion love to self-interest and such like dividing lusts in others that it is a duty most difficile to be practised as being the result of all those graces mentioned ver 2. and not attainable even by those who are endued with those graces except they apply themselves wholly to it and use the utmost of their serious endeavours for that end as is clear from the connexion of this verse with the two preceeding and from the word in the original rendered endeavouring implying study diligence and solicitude 4. Neither fair pretences for peace and union in the Church not seconded but rather contradicted by practice nor yet some carelesse endeavours which are easily broken by appearing difficulties are that which God will accept of at our hands as the duty required for preserving unity in the Church where it is or for restoring unity where it is already lost there is no lesse called-for than the utmost of our serious endeavours for that end so as we not only carefully eschew what may on our part give cause of renting 1 Cor. 8. 13. but also that we be not easily provoked when a cause of renting is given by others 1 Cor. 13. 5. and that when a rent is made we spare no pains nor stand upon any thing which properly is our own for having it removed Gen. 13. 8 9. and that we do not-weary of those endeavours under small appearances of present successe 2 Cor. 12. 15. for he biddeth them seriously endeavour to keep the unity of the Spirit 5. So many are the temptations arising from the corruptions of those among whom we live to make us neglect this duty of keeping the union of the Spirit that except we be of such peaceable dispositions as to digest many things one in another which otherwise our corruptions would make much stir about we cannot choose but fall at ods rent assunder as so many disjoynted legs and arms and upon every occasion involve our selves and the Church of Christ in several sad and dangerous broils and ruptures for he calleth peace that is a peaceable disposition kything in all our deportment the bond or ligament whereby the members of the Church are knit together in the bond of peace saith he 6. Whatever differences may fall out among the members of the Church in the matter of opinion and judgment yet they are not presently to break the bond of peaceable walking one with another by counteractings and factious sidings but ought to study unanimous and joynt practice in those things wherein there is agreement and where this peaceable deportment flowing from a peaceable frame of spirit is it tendeth much to preserve what remaineth of this spiritual unity and to regain what is already lost for peace with man which is the peace here spoken of doth especially consist in our harmonious walking together flowing from a peaceable frame of spirit and is here enjoyned as a special mean for keeping the unity of the Spirit even in the bond of peace Vers. 4. There is but one body and one Spirit even as ye are called in one hope of your calling HE doth now inforce the former exhortation to unity and peace first from an argument taken from those many things which are one and the same in the Church and all the true members thereof and for this end doth reckon forth seven unities which may be looked upon as so many bonds and tyes of the essential unity especially of the invisible Church and as so many arguments also that therefore all professing Christ should not only labour to be one in all those as they would evidence themselves to be sincere Believers and members of that blessed society but also improve their unity in these for keeping unity and peace in lesser differences There are three of these unities which are so many bonds and arguments in this verse The first is that the whole Church is but one body to wit the invisible Church of real Believers is one mystical body knit by faith to Christ their head Eph. 3. 17. and by the bond of love among themselves Joh. 13. 35. And the visible Church is one politick body 1 Cor. 12. 27. conjoyned with Christ their head and among themselves by external covenanting Psal. 50. 5. and their serious professing of saving truths Act. 8. 12 13 with 23. and this body is but one the invisible Church without all doubt is so and the Catholick visible Church made up of all Christians and true Churches in the world is also one because they have the same King Laws Word Sacraments of admission and nutrition which they visibly subject themselves to and receive and have a grant of the same common priviledges from God in the Gospel and therefore they are all one visible Church 2. There is but one Spirit to wit the third Person in the blessed Trinity who residing in Christ the head Isa. 61. 1. and in all the members Rom. 8. -9. as the soul in the natural body doth by His gifts and graces animate move and govern the Church the body presently spoken of 3. As the Church is one in these two so their hope following upon effectuall calling is also one Where by hope is not so much meaned the grace of hope as the object of that grace or good things hoped for as Col. 1. 5 especially heaven and glory the common inheritance of the Saints Col. 1. 12. which they get not in hand but only do possesse it in hope Rom. 8. 24 25. And this hope is said to be one to wit for kind and substance though there will be different degrees in glory Dan. 12. 2 3. Doct. 1. That the whole Church
faith allowed by Christ neither is there any other faith but this one in true Believers if we look to those Truths which are of absolute necessity to salvation there is an agreement in those and one and the same faith of those in all whatever may be their differences about other inferiour Truths Act. 4. 12. Thirdly there is but one Baptism whereby is meaned neither the Baptism of affliction Mat. 20. 22. nor of the extraordinary gifts of the holy Ghost Acts 1. 5. but the ordinary Sacrament of Baptism the practice whereof is enjoyned by Christ under the Gospel Matth. 28. 19. And it is said to be one not in respect of the persons administrating or receiving this Ordinance but of its nature and substance as having the same author Christ Matth. 28. 19. the same outward element for kind Act. 8. 36. the same way of administration enjoyned Matth. 28. 19. the same ends and uses towards those who are baptized Rom. 6. 3. 4. Doct. 1. All these who are of this one body animated and acted by this one Spirit and have well-grounded hope of glory they must and do subject themselves to Christ as Lord in so far as they are ruled by His Laws Acts 9. 6. and patiently submit to His corrections and chastisements Heb. 12. 6 7. for He maketh their being of one body having one spirit and one hope and their subjection to this one Lord of equal extent one Lord saith he 2. The consideration of this that the whole Church and all the Members thereof are subject to the dominion of one Lord and Master Christ Jesus is a strong argument for inforcing this duty of keeping unity and peace among themselves this being a duty which not only he did presse most vehemently upon His followers when He was about to leave the world and depart from them Joh. 13. 34 35. but also did most earnestly intreat the Father for even that they might be all made one in Him Joh. 17. 21 22. Besides what a shame is it for the Servants of one Master to fall at odds among themselves and thereby neglect their Masters work committed to them for he presseth the study of unity from this that there is one Lord. 3. The Law by which the Lord Christ will have His subjects ruled and governed is not searched out and known by sense or naturall reason but being revealed in the Word it is laid hold upon by faith and credit given to it because of His authority who hath revealed it for so much may be gathered from his making mention of faith or the Doctrine of faith immediately after he had spoken of the Lord Christ one Lord one faith saith he 4. The consideration of this that the whole Church and all the true and lively Members thereof do professe one and the same fundamentall Truths revealed in Scripture as the only object of saving faith and way to salvation ought to be a strong motive for keeping concord and unity in all other things which otherwise might occasion dissention and strife This agreement in the main in the journeys end and the necessary way which leadeth to it should make them ashamed to fall at odds and strife about other things of lesse importance and moment for he presseth unity from this that there is one faith 5. The wise Lord hath judged it fitting to add the Sacraments as seals unto the Doctrine of faith and salvation contained in Scripture that hereby we may be the more enabled to take up and understand that Doctrine and be the more affected with it as having the purpose of it not only exhibited and represented to our ear in the Word but to our eye also in the Sacrament and that we may be the more confirmed in the truth of that Doctrine as having not only His word and writ for it but also His seal and pledge for after mention made of the Doctrine of faith he presently addeth there is one Baptism 6. The Lord hath added Sacraments to the doctrine of faith not only for the reasons mentioned but also for engaging the party receiver unto such duties as the Doctrine of faith doth presse upon him a Sacrament being as a military oath whereby we bind our selves to fight under the Lords banner and in all things to be for Him for he doth presse them to duty even to keep unity from this that they were partakers of this one Baptism 7. The consideration of this that the Church and all the Members thereof are dedicate to God in one and the same Sacrament of Baptism unto the receiving whereof all do accord is a strong motive to make them keep peace and unity in other things seing this onenesse in Baptism doth imply our communion in all other things which are signified and sealed unto us by that Sacrament which are all those things wherein our salvation is most nearly concerned and that by Baptism we are solemnly engaged to go about our Master's work Rom. 6. 4. and so to eschew all renting and falling out among our selves by which His work is much retarded for he maketh this another argument to enforce unity that they did all partake of one Baptism Only know that though we are not to re-baptize those who are baptized by schismaticall and hereticall Churches even though they err in some fundamentall truths so long as the substantiall parts of Baptism are preserved though mixed with much of their own superstitious trash and therefore in some respect we may be said to have one common Baptism with them yet it doth not follow hence that we are tied to keep unity with them simply and in all respects We are only hereby tied to seek union with them not by joyning in their schism or damnable heresies but by labouring to reclaim them from those and if they be one in all the other essentiall ties and bonds of union here mentioned as of having one Lord one faith c. this onenesse of Baptism doth engage to be willing and endeavour for our part to keep the bond of peace with them in other things for those seven unities or bonds and arguments are not to be taken separately but joyntly as to the pressing of unity yea and though they be not one in all the rest yet it engageth us to own them in those things wherein they are right and owned by God providing always we touch no unclean thing 2 Cor. 6. 17. In these respects and with those limitations we deny not but unity should be keeped with hereticall Churches even the Church of Rome her self Vers. 6. One God and Father of all who is above all and through all and in you all HEre is the seventh unity which is the last bond or ty of the Churches essentiall unity and serveth also for an argument perswading to keep peace and unity in other lesser differences which argument is first propounded to wit all Believers have one common God and Father for though God as Creator is the God and Father
ye kind one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you HEre is the sixth precept enjoyning the exercise of some vertues which are opposite unto and remedies against those vices presently mentioned The first whereof is mutuall kindnesse a vertue whereby from a sweet and loving disposition of heart towards all Rom. 12. 10. we labour to be affable easie to be entreated for the good of others Iam. 3. 17 and of a sweet and amiable carriage towards those with whom we converse Rom. 12. 18. and it is opposite both to pride of spirit evidenced in a lofty carriage Psal. 10. 2. 5. and to morosity or uncivil austerity 2 Sam. 25. 17. The second is tender-heartednesse commiseration or mercy whereby we are most inwardly and in the very bowels as the word signifieth touched and affected with compassion towards the miseries and infirmities of others so far would he have them from thirsting after revenge And thirdly he recommendeth unto them to give evidence of their kindnesse and tender-heartednesse in an hearty free and pleasant pardoning of mutuall wrongs as the word signifieth And lastly he inforceth this dutie of mutuall forgivenesse from Gods example in forgiving us all our offences for Christs sake Concerning which duty of forgiving and pardoning one another here enjoyned know first that as to the wrong to be forgiven in so far as it is alwayes an offence against God and sometimes against the publick laws of the land we have not power to forgive it Isa. 43. 25. nor to meddle with it further than by prayer to God Iam. 5. 14 15. and in some cases by intercession with the Magistrate but in so far only as it is a wrong done to us we are to forgive it Know secondly that this forgivenesse implyeth a removall of all inward grudge and endeavour after private revenge Lev. 19. 18. together with a readinesse to do all duties of love and kindnesse to him who hath done the wrong as God doth minister occasion and ability Exod. 23. 4 5. Which yet thirdly doth not bind us up from having recourse to the Magistrate for attaining restauration to our right and reparation of our wrongs providing we go not to law for trifles 1 Cor. 6. 7. nor yet before all amicable means be privately essayed for taking away the occasion of strife 1 Cor. 6. 5. See further upon Col. 3. ver 13. doct 3. Hence Learn 1. The exercise of kindnesse in a sweet and amicable carriage is a singular remedy against sinfull anger and all its branches in so far as thereby we not only give no occasion of anger unto others but also do give place unto wrath Rom. 12. 19. whereby it slayeth it self and we do overcome evil with good for as a remedy against all the branches of sinfull anger formerly mentioned he enjoyneth And be ye kind one to another 2. The exercise of mercy and tender-heartednesse is another soveraign remedy against sinfull anger and all its branches in so far as thereby we are inabled to look upon the fooleries infirmities yea and other greater injuries done by our neighbour with pity and compassion which otherwise would provoke our anger and passion for he enjoyneth this as another remedy against all the branches of sinfull anger Be ye tender-hearted 3. Then and not while then may a man conclude that wrath and anger are sufficiently mortified when he is not only in a readinesse to discharge all duties of kindnesse and love to the party who hath injured him but doth also look upon him for so doing as one who is an object of compassion and pity rather than of passion and anger for in stead of bitternesse wrath anger and malice against those who had injured them he injoyneth And be ye kind one to another and tender-hearted 4. The exercise of kindnesse and tender-heartednesse ought and will go together where there is a suitable object for both to work upon so that kindnesse will not be broken off because of the miseries and infirmities of those to whom we owe kindnesse but rather heightened and helped by an addition of tender-heartednesse and bowels of compassion for he commandeth not only be ye kind one to another which respecteth our neighbour under either state whether of prosperity or adversity but also be tender-hearted which respecteth him under misery 5. Those graces of kindnesse and mercy are to be exercised especially in the case of wrongs and injuries yea the reality of those graces are best tried not by our exercising them to such as do us no hurt but in bearing with and pardoning of those who have given just cause of provocation by real injuries for the Apostle will have kindnesse and tender-heartednesse exercised in forgiving one another which supponeth a wrong done 6. Even those who have gotten a heart from God to forgive wrongs done to themselves by others are not so free of infirmities but they will be sometimes doing reall injuries unto others and therfore stand in need of forgivenesse themselves for so much is implyed while he calleth for mutual performance of this duty even forgiving one another 7. Only those whom God hath forgiven for Christs sake can freely pleasantly and from the fountain of true love in the heart forgive those wrongs which are done to them by others and the more a man hath attained to know that God hath pardoned himself he will be the more inclinable to shew forgivenesse unto others for he maketh their forgiving of others a consequence of Gods forgiving them And therefore when the Scripture commandeth us to forgive that we may be forgiven Mark 11. 25. it doth not mean that our forgiving others doth go before Gods pardoning of us but is an immediate effect of it or at the most an antecedent to our sensible perceiving of it Forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you 8. That Gods practice in forgiving us is an effectuall argument for exciting us to forgive and pardon one another see upon Col. 3. 13. doct 7. 9. The example of God in forgiving us is not only an argument exciting us to forgive one another but also a pattern which we are to resemble in the manner of our forgivenesse not that our forgivenesse can match His in equality or perfection but in similitude and likenesse which consisteth chiefly in this that we forgive sincerely not hypocritically freely and not unwillingly fully and not by halfes irrevocably and not for a time only as He doth Matth. 18. 35. Mica 7. 18. Col. 2. 13. Jer. 31. 34 for he saith Forgiving one another even as God hath forgiven you 10. Though God hath freely forgiven us yet He hath seen to the satisfaction of His provoked justice for the wrong done antecedently to His forgiving of us which satisfaction is not exacted of us but of Christ who was made sin for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. And therefore though we are to imitate God in remitting the private injury
done to our selves and that in the manner mentioned in the preceeding doctrine yet we have not power to dispense with the injury done to the Justice of God nor to the publick Laws of the Land yea in some cases the Law of God alloweth that we pursue the party before the Judge and notwithstanding of our forgiving him to seek that the Law may strike against him Deut. 21. 18 c. Even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you CHAP. V. THe Apostle in the first part of this Chapter having first confirmed the precept given in the last words of chap. 4. by pressing upon them to imitate God in forgiving one another from the fountain of love ver 1 2. doth yet exhort them unto such duties as belong unto all Christians in generall And first he forbiddeth six vices all of them almost contrary unto chastity because first they are uncomely for Saints ver 3. Secondly inconvenient ver 4. Thirdly they exclude from Gods Kingdom ver 5. And fourthly they bring down Gods wrath ver 6. Secondly he dehorteth from partaking with wicked men in their sins ver 7. because of that blessed change wrought in them from darknesse to light ver 8. The force of which consequence is proved from the fruits of light ver 9. and having pointed at the rule of right walking ver 10. and explained the precept set down ver 7. by discharging all accession to the sins of the wicked and enjoyning them to reprove them ver 11. he enforceth yet further the duty so explained first from the abominable filthinesse of those sins ver 12. Secondly from the good following upon reproof even the conviction of the sinner ver 13. And thirdly from Gods own example who reproveth the world of sin and thereby conveyeth light unto them ver 14. Thirdly he exhorteth to circumspect walking ver 15. which consisteth mainly in redeeming the time ver 16. and in order hereto that they would acquaint themselves with Gods revealed will ver 17. Fourthly he exhorteth them to eschew drunkennesse And fifthly to be filled with the Spirit ver 18. and to vent that fulnesse of the Spirit first in melodious singing of praises unto God ver 19. Secondly in giving of thanks for all things ver 20. In the second part of the Chapter The Apostle having premitted a generall exhortation unto all to submit themselves one to another ver 21. doth presse those duties which belong to Christians as they are members of Families And first the duties of wives under the name of submission set forth by the manner of it as unto the Lord ver 22. Secondly by the ground or reason of it the husbands headship illustrated from Christs ver 23. Thirdly by the pattern of it the Churches subjection to Christ. And fourthly by the extent of it to all things ver 24. Next he presseth the duty of husbands under the name of love 1. from Christ's love to His Church giving Himself for her ver 25. and that for two ends to wit the sanctification ver 26. and glorification thereof ver 27. Secondly from the near union betwixt husband and wife they being one flesh and therefore he ought to love her ver 28. Because 1. all men care for their own flesh 2. Christ careth for His Church ver 29. because of the strict union betwixt Him and the Church ver 30. And thirdly the ancient law of Marriage doth expresly enjoyn so much ver 31. And because he hath spoken of the union betwixt Christ and the Church he declareth it to be a great and unsearchable mysterie ver 32. and so concludeth the purpose by summing the duties of husbands and wives in two words love and reverence Vers. 1. BE ye therefore followers of God as dear children THe Apostle being to insist further in exhorting to such particular vertues as do belong to all Christians in general of whatsoever rank or station doth first illustrate the sixth and last precept given chap. 4. whereby he enjoyned the exercise of mutual kindnesse and mercy in forgiving one another because of Gods example in forgiving them for Christs sake Which precept he doth illustrate first by reinforcing the duty together with the motive to it from Gods example while 1. he commandeth them to be followers of God to wit in the exercise of kindnesse mercy and forgivenesse for according to the present scope the imitation of God here enjoyned seemeth to be astricted unto those particulars as Matth. 5. 44 45. and Luk. 6. 35 c. though otherwise it may be extended and elsewhere is extended unto all those divine vertues whereof some representation and shadow at least ought to be in us 1 Pet. 1. 16. And secondly he giveth a reason why they should imitate God thus even because they were His children by Adoption and not only children but dear children and dearly beloved by God their Father All of them did at least professe themselves to be such Mal. 1. 6 and the better part of them really were such Joh. 1. 12. and therefore they were to imitate Him in the exercise of those vertues as they would evidence themselves to be of His children Doct. 1. One and the self same action of God and chiefly His works of mercy towards Believers are more than one way advantagious unto them in so far as thereby not only they are freed from sin and misery but also have an argument and motive furnished both unto them on whom He sheweth mercy whereby they may be incited to their duty of shewing mercy unto others and to others also to shew mercy unto them for he sheweth that God in forgiving them had cast a copy to be followed by them in their forgiving one another while he saith Be ye therefore followers of God 2. Though we neither ought nor can imitate God in His works of creation and providence Isa. 14. 13. 14. neither may we presume to imitate Him in any thing further than His revealed will prescribeth as our duty Isa. 8. 20. yet what ever attributes or actions of His have in them any proportion or resemblance with any vertue or duty prescribed unto us we ought to look upon such as our copy and pattern to be followed by us for he saith Be ye followers of God with relation to His forgiving them for Christs sake 3. It is not sufficient to do the same things to others which God hath done to us except we endeavour to imitate and follow Him in the way and manner wherein He doth them So as that we do them not from any base or inferiour motive or for any wrong end but from a desire to be conform unto Him and unto what is required of us in the Word by Him for this following and imitating of God here enjoyned implyeth a purpose and endeavour to conform our selves to Him Be ye therefore followers of God 4. Gods example in such things as are imitable by us is the only un-erring pattern to be absolutely followed and
subject to her own husband so that what ever wives be otherwise for parts for birth for beauty for thrift for breeding if this be inlaking they want their chief ornament are dishonourable to God and a disgrace to their husbands for Paul doth hold it forth as their great lesson and the sum of all their duty Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands 4. There is no wife what ever be her birth parts or any other priviledge who is exempted from this ty of subjection to her own husband The law of nature God's ordinance and her own voluntary covenant do bind her to it for he speaketh indefinitely to all wives submit your selves 5. There is not any husband to whom this honour of submission from his own wife is not due no personall infirmity frowardnesse of nature no nor errour in the point of Religion doth deprive him of it 1 Cor. 7. 13. for he speaketh indefinitely also of husbands Wives submit your selves unto your own husbands 6. A wife can never discharge her duty in any measure of conscientious tendernesse towards her husband except she have an high esteem of the Lord Christ and be in the first place subject unto Him that so from love to Him she may subject her self to her husband not going without those bounds of submission which are consistent with her love to Christ for while he biddeth submit themselves unto their husbands as unto Christ he supposeth they had submitted to Christ already and speaketh to them as such Vers. 23. For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the Church and he is the saviour of the body THe Apostle doth next enforce this duty of submissive obedience upon wives from the ordinance of God who hath made the husband to be an head to his wife which similitude of an head taken from a naturall or politick body implyeth first the husbands eminency by reason of his sex the woman being the weaker vessel 1 Pet. 3. 7 and made for the man to wit an helper to him Gen. 2. 18. and the man not for the wife 1 Cor. 11. 9. as the head is more eminent than the body 2. It implyeth the husbands power and authority of government over his wife as the head hath power over the body to rule and direct it in which respect the man is called the image of God in a sense peculiar to himself which agreeth not to the woman 1 Cor. 11. 7. And it implyeth thirdly that ordinarily men are at least should be endued with a greater measure of knowledge prudence and other parts which they are to employ for the behoof of their wives 1 Cor. 14 35. even as the head is the seat of wisdom knowledge nerves and senses sending down influence for sense and motion to all the members upon all which grounds women ought in reason to be subject to their husbands Which argument he doth illustrate and enforce from the similitude of Christs headship over the Church whereof see chap. 1. ver 22 so that wives ought to submit themselves because God will have some resemblance of Christs authority over the Church held forth in the husbands authority over the wife I say some resemblance only for the comparative particle as holdeth forth not an equality but a similitude and likenesse and in some things only betwixt Christs headship over the Church and the husbands over the wife even in those things which I presently shew are implyed in the husbands headship which are some shaddows only of that eminency power and fulnesse of grace and perfections which are in our head Christ. But besides those the Apostle doth here expresse one thing wherein this resemblance doth also hold to wit that Christ as head is the Saviour of the body thereby implying that as Christs dominion over the Church His body doth tend to and is exercised in procuring and bringing about the Churches good and salvation So the husbands authority and eminency are given him for the like end even to procure the good and safety of his wife in defending her from injuries 1 Sam. 30. 18. providing for her 1 Tim. 5. 8. directing her in things necessary c. 1 Cor. 14. 35. and therefore the wife upon this consideration also ought to subject her self seing the husbands power and authority over her are given for her good Besides those doctrines which the Text thus explained doth expresly hold forth we may gather these consequences from it 1. It is not sufficient that wives do subject themselves to their husbands from respect to their own peace ease credit or to any thing of that sort but their subjection ought to flow from the conscience of and respect to that state and dignity wherein God hath placed their husbands above them so that their personall infirmities do not prevail so much to make them despise them as the dignity of their state to beget respect reverence and obedience towards them for Paul enforceth such a subjection as floweth from this ground while he saith for the husband is the head of the wife 2. There is no society though never so strictly tied together with strongest bonds which can comfortably subsist and keep together for any space of time except there be different degrees of superiours and inferiours some to govern and others to obey in the Lord among them for the wise Lord did see it necessary so to ordain even in conjugall society of husband and wife who are so strictly tied that both are but one flesh See ver 31. and yet the husband is made the head of the wife 3. Christians ought to be of such an heavenly frame of spirit as to take occasion from things civil or naturall which do occur in their ordinary employments to ascend to heavenly contemplations of things spirituall which have some resemblance to these other things which are among their hands for the Apostle teacheth so much while he leadeth husband wife from the consideration of the union order and duties of married parties to contemplate that sweet union and order which is betwixt Christ and His Church both here and in the following verses Even as Christ is the head of the Church saith he 4. Husbands and consequently other Superiours have a speciall piece of the image of Christ put upon them in respect of their power and authority over their inferiours given them of God whereby both inferiours may be afraid to vilifie and contemn their authority lest they be therein found defacers of the image of God and they themselves also may be taught to resemble Christ whose image they bear in employing their state and dignity so as they walk answerably to it if they would have that submission and respect from inferiours which is due unto it for Paul maketh that eminency and authority which husbands have over their wives a shaddow and resemblance of Christs power over His Church even as Christ is the head of the Church 5. As the members
of Christs body are by nature lost and gone even dead in sin and children of wrath Eph. 2. 1. -3. So there was no way for their recovery but by Jesus Christ His becoming man and suffering death and uniting Himself being now risen from death unto them as their head that so He may bestow the influences of spirituall life with a right to heaven upon them here and at last take them to Himself in glory hereafter for he sheweth that Christ is become the Churches head that He might be a Saviour of his lost body 6. The dominion and power which husbands have over their wives is not tyrannicall rigid or soveraign but loving gentle warm and amiable and such as the wife may look upon as a mercy to her self as well as a dignity unto her husband for it is compared here unto that sweet and naturall power which the head exerciseth over the body and Christ over His Church who maketh His people willing in the day of His power and it ought to be employed wholly for the good and safety of his wife as Christ is the Saviour of the body Vers. 24. Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be to their own husbands in every thing THe Apostle secondly repeateth the exhortation as a conclusion from the former argument that wives should subject themselves unto their own husbands and addeth two things 1. The manner of this subjection to wit such as it may resemble the subjection of the Church unto Christ which is to be understood not in all things for wives are not to subject their souls and consciences to their husbands as Believers do to Christ trusting in Him for life and salvation but in some things only to wit so as they may subject themselves willingly chearfully lovingly chastly and dutifully unto their husbands for so doth the Church subject herself unto Christ. He addeth secondly the extent of this subjection and obedience even to all things which is not to be understood of all things absolutly and without exception Acts 5. 29 but all things lawfull godly honest and which are not forbidden in the Word of God even though they crosse the humour of the wives and argue little discretion in the husband who commandeth them Numb 5. 14 15. c. for nothing is excepted here but what is contrary to that subjection which is due to Him who hath commanded this subjection of wives to their husbands as Paul commenteth upon an expression like to this 1 Cor. 15. 27. Doct. 1. As subjection in wives unto their husbands is a most necessary duty So considering the inbred pride arrogance and self-willednesse which is in all the sons and daughters of Adam by nature it is a work of no small difficulty to get wives peswaded to give that hearty chearfull loving and dutifull respect and obedience unto their husbands which both the Law of nature and the written Word of God do require from them for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments Therefore as the Church is subject unto Christ so let the wives be unto their own husbands 2. Though there be much unmortified corruption in the Church of true Believers and a law in their members rebelling against the law of their mind Rom. 7. 23. yet God doth look upon them as true and loyall subjects to Christ in so far as with the Spirit and better part according to which God doth reckon with them they serve the Law of God Rom. 7. 25. and do groan after and long for the time when they shall be fully freed from the body of death and throughly subjected unto the will of God Phil. 1. 23. for while he saith as the Church is subject unto Christ it is supponed that the Church is subject unto Him and looked upon by God as such 3. The servants of Christ in pressing duties ought mainly to guard against that extremity which people naturally are most prone to fall into especially seing all the guards which can be used will have sufficient work to keep the heart from breaking over upon that hand for though there be some things excepted from coming under that obedience which wives do owe to their husbands as was cleared in the exposition yet because wives are more inclined to multiplie exceptions in this purpose than to diminish them Therefore he extendeth this obedience expresly to all things leaving them only to gather from the circumstances of the Text and other places of Scripture those few things which are excepted that thereby he may with one word cut off all unscriptural exceptions limitations and restrictions which imperious aspiring spirits impatient of the yoke are ready to bound and straiten this submission and obedience by Let them be subject in every thing saith he Vers. 25. Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church and gave Himself for it THe Apostle doth now exhort husbands to their duty which he first proponeth summarily under the name of love to their wives whereby the heart and inmost affections of the husband ought to be so inclined and disposed towards his wife as that not only he do wish her good but also endeavour unto his utmost to bring it about which is not to be so understood as if the wife were not bound to love her husband also Tit. 2. 4. But he presseth love upon the husband in particular because he is most ready to fail in this duty of love and to abuse that superiority which God hath given him over his wife by proving rigorous and bitter against her Col. 3. -19. Now this love enjoyned to husbands is not that common Christian love which is extended unto all Christians of both sexes as unto brethren and sisters in Christ Joh. 13. 34. but a speciall and conjugall love which ought to be extended unto none but unto a mans own wife and it includeth cohabitation with his wife and contentation with her love only Prov. 5. 18 19. a patient bearing with her infirmities and frailties 1 Pet. 3. 7. with a fatherly care to defend her 1 Sam. 30. 5 c. to provide for her in all things according to his power which either her necessity or dignity of her rank doth require 1 Tim. 5. 8. lovingly to govern direct and instruct her 1 Cor. 14. 35. yea and to cherish her ver 29. Next he inforceth this duty by two arguments The first whereof is proponed in this verse to wit Christ's example who loved His Church and from love gave Himself for it See upon ver 2. Which example of Christ's love doth not only inforce the duty as an argument but also point forth the right manner of the duty as a pattern In so far as the husbands love ought to resemble Christs to wit in the chastity of His love who loveth none to His Church Joh. 17. 9. the sincerity of His love who loveth the Church not for His but
for her advantage Prov. 8. 30. with Gal. 2. -20. not for what is hers but for her self Hos. 14. 4 and not in words only but in deeds also testifying His love by the effects Joh. 15. 13. and in the constancie of His love who loveth whom He loveth unto the end Joh. 13. -1. even notwithstanding of their infirmities Psal. 89. 30 33. such ought the husband's love to be Doct. 1. Though husbands are not to suffer their wives to exercise dominion and authority over them that being contrary to the Ordinance of God and the good both of husband and wife ver 22. 23. yet seing the nature of men and of husbands in particular with relation to their wives are sufficiently bent of their own accord to exercise any power and authority they have and rather to exceed their due than to keep within it therefore neither ought they themselves so much to mind their power neither is it so necessary for them to be minded thereof by others as to be carefull how to use their power and authority well and as it ought for therefore the Apostle though he commanded the wives to submit yet he doth not expresly bid the husbands rule over their wives but husbands love your wives as thinking it more fit to let them understand how to use their power well than to stir them up to the exercise of it 2. The great and main duty which an husband as an husband ought to learn and so learn as to practise it is love to his wife and so to love her as to make love kyth in all his deportment towards her and in all those other duties which he oweth to her this being that one thing in the husband which sweetneth the yoke of subjection laid upon the wife giveth her courage under it and maketh her willingly submit unto it when it receiveth such a sweet return from her husband for Paul doth hold forth this as the husbands great lesson and the sum of all his other duty Husbands love your wives 3. There is no husband whatever he be for birth parts authority or power who is not tyed to love his wife and to evidence his love to her in all those duties mentioned in opening up the Text for he speaketh indefinitly unto all Husbands love your wives 4. Neither is there any wife to whom all those duties flowing from the fountain of love are not due by her husband No meannesse of birth Esther 2. 17. no personall infirmity 1 Sam. 1. 5. adultery being excepted Matth. 19. 9 nor frowardnesse of nature Joh. 19. 17. do prejudge her of them for he speaketh indefinitly also of the wives Husbands love your wives 5. Though it concerneth husbands and wives and others also who are tied together by mutuall relations as masters and servants parents and children to take some sort of inspection one of another lest any of their relations come short of their duty 2 King 5. 13. yet it concerneth every one most to make conscience of his own duty not only to God but also to his relations and that as for other reasons so for this There can be no greater encouragement to stir up his relations to make conscience of their duty to him for he commandeth every one to mind their own duty most the wives to submit themselves the husbands to love their wives and so in the rest 6. As Jesus Christ hath deigned Himself to undergo the relation of an husband to His Church So this and those other relations taken on by Him are not empty titles He doth the duties which all such relations do bind to even to the utmost And particularly He is such an husband that for love to His Church and all other duties flowing from love He is exemplary unto all other husbands seing greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down His life for His friends Joh. 14. 13. for as Paul implyeth here and in the verses following that Christ is the Churches husband so he holdeth forth His love as a pattern to be imitated by all Husbands love your wives even as Christ also loved the Church 7. The love which a husband carrieth to his wife ought to be founded not upon beauty riches health or any such thing only which is subject unto decay but also and principally upon that unchangable foundation of the love of Christ unto His Church which is here held forth not only as a pattern but as an argument also and the reason wherefore husbands ought to love their wives even as Christ also loved the Church 8. As those whom Christ doth love with a speciall love are only His that is real Believers who are subject to Him ver 24. So Jesus Christ did give Himself to death not for all and every one Joh. 17. 9. but only for His Church which is His All and consisteth of some of all Nations and of all ranks in the world in which respect only Christ is said to have died for all 1 Tim. 2. 6. for Paul astricteth both His love and His death to the Church As Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it See some further Doctrines gathered from the like words ver 2. Vers. 26. That he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word HE insisteth upon this excellent pattern of love by shewing two ends why Christ from love did give Himself for His Church The first whereof is attained in the present life and expressed in this verse to wit that He might sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself Which sanctifying work as it is here taken doth comprehend that whole complex businesse of translating the Elect from the state of sin and death to the state of grace and life even our regeneration justification and the gracious change of our dispositions or sanctification strictly so called as Joh. 17. 17. which he calleth a cleansing of us expressing the manner how Christ doth sanctifie His Church even by doing away the guilt of sin or obligation to wrath because of sin in justification Rom. 8. 1. and the filth power and activity of sin in the renovation of our natures after His own Image Rom. 6. 14. which cleansing work is here described from the externall means and instruments by which Christ doth cleanse His Church and make application of the vertue and power of His death and sufferings in order to that end And those are 1. the Sacrament of Baptism called the washing of water because of the externall rite and element used in that Sacrament and cleansing is ascribed to this washing not as if there were any vertue bestowed upon the water by God whereby grace is conferred and really wrought 1 Pet. 3. 21. but because though it be God alone who wholly and effectually doth sanctifie and cleanse us 1 Cor. 3. 7. yet this Sacrament as also the other are made use of by Him not only to represent Christ and those gracious saving works of His 1 Corinth
the most rigid critick or Momus himself shall not find any inlack or defect in either as the word rendered without blemish will bear Doct. 1. All those who are justified and sanctified here and none but they shall be glorified hereafter for Christ must see the travel of His soul Isa. 53. 11. which is not only to sanctifie those for whom He gave Himself ver 26. but also to glorifie them and to bring them to glory by the way of holinesse That He might present it to Himself a glorious Church 2. Christ hath purchased by His death not only sanctification to His Church but also heaven it self and therefore our glory in heaven is not merited by our holinesse but being purchased by Christ is freely gifted to us Rom. 6. 23. He gave Himself for it that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church saith he 3. Though Belivers even while they are here be brought near to God in Christ by faith Eph. 2. 13. and have fellowship with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 1. -3. yet all that fellowship and nearnesse is but a distance and kind of estrangement being compared with that most perfect presence and intimate fellowship which shall be enjoyed hereafter the former being but mediate through the glaste of Ordinances 1 Cor. 13. 12. frequently interrupted Psal. 30. 7. and no wayes full 1 Cor. 13. 12. but the latter shall be immediate 1 Cor. 13. 12. constant 1 Thess. 4. 17. and so full that they who enjoy the meanest degree shall find no inlack Psal. 17. 15. for he speaketh of Christs presenting His Church to Himself in glory at the great day as if there were nothing but uncouthnesse and distance betwixt Him and the Church untill then that he might present it to himself a glorious Church saith he 4. Though every believing soul is when the Father draweth it to Christ contracted and handfasted with Him Hos. 2. 19 20. yet for good and wise reasons it pleaseth the Lord Christ to delay the taking of us home to Himself and the accomplishment and consummation of the begun marriage untill all the Elect being effectually called shall be presented to Him at once and so this spirituall marriage shall be fully accomplished betwixt Jesus Christ and the Bride the Lambs wife Rev. 19. 7. even as in earthly marriages there is first a Contract or Espousals and then for just and honest reasons some space of time ought to interveen betwixt that and the full accomplishment of the marriage Deut. 20. 7. Matth. 1. 18. for Paul sheweth that then at the great day the whole Church of real Believers shall be presented to Christ as the Bride is to the Bridegroom for the solemn consummation of the marriage That he might present it to himself a glorious Church 5. As believing souls even after their being contracted with Christ by faith and after they are renewed and cleansed in part do not get all their filthy garments put off there being a body of sin and death which cleaveth unto the best So at the finall solemnization of the marriage in the great day the Church of Believers the Bride and Lambs wife shall be clad in garments of glory being fully freed from the smallest remnant of sin and misery and made wholly glorious both in soul Matth. 22. 30. and body Phil. 3. 21. for he saith that he might present it unto himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c. 6. Those garments of glory and needle-work wherewith the Church the Lambs wife shall be arrayed in the marriage-day are dearly purchased and freely bestowed upon her by Christ her Bridegroom and head for Paul saith Christ gave himself for the Church that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c 7. This perfect glorious state wherein the Church shall be for ever with Christ her Lord her Head her Husband is such as none can positively declare what it is yea neither can the heart of man comprehend it and all the knowledge which can be here in our state of imperfection attained of it is not so much positive or a knowing what it is as negative or a knowing what it is not by removing all those things from it which imply the least degree of sin and misery for therefore doth Paul set it out here by four negatives Not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing and without blemish and by one affirmative only that it should be holy Vers. 28. So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself FOlloweth the second argument to inforce this duty of love upon husbands towards their wives taken from the near conjunction betwixt husband and wife which he doth propound in this verse by shewing that the wife is the husbands body in so far as by the law of marriage which shall be explained ver 30. they two become one flesh so that in loving her he doth love himself to wit not so much because his so doing tendeth to his own good and peace though that be also truth Prov. 5. 17 18 19. as that she is his own body a piece of himself yea and his whole self or a second self they two being one flesh and therefore he ought to love her yea and to love her with the same sincerity and ardency of affection kything in the same or like effects wherewith he loveth his own body yea both his soul and body which are himself for the words as their own bodies are both an argument to inforce upon them the duty and a rule to direct them in the right manner of practising the duty Doct. 1. As love in husbands toward their wives after the pattern of Christs love unto His Church is a most necessary duty So considering the many quench-coals of love which the mutual infirmities both of husbands and wives do frequently furnish together with that naturall pronenesse which is in corrupt man being advanced and preferred above others to abuse his authority to domineer with a kind of tyranny over such as are under him it will be found a task not so easie as at the first it would appear for husbands to keep this affection and love flowing from the right fountain and manifesting it self in all its necessary effects towards their wives for to what purpose else doth he reiterate this exhortation and inforce it by so strong and convincing arguments So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies 2. That place of honour and superiority which God hath given the man over the wife as appointing him to be her head doth tye him unto answerable duty so that the greater his honour is the greater is his burden and in particular it bindeth him to love her and from love to govern instruct cherish her and provide for her and to all other things by proportion which the head doth for the body for from what he said ver
Paul doth not condemn but approve this custom among men that no man ever hated his own flesh but nourisheth and cherisheth it 6. As Christs example in His dealing towards the Church is a most excellent copie to be eyed and imitated by husbands in their carriage toward their wives and that not only in their love but in all those other duties flowing from love which they owe unto them So it doth concern both husbands and wives to eye this pattern much and to draw their motives and encouragements unto their mutuall duties from it as that which will much conduce to keep their hearts in a spirituall frame even in those performances and to prevent that carnal worldly disposition which the misguided care of performing such duties as the married-state of life calleth for doth usually contract for as he propounded Christs example for a motive to and pattern of the duty of love ver 25. so of those duties also of nourishing and cherishing which flow from it in this verse even as the Lord the Church 7. A husbands care ought to extend it self not only to nourish and cherish his wife in things temporal and which concern her body only but also in things spiritual and which concern her soul and therefore he would be circumspect lest under pretence of eschewing all suspicion of displeasure with her and of giving necessary tokens and evidences of his love and kindnesse to her in order to his outward cherishing her he do neither willingly neglect the care of her salvation or by fondnesse or lightnesse incapacitate himself to do her any good in that respect for Christ doth nourish and cherish His Church by taking care of and providing mainly for the souls and eternall state of His People and husbands are commanded here to make Him their pattern Even as the Lord the Church saith he Vers. 30. For we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones HE giveth here a reason why Christ doth so cherish His Church where in stead of naming the Church expresly which the sequell of his discourse did require he mentioneth himself and other true Believers among the Ephesians under the pronoun we the Church here spoken of for whom Christ did give Himself being only made up of such And the reason is taken from that neer and strict union or that spirituall marriage which is betwixt Christ and Believers whereof that ancient marriage betwixt Adam and Eva was a kind of type and shadow as appeareth from the words here used which are taken from Gen. 2. 23. and were uttered at first by Adam concerning himself and his wife but are here by allusion to that marriage of theirs made use of to set forth the spirituall marriage betwixt Christ and His Church the tie and bond whereof is so near and strict that as the Apostle sheweth all Believers are members of His body yea not only of one nature with him which is common to them with all mankind but also as they are new creatures they have their originall and nourishment from Him even from His flesh and bones in so far as they owe the beginning progresse and accomplishment of their spirituall life to Christ His taking on of flash and His suffering in the flesh and by the vertue of those His sufferings they are quickned and fed and so are of His flesh and of his bones Doct. 1. Then do we speak and hear to our comfort and edification these truths which expresse the tender and warm care of Christ unto His Church when we make application of them to our selves and by a lively faith do enter our selves among these for whom He doth so care for the Apostle having in the preceeding verse spoken of Christs nourishing and cherishing of His Church applyeth that to himself and other true Believers among the Ephesians while he saith for we are members of his body 2. Then may we upon good grounds apply these generall truths unto our selves when as members of Christs mysticall body we draw our spirituall life and nourishment from that vertue and influence which Christ hath purchased by His sufferings in the flesh for upon this ground Paul doth substitute himself and other true Believers in stead of the Church and claimeth interest in Christs tender and warm care whereby He doth nourish and cherish His Church while he saith we are members of His body of His flesh and of His bones 3. There is no relation which Christ hath taken on toward His Church but it bindeth him to and accordingly he will perform all those answerable duties which men under these relations are bound to perform toward those to whom they have them for he giveth a reason why He did nourish and cherish His Church as a man doth his body and a husband ought to cherish his wife because he had taken on the relation of an head and husband to His Church while he saith we are members of His body of His flesh and of His bones 4. As true Believers have a twofold being one naturall and another spirituall so they have a twofold originall answerable to each of these In their naturall being they owe their originall under God unto their parents as being bone of their bones and flesh of their flesh as Eva the first woman did owe it to her husband But as they are renewed and born over again they owe their spirituall being not to the will of the flesh or the will of man Joh. 1. 13. but to the vertue of Christs obedience and sufferings in His flesh 1 Joh. 4. 9. for he saith not they are bone of His bones and flesh of His flesh as Adam saith of his wife Gen. 2. 23. to point that she did owe her naturall being unto him as being come and made of him but that they were of His bone and flesh to wit in their spirituall being as they were renewed and members of His body for we are members of his body of His bone and of His flesh Vers. 31. For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother and shall be joyned unto his wife and they two shall be one flesh THis verse in the literal plain and historical sense of the words holdeth forth the law of marriage binding all married parties in all times which was pronounced by Adam Gen. 2. 24. and approved by God Himself Matth. 19. 5. And the words taken in this sense contain the third reason to prove the former consequence ver 28. that seing wives are the bodies of their husbands therefore they should be loved The argument is taken from that law of marriage expresly declaring that for this cause to wit because the wife is bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh as the cause is expressed Gen. 2. 23 24. which is the same in effect with the cause given ver 28. even because she is the body of the husband to which this verse literally taken doth relate or to the thirtieth verse immediatly preceeding in
which is betwixt Christ and His Church for what was spoken historically of marriage is here applied mystically to Christ For this cause shall a man leave c. 3. As the Church of true Believers is the Bride the Lambs wife espoused already to Christ So never any man did more to purchase a Bride to himself than Christ hath done for His. He laid aside the glory which He had with the Father and became of no reputation as was mystically foretold in this history of the first marriage A man shall leave his father and mother 4. The great travel and trouble which Christ was put to for purchasing a Bride unto Himself doth not make Him regard her the lesse now when He hath her for He doth inseparably cleave unto her with most ardent and exemplary affection as was also mystically foretold And shall be joyned to his wife Vers. 32. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church THe Apostle concludeth this purpose concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church here made use of to illustrate that near conjunction betwixt husband and wife with an observable acclamation that it is a great mysterie which word as it is usually taken in Scripture doth signifie a thing secret not obvious to every understanding and hid either in it self or in its cause and reason whether it be held out in plain terms or under the vail of some external sign or figure to represent it See 1 Tim. 3. 16. Eph. 3. 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. Rom. 11. 25. 2 Thess. 2. 7. And lest by reason of his speaking all alongs of the bodily marriage betwixt husband and wife any had so far mistaken him as to think he called that a mysterie therefore he explaineth himself by shewing he was to be understood not of the bodily marriage but of the spiritual or that strict union or conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church Now he calleth this union a great mysterie because it is a thing hid in it self before it be revealed 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. yea and after it remaineth unsearchable by the light of reason how Christ now glorified in heaven can be one with us on earth and can only be acknowledged by faith Heb. 11. 1. Beside the bonds of this blessed union and conjunction are not naturall or bodily but spirituall even the Spirit of Christ Eph. 2. 18. and the grace of faith Eph. 3. 17. and therefore though the conjunction following upon these bonds be real Joh. 17. 21. operative Joh. 15. 5. and indissoluble Joh. 10. 28 29. yet the way of it is wholly spirituall and heavenly and consequently not so much to be searched into by reason what or how it is as to be believed that it is and improved for attaining and finding in our selves those blessed effects which do attend it where it is Doct. 1. That Papists have not ground from this place to make marriage a Sacrament properly so called is clear from the Apostle's own commentary whereby he sheweth by the mysterie here spoken of he doth not understand the bodily marriage but the spiritual beside that the word mysterie as we shew in the use of Scripture doth signifie a sacred secret not obvious to ordinary capacity and therefore every mysterie is not a Sacrament See 2 Thess. 2. 7. Rom. 11. 25. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church 2. The more a man doth attain to know of this mysterie of the mystical union and conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church the more he will be ravished with admiration at the unsearchable deepnesse and profundity of it so far will he be from thinking himself able sufficiently to comprehend it for even Paul who saw as far in this mysterie as any other Eph. 3. 4. doth stand admire and cry This is a great mysterie 3. As Ministers are bound to set forth to the Lords People that most near and blessed union betwixt Christ and believing souls and to presse upon them the study of the knowledge of it So both Pastors and People have need of much sobriety of spirit in diving into this subject not trusting to the quicknesse of their own wit nor judging of it by natural reason but resting upon what God hath revealed and made known concerning it and choosing rather to remain ignorant where he hath not revealed than curiously to search and pry further than is revealed for Paul while he is instructing them in this subject seeth it necessary to minde them of the profoundnesse of it this is a great mysterie 4. As we are ready through ignorance or inadvertence to mistake the right meaning and sense of Scripture So the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath carefully guarded against all such mistakes while he doth clear the right and genuine sense of a doubt some and dark Scripture by Scripture it self either in the same place or another for so doth Paul here while to obviate a possible mistake he saith But I speak concerning Christ and the Church Vers. 33. Neverthelesse let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself and the wife see that she reverence her husband HE doth here by way of diversion from dipping further at this time in that spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church exhort both husband and wife to learn from that forementioned law of marriage a short sum of their respective duties and first that every husband without exception or admitting any excuse would love his wife as himself that is seing she is a piece of himself as ver 28. otherwise if the particle as were only a note of similitude comparing different things and making a mans love unto himself the rule of his love unto his wife Then every man's neighbours should be equally loved with his wife for every man is to love his neighbour as himself in that sense Gal. 5. 14. And secondly he enjoyneth the wife that she reverence or as the word signifieth from love do fear her husband the meaning whereof is that she inwardly acknowledge that degree of honour which God hath put upon him 1 Cor. 11. 3. and give evident testimony of her inward esteem in words 1 Pet. 3. 6. actions and whole carriage and especially in her loathnesse to offend him 1 Pet. 3. 2. Doct. 1. Though there be some latent mysteries intended by the Spirit of God to be set forth by some plain histories recorded in Scripture besides their historicall and literall sense yet we are not upon that pretence to turn the whole Scripture into an allegory as if no more were intended in those Scriptures by the Spirit of God but only to set forth the spirituall mysterie We ought to look upon the historicall and literall sense of them also and mainly and make such use of them as being so taken they will afford for Paul having shown the mystical and allegorical use of Adam's words doth divert from that
Inheritance 1 Joh. 5. 10 11 12. for saith he God gave i● by Promise Vers. 19. Wherefore then serveth the Law It was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the promise was made and it was ordained by Angels in the hand of a Mediator 20. Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one but God is one HEre is a second Objection to wit If the Law or works done in obedience to the Law do not justifie Then it seemeth the Law hath been given by Moses upon mount Sinai in vain and to no purpose which Objection is expressed in a Question the meaning whereof is For what end was the Law at that time delivered containing such a number of precepts enjoyning so many moral judicial and ceremonial duties promising life unto the obedient Lev. 18. 5. and threatning God's wrath and curse to the disobedient Deut. 27. 26. wherefore was all this if the inheritance of life eternal come not by the works of the Law The Apostle answereth shewing first one main end for which the Law was added to the Promise and so much inculcated at that time to wit for the discovery Rom. 3. 20. and restraint of sin Numb 15. 39. and for the more through-conviction of the sinners lost and cursed estate in himself because of sin Rom. 3. 19. He sheweth secondly that this servile and childish discipline as having more of terror than love in it was to continue only during the infant-state of the Church until at Christ's coming in the flesh that spiritual seed of Abraham to whom the Promise was made should appear compleat in its principal parts and both Jew and Gentile be gathered into one Body But thirdly lest he should seem to debase the Law too much he commendeth it partly from the ministry of the Angels used therein Heb. 2. 2. Act. 7. 38. and partly from the mediation of Moses who did communicate the Word of the Law from God to the people Deut. 5. 5. Which latter as it serveth to commend the Law so also to inforce the Apostle's main scope to wit That the precepts and threatnings of the Law were only added because of transgressions and that God intended no such thing as thereby to hold forth to the people of Israel a Covenant of life upon condition of obedience to what the Law required seing there was a necessity to make use of Moses as a mids-man to speak between God and the people which did argue them to be conscious to themselves of their own guilt and therefore durst not approach unto God Exod. 20. -18 19. And therefore fourthly The Apostle proveth this consequence ver 20. from the office of a Mediator which is not used but only betwixt disagreeing parties whence he leaveth them to gather that it had been altogether in vain for God to have entred a Covenant for life upon condition of works with such a guilty sinfull people as could not fulfill the condition required in that Covenant and consequently could reap no advantage by it especially seing as he expresly affirmeth God is alwayes one consonant to Himself and doth not dispense with one jot of that perfect universal and constant obedience required as the condition of obtaining Salvation according to the tenour of the Covenant of Works Deut. 27. 26. From Vers. 19. Learn 1. So bent are men upon the abuse of things in themselves good whether divine Ordinances or any other gift bestowed by God upon them that they cannot difference betwixt the right use and the abuse of these things and are apt to conclude if they may not abuse them to gratifie some one lust or other that they can serve for no use to them and so are given by God in vain Thus the false Apostles concluded that if the Law was not given to justifie it was wholly uselesse Wherefore then serveth the Law say they 2. As the Moral Law Gen. 13. 8. together with the powerfull working of Gods Spirit in the Regenerate Gen. 39 9. and Gods restraining grace Gen. 20. 6. the discipline of the Church Gen. 9. 25. and the power of Magistracy which then was Gen. 9. 6. did serve to discover and restrain transgressions and to convince sinners of their lost estate because of sin before the Law given upon mount Sinai and do yet serve for the same uses and ends to the christian Church So the Lord was pleased in renewing the Covenant of Grace with His People upon mount Sinai to cast it in such a legal mould as that hereby He might bring down the pride of that stiff-necked people and the more effectually convince them of sin and of God's curse due to them for sin which legal dispensation of the Covenant did stand in this mainly that the duties and curses of the Law were held forth frequently fully and clearly Exod. 20. 2 c. Deut. 5. 6 c. 27. 15 c. and 28. 15 c. and the Promises chiefly of eternal life yea and of Christ and remission of sins but sparingly and for the most part very obscurely under the vail of earthly shadows and ceremonies 2 Cor. 3. 13. and under some dark prophecies Isa. 53. 7 8. compared with Act. 8. 34. And besides all this there was a yoke of other duties over and above the duties of the Moral Law laid upon them to wit the duties of the Law both judicial and ceremonial Exod. 24. Lev. 1. and obedience to them most strictly urged and that under hazard of the same so much reiterated curse Deut. 27. 26. for saith he The Law was added to wit on mount Sinai and added to the Covenant-promise made to Abraham because of transgressions Now he cannot mean the Moral Law as to the substance of it for that did perpetually sound in the Church ever since it was a Church even before Moses Gen. 18 19. and so it was not then added neither doth he mean by the Law that whole Doctrine which was delivered from God upon mount Sinai for that Doctrine did contain in it a Covenant of Grace the very promise of salvation and pardon of sin through the Messias to come Luke 24. 29. which was formerly made to Abraham only it was cloathed with a more legal dispensation and so the Law taken so generally cannot be said to have been added It remaineth therefore that by the Law which was then added to the Promise because of transgressions must be meaned that legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace set down in the body of this second Doctrine whereby it did at the first view and without very accurate inspection appear to be a Covenant of Works although it was really a Covenant of Grace 3. This legal dispensation of the Covenant of Grace was not to continue alwayes in the Church but until the partition-wall being broken down at Christ's death Eph. 2. 14 15 16. the Gentiles should be called unto the fellowship of the Church and together with the Jews make up one compleat seed unto Abraham
then was the yoke of judicial Gen. 49. 10. and ceremonial duties Act. 15. 10. to be taken off the vail of shadows and dark prophecies whereby Christ and free-grace were hid and covered to be laid aside 2 Cor. 3. 11 12. And though the duties of the Moral Law are yet to be pressed Col. 3. 18 c. and the curse of the Law to be denounced against all who are in their natural estate Col. 3. 6. yet covenanted grace and furniture for duty Joh. 1. 17. and Christ's becoming a curse for us to redeem us from the curse of the Law are more clearly held forth now in the dayes of the Gospel ver 13. than they were formerly for saith he It was added because of transgressions till the seed should come to whom the Promise was made 4. The Gospel is so to be commended and preferred unto the Law as nothing of that honour and respect which is due unto the Law be taken from it and the Doctrine of the Law and Gospel are to be so bounded as neither may encroach upon the other for left Paul in setting limits between the Law and the Gospel should seem to vilisie the Law he commendeth it from this That it was ordained by Angels in the hand or by the ministry and service of a Mediator 5. Though Moses was the Mediator here spoken of Deut. 5. 5. yet it followeth not that Angels and Saints are Mediators in Heaven for Moses was present with the people and ordained a Mediator by God for this one act which was to relate and report the Law from God to the people now it can carry no shew of reason from this to conclude that therefore the Saints who are absent in Heaven and so are ignorant of us Isa. 63. 16. or that either Saint or Angel should be constituted Mediators to report our prayers and the secrets of our hearts unto God especially seing no Scripture doth prove that any such office is put upon them by God It was ordained in the hand of a Mediator From Vers. 20. Learn 1. Conscience of guilt presenteth God as terrible and taketh away all confidence from the guilty sinner to approach in a friendly manner by himself to a provoked God for no entercourse can be between God and His people when they are not one but differ by reason of His peoples sin A Mediator is not of one saith he there was a disagreement through sin which called for a Mediator 2. The Covenant of Works entred with Adam in the state of innocency was immediate no Mediator interveening to make them one wherein it differeth from the Covenant of Grace Heb. 8. 6. for God and man before the fall were one and no disagreement betwixt them because of sin and so there was no use for a Mediator in the Covenant that was then made for A Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith Paul 3. No man can attain to Heaven or reap any advantage by a Covenant of Works except he were perfectly holy and as free of sin as Adam was before his fall for the Apostle proving that God made no Covenant of Works with them upon mount Sinal and that they could have reaped no benefit by such a Covenant thinketh it sufficient to evince that they were then a sinfull people which he evinceth from this that they stood in need of a Mids-man betwixt God and them Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one saith he 4. The Lord in all His dispensations is alwayes one and like to Himself without any shadow of turning Iam. 1. -17. His work and way of dealing may and hath changed even His way of dispensing the Covenant of Grace to His Church Heb. 8. 8 9. but He remaineth unchangeable there being no change of that kind which He hath not fore-ordained by His unchangeable decree Eph. 1. -11. Thus he saith God is one that is with relation to the present scope If any plead a right to Heaven for the merit of their works God will abate nothing of what He Himself did once prescribe and require of man in the Covenant of Works Vers. 21. Is the Law then against the Promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily Righteousness should have been by the Law 22. But the Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the Promise by Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe FOlloweth the third Objection to wit If the Law be given to discover and condemn for transgressions as is affirmed ver 19. Then it is contrary to the Covenant-promise which doth cover and pardon sin quicken and justifie the sinner He answereth 1. by denying and rejecting the consequence as absurd and abominable 2. By retorting the Argument against the Adversaries themselves for if the Law or if our works done in obedience to the Law could procure eternal life as they affirmed Then our righteousnesse before God should consist in Works or the Law should justifie leaving them to gather that this would suppose the former Covenant by promise to be abolished and quite destroyed by the Law so that according to their Doctrine the Law was both contrary unto and destructive of the Promise ver 21. 3. He answereth directly shewing the Law called here the Scripture or that Scripture as it is in the Original while it convinceth accuseth and condemneth all mankind for sin and so concludeth and incloseth all men under sin and the curse due to sin as the Judge doth the malefactor in prison is not contrary but subordinate and subservient to the Promise in so far as that hereby the guilty sinner being made to lay aside all confidence in his own righteousnesse Rom. 7. 9. doth flee by Faith in Jesus Christ for a refuge to the Promise and so the thing promised to wit Righteousnesse and Salvation becometh the sinner's and is conveyed upto him to wit upon his believing From Vers. 21. Learn 1. It is the way of Hereticks to set Scripture against Scripture and to make one Scripture seem to contradict another except their erroneous sense and interpretation of Scripture be received as intended by the Spirit of God for these false Apostles did affirm if so the Law did not give life but did only discover and accuse for transgressions then God's mind in the Law should have been contrary to His mind revealed in the Promise Hence Paul propoundeth this question unto himself to answer Is the Law then against the Promises of God 2. However Hereticks may labour to fasten such absurdities upon Truth as if it were contrary to some other parts of God's mind revealed in Scripture yet their bold allegations will be found alwayes false and Truth to be ever most consonant and never contrary to it self for so the Apostle sheweth of the Truth in hand God forbid saith he 3. There are some sins chiefly those that do most directly reflect upon any divine perfection or attribute of God the
and all the members thereof are but one body is a strong argument inforcing the duty of keeping peace and unity it being no lesse absurd and prodigious for Christians to bite and devour one another than if the members of one and the self-same natural body should rise up against tear and destroy one another for he inforceth the study of unity from this That there is one body 2. That any be a member of this one body it is necessary he have the Spirit of God residing in him whereby he may be quickened and acted either by the saving operations of that one Spirit otherwise he cannot be a member of the invisible body Rom. 8. 9 10. Or by His common gifts and operations otherwise a man come to age and understanding cannot be a member no not of the visible body 1 Cor. 12. ●1 for he maketh this one body and one Spirit of equal extent There is one body and one Spirit 3. That the whole Church and all the members thereof are animated and acted by one and the self-same Spirit of God is a strong motive to incite to the study of peace and unity seing divid lusts and practices are among those sins which grieve the Spirit See ver 30. 31. and that the difference of gifts and graces wrought in us by that one Spirit are given of purpose to make each member either usefull to another by that wherein it excelleth or indigent of the help of others in that wherein it cometh short and so to have the same care one of another 1 Cor. 12. from vers 14. to the end for he presseth unity from this that there is one Spirit 4. As an external call by the ministery of the Word and professed obedience thereto is sufficient to make a man a member of the visible body and to partake of the common operations of the Spirit So that any be of this mysticall invisible body and quickened and acted by the saving operations of this one Spirit it is necessary they be effectually called and actually translated out of their natural state to the state of grace for he maketh their being of this one body and having this one Spirit to be necessarily joyned with their calling to wit their being of the visible body and having the common operations of the Spirit with the external calling and their being of the invisible body and having the saving operations of the Spirit with the inward and effectuall calling Even as ye are called 5. Though effectual calling be a work of Gods Spirit there being none who comes to Christ except the Father draw him Joh. 6. 44. yet none is compleatly called untill he yeeld obedience to Gods call and being wrought upon by God doth actually work and concur with God for that end for what he called chap. 1. ver 18. Gods calling is here expressed to be their calling because then only are we called when we obey the call of God In one hope of your calling saith he 6. As those who are yet in nature not effectually called are in a hopelesse state having no right to heaven and happinesse and consequently no ground to hope for it how big soever they be otherwayes in their vain and groundlesse hopes Deut. 29. 19 20. So effectual calling doth open to the person'called a large door of well-grounded hope that whatever be his misery here yet he shall be perfectly blessed in the full enjoying of God for evermore hereafter for the called man only hath right to those rich promises 2 Pet. 1. 3 4. and God by calling him doth engage Himself to perform all that is promised to the called man according to his hope 1 Thess. 5. 23. with 24. for therefore are those glorious things hoped-for called the hope of our calling 7. The consideration of this that called Saints are all of them aiming at one and the self-same prize of their high calling and shall live together in glory should be a strong argument to make them live in peace and concord while they are here Their joynt aiming at one mark should make them of one mind and heart especially seing there is that in glory which will suffice all and their seeking of one thing needeth be no occasion of strife and emulation but rather of unity in heart mind and affection for why should they strive together who not only are brethren Gen. 13. 8. but also are heirs together of the grace of life 1 Pet. 3. 7. yea heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and shall one day reign together in glory for he presseth their keeping unity from this that they were effectually called and heaven and glory hoped-for would suffice all and be enjoyed by all Even as ye are called in one hope of your calling Vers. 5. One Lord one faith one baptism IN this verse are other three of these unities which are also so many bonds of and incitements to that unity exhorted unto ver 3. First there is but one Lord which title though it belong to all the three Persons in the blessed Trinity by right of creation and accordingly is given to God under the name of Master Mal. 1. 6. yet seing the unity of the Spirit is spoken to ver 4. and of God the Father ver 6. therefore it ought in this place to be astricted to Christ the second Person to whom it is in a peculiar manner due by right of Redemption in so far as He hath redeemed the Elect from their naturall slavery and bondage under sin Satan and Gods wrath to be a peculiar people unto Himself 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. and hereby hath purchased a right to rule over them as Mediator Lord-depute and Administrator under the Father Philip. 2. 9 10 11. And He is said to be but one Lord there being none to whom either as partner or substitute He will communicate this His glory of dominion and lordship over His Church either in whole or in part 1 Pet. 5. 3. Secondly there is but one faith where by faith may be meaned the grace of faith for that is also one in respect of the author God Col. 2. 12. of the object which it apprehendeth the whole Word of God Act. 24. 14. and especially Christ and the promises Philip. 3. 9 Yet by faith is mainly here meaned the Doctrine of faith proponed by God to be believed as Gal. 1. 23. and this Doctrine is but one because though in the severall ages of the Church it was proponed diverse wayes and with considerable variation in some weighty circumstances Eph. 2. 14 15. yet in substance it hath been is and ever shall be the same Act. 15. 11. Heb. 13. 8. and from Christs coming in the flesh even to the end of the world it is to remain the same both for substance and circumstance Heb. 12. 27 28. and though there be different opinions in the Church about divine Truths revealed in the Scripture which occasioneth different faiths See ver 13. Yet there is only this one