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A35951 An expositon of all St. Pauls epistles together with an explanation of those other epistles of the apostles St. James, Peter, John & Jude : wherein the sense of every chapter and verse is analytically unfolded and the text enlightened. / David Dickson ...; Expositio analytica omnium Apostolicarum Epistolarum. English Dickson, David, 1583?-1663.; Retchford, William.; Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews. 1659 (1659) Wing D1403; ESTC R7896 807,291 340

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manner The first comparison is in the opposite state of a natural and a spiritual body The first Adam was made a living soul not giving life which had a life indeed but supported as other creatures are with meat and drink c. And not such as could continue life to the body without nourishment But Christ the last Adam is made a quickning Spirit who could communicate virtue to those that were his by his Spirit that without nourishments of the body the most blessed union of body and soul may bee preserved Vers. 46. Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual but that which is natural and afterward that which is spiritual The second comparison in respect to Order The first Adam had the precedency in the natural state of the body The second Adam was latter in the spiritual state of the body for the imperfect state ought to precede so God is wont to proceed to the highest perfection Hee saith not simply that Adam was before Christ but that the Natural state of the first Adam is first in time in Adam in Christ and in us And our Spiritual state which is from Christ is latter Vers. 47. The first man is of the earth earthy the second man is the Lord from Heaven The third comparison in the order and dignity of the person The first-Man meer man is of the earth earthy whose body rose out of the earth and is resolved again into earth upon the substraction of food whereupon hee could communicate unto us nothing but a terrene life But the second Adam is both man and God from Heaven who although hee hath a body from the earth yet because hee is God from Heaven and therefore is called heavenly as hee could support his body that it should not see corruption though in its own nature terrene and resoluble into dust and as it being raised out of the grave hee could make it every way glorious immortal and heavenly not needing earthly supports So in like manner can hee make our bodies such Vers. 48. As is the earthy such are they that are earthy and as is the heavenly such are they also that are heavenly From these hee proves the future mutation of the qualities of the body from earthly to heavenly from natural to spiritual by four Arguments Argum. 1. Such as was the earthly Adam the head of our stock after the fleshly propagation such it became us to bee born viz. mortal Therefore as the heavenly Adam our head in respect to regeneration and glorification is after his resurrection viz. Spiritual glorious incorruptible immortal such shall wee bee that are born again of him after our resurrection Vers. 49. And as wee have born the image of the earthy wee shall also bear the image of the heavenly Argum. 2. From its future certainty As sure as wee bear the image of the first Adam in the qualities of our substance being made conform to him in soul and body so sure shall wee bear the image of the second Adam in the glorious qualities of our substance Vers. 50. Now this I say Brethren that flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdome of God Neither doth corruption inherit incorruption Argum. 3. The promises of glorifying our bodies or of bringing us into the glorious Kingdome of God ought to bee fulfilled But flesh and blood i. e. our bodies as now they are corruptible cannot enter into the Kingdome of God unless they bee fitted for that glorious state Therefore our bodies shall bee made meet by the mutation of their qualities to enter into the Kingdome of Glory Corruption By way of confirmation to this reason hee adds Argum. 4. Corruption cannot inherit incorruption Therefore necessary it is that our bodies bee changed in their qualities from corruptibility to incorruptibility Vers. 51. Behold I shew you a mystery wee shall not all sleep but wee shall all bee changed Objection 3. What shall become of those that are alive at the comming of our Lord How shall they arise which shall not dye but bee found alive by the Judge at his comming Hee answers by opening the mystery viz. that all shall not die nor rise again but they shall bee taken that remain alive at the comming of our Lord and changed into an eternal state of immortality either in glory or torments which change shall bee in stead of death and a resurrection Vers. 52. In a moment in the twinckling of an eye at the last Trumpet for the Trumpet shall sound and the dead shall bee raised incorruptible and wee shall be changed Hee shews the manner of this change that it shall bee in the twinckling of an eye i. e. in a moment all that are alive and dead shall be summoned by a fearful alarum to the judgement of God Vers. 53. For this corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality Hee gives two Reasons of this change First Mortality must bee swallowed up of immortality and this mortal body must put on immortality Therefore they shall bee changed that are found alive at the comming of our Lord. Vers. 54. So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal shall have put on immortality then shall bee brought to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up of victory 55. O death where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory Reason 2. The Prophecie of Hosea ought to bee fulfilled chap. 13. v. 14. who fore-told our full victory over death and the grave Therefore they that are alive shall bee changed at the comming of the Lord which shall bee in stead of death Vers. 56. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law That this victory may appear the greater hee intimates the victory wee shall have over sin and the Law without which the grave cannot prevail any thing over us for unless satisfaction bee given to the Law sin wrath and death remain in full power But after satisfaction is made to the Law for us sin and wrath are taken away wherewith death is armed as with a sting which being disarmed is abolished and triumphed over Vers. 57. But thanks bee to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Iesus Christ. Hee shews a twofold use of this victory The first is that thanks may bee given to God who hath given us through Christ victory over death sin and the Law yea verily hee hath imputed the victory of Christ to us and hath made it ours for hee hath died for us and by his resurrection hath obtained for us victory over death that hee might make us conquerours Vers. 58. Therefore my beloved Brethren bee yee stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Another use of this doctrine is this That under hope of the free gift at the day of resurrection wee would persevere constantly in the Faith of the Gospel
qualities of his person and a more excellent condition than any of the Levitical Priests Therefore his Priesthood is more excellent than theirs As for the qualities of his person 1 Hee is holy both in his nature and in his desire wholly devoted to the glory of God the Father 2 Hee is harmless who doth injury to no man nor creature 3 Hee is undefiled first hee is free from the pollution or blot of all sin both of his own and others 4 Hee is separated from sinners i. e. No waies obnoxious to sin or so far from sin that hee cannot bee a sinner As to the state or condition of his person his is higher than the Heavens and all creatures therein for hee is raised above the Visible Heavens in his body exalted to a fellowship with the Father in his Throne Vers. 27. Who needeth not daily as those high Priests to offer up sacrifice first for his own sins and then for the peoples for this he did once when he offered up himself Argum. 15. Following upon the former Christ is not necessitated to offer Sacrifice for his own sins who had none or to offer Sacrifice often for the sins of the people it was sufficient to offer himself once But it was necessary for the Levitical Priests daily to offer both for their own and the peoples sins Therefore his priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Offered up himself Argum. 16. The Sacrifice of Christ was not of any cattel or brute beasts but hee offered up himself and to the offering of this Sacrifice there could not bee any fitting and worthy Priest besides himself hee alone offered up himself but the Levitical Priests offered cartel which men could perform Therefore Christs Priesthood is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 28. For the Law maketh men High-Priests which have infirmity but the word of the oath which was since the Law maketh the Son who is consecrated for evermore Argum. 16. Is taken from a six-fold difference betwix● the Levitical or Legal Priesthood and the Evangelical Priesthood of Christ. 1 The constitution of the Levitical Priesthood proceeds from the Law which may bee changed but the constitution of the Evangelical Priesthood or of Christ flows from the word of the Oath which cannot bee changed because the Oath of God is unchangeable 2 The Levitical Law admitteth many to the Priesthood the Gospel only one that is Christ. 3 The Law admitteth one man to succeed another the Gospel admitteth one only without a Successor viz. Christ the Son of God 4 The Levitical Law admits men to bee Priests that labour with infirmities i. e. obnoxious to sin who cannot make their Sacrifice effectual to appease God or the blessing which they pronounce they cannot really confer upon those whom they bless but the Evangelical Word hath ordained Christ the Omnipotent Son of God who is able in all things to make his Priesthood effectual 5 The Law appoints temporary Priests who are consecrated only for the short time of their life but the Gospel hath the only Son who is consecrated for ever 6 The Levitical Law went before nor was the Law Gods ultimate determination touching Priests but the Gospel or the word of the Oath succeeded after the Law as Gods ultimate determination Therefore the Priesthood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical All tends to this that the believing Hebrews seeing the weakness and abolition of the Levitical Priesthood and the excellency of Christs might renounce their Legal Rites and more firmly cleave unto Christ. CHAP. VIII HEE prosecutes the same Argument There are two parts of the Chapter In the first he proves the excellency of Christs Priesthood above the Levitical in four Arguments to vers 7. In the second hee proves the New Covenant to excel the Old Concerning the whole Chapter he prefaceth that in it is contained the summe of the whole comparison betwixt the Priesthood of Christ and the Levitical Vers. 1. Now of the things which wee have spoken this is the summe wee have such an High-priest who is set on the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty in the heavens Arg. 1. Christ our High-priest is such and of so great dignity that hee sits King at the right hand of the Throne of the Majesty of God the Father in the heavens equal to the Father in power and glory Hee leaves us the other part of the Comparison as sufficiently clear concerning the Levitical Priest that hee is not such an one Therefore the Priest-hood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Vers. 2. A Minister of the Sanctuary and of the true Tabernacle which the Lord pitched and not man Arg. 2. Christ is the Minister of that Sanctuary in the heavens where hee sits King in his Throne and all holy things which appertain to the worship of God and the salvation of man not faintly but effectually acting the part of a Priest in Heaven although hee is a Royal Priest as to the dignity of his Person and the manner of his Administration yet as a Minister as pertaining to his Mediatory Office Such are not the Levitical Priests on earth but onely Ministers Therefore the Priest-hood of Christ is more excellent than the Levitical Of the true Tabernacle Arg. 3. Christ is in heaven the Minister of that true Tabernacle which the Lord hath pitched and not man viz. of his body which Christ himself compared to a Tabernacle and is figured by the typical Tabernacle which true Tabernacle of his body the Holy Ghost miraculously formed and prepared for him in the womb of the Virgin And Christ now ministring in Heaven represents that body to the Father and his Humanity wherein hee suffered and offers to him continually interceding for us in the same body But the Levitical Priests are onely Ministers of the typical Tabernacle which man hath built Therefore c. Vers. 3. For every High-priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer Hee proves that Christ doth constantly offer up the true Tabernacle of his body to God the Father by three Reasons Reas. 1. Because seeing that every Priest is ordained to offer up gifts and sacrifices it is necessary that Christ have somewhat to offer But besides his intercession and the presenting of his sacrificed body to the Father Christ hath nothing in Heaven which may reconcile God Therefore the true Tabernacle of his body is that onely which Christ offers to God in the Celestial Sanctuary Vers. 4. For if hee were on earth hee should not bee a Priest seeing that there are Priests that offer gifts according to the Law Reas. 2. Because if hee was on earth hee could not bee a Priest by the Law to offer to wit those things which the Law prescribes to the Priests viz. Gifts and typical Sacrifices Therefore that true Tabernacle of his body onely remains which Christ offers in his heavenly Sanctuary Vers. 5.
For 1. As the Symboles of Gods presence was in the typical Tabernacle so the fulness of the Godhead dwelleth bodily in Christ. 2. As the typical Tabernacle had inclosed in it all the holy things the Candlestick Table of Shew-bread Laver Altar c. So hath the humanity of Christ or Christ the Man all holiness and perfection the fulness of all good and all holy things in him Light Food Washing and Reconciliation and all in himself that out of his fulness we may all receive Grace for Grace 3. As the Tabernacle in the outmost Coverings seemed but base yet had better stuff within so our Lord when he dwelt in the Tabernacle of his flesh amongst us was found in form as a man and in the shape of a servant but inwardly was full of Grace and Truth 4. In calling Christs Body The true Tabernacle which God builded and not man he teacheth us To make use of Christ in truth as the Church of old made use of the Tabernacle in the Type that is in him seek God Towards him turn the eye of our soul when we seem to our selves to be far removed to the end of the earth in him offer all our spiritual sacrifices in him seek our Washing our Food our Light our Comfort in him as his Priests make our Abode and daily Dwelling In him let us live and breathe 5. In so calling Christ hee appropriateth the sacrificing of his Body to himself in his own person as the personal and proper act of his Priesthood for the offering of the which Sacrifice once and never after as Heb. 7.27 sheweth he keepeth still the stile of the onely Minister of the true Tabernacle as his own incommunicable Prerogative And therefore whosoever presumeth to offer his Body presumeth also to take his place Vers. 3. For every High-Priest is ordained to offer gifts and sacrifices wherefore it is of necessity that this man have somewhat also to offer He proveth That Christ is the Minister of the Tabernacle of his own Body by offering it up because it behoved him seeing he is a Priest to offer up something either the typical Oblations or else his own Body represented by them But the typical Oblations he could not offer according to the Law not being a Levite Therefore he behooved to offer up himself represented by the typical Oblations Then the Apostle acknowledgeth no Priest but either the Levitical Priest or the Priest that offereth up his own Body And whosoever pretendeth to have the Office of a Priest now usurpeth either the office of the Levite or Christs Office Vers. 4. For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law 1. He proveth That Christ cannot offer up the typical Oblations because he cannot be a Priest on earth albeit he were on earth because Priesthood on earth is proper to the Levites onely For they are the onely Priests by Law on earth and have prescribed to them by Law what they should offer Quest. You will ask me here Was not Chriest a Priest when he was on earth I answer Yes Quest. How then saith the Apostle here If he were on earth he should not be a Priest I answer Because albeit he began his Priesthood upon earth yet he could not brook his Office of Priesthood upon earth For as the High-Priest who was the Type carried the Sacrifice once a year through the Court and before the Sanctuary killed the sacrifice and then took the blood thereof in unto the Holiest of all and presented himself there before the Lord with the blood to intercede for the people and there remained during the time of Intercession appointed to him So Christ carrying his sacrifice out of the City offered up his Body on the Altar of his Godhead to his Father and by his own blood entred into the heavenly Sanctuary and sate down on the right hand of the Majestie on high and there he liveth for ever to intercede for us having then ended his sacrifice as this Apostle proveth Chap. 7.27 and Chap. 9.25 26. And having no sacrifice now to offer on earth it is with reason that the Apostle saith If he were on earth he should not be a Priest Whence we learn 1. That Christ is not now on the earth not in any place thereof and therefore if any man say to us Lo here he is Lo there he is we must not beleeve him it is a false Christ he sheweth us and not the true as Christ himself forewarneth Mat. 24.23 2. That it is impossible that Christ should now be on the earth for then should he lose his Priesthood which is impossible For if he were on earth he should not be a Priest saith the Apostle here 3. That Christs Priesthood is onely discharged now in heaven seeing he cannot be a Priest on earth 2. His Reason is They are Priests which offer Gifts according to the Law Then Every Priest who brooketh his Priesthood on earth must offer Gifts according to the Law as the Apostle here reasoneth And such Priests as those Christ hath abolished having changed the Priesthood and the Law also Therefore there can be no Priest by Office on earth at all with Gods allowance Vers. 5. Who serve unto the Example and Shadow of Heavenly things as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith He that thou make all things according to the Pattern shewed unto thee in the Mount He describeth the proper use of the Levitical Priests to serve unto the Example of heavenly Things Then 1. The Incarnation of Christ his Death and the Benefits thereof signified by Levitical Shadows are heavenly things in regard of their heavenly Fruits and Effects and other heavenly respects and are with an heavenly minde to be looked upon 2. The Ceremonies of the Law were not idle Rites but Examples and Figures of Christ and his Graces by the which men were led then as by the hand to Christ who was to come 2. From Exod. 25.40 he proveth they were Shadows of heavenly things because the Pattern in the Mount represented the heavenly things and Moses Tabernacle represented the Pattern in the Mount Therefore it represented heavenly things And unto this Pattern was Moses tyed Then 1. God would not no not in the time of Types suffer any device of man to come in for representing any thing heavenly Much less will he now 2. Those which himself ordaineth he will have observed and none omitted Vers. 6. But now hath Hee obtained a more excellent Ministery by how much also Hee is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better Promises 1. The offering of the Typical Oblations hee hath made proper to the Levites Now the offering of the true Sacrifices and service belonging thereunto hee appropriateth to Christ and calleth it A more excellent Ministery Then 1. The offering of the thing signified by the Levitical
Covenant and ceremonial forms of worship are abrogated The Summe of Chap. IX THen That you may see this more clearly let us take view of the typical Ordinances in the Old Covenant and of their accomplishment in Christ under the Old Covenant and typical Tabernacle there were sundry shadows vers 1 2. The Tabernacle divided in two rooms and their furniture within them both vers 3 4 5. In the outer room the Priests resorted daily vers 6. In the inner room onely the High Priest once a year vers 7. The close-keeping of which room signified that the way to Heaven was not to be fully clear during the time of those shadows vers 8. Nothing done then externally could quiet the conscience vers 9. All being but temporary shadows imposed till Christ came to reform all vers 10. But when Christ came hee gave to those shadows accomplishment For hee was Priest of the true Tabernacle of his own Body signified by the typical Tabernacle vers 11. And by his own blood entred into Heaven for our Eternal Redemption vers 12. For if the types procured a Ceremonial cleansing vers 13. How much more shall his blood truly and in effect procure our Justification and Sanctification vers 14. And therefore that Remission of sins and Eternal Life might be given to the faithful both then of old and now hee behoved by his office to make his Testament and die vers 15. For so requireth the nature of a Testament vers 16 17. Wherefore the typical Testament of old also behoved to have a typical death as Levit. 16. maketh plain vers 18 19 20 21. Yea every cleansing of the Types and every Remission behoved to be with blood vers 22. Therefore the things represented by the types behoved to be cleaned by better blood even the blood of the Messias vers 23. For Christ entred not into the typical Sanctuary but into Heaven it self vers 24. And offered not himself often as the imperfect Levitical Sacrifice was offered vers 25. For then should hee have often died But his once offering was sufficient for ever vers 26. And as God appointed men but once to die vers 27. So Christ was but once offered till the time hee come to judgement for the salvation of the faithful vers 28. The Doctrine of Chap. IX Vers. 1. Then verily the first Covenant had also Ordinances of Divine Service and a worldly Sanctuary THe word Ordinances in the original is also Justifications in the plural number so called because they represented our Iustification Whereof wee learn 1. That as other things were typed under the Law so also was our Justification and the manner of obtaining the same shadowed forth 2. That those things which then were called Justifications were so called onely because they were the representations of the way of obtaining Justification for they did not justifie 3. That albeit Justification be onely one yet the types therefore were many no one of them being able to express the truth but in part 2. By calling them Ordinances of Divine Service hee teacheth us That sometime those Ceremonies which are now abolished were during their own time parts of Gods external worship in regard of the Commandement of God injoyning them 3. By calling the Sanctuary Worldly hee teacheth us To think of all the external glory of Levitical Service onely as the earthly representation of heavenly things and under all these earthly shadows to seek in to an heavenly signification Vers. 2. For there was a Tabernacle made the first wherein was the Candlestick and the Table and the Shew-bread which is called the Sanctuary 3. And after the second Veil the Tabernacle which is called the holiest of all 4. Which had the Golden Censer and the Ark of the Covenant overlaid round about with Gold wherein was the Golden Pot that had Manna and Aarons Rod that buded and the Tables of the Covenant 5. And over it the Cherubims of Glory shadowing the Mercy-Seat of which wee cannot now speak particularly 6. Now when these things were thus ordained the Priests went alwaies into the first Tabernacle accomplishing the Service of God 7. But into the second went the High-Priest alone once every year not without blood which hee offered for himself and for the errours of the people Hee setteth before our eyes the pleasant face of Gods outward worship that in the wise appointing of every thing for place for division of rooms for furniture for ornaments for materials for persons for actions for order of doing wee may behold the Glory not onely of the appointer of them but also the glory of the Church and of Heaven and of Christ and of his Saints represented thereby as far above the glory of those outward things as heavenly and spiritual things are above earthly as the particular Exposition of the meaning of the Types in their own proper place will make plain which wee cannot meddle with here seeing the Apostle judgeth it not pertinent Vers. 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Hee expoundeth what the High Priests going through the Veil but once a year did mean saying the Holy Ghost signified something thereby Then 1. The Holy Ghost is the Author of these Ordinances of Levi and of matters appointed about that Old Tabernacle as of the expressions of his own mind to the Church and so hee is very God 2. The Holy Ghost is a distinct person of the God-head exercising the proper actions of a person subsisting by himself directing the Ordinances of the Church teaching the Church and interpreting the meaning of the Types unto the Church 3. The Church under the Law was not altogether ignorant of the spiritual signification of the Levitical Ordinances because the Holy Ghost was then teaching them the meaning 4. Those Rites and Ceremonies were not so dark in themselves as they could not be in any sort understood but were expressions of the mind of God to the Church of that time 2. That which the Holy Ghost did signifie was this That the way unto the holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing Then That the holiest of all represented Heaven the Old Church did know 3. Hee saith not that the way to Heaven was closed but not clearly manifested Then They knew the way to Heaven darkly through the Veil of Types 2. They knew there was a time of clearer light comming 4. The time of the endurance of this not clear manifestation of the way to Heaven is set down to be Whilst the first Tabernacle was standing Then the Old Church was taught 1. That the clear light of the way to Heaven was not to be revealed while those shadows and that Tabernacle endured 2. That when the clear manifestation of that way should come by the Messias that Tabernacle was not to stand 3. That when God should cause that
course 2. Christ must be looked upon by him who would be helped in his Race the Eye of the Soul being drawn off of every thing which might divert the Man or discourage him such as are the multitude of Backsliders the multitude of Mockers the multitude of by-ways and runners therein the multitude of fears from our own unworthiness and sinfulness and temptations on all sides and our mindes fixed on Christ with loving and longing looks which may draw life and strength from him 3. We must look on him as JESUS the Deliverer from sins and giver of Salvation even him who saveth his people from their sins 4. We must look upon him as the author and finisher of our faith that is as our God who hath begun his good work in us and will also perfect it Who hath given us grace to believe and will surely continue this grace with us even to the end lest the fears of our Faith failing make us to faint 5. We must look upon him as our pattern and example who having run the race before us hath set forth himself for our imitation that in him we might finde all whereof we stand in need 2. How Iesus ran this race he sheweth for our example 1. He had Joy set before him which he was to receive by our Salvation wrought So have we joy set before us also 2. For the hope of that joy he ran with courage So must we 3. He ran with the Cross upon his back all the way being a man acquainted with sorrows So must we resolve also 4. In his griefs and sorrows shame set upon him from the world and poured out contempt upon him So must we resolve to finde it 5. For the hope of the joy he endured patiently and went on under the Cross and wearied not So must we 6. Albeit shame was the sharpest of his griefs from the world yet he regarded it not but despised all despising and shamed shame as unworthy to be taken notice of in comparison of his Design So must we 7. He overcame all at length So shall we through him also 8. He hath gotten the Joy and the Glory for which he ran So shall we with him If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him 9. He is set down on the Right Hand of the throne of God that is is joyned with the Father in the Glorious Government of Heaven and Earth and all things therein for the good of all his followers So that we need to fear nothing in our way seeing he hath the Government of all Vers. 3. For consider him that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself lest you be wearied and faint in your mindes He pointeth forth a special part of his suffering namely The contradiction of sinners willing them to ponder this well for their uphold Then 1. Nothing more forcible to discourage a persecuted Christian than Contradiction A man will suffer much if he know it be for truth but if the truth for which he suffereth be called in question and Scribes and Pharisees and chief Church-men shall contradict him and brangle his Faith in the Truth it is more painful than a Rack-stock unto him 2. The consideration of our Lord Jesus his being exercised this way is a special mean to guard us in such a Temptation 3. If we be not armed against contradiction by certain knowledge of the Truth and Faith in Jesus we cannot hold out but upon force weary under the Cross and be lost or dissolved like water and fall by as the word importeth Vers. 4. Ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin These Hebrews were somewhat dashed and discouraged by the persecution which they had already born and were like to faint Therefore he setteth them on to prepare for suffering to the blood that every suffering lesse than that might be the more tolerable in their eyes 1. He maketh their Party Sin Then 1. Christians must remember in their troubles that they are tryed whether they will choose to sin or to suffer 2. When they disobey their persecutors they must not be interpreted to be strivers against them so much as against sin 3. With what colour or pretence soever sin be urged upon Christians they must not yield but resist in a Christian manner and fight Christianly against that sin whereunto they are tempted The more stedfastly they resist they must prepare themselves for the more suffering and resolve at length to lay down their blood in suffering No yielding to sin must be while life is in us 2. He maketh the greater sufferings which remain a reason to make them bear the present the better Then 1. Suffering in a mans person is the highest degree of suffering 2. Resolution for the worst that can come maketh lesser troubles more comportable 3. Except a man prepare himself for the worst that can be done unto him by man for the Truth he will faint in lesser sufferings Vers. 5. And ye have forgotten the Exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children My son despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him From the General Doctrine of bearing afflictions Pro. 3.11 12. He stirreth them up to Christian patience in persecution and every other trouble Then Persecution for Righteousness cometh in the account of Chastisement and is appointed amongst other ends to amend our faults 1. He maketh these Hebrews the party to whom the Proverbs were directed and God the speaker thereof Then 1. Whosoever be the Pen-men of the Scripture it is God who speaketh in it 2. The Scriptures do direct their speech to every Age and Church and Person no less than to those who lived in the Church of old when it was first written 2. He chargeth them for their forgetting of such a kindly speech as is the stiling of the afflicted by the names of Sons Then 1. The special point of faith which the Lord will have fostered under the Cross is the faith of our Adoption that we never mistake our Fathers affection nor our gracious estate by calling for any hard dealing wherewith possibly we may be exercised 2. He will have us assured of our Adoption by Gods manner of speaking unto us as a Father to his Children 3. He sheweth us that the not remembring of the Word of God speaking unto us according to our estate is the cause of fainting and of mistaking 3. The Exhortation dischargeth despising of the Rod and fainting under the Rod. Then 1. These are the two evils which we are inclined unto either to harden our selves against corrections and count light of them or else to be discouraged and cast down by them Both of which we must eschew 2. Though the Lord both strike and rebuke for sin yet esteemeth he us to be Sons not the less Vers. 6. For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth He giveth a reason to confirm the afflicted
store reserved unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men Argum. 4. The Heavens which now are and the Earth which now is are by the same word and his efficacious will reserved unto the fire of the last judgement when the wicked and especially the scoffers at the coming of Christ shall be condemned and perish Vers. 8. But Beloved be not ignorant of this one thing that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years and a thousand years as one day Hee takes away an Objection The wicked might say why doth hee defer his coming The answer is threefold First Although the Lord seems to defer his coming yet his deferring ought not to be an offence to any because this delay ought not to be estimated by our sense but out of Gods eternity to whom that space of time which seems to us to be very long is but as one day and with whom one day and a thousand years do not differ as to the proportion of measure Vers. 9. The Lord is not slack concerning his promise as some men count slackness but is long-suffering to us-ward not willing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance Answ. 2. This delaying doth not proceed from slackness as some Judge but from the patience of God towards us to wit the Elect whereas many as yet are not converted and whereof God will have none perish but all in his time to come to repentance which cannot be unless the coming of Christ should be deferred to a season For if God should anticipate the time of judgement decreed by himself some of them which hee hath chosen to salvation from eternity should perish Vers. 10. But the day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night in the which the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works that are therein shall be burnt up Answ. 3. And Argum. 5. Reproving scoffers from the manner of Christs coming which is described in three things 1. It shall be unawares to men as thieves use to come at such a time when they know they are least expected 2. It shall be with the greatest change of the whole universe 3. With the disanulling of all things wherein the Atheists sought their felicity in the world for the Heavens shall pass away with a great noise the elements shall melt with fervent heat the earth also and the works therein shall be burnt up so that all ought to be sollicitous in preparing themselves rather than to enquire curiously about the manner or time of his coming or to complain of his slackness The Second Part. Vers. 11. Seeing then that all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought yee to be in all holy conversation and godliness The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee draws this Doctrine into use by an Exhortation to follow after godliness and to perseverance in it The Arguments of the Exhortation are eight Argum. 1. By requiring a testimony from their consciences All these visible works especially which are in the earth are to be dissolved Therefore wee ought to follow after holiness Vers. 12. Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God wherein the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Argum. 2. Because so it becomes you who expect with hope and hasten with desire to meet the Lord at his coming i. e. it behoves you hoping for the coming of Christ to labour patiently in your vocation and to endeavour after holiness Wherein Argum. 3. Because the coming of the Lord to judgement will be so terrible that the Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the elements shall melt with fervent heat Vers. 13. Nevertheless wee according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness 14. Wherefore Beloved seeing that yee look for such things be diligent that yee may be found of him in peace without spot and blameless Argum. 4. Because according to the promises of God Isa 65.17 and 66.22 wee expect new Heavens and a new Earth wherein the just alone shall dwell Therefore wee ought to endeavour after holiness and righteousness who have this hope Hee calls both the Heavens and the Earth the habitation of the just because the world shall be the Possession Palace and Kingdome of the Elect who shall accompany Christ wheresoever hee shall go Be diligent Hee adds Argum. 5. With a repetition of his Exhortation to holiness Being diligent that being without spot and blameless yee may be found of Christ in peace i. e. being reconciled to God and be accounted the friends of Christ by him when hee shall come to judgement Vers. 15. And account that the long-suffering of our Lord is salvation even as our beloved Brother Paul also according to the wisdome given unto him hath written unto you Argum. 6. With preventing an Objection yee ought to be so far from being overcome with weariness because Christ seems to defer his coming that on the contrary yee ought to account it a sign of salvation given to all of you that this is not delay but rather the forbearance of the Lord and slowness to wrath Even as Argum. 7. Paul in his Epistle written to you Hebrews according to the abundant measure of wisdome given to him diligently exhorts you to follow after holiness and patience under the hope of Christs coming as in many places so especially in the end of Chap. 10.36 verse Therefore ought yee to follow after holiness and patience Vers. 16 As also in all his Epistles speaking in them of these things in which are some things hard to be understood which they that are unlearned and unstable wrest as they do also the other Scriptures unto their own destruction Hee takes occasion from the mention hee made of the Epistle of Paul to the Hebrews of commending the rest of Pauls Epistles for Canonical and to take away the offence upon the difficulty of some places in his Epistles from this that neither the sayings of Paul nor any other Scriptures are wrested unless by those that are unlearned and unstable or perverse men and that to the destruction of them that pervert them Vers. 17. Yee therefore Beloved seeing yee know these things before beware lest yee also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your own stedfastness 18. But grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ to him be glory both now and for ever Amen Argum. 8. Propounded by way of Exhortation to shake off the idleness of the flesh Being fore-admonished concerning the errours of false Teachers by which they seduce their Disciples from the way of Truth and Holiness yee ought so much the more not onely to beware lest yee fall from your own stedfastness i. e. from the Faith and Obedience
shew of good works and they that affect Justification thereby fondly desire to bee justified as it were by works or a shew of good works The third cause because they knew not Christ by reason of his humility and the infirmity of his flesh in whom they should believe that they might bee justified but despised him and to their own destruction set themselves against him stumbling at him as at a stumbling stone Vers. 33. As it is written Behold I lay in Zion a stumbling stone and rock of offence and whosoever believeth on him shall not bee ashamed Both parts of this experience hee confirms from the Prophets prediction Isai. 8.14 and 28.16 after this manner Behold I will lay saith God Christ in the Church whose beginning is out of Zion a tryed stone a rock of offence as the incredulous Jews have experienced and whoever believeth in him in the expectation of him that is in his righteousness and life eternal hee shall not bee frustrated as the believing Jews have found by experience And thus the Apostle hath firmly proved that wee are justified by Faith CHAP. X. HEE further prosecutes the argument of the Jewes temporal rejection shewing this to bee the cause in that the Jews foolishly and stubbornly rejected the righteousness of God in Christ. There are two parts of the Chapter In the first hee shews the folly of the Jews to ver 14. In the other their stubbornness to the end of the Chapter Vers. 1. Brethren my hearts desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they might bee saved The Apostle being about to shew the just causes of the Jews rejection hee prefaces as before from his good affection lest any thing should bee thought to bee spoken by him out of hatred Vers. 2. For I hear them Record that they have a zeal of God but not according to knowledge Hee shews their preposterous zeal for God to bee the cause of his affection which zeal was worthy of humane commiseration though it was not to bee commended because it did not arise out of knowledge but ignorance therefore it was blind zeal the zeal of fools Vers. 3. For they being ignorant of Gods righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God Hee proves the folly of the Romans by six Arguments The first Argument Out of ignorance of the righteousness of God imputed to us by Faith in Christ they affected the inherent righteousness of their own works and proudly rejected the righteousness of Christ offered to them Therefore they betrayed their folly Vers. 4. For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth The second Argum. Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to him that believes i. e. the whole Law is therefore given that men acknowledging their sins manifested by the Law might flee unto Christ and might obtain righteousness by Faith Therefore the Jews did foolishly who making a shew of the Law did not acknowledge Christ which is the end of the Law Vers. 5. For Moses describeth the righteousness which is of the Law that the man which doth those things shall live by them Argum. 3. The righteousness of the Law or Works as Moses testifies confers life upon none but those that perform all things that are commanded in the Law which is impossible Therefore the Jews foolishly affected such a kind of righteousness Vers. 6. But the righteousness which is of Faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart who shall ascend into heaven that is to bring Christ down from above 7. Or who shall descend into the deep that is to bring Christ up again from the dead Argum. 4. The righteousness of Faith as the same Moses witnesseth forbids those that believe in God from being troubled for those things which are so difficult or impossible as to ascend into heaven or to descend into the deep Because seeing Christ hath already overcome those difficulties descending from heaven and rising from the dead to bee any further troubled how to attain righteousness life eternal and freedome from death is no less than to destroy the foundations of the Christian Religion and to enquire how it was possible to descend from heaven or rise again from the dead Therefore the Jews betray their folly who renounce this righteousness of Faith Vers. 8. But what saith it the word is nigh thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of Faith which wee preach Argum. 5. The righteousness of Faith as it gives security to those that believe touching the difficulties in the way of salvation so also it holds forth an easie way to righteousness and salvation For the Word of God or the Word of the Gospel the same which the Apostles preached is neer us that receiving it into our hearts wee may acquiesce in it and confess the truth of it with the mouth As if hee should say to us Bee not troubled cast your care upon God and believe him that speaks in the Gospel and shew forth your Faith by your works Therefore the Jews rejecting this easie way of righteousness propounded are very foolish Vers. 9. That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Iesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead thou shalt bee saved Argum. 6. Opening and confirming the former The sum of the Gospel is propounded under this most sweet condition viz. If thou applyest with sincere affection to thy self the redemption procured by Christ and manifested in his Resurrection by the power of God and studiest to glorifie Christ with a sincere confession without doubt thou shalt obtain salvation Therefore the Jews refusing this condition of Justification and Salvation betray their folly Vers. 10. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation This hee confirms with five reasons The first Reason is From the connection of Faith in the heart and confession in the mouth according to the order appointed by God which is that by Faith from the heart in Christ Jesus wee might obtain righteousness or Justification and that justified by Faith wee might proceed to the possession of Salvation glorifying Christ by confession of the mouth or outward works Therefore they ought to bee joyned Faith in Christ from the heart and confession of Christ in the mouth or inward Faith and outward works ought to bee joyned together Vers. 11. For the Scripture saith Whosoever believeth on him shall not bee ashamed Reason 2. Confirming the connection of true Faith and Salvation from the testimony of Isai. 28.16 which shews that they shall not bee frustrated in their hope or their expected salvation whoever believe in Christ Therefore the connection of Faith and Salvation is firm Vers. 12. For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon
unto you that the Lord Iesus the same night in which hee was betrayed took bread 24. And when hee had given thanks hee brake it and said Take eat this is my body which is broken for you this do in remembrance of mee That hee may correct these errours First hee sets down the institution of the Sacrament to vers 27. and then hee exhorts them to and teaches them the lawful use of this Sacrament to the end As for the institution of the Supper hee shews that the Lord Jesus being about to suffer by way of Testament set his seal to the Covenant of Grace which by his mediation hee entred into between God and the Church Whereby the glorious memory of his death might bee celebrated in the world till his second comming and might bee delivered to the faithful and being delivered it might judicially confirm a right to his person and the benefits of his sufferings and a living virtue flowing from his death resurrection and exaltation to the sanctification and salvation of Beleevers and that by the symbols of this holy Banquet and holy Communion with God and amongst themselves To which end Christ sitting at Table with his Disciples after the eating of the Paschal Lamb First Took Bread and sanctified it by giving of thanks brake and gave it to his Disciples commanding them to take and eat further hee declared the Bread received and eaten to bee his body represented after a Sacramental manner that i● being given for our Redemption and after a judicial manner applied to us and last●y hee commanded that his Disciples or all the faithful should imitate this his action in the Church in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption by the sufferings of his body Vers. 25. After the same manner also hee took the Cup when hee had supped saying This Cup is the New Testament in my blood this do you as oft as yee drink it in remembrance of mee That which concerns the other part of the Supper follows In the same Supper viz. after the Paschal Supper when the Bread was distributed Christ took the Cup with Wine sanctified by the giving of thanks gave it to the Disciples to drink further concerning the Cup hee declared That it being taken and drunk was that new Covenant of Grace between God and the Church established Sacramentally by his blood i. e. As it is ratified on Gods part that gives so it is confirmed on the beleevers part that receives and judicially applied and sealed Lastly Hee commanded that his Disciples should frequently imitate him in this action in remembrance of him who had paid the price of Redemption for the Church by the shedding of his blood Vers. 26. For as often as yee eat this Bread and drink this Cap yee do shew the Lords death till hee come And that wee might acknowledge that of two Elements Bread and Wine one Supper frequently to bee celebrated in the Church ought to bee made the Apostle would have perpetuated in the Church a publick commemoration of our Lords death by the often reiteration of this Sacrament and that because Christ would not bee present in his body with the Church before the last judgement by this Sacrament hee would that the memorial of the Churches redemption by his death might bee preserved and celebrated until hee come out of Heaven in the last day Vers. 27. Wherefore whosoever shall eat this Bread and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily shall bee guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. After the Apostle had repeated the institution of this Sacrament hee exhorts and instructs the Corinthians in the right use of it and that in six waies First Shewing the danger of guilt which they are liable to who prophane this Sacrament For whosoever without preparation and reverence otherwise than becomes such an Ordinance approaches so great mysteries abuses the Sacrament despiseth Christ and comes near to the wickedness of those that crucified Christ. Vers. 28. But let a man examine himself and so let him eat of that Bread and drink of that Cup. Secondly Shewing the easiness of preparation that every one may worthily receive this Sacrament Onely saith hee set every man examine himself that being sensible of the greatness of his sin and misery hee may see how much need hee hath of a remedy by Christ and let him consider with what Faith and purposes of holiness hee is bound to approach communion with Christ who is a thousand times lost without him and when hee hath examined himself so let him eat and drink in that holy Banquet i. e. so let him apply the thing signified with his participation of the sign that hee consider what need hee hath of it Vers. 29. For hee that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation to himself not discerning the Lords body Thirdly Having shewed the punishment of eating unworthily That hee brings judgement or temporal and eternal punishment unless hee repent upon himself by unworthy eating and drinking who participates of the outward Sacrament without examination of himself because hee discerns not this Feast or the thing signified from his own common Supper but comes to the Lords Table no otherwise than to some common one Vers. 30. For this cause many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep Fourthly Shewing before their eyes the examples of Gods temporal anger in diseases and death it self inflicted already upon many of the Corinthians for their prophanation of the Sacrament Vers. 31. For if wee would judge our selves wee should not bee judged Hee clears from severity this infliction of temporal judgement First From the equity of it That God justly punishes those that judge not themselves or repent not but lye securely in their sin which hee would not do if they repenting would judge themselves Vers. 32. For when wee are judged wee are chastened of the Lord that wee should not bee condemned with the world Further That the inflicting of these punishments is a fatherly chastisement whereby the faithful may bee brought to repentance and not perish with the world Vers. 33. Wherefore my Brethren when yee come together to eat tarry one for another Fifthly The Apostle directs the Corinthians to a right use of the Supper giving a Precept to avoid Schism that they would tarry one for another and would partake of the holy Supper together and every man take not his supper asunder because the Supper of the Lord is a common action of the Church in the publick Assembly to bee celebrated after the manner of a Feast Vers. 34. And if any man hunger let him eat at home that yee come not together unto condemnation And the rest will I set in order when I come Sixthly By forbidding their manner of feasting in publick by their feasts of charity before the holy Communion and commanding that if need were they would eat at home to satisfie their hunger repeating the danger of prophaning the Supper and of the
Conversion and Salvation of so many men should bee ascribed to the virtue of the Apostle that it should bee wholly ascribed unto God for by so much the more the Power of God is conspicuous in great works by how much the weakness of the Instrument more evidently appeareth Vers. 8. Wee are troubled ●n every side yet not distressed wee are perplexed but not in dispair 9. Persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed Hee answers 3. That all his afflictions are moderated and hee himself is upheld by God in all things that hee is not destitute of the help of God doth not sink under his burthen that hee doth not forsake God nor dispair is not forsaken of God not left or lost Therefore it matters nothing how weak he is in himself Wee are afflicted hee saith yet not distressed i. e. on every side wee are troubled with adversity but wee are not brought into such streights as to bee over-whelmed but wee are preserved by the help of God in the midst of afflictions Wee are perplexed but not in despair i. e. wee doubt sometimes what may bee done in the dangers of this life but wee are not so destitute that wee are void of all counsel Wee are persecuted but not forsaken i. e. God permits us to bee vexed and evil intreated by the enemies of the Gospel but hee neither permits us to bee slain before the time by him determined neither doth hee withdraw his consolations from us Wee are cast down but not destroyed that is wee sometimes seem presently ready to perish but God helping us wee are kept from perishing Vers. 10. Alwayes bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Iesus that the life also of Iesus might bee made manifest in our body Hee answers 4. That his afflictions make for the glory of Christ because the Image of Christ suffering and dying may bee seen in them and that the virtue and strength of Christ living may appear in supporting him under so many afflictions Therefore it matters not how weak hee may bee in himself Vers. 11. For wee which live are alway delivered unto death for Iesus sake that the Life also of Iesus might bee manifest in our mortal flesh Hee confirms this from hence that the Apostles who lived in the midst of troubles by the strength of Christs Spirit for the cause of Christ daily undergo danger that the quickning Virtue of Christ may more and more appear in sustaining their fleshly infirmities obnoxious to that miserable condition Vers. 12. So then death worketh in us but life in you Object 2. But not necessarily because thou art the Servant of Christ therefore thou shouldest bee also miserable and contemned For wee Corinthians are Christians and yet wee live more prosperously Hee answers four manner of wayes 1. By granting it to bee so yet by the Wisdome of God it comes to pass that in some stronger Christians as the Apostles the Image of Christ dying might rather appear at least to the world But in others as the weaker Corinthians the efficacy of Christs Life supporting them under extreme afflictions might bee more apparent to the world Vers. 13. Wee having the same spirit of Faith according as it is written I believed and therefore have I spoken wee also believe and therefore speak 14. Knowing that hee which raised up the Lord Iesus shall raise up us also by Iesus and present us with you Hee answers 2. Although the Apostles may bee afflicted more than the Corinthians yet there is the same Spirit of Faith both in them and in the Corinthians by which Faith believing with David Psalm 116. ver 10. The Apostle dare promise to himself together with the Corinthians a glorious Resurrection although now hee is more pressed under the Cross than they Vers. 15. For all things are for your sake that the abundant grace might through the thanksgiving of many redound to the glory of God Hee answers 3. That hee was afflicted for their consolation and confirmation as also that from his afflictions and deliverances occasion of praying and suffering together with the Apostles might not onely bee given to the Corinthians But also occasion of thanksgiving with them for their eminent deliverances from trouble which God forthwith granted to him with the rest of the Apostles and was about to grant Vers. 16. For which cause wee faint not but though our outward man perish yet the inward man is renewed day by day Hee answers 4. That hee was not tyred nor wearied by his afflictions whereof hee subjoyns three Reasons Reason 1. Because as much as was diminished of those goods that made for the maintaining the State of this present life so much was added to his holiness for the increasing of his spiritual life Vers. 17. For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory Reason 2. Because it did procure an unspeakable weight of glory to the promoting of which afflictions help as instruments and means both of mortification and glorification so that no afflictions are to bee accounted of yea truly the lightness of afflictions which is but for a moment clearly vanisheth and becomes as nothing in comparison with future glory Vers. 18. While wee look not at the things which are seen but at the things which are not seen for the things which are seen are temporal but the things which are not seen are eternal Reason 3. Why hee doth not wax faint is Because saith hee by Faith I look at things eternal and invisible by reason of which I despise all temporal and visible i. e. both Riches Honours and Profits c. I do not look at because those are onely durable for a time but I have my mind intent upon those good and eternal things which God hath promised Therefore I do not weigh the loss of temporal things by all which the Apostle confirmeth the Corinthians lest they should bee offended at his afflictions CHAP. V. HEE goes on to shew more fully his faithfulness in the Ministery by mentioning seven impellent causes whereby hee was moved to faithfulness in the discharge of his duty Vers. 1. For wee know that if our earthly house of this Tabernacle were dissolved wee have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens The first impellent cause to faithfulness in the Ministery is his certain confidence of a blessed immortality which after death remains for him and all the rest of the faithful Ministers of Christ of which felicity also the body shall bee partaker in the Resurrection I am perswaded saith hee that after the dissolution of this my frail body I shall continually injoy felicity of soul and the glorious immortality of a raised body why should not I therefore bee faithful so long as I dwell in this mortal body Vers. 2. For in this wee groan earnestly desiring to bee cloathed upon with our house which is from Heaven
parents if hee would glory in the Nobility of his Race hee sprung from the more Noble Israelites because from the Tribe of Benjamin Benjamin was the Son of Rachel a woman free-born but some Tribes had their original from bond-maids If they strived for the Antiquity of Religion that they remained in the Covenant as true Abrahamites here also hee was equal to any one of them Vers. 23. Are they Ministers of Christ I speak as a fool I am more in labours more abundant in stripes above measure in prisons more frequent in deaths oft Sign 3. If they had striven for the dignity of office herein modestly as one compelled hee prefers himself before them in respect of his Apostleship and office granted to him extraordinarily I am greater saies hee because I am an Apostle In labours The fourth Sign of his dignity is sincerity in the administration of his office Of this his sincerity hee produces nine Testimonies First His labours or his diligence Secondly His sufferings in general which belonged to his health and bodily liberty and the dangers of his life Vers. 24. Of the Iews five times received I forty stripes save one Thirdly Hee produces his special sufferings from the Jews that hee was whipped by them five times according to the number of stripes inflicted upon malefactors by the Law for the Jews although they are cruel yet they would seem to contain themselves within the Law Deut. 25.3 Vers. 25. Thrice was I beaten with Rods once was I stoned thrice I suffered shipwrack a night and a day I have been in the deep Fourthly His sufferings from the Gentiles bear testimony that by their Lictours or Sergeants hee was beaten thrice with clubs and whips and once stoned Fifthly That hee thrice suffered shipwrack in one whereof after hee was twenty four hours tossed by the waters in the deep Sea hee was freed by the powerful hand of God Vers. 26. In journying often in perils of waters in perils of robbers in perils by mine own Country-men in perils by the heathen in perils in the City in perils in the Wilderness in perils in the Sea in perils amongst false Brethren The Sixth Testimony of his sincerity comprehends the labours of his journying and eight kinds of dangers which hee found in sundry places and from divers kinds of men Vers. 27. In weariness and painfulness in watchings often in hunger und thirst in fastings often in cold and nakedness The seventh hath five sorts of troubles with which while hee fulfilled the work of the Ministery hee was very often exercised wherein being wearied hee was instead of rest forced to take in hand new labours Vers. 28. Besides those things which are without that which commeth upon mee daily the care of all the Churches Eighthly His unconquerable patience in daily publick businesses a solicitous mind for all the Churches of Christ. Vers. 29. Who is weak and am I not weak who is offended and I burn not The ninth Testimony of his Sincerity is his sympathy with all that are afflicted and offended by any scandal Vers. 30. If I must needs glory I will glory of the things which concern my infirmities Hee retorts the Objection of his adversaries But all these things have made thee a contemptible and miserable man Hee answers that hee purposely determined to glory in these as the things which did more commend his sincerity than the prosperous affairs of the false Apostle adorned them Vers. 31. The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ which is blessed for ever more knoweth that I lye not 32. In Damascus the Governour under Are●as the King kept the City with a Garison desirous to appreh●nd mee 33. And thorough a window in a basket was I let down by the wall and escaped his hands Lastly Because these things which hee had mentioned may seem incredible viz. that one should bee able to bear so many afflictions premising an oath touching the truth as well of those things that were said already as of those that were to bee spoken hee mentions the special danger of his life out of which there was no apparent escape unless God had kept him safe for the good of the Church and opened a way by his special providence for his escape concerning which Act. 9.23 CHAP. XII HEE proceeds in his holy glorying There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee explains the heavenly vision presented to him together with the events of the same To vers 11. In the second hee proves that the Corinthians ought to have freed him from this necessity of glorying or defended him To vers 19. In the third hee produces the causes of his troubles Vers. 1. It is not expedient for mee doubtless to glory I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. The Preface being Premised that hee doth not glory for his own sake because that was not expedient for him For this is here somewhat emphatical for mee but for the Corinthians and the Churches sake whom it concerned to preserve the authority of the Apostle intire hee commeth to extraordinary revelations one of which hee begins historically to declare Vers. 2. I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years ago whether in the body I cannot tell or whether out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth such an one caught up to the third heaven I knew a man Hee discovers the excellency of this revelation and his modesty by nine Arguments Argum. 1. That hee scarcely dare publish his name in this business but lest hee may seem to arrogate much to himself hee is compelled to speak of himself in a third person In Christ Argum. 2. That although this revelation may seem to extol him above the common condition of men yet hee doth not affect any other excellence than to bee in Christ or in the number of Beleevers who have renounced themselves that they may glory in Christ alone Fourteen Argum. 3. That silently with himself hee had suppressed the mention of this glorious revelation whole fourteen years never intending to recite it unless hee was compelled by the importunity of his Emulators who endeavoured to diminish his Apostolical authority to the damage of the Gospel and the Church Caught up Argum. 4. That hee was caught up to the upper heaven above all the Stars to the place of the blessed Spirits where God chiefly manifests his glory Whether in the body Argum. 5. That hee is ignorant whether hee was caught up by the local translation of his body into Heaven or whether his soul extraordinarily was separated for that time and lifted up into Heaven concerning the other notwithstanding I am certain Vers. 3. And I knew such a man whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth 4. Hee was caught up into paradise and heard unspeakable words which it is not lawful for a man to utter Into Paradise Argum. 6. That hee certainly knew the matter done and that hee was caught up
Paul as his Brother not onely for profession of Faith but also for the office of preaching the same Gospel Vers. 2. To the Saints and faithful Brethren in Christ which are at Coloss Grace bee unto you and Peace from God our Father and the Lord Iesus Christ Furthermore the persons saluted are described or the Members of the Colossian Church and are called 1 Brethren Because they are begot again by the same Father to the same hope of the inheritance 2 Holy Because they are consecrated to God and sanctified by the Holy Ghost 3 Faithful Because they were ingrafted into Christ by Faith Lastly By an Apostolical blessing Grace and Peace are applied to the Colossians Grace comprehends all the special effects of Gods favour which by way of Sanctification tend to happiness But Peace comprehends all the degrees of happiness even to perfection in Heaven God the Father and Jesus Christ is counted the Author and efficient cause of good things as hee is the Son and Mediatour hee is after the Father in effecting according to order of working Vers. 3. Wee give thanks to God and the Father of our Lord Iesus Christ praying alwaies for you Vers. 4. Since wee heard of your Faith in Christ Iesus and of the love which you have to all the Saints The first way of his confirming the Faith of the Colossians is by giving thanks for their sincere conversion Of this kind there are seven Arguments all which do prove that the Colossians ought to bee strengthened in Faith Argum. 1. You gave mee much cause of thanksgiving and prayer to God after I heard of your conversion to the Faith Therefore even upon this account you ought to bee stedfast in the Faith And love Argum. 2. The sincerity of your Faith in Christ appeared openly in your love towards all the Saints the report whereof came to my hearing Therefore it is fit you should bee stablished in the Faith Vers. 5. For the hope which is laid up for you in Heaven whereof yee heard before in the word of the Truth of the Gospel Argum. 3. I know of a truth that the happiness yee hope for is laid up in Heaven for you and as it were conferred upon you I give thanks to God for that favour Therefore c. Yee heard Argum. 4. Confirming the former You have the unquestionable Word of God the Word of Gospel-Truth for the foundation of your Faith and Hope Therefore ought you to bee stedfast in the Faith Vers. 6. Which is come unto you as it is in all the world and bringeth forth fruit as it doth also in you since the day yee heard of it and knew the Grace of God in truth Argum. 5. The Word of the Gospel whereby yee are converted is the same Gospel which was dispersed abroad to the rest of the world and hath the same efficacy to make you fruitful from the day wherein by Faith yee imbraced the Grace of God which hee hath communicated to other Christian-Churches Therefore it is fitting you should bee established in the Faith Vers. 7. As yee also learned of Epaphras our dear Fellow-servant who is for you a faithful Minister of Christ Argum. 6. Your Pastor Epaphras taught you no other things than wee Apostles every where teach who therefore willingly acknowledge Epaphras our fellow-servant and a faithful Minister of Christ Therefore c. Vers. 8. Who also declared unto us your love in the Spirit Argum. 7. You have given a special token of your sincere Faith viz. the demonstration of your Christian love towards mee whereof I have the testimony of Epaphras your Minister which as all the former affords mee Arguments of thanksgiving unto God and of the confirmation of your Faith towards God Vers. 9. For this cause wee also since the day wee heard it do not cease to pray for you and to desire that yee might bee filled with the knowledge of his Will in all wisdome and spiritual understanding The second way of confirming the Colossians Faith and of the Apostles love towards them is his earnest and constant prayer for them excited upon the report of their Faith in Christ and love towards the Saints there are six branches of his prayer 1 I pray that yee may obtain a large measure of knowledge of the Divine Will revealed in the Word of the Gospel concerning Christ and his benefits In all Wisdome 2 I pray that this knowledge may abound in you in wisdome and spiritual understanding i. e. in an holy contemplation of the mysteries of Faith and in a prudent application of knowledge received to practice in the exercise of every virtue Vers. 10. That yee might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing being fruitful in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God I pray 3 That you may walk or lead your lives worthy of the Lord or as it becomes those that are converted in the sight of God that in all things you may please him Every I pray 4 That you may bee fruitful not in one but in all kinds of good works May increase I pray 5 That you may grow up in experience and acknowledgement of the Divine Virtue through obedience of his Will endeavouring more and more to know love and cleave to him more and more Vers. 11. Strengthened with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness I pray 6 That such a measure of heavenly strength may bee vouchsafed to you out of the rich treasury of his glorious power that you may bee able to endure any burden of afflictions or persecution with a good courage and that so long as it shall seem good to the pleasure of God not onely without disturbance of mind but with the greatest delight and rejoycing Therefore yee ought to bee established in the Faith unless you think the prayers which the Holy Ghost stirs up in my heart for you are in vain Vers. 12. Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light The third way of confirming their Faith is a thankful declaration of the certainty of our Redemption founded in the Grace of God and the excellency of Christs person The reasons of the thanksgiving are five Reas. 1. Because God the Father hath prepared us to enter into the Kingdome of Heaven This benefit is more especially seen in the following Reasons 1 The donor of the benefit is God the Father the Author and first Fountain of all good bearing a Fatherly affection towards us 2 When wee are said to bee made meet c. Our misery is presupposed and that wee are unfit by nature born wretched and polluted by sin and the sons of wrath 3 Although wee were unmeet yet the Grace of God hath made us meet by an efficacious vocation and regeneration of us 4 The felicity whereunto wee are called is an enduring inheritance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is given by
an one Christ is i. e. how excellent hee is in the offices of his Apostleship or of his Prophetical and Priestly office wherein hee humbled himself and suffered Argum. 1. From Psal. 8.5 to this purpose The man Christ is highly accounted of with God and other men are subjected because of him if the Majesty of God and the Magnificence of his works bee compared with the meanness of humane nature or if it bee considered how great God is and how eminent his other works and how mean and low man is Therefore the excellency of Christ as man ought not to bee lessened with us because of the infirmities and sufferings of the humane nature which hee took Vers. 7. Thou madest him a little lower than the Angels thou crownedst him with glory and honour and didst set him ruler over the works of thy hands Argum. 2. From Psal. 8.6 Although Christ in the time of his humiliation was made lower than the Angels in respect to his sufferings in the flesh yet that humiliation was not perpetual but for a short time and onely in part in respect to the humane nature that suffered Because the price of Redemption being paid hee was raised from the dead exalted to the right hand of God and crowned with glory and honour declared Lord and King over all the works of God Therefore wee ought not to detract from him because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 8. Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet For in that hee put all in subjection under him hee left nothing that is not put under him But now wee see not yet all things put under him 9. But wee see Iesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with glory and honour that hee by the Grace of God should taste death for every man Argum. 3. From Psal. 8.7 Christ is the Lord of Angels even as hee is man For God hath put all the works of his hands without exception in subjection to him and so amongst the rest Angels Therefore c. But now Argum. 4. Propounded by way of Solution to an Objection Although yet wee see not all things subjected unto Christ in respect to his members which are daily opposed by very many enemies Yet wee see not with the eyes of Faith onely but even the light of reason by many tokens and are convinced by the multitude of miracles Christ after his humiliation below the condition of Angels now crowned with glory and honour in his own person in Heaven and sitting at the right hand of his Father till all his enemies bee made his foot-stool and thus wee see the victory of Christ begun Therefore wee must not detract any thing from the excellency of Christ because of his sufferings either in his own person or in his members A little Argum. 5. From the fore-telling of his humiliation Psal. 8.6 From the decree of God and to the fulfilling the Prophecies of Christ it behoved him to bee humbled and suffer death and to this end in a sort to bee made lower than the Angels that hee might suffer death Therefore c. Taste Argum. 6. Not unadvisedly or compelled by necessity did Christ suffer but freely or out of the gracious good will of God towards us hee tasted death for a short time not for himself but for all us his Sons that hee might bring us to salvation as it is expounded in the following verse Therefore his estimation is not to bee lessened because of his sufferings in his assumed flesh Vers. 10. For it became him for whom are all things and by whom are all things in bringing many Sons unto Glory to make the Captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings Argum. 7. It was agreeable to the Glory of God who is the Author and End of all things seeing that his justice mercy wisdome power and the rest of his Attributes might bee manifested chiefly by the sufferings of Christ that hee might consecrate inaugurate consummate and every waies make him meet to bee Captain of our salvation the more conveniently by afflictions to bring many Sons his Elect to life and glory not by his Doctrine onely nor onely by the example of his life but also by the merit of his death undergone for the redeeming of them Therefore his excellency ought not to bee abated because of his sufferings in the flesh Vers. 11. For both hee that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one For which cause hee is not ashamed to call them Brethren Argum. 8. The Redeemer and the Redeemed Hee that sanctifies and they that are sanctified not onely by the decree of God and the predictions of Scripture but also from Justice it self are of one and the same Nature of the same Natural lump derived from the same Adam For the Justice and Wisdome of God required that in the humane Nature which had sinned sin should bee punished And therefore required that the Redeemer of men should bee truly man Therefore the reputation of Christ the Son of God because of his assuming the infirmities of humane Nature is not to bee diminished For which Argum. 9. Confirming the former The Messias would bee incarnate that wee might bee his Brethren and that hee might shew forth himself a Brother unto us And although hee is the Son of God yet hee is not ashamed to call the Redeemed or Elect his Brethren Therefore the reputation of Christ is not to bee lessened because of his sufferings in humane flesh but rather ought wee to boast in his relation to us and to glorifie him so much the more because of his sufferings for us Ver● 12. Saying I will declare thy name unto my Brethren in the midst of the Church will I sing praise unto thee This Argument hee proves by three Testimonies of Scripture The first is taken from Psal. 22.22 wherein Christ undertakes to pay the price of our Redemption and promiseth to preach the Righteousness purchased by his Obedience to his Brethren the Elect or the Church of the faithful in whose Congregations hee is present by his Spirit even after his ascension stirring up joy and thanksgiving in the hearts of the faithful by the preaching of Righteousness Vers. 13. And again I will put my trust in him and again Behold I and the children which God hath given mee The second Testimony is taken from Psal. 18.3 whence Christ is proved to bee man because put in the number of the Covenanters depending upon God by Faith Again Testimony the third From Isa. 8.18 where Christ is brought in by the Prophet associating himself with Children as his Brethren whom God had chosen and given to him to bee redeemed and saved whom hee presents with himself to the Father to bee glorified Vers. 14. Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood hee also himself took part of the same that through death hee might destroy him that had the power of
Argum. 4. Faith satisfies it self in the word of Almighty God concerning making the world out of nothing or concerning the Creation of all things which wee see out of no apparent or pre-existent matter Therefore wee must live by Faith and persevere in it although wee see nothing of those things which are promised to us in the word of God seeing God can effect our salvation promised to us out of things which appear not no less by his word than hee could create the world out of nothing Vers. 4. By Faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Kain by which hee obtained witness that hee was righteous God testifying of his gifts and by it hee being dead yet speaketh The properties of Faith follow which are illustrated by the special experience of the Saints which hee disposes into four classes as it were for orders sake The first is of those which lived before the flood to vers 8. The second is of those which lived from the flood till Israel went down into Egypt to vers 23. The third is of those that lived at their comming out of Egypt to vers 32. The fourth is of those that lived after to the end The first in the first rank or classis is Abel who is said by Faith to offer a more excellent Sacrifice than Cain not onely ●hat Faith caused that hee should make choice of the best Sacrifice which by the command of God it was lawful for him to offer but especially because by Faith in the thing signified i. e. the MESSIAH the immaculate Lamb of God promised who was to take away the sins of the world hee fastened his eyes and worshiped God in Spirit whereas Cain stuck in the naked superficial Ceremony onely And so Abel is declared justified by Faith God giving testimony of the excellency of his Sacrifice which hee offered By which Faith although dead yet hee speaks teaching by his example all in the Church to beleeve in Christ and to seal their Faith with the Martyrdome of blood if it be the will of God Hence Argum. 5. The faithful are declared just by Faith their offerings are accepted their worship is approved of God and posterity is edified by the example of Beleevers as is manifest by the example of Abel Therefore ought wee to persevere in the Faith Vers. 5. By Faith Enoch was translated that hee should not see death and was not found because God had translated him for before his translation hee had this testimony that hee pleased God 6. But without Faith it is impossible to please him for hee that cometh to God must believe that hee is and that hee is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him Enoch follows in the second place who is said by Faith to bee translated into life immortal death or the separation of his Soul from his body not intervening only a change made from mortal to immortal qualifications He proves that this Translation was a fruit of Faith because Enoch pleased God or was approved before the translation of him and without faith it is impossible to please God the reason whereof is given because no man comes unto God or is admitted into fellowship with him unless hee subscribe to the All-sufficiency and goodness of God by Faith so as to apply that goodness of God to himself which is offered him and come unto God desirous of communion with him for it is Faith alone that divests a man of all his own worth and joyns him to God that is merciful and full of compassion Hence Argum. 6. By Faith wee obtain Eternal Life as God hath testified to us in the translation of Enoch who had hee not been indued with faith had not pleased God nor come unto him nor had been admitted into heaven Therefore ought wee to persevere in the Faith Vers. 7. By Faith Noah being warned of God of things not seen as yet moved with fear prepared an Ark to the saving of his house by the which hee condemned the world and became Heir of the Righteousness which is by Faith Noah is the third who warned of God concerning the coming of a Flood many years after believed and feared and by the Command of God prepared an Ark to the saving of his Family whereby hee convinced the rest of the world then living with himself of unbelief and is declared the Heir of that Righteousness which is by Faith in Christ who was represented by the Ark Hence Argum. 7. By Faith wee are to take heed of the anger of God and diligently use the appointed means to Salvation by which diligence wee convince the world of unbelief and slothfulness and testifie the truth of our Faith whereby wee believe in Christ and obtain the inheritance of Righteousness in him as is manifest in the experience of Noah Therefore wee ought to persevere in the Faith Vers. 8. By Faith Abraham when hee was called to go out into a place which hee should after receive for an inheritance obeyed and hee went out not knowing whither hee went 9. By Faieh hee sojourned in the Land of Promise as in a strange Country dwelling in Tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob the Heirs with him of the same Promise 10. For hee looked for a City which hath foundations whose Builder and Maker is God The second Rank or Classis of Believers which lived to the time of Israels going down into Egypt whereof the first in order is Abraham who by Faith left his Country and followed God into a strange Land leaning upon the Promise of God for an inheritance to bee given him uncertain in the mean time where hee should sojourn ver 8. By Faith also hee sojourned in the promised Land dwelling in Tabernacles as some Pilgrim and Stranger as Isaac and Iacob his Posterity did to whom the same promise of an Inheritance was made ver 9. For hee did not so much look at that typical Land of Canaan as Heaven represented by that Land of Promise which is like a fenced and strongly founded City whose Builder is God and not man Hence Argum. 8. By Faith wee being called of God leave all earthly things and content with our condition being according to the Will of God whatever it is wee sojourn in this world under hope of a most abiding Inheritance to bee possessed by us in heaven as appears in the example of Abraham Therefore c. Vers. 11. Through Faith also Sarah her self received strength to conceive Seed and was delivered of a Child when shee was past age because shee judged him faithful who had promised 12. Therefore sprang there even of one and him as good as dead so many as the stars of the Sky in multitude and as the Sand which is by the Sea shore innumerable Before hee passes from what hee had to say of Abraham hee mentions the Faith of his Wife Sarah whose Faith concurred with Abrahams to apprehend the promise of the numerous Off-spring which should issue from him
another World in effect of that which was of old changing the holding and nature and use of all things to his Subject● For a man ere hee come in to Christ is Gods enemy and to him all things in the World are enemies the Host and Souldiers of his dreadful Judge But after a man is made Christs Subject they turn all to bee his Friends and his Fathers servants working altogether for his good That is another and a new World indeed 2. It is called the World to come because albeit this change began with the work of Grace before Christ came yet it was nothing in comparison of the World i● come under the Messias And that which is now under the Gospel is little or nothing in comparison of that glorious change of the nature and use of all things unto Christs Subjects which is to bee revealed at his last coming Then whatsoever thing wee have hitherto found to our good since wee knew Christ it is but little to what shall bee our World is but to come 1 Cor. 15.19 3. The World is put in subjection to Christ that hee may dispose of it at his pleasure Then Christ is twice Soveraign Lord of the World once as Creator again as Mediator in his Manhead to make all the creatures in heaven and earth serve nill they will they to farther the work of full Redemption which hee hath undertaken 4. Hee excludeth the Angels from this honour Then In Christs Kingdom the Angels are in subjection to Christ for the good of his Subjects no less than sheep and oxen as the Psalm saith and not to bee adored with him as Soveraigns over us Vers. 6. But one in a certain place testified saying What is man that thou art mindful of him Or the Son of man that thou visitest him 7. Thou madest him a little lower than the Angels Thou crownedst him with glory and honour and didst set him over the works of thine hands 1. Being to prove by Scripture his purpose hee citeth neither Book nor Chapter but the words which are of the eighth Psalm and fourth Verse Then The Apostle will have the Church so well acquainted with text of Scripture that at the hearing of the words they might know where it is written though neither book nor verse were cited 2. The Prophet looking on man even on Christs manhead wherein hee was humbled hee wondereth to see mans nature so highly dignified above all creatures Then 1. The baseness of mans natural being compared with other more glorious creatures maketh Gods love to us above all other creatures so much the more wonderful 2. Christs Humiliation and Exaltation were both foreseen and revealed by the Prophets Vers. 8. Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet For in that hee put all in subjection under him hee left nothing that is not put under him But now wee see not yet all things put under him 1. Hee proveth that Angels are in subjection to Christ because the text of the Psalm saith All is put in subjection and so neither Angels nor other creatures are excepted Then 1. For understanding of the meaning of Scripture it is necessary to consider not only what it saith expresly but also what it sai●h by consequence of sound reason 2. And whatsoever is rightly deduced by evidence of sound reason of the words of Scripture is the meaning of the Scripture as if it were spoken expresly 2. H●e saith There is nothing left that is not put under Christ. Then Not good Angels only but all Spirits and all that they can do also are subject to Christ and hee can make them nill they will they contribute to the furtherance of his own purpose for the good of his Subjects and hurt of his foes 3. Because Christs enemies are still troubling his Kingdome hee moveth a doubt saying Wee see not yet all things put under him Then 1. The troubles of Christs subjects hinder the natural mind to perceive the Glory of Christs advancement 2. Carnal reason the Proctor of mis-belief will admit no more of divine truth than it is capable of by sense Vers. 9. But wee see Iesus who was made a little lower than the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with Glory and Honour that hee by the Grace of God should taste death for every man 1. Hee answereth the doubt saying Wee see Jesus crowned with glory and honour and so a course taken for putting all that oppose him farther and farther under him Then 1. The subjection of all things to Christs Throne cannot bee seen but in the exaltation of his person 2. When wee see his person exalted to such high dignity in heaven it is easie to see him put all under that riseth up against him 3. That which may bee taken up of Christ partly by his word and doctrine partly by his miraculous works and extraordinary gifts of the Spirit powred out upon the Primitive Church partly by his ordinary and powerful working upon the souls of his own since that time unto this day humbling and comforting changing and reforming mens hearts and lives I say these evidences of his Power do make a spiritual eye in a manner to see Jesus the worker of these works crowned with glory and honour 2. Hee meeteth another doubt arising from the abasement of Christ in his sufferings and death to which hee answereth in the words of the Psalm first that it was fore-told in that same Psalm that hee was to bee made for a little lower than the Angels to wit by suffering of death Then 1. The Cross of Christ is a ready stumbling block for a carnal mind else what needed the removing of the scandal 2. It is true indeed Christ in his humiliation was abased under the Angels and emptied 3. This abasement was but a little and for a short time 4. It was fore-told in the Psalm that speaketh of his Exaltation 5. If wee look to the Scripture fore-telling wee shall not stumble at Christs Humiliation 3. Hee giveth a farther answer by shewing the end of Christs Suffering to bee for our cause in the favour of God to us That hee should by the Grace of God taste Death for every one of us Then 1. Christs suffering was not for his own deserving but for ours and therefore should bee glorious in our eyes 2. Every Believer and Elect Soul hath interest in that death of his and so every man bound to love him and magnifie him for it and to apply the fruit of it to himself 3. This death was but a tasting of death because hee continued but a short time under it for his short suffering was so precious that hee could not bee holden by the Sorrows of Death but Death for a little was sufficient and therefore should diminish no mans estimation of him 4. It was by the Grace of God that his Death for a short should stand for our Eternal and therefore gracious and glorious should these his sufferings bee
repeated But Christs entry into Heaven to be perfect because but once not to be repeated 3. The Levitical Priests entred by the blood of Goats and Calves But Christ entred by his own blood 1. And if Christ entred but once into Heaven after his Suffering Then Wee must not think that his Body is any where else but in Heaven onely wherein it is once onely entred 2. If the blood whereby Christ entred into Heaven was his own blood Then 1. Verily Christs Body was like ours in substance having blood in it as ours and wee must not conceive otherwise of his body than to be of the same substance and substantial properties with ours 2. The blood belonged to the same person to whom the properties of God belongeth so often in this Epistle attributed unto Christ. His Blood was the blood of God Act. 20.28 That is the same Jesus was God and man with flesh and blood in one person 3. The Fruit of Christs bloody Sacrifice hee maketh The Eternal Redemption of those for whom hee offered it And to the typical Sacrifice hee ascribeth no redemption at all in the comparison Thereby giving us to understand 1. That from the worlds beginning to the end thereof salvation of sinners is by way of Christs Redemption That is by his loosing them through payment of a price 2. That the Redemption was manifested to have force when after his bloody Sacrifice hee entred into Heaven 3. That such as are once redeemed by Christ are Eternally Redeemed not for a time to fall away again but eternally to be saved most certainly Vers. 13. For if the blood of Bulls and of Goats and the Ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh Vers. 14. How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works to serve the living God To prove that eternal Redemption is the fruit of Christs Sacrifice he reasoneth thus If the Typical Sacrifices and Rites of old were able to work that for which they were ordained that is external Sanctification Much more shall Christs true Sacrifice be able to work that for which it was appointed that is Eternal Remission of sins and inward Sanctification unto eternal life Then there are two sorts of Sanctification One external of the flesh which maketh a man holy to the Church whatsoever he be within Another internal of the conscience and inner man which maketh a man holy before God 2. The purifying of the flesh he maketh to be by the exercise of such and such Ordinances of Divine Service for the time Then External or Church-holiness of the outward man is procured by such and such exercises of Divine Ordinances in the Church as serve to make a man to be reputed and holden for clean before men and so to be received for a member of the Church as is to be seen Numb 19. 3. From his form of reasoning we learn That whatsoever liberty and access of coming to the Church was made to the Jew of old by these ceremonies of the Law as much and more liberty is made to the Christian to come in to God by the blood of Christ. 4. In describing Christs Sacrifice he saith Christ through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God Then 1. Christ is both the Sacrifice and the Priest in one person He offered himself as man through the Eternal Spirit that is by the vertue and power of his own Godhead by which he preached before his Incarnation to sinners 1 Pet. 3.19 2. His sacrifice was without spot He was that spotless Lamb in whom was no sin nor imperfection nor defect of any thing that the sacrifice required 3. The vertue of the sacrifice which made it to purchase Eternal Redemption unto us floweth from the infinite worth of his Eternal Godhead 4. Albeit Christs two natures have their distinct respects in the actions of his Office yet Christ is one and undivided in the execution of his Office 5. The fruit and force of the sacrifice is set down in this that this Blood shall purge our conscience from dead works to serve the living God That is shall both absolve a man from his foregon sin and also enable him to serve God for time to come Then 1. Sins are but dead works flowing from nature dead in sin and not onely deserving but also drawing on death upon the sinner 2. The conscience lieth polluted with the filthiness of dead works till the vertue of the blood of Jesus applied bring intimation of absolution 3. Christs blood doth not purge the Conscience from dead works that a man should go wallow in them again but that he may serve the living God more acceptably 4. The purging vertue of Christs blood is joyned with the sanctifying and renewing of the absolved sinner and what God hath conjoyned let no man put asunder Vers. 15. And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions which were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Now lest any man should stumble at Christs death he sheweth a necessity thereof in respect of his office of Mediation and the purchase to be made by his Redemption The force of the reason is this Remission of sins could not have been given under the Law except the Mediator had been to pay the price of the same under the Gospel Nor could the faithful and called ones either then or now obtain eternal life for an inheritance otherwise than by the Mediators death Therefore it behoved the true Mediator by means of death to pay the promised price of the purchase of remission of sins and eternal life Then 1. The remission of transgressions and the inheritance of eternal life are both fruits of Christs Passion 2. The fruits of his Passion extended themselves unto them who were under the Old Testament as well as unto us under the New 3. The way of purchase of these benefits was by Redemption that is to say by lawful purchase such as might satisfie justice 4. The way in special was by means of the Mediators death His life was laid down to redeem ours His one life as good as all ours 5. For this cause Christ took the office of a Mediator unto himself that he might have right and interest by death to make this purchase 6. And therefore except he had really died the purchase could not have been lawfully made Vers. 16. For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator Another reason to prove the necessity of Christs death from the force of the word Covenant which signifieth also a Testament The force of the reason is this Christ Jer. 31.31 promised to make a New Covenant and therefore also a New Testament i● to make a New Testament then also he promised
earthly affections mortified 3. Their encouragement and cause of joy was the sensible feeling within themselves of the comfort of eternal Riches in Heaven keeping for them Then 1. It is the assurance of our heavenly inheritance which must make us ready to quit our earthly moveables 2. Who so getteth a heart to quit any thing on earth for Christ shall have better in heaven than he can lose here 3. GOD useth to give earnest of what he is to give in sensible feeling of spiritual Riches to such as believe in him 4. When men can esteem of things heavenly as they are that is enduring goods and of things earthly as they are that is perishing moveables then shall they readily quit the earthly in hope of the heavenly Vers. 35. Cast not away therefore your confidence which hath great recompence of reward Now he exhorteth them to go on in this ●old avowing of Christ For this Confidence in the Original is such as hath with it a full and free profession of all their faith Then confidence and bold avowing of the truth is required A plain and full testimony must we give to Christs truth our confidence in profession is in part casten when our testimony is sparing 2. The encouragement he giveth is The hope of a reward Then 1. Constancy in avowing of Christ shall be well rewarded although not of deserving yet of Gods grace 2. He that quiteth his profession renounceth the reward promised to the constant Quest. But doth not this exhortation import the elects unsettledness and uncertainty of perseverance I answer Not but onely his weakness of himself and need of such exhortations to further his constancy 2. The danger of dishonoring God in some particular slip or fall is ground sufficient for this exhortation and this is the most of necessity it can import 3. Exhortation being given to the common Body of the visible professors teacheth them properly and not the elect formally Vers. 36. For ye have need of patience that after ye have done the will of God ye might receive the promise He giveth a reason Because they have need of patience therefore they must not cast away their confidence Then 1. The reward will not be given till a time intervene 2. And troubles will lie on in the mean while to make the time seem the longer 3. Patience is needful as a mean to fit us to attend 4. Confidence of the truth must support our patience 2. The time of their Patience he setteth as long as God thinketh good to employ them and after that the reward cometh Then 1. The time of patience is as long as God hath any thing to do with us in this world 2. Patience must not be joyned with idleness but with active obedience of Gods will as he requireth it 3. After that employment is ended the promised reward is given Vers. 37. For yet a little while and he that shall come will come and will not tarry He encourageth them to Patience by promise of the Lords coming to relieve them shortly Then 1. The tearm of patience is until the Lord come to deliver 2. The patient attender on his coming shall not be disappointed For he will come and will not tarry beyond the due time of our necessity 3. It should strengthen us unto Patience that the time is short and the delivery certain Vers. 8. Now the just shall live by Faith but if any man draw back my soul shall have no pleasure in him How shall they send in the mean time He answereth from Habak 2.4 The just shall live by Faith That is The man who will be found righteous must not look to present sense but sustain his soul with the word of Promise Then 1. In the midst of troubles and Gods felt absence Faith will content it self with the onely promises of GOD. 2. Looking to Gods word by faith is able to keep a soul in life and patience 2. He threatneth the misbelieving Apostate that chuseth to draw back and not live by faith The words of the Prophet are He whose soul is lifted up in him is not upright The Apostle betaketh him to the meaning which being compared with the Prophets words doth teach us 1. That he who refuseth to live by faith is lifted up with the false confidence of some other thing than God He hath some strong hold within himself wherein he doth trust 2. He that lifteth up himself in his vain confidence will draw back from beleeving in Gods word in the time of tryal 3. Hee that draweth back in the time of tryal bewrayeth the want of this sincerity 4. A back-slider from the profession of the Truth is loathsome both to God and to his Saints Vers. 39. But wee are not of them who draw back unto perdition but of them that beleeve to the saving of the soul. Hee mitigateth the threatning lest hee should seem to suspect them of inconstancy Then 1. Such Threatnings and Exhortations as have been given here do not import the uncertainty of their perseverance who are threatned but standeth with the assurance of the contrary 2. Hee who threatneth should be as wary to weaken his hearers Faith as his own 3. Hearers must understand that the right use of threatning is to rowse men out of security and not to discourage them 2. Wee are not of them saith hee who draw back unto perdition Then 1. They who draw back from constant avowing of the Faith draw near unto perdition Hee that forsaketh the Cross runneth himself on the Rock of his own destruction which is worse 2. The Elect are not of that kind or sort of men who fall into Apostasie unto perdition They may fall for a time but are not of them that draw back unto perdition 3. Wee are of them saith hee who beleeve to the salvation of the soul. Then 1. True Beleevers are of that kind of whom all do persevere 2. Persevering in the Faith is going on to Salvation The Summe of Chap. XI NOw that you may know the better how to live by Faith consider that Faith apprehendeth things to come as present and subsisting by holding them in their original Fountain which is the word of Promise and beholding in the Mirrour of the Word the clear certainty of things as yet not seen to sense vers 1. For so were the Elect Beholders and Partakers of Christ before hee came and were justified vers 2. And so have wee certainty of the Creation of the World of nothing vers 3. By it was Abels person and sacrifice accepted and preferred before his elder Brother vers 4. By it was Enoch made ready for Heaven vers 5 6. And Noah by it saved both in body and soul vers 7. Faith made Abraham leave his Country in hope of Heaven vers 8 9 10. By it Sarah being old got strength above the course of Nature to become a fruitful Mother vers 11 12. All these unto their dying day were contented with the fore-sight of
this was prefigured in the Law For Levit. 16.27 The Sin-offering was burnt and none of the Priests the servants of the Tabernacle did eat thereof To shew 1. That such as adhered to the Tabernacle and Levitical Service as needful to their salvation specially after Christ the Sin-offering that was offered should not be partakers of him Again Sin-offering was offered without the camp to shew That such as would be partakers thereof must forsake the Iewish Synagogue and come out of it towards Christ who will not have his Church mixed with the forms of the Iewish Church Thirdly the Bodies of the Sacrifices of sin were then taken from the use of the Priests of the Tabernacle when the blood was now brought into the Sanctuary To shew that Christ should be taken from them who after his blood was shed and had made Attonement within the Sanctuary of Heaven should not relinquish the Iewish Tabernacle and the shadowing Figures thereof Vers. 12. Wherefore Iesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate Another end of the burning of the Sin-offering without the Camp he sheweth first To be the prefiguration of the ignominious usage of Christs Body cast out of the City of Ierusalem 2. Again Like as the Sin-offering howbeit the body thereof was burnt without the Camp yet the blood of it was brought within the Sanctuary to make a Figurative Attonement Even so how basely soever men did use Christs Body in casting of it without the City yet was his Blood in high estimation with God made Attonement for the people and sanctified them Vers. 13. Let us go forth therefore unto him without the Camp bearing his reproach Hence he draweth an Exhortation To be ready to renounce the world and to take up our Cross and follow Christ. Wherein he teacheth us 1. That Christs sufferings without the City represented the state of his mystical Body and Kingdom thrust forth and contemptibly rejected of the World 2. That such as will be partakers of Christ must resolve to be so handled also and must sequestrate their affections from the World and must be contented to be crucified unto the World with our Lord and Master Christ Jesus 3. That what reproach is suffered for Christs sake is not the mans but Christs reproach for whom it is suffered And so the reproach is as honourable before God as it is ignominious before the World Vers. 14. For here we have no continuing City but we seek one to come He giveth a Reason of this Exhortation Teaching 1. That the instability of this present World and our short and uncertain time of pilgrimage therein should be a motive to make us loose our affections off it in time 2. That the hope of a quiet and sure and blessed place of rest hereafter should be another motive to make us renounce this World with the better will 3. That the true Pilgrims imployment in this World is to be seeking how to come home to his own Countrey and City prepared for him Vers. 15. By him therefore let us offer the Sacrifice of praise to GOD continually that is the fruit of our lips giving thanks to his name Another Exhortation to offer Spiritual Sacrifices Wherein we learn 1. That as Christ hath abolished all properly called Priests by Office so hath he made all Christians spiritual Priests by common duty 2. As Christ hath offered the propitiatory Sacrifice of his own Body once for all that are to be saved and hath left no properly called Sacrifice no Offering ●or sin no Propitiatory Offering now to offer So hath he appointed the spiritual Sacrifice of Thanks to be offered by every faithful man and woman such as is Prayer Praises and Thanksgiving to God 3. That these our Sacrifices of Prayer and Praise is the spiritual service of Saints answerable to the Thank-offering of the first-fruits and Calves and Bullocks which was the external Sacrifice of the Old Church 4. That the Offering of these spiritual Sacrifices is not tied unto set hours as the Legal but to be done continually 5. That these our Sacrifices of Prayer and Praises are not to be offered by the mediation of Saint or Angel but by Jesus Christ onely 6. That albeit they be unworthy as from us yet being offered by Christs Mediation they shall be accepted for service at our hands Vers. 16. But to do good and to communicate forget not for with such Sacrifice God is well pleased Another Exhortation to good Works and Alms-deeds Teaching us 1. That goods works and Alms-deeds are appointed to be of the number of spiritual Sacrifices and a part of the Thank-Offerings of the Saints 2. That because they are Sacrifices they must not be offered to the Idol of our own credit and estimation or our own private ends but unto God even in obedience unto him and for the glory of him And because they are a part of the Thank-offerings of the Saints they must not incroach upon the Sin-offering of the Saviour the onely Expiatory the onely Propitiatory and the onely Meritorious Sacrifice 3. That being so offered they are well-pleasing unto God The smell of Christs Sin-offering once offered making our Thank-offering to be sweet smelling unto God Vers. 17. Obey them that have the rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your souls as they that must give account that they may do it with joy and not with grief for that is unprofitable for you Another Exhortation to obey such as had the Rule over them their Guides and Leaders as the word importeth That is publique Office-bearers in the Church appointed of God to teach and govern them by the Word and Ecclesiastical Censures Then 1. The Churches of Christ are not dens of confusion but Houses of Order having some to be Guides and Rulers and some to be instructed and guided by the direction of Gods Word and Ordinances 2. Even the meanest and poorest Churches albeit no more powerful than were the Churches of these scattered Hebrews must be so provided 3. The right duty of the Office-bearers in the Church is first to be guides pointing out the way in Gods word which the people should keep towards Heaven Next to be Leaders going before them in the example of Faith and the fruits thereof in their conversation And thirdly Rulers by the Rod of Discipline ●o take order with the scandalous and to recal Wanderers to incourage the obedient for thus much doth the word import 4. The duty of the people is to obey the direction of such Guides and Rulers and to submit themselves unto their censures and to maintain them in their Office every way that this order may be continued and not fall by any want which the people may supply 2. The Reason which he useth to induce them is They watch for your souls as they who must give account Then 1. The charge of Church-Rulers is the heaviest of all charges because of souls 2.
Satan viz. 1 If they would lay their foundation upon the most holy Doctrine of the Apostles which hath no mixture of humane inventions and would not depart any thing at all from it 2 If they would daily take care to carry on the superstructure and would strive unto perfection in the knowledge and beleef of the Truth revealed in the Word of God 3 If they were diligent in their prayers out of a sense of their necessities following the guidance of the Holy Spirit which helps the infirmities of the Saints and shews them for what and how they must pray according to the will of God Vers. 21. Keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ unto eternal life 4 If they indeavoured to love their brethren and neighbours out of a sense of the love of God towards them 5 If they would set the coming of the Lord before their eyes 6 If they apprehended eternal life 7 If against their own unworthiness they adhered to the mercy of Christ who is so to bee our Judge that hee will take the Gospel and the free benefit of our Redemption procured by himself for his rule From this it follows that wee ought to persevere in the Faith Vers. 22. And of some have compassion making a difference 23. And others save with fear pulling them out of the fire bating even the garment spotted by the flesh Arg. 9. Is propounded by way of precept because a reason is given of God to the Church whereby not onely they may persevere but they may reduce into the way those that wandred out and raise up those that were fallen To wit if they would handle every one according to his condition i. e. putting a difference between those that erre mercy and compassion was to be used towards those that were tractable and meek but if any one was stubborn and more securely shall indulge himself in his sin with fear and a more severe castigation they should endeavour to preserve him to wit by excommunication if otherwise hee could not be amended There are two Reasons given of this Reas. 1. Under a fit similitude for where wee see any one in danger to be burnt with fire we stick not to snatch him out by force So are they to be cured who repent not unless they be sharply handled who are to be rescued from hell and destruction even by the severest censures Reas. 2. By an allusion to a Legal type Levit. 15. Because where there is danger of infection and contagion as in obstinate offenders and such as lead the way to others their society is to be avoided and wee must depart from such Libertines given up to the pollution of the flesh As in times past under the Law there was a separation from Lepers and those that were pestilentially infected which is the consequence of excommunication Vers. 24. Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy The third part of the Epistle remains to wit the conclusion in which hee shews that all the praise of their perseverance is to be given unto God lest any man should ascribe too much to the power of man whose diligence in the use of means as to the premises is so much urged These five following Reasons shew that the praise of not perseverance is wholly to be attributed unto Christ. Is able Reas. 1. Because the power of preserving beleevers wholly abides in him that in this life they might not fall or faint in the course of holiness To present Reas. 2. Because there is power in him to present all his in the day of judgement unblameable in the sight of God with exceeding joy Vers. 25. To the onely wise God our Saviour bee glory and majesty dominion and power now and ever Amen Reas. 3. Because hee is the onely wise God that by his own waies and means hee may accomplish this whole business Saviour Reas. 4. Because hee is our Saviour by his merit office and efficacy it is necessary hee should accomplish what hee hath undertaken Glory Reas. 5. Because in every one of his works hee willeth the manifestation of his glory So that chiefly in this business he will have the glory of his Majesty appear his infinite power to be seen and his supream authority over all men and things to be eminently discovered and acknowledged both now and for ever Therefore you that are true beleevers shall persevere and all the glory of your salvation shall bee given unto God to whom of right it belongs and shall be ascribed for ever Amen THE END A Catalogue of Books printed for Francis Eglesfield Courteous Reader These Books following are to bee sold by Francis Eglesfield at the Sign of the Marygold in St. Pauls Church-yard Books of Divinity PIous and learned Annotations on the Bible with a large and useful Analysis in folio By the learned Iohn Diodate The Body of Divinity it being the sum and substance of Christian Religion Catechistically propounded and explained by way of Question and Answer By Bishop Usher The Holy Court in five Tomes written in French by Nicholas Causine and translated into English by Sir Thomas Hawkins and others The Works of that learned and pious Gentleman Sir Richard Baker Knight are these viz. 1 Meditations and Disquisitions on the Lords Prayer in 4o. 2 Meditations and Disquisitions on the first Psalm in 4o. 3 Meditations and Disquisitions on the seven penitential Psalms in 4o. 4 Meditations and Disquisitions on the seven Consolitory Psalms in 4o. 5 Ca●o Variegatus or Cato's Moral disticks translated and paraphrased with Variations of Expressings in English verse in 4o. 6 Motives to Prayer in 12. 7 The Apology for Laymens writing of Divinity together with the fall of Lucifer in 12. 8 Meditations and Disquisitions on the Creed a very useful book for these times in 12. 9 Soliloquies for the Soul in 12. A learned Commentary on the first Psalm in 4o. Both by Finneus Fletcher The Purple Island being poetical Miscellanies in 4o. Both by Finneus Fletcher Joy in Tribulation being a Consolation for afflicted Consciences by the same Author in 12. Five Sermons preached on several Occasions at the Court before the Kings Majesty By that Reverend and Learned Divine D. Preston in 4o. Riches of Mercy to men in misery very fit for these times of Atheism and Apostacy by the same Dr. Preston and approved of by Dr. Sibbs in 4o. His Remains containing three excellent Treatises namely Iudas Repentance the Saints spiritual Strength and St. Pauls Conversion by the same Author in 4o. A Commentary on the Divine Revelation of St. Iohn by David Parreus in folio Doomsday or a Treatise of the Resurrection of the Body delivered in 22 Sermons on the 1 Corinthians 15.16 by the Judicious Divine Dr. Day in 4o. Light from Heaven in 4. By Dr. Sibbs Lidas Conversion or the Riches of Mercy in 12.