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A87510 A mixture of scholasticall divinity, with practicall, in severall tractates: vvherein some of the most difficult knots in divinity are untied, many darke places of Scripture cleared, sundry heresies, and errours, refuted, / by Henry Ieanes, minister of God's Word at Chedzoy in Sommerset-shire.; Mixture of scholasticall divinity, with practicall. Part 1 Jeanes, Henry, 1611-1662. 1656 (1656) Wing J507; Thomason E872_3; Thomason E873_1; ESTC R202616 347,399 402

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and head of his Church and therefore termed a mediatory power and this is the power spoken of in this place But now say our Divines against the Papists Christ is Mediatour according unto both natures not only as man but as God and man The divine authority then of Christ is mediatory not as it is common unto every person in the Trinity but as it is appropriate unto him the second person Thus speakes the learned and pious Bayne on the Ephesians pag. 187. This person as God receiving by voluntary dispensation this honour from the Father that he should in an immediate and appropriate manner execute government over all the creatures in heaven and earth And again pag. 183. So that though the Father and Spirit have a right and soveraignty over the creature yet they doe not immediately execute this in such sort as the Son doth which maketh Christ say Joh. 5.22 The Father judgeth none but hath given all judgment unto the Son But now it may be objected that as every person executeth government over all creatures both in heaven and earth because it is an outward worke of the Trinity and therefore common unto every person so also they doe it in an immediate manner immediatione tum suppositi tum virtutis as all divine works are done and therefore Christ's execution of the soveraigne dominion of God over every creature immediately makes nothing unto the appropriation of this soveraigne dominion unto his person A solution of this doubt you may gather from what D. Field pag. 43. answereth unto a like objection against his being a mediatour according unto both natures concurring in the work of mediation His words I shall insert at large If it be alleadged that opera Trinitatis ad extra are indivisa that is that there is nothing that one of the persons of the blessed Trinity doth towards the creatures but they all doe it and consequently that those things which Christ did in his divine nature pertained not to the office of a Mediatour being common to all the persons We answer that as the persons of the blessed Trinity though they be one and the same God yet differ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in subsistence and the manner of having and possessing the Deity and divine nature so though their action be the same and the work done by them yet they differ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the manner of doing it for the Father doth all things authoritativè and the Son subauthoritativè as the School-men speak that is the Father as he from whom and of whom all things are the Son as he by whom all things are not as if he were an instrument but as principium à principio that is a cause and beginning of things that hath received the essence it hath and power of working from another though the very same that is in the other And in this sort to quicken give life and to impart the spirit of sanctification to whom he pleaseth especially with a kind of concurring of the humane nature meriting desiring and instrumentally assisting is proper to the Son of God manifested in our flesh and not common to the whole Trinity and therefore notwithstanding the objection taken from the unity of the works of the divine persons may be a worke of mediation In these words he layeth down two grounds of the appropriation of workes of divine power and authority to Christ as a Mediatour The first is the order and manner of his both subsisting and working but this if I mistake not is impertinent and unsatisfactory unto the Objection For it would have agreed unto him as the Sonne of God if he had never been Mediatour But the second ground the instrumental concurrence of the humane nature commeth home and fully satisfieth the doubt For though all the persons have an immediate influence upon all works of divine power and Authority yet the Sonne only produceth such of them at least as relate unto his Church by the instrumental association and concurrence of his manhood personally united with him To performe them simply as God is common to the whole Trinity To performe them as God man is appropriate to Christ as Mediatour As ascribed unto him they are say Divines Theandrical that is divinely humane And this occasioneth me to interpret that place alleadged by M. Bayne John 5.22 The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgment unto the Son Here the Father judgeth no man in the same sense that it is committed unto the Son now it is committed unto the Son as he is Mediatour God incarnate God manifested in the flesh subsisting in the forme of a servant that is the nature of a man and thus the Father judgeth no man Thus f Judicare describitur aliter pa●ris quàm filii Describitur enim pater non judicare eâ ratione quia non exerce● personam sensibilis judicis quia pater non est homo non est judex sensibilis deill● enim judicio est sermo quo mundus est judica●dus Cajetan expounds the words The Sonne alone shall exercise the part of a Judge which may be perceived by the senses of the body He alone shall set upon an external Tribunal and pronounce an audible sentence But this appropriation of Divine authority unto Christ is not this donation of all power unto him in heaven and earth For that as you may see in D. Feild pag. 434. is an immediate consequent of the personal union Whereas this is a sequel of Christ's passion and resurrection Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his glory Luk. 24.26 When he had by himselfe purged our sins he sate down on the right hand of the majesty on high Heb. 1.3 2. Christ's judiciary power is one branch of that universal power given unto him in heaven and earth Now saith Christ the Father hath given the Son authority to execute judgment because he is the sonne of man John 5.27 or rather as Beza renders it as the Son of man so that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much thinkes he as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the foregoing verse as you may see in Cajetan Christ sheweth how that the Father hath given unto the Sonne as he is the Sonne of God to have life in himselfe without dependance on any other not by any gratuitous gift but by natural generation and here in this verse he declareth how he hath given him Authority to execute judgment as he is the Son of man by a gratuitous gift 3. The giving of all Authority to Christ in heaven and in earth is by the general consent of Divines included in the placing of him at the right hand of God Now however Damascene stretcheth the expression of his sitting at the right hand of God to signify his equality with the Father from all eternity in point of divine majesty yet as Bishop Davenant on the Colossians pag. 263. observeth
it is spoken of Christ properly and chiefly according unto his humane nature He is stiled by the Psalmist the man of God's right hand Psal 80.17 To denote think some that as man he sits at the right hand of God This may be farther proved not only from the Creed commonly called the Apostles Creed but also from Ephes 1.20 For from hence I thus argue Christ was set at the right hand of God in regard of the same nature wherein he was raised from the dead But it was his humane nature that was raysed from the dead and therefore it was in respect of that that he was placed at the right hand of God and consequently unto that all power was given in heaven and earth That shall be the observation which hence I shall pursue Observ All mediatory power was dispensed unto Christ's humanity after it's resurrection This I shall explain confirme and apply 1. For Explication Christ's power of Authority as Mediatour is twofold 1. Special over his Church 2. General not only in the Church but out of the Church over all creatures in heaven and in earth 1. Then Christ as Mediatour hath a special and direct power over his Church And that this power is comprized in the text though not only is agreed unto on all hands Concerning it we have in the Text these particulars remarkable 1. The kind 2. The cause or original 3. The fulness or extent of it 1. For the kind of it it is a spiritual power over the soules and consciences of men Joh. 18.36 Rom. 14.17 2. For the Original of it it is given and that in a twofold sense 1. It is data or dispensatoria in opposition to ingenita or nativa it is not a natural but donative dispensatory or delegated power 2. It is data in opposition to rapta it is given not usurpt therefore a just and lawful power 3. Next we have the fulness or extent of it and that 1. intrinsecal 2. Extrinsecal 1. Intrinsecal He hath all sorts and kinds of spiritual power the Prophetical Priestly and Kingly power 2. Extrinsecal His power as Mediatour extendeth unto all places All power is given unto him in heaven and in earth In heaven the Church Triumphant in earth the Church Militant Here he hath power to distribute grace there he hath power to conferre glory Unto these particulars expressed in the text I shall adde the limitation or restriction of this power in regard of time and that 1. in regard of it's first collation 2. in respect of it's whole duration 1. In regard of it's first collation Our Saviour saith Maldonat so speakes as if he had not this power before the resurrection For he speakes as of a new matter Now all power is given unto me in heaven and in earth and therefore now I give you your full commission Goe ye therefore and teach all nations baptizing them c. And for this he quotes Athanasius But now this is to be understood not so much concerning his commission or Authority in it selfe as of the plenary execution thereof Thus Lyra. Although Christ saith he as man from the very first moment of his conception had power in heaven and earth authoritativè yet he had it not executivè before his resurrection The Baptisme of Christ was as you may see in * Theol. med lib. 1. cap. 21. Sect. 32 33 34 35. Ames his publique inauguration to the publique performance of his office Therefore in it as he there sheweth at large the three offices of Christ are affirmed and confirmed But yet notwithstanding all this there was an enlargement of all his offices after his resurrection in point of execution Thus first there was an enlargement of his Prophetical office The first commission that he opened unto his Apostles was only to goe to the lost sheep of the house of Israel and to refraine the way of the Gentiles and the Cities of the Samaritans Math. 10.5,6 But now he enlargeth their commission and commands them to disciple baptize and teach all nations Besides by his inspired instruments he hath compleated the rule of our faith and manners not only in respect of essentials for so it was before but also in regard of all it 's integral parts 2. There was an enlargement of his Priestly office for now he interced's not so much in an oral as in a real way not in the humble posture of a supplyant as it were with bended knees with strong cryings and teares as in the dayes of his humiliation Heb. 5.7 But in an Authoritative way gloriously representing unto his Father those things which he hath done and suffered for his Elect. When we say that Christ now interced's in a way of Authority our meaning is not that he hath authority to command the Father For to affirme that were blasphemy but that he hath a right unto whatsoever he interced's for as having amply merited it at the hands of his Father so that his intercession is virtute pretii in vertue of the price that he hath paid and purchase that he hath made in the behalfe of all the Elect. 3. There was after his resurrection an enlargement of his Kingly office in poin●…f execution 1. The institution of all ordinances and all offices in his Church or Kingdome whether extraordinary or ordinary was fully compleated Ephes 4.11,12,13 During his forty dayes converse with his Apostles after his resurrection he spake with them of the things pertaining to the Kingdome of God Acts. 1.3 And then doubtless gave them full directions for his worship as also for the present and future government of his Church and shortly afterwards he powred on them miraculous gifts and graces of his spirit to qualifie them for the propagation of his Gospel or Kingdome 2. The borders of his Kingdome were enlarged for before they were confined unto Judah and Israel Psal 76.1,2 and such few Proselites as joyned themselves unto the communion of that Church but now he hath the heathen for his inheritance the utmost parts of the earth for his possession Psal 2.8 the Kingdomes of this world are become the Kingdomes of our Lord and his Christ Revel 11.15 2. We have a limitation or restriction of this power in regard of the time of it's whole duration 1 Cor. 15.24 When the end commeth then he shall deliver up the Kingdome to God even the Father that is he shall surrender up to his Father his mediatory power and Kingdome which he now administreth and which he received for the gathering protection and salvation of his Church and subduing of all his and our enemies And this is all that I shall say at present touching Christs special power or Authority that he hath in his Church Divers are of the opinion as you may see in M. Gillespies Aarons rod blossoming pag. 214 215 that this only is the all-power meant in the text But I rather incline unto those that understand it in such an extent as that
made themselves Eunuchs whereupon some ambitious fooles castrated themselves and so that they might be great men in power and place they made themselves monsters and no men Shall men be thus forward to imitate the defects and deformities of powerfull personages here on earth and shall not we be very diligent in our imitation of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords who hath all power given unto him in heaven and earth Our Saviour himselfe makes the extent and universality of his dominion a motive as unto faith in him obedience to him so unto imitation of him All things are delivered into my hands c. therefore learne of me and he instanceth in two particulars that more especially deserve to be imitated for I am meeke and lowly in heart which brings me unto the third sort of dutyes unto which from the fulnesse of Christs authority we may be exhorted and they are such as relate unto our Brethren meeknesse and humility Vse 1. of Exhortation First from the fulnesse of Christs authority compared with his meeknesse we may all be exhorted unto meeknesse All things were delivered unto him of his Father and yet he was meek Math. 11.27,29 His carriage unto even his most insulting and provoking enemies was full of meeknesse in his greatest sufferings There never dropt from him so much as one impatient word or syllable who when he was reviled reviled not againe when he suffered he threatned not but committed himselfe to him that judgeth righteously 1 Pet. 2.23 and yet he could have taken upon the greatest of his adversaries a most speedy easy revenge to see such power matched with such patience should make us all blush at the excesses of our anger and the rage of our impatience towards all those almost with whom we converse Not only private but even publick persons those of greatest place may very well in the execution of their places propound unto themselves this matchlesse meeknesse of their Saviour and carry their goverment as Christ did upon their shoulders in patience that is so farr as they may without prejudice unto justice beare with the weaknesse and way wardnesse of their charges Magistrates may hence be instructed to carry their people in their bosome as a nursing father beareth the sucking child Num. 11.12 ministers may hence learne to be patient in meeknesse instructing those that oppose themselves if God peradventure will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth and that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Divell who are taken captive by him at his will 2 Tim. 2.24,25,26 Aaron carryed the twelve tribes in his brestplate next to his heart to shew that in care he was to bear them Exod. 28. ver 29. But he had them also engraven in two Onyx-stones ver 12. and those set upon his very shoulders to shew he must otherwhile beare them in patience too And it is not only Aarons case and other high Priests under the Law The Morall is applyable unto all ministers of the Gospell they are to beare their people as in their breasts by pastorall care and affection so on their shoulders in great patience and long-suffering Use 2. of Exhortation Secondly from a comparison of the fulnesse of Christs power with the greatnesse of his humility all men the greatest of men may be exhorted unto humility towards even the meanest of their brethren All things were delivered unto him of his father and yet he was lowly in mind therefore learne of him Math. 11.27,28 In Iohn 13. we have his actuall knowledge or consideration of his soveraignty connexed with an action wherein was the very depth of humility vers 3 4 5. Jesus knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands and that he was come from God and went to God He riseth from supper and laid aside his garments and tooke a towell and girded himselfe after that he poureth water into a bason and began to wash his Disciples feet and to wipe them with the towell wherewith he was girded Some might interpret this action of our Saviour to proceed from incogitancy or inadvertency and thinke that he forgat himselfe and did a thing unbecoming his dignity To prevent this the Evangelist makes his notice of and meditation upon the fulnesse of his authority the preface unto this his great example of humility knowing that the Father hath given all things into his hand c. he ariseth from supper c. and began to wash his Disciples feet c. The washing of feet was a civility with which at those times in those hot Eastern countryes strangers were entertained especially in the evening and therefore perhaps might be usuall towards superiors and equalls but that he that had all things given into his hands by the Father he that was come from God and was forthwith to goe to God should wash the feet of his owne disciples of which some were poor fisher men is an unheard of condescention who can be proud and looke upon so humble a Saviour whose pride should not so lowly an action of his beat downe what power is there that should swell the spirit of any mortall wight when he that hath all power given unto him in heaven and earth stoops unto so low a service who should refuse to write after such a copy of Lowlinesse Especially seeing our Saviour himself exhorts hereunto vers 13 14. Ye call me Master and Lord and ye say well for so I am If I then your Lord and Master have washed your feet ye also ought to wash one anothers feet In washing of the feet there is Synecdoche Speciei the speciall is put for the generall washing of the feet being a base and abject service stands for all offices or duties of love though never so low and meane unto such offices all men are obliged even superiors unto their inferiors In una itaque specie officii totum genus officiorum intelligimus Ita quod explicando debitum abluendi pedes comprehēditur debitum cujusque officii tam corporalis quā Spiritualis quia ipsa ablutio à Iesu corporalis quidem exercitata est Spiritualis verò sermone exposita Intendit ergo ad literam-Iesus ut ab ip sius exemplo cognoscamus nos debitores invicē ad mutua officia quibus opus est tā ad corpus quàm ad Spiritum Mutua siquidem praecipit dicendo alter alterius Sed intellige proportionaliter ut non dedignentur superiores exercere officia sibi congrua tam ad corporis quàm ad Spiritus aliorum utilia ex quo Iesus Dominus non horum aut illorum sed omnium magister non horum aut illorum sed omnium dignatus est sponte tam vile exercere officium lavandi pedes piscatorum c. Exemplum enim dedi vobis Ne facta à Iesu domino magistro admiranda potius quam imitanda acciperemus explicat imitanda Cajetan in
disposition unto that other darknesse which is in Hell Those that doe not behold the glory of Christ here darkly in the glasse of his ordinances 1 Cor. 13.12 they are utterly unqualified for the distinct clear and immediate intuition of his glory in heaven where he is seen face to face The inheritance of the saints consisteth in light and therefore persons ignorant of God and Christ are altogeather unmeete to share in it and therefore we may say of them whiles they are on earth that they are in darknesse and the shadow of death in the borders and suburbs of hell This dispositive cause of the glory of the elect we have vers 25. to goe no farther illustrated by a twofold comparison one of dissimilitude another of similitude 1. By a comparison of dissimilitude The world hath not knowne thee and therefore I pray not for it but these that thou hast given me have knowne that thou hast sent me and therefore I intercede for their glory 2. By a comparison of similitude I have knowne thee and these have knowne that thou hast sent me I have knowne thee in all perfection Col. 2.3 Math. 11.27 John 1.18 And these know my mission by thee and therefore in some measure they know thee also unto them only of all the sons of men have I revealed thee and disclosed thy counsell and therefore I am an earnest intercessour in their behalfe that they may be with me where I am and behold my glory I have communicated a saving knowledge of me and thee unto them and therefore do thou impart glory and happinesse unto them They are conformable unto me while I am here on earth and therefore let them consort me in heaven hereafter But to speake more particularly of the branches of this our conformitie after death unto the fulnesse of Christ's glory It is 1. of our soules presently after dissolution from their bodies 2. of our bodies too upon their reunion with our soules in the resurrection 1. Of our soules presently upon their dissolution from our bodies Then the spirits of just men are made perfect Hebr. 12.23 perfectly freed from sinne and misery And if we speake of their happinesse in regard of essentials possessed of as great a perfection thereof as is communicable unto them In their understandings there will be perfect light They shall see God face to face 1 Cor. 13 12. they shall see Christ as he is 1 John 3.2 In their wills there shall be love and joy flaming unto the highest What the Apostle speakes of the Church in generall Ephes 5.27 is applicable unto every believing soule presently upon separation from the body Christ forthwith presents it unto himselfe glorious not having spot or wrinckle or any such thing c. Secondly In the resurrection Christs members shall enjoy a perfect state of glory in their bodies as well as their soules This second branch of their conformitie unto Christs fulnesse of glory I shall set forth and confirme by the explication of foure places of scripture The first is Phil. 3.21 who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according unto the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe In sanctification there is a change wrought in both the bodies and soules of the saints 1 Thes 5.23 But this is but an imperfect change In their glorification after death there will be a full and perfect change as of their soules presently upon their separation so of their bodies in the resurrection And this change of their bodies we have here set forth from the manner tearmes and cause of it 1. From the manner or kind of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not an essentiall but accidentall transformation Looke as in change of old and broken vessels the matter is the same onely the colour is fresher and brighter the fashion newer and better So in the resurrection our bodies shall be the same for substance They shall retaine the same flesh and bloud the same figure and members that now onely they shall be over-cloathed with spirituall and heavenly qualities and prerogatives of corruptible they shall be made incorruptible of passible impassible of earthy heavenly and this we have here expressed by the tearmes of this change from which and to which It is a transformation of our bodies from vilenesse a configuration or conformation of them in glory unto the body of Christ 1. Here is terminus a quo the tearme from which vilenesse our vile bodies In the Greeke it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the body of our vilenesse that is by an Hebraisme our vile bodies our most vile bodies This vilenesse is either generall or speciall 1. generall common to all mankind to wit mortality and passibility obnoxiousnesse unto inward infirmities and diseases outward common calamities and finally unto death and corruption 2. Speciall accrewing unto the saints by persecution Gal. 6.17 Their bodies while living may be blemished with scars wounds dismembring and after death may many wayes be disfigured Well! all defects and blemishes shall be removed and our bodies shall be fashioned like unto Christs glorious body Here we have the second tearme of this change the tearme unto which glory and this is set downe not absolutely but in a way of comparison a comparison of similitude This glory shall be like that of Christs body in his resurrection He shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body and his glorious body or body of glory was cloathed with four glorious dotes or endowments impassibility subtilty agility and clarity For farther explication of which I shall referre you unto what I shall presently deliver on 1 Cor. 15.42,43,44 Onely one thing I shall desire you to remarke for the present and that is this Whereas divers Papists understand the subtilty of Christs body in order unto the penetration of any other bodies they are herein contradicted by some of their owne Schoolemen Durand Capreolus and Estius The two latter understand by it the perfect and full subjection of the glorified body unto the glorified soule b Perfecta subjectio corporis ad animam quoadoperationes cognitivas appetitivas videtur pertinere ad subtilitatem haec subiectio potest intelligi vel quantum ad operationes sensitivas praecisè ut nihil sit in corpore per quod puritas talium operationum impediatur sicut nunc fit in nobis frequenter propter grossitiem impuritatem spirituum deservientiaum operationibus sensitivis Omnis enim impuritas talis segregabitur a corporibus gloriosis vel potest intelligi talis subjectio propter obedientiam perfectam quam tunc habebunt vires sensitivae ad rationem quae obedientia modò non est in nobis cum caro concupiscit adversus spiritum ob hoc corpus nunc dicitur animale ab animalitate quia motus animales magis sunt in nobis secundum impetum sensualitatis quam
interruption Then answered Peter and said unto Jesus Lord it is good for us to be here if thou wilt let us make here three Tabernacles one for thee and one for Moses and one for Elias And yet Peter was only a spectator of this glory and had himselfe no share in it O then what infinite satisfaction may we expect in the beholding of Christs glory in heaven for it will be accompanied with an everlasting enjoyment thereof the lustre of it will be diffused unto us so that some shall enjoy the glory of the Sun some of the Moone some of the Starres 1 Cor. 15.41 We may conclude then of heaven as Peter of the mount of Christs transfiguration Lord it is good for us to be here In earth we are surrounded with spectacles of discontent but in heaven the glory of Christ will be an all-pleasing object for in the sight of it will stand part of our blisse and therefore it should command our hearts and draw unto it our thoughts and affections Christ glorified is our treasure and where your treasure is there will your heart be also Math. 6.21 Wheresoever the body is thither will the Eagles be gathered together Luk. 17.37 Math. 24.28 Hosea chap. 1.11 Prophesying of the true members of the Church under the Gospell giveth them this character They shall appoint themselves one head and ascendent è terrâ they shall come up out of the land that is they shall ascend from earth to heaven in their desires In Cant. 8.3 the motion of the Church even here in her state militant is ascension Who is this that commeth up out of the wildernesse Though she be in a wildernesse condition yet the texminus ad quem of all her motions is the land of promise the heavenly Jerusalem she is still comming up out of the wildernesse The constant prayer of the Church is for the comming of her Lord and Husband Christ Jesus and the spirit dictates this prayer unto her The spirit and the bride say come Revel 22.17 She knoweth that the day of his comming will be her wedding day And hath she not reason to long for the consummation of her marriage with so all-glorious an husband She is assured that the day of his comming will be her coronation day wherein he will grant her to sit with him in his throne Revel 3.21 and place upon her head a crowne of righteousnesse 2 Timoth. 4.8 of life Jam. 1.12 and glory that fadeth not away 1 Pet. 5.4 What more tempting and alluring then the beauty of such a crowne the glory of such a throne And therefore she hath great cause to love the appearing of the Lord Jesus 2 Timoth. 4.8 and to desire that it may be hastened 2. From Christ's all-fulnesse of glory and the certainty that we have of our participation thereof we may be exhorted to use our strictest endeavours in our declining of sinne pursuite of holinesse and tracing the waies of new obedience Hath not Christ decreed to make us glorious like himselfe The glory which thou gavest me I have given them Joh. 17.22 and is it not then a very undecent thing for us to have here inglorious soules base and unworthy affections and conversations He hath prepared for us riches of glory And unto such riches will not poore and low soules be unsuitable We are begotten by the refurrection of Jesus Christ unto a lively hope an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for us 1 Pet. 3.4 and unto such an undefiled and heavenly inheritance will not defiled consciences and earthy minds be altogeather disproportioned and so unqualified and unmeete for the partaking of it If you compare vers 20 21. of 3 Phil. you may find an argument to stirre us up unto heavenly mindednesse We looke from heaven for the saviour the Lord Jesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body c. Therefore let our conversation be in heaven Here on earth as it was said of Lazarus Luk. 16.25 we receive our evill things Even a Jacob complaines of the few dayes of his Pilgrimage as evill Gen. 47.9 and unto a Solomon all things under the sunne were vanity and vexation of spirit Eccles 1.2 and therefore while our bodies are fastened unto the earth this theater of misery our soules should soare up to heaven in devotion Because those that have chosen Christ for their Head and King shall ascend from earth to heaven in their bodies at the resurrection ascendent è terra Hos 1.11 They shall come up out of the land therefore it is fit that now in this life they should come up out of the land ascend and mount unto heaven by divine and spirituall meditations and heavenly affections When Christ took Peter James and John to be witnesses of his glorious transfiguration he bringeth them up into a high mountaine apart Math. 17.1 and why might not this betoken that to qualifie us for the contemplation of Christ's glory here and the fruition of it hereafter there is requisite an elevation and separation of our hearts from the distractions of all things here below Saint John having propounded our future conformitie unto Christ's glory 1 Job 3.2 when he shall appeare we shall be like him c. he presently addeth vers 3. that the hope of this conformitie is accompanied with unfeigned endeavours after purity and every man that hath this hope in him purifieth himselfe even as he is pure And indeed it would be very irrationall for a man to hope to be like Christ in his glory and happinesse and at the same time to resolve to be unlike him in his grace and holinesse In Rom. 8.23 they that waite for the Adoption that is the consummation and manifestation of their adoption to wit the redemption of their bodies are described by the Apostle to be holy and penitent persons such as have the first fruits of the spirit Gal. 5.22,23 and such as groane within themselves that is under the sight and sense of their lusts and corruptions This connexion of spirituall sorrow and humiliation with the first fruits of the spirit is very congruent because there is a great deale of equity in this that we should mourne and groane for that which grieveth the Spirit by whose graces we are sealed that is marked out for redemption Ephes 4.30 In heaven the spirits of just men shall shall be made perfect Ephes 12.23 and if we desire after death to be rankt amongst them we should labour by the promises to cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of the flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of God 2 Cor. 7.1 to be perfect as our father which is in heaven is perfect Math. 5.48 When we awake satisfaction with the image or likenesse of God will be our reward Psal 17. vers last and therefore here it is our duty to put on the new man which is renewed after the image
of God When our soules are sinlesse then they shall be compleatly happy and therefore the inchoatiō of their blisse consisteth in repentance for mortification of sinne The vessell of our bodies shall one day be replenished with glory therefore every one should know how to possesse it in sanctification and honour not in the lust of concupiscence 1 Thes 4.4 Christ will fashion our bodies like unto his glorious body and therefore unfitting to debase them unto the drudgery of sinne O how can they hereafter be meete receptacles of and qualified subjects for glory if we wholly make them the instruments of our lusts and their members weapons of unrighteousnesse vessels unto honour should purge themselves from vessels unto dishonour and not prostitute themselves unto such sordid uses as those are applied unto 2 Timoth. 2. vers 20 21. If we are vessels of mercy which God hath prepared unto glory and on whom he will make knowne the riches of his glory Rom. 9.23 we shall be very ungratefull if we doe not glorify him in our bodies and spirits 1 Cor. 6.20 if we employ any faculty of this or member of that unto his dishonour The blessednesse of glorious saints in heaven is to see God face to face 1 Cor. 13.12 to see Christ as he is 1 Joh. 3.2 And therefore for this every gracious saint prepareth by seeking his face here in his ordinances Psalm 27.8 Because God will one day make knowne unto us the wayes of life Psalm 16.11 in a way of possession therefore it is fit that now we apply our selves unto Gods shewing us the way of life in the way of instruction and revelation Our constant prayer should be that of Davids Psalm 25.4,5 Shew me thy waies o Lord teach me thy paths lead me in thy truth and teach me Christ prayeth in the behalfe of all the elect those whom his father hath given him that they may be where he is and that they may there behold that is enjoy his glory which God hath given him John 17.24 Now unto this prayer our soules do not say a hearty Amen unlesse they pant after the assemblies of the saints and communion with Christ in them as the hart panteth after the water brookes Ps 42.1,2 Where two or three are gathered together in the name of Christ there hath he promised to be in the midst of them Math. 18.20 And they that loath such society would soon be tired and cloyed with the happinesse of heaven There are persons loathing Christ and loathed by him those that principally affect such and delight most in their felloship and company do not cordially care to come where Christ now is in his exalted condition and if their hearts were left unto their liberty of choice they would refuse the pleasures of paradise for those of an alebench or taverne if they were perpetuall And if it were possible for thē to have a view of the glory which God hath given Christ they would quickly be weary of so happy a sight and turne away their eies from beholding it Thus have I at last gone over the severall branches of that all-fulnesse which dwelleth in Christ I shall briefly insist upon some uses that may be made of them considered jointly and so I shall put a conclusion unto my meditations upon this subject These Uses shall be either of information exhortation or consolation 1. Of Information and they shall be two 1. From this all-fulnesse that dwelleth in Christ we may inferre his incomprehensiblenesse He is a mine unto the bottome of which we can never digge He is an ocean that can never be fathomed His riches are said to be unsearchable Ephes 3.8 which Epithet denoteth the undiscoverablenesse of them by the light of nature the incomprehensiblenesse of them by the light of faith 1. The absolute undiscoverablenesse of them by the light of nature Flesh and bloud can never reveale them so that without divine revelatiō we had been as utterly ignorāt of thē as the world was of the mines of America before the discovery of Columbus The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trāslated unsearchable signifieth not to be traced out by the footsteps for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to find out by the footsteps The riches of Christ are not to be traced out by any footsteps of them for in the whole book of the creature there are no vestigia no prints left of them 2. The riches of Christ are said to be unsearchable in regard of their incomprehensiblenesse by the light of faith We may comprehend them manu not visu 1 Cor. 2.9 That faith which is most quick sighted doth not reach a full adequate and comprehensive knowledge of them Of the riches of glory it hath only a glimpse and that a farr off The riches of grace redemption righteousnesse c. it seeth only darkly and dimmely as through a glasse and then the riches of his divine person and nature are absolutely infinite and therefore cannot be comprehended by the finite understanding of man For between the object comprehended and the power or faculty comprehending there must be a proportion But between that which is finite and that which is infinite there is no proportion As the Apostle saith here of the riches of Christ in generall that they are unsearchable so in Col. 2.3 he affirmeth particularly concerning the treasures of wisdome and knowledge in Christ that they are hidden and they are said to be hidden because they are totally and altogether concealed from the unregenerate Math. 16.16 1 Cor. 2.14 1 Cor. 1.23 And because they are but sparingly and in measure here in this life manifested unto the regenerate 1 Cor. 13.12 2. From this all-fulnesse that dwelleth in Christ we may inferre the excellency and preciousnesse of the calling of the ministry for it is by God designed unto the proposall and application of this all-fulnesse unto the sons of men and what calling or office can have a richer a more noble and diviner object We have saith the Apostle this treasure in earthen vessels 2 Cor. 4.7 Though the most faithfull holy and diligent ministers of the Gospell be but earthen vessels yet they hold a divine and heavenly treasure In Christ are hid all the treasures of grace of wisdome and knowledge And ministers are Christs Almoners and cofferers to distribute these treasures unto poor hungry and naked soules And what imployment can be more honourable in it selfe and more beneficiall unto a man by the fall of Adam sunke into an extremity of want and poverty The Apostle Paul acknowledgeth that to preach the unsearchable riches of Christ was a great grace given unto him Eph. 3.8 where I shall take notice of three things 1. The riches of Christ were either such as he was possest of in himselfe or such as he communicatth unto us 1. Such as he is possest of in himselfe The riches of his person and natures his rich and glorious offices the riches of his satisfaction
persons from their places that is named in this world or that which is to come that is renowned here on earth or in heaven in the state of heavenly blisse which is said to be future or to come not because it doth not now exist but for that it is to come unto us that live here in this present world Lastly we have a distribution of this soveraigne authority or dominion of Christ It is 1. generall over the whole Creation And hath put all things under his feet v. 22. 2. speciall over the Church And gave him to be the head over all things to the Church 1. Generall over the whole creation and hath all things put under his feet Zanchy by all things here understands the enemies of Christ which shall be subjected unto him by way of conquest he shall in a victorious manner as it were tread upon them and trample them under his feet As the Captaines of the men of warre with Joshua did tread upon the five kings that were taken Josh 10.24 For this * Qui de ecclesia non sunt subjecti sunt Christo ficu● quae sub pedibus habemus nempe ut vilia digna quae conculcentur et conterantur Zanchius restriction of the phrase to wicked men and the enemies of Christ he giveth this reason the sheepe the members of Christ are in his hand not under his feete no man shall pluck them out of his hand Joh. 10.28 For answer the Scripture indeed mentioneth a twofold putting under the feete of Christ penall or obedientiall 1. There is a penall and disgracefull way of putting under the feet of Christ by way of punishment or contempt but when the Scripture speakes of that there is allwaies expresse mention made of enemies Psal 110.1 1 Cor. 15.25 But putting under the feet of Christ when it is used simply by it selfe without any such addition of enemies signifieth that which is obedientiall and denoteth the generall subordination of all creatures whatsoever unto Christ If any differ herein from me I shall desire him impartially to consider that place in Heb. 2.5,6,7,8 Where the Apostle hath a large discourse of this very subject And out of this place I shall draw three arguments to prove that the putting all things in subjection under the feet of Christ is so comprehensive as that it takes in not only enemies but all the creatures 1. v. 5. He hath put in subjection unto him the world to come that is heaven the inhabitants of which are the glorious Saints and Angels 2. v. 8. In that he put all in subjection under him he left nothing that is not put under him The Apostle we see is peremptory and expresse that no creature whatsoever is excepted or exempted from this subjection and therefore it would be saucinesse in any man to restraine it only unto enemies 3. The 8th Psalme out of which this phrase is applied unto Christ makes mention of all sheepe and oxen yea and the beasts of the field the foules of the aire and the fish of the sea and whatsoever passeth through the path's of the sea 's Psal 8.7,8 that were put under his feet Now these creatures are not capable of any enmity or hostility against Christ and therefore the phrase doth not here signify the speciall subjection of enemies by way of victory and triumph 2. We have here the second branch of Christs dominion that speciall soveraignty and supreme authority which he hath over his Church Gave him to be an head over all unto his Church that clause over all as is noted by Mr Bayne may be understood either in regard of Christ or the Church 1. In regard of Christ and so it denoteth the perfection of his glory and authority Gave him who is over all things to be the head unto the Church and so here is not only signified the excellency of Christ but farther the greatnesse of the gift or benefit herein bestowed by God upon the Church in that he hath given her a most eminent glorious and powerfull head But of this the Apostle speakes so fully in the foregoing words as that to insert it here againe so suddenly would be little lesse then a tautology I conceive therefore that the words are meant in regard of the Church so that in them is couched a comparison of the greater with the lesse of Christs head-ship unto the Church with his domination which he hath above all other creatures Christ may be said to be an head unto the whole universe He is the head of all principality and power Col. 1.10 But he is an head unto the Church in a more singular and eminent manner then he is unto any other of the creatures then he is unto the Angels He was unto the Angels only a mediator of confirmation or preservation unto us also a mediator of redemption and therefore now being at the right hand of God he presents unto him in our behalfe the satisfaction of his death for the remission of our sinnes the merit of his death for the supply of all our wants and in such a manner he doth not intercede for the elect Angels who are free from both sinne and indigency Besides there is not such a suitablenesse of nature between him and the Angels as there is between him and the Church of the redeemed For he tooke not on him the nature of Angels but he tooke on him the seed of Abraham Heb. 2.16 Zanchy expounds the words as of the singularity of Christs love unto the Church so also of the extent and universality of his influence upon her So that over all things with him sounds as much as in all things in all mercies and benefits needfull unto the Church his body in all duties belonging unto him as the head of his Church He communicates unto her all good things grace and glory Psal 84.11 he is present with her in all her streits and supplieth her in all her wants He dischargeth for her and unto her all the offices of an head he illightneth quickneth governeth and protecteth her But this interpretation may be thought to be strained therefore I shall acquiesce in the former touching the specialty of Christs headship Bayne or soveraignty over the Church It is more intimate communicative and beneficiall then that over any other Creatures though never so great and glorious A second place is Phil. 2.9,10,11 Where we have of Christs exaltation 1. an emphaticall affirmation 2. a large and lively description 1. An emphaticall affirmation God also hath highly exalted him It is not barely said that God exalted him but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 super exaltavit highly exalted him Exalted him above all highnesse Exalted him unto the greatest height of honour and power that the humane nature is advanceable so highly he exalted him that all Creatures whatsoever from the highest heavens unto the center of the earth are far below him as it were under his feete 2. We have a large
inherent in it but by the power and Spirit of Christ concurring with it actuating applying and mightily enforcing of it In Isa 53.1 The Gospell is refer'd to the Prophets and Apostles in regard of ministry and dispensation our report but it is refer'd to the Lord only in point of efficacy and operation the arme of the Lord. Upon the Lord Christ therefore let us depend and to him let us repaire for the successe thereof which brings me to the last particular Fifthly Ministers and people are in the ordinances of Christ all acts of worship to do all in the name of Christ that is with invocation of his name calling upon the name of God through his mediation and this to be included in the phrase as it is used Col 3.17 is the consent of most interpreters on the place by this it is that as all creatures and actions in generall so all ordinances in a more speciall and peculiar manner are sanctified unto us How can we with any probability expect a blessing from Christ upon our publique assemblies on the Lords day when we rush unto them from our beds or worldly businesse without so much as imploring such a blessing in our families or closets If we do not seeke Christ in our home devotions in a way of preparation unto our publique I believe we can hardly be said to be gathered together in his name according to the full import of the expression and without this it will be but presumption to flatter our selves that Christ will be in the mid'st of us Doth a minister preach in the name of Christ when he doth not before hand so much as open his mouth for Christs assistance in his study and concurrence in his pulpit Do people heare in the name of Christ when all the weeke long they do not put up so much as one petition unto him to enable their minister for his worke and to blesse it unto them And if we do not meet together in the name of Christ we may justly feare that Christ will be a stranger unto our meetings Lastly This fulnesse of Christs office bespeakes our due respects it challengeth faith in him obedience unto him and worship of him All Saints should obey the King of Saints the members of the Church should follow the full direction of their head both inward and outward servants should be ruled by the sonne and Lord of the family sheep should be guided by their shepherd the stones in the spirituall building should be regulated unto the foundation Not to hearken unto the messenger of the Covenant how can it be interpreted any other then a refusall of the Covenant To slight the high Priest of our profession what is it but a vertuall renouncing of the Christian religion To be disobedient and disloyall unto the King and head of the Church what is it but an interpretative disclaiming of his soveraignty over the Church Consider the Apostle and high Priest of our profession Christ Jesus Heb. 3.1 The Greeke word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Pareus noteth is very emphaticall for it signifies not barely to understand apprehend or behold a thing but farther with very great and earnest endeavour to bend and apply the mind unto the consideration of a thing to consider it diligently and heedfully Consider the Apostle and high Priest of our profession is as much as ponder the perfection of Christs office with all possible diligence and attention with all your heart and minds But now words of knowledge in Scripture imply the affections and practice Consider the Apostle and high Priest of our profession that is attentively and deeply weigh the fulnesse and dignity of his calling and accordingly feare love worship serve and obey him Give him all honour and glory throw all your faith and hope upon him seeke for your salvation only in him and carefully decline all offence of him The Apostle Peter having proved 1. Epistle Chapt. 2. vers 6. out of the Prophet Isaiah that Christ is the chiefe corner stone elect and precious which God hath laid in Zion the spirituall house of his Church he inferreth hereupon vers 7. that he is of great price and excellency unto every believer unto you therefore which believe he is precious Here the abstract 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for the concrete 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the putting of Abstracts for their Concretes usually encreaseth and heightneth a matter and puts weight and an emphasis upon it Vnto you that believe he is an honour that is he is or should be very honourable and exceeding precious in your eies and indeed whom should we esteeme reverence and honour if not the foundation of our salvation that by the faithfull and full discharge of his office upholds every one of our soules from sinking into the very bottom of hell and damnation Can we have too high an estimate of such a person Who would not come unto him and by faith leane upon him Saint Peter exhorts hereunto and backs his exhortation with many motives He is a stone a chiefe corner stone vers 4 6. and therefore you may safely rely upon him He is a living stone a vitall foundation and therefore quickneth whom he will Joh. 5.21 He maketh every member a lively stone Those therefore that are not built upon him are spiritually dead and livelesse Indeed not only the Jewes but the generality of men reject all his offices refuse to build and rely upon him But though he be disallowed of men he is chosen of God God from all eternity designed him unto this office of foundation and in the fulnesse of time actually called sent sealed sanctified qualified and enabled him for execution thereof He is a stone as of great strength so of great price also he is a precious stone precious in regard of the infinite dignity of his person precious in respect of the incomparable value of his satisfaction and merit and precious also in regard of the riches of the gifts and graces wherewith his humane nature was adorned Thus you see that here is stability an enlivening efficacy the decree and call of heaven unspeakable beauty and excellency inviting to come unto Christ come unto him because he is a stone a living stone a stone chosen by God a precious stone You may see farther how that by coming unto him great and ineffable benefit comfort and honour will redound unto us It will be a profitable a comfortable or honourable Course 1. Then it will be very beneficiall and advantageous unto us if we come unto him as unto a living stone we shall as lively stones be built up a spirituall house v. 5. for an habitation of God through the spirit Ephes 2.21 And without dependance upon him as our foundation by faith there will be no place and existence for us in the spirituall structure 2. It will be very comfortable unto us Behold I lay in Zion a chiefe corner stone and he that believeth on him
unto a glorious and immortall life is a sufficient argument that he is able to save unto the uttermost But can we conclude our salvation from his bare ability to worke it In the next place therefore he is not only able but willing to save unto the uttermost and we have an undoubted testimony of this his will his continuall intercession for our salvation seeing he liveth for ever to make intercession for them The eternall life unto which Christ is raised is not for himselfe but for his members those that come unto God by him to promote the worke of their salvation He liveth for ever purposely to make intercession for them He liveth for ever to act as a publick person as high Priest of his Church continually to sollicite the salvation of their soules that approach him by faith He cannot you see be unmindfull of the salvation of his people but he must withall be forgetfull of the end and designe of his exaltation He liveth for ever to make intercession for them Lastly we have the qualification of those unto whom this ability and sufficiency of Christ to worke salvation is actually effectuall They must be such as come unto God by him He will save unto the uttermost all such and only such and this affords matter for two uses to be made of this head one of consolation another of exhortation Use 1. of Consolation The first of consolation He will save to the uttermost every soule that cometh unto God by him though before conversion rankt with Paul amongst the chiefe of sinners 1 Tim. 1.15 There is no snare of Satan so strong but he can breake it no wound in the conscience so deep but he is able to cure it no disease in the soule so inveterate but he is able to heale it His blood is so satisfactory unto Gods justice as that it can wash away the blackest guilt so meritorious is it that it can purchase a spotlesse holinesse an eternall weight of undefiled and unfading glory Such is the sufficiency of his grace as that it can subdue the most raging and resistlesse lusts it can resist the strongest and most restlesse temptations 2. Of exhortation 2. Here is an exhortation to come unto God by Christ for salnation for he will save unto the uttermost only those that come unto God by him that is by a true faith and unfeigned repentance Heb. 11.6 John 6.35,37 by communion with him in worship and by all acts of new obedience Exod. 16.9 Levit. 10.3 Micah 6.7,8 Heb. 4.16 Heb. 11.6 These alone are the persons which count the full salvation which Christ hath wrought worthy of all acceptation As for those who draw nigh unto God only by profession in the usage of outward ordinances when all the while in their hearts and lives by their unbeliefe impenitency and profanenesse they keepe a great distance from God and Christ They are great undervaluers and scornefull slighters of his ability to save unto the uttermost We may apply here that saying of the Apostle Heb. 2.3 How shall we escape if we neglect so great a salvation How shall we escape damnation if we neglect such an all sufficiency of salvation as is treasured up in Christ Jesus And doe we not neglect it if we will not so much as come unto him for it nay doe we not refuse and reject it if we walke in and be delighted with those pathes and waies that are opposite unto salvation and lead directly unto hell and damnation This text gives little hope of salvation unto Pagans and Papists for the former cannot come unto God by Christ because they are utterly ignorant of the name of Christ And the Papists will not come unto God by him alone they dare not adventure their salvation upon his ability unto which the scripture gives such a cleere full testimony but will depend in great part upon their own satisfactions and merits as also upon the intercession of saints and Angels which are but Chimaera's idle and lewd fictions and therefore cannot a jot be helpefull unto their salvation but may indeed promote their damnation nay the assertion of them throws such a dishonour upon the fulnesse of salvation in Christ as that I am sure it deserveth in a very high measure damnation But though I am thus peremptory touching the desert of their doctrine yet I shall leave the finall state of their persons unto the doome of their judge There are divers formall loose and profane Protestants whose salvation is as if not more hopelesse then that of Papists for God and Christ and unmortified lusts unsubdued sinnes will never associate and therefore if we live stay and wallow in these without repentance we have not as yet drawn nigh unto those For what fellowship hath righteousnesse with unrighteousnesse and what communion hath light with darknesse And what concord hath Christ with Belial 2 Cor. 6.14,15 God and Christ then are unapproachable as long as we are in a state of unrighteousnesse in a state of darknesse and ignorance utterly unacquainted with God and Christ as long as we are sons of Belial and Children of disobedience Besides comming unto God by Christ for salvation is ever accompained with selfe deniall and therefore excludes all dependance upon any thing either in our selves or any other creature It is joyned also with humiliation and selfe abhorrency a due sight and deepe sense of our lost lapsed condition our liablenesse unto hell and damnation It is the apprehension of danger that makes men runne unto a remedy Men will never be duely and deepely sollicitous for salvation whose eies are not opened to apprehend that if their soules be not saved in the day of the Lord Jesus they are undone for ever and miserable beyond all imagination and that without a Christ there is an absolute and utter impossibility of such salvation Such thoughts as these will quicken the addresse of a soule unto God by Christ for salvation put life vigour and Zeale into it Acts 16.29,30 and make a man contemptive of all infortunities in comparison of the losse and damnation of his soule For could we weigh as the matter deserveth what an unvaluable losse that is we would with patience brooke the greatest miseries of which our outward man is here in this life capable so we could be assured that our spirituall part might be delivered from the wrath to come so our soules might be saved our darling our only one be delivered from the power of the dog the snare of Satan Lastly we may hence be exhorted unto zeale and constancy in our worship and service of and obedience unto Christ He hath saved us to the uttermost and therefore it is but equitable that we should serve him unto the uttermost of both our power and time with all our soules might and strength He hath done nay suffer'd his utmost for our salvation and still he imployeth all his power and interest in heaven and earth
saith that we are saved by hope Rom. 8. vers 24. that is we are saved here in this life not in regard of a present and plenary possession or fruition but onely in respect of an assured expectation thereof And thus I have ended with the exposition of the words in themselves I am in the next place briefely to examine the inference of them from the foregoing There dwelleth in Christ as man all-fulnesse of the Godhead bodily therefore ye who believe in Christ are compleat in him for he is able to make you compleat Because hereupon it followeth 1. that in all that he did and suffer'd there was an infinite merit able to purchase this compleatnesse 2. That there was in him an insinite power able to conferre this compleatnesse Some understand those words of our saviour Joh. 6.63 concerning the humanity of Christ considered alone without his Deitie It is the spirit that quickneth that is it is the Godhead united unto the humane nature that giveth spirituall life The flesh profiteth nothing that is the humane nature of Christ if it were disunited from the divine it would be of little availe unto the quickenance of our soules It s concurrence is not onely profitable but necessary yet it is onely instrumentall and therefore in the vertue of it's principall agent the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelling bodily in it If Christ had beene meere man though clothed with all the power that a creature is capable of He could not have saved so much as one single soule from eternall death But he is God as well as man and therefore able to justifie sanctifie and glorifie even millions of worlds With thee saith the Psalmist unto God is the fountaine of life Psalm 36.9 A fountatine that can never be exhausted The fulnesse of the Godhead in Christ is not as a river but as a sea whence flow all those streames that make glad the city of God Psalm 46.4 It was from his Deity that there was in him an ample sufficiency to finish the transgression to make an end of sinnes and to make reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousnesse Dan. 9.24 Because his righteousnesse is the righteousnesse of God Phil. 3.9 therefore it is appliable to and available for all the believers that ever were are or shall be in the world Because it was the great God that was our Saviour and gave himselfe for us Therefore he hath redeemed us from all iniquity and purified us unto himselfe a peculiar people Tit. 2.13,14 Because he is the Sonne of God therefore his bloud cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 therefore by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 Because the Father hath by eternall generation given unto the Sonne to have life in himselfe Joh. 5.26 therefore he quickeneth whom he will vers 21. He can quicken those soules that are dead in sinns and trespasses and he will at the last day quicken those bodies that have for thousands of yeares beene rotten in their graves Because he is the Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15.47 The Lord of Glory 1 Cor. 2.8 therefore he can clothe our mortall and corruptible bodies with incorruption and immortality He can change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body according unto the working whereby he is able even to subdue all things unto himselfe Phil. 3.21 Can you desire more comfort then that which this point yeeldeth It promiseth as much perfection as our natures can hold But it is indeed onely unto those who are qualified as those Colossians were unto whom our Apostle directs this Epistle Saints and faithfull Brethren Chapt. 1.2 who have received Christ Jesus the Lord rooted and built up in him and established in the faith abounding therein with thanksgiving Chapt. 2. vers 6 7. This restriction is implied thinke some in that the Apostle doth not say ye are compleate from him or by him but ye are compleat in him That clause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in him containeth say they a description of those that are thus compleate They are such as are in Christ as have an actuall inexistence in him Such as are incorporated and implanted into him by the spirit and faith And they are all new creatures 2. Cor. 5.17 they have all the spirit of Christ Rom. 8.9 Men may take a full draught of a * Musculus Da venant naturall fountaine and yet not goe into it but stand without it But now as for this spirituall fountaine Christ Jesus none can so much as sippe of the water of life in him without passing into him by the act of a faith that purifyeth the heart Acts 15.9 and worketh by love Galat. 5.6 and out of the belly of him that believeth shall flow rivers of living water John 7.38 Branches separate from the vine wither and grow saplesse Members cut off from the head are dead and become carrion Professours disunited from Christ can have no vitall communion with him no participation of any true and reall compleatnesse from him They are but livelesse pictures of Christians have onely a forme of Godlinesse onely the carcasse of that perfection which Christ imparteth unto his members and therefore however they may be for their naturall and acquired endowments most accomplished persons yet as touching spirituals they are next to divels of all creatures most imperfect and incompleate wretched and miserable poore blind and naked Revel 3.17 able to doe nothing John 15.5 In a second place Paul inferreth from the personall union the dignity of the humane nature of Christ in comparison of the good Angels Because in him dwelleth all fulnesse of the Godhead therefore he is the head of all principality and power Here examine we 1. what is meant by principality and power 2. How Christ as man is the head of all principality and power 1. Then enquire we what is meant by principality and power In vers 15. of this chapter and in Ephes 6.12 they signify evill Angels But here they are taken onely for the good Angels Angels which are tearmed in scripture the elect Angels 1 Timoth. 5.21 the Angels of heaven Math. 24.36 the Angells of light 2 Cor. 11.14 the sonnes of God Job 1.6 Job 38.7 who are tearmed 1. Principalities from that excellency which they have by nature and grace above other creatures they are the chiefe of the creation as it were Princes in comparison of other creatures 2. They are stiled powers for that Authority which God hath delegated unto them over other creatures For the restriction of the tearmes here unto the good Angels I shall alleadge 3 arguments 1. This headship is a sequele of the personall union and therefore no meere creature shareth in it But if it denoted barely a superiority over the wicked Angels it were a priviledge communicable unto the good Angels 2. To be head is properly a superiority that is some way or other beneficiall unto those
unto whom it relates And therefore Christ intended good unto those principalities and powers unto whom he is an head But he designed no good unto the wicked Angels and therefore they are not here meant 3. The Principalities and powers here are in all probabilitie the Angels the worship of whom is prohibited vers 18. And they are good Angels For unlikely that the seducers against whom the Apostle dealeth should presse them unto the worship of wicked Angels Having found what is meant by these principalities and powers enquire we next how Christ as man is an head of them Why 1. in regard of excellency above them 2. in regard of authority over them And 3. As some thinke in respect of influence upon them 1. Then because in the manhood of Christ there dwelleth all-fulnesse of the Godhead bodily therefore as man he is an head unto the good Angels in regard of excellency or eminency above them He is superiour to them because all Angelicall perfections whatsoever fall farre short of the hypostaticall union which is denyed unto the Angels and vouchsafed unto the humane nature in the person of Christ He tooke not on him the nature of Angels but he tooke on him the seed of Abraham Heb. 2.16 Being made so much better then the Angels as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name then they Heb. 1.4 Though they be Principalities and powers excellent glorious and powerfull creatures yet they are still but meere creatures But now Christ as man hath by the personall union obtained a more excellent name then they because thereby as man he is personally the sonne of God * Homo potest accipi ratione suppositi sie cum suppositum naturae humanae in Christo si● persona filii Dei cui per se convenit esse Deum verum est quod Christus fecundum quod homo sit Deus Aquinas part rert quaest 16. Art 11. God himselfe the Lord and creatour of principalities and powers 2. Because in Christ man dwelleth all-fulnesse of the Godhead bodily therefore he is an head of the good Angels in regard of authority over them they are his servants his ministring spirits Heb. 1.14 made subject unto him 1 Pet. 3.22 so that he can command them at pleasure And hereupon they are tearmed his Angels Math. 13.42 and 16.27 and 24.31 Mark 13.27 Revel 1.1 and 22.16 That holy thing which shall be borne of thee said the Angell unto the Virgin Mary shall be called the sonne of God Luk. 1.35 Christ as man was the naturall sonne of God by the assumption of our nature in unitie of one person and because he was the sonne of God heire and Lord of all therefore he is the King and governour of even thrones and dominions principalities and powers and hath them all at a becke 3. Some go farther say that Christ is an head unto the go●d Angels in regard of internall influence upon thē He is unto thē say they a mediatour though not of redemption or reconciliation For so he is a mediatour only betweene God and men for whom he gave his life a ransome 1 Timoth. 2.5,6 yet of preservation or confirmation in that they owe unto his merits the prevention of their fall and the continuance and establishment of their peace and friendship with God But this opinion may be impugned by what some Schoolemen of great note Vasquez in tert part Thomae tom 1. disp 49. Beca●us Summa Theol. tom 1. tract 3. cap. 2. quaest 4. pag. 58. c. and tom 5. cap. 14. quaest 9. pag. 261 and others have said against the meritorious influence of Christ as man upon the grace and essentiall glory of Angels who yet grant in his humanity an influence of illumination Ephes 3.10 and accidentall joy Luk. 15.7,9 upon them We may from them take these two arguments 1. To say that the Angels confirmation in their gracious and glorious estate the preservation of them from falling doth presuppose the fall of Adam is a proofelesse assertion But the mediation of Christ presupposeth the fall of Adam as being occasioned thereby And for any one to affirme that Christ had been mediatour and had been incarnate if Adam had never falne is to speake without evidence from scripture therefore Christ's mediation for the confirmation and preservation of Angels is an unscripturall notion 2. Christ merited for those unto whom he was a mediatour But now Christ did not merit any thing for Angels therefore he was not a mediatour for them The minor which onely will be questioned may be thus proved Christ died for all those unto whom he merited any thing because his merits had their consummation at his death * John 19●36 But now the scripture speakes not one word or syllable of Christ's dying for the Angels and therefore we may conclude it is also silent as touching his meriting any thing for them And therefore I shall for my part content my selse with ignorance thereof Indeed the two former particulars of Christ's headship over the Angels superiority above them and government of them is sufficient for the comfort of the Church It is a great honour unto the Church that the good Angels in heaven are in point of Dignity inferiour unto her husband but that they are under his authority subject unto his government makes much for her reall benefit and security For how can she be unsafe who is married unto the Lord Generall of the Militia of heaven All the Angels in heaven are the subjects of Christ man fully conformable unto his commands and therefore will be very ready to doe any possible service unto the Queene of their King They will be very forward to minister in all things requisite unto all heires of salvation Heb. 1.14 to encampe round about them Psalm 34.7 It is part of their charge given unto them by Christ to keepe his members in all their wayes to beare them up in their hands least they dash their foot against a stone Psalm 91.11,12 Though the Church be begirt with never so many and powerfull adversaries yet she should shake off all carnall feare of them Because her Saviour can when he will command what multitudes please him of the heavenly host for her guard and protection The combinations and attempts of all the principalities and powers in earth and hell for her ruine cannot but be vaine and fruitlesse as long as her head is head of all the principalities and powers in heaven for against these the other can make no resistance This Presidenteship of Christ over the Angels was shewed in a vision unto the prophet Zechariah for the incouragement of the Jewes against their abject state under the Persian empire I saw by night and behold a man riding upon a red horse and he stood among the myrtle trees that were in the bottome and behind were there red horses speckled and white Then said I O my Lord what are these And the Angell that talked with
God will make plentifull provision for all their wants It is the inference of the Apostle himselfe Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his owne sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things He that soared not his owne sonne his deare son his most tenderly beloved sonne but delivered him up for us all unto the slaughter how shall he not with him freely give us all things that is all things needfull for our eternall happinesse and salvation all things that pertaine to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.13 The promises of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Timoth. 4.8 4. They may hence be certaine of a continuall confirmation of their graces and preservation from Apostacy Gods t If Kings bear goodwill to some family if his love begin in some chief one who is with him at court as his speciall favourite it is so much the firmer to all the rest of them Thus here how firme and sure is his love to us who●n he hath loved unto life in Christ our head and eldest brother who is his naturall sonne from whom it is impossible that his love should ever start and when it is sure to the head can the body be forsaken Mr Bayne on Eph. ● ver 4. pa. 39. love of them is like his love of him immutable Thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me saith Christ Joh. 17.23 If the head be alwaies the beloved the members can never be hated The fruits therefore of this love the gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 If the naturall sonne of God be daily his delight and that as well unto as from eternity Therefore with everlasting kindnesse he will have mercy on his adoptive sonnes The mountaines shall depart and the hils be removed But my kindnesse shall not depart from them neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on them Isai 54.8,10 But now if he should not uphold and establish them by his spirit Psalm 51.12 if he should not continually support and underprop their graces but suffer them totally and finally to decay and wither this would be a palpable withdrawing of his loving kindnesse and a shutting up his tender mercies in anger Besides the sonnes love of them resembleth the fathers love of him Joh. 15.9 As the father hath loved me so have have I loved you Now there is no change in the fathers love of him therefore neither in his love of them And therefore we may conclude that as it is their duty so it shall be their priviledge and happinesse to continue in his love The Apostle Paul professeth in the behalfe of all believers that nothing can divorce them from the love of God in Christ that is for Christ I am perswaded saith he that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8.38,39 In those last words which is in Christ Jesus our Lord The Apostle layeth downe the ground of the perpetuity of God's love of his children 'T is not in themselves but in Christ Jesus that is it is for his sake for that unalterable affection which he beareth unto him Lastly from the eminency of God's favour unto Christ his members may with confidence expect the perfect and full glorification of their soules and bodies hereafter in heaven For our Saviour himselfe in that prayer of his Joh. 17. having petitioned for the glory of all that were to believe on him he inforceth this his petition by representing unto the Father the love that he hath borne unto him as man from all eternity Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with mee where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given mee for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world ver 24. Is is as if he had said That love which thou bearest unto me expresse unto those that are mine As thou loved'st mee invest them with that glory which thou hast decreed unto my humanity Believers then may as confidently expect their owne glory as they are assured of the Fathers affection unto Christ and this assurance should digest all their sorrowes and miseries here in this life From Consolations I proceed unto Exhortations and they shall be directed either unto the enemies or members of Christ 1. Then for enemies and aliens they may hence be exhorted 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against Christ 2. Unto a serious and earnest endeavour after reconciliation and union with him 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against him and his his members ministers and other ordinances Who dare almost oppose the Minions of earthly Princes for History presents us with plentifull instances of such whom their very frownes have ruined O then the hatred of heavens favourite must needs be infinitely more fatall and unfortunate Because he is able to crush his most potent adversaries tremble then to consider that all thy life long thou hast hated the beloved loathed and abhorred God's darling been averse from the Son of his love rejected his elect servant in whom his soule delighteth been a most disaffected and malignant Antagonist unto him in whom the Father is well-pleased 2. Because Christ is so highly graced with God all his enemies may be exhorted to doe what lieth in them for the future for reconciliation and union with him by application of themselves unto the diligent use of such meanes and ordinances as God hath sanctified and set apart for that purpose For those that are not united with him cannot expect so much as a good look from God because God is reconciled onely in him 2 Cor. 5.19 he accepts none but in the beloved Ephes 1.6 He is well pleased with none but such as are in him Those that are out of him lye under the displeasure and wrath of God which is a consuming fire In terrene courts how ambitious are men to be related unto the grand favourite as knowing that he is the channell of all considerable preferments Should it not then be the utmost ambition of men to have relation unto Christ for through him onely God dispenseth all saving favours unto the sonnes of men We may say of him in reference unto God as Tacitus did of Sejanus the powerfull favourite of Tiberius ut quisque Sejano intimus ita ad Caesaris amicitiam validus Contrà quibus infensus esset metu ac sordibus conflictebantur He that was an intimate of Sejanus needed not with any great labour search for honours He that had him his enemy languished under dispraise and misery None had any honour without his favour Neither without him could any keep any place of either profit or credit with security Besides
up unto a correspondency with him in his affections to love those persons and things which he loveth and to detest whatsoever he hateth Courtiers usually seeme at least to proportion all their passions unto those of the Princes minion They admire whatsoever he liketh they adore whomsoever he affecteth and professe a deepe dislike of all that he disaffecteth They affront and quarrell all upon whom he frowneth Well then may not we be ashamed that there is not the like compliance in us with Gods favourite We dote upon sin which his soule abhorreth We delight in that company and those places unto which he is a stranger We loath those ordinances which have his most evident approbation and institution Those unsavoury and prophane jests rotten communication that are an abomination unto him and stinke before him are the matter of our greatest merriment We distast most the conversation of those that have most intimate communion with him Those are an eye-sore unto us who are as tender unto him as the Apple of his eye His jewels Mal. 3.17 his crowne jewels his crowne of glory and royall diademe Isay 62. ver 3. are accounted by us as the filth of the world and offscouring of all things 1 Cor. 4.13 There is nothing that he esteemeth more amiable in men then the beauty of holinesse the Image of God This is the chaine upon the neck of his spouse Cant. 4.9 that ravisheth his heart And there is nothing more that our hearts rise against O what a dangerous thing is this antipathy unto him that is in the bosome of the father at his right hand How unsafe is it to be thus opposite unto his affections Hereby we must needs incurre the displeasure both of him his father and that is the undoubted path unto everlasting ruine and destruction for in their favour is lise Psalm 30.5 7. And lastly If Christ be so great and gracious with God It then very much concerneth us to labour for assurance of his love and favour For we must needs be liable unto perpetuall torment and terrour of mind as long as we are in suspense of our eternall condition As long as we are doubtfull whether we shall be for ever miserable or happy And the wrath of Christ who is chiefe in the affection of the father is as Solomon speakes of the wrath of a King as the messengers of death and roaring of a lyon Whereas on the other side in the light of his countenance is life and his favour is as a cloud of the latter raine Prov. 16.14,15 and 19.12 and 20.2 If he smile upon a soule nothing can make it miserable and if he frowne upon it nothing can make it happy For God is reconciled to none but in and through him He makes none blessed but for his sake Well then we can expect no tranquility of spirit no solid comfort no sound peace of conscience no joy unspeakable and full of glory untill we have attained a certaine and well bottomed perswasion that the sonne of Gods love in whom alone he is well pleased hath lifted up the light of his countenance upon us What I have said touching our assurance of Christs love may be applied unto our assurance of Gods love of us in and for Christ For it is of no lesse importance as being inseparably connexed therewith and the ground and cause thereof and therefore without Gods love of us for Christ his sake we can never be happy and without assurance of it we can never be comfortable Hereupon is it that in the salutations prefixed unto most of Paul's epistles peace is made a sequele of grace from God our father and the Lord Jesus Christ Without the grace of acceptation with the father and the Lord Jesus Christ and also sense and apprehension thereof no peace of conscience no serenity of spirit is to be expected That man that is doubtfull of Gods love in and for Christ if his conscience be awak'ned cannot but have a perpetuall tempest in his bosome For he can apprehend God ●o otherwise then a consuming fire And such a consideration must needs beget unutterable horrour Our Saviour himselfe makes this assurance the scope of the revelation of Gods goodnesse and mercy in the gospell John 17.26 And I have declared unto them thy name and will declare it that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them There be some that understand that clause that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them concerning the extension or termination of Gods love of Christ unto Believers as a secondary object and they thus glosse the words That thou may'st love them for my sake that thou may'st love them with that love wherewith thou hast loved me Believers are made by faith one body with Christ and therefore cannot but share in Gods love of Christ If God love him They cannot but be beloved in and for him and therefore our Saviour addes and I in them which is saith Maldonate because I am in them to wit as the head in the members As if he should have said seeing I am in them seeing I dwell in their hearts by faith so that I and they make but one body mysticall therefore thy love of me cannot but be derived unto them If thou lovest me it is impossible thou should'st hate them This termination of Gods love of Christ unto Believers is in regard of the fruites and effects of it so it is the same with it's presence of influence on them The body of the Sun is in the heavens but the efficacy of it reacheth unto the lowest of the elements the earth causing on its surface light and warmth and producing in the very bowels of it many rich metalls and minerals Thus the love wherewith God loveth Christ is in God himselfe if we speake of a presence of inherence taking the word largly as it is applicable unto any adjuncts even such as the attributes of God are But it is in all them that believe in regard of a presence of influence and effective presence for it enlightneth and comforteth them and produceth in their bosomes the precious gifts and graces of the spirit But now the love wherewith God loveth Christ is said to be in believers not onely in regard of their participation but also perception of it not onely effectively in regard of its effects grace and glory but also objectively in regard of an objective or intentionall presence as it is the object of their knowledge apprehension and assurance And they never fully and truly know and apprehend it as they ought but in the rebound and by way of reflection untill they be assured of it's being terminated unto and reflected upon them untill as it is Rom. 5.5 the love of God be shed abroad in their hearts untill they have a full sence and feeling of that love wherewith God loveth them in Christ untill they have tasted that the Lord is good
Christ He hath given himselfe for us an offering and a sacrifice to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for a sweet smelling savour or for a savour of sweetnesse that is Christs offering and sacrifice of himselfe was as acceptable unto God as the sweerest odours are unto mans sence of smelling The Apostle plainly alludeth unto the sacrifices in the Old Testament in which God is said to smell a sweet savour or a savour of rest Gen. 8.21 Lev. 1.9 Burnt flesh yeilded no pleasing savour unto man and impossible that simply considered as it was in it selfe it should be as a sweet odour unto God Isay 1.11 In these places then there is a sacramentall Metonymy by which that is ascribed unto the signe which agreeth in truth and indeed unto the thing signified to wit the sacrifice of Christ In that alone properly God smelleth a savour of rest that is it onely propitiateth or appeaseth God and maketh his anger to rest Ezek. 16.42 When stinking smels offend our nostrils we usually burne some sweet perfumes which quiet our disturbed sence There is nothing so noysome and unsavoury unto God as our sinnes But now the offering and sacrifice of Christ doth yield so fragrant a smell as that it prevaileth above them so that we may say God doth not sent them His wrath is pacified and we smell sweetly in his nostrill's The sufferings of Christ made him perfect as touching his office Heb. 2.10 chapt 5.8,9 The offering of Christ perfects for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10.14 and therefore there was a perfection in his sufferings and offering For nothing that is unperfect in it selfe can communicate perfection unto others In Rom. 1.17 there be two expressions concerning the righteousnesse of Christ arising from his obedience that shew forth the fulnesse of the satisfaction and merit that was in his obedience Christ's righteousnesse is tearmed the righteousnesse of God and it is said to be revealed from faith to faith 1. It is tearmed the righteousnesse of God and that to omit other sences impertinent unto our present purpose two manner of waies personally or objectively 1. Personally It was the righteousnesse of a person who was God So that his Godhead gave value excellency and efficacy unto it But of this I shall speake at large when I come to the demonstration of the point c. and therefore I shall now onely mention it Secondly Objectively and that in a twofold regard In regard of it's acceptation by God and consistency before God 1. In regard of it's acceptation by God It is a righteousnesse which he fully accepts and in which he bath a most perfect acquiesce nce and complacency He is well pleased as with the person so with the righteousnesse of his well-beloved sonne 2. In respect of it's consistency before God There is no righteousnesse but that wherein we can stand before the tribunall of Gods justice and rigour of his law Secondly The all-sufficiency and redundancy of Christs righteousnesse is signified by a second expression in the words the Revelation of it from faith to faith that is as appeares by comparison of the forme of speech with others of the like import Psalm 84.7.2 Cor. 3.16 from one degree of faith unto another It is as much as if he had said It is revealed unto the most growing and increasing faith If we make never so great a progresse in faith If we daily proceed from faith to faith If our faith grow stronger and stronger it will never be able fully to comprehend however it may in some sort apprehend the righteousnesse of Christ Estius thinkes that the phrase is like unto that which is usuall in Scripture from generation to generation and so the meaning of the words is the righteousnesse of Christ is revealed unto believers throughout all generations The strongest and most * Dr Edward Reynolds on Psalm 110. p. 467. enlarged faith of all the Saints that ever were are or shall be in the world is but finite and therefore can never be commensurate unto the righteousnesse of Christ which is the righteousnesse of God therefore infinite in worth unto which no faith whatsoever can have an adequate proportion and consequently can never be able to looke beyond it Thirdly The fulnesse of satisfaction and merit in the humiliation of Christ was really evidenced by Christs exaltation as a Signe Christ was throwne into the prison of the grave as our surety and there was no deliverance of him thence but by payment of the utmost farthing we owed unto Gods justice But now as the Prophet saith He was taken from prison and judgement Isai 53.8 and exalted unto as great an eminency of glory and authority as a creature is capable of God raised him from the dead tooke him up into heaven placed him at his right hand and there admitted him unto the glorious exercise of an Authoritative intercession And is not this a most convincing argument that he hath paid off all our debts that he hath given a full recompence unto Gods displeased holinesse a sufficient satisfaction unto his justice provoked with our sinnes and is quitted from that guilt of them which he assumed in our behalfe Dr Edward Reynolds on Psalm 110. pag. 30. Hereupon is it that our Saviour saith Joh. 16.8,10 The Spirit or Comforter will convince the world of righteousnesse because I goe to my Father and yee se me no more Where we have first the matter of this conviction and secondly the argument by which it is wrought 1. The matter of it righteousnesse to wit of Christ and that not onely private as he is lookt upon under a personall capacity but also publique as he is considered under a mysticall capacity as surety for and head of his Church And this is a righteousnesse which he communicates unto all his members The meaning of the words then is The spirit shall convince the world not onely that Christ was righteous and innocent in his own person and therefore unjustly numbred amongst the transgressours but also that he had righteousnesse enough in him for the justification of the whole world 2. We have the argument by which this conviction is wrought the ascension of Christ into heaven and the permanency of his abode and glory there Because I goe to my father and ye see me no more Our sinnes and Gods justice would have kept Christ still in his grave and never admitted him into heaven untill he had fulfilled all righteousnesse that is performed all the duties and suffered the whole curse of the law as touching the substance thereof And if without doing this it had been possible for him to have presumed to enter heaven God would presently have sent him downe unto the earth againe where he should have beene visible untill he had answered the most rigorous demands of the law Dr Edward Reynolds on Ps 110. pag. 130. 131. The same thing is affirmed by the Apostle 1 Timoth. 3.16 where it is
four particulars considerable in our good workes 1. Gods donation of them unto us 2. Our Obligation unto them 3. The imperfection and pollution of them 4. The disproportion between them and eternall life 1. Gods donation of them unto us The gifts of God are uncapable of meriting any thing with God But all our good workes are the free gifts of God 1 Cor. 4.7 1 Cor. 15.10 and 2 Cor. 3.5 Phil. 1.29 and 2.13 Is 26.12 And therefore by them God cannot be bound to bestow more upon us This argument drave c Dicendū est quòd meritum de condigno subdistinguitur quia quoddā est meritum de condigno largè sumpto pro quadam dignitate quam Deus ex ordinatiōe requirit in operibus nostris ad hoc ut remunerentur vitâ aeternâ Et haec dignitas est in nobis per gratiam charitatē habitualem Aliud est meritum de condigno strictè propriè accepto tale meritum est actio voluntaria propter quam alicui debetur merces ex justitia sic quod si non reddatur ille ad quem perti●et reddere injus●è facit est simpliciter pro priè injustus tale meritum de condigno invenitur inter homines sed non est hominis ad Deum Quod patet quia quod redditur potius ex liberalitate dantis quàm ex debito operis non cadit sub merito de condigno strictè propriè accepto Sed quicquid à Deo accipimus sive sit gratia sive sit gloria sive bonum temporale vel spirituale praecedente in nobis propter hoc quocunque bono ope●e potiùs principaliùs accipimus ex liberalitate Dei quàm reddatur ex debito operis ergo nihil penitus cadit sub merito de condigno sic accepto Major patet ex ratione meriti de condigno priùs positâ Minor probatur quia facilius minus est reddere aequivalens eius quod quis accepit ab alio quam eum constituere debitorem quia ad constituendum eum debitorem requiritur quòd plus reddat quàm acceperit ut sic ratione plurium alius efficiatur debitor sed nullus potest reddere Deo aequivalens dicente Philosopho 8. Ethic. Quia in his quae sunt ad Deos ad Parentes impossibile est aequivalens reddere ergo multò minùs est possibile quod ex quocunque nostro opere Deus fiat nobis debitor ita ut si non redderet debitum esset injustus Causa autem huius est quia illud quod sumus quod habemus sive sunt honi actus sive boni habitus seu usus totum est in nobis ex liberalitate divina gratis dāte cōservāte Et quia ex dono gratuito nullus obligatur ad dandū amplius sed potiùs recipiēs magis obligatur danti ideo ex bonis habitibus et ex bonis actibus sive usibus nobis à Deo datis Deus non obligatur nobis ex aliquo debito justitiae ad aliquid ampliùs dandum ita quod si non dederit ●it injustus sed potiùs nos sumus Deo obligati Et sentire seu dicere oppositum est temerarium seu blasphemium c. Durand in lib. 2. sentent dist 27. quaest 2. unto the great regret of merit-mongers to impugne the merit of condignity properly and strictly so called for such a merit is a voluntary action whereunto the reward is due of justice so that if it be not given an injury is committed and he to whom retribution properly appertaineth should simply and properly be unjust Now there can be no such matter between God and man because whatsoever we receive of God c. whatsoever good workes we have before done for it yet we receive the same rather of Gods liberality then of the debt of the worke And the reason that he alleadgeth for this is because all that we are and all that we have whether good habits or good acts or the use of them is wholly and altogether from the bounty of God freely both giving and preserving them And for as much as no mans free gift can bind him to give more but he that receives more is the more bound to him that gives it therefore hence it followes that by the good habits and deeds which God hath enabled us to doe he is not bound by the debt of his justice to give us more that he should be unjust if he gave it not but we rather are bound unto him and it is rashnesse yea blasphemy to thinke or say the contrary And at last upon all this he inferreth this conclusion siquid pro bonis operibus nostris nobis datur vel redditur potiùs principaliùs est ex liberalitate dantis quam ex debito nostri operis If God give any reward unto our well-doings this is not because he is a debtour to our workes but rather of his owne liberality A second Argument that our best workes are uncapable of merit and consequently that the subordination of our merits unto Christ's is impossible is our obligation unto them We are bound to fulfill the law in all perfection The best of workes the highest degree of obedience is but our due debt by Gods command Now the payment of due debts the performance of our dutie unto God can merit nothing at his hands Luk. 17.20 A third argument proving that our good workes are uncapable of having any power of meriting derived unto them is their sinfull imperfection and pollution All our righteousnesses are as menstruous and as filthy rags Esay 64.6 All our graces are imperfect all our duties are polluted and therefore stand in need of favour grace and mercy for acceptation Nay they are so farre from meriting heaven and eternall life as that they supererogate for hell and everlasting damnation The fourth and last argument is the vast disproportion between our good workes and eternall life For 1. Eternall life and happinesse is objectively infinite as being the vision and fruition of God an infinite good unto it therefore nothing that we can doe or suffer can be equivalent Rom. 8.18 2. Our future life and happinesse is infinite in point of duration But now saith Anselme a very ancient Schooles man if a man should serve God a thousand yeares with as great fervour and zeale as possible he could not by way of condignity merit to be in the king dome of heaven so much as for halfe a day And thus you see that the derivation of merit unto our workes from Christ's merits is an utter impossibility But there is one of their great Schoolemen Gabriel Biel in tert sentent disp 19. Art 2. Conclus 5. that speakes yet farre more dishonourable of Christ's merits For he ascribes merit unto our workes in a way of equality with Christ Though the passion of Christ saith he be the principall merit for which the grace of God the opening of heaven
and hope if he had not been assured to be made conformable thereunto The life and glory of all believers is bound up in Christ's life and glory as Judah said the life of Jacob was bound up in Benjamins life Gen. 44.30 Our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3.3 therefore if God did not leave his soule his person in sheol in the grave in the state of death neither will he leave there the persons of any that belong unto him Because God did not suffer his holy one to see Corruption therefore he will rescue and redeeme all his saints from corruption and not suffer them to be finally overwhelmed therewith He will deale with them as he did with Christ shew unto them the path of life make knowne unto them the waies of life c. Psalm 16.11 Cause them to have in his presence fulnesse of joy and at his right hand pleasures for evermore or make them full of joy with his countenance Acts 2.28 The glory which thou gavest me saith Christ I have given them Iohn 17.22 which words to omit other interpretations that are impertinent unto our purpose and lesse probable may be understood either of the reall glory of his exaltation by God or else of the glory of his relation unto God 1. Of The reall glory of his exaltation by God and then the meaning of the words is that heavenly felicitie unto which thou hast predestinated my humanity I have designed unto all those that believe in me I have promised it unto them and will purchase it for them and give them in way of earnest the first fruits and tast of it Gods gift of glory unto Christ is irreversible and therefore Christ's grant of it unto believers is irrevocable Or Secondly the words may be understood of the glory of Christ's relation unto God the dignity of his sonne-ship We beheld his glory the glory as of the onely begotten of the father Iohn 1.14 This glory was given unto Christ by eternall generation so that he is the naturall Sonne of God believers unto whom Christ giveth this priviledge by grace are sonnes by grace and adoption and yet even this adoptive filiation is such an unspeakable honour as that in comparison of it to be descended from the greatest Potentate that ever was in the world is but to be basely borne If we take this sence it will also fit our present purpose For what is the full glorification of the saints but the manifestation and consummation of their adoption 1 Ioh. 3.2 The fulnesse of glory is that inheritance unto which the faithfull are adopted and into the possession of which they shall enter at the end of the world And in this sence is it that their full glorification is stiled by the Apostle Paul their Adoption Rom. 8.23 In Iohn 17. vers 24,25 Christ intercedeth for the communication of his glory unto all the elect Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world O righteous father the world hath not knowne thee but I have knowne thee and these have knowne that thou hast sent me Here we have a description of the glory of believers and an amplification of it from the subjects and causes thereof 1. A description of it He makes it to stand in two things a coexistence with Christ in heaven a vision or intuition of his glory 1. A coexistence with him in heaven I will that they whom thou hast given me be with me where I am As God he was in heaven even while he was upon the earth Ioh. 3.13 But he speakes of himselfe all along as man and Mediatour and he speakes of his being in heaven as a thing present because it was very shortly and certainely to come to passe Thus vers 4. he makes protestation that he had finished the worke which God gave him to doe and yet it was not finished untill he cried out upon the crosse it is finished John 19.30 Austin puts a difference between being where Christ is and being with Christ The damned in hell are where Christ is as God But those only are with him that have a fellowship with him in his glory As he said unto the good thiefe to day shalt thou be with me in paradise Luke 23.43 But Maldonate rightly noteth that no great stresse is to be laid upon this because that which he tearmeth here a being with Christ he stileth Chap. 12.26 a being where Christ is Where I am there shall also my servant be However yet the same Authour observeth that to be with Christ hath a greater force and emphasis then to be where he is because it more expressely signifieth a participation of his glory a communion in his inheritance and kingdome a reigning togeither with him 2 Timoth. 2.12 A Second particular wherein the glory of believers is made to stand by Christ is their vision and intuition of his glory That they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Here they have but a glimpse of Christs glory It shineth as it were through a small chinke into a dungeon of darkenesse It is a light that shineth in a darke place 2 Pet. 1.19 But in heaven they shall have a full aspect of the splendour of his glory For they shall see him as he is Esay 1.32 face to face 1 Cor. 13.12 The sight of this glory shall be of a transforming nature for if the imperfect beholding of his glory in the glasse of his gospell change into the same image into a growing glory from glory to glory why then the full view of his glory in heaven will transforme into a fulnesse of glory The vision and intuition of his glory then doth amount unto a fruition of it They shall be not bare spectators but also partakers of it Thus to see the kingdome of God and life John 3.36 is to enjoy the kingdome of God and life Secondly We have an amplification of this glory and that from it's subjects and causes 1. From its subjects primary and secondary 1. Primary Christ May behold my glory Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his glory Lu. 24.26 Glory is said to be his in 4 regards 1 in respect of his fathers donation The glory which thou hast given me to wit by the decree of Predestination 2. By his owne purchase He humbled himselfe and became obedient unto death even the death of the crosse Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name Phil. 2.8,10 3. In regard of plenary participation 4. in respect of originall and primary possession Christ was possessed of a fulnesse of glory for to distribute it unto his members Christ the head is the primary his members are the secondary subjects of this glory unto whom it is diffused from him I will that
velut ab ipso attracta sese quam celerrimè movebunt nam ab objecto trabi rapi quippiam notum est utovem à ramo viridi sibi ostenso puerum à pomo filium à matre conspectâ ac vicissem matrem à filio quae tamen omnia moventur etiam ab interna quadam insita virtute Estius in locum 1 Thes 4.17 Whence they collect that glorified bodies shall be made so strong nimble agile as that they shall be able to meet the Lord in the aire afterwards to soare up with him unto the very heavens Out of the Apocrypha they cite wisedom 3.7 In the time of their visitation they shall shine and runne to and fro like sparkes among the stubble A fourth endowment of glorified bodies which Paul reckoneth up is spirituality It is sowen a naturall body it is raised a spirituall body 1 Cor. 15.44 This is that which the Schoolemen call subtilty The mis-interpretation of which by some I have before noted and then also I acquainted you with Capreolus and Durand their exposition of it which I confesse is orthodox but yet not the meaning of the Apostle in this place For a naturall body unto which a spirituall body is here opposed is in the Greeke not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an animal or soulie body that is actuated and animated by the soule after a naturall way and manner by the intervention of bodily helps such as eating drinking sleeping and the like In all congruence of opposition then spirituality is here opposed unto animality and a glorified body is said to be spirituall in regard of an immediate supportance by the spirit without any corporall meanes in an everlasting incorruptible blessed and glorious life In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angels of God in heaven Math. 22.30 without any use of the generative and nutritive faculties The Fourth and last place which I shall alleadge touching this particular is Rom. 8.23 Where the full and perfect glorification of the bodies of those that here receive the first fruites of the spirit is tearmed Synecdochically in regard of the tearme from which it is redemption to wit from all the punishments of sinne and in conformity hereunto the day of generall judgment and resurrection is stiled the day of redemption Ephes 4.30 There is a redemption by way of price and a redemption by way of power The redemption of both our soules and bodies in a way of price was finished by Christ in the worke of his humiliation and he rested from it upon the day of his owne resurrection The redemption of our soules by power is perfected in the houre of death But the redemption of our bodies by power will not be consummated untill the day of our resurrection and then they shall be fully delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God And thus have I confirmed our future conformity in soules and bodies unto the all fulnesse of glory that dwelleth in the humanity of Christ Now the certainty hereof should comfort us against the sinfull corruptions of our soules the naturall cumber and wearinesse the most ignominious deformities the most painfull infirmities of our bodies all other wants and miseries of our lives and lastly the feare of death a King of terrours unto all that are out of Christ 1. Against the sinfull corruptions of our soules There is no evill of so malignant a nature as sinne and therefore nothing so great and grievous a burden unto a pious and sanctified spirit Nothing so strong an argument for griefe and mourning But now the assured hope of our conformation unto Christs glory will put due limits and bounds unto this our sorrow so that it will keepe it from degenerating into despaire and keep us from being swallowed up of over much sorrow 2 Cor. 2.7 for it assureth us that all our corruptions shall one day be totally and finally subdued and we shall be endewed with a spotlesse holinesse that cannot be defiled and so shall be presented unblameable and unreproveable in the sight of God Col. 1.22 Secondly Here is comfort against the naturall cumber and wearinesse the ignominious deformities the painfull infirmities of our bodies c. For our resurrection will be a glorious redemption from them all Here many times our dull and unactive bodies are unable or unready to obey the commands to performe the desires of our soules and so are burdensome clogs and not serviceable helps unto them That which is sowed in weakenesse shall be raised in power Glorified bodies shall be endewed with such a power as shall render them most obedient able and agile instruments of their soules The Speed of their motion shall be like that of the devouring fire in a heape of drie stubble and the height of it shall surpasse the towring flight of the eagle For they shall be able to meet the Lord in the aire 1 Thes 4.17 when he comes to judgment and afterwards mount up unto the third and highest heavens Suppose we have blemishes either naturall or contracted that render us deformed in the sight of men Why the glory and beautie of the resurrection will exclude all defects The most unhansome ill-favoured and mis-shapen body of a saint shall be fashioned like unto Christ's glorious body Our bodies here are little better then receptacles of frailty and paine subject unto all manner of inward distempers or outward annoyances But the impassibility and clarity of our bodies in their glorified condition be will an abundant compensation for all this He that can with an eye of faith behold the future configuration of his vile body unto Christs body of glory will with patience support his spirit under the tedious languishment of a lingering consumption under the raging violence of a pestilentiall feaver under the otherwise unsupportable torments of the goute cholick stone c. And in the third place he will patiently undergoe all other wants and miseries of this life As for wants he knoweth that we have Gods promise to supply them Phil. 4.19 God shall supply all your need according unto his riches in glory by Christ Jesus As for all the most grievous aflictions of this life he expects a far more exceeding weight of glory that will overpoyse them 2 Cor. 4.17 The Apostle there expresseth our future blisse in foure gradations 1. It is glory 2. it is massie or weightie glory whereas our aflictions are but light 3. it is eternall and in comparison of that our aflictions are but for a moment 4. it is a farre more exceeding weight then our aflictions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly exceeding or above measure exceeding that is it is unmeasurable I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that shall be revealed in us Rom. 8.18 This life unto the best is Bochim a vale of
for the promoting of this end We should then be very ungratefull wretches if we should not doe and suffer our utmost if called thereunto for the advancement of his glory especially seeing the utmost that we can doe and suffer for him is a poore inconsiderable nothing in comparison of what he hath done and suffered for us For our glory and happinesse he hath and will lay out his whole time even from his Incarnation unto the day of judgment Vnto us a child is borne unto us a sonne is given Isai 9.6 This was the scope of his humiliation and exaltation Rom. 4.25 Who was delivered for our offences and was raised againe for our justification and for the compleating and accomplishing of this worke he liveth for ever to make intercession Now unto such a peerelesse love the least returne we can make is to be very carefull to mis-pend none of our time unto the dishonour and disservice of such a Saviour to redeeme a good part of our time for his worship to imploy all our time for his glory Col. 3.17 I have been the briefer upon this fulnesse because it is grounded upon some other fulnesses of his which follow the fulnesse of the Godhead of grace of power of Satisfaction merit and of glory unto the handling of which we are in the next place to betake our selves 2. Christ secondly may be regarded absolutely as he is in himselfe without relation unto any other thing and so either according unto his natures or his twofold state of humiliation and exaltation 1. Christ may be look't upon according unto his natures and that both Divine and humane 1. According unto his divine nature as he is God and so there is in him all fulnesse absolutely without respect or comparison so consider'd he is as a mighty sea of being and perfection without banke or bottome in which are either formally or eminently all possible and conceivable perfections So considered he is all-fulnesse and that is more then the dwelling of all-fulnesse in him But this is not the fulnesse here meant for the fulnesse agreeable to Christ as God is underivative without a cause He being possest of it not by voluntary dispensation but by naturall necessity and so is not the fulnesse in the text that hath a cause the decree and pleasure of the father It pleased the father that in him should all fulnesse dwell If we consider Christ as man so there was in him a threefold fulnesse the fulnesse of the Godhead the fulnesse of grace and the fulnesse of power 1. The fulnesse of the Godhead In him dwelleth all fulnesse of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 There be but two orthodoxe interpretations of these words that can pretend unto any probability and the difference of them is grounded upon the various ●acception of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 render'd bodily for that may signify either completivè truely and really in opposition to the Arke and Temple and other ceremonies of the law in which the Godhead was typically or else 2. personally to distinguish the inhabitation of the Godhead in the manhood of Christ from accidentall essentiall and integrall unions The First exposition is insinuated by a De ipso verò Capite nostro Apostolus ait Quia in ipso inbabitat omnis plenitudo Divinitatis corporaliter Non ideò corporalitèr quia corporeus est Deus sed aut verbo translato usus est tanquam in templo manufacto non corporaliter sed umbraliter habitaverit id est praefigurantibus signis Nam illas omnes observationes umbras futurorum vocat etiam ipso translate vocabulo Summut enim Deus ficut scriptum est non in manufactis templis habitat c. Austin in the latter end of his 57 Epistle Ad Dardanum and 't is that by the dwelling of all fulnesse of the Godhead bodily in Christ is meant nothing else but that in him were fulfilled the Ceremonies of the law And countenance unto this interpretation they fetch from vers 17. where Christ as a body is opposed unto the shadowes of the law Which are a shaddow of things to come but the body is of Christ Under the Old testament God his name and honour dwelled in the Sanctuary in the Tabernacle and Temple in the Arke and propitiatory between the Cherubims Deut. 12.11 1 Sam. 4.4 1 Kings 8.13 2 Kings 19.15 Psalm 26.8 Psalm 80.1 Isay 37.16 but this his dwelling was onely typicall and umbratile in shadowes and prefiguring signes In the manhood of Christ he dwelled bodily that is in it were fulfilled all the ceremonies and shadowes of the law Against this exposition I have these three following objections 1. These words as is cleare by the particle for are a proofe or argument to back or enforce the exhortation of the Apostle in the foregoing words Beware lest any man spoile you through Philosophy and vaine deceit after the tradition of men after the rudiments of the world and not after Christ For in him dwelleth all the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily But if the meaning of them be onely that Christ fulfilled the ceremonies of the law why then they will not be an home and adequate proofe For they will onely conclude against the ceremonies of the law the rudiments of the world and not reach Philosophy and the traditions of men This exposition then suites not with the coherence A Second objection is made by the solid and judicious b Insanctis inest per gratiam habitat in eis suum spiritum in illis exerens unde illud 2 Corinth 6. inhabitabo inambulabo in eis sed nunquam vel in ipsis vel in Angelis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ergo aliud significat haec vox quàm verè quasi umbris ceremoniarum opponatur bàc veritas Nam verè etiam non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 habitat in sanctis Zanchy The fulnesse of the Godhead is never said in scripture to dwell bodily in the saints or Angels but it may be said to dwell in them truely and not typically and therefore bodily doth not signifie truely in opposition unto the shadowes of the ceremonies under the law 3. This exposition as it is made to clash with the second is needlesse for as our new Annotations on the place the meaning is much at one in whether of the two senses we take the word For God is said in the Old Testament to dwell in the tabernacle Arke of the Covenant and Temple but onely as in the shadowes and figures of Christs humane nature which he should take on him in the fulnesse of time to dwell in the same personally or really and substantially with all his fulnesse There is a third exposition that maketh bodily to expresse the howse or Habitation in which the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelleth 't is not onely the soule but the body also Whereupon his body is termed a temple to wit of the Deitie Joh. 2.21 The personall union is not onely