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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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Hell to our best friends to the end they may hate the one and escape the other Thus God doth in the Scriptures thus Christ often doth in his heavenly Sermons and useth this as a means to prevent their Damnation and promote their Salvation So that his former discourse was consistent both with Christian Charity and his good perswasion of them I am perswaded better things of you and such as accompany Salvation These words imply 1. That there were good things in them 2. He was perswaded of this The good things which in comparison of the former barrenness or fruitfulness in bringing forth briars and thorns and cursing and burning were better were 1. Their Qualification 2. Their Condition And they were better not because the other was good for they were not but very evil but because they were very good as the other were very bad This is a special kind of Phrase and Expression yet in some Languages ordinary yet it 's improper though elegant Some would call it a M●iosis which is when more is meant than is expressed and so it 's reducible to a Syn●chdochs Their qualification was from some heavenly vertues which did manifest themselvs in their practice their Condition was that of Salvation They were in the state of Salvation for their vertues were such as that by divine Ordination and Promise there was an inseparable Connexion between Salvation and them For Salvation and divine Graces go together in one Company the Graces go before Salvation follows after yet so that the Graces take hold of Salvation as the word in the Original signifies For such Christians as these Hebrews were have a present Right by Faith evidenced by the Works of Charity unto eternal life and Hope takes hold of it But what these vertues were we shall know from the next Verse 2. That these better things were in them the Apostle was perswaded that is he did not deny them no nor doubt of them but was confident of their good Qualification and Disposition § 10. Yet if a man be confident of another man's sincere Christianity he must have some ground sufficient for his confidence otherwise it 's vain and irrational Therefore he gives us the ground Ver. 10. For God is not unrighteous to forget your work and labour of Love c. The ground of his confidence concerning 1. Their qualification was his Knowledge of their Divine and Christian virtues 2. Concerning their condition was his Knowledg of God's Righteousness In the first we may observe 1. Their virtues 2. The manifestation of them so as that he might know them The virtues were Faith and Love Faith in Christ Love of the Saints Their Love is expresly mentioned your labour of Love their Faith is implied in that it was toward his Name There were other virtues for these could not be alone as their Patience in suffering of Afflictions for Christ's sake and that with joy and their hope of Glory Chap. 10. 34. The manifestation of these was in their work and labour in continuing to minister unto the Saints whereof he had certain Knowledge Here we are informed that Love will be working and labouring and ever bringing forth fruit and that is not real and sincere Love which is not such Therefore another Apostle exhorts us not to love onely in tongue but in truth and in deed 1 John 3. 18. And what it is to love in truth and indeed is signified in the 16th and 17th Verses going before it 's to give the lives of our bodies for them and relieve them with our goods it's a dying and giving Love And happy they which find this heavenly fire burning in their Souls But in most men though professed Christians we either find no Love or if any it 's but cold it will neither take pains nor be at Charge much less hazard life for the Brethren as Christ gave his life for us This love was fixed upon the suffering Saints who were persecuted for Christ's sake they were the speciall Object of it and this did argue their Love to God and their Faith in Christ without which this love could not have been truly Christian Therefore the Apostle joyns Faith in Christ and Love to all the Saints together Col. 1. 4. By all which we may understand that there is a Connexion of divine vertues For where one is in sincerity there all the rest are they cannot be seperated This work and labour in particular was their Ministration to the Saints Where we must enquire 1. What this Ministration is 2. To whom they did minister 3. How long they did minister 1. This Ministration was a work of Faith and Love whereby they used all just and effectual means in their power to preserve maintain comfort deliver the Saints persecuted and suffering 2. These Saints were Christians which suffered banishment imprisonment loss of Goods and other earthly Comforts for the Profession of their Faith in Christ. And by this Suffering were they known to be Saints Therefore this Love was not meerly natural nor meerly Moral but truly Christian Love and so denominated from the parties that loved who are such as that we are bound to love them above others and this Love is that whereby we may know that we are passed from Death to Life 3. The continuance of this Love was that they had ministred formerly in time past and now for the time present they continued this Work of Love for Christian Love is an immortal fire it will still burn and never dy This Ministration was a great evidence of their good Qualification and a good and firm ground of the Apostle's perswasion The ground of his perswasion concerning their good condition was the Knowledge of God's Righteousness For God is not unrighteous to forget your Work and Labour of Love This Proposition is Negative and includes the Affirmative which is That God is fighteous and will remember their Christian Faith Love and good Works And it 's delivered Negatively to signify the infallible certain truth of the Affirmative for in this Case the Negative is more peremptory and emphatical The ground it self is thus expressed his Knowledge of it is implyed But let 's consider 1. What it is for God here to forget or remember 2. What it is for him to be righteous or not unrighteous 1. God can forget nothing at any time but alwayes remembers all things and the reason of this is the perfection of his Knowledge which is infinite as he himself is Therefore to forget in this place is not to take notice of their vertues and actions so as to recompense them To remember is so to regard them as to render a Reward To reward is an Act of God as a Supream Judge The Righteousness of God is his distributive Justice and faithfulness in performing his Promise in judging according to his Law And this rewarding of his loyal and obedient Subjects is a proper Act of his judicial Justice for God is the universal Judge and is
an Acknowledgment of the Power and the receiving of the Command and it is a willing and free Observation of the Command The Superiour here is God who is the supream Lord Abraham is the Subject to come out of his Country is the Law and Command Abraham's coming out of his Country and that willingly as bound by God's Command is his Obedience And here it 's to be observed that except Man first submit unfeignedly unto God as his Supream Lord renouncing his own Will he can never sincerely obey For this voluntary total Submission is the ground of all Obedience and may be said to be the Observation of the fundamental Law of Allegiance which is required in the first Commandment upon which all the rest do depend Obedience in general is no particular Duty to be restrained to any particular Command exclusively for it extends to all 2. He went out not knowing whither he went In that he knew not whither he went it doth inform us of the total absolute Resignation of his Will and heart to God This high degree of Resignation and Submission is due only unto God as absolutely wise and just and infinitely merciful There be two parts of this Obedience 1. He went out 2. He knew not whither he went 1. He went out This was a difficult part of Obedience To forsake his Countrey Kindred Friends Inheritance which his heart did so much affect and dearly love and to renounce that Religion which he had learned and observed seems to be above natural Power To part the heart and that which it most loveth is a Work that cannot be performed without some mighty conflict and torment of the Soul to overcome our strongest Affections and so forsake our darling-sins is an Heroick and Divine Victory Yet this was done by him and must be done by us all if we will be saved To deny our selvs take up the Cross forsake Father Mother Wife Children Brother Sister and Life it self was first of all required by Christ as without which no Man could be his Disciple The Promise of eternal Life and Treasure in Heaven could not part the young man and his great estate and therefore he continued uncapable of eternal Bliss 2. As he came out so he went he knew not whither for the Command was that he should go unto a Land which God should shew him a Land he never knew for he neither knew it not the way unto it This made the business more difficult for he must depend wholly upon God for his Protection Assistance and Direction And when we leave our Sin we must come unto our God and when we forsake the World we must come unto our Saviour and though the way may be very rough and troublesom we must pass through it We must not take up our Rest untill we come unto our Canaan whither out God will bring us 3. This he did by Faith which without Faith was impossible to be be done For except he had certainly known that it was God who called him and believed God's Command and Promises he could not have obeyed so as to come out and go towards Canaan So that this Belief was the very principle of his Obedience without this Faith this Obedience had been not only irrational but impossible But God who was his absolute supream Lord did command him and as almighty and most faithful did promise him a great and glorious Reward which would abundantly recompense his Damages which he should suffer in obeying him and these did effectually move him and powerfully incline his heart to Obedience For God doth know what will work most strongly upon Man's heart and therefore by a divine Light and Inspiration penetrateth the heart and lets him assuredly know that he calls him to eternal Glory so that by this divine Vocation Faith is produced in the Heart of Man and by it he most willingly and joyfully comes unto his God and continues to obey him From all this it 's evident that Man's Conversion is a supernatural Work of God's great Mercy and Power for that which is impossible with Man is possible with God The natural freedom of the Will is a poor impotent thing let us therefore pray earnestly to our God to give us with his Word his blessed Spirit § 12. This was the first and fundamental Effect of Faith in Abraham the second is that whereby he was content to be a Pilgrim and Stranger on Earth that he might attain an abiding City in Heaven which God had promised and prepared for him For so it followeth Ver. 9. By Faith he sojourned in the Land of Promise as in a strange Country dwelling in Tabernacles with Isaac and Jacob the Heirs with him of the same Promise Ver. 10. For he looked for a City which hath Foundations whose Bu●lder and Maker is God THese words inform us that after that Abraham was once by Faith converted and became obedient to the heavenly Call he presently changed his Condition and was a Stranger in this World and a Citizen or Denison of Heaven Such are all the Saints of God upon their Regeneration In them we may observe two things 1. The sojourning of Abraham with Isaac and Jacob in the Land of Canaan Ver. 9. 2. His Expectation of a better Country Ver. 10. In the first we have three Propositions 1. That Abraham Isaac and Jacob were Heirs of the same Promise 2. That they sojourned as Strangers in a strange Land dwelling in Tabernacles 3. They thus sojourned by Faith In the first observe 1. A Promise 2. Heirs of this Promise 3. The parties who were Heirs 1. By Promise understand the thing promised which was the Land of Canaan This was the Inheritance yet they had it not by natural Descent nor by Purchase nor by Exchange but by free Promise For it was promised and that by God who is the Proprietary of all Land and Coun●reys and could not only convey it but give Possession This Inheritance was but a Type of a far better and this Promise was added to another far greater and more excellent 2. There were Heirs of this Promise or Land promised and to be an Heir in this place is to have a Right unto that Land and the Title and Ground of this Right was God's Promise which was the best and surest Instrument of conveyance in the World Before this Promise they could challenge no Right unto it after the Promise their Right was firm good clear without any flaw at all This is the great Mercy of God that when upon his Command we part with any thing he will give us something better that will more than countervail our damage 3. Abraham Isaac and Jacob were the Heirs For the Indenture and first Promise was made to Abraham sealed and confirmed Gen. 15. and in him it was made to them in which respect they were Joynt-Heifs but the same Promise was made severally to Isaac and then after that to Jacob. The parties who then possessed this Land
a Text found in the Old Testament and here alledged and applyed to these Hebrews 2. In that which is expressed or expresly delivered we find three things 1. The manner how this Text is brought in and applied 2. The Text it self 3. The Apostle's Discourse upon the same 1. It 's brought in by way of Reprehension for they are charged with forgetfulness of an Exhortation of a Father to them as Children This informs us 1. That the words are an Exhortation 2. This Exhortation is directed unto them 3. It 's directed to them as Children 4. They had forgotten it 1. The words are an Exhortation To understand this we must consider both what an Exhortation is and also how these are an Exhortation An Exhortation in Scripture hath alwayes for Object some Duty commanded by God and is a stirring up of Man to the Performance of the Duty and that the Will may be more effectually moved the Performance is urged upon powerful Motives That they are an Exhortation may easily appear if we understand the general nature of all Exhortations and consider the Portion of Scripture whence these words are taken wherein we find the wise man pressing many and weighty Duties The word it self here used in the Greek doth sometimes signify a Consolation and such the Text is sometimes an Exhortation and such it may also be Yet in strict sense it is a Dehortation for it 's Negative despise not faint not and to despise the chastening of the Lord and faint under his Rebuke is an Evil a Sin which is forbidden in God's Law and here dehorted f om But yet as every Negative implies an Affirmative so doth every Dehortation an Exhortation to some Duty and the Duty here exhorted to is to take our Sufferings as Chastisements from God and to bear his Rebukes patiently 2. This Exhortation is directed to them for so it 's said The Exhortatien which speaketh unto you It 's true that the words are the words of God written by Solomm and seem to be directed more immediately to the People of God in his time yet this is a certain Rule that when a Duty is ordinary and general and of general Concernment and commanded in the Scriptures by God the universal Law-giver then it concerns all men so that no man can be exempted nay further if it be not only universal but also perpetual it binds all men of all timos And in this respect it may be said that what God speaks to one he speaks to all like that of our Saviour What I say to you I say to all Watch. Therefore we must understand this as spoken even to us as well as to others of former times This therefore would be our wisdom that when we read or hear of exhortations to duties of universal and perpetual Obligation to apply them to our selves and to make full account that God in them doth speak to us 3. It 's directed to them as Children This he infers from the word my Son where word Son though singular must be taken collectively so as to include the whole body and community of Sons both all joyntly and every one severally without exception This implies a special Relation such as is between Father and Children and also the love and authority of a Father and the Duty and Obligation of a Child Yet there are many kinds of Sons as natural adopted amongst men and also spiritual who are related unto God and such are here meant Such all should be but many are nor some are These are made by spiritual Regeneration and gracious Adoption and so soon as any shall sincerely believe in Christ they are justly Sons and so in this special manner related to God The matter of the Exhortation is such that it must be directed unto them and them alone 4. This they had forgotten It was their duty to have remembred it yet they did not For 1. It was forgotten this was a sin 2. They had forgotten it this was their sin and therefore so charged upon them by the Apostle actually to remember this expresly at all times was impossible neither was it required yet in time of Affliction when God's chastising and rebuking hand was upon them they should have thought upon it But it was not necessary to remember these very words but the thing contained in the words neither is the remembrance here required meerly speculative and an act only of the Understanding but it 's also practical For they must so remember the Duty as to do it memory without this is to no purpose This seems to imply that we are bound to understand the word of God in Scriptures necessary to Salvation and often to call to mind that which we do understand § 6. Thus the Text which we find Prov. 3. 11. is brought in and now the matter is to be considered wherein we have 1. The compellation 2. The exhortation it self 1. The compellation is sweet and comfortable for the person speaking and calling unto us is God as a Father the parties called unto are sinful men as children This implies a great condescension and a special love on God's part and a near relation and happy condition on mans part How low did the glorious and eternal Lord of Heaven and Earth descend to look upon respect and love poor mortal man dust and ashes who had defaced his Image imprinted upon him and was become his Enemy To redeem him with the precious Blood of his only begotten Son to call him regenerate him adopt him and make him Heir of an eternal Crown was matter of astonishment to Angels And how much is this silly and unworthy Creature honoured and how much is his estate advanced by this Relation How deeply is he engaged and obliged to eternal gratitude and obedience David might well admite and say Lord What is man that thou takest knowledg of him or the Son of man that thou makest account of him Psal. 144. 3. This compellation my Son is full of comfort and should be a mighty motive and incentive unto perseverance in the midst of greatest Sufferings 2. In the exhortation it self we may consider 1. The Duty exhorted unto 2. The Motive unto performance 1. The Duty is 1. Not to despise the Lord's chastening 2. Not to faint under his Rebuke In the first we may take notice 1. Of Chastisement and Rebuke 2. Of not despising not fainting 1. Chastisement and Rebuke are here taken for the same and signify their Sufferings from their unbelieving Brethren yet so that in the Book of the Proverbs they signify any Afflictions suffered by God People The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to restrain or correct by instruction admonition chiding threatning punishing So the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to blame or reprove Both these are either verbal or real by words of the Mouth or violence of the Hand and here both may be meant and especially the latter The former word used in the Greek seems
to allude to the institution and education of Children who are sometimes more severely corrected not only by Words but by the Rod. The cause of Rebuke and Chastisement is some fault or offence the end is correction and reformation in respect of the former they are Punishments in respect of the latter Corrections in themselves they are Afflictions and sometimes they are Tryals God's Children have their failings ignorances negligences and sometimes are guilty of more hainous Sins In respect of these God as a Judge doth punish as a wise Master tryes them as a loving Father corrects them and by these doth prevent Sin for time to come stirs up to heavenly Duties makes them more penitent for Sin past more careful of themselves and prepares them for their possession of their eternal Inheritance Though they may truly be said to be Punishments because grievous for the time yet they are more properly Chastisements and Corrections because the principal thing intended is their future good As they come from their Persecutors they are Wrongs as from God they are Effects not only of his Justice but chiesly of his Mercy 2. To despise is to think them fortuitous and to bear them with a stupid or sensless mind and not consider and understand they come from God that the end is repentance and amendment that the cause is sin or if we understand these things not to repent and reform but continue and harden our hearts in sin For this is not to regard God's chastising hand so as to make right use of our Sufferings To faint under these is to be weaty of our Profession and to incline to Apostacy because our Sufferings for it are so grievous and of so long continuance And in this negative Dehortation is implied an affirmative Exhortation and the Duty exhorted unto is to make the right use of our Afflictions by reformation of our selves and a patient and constant Suffering unto the end For God's des●●n in these is to prevent Apostacy that we may not be condemned with the World § 7. The Motive and Reason inclining us to performance followeth Ver. 6. For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth overy Son whom he receiveth AS for the translation of these words there is some difference between the Hebrew Copies which we now have and the Septuagint which the Apostle followeth For the Hebrew readeth That God correcteth even as a Father the Son in whom he delighteth but the S●ptuagint otherwise That he chastenth and scourgeth every Son whom he receiveth Some think that the Hebrew Copy which the Seventy translated differed from that which we now have Yet notwithstanding the sense of both for the matter and substance is the same For to chastise a Son whom he loveth and in whom he receiveth is to correct and scourge as a Father the Son in whom he delighteth The words must be considered 1. In themselves absolutely 2. As a reason of that which went before 1. In themselves the matter and subject of them is the castigation and correction of Children And here correction and chastigation of every Child whom God receiveth is the Effect and his love is the Cause and from this Cause and love of God is inferred the Effect the Chastisement of every Child The Propositions are two 1. God loveth and receiveth some as Children 2. He chastiseth every one whom he so loveth and receiveth 1. This Love here intended is a Love wherewith God loves us as Children which is the greatest and most tender love of all others and presupposeth another love antecedent whereby he Regenerates Adopts and makes us his Children this latter is a Love of benevolence and good will issuing from his own Goodness and that most freely The Object of it is Man as sinful ungodly an Enemy in whom there is nothing amiable and sit to move God to love us The former is a Love of complacency after he hath made us amiable and a sit Object of Love This Reception may either be an admission of us into the number of Sons which is adoption or his acceptation of us and delight in us once adoped and this seems here to be intended This paternal love and acceptation is the cause 2. The Effect is Chastisement For to correct chasten and scourge a Son here are the same And here it 's to be noted 1. That the Subject of this Castigation is Every Son 2. That it 's an Effect of Fatherly Love 1. It 's proper to a Son for though he may punish and afflict others yet he doth not chastise them And as it 's proper unto Sons so it agrees to every Son not any one of them is excepted for as all are castigable so all are castigated in one kind or another in a greater or lesser measure 2. That this Castigation is from Love because it tends conduceth and is in some sort necessary to our spiritual and eternal good God knows both our condition and disposition that both are such that they require Chastisement and Correction without which we are in danger of many Sins and of Apostacy to be prevented Yet the principal Cause of prevention is the sanctifying Spirit which alwayes makes use of the Word and many times of the Rod of Correction which will not be laid aside wholly whilst God's Children are in the Flesh But in Heaven where there is no danger there is no Use of it any more because them we shall be sanctified fully and for ever This is the meaning of the words considered absolutely but if we refer them to what went before we shall find them to contain a Motive and a Reason to perswade us to perform the Duty exhorted unto And the force of it is very great for if our Sufferings be from God as a Father and out of Love to us as his Children tending to our good and no Child of his is exempted from them then we should not despise them not faint under them but God himself saith they are such This Reason is more distinctly and particularly unfolded and urged in the words following § 8. Thus you have heard 1. How these words are brought in 2. What the Matter of them is Now 3. Follows the Apostle's Discourse upon them Ver. 7. If you endure Chastening God dealeth with you as with Sons for what Son is there whom the Father chasteneth not Ver. 8. But if ye be without Chastisement whereof all are Partakers then are ye Bastards and not Sons THis Discourse is grounded upon these words of the former Text He chastiseth every Son and informs us that God by his Chastisements doth evidence his Fatherly Affection towards us and that he accounts us his Children and not Bastards The Reasons which he finds in the former words of Scripture are reducible to three The first is taken from his Fatherly Affection manifested in Chastisements The second from God as a Father different from all earthly Fathers even in chastening us The third is taken from the Issue and
for Christ's sake can have any Right to eat of this Altar and Sacrifice of Christ so as to be saved by it § 13. Therefore the Apostle draws a practical Conclusion from the former words in this manner Ver. 13. Let us go forth therefore unto him without the Camp bearing his Reproach Ver. 14. For here we have no continuing City but we seek one to come THis Text is an Exhortation and therein two things are observable 1. The Duty exhorted unto 2. The Reason whereupon it 's urged 1. The Duty is two-fold 1. We must go forth to him 2. We must bear his Reproach 1. We must come forth of the Camp or City to him 1. The Camp or City is Judaism and all erroneous Sects and also the World and men of the World we must separate from all things inconsistent with the Truth and Christ. This is not expressed but implied 2. Out of this Camp or City we must come forth and that we do when we renounce all Errours in Religion and all earthly Affections Our Opinions and Errours in Religion are so many Idols setup in our Souls and are contrary to the Truth of the Gospel and the things of the World which we so much affect and dearly love are all of us by Nature contrary to the Love of Christ We have something in our hearts which keeps us from our God till we be truly converted 3. To come forth to Christ therefore is to be rightly informed and to believe the saving Truth of Christ and upon this right Information to love him above all as far more necessary excellent and beneficial than any thing than all things else This is the same with denying ourselvs forsaking all for his sake hating Father Mother Wife Children Brethren Sisters and Life itself out of love to him and to forsake all for his sake For lay all of these with all the Kingdoms and rarest Contents of the World together on oneside and Christ on the other they are all base uncertain vain empty things Dross and Dung and nothing to Christ who is infinitely precious and incomparably more excellent than all and more beneficial to a poor guilty Sinner To come forth to him is not to change the Place but our Hearts it 's a Motion not of the Body but the Soul and if we once knew the Beauty of Christ and had tasted of his Sweetness we should be ravished with him and all the World could not keep us from him In him alone true Happiness is to be found 2. The second part of the Duty is to bear his Reproach Here is Reproach his Reproach the bearing of his Reproach In this the Author alludes unto the bearing of the Cross which was the greatest Shame and Disgrace any man could be put unto To endure Shame and Disgrace and suffer in our Reputation Credit Honour and good Name is a very grievous Evil and few can endure it and some can better suffer Death than Ignominy and Disgrace The Cross was not only a matter of Reproach but of grievous pain and torment and was the Epitome of all positive Evils and therefore by Reproach is signified all kind of afflictions and miseries which we may suffer from men or may be obnoxious unto in this Life Yet this Reproach and this Cross here meant must be his Reproach his Cross. If we suffer Punishment for our own Crime and through our own Folly then it 's not Christ's Cross Simon of Cyrene did not bear his own but Christ's Cross and followed him This is a Reproach and Cross laid upon us for his sake because we profess his Truth obey his Laws oppose Sin and his Enemies refuse to comply with the World in any Sin renounce all Errours Idolatry Superstition and wicked Customs of the World and all this out of Love to Christ. To bear this Cross is not meerly to suffer any wayes but to suffer the worst Man can do unto us with Patience with Constancy with Joy and to think our selve● happy and much honoured that we are counted worthy to suffer for so great a Saviour ●nd in so noble a Cause This requires a divine Faith well grounded upon the Word and Promises of God and a special Assistance of the d●vine Spirit for these will strengthen our hearts and make us willing to suffer any thing before we offend our God and lose our Saviour § 13. The words of the former Verse considered as a Doctrine or Proposition are a Conclusion deducible from antecedent Premisses but as containing a Duty to be performed they are inferred from the 14. Ver. where we have a Reason given us why we should come forth to Christ and it is two-fold 1. Because we have here no abiding City 2. Because we seek one to come 1. We have no abiding City By City understand two things 1. A place fit for comfortable and safe habitation 2. An Estate answerable unto this Habitation whereby we may live happily in this place For neither can an Estate without a place nor a place without an Estate make our condition good and such as we desire An abiding City is a place of eternal Rest and Safety which in it self stands firm for ever and the Inhabitants shall never remove or be dispossessed As it is such a Place so it 's an Estate not only of all necessaries but of all things delectable and desirable with plenty of them sufficient to make a man fully happy and as these things in themselvs so the Enjoyment of them is everlasting Yet here that is in this life on Earth and under Heaven there is no such City no such Place no such Estate And as it is not here so we have it not for nothing can be had or enjoyed where it is not We may have many great and glorious things on Earth for here are goodly Estates Kingdoms and vast Empires strong and beautiful Cities Towns and Habitations and some have them yet these are not abiding in themselvs nor in the Possession of the Owners Experience of all times besides the Word of God doth teach us this certain Truth Therefore we knowing that there is no such City here seek no such thing here because no such thing can be had here 2. But we seek one to come That is though there be no such thing here neither have we any such City on Earth yet there is such a City though not here yet else-where though not present yet to come and we seek it There is one a Place of everlasting Rest and firm Mansions in our Father's House and a glorious Estate of full and perfect Happiness far above the Conceit and Imagination of mortal men and the Possession both of the Place and Estate shall be everlasting as all the Inhabitants and Owners of this City shall live for ever Yet it 's to come which signifies that no such thing is here neither can it be enjoyed in this present mortal life the full and perfect Fruition is reserved for Heaven
1 Sam. 15. 29. And these are his words I am the Lord I change not therefore the Sons of Jacob are not consumed Malach. 3. 6. So that all is sure on God's part and Man hath no cause to waver except he neglect his Duty and if he perish his destruction must be of himself O therefore let us give all diligence to make our Calling and Election sure and persevere unto the end And shall we who have so great advantage so many helps so blessed an Opportunity and the Promise of a faithful God neglect and injure our selves so much as to lose this glorious and incomparable prize Shall we come out of Aegypt and come so near the borders of the heavenly Canaan and turn back or refuse to go forward Let us detest and eternally abhor to waver let us go on whatsoever it may cost us § 22. The third Duty is to further and set forward one another in this blessed Work This is the Exhortation of the Apostle Ver. 24. Let us consider one another to provoke unto Love and good Works THE first Duty exhorted unto seems to be principally Faith in the full assurance whereof we must draw nigh to God The second Hope in the Profession whereof we must persevere The third Charity to which we must provoke one another The words have little difficulty in them and so need not much Explication In them we are exhorted 1. To consider one another 2. To provocation upon consideration 3. To provocation unto Love and good Works 1. This consideration is a Work and Duty of every Christian as he is a Member of the Church and it is universal all are bound unto it The Object is every Christian and Fellow-Member The thing to be considered is not their temporal but their spiritual Carriage and Conversation so far as it shall be manifested and made intelligible unto us The immediate End thereof to know their Life Carriage and Conversation which cannot be so well done as by a serious view and animadversion The Duty is to be performed mutually so as that every Christian may be the person considering another and the person considered by another In this Act though we may make use of our Eyes and outward senses yet we most of all must exercise the apprehensive and judicative faculty of our Understanding 2. We must consider to Provocation This word is but used twice in the New Testament and the Verb no oftner yet we find the Verb frequently taken up by the Septuagint under several Hebrew words It may be taken here either actively to provoke others or passively to be provoked our selves We provoke or stir up others when we see them ignorant forgetful negligent cold backward and that by Information minding them of their Duty perswading moving quickning them unto performance Or if we see our Brethren persecuted we stir up such as are able to pity them and by Works of Mercy to relieve them We are passively provoked our selvs by considering the good Example of others to do the like and follow them 3. The thing which we must provoke others or be provoked our selves unto is Charity for we must be provoked and provoke 1. To Love 2. To good Works which are the fruits of Love and amongst these good Works the principal are Works of Mercy whereby God's poor and persecuted Saints are relieved and comforted And that is no true real Love which is without good Works as that is no true Faith which can be separated either from the Love of Christ or from the Love of Christian Brethren From the words considered in the Context and explained in this Latitude many practical Conclusions are deducible 1. From the Context we are informed that Confession without Practice Love and good Works is defective imperfect and to little purpose Confession of the Mouth Love in the Heart and Works issuing from Love must go together and must never be separated in true and sincere Christians 2. From the word provoking taken passively we may learn this lesson to give good Example unto our Brethren and so let that heavenly Light which is in us shine forth that others may see our good Works and glorify our Father which is in Heaven For we should be the Light of the World and our Lives should be a Mirrour of all divine vertues 3. We must consides and take special notice of such as are eminent in Piety Righteousness and true Holness and follow closely their good Example they give us and tread in their paths which lead to the eternal Rest of Heaven 4. Take provoking actively and the Text informs of another Duty and that is to have care not only of our own Souls but the Souls of others and to use all means to promote their Salvation as well as our own Love teacheth us this Lession for we must Love our Neighbour as our self and the greatest Love we can shew unto him is to endeavour his spiritual and eternal good And we must remember that Love especially Christian Love is diffusive and communicative and in imitation of God doth good unto many Non solum nobis nati a●t ●e●iati sumus We are neither born nor born again for our selvs The End both of our natural and spiritual Birth is to benefit others as well as our selvs we should sharpen quicken and mightily stir up others to the best things especially to Love and good Works And this is the Duty not only of Ministers in relation to their People or of Parents in relation to their Children or of Masters in relation to their Servants but it 's general and so extensive that no Christian is exempted from the performance And the neglect of this Duty hath been the Cause why there is so little Piety so much Iniquity amongst us and why most men are profane or bare Professor and so few are zealous in the best things 5. From hence we may infer the Excellency of Christian Society Civil Society tends much to the temporal good of person civilly associated but spiritual Society in Religion and Christianity is far more excellent and beneficial Yet this presupposeth the Persons associated with whom we live and must converse to be good for otherwise ill Company is most pestiferous Therefore the Apostle commanded the Corinthians to purge out the old Leaven and scandalous Persons which like a contagion infect others And this doth imply that Christian Assemblies should be kept pure and consist of Orthodox and pious Members and to live amongst such must needs be a great advantage unto poor Souls seeking Salvation § 23. There was a fourth Duty exhorted unto For Ver. 25. They mustnot not for sake the assembling of themselves together as the manner of some was but they must exhort one another and so much the more as they saw the day approaching IN which we have 1. A Duty 2. A Reason to enforce the performance The Duty is expressed 1. Negatively They must not for sake the assembling of themselves
Devils 3. If they had offered them to God their Blood could not have expiated their Sins The Case being so different though the Obedience of Abraham was so pleasing to God yet their sacrificing was plainly unnatural Murther and abominable Idolatry 4. If our Faith be sincere we must Sacrifice our Isaac even what we love most unto our God The Lord increase our Faith that we may do this Service readily In the Text two things are observable 1. Isaac's Blessing and Effect or Work of his Faith 2. His Faith whereby he blessed his Sons In the Blessing we have 1. The Parties blessed 2. The Matter of the Blessing 3. The Blessing it self 1. The Parties blessed were Jacob and Esau these were Twins conceived and born together For as their Birth so their Conception were simultaneous in respect of time They were both his Children both Sons and all the Children which he had for we read of none others born unto him Jacob was the Younger because born th● l●●ter yet preferred before the Elder by God's free Election and also in this Blessing for he received the Priviledges of the first-begotten and in him not in Esau he made the Covenant good 2. The Matter of the Blessing were things to come hoped for not seen and therefore fit Objects of Faith as no wayes certainly intelligible by the natural Light of Reason These things were Blessings and the same both temporal and spiritual Esau's Blessings were only temporal and not spiritual Jacob's both temporal and spiritual From which dispensation of these Mercies we may observe 1. That profane Persons as Esau may enjoy temporal Blessings and Prosperity and that in a greater measure than God's Children do and therefore they are no Argument of God's special Love for God causeth his Rain to fall and his Sun to shine as well upon the unjust as upon the just 2. That the godly such as Jacob was have the Blessings of this Life and of that which is to come And because they desire heavenly more than earthly Blessings therefore God though sometimes he denyes them earthly Prosperity yet will be sure to give them heavenly Comforts 3. The Blessing it self was an Act of Isaac though God was the principal Cause Of blessing others I have spoken Chap. 7. 6 7. All Blessings come from God for he is the Fountain and first Cause of them and disposeth of them as he pleaseth He sometimes communicates them by Man to Man as in this particular Example and makes Priests Prophets Parents instrumental and gives them Power to bless in his Name and that either in an ordinary or extraordinary way This Blessing was extraordinary wherein God made his words effectual for what he said came to pass The words of Benediction were Prophetical yet not meerly a Prophecy or Prediction but a Prediction with Power And though he intended to have blessed Esau with the principal Blessing yet Jacob obtained it It was God's Will to order it so yet his Will gave no Warrant to Rebeccah or Jacob to use any unlawfull means neither did their frailties hinder God's Mercy so gracious he was When the Blessing of Jacob intended for Esau was once past it proved irrevocable though profane Esau sought it even with tears yet there was no place found for Repentance But how did Isaac thus bless his Sons The Text informs that he blessed them by Faith and this is evident because the Benediction was concerning things to come This Faith required some divine Revelation and Promise as a necessary Ground and Foundation God had promised before great Blessings to his Father Abraham and to him yet to be fulfilled to their Posterity by this he understood that they should fall upon his Children but whether the principal Mercies should be given to Jacob and his Posterity or to Esau and his Children he knew not that was not revealed unto him and therefore he was so much mistaken Yet besides the former Revelation and Promise he had some more particular Illumination concerning his Sons and their Children for time to come and his Faith did believe both and relyed confidently upon the Promises and out of this Faith he blessed them really which without Faith he could not have done This shews the excellency of Faith and may perswade all Parents to believe and may encourage them to continue in Faith forby it they may derive some Blessings to their Children if they shall prove capable For some Children prove to be profane as Esa● and are not capable of spiritual Blessings § 20. Jacob succeeded Isaac and being blessed by his Father he blessed Joseph's Children For Ver. 21. By Faith Jacob when he was a dying blessed both the Sons of Joseph and worshipped leaning on his Rod. IT 's an happiness to be the Children of believing Parents who by their Faith transmit Blessings to Posterity For Jacob the Son of believing Isaac was blessed and he by his Faith transmits God's Blessings to Joseph's Children In the words we may note 1. Jacob's Effects or Works of Faith 2. His Faith The Effects are two 1. His Blessing of Joseph's Children when he was a dying 2. His Adoration leaning upon his Staff 1. To begin with the Blessing which was both predictive and effective as the former was we may observe 1. The Persons blessed 2. Divers Circumstances and Passages of this Act. The Persons were not his own immediate Children but his Grand-Children by Joseph every one of the Sons of Joseph These were Ma●●asseh and Ephrains and as we read of no other so it 's likely these two were all the Sons of Joseph at that time The Blessings by him solemnly then declared were to be expected and received by their Posterity 2. The Circumstance of time is expressed to be when he was a dying that is a little before and when he was drawing nigh unto death For then having some thoughts and care of his Posterity and especially of Joseph and his Children whom he dearly loved the Spirit of the Almighty came upon him to inform him of things to come especially concerning his Nephews and moved him to bless them and that being done he leavs the World The Passages are many Joseph presents his two Sons before him and perhaps by some divine Instinct or Impulse that he might bless them before his death and intended the Priviledg of Birth-right to his Elder Son as Isaac did formerly purpose Jacob layes his hands upon them a Rite used in Benediction He guided them so that he laid his right hand upon Ephraim the Younger and this was purposely done by divine direction This being done he adopts them and by Adoption makes them his immediate Children and by his Blessing gives them the Portion of two Tribes with the rest of his Sons and prefers the Younger before the Elder 2. The second Effect is his Adoration leaning upon his Staff where you must observe that the Apostle follows the Septuagint as in most part of this Epistle he doth Whereas others following
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
Effect of Chastisements In the first the Apostle makes this his Principle that chastening is proper to every Child of God and so proper that it agrees to none else From hence he argues to this purpose If God chastiseth all Sons and only Sons then if you endure Chastening he dealeth with you as with Children But he chasteneth all Sons and only Sons Therefore if you endure Chastening he dealeth with you as with Sons The Assumption that he chasteneth all Sons and every Son we find in the latter end of Ver. 7. That he chasteneth only Sons is implied Ver. 8. For Explination I will 1. Reduce the whole into Propositions 2. Inform you of the principal Conclusion inferred from the whole The Propositions are these 1. With those who endure Chastening God dealeth as with Sons 2. There is no Son whom the Father chasteneth not 3. They who are without Chastening whereof all are Partakers are Bastards and ●as Sons These Propositions are made in Thesi though we find them here in Hypothesi as applyed to these Hebrews In the first Proposition we have 1. The Antecedent 2. The Consequent 1. The Antecedent supposeth them chastened or enduring Chastening for these may be the same because enduring may be suffering so as that in and under Afflictions they may be considered as only passive Yet sometimes to endure may be a vertuous Act of the Soul receiving and bearing Affliction as a Chastening from God for Affliction may be sent from God as a Chastisement and for Correction and yet not so received by Man Thus God complains of his People They received not Correction they turned not to him that smote them God dealt with them as a Father but they proved undutiful Children When God doth accompany his Chastisements with the sanctifying power of his Spirit so that Reformation followeth then the Party chastened may be said to endure Affliction not only passively but actively too 2. This presupposed and granted the Consequent of this first Proposition is that God dealeth with them as with Children that is out of Love he chasteneth them for their spiritual Good which he intends because he will not suffer Sin to ly upon them lest it prove their Ruine The Chastening issues from Love and the End is their Benefit and Good for such is the Chastening of a wise and good Father This is necessarily consequent upon the former granted For if he chastise any so that they are corrected then he doth the part of a loving Father and thereby manifests that he accounteth them as Children The second Proposition There is no Son which the Father chasteneth not Here it 's expressed Interrogatively For what Son is there whom the Father chasteneth not Where the Rule That a negative Interrogation is a vehement Affirmation holds good This may be understood of an earthly or an heavenly Father if of an earthly then it 's to be understood of wise and good Fathers not of such as are careless or ignorant or foolishly indulgent as too many such there be And of such if they have many Children they deal thus with every one and all such Fathers deal thus with their Children And as this is true of all wise earthly Parents so much more is it true of our heavenly Father For there is not any Son of his who needs Correction but he correcteth him otherwise he did not love him The rational or causal Conjunction for doth intimate unto us that when it 's said He dealeth with you or useth you as Children that by Children he means all and every Child of his The third Proposition They which are without Chastisement whereof all are Partakers are Bastards and not Sons Here it 's put Hypothetically and the Proposition is Connex yet so that it may be extended to an universal Categorical This takes for granted according to the former Proposition that all are Partakers of Chastisement for all the Sons of God are corrected This presupposed the Antecedent is that some are without Correction or Chastisement that is God suffers them to go on in their Sins and in his just Judgment permits them to go on to their own eternal undoing The Consequent of this is that all such are Bastards and not Children and so accounted of God who denies his Mercy unto them No 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Bastard may be either a Son illegitimate or if Legitimate yet degenerate or one that is no Son or if a Son yet not so accounted not so acknowledged Many such there be who profess themselvs the Children of God and bear that glorious Name yet are not truly and really such and God doth deny them therefore it 's said that they are Bastards and not Sons where it 's implyed that by Bastards are meant such as are not Sons of God either in his account or indeed The Consequence is clear enough for if all Sons are Partakers of Chastisement and some or many are without then such as God chasteneth not are not his Sons they are Bastards and to be such is the saddest condition of all others for no man in this Life can be in a worse or more miserable It 's a sad and woful thing for a Child to be left unto himself and suffered to go on in untoward courses but far more sad it is for a Man to be suffered to go on in Sin without any Chastisement or Correction There is no Hope of such God seems to cast them off desert them leave them to their own Lusts deliver them unto Satan and then they must needs perish It 's evident God loves not such nor intends their everlasting Salvation but leavs them with the World to be condemned with the World Blessed be that God who takes a more special care of us and when we need corrects us and so deals with us as with Children 2. The Conclusion which he intends to infer from this is That if God out of a Love as a Father chasteneth us as he doth every Son and only his Sons then it 's our Duty not to despise the Chastening of the Lord nor to faint under his Rebuke § 7. The second thing observed by the Apostle is that God is a Father as is implyed in the Text where we are called his Sons and if we be his Sons then he is our Father in chastizing us and far above our earthly Fathers and that in chastizing For thus he argues Ver. 9. Furthermore we have had Fathers of our Flesh which corrected us and we gave them reverence Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of Spirits and live Ver. 10. For they verily for a few dayes chastened us after their own pleasure but he for our profit that we might be partakers of his Holiness THese words are virtually an Exhortation for by the clear manifestation of the Duty he exhorts us to performance The Duty is subjection to God our spiritual Father Chastising us The reason of this Duty is delivered by way of comparison
and Beeing but to be happy For as bitter Pills and Portions and also correcting Plaisters may effectually cure our Bodies motrally wounded or diseased so the Lord's Chastisements may heal our sick Spirits and so prevent spiritual Death and Punishments And as the Patient must be willing to receive bitter Pills and Potions for recovery so must we chearfully submit unto our heavenly Fathers Correction for our eternal safety and felicity § 11. Thus far the absolute consideration of these words Now follows the Comparison which presupposing some agreement in quality as in quanity of imparity For if we be bound to obey and reverence our earthly Fathers correcting us then we are bound to obey and be in subjection to our heavenly Father chastening us The reason is because as they so he hath power over us But this is not all for if we are bound if to them much then to him much more They are only Fathers of our Flesh and Bodies and have only a correcting power over them but he is the Father not only of our Bodies but also of our Spirits and hath an absolute Dominion over both not only to instruct counsel command but also to correct and his Correction tends not only to our temporal but our spiritual Health Safety and Happiness This the Apostle makes evident in the 10th Verse Where again we may consider some things 1. Absolute concerning our Earthly Heavenly Father 2. Comparative The words absolutely considered inform us 1. That our earthly Fathers for a few dayes chastened us after their own pleasure 2. That God our heavenly Father chasteneth us for our profit that we may be Partakers of his Holiness 1. In the former Chastisement we may observe 1. It 's short and for a few dayes 2. It 's arbitrary after their own pleasure 1. It 's short because it continues only for the time f our Child-hood and Minority when we are most apt to go astray and least able to direct out selves In these tender years Children may receive any Impression and that more easily than afterwards then the Foundation of Vertue or Vice is laid and if Children have their Liberty be neglected and left unto themselvs they are most subject to be corrupted Therefore the● they have most need of Correction and may be more easily kept under yet many times it falls out that Fathers devoid of Wisdom and not considering what is best and most truly good for their Children out of Passion and rashly not aiming at the choise End do correct them And the more Power they have and the less Resistance there is the more arbitrary and irregular their Chastisements prove so that as the time of their Chastening is short so it 's not regulated by the Dictates of Reason but follows Fancy and false Imaginations of the mind which many times represents as just and good that which indeed is evil and unjust The Intention of the Apostle in these words is to manifest the imperfection and deficiency of humane Castigation whereby it differs from that which is divine For 2. God chasteneth ●● for our Profit that we may partake of his Holiness This is the Perfection of God's Correction which is not for a few dayes but continues for term of Life till he hath made us perfect and done his whole Work upon us It 's always regulated by his perfect Wisdom issues from purest Love tends unto and ends in our Happiness It 's no wayes arbitrary for he never chasteneth but when he sets cause and knows certainly that it will be good for us All this is implyed in these words for our profit where by profit we must not understand the good things of this World and the great Mammon which so many worship but some better thing some spiritual and divine benefit which in a word is a Participation of God's Holiness which Clause seems to be exegetical that we might know what he meant by Profit For whatsoever tends to make us spiritually better more like to God and more capable of Communion with him that 's true Profit God's Holiness may either be that whereby she is holy in himself o● that whereby weare holy He in himself is essentially infinitely and eternally holy most glorious excellent and pure in himself For the Holiness of God is sometimes taken for his Excellency and Glory sometimes for his Purity and perfect Righteousness in which respect it 's said That he is Light and in him is no Darkness so that he cannot sin be impure or unjust and therefore may be said to be Holiness it self As he is holy in himself so he is the Efficients and Fountain of Holiness to us for he makes us holy yet our Holiness is from him by participation and participated by us is more his than ours To be Partakers of his Holiness is either to be made holy as he is and so purified from Sin or being made holy to have Communion with him in some degree here or fully and for ever hereafter This Holiness is communicated to us by Chastisement accompanied with the Sanctisication of the Spirit for that 's the end wherea● God aims and the Effect which he produceth in his Children His Love doth set him on work his Wisdom directs and his Almghty Power effecteth that which his Love desireth This is the Absolute Consideration the Comparative followeth and that in quantity inequal for he argues from the less unto the greater For if they had with Patience endured their earthly Fathers chastizing them for a few dayes after their pleasure how much more should they with Patience and all humble Subjection endure their heavenly Father chastizing them in Wisdom for their everlasting Good This is a place which teacheth all Children their Duty towards their Parents chastening them and they must acknowledg their Power humbly submit unto it and be thankful unto them and their God for this good Work without which they might have been more wicked and more miserable And all Fathers should know that their Children are trusted in their hands by God not only to be instructed but corrected and in this part of Education they must imitate God and chasten them wisely in Love for their good The principal thing to be remembred is that seeing it is God that doth chastile them and in this manner and for their greatest good therefore they should not faint in their Sufferings for their Profession § 11. The Apostle proceeds further to discourse on the Text in Proverbs which speaks of Chastisement Of which it might be said that it 's a matter not of Joy but Grief and how then can it proceed from Love and be any wayes beneficial By way of prevention he resolvs this doubt in the words following Ver. 11. Now no Chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous but grievous Nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of Righteousness unto them that are exercised thereby BY these words we learn what the End and Effect of the Lord 's Chastening is
God with a profane and wicked heart some serve him ignorantly or negligently without servency and due affection The Pharisee could give Alms Fast Pray pay Tythe of Mint Anniseed Cumin and neglect the weighty things of the Law as Justice Judgment Mercy they could and did draw near to God with their Lips and yet be far from God with their hearts they served God but according to the Traditions of men The Jews were zealous and devout in Ceremonials yet their hearts were polluted and their hands full of Blood Therefore we must know that no profane man or hypocrite or indisposed person can serve God acceptably To do this doth presuppose man in the state of Grace and an heart prepared and rightly disposed the person must first be accepted before the work can please God And as the Person so the Service must be rightly qualified and so it is when it proceeds from Faith in Christ is conformable to the Word of God and tends unto his Glory And if We and our Service be thus qualified though our infirmities be many yet so great is God's mercy that for Christ's sake he will accept both us and it we must not presume upon his mercy but yet we must rely upon him when we have a special care to shun that which offends him and do that which is just and holy and when we have done our best humbly in the Name of Christ pray for pardon of defects and acceptance of our sincere endeavours Yet we cannot serve God thus acceptably without reverence and godly feat Reverence in God's Service looks at his excellency and glorious Majesty and at our own unworthiness and the infinite distance between Him and Us and therefore we must adore God's excellent Majesty with deep humility abasing our selves very low being afraid and ashamed out of a sense of our own vileness to come near him except in his great mercy and free grace he vouchsafe access Signs of this reverence is cut kneeling bowing covering our faces prostration and such like gestures And if we were either apprehensive and sensible of our own vileness or God's excellency how could we possibly be so profane and unreverent in his Worship Godly fear may be the same with Reverence or distinct from it The word in the Greek signifies sometimes caution sometimes devotion sometimes fear and that in the Service of God which is a religious fear and care not to offend but to please him Both reverence and fear in this place may farther be a more then ordinary care and diligence in the Service of God that we may please him and be accepted of him For as the greatest honour with the greatest humility is due to God that Supreme Lord whose Majesty is infinite and eternal so the greatest caution must be used in his Worship for he will be sanctified in all them that draw near unto him 3. This is the manner how he will be served by all such as are admitted Subjects of this unmoveable and unchangeable Kingdom The reason is He is a consuming Fire These words are improper and metaphorical and a Metaphor is a contract Similitude which here we find In such Comparisons we may observe 1. The things compared as like and agreeing 2. The thing wherein they do agree The things here compared are God and Fire God is like to Fire The thing wherein they agree is this that they are consuming So that the meaning is That God is like unto Fire and he is like to it in this that as That so He hath a consuming force Many are the qualities and effects of Fire but this one is singled to represent the terrour of God For though that flery Law which God gave out of the midst of fire burning up to Heaven be removed yet in the Gospel of sweetest mercy and freest grace there are threatnings of unquenchable Fire and eternal Flames Therefore this expression signifies his punishing and vindictive Justice the Subjects whereof are profane impenitent and unbelieving persons who are disobedient to the Law of Grace and refuse the tender of saving mercy The effect of this Justice upon these Offenders are severe and everlasting punishments which cannot be expressed or conceived but are represented by the raging flames and ●●erce burning of the most violent Fire which cannot be quenched And as the torment of violent hottest flames is the most grievous so these punishments are and if the Sufferers be immortal and immortally sensible the Torment will be not only grievous but perpetual The sum is that the punishment of delinquent and disloyal Subjects which the Judge shall execute and they suffer is extreme and everlasting The force of the Reason is great for as men tremble to think of everlasting tormenting and consuming Flames so let them have a special care to serve God unto the end in due manner This implies that there is a glorious Reward of eternal Light and delight to all such as shall like loyal Subjects continue constant unto the end in the profession of the Truth and the acceptable Service of this glorious and eternal Soveraign CHAP. XIII § 1. PRofession without Practise Faith without good works cannot attain the fruition of that eternal Life which Christ hath merited and God hath promised therefore the Apostle in this Chapter exhorts to Love good Works constancy in the Truth and other Duties He begins with Love Ver. 1. Let brotherly Love continue THe Analysis of this Chapter is easy for we have 1. The hortatory part thereof 2. The conclusion of the whole The Duties exhorted unto with several Motives are reduced to a kind of order by divers Expositors Yet as this is not exactly done so it 's needless to do it We may indeed enumerate the Duties and reduce them to their proper places and heads in the Body of Divine Wisdom and that is very easie to be done Yet the Wisdom of the Apostle was this that he doth not mention all Duties but such as were most requisite at that time to be performed by those persons and doth not strictly follow the method of the moral Law but takes liberty to place them in that order which he thought most convenient For he knew the performance of them to be the principal thing and it was sufficient for him to press them and then to know them The first Exhortation is to brotherly Love The Duty is 1. Brotherly love 2. Continuance in it Brotherly love is love of the Brethren For there are Brethren and these must be loved To love our Neighbour as our selves is the substance of the second Table of the moral Law And as there are several degrees of Neighbours so there is of Love Neighbours in full extent include Strangers Enemies and all such as are capable of our Love Of these some are more nearly linckt unto us as Brethren Yet these are either natural political or spiritual here spiritual Brethren are meant who have God to be their Father Jerusalem above to be their