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

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and divine and that 's evident from the effect which is Salvation he is able to save This Salvation is not natural or temporal but spiritual and a full deliverance from sin the greatest evil and the most woful Consequents thereof for he so delivers that he makes the parties saved fully happy and blessed 3. He might save Man and that spiritually and yet but for a time but he is able to save for ever and this is full and compleat Salvation indeed and it 's indifferent whether the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 be turned to the uttermost or for ever for both are intended Neither could Christ save fully and to the uttermost except he should save for ever with an everlasting Salvation 2. The subject and parties whom he thus saves are not all and every one but such as come to God by him Some will not come to God at all some will come to God but not by him But they who will be saved must 1. Come to God and none else And 2. Must come to God by him and by none else This is the qualification and right disposition of the subject without which it 's not capable of Salvation For Actus activorum sunt in passo unit disposito may be applyed here For as this rule is true in natural so it 's true in supernatural Phisophy To come to God some times is to turn from Sin and Satan to God and Righteousness and the further we depart from Sin the nearer we come to God For this coming is a spiritual and divine motion between the terms of Sin and God it 's from Sin and to God Sometime it 's to worship God which if done aright presupposeth the former motion When a man doth worship God he turns his back upon all other things and leaves all other business and company and turns his face the face of his Soul to God as Supream Lord and the fountain of all happiness One part of Worship is to pray and present our petitions unto God wherein as we seek for many things so amongst others we sue for pardon This is a principal Suit which sinful man hath to his God therefore to come to God in this place is by prayer to sue earnestly for pardon of Sin everlasting Salvation and the more sensible of Sin we are the more powerful is our prayer Yet we may come to God and sue earnestly for mercy and not speed except we take the right way We must therefore not only come but come by Him that is by Christ God is not accessible to sinful guilty man without a Mediatour who may and can satisfy his justice merit his favour and mercy and will effectually intercede for him and plead his Cause These things only Christ can and will do and if we will speed we must believe that he alone is our Mediatour and rely upon him alone as our only Propitiatour and Intercessour And all such as live under the Gospel must rely upon him as having suffered Death already offered his great Sactifice obtained eternal Redemption hath ascended Heaven and is set at the right hand of God where he is made an everlasting King and interceding Priest They who thus come to God by him renounce all righteousness in themselves acknowledg themselves guilty and miserable Wretches plead the Blood of Jesus Christ and cast themselves wholly upon his infinite mercy which he hath merited and God hath promised with a resolution to subject their selves wholly to him and obey him for ever Thus the Saints of God did come to him by Faith 1. In the Seed of the Woman who should bruise the Serpents Head Then 2. In Christ as the Seed of Abraham in whom all Nations should be blessed 3. In the Son of David who should sit upon his Throne and reign for ever and ever 4. In him as exhibited and glorified The faith of the former was but implicite the faith of these last is more explicite clear and distinct This is his ability to save wholly and to the uttermost 2. The reason of this is Because He ever liveth to make Intercession for then Where we must consider 1. What it is to make Intercession 2. For whom this Intercession is made 1. To intercede is to sue plead and sollicite for another and so in generall it 's taken here This Intercession presupposeth that he is immortal is in Heaven appears continually before his Father's Throne for all his Clients in the Court of Heaven He hath great interest in the supream Judge as a most beloved Son before a Father sitting in the Throne of Grace He sues for Pardon and Salvation He pleads his own Blood and Propititation his Father's Promise his Clients Faith and except he should plead his Propitiaion he could not make the cause of his Client good Therefore we have his Intercession and Propitiation joyned together for he is our Advocate with the Father and the propitiation for our Sins 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. This is directly against the Socinian 2. The parties for whom he pleads are they who come to God by him for it 's in vain and against the rules of that Court to plead for any others who are impenitent and unbelieving For though the Scripture saith He died for all to make their sin 's re●sissible yet it no where saith He makes Intercession for all to obtain actual Remission and Salvation For his Blood and Sacrifice doth merit Remission the Covenant doth promise it to Believers Faith makes us immediately capable and justifiable and by virtue of the Promise gives us right Christ's Intercession obtains actual pardon These who come to God by him are his Clients and he undertakes their cause and is alwayes ready to carry it for them The reason why Advocates were appointed by the imperial Laws as Civilians tell us was to supply the defects of such Clients as could not alwayes be present were ignorant of the Law and could not manage their own cause before the Judge So the imperfection of our prayers our unworthiness and our many defects gave occasion to the supream and universal Lord and Judge out of his abundant mercy to appoint Christ Jesus Advocate-General in the Court of Heaven and to make our Justification to depend not only upon his death suffered on Earth but his intercession made in Heaven He is that Angel which John saw in Heaven who came and stood by the Altar having a Golden Censer and there was given unto him much Incense which he should offer or add unto it the prayers of all Saints upon the Golden Altar which was before the Throne Rev. 8. 3. This is an allusion to the Levitical Priest offering Incense in his Golden Censer upon the Golden Altar before the Throne or Mercy-seat of God and praying for the People And in this he was a Type of Christ making such Intercession in Heaven as that the prayers of penitent Sinners perfumed with the Incense of his merits and offered unto God the
fully enjoy it till his second appearance therefore they look and wait for his coming from Heaven that then their joy may be full Some think the Apostle doth here allude to the manner and order of the Levitical Service which was this The High-Priest enters the Sanctuary to pray and expiate Sin and the People stay without and wait for his coming out to bless them So Christ enters Heaven that glorious and eternal Sanctuary there appears before God and stayes a while and all his Saints do wait and look for his return and coming out from thence that they may by him be eternally Blessed These Lookers for him are they who shall be rewarded For though Christ came the first time to dye for all so far as to make their Sins remissible yet he comes the second time to conferr the ultimate benefit of his Redemption only upon them that look for him To look for Christ from Heaven doth presuppose the parties regenerate and renewed from Heaven justified and in the estate of justification and as having a title unto eternal Glory with a certain belief that Christ will come from Heaven and appear in Glory and that then they shall be glorified with him And this looking for Christ is their hope with a longing desire expressed sometimes by groans and yet a patient waiting God's leisure out of an assurance that he that shall come will come and will not tarry All this is signified by that of the Apostle And not only they but our selves also who have the first Fruits of the Spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the Adoption to wit the Redemption of our Bodie Rom. 8. 13. Where we have 1. The persons waiting or the expectants 2. The thing waited for 3. The act and manner of waiting 1. The persons waiting are such as have the first Fruits of the Spirit which is a certain measure of Sanctification and consolation for these are the beginnings of Heaven where our holiness and comfort shall be perfect and full and these being but a little which bear the like proportion with eternal Glory as the first Fruits do with the Harvest do assure us as an Earnest of the full possession 2. Adoption is said to be the Redemption of our Bodies that is the Resurrection when our Adoption shall be compleat for then our minority being past and the time appointed by our heavenly Father come we shall be put into full possession of the Inheritance and glorious eternal estate which God hath prepared for those that love him and this is that which is called Salvation in this place 3. The act of waiting is an act of hope which resting upon the promise is assured and fully perswaded of the fruition of Glory in God's time and looks often towards it as our own The manner of this waiting is with vehement desires and longings and g●oans and yet with patience For because this blessed estate is so full of happiness and yet to come and only present in the first Fruits therefore we earnestly desire and long for Christ's comming saying Come Lord Jesu come quickly And because for the present we are pressed with the remainders of sin and corruption within us and with temptations and persecutions without and the distance between Heaven and Us is great therefore we groan and sigh and say Oh when will that time come when I shall be rid and fully freed from Sin and sorrow for ever I see the place of mine eternal Rest afar off when shall I come near and enter and enjoy my God for ever Yet because we have God's Word to assure us of possession we therefore are patient and content our selves in God's Will For if it be his will and pleasure that we must stay a while longer and suffer more we desire his will may be done and we submit unto it and there is great reason we should so do For we are unworthy of the least mercy and he might require a thousand years tryal and suffering and to give us so great and glorious reward and that within so short a time after our first regeneration is an act of greatest love and bounty § 28. Thus far the words have been absolutely handled now it 's time to consider them comparatively The notes of Similitude for it 's a comparison in quality are As and So For as man dies so Christ dies As man dies once So Christ dies once and no more And as man is appointed by God to dye but once so Christ was appointed by God to dye but once And as man after Death comes to Judgment so Christ after he died once will not dye again but come to Judgment Yet as in all things that are like there is some dissimilitude and difference so there is in Man and Christ. Man dies for his own Sin Christ for the Sins of others Man's Death doth not satisfy for Sin Christ's Death satisfies divine Justicé and his Sacrifice doth expiate the Sins of many for ever Upon man's Death follows Judgment and he himself is judged but after once suffering and offering Christ appears and comes to Judge and not to be judged to reward such as believe in him but not to be rewarded And here it 's to be noted 1. That as Christ died to make man savable so he appears before God actually to save and comes to Judgment to make man fully happy As by his Death he merited Remission and Glorification inestimable Benefits so he appears before God for us now and in the end will come to Judgment that he may communicate these Benefits and make men actually partakers of them 2. That remission of Sins and the enjoyment of Salvation and full happiness do depend upon Christ's Sacrifice once offered as the effect depends upon the cause To sum up the Chapter we must observe 1. That the Subject of it is the Sacrifice of Christ. 2. That in it the scope of the Authour is to prove the excellency of the same above all Levitical Services 3. That his method is this 1. He describes the Tabernacle and the parts thereof and the Services performed therein and singles out the greatest Service performed by the greatest Priest in the most holy place which was the yearly Sacrifice of Expiation 2. He proves the Sacrifice of Christ to be far more excellent then this in many respects but chiefly in respect of the effects thereof The first effect is eternal Expiation ver 12. The second purification of the Conscience from dead Works to serve the living God in which respect it did excell all Legal purifications ver 14. The third is the confirmation of the New Covenant by virtue of this Expiation and Purification ver 15. The fourth lest they should think it strange that the Death and Blood-shed of their Messias should be any wayes conducing or necessary to these effects of Confirmation Expiation and Purification he lets them know First That for confirmation of the New Covenant it was very
Sufferings shall speedily determine their Joys shall never end For when life is ended all these Conflicts and cruel Fights are ended and they are instantly at rest cease from all their Labours and are secured of their eternal full Glory 3. A thousand years with Man are but as one day with God and in this ●espect his stay till the last Saint shall be perfected and finally Victorious is not much 4. When the day appointed is once come he will not stay an hour no not a minute He will rend the Heavens and come down and do glorious things And is his coming so certain and so speedy and hath God said so why should we be impatient and complain of delay The Saints of God sometimes will cry out Oh when shall these Labours these Difficulties these Sufferings of ours have an end How long will my Saviour delay his Coming When will he come in the Clouds of Heaven with all his holy Angels Shall I never see an end of this Battel and obtain a final Victory and so triumph for ever And the Church is alwayes praying Come Lord Jesu come quickly To all this his answer is Surely I come quickly And Behold I come quickly and again Behold I come quickly and my Reward is with me to render to every one according to his Works Revel 22. 7 12 20. And if we will not be patient strive suffer and fight a little while and that for a great and glorious Reward which we shall receive certainly and without all doubt we shall render our selvs unworthy altogether of so blessed a Victory and so joyful a Triumph as God hath of his free and unspeakable mercy promised us § 39. Further to encourage them he proves the certainty of their Reward to such as persevere and his displeasure against all such as draw back out of the next words of the Prophet which he renders thus Ver. 38. Now the Just shall live by Faith but if ●●y man draw back my Soul shall have no pleasure in him IN the handling of these words we must consider 1. How they come in upon the former 2. To what end the Apostle doth alledge them 3. What the matter therein contained is 4. For particular and more distinct Explication reduce then to Propositions 1. They come in upon the former as agreeing with them in the matter which is the great Reward Yet they have more immediate Connexion with the words immediately a●tecedent 1. As being taking out of the same place of the Prophets 2. As signifying that when Christ shall come he will accept and reward those that persevere and reject the rest 2. The End Scope is to encourage them from God's own words and Promise for they are the words of God to persevere and not draw back 3. The material parts are two 1. The final Acceptation of such as persevere 2. The Rejection of such as do not but draw back The Propositions are two 1. The just shall live by Faith 2. If any Man draw back my Soul shall have no pleasure in him In the first Proposition we have 1. Faith 2. Righteousness 3. Life These three are subordinate for by Faith we attain Righteousness by Righteousness Life and by what we are justified by that we live No Faith no Righteousness no Righteousness no Life these three go together In the words we have two Propositions at least implied 1. We are justified or just by Faith 2. We are glorified and live by Faith According to the former Proposition the Apostle made use of this Text in the Prophet Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 11. to prove Justification by Faith in Christ without Works For because Man is sinful and guilty his Justification is Remission of Sin which presupposing the party penitent and believing depends upon the Satisfaction Merits and Intercession of Christ and the Mercy of God expressed in the Promise As there he makes use of this Text to prove gratuitous Justification so here he takes it up again to assure them that if they continue in this justifying Faith to the End in the End they shall live and be glorified and that Faith which is first justifying shall be Faith glorifying 1. We have Faith which is a divine practical Assent unto the saving Truths of the Gospel and a reliance upon the Promises of God And here it 's taken for this Faith continued to the End even in the midst of all Persecutions and Afflictions and includes the former continued Boldness of Profession with Patience and other heavenly Vertues with which it hath an inseparable Connexion and is the foundation of all 2. Upon Faith followeth Righteousness for the just have Faith and are just and justified by Faith For by just are here meant the justified by Faith according to the Tenour of the new Covenant For Man being sinful and guilty cannot be justified by his own Innocency Purity inherent Righteousness and perfect Obedience He is condemnable by Reason of his Guilt and is freed from Condemnation by deprecating the Wrath of the Supream Judg and pleading Christ's Sacrifice and God's Promise according to his penitent Faith God in justifying is merciful because the Person justified is a Sinner yet just because Christ hath suffered God hath promised and Man guilty doth believe This Justification doth not leave a Man under the Power and Dominion of Sin but in freeing from Guilt he renews and sanctifies him by his Spirit so that he is inherently righteous So that he is justified and inherently just yet the place is to be understood of such as are finally just as they are finally believing For he that hath Faith is just he that continueth in Faith continueth just and he that is finally believing is finally just 3. As guilty Man is just by Faith so being just he shall live by Faith By Life in this place is meant a spiritual happy and eternal Life the Life of Glory which is the great Reward which will certainly follow upon final Faith For it 's Faith which by vertue of Christ's Merit and God's Promise gives a Right to Life and upon a finall Faith the Possession and full Enjoyment of this blessed Life doth certainly follow The Duty therefore which the Apostle urgeth is final Perseverance in Faith and the Motive whereby he seeks to stir them up to Performance is the certain full Possession of the great Rewards for which he alledgeth God's own Word and Promise recorded in the Prophet And if they will hearken unto God speaking by the Prophet and take his Word and Promise there is great Reason why they should persevere § 40. As the former Reason is taken from God's Promise of Life so the latter is drawn from the Punishment and Displeasure of God which if they fall away they must suffer as certainly threatned by God For if any Man draw back my Soul shall have no pleasure in him The Proposition is hypothetical or compound and connex the Nature whereof is to deduce a Consequent from an
is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked who can know it Jer. 17. 9. Of this heart and these motions it 's said That the Word of God is the discerner For this Law must needs discern them otherwise it could not discover the pravity and rectitude of them as it must do if it will be a perfect Rule of Judgment The word discerner may signify a perfect judicial knowledg To understand this the better you must observe 1. That when it 's said the Word or the Law is a discerner it 's meant that God in his Word discovers and distinguisheth these 2. That in Judgment he will as clearly discern all moral acts and operations of the Soul as agreeable or disagreeable to this Law and will judge the party accordingly 3. That he by execution will make this Word effectual to the eternal confusion of disobedient and rebellious Wretches And lest any should think that something might be concealed from the Judge it 's added Ver. 13. Neither is there any Creature that is not manifest in his sigh● but all things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him with w● on we have to do THis place informs Us of the perfect knowledg of God as He is Judge without which his Judgment cannot be just and perfect It presupposeth that perfection and attribute of God's understanding whereby he fully and clearly knoweth himself and all things else In this place it 's an exercise of that perfection restrained to things created and especially to matters of Judgment as all Persons and Causes of Men to whom the Gospel is made known as to be judged by him Where we may observe 1. The object all and every thing For it 's said not any thing and all things 2. The manifestation and clear representation of all in general and every thing in particular For there is not any Creature that is not manifest and all things are naked and open We need not here stand upon the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 turned here opened For in it there is a Metonymy and a Metaphor whether the Metaphor be taken from a body laid upon the back or flead and excoriated or divided through the back-bone it all comes to one for it signifies some thing made manifest 3. They are thus manifest in his sight naked and opened to him Which implies two things 1. That they are manifest naked opened that is very clearly most evidently and fully discovered to him 2. That if they be so clearly and fully manifest in his sight and to his eyes he must needs know them fully and clearly The sum of this is that God knows all things fully and clearly and therefore cannot be ignorant of any Man or any thing in any Man who must have to do with him that is be judged by him This is the matter of this Text considered in it self and is the same with that of the Prophet I the Lord search the Heart and try the Reins even to give every Man according to his ●ays and the fruit of his doings Jer. 17. 10. The force of it as a reason is this That seeing we must be judged according to a just Law by a most exact impartial and all-knowing Judge it concerns us much to labour and use all means to persevere For if we neglect this work or perform it sleightly or secretly in our deceitful hearts turn away and depart from God he will one day summon 〈◊〉 to Judgment we must appear before his Tribunal he will fully and clearly discover the persidiousness of our hearts shut us out of his eternal Rest and cast us into everlasting Flames and though now we will not believe it yet then we shall find it to our woe what a fearful thing it is to ●isobey the Laws of this most Just All-knowing and Almighty God Men now do little regard the Word of God and his Commands Promises Threatnings fear not to transgress his decrees seldom seriously think of that Day when all their baseness and treachery shall be discovered to their everlasting shame confusion and destruction This will be the end of such as do not consider with whom they have to do § 7. The third Reason is from the Priest-hood of Christ For Chap. 3. ver 1. we are exhorted to consider the Apostle and the High-Priest of our Profession He hath formerly pressed the duty of perseverance upon the consideration of his Apostleship and prophetical excellency and here urgeth it again upon the consideration of his Priest-hood This is the first connexion of these words with ver 1. of the third Chapter Again he seemed in the two former Reasons taken from the sad consequent of Apostacy and the severity of the Judge to set before them the Arduum or difficulty of the performance and in these words the possibile that though it be difficult yet it may be done by means of our great High-Priest The former arguments tended to work fear this to cause hope the former well considered might make them careful and diligent this last might encourage and give them comfort This is the second Coherence with the Text immediately antecedent But the words must be considered in themselves before we can understand the force of the Reason contained in them For this end we must take notice that the subject matter of them is the Priest-hood of Christ or Christ our great High-Priest Jesus the Son of God And concerning this High-Priest He 1. Affirmeth some things 2. From the things affirmed inferrs the main Conclusion He affirms of him 1. That he is entred into Heaven 2. Is very merciful to us and compassionate 3. Will prove very helpful The conclusion inferred is To hold fast our Profession Seeing Christ as Priest is the subject of the Text and this last part of the Chapter let 's hear what he writes Ver. 14. Seeing then that we have a great High-Priest that is passed into the Heavens Jesus the Son of God Where we may observe 1. The eminency of the person 2. The excellency of his Office 3. His Relation to us THe person is Jesus of Nazareth the Son of the Virgin Mary conceived at Nazareth born at Bethlehem and Crucified at Jerusalem This Jesus is Son of God not only because of his supernatural Conception and Birth but his eternal Generation For that Word which was from everlasting and by which the World was made was made Flesh and did assume that humane Nature conceived by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary and possesseth the same inseparably and eternally This is the eminency of the Person who is Superiour to all Men and Angels The excellency of his Office is that he was a Priest and not only so but an High-Priest as Aaron was above other Priests and President in all matters of Divine Worship and might perform some sacerdotal Acts which none but he might do Many High-Priests were of that Dignity that they were equal with Kings But he was not only High-Priest but
Name of that City was Zedec afterwards it was called Salem and then Jerusalem 2. That Melchizedec and Adonizedec was the common Name of the Kings of that place as Pharaoh was of the Kings of Egypt and Caesar of the Romane Emperours Whether this King was by descent a Canaanite or some other is not material to know yet Moses informs us that he was not onely a King but a Priest and such he might be and yet an Idolater But to take away that doubt it 's added that he was the Priest of the most High God This word Priest doth signify his Superiority and Authority in matters of Religion and he was a prime Minister and did officiate in things pertaining to God As a King he governed men as a Priest he worshipped God The word Cohen which signifies a Prince or a Priest is here determined to the signification of a Priest or publick Officer in sacred things Whereas it 's said that he was the Priest of the most High God it may be understood 1. That he was constituted and consecrated a Priest by God and so received his Power immediately from Heaven as he must needs do because he derived not his Power from any Predecessor and his Order vvas very high and so high that he was said for to be a lively Type of Jesus Christ the Son of God and the supream and eternal Priest of Heaven 2. That he did worship no Idols or petty Gods but the Supream Lord and Living God that made Heaven and Earth and taught his People so to do From these words Ver. 1. For this Melchizedec King of Salem and Priest of the Most High God VVEE may observe 1. That Religion was not so generally corrupted in those times but that there were some as well as Abraham and even in cursed Canaan as well as in other places who did worship the true God 2. That the Offices of King and Priest are not so inconsistent but that they may lawfully be assumed and exercised by one Person For Melchizedec though one single Person was invested both with Civil and Ecclesiastical Power And if one person be so qualified that he is able to discharge both places so far as he is bound there is no doubt to be made of the Union of both in one man and the Duties of both might be the more easily performed by one when the Power extended but to a Family or a little Territory as this of Salem was especially when onely the greater Services were to be done by him that was King and Priest who had the Superintendency and Command over the rest who both in matters of State and Religion were subservient unto him Yet when Israel was multiplied to a great Nation it pleased God to separate these two Powers and gave the one to one Tribe and the other to another And if this separation had not been made by God himself the opposition made by Corah Dathan and Abiram could not have bin so hainous a Sin And Christ himself though a King and Priest would not take upon him any Civil Jurisdiction neither did he give his Apostles any Power Civil for their Commission was to teach and baptize to build the Church and not the State neither would he have his Souldiers entangled with the Affairs of this life The Work of the Ministry was so great that there rather wanted more Labourers to be sent into that Harvest And for any man to take upon him more Power than he can well manage or a greater charge than he is able to discharge must needs be unlawful § 6. These were the Offices The Acts of his Priest-hood come next to be considered the first whereof was that he blessed Abraham For Ver. 1. Melchizedec met Abraham returning from the Slaughter of the Kings and blessed him In these words with those that follow we have the exercise of his Sacerdotal Power And in this Exercise three things 1. The Person upon whom he did exercise it 2. The Time when 3. The distinct Acts thereof 1. The Person was Abraham one of the most eminent and excellent men of the World the friend of God the Father of Israel of all Believers of Christ according to the Flesh who had received the great Promise and was a Priest and Prince himself and all this did argue the greatness and excellency of Melchizedec 2. The time was when he met him returning from the Slaughter of the Kings For 1. Abraham as we read in Gen. 14. had conquered and slain the Kings recovered the Captives and their Goods and taken a great Spoil 2. After this great and glorious Victory he was returning towards Mamre 3. In his return near to Salem Melchizedec met him with Provision of Bread and Wine to refresh him and his Army Then it was that he exercised his Sacerdotal Power 3. The first Act was he blessed him The words and form of this Benediction are these Blessed be Abraham of the most High God Possessour of Heaven and Earth This Blessing was not a meer expression of his desire for so any Inferiour may bless a Superiour but it was a sacerdotal powerful and authoritative Benediction yet in the Name of God as it was by Commission from God and therefore real and effectual upon the Subject Whether it was particular or general is not expressed Some as Mercerus think the words to be Indicative and so to be understood as though he had said Blessed is Abraham c. Others Let Abraham be blessed or The Lord bless Abraham as the Blessing of the Levitical Priests is delivered The Lord bless thee and keep thee c. Numb 6. 24. This Blessing is neither a Wish and desire nor properly a Prayer nor yet a meer Prediction A Prayer is directed unto God a Blessing unto Man the one seeks it from God by Petition the other pronounceth and declareth it by Warrant and Commission from God In the one the Priest doth represent Man in this other he represents God Here by the way we may observe That a Priest hath Power by vertue of his Office and God's Institution to bless So this Priest and the Levitical also and the Minister of the Gospel may and ought to do § 7. The second Act was the Tything of Abraham for so the next words twll us Ver. 2. To whom Abraham gave the tenth of all This is the first place of the Scriptures which speaks of Tythes or the Tenth of mens Goods paid unto God and received by his Priests and such as represent him in matters of Religion And here we may observe 1. Who paid them 2. To whom they were paid 3. Of what they were paid 1. Abraham the party blessed payes them and so they who receive spiritual Blessings and are made fit Subjects of God's Mercy in Christ must give and pay them 2. The party receiving them was Melchizedec who as a Priest blessing Abraham and not as King receivs them and to him they are paid So Christ appointed the
Works because they 1. Signify God's Approbation of the Doctrine 2. Cause men to wonder 3. Are done by a divine and supernatural Power The same words are used 2. Cor. 12. 12. In Signs Wonders mighty Deeds They are said to be divers because they are not onely many of one kind but of several and different kinds as dispossessing of Devils raising the Dead and miraculously healing all kind of Diseases and as they are Works of extraordinary Power and Wisdom so they are of Mercy 2. By Gifts or Distributions of the Holy Ghost according to his own Will So that there were Gifts of the Holy Ghost Distributions of them These according to his Will Gifts of the Holy Ghost were extraordinary Qualities and Powers given such as heard the Apostles Doctrine and believed it as power to heal to speak in strange Languages to prophesy to do Miracles They are said to be Gifts and Effects of the Holy Ghost because they had them not by Nature or Industry or Instruction by Man but from the Power of God-Redeemer and the Spirit of Christ. They are called in the Original distributions or divisions because they were 1. Communicated to divers Persons 2. Were many of different kinds 3. Were given in several degrees They were distributed according to his own Will 1. Freely 2. To whom he will 3. What Gifts he will 4. In what measure he will For there are diversities of Gifts 1. Cor. 12. 4. But all these worketh that one and the self-same Spirit dividing to every man severally as he will Ver. 11. The Effect of these Miracles and Gifts was the confirmation of the Doctrine of the Apostles which they did confirm by Word and Deed For 1. They did most certainly affirm and assert this Doctrine as having heard it immediately of Christ and as having received the immediate Knowledge there of from him 2. They did these Signs Wonders and mighty Deeds and upon the Imposition of their hands Believers received the extraordinary Gifts of the Holy Ghost yet they neither did these Miracles nor gave these Gifts by their own power or holiness But the Works were done and the Graces given by them as Instruments in the Name of Christ as risen and glorified and from God So that the Power of God the merit of Christ their Ministration did all concur to the production of these glorious Effects God was the principal Cause therefore is it said that by these God did bear them witness and attest their Doctrine to be true and from him so that this confirmation was a giving credibility to the Doctrine of the Gospel so far as it was new and delivered the positive truths concerning Jesus of Nazareth dying for our sins rising again sitting at the right hand of God and the dependence of Justification before the Tribunal of God and eternal Glory upon Faith in him making Intercession in Heaven For there was no need thus to confirm the Ceremonials of Moses and the Covenant of God with Israel before Mount Sinai to the Jew For these things he made no doubt of nor was this confirmation needful for to perswade the Gentile of the Equity and Justice of the Morals of the Scripture for the natural light of Reason did approve them These Miracles and Gifts were Proofs very strong and powerful for they were no jugling Impostures or Delusions but real demonstrations of the divine Will and clear to the senses § 7. The Transgression is a neglect of this divine Doctrine thus declared thus confirmed This neglect implies a contempt and is a disobedience to that Law of God-Redeemer by Christ exhibited in not believing and repenting or a positive de●ial of this excellent truth in such as never professed it or in Apostates who once received it The punishment is eternal death which can no ways be avoided by the Offenders neglecting this Salvation The force of the Argument is the last and chief thing to be considered To understand this we must observe the Form of the Apostles Argument which is this That sin which makes us liable to grievous and unavoidable punishment must with earnest heed be avoided But to let slip or recede from and neglect the Doctrine of the Gospel is such a Sin Therefore with all earnest heed to be avoided The Apostle in this Argument presupposeth 1. That sin makes liable to Punishment ●ainous sins to grievous punishments some sins to unavoidable punishments For the punishment of some sins are avoidable and the sins whereby we are made obnoxious though committed yet may be remitted Some are not by the tenor of God's Laws remissible 2. That we are made liable to punishment by the divine comminations 3. That the end of Comminations in God's Laws is by representing the penalty as certainly due upon Transgression to restrain us from Transgression and Disobedience For though the Love of God and Righteousness and hatred of Iniquity are the principal Motives to Obedience and Restraints from sin yet the hope of Rewards and fear of Punishments may have great force because we love our selves desire our own peace and happiness and abhor such things as tend to our misery and ruine These things taken for granted make the Proposition good But the doubt might be of the Assumption That neglect of the Doctrine of the Gospel will make us liable to such a grievous unavoidable punishment This he therefore proves thus If Disobedience unto the Law muc● more will the Disobedience to the Gospel make us liable to such a Punishment But Disobedience to the Law made the Offenders liable to such a Punishment This the Hebrew and Jew would grant for they knew it but the Proposition onely could be controverted by them Therefore he confirms it from this presupposed in general That greater sins make us obnoxious to greater Punishment but disobedience to the Gospel is the greater Sin And this he proves fully and that from many particulars For this end he proves the Doctrine of the Gospel more excellent than that of the Law more powerfully binding men to receive it and retain it And if it be so then to sin against it is more hainous than to sin against the Law That it is as excellent there could be no doubt for it hath all the excellencies of the Law But that it was more excellent he manifests by four things 1. It was the Doctrine of so great Salvation for such the Law was not It by it self without the Promise could not save eternally and suppose it could yet it was not so full so clear so powerfull and effectually conducing to eternal life 2. It was first spoken by the Lord Christ who is so far above the Angels by whom the Law was given 3. It was confirmed by Miracles far more in number and more glorious 4. Upon the hearing and receiving the Gospel the Believers received many different and extraordinary Gifts of the Spirit which the Hearers of the Law did not For the Apostle saith to the Galathians He therefore that
were yet here they are called Brethren as believing in Christ and holy as sanctified by the Spirit of Christ So that this is a Fraternity in respect of Religion Christian. They became such Brethren and so holy by the heavenly Call they were partakers of the heavenly Calling For as they were not Brethren so neither were they holy by natural Generation but by supernatural and spiritual Regeneration as before To be partakers of this Call is either barely to be called or to be partakers of this Mercy together with others It 's said to be Heavenly as some understand it in respect of the efficient and the final Cause It 's from Heaven that is from God who is the principal Cause of this Work and because they are to be called to Heaven that is eternal Glory which is the end and ultimate Effect thereof In it we may consider 1. The Work of God 2. The Duty of Man 3. The Benefit following upon both The Work of God is by the Word of the Gospel and the Power of the Spirit to enlighten and sanctify man and gave him a Divine Power to believe and turn unto Him The duty of Man is to be obedient to the heavenly Call The benefit is the admission of him as obedient unto his heavenly Kingdom and receiving him as an Heir of Glory Upon this heavenly Call followeth a great change both in the disposition and condition of man called For his disposition he is made of unholy holy and therefore said to be called with an holy Calling and to be called unto Holiness For his condition he is made of miserable happy and therefore said to be called unto eternal Glory And because the distance between holiness and happiness and sinful and miserable Man is so great therefore this work of God is a work of great power and because the change is so happy therefore it 's a work of great mercy wherein God freely prevents man so that if he should not thus prevent him he would be for ever sinful and miserable Wo unto all such as are disobedient to this heavenly Call and neglect this preventing Grace for as their Sin is more hainous so their Punishment shall be more grievous The Apostle seems to put them in mind of this Calling to let them know how deeply they are engaged to God and how unworthy they should be if they should not persevere unto the end § 3. The duty exhorted unto is expressed ver 6. It 's to hold fast the confidence and rejoycing of the hope firm to the end and is repeated ver 14. It 's opposed to unbelief ver 12. Take heed Brethren lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God The duty therefore is persevetance which presupposeth that they had received the Truth of the Gospel and professed their Faith in Christ and is a contin●ance in this Faith once received and professed to the end This Faith was from God and was wrought in them by the heavenly Call and the continuance of it depends upon God He gave it at the first he continues it to the last yet so that man must be obedient at the first and use all means with diligent care to preserve it to the last Some refuse to obey at the first others who have professed and received the Truth fall off before the end and both these are sins and they only guilty of them § 4. The reasons follow 1. From the excellency of Christ which is set forth by Comparison The parties compared are Christ and Moses both excellent but Christ far more And here it is observable 1. That the duty is the same with that which was pressed Chap. 2. 2. That the ground of that was the excellency of Christ above the Angels of this the excellency of Christ above Moses 3. The reason there was that if the disobedience unto the word of Angels was punished with Death how much more grievously shall they be punished which disobey the Gospel of Christ 4. The reason here is that if their fathers for their unbelief and disobedience to the Doctrine of Moses were eternally shut out of God's rest how much more shall they he shut out of Heaven and Christ's eternal rest if they do not continue in the Faith of Christ but fall off from their profession To understand this first reason we must consider 1. The excellency of Christ and the excellency of Moses absolutely and positively 2. The excellency of both comparatively that so we may understand the excellency of the one f●t above the the excellency of the other 1. Therefore they must consider the excellency of Christ Jesus which is this That he is the Apostle and High-Priest of their Profession Their profession was of the Christian Faith and Religion which they did professe The Authour Apostle and Legate sent from Heaven who first published this Faith and Doctrine was Christ the Son of God by whom God spake who was formerly proved to be more excellent then the Prophets then the Angels So that their Religion was from God nor by Prophets or Angels but by Christ the great Prophet For here to be an Apostle is to be a Prophet Yet Moses and so many others may be Prophets yet no High-Priest but Christ Jesus is not only the Prophet but the High-Priest who mediates between God and Man and officiates so as to make his Doctrine effectual and saving and expiate his Peoples Sin that they may be reconciled to their God This two-fold power was necessary as without which he could not have been a perfect Saviour These are his two Offices upon which the Apostle so much enlargeth and insisteth But 〈◊〉 may be an Officer and yet prove unfaithful and not discharge his trust yet Christ was faithful For it follows Ver. 2. Who was faithful to him that appointed him § 5. This is concerning Christ's fidelity expressed both absolutely in these words and comparatively in those which follow 1. Absolutely He was faithful to him who appointed him 2. Comparatively As Moses was faithful in all his House The former words 1. Imply his ordination 2. Expresse his fidelity to him that ordained him Where we have two Propositions 1. That God appointed Him 2. He was faithful to God In that He was appointed or made an Apostle and High-Priest of our Christian profession for so the words are to be understood it 's evident that He did not Usurp this two-fold Power and Office but received it and acquired it legally and none could invest Him with this Power but onely God and the reason is because it is so eminent and transcendent After he was once advanced he was faithful to that God who advanced and trusted him with so great a Power This fidelity was the true and full discharge of his Apostolical and Sacerdotal Office in perfectly doing all things necessary for the eternal Salvation of Man so far as it depended upon this two-fold Office As an Apostle or Prophet
immediately design and qualify for this Work § 3. Thus you have heard 1. That a Priest is an Officer in Religion 2. That his proper Work is to offer Gifts and Sacrifices The third thing is the disposition which is most suitable to his place 3. He must be merciful and inclined to compassion as one who himself hath his Infirmity For it followeth Ver. 2. Who can have Compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for that he himself also is compassed with Infirmity THis disposition and affection is so necessary that no man without it is fit to be a Priest For this reason God contrived a way whereby Christ after he was risen from the dead ascended into Heaven obtained fulness of joy in his presence and pleasures for evermore at his right hand might be sensible of Man's misery To understand the words of the Text we must consider 1. What it is to have Compassion 2. Upon whom he must have Compassion 3 Why he should be the more compassina●e To have Compassion is to be inwardly affected with the misery of another so as to be moved and inclined so far as we are able to help relieve and comfort them Therefore saith one Misericordia est ●iseria aliena in corde nostro The word in the Original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to suffer moderately or rather in some certain measure 1. He must suffer for he that is merciful doth suffer with them that suffer and mourn with them that mourn for we should be like fellow Members of one Body and as there is a Sympathy or fellow-feeling amongst the Members of one Body so there should be amongst us Yet as our own Passions and Affections should be moderated by the rules of Reason so must this Compassion be it must neither be boundless nor irregular For there be such hainous Offenders and abominable Sinners that they are no fit Subjects either of the Mercy of God or Man and we may exceed in our Compassion Therefore the Rules of divine Wisdom and Justice must regulate and measure the same otherwise we may make our selves unfit to officiate for others yet this was seldom the fault of Priests whose Compassion was usually defective 2. The parties to be pityed and the Subject of the Priest's Compassion were the ignorant and such as are out of the way Ignorance and Errour are often taken for sins yet not such as are capital and crying crimes but Offences committed out of ignorance infirmity and violence of temptation for which under the Law Sacrifices were prescribed and accepted upon the Confession of the Delinquents for there was no Sacrifice to expiate capital sins for they must be punished by Death They which were ignorant and seduced out of the way willing to confess and desirous of pardon were to be pitied as a fit Subject of the High-Priest's Compassion 3. The reason why he should the more have Compassion on these was because he was compassed himself on every hand with the like infirmity and might easily fall into the like Sin This should make him the more careful to make Reconciliation for them as for himself because he might fall into the same condition and it was the Wisdom of God to make such kind of Persons to be Priests § 4. The end of the Priest's officiating and his Compassion was to make Reconciliation for his own and their sins For Ver. 3. And by reason hereof he ought as for the People so also for himself to offer for Sins THe reason why he must be merciful and sensible of the guilt and misery of the People was that he might offer for their Sins and because he was compassed with infirmity and had his own Sins therefore he must offer for himself His own infirmity and sin might move him both to pity them and also seek their pardon as his own To offer for Sins is to do that upon which God hath promised to pardon and remission is the very end and ultimate effect of all propitiatory Sacrifices and the Service of all lawful Priests Before I conclude this part of the Chapter it may be expedient to resolve two Questions The first is Whether it be necessary and essential to a Priest to have sins of his own for which he must offer The second is Whether in the times of the Gospel after Christ had offered his Sacrifice and was confirmed an eternal Priest in Heaven there be many persons properly called Priests and such as are here described To both I answer Negatively For 1. It 's not essential to a Priest to have sins of his own or that he be a Sinner For Christ himself is a most perfect and compleat Priest and yet without Sin yet he is merciful and as sensible of our miseries as any ever was And this indeed was a necessary qualification in a Priest that must make reconciliation for Man and he that is unmerciful is no ways sit to be a Priest for guilty Wretches yet a Priest may be merciful and yet without sin though there never was any such Priest in the World but Jesus Christ the Son of the living God For the second there never was in proper sense since Christ's Ascension into Heaven in the Church-Christian any such Priest as is here described And it 's observable that such as officiate in the Church-Christian and minister in holy things are in the New Testament called Ministers Elders Bishops Pastors Teachers Men of God Apostles Evangelists Prophets but never styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Priests much less High-Priest neither are there any Temples Altars Sacrifices in the time of the Gospel that are properly such Some of the Church of Rome do affirm The Masse to be a Sacrifice and the same with that which Christ offered upon the Cross and propitiatory for the Sins of the Living and the Dead Yet seeing they confess 1. That it 's incru●ntum unbloody therefore it must needs essentially differ from that Sacrifice and Oblation wherein the Blood of Christ was once shed never to be shed again never to be re-iterated 2. Seeing it 's not essentially the same it cannot be properly propitiatory 3. Seeing it 's not expiatorium redemtorium as they grant it is not How should it be the same 4. That which is a representation commemoration and application of that Sacrifice once offered never to be offered again can neither be the same nor propitiatory And as it is not the same Sacrifice but essentially different from it it 's no Sacrifice at all in proper sense neither can any wit of Man prove it so to be Therefore in respect of it their Priests can be no Priests their Tables no Altars their Temples no Temples When divers of the Ancients call the Ministers of the Gospel or Bishops Priests the Service of the Eucharist a Sacrifice and the Communion-Tables Altars they must either be understood to speak tropically and metaphorically or deliver that which is untrue and also contradict
consequence Therefore though they did not absolve them yet they prayed for them and referred them to the Judgment of God § 6. The Apostle not content barely to affirm this Renovation to be impossible gives us a reason hereof and that in a third Proposition which is They Crucify the Lord Jesus a new and put him to open shame This should have been the second but I follow the order of the words For this is the genuine method 1. Christians may fall away 2. Falling away they Crucify Christ and put him to open shame 3. It 's impossible for them doing so to be renewed by Repentance This third which I handled in the second place contains the medium whereby the impossibility of Repentance is inferred But 1. I will explain the words 2. Shew how they come in upon the former 1. To Crucify the Lord Jesus the Son of God afresh and to put him to an open shame are in some respect the same For the Death of the Crosse is a shameful and ignominious Death and Punishment therefore we read of shame and the Crosse joyned together For it 's said of Christ That he endured the Cross and despised the shame Hebr. 12. 2. There be many tormenting and disgracing Punishments inflicted by higher Powers upon Malefactors Amongst these Capital penalties are the greatest Of Capital Crucifying or putting to Death upon the Crosse is most cruel and ignominious This our blessed Saviour the Son of God once Suffered For such was the malice of the Jews that nothing but his Death and no other Death but the Death of the Crosse besides many other indignities would satisfy them The end of just punishments are loss pain and shame Therefore Malefactors were executed publickly and openly that others might see hear and fear to do the like Sinnes lest they should suffer the like Punishments if they should prove guilty of the like Crimes And not onely the Punishments executed by Man but such as are inflicted by God are exemplary Therefore as the Apostle saith The punishments which the Israelites suffered in the Wildernesse are our ensamples 1 Cor. 10. 6 11. Therefore the word turned put him to open shame signifies to make an example of shame and disgrace To return unto the Text Apostates are said to Crucify Christ unto themselves afresh the meaning is not that they put Christ to Death upon the Cross in proper sense For that they cannot do he dyed upon the Crosse once and rose again is immortal in Heaven and shall never dy any more For in that he dyed he dyed unto Sin or for Sin once and but once seeing he being raised from the Dead he dyed no more Death hath no more Dominion over him Rom. 6. 9 10. Therefore the words are to be understood Tropically they are a Metaphor which is a contract Similitude and signify that they are like unto the Jews and deal with Christ in somethings as they did For as the Jews judged Christ not to be the Messias and Son of God but a Seducer an Impostor and Malefactor and desired Judgment against him as such that he might be Crucified and put to open shame so these Apostates denying Christ whom they had formerly professed must needs account of him no better then the Jews did and so justify all their Accusations against him and his Crucifying as just and justly deserved by him But these Revolters especially agree with the malicious Jews who renounce him blaspheme him and persecute him in those who profess him such Julian was This is to tread under foot the Son of God and to count the blood of the Covenant that is whereby the everlasting Covenant was confirmed and they sanctified an unholy or profane thing This is the highest contempt of Christ and his Blood that possibly can be Some observe from these words Crucify him afresh 1. That though they cannot Crucify him because he is far out of their power yet for their part they are ready and have a mind to do it and would do it if it were in their power 2. That though he was Crucified once yet if he were living and in their reach they would Crucify him again § 7. This is the meaning of the Words Now secondly Let 's consider how they come in upon the former and what connexion they have with them They presuppose that Apostates do Crucify the Son of God to themselves afresh and are guilty of this Crime For Apostacy is their Sin and this necessarily follows upon it and is inseparably joyned with it And they seem to give a reason of the impossibility of their Renovation by Repentance For there can be no Renovation or Sanctification but by the Blood of the Son of God and this they deny renounce trample under foot therefore they can neither repent nor by repentance be renewed or receive any benefit For repentance presupposeth necessarily Faith in the Blood of Christ and the force thereof dependeth upon that Blood and the belief thereof without both which no repentance can ever do any good or benefit any man and this is the immutable Will and Decree of God Neither will God give Repentance to any Apostate or accept him though he should and could repent For Christ did never merit nor God promise to any such persons either of these The reason of all this is That God decreed that Christ should dy but once and that Sinners should be initiated but once and that whosoever makes void to himself this one Death and this one Initiation shall never have any benefit by a second Death or a second Initiation These are contrary to the eternal and unchangeable Rules and Laws of his Kingdom and by these Rules their Sin is irremissible and their final destruction unavoidable Therefore let us hear and fear lest by any means we fall away from that Christianity which we have received professed and engaged in By all this it 's evident that it 's in vain to lay the foundation again by Repentance Faith Baptism and the rest This reason to make it more plain is illustrated by a Similitude which as all other Comparisons hath two parts 1. A Proposition 2. A Reddition The Proposition is expressed the Reddition implyed The subject of the first part or proposition is the Earth and as there are two sorts or kinds of Earth good and bad so there be two parts of the proposition The first Concerning good Earth The second Concerning bad and barren Ground 1. Concerning the good we may consider 1. The Proposition and then the Reddition In the first observe 1. The Fruitfulness 2. God's Blessing The fruitfulness presupposeth Rain Dressing For without these two Moisture and Husbandry no Ground can be fruitful The Rain is from Heaven the Husbandry from Man The goodness of it is that it drinketh in the Rain bringeth forth Herbs meat for them by whom it 's dressed and here by Herbs may be meant all kind of Fruit that 's fit for man's food As it 's fruitful so
an High-Priest to offer c. Therefore he must have somewhat to offer The principal part of this Syllogism is the Conclusion That Christ of necessity must have somewhat to offer The necessity is that if he have not somewhat to offer he cannot be an High-Priest according to God's Ordination For though he may be one Titulary yet Effectively he cannot This necessity is from divine Ordination which hath determined that an High-Priest must offer but to offer without something to be offered is impossible Besides he must offer something that God will accept for that end that God intended that Office which was to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People and propitiate his Majesty offended by their iniquities ' The Premisses from whence this conclusion is inferred were handled before The Proposition we find expresly Chap. 5. 1. The Assumption was the Subject of the former Chapter When it 's said that he must have somewhat to offer it 's meant that the thing he must offer and have to offer must be not onely something that was much different from that which the Levitical High-Priest did offer but also something far more excellent and such as was suitable to the Sanctuary whereof he was a Minister which was Heaven What this was which he had to offer and which he offered we shall hear after Chap. 9. And in this respect the words refer to that which follows in the 9. 10. Chapters For in this place the Author informs us onely that seeing he was an High-Priest and a Minister of a Sanctuary and the chief part of Ministration was to offer therefore he must have somwhat to offer But what this somewhat to be offered is or that he offered it is not here so much as mentioned as yet For the intention of the Authour is first to prove in general his Ministry to be the more excellent 1. Because of the more excellent Sanctuary 2. Of his more excellent offering 3. Of the more excellent Covenant whereof he is a Minister § 4. After it was proved That Christ's ministry was more excellent in respect of the Sanctuary in the next place it 's made evident that he is more excellent in respect of his Offering This he doth in these words Ver. 4. For if he were on Earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests that offer Gifts according to the Law Ver. 5. Who serve unto the example and shadow of heavenly things as Moses was 〈◊〉 of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith he then make all things according to the pattern shewed thee in the Mount THe Apostle presupposing Christ to be an High-Priest and that being such he must be one either in Heaven or Earth He doth here 1. Deny him to be a Priest on Earth And 2. Proves his Negative 1. He denies in these words That if he were on Earth he should not be a Priest that is an offering-Priest according to the Law amongst the Jews He should not that is he could not in respect of divine ordination 2. The reason whereby he proves this is in the words following which may be reduced to several Propositions A● 1. There are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law 2. These serve unto the example of heavenly thing 3. Moses was commanded to make all things according to the pattern shewed in the Mount The force of the first part of the reason is because God hath appointed Priests to minister and officiate on Earth in an earthly Sanctuary and these must be of the Tribe of Levi of the House of Aaron and not any other Christ was not of this Tribe nor of this Family and House And these of that Tribe and Family were made Priests and that by God and that exclusively to all others and by that Institution None but they had power to offer Gifts So that Christ could no wayes be a Levitical Priest The force of the second part of the reason is because They served according to the example and shadow of heavenly things for so the words may be turned Where 1. To serve is to officiate as Priests and in particular in offering Gifts and Sacrifices 2. Their service was not spiritual and heavenly so as to expiate sin and purge the conscience 3. Their service was but earthly and carnal and a shadow and imitation of heavenly things 4. All this was according to Gods Command which we find Exod. 25. 4. Where Gods charge to Moses was this Look that thou make them after the pattern which was shewed thee i● the Mount which words imply that Moses in matters of Religion and in manner of God's Service did nothing of his own Head but that he had his direction in all things from God who made him to understand all things concerning the Tabernacle Priests and Services fully and perfectly so that he was able to give directions and perfect instructions unto others who were capable of them This doth teach us an excellent lesson and that is Not to reach any Doctrine but that which is revealed and confirmed from Heaven nor perform any thing in his Service but according to his Institution Humane Inventions in matter of Religion though they may have a fair colour of devotion and reverence are not tolerable God will not endure that any Man should devise any thing in his Worship for it is an high presumption And as Moses was bound to give direction according to the pattern so the Priests in their Service were bound to follow Moses directions Amongst other things which Moses according to the pattern did prescribe one was the service and offering of the Priests and they could not lawfully officiate but according to his prescription both for the matter and manner of their offerings The pattern did only direct him to prescribe as an earthly Tabernacle so carnal offerings and none other yet these though but shadows yet were shadows and obscure significations of heavenly things For the Sanctuary was a shadow of an heavenly Sanctuary the Priest of a better Priest the Service of a far better Service Therefore the pattern it self shewed in the Mount must have some agreement with these heavenly and better things As the former part of the reason was in respect of the Priest that must offer so this latter is in respect of the service and offering and both make but one reason And it 's to this purpose That as Christ if he had been on Earth could not have been a Priest because there was other Priests instituted by God so neither could he have offered Gifts and Sacrifices prescribed by the Law which were shadows of heavenly things For none but the Levitical Priests might offer these Hence it follows That seeing Christ being an High-Priest must have somewhat to offer and he could not be a Priest on Earth to offer such things as the Levitical Priests did offer therefore he must have some other thing and the same far more excellent to
not made of things that did appear 2. They were made or framed by the Word of God 3. This is understood by Faith Or rather thus 1. The Worlds were framed so that things seen were not made of things that did appear 2. They were thus framed and made by the Word of God 3. That they were thus made we understand by Faith Where we have two Propositions concerning the Object one concerning the Act. In the first Proposition we have 1. The Worlds and Things seen 2. The World 's framed and things seen made 3. Things seen not made of things that did appear 1. By Worlds must be understood Heaven and Earth and all things therein the Hosts of them the reason of the name Worlds you may read Chap. 1. 2. Things seen may be visible part of the World which is conspicuous and may be seen by bodily Eyes as the frame of Heaven and Earth with the Lights of Heaven and Creatures upon Earth and also the Waters and the Seas and all things therein in which respect they are contra-distinct to invisible Creatures For all things were made by Christ and these were either visible or invisible other wayes things seen may be things existent and in perfect being 2. These were framed and made that is they received their being and existence for the act and work of Creation gave existence to things that had no actual being before Yet the Word framed is extended by some to signify not only the work or act of Creation but also the union order and perfection of the whole and all the parts but howsoever it may connote these yet the intended force of it is to be Created so as that creation and Making are the same 3. The things seen were of things that did not appear By things not appearing some understand the Samplar and Idea of things in the Mind and Counsel of God but this can harldy be the sense But others say That things not appearing are things not pre-existent or in being And this may be taken two wayes 1. To signify that the first Creation did presuppose no matter stuff or atoms or any such thing because all things were purely and meerly Nothing had no being nor principle nor rudiment nor part of being at all And this doth differense the powerful and wonderful active strength and productive force of God from the power and active force of all other Agents in respect of which that 's true Ex nihilo nihil fit 2. To signify that the things now seen were made of that Earth that seminary and imperfect Rudiment which Gen. 1. 2. as the Septuagint translate it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 invisible and darkness was upon the face of it For out of it God created the Elements and mixt Creatures which when Light was made and they finished did appear and most of them were visible This last sense is good and so is the former and both may agree because that Earth and imperfect Chaos concreated with the Heaven of Heavens was first nothing then invisible and not appearing before the things made out of it could be seen Where note that not to be made of things appearing and to be made of things not appearing are the same 2. The second Proposition is That these were made by the Word of God The Word of God is either the Word which was God and begotten of the Father from everlasting and so it cannot be taken here or the Word of God expressing something out of himself And this is also two-fold 1. That Word whereby he effecteth something 2. That which signifieth his mind and is not effective and productive further then to make his mind known But here his effective and productive Word is meant For God said Let there be Light this is his Word and there was Light this is the production of his powerful Word This Word is called the Will and Command of God not that it was so but because it did signify that it was his Will that at such a time such or such a thing should be made or created and did as it were command himself and his almighty power to effect it For he spake unto himself as almighty and his Word was his Deed and as his Wisdom Word and Power are not separated in himself so neither were they separated in this Work So that the World was made without any difficulty toil tumult tools or other adjuvant ministerial Causes The mighty glorious Work was done instantly and with ease by him to whom nothing is impossible The third Proposition is That by Faith we understand that the World was thus created Where three things 1. The thing understood 2. The understanding of it 3. The understanding of it by Faith 1. The thing understood is not this that the World was made for that may be known by Reason For it 's clear enough that it 's an Effect and must necessarily have an efficient Cause which must produce and effect it And they which hold it was ab eterno from Eternity some of them do confess this only they affirm that it was meant necessarily by the Supream Agent and the Production of it was like the Production of Light from the Sun which was no sooner in Being but Light did necessarily flow and issue from it so that there could be no Priority of time between the Sun and Light but the Being of both was simultaneous But that this World should be made at such a time and at first of no pre-existent matter and in the space of six dayes and in that order one part after another and by the Word of God as the sole efficient and so many years ago is far above Reason 2. Yet this is understood and it 's our reason and intellective faculty which doth apprehend and understand it For without it we can know nothing by it we know all things that are known unto us even the deep things and Counsels of God revealed Neither is Reason meerly passive but really active in this Work for it moves acts knows this Creation of the World as certainly as it doth things cognoscible by the senses or those whereof we have intuitive or demonstrative Knowledg 3. Yet we know it by Faith which is a divine and supernatural Light and elevates Reason above it's natural Sphere Faith sometimes by a Trope is taken for the Rule of Faith which is the Word and Revelation of God The proper Act of this word is to represent and this Representation may be made either outwardly or inwardly in the Soul so as to inform it and that either immediately which is Inspiration or mediately which is a more imperfect Disciplination When the Soul is once informed it receives the Impression knows the thing represented and assents unto it and this assenting Knowledg is a vital Act. The thing here represented is such as Reason by it's natural Active Power cannot reach therefore this divine Representation is necessary as a supernatural Light which by the
no Son to be a Son So he was called is that he was chosen and adopted which kind of Filiation is accounted good in Law by the Consent of Nations Yet there is another thing which may be signified by this word called that is he was not only so called by her but so accounted called honoured by others God had made her an Instrument not only of his Preservation but his excellent Education Honour and high Advancement 3. Yet he refused to be called her Son It 's not meant that he was base and unthankful as not acknowledging her tender Compassion towards him when he was ready to perish or her singular Love to him and special care of him manifested in his Education and Advancement No doubt he did account her as his best friend under Heaven and his greatest Benefactrix under God and he did give her all Respect and Honour due unto her as his Mother His own natural Mother might have been willing but was no wayes able to do so much for him This Refusal therefore was no unworthy Incivility Disrespect or base Ingratitude but a free and noble Act of his divine and sanctified Soul whereby he being illuminated from Heaven did see the baseness uncertainty and danger of that great Estate of Honour Wealth Power and rare Contents of the World and did judge the Enjoyment of it if not inconsistent with yet prejudicial to his spiritual and eternal Happiness And upon this account he was willing to part with them for a better end and a great good Whilest we are seeking the eternal Bliss of Heavens Kingdom we must be willing to part with and forsake all things even the most delicious and glorious though we affect them much In this Case we must not only forsake Sin but such things which at other times upon other occasions we may justly love and lawfully enjoy Isaac must be sacrificed if God command it and Christ himself for a time must lay aside his Glory if it be the Will of God that he should sacrifice himself upon the Cross Whosoever loves not Jesus Christ above all more than his Life more than himself he cannot be Christ's Disciple nor expect Salvation and eternal Life by him This was not the Spirit of the World for most men will rather refuse to be called the Sons of God that they might be the Sons of Pharoah's Daughter and advanced in Princes Courts than refuse to be called Pharoah's Sons that they might be the Disciples of Christ and Sons of God Man devoid of Grace and heavenly Wisdom is strongly bent and strongly inclined to the Glory Honour Wealth and Delights of this World they seem so glorious and taste so sweet that they much take the Soul they promise some rare Content and perfect Happiness Therefore men seek and pursue them eagerly hoping and expecting much from them and if they once are possessed of them and enjoy them Oh! How unwilling are they to part with them They prefer them before Heaven and the eternal felicity thereof The young man who so much desired to enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and yet refused to receive it upon our blessed Saviour's terms is an Example universally to be remembred and considered for it plainly tells us that to part them and the heart of Man once strongly affected with them is impossible to any created Power and only possible to the Almighty Power of God Hence it doth appear how highly elevated and how excellently qualified the Soul of Moses was who could so fully and freely refuse to be called the Son of Pharoah's Daughter This perhaps was not done without some great Conflict the issue whereof was a clear and glorious Victory 4. This mighty turn and change was made in Moses when he came to years of Age. The distinct and particular Year of his Age when he made this Refusal is not mentioned As for Instruction or Example for any such heavenly vertue it was not likely he should find any such thing in the Court of an Heathen Prince It might be that he might have some concealed Converse with his Parents or his Brethren in whom that Heavenly aspiring Spirit which was in Abraham Isaac Jacob might remain These might inform him of some divine and saving Truths and of that Seed in whom all Nations should be blessed yet in the midst of so many Temptations these could work little upon him Therefore it is to be presumed that as Abraham so he was Partaker of the heavenly Call and this did enable him to make this noble Resolution Howsoever it was with him yet we are born and bred up in the Church upon whom the Light of the Gospel doth continuallp shine and at the door of whose hearts Christ stands continually knocking should learn this Lesson betimes We having so many helps and means of Conversion should consecrate our tender years and much more the slower and time of our riper dayes unto God But wo unto us because we will not know the day of Visitation and the things which belong unto eternal Peace we are worse than the Ox that knows his Owner and the Ass which knows his Master's Crib than the Turtle the Swallow and the Crane which know their times and yet we do not know our God we do not know our Saviour § 24. This was his Self-Denial after which the Apostle informs us of his bearing the Cross Where we must consider 1. His Choice 2. The Ground of it 1. His Choice was rare and wonderful for he chose the Cross Two things indeed were proposed unto him 1. The Suffering of Affliction with God's People 2. The Enjoyment of the pleasures of Sin for a season The one was sweet and in present Possession the other bitter Yet if we consider the Society and Company with whom he must suffer they were the People of God but the other were cursed profane Wretches So that if he look at the Company the Choice was easily made yet if he compare Afflictions and present Sufferings with present pleasures and the Enjoyment of them it would prove very difficult to forsake the sweet and pitch upon the bitter And here we must observe 1. That Self-Denial and bearing the Cross do go together 2. That to refuse to be called the Son of Pharoah's Daughter and to for sake the Enjoyment of the pleasures of Sin and the Riches of Aegypt were the same and he that refuseth the one must forsake the other The matter will be more plain if we reduce this Text to Propositions in this manner 1. God's People suffered Afflictions 2. He was willing to suffer with them 3. He was willing rather to suffer with them than to enjoy the pleasures of Sin for a season 1. By People of God in this place may be understood the Israelites who at that time were the only Nation in Covenant with God and were his People in a special manner and then under grievous Afflictions by reason of the Cruelty of the Aegyptian King Yet this
of All and many great miseries for his sake and continued faithful in the Covenant of their God 4. They did all this by Faith For they believed the Word of God to be true rested in his promises exspected the great Reward and were assured that it was better to suffer Affliction for a while then lose the eternal Comforts of their God § 38. Thus the Catalogue and Induction of these rare Worthies is finished and by it we understand the universal necessity of Faith and the excellency of it in the rare Effects thereof and the Chapter is closed up thus Ver. 39. And these all having obtained a good Report through Faith received not the Promise Ver. 40. God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect IN these words we may observe the difference of the Times wherein these Worthies and those wherein the Apostle and these Hebrews lived with the imperfection of the one and the perfection of the other In the former Verse we have a Rhetorical Epanalepsis and a elegant Repetition of the main Proposition which the Author intended to prove by Induction For he had said ver 2. That by Faith which he had described the Elders obtained a good Report This he repeats again in this manner These all having obtained a good Report through Faith The propositions are two 1. The forementioned Elders obtained a good Report through Faith 2. Yet they received not the Promise In the first we must consider 1. The parties intended 2. Their good Report 3. The means whereby they obtained this good Report These things were formerly spoken of and therefore I may be brief 1. The persons formerly said to be the Elders that is the Saints who lived in former time This was a general term which is here more explicitely limited and enlarged by pointing at the particular persons The words are all these by these are meant Abel Enoch Noah Abraham and the rest by name expressed or some other wayes implyed All this note of universality puts them all and every one together without exclusion or exception of any one 2. These all these obtained a good Report and had their Testimonials To be witnessed is to be commended and well spoken of by a Synechdoche as you formerly heard The person who approved and testified of them was God and that in the holy Scriptures and Records of former times and they must needs be good whom God doth commend All expressed by name are spoken of expresly and particularly in the Canonical Writings of the Old Testament and some others not named at all The rest who lived after the Canon was finished are also in the Canon commended implicitely and by undoubted Consequence For when God approves any Virtues and virtuous Acts he approves all such as are endued with those Vertues and manifest them in their lives and conversation 3. The means whereby they became so famous and of so good report was their Faith For without it they neither could have pleased God nor done so rare and glorious Works nor obtained so great Promises nor suffered with patience so great tryals and afflictions Faith was the fundamental Virtue in them all and the very principle of all their divine Actions and Sufferings These obtained a good Report yet received not the Promise For 1. They had a Promise 2. They received it not 1. By Promise understand something promised which upon God's Promise made to them they expected What this was is doubted by many some will have it to be the Resurrection some the Deliverance out of Limbus where it 's imagined their Souls were lodged till Christ descended into Hell and brought them out of that Lake As for the former opinion if understood of the universal Resurrection it may be true As for the latter it presupposeth divers things which yet were never proved and therefore it 's no matter or fit object of a divine Faith it 's a meer fiction and no better This is very certain and clear out of Scripture that they all had a Promise of Christ to be exhibited and this was the great Promise the foundation and chief corner-stone of their Faith No Faith but in him could please God or give sinful man any hope of eternal Glory 2. This Promise they received not for though it be said before ver 33. That many of them received Promises and it 's true they did so yet Christ was not exhibited in their times they all dyed before the Incarnation Passion Death and Glorification of Christ The Word made Flesh. This signifies both the imperfection of those Times and of their Faith for they believed indeed in Christ and by that Faith were justified and saved yet their Faith was in Christ to come and could not be so full and clear as that of the Saints under the dispensation of the Gospel And the Redemption of Christ to come was fore-seen and fore-accepted of God and was effectual to all Believers from the beginning Yet this doth manifest the excellency of Faith in that it was so effectual in these Saints before the exhibition of Christ and doth much commend these Saints who seeing Christ represented unto them at so great a distance yet did so firmly believe in him and by that Faith did effect so glorious Works and so constantly endured so many Afflictions And here one thing specially is to be noted that is that the Faith whereby they obtained a good Report was not a meer speculative assent but a divine lively powerful working Faith Such must ours be or else we can never certainly expect eternal life This condemns many of us living in the times and light of the Gospel For some of us have no Faith some have only a speculative liveless Faith some have only a weak Faith and come far short of these Worthies Yet we have their example and enjoy a clearer Light Thus far concerning the times wherein these Saints lived 3. In the next place follows God's benignity and favour unto us who live in the dayes of the Gospel For God hath provided some better thing for us that without us they should not be made perfect Where we have two Propositions 1. God provided some better thing for us 2. They were not made perfect without us In the former observe 1. Some better thing 2. The same provided by God for us This better thing is the exhibition of Christ and the revelation of the Gospel which made the latter times more perfect and more happy The truth of this appears 1. By that Halelujal● which the Angels sung at Christ's Nativity when they brought the News thereof from Heaven Luke 2. 13 14. 2. By words of our Saviour who turning unto his Disciples said privately Blessed are the Eyes which see the things that ye see For I tell you that many Prophets and Kings have desired to see the things which ye see and have not seen them and to hear the things which ye hear and have not
men For as we must love all men even Strangers Enemies and Persecutors so we must have peace with all yet so far as this concord agrees with the Laws of God For we must agree with no person in that which is evill and we must have a special care to agree with the best If we differ from any man in that which is lawful we offend This peace presupposeth society and is the bond that knits together multitudes 3. We must follow peace as one that followeth and pursueth some thing running from him for to take it it 's the same with that Exhortation Seek peace and pursue it Psal. 34. 14. The phrase implies that it is a very difficult thing to have peace with a few much more with all For we find that true That when we are for Peace and speak for it most men are for War Psal. 120. 7. The means whereby we may lay hold of it according to the advice of the Psalmist is to eschew Evil and do Good to keep our Tongues from Evil and our Lips from speaking Guil. For we must not comply with any person in his Errours or his Sin nor neglect to reprove him or oppose him in his iniquity for our own quiet Yet to be just and merciful and kind is a good and lawful means and very effectual to obtain peace And in this way we must do what we can and use all diligence and if the issues answer not our defires and endeavours we have done our Duty and discharged our Conscience God doth not bind us to impossibilities For the Command is not absolute but given with this Proviso If it be possible as much as in you lieth live peaceably with all men Rom. 12. 18. The sum of all is this We must give no just occasion or cause of difference to any person but use all lawful wayes and just means to procure peace Secondly We must follow holiness c. where we have 1. The Duty which is holiness 2. The Reason why we should perform it and that is because without it no man shall see the Lord. Some think these words are added to limit and direct our pursuance of peace wherein we must be so innocent as not to offend our God Some think holiness to be sincerity in the religious Service and Worship of our God For all Worship even of the true God is unholy if not performed with a sincere heart which being washed in the Blood of Christ and sanctified with the Spirit out of love to God hates Sin and endeavours to avoid it The principal subject of Holiness is the will and heart of man and it is a qualification whereby it 's conformed and made like to God It is the supernatural light beauty and purity of the Soul and purifies all acts and operations both inward and outward It 's that whereby we devote and consecrate our selves to God and have union and communion with him It 's opposed not only to profaness but hypocrisy and iniquity This holiness we must follow and pursue for it 's a difficult thing as to follow peace with all men so to be holy and the greater the difficulty the greater must be our care not only to be but to continue holy 2. The Reason hereof is because without it no man shall see God This implies 1. That God may be seen 2. That without holiness he cannot be seen 3. That by holiness this happiness may be obtained 4. That because without holiness it cannot and by holiness it may be obtained therefore we must follow holiness with God as we do peace with Man The three first are absolute 1. To see God as many understand it is immediately and clearly to behold God's Glory which is a priviledg reserved for Heaven Thus to see him is that which they call intuitive Knowledg and beatifical Vision from which unspeakable joyes and eternal delights do ever issue Yet it 's an Hebrew expression and signifies to enjoy therefore to see God is to enjoy him and have some special union and communion with him and derive some happiness from him either by Grace in this Life and Glory in the Life to come 2. This communion cannot be obtained without holiness For all Communion presupposeth union all union agreement and without holiness there can be no agreement no union no communion with God For he is holy and requires holiness in all them that draw near unto him for to worship him He is Light and in him is no Darkness that is He is pure and perfectly holy and as there is no fellowship of Light and Darkness so they who walk in Darkness and are polluted with Sin can have no fellowship with him So that without holiness we are not capable of fellowship with him 3. By holiness we may see him and enjoy him and according to the measure of our holiness is the measure of our enjoyment The more holy we are the nearer fellowship we have with him and derive more joy and comfort from him That by this holiness this sight and enjoyment may be obtained is evident from Christ's words Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God 4. Seeing there can be no vision or fruition of God without holiness therefore our Duty is to be holy as God is holy for that 's the Duty urged upon this ground The reason why it 's not said by holiness we may see God but without hol●ness we cannot see God is to signify the necessity of this purity as a means without which this blessed fruition cannot be attained Every one that knows how blessed a thing it is to be near unto our God and converse with him doth purify himself as he is pure 1 Joh. 3 3. And it highly concerns us all to keep our hearts right with God and this should be our chiefest work in this Life as we desire to have Communion with God here or see his Face in the Light of eternal Glory by Repentance and Faith in Christ's Blood and constant prayer for sanctification to cleanse our hearts from all impurity For the more pure we are the more capable we shall be of this great benefit and when we are once fully purified we shall be admitted into his glorious presence and enjoy him for evermore And this must be a certain principle That he that will be happy as God is must be holy as he is § 14. That they might continue holy the Apostles Exhortation is Ver. 15. Looking diligently lost any man fail of the Grace of God lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble you and thereby many be defiled THese words may be understood either of private care and vigilancy of one over another or of publick Discipline and the end of both especially of the latter is to prevent Apostacy and Scandal And here are observable 1. Some Danger or Evil to be prevented 2. The prevention of the same The Evil seems in this Text to be Apostacy in the next Scandal If we
Method of the Apostle is this 1. He compares the Law and the Gospel 2. By this Comparison manifests the excellency of the Gospel above the Law 3. From this manifested he inferrs the Duty They must not reject the Gospel and fall away 4. He urgeth the Performance of the Duty from the severe and terrible Punishment which must be suffered by such as perform it not So that from the 18th Verse to the 25th we have the Doctrine and in the 25th the Use. This Argument hath great Affinity with that we find used Chap. 2. 2 3. § 19. This being the Coherence whereby the Scope of the Apostle may be understood Let us consider the words themselvs wherein we may observe the Doctrine concerning 1. The Law 2. The Gospel 3. Their passing from the one to the other 4. The Use to be made of it In the first we have 1. The Manner of Promulgation 2. The fear it caused in Israel and Moses 3. Their freedom from it According to these three things we have three Propositions 1. The Promulgation of the Law was terrible 2. Being terrible it caused both Israel and Moses to fear exceedingly 3. These Hebrews were freed from this Law 1. For to understand the manner of Promulgation we must know the place and that in general was a Mountain in particular Sinai a Mountain in Arabia the Desert This Mountain is said to be palpabilis tactilis touchable or which may be touched that is it was visible and sensible a Mountain bodily accessible though not at that time and on Earth This is added to put a difference between this Hill and the spiritual Zion which is sometimes called Heaven from whence the Gospel was revealed therefore when Christ revealed the Gospel it 's said he spake from Heaven whereas when God gave the Law on the Mountain he is said to speak on Earth Ver. 25. This place was not terrible in it self but at this time because of the Fire wherewith it burned at that time For some Mountains where there are Vulcans as upon Vesuvius Aetna Hecla the Pike of Tenariff and many in America and other places of the Earth to burn with Fire is usual But this Burning was extraordinary at this time for the Mountain then did burn with fire Deut. 5. 23. yea it did burn with fire up to the midst of Heaven Deut. 4. 11. as though Heaven and Earth had been on a flame And this was some resemblance of that dreadful Fire which shall consume the combustible World at the latter day The flaming Fire gave Light but there was Blackness and Darkness which might be caused by thick Clouds and Smoak which covered the Mountain for ●as before it burnt with Fire unto the midst of Heaven with Darkness Clouds and thick Darkness Deut. 4. 11. For Mount Sinai was altogether on a Smoak because the Lord descended upon it in Fire and the smoak thereof ascended as the Smoak of a Furnace and the whole Mount quaked greatly Exod. 19. 18. There were also Thundrings and Lightnings and the Noise of the Trumpet and the Mountain smoaking Chap. 20. 18. This was a Type of that utter Darkness of Hell Besides there were Tempests and terrible Storms a Sign of God's fearful Indignation which shall fall upon the Wicked The Sound of the Trumpet and the Voice of words did encrease the terrour for the Voice of the Trumpet was exceeding loud Exod. 19. 16. And all the People saw the Thundrings and the Lightnings and the Sound of the Trumpet Chap. 20. 18. This Trumpet did summon the People to appear before the Lord and did prepare them for to receive the Law and to hear their doom if they should transgress it As this was a Legislative so there shall be a Judicial Trumpet to convent the whole World to appear before the Judgment-seat of Christ An Arch-Angel shall sound the Trumpet and the Noise shall be loud and miraculous When the People were prepared on the third day the Trumpet sounded and then followed the Voice of words for God condescending to the Capacity of Man gave the Law out of the midst of the Fire and spake in an audible Voice in the Language of that People that they might understand it As the Sound of the Trumpet so the Voice of God was loud majestick terrible like Thunder so that the Words or Commands of the Law were dreadful not only in respect of the Sound but the Matter This dread and terrour did appear in two things 1. In this that they that heard entreated that the word should not be spoken to them any more for they said to Moses Speak thou with us and we will hear but let not God speak with us lest we dy Exod. 20. 19. And again they said Now therefore why should we dy for this great Fire will consume us If we hear the Voice of the Lord our God any more we shall dy Deut. 5. 25. Let me not hear again the Voice of the Lord my God neither let me see this great Fire any more that I dy not Chap. 18. 16. 2. They could not endure it and this is evident from their fear of Death And if Israel could not endure this Voice of the Law-giver and the sight of the Lord how will Wicked men endure to see Christ come from Heaven in flaming Fire and to hear his Sentence Go ye cursed into everlasting Fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels the most dreadful words that ever God spake or Man did hear or shall hear The terrour was yet greater for there was a Line drawn and a Range sixed to keep both Man and Beast at a Distance from the Mount and Moses was commanded to set these bounds before-hand to the People and if either Man or Beast came within the Range they were stricken dead instantly by Lightning or Thunderbolts The Reasons why this Law was given in this manner are many as 1. To signify the Majesty of the Supream Lawgiver and that they inight know that the Laws given were not the Laws of men but of the great Lord of Heaven and Earth And the more clearly he did manifest himself the greater Authority the Law must needs have 2. Great and weighty things are done with greatest solemnity and the more the solemnity is the greater Impression is made upon mens hearts 3. Seeing the very Promulgation and giving of the Law was so dreadful how dreadful must the Transgression be this was a mighty Motive to incline them to Obedience Therefore Moses said that God was come to prove them and that his fear might be before their faces that they sin not Exod 20. 20. 4. This did let them know that little Comfort was to be expected from that Law which did so strictly command and ministred no Power to obey had no Promise of Pardon therefore they should more earnestly desire and look for that great Prophet by whom God would speak unto them more comfortably and by whom they might have free access and
boldness to come before the Throne of Grace made accessible by his Blood This was a Law or Covenant rather of Justice than of Mercy of Fear than of Hope of Servitude and Bondage rather than of Liberty It was made to discover Sin to make it exceeding sinful to be a School-master to Christ. 2. This was the terrible manner of Promulgation the Effect whereof was fear and terror and the same very great and exceeding and that 1. In the People as we heard before who could not endure either the Voice or the strict Commands and Comminations They endured it a little but could endure no longer for fear of present death 2. And that which was more in Moses for so terrible was the sight that Moses feared did quake did fear and quake exceedingly and he said so and expressed his great fear And how terrible must that sight be which did strike such a terrour into a man so holy of such a constant Spirit so familiarly acquainted with God and who alone at that time should comfort and encourage the People That Moses said thus we do not read yet that which is affirmed by a man inspired as inspired must needs be true 3. They were not come to this Mount to receive so terrible a Law but they were freed from all these Terrours and from the Curses threatned and had received the Spirit of Adoption and therefore there was no reason why they should fall off to Judaism and return to that dreadful Mount and consuming Fire any more § 20. Thus far of the terrour of the Law the condition of such as were under it and the freedom of these Hebrews from it Now follows the condition of them as freed from the Law and living under the Gospel Before their Conversion they were in Minority Servitude and continual Fear but since they are in a more happy condition as being translated into the Kingdom of God's dear Son wherein they enjoyed incomparable Priviledges spiritual Liberty and many sweet Comforts To understand all this the Apostle saith Ver. 22. But ye are come unto Mount Zion the City of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and an innumerable Company of Angels IN these words and those which follow unto the five and twentieth Verse we may observe 1. A Description of a spiritual and eternal Kingdom 2. The Enjoyment of or rather the Admission into the same In the Description some observe 1. The Place 2. The Persons of this Kingdom The Place is Zion the City of the Living God the new Jerusalem The Persons are Subjects Soveraign The Subjects are Angels Men. Living Departed The Soveraign is God the King and Judg. Christ the Priest and Mediator There was a certain Place and certain Persons and they were come unto this Place these Persons Here we have a Zion a City a Jerusalem this Zion is a Mount this City is the City of the living God this Jerusalem is the heavenly Jerusalem Zion the Mount the City of the Living God the heavenly Jerusalem here are the same and they may signify the Place or the Persons or the Association of Persons in such a Place and they may signify grammatically and properly or Rhetorically and Tropically Grammatically Zion opposed to Sinai is a Mount in Jerusalem where was first a Fort of the Jebusites then the Royal Palace of King David who adorned it with other Buildings and thence it was called The City of David On the North of this Mount some say the Temple was built and because that was the Palace and Throne of God therefore according to some Writers it was styled The City of the great King and because God did choose that place for his special presence it had the Name of The City of the Living God Shindler observs that the whole City was called Jerusalem in the Dual Number because it had two parts the one was the City of David on Mount Zion the other the City of Vision on Moriah which afterwards was inclosed But not to stand upon these things Zion and Jerusalem are taken for one City which God in former times did honour above all Cities in the World Therefore sung the Psalmist Why leap ye ye high Hills This is the Hill which God desireth to dwell in yea the Lord will dwell in it for ever Psal. 68. 16. For by God's special Residence in this place it was advanced above all other Cities of the Earth though never so magnificent But this was her greatest Glory That Christ the Son of God was presented there preached there and there did glorious Works there the Holy Ghost came down from Heaven upon the Apostles there the Gospel began first to be preached and thence it came out into all the World According to the Prophecy of old it came to pass for so the Evangelical Prophet wrote And in the last dayes it shall come to pass that the Mountain of the Lord's House shall be established in the top of the Mountains and exalted above the Hills and all Nations shall flow unto it And a little after for out of Zion shall go forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem Isa. 2. 2 3. Where by Law and the Word of God understand the Doctrine of the Gospel This is the Grammatical sense Rhetorically Zion and the City of Jerusalem often signify the Church Militant and Triumphant by reason of God's spiritual and supernatural presence and habitation in the same If we consider this Church locally the place of our Pilgrimage is the Earth the place of our Rest and perpetual Abode is Heaven from whence we receive our spiritual Being where we must converse and whither we tend in these respects Heaven may be said to be the place whither upon our first Conversion we come The Persons which make up this Body and the spiritual Inhabitants are more intended by this Zion and this City yet they cannot make up this Politick Body Society and Common-weal but as associated under their Soveraign God-Redeemer And to distinguish this Zion and City of Jerusalem from that which was on Earth situate and lying in the Land of Canaan in the Tribe of Judah and Benjamin this is said to be The heavenly Jerusalem which is above and the Mother of us all which one day shall come down from Heaven as a Bride prepared for her Husband and God who dwells in her by Grace shall then dwell in her by Glory and bless her fully and for ever To come to this City and Kingdom is to be admitted and incorporated into the same upon our sincere Faith in Christ. In this City we find many Persons amongst whom the most eminent are the Angels those holy immortal and blessed Spirits of Heaven who ever see the face of God and environ his glorious Throne These are not few but many for they are an innumerable Company or Multitude for the Chariots of God are twenty thousand even thousands or many thousands of Angels Psal. 68. 17. The number of the Angels
and now again in these last dayes then by Moses and the Prophets now by Christ his Son 2. That when he gave the Law and made the former Covenant he spake on Earth upon Mount Sinai but when he spake by Christ he spake from Heaven for he came from Heaven returned to Heaven again and from Heaven sent down the Holy Ghost upon the Apostles and by that Spirit in them revealed the Gospel 3. That some Sins are more hainous than others and the more hainous the Sin is the more heavy the Punishment will be 4. That to refuse God speaking on Earth was a grievous Sin and deserved a grievous Punishment and so to refuse him speaking from Heaven is a great Sin and renders the Refuser liable to fearful Punishment 5. That the latter is a more grievous Sin than the former and deservs a greater Punishment These things presupposed the Reason is clear and we must in any wise take heed of rejecting or renouncing the Gospel because if they who transgressed the Law given on Earth were severely punished then they if guilty of a far greater Sin as all such are who refuse the Gospel revealed from Heaven then they must suffer a far greater Penalty and no wayes could they escape it This differs something from the Argument used Chap. 2. 2 3 c. for that compares the Law delivered by Angels with the Gospel spoken and confirmed by Christ and the excellency of Christ above the Angels is the ground of his Argument But here God's speaking on Earth by Angels is compared with God's speaking from Heaven by Christ and here the Excellency of Heaven from whence the Gospel was revealed above the Earth where the Law was given is made the Foundation of the Reason And God by giving the Law on Earth and the Gospel from Heaven did intimate that there was some Excellency in the Gospel which was not in the Law in the new Covenant which was not in the old otherwise God could have revealed them both on Earth or both from Heaven Let us apply this unto our selvs and consider 1. Who speaks unto us 2. What he speaks 3. From whence he speaks 1. It 's not Man but God not Moses but Christ The Law indeed was by Moses but Grace and Truth by Jesus Christ. The Majesty and Power of him who speaks is such as Angels are bound to attend and obey with all humble Submission and shall we Worms nay Dust and Ashes refuse to hear this glorious Lord 2. The Matter that he speaks and we hear is the best the most sweet the most comfortable and the most excellent never better things seen or heard or understood by the Heart of Man The Gospel is a Doctrine of profoundest Wisdom of greatest Love and Mercy and of highest Concernment and most conducing to our everlasting good And shall we reject it Shall we sin against so great a Majesty so great a Mercy Sins against the Mercies of God so freely tendred to us in Jesus Christ are the most hainous of all others Let us tremble to think of these Sins and those Punishments which they must suffer that are guilty of them 3. He speaks from Heaven for the Gospel is a Mystery hid from the beginning of the World and was brought unto us from the Bosom of the Father by his only begotten Son and by the Holy Ghost it 's the clearest manifestation of God's deepest Counsels concerring Man's eternal Estate and of his greatest Love to sinful Wretches the brightest Light that ever shined from Heaven yet we hear it and most men regard it not but reject it to their everlasting Woe § 24. The Apostle draws to a Conclusion and urgeth Perseverance by another Argument in the words following Ver. 26. Whose Voice then shook the Earth but now he hath promised saying Yet once more I shake not the Earth only but Heaven also Ver. 27. And this Word Yet once more signifieth the removing of those things that are shaken as of things that are made that those things which cannot be shaken may remain GOD shook the Earth when he gave the Law and from this shaking the Authour takes occasion from the words of Haggai to prove the Immutability of the Gospel and the Administration of Christ's Kingdom In the Text the Proposition concerning this Immutability is 1. Cleared 2. Applyed in the two last Verses of the Chapter In the first he doth 1. Affirm the shaking of the Earth in giving of the Law 2. Alledgeth God's Promise of another shaking not only of Earth but Heaven 3. From that Promise he infers the Immutability of the Evangelical Administration The Propositions of the first part of the Text are two 1. That God then shook the Earth 2. That he that then shook the Earth promised to shake once more not only the Earth but Heaven also 1. God then shook the Earth The Adverb then points at the time of giving the Law on Mount Sinai for in the former Verse it 's said that he spake on Earth in the Hearing of all Israel That then he shook the Earth is the express words of the History Mount Sinai was all on a S●●ak and the whole Mount quaked greatly Exod. 19. 18. With this agrees that of the Psalmist When thou O God wentest before thy People when thou didst march through the Wilderness The Earth shook the Heavens also dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it self was moved at the presence of God the God of Israel Psal. 68. 7 8. The principal things then signified by this shaking the Mount and the Earth were two 1. The Alteration of the former Administration of the Church and 2. The Constitution of that Order which continued untill the times of the Gospel For 1. Then God made a great Alteration in the Kingdom of Aegypt divided the Red Sea and shook the hearts of men in several Nations 2. He reduced the People of Israel into a Polity both Civil and Ecclesiastical made a Covenant with them gave them Laws Moral Ceremonial Judicial ordained a Priest-hood instituted a Form of Worship to continue till the coming of the Messias Thus then he shook the Earth 2. He promised once more to shake not only the Earth but Heaven Where the Subject is Shaking and presupposeth one Shaking past and informs us of another and the same far greater The former was only of the Earth the latter of Heaven too This Shaking is the thing promised the Promise was made first the Performance followeth several hundred years afterwards The Promise we find in Haggai the Prophet the words are these For thus saith the Lord of Hosts Yet once it is a little while and I will shake the Heavens and the Earth and the Sea and the dry Land And I will shake all Nations and the Desire of all Nations shall come and I will fill this House with Glory saith the Lord Hag. 2. 6 7. Where we may observe 1. That the Occasion of these words was this the
People of Judah returned out of Captivity rebuilt the Temple and dedicated the same with great Joy yet so that many in this Solemnity did weep for the ancient People which had seen the former House built by Solomon knew that it was far more magnificent than this latter Temple which was no wayes comparable to the former God to comfort these dejected Jews makes a Promise to make this latter House far more glorious than the former by the coming of Christ who should honour it with his presence 2. That the Apostle neither follows the Hebrew nor the Septuagint precisely yet he takes that which was for his purpose and retains the sense and rather expounds than translates or cites the Prophet for ●ie signifies 1. That the words are a Promsse of God 2. That the Shaking promised and to come was greater than the former for then God's Voice shook the Earth but now he would shake not only the Earth but the Heavens 3. That the Earth the Sea the dry Land are the same and only different parts of the same Globe By all this we understand the mighty Power of God who by his Word and Voice can shake the Earth the Rocks the strongest Mountains who can shake not only Earth but Heaven who can make great Alteration in the World when he pleaseth yet the proud and stony Heart of Man is little moved at the word of this glorious God But for the more full Explication of the words of the Prophet we must consider what this shaking of Heaven and Earth is and how this was fulfilled 1. This Shaking is a Work of God whereby he makes great Alterations and Commotions in the World preparing for something to follow and in this he usually manifests his glorious Power and Wisdom Yet these Alterations are seldom made without some prodigious and miraculous Works and such as many times amaze and terrify mortal men Thus before the coming of Christ when this Promise was fulfilled there were many prodigious and dreadful Signs i● Heaven Earth the Sea before the Civil Warrs between Pompey and Cesar and that between Augustus and Brutus Cassius Lepidus Antony Upon these followed the Alteration of the Roman Government and an universal Peace At Christ's Birth the universal Enrollment was a great Commotion amongst men the Angels from Heaven singing and celebrating Christ's Nativity on Earth and the new Star seen of the wise men in the East and directing them to the place where Christ was born imply an extraordinary Commotion in Heaven When Christ suffered and dyed upon the Cross the Heavens were darkned the Earth did quake the Rocks were rent asunder and the Graves were opened and at his Resurrection there was an Earth-quake and a glorious Angel descended from Heaven so that even then the Earth and the Heaven were shaken and so they were before the Ruine and Destruction of Jerusalem But the principal performance of this Promise was the Alteration made by taking away the Law and bringing in the Gospel Then Heaven was shaken for Christ ascended entred sate down at the right hand of God began to reign and make Intercession the Angels and all the Holls of Heaven became Subject unto him and all Creature were at his Command Then the Earth was shaken for the Holy Ghost descended upon the Apostles the Gospel was preached to Jews and Gentiles the Law and Levitical Service and Priest-hood were taken away the Idolat●y of the Gentiles beaten down the Jews and Gentiles are converted and became Christian. So that this Shaking was an Alteration in Religion and in the Administration of Christ's Kingdom and it was universal in Heaven and Earth § 25. The latter part of the Text is a Discourse of the Apostle upon the words of the Propher wherein he 1. Takes notice of the word Yet once more 2. Informs us what it signifies and imports Yet once more hath no sense without the Verb I will shake which is therefore to be understood The Action is Shaking yet once more the Circumstance The meaning is I have once shaken the Earth and I will shake it again and not shake it but Heaven also and make a far greater Alteration yet I will but do this once and no more From hence in the second place the Apostle inferrs two things 1. That whatsoever was removed and abolished in this latter Shaking was removed for ever and 2. Whatsoever was then brought in must stand unalterable for ever This is that which the Apostle saith is signified by that word Yet once more If the words be reduced to Propositions they are these 1. There is a removing of things shaken as of things made 2. There are things which cannot be shaken which remain 3. The former things were removed that the latter might remain 4. All this was signified by the word of God's Promise Yet once more 1. There is a removing c. 1. We have things shaken The things are the Levitical Law Priest-hood Tabernacle Service and the Administration of God's Kingdom under the Law and the first Covenant These things were shaken moved and altered yet an Alteration may be of the Substance or Accidents of the thing but this was of the Substance for they were so moved that they were removed the very Substance and Being of them was so changed that they were wholly taken away for as one Law may be so made as to repeal and wholly abrogate another so the Gospel and the Administration of Christ were so brought in by God as they took away and wholly abolished the Law It 's further said that there was a removing of these as of things made which some do so understand as though the things made were the Tabernacle or Temple with all the Utensils of both which though they were made according to the Pattern in the Mount yet were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things made with hands and but Shadows of far better things which once exhibited these must needs vanish Yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may signify things finished and past never to return again The Hebrew wo●d 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is very often turned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth signify to destroy suppress and make an End of 2. There were things which could not be shaken which remained Things not shaken or moved are the Gospel and the manner of the Administration of Christ's Kingdom after his sitting at the right hand of God These are not shaken nor altered either in part or whole in Substantials or Accidentals but they remain in full force and shall so continue unto the End No other Doctrine Manner of Worship Order in Heaven or Earth or Administration must be expected for the Christian Religion shall continue to the End till time shall be no more and this was God's purpose in the bringing in of these things 3. The former things were removed that these might be introduced and established When two things cannot stand together the one is removed that the other might take place and
this is the Case in particular The Law and the Gospel are inconsistent so is the Legal and Evangelical Administration and they cannot stand in force together therefore there is a necessity of nulling the one because otherwise the other cannot be established Now though the Law was suitable to former times of Minb●ity and Imperfection yet being imperfect and full of shadows there was great Reason it should be removed when the Substance of those shadows and that which was far more perfect was exhibited and there was a necessity of the removal of the former that way might be made for the latter as far more excellent This was the Reason why the Apostles especially Paul did labour so much not only to prove the Imperfection but to endeavour the Abolition of the Law after the Gospel was revealed from Heaven 4. This Removal of the Law to bring in the Gospel and a more perfect Administration was signified by that word of the Propher Yet once more For if God had said I will again shake Earth and Heaven and omitted the word once more then there had been in that Promise no ground of the Apostle's Inference to prove the stability and immutability of the Gospel But seeing the word yet once more is added his Inference was firm and valid and the Apostle knew that God's meaning was not basely this I will once more but I will once and no more and never again shake Heaven and Earth For from the Expression thus understood it doth necessarily follow that if in this one shaking he 〈◊〉 any thing that must needs stand firm for ever because there shall be no 〈◊〉 no Alteration in matter of Religion to the World's End This is a strong place against M●●●-nens and the cursed Innovators of all times § 26. Thus far the Doctrine concerning the Gospel and the Immutability of Christ's Kingdom hath been cleared the Application of it to these Hebrews follows Ver. 28. Wherefore we receiving a Kingdom which cannot be moved let ●● have Grace whereby we may serve God 〈◊〉 with reverence and godly fear Ver. 29. For our God is a consuming Fire THE illative Particle Wherefore doth inform us that these words follow upon the former as a Conclusion from the Premisses yet the Conclusion is not in the first words but those that follow If we consider the words in themselves we have 1. A Doctrine in the first words 2. An Use in those which follow The Use is an Exhortation wherein we may observe 1. The Duty exhorted unto which is To have Grace to serve God 2. The manner how we must serve God and that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and ●●dy fear 3. The Reason Because our God is a consuming Fire The Doctrine is this Paul and thsee Hebrews received a Kingdom which could not be moved and it 's first to be explained and the difficulty lies in this phrase of receiving a Kingdom For 1. There is a Kingdom 2. This Kingdom cannot be moved 3. They received it 1. There are many temporal Kingdoms but this is Spiritual and Divine The King is God the Administratour-General is Christ who in the administration of this Kingdom is so one with God that he is King as he is the Subjects believing Saints the rules of Goverment are the Doctrines of the Gospel the priviledges and benefits of this Kingdom are the blessings of Grace and Glory 2. This Kingdom cannot be moved or is not movable or alterable because Prince People Laws and Administration continue for ever The present manner of Administration shall not determine till God be all in all That it cannot be moved but remains stable you have heard before 3. They had received this Kingdom A Kingdom may be received either by a Prince to Govern it or by Subjects to be Governed the former is not the latter is intended For Subjects to receive a Kingdom may be either a Duty or a Benefit as a Duty it is to submit unto the Power and Laws of the Soveraign as a Benefit it is to be admitted as a Subject to enjoy the priviledges peace and happiness of the Kingdom Both may be here meant and the benefit presupposing the Duty fully and finally performed may be and shall be that we shall be Kings and Priests and reign with Christ for ever For the eminent and excellent estate of Glory following upon a final Victory over all Enemies even Death it self subdued is said to be a Kingdom This expression seems to be taken from that of the Prophet But the Saints of the most High shall take or receive the Kingdom and shall possesse the Kingdom for ever even for ever and ever Dan. 7. 18. The reason why here is mention of a Kingdom is because the former Discourse from ver 22. to this Text is concerning the excellent administration of Christ's Kingdom unto which God by his Grace and Calling upon their receiving of the Gospel had translated and admitted them § 27. This is the Doctrine the Exhortation followeth Where 1. The Duty is to have Grace to serve God Where we may observe 1. Grace 2. The having of this Grace 3. The having it to serve God 1. By Grace may be meant the Doctrine of Grace which is the Gospel so called Tit. 2. 11. 2. Faith and Belief 3. The profession of this Faith 4. The sanetifying power of the Spirit which all true Believers and Professors have and this presupposeth all the former or infolds them 2. To have this Grace is to have this sanctifying power and to hold it keep it exercise it more and more And though some Coples read it Indicatively we have yet most read it let us have that is let us hold it 3. The end why we must have and hold it is that we may serve God This implies that God is the Soveraign in this Kingdom and we are the Subjects and our duty is continually to serve our Lord and King To serve him is not only with all humility to adore his excellent Majesty but also sincerely wholly and absolutely to submit unto his power and obey his Laws This implies 1. That in this Kingdom we are not our own Masters or at liberty to do what we would But God is our Master and we are bound to obedience by his Laws 2. That without the Grace of God continued and held fast we cannot serve our God constantly without Grace we cannot serve him without Grace held fast we cannot serve him to the end 2. The manner how we must serve God is to serve him acceptably with reverence and goldly fear In general our Service must be acceptable in particular it must be reverence and godly fear which render it pleasing to God and without which it cannot be accepted Men may fear God that is perform some religious Service to God and yet it will not prove acceptable For some serve God and not with a pure and sanctified heart some serve God in outward Circumstantials and Rituals not in Substantials some serve
to submit our selves The parties who must perform this Duty are Christian People as having Rules over them they are the Flock under their Shepheards Subjects under their Governours The parties to whom the Duty must be performed are such as have the Rule over them who before were called Guides which taught unto them the Word of God and here such as watch over their Souls All this implies that they are Superiors Governours Officers and to distinguish them from Civil Magistrates they are said to be trusted with men's Souls not their Bodies and Estates these are Officers in the Church whether extraordinary or ordinary of what order ranck or quality soever if instituted by Christ yet ordinary are here chiefly meant These are called Ministers of the Gospel Elders Pastors Teachers Their work chiefly is in Word Prayer administration of the Sacraments These most be fitly qualified for knowledg life utterance and approved by such as being sufficient to judg of them are appointed by the Church for that work They should be such as against whom no exception can justy be taken And this is said to be their Vocation upon which usually follows Ordination by Imposition of hands a certain form of words and prayer These are acts of the Church designing and engaging fit persons but their power is from Christ All this is to be understood of ordinary Pastors These are the persons to whom the Duty is to be performed The duty is Obedience and Subjection Obedience presupposeth Commands and subjection Power The Commands must be done the Power must be acknowledged The Power is spiritual and from God for they are made Overseers of the Church by the Holy Ghost Act. 20. 28. And it 's so great that Christ plainly affirms That whosoever heareth and receiveth them heareth and receiveth Christ and God who sent Christ and he that despiseth them despiseth Christ and God who sent him Matth. 10. 40. Luke 10. 16. And this is true not only of the Apostles but of their Successors Yet this presupposeth that they do all things in their place according to their Commission from Christ and in his Name exercising their Power according to his Command 2. The Reasons are taken 1. From their Work 2. From their Account 1. Their work is to watch over their Souls and here we must take notice 1. That the subject of their work are mens Souls and the Soul is the principal and more noble part of man and here it 's to be considered as immortal and capable of an eternal estate of felicity or misery And here they are considered as in great danger of eternal punishment and the work of the Minister must be to prevent it so far as he can This is done by watching which is a Metaphor taken from a Shepheard or a Scout or Sentinel And whatsoever the one should do for his Sheep and the other for his Country to save and preserve them this he must do for the Salvation of mens Soul For mens Souls are as Sheep without a Shepheard wandring in the wayes of Sin in danger of Satan Hell and Death d●st●●ute of all necessary saving Blessings and all power either to direct or protect themselves And this Watching includes many works as instruction of the Ignorant reproof of the Guilty threatening the Stubborn strengthening the Weak comforting the Sorrowful directing all giving good example to all encouraging all praying for all To Watch is to do the whole work of the Ministry for Doctrine and Worship in the right dispensation of the Word and Sacraments Some understand by these Guides and Rulers all other Officers and Governours of the Church for Discipline but these may be other besides Ministers which are here principally intended Seeing these watch and that over their Souls and for their eternal Salvation to prevent their damnation they should be considered as most necessary of all other men and should be esteemed highly in love for their works sake People do little consider how great a blessing from God and happiness to Man good and faithful Ministers are but if they once find the power of their Doctrine and the comfort of the Spirit they prize them as Messengers and Angels sent from Heaven out of great mercy for their eternal good Yet the best are most hated of the Devil despised by Men reviled persecuted and sometimes martyred Yet we must not think this any strange thing seeing they called Christ Beelzebub and counted the Apostles the filth of the World and the off-scouring of all things But the insufficiency and infidelity of vicious lazy ambitious covetous Wretches though it may give some occasion of contempt cannot excuse the wickedness of the World in this particular 2. As Watching over mens Souls is the first reason so the second is taken from their Account which may be good or bad in respect of the Ministers or the People committed to their Charge where it 's to be observed that it may be good in respect of the Minister who hath been faithful and yet bad in respect of the People who have been disobedient Yet here the account is chiefly considered with reference to the People And it is two-fold 1. Good and made with joy which is profitable 2. Bad and made with grief which is unprofitable to the People This implies that Ministers as they receive power from Christ so they receive Mandates with Instructions and are deeply charged and wo unto Paul if he preach not the Gospel For such will be guilty not only of their own sins but of the Blood and Damnation of the Peoples Souls this is an heavy Charge This implies they are Stewards and the Flock is not their own but Christ's who trusted them in their hands and will call them to account and as they prove faithful or unfaithful so he will deal with them and punish or reward them more then other men and surely if we did remember this Account or loved Christ we would feed his Flock which cost him so dear even his own Life and Blood And the People should consider the expence of Christ's Blood the charge the study the pains the prayers of their faithful Ministers and this consideration should work much upon them and perswade them to obedience and submission because the performance of the Duty will end in the Ministers joy and their profit For as it is a great grief to their Guides to see the People impenitent and all their labour lost in respect of them so it is a matter of great joy to see them converted and brought into an estate of Salvation so that they can say These Souls I have gained and saved from Hell and can present them blameless as washed in the Blood of Christ before the Judgment-seat of God And as it is a joy to their Pastors so it is a profit and great advantage unto them for their joy shall end in the Peoples Salvation who will bless the Day that ever they hearkened to them and in receiving them received
that he was miraculously delivered and restored unto them for their great Comfort and the benefit of the Church And it 's certain many Prayers were made for Paul's Liberty when a Prisoner at Rome For they thought it a great Prejudice to the Gospel a Dammage to the Church and an hinderance of the Conversion of many Souls that so vigilant laborious faithful zealous and eminent an Apostle should be imprisoned and consined And Paul himself knew that his Liberty and his Presence would be both a great Comfort and also a Benefit not only unto these Hebrews but to many other Christians and Disciples Therefore he requests them as they desired the Comfort and Benefit of his presence amongst them upon his speedy Release to pray for him frequently and servently § 18. The next part of the Conclusion is the Apostle's Prayer Ver. 20. Now the God of all Peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus that great Shepherd of the Sheep through the Blood of the everlasting Covenant Ver. 21. Make you perfect in every good Work to do his Will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight through Jesus Christ to whom be Glory for ever and ever Amen THESE words are a perfect Prayer of which we have two principal parts 1. A Petition 2. A Doxology Yet these may be made four 1. The Compellation of the Party invocated 2. The Petition of the Party invocating 3. The Doxology 4. The Conclusion and Confirmation of the whole Yet the first and last of these four belong both to the Petition and Doxology To begin with the Petition which presupposing Adoration begins with the Compellation and goes on with the Petition In the Compellation we have a Description of God the Party prayed to and that is from his Titles 1. Of Peace and 2. Of Power He is first acknowledged the God of Peace as in another place the God of all Grace 1 Pet. 5. 10. The God of all Peace and Grace may be the same and that is a most gracious and loving God Yet if Peace be taken according to the Hebrew for perfect Happiness and the Enjoyment of all Blessings then the God of Peace is that God which is the Fountain of all Goodness and perfect full eternal Happiness yet such he is as a gracious God and loving Father reconciled and propitiated by the Blood of Christ. As he is a God of Peace so he is of Power and this Power is set forth by that glorious Work of raising Christ from the dead for therein was manifested the exceeding greatness of his Power according to the working of the s●●e when he raised Christ Ephes. 1. 19 20. The Party whom he raised was Jesus Christ whom he describes from his Relation to the Church to be the great Shepherd of the Sheep through the Blood of the everlasting Covenant Where we may observe 1. That there is the Blood of the everlasting Covenant 2. By or through this Blood Christ became the great Shepherd of the Sheep 3. God raised this great Shepherd from the dead 1. The Covenant is the Law and Covenant of Grace wherein God binds himself to sinful Man by excellent Promise upon the Conditions of Repentance and Faith to give him remission of all his Sins and everlasting Life Of this you have heard Chap. 8. This Covenant is everlasting because though the Covenant made with Israel in the Wilderness was abolished yet this is unalterable and shall continue for ever and by it and it alone the Called attain both the title and possession of the eternal Inheritance The Blood of this Covenant so called by Christ Mark 13. 22. Luke 22. 20. is the Blood of Christ which was shed as for other ends so for the confirmation of this Covenant And the Blood Death and Sacrifice of Christ confirmed the Covenant because it made it effectual and able to reach the end which was the eternal Salvation of sinful man For by this Blood being shed he satisfied divine Justice and made Sin remissible and merited the mercies promised the promises themselves the terms and conditions and power to perform them and by this Blood pleaded in Heaven upon the performance of the conditions he obtains actual Remission and in the end actual fruition of their eternal Inheritance The former Covenant with Israel was indeed confirmed with Blood of Sacrifices yet because that Blood could not expiate Sin and the Levitical High-Priest could not enter Heaven to plead any such expiatory Blood therefore that Covenant was not everlasting In respect of this Blood purging mens Consciences from dead Works Christ was made the Mediatour of the New Covenant of which you may see Chap. 9. 15. By this Blood therefore it is said That Christ is the great Shepheard of the Sheep For because Christ took upon him the form of a Servant and became obedient unto Death the Death of the Cross and shed his Blood therefore God exalted him and gave him a Name above every Name And therefore did his Father love him and made him an eternal Shepheard of the Sheep because he had laid down his life for his Sheep Joh. 10. 17. For this very cause his Father gave him Po●er over all Flesh that he might give eternal Life to as many as he had given him Joh. 17. 2. So that by this Blood he became the Shepheard the Great Shepheard For all the Prophets and the Apostles and Ministers of the Gospel are Shepheards yet so that they are but Servants under him the Sheep are not theirs but Christ's who bought them by his Blood And God raised him and made him Lord and the great and chief Shepheard of the Flock that he might keep them raise them up at the last Day and then give them everlasting life This Shepheard was raised by the mighty power of God who not only raised him From the Dead but made him King and Priest for ever that is the great and chief Shepheard This is more at large described Eph. 1. 19 20 21. to the end for that place doth expound this for one part For if we consider Christ in this place as the Object of God's almighty Power We may observe 1. His Humiliation 2. His Exaltation His Humiliation is signified by his Blood and Death whereby the new and everlasting Covenant is confirmed Thus humbled thus Dead he is the subject of God's almighty Power which did manifest it self 1. By raising him from the Dead 2. By making him the great Shepheard Lord and King advancing him above the Angels the Principalities Powers and Dominions of Heaven and all Names and Powers on Earth and gave him to be Head and Shepheard of the Church-Universal And the reason why the Apostle gives God these titles of Peace and Power and instanceth in the Resurrection and Exaltation of Christ as glorious Effects of this Power is because the continued sanctification and perfection of man once regenerate which is the thing desired in the Petition following depends
and Timothy together and enjoy their blessed Society 1. Timothy was set at Libetry Who this Timothy was both by Birth Education Office and Employment we we may easily understand from the Acts of the Apostles Paul's Epistles and especially from two written and directed to him in particular He was a Jew by his Mother a Christian by Paul's Conversion of him a Minister of the Gospel an Evangelist and an Assistant unto Paul in the Work of the Ministry and though he was but young yet he was eminent and famous in the Churches planted by Paul a Person of Integrity and Fidelity This Timothy was set at Liberty which implies that he was bound imprisoned or some wayes restrained of his Liberty but where and how is not expressed in Scripture Yet now he was set at Liberty God had delivered him out of the hands of his Enemies and they must know it as a matter of Joy and Comfort It was a sad thing that such a Man as Timothy so faithful so serviceable to Paul and the Church of God should be restrained and he knew that to hear and have certain Intelligence and from him that he was released must needs comfort and rejoice their hearts So also we when we hear of the Liberty and Peace of the Church and especially of pious and eminent Ministers should be glad and should render Thanks unto our God for so great a Mercy 2. Yet there was a further degree of Comfort for he gives them hope that as Timothy was ser at Liberty so he would come unto them shortly and would see them and give them a Visit in his own Person And not only Timothy but he himself would come with him and see them together with him that they might mutually comfort and rejoice one another and this Meeting and Society would be sweer To hear of their Liberty was good News but to be certified of their speedy coming together to see them was better God's Servants cannot alwayes converse together on Earth that Happiness is reserved for Heaven yet their hearts do rise and much rejoyce when they can see and enjoy one anther though but for a time § 21. The fifth part of the Close of this Letter is spent in Salutations Ver. 24. Salute all them that have the Rule even you and all the Saints They of Italy salute you THE Saulutations are 1. Of Paul 2. Of them of Italy For Paul and they of Italy were the Persons saluting and their Guides and the rest of the Saints were the Persons saluted True and hearty Salutations are an Expression of our Love and good Affection towards the Persons saluted and they are either of Persons present or absent When we salute Persons present we express our Affection by words of Peace Health Happiness and by Embracements or Kisses or both according to the Custom of the Time and Places But when Friends are absent we signify our good desires by Writing or words of Messengers and so embrace one another at a Distance There are some who are not capable of Salutation to whom we must not say God speed 2 Joh. 10. Some are capable but not of a Christian Salutation because not capable of spiritual Grace and Peace in Christ Yet these Salutations are Christian 1. From Paul a Christian to the Hebrews Christians 2. From the Saints and Christians of Italy to the Saints and believing Hebrews Paul is the first in sending Salutations the Persons by him saluted are 1. Their Guides or Ministers put in the first place because of their Office and Eminency 2. The People which by Profession of Faith in Christ their Baptism and Society with the Church were Saints The Persons saluting in the second place and that by Paul were they of Italy that is their Brethren Saints and Believers in Italy and of the Church of Churches in Italy the Persons saluted are the same saluted before To salute anciently amongst the Jews and Israelites was to wish Peace under the Gospel Grace and Peace The Syriack turns these words Desire ye the Peace of your Guides c. but he is singular These Salutations though good in themselvs are much abused and made words of Course and Custom or turned into Complements devoid of reall and hearty Love § 22. The last part of the Conclusion is a Benediction in these few words Ver. 25. Grace be with you all Amen THis is so a Salutation as that it is a Benediction pronounced with Apostolical Power and was effectual upon all such as are capable This is a Benediction proper to Paul and usually if not alwayes written with his own hand which then was well known in many Churches though the Epistle it self might be written by some other whom he used for his Scribe It is so proper unto him that we find it used by none other of the Apostles neither James nor John nor Peter nor Jude Only John doth conclude and shut up the Revelation with it but that was not written with Paul's own hand And by this in those times this Epistle might certainly be known to be his We use to salute one another at our first Meeting and also at our Parting which latter is called a Valediction So Paul in all his Epistles excepting this begins with Grace and Peace and that 's his Salutation and he ends this as all the rest with Grace and this is his Valediction and Benediction This Benediction we find sometimes briefer sometimes larger and the largest of all closeth up the second Epistle to the Corinthians and we must know that the briefest contains all the matter of the largest though not expresly The usual Blessing both of old and of latter times is The Lord be with you For if the Lord be not against us but for us and with us we must needs be so far happy yet the Lord may be with us and in Mercy many wayes but to be with us in the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is the highest and happiest degree of God's presence tending to our eternal Bliss Therefore the Apostle's Blessing is The Lord be with you all greater Blessing than this there cannot be By Lord is meant Jesus Christ our God-Redeemer whom the Father out of greatest Love sent to save us in whom and by whom we receive all spiritual Blessings which are signified by Grace which presupposeth here the Love of the Father the Redemption by Christ and the Communion of the Spirit the Effects of all which in us is Remission Reconciliation Adoption Sanctification heavenly Joy and Comfort For this Grace is sufficient to make us in time though by degrees fully and for ever happy And by Grace here is meant the continuance encrease and perfection of Grace This Grace he desired prayed for and pronounced upon them all as Believers for none but such are capable of it Amen is added to Petitions Doxologies Confessions and Benedictions as here it is to confirm his Benediction and to seal it up unto them The God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ be blessed for ever FINIS * Though the principal subject be the prophetical and sacerdotal office yet there is mention made several times of his Regal excellency b I take prophecy in a large sense * 1 Pet. 4. 22. * Beza upon the place Ver. 6 7 8 9 c. Ver. ● * He signifies 1. That the Hebrews had no reason to be offended with the death and humiliatiof Christ. 2. That this humiliation was no hinderance of but a means unto his exaltation and it was so ordered by the wisdom of God for the unspeakable benefit of man who ●ould ●ot he saved but by this being lower then the Angels * There is no need to distinguish between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between videre ●●d cernere † It may be a word which suited with the metaphor of a Cup wherein is contained some bitter po●ion which torments him who tasts of it Therefore Christ compares his sufferings to such a Cup ' when he saith Let this Cup passe from me Ver. 13. Ver. 14. * Therefore the Sacraments in publick Assemblies were called Exhortations * Many think that Priesthood is of Institution * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * The Aethiopick and Arabick have not the word Imposed Some Copies read not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Voluntas est ambulatoria * For we find the word Megillah taken for a Roll. Ezra 6. 2. Ezek. 2. 9 3 1 2 3. † The Psalmist seems chiefly to intend the Books of Moses which were written before his time * Yet in this the Apostle may allude to the purifications under the Law By Ceremonial understand Typical * 1 Cor. 15. 18. * Conscience may be taken for the Heart and the intention of the Heart