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A49796 An exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrewes wherein the text is cleared, Theopolitica improved, the Socinian comment examined / by George Lawson ... Lawson, George, d. 1678. 1662 (1662) Wing L707; ESTC R19688 586,405 384

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1 Sam. 15. 29. And these are his words I am the Lord I change not therefore the Sons of Jacob are not consumed Malach. 3. 6. So that all is sure on God's part and Man hath no cause to waver except he neglect his Duty and if he perish his destruction must be of himself O therefore let us give all diligence to make our Calling and Election sure and persevere unto the end And shall we who have so great advantage so many helps so blessed an Opportunity and the Promise of a faithful God neglect and injure our selves so much as to lose this glorious and incomparable prize Shall we come out of Aegypt and come so near the borders of the heavenly Canaan and turn back or refuse to go forward Let us detest and eternally abhor to waver let us go on whatsoever it may cost us § 22. The third Duty is to further and set forward one another in this blessed Work This is the Exhortation of the Apostle Ver. 24. Let us consider one another to provoke unto Love and good Works THE first Duty exhorted unto seems to be principally Faith in the full assurance whereof we must draw nigh to God The second Hope in the Profession whereof we must persevere The third Charity to which we must provoke one another The words have little difficulty in them and so need not much Explication In them we are exhorted 1. To consider one another 2. To provocation upon consideration 3. To provocation unto Love and good Works 1. This consideration is a Work and Duty of every Christian as he is a Member of the Church and it is universal all are bound unto it The Object is every Christian and Fellow-Member The thing to be considered is not their temporal but their spiritual Carriage and Conversation so far as it shall be manifested and made intelligible unto us The immediate End thereof to know their Life Carriage and Conversation which cannot be so well done as by a serious view and animadversion The Duty is to be performed mutually so as that every Christian may be the person considering another and the person considered by another In this Act though we may make use of our Eyes and outward senses yet we most of all must exercise the apprehensive and judicative faculty of our Understanding 2. We must consider to Provocation This word is but used twice in the New Testament and the Verb no oftner yet we find the Verb frequently taken up by the Septuagint under several Hebrew words It may be taken here either actively to provoke others or passively to be provoked our selves We provoke or stir up others when we see them ignorant forgetful negligent cold backward and that by Information minding them of their Duty perswading moving quickning them unto performance Or if we see our Brethren persecuted we stir up such as are able to pity them and by Works of Mercy to relieve them We are passively provoked our selvs by considering the good Example of others to do the like and follow them 3. The thing which we must provoke others or be provoked our selves unto is Charity for we must be provoked and provoke 1. To Love 2. To good Works which are the fruits of Love and amongst these good Works the principal are Works of Mercy whereby God's poor and persecuted Saints are relieved and comforted And that is no true real Love which is without good Works as that is no true Faith which can be separated either from the Love of Christ or from the Love of Christian Brethren From the words considered in the Context and explained in this Latitude many practical Conclusions are deducible 1. From the Context we are informed that Confession without Practice Love and good Works is defective imperfect and to little purpose Confession of the Mouth Love in the Heart and Works issuing from Love must go together and must never be separated in true and sincere Christians 2. From the word provoking taken passively we may learn this lesson to give good Example unto our Brethren and so let that heavenly Light which is in us shine forth that others may see our good Works and glorify our Father which is in Heaven For we should be the Light of the World and our Lives should be a Mirrour of all divine vertues 3. We must consides and take special notice of such as are eminent in Piety Righteousness and true Holness and follow closely their good Example they give us and tread in their paths which lead to the eternal Rest of Heaven 4. Take provoking actively and the Text informs of another Duty and that is to have care not only of our own Souls but the Souls of others and to use all means to promote their Salvation as well as our own Love teacheth us this Lession for we must Love our Neighbour as our self and the greatest Love we can shew unto him is to endeavour his spiritual and eternal good And we must remember that Love especially Christian Love is diffusive and communicative and in imitation of God doth good unto many Non solum nobis nati a●t ●e●iati sumus We are neither born nor born again for our selvs The End both of our natural and spiritual Birth is to benefit others as well as our selvs we should sharpen quicken and mightily stir up others to the best things especially to Love and good Works And this is the Duty not only of Ministers in relation to their People or of Parents in relation to their Children or of Masters in relation to their Servants but it 's general and so extensive that no Christian is exempted from the performance And the neglect of this Duty hath been the Cause why there is so little Piety so much Iniquity amongst us and why most men are profane or bare Professor and so few are zealous in the best things 5. From hence we may infer the Excellency of Christian Society Civil Society tends much to the temporal good of person civilly associated but spiritual Society in Religion and Christianity is far more excellent and beneficial Yet this presupposeth the Persons associated with whom we live and must converse to be good for otherwise ill Company is most pestiferous Therefore the Apostle commanded the Corinthians to purge out the old Leaven and scandalous Persons which like a contagion infect others And this doth imply that Christian Assemblies should be kept pure and consist of Orthodox and pious Members and to live amongst such must needs be a great advantage unto poor Souls seeking Salvation § 23. There was a fourth Duty exhorted unto For Ver. 25. They mustnot not for sake the assembling of themselves together as the manner of some was but they must exhort one another and so much the more as they saw the day approaching IN which we have 1. A Duty 2. A Reason to enforce the performance The Duty is expressed 1. Negatively They must not for sake the assembling of themselves
God with a profane and wicked heart some serve him ignorantly or negligently without servency and due affection The Pharisee could give Alms Fast Pray pay Tythe of Mint Anniseed Cumin and neglect the weighty things of the Law as Justice Judgment Mercy they could and did draw near to God with their Lips and yet be far from God with their hearts they served God but according to the Traditions of men The Jews were zealous and devout in Ceremonials yet their hearts were polluted and their hands full of Blood Therefore we must know that no profane man or hypocrite or indisposed person can serve God acceptably To do this doth presuppose man in the state of Grace and an heart prepared and rightly disposed the person must first be accepted before the work can please God And as the Person so the Service must be rightly qualified and so it is when it proceeds from Faith in Christ is conformable to the Word of God and tends unto his Glory And if We and our Service be thus qualified though our infirmities be many yet so great is God's mercy that for Christ's sake he will accept both us and it we must not presume upon his mercy but yet we must rely upon him when we have a special care to shun that which offends him and do that which is just and holy and when we have done our best humbly in the Name of Christ pray for pardon of defects and acceptance of our sincere endeavours Yet we cannot serve God thus acceptably without reverence and godly feat Reverence in God's Service looks at his excellency and glorious Majesty and at our own unworthiness and the infinite distance between Him and Us and therefore we must adore God's excellent Majesty with deep humility abasing our selves very low being afraid and ashamed out of a sense of our own vileness to come near him except in his great mercy and free grace he vouchsafe access Signs of this reverence is cut kneeling bowing covering our faces prostration and such like gestures And if we were either apprehensive and sensible of our own vileness or God's excellency how could we possibly be so profane and unreverent in his Worship Godly fear may be the same with Reverence or distinct from it The word in the Greek signifies sometimes caution sometimes devotion sometimes fear and that in the Service of God which is a religious fear and care not to offend but to please him Both reverence and fear in this place may farther be a more then ordinary care and diligence in the Service of God that we may please him and be accepted of him For as the greatest honour with the greatest humility is due to God that Supreme Lord whose Majesty is infinite and eternal so the greatest caution must be used in his Worship for he will be sanctified in all them that draw near unto him 3. This is the manner how he will be served by all such as are admitted Subjects of this unmoveable and unchangeable Kingdom The reason is He is a consuming Fire These words are improper and metaphorical and a Metaphor is a contract Similitude which here we find In such Comparisons we may observe 1. The things compared as like and agreeing 2. The thing wherein they do agree The things here compared are God and Fire God is like to Fire The thing wherein they agree is this that they are consuming So that the meaning is That God is like unto Fire and he is like to it in this that as That so He hath a consuming force Many are the qualities and effects of Fire but this one is singled to represent the terrour of God For though that flery Law which God gave out of the midst of fire burning up to Heaven be removed yet in the Gospel of sweetest mercy and freest grace there are threatnings of unquenchable Fire and eternal Flames Therefore this expression signifies his punishing and vindictive Justice the Subjects whereof are profane impenitent and unbelieving persons who are disobedient to the Law of Grace and refuse the tender of saving mercy The effect of this Justice upon these Offenders are severe and everlasting punishments which cannot be expressed or conceived but are represented by the raging flames and ●●erce burning of the most violent Fire which cannot be quenched And as the torment of violent hottest flames is the most grievous so these punishments are and if the Sufferers be immortal and immortally sensible the Torment will be not only grievous but perpetual The sum is that the punishment of delinquent and disloyal Subjects which the Judge shall execute and they suffer is extreme and everlasting The force of the Reason is great for as men tremble to think of everlasting tormenting and consuming Flames so let them have a special care to serve God unto the end in due manner This implies that there is a glorious Reward of eternal Light and delight to all such as shall like loyal Subjects continue constant unto the end in the profession of the Truth and the acceptable Service of this glorious and eternal Soveraign CHAP. XIII § 1. PRofession without Practise Faith without good works cannot attain the fruition of that eternal Life which Christ hath merited and God hath promised therefore the Apostle in this Chapter exhorts to Love good Works constancy in the Truth and other Duties He begins with Love Ver. 1. Let brotherly Love continue THe Analysis of this Chapter is easy for we have 1. The hortatory part thereof 2. The conclusion of the whole The Duties exhorted unto with several Motives are reduced to a kind of order by divers Expositors Yet as this is not exactly done so it 's needless to do it We may indeed enumerate the Duties and reduce them to their proper places and heads in the Body of Divine Wisdom and that is very easie to be done Yet the Wisdom of the Apostle was this that he doth not mention all Duties but such as were most requisite at that time to be performed by those persons and doth not strictly follow the method of the moral Law but takes liberty to place them in that order which he thought most convenient For he knew the performance of them to be the principal thing and it was sufficient for him to press them and then to know them The first Exhortation is to brotherly Love The Duty is 1. Brotherly love 2. Continuance in it Brotherly love is love of the Brethren For there are Brethren and these must be loved To love our Neighbour as our selves is the substance of the second Table of the moral Law And as there are several degrees of Neighbours so there is of Love Neighbours in full extent include Strangers Enemies and all such as are capable of our Love Of these some are more nearly linckt unto us as Brethren Yet these are either natural political or spiritual here spiritual Brethren are meant who have God to be their Father Jerusalem above to be their
31. 4. They must remember their former constancy in great Afflictions when they suffered in their own persons and also with others ver 32 33 34. 5. If they persevere the Reward will be great the enjoyment will be very certain and shall not long be delayed ver 35 36 37 38. CHAP. XI VVHerein Perseverance is urged upon other Reasons and Motives as 1. From the excellency of Faith in it self For 1. It can secure us of glorious Rewards to come 2. Assure us of things far above sense and reason ver 1. 2. From the Effects and also the Consequents thereof For 1. The Effects thereof are so excellent that by them the Saints of antient time became famous and obtained an excellent Testimony from God himself which is upon Record in sacred Scripture ver 2. 2. By it we know the World was made of things that did not appear ver 3. 3. From the particular examples of the Elders endued with this heavenly Virtue who obtained so good Report And in this Argument from Example we must observe 1. That it is only proposed in this Chapter and applied in the next 2. That the rare Effects of this Faith in them were that they 1. Obtained great Mercies 2. Suffered great Afflictions 3. Did rare Exploits 3. That they being many are Marshalled in order and reduced to three Companies 1. Such as lived near the Creation and before the Flood 2. Such as lived after the Flood before the Law 3. Such as lived under the Law till near the time of the Incamation 4. Some are mentioned by Name and the effects of their Faith specified and expressed some are not named at all 5. The Apostle insists most largely in Abraham and Moses as rare and eminent Patterns 6. All these lived before the exhibition of Christ and this is their great commendation that in the times of imperfection their Faith was so excellent and had so rare effects CHAP. XII VVHerein 1. The Motive from Examples proposed in the former Chapter is applied and these Hebrews exhorted to imitation ver 1. 2. The unparallel'd Example of Christ is proposed as a mighty Motive seeing for the Joy that was set before him he with great patience endured more then ever any did and that from wicked men ver 2 3. 3. Though they had suffered much yet they had not resisted to Blood and loss of their lives ver 4. 4. They must consider that all their Afflictions which they Suffer come from God as a Father loving them and looking upon them not as Bastards but as Sons and chastising them in Wisdom to make them more holy and more happy ver 5 6 7 8 9 10 11. And the Means of perseverance which they must use are 1. To encourage themselves and renew their strength 2. To live in peace and holiness 3. By Discipline to cast out from amongst them Apostates and scandalous Persons as Fornicators and profane Persons as Esau And the Motives to use these means are 2. Lest they be turned out of the way 3. Lest the Blessing be irrecoverably lost ver 12 13 14 15 16 17. 5. The sad estate of fear and bondage under the Law and the blessed and glorious estate under the Gospel in the Kingdom of Christ should perswade them much To be constant and never to think of returning back to Judaism again ver 18 19 20 21 22 23 24. 6. If they which refused to hearken to the Law given on Earth were severely punished How much more must they suffer who disobeyed him speaking from Heaven ver 25 7. They must persevere in their Profession and serve God accordingly because the former dispensation under the Law is altered and taken away and the dispensation of the Gospel shall never be shaken That this Dispensation continues for ever he proves out of Haggai by whom God said Once more I will shake not only Earth as I did when I gave the Law but Heaven too And after this there never shall be any more shaking or alteration in his Spiritual Kingdom ver 26 27 28. And lest they should not live according to their Profession he lets them know that God is a consuming Fire ver 29. CHAP. XIII VVHerein the Apostle 1. Exhorts 2. Concludes 1. He exhorts to brotherly-brotherly-Love Hospitality and other Duties and urgeth the performance by several Reasons and Motives from ver 1. to the 18th 2. He concludes with Request Intercession Intreaty Information Salutation Benediction These things give light unto the Whole and the more particular Explication you may expect in the Comment AN EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLE TO THE Hebrews CHAP. 1. § 1. OF the Divine authority the Authour the Language and Translation of this Epistle others have spoken at large the Matter is the principal thing To do something cast in my mite after other learned men have done their part and to unfold the mysteries thereof is my design And before I enter upon particulars I think it expedient to acquaint the Reader with the scope and method of the Apostle The end and scope is easily known if we read the whole together and seriously consider the Contexture For upon this done it will appear and that very clearly that the whole and all the parts tend to the confirmation of the blebrews in that Christian Faith which they had professed and for which many of them had suffered For the divine Authour knew full well there was danger of Apostacy or at least of doubting in all because of the relapse of some He was not ignorant what the Devil by subtil perswasions or cruel persecutions might do For though some were strong yet many were weak and losse of Goods Imprisonment Banishment and hazzard of Life were shrewd temptations And though it was God who must assist strengthen support and establish them yet he might make him an Instrument in that work so far as to furnish them with Weapons and Armour and perswade them to make use of them Yet we must not think that the inward motive which stirred him up to write was meetly his natural affection to his Brethren and desire of their good or that he used only such means to confirm them in the Truth as natural reason and humane prudence did dictate We must have far higher conceits of this Letter which for matter is divine and far above the dictates of reason For he was inspired moved and infallibly directed by the Holy Ghost The principal Subject of the whole is Christ's prophetical and sacerdotal Office wherein he did excell not only the former Prophets and Priests but Angels too The attentive and intelligent Reader will easily find this and from thence observe his method For he single out his prophetical Office wherein he proves him far more excellent then Prophets Angels and Moses himself and all this in the first four Chapters In the fifth he begins his discourse of his Priest-hood as far above that of Aarons yea above Melchlsede●ks and in this he Tpends the fifth
it receiveth Blessing from God For it is God that maketh the Earth fruitfull and flourishing and without his Blessing the best Land though never so well husbanded is barren and of this we have frequent experience The Reddition of this is 1. That the thing signified in general is sinful Man and especially his heart Yet there is a great difference of men's heart for though no man can make his heart spiritually good yet every man may make his heart bad and worse then other mens and may by neglect and other wayes much obscure the light of Nature and dull the edge of conscience and so render himself indisposed for better things If this were not so there would be no inequality but all men would be equally sinful which daily experience contradicts A good heart is like good Ground therefore may be an heart not so bad or morally good according to the light of Nature and the power of Conscience which we find in Heathens and somewhat improved higher by Christian Education For the heart to bring forth fruit meet for the Dresser is to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit answerable to God's Spiritual Husbandry and the Showres of his heavenly Doctrine and the workings of his Spirit It 's to walk worthy of our Calling wherewith we are called This is that good and honest heart which bringeth forth fruit unto perfection The Blessing received is the continuance of the means of Salvation the increasing of heavenly Graces and Comforts and in the end eternal Life which is the greatest Blessing of all The end of this part of the Comparison is not only to perswade and encourage to Duty because of the great Blessing and Reward which will follow but also to let others who incline to Apostacy know how they deprive themselves of God's heavenly Blessings and these glorious Rewards § 8. The second protasis or proposition is concerning bad Ground which 1. Appears to be bad by bearing Thorns and Bryers 2. Is used as bad Ground 1. By being rejected 2. Nigh unto Cursing 3. In the end burned This Ground is a bad heart which is manifested by the fruits which are words and deeds tending to the dishonour of God and the hurt of Man And this Sin is so much the greater because of the means of Grace and workings of the Spirit over and above the light of Nature which God hath graciously afforded them The punishment of this barrenness in all virtue and fruitfulness in Sin followeth and there are three degrees thereof The first is rejecting when God takes away his Ministers his Word or if they continue withdraw the powerful working of the Spirit whereupon man is justly deserted of God as unworthy of any farther spiritual Dressing and useless for that end God in his great Mercy intended him The second he is nigh unto Cursing and the sentence of Excommunication whereby he is delivered up to Satan and a reprobate mind Hence blindness hardness of heart and the spirit of slumber This was the case of the unbelieving Jew and is the greatest Curse that can fall upon man in this life The third their end is Burning For rejection and this Curse will end in eternal punishments compared to torment with unquenchable fire This comparison is not only an illustration for the more clear representation of the condition of Apostates but also a very serious admonition to take heed of that grievous Sin and of all things that tend thereunto because the end will be so woful and the punishment so grievous For if men deal thus with their Ground which is devoid of reason sense and understanding how much more cause hath God to punish and that so severely men who are endued with understanding and enjoy so many helps and means of Conversion and Salvation § 9. The second reason of the Apostates resolution is given Ver. 9. But beloved we are perswaded better things of you and things that accompany Salvation though we thus speak THe brief meaning of the words is 1. That though we did sharply reprove you and by our discourse of Apostacy might seem to imply that you were either Apostates or very near unto it yet I desire to be understood in another manner For I have more charity for you better conceirs of you and hopes of your continuance in Christianity so that you need not be initiated again by laying the foundation and I have good Grounds of this my hope 2. This is the reason why I will not lay the foundation again but go on to perfection and further inform you of higher points of Doctrine and in particular of the excellency of Christ's Priest-hood In this reason we may observe 1. His hope and good perswasion of them 2. The ground of this his hope In these words we have a Rhetorical Anticipation whereby he endeavours to prevent the thoughts which might arise in their hearts upon his former speeches and expressions For they might think that he did by them tacitely condemn them as Apostates or in the way to Apostacy And if he did so he must needs wrong them and discourage them for he did tacitely imply though not positively and expresly affirm that they were of a bad disposition and in a very sad condition and this Opinion of them was against charity and truth To remove such suspicious and jealousies out of their minds he in these words assures them of his Charity and that his words were not inconsistent with his good conceipt of them The first that is his Charity he signifies by the term of Compellation Beloved for he loved them with a dear and tender Love as Christians continuing in Christianity This he could not have done if he had judged them Apostates and Enemies to Christ. By this we are taught that it is our Duty not onely to love our Christian Brethren but upon occasion to express it and further to give the reason and ground of our love as the Apostle here doth For the reason and ground of this love was his perswasion of their continuance in Christianity For he was perswaded better things of them c. In which words 1. He confesseth he spake such things as might seem to charge them with Apostacy and condemn them as cursed 2. He yet denies that those words do imply any such thing and that he was so far from any such thoughts of them that he was perswaded of the contrary He did indeed reprove them for their Ignorance and Negligence whereof some of them were highly guilty and also signify the deplorable and desperate case of Apostates and there was danger lest some might in time be guilty of that Sin yet all this was not to accuse them but warn them that this danger might be prevented To reprove and admonish are Acts of Charity and such as the most loving Father in the World may and sometimes must use if he truly love his Children We may represent the ugly and filthy face of Sin and the horrid pains of
Mother are born of the same incorruptible seed animated with the same Spirit of Christ and partakers of a divine Nature This spiritual consangunity is a principle of spiritual Love and this Divine Nature an object of a more ardent affection Though therefore we must love others truly and as our selves yet these if we be Christians we must love more then others And though we know no man's heart and reins yet such as appear and manifest themselves by their profession and practise to be Saints we must love as Brethren and though they be not such and we mistake yet our Love is acceptable to God This Love is not only a complacency in them and an esteem of their persons as having more of God in them then other men but we must effectually desire their good and happiness and when occasion serves really promote it It must be a real and a giving and a suffering love For as Christ laid down his Life for us so we must lay down our Lives for the Brethren And we must not love only in word and tongue but in deed and in truth 1 Joh. 3. 16 18. By vertue of this Love there is in us a secret Sympathy which will manifest it self by rejoycing with them that rejoyce and mourning with them that mourn Yet this spiritual Love and divine Affection is found in few and it 's not so fervent and effectual in us as it should be Self-love and love of the World do much abate it And as the Brethren love the Brethren so the World hates them and counts them their greatest Enemies This is the love we must love them but this love must remain and continue in them This doth presuppose that they formerly had loved them and that was evident enough for they had ministred unto the Saints and did minister Chap. 6. 10. and became Companions of such as were teproached Chap. 10. 34. And their Duty was that as they had begun so they should go on and love to the End Life and Love must end together whilest we live we must love the Brethren And the words are not onely Paul's Exhortation but God's Command and the same universal and binds us as well as them § 2. The second Duty is Hospitality Ver. 2. Be not forgetful to entertain Strangers for thereby some have entertained Angels unawares VVHere 1. The Duty is to entertain Strangers 2. The Motive is Because some have thereby been so happy as to entertain Angels unawares The Object of this Duty is Strangers the Duty it self is to entertain them the Cayeat is Not to forget so to do Strangers in this place may be either Christians or others both are an Object of Charity but especially the former We are Strangers when we are from home in another Place or Country where we have few Friends are not well known And being amongst Strangers where we have neither harbour nor other necessaries we must needs be in a miserable Condition and a proper Object of Hospitality Though this extends to others yet it 's principally understood of such as in these times were persecuted and scattered in strange Countries and being spoiled of their Goods were in great necessity not knowing sometimes where to have the next Lodging or Morsel of Bread These are principally meant and must be entertained To entertain them is freely to take them into our Houses and according to our ability supply their Wants for where should these receive Comfort or Relief but with Christian Brethren Some might pretend themselves to be such and that falsly and so abuse the Charity of well-meaning Christians yet there were several wayes whereby poor Christians and their sad Condition might be known And if they were once known we must not forget this Duty to forget is to neglect it not to forget is to perform it The Motive or Reason is this That by the performing of this Duty some have entertained Angels unawares The Persons who are here understood were Abraham and Lot both pious and righteous men of great Civility and Humanity and such as considered the Condition of Strangers as being Strangers themselves and dealt with them accordingly These received and entertained Angels who being sent by God did appear first to Abraham then to Lot Their business was to destroy Sodom Gomorrah and the Cities of the Plaines Yet in the Execution of this Judgment God remembred Abraham and Lot and according to his tender care of them gave these Angels a Charge and Instructions to preserve them They first came to Abraham in the appearance of men and of Strangers and as such he invites them and entertains them in the same manner they came to Sodom where they were invited and entertained under the same Notion yet they were truly and really Angels though conceived to be Men Therefore is it said they entertained them unawares that is though wittingly and willingly they received them as Men yet they knew them not at first to be Angels The force of this Reason to perswade Hospitality is 1. In respect of the Guests 2. Of the benefit they received by them 1. It was an Honour and a special Grace that the glorious blessed immortal Inhabitants of Heaven should enter their Houses and Tents accept of their Invitation and be so familiar with them 2. In respect of the benefit they received by them for first they came from Heaven to Abraham to let him know his Wife Sarah should bear him a Son and within a short time God would perform his Promise unto him This was a great Blessing much expected and desired of a long time and now determined assuredly to a certain Period within the present Year besides God acquainted him by these Angels with his Intention to destroy Sodom and yet upon his Intercession to save the Righteous in it and this Prayer may be conceived to be effectual for saving though not the City yet his Kinsman in it Lot also had the Honour and the Benefit too for by his blessed Guests he was saved not only from the cursed Sodomites but from the Flames that destroyed that City Yet it may be said What was this to these Hebrews or What is it to us It was a rare thing and not expected of these Saints and beloved Servants of God Yet it is much to us for by the receiving Strangers out of Faith in Christ and Love to God we may receive precious Saints and with them some blessed Angels which have a special Charge to keep and guard them in that condition and if a Cup of cold Water shall be rewarded how much more will so great a Work of Mercy be remembred Nay which is more by receiving them we receive Christ who will acknowledg this kindness as done to Him For in the day of final Judgment He will acknowledge before all Men all Angels and his heavenly Father that this Work of Mercy done to His was done to Him § 3. Yet there is another Work of Mercy which he exhorts them unto
Spirits To be Ministers is 1. To be Servants in general 2. To be Officers and imployed either in sacred or civil Service therefore the word doth signify Priests or Magistrates Yet these are Ministers or Servants in the Court of Heaven under God the Supream Lord of all 3. They are sent forth for as they have their Office so they have their Imployment they are sent forth to Minister They do not go of their own head but have their work designed by God and receive both Direction and Command from him 4. The parties for whose good the Minister are the converted Believers who are designed Heirs of Salvation and eternal Glory For though they be God's Servants yet they serve for the good of his Children and this is their principal work and their happiness is the end of their Service 5. They are all and every one both Servants and also sent forth for this Service the greatest is not exempted This is the absolute consideration of the words The relative as they referr unto the scope of the Apostle is to prove that Christ is more excellent and they inferior to Christ. The force of the argument lyes chiefly in this 1. That they are Ministers and Servants 2. That all of them none excepted are such For all and every of them be Ministers not Lords and Kings then they are inferior to Christ. Nay they all and every one of them are subject to Christ as the Word from the Creation and after Christ as the word incarnate was set at the right hand of God they all were his Servants commanded and sent by him for the promoting of the Salvation of his redeemed ones believing on him So that they are not only Servants but his Servants this Doctrine informs us 1. Of the excellency of Christ advanced in our Nature above the Angels 2. Of the benefit of Believers they are Heirs of Salvation and the Angels the heavenly Spirits must take a special care of them 3. Of our Duty 1. To believe that we may be Heirs of Salvation and enjoy the guardance guidance and protection 2. To be humble Servants unto God to do good to others especially the Houshold of Faith seeing Angels though excellent are humble Servants to Christ for our good This principal matters in this Chapter are several The first is concerning the excellency of the Scriptures wherein God speaks by Prophets and by his own Son 2. The excellency of Christ in respect of the Prophets and the Angels 3. The Nature and Ministry of Angels The Use of this Doctrine follows in the beginning of the next Chapter CHAP. II. Ver. 1. § 1. THis Chapter is an Exhortation to the constant Profession of the Doctrine of the Gospel These words may be considered 1. In that Connexion with and dependence upon the former 2. In themselves The Connexion and Dependence is signified by the illative therefore which implys that the proposition in the first verse is a conclusion inferred from some premisses in the former Chapter wherein the Apostle had not only affirmed and proved that Christ was a Prophet more excellent then the former Prophets but the Angels And if he was so then it follows he must needs be heard and his Doctrine observed which is the substance of the first verse For seeing God speaks by the Prophets and more excellently by Christ therefore Prophets much more Christ are to be heard § 2. This is a Connexion The words themselves we must consider First As an Exhortation And secondly in the same 1. The duty exhorted unto 2. The reasons whereby the performance is urged An exhortation is reducible to a Rhetorick and proper to a deliberative Theme according to Aristotle and Tully ' whose Rules are not meerly Rhetorical but Political and are miscellaneous It presupposeth the party exhorted to know and remember the thing exhorted unto and a perswasion that it 's good especially honest and just The end of it is to move inslame and stir up the Will and Heart of the Auditor to performance This upon the by To proceed we have 1. The matter of the Exhortation or the Duty exhorted unto For the subject of divine Exhortations is some duty possible by the power of Grace to be performed Duty presupposeth a Command of God upon which follows an obligation to performance and a duty is nothing else and is a duty whether performed or not The duty is affirmative or negative So that in the words we have not only an exhortation but a dehortation too yet to speak properly they are but implyed For the Apostle signifies rather that the matter is a duty then exhorts unto it The affirmative is to give the more earnest heed to the things heard the negative not to let them slip yet the former must be done lest the latter which is a Sin should follow The matter of the duty is the things heard that is the Doctrine of Christ the great Prophet and his Apostles as made known and heard by them The act is attention earnest attention the more earnest attention because spoken by Christ more excellent then the Prophets then the Angels This attention is not only a diligent consideration of the things heard but a belief and constant profession joyned with practise and presupposeth the knowledg of them The negative which upon the neglect of the affirmative will follow is not to let them slip Thus it 's translated in our English but with divers Latine Interpreters it's to leak or flow out or aside And here Expositors compare the Soul unto a broken Cistern or torn-Vessel which will not keep any liquid substance powred into it In this sense to let slip seems to be nothing else then to forget But the Sytiack turns it so lest we fall off or from our profession The Septuagint use the Apostles word Prov. 3. 21. where the Hebrew word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luz which signifies not only in that Language but in the Chaldee to depart go back decline from a thing Therefore here the sin we must take heed of is not only to forget the Doctrine of Christ but to fall from the Faith and Profession of it And the reason why they must be so careful is because there was great danger and many temptations which would prove the more effectuall against the careless and the negligent In a word the duty is upon most dillgent attention constantly to believe and profess the Doctrine of Christ and never to recede or fall from it Thus to do is our duty there is a necessity of precept God's Command binds us we ought and the reason is because the Doctrine we have heard is the Doctrine of Christ the Doctrine of God made Man And it was God's Command to hear him the great Prophet upon peril of total Destruction This duty is reducible to the first Commandment evangelically understood and not to hear believe profess the Doctrine of God Redeemer by Christ is a grievous sin there forbidden As the duty
were yet here they are called Brethren as believing in Christ and holy as sanctified by the Spirit of Christ So that this is a Fraternity in respect of Religion Christian. They became such Brethren and so holy by the heavenly Call they were partakers of the heavenly Calling For as they were not Brethren so neither were they holy by natural Generation but by supernatural and spiritual Regeneration as before To be partakers of this Call is either barely to be called or to be partakers of this Mercy together with others It 's said to be Heavenly as some understand it in respect of the efficient and the final Cause It 's from Heaven that is from God who is the principal Cause of this Work and because they are to be called to Heaven that is eternal Glory which is the end and ultimate Effect thereof In it we may consider 1. The Work of God 2. The Duty of Man 3. The Benefit following upon both The Work of God is by the Word of the Gospel and the Power of the Spirit to enlighten and sanctify man and gave him a Divine Power to believe and turn unto Him The duty of Man is to be obedient to the heavenly Call The benefit is the admission of him as obedient unto his heavenly Kingdom and receiving him as an Heir of Glory Upon this heavenly Call followeth a great change both in the disposition and condition of man called For his disposition he is made of unholy holy and therefore said to be called with an holy Calling and to be called unto Holiness For his condition he is made of miserable happy and therefore said to be called unto eternal Glory And because the distance between holiness and happiness and sinful and miserable Man is so great therefore this work of God is a work of great power and because the change is so happy therefore it 's a work of great mercy wherein God freely prevents man so that if he should not thus prevent him he would be for ever sinful and miserable Wo unto all such as are disobedient to this heavenly Call and neglect this preventing Grace for as their Sin is more hainous so their Punishment shall be more grievous The Apostle seems to put them in mind of this Calling to let them know how deeply they are engaged to God and how unworthy they should be if they should not persevere unto the end § 3. The duty exhorted unto is expressed ver 6. It 's to hold fast the confidence and rejoycing of the hope firm to the end and is repeated ver 14. It 's opposed to unbelief ver 12. Take heed Brethren lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God The duty therefore is persevetance which presupposeth that they had received the Truth of the Gospel and professed their Faith in Christ and is a contin●ance in this Faith once received and professed to the end This Faith was from God and was wrought in them by the heavenly Call and the continuance of it depends upon God He gave it at the first he continues it to the last yet so that man must be obedient at the first and use all means with diligent care to preserve it to the last Some refuse to obey at the first others who have professed and received the Truth fall off before the end and both these are sins and they only guilty of them § 4. The reasons follow 1. From the excellency of Christ which is set forth by Comparison The parties compared are Christ and Moses both excellent but Christ far more And here it is observable 1. That the duty is the same with that which was pressed Chap. 2. 2. That the ground of that was the excellency of Christ above the Angels of this the excellency of Christ above Moses 3. The reason there was that if the disobedience unto the word of Angels was punished with Death how much more grievously shall they be punished which disobey the Gospel of Christ 4. The reason here is that if their fathers for their unbelief and disobedience to the Doctrine of Moses were eternally shut out of God's rest how much more shall they he shut out of Heaven and Christ's eternal rest if they do not continue in the Faith of Christ but fall off from their profession To understand this first reason we must consider 1. The excellency of Christ and the excellency of Moses absolutely and positively 2. The excellency of both comparatively that so we may understand the excellency of the one f●t above the the excellency of the other 1. Therefore they must consider the excellency of Christ Jesus which is this That he is the Apostle and High-Priest of their Profession Their profession was of the Christian Faith and Religion which they did professe The Authour Apostle and Legate sent from Heaven who first published this Faith and Doctrine was Christ the Son of God by whom God spake who was formerly proved to be more excellent then the Prophets then the Angels So that their Religion was from God nor by Prophets or Angels but by Christ the great Prophet For here to be an Apostle is to be a Prophet Yet Moses and so many others may be Prophets yet no High-Priest but Christ Jesus is not only the Prophet but the High-Priest who mediates between God and Man and officiates so as to make his Doctrine effectual and saving and expiate his Peoples Sin that they may be reconciled to their God This two-fold power was necessary as without which he could not have been a perfect Saviour These are his two Offices upon which the Apostle so much enlargeth and insisteth But 〈◊〉 may be an Officer and yet prove unfaithful and not discharge his trust yet Christ was faithful For it follows Ver. 2. Who was faithful to him that appointed him § 5. This is concerning Christ's fidelity expressed both absolutely in these words and comparatively in those which follow 1. Absolutely He was faithful to him who appointed him 2. Comparatively As Moses was faithful in all his House The former words 1. Imply his ordination 2. Expresse his fidelity to him that ordained him Where we have two Propositions 1. That God appointed Him 2. He was faithful to God In that He was appointed or made an Apostle and High-Priest of our Christian profession for so the words are to be understood it 's evident that He did not Usurp this two-fold Power and Office but received it and acquired it legally and none could invest Him with this Power but onely God and the reason is because it is so eminent and transcendent After he was once advanced he was faithful to that God who advanced and trusted him with so great a Power This fidelity was the true and full discharge of his Apostolical and Sacerdotal Office in perfectly doing all things necessary for the eternal Salvation of Man so far as it depended upon this two-fold Office As an Apostle or Prophet
This Righteousness so far as it reacheth is true and tends much towards eternal life and the estate of such as do attain it is comfortable and hopeful But there are usually defects in it and those very great For 1. It doth not proceed to a deep and firm radication nor 2. To any habitual predominancy over all lusts nor 3. Will it endure any great tryall There may be and are indeed in many Persons Knowledge Faith Love Hope and Comfort and these not meerly Moral but Supernatural and divine caused not onely by the outward revelation of the Word but also by inward illumination and inspiration of the Spirit yet some of these if they be Persons of great estate will be unwilling to sell all and give unto the poor or restore four-fold to those they have wronged or forfeit credit liberty their whole estate and hazard their lives out of Love to their dear Saviour yet all these must be done and that freely and willingly before we can attain to an estate of Confirmation 4. Yet this Confirmation doth not depend upon the radication and intensive measure of their divine vertues but upon the Will and support of God which certain support Man cannot expect by vertue of the Covenant before he arrive at such a measure of Grace and performance of Duty For it 's the meet Mercy of God who delights in an upright heart which moved him to promise this Confirmation to persons of integrity who have overcome the World for till Faith improve so far as to obtain this Victory and that clearly Man may fall and the desires and fears of the World may the more easily prevail against him and God may justly desert him because he neglects to come up unto his terms and refuseth the conditions and qualification necessary to a compleat real and sincere Disciple to whom alone Confirmation by vertue of the Promise is due That which supports a Man against all temptations and prevents Apostacy is strength this strength is internal and external and both from God The internal strength is such a measure of Faith in Christ in Man as is sufficient to overcome the World and obtain a clear victory The external strength is that power of God superadded to the former which not only continues and preserves the inward power of Grace but also is continually ready to supply all defects and make the final issue infallible and most certain For there is a glorious Inheritance reserved in Heaven for those who are kept by the power of God through Faith unto Salvation ready to be revealed is the last time 1 Pet. 1. 4 5. Where we have Faith within and the power of God without and the preservation of the parties regenerate unto Salvation and final enjoyment as the effect of both Neither of these belong unto those which have only the Spirit of preparation and not of inhabitation For though they are in a fair way unto and in good hope of both yet they have attained neither Yet there are others which find the victorious power of Faith within them and having received the Spirit of Adoption testifying that they are the Sons of God and the first fruits of Glory may be assured of their preservation to the end according to the tenour of the Promises made in many places of Scripture to such as are so qualified as they know themselves to be § 12. Thus far the Apostle's Resolution and the Reasons thereof Now followeth his exhortation which comes in very seasonably after his former Doctrine of Apostacy which was terrible and the latter concerning the happy and safe estate of such as were qualified as they were For lest the one should occasion dispair and the other presumption and security by this exhortation he intimates that the very estate of confirmation in this life doth not exempt from duty and diligence on Man's part not exclude some kind of desertion on God's part For this Confirmation differs from that which shall be in Heaven where there shall be no Sin no Temptation but perfect holiness without any danger and a plenary possession of the blessed Inheritance For the estate of the Confirmed in this time of mortality is like that of Israel after that they had broken the main strength of the Canaanites divided the Land by lot and did begin to enjoy it But after all this was done there remained several parts of the Land not yet reduced nor totally subdued And God did so order it to try them and also to continue and improve their Military skill and valour So it is with God's regenerate Ones his true Israelites for though they have broken the main strength of the Enemy and as it were in one pi●cht Battle obtained a clear Victory yet the remainders of corruption may sometimes put them hard to it and much annoy them And it 's God's Will it should be thus to teach them humbly to depend upon him and that continually to exercise their heavenly virtues to keep their watch and never put off their Armour till they have obtained a total and final Victory The principal things to be observed in this Exhortation are 1. The Duty exhorted unto 2. The Reasons why it should be performed For he that will exhort effectually must 1. Let the parties exhorted know distinctly what the Duty is 2. Demonstrate that it's very reasonable to perform it and the more clearly and fully both these are done the more effectually will the heart be moved For the rational Creature must be moved rationally Every exhortation implies the desire of the Oratour or party exhorting otherwise why doth he perswade why doth he exhort therefore saith the Apostle I desire you In this it differs both from a Command and a Petition and if the party desiring be excellent or beloved and the thing desired be reasonable and advantageous it should prevail much If such a person as Paul so worthy and so excellent shall desire the performance of a thing which is not only convenient but necessary to the attaining of eternal life how ready should we be to do it § 13. But To know the Duty is most considerable and it is Perseverance the same which was formerly urged Chap. 2. 3 4. This duty is proposed affirmatively and negatively and the performance of it concerned all and every one For thus he writes Ver. 11. And we desire that every one of you shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end Ver. 12. That you be not slothfull THere is no mention of Perseverance in the Text yet it 's sufficiently implyed for if they must shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end then they must persevere But to understand the duty more fully let us enquire 1. What hope is 2. What the full assurance of hope 3. What it is to shew the same diligence to the full assurance of hope unto the end Hope is sometimes taken for the thing hoped for not as it is
in it self but as it is an object of that hope which is a divine vertue and this eternal Life which though it be not the only yet is the principal object of our Christian hope Sometimes it 's taken properly for the expectation of this glorious and great Reward of eternal felicity It presupposeth Faith whereby we certainly believe it possible to be had and enjoyed with a vehement desire and longing after it And though the distance between us and it be great yet we are patient and willing to stay God's leisure There is a vain and groundless hope which is irrational there is a rational and probable hope yet not so firm and certain there is a firm and certain hope and that is when we have assurance of the thing hoped for This assurance also may admit of degrees for it may be full or not full This full assurance is the second thing and it 's that which removes all doubts and fears and this it may do at sometimes and not at others it may be interrupted or continued to the end This place speaks of full assurance of hope to the end This assurance will not be had much less continued to the end by sloth by diligence it may And so we are in the third place come unto the Duty which is to use all means and that with diligence whereby we may attain this assurance and continue it full unto the end And here he implies that they had been formerly diligent and so diligent as to have attained this assurance yet here he tells them 1. That they must continue the same diligence to the end 2. That the same diligence zeal affection they had shewed formerly being continued would serve the turn Assurance or certainty is either of the thing or the person The latter presupposeth the former for there can be no certainty to the person of a thing which is not certain in it self This certainty is in respect of the person who is either God or Man Eternal life is certain in respect of God who is able to give it and hath decreed so to do And that it might be certain unto us and that before the time of possession he hath signified his purpose bound himself by promise and confirmed his promise by Oath so that on his part it 's fully and every way certain Yet because the promise requireth a qualification and a performance of duty in the person to whom the promise is made therefore before we can be certain we must not only perform the duty and have the qualification but we must certainly know that we have done that which the Promise requireth and are duly qualified And the more clear and full the knowledg is the more full the assurance of hope and if this full knowledg continue this full assurance continueth to the end which is no groundless presumption but a firm and well-grounded hope Yet this is so to be understood that so far as Man may neglect his Duty and abate in the Qualification so far this assurance may abate If man's diligence in performing the Duty continue to the end this full assurance will do so too For to them who by patient continuance in well-doing shall seek Glory Honour and Immortality God will render eternal life Rom. 2. 7. Yet this patient continuance in well-doing depends upon God's special assistance and support For it 's God that worketh in us the Will and the Deed of his good pleasure Phil. 2. 13. And this is the reason why we must work out our Salvation with fear and trembling The full assurance not only depends upon the merit and intercession of Christ the Decree Promise and Oath of God but also requireth the diligence of Man and the continual support of God God's support assistance and concurrence are alwayes ready yet so is not Man's diligence For the best and most confirmed Saints on Earth may sometimes be remisse and so have their failings whereupon follow desertions to their great discomfort Yet neither do their failings wholly annihilate Grace nor frustrate the final event but God sometimes in his wonderful wisdom by with-drawing his comforts awakens and quickens them to Duty and useth outward Afflictions as Chastisements to improve their inherent virtues and corrects them And in that he promiseth to be their Father he binds himself to Chastise them if need require Otherwise he should not take them as Sons but account them as Bastards and so utterly neglect them So that we may apply that of the Psalmist in this case If his Children for sake my Law and walk not in my Judgments If they break my Statutes and keep not my Commandments Then will I visit their Transgression with the Rod and their Iniquities with Stripes Nevertheless my loving kindness will I not utterly take from him nor suffer my faithfulness to fail Psal. 89. 30 31 32 33. So God's adopred Children may have their failings yet God will Chastise them that their Covenant may stand firm unto the end Yet let every one be diligent to the end and look for no comfort but upon performance of Duty For that God who is most merciful will be holy and just and he requires his Children should be so too Therefore let all those who have made so great a progress in Grace as to attain a full assurance of hope and a sight of their heavenly Canaan go on with all care and diligence for it 's a sad thing after that we are upon the borders of our heavenly Country to be turned back and wander in this Wilderness For Ver. 12. We must not be slothfull but followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises § 14. THE Duty exhorted unto may be sufficiently understood by what hath been said already but that 's not sufficient it must be performed Yet who will go about it except it be reasonable And to manifest this is the next Work of the Apostle declaring the Reasons and Motives the first whereof is from Examples 1. Of many not named 2. Of Abraham in particular Examples do prove the Duty to be not onely possible but to have been actually performed and as such they do not bind though they may encourage but because the matter of them is something commanded they may and do oblige and not onely so but God commands us to imitate them and for that end makes them known and proposeth them yet in these patterns there is a special reason and motive superadded for as they by Faith and Patience obtained the Promises so shall we if we follow them The Persons intended are patterns for imitation in two things 1. The end whereat they aimed which was the attainment of the Promises 2. The means whereby they attained this end Faith Patience 1. They attained the Promises By Promises understand the things promised which were spiritual deliverances blessings and rewards and in one word Salvation yet temporal Mercies in reference to spiritual are not to be excluded For God
God's eternal Beeing and Life is more certain and evident to us then his doing this or that good for his sinful Creature 3. God swaring is in some sort inferiour to himself and his eternal Beeing 4. This was a strange condescension in God in regard of man's infirmity that He would hazzard the forfeiture of his Deity O sinful man be eternally ashamed to doubt of God's Promises seeing he hath so deeply engaged himself unto thee and hath laid down his God-head as a stake and pawn never to take it up again if he fail the least jot with thee This Oath we find Gen. 22. 16. where we have 1. The form I have Sworn by my self 2. The occasion whereupon He sware and that was the extraordinary Faith and Obedience of Abraham whereby he was ready at God's Command to Sacrifice his Son his only Son And whosoever shall attain to the same degree of Faith which Abraham did manifest in this act of Obedience may be secured by this Oath for God by it intended to confirm the Promise of righteousness and eternal life not only to him but to all Believers who are the genuine Sons of Abraham This was the Confirmation the Promise confirmed followeth Ver. 14. Surely Blessing I will Bless thee and Multiplying I will Multiply thee ABraham had Faith before and was justified before this time But upon this hard Tryal his Faith did more gloriously shine forth and proved to belike refined Gold coming out of the Furnace far more bright and his righteousness and eternal reward besides other mercies were far more firmly confirmed unto him The words of God spoken are here repeated but in part yet so that we must understand the rest to be intended and taken altogether they are so full and uttered in that manner as though God could not express how much he loved him For the words do signify the certainty and abundance of his love which he would really manifest unto him especially in Christ in whom all Nations must be blessed There are indeed in this Promise some Blessings proper unto Abraham but the chief was spiritual and eternal bliss in Christ without which all the rest could not have made truly and fully happy § 17. Abraham by this Promise thus made sure by Oath was mightily strengthened and by his patient enduring attained in the end the Promise For Ver. 15. So after he had patiently endured he obtained the Promise THe Promise is the thing promised and the thing promised was final Righteousness Joy and Peace the obtaining is the enjoyment of this blessed estate which he so much desired so much sought The means was his continued patience whereby he overcame all difficulties continuing firm in the Covenant to the end The sum of all and the scope of the Apostle is to let them know by this example of their Father Abraham whom they so much honoured that if they patiently endured to the end and faithfully performed their Duty they should obtain and enjoy the same glorious Reward whereof he was already possessed And this example should quicken incite and mightily encourage them and it should so much the more encourage because the event should be so certain But this is our misery few believe these things and so neither the Commands Promises and Oath of God nor these examples of rare Heroick spirits do work upon us and though we might yet we will not be made certain of eternal bliss For God hath done all things on his part to assure and confirm us as appears by this Oath § 18. For this was the end for which God promised and confirmed the Promise by Oath as it appears by the words following wherein we may consider 1. The end of an Oath in general 2. The end of this particular Oath intended by God Concerning an Oath as taken and used by Men for of such he speaks he observes two things 1. That it 's taken by a greater 2. It 's for confirmation an end of all strife Ver. 16. For men verily swear by the greater and an Oath for confirmation to them is the end of all strife 1. MEn verily swear by the greater and some Men and Angels are greater and may have power to punish perjured persons yet suppose such an Oath to be lawful as in some cases it may be yet it 's insufficient for that end for which an Oath in general was intended and ordained For neither Men nor Angels know the secrets and intentions of the hearts of Men who Swear neither can they punish with eternal punishments the Offenders But God who is Omniscient Omnipresent Omnipotent and exactly just knows the hearts and secrets of all Men in all places at all times and can and will punish the Offenders and in particular false and vain Swearers not only with temporal but eternal punishments if they be not prevented by serious and timely Repentance Therefore men usually Swear by God and requires others so to do otherwise they will not believe them and rest satisfied And though they should yet the God of eternal Truth will not be abused and attested for to confirm a falshood and wo to him who shall forfeit his interest in him and provoke him against his own Soul as false Swearers do 2. Because the end of an Oath is to determine strife therefore men swear by a greater who can take vengeance and certainly knows who do profane his Name That this is the end to determine strife the Apostle signifies by these words And an Oath fo● confirmation to them is an end of all strife Where it 's to be noted 1. The subject matter of an Oath is some strife or controversy that is a thing which may be doubted of and is not known to them who doubt but only to the party that asserts it by Oath 2. This doubt must be such as cannot be cleared by sense or reason or any other argument but a testimony 3. Yet there is some kind of necessity of confirmation 4. This confirmation cannot be made but by testimony 5. Because the testimony of man is insufficient and unsatisfactory therefore God is invoked to be a co-witness 6. Because it 's supposed that no man will forfeit his interest in God and invoke him against his own Soul when a thing is confirmed by Oath they rest satisfied For the party swearing can do no more and when he hath taken his Oath he hath done enough except he be an Atheist and no Atheist should be permitted or admitted to Swear his Oath will signify nothing § 19. As the end of an Oath in general is to end all strife and finally determine Controversies so the end of that Oath in particular which God sware to Abraham is to take away all controversy and doubt about the eternal Inheritance For by it God 1. Shews the immutability of his Counsel 2. By this shewed ministreth strong consolation to the Heirs of Promise which fly for refuge to the hope set before them So that the end is
satisfaction made Neither is it cruelty but Justice to require explation to be made and to accept it for a guilty Person and so upon the same to remit him is a great Mercy The second word is Not to remember To remember Sin in this place is an Act of a Judge taking notice of Sin so as to punish the Sinner Not to remember is not to charge the Sin upon the Sinner and so punish him but to free him from the Punishment and the Guilt too so that he shall neither be punished nor be liable to Punishment And it 's observable 1. That he will not only be mercifull but he will not remember 2. That though in the Hebrew there be but one Negative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet in the Septuagint and the Apostle we find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double Negative where by the Multitude of words is signified that God's Mercy will be very great and by the Negatives that it will be very certain and the Sinner shall have no cause to doubt And both the words and the Negatives imply that God will certainly and abundantly pardon and he will in no wise punish 3. This Remission is eternal and takes away the Guilt of Sin for ever and puts the sinful guilty wretch once pardoned in a condition of eternal safety In the Law notwithstanding their Sacrifices for Sin and Burnt-Offerings and Expiations there was a yearly remembrance of Sin upon the day of Expiation and their many Sacrifices offered by many Priests often could not take away Sin But Christ by one Offering consecrated the sanctified for ever and by his Blood entring into the Holy place obtained eternal Remission and made Sin eternally pardonable And upon Repentance and Faith follows actual and eternal Remission and freedom from all Guilt and Punishment for evermore So that the pardon here promised is plenary for it 's total of all sins and perpetuall and an Act of eternal Amnesty or Oblivion will be passed in the supream Court of Heaven No sin not any shall in any wise be remembred any more 4. The party pardoning is God who makes the Covenant and in the Covenant this Promise For it 's said I will be mercifull I will not remember He is the supream Law-giver and the supream Judg and if he once justify none can condemn His Sentence cannot be revoked and null'd there lyes no Appeal from his Tribunal his Decrees once passed stand firm for ever Yet God pardons as propi●●ated by the Blood of Christ and ●s there upon freely and abundantly merciful For to pardon one whom he may justly punish is Mercy to pardon many grievous sins is abundant Mercy to pardon for ever is eternal Mercy It is the Lord the Lord God merciful and gracious ●●ng-suffering and abundant in goodness and truth Keeping Mercy for thousands forgiving Iniquity and Transgression and Sin Exod. 34. 6. 7. Where we may observe that Mercy goes before Remission He loved and pi●yed us when we were sinful and Enemies and gave his only begotten Son for us that by his Blood he might make way for his Mercy make our Sins pa●●●onable and when the Sinner once repetus and believs and the Blood of Christ is once pleaded then he actually freely abundantly eternally pardons How are God's justified Ones bound to praise him with all their heart for evermore 5. The Persons pardoned are not all Sinners and every Transgressout For though God's Mercy ●e as he himself is infinite yet it 's by his Wisdom and Justice limited to certain Persons For though Christ hath merited pardon by his death yet no Sinner as a Sinner is capable of it his Death makes Sin and Faith makes the Sinner pardonable God must write his Laws in Man's heart and Man must know his God and Saviour and believe in him and Christ must make Intercession before Man can be actually justified Therefore this Promise follows all the rest Except Man receive God for his God and God become his God no pardon can be expected God received as our God and engaging himself to be our God in Christ doth justify And this is great Mercy of God that seeing Man is by Nature uncapable of Remission because sensless of his Sin and ignorant of his Saviour he writes his Laws in his heart to take away the stony and sensless quality thereof and makes it tender and sensible and so Man sees his Sin hates it is humbled and grieved for it willing to turn unto his God He enlightens him and lest he should despaire he manifests unto him his Saviour and his infinite Mercy in him promiseth pardon invites and calls him and lets him know there is plentiful Redemption Upon all this Man is willing to submit himself and take God to be his God in Christ and now he is in a capacity of pardon and justifiable Thus Man by God's Grace and performance of his Duty by the power of that Grace is prepared for this great Mercy of Remission and Justification And they who through neglect of hearing God's Word and Prayer continue in their Sin and harden their hearts can have no hope of this great benefit which God is so willing to give and sinful Man unwilling upon God's terms to receive These words thus explained contain this Promise That God will forgive Man his Sin and justify him and the words are brought in upon the former by the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Hebrew and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek turned by our Translators For. And as I have observed before it 's sometimes expletive sometimes illative for therefore sometimes causal and accordingly is rendred Sometimes the Hebrew Particle signifies When. If it be expletive it 's used onely to bring in this last Promise and joyn it with the rest But if it be not such but used here as a rational Conjunction the Connexion of these words with the former is very doubtful Some make Remission to be the ground of all the other Priviledges which God doth promise because he will forgive their Sins Thus Dr. Gouge seems to understand it Yes this seems to give a Reason why God will write his Laws in their hearts be their God and so teach them as that they shall know him and it 's this That he may make them capable of Remission and being made such he may remit them This is certain that this is a distinct Promise of the Covenant different from the rest and it 's such a Promise and of so great a Blessing that the Law had none such neither by the Observation of it could any Man obtain Pardon and Justification And it 's certain and clear enough that one end why God made this Covenant and in the same promised to write his Laws in our hearts was that by them so written we might repent and believe and by them obtain Remission For the chief Laws and Commandments of this new Covenant are those of Repentance and Belief
Doctrine so it is also a ground of the future Exhortations For if there had been no way made or if there had been a way and we could have had no liberty of accesse unto the Throne of Grace by the Blood of Christ or if there had been a way and liberty to enter and yet no High-Priest set over the House of God it would be in vain to continue in the profession of Christian Faith or to perform any of those Duties exhorted unto in the following part of the Epistle But seeing we have all these and none of them nor any other thing necessary to Salvation is wanting but eternal life is possible and certainly upon these Reason to be obtained therefore we have a great motive and encouragement to go on and continue in the performance of the Duties exhorted unto For the ground of our hope is the possibility and certainty of attaining eternal Salvation and the ground of our practise and perseverance is our Hope which is the stronger because a way is made a liberty to enter obtained and a Priest set over God's House who will secure us of eternal bliss if we continue to believe and obey him to the end This is so much the more an effectuall reason because none of these could be had by the Law § 19. But what are these Duties exhorted unto They are several yet such as have great affinity one with another and all tend to one end The first this is Ver. 22. Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of ●aith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil Conscience and our Bodies washed with pure Water THE Apostle in these words and those which follow exhorts to severall Duties 1 To draw near to God ver 22. 2. To persevere in their Christian Profession ver 23. 3. To stir up one another to Love and good Works ver 24. 4. To Continue in Christian Communion ver 25. In the first Exhortation we may observe 1. The Duty exhorted unto and to be performed 2. The manner of performance 3. The preparation of the persons who must perform it For the Duty is to no purpose no wayes profitable if it be not 1. Performed 2. Performed in due manner 3. Performed by persons prepared and duly qualified 1. To draw near to God for so the words are to be understood is to Worship God in general in particular to pray and seek Remission and eternal Life from him This is to make use of the way Consecrated through Christ's Flesh and of our liberty to enter into the Holiest procured by the Blood of Christ. It 's the same with coming boldly unto the Throne of Grace that we may obtain Mercy and find Grace for seasonable Help Chap. 4. 16. It 's the same with coming to God by Christ to sue for Mercy Chap. 7. 25. The party therefore to whom we come is God yet considered as sitting in the Throne of Grace and propitiated by the Blood of Christ. The drawing nigh or coming to God thus considered is a motion not of the Body but the Soul whereby it turns away both the mind and heart from all other objects and turneth and addresseth it self unto God to converse with him for his Favour Mercy Blessings that it may obtain them from him And it fixeth upon him and abides with him till the business with him be finished This Coming is called Worshipping as Worshippers are called Commers ver 1. 2. This being the Duty it must be performed with a pure heart and in full assurance of Faith this is the manner and the due qualification of the act of drawing nigh to God without which it can neither please God nor profit Man This qualification is two-fold 1. The purity of Heart 2. The full assurance of Faith 1. It must be performed with the Heart For all serious actions issue from the Heart and whatsoever is not done with Knowledg and Will is not the action of a Man as a Man and a rational Creature The Worship of God whereby we seek eternal happiness requires both and in the highest degree of our activity because in it we have to do with God concerning the most weighty business of all others yet we may Worship with the Heart and not with a true Heart that is without sincerity The Heart is then sincere when according to God's Will it 's firmly fixed upon and aims chiefly at the chief End God's Glory and eternal Happiness desiring and intending both far above all other things and this out of clear Understanding And here it 's to be observed That sincerity is required not only in the person Worshipping but in the action of Worship He that is habitually sincere may so f●● forget himself as to worship without sincerity and the principal part essence power reality and truth of that Worship which God requires For this truth and sincerity is the very Life and Soul of acceptable Worship If we incline or have secret and remote thoughts of Vain-glory of falling off from our profession or returning to Sin then our Heart is not perfect sincere upright and our worship must needs be like our hearts which ought in the first place wholly and folely be given and offered to God By this we easily understand and both how few do Worship God sincerely and how defective the Worship of the best may often prove 2. Besides sincerity is required a full assurance of Faith Faith is both a belief and a confidence and assurance full assurance is an higher degree of both As a belief it 's grounded on God's Word in general revealing the Truths and Propositions to be believed as a confidence it 's grounded on the promise a special part of God's Word The belief goes before confidence follows after as depending upon the belief for the promise is first a Truth and so to be considered before it can be conceived under the formal notion of a Promise He that cometh to God must believe that he is and that he is a Rewarder of them that diligently seek him That God is a Rewarder of those who diligently seek him is a truth or true proposition and is to be believed and it is a Promise because therein God signifies that as he is able so he is willing to reward such any he hath in the Gospel signified his unchangeable Will and Decree so to do and hath bound himself both by his Decree and his Word which is the signification of the Decree The full assurance of this Faith is grounded upon the infallible Truth of his Word and the fidelity and immutability of his Promise And where as this full ssurance is thought generally an high degree of Faith yet Faith is no divine Faith without it For no man receives the Word and Promise of God as the Word and Promise of God that wants this full assurance For the firmness of Faith should answer the firmness of God's Word If this full assurance were an assurance of our particular estate
Apostates Therefore as they desired God's favour and an happy End and feared his Indignation and their own eternal Destruction let them persevere and use all means to perswade others to continue firm and faithful to the end And here you must observe that the principal Duty exhorted unto is Perseverance and the rest are subservient thereunto § 25. It follows Ver. 26. For if we sin wilfully after that we have received the Knowledg of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for Sins IN these words 1. We have a Reason given to perswade unto perseverance 2. Yet this Reason is directly and immediately disswasive and dehorrative from Apostacy 3. Secondarily and by Consequence it exhorts and moves to perseverance For whatsoever Reason is against Apostacy the same is for perseverance 4. This Reason doth seem to imply that the forsaking of Christian Assemblies was Apostacy or tended to it and the day approaching to be a day of Judgment and in particular of the Punishment of such as fall away 5. This Reason begins here and is continued to the 32d Verse 6. It 's taken à poena from the Punishment which is avoided by perseverance and is executed upon Apostates 7. In Form it 's this If the Sin of Apostacy be unpardonable and shall be punished with unavoidable and most grievous Punishment then we ought to be very careful cop●●severe But the Antecedent is true Therefore we ought to persevere In the words of the Reason we have 1. The Sin 2. The Punishment which is Unavoidable Grievous The Sin is described in the 26. Ver. to be a sinning wilfully after we have received the Knowledg of the Truth Where we must consider 1. What it presupposeth and that is the Acknowledgment of the Truth 2. What it is upon this presupposed It 's a wilful sinning In the presupposition we have 1. Truth 2. The Knowledg of it 3. The receiving of this Knowledg 1. By the Truth is meant the true pure and most certain Doctrine of the Gospel concerning Christ already come Faith and Salvation This is called Truth because it 's true and most eminently and infallibly true which is no wayes in any thing false and erroneous as being at first immediately revealed from God the God of Truth of all Truth who is not only true but Truth it self It 's called also the Truth by way of eminency as the most excellent Truth revealed for Man's eternal Happiness The Reason of this Truth is the Perfection of his full and clear Knowledge and his absolute Integrity and purest Holiness which both are such as that he neither can nor will reveal any thing but Truth 2. Truth may be Truth and yet not known to any Man or Angel and this Truth was first known only unto God Yet it pleased him out of his great Mercy to reveal his mind to Man and in particular this Truth of the Gospel by Christ and his Apostle who made it known unto others who by that means came to know it For many who heard the Gospel preached and attended unto it attained to the Knowledg of the great Mystery of God's Kingdom and of those things which were sufficient and effectual for Information of the Understanding unto everlasting Life This Knowledg was not Mathematical Physical Political or Metaphysical as some use to speak but Theological and Divine and a Light above the Light of Nature The word may signify not only Knowledg but Acknowledgment of this Truth by a full Assent upon Conviction And this might be caused not only by outward Revelation Information and Miracles but also by the Illumination of the Spirit and supernatural Gifts For God goes far with Man and doth much to save him he many times penetrates his inward parts and by his divine Light and Power enters into his very heart and all this to convert him 3. They received this Knowledg God did not only offer it but give it which he might be properly said to do when they received it They had it not by Nature for it 's far above the natural Man They acquired it but not by their own Power and Industry neither did they merit it Yet in this receiving they were not meerly passive yet passive before they could be active God must do something without Man before he can actively receive he must prevent him by Revelation and Information without and by Illumination and Operation within and this done Man may be active For to receive it is certainly an Act not only of the Understanding which assents but of the Will which approves So that he both wittingly and willingly receives and that with some delight and proceeds to Profession and continues for a while to believe approve profess Though this receiving of Knowledg may seem only to be Acknowledgment yet it 's something more Truth is opposed to Erroar Knowledg to Ignorance Acknowledgment to Dissent Approbation to Rejection of this Truth § 26. This receiving and having is presupposed to Apostacy and sinning wilfully For no Man can loose and fall away from that which he never had either in Title or Possession so none can fall away from Grace or any degree of Grace which he never had The Heathens in Scripture were never said to bre●k the Covenant of God or forsake God as their God by Covenant Therefore the proper Subject of Apostacy is one in the Church a member of the visible Church and in the times of the Gospel a Christian who hath professeth his Faith in Christ yet of these Apostates there is a difference and there are degrees of this Apostacy For some receive and profess Christianity by tradition and an implicit Faith yet never have any distinct knowledg of the Truth to be believed Some believe and understand more explicitely the Doctrine of Christianity and are convinced of the truth of it yet are never affected with the matter so as to forsake their Sins and reform their Lives but continue in their Sin Some know believe are affected with the matter as so they begin by the power of the Spirit to escape the corruption that is in the World through lust and find some spiritual joy and comfort To fall away from any of these is Apostacy but to fall from the last is the greatest And there was something proper to those times which did aggravate this sin very much For the Truth then was confirmed both by Miracles and Gifts of the Holy Ghost this confirmation was clear and extraordinary and to renounce that Truth so confirmed must needs be hainous and of this the Apostle seems to speak Christians may fall away three wayes by denying the Truth 1. In their Profession Or 2. In their practise Or 3. In both And that denial which we call Apostacy is destructive of Christianity and maketh a man of a Christian no Christian. Yet some may deny Christ or fall into some grievous Sin and yet verily believe in their hearts and retain the love of Christ as Peter and others have
Antecedent And this is a certain Rule that if the Antecedent be true the Consequent is so too The Connexion is not natural but depends upon divine Ordination who hath determined in general that Punishment shall follow upon Sin and in particular that final Perdition shall follow upon Apostacy This is part of the Text which the Apostle alledgeth out of Habakkuk and therefore the Original is Hebrew And this gives occasion to consider the difference of the Translations the Vulgar Junius Vatablus the Divines of Zurick following him and our English differ amongst themselvs in translating the Hebrew and the Septuagint which the Apostle follows seems to differ much from all the Rest. Besides the Hebrew Copy which they turned did not agree with these of latter times This difference will appear in the Explication of particulars which are two 1. Apostacy 2. God's Displeasure 1. The Apostacy which is signified by the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is said to be Pride so some to be Unbelief so others to be a Lifting up so our English to be a drawing back so the Septuagint These may be reconciled for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to fear and out of fear to hide ones self and also to remit and abate of our former Boldness and Courage this signification agrees well enough with the Arabick signification of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gafal which some tells is to hide or neglect For all Apostacy issues from fear and a Remission of our more intensive Courage in time of Persecution so as to yield basely and cowardly unto our Enemy whom we might have resisted and overcome This drawing back is an Unbelief after Belief and Profession of our Faith And it may and sometimes doth proceed from Pride which will not suffer the heart to submit unto the Will of God and depend upon that Righteousness which is by Faith it will scorn to bear the Cross of Christ and it will despise the Promises and Comminations of the Gospel Yet it may issue from other Causes 2. The Punishment is expressed in these words My Soul shall have no pleasure in him In our present Hebrew Copies we read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Soul whereas the Septuagint read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 My Soul To change the Affix Jod into Vau was an Errour easily committed in the Transcription By Soul therefore is not meant the Soul of the Apostate but of God and the Soul of God is God who is only Soul and Spirit and hath no Body Of God it 's said He will have no pleasure in the Apostate which is a Meiosis and signifies He will be highly displeased with him The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated to be upright doth signify also to please so the Septuagint divers time do turn it and I know no Reason why the Translatour should vary from them especially in Habakkuk By this Phrase is declared God's high displeasure against them for their Sin for as their Sin was high and hainous so was his Displeasure who would punish them severely that the penalty might be proportioned and made adequate to their Sin So in these words the words of God we find the Arguments both à Praemio Poena briefly contracted § 41. Yet lest the Hebrews should think that the Apostle had conceived some Jealousy and Suspicion of an Inclination in them to Apostacy he as in the sixth Chapter prevents all such thoughts by these words following Ver. 39. But we are not of them which draw back unto Perdition but of them that believe to the saving of the Soul THis is an Application of the former Doctrine delivered in general to Paul and these Hebrews in particular There is little need of Explication for the words are easily understood from that which went before For to draw back is Apostacy and Perdition is utter Destruction which issues from the Displeasure and severe Justice of God To believe is the Duty Salvation of the Soul the Reward and to believe unto the Salvation of the Soul is to persevere in Faith unto the End and the full Possession of eternal Glory By these words we learn 1. To have a charitable conceit of Professors when we see and know nothing contrary to sincerity 2. To examine and thoroughly search our hearts that we may more clearly understand our spiritual condition Whether it be good or bad Whether our Faith be sincere and our Profession real or no Whether we tend unto Perdition or Salvation 3. They imply a secret Exhortation to Perseverance and a Dehortation from Apostacy upon the two main and principal Reasons of Perdition and Salvation 4. They serve for Comfort for to have a certain Knowledg of our Sincerity Constancy and Performance of our Duty and the Conditions of the Covenant is a Ground of great Joy and Comfort in the midst of our Afflictions and Tribulations for upon this Knowledg we are assured that God doth love us we are freed from the danger of Damnation have a firm Title unto everlasting Glory and all things shall work together for our good And happy we if we can truly say as here the Apostle doth We are not of them who draw back unto Perdition but of them who believe unto the Salvation of the Soul The Sum and Substance of the whole Chapter is 1. The Doctrine of the Excellency and Efficacy of Christ's Sacrifice which once offered doth consecrate the sanctified for ever 2. Exhortation to several Duties and especially to the principal which is Perseverance which is urged upon them by severall Arguments especially that of the fearful Punishment of Apostates and the glorius Reward of Perseverance CHAP. XI Concerning the excellency of Faith exemplisied in the Saints of former times § 1. THE Connexion of this Chapter with the former the Scope and Method are obvious and easily understood by the observant and considerate Reader 1. The Connexion is this the Apostle continues his Discourse concerning Faith and Profession and Perseverance in them unto Life Salvation and the receiving of the great Reward and his Exhortation unto Perseverance So that they agree in the same subject matter 2. The Scope is by a new Argument to stir them up unto continuance in the Exercise of this heavenly vertue 3. The Method is easily perceived by the Disposition of the parts which are 1. A Description of Faith Ver. 1. 2. An Instance in two general Effects Ver. 2 3. 3. An enumeration of many Saints and Worthies of former times who by this Faith did suffer grievous Afflictions did rare Exploits and obtained many great Blessings These Saints are represented unto us as marshalled and set in Array according to the times wherein they lived and 1. Some are expressed by Name 2. Some are not named at all Of such as are named 1. Some are honoured with the Testimony of the rare Acts and Effects of their Faith related in particular out of the Scriptures 2. Some are only named and the Effects of their Faith
heard them Luke 10. 23 24. 3. The joy of Simeon when he saw his Saviour though then but an Infant and imbraced that blessed Babe in his arms doth manifest the same 4. We might add that the times of the Gospel were more excellent because the Angels came to School on Earth amongst Men to learn something that they had not known before This is implyed by these words of Paul And to let all men see what is the fellowship of the mystery which from the beginning of the World hath been hid in God who created all things by Jesus Christ. To the intent that Now unto Principalities and Powers in heavenly places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God According to the eternal purpose which he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord Eph. 3. 9 10 11. And by those of Peter 1 Pet. 1. 17. Which things the Angels desire to look into 5. Upon the exhibition of Christ and the revelation of the Gospel the rule of Faith was more fully clearly and distinctly declared as the former places do signify and the Holy Ghost was more plentifully powred down from Heaven So that the times of the Gospel were times of far greater perfection then the former had been 2. This better thing was provided by God who disposeth of all times and of all things to be done as knowing both what and when is most fit to be effected And as by his Wisdom he contrived this better thing so by his Will he determined it and when the time came by his Almighty Power he accomplished what he had provided This implie● that it was his Work and from his own free Will he made this provision without any thoughts of Man 3. He provided this better thing for us that is for Paul and the Hebrews and all such as lived under that excellent dispensation and enjoyed the light of the Gospel For they are the parties who had the benefit and the priviledg which the Elders and Ancient worthies expected but never received in their times § 40. They were not perfected without us this is the second Proposition which 1. Implies That they were perfected 2. Expresly affirms That they were not perfected without us 1. The former times were times of imperfection both in respect of the object of Faith which was Christ to come and also in respect of the revelation and proposal of the rule which was then more dark and implicite and therefore before Christ's exhibition and the clear light of the Gospel the Saints and Elders of Old could not be perfected What the imperfection of their Souls and Spirits separated was before the time of Christ's Ascention we know not so clearly and we are ignorant in part of that perfection which they then acquired But certainly besides that some of them were raised with Christ their condition was much bettered The knowledg of their Saviour was much increased and their joyes much advanced But that this perfection should be their deliverance out of the dark Limbus and upper part of Hell I cannot be perswaded I find no Scripture for it 2. Yet they were not perfected without us who live under the Gospel God so ordered it that as their Faith was not so perfect as ours so their estate should not be bettered till the glorious light of Heaven shined out upon us and them joyntly and upon us both together If they were not made perfect without us and they received not the promise and we did and they continued constant in Faith how much more are we who have received it bound to be constant and persevere § 41. Though we find many examples in Scripture proposed for imitation and several Duties pressed thereupon yet we find no place in this kind so full so large so particular as this of the Apostle wherein he singles out the prime and choisest Worthies of God which have lived in all Ages before Christ from the beginning of the World And it 's a kind of Induction which though not expresly yet implicitely reacheth almost a general For examples logically considered are but particular individuals which united together make up a Totum genericum which many say is nothing but species ●●sima but we must not quarrel about words Morally and Theologically taken they do illustrate and make plain the matter whereof they are examples but as examples do not bind except the matter be found in some precept in force or of universal and perpetual obligation as this of Faith and perseverance in Faith is Yet this is observable in Scripture that God doth not only give us examples for imitation but commands us to follow them and they are added to the precepts to make the duty more evident more easy and more fit for encouragement Surely there was some special reason why the Authour should so inlarge in this topick of examples The reason seems to be the necessity of Faith in respect of Salvation which was such as that never any of the best of Saints could attain it or did attain it without this Virtue Besides as there was danger so there was great fear of Apostacy because of many temptations And it 's remarkable that he doth not instance in any Ceremonial Duty as of Sacrifice and such like nor in the works of the Law but in Faith yet a most lively and working Faith and he doth manifest that this was a fundamental virtue from the beginning As for his method it 's as clear as such a matter is capable of and the subject is handled with a great deal of artifice He 1. Describes Faith and makes that the basis and foundation of his following Discourse not only to let them know what the duty was he formerly exhorted unto but to give light to the Examples following 2. He signifies that it was an ancient and general vertue whereby the Elders became so famous 3. Because it was fit in producing so many Examples to observe some Order and so begin with one more ancient than the rest as with Abel who was the second Son of the first Man and lest it might be said that there were many Ages of the World before his time he informs us that the World had a beginning and that by Faith we believe it and therefore his first Example is one living in the beginning of the World and from him draws the Series or Catalogue down to latter times CHAP. XII Wherein the Exhortation to Perseverance is continued § 1. THE Analysis of this Chapter is easy for in the Exhortation continued we must observe 1. The Duty exhorted upto which is Perseverance 2. The Reasons and Motives whereupon it 's urged Which are 1. The former Examples 2. The Example of Christ. 3. The Nature of their Sufferings as they come from God 4. Divers ill Consequents if Apostacy and the Causes and Occasions thereof be not avoided 5. The Excellency of the Church under the Gospel above the Church under the Law 6. The Manner of revealing the Gospel 7.
taken from our subjection to our earthly Fathers and that from 1. The excellency of our heavenly Father as far above the Fathers of the Flesh ver 9. 2. The manner of Chastening us for our greater good ver 10. The reasoning in form is to this purpose If we have been subject to the Fathers of our Flesh how much more ought we to be subject to the Father of Spirits that we may live But we have been subject to the one Chastening us Therefore much more ought we to be subject to the other This is the substance of ver 9. The Consequence he proves thus 1. If our earthly Fathers Chastened us only for a few dayes and after their own pleasure and yet we were subject to them much more ought we to be subject to God our heavenly Father chastening us for our profit that we might be partakers of his Holiness But we were subject to them so chastening us for a few dayes after their pleasure Therefore much more ought we to be subject to him Chastening us for our profit that we may be partakers of his holiness This being the form of the Apostle's Argument I will proceed to consider the words 1. Absolutely 2. Comparatively I need not stand upon the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turned furthermore whereby the Connexion with the former words is signified to this purpose that besides what I have observed out of the former Text it 's further observable that God is compared to a Father who both as a Father and as Chastening is far more excellent then any earthly Father and from thence an argument and that of great force is drawn to prove that they should take his Chastening patiently This premised the words considered 1. Absolutely declare some things of Man as chastising Fathers God as chastising his Children Of men three things 1. We have had the Fathers of our Flesh. 2. These corrected us 3. We gave reverence to them correcting us 1. We have had Fathers of our Flesh. All Children have their Fathers for in that respect they are called Fathers because they have Children There are Fathers Moral Political Physical and all regenerate persons have a Father spiritual and the same subordinate or supreme By Fathers here are meant they who are Physical or Natural who under God by regeneration are causes of our natural Being and these are said to be the Fathers of our Flesh that is as most do understand it of our Bodies thereby implying that our Souls are not by Genetation or Ex traduce but in a more excellent and immediate manner from God creating and infusing them as many do express it Whether these be proper or fitting expressions I do not here debate but only say that the immortall Soul is concreated with and in the Body as a fit Receiptacle by an higher way and in a more excellent manner then we do or can know This doth not exclude though it doth not intend Fathers by Adoption and seems to be added to difference Men from God and earthly Fathers from our heavenly who makes the Body yet frames the Soul in a more special manner 2. These Fathers of the Flesh did correct us And this is the Duty of all Parents if they wisely and truly love their Children desire their happiness hope for comfort from them And there are very few Children which do not sometimes need Correction as well as Instruction Yet many Parents are very negligent in this particular Some are imprudent some are too indulgent and remiss some are careless and do not consider what the Consequents of this neglect will be The ignorance imperfection corruption of Children conceived and born in Sin require in their Parents a more then ordinary care Yet many Children are duly corrected and this Correction is a kind of punishment and yet a mercy and may prevent many sins and much misery for time to come for the end of it is reformation and though the party correcting may in respect of correction be thought to be and in some sort is a severe Judg yet in respect of the good intended he is a loving Father Happy are those Children which are duly corrected in time 3. Being corrected we gave them reverence The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seems in signification to agree with the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is with humility to submit For Children being ashamed of what they have done amisse do with humility submit not only to their Fathers instruction but correction And though they would take it ill at the hands of others yet they endure it patiently from them to be beaten and scourged for their faults And all Children should know that their Fathers have power not only to instruct and direct but to punish them when they see just Cause and they should the more willingly subject themselves because their Parents are under God the Cause of their Beeing maintain them love them and even in punishing them seek their good § 10. These absolutely declare some things concerning Men as earthly Fathers the words following inform us of some things concerning God as a Father and our Duty to him as such and they are three 1. God is the Father of Spirits 2. We must be subject to him 3. We must be subject that we may live 1. God is the Father of Spirits By Spirits some understand spiritual intellectual substances as Angels and immortal Souls yet here it seems to be restrained to humane Souls as contradistinct to the Flesh and Body mentioned before And the Soul is a Spirit that is an invisible spiritual intellectual Substance of a far more curious and excellent constitution then the Body Yet here it may be taken not only Physically as a Soul and Spirit but Morally as capable of a spiritual Felicity God is here said to be the Father of this Soul this Spirit in the Creation whereof the earthly Father hath no efficiency as by Generation not able to reach so noble and divine a Substance God only is the Efficient and Maker of it as you have heard before and that in some special manner And he is the Father not only because he hath made it but also because he alone hath power over it so that it 's exempted from all jurisdiction both of Men and Angels who as they cannot make it so they cannot command or judge it For the Conscience and immortal Soul is only subject unto his Imperial Dictates especially as it is ordinable unto an eternal estate 2. Therefore as he alone hath power over it so our Spirits and Souls are bound to be subject to him and him alone For where there is Soveraignity there subjection is due and as it 's due to him alone so we must submit freely and willingly to him alone as our Supreme Lord both commanding and as a Father correcting and sanctifyng his correction unto our good 3. For we must be subject unto him that we may live To live is not only to enjoy a physical Life
he doth this not like our earthly Fathers in an arbitrary way but after a certain Rule of perfect Wisdom and that for our good that we may be more holy and reap the peaceable fruit of Righteousness let us endure it with Patience and patiently continue to the End § 12. After this Discourse the Exhortation to the main Duty is expressed and repeated in these words Ver. 12. Wherefore lift up the Hands which hang down and the feeble Knees Ver. 13. And make strait Paths for your feet lest that which is lame be turned out of the way but let it rather be heaeled THis Text might be considered as a Conclusion drawn from the former Discourse or inferred from the last words of Ver. 13. If from the former then take it in this manner If Suffering be God's Chastening issuing from Love ordered in Wisdom ending in our greater good then we must lift up the hands which hang down c. If from the latter then the Argument is drawn from the ill Consequence of our fainting Remissness we shall like that which is lame be turned out ●f the way In the words themselvs we have 1. A Duty 2. The Reason why it should be performed 1. The Duty is set forth in Metaphorical terms and the Similitudes seem to be taken 1. From Wrastlers 2. From such as run in a Race The former when once they begin to faint hang down their hands and cannot lift them up the latter when they are wearied become feeble in their knees cannot run strait on but turn or are turned out of the way These things are translated unto the Soul It implies that these Hebrews through neglect of their heavenly vertues and other means of Perseverance and Prayer unto God began to faint and lag in their heavenly Course They were wearied much and vexed with the Opposition of their unbelieving Brethren reproaching persecuting threatning them and spoiling them of their Goods and began to waver in their Profession They perhaps entertained thoughts of falling away and debated within themselvs whether they should continue or no and to doubt and be unresolved was a degree of Apostacy This was in them a Sin and though the words are an Exhortation yet they imply a Reproof The Duty exhorted unto was a Reformation of this deficiency by a more serious consideration of so many and rare Examples the nature of Sufferings they were Chastisements the glorious Reward of Perseverance the fearful Punishment of Apostacy And by this consideration with Prayer for strength they ought to encourage themselvs rouze up their drowzy Spirits gird up the Loyns of their minds and resolve to go on and finish their Race They must not through sloth love of Ease of their Estates of Liberty of their Lives now begin to turn back and so lose the benefit of their former Labours and Sufferings By this we understand our frailty and how ready we are to give back in the way to eternal Glory if God do desert us yet this is our Comfort that he will not deny to support us except we give him Cause by our negligence and grievous Sins 2. The Reason why we should often renew and raise up those Graces which are left in us is lest we prove lame and so be turned out of the way To be lame is to lose our spiritual strength and vigour of heavenly motion and this is our Sin because we diminish it by not using that Power which God hath given us And the Punishment of this Sin is to turn us out of the way and reject us for God may in this Case justly withdraw his sanctifying Power and condemn us as unworthy of that eternal glorious Reward to which he called us Yet this turning out may be considered either as a Punishment and Judgment from God or as a Sin of Man who willingly turns out of the way and makes himself guilty of Apostacy This Lameness may be cured for some times it is not a mortal and desperate Disease but such as by Discipline of the Church and Penitency of the Party may be healed Therefore it 's added But let it rather be healed This seems to point at Ecclesiastical Censures whereby Persons that begin to fall away are excommunicated and delivered up to Satan and so left in a desperate Case yet the Apostle doth advise that where there is any hope of Recovery the Church should endeavour to make them penitent and so to absolve and restore them upon Repentance and not leave them to perish Thus the ancient Church dealt with those who were called Lapsi And according to this sense to turn out of the way is to censure and excommunicate and to heal is to restore them made penitent § 13. Though Perseverance both in Faith and the Profession thereof be the principal D●ty yet Faith cannot be without other vertues as Peace and Holiness therefore he adds Ver. 14. Follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see God THe reason of this Exhortation to these two Duties of Peace and Holiness may be this 1. Because without these our Profession is but Hypocrisy 2. These beautify and grace Christian Religion much and demonstrate our sincerity 3. By these we so demean our selves that our very Adversaries can have no just occasion to persecute us 4. If we follow peace with all men we shall avoid many Troubles which unadvised Zelots busy-Bodies turbulent and quarrelsom Persons bring upon themselves other good Christians If we follow holiness we shall give no scandal unto others please God and prepare our selves for Heaven the vision and fruition beautifical which will be our full hapiness So that there was special reason for to add these Exhortations But to consider the words in themselves we find in them a two-fold Duty 1. Of peace with Men. 2. Of holiness towards God 1. We must follow peace with all men where we must consider 1. What peace is 2. The parties with whom we must have peace 3. The following of this peace 1. Peace in this place is not agreement with every one in opinion affection practise for many have false opinions corruptions in affections and their practise is ungodly But peace is a virtue whereby we live quietly It issues from the loving of our Neighbour as our selves It 's opposed to a turbulent disposition of the Soul and all those qualities motions passions which cause dissension It cannot be without humility meekness patience forbearance kindness It so orders all words and actions that they tend to preserve concord and it gives no just cause of offence to any It labours to make up Breaches and reconcile Differences It 's an excellent virtue and is hardly separable from any Duty of the second Table therefore some have thought that by Peace in this place is signified the observation of all the Duties of that part of the moral Law which prescribes the duty of man to man 2. The parties with whom we must have peace are all
this is the Case in particular The Law and the Gospel are inconsistent so is the Legal and Evangelical Administration and they cannot stand in force together therefore there is a necessity of nulling the one because otherwise the other cannot be established Now though the Law was suitable to former times of Minb●ity and Imperfection yet being imperfect and full of shadows there was great Reason it should be removed when the Substance of those shadows and that which was far more perfect was exhibited and there was a necessity of the removal of the former that way might be made for the latter as far more excellent This was the Reason why the Apostles especially Paul did labour so much not only to prove the Imperfection but to endeavour the Abolition of the Law after the Gospel was revealed from Heaven 4. This Removal of the Law to bring in the Gospel and a more perfect Administration was signified by that word of the Propher Yet once more For if God had said I will again shake Earth and Heaven and omitted the word once more then there had been in that Promise no ground of the Apostle's Inference to prove the stability and immutability of the Gospel But seeing the word yet once more is added his Inference was firm and valid and the Apostle knew that God's meaning was not basely this I will once more but I will once and no more and never again shake Heaven and Earth For from the Expression thus understood it doth necessarily follow that if in this one shaking he 〈◊〉 any thing that must needs stand firm for ever because there shall be no 〈◊〉 no Alteration in matter of Religion to the World's End This is a strong place against M●●●-nens and the cursed Innovators of all times § 26. Thus far the Doctrine concerning the Gospel and the Immutability of Christ's Kingdom hath been cleared the Application of it to these Hebrews follows Ver. 28. Wherefore we receiving a Kingdom which cannot be moved let ●● have Grace whereby we may serve God 〈◊〉 with reverence and godly fear Ver. 29. For our God is a consuming Fire THE illative Particle Wherefore doth inform us that these words follow upon the former as a Conclusion from the Premisses yet the Conclusion is not in the first words but those that follow If we consider the words in themselves we have 1. A Doctrine in the first words 2. An Use in those which follow The Use is an Exhortation wherein we may observe 1. The Duty exhorted unto which is To have Grace to serve God 2. The manner how we must serve God and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and ●●dy fear 3. The Reason Because our God is a consuming Fire The Doctrine is this Paul and thsee Hebrews received a Kingdom which could not be moved and it 's first to be explained and the difficulty lies in this phrase of receiving a Kingdom For 1. There is a Kingdom 2. This Kingdom cannot be moved 3. They received it 1. There are many temporal Kingdoms but this is Spiritual and Divine The King is God the Administratour-General is Christ who in the administration of this Kingdom is so one with God that he is King as he is the Subjects believing Saints the rules of Goverment are the Doctrines of the Gospel the priviledges and benefits of this Kingdom are the blessings of Grace and Glory 2. This Kingdom cannot be moved or is not movable or alterable because Prince People Laws and Administration continue for ever The present manner of Administration shall not determine till God be all in all That it cannot be moved but remains stable you have heard before 3. They had received this Kingdom A Kingdom may be received either by a Prince to Govern it or by Subjects to be Governed the former is not the latter is intended For Subjects to receive a Kingdom may be either a Duty or a Benefit as a Duty it is to submit unto the Power and Laws of the Soveraign as a Benefit it is to be admitted as a Subject to enjoy the priviledges peace and happiness of the Kingdom Both may be here meant and the benefit presupposing the Duty fully and finally performed may be and shall be that we shall be Kings and Priests and reign with Christ for ever For the eminent and excellent estate of Glory following upon a final Victory over all Enemies even Death it self subdued is said to be a Kingdom This expression seems to be taken from that of the Prophet But the Saints of the most High shall take or receive the Kingdom and shall possesse the Kingdom for ever even for ever and ever Dan. 7. 18. The reason why here is mention of a Kingdom is because the former Discourse from ver 22. to this Text is concerning the excellent administration of Christ's Kingdom unto which God by his Grace and Calling upon their receiving of the Gospel had translated and admitted them § 27. This is the Doctrine the Exhortation followeth Where 1. The Duty is to have Grace to serve God Where we may observe 1. Grace 2. The having of this Grace 3. The having it to serve God 1. By Grace may be meant the Doctrine of Grace which is the Gospel so called Tit. 2. 11. 2. Faith and Belief 3. The profession of this Faith 4. The sanetifying power of the Spirit which all true Believers and Professors have and this presupposeth all the former or infolds them 2. To have this Grace is to have this sanctifying power and to hold it keep it exercise it more and more And though some Coples read it Indicatively we have yet most read it let us have that is let us hold it 3. The end why we must have and hold it is that we may serve God This implies that God is the Soveraign in this Kingdom and we are the Subjects and our duty is continually to serve our Lord and King To serve him is not only with all humility to adore his excellent Majesty but also sincerely wholly and absolutely to submit unto his power and obey his Laws This implies 1. That in this Kingdom we are not our own Masters or at liberty to do what we would But God is our Master and we are bound to obedience by his Laws 2. That without the Grace of God continued and held fast we cannot serve our God constantly without Grace we cannot serve him without Grace held fast we cannot serve him to the end 2. The manner how we must serve God is to serve him acceptably with reverence and goldly fear In general our Service must be acceptable in particular it must be reverence and godly fear which render it pleasing to God and without which it cannot be accepted Men may fear God that is perform some religious Service to God and yet it will not prove acceptable For some serve God and not with a pure and sanctified heart some serve God in outward Circumstantials and Rituals not in Substantials some serve
to our Christian Brethren and now the Apostle exhorts to Duties of another kind as first of Chastity Ver. 4. Marriage is honourable in all and the Bed undefiled but Wheremongers and Adulterers God will judg VVHere we have 1. A Duty which is Chastity and Fidelity in Marriage 2. The Reason why we should be chaste and that is because Whoremongers and Adulterers God will judg 1. The Duty is expressed in most Copies and Translations Indicatively not Imperatively for it 's not said Let Marriage be honourable in all c. but It is honourable Yet this is not material for suppose the Indicative-Reading should be true yet a Duty is plainly implied for 1. The Texts both antecedent and consequent are hortative to Duties 2. That Marriage should be honourable and the Bed be undefiled is certainly a Duty and an Exhortation thereunto is implied 3. The Reason added doth prove as much The Duty exhorted unto is Chastity and Chastity is two-fold first of single then of married Persons This is of married Persons who according to God's Constitution and their own Contract give their Bodies one unto another and are bound to be faithful And this Fidelity is to preserve the honour of Marriage which they do whilest they keep the Marriage-Bed undefiled When it 's said Marriage is honourable and the Bed undefiled the meaning is Marriage ought to be honourable and the Bed ought to be undefiled Not only Adultery but also Fornication and all Uncleanness dishonour the Body and this is evident from these words of the Apostle For this is the Will of God even your Sanctification that you should abstain from Fornication That every one of you should know how to possess his Vesselin Sanctification and Honour 1 Thess. 4. 3 4. Where we may observe that by Vessel according to the Hebrew is meant the Body 3. That by Sanctification in that ●lice is understood Chastity as opposed to the Lust of Concupiscence 3. That this Sanctification is the Honour of the Body therefore when it 's said That he that commi●●eth Fornication sinneth against his own Body 1 Cor. 6. 18. the meaning is He dishonoureth his own Body As Marriage must be honourable so the Bed must be undefiled which latter words explain the former for then is Marriage honourable when the Marriage-Bed is kept undefiled For by Bed is meant the Marriage-Bed and the Bodies of the Parties married to be undefiled is not to be polluted by Adultery And if it be it 's dishonoured if it be not then the Honour of it is preserved So that the sense of the whole is this Let married Persons be faithful one unto another and take heed of dishonouring their Bodies by Adultery To signify this Duty to be general and to bind all such as are Man and Wife he faith Marriage is and by God's Institution ought to be honourable in all that is in all married Persons both Man and Wife whilest they are Man and Wife And as it ought to be honourable so it ought to be undefiled in all In these words Whoredom and Adultery are prohibited and ehorted from This Chastity is the Duty of Christians more than of other Persons because they know God's Institution and their Bodies are the Members of Christ and the Temples of the Holy Ghost 2. The Reason and Motive is because Whore-●ougers and Adulterers who dishonour their Bodies and defile the Marriage-Bed God will Judge that is punish So that the Dissuasive is à Poena from the Punishment which God will certainly inflict and they shall certainly suffer if they be not chaste but prove guilty of Adultery This Punishment is not only eternal after this Life if they repent not but also temporal even in this Life though they may repeht This is evident in David who though he repented yet suffered grievously for his Adultery More of Marriage Chastity Adultery may be read in my Th●c-Politica § 5 The fifth Duty pressed upon them followeth Ver. 5. Let your Conversation be without Covetousness and be content with such things as ye have For He hath said I will never leave thee nor for sake thee Ver. 6. So that we may boldly say The Lord is my Helper I will not fear what Man shall do unto me IN these words we must consider 1. The Duty 2. The Reason why we should perform it The Duty is 1. Negative Be not covetous 2. Astirmative Be contented For if we look at the Law and so consider the words they are 1. A Prohibition 2. A Precept If we look upon the Performance of the Duty as expressed by the Author we have 1. A Dehortation 2. An Exhortation The Dehortation is this Let your Conversation be without Covetousness The meaning whereof in brief is Be not cove●ou● The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is turned by our English Translators Conversation by the Viugar and Vatablus Mores Manners by the Syriack and Arabick Mens Animus the Mind All these may be easily reconciled for Conversation signifies humane Actions as they are habitually morally-good or evil these as Habits are termed by the Moralists Mores Manners or Customs as vertuous or vicious And because the Principle of these Actions are the Mind as taken for the Understanding and the Will therefore the word may be turned mind or affection for so the word in Greek doth sometime signify Some do understand by the Original word the means whereby we seek these earthly things and the manner how we use spare or spend them And this sense differs not much from the former This Duty doth presuppose 1. A right Judgment of these worldly Goods in respect of themselves the end for which they are given the manner how they are justly acquired used expended 2. A right disposition of the heart agreeable to this Judgment These things presupposed we may the better inquire into the nature of Covetousness which is defined by many to be An immoderate love and desire of these earthly Goods The object and matter therefore in general is these earthly Goods whether corporeal movable or immovable or incorporeal according to the distinction of the civil Law These are considered as conducing to the preservation and continuance of man's Life therefore called our Livelyhood The principal things as most necessary and more immediately preserving Life are Food and Raimen● And because Mony answers in value and the esteem of men all those things which may be called Goods and by It upon exchange they may be purchased and acquited therefore covetousness is called sometimes the love of many 1 Tim. 6. 10. And here our Conversation must be free from the love of mony so the Original is The proper act of Covetousness is in the heart and mind of man conceiving and judging of these things as more necessary or excellent then they are which is a kind of overvaluing and setting too high a price on them 2. Affecting loving and desiring them immoderately above the worth of them and that measure which God hath
for Christ's sake can have any Right to eat of this Altar and Sacrifice of Christ so as to be saved by it § 13. Therefore the Apostle draws a practical Conclusion from the former words in this manner Ver. 13. Let us go forth therefore unto him without the Camp bearing his Reproach Ver. 14. For here we have no continuing City but we seek one to come THis Text is an Exhortation and therein two things are observable 1. The Duty exhorted unto 2. The Reason whereupon it 's urged 1. The Duty is two-fold 1. We must go forth to him 2. We must bear his Reproach 1. We must come forth of the Camp or City to him 1. The Camp or City is Judaism and all erroneous Sects and also the World and men of the World we must separate from all things inconsistent with the Truth and Christ. This is not expressed but implied 2. Out of this Camp or City we must come forth and that we do when we renounce all Errours in Religion and all earthly Affections Our Opinions and Errours in Religion are so many Idols setup in our Souls and are contrary to the Truth of the Gospel and the things of the World which we so much affect and dearly love are all of us by Nature contrary to the Love of Christ We have something in our hearts which keeps us from our God till we be truly converted 3. To come forth to Christ therefore is to be rightly informed and to believe the saving Truth of Christ and upon this right Information to love him above all as far more necessary excellent and beneficial than any thing than all things else This is the same with denying ourselvs forsaking all for his sake hating Father Mother Wife Children Brethren Sisters and Life itself out of love to him and to forsake all for his sake For lay all of these with all the Kingdoms and rarest Contents of the World together on oneside and Christ on the other they are all base uncertain vain empty things Dross and Dung and nothing to Christ who is infinitely precious and incomparably more excellent than all and more beneficial to a poor guilty Sinner To come forth to him is not to change the Place but our Hearts it 's a Motion not of the Body but the Soul and if we once knew the Beauty of Christ and had tasted of his Sweetness we should be ravished with him and all the World could not keep us from him In him alone true Happiness is to be found 2. The second part of the Duty is to bear his Reproach Here is Reproach his Reproach the bearing of his Reproach In this the Author alludes unto the bearing of the Cross which was the greatest Shame and Disgrace any man could be put unto To endure Shame and Disgrace and suffer in our Reputation Credit Honour and good Name is a very grievous Evil and few can endure it and some can better suffer Death than Ignominy and Disgrace The Cross was not only a matter of Reproach but of grievous pain and torment and was the Epitome of all positive Evils and therefore by Reproach is signified all kind of afflictions and miseries which we may suffer from men or may be obnoxious unto in this Life Yet this Reproach and this Cross here meant must be his Reproach his Cross. If we suffer Punishment for our own Crime and through our own Folly then it 's not Christ's Cross Simon of Cyrene did not bear his own but Christ's Cross and followed him This is a Reproach and Cross laid upon us for his sake because we profess his Truth obey his Laws oppose Sin and his Enemies refuse to comply with the World in any Sin renounce all Errours Idolatry Superstition and wicked Customs of the World and all this out of Love to Christ. To bear this Cross is not meerly to suffer any wayes but to suffer the worst Man can do unto us with Patience with Constancy with Joy and to think our selve● happy and much honoured that we are counted worthy to suffer for so great a Saviour ●nd in so noble a Cause This requires a divine Faith well grounded upon the Word and Promises of God and a special Assistance of the d●vine Spirit for these will strengthen our hearts and make us willing to suffer any thing before we offend our God and lose our Saviour § 13. The words of the former Verse considered as a Doctrine or Proposition are a Conclusion deducible from antecedent Premisses but as containing a Duty to be performed they are inferred from the 14. Ver. where we have a Reason given us why we should come forth to Christ and it is two-fold 1. Because we have here no abiding City 2. Because we seek one to come 1. We have no abiding City By City understand two things 1. A place fit for comfortable and safe habitation 2. An Estate answerable unto this Habitation whereby we may live happily in this place For neither can an Estate without a place nor a place without an Estate make our condition good and such as we desire An abiding City is a place of eternal Rest and Safety which in it self stands firm for ever and the Inhabitants shall never remove or be dispossessed As it is such a Place so it 's an Estate not only of all necessaries but of all things delectable and desirable with plenty of them sufficient to make a man fully happy and as these things in themselvs so the Enjoyment of them is everlasting Yet here that is in this life on Earth and under Heaven there is no such City no such Place no such Estate And as it is not here so we have it not for nothing can be had or enjoyed where it is not We may have many great and glorious things on Earth for here are goodly Estates Kingdoms and vast Empires strong and beautiful Cities Towns and Habitations and some have them yet these are not abiding in themselvs nor in the Possession of the Owners Experience of all times besides the Word of God doth teach us this certain Truth Therefore we knowing that there is no such City here seek no such thing here because no such thing can be had here 2. But we seek one to come That is though there be no such thing here neither have we any such City on Earth yet there is such a City though not here yet else-where though not present yet to come and we seek it There is one a Place of everlasting Rest and firm Mansions in our Father's House and a glorious Estate of full and perfect Happiness far above the Conceit and Imagination of mortal men and the Possession both of the Place and Estate shall be everlasting as all the Inhabitants and Owners of this City shall live for ever Yet it 's to come which signifies that no such thing is here neither can it be enjoyed in this present mortal life the full and perfect Fruition is reserved for Heaven
and the time of Resurrection and Immortality And we seek it this implies 1. That we believe there is such an Estate and that upon sure Ground for God hath said so 2. That we knowing the Excellency and Glory of it do much desire and long for it as that which once possessed will make us fully and for ever blessed 3. That we have some hope of the attainment and the same certain as being grounded upon the Promise of God confirmed to us by an Oath and besides we have a present Title unto it and the first fruits thereof even in this Vale of Tears This Belief this Hope this Title these first-Fruits set us on seeking of this City and all our Life-time is nothing else but a Seeking and this is our great business all our other Works and Labours are but upon the by or subordinate to this This Seeking is the Exercise of our u●most Power with greatest diligence in the Use of those means God hath ordained for the attaining of that blessed Condition which was prepared from the beginning but to be fully enjoyed in the End of the World The outward means are Word and Sacraments the inward Knowledg Repentance Faith and new Obedience for by the Use of the outward and Improvement of the inward means we are made capable of Heaven The words being th●s explained let us consider the force of the Reasons and Motives therein contained which are two 1. We have no abiding City 2. We seek one to come 1. If we have nothing certain and constant here Why should we be willing to abide here where we have no abiding nor enjoy any thing that is abiding and permanent All things are Vanity of Vanities even most vain flitting and empty of all solid Goodness Every thing under Heaven though never so excellent and lasting is subject to waste and consumption yea the Heavens and the Earth shall perish and wax old and God shall change them as a Garment and as a Vesture shall they be changed And as all things are mutable and perishing in themselvs so our Possession of them is uncertain and how many wayes may we be dispossessed of them And shall it trouble us to part with that which one day and we know not how soon must be taken from us and to leave that place which suddenly must be left For at the time of death if not sooner shall we be stript of all take our leave with dearest Friends and all things and persons though never so near and dear unto us must be left behind us and then we must remove hence and be no more seen And why should the thoughts of bearing his Reproach torment our minds For Christ hath born it before us and the burden is but leight and shall not ly long upon our backs for no Sufferings can extend beyond this mortal Life 2. The second Reason is very effectual for we have an abiding City to come Christ as you heard for the joy that was set before him endured the Cross and despised the Shame and why should not we follow him and do as he hath done We can lose nothing of much value but for what we lose we shall receive many things incomparably better for Treasure on Earth Treasure in Heaven for a Mortal Life an Immortal for uncertain and fading things certain and everlasting for a removable Tabernacle an everlasting Temple for a Wilderness an ever-blessed Canaan And every step of our Remove out of this World is but an Approach unto our abiding City where will be no Reproach no Cross no Suffering but perpetual Ease Peace Safety Happiness And if we had any effectuall Faith and lively Hope of these eternal Mansions and this glorious Estate how easy were it for us even with Joy to go out of this Camp this City to our Saviour bearing his Reproach For want of Consideration we have no lively clear Apprehension no firm Belief and effectual Hope of this heavenly City Some press this Duty upon other Reasons implied in the former words namely because 1. We shall be Partakers of the Sacrifice of Christ. 2. We are sanctified by his Blood 3. He went out of the City first carrying his Cross and gave us an Example Yet these may inferr and prove this to be a Duty though they be not so powerful Motives stirring up to Performance § 14. The next Duty we are exhorted unto we find Ver. 15. By him therefore let us offer the Sacrifice of Praise to God continually that is the fruit of our Lips confessing unto his Name LET us consider 1. The Context 2. The Text. 1. The Context and Connexion with the former words is implied in the Illative Therefore which usually inferrs a Conclusion from some Premisses Antecedent and most Expositors do take this Text to be a Conclusion but what the Premisses be they do not agree 1. Some think they referr to Ver. 10. We have an Altar though not Mosaical and Levitical therefore let us make use of it and offer upon it some Moral and Spiritual not Carnal Sacrifice Others inferr it from Ver. 12. where it 's said We are sanctified by Christ's Blood therefore let us offer c. For the Priests were first sanctified and consecrated by Blood before they could minister and Sacrifice Others make it part of the formet Duty Ver. 13. and urged upon Motives in the 14th and in this manner Seeing we have no abiding City here but seek one to come which is purchased by Christ's Blood let us not only go forth to him bearing his Reproach but let us also do this with Praise and Thanksgiving in that we are counted worthy to suffer for him and with him This seems to agree with that of the Apostle Coloss. 1. 11 12. where Prayer is made for strength that they may be able to suffer with Patience long-Suffering and Joyfulness giving thanks that they were made fit to have part of the Inheritance of the Saints in Light And it 's true that this Conclusion may be inferred from these severally or from all jointly in this manner That seeing we have an Altar an High-Priest are sanctified by his Blood and made capable of an abiding City to come therefore let us offer and offer this Sacrifice of Praise and that by him Yet the Cónjunction thereforē may be expletive here as sometimes it is and the words have no Reference to the former but be a new Exhortation distinct from the former and added unto them 2. The Text in it self is an Exhortation and therein we may observe 1. The Duty exhorted unto which is to offer the Sacrifice of Praise and Thanksgiving 2. The Directions how it must be offered and they are these It must be offered 1. By Christ. 2. To God 3. Continually 4. To his Name Yet the Directions concerning the manner are properly two It must be offered 1. By Christ. 2. Continually If we reduce these into divine Axioms or Propositions we may digest them thus 1. There
men For as we must love all men even Strangers Enemies and Persecutors so we must have peace with all yet so far as this concord agrees with the Laws of God For we must agree with no person in that which is evill and we must have a special care to agree with the best If we differ from any man in that which is lawful we offend This peace presupposeth society and is the bond that knits together multitudes 3. We must follow peace as one that followeth and pursueth some thing running from him for to take it it 's the same with that Exhortation Seek peace and pursue it Psal. 34. 14. The phrase implies that it is a very difficult thing to have peace with a few much more with all For we find that true That when we are for Peace and speak for it most men are for War Psal. 120. 7. The means whereby we may lay hold of it according to the advice of the Psalmist is to eschew Evil and do Good to keep our Tongues from Evil and our Lips from speaking Guil. For we must not comply with any person in his Errours or his Sin nor neglect to reprove him or oppose him in his iniquity for our own quiet Yet to be just and merciful and kind is a good and lawful means and very effectual to obtain peace And in this way we must do what we can and use all diligence and if the issues answer not our defires and endeavours we have done our Duty and discharged our Conscience God doth not bind us to impossibilities For the Command is not absolute but given with this Proviso If it be possible as much as in you lieth live peaceably with all men Rom. 12. 18. The sum of all is this We must give no just occasion or cause of difference to any person but use all lawful wayes and just means to procure peace Secondly We must follow holiness c. where we have 1. The Duty which is holiness 2. The Reason why we should perform it and that is because without it no man shall see the Lord. Some think these words are added to limit and direct our pursuance of peace wherein we must be so innocent as not to offend our God Some think holiness to be sincerity in the religious Service and Worship of our God For all Worship even of the true God is unholy if not performed with a sincere heart which being washed in the Blood of Christ and sanctified with the Spirit out of love to God hates Sin and endeavours to avoid it The principal subject of Holiness is the will and heart of man and it is a qualification whereby it 's conformed and made like to God It is the supernatural light beauty and purity of the Soul and purifies all acts and operations both inward and outward It 's that whereby we devote and consecrate our selves to God and have union and communion with him It 's opposed not only to profaness but hypocrisy and iniquity This holiness we must follow and pursue for it 's a difficult thing as to follow peace with all men so to be holy and the greater the difficulty the greater must be our care not only to be but to continue holy 2. The Reason hereof is because without it no man shall see God This implies 1. That God may be seen 2. That without holiness he cannot be seen 3. That by holiness this happiness may be obtained 4. That because without holiness it cannot and by holiness it may be obtained therefore we must follow holiness with God as we do peace with Man The three first are absolute 1. To see God as many understand it is immediately and clearly to behold God's Glory which is a priviledg reserved for Heaven Thus to see him is that which they call intuitive Knowledg and beatifical Vision from which unspeakable joyes and eternal delights do ever issue Yet it 's an Hebrew expression and signifies to enjoy therefore to see God is to enjoy him and have some special union and communion with him and derive some happiness from him either by Grace in this Life and Glory in the Life to come 2. This communion cannot be obtained without holiness For all Communion presupposeth union all union agreement and without holiness there can be no agreement no union no communion with God For he is holy and requires holiness in all them that draw near unto him for to worship him He is Light and in him is no Darkness that is He is pure and perfectly holy and as there is no fellowship of Light and Darkness so they who walk in Darkness and are polluted with Sin can have no fellowship with him So that without holiness we are not capable of fellowship with him 3. By holiness we may see him and enjoy him and according to the measure of our holiness is the measure of our enjoyment The more holy we are the nearer fellowship we have with him and derive more joy and comfort from him That by this holiness this sight and enjoyment may be obtained is evident from Christ's words Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God 4. Seeing there can be no vision or fruition of God without holiness therefore our Duty is to be holy as God is holy for that 's the Duty urged upon this ground The reason why it 's not said by holiness we may see God but without hol●ness we cannot see God is to signify the necessity of this purity as a means without which this blessed fruition cannot be attained Every one that knows how blessed a thing it is to be near unto our God and converse with him doth purify himself as he is pure 1 Joh. 3 3. And it highly concerns us all to keep our hearts right with God and this should be our chiefest work in this Life as we desire to have Communion with God here or see his Face in the Light of eternal Glory by Repentance and Faith in Christ's Blood and constant prayer for sanctification to cleanse our hearts from all impurity For the more pure we are the more capable we shall be of this great benefit and when we are once fully purified we shall be admitted into his glorious presence and enjoy him for evermore And this must be a certain principle That he that will be happy as God is must be holy as he is § 14. That they might continue holy the Apostles Exhortation is Ver. 15. Looking diligently lost any man fail of the Grace of God lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you and thereby many be defiled THese words may be understood either of private care and vigilancy of one over another or of publick Discipline and the end of both especially of the latter is to prevent Apostacy and Scandal And here are observable 1. Some Danger or Evil to be prevented 2. The prevention of the same The Evil seems in this Text to be Apostacy in the next Scandal If we