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

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own House and Family which is the Church to whom He dispenseth and distributeth all her mercies comforts and crosses with no lesse yea with infinitly greater care wisdom and foresight than any man doth care provide for and govern his own family So among other things He dispenseth and ordereth times and seasons for his Church as not only having fixed in his eternal counsel the general periods of the Churches time how long the Church should be in her state of infancy how long under the bondage of the Law and how long she shall continue in her more grown and perfect age under the Gospel but also the time and season for bestowing of particular mercies and inflicting corrections and chastisements for the word rendred dispensation signifieth the way of administrating the affairs of the family by the master thereof and the times come under those things which are administrated by God That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times 7. As every time chosen of God for bestowing of any mercy is the full and fittest time for his bestowing of it So the time of Christ's incarnation is in a speciall manner the full time and fulnesse of time and that not only because it was that full time which God had appointed in his decree and for reasons known to his own unsearchable wisdom condescended upon as the most fitting time for that great work but also because all the fore-going prophecies promises and types of the Messias were fulfilled in those times Luke 24. 27. and the will of God concerning man's salvation was then and not till then fully revealed Heb. 1. 2. for the Apostle calleth those times the fulnesse of times That in the dispensation of the fulness of times 8. Though the benefits purchased by Christ and particularly that of effectuall calling and gathering together unto God those whom sin did separate from Him be intended for and accordingly doth light only upon few Mat. 7. 14. Yet the Gospel and Promise by which Christ and the benefits purchased by Him are revealed is drawn up in the most comprehensive expressions And this of purpose that none may hereby be excluded from laying hold upon that gracious offer but such as do exclude themselves Joh. 5. 40. for saith he That he might gather together in one all things both which are in heaven and which are on earth by which broad expressions are meaned only the Elect for there is an universality and world even of those 2 Cor. 5. 19. and not all the creatures not Devils or Reprobates Joh. 17. 9. yea to speak properly not yet the elect Angels who being never separated from God by sin cannot be gathered to him by Christ though they may improperly and in some respects be said to be so to wit because of those advantages which they have by Christ as that they are now most perfectly and inseparably united with God without hazard of being separated from Him Mat. 18. 10. and have attained the knowledge of that wonderfull plot of Man's Salvation through Jesus Christ which was a mysterie even to them Eph. 3. 10. and a greater measure of joy than formerly they had upon Christ's converting and saving of lost sinners Luke 15. 7 10. Doct. 9 All who belong to God's purpose of Election and who are or shall be gathered together in Christ are either in heaven or earth Paul knew no purgatory or third place for the souls of the Elect to go unto after death to endure the temporal punishment due to their sin for he divideth those all things which were to be gathered into things in heaven and things on earth 10. There is an union betwixt the Saints departed now in heaven and those who are yet alive upon the earth so as they make up one mystical body under one head Christ to whom the Saints departed are united though not by faith 1 Cor. 13. 10. yet by sense as we are united to Him by faith and as they are united to Christ so also one to another and to us by love for charity never faileth 1 Cor. 13. 8. from which union there floweth a communion betwixt them and us whereby they do pray for the Church in general Rev. 6. 10. though not for the particular conditions and persons of men upon earth whereof they are ignorant Isa. 63. 16. and the Godly upon earth do in heart and affection converse with them in heaven Philip. 3. 20. desiring continually to be dissolved and to be with Christ Philip. 1. 23. though they are not to pray unto them or give them religious worship Rev. 19. 10. for saith he That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times he might gather together in one things in heaven and things on earth 11. Jesus Christ is that person in and by whom we are gathered together unto God by faith in Him and to the Angels and also among our selves by the grace of love He having united the two dissentient parties God and man in His own Person Mat. 1. -23. and having satisfied justice for that wrong which caused the rent Isa. 53. 5. and working in us by His Spirit those graces of faith and love whereby we are made one with God and among our selves Act. 5. 31. and having by His death taken away that wall of partition and enimity which was betwixt Jew and Gentile Eph. 2. 14 15 16. it being also necessary that we be in Him by faith before we be united to God through Him for the Apostle is so much delighted with this Truth himself and would so gladly have it well known believed by others that he doth inculcate it twice in this one vers That he might gather together all things in Christ and again even in Him Vers. 11. In whom also we have obtained an inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of Him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will 12. That we should be to the praise of his glory who first trusted in Christ. THe Apostle having hitherto spoken of all the Elect in general doth now make application of the former doctrine first to the Jews and next to the Gentiles and hereby he doth yet further and thirdly inforce the fore-mentioned scope while he sheweth in effect that the prerogative of the Jews above the Gentiles made not grace the lesse free to them and that nothing which the Gentiles could pretend to beyond the Jews made it lesse free to them either And first he applyeth it unto the Jews whereof Paul was one and therefore he speaketh of them in the first person We. And first he sheweth that they to wit Believers among them as is explained ver -12. had in Christ and by vertue of His merit and intercession obtained an inheritance to wit of Heaven and Glory Col. 1. 12. and by consequence all the fore-mentioned blessings which lead to it and this not from their own merit or free choice but freely and as it were by lot wherein least of man is seen
and Body as a Sacrifice by death upon the Crosse. The wrong was infinit Gen. 39. 9. and so must the price be even no lesse than the Bloud of God Act. 20. 28. Who gave himself for our sons 5. Such was the desire which Jesus Christ had to the salvation of lost sinners Prov. 8. 31. such was His care to perform what He had undertaken to the Father and what was fore-told of Him in Scripture Psal. 40. 7 8. that willingly and of His own accord without any constraint except that of love Joh. 15. 13. He did offer up himself a Sacrifice to satisfie provoked justice for He gave himself for our sins saith Paul 6. They for whom Christ did give Himself upon the Crosse are also delivered by Him from this present evil world which Christ doth not by taking them presently out of this world by death or otherwise Joh. 17. 15. But first by renewing their natures and so separating them from the condition of unregenerate men who are called the world 1 Joh. 15. 19. And secondly by guarding them against those baits and snares of sinfull temptations which are mainly prevalent in the men of this world 1 Joh. 2. 16. Thirdly by defending them so far as He seeth conducing for His own glory Psal. 76. 10. and their good Psal. 84. 11. from the malicious cruelty of wicked men of this world Psal. 105. 14. And lastly by taking them at the close of their time 2 Cor. 5. 1. from Earth to Heaven that they may be for ever with Himself Joh. 14. 3. for He gave himself that He might deliver us from this present world Doct. 7. So much do wickednesse and wicked men abound in the world Gen. 6. 5. so many are the snares and temptations to sin and wickednesse which are in it 1 Joh. 2. 16. so many also are the crosses and calamities which godly men may resolve to meet with while they are in the world Psal. 34. 19. that though the world simply in it self and as it speaketh our duration and abode in this life all the dayes of our appointed time be not evil but distinguished from evil Joh. 17. 15. Yet for those causes and in those respects the present world is an evil world for so it is here called 8. That any of lost mankind in whom by nature sin doth reign should have their natures renewed the power of sin in them mortified and so themselves delivered from this present evil world it was necessary that Christ should offer up Himself for as life eternal so also God's Image and Holinesse was forfeited by Adam's fall unto all his posterity 1 Cor. 15. 21. and so behoved to be purchased by Christ's death before ever we could attain unto it Heb. 9. 14. for saith the Apostle He gave himself that we might be delivered from this present evil world 9. This evil world wherein so much wickednesse so much misery and so many wicked men abound is but present not lasting transient not continuing it is hastening to its end Rom. 8. 19. and at last shall be consumed with fire 2 Pet. 3. 10. and a new World new Heavens and a new Earth are to succeed unto it wherein shall dwell righteousness 2 Pet. 3. 13. for he calleth this a present world importing that there is another to come 10. That Jesus Christ did offer up Himself in satisfaction to provoked Justice for the sins of the Elect was a thing decreed and appointed by the Father which as it speaketh the Fathers unspeakable love unto lost sinners Joh. 3. 16. so it sheweth the ground whereupon the satisfaction given by Christ is accepted for those who by faith lay hold on Him Joh. 6. 39 40. it was so transacted betwixt the Father and the Son even that He should give himself for our sins according to the will of God to wit the Father for when God is opposed to Christ then God signifieth the Father Yet so as the other two Persons of the Godhead are not excluded as is noted upon Ver. 1. Doct. 6. 11. By reason of this satisfaction given by Jesus Christ to provoked justice for our sins God who was before a consuming fire to sinners Heb. 12. 29. a strict sin-pursuing Judge Exod. 34. 7. becometh now our Father for justice being satisfied and that satisfaction laid hold upon by faith Rom. 5. 1. the enimity ceaseth and we become children yea heirs and joynt-heirs with Christ having received the Spirit of adoption whereby we cry Abba Father Rom. 8. 15 16 17. This is imported while it is said According to the will of God and our Father Vers. 5. To whom be glory for ever and ever Amen HEre is the close of the Salutation in which by holding forth his own practice for an example he comprehendeth the duty of the Redeemed they are to ascribe lasting glory and praise to God the Father for His good-will to this work of our Redemption by Jesus Christ. Doct. 1. As God in this great work of our Redemption by Jesus Christ hath made the glory of almost all His Attributes especially of His Justice as to Christ Rom. 8. 32. of His Mercy as to us Eph. 1. 7. and consequently of His infinit Wisdom 1 Tim. 1. 17. to kyth and shine forth So it ' is the duty of the Redeemed and such a duty as useth willingly to flow from the very making mention of that so excellent a Work in a heart duely affected with the worth thereof even to acknowledge that glory of His which is manifested therein and to wish that His glory may be set forth more and more both by our selves and others and this not only by speaking to the commendation of His Glory and Greatnesse Psal. 145. 5 6. but by making our whole life and conversation to be nothing else but a testimony of our thankfulnesse to Him 2 Cor. 5. 15. for the Apostle having mentioned that great Work ascribeth glory to God as God's due and his own duty To whom be glory 2. This duty of ascribing glory to God for the great and excellent work of our Redemption is such that it can never be sufficiently discharged there is no lesse required than a succession of Ages to Ages yea and Eternities leisure to ascribe glory to God for so much is imported while he saith To whom be Glory for ever and ever 3. The Glory of the Redeemer and of God who sent His Son to do that Work shall be the long-lasting and never-ending song of the Redeemed-ones through millions of imaginable ages even to all eternity so much doth the word rendered for ever and ever bear for it signifieth to ages of ages or innumerable ages 4. Our praise and thanksgiving to God must not be formal or verbal only Mat. 15. 8. but ought to be fervent and serious as proceeding from the most intimate affection of the heart Luk. 1. 46 47. signified by the word Amen that is Let it be so an earnest wish Vers. 6. I marvel that ye
as in the production of other natural effects for as the word is well rendred in beavenly places and better than in heavenly things so it seemeth the bestowing of those spiritual blessings is ascribed to God in heavenly places mainly because their original is only from Heaven and not from earth With all spiritual blessings in heavenly places Vers. 4. According as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love THe Apostle in the second place treateth of those spiritual blessings more particularly and so doth branch forth at large that reason of his thanksgiving to God presently mentioned and this in pursuance of the former scope which is to shew that salvation with all its causes do flow only from God's free grace in Christ that so the Ephesians might be firmly rooted and confirmed in the faith of this Truth And first he speaketh of those blessings as they were prepared and appointed for Believers in God's eternal decree of Election and Predestination to ver 7. In this verse he sheweth first That these spiritual blessings are bestowed upon Believers in time not by chance or rashly not from any worth in the receiver but according as God had fore-ordained in His decree of Election whereby before the foundation of the world that is from all eternity See Joh. 17. 24 He did choose some of mankind to eternal life Mat. 25. 34. passing by others and did choose them in Christ not as if Christ's death had moved God to love and elect for His electing love did move Him to give Christ for sinners Job 3. 16. Neither did He choose them in Christ as if they had been considered by God as already in Christ by faith and that because of their faith thus foreseen they had been elected by Him for so faith should not be a fruit flowing from election but a condition pre-required in the person to be elected which doth contradict this same very Scripture affirming that all spiritual blessings whereof faith is one do flow from and are bestowed according to the decree of Election He did therefore choose them in Christ as in Him whom He did in one and the self-same decree choose to be the Head of the Elect and chief foundation-stone of all that precious building His own House and Church 1 Pet. 2. 6. and by whom that glory and all things tending to that glory unto which He did choose them were to be purchased that so without doing injury to provoked justice they might be applied unto and actually bestowed upon the Elect for so is this purpose more clearly expressed 1 Thess. 5. 9. Secondly he illustrateth this decree of Election from the nearest end which God did design to be brought about by it even the sanctification of the persons elected whereby they should be rendred blameless before men and sincere and upright before God and that in love to wit in the duties of love to their neighbour flowing from love to God Mat. 22. 37 39 by which love as a touchstone the soundnesse of their sanctification should be tried Doct. 1. As God from all eternity hath chosen some of mankind and firmly decreed to bestow upon them eternal life Luke 12. 32. so there are others whom He decreed not to save but to condemn In which latter decree and much more in the former God hath done nothing unjustly seing as soveraign Lord over all the creatures He hath absolute dominion to dispose of them as He pleaseth Rom. 9. 19 20 21. and though sin in the reprobate was not the cause of God's decree of reprobation Rom. 9. 11 12 13. yet it is the cause of the reprobates condemnation so that his condemnation is just for saith he He hath chosen us which implyeth some were not chosen seing where all is taken there is no choice 2. Though no man except he who hath sinned that unpardonable sin Mat. 12. -32. can certainly know he is a reprobate there being no marks except that alone set down in Scripture by which reprobation can be certainly known Yet the Elect may attain to the assured knowledge of their own election seing God hath set down in Scripture the marks and evidences of election Joh. 6. 37. and hath promised to give His Spirit unto His own whereby they may infallibly discern these marks at least at sometimes in themselves 1 Cor. 2 12. for although the Apostle doth pronounce those Ephesians to be elected according to the judgement of charity only which believeth the best of others where nothing appears to the countrary 1 Cor. 13. 7. yet he behoved to have some undoubted perswasion of his own election before he could warrantably conclude himself to be elected seing not charity but certain knowledge is the principle from which a man ought to judge of himself 2 Cor. 13. 5. As He hath chosen us in Him saith he 3. Though the doctrine of Election and Reprobation be such as the unlearned and unstable are apt to wrest and stumble at to their own destruction 2 Pet. 3. 16. yet it is not wholly to be suppressed and locked up in silence from the Lord's People but would be soberly and prudently sometimes propounded unto them and that because of the many and great advantages which may be reaped not only by the doctrine of election such as the assurance of salvation Rom. 8. 29 30. strong incitements unto holinesse 2 Pet. 1. 10. and courage under crosses of all sorts Rom. 8. 38 39. but also by the doctrine of reprobation as contributing much to promove the salvation of the Elect by making them hate sin more Psal. 119. 119 120. and prize the kindnesse and good will of God more which made choice of them passing by others as good as they Rom. 9. 22 23. for the Apostle propoundeth this doctrine to the whole Church and insisteth upon it According as He hath chosen us in Him c. 4. As electing love in God is of an old standing even from all eternity and therefore most free there being nothing in the Elect before they had a being which might draw His love towards them So the Lord can and usually doth keep His purposes and thoughts for good to a people or person for a long time hid before He do discover them and make them known for He had set His love upon these believing Ephesians from all eternity which yet lay hid from the beginning of the world and did not kyth untill their effectual calling He hath chosen us before the foundation of the world 5. The Lord bestoweth spiritual blessings in time according to what He hath inacted in that His eternal decree of election before time So that every elect soul shall most undoubtedly enjoy those blessings And all of them even Faith it self not being excepted do flow from Election and are bestowed upon the Elect because they are elected unto them for saith he God hath blessed us with all spiritual
captivity captive and gave gifts unto men THe Apostle secondly in this first branch of the second generall argument for union from the diversity of gifts doth confirm from Psal. 68. 18. what he presently said that Christ is the author and bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures In which place of the Psalm David doth look through the ark a type and shadow to Christ the substance and in a prophetical way speaking of things to come as already past to point-out the certainty of their performance he doth foretell that Christ should in a triumphant manner ascend up on high or unto the heighest heavens See ver 10. and that at and by vertue of His ascension He should first lead captivity captive that is as he had upon the crosse foiled His many enemies and begun to triumph over them Col. 2. 15. So in His ascension He should continue the triumph evidently declaring that He had given a totall rout to all the spiritual enemies of His Church and Kingdom The expression used to set forth this purpose hath in it an allusion to conquerors who in their triumphing solemnities used to drive their captive enemies before their own triumphant chariots See this expression used in the same sense Judg. 5. 12. And secondly following the same allusion to triumphing conquerors who used to divide and scatter the spoil and other magnificent gifts among the applauding Citizens and Souldiers he sheweth that Christ should at and by vertue of His ascension pour-forth and distribute a large measure of gifts and graces upon His Church and severall members thereof which prophesie the Apostle citing the place with some variation of the words but keeping close to the sense and purpose doth shew was now fulfilled by Christ and consequently that Christ is the bestower of all graces and gifts with their different measures as was affirmed ver 7. Doct. 1. Ministers ought to hold forth nothing for truth or presse nothing as duty upon the Lords people but what they may confirm and prove to be such from the authority of God speaking in Scripture yea and it is their duty sometimes to bring forward their proof by making expresse mention of it for thus doth Paul confirm what he spake ver 7. by a testimony cited from the Psalms Wherefore he saith that is David or the Spirit of God speaking by David saith 2. As there was much of Christ revealed in the Scriptures of the Old Testament though but darkly and under a vail of types and ceremonial shadows So He was revealed and spoken-of in those Scriptures as true God and Jehovah for that which is said Psal. 68. was spoken of God even Jehovah as appeareth from ver 4. and all alongst which Paul sheweth here was fulfilled in Christ Wherefore be saith he hath ascended c. 3. Though the very words and phrase of Scripture are much to be thought of and closely adhered unto so far as is possible lest by our unnecessary casting of Scripture-purpose in an affected strain of words unknown to Scripture we lose at length the purpose with the words 2 Tim. 1. 13. Yet the sense and meaning of Scripture is mainly to be sought-after and kept in remembrance so that though we do not call to mind the very words of such a Scripture but only the sense meaning and purpose of it we may draw comfort or information from it or make use of it otherwayes for the Apostle here as oft elsewhere doth not so much adhere to the precise words as to the sense of that Scripture which he cites in so far as where in the Psalm it is said Thou hast ascended and received gifts for men to wit He received them to be given to men it is here When He ascended and gave gifts unto men 4. Our Lord Jesus Christ having finished the work which was given Him to do on earth Joh. 17. 4. did locally ascend unto heaven carrying His humane nature up thither Act. 1. 9. 10. that so He might be exalted in that glory which He had before the world was Joh. 17. 5. and take possession of heaven in our name Eph. 2. 6. and there prepare a place for us Joh. 14. 2. for saith he When He ascended up on high 5. As Christ did engage in a warfare on our behalf with many strong and potent enemies to wit the devil the world sin death and hell So He hath carried the day of all and gained an absolute compleat victory over all in so far as though the Godly must have a battel with these Eph. 6. 12. yet Christ the Head of Believers is now above the reach of hazard from enemies and consequently Believers in their Head yea and they themselves are above all hazard also in so far as all their enemies cannot mar their salvation Rom. 8. 35 c. Sin and Satan doth not reign in them Rom. 6. 12 14. death hath lost its sting towards them 1 Cor. 15. 55. and become a passage unto life Philip. 1. 23. for by this captivity which Christ led captive is meaned not those whom He delivered from captivity but whom He fought against brought in captivity and triumphed over even all His and our spiritual enemies He led captivity or a multitude of captives captive 6. The constant opposition which Satan raiseth against the Church and Kingdom of Christ doth not so much flow from any principle of hope in him to prevail in that wofull work as from his inveterate blinded malice against the salvation of sinners so that he cannot but malign and oppose it though he know he cannot mar it for at Christs ascension he could not but know that by all his malicious cruel actings against Christ he had effectuate nothing but his own eternal shame and confusion seing that Christ did thereby openly declare He had led captivity captive 7. As those for whom Christ did purchase any good or advantage by His death and did manifest His purchasing good for them by His ascension were men and not devils So not only saving graces which are given to the Elect only but also common gifts are a part of His purchase which are given sometimes to reprobates for the good and edification of His Church Matth. 7. 22 23. for both these are comprehended here under gifts which being purchased by His death He did at His ascension in a larger measure than formerly give unto men and to men indefinitly even to rebels Psal. 68. -18. Vers. 9. Now that he ascended what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth THe Apostle doth thirdly comment upon and apply the cited testimony And first he sheweth what Christs ascending unto heaven to wit by His own divine power otherwise the Apostle's inference in this place should not hold did presuppose as necessarily foregoing even His previous humiliation and abasement in all its steps expressed by His descending to the lowerparts of the earth where the lower parts are to be
understood by comparing not the parts of the earth among themselves but earth with heaven the earth being the lowest part of the world and particularly it pointeth either at His conception in the womb of the Virgin See conception so expressed Psal. 139. 15. or at His burial expressed by a like phrase Matth. 12. 40. wherein the Apostle's scope is not only to prove that the former testimony is pertinently cited and applyed to Christ but also to presse humility in order to unity and peace from Christs example as Phil. 2. 7. Now Christ is said to have descended not properly and locally as man for before His incarnation He was not man but as God and therefore not properly by changing place but improperly and with respect had to His state by taking on the humane nature upon earth under the infirmities whereof He did for a time hide His divine glory so that very little of it did appear and to some few only Isa. 53. 12. Doct. 1. Sacred Scripture is a great depth containing much more than what is obvious at the first view and therefore we are to advert not only to that which is expresly said in Scripture but what may be drawn from it by direct and just consequence for Paul doth so look on this testimony of Christs ascension as finding another great Truth concerning His previous humiliation lurking under it and by just consequence deducible from it while he saith Now that He ascended what is it but that He first descended 2. It is not enough for Ministers to cite Scriptures for confirmation of those Truths which they hold forth to the Lords People except the Scriptures cited be pertinent and the pertinency of them be also made clear and obvious for Paul having cited a Scripture to confirm somewhat which he said of Christ doth prove the Scripture cited doth speak of Christ because it implyeth previous descending and humiliation in the partie spoken of which can agree to none other of the Persons of the blessed Trinity but to Christ only Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 3. Such was the love of Christ to lost sinners Joh. 15. 13. and to the glory of His own and his Fathers mercy to be manifested in their salvation Joh. 17. 4. that He did willingly lay aside His glory which He had with His Father before the world was Joh. 17. 5. by assuming the nature of man to Himself and suffering therein the utmost of misery and grief which the malice of men and devils could inflict and which seemed good unto the Father in order to the satisfaction of provoked justice to inflict Heb 10. 7. for all this is implyed in His descending and saith Paul Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 4. Then do we study and know Christs exaltation aright when we do also seriously consider and think upon His previous humiliation and abasement for therein we may see not only how low He stooped for our good but also that He hath fully accomplished whatever He undertook and is now absolved Joh. 17. 4 5. and that the Lords usuall way is with His own as it was with Christ to make their deep humiliation and lowlinesse of mind go before their highest exaltation and honour Prov. 15. 33. for Paul doth read previous humiliation in Christs exaltation and thinks upon both joyntly Now that He ascended what is it but that He descended 5. Then do we think upon Christs humiliation and abasement aright when we consider it in its greatest depth and lowest step unto which He demitted Himself even to the lowest parts of the earth for therein we may see the greatnesse of His love the depth of our misery and the full sufficiency of the price paid by Christ in the state of His humiliation in order to our delivery He also descended first into the lower parts of the earth by which is not meaned the place of the damned nor any place near to that where the souls of the Patriarchs were before Christs death as the Papists affirm this being contrary to Scripture affirming that Christs soul was after death to be in heaven Luk. 23. 43. and that the souls of the Patriarchs were there also Luke 16. 22 23 25 26. but hereby as I shew in the exposition is meaned His conception and buriall with all the other steps of His humiliation interveening Vers. 10. He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all heavens that He might fill all things THe Apostle in the explication and application of the cited testimony doth next shew what it expresly holdeth forth to wit Christs ascension and illustrates it from this that the person who ascended though now made man was the same with him who descended to take on the nature of man 2. That He ascended to the highest heavens the seat of eternall glory far above those visible heavens not only in situation but also in duration and glory and are called the heaven of heavens 1 King 8. 27. the third heavens 2 Cor. 12. 3. 4. and sometime simply by the name of heavens Act. 3. 21. And thirdly from the end of His ascending even to fill all things not all places with His bodily presence for Him must the heavens contain Act. 3. 21. but that He might fulfill all prophesies concerning Himself and all those parts of His mediatory Office which were yet to be performed in heaven and particularly that He might fill His Church and all the members thereof which are His all even His whole body Joh. 6. 45. with a large and plentifull measure of the gifts and graces of His spirit Joh. 7. 39. according as was foretold in the cited testimony Doct 1. The distinction of natures in Christ after His incarnation doth not infer a distinction of persons in Him He remaineth one person still for the Apostle speaketh of Him after incarnation as of one He that descended is the same also that ascended 2. Jesus Christ remaineth one and the same person after His assuming the humane nature unto Himself with that which He was before so that neither is the person of God-man Mediator any third thing made up or compounded of both those natures neither did the humane nature add any thing before wanting to make up perfect or work any alteration in the personall substance of the Son of God only the humanity of Christ being destitute of any personal subsistance of its own is as it were ingrafted in the second person of the God-head the Son of God and doth subsist in Him for Paul sheweth that He who ascended being now God-man is the same with Him who descended before His incarnation He that descended is the same also that ascended 3. By vertue of this personall union betwixt the divine and humane nature of Christ there ariseth such a communion of the distinct properties of each nature that those things which are proper only to the one nature are ascribed to the whole
A BRIEF EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLES of Paul TO THE GALATIANS AND EPHESIANS BY JAMES FERGUSSON Minister at Kilwinning Isa. 28. 10. For precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little Col. 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another c. LONDON Printed for the Company of STATIONERS Anno Dom. 1659. To the Right Honourable and noble Lords Alexander Earl of Eglintoun c. AND Hugh Lord Montgomery his Son And to the Right Honourable noble Lady The Lady Mary Lesley Lady Montgomery RIGHT HONOURABLE IT is decreed in Heaven That we must through much tribulation enter the Kingdom of God Act. 14. -22. God only wise hath so resolved that by means of sanctified trouble the Heirs of glory may be weaned from earth and learn to place their chief contentment and happinesse not upon their enjoyments below which are uncertain empty and perishing but upon things above an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for them How hard were it to make even those who are born of God long to be dissolved and bid adieu to all their sublunary contentments except the Lord in mercy did place a prick in every one of those roses and make their most promising earthly comforts within a little to prove as streams of brooks that passe away Job 6. 15 And how should this conciliate love to a sad and suffering lot and make the Lord's People who are strangers and pilgrims delight in the way which leadeth to such an home as Heaven is It is indeed our unacquaintance with Scripture and with what the Word of Truth holdeth forth to be the mind of God while He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth which doth occasion so much proud rising of spirit or base dejectedness of mind when the Lord doth not carve us out such a satisfying lot in all things as we would How often do we mistake our way and little lesse than quarrel with God only because He hedgeth us in with thorns of affliction that we cannot find out our lovers and therefore that man is truly blessed whom the Lord doth not only chastise but also instruct out of His Law Ps. 94. 12. and thereby make him understand and hear the voice of the rod and of Him who hath appointed it Mica 6. 9. And herein indeed the Lord doth greatly manifest His marvellous loving kindnesse and in wrath remembreth mercy that He joyneth instruction with correction and doth furnish His afflicted People with abundant means by which they may take up the mind of God for good unto them under His saddest dispensations even that the fruit of affliction is to take away their sin Isa. 27. 9 that He doth punish them seven times more and yet seven times more untill their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they accept of the punishment of their iniquity Levit. 26. 24 28 41. that though He visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Nevertheless His loving kindnesse will He not utterly take from him Psal. 89. 32 33. and that when they are judged they are chastened of the Lord that they should not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. All this and much more to this purpose hath the Lord made known by His Word and doth daily inculcate and make more and more known by His sent Ministers who according to their Commission do open up and apply the rich treasure of holy Scripture unto the Lords People of their charge And as if all this were not sufficient He hath besides stirred up the spirits of many of His Servants in every age to 〈…〉 mit their Labours upon Scripture unto writing for the more publick use of the Church of God not only in the present but also the succeeding generations As for my self I ingenuously professe that being conscious of mine own weaknesse I did much incline to rest satisfied with expressing my Commission by word only in preaching to and conferring with my Flock and those of my charge But being earnestly requested and in a manner commanded by some Reverend Brethren whom I honour and reverence in the Lord to draw up briefly in writ a plain Analysis a short and sound Exposition of and the chief Observations grounded upon such Scriptures as I had either largely preached upon or more briefly opened-up to the Lords People of my charge I shewed them some of my weak endeavours of that kind to be disposed upon at their pleasure which when they were pleased to publish and to call for more work of the same nature expressing their confidence that what I had already done was acceptable to all that love the Truth and would be edifying to the present and after-ages and being thereunto also encouraged by diverse faithfull and understanding persons I have in obedience to their desires given-out this other Piece to be disposed of by them as they should see good And seing they have advised the publishing of it To whom could I with more confidence and conscience of duty dedicate these my mean labours than to your Honours considering that God hath appointed me to watch for your souls as one who must g 〈…〉 n account and that your Honours have endeavoured for your parts to encourage me to go about all the parts of my Ministery with joy and not with grief My Lords when I called to remembrance how long each of you was detained these years by-past from enjoying the benefit of my publick Ministery by your necessitated abode elsewhere I thought the best way to give you an account and to make you reap some fruit of my labours in your absence was to present these my weak endeavours to your Honours and what you have heard from me upon these Scriptures in publick when you were permitted to be my hearers I hope this little piece shall conduce to bring it to your remembrance and the Lord Himself convey it into your hearts there to remain to make your Honours more and more wise to salvation that in the day of the Lord Jesus ye may be matter of joy and a crown of rejoycing to those who have laboured among you and spoken the Word of God unto you And for you Madam who hath had liberty to be my hearer more frequently and constantly than my noble Lords as I trust your Honour will observe there is a good harmony betwixt that which I taught in the Congregation and which I now publish to the world and that this little piece shall according to your usuall diligence in searching Scripture and in keeping fellowship with God in the practice of all commanded duties be improved by your Honour for your further edification and encouragment to walk worthy of the Lord unto all well-pleasing So when I consider how refreshfull it hath been often unto me to behold your sweet submission under the Lord's hand your truly
bitter and implacable persecutors as having some respect to conscience in other things and being acted in this from the principles of a deluded conscience Joh. 16. 2. which of all other ties doth most strictly bind and most effectually drive forward to fulfill its dictates especially in things of religious concernment Act. 13. 50. for Paul who profited in the Jews Religion above his equals and was exceedingly zealous did persecute the Church 9. The life and way of some who are engaged in a false Religion may be so blamelesse and according to the dictates of their deluded conscience so strict as that it may be a copie unto those who professe the true Religion and a reproof to many such for their palpable negligence so was Paul's way while he was a Pharisee even such as may serve for a copie unto Christians to walk by in several things as first to be active in spreading the true Religion in our places and stations and bearing down of contrary Errors as he was in persecuting the Christian Church because it was opposite to the Jewish Religion professed by him Secondly that what we do in Religion or for God we do it not negligently but with all our might Eccl. 9. 10. and to the uttermost of what our power can reach as he did persecute the Church not lazily but above measure or extreamly Thirdly that we labour to profit advance and grow in Religion both as to the knowledge of Truth contained in it Heb. 6. 1. and practise according to those Truths 2 Pet. 1. 5. as he profited in the Jewish Religion Fourthly that in the matter of growth there be an holy emulation and strife with others that we may outstrip them as he profited above many of his equal● Fiftly that we be zealous for our Religion as having love to it and to the honouring of God whether by our selves or others according to it Act. 15. 3. together with grief and anger when God is dishonoured and Religion wronged Joh. 2. 15 16 17. as Paul was zealous of the Traditions of his fathers for zeal hath in it a mixture of love and anger Doct. 10. As love to the honour of God may engage a man sometimes to speak to his own commendation So there would be that modesty and sobriety of spirit as it may appear he doth not speak from arrogancy or pride and that he seeketh not his own commendation in speaking for Paul commendeth his own diligence and abilities that thereby he may commend Free-grace which delivered him out of that state but with great modesty for he saith not he profited more than all but more than many and not more than his superiours but more than his equals to wit for time and age and those not in all the world but of his own nation 11. As our affections of joy love hatred anger and grief are by nature so corrupt Eph. 2. 3. that even the choicest of them if they be not brought in subjection to the Word by the Spirit of God will lay forth themselves rather upon forbidden and unlawfull objects than that which is warrantable and commanded by the Lord So our zeal and fervency of spirit in particular will bend it self more toward the maintenance of Error than of Truth for Error is the birth of our own invention Gal. 5. 20. and hath the rise from some unmortified lust within which it doth gratifie 2 Tim. 4. 3. so is not Truth Thus Paul sheweth that his zeal tended more to maintain that part of the Jewish Religion which was unwarrantable to wit the unwritten Traditions than all the rest of it And was much more zealous of the Traditions of my fathers saith he Vers. 15. But when it pleased God who separated me from my mothers womb and called me by his grace 16. To reveal his Son in me that I might preach Him among the Heathen immediately I conferred not with flesh and bloud 17. Neither went I up to Jerusalem to them which were Apostles before me but I went into Arabia and returned again unto Damoscus HEre is a second Evidence of the truth of what he formerly asserted ver 11. and 12. to wit that as God in His providence had been making way both in Paul's birth and education for that which He had purposed to imploy him in so when it pleased God at the time of his gracious and effectual calling ver 15. to make Christ and the doctrine of Redemption by Christ known unto him by extraordinary and immediate revelation Act. 9. 4. that as an Apostle immediately called by God ver 1. he might publish the knowledge of Christ among the Gentiles he was so much perswaded of his immediate Call from God that he did not debate the matter neither with himself nor others who might have disswaded him from giving obedience to it ver 16 but immediately went about the discharging of his Apostolick Office not without great hazard and pains to himself in Arabia and Damascus without so much as once visiting any of the Apostles ver 17. far lesse went he to be instructed in the knowledge of the Gospel by them or to receive Ordination unto the Ministerial Office from them as his adversaries did falsly alleage of him the falshood whereof he is here making evident From Vers. 15. Learn 1. Such is the power of God's good pleasure whereby He doth whatsoever He willeth in Heaven and Earth Ps. 135. 6. that the will of man though never so deeply engaged in the course of sin and wickednesse cannot resist it but most willingly doth yeeld unto it whenever the Lord thinketh fit to let forth that His good pleasure in its gracious and powerfull effects of drawing a sinner out of Nature to the state of Grace as it appeareth from the adversative particle But whereby the Apostle opposeth Gods pleasure to his own former weaknesse as prevailing over it But when it pleased God c. 2. The fountain-cause of man's salvation and of all things tending to it especially of his effectual calling and of that whereby he is made first to differ from another is God's good-pleasure and nothing present Eph. 2. 1. or foreseen to be Rom. 9. 11. in the person who is called for the Apostle ascribeth all of that kind in himself to the pleasure of God But when it pleased God to reveal His Son in me 3. The disposing of events or of things which shall fall out together with the time when they shall fall out are wholly ordered by God's will and pleasure for this pleasure of His circumscribeth even the time of Paul's calling But when it pleased God then and neither sooner nor later was Christ revealed to him 4. The Lord by His working in us and particular acts of providence towards us is often making way for some hid design and purpose of His about us which for the time we are ignorant of but when it appeareth by the event a wonderfull contexture of providences making way for it and
10. 31. duties of our lawful imployments Heb. 11. 33. and to our carriage under crosses Heb. 11. 24 25. for by the life which Paul lived in the flesh is meaned this natural life Heb. 5. 7. 1 Pet. 4. 2. and his living this spiritual life of Faith was extended even to the things of that life The life which I now live in the flesh is by the Faith of the Son of God Doct. 7. As Jesus Christ did give Himself a Ransom for the Elect See chap. 1. 4. so no worth in us no good which He expecteth from us or need which He stood in of us but only love in Him to us did move Him so to do He loved me and gave Himself for me 8. Though the full perswasion and assurance of Christ's special love unto and His dying for me in particular is not the very essence and being of saving Faith Eph. 1. 13. for saving Faith may be without it Isa. 50. 10. Yet it is a thing which may be had without extraordinary revelation the Spirit of God enabling the Believer to discern in himself those graces 1 Cor. 2. 12. which are set down as marks of His special love and favour in Scripture 1 Joh. 3. 14 18 19 21 24. and bearing witnesse with His Spirit that he is a childe of God Rom. 8. 16. and this assurance should be aimed at in the right method by all 2 Pet. 1. 10. for Paul speaking in the name of other Believers sheweth he had attained it Who loved me and gave Himself for me saith he 9. This full perswasion and assurance in its own nature is so far from making those who have it loose the reigns to wickednesse and security that upon the contrary it serveth as a strong incitement to make them mortifie sin and live that spiritual life of Faith which is here spoken of for it served for this use unto Paul I live by the Faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself forme Vers. 21. I do not frustrate the grace of God for if rightebusnesse come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain HAving removed the objection the Apostle proceedeth to establish Justification by Faith and not by the Works of the Law by a second argument to this purpose If we be justified by the Law or works done in obedience to the Law Then those two absurdities would follow 1. God's free grace and favour should be rejected despised frustrated and made uselesse for the word signifieth all these and the reason of the consequence lyeth in this That if Justification be by Works Then it cannot be by Grace Rom. 11. 6. 2. Christ's death had been in vain without any necessary cause or reason if the Justification of finners could have been attained by Works or by any other mean Doct. 1. They who have attained unto the perswasion and full assurance of God's favour and love in Christ ought above all others to maintain the glory of His Grace and Mercy in saving of sinners freely not admitting of any thing whether in practice or opinion whether in themselves or so far as is possible in others which may incroach upon it obscure it or weaken the thoughts of the excellency of it in the minds of men for Paul who was perswaded of Christ's love ver 20. doth look upon this as his duty flowing from that assurance I do not frustrate the Grace of God saith he 2. The joyning of Works with Faith in the matter of Justification is a total excluding of God's Free-grace and favour from having any hand in this Work for Grace admitteth of no partner so that if Grace do not all it doth nothing if any thing be added to it that addition maketh Grace to be no Grace Rom. 4. 4. for the Apostle reasoning against those who would have made Works to share with God's Free-grace and favour in Justification sheweth his joyning with them in that opinion would be a total rejecting and making uselesse of God's Grace I do not frustrate the Grace of God 3. That the Apostle doth exclude in this dispute from having any influence in Justification the Works not only of the Ceremonial but also of the Moral Law appeareth from this That he opposeth the Merit of Christ's death to all Merit of our own whether by obedience to the one Law or to the other neither can any reason be given for which our meriting by obedience to the Ceremonial Law maketh Christ to have died in vain which is not applicabl to the Moral Law For if righteousness come by the Law then Christ died in vain 4. That he excludeth also not only the Works of the Moral Law which are performed by the natural and unregenerate man but also those which the Godly do perform by vertue of Faith drawing influence from Christ appeareth from this that the Apostle useth this argument taken from the uselesnesse of Christ's death not against the unconverted Jews who had not received the Gospel and so would easily have granted that Christ was dead in vain but against those who had received the Gospel and so would never have pleaded that any Works done by a natural man but those only which flow from the Grace of Christ could justifie a sinner and yet Paul reasoneth against those If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain 5. That he doth exclude also all Works of ours whatsoever from being the meritorious cause of our Justification not only in whole and their alone without the Merit of Christ but also in part and joyntly with His Merit appeareth from the former ground that he is reasoning against professed Christians who doubtlesse did give Christ's Merit and Death some share at least in Justification else the absurdity which is deduced from their Doctrine by Paul should have had no weight with them as being no absurdity in their mind Then Christ is dead in vain 6. If there had been any other way possible in Heaven or Earth by which the Salvation of lost sinners could have been brought about but by the Death of Christ then Christ would not have died our disease was desperate as to any other cure for while he saith If righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain he affirmeth two things 1. That to suppose Christ hath died in vain or without cause is a great absurdity no wayes to be admitted of 2. If the Justification and Salvation of sinners could have been attained by Works or any other mean then His Death had been in vain and so that it were an absurd thing to suppose he would have died in that case CHAP. III. IN the first part of this Chapter the Apostle having sharply rebuked these Galatians for their defection ver 1. useth five other Arguments to prove that we are justified by Faith and not by Works First They had received the saving Graces of God's Spirit by hearing the Doctrine of Justification by Faith and not by Works ver 2.
of all hope of any inheritance in the Land of promise Gen. 21. 9 10. So the Law of Moses or the Covenant given by God upon mount Sinai while it was rightly used as a Pedagogue leading to Christ it did bring forth children to God heirs of the heavenly inheritance such were all sincere Believers under the Old Testament but when it was abused and set up as a Covenant of Works in opposition to the Covenant of Grace it did then bring forth children unto bondage and those who did so adhere unto it were detained under damnable slavery and cut-off from Christ Gal. 5. 2. for the Apostle shewing that this Covenant was prefigured by Agar doth hint at one reason which leadeth us to seek after moe Which Covenant saith he is Agar for Agar is mount Sinai in Arabia 7. No Church or People hath Religion so firmly established which in progresse of time may not make such apostasie from it as that there will be a vast difference betwixt what they once were and what they now are for such a Church was Jerusalem once Psal. 76. 1. 2. but now her case was much altered Therefore saith he this Covenant doth answer or keepeth concord with Jerusalem not which once was but now is importing there was a foul change to the worse And is in bondage with her children Vers. 26. But Jerusalem which is above is free which is the mother of us all THe Apostle having shewen that Hagar did prefigure the first or old Covenant doth now briefly describe that second or new Covenant which was prefigured in Sarah First by declaring where that Covenant did reside or who adhered to it to wit Jerusalem which is above whereby is not meaned the Church triumphant in Heaven for it is clear he speaketh of a Church whereof Believers upon earth are members even the Militant Church especially of the truly regenerate claiming to life according to the tenour of the Covenant of Grace although the Catholick Church-visible be not excluded seing it is a Church begetting children to God by the use of Ordinances and is here called Jerusalem because that City was a type of the true Church for her compactnesse and order Psal. 122. 3. beauty Psal. 48. 2. and divine protection which did attend her Isa. 31. 5. and this Church is said to be above because her original is from Heaven Iam. 1. 17. and the lively members thereof have their conversation in Heaven Philip. 3. 20. Secondly by shewing the state wherein those who adhere to this Covenant are a state of freedom from sin Rom. 6. 18. the curse of the Law Rom. 8. 1. and the yoke of that ancient legal dispensation Ephes. 2. 15. Thirdly by declaring who are the children of this Covenant or members of the true Church adhering to this Covenant even all sincere Believers whether Jews or Gentiles Doct. 1. The Lord doth never so far give way to the spirit of error and rage of persecution but even in the worst of times He hath some who do keep their garments clean and hold up a banner for Truth notwithstanding of all contrary endeavours for the utter extirpation of it for though Jerusalem the usual place of Gods abode was at this time in bondage with her children a very receptacle of Christ's enemies Act. 8. 1. and chief head of all that opposition which was against the Gospel Act. 9. 2. yet God wanted not a Church even Jerusalem which is above 2. As freedom from God's wrath and curse may be attained and enjoyed under bodily bondage and oppression so being attained it maketh the attainer truly free so that all his other bondage is not to be valued much for the true Church though for the time heavily oppressed in her members ver -29. of whom some were also in a state of bodily servitude Col. 3. 22. yet because of her freedom from God's wrath and curse she is said to be free as if this bondage being removed there had been none remaining Jerusalem which is above is free 3. Though those who are regenerate do owe their new birth to God their Father only in so far as the vertue and power whereby they are brought from death to life is only His Eph. 1. 19. and neither Church-Ministry nor any created power whatsoever can by any proper efficiency reach this so divine and supernatural an effect yet the Church is the mother of all the Regenerate in so far as she is gifted with Ministers 1 Cor. 12. 28 whose office is to dispense the Word which Word being blessed of God is both the seed of this new birth 1 Pet. 1. 23. as also the food and milk 1 Pet. 2. 2. whereby the new-born children are nourished for in this sense the Apostle saith Jerusalem is the mother of us all 4. Though no Church no not the Church universall which is most properly our mother ought to be heard and obeyed further than her Commands do agree with the Commands of God our Father Act. 4. 19. yet we are still to give her respect and reverence as also to employ our parts and graces and all that is ours for the defence and advancement of her just interest in our places and stations and that because she is the mother of us all Vers. 27. For it is written Rejoyce thou barren that bearest not break forth and cry thou that travellest not for the desolate hath many moe children than she which hath an husband THe Apostle in the fourth place confirmeth the truth of the former mysterie by a Scripture taken out of Isa. 54. 1. where the Prophet doth direct his speech to the Christian Church under the Gospel as she was to be in her beginnings and about the time of Christ's incarnation and sufferings whereof he had most clearly prophesied chap. 53. and having designed her by the name of a barren woman that beareth not and travelleth not because of the paucity of Converts to the Christian Faith at that time and of a seemingly desolate woman without an husband because of the crosse and persecution which she was then to be under he exhorteth her to rejoyce and to expresse her joy against all contrary discouragements and that because her state should be changed and she made a more fruitfull mother by a numerous accession of converts to the Christian Faith from among the Gentiles than the Jewish Synagogue her self who formerly had enjoyed God's grace and presence and at that time should seem to be more owned of God because of the great prosperity multitude of followers and outward beauty attending her beyond the Christian Church Doct. 1. The supream Judge by whom all controversies of Religion are to be determined and in whose sentence we are to rest is the holy Spirit speaking in Scripture for Paul in this present controversie appealeth to Scripture For it is written saith he 2. It is not the Churche's lot to be alwayes alike fruitfull in bringing forth children to God she hath her barren times wherein
Jesus Christ the Son of God by nature Unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ. 5. That any of those who are children of wrath by nature are advanced to that excellent dignity of being Children by adoption to the most High and of enjoying all the fore-mentioned priviledges of children it is through Jesus Christ the Mediator in so far as He having purchased Heaven the inheritance of children by His own merit He hath absolute right and title unto it to bestow it upon whom He pleaseth Mat. 28. 18. And having united the Elect by faith unto Himself and thereby given them a right and interest in Himself they not only become the sons of God Joh. 1. 12. but are made heirs and co-heirs with Christ Rom. 8. 17. and so do enjoy a right to the heavenly inheritance through Him for saith he having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ. 6. As God hath in His eternal decree of Election firmly resolved and determined to bestow this high priviledge of Adoption upon the Elect both begun Adoption here and compleat Adoption or the actual installing of them in Glory hereafter and by consequence did decree to give them saving Faith also seing Adoption floweth from it and dependeth upon it Joh. 1. 12. So whomsoever He hath decreed to lift up to this high dignity of sons He hath decreed also to renew their nature and to make them holy that so their carriage may be suitable to their state and priviledges for saith Paul ver 4. He hath chosen us that we should be holy and here having predestinated us unto the adoption of children 7. All was in God Himself and nothing without Himself which moved Him to elect and choose those whom He did set His love upon so that neither fore-seen works or the right use of natural parts Eph. 2. 10. nor fore-seen faith Act. 13. 48. nor yet the merit of Christ 1 Joh. 4. 9. nor outward respects such as nobility wisdom riches 1 Cor. 1. 26. yea nothing present or to come in heaven or earth did move Him to choose any or one more than another for saith he God predestinated us in Himself whereby are excluded all causes moving God to this act without Himself 8. God hath absolute power and soveraign right to dispose as He will of all His creatures even of reasonable creatures and this not only in their temporary but also in their eternal concernments which soveraign will of His is the supream sinlesse cause why God did elect some to glory yea and why He did passe by others Rom. 9. 18. for the Apostle condescending upon the reason why God did design some for grace here and glory hereafter doth pitch upon this soveraign will of His According to the good pleasure of His will 9. The Lord God hath sweetly tempered His absolute dominion and soveraign will with rich favour and condescendency towards those whom He did elect His will to them was good-pleasure and good-will In so far as when He might have fitted them for destruction as He did the reprobate Rom. 9. 22. or never have given them a being or but the being of beasts to be annihilated after death or have drawn out their life to all eternity upon earth allowing them some tolerable contentment there every one whereof would have been a favor being compared with the state of damned reprobates yet His good-will hath bee● a better will to them whereby He hath decreed to give unto them a rational being with a short Lease of a miserable life here and endlesse joys and pleasures at His right hand for evermore 1 Thess. 4. 17. for saith the Apostle He hath predestinated us not simply according to His will but according to the good pleasure of His will Vers. 5 To the praise of the glory of His Grace wherein He hath made us accepted in the Beloved THe Apostle having already described the decree of Election from two of those ends which God proposed unto Himself to be brought about by it to wit the sanctification ver 4. and glorification of the Elect ver 5. doth here in further pursuance of the former scope mentioned upon ver 3. first further describe this decree from a third and supream end which God therein designed most which is That as His grace or freedom of His love toward the Elect is glorious and praise-worthy in it self and therefore called the glory of His Grace or His glorious Grace according to the custom of the Hebrew language So it might be acknowledged to be such and set forth as such especially by the Elect themselves And secondly That he may clear how deservedly this Grace ought to be praised having already showen that it was the fountain-cause of our Election before time ver 5. he doth now declare that this same grace and good-will in God is the only cause why God doth in time manifest that His eternal love in the effects thereof by making the Elect lovely and fit to be accepted of by God as f●iends through Jesus Christ the beloved and by accepting them both in their persons and actions and being reconciled to them accordingly for the word signifieth both to make accepted and to accept Doct. 1. That grace free-favour and good-will which God doth manifest in saving of lost sinners is altogether glorious as having many and singular excellencies in it It is an ancient grace ver 4. most free Hos. 14. 4. omnipotent Joh. 12. 32. and a most liberal grace Psal. 84. 11. and therefore a grace so glorious that no created understanding can conceive much lesse tongue can expresse those marvellous ravishing and transcendent excellencies which are in it Eph. 3. 19. for he calleth it the glory of his grace or his glorious grace 2. It is the duty of all the Elect to praise admire and highly to esteem of this glorious grace and to testifie this their high esteem of it both by word and work in the whole strain of their life and conversation This grace being so glorious and praise-worthy in it self so rich and beneficial towards us and this duty of praise being all which we can bestow Psal. 116. 12 13. and God doth call for from us in way of thankfulnesse for this His glorious grace Psal. 50. 15. for seing God in Election did propound to Himself the up-stirring of the Elect to praise the glory of his grace it must needs be their duty to praise it 3. This eternal decree of Election and Predestination is so contrived that when it is made known matter of praise to God's glorious grace is abundantly manifested in it for its rise is of grace preventing all actual or fore-seen worth in those who are elected See ver 4. doct 6. and all the midses whereby the execution of this decree is carried-on to its utmost period are also of grace See ver 5. doct 1. So that all-alongs it breatheth grace and nothing but grace for He did choose us to the praise of the
Rom. 10. 14 15. for the Apostle having already spoken of God's bestowing all saving grace upon them doth here condescend upon the mean made use of by him in that work Having made known unto us the mysterie of his will 4. There is nothing which moveth God to reveal his Gospel unto one people and not to another or more obscurely to one and more clearly unto another but only his own good will and pleasure so to do neither doth the Lord any thing contrary to justice hereby seing he is not obliged to send the Gospel unto any Rom. 11. 35. and all have more knowledge of God by nature than they make good use of Rom. 1. 21. for this alone is here given as the reason of his making known the mysterie of his will even according to his good pleasure 5. So carefull is God to maintain the interest of his free-grace in our salvation as being the only supream and fountain-cause thereof that he thinketh it not sufficient once to assert in the general that salvation and all the means and steps tending towards it do flow from his free-grace but that this be again and again inculcated and all the particular steps which lead to salvation being condescended upon that his free-grace favour and good will be held out as the fountain of each step in particular for the Apostle doth so and that by an heavenly and divine artifice sliding down from one step to another from Election to Redemption and from Redemption to effectual calling and from effectual calling unto God's bestowing the outward mean of salvation the Gospel not only ascribing all to God's free-grace but making grace the mid-link of the chain whereby he joyneth the several parts of his discourse together so ver 8. Wherein he abounded and here According to the good pleasure of his will and which he purposed in himself as having no cause without himself to set him on work 6. As the decrees of God are firm fixed and unchangeable So he doth nothing in the matter of man's salvation even to the least circumstance but what he hath decreed to do which as will appear from ver 11. doth hold in all other things which God doth for by God's purpose is meaned his eternal decree with respect had to its stability and unchangeablenesse there being neither want of fore-sight nor of power in God to occasion the alteration of his purpose which are the causes why men are frequently necessitated to alter theirs and this purpose and decree is spoken of here as the rule according to which God of his good pleasure did make known the mysterie of his will unto those Ephesians in order to their salvation Which he had purposed in himself saith he Vers. 10. That in the dispensation of the fulnesse of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ both which are in heaven and which are on earth even in him HEre is the intended effect which God did aim at in His gracious purpose of making fully known the mystery of the Gospel both to Jew and Gentile to wit That at the full time and season which God had dispensed measured out and pitched upon as most fitting for the businesse in hand to wit the time of Christ's incarnation and sufferings Gal. 4. 4. He might gather together in Christ all His own Elect whether already glorified or yet upon earth who before were separated from God and one from another and might make them one with God being united with Christ their head by faith Eph. 3. 17 and one among themselves being united by love Col. 3. 14. Now the Apostle affirmeth this gathering of all the Elect was to be in the fulnesse of times for though many of them were already actually gathered and glorified to wit the things in Heaven before that time yet the exhibition of that by vertue whereof they were gathered was at and not before that time to wit the time of Christ's incarnation obedience and sufferings Heb. 9. 15. Doct. 1. All mankind by nature and being considered in themselves are under a fearfull dissipation and scattering Sin hath rent and separated them from God from man and from the blessed Angels for gathering presupposeth a foregoing scattering and the word rendred gather together in one being taken from a word which signifieth the head of a natural body or a short sum of a sparse discourse and so signifying here to gather together under one head to wit Christ and unto one sum and body amongst themselves it supposeth that they are separated from God from Christ one from another and from the Angels also for they were to be gathered into one body with those That he might gather together in one c. 2. The Lord hath not left all mankind in this wofull separation and scattered condition but as He hath firmly purposed and decreed from all eternity so in time He setteth about to gather together some of scattered mankind and to unite them to Himself one to another and to the blessed Angels for the word rendred to gather implyeth a gathering unto all these as is said And he hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 3. The gathering together of the scattered Elect and making of them one with God and among themselves doth not depend upon the choice of their own free-will which could do no other but refuse to be gathered Mat. 23. 37. and so Christ should not have seen of the travel of His soul and been satisfied contrary to what is promised Isa. 53. 11. But upon the fixed and unchangeable purpose of God which engageth His Omnipotency to make them willing to be gathered Psal. 110. 3. and therefore they shall be infallibly gathered for the Apostle as appears from the context maketh this gathering depend on Gods purpose He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 4. It is only God who by His omnipotent power doth gather together the scattered Elect and maketh them one with Himself and with one another in Himself We do so much love to wander Jer. 14. 10. that we would live and die estranged from God if the Lord by strong-hand did not reclaim us from our wandrings for saith Paul He hath purposed in himself that he might gather together in one 5. The preaching of the Gospel and making known that blessed mysterie is the mean which God maketh use of in this work of gathering the scattered Elect because though our actuall gathering be an act of Gods omnipotent power yet He dealeth with us as with rational creatures by giving us an offer of His friendship commanding us to accept of it as it is offered and in the mean time sending forth his power with the command whereby He maketh us to accept Act. 16. 14. for as is clear from the connexion God's end intended in making known the mysterie of his will is That he might gather together in one 6. As God is the great Master of his
And therefore is He called the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4. 13 yet upon the actual exercising of the grace of Faith the Spirit of God doth more fully manifest Himself to be dwelling in Believers by His carrying-on the work of sanctification in them for their greater comfort and further strengthning of their faith for saith he After ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit 3. Whoever have rightly closed with the Gospel and Christ in the Gospel by believing will have the grace of sanctification and holinesse of life following upon their so doing as also sometimes some measure of joy peace and sensible comfort for as I cleared by the seal is meaned those graces And after ye believed ye were sealed saith he 4. Even real Believers have need of confirmation and sealing as being oftimes exercised and tossed with several doubts and scruples both concerning the truth of the Gospel and promise in general Mark 9. 24. and the reality of their own closing with and interest in the Promise Psal. 88. 14. for therefore is it that after those Ephesians had believed they were sealed hereby to evidence the truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their believing the Gospel After ye believed ye were sealed 5. The Lord hath provided and accordingly doth bestow sufficient means upon Believers whereby all their fore-mentioned doubts may be solved and they abundantly satisfied for besides the writing of the Promise upon their hearts and the outward seals of the Covenant of Grace or Sacraments which are visibly dispensed by Christ's Ministers there is an inward seal to wit the saving Graces of God's Spirit together with growth and increase in those imprinted by the Spirit of God upon the hearts of Believers in order to their confirmation although they sometimes cannot perfectly discern nor exactly take up the draughts and lineaments of it After ye believed ye were sealed 6. The saving graces of God's Spirit wrought in a Believer and exercised by him in all sorts of holy duties and especially growth in grace is a most convincing evidence not only that the Word of the Gospel by which holinesse is wrought is the undoubted Truth of God for this is the witnesse by water spoken of 1 Joh. 5. 8. there being no other thing but the Truth of God able to produce such strange and supernatural effects as those but also it serveth to evidence the reality of the man's interest in the promise and of his right to the heavenly inheritance in whom those saving graces and the fruits of holinesse are seing holinesse of life is the inseparable effect of saving faith and interest in the promise Act. 15. 9. for by the Seal is meaned mainly the graces of sanctification and as was shewn they get that name because as Seals do confirm publick Writs and make them appear to be authentick so the saving and sanctifying graces of the Spirit do confirm to those in whom they are the Truth of the Gospel and the sincerity of their faith in Christ In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 7. Our doubts and scruples whether concerning the truth of the Promise in general or our own particular interest in the Promise ought not in reason make us suspend our believing in Christ and the Promise untill we first be sealed and sanctified and so receive sufficient confirmation but on the contrary we are first to set our Seal to God's Truth by believing and venturing our salvation upon it and then we may expect next to have God setting His Seal upon our heart in order to our confirmation for that is the order here set down In whom after ye believed ye were sealed 8. The sanctifying of our natures and adorning of our hearts with saving graces together with any confirmation in the truth of the Promise or of particular interest in the Promise which Believers receive from these is the work of God's Spirit only for it is ascribed to Him here and with relation thereto He is called the holy Spirit not only because He is essentially holy and very holinesse it self but also the author of sanctification and of all saving graces in Believers Gal. 5. 22. and the Spirit of promise not only because He was promised to be abundantly poured-out upon Believers under the New Testament Act. 2. 16. but also His office is to seal and confirm by His gracious operations the Promises of the Gospel to Believers Rom. 8. 16. Ye were sealed saith he with the holy Spirit From that use for which the holy Spirit with his saving graces was bestowed upon them Learn 1. As the Spirit of God is a person subsisting and not a created gift or grace so this holy Spirit doth not only bestow His gifts and graces upon Believers but also cometh Himself unto them and dwelleth in them In so far as though He be not personally united with them as the divine nature is with the humane in Christ yet He is not only with them in his essence and being as He is present every-where Jer. 23. 24. nor yet in respect of His working by a general providence only as He is present even with wicked men for in Him they live move and have their being Act. 17. 28. but He resideth in them as in his own Temple by his special and saving operations whereby He not only bestoweth upon them the habits of all saving graces at their first conversion Ezek. 36. 25 26. but doth also by his immediate strong and special influence daily preserve those graces in life Joh. 10. 28 29. actuate them Philip. 2. 13. and ordinarily maketh them to grow Hos. 14. 5. for whereas the word Spirit in the former verse is in the neuter gender● he repeats it here by a masculine relative which would be better rendred who than which to shew that the Spirit is a person subsisting Which Spirit he saith is given us for an earnest of our inheritance 2. Heaven and glory is the only portion and inheritance of Believers all their enjoyments earthly though never so great being but mean fading in themselves and lyable to spoyling and vastation from others so that this inheritance which is incorruptible fadeth not away and is reserved in the heavens 1 Pet. 1. 4. is only worthy to be looked upon as their inheritance for the Apostle calleth it our inheritance by way of excellency Which is the earnest of our inheritance 3. As the right unto this inheritance is made-over unto Believers upon their resigning themselves to God by faith in way of covenant and paction Isa. 55. 3. So the Lord hath thought it convenient not to give them the possession of it presently upon their right but to delay it for a season that in the mean time they may exercise their hope in longing after it Philip. 1. 23. And God may get glory from the heirs of heaven here upon earth and among earthly men by being the means of salvation unto some Mat. 5. 16. and of conviction and just
incarnate and cloathed with our flesh untill then having hid His divine glory so that very little of it did appear under the infirmities of the humane nature from His incarnation untill then Philip. 2. 7 8. but then He did manifest His divine glory absolute power and authority in a way incomprehensible by us in and through the vail of His glorified flesh for the Apostle sheweth those things were done in this order while he saith When He raised Him from the dead and set Him at His own right hand 5. Although the divine and humane nature in Christ are not confounded but remain distinct both in their essence and operations each nature doing that which is proper unto it self Heb. 9. 14. 1 Pet. 3. 18. yet so near and strict is that personall union of the two natures in Christ that those things which are proper only unto the one nature are ascribed unto and spoken of the whole person for here though this high honour and trust put upon Christ was in some things verified only in the divine nature in so far as it speaketh His manifestation of His divine glory and exercising His divine authority as God incarnate in and through the humane nature And though in some things it was verified only in the humane nature in so far as it speaketh His obtaining of glory and power from the Father which before He had not yet the whole of it is ascribed unto the whole person of Christ God-man while he saith And made Him to sit at His own right hand 6. Though Christ as Mediator be exalted to such high honour and authority as no meer creature is capable of yet so far is His humane nature from being made hereby omnipotent omnipresent and consequently equal with God That even whole Christ considered as Mediator is inferior and lesse than the Father Joh. 14. -28. as having received all this honour and authority from the Father Matth. 28. 18. and administrating His Kingdom in the Father's Name Joh. 5. 22. which He is also to render up unto the Father 1 Cor. 15. 24. for not only do the Scriptures cited but also the phrase here used prove so much seing those whom the King setteth at his right hand do hold their dignity and trust from him and must be comptable unto him And set Him at His own right hand Vers. 21. Far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come 22. And hath put all things under His feet THe Apostle in the second place insisteth upon that second effect of God's mighty power and explaineth what he meaned by the Father's setting of Christ at His own right hand even that which we formerly shewed to wit that transcendent glory and dignity with full power and soveraignity which was put upon Him And first he speaketh of that general power and eminency which He hath over and above all the creatures by shewing that He is exalted in glory not only above but far above the glory of all creatures whatsoever whether principality power might or dominion under which is comprehended every thing that is excellent among the creatures whether in Heaven Earth or Hell for sometimes good Angels are expressed by those titles Eph. 3. 10. sometimes bad Angels Eph. 6. 12. and sometimes Civil powers Tit. 3. 1. And lest any might apprehend some dignity besides not comprehended under any of these four he addeth a general clause comprising every name that is all things excellent or famous and worthy to be so named as famous men are called men of Name So that he hereby sheweth no creature can enter in competition with Christ in glory dignity and worth and withall he extendeth this glory put upon Christ in its duration not only unto this world but that which is to come and shall never have an end ver 21. And that he may exalt Christ yet further he sheweth that He is not only above all creatures in glory but also in dominion and soveraignity the Father having placed all the creatures in a state of lowest subjection unto Him even under His feet to be disposed of as He seeth fit From Vers. 21. Learn 1. The glory and splendor of things created hath some aptnesse in it if it be not rightly looked on or rather we are apt to take occasion from it to hide and undervalue the glory and excellency of Jesus Christ for otherwise the Apostle would not labour so much to set Him high up above them and His glory above theirs Far above all principality and power 2. Though Scripture give some ground to affirm that there are different degrees and dignities among the Angels Dan. 10. 13. and 12. 1. yet what are their different orders offices and dignities Scripture doth nowhere determine neither is there any ground for us to determine from this place for as we shew the Apostle's scope is under those titles and the general clause subjoyned to lay aside not only Angels but all civil powers and all created dignity whatsoever from competing with Christ in the point of power excellency and worth Far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named 3. Even the humane nature of Christ and His glorified body by vertue of that unspeakable union which is betwixt the two natures of Christ in one person is lifted up so high in glory that the glory of Kings and Emperors of Sun Moon and Stars of the souls of just men made perfect yea and of glorious Angels is nothing to it and lesse than the light of a candle being compared with the Sun in his brightnesse for he is speaking here of that glory which Christ hath by sitting at the right hand of God which as to some pieces of it doth belong to Christ as man and of it he affirmeth that it is far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named 4. As we do then only think aright of that high glory put upon Christ when we look on it as matchlesse and not only above but far and infinitly far above all that glory which can be found in all or any of the creatures So the holding forth of Christ in his glory by the Lord's Servants is a point of great concernment for the good of God's People to make all created glory wax dim and bulklesse Dan. 3. 16 17 18. to draw their hearts up after and towards Him Joh. 4. 10. to hearten them against those discouragements they usually meet with in doing service to Him Act. 7. 55 56. and to make them more reverent in their approaches to Him Heb. 12. 25. for therefore doth Paul so much labour as he cannot well satisfie himself in setting forth that high glory wherein Christ is while he saith He is above and far above and then enumerateth four comprehensive particulars and addeth a general clause comprising all
promise even such certainty as the giving of a pledge and holding forth of an effectuall and necessary cause do give for performance of the thing promised for Christs resurrection is both a pledge 1 Cor. 15. 20. and cause of our resurrection Rom. 8. 11. which holdeth also in His glorification Doct. 1. The fruits and effects of Gods eternal love and mercy and of Christs merit toward the Elect are not confined within this present life but are in a great part to have their accomplishment after time when the bodies of Believers shall be raised up in glory at the last day and they perfectly glorified with Christ in Heaven for ever for those two fruits of the Fathers love and of Christs merit even the Resurrection and Glorification of Believers are here expressed while it is said and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places 2. Those and those only shall partake of the resurrection of the just which is to life everlasting Job 5. 29 And shall be glorified hereafter whom God doth quicken by converting grace here for those three parts of the delivery of lost sinners are of equal latitude He hath quickened us raised us up and made us sit in heavenly places 3. As it is a thing full of difficulty to be believed that after worms have consumed this flesh of ours it shall be raised up in glory and that we who are heirs of hell and children of wrath shall one day reign with Christ for ever so those are things not only sure in themselves but which the Lord would have converted and quickened Believers assured of that so their comfort under crosses might be more abounding 2 Cor. 4. 14. with 16 17 18. and their courage against death more strong 1 Thess. 4. 18. and that they in all things may live as becometh those who not only shall rise and take possession of glory in their own persons but also are already risen and glorified with and in Christ their Head Col. 3. 1 even by having their conversation in Heaven while they are yet upon earth Philip. 3. 20. for that they might be perswaded of their future resurrection and glorification the Spirit of God doth speak of them as already done viz in the sense given in the exposition He hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places Vers. 7. That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindnesse towards us through Christ Jesus THe Apostle thirdly propoundeth the final cause or the end intended by God to be brought about by His gracious working formerly mentioned towards those Ephesians and first Converts among the Jews even that in all ages succeeding the present unto the end of the world God might give an evident proof and infallible demonstration for so much doth the word rendred shew signifie of the exceeding riches of His grace that is how far the abundance of His mercy and favour toward sinners doth exceed all expression and created comprehension the setting forth whereof to the following ages was intended by God not only for His own glory as chap. 1. 12. ●14 but also for the encouragement of all vile sinners unto the worlds end to draw nigh unto God for mercy in Christ as being animated hereto by this example and infallible evidence of the exceeding riches of Gods grace for so doth the Apostle more fully explain his own meaning 1 Tim. 1. 16. And in the close of the verse he sheweth wherein that convincing evidence doth lye by giving a short comprehensive sum of all he hath spoken from the beginning of the Chapter even in God's kindnesse that is all those effects formerly mentioned of His mercy love and free grace flowing from His good gentle and bountifull disposition and this towards them whose misery was formerly described and through Christ as the purchaser and applier of all those Doct. 1. As there is grace yea riches and abundance of grace in God even such as exceed all expression 2 Sam. 7. 20. all comprehension Isa. 55. 9. yea and all the sins of creatures Rom. 5. 20. So the more a man doth dwell upon this sweet subject his thoughts and apprehensions of it will be the more enlarged and his expressions also will in some measure go alongs with his thoughts for the Apostle having before ver 4. expressed it under the name of riches in mercy and falling here upon the same subject again his thoughts of it are more enlarged and his expression doth rise accordingly so that it is now not only riches but exceeding riches of his grace 2. As it is a matter full of difficulty for those who are sensible of their own vileness to believe the exceeding riches of Gods grace towards lost sinners and to believe it especially with application unto themselves Act. 2. 37. So the particular instances and examples of Gods mercy and grace tow 〈…〉 ds others have a peculiar fitnesse and efficacy in them to convince us how exceedingly gracious God is and so to convince us as we may be encouraged to draw nigh to that same fountain of rich grace for pardon and life unto our selves 1 Tim. 1. 16. a fitnesse beyond what is in the simple doctrinal declaration of those riches of grace in so far as those instances and examples do speak not only that mercy and grace may be had but that it hath been attained unto and by those who in all respects did judge themselves and were really as unworthy of it as unable to lay hold upon it in the mean time and to make good use of it afterwards as we do judge our selves so that the yce is broken and the foord ridden before us for the Apostle sheweth that God gave such instances of mercy and grace in those primitive Christians that he might shew forth as it were by demonstration and evidence the exceeding riches of His grace and this in order to the encouragement of others to venture their salvation upon that same grace as we shew in the Exposition 3. The more sinfull miserable and wretched they are to whom the Lord is gracious there is the more convincing proof given of the exceeding riches of His grace and so a greater encouragement for those who are yet in their gracelesse state to roll themselves over upon this His rich grace and to expect good from it for it was the quickening of such vile sinners whose misery is described ver 1 2. 3. which did tend to shew forth the exceeding riches of His grace which the Apostle also hinteth at while shewing wherein that convincing evidence did lye he saith his kindnesse towards us the word us is emphatick as to the purpose in hand 4. It was a thing resolved upon by God revealed to His servants and accordingly made known by them to the Church that the glorious light of the Gospel though opposed by the fury and industry of men and devils yet should never
glory and therefore desireth them not to faint Vers. 14. For this cause I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ 15. Of whom the whole familie in heaven and earth is named THe Apostle doth now follow forth the second part of the Chapter which was begun ver 1. and interrupted by a digression untill this verse for such reason as was given ver 2. And in this part of the Chapter while he giveth a sum of his fervent prayers to God for them that they might persevere and grow in the faith and experimentall knowledge of the Doctrine of Salvation delivered by them he doth not only give an evident testimony of his sincere affection and endeavour after their salvation but also laboureth hereby to beget the like ardency of affection in them and so doth indirectly at least though most pithily by the example of his prayers excite them to persevere and make progresse in the experimentall knowledge of and communion with Jesus Christ. In this prayer there is first a preface in those verses wherein he doth 1. repeat the occasion of his prayer which was mentioned ver 1 and doth relate as I there shew unto the close of chap. 2. even because they were already builded by faith upon Christ. 2. He denominateth his prayer from the outward gesture he used therein bowing of the knee thereby expressing the humble reverent frame of his heart in prayer And 3. he sheweth unto whom he did pray to wit God the Father described first from His relation to Jesus Christ as chap. 1. ver 17 This is the sum of verse 14. Secondly from his relation to His Church as being the Father by Adoption of the whole Church of the truly regenerate whether triumphant in heaven or militant upon earth whether Jew or Gentile which is here called a family and said to have its name from God as being His Familie Children Domesticks of His houshold and that both in name and thing the one whereof is not to be separated from the other seing God bestoweth not empty names and titles upon any Now God is thus described with relation to the purpose in hand for hereby the Apostle breaketh down the arrogance of the Jews who would have had the whole Church denominated from and contained within the Jewish Nation excluding the Gentiles whom therefore Paul doth upon all occasions make equal sharers of an interest in God through Christ with the Jews and thereby sheweth his warrand to pray for perseverance and growth in grace from God even to them From Vers. 14. Learn 1. It is the duty of Christs Ministers as to teach and admonish the People of God committed to their charge 2 Tim. 4. 2. So also to pray to God for them And that not only in publick with them as being the mouth of the People unto God Joel 2. 17. but also in private to the Lord for them seing their own pains cannot profit without the Lord's blessing 1 Cor. 3. 6. which Ministers ought fervently to seek from God by prayer else they have not ground to expect it Ezek. 36. 37. for Paul as he taught these Ephesians so he prayed for them and that not only in publick but also in private as he here sheweth For this cause I bow my knees 2. It is of no small advantage unto the Lords People to have such a Minister as is able to pray and accordingly doth pray pertinently spiritually and fervently with them and for them By whom as by their mouth they may have their severall cases made known unto God more distinctly than can be expressed by many of themselves Joel 2. 17. and they themselves are edified and instructed how to pray with the like affection and fervency 1 Cor. 14. 19. By whose affectionate prayers unto God for them a blessing is drawn down from heaven to make the Word preached effectual in them Iam. 5. -16. and they themselves incited and rouzed up to seek after those good things prayed for unto them hereby also they are comforted and encouraged as knowing their Minister is speaking to God for them when he is absent from them and cannot speak unto them Philip. 1. 4. and when they through some one distemper or other cannot deal with God for themselves at least in any measure satisfactory to themselves Iam. 5. 14 15. for as Paul's exhortation and doctrine was advantagious unto these Ephesians So also were his fervent prayers in order to their being kept from fainting and to their up-stirring to endeavour after those good things which he sought from God unto them and therefore doth he mention his praying for them in this place For this cause I bow my knees 3. From the Apostle's scope in making known unto them what and how he prayed for them See a further note chap. 1. ver 17. doct 1. I bow my knees 4. Our prayers unto God for others especially the prayers of a Minister for his Flock should take their rise not only from their wants afflictions and sinfull infirmities Iam. 5. 14 15. but also from the grace and good things of God already received by them that they may persevere and grow in them and be preserved from abusing them seing the graces of the best are but imperfect 1 Cor. 13. 9. subject to decay Rev. 3. 2 and may be abused 2 Cor. 12. 7. for the Apostle taketh occasion to pray for these Ephesians from the good already received by them even their being builded already upon Christ mentioned chap. 2. ver 22. unto which the words for this cause do relate 5. Though we be not tied by a divine precept or Scripture-example unto any one gesture in prayer seing the Saints have used several gestures according to the present frame of their heart thereby expressed 1 King 8. 22. 2 Sam. 12. 16. Luke 18. 13. 2 Sam. 7. 18. and though God be a Spirit who will be worshipped in spirit and in truth Joh. 4. 24. and careth not for the outward man alone Matth. 15. 7 8. yet seing God craveth service both from the soul and body as having created and redeemed both 1 Cor. 6. 20. and seing an outward reverend gesture of the body in prayer doth not only expresse and natively flow from a reverend frame of spirit within from which the body is acted in other things but also serveth to stir up the affections in prayer as being a man's remembrancer what his heart ought to do if he would not play the grosse hypocrite with God therefore it is a thing needfull and convenient if we be not otherwise restrained Nehem. 2. 4. to use some reverend gesture of the body while we are about the duty of prayer for Paul did kneel in prayer I bow my knees saith he 6. We ought especially in prayer to draw near to God with deep reverence unto and high esteem of the majesty of God being joyned with low and mean thoughts of our selves because of our basenesse and unworthinesse seing God honoureth them
who honour Him 1 Sam. 2. 30. and giveth grace unto the humble Iam. 4. -6. for Paul did evidence such a frame of heart by bowing his knees when he prayed 7. Deep reverence of heart towards the sacred majesty of God in prayer may well consist with faith and confident approaching unto God as a reconciled father Both of them ought to be joyned together in prayer yea and both when they are sincere and not counterfeit do mutually strengthen and intend one another so that the more we put our trust in Him the more will our hearts fear and adore Him Psal. 130. 4. for the Apostle exercised not only reverence in his prayer as is already shown but also confidence while he taketh up God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and of the whole family of Believers through Him 8. See further concerning this title given to God with relation to Christ upon chap. 1. ver 3. in the exposition and doct 2. and ver 17. doct 3 5 6. unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. From Vers. 15. Learn 1. As there is but one Church universal comprehending all the Elect in all times and places whether in heaven or earth So all within the Church are of one kinred and linage descending of one common father for he designeth the Church to be one whole family in heaven and earth the word signifieth such a family as is the linage of one man 2. As this one Church is Gods family and houshold See chap. 2. ver 19. doct 8. So all the members of His Church and family are comprehended either in heaven or earth Scripture knoweth nothing of a purgatory or third place different from these for the Apostle sheweth this whole family is in heaven and earth and named of God 3. Those near relations under which God doth stand towards His Church are founded upon Jesus Christ and all the benefits flowing from such relations are conveyed unto the Church through Him without whom God is a consuming fire to sinners and in whom He is a reconciled father unto Believers for the Apostle looketh upon God first as He is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and next as He is the Father of all the Elect Of whom the whole family is named to wit His children Joh. 1. 12. and domesticks Eph. 2. 19. 4. The near relation which God hath to His Church and His Church to Him is sufficient ground and warrant for faith to rest upon Him and plead with Him for supply and furniture of all grace and of every thing needfull for shall not He provide for His own children who hath pronounced those among men to be worse than infidels who provide not for theirs 1 Tim. 5. 8. Hence the Apostle maketh this a ground of his confidence to be answered by God in what he sought in behalf of those Ephesians even Gods fatherly interest in them Of whom the whole family in heaven and earth is named Vers. 16. That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man THe Apostle doth secondly particularize those petitions which he put up to God in his prayer and they are four The first whereof is in this verse to wit That God from the fountain of that in-exhaustible treasure of His divine attributes called His glory Exod. 33. 18. with 34. 6 7. and especially of His mercy and power which are set forth by the name and epithet of His glory or glorious Eph. 1. 6. Col. 1. 11. would furnish them with a daily increase of spirituall strength whereby they might resist the devil and all spirituall adversaries in their Christian course Chap. 6. 12. which strength was to be wrought by the holy Spirit in their inward man whereby as 2 Corinth 4. 16. is meaned the soul not simply in it self but as living the life of grace and those things which relate to that spiritual life as the outward man doth comprehend all those things belonging to a man's outward estate So in a word he prayeth that they may be strong and flourish in all things which relate to the spirituall estate of their eternal souls Doct. 1. From the Apostle his being able to give an after-account of what he prayed for see chap. 1. ver 17. doct 2. that he would grant unto you 2. Whatever strength or natural parts of body or mind men naturally have to compasse their effairs of this world Gen. 4. 20 21 22. yet they are wholly destitute of all spiritual strength and activity for compassing heaven and happinesse and for walking in the way of holinesse which leadeth to it for the Apostle findeth an inlack of this strength even in the converted Ephesians and therefore doth seek it from God unto them Much more must it be wholly wanting in those who are not yet converted That he would grant unto you to be strengthened in the inward man 3. Though there be a new principle of spirituall strength wrought in those who are renewed at their first conversion Jer. 31. 33. whereby the renewed heart being wrought upon by the Spirit of God doth really work that which is spiritually good Philip. 4. 13. Yet a constantly-renewed supply of grace and strength from the Spirit of God is necessary even to the renewed man whereby those seeds of grace already wrought in him may be upheld in their being Jer. 32. -40. preserved against the furious assaults of raging tentations Luk 22. 32. a 〈…〉 d and made to do that which is truely good Philip. 2. 13. and much more that hereby grace begun in conversion may be made to grow and advance towards perfection Philip. 1. 6. for the Apostle prayeth even for those converted Ephesians that they may be strengthened with might in the inward man 4. Such is the vanity lightnesse and inconstancie of our hearts in good Psal. 39. -5. our impotencie to resist tentations Matth. 26. 34. our pronenesse to turn from the wayes of God Gal. 5. 7. So strong so subtile so assiduous are our spirituall adversaries Eph. 6. 12. So many are those difficulties discouragements diversions and hinderances which we have to wrestle with and overcome in the way to heaven Act. 14. -22. that except we be underpropped and strengthened by Gods almighty power we cannot stand one moment and much lesse advance in our Christian course for therefore doth Paul pray that they might be strengthened with might in the inward man 5. Even the regenerate children of God in seeking increase of strength and of more grace from God must not if so they would obtain their suit plead from their merit or any good use they have made of their former grace seing upon a strict account it will be found that grace hath not been so improven by the best as it ought Isa. 64. 6 But they must seek what they so expect as a gift from God's free grace without any respect had to their own worth for the
Apostle teach while proving the variety of gifts he giveth an instance in those diverse offices wherein those gifts are to be exercised And he gave some Apostles some Prophets c. 4. The gifts which God bestoweth upon His publick Ministers for the work of the Ministery are the prime and chief of all those gifts which the Lord Christ doth bestow upon His Church and much to be preferred to the private gifts of others in so far especially as they are the ordinary mean appointed by God for working saving Grace Rom. 10. 14 15. for therefore is it that the Apostle not only here but else where Rom. 12. 6. 1 Co● 12. 28. being to give an induction of those various gifts bestowed by Christ upon His Church doth begin with and insist mainly on those gifts which are given to His publick Ministers and preachers of the Word He gave some Apostles some Prophets 5. A Ministery sent by Christ and sufficiently furnished with ministeriall gifts for the conscientious discharge of that calling is a singular gift of God unto a people whereby Christ doth supply the want of His bodily presence among them and bringeth about the edification of His Church as effectually as if He Himself were present upon earth Joh. 14. 12. for when Christ ascended up far above all heavens He gave in a special gift to His Church and as it were in supply of His absence some Apostles some Prophets 6. The Lord Christ hath never appointed such an office-bearer in his house as the Pope whom Papists call the visible head of the universal Church on earth supplying the room and place of Christ now absent in heaven nor yet of a Lord prelate commonly called Bishop who according to the maintainers of that office is one entrusted with the actual oversight of many Congregations and of whole Provinces with a degree of authority flowing from their office over and above all the Ministers of Jesus Christ within those bounds for if Christ had appointed those great Offices and office-bearers as necessary in His house how should the Apostle have passed them over not only in all other places where he speaketh of this purpose but also here where he is reckoning forth those gifts and offices which Christ ascending to heaven hath appointed to supply in a special manner the want of His bodily presence upon earth which without all doubt should be most supplied by those if they were of His appointment and therefore though the office of ruling Elder and Deacon be not so necessary to be here mentioned Yet those great Offices the mentioning whereof would have been so subservient to his purpose could not be well omitted Now none of those are here for he gave some Apostles some Prophets c. 7. The Lord Christ hath not intrusted all with a publick office in His house but some only to whom the rest ought to submit themselves and obey in the Lord Heb. 13. 17. Neither are all Office-bearers intrusted with one and the same office and therefore not indued with the same measure of gifts and parts so that we are not to measure all by some rejecting others who come not up in all things to those for He gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists c. some only and not all 8. The Lord hath alwayes raised and yet will raise up men in His Church according to what the exigence of the times requireth and though we have not ground to look for men extraordinary whether for gifts or office Yet for men singularly assisted in their ordinary stations when the important affairs of the Church do call for such for here when there were extraordinary things to be done the first foundations of the Christian Church to be laid the Canon of Scripture to be compleated the Jewish way of Religion once established by God to be put down the Lord Christ sendeth forth extraordinary office-bearers and extraordinarily assisted for to bring all this about He gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists 9. So wise and mercifull is the Lord Christ that He doth not overburthen His servants too much but where their work goeth beyond their strength He hath sufficiently provided how a part of their burden may be taken on by others for the work of laying the foundations of the Christian Church being too heavie for the twelve Apostles He did allow them co-workers and fellow-helpers even the Prophets and Evangelists He gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists c. 10. Whatever is done in the Church of Christ according to His order though mediately by the hands of men Christ will own it as if it were done immediately by Himself which holdeth especially in the Churches calling of fit men to the work of the Ministery according to the order appointed by Christ for he maketh the calling of ordinary Pastors and Teachers though it be mediate only and by men to be from Christ as well as the immediate extraordinary calling of the Apostles He gave some Apostles some Pastors and Teachers 11. As it is needfull that both the judgments of people be informed and their affections wrought upon and as God hath furnished His servants with answerable gifts for effectuating both so we are not to despise either of those sorts of gifts neither the sound plain able teaching gift though it be not so operative or taking upon the affections nor yet the pithy moving pastorall gift that worketh upon the affections though it be not accompanied with profound knowledge and great learning in those who have it for the Lord dispenseth both those gifts and oftimes not to the same person He gave Pastors and Teachers Vers. 12. For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ. THe Apostle having thus far enlarged himself upon the first branch of that general argument for union taken from the diversity of gifts in the Church to wit because they all came from one and the same author he doth now fall upon its second branch inforcing unity notwithstanding the diversity of gifts and offices because they are all given for promoting one and the same end which end is first propounded in this verse in three different expressions all tending much to the same purpose but with some difference in regard of three sorts of persons to whom the ministerial function hath reference First in regard of the Saints or people the end of the Ministery is to perfect them that is to bring them out of that disorderly disjoynted and confused frame posture and condition wherein they are and to fix them in a well-ordered compact spiritual frame and state which is attained when they are joyned to Christ by faith and one to another by love for the word signifieth to prepare fit and dispose things in an orderly frame Rom. 9. -22. and especially such things as were before rent asunder Mark 1. 19. or out of their own due place and order as disjoynted members
which is betwixt Christ and His Church for what was spoken historically of marriage is here applied mystically to Christ For this cause shall a man leave c. 3. As the Church of true Believers is the Bride the Lambs wife espoused already to Christ So never any man did more to purchase a Bride to himself than Christ hath done for His. He laid aside the glory which He had with the Father and became of no reputation as was mystically foretold in this history of the first marriage A man shall leave his father and mother 4. The great travel and trouble which Christ was put to for purchasing a Bride unto Himself doth not make Him regard her the lesse now when He hath her for He doth inseparably cleave unto her with most ardent and exemplary affection as was also mystically foretold And shall be joyned to his wife Vers. 32. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church THe Apostle concludeth this purpose concerning the spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church here made use of to illustrate that near conjunction betwixt husband and wife with an observable acclamation that it is a great mysterie which word as it is usually taken in Scripture doth signifie a thing secret not obvious to every understanding and hid either in it self or in its cause and reason whether it be held out in plain terms or under the vail of some external sign or figure to represent it See 1 Tim. 3. 16. Eph. 3. 3. 1 Cor. 15. 51. Rom. 11. 25. 2 Thess. 2. 7. And lest by reason of his speaking all alongs of the bodily marriage betwixt husband and wife any had so far mistaken him as to think he called that a mysterie therefore he explaineth himself by shewing he was to be understood not of the bodily marriage but of the spiritual or that strict union or conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church Now he calleth this union a great mysterie because it is a thing hid in it self before it be revealed 1 Cor. 2. 7 8. yea and after it remaineth unsearchable by the light of reason how Christ now glorified in heaven can be one with us on earth and can only be acknowledged by faith Heb. 11. 1. Beside the bonds of this blessed union and conjunction are not naturall or bodily but spirituall even the Spirit of Christ Eph. 2. 18. and the grace of faith Eph. 3. 17. and therefore though the conjunction following upon these bonds be real Joh. 17. 21. operative Joh. 15. 5. and indissoluble Joh. 10. 28 29. yet the way of it is wholly spirituall and heavenly and consequently not so much to be searched into by reason what or how it is as to be believed that it is and improved for attaining and finding in our selves those blessed effects which do attend it where it is Doct. 1. That Papists have not ground from this place to make marriage a Sacrament properly so called is clear from the Apostle's own commentary whereby he sheweth by the mysterie here spoken of he doth not understand the bodily marriage but the spiritual beside that the word mysterie as we shew in the use of Scripture doth signifie a sacred secret not obvious to ordinary capacity and therefore every mysterie is not a Sacrament See 2 Thess. 2. 7. Rom. 11. 25. This is a great mysterie but I speak concerning Christ and the Church 2. The more a man doth attain to know of this mysterie of the mystical union and conjunction which is betwixt Christ and His Church the more he will be ravished with admiration at the unsearchable deepnesse and profundity of it so far will he be from thinking himself able sufficiently to comprehend it for even Paul who saw as far in this mysterie as any other Eph. 3. 4. doth stand admire and cry This is a great mysterie 3. As Ministers are bound to set forth to the Lords People that most near and blessed union betwixt Christ and believing souls and to presse upon them the study of the knowledge of it So both Pastors and People have need of much sobriety of spirit in diving into this subject not trusting to the quicknesse of their own wit nor judging of it by natural reason but resting upon what God hath revealed and made known concerning it and choosing rather to remain ignorant where he hath not revealed than curiously to search and pry further than is revealed for Paul while he is instructing them in this subject seeth it necessary to minde them of the profoundnesse of it this is a great mysterie 4. As we are ready through ignorance or inadvertence to mistake the right meaning and sense of Scripture So the Spirit of God speaking in Scripture hath carefully guarded against all such mistakes while he doth clear the right and genuine sense of a doubt some and dark Scripture by Scripture it self either in the same place or another for so doth Paul here while to obviate a possible mistake he saith But I speak concerning Christ and the Church Vers. 33. Neverthelesse let every one of you in particular so love his wife even as himself and the wife see that she reverence her husband HE doth here by way of diversion from dipping further at this time in that spiritual conjunction of Christ and His Church exhort both husband and wife to learn from that forementioned law of marriage a short sum of their respective duties and first that every husband without exception or admitting any excuse would love his wife as himself that is seing she is a piece of himself as ver 28. otherwise if the particle as were only a note of similitude comparing different things and making a mans love unto himself the rule of his love unto his wife Then every man's neighbours should be equally loved with his wife for every man is to love his neighbour as himself in that sense Gal. 5. 14. And secondly he enjoyneth the wife that she reverence or as the word signifieth from love do fear her husband the meaning whereof is that she inwardly acknowledge that degree of honour which God hath put upon him 1 Cor. 11. 3. and give evident testimony of her inward esteem in words 1 Pet. 3. 6. actions and whole carriage and especially in her loathnesse to offend him 1 Pet. 3. 2. Doct. 1. Though there be some latent mysteries intended by the Spirit of God to be set forth by some plain histories recorded in Scripture besides their historicall and literall sense yet we are not upon that pretence to turn the whole Scripture into an allegory as if no more were intended in those Scriptures by the Spirit of God but only to set forth the spirituall mysterie We ought to look upon the historicall and literall sense of them also and mainly and make such use of them as being so taken they will afford for Paul having shown the mystical and allegorical use of Adam's words doth divert from that
duty For understanding of which promise know that though it was to be understood even in the most plain and obvious sense of the words as it was held forth to the ancient Church to whom God used to promise and bestow things carnall and earthly as an earnest and shadow of things heavenly 1 Cor. 10. 11. Yet even then there was a tacite condition implied to wit in so far as the thing promised should serve for Gods glory 2 Chron. 35. 24. and the good of those to whom the promise was made 1 King 14. 13. But now under the New Testament though this promise even in the letter be doubtlesse fulfilled unto many Yet it is chiefly to be understood in a sprituall sense in so far as the godly obedient childe whether he live long or short doth alwayes live well because he liveth in Gods favour Psal. 63. 3. and cometh to a full and ripe age as having reached the prize and mark for attaining whereof life is given even the salvation of the soul Isa. 65. 20. Hence Learn 1. Though our first and chief motive unto duty ought to be the equity and righteousnesse which is in the thing it self as being commanded by God Yet we may eye the promised reward whether temporall or eternall as a secondary motive and encouragement providing it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by our obedience Luk. 17. 10. for as ver 1. he inforced this duty of obedience from the equity of it in the first place So here from the advantage which should redound unto children by it in the second place That it may be well with thee 2. So merciful is God to man that He hath injoyned only those things as equitably righteous and conducing to His own glory which tend also and no lesse to our own profit and advantage so that we need not to separate our own well-being from His glory but are alwayes to seek the former as a mean of and in subordination to the latter for the Apostle sheweth that this duty of obedience in children as it tendeth to glorifie God in the first place it being a doing of what is right according to His command So it tendeth to the advantage of children in the next That it may be well with thee 3. To live well and long upon the earth is in it self not to be despised or under-valued in so far as though the godly man the longer he liveth he is the longer keeped out of heaven yet he findeth the moe proofs and experiences of Gods goodnesse here on earth 1 Joh. 3. 13. and hath the larger opportunity of a fair seed-time of glorifying God here and consequently shall of free grace reap a more plentifull harvest of comfort at death and of glory hereafter 2 Cor. 9. 6. for he promiseth this as a blessing to the obedient childe that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth which as we shew is accomplished sometimes in the very letter 4. Then do we rightly apply unto our selves under the New Testament those things which were spoken to the Jews under the Old when passing-by what was in such things typical or astricted to the infant-state of the Church which then was we look upon what was substantial moral or of common equity as belonging unto us yet for so much doth the Apostle teach while citing the promise annexed to the fifth command he saith only that thou mayest live long upon the earth and omitteth the last clause of that promise to wit which the Lord thy God giveth thee Exod. 20. 12. whereby that promise was in a peculiar manner astricted to the Jews and to the land of Canaan which He did give them to inherit 5. The best way to thrive even in things worldly and to attain prosperity health wealth and length of dayes so far at least as shall serve for Gods glory and our own good is to live a godly life by taking heed thereto according to Gods Word and especially by giving due reverence and obedience to our natural parents and consequently to all our lawfull superiours because of the Command of God for unto the Command ver 2. Honour thy father and mother this promise is subjoyned that it may be well with thee and thou mayest live long upon the earth Verse 4. And ye fathers provoke not your children to wrath but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord. HE doth here in a word set forth the duty of parents And because they are apt to abuse their parentall authority and chiefly the fathers therefore he enjoyneth to them and by consequence to the mothers to beware of provoking their children to wrath or of imbittering their spirits which is done either by denying them that which is their due in food r●iment or meanes of education Lam. 4. 3. or by commanding things in themselves unjust 1 Sam. 20. 31. or by unjust and rigorous commands about things in their own nature indifferent 1 Sam. 14. 29. or inveighing with bitter words against them chiefly when there is no cause 1 Sam. 20. 30. and lastly by beating them either unjustly when there is no fault 1 Sam. 20. 33. or immoderatly unseasonably or basely when there is a fault Next he doth guard them against the other extremity of too much indulgence to their children while he exhorts them first to bring them up or as it is in the original to nourish them which comprehendeth not only their giving unto them present maintenance from the womb Gen. 21. 7. but also their providing for them against the future 2 Cor. 12. 14. and training them up in any lawfull imployment whereby they may be able under God to sustain themselves and theirs Gen. 4. 2. And secondly to joyn nurture and admonition with their education by the former whereof is meaned the timous seasonable and compassionate correction of children which parents are bound to dispense Prov. 13. 24. and by the latter is meaned the information of their judgement how they ought to carry themselves towards God in things religious Gen. 18. 19. and how towards man in righteousnesse civility and good manners which is also a great piece of the duty of parents towards children Prov. 31. 1 8 9. And lastly he addeth that their education must be in the admonition of the Lord Christ that is such as becometh Christians and by which young ones are instructed chiefly in the knowledge of Gods Word of Jesus Christ and of the way of salvation held forth by Him Hence Learn 1. Such is the prevalencie and interest of sin in the soul of man now fallen that in some it wholy extinguisheth or much weakeneth the most intense of our natural affections and maketh them run in a channel quite contrary unto what they ought for the Apostle supponeth that even naturall affection in some parents to their own children will be so far weakened as by their unnatural carriage to provoke and imbitter them