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

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and full discharge unto him their surety and so a virtuall pardon of them Hence the answer or apology of a good conscience unto the cry of sinne the accusation of the law and the concurrence of this answer unto our salvation is made by the Apostle Peter to depend upon the resurrection of Jesus Christ his going into heaven and his being there on the right hand of God and the subjection of Angels authorities and powers unto him 1 Pet. 3.21,22 Hence is it also that the Apostle Paul inferreth the non-condemnation of the elect rather from Christs exaltation then his death because his exaltation is a cleere and full evidence that his death is abundantly satisfactory unto the justice of God Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us Rom. 8.34 many sin Satan and the law may be ready and very forward to accuse but none of these have any power to condemne for it is Christ that died for us And in the death of such a person as Christ there cannot but be a fulnesse of satisfaction But of this without his resurrection we could have had but little assurance and therefore that with the following parts of his exaltation the Apostle makes the chiefe ground of his confidence yea rather that is risen againe He haith paid the utmost farthing for he is delivered out of prison He is risen nay he is exalted unto a throne a crowne a Kingdome He hath all power given unto him in heaven and earth He is sate downe at the right hand of God and there he hath authority to make intercession in the behalfe of all the elect for whatsoever he pleaseth If he were not disburd'ned of the guilt of our sinne God would never have thus highly exalted him never suffered him to have been thus neare him to have had such power and prevalency with him Because the father hath committed all judgment unto the sonne Joh. 5.22 the sonne himselfe concludeth the freedome of all believers from condemnation Verily verily I say unto you He that Heareth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death unto life Joh. 5.24 Thus you see how the fulnesse of Christs soveraignty dominion exempts believers from the guilt of sinne Now It is only guilt that makes men afraid of death hell it is the sting of death it is that which puts us into danger of hell fire therefore being freed from guilt we may be confident to be delivered from the wrath to come we need not fear the arrest of death or imprisonment in hell Christ our mediatour hath the keyes of death and therefore unto his death shall not be a prison but a bed or a withdrawing roome a place of repose He hath the keyes of hell and therefore he will suffer none of these to be cast into it for whom he hath prepared a mansion in his fathers house Secondly The fulnesse of Christs authority may comfort all his members against the power rage and raigne of sinne what complaint more usuall with believers then that of the violence of their lusts Oh say they our corruptions are so powerfull and vigorous as that we are afraid they will sometime or other break out unto our either disgrace if not undoing why if they would but looke off from themselves upon Christ Jesus at the right hand of his Father they might behold him invested with authority to mortify their most violent lusts to subdue their most head-strong corruptions He gave his Apostles power against uncleane spirits to cast them out Math. 10.1 and to heale all manner of sicknesse and all manner of diseases He gave the seventy disciples power to tread on Serpents and Scorpions and over all the power of the enemy Luk. 10.19 So he gives unto his disciples and members power to cast out uncleane habits every serpentine lust which are the spawne and broode of that great Serpent Indeed no wind so boisterous impetuous as the unmortified passions of men no sea so tempestuous so rough or restlesse as the hearts of unregenerate men Isa 57.20 The wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up wire and dirt The sea is calme sometimes but there is a perpetuall tempest in their bosomes their lusts are alwaies raging they are like a troubled sea when it cannot rest they cast up nothing but mire and dirt All their words and actions are not only sinfull but sins mire and dirt But now Christ is such a manner of man as that he can easily rebuke both the very wind seas obey him Mark 4.41 He hath such authority from his father as that he can in all the elect with a word as it were still the wind of passion and calme the sea of sinne and stay it 's proud waves Secondly The fulnesse of Christs power and authority yeelds comfort against the strength malice and temptations of Satan Christ hath the keyes of hell and therefore they that have interest in Christ have no reason slavishly to feare all the Divels in hell Satan indeed is the prince of the power of the aire but what is the power of the aire in comparison of the power of our mediatour All power in heaven and earth Satan is compared to a strong man armed Luk. 11.21 but in the next verse we find that Christ is stronger then he able to overcome and bind him to take from him all his armour wherein he trusted and to divide his spoiles Math. 12.29 Luk. 11.21,22 The Seed of the woman is able to overpower the seed of the serpent the utmost mischiefe that the seed of the serpent the Divell and his instruments can doe is but to bruise the heele and that is no mortall wound for it is farre from either head or heart but the seed of the woman Christ Jesus shall bruise the head of the serpent that is destroy the power the Kingdome and workes of the Divell 1 Jo. 3.8 It is true we wrestle not against flesh blood but against principalities against powers against the rulers of the darknesse of this world c. Eph. 6.12 But let us be strong in the Lord Jesus and in the power of his might for it is a power farre above all principality power might and dominion c. Eph. 1.21 Christ is the head of all principality and power Col. 2.10 And therefore Paul had good reason to be perswaded that neither Angels principalities nor powers shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. Lastly The fulnesse of Christs authority is a support and comfort unto all that belong unto him against opposition of men whether violent by persecution or fraudulent by heresy schisme Why should any member of the Church be diffident and distrustfull
up unto a correspondency with him in his affections to love those persons and things which he loveth and to detest whatsoever he hateth Courtiers usually seeme at least to proportion all their passions unto those of the Princes minion They admire whatsoever he liketh they adore whomsoever he affecteth and professe a deepe dislike of all that he disaffecteth They affront and quarrell all upon whom he frowneth Well then may not we be ashamed that there is not the like compliance in us with Gods favourite We dote upon sin which his soule abhorreth We delight in that company and those places unto which he is a stranger We loath those ordinances which have his most evident approbation and institution Those unsavoury and prophane jests rotten communication that are an abomination unto him and stinke before him are the matter of our greatest merriment We distast most the conversation of those that have most intimate communion with him Those are an eye-sore unto us who are as tender unto him as the Apple of his eye His jewels Mal. 3.17 his crowne jewels his crowne of glory and royall diademe Isay 62. ver 3. are accounted by us as the filth of the world and offscouring of all things 1 Cor. 4.13 There is nothing that he esteemeth more amiable in men then the beauty of holinesse the Image of God This is the chaine upon the neck of his spouse Cant. 4.9 that ravisheth his heart And there is nothing more that our hearts rise against O what a dangerous thing is this antipathy unto him that is in the bosome of the father at his right hand How unsafe is it to be thus opposite unto his affections Hereby we must needs incurre the displeasure both of him his father and that is the undoubted path unto everlasting ruine and destruction for in their favour is lise Psalm 30.5 7. And lastly If Christ be so great and gracious with God It then very much concerneth us to labour for assurance of his love and favour For we must needs be liable unto perpetuall torment and terrour of mind as long as we are in suspense of our eternall condition As long as we are doubtfull whether we shall be for ever miserable or happy And the wrath of Christ who is chiefe in the affection of the father is as Solomon speakes of the wrath of a King as the messengers of death and roaring of a lyon Whereas on the other side in the light of his countenance is life and his favour is as a cloud of the latter raine Prov. 16.14,15 and 19.12 and 20.2 If he smile upon a soule nothing can make it miserable and if he frowne upon it nothing can make it happy For God is reconciled to none but in and through him He makes none blessed but for his sake Well then we can expect no tranquility of spirit no solid comfort no sound peace of conscience no joy unspeakable and full of glory untill we have attained a certaine and well bottomed perswasion that the sonne of Gods love in whom alone he is well pleased hath lifted up the light of his countenance upon us What I have said touching our assurance of Christs love may be applied unto our assurance of Gods love of us in and for Christ For it is of no lesse importance as being inseparably connexed therewith and the ground and cause thereof and therefore without Gods love of us for Christ his sake we can never be happy and without assurance of it we can never be comfortable Hereupon is it that in the salutations prefixed unto most of Paul's epistles peace is made a sequele of grace from God our father and the Lord Jesus Christ Without the grace of acceptation with the father and the Lord Jesus Christ and also sense and apprehension thereof no peace of conscience no serenity of spirit is to be expected That man that is doubtfull of Gods love in and for Christ if his conscience be awak'ned cannot but have a perpetuall tempest in his bosome For he can apprehend God ●o otherwise then a consuming fire And such a consideration must needs beget unutterable horrour Our Saviour himselfe makes this assurance the scope of the revelation of Gods goodnesse and mercy in the gospell John 17.26 And I have declared unto them thy name and will declare it that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them There be some that understand that clause that the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them concerning the extension or termination of Gods love of Christ unto Believers as a secondary object and they thus glosse the words That thou may'st love them for my sake that thou may'st love them with that love wherewith thou hast loved me Believers are made by faith one body with Christ and therefore cannot but share in Gods love of Christ If God love him They cannot but be beloved in and for him and therefore our Saviour addes and I in them which is saith Maldonate because I am in them to wit as the head in the members As if he should have said seeing I am in them seeing I dwell in their hearts by faith so that I and they make but one body mysticall therefore thy love of me cannot but be derived unto them If thou lovest me it is impossible thou should'st hate them This termination of Gods love of Christ unto Believers is in regard of the fruites and effects of it so it is the same with it's presence of influence on them The body of the Sun is in the heavens but the efficacy of it reacheth unto the lowest of the elements the earth causing on its surface light and warmth and producing in the very bowels of it many rich metalls and minerals Thus the love wherewith God loveth Christ is in God himselfe if we speake of a presence of inherence taking the word largly as it is applicable unto any adjuncts even such as the attributes of God are But it is in all them that believe in regard of a presence of influence and effective presence for it enlightneth and comforteth them and produceth in their bosomes the precious gifts and graces of the spirit But now the love wherewith God loveth Christ is said to be in believers not onely in regard of their participation but also perception of it not onely effectively in regard of its effects grace and glory but also objectively in regard of an objective or intentionall presence as it is the object of their knowledge apprehension and assurance And they never fully and truly know and apprehend it as they ought but in the rebound and by way of reflection untill they be assured of it's being terminated unto and reflected upon them untill as it is Rom. 5.5 the love of God be shed abroad in their hearts untill they have a full sence and feeling of that love wherewith God loveth them in Christ untill they have tasted that the Lord is good
banner to them that feare thee that it may be displayed because of the trueth If the great men of the world be averse from us slight and contemne us it matters not Christ's desire is unto us Can. 7.10 He will put us as a seale upon his heart and his arme Can. 8.6 Though we have but little favour with the world we have a fulnesse of favour riches of grace with Christ We should not be discouraged at the unspeakable and implacable malice and hatred of our rageing persecutors as long as we have an unexpressible and incomprehensible love of Christ to oppose unto it We should not be dismayed at the depth's of Satans envy and malignity Revel 2.24 For in Chri'sts love there are all dimensions We should not afflict our selves for our povertie meannesse of birth and calling and the like outward abasures For none of them exclude from the grace of Christ He is rich unto all that call upon him We should not therefore despaire of pardon though guilty of many and great enormities For Christ's love passeth knowledge the comprehension of men or Angels and therefore hideth covereth nay quite burieth a multitude of sins All the sinnes of believers But now that prophane persons may not abuse this comfortable doctrine of the fulnesse of Christ's love I shall desire you to take notice of the character that the Scripture giveth of those unto whom it is appropriated The riches of his Glory that is glorious grace is made knowne only on vessells of mercy Rom. 9.23 and vessells of mercy are vessells unto honour sanctified and meet for the masters use and prepared unto every good worke 2 Tim. 2.21 The Lord Jesus Christ is rich in mercy but it is only unto those that call upon him to wit out of an unfeigned faith and undissembled love Rom. 10.12 that have a Spirit of prayer and supplication powred upon them 2. From this fulnesse of Christs love we may be exhorted unto three dutyes 1. Thankefulnesse for it 2. A diligent study and 3. a carefull imitation of it 1. Thankefulnesse for it We will remember thy love more then wine saith the Church unto Christ Cant. 1.4 But she hath a thankfull tongue as well as heart as she remembreth it inwardly in her selfe so with joy and triumph she outwardly publisheth and manifesteth it unto others chap. 2. chap. 3. chap. 7. And this her recognition and commemoration of Christs love is not in a formall dull cold and unpracticall way for it hath such an impression upon her heart as that it makes her even sicke with the love of him Cant. 2.5 It begets in her a love of a most powerfull and unconquerable influence It is a love as strong as death Cant. 8.6 that is it is as forcible and irresistible trampling upon and breaking through all difficulties that occurr in performance of duties unto or undergoing of sufferings for Christ This love is inflamed into jealousy and this jealousy is as cruell or hard as the Grave ibid. that is as inexorable unto all the enemies of Christ unto her most profitable and pleasant sins her darling and most indulged lusts This love is for its intensivenesse motion upwards unto heaven and consumptive efficacy compared unto fire ibid. The coales thereof are as coales of fire which hath a most vehement flame 1. Fire is the hottest of elements So the Churches love of Christ is more solidly intense then her love of any creature whatsoever She is as it were all in a fire with the love of him 2. The motion of fire is upwards towards heaven The love of Christ is as a fiery Chariot whereby a soule is carried up unto heaven 3. Fire burnes all things combustible So love of Christ consumeth all a mans corruptions And whereas elementary fire may be quenched the love of Christ is a celestiall flame Many waters cannot quench it neither can the flouds drowne it Cant. 8.7 It cannot be extinguished or abated by calamities And in the last place it is so sincere and incorrupt as that it cannot be bribed by any treasure If a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned ib. If your love of Christ reach not this height we have described it comes short of a due gratitude we are unthankfull for Christs fulnesse of love if it be not as a loadstone to attract from us a love of him with all our hearts soules and might In the language of the Scripture we are utterly forgetfull of Christs love if it do not constraine unto duty and restraine from sin We despise the riches of Christs goodnesse grace and bounty forbearance and long-suffering if it do not lead us unto a strict and severe repentance 2. The fulnesse of Christs love may provoke unto a most diligent study of it It is an inexhaust fountaine an unfathomeable ocean a bottomelesse unsearcheable mine There is therefore more then enough in it to satisfy the restlesse inquiries of those that are most curious and thirsty after knowledge In Eph. 3.13,16,17,18 There be 4. Motives unto this study of Christs love 1. The comprehensivenesse 2. the incomprehensiblenesse of this love 3. The subject and 4. the influence of the knowledge thereof 1. The comprehensivenesse of the Love of Christ It takes in all the d Paulus nihil per istas dimensiones intelligit quam Christi charitatem de quâ continuò post significans eum cui verè perfectè cognita est undequaque sapere ae si diaeisset quaqua●versùm respiciant homines nihil reperient in salutis doctrinâ quod non huc referendum sit Continet enim una Christi dilectio omnes sapientiae numeros ideo quo facilior sit sensus ita resolvi debent verba ut valeatis comprehendere Christi dilectionem quae est longitudo latitudo profunditas al●…tudo sapientiae nostrae hoc est tota perfectio Similitudinem enim sumit à Mathematicis ut à partibus totum desig●et Quoniam hic omnium ferè communis est morbus rerum inutilium studio ardere utilis vallè est ista admonitio quod scire nobis expediat quid Dominus considerare nos velit sursum deorsum ad dextram sinistram à fronte à tergo Dilectio Christi nobis proponitur in cujus meditatione nos exerceamus dies ac noctes in quam nos quasi demergamus Hanc unam qui tenet satis habet extra eam nihil est solidum nihil utile nihil ●enique rectum aut sanum Circumeas licet coelum terras maria non altius transcendes quin legitimum sapiendi finem transilias Calvin in Ephes 3. v. 18. dimensions the length breadth depth height of spirituall wisedome all the objects of saving knowledge which are some way or other reducible unto it And hereupon that great Doctor of the Gentiles resolved to study privately and to preach publikely nothing but what did some way or other referre unto that
God will make plentifull provision for all their wants It is the inference of the Apostle himselfe Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his owne sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things He that soared not his owne sonne his deare son his most tenderly beloved sonne but delivered him up for us all unto the slaughter how shall he not with him freely give us all things that is all things needfull for our eternall happinesse and salvation all things that pertaine to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.13 The promises of the life that now is and of that which is to come 1 Timoth. 4.8 4. They may hence be certaine of a continuall confirmation of their graces and preservation from Apostacy Gods t If Kings bear goodwill to some family if his love begin in some chief one who is with him at court as his speciall favourite it is so much the firmer to all the rest of them Thus here how firme and sure is his love to us who●n he hath loved unto life in Christ our head and eldest brother who is his naturall sonne from whom it is impossible that his love should ever start and when it is sure to the head can the body be forsaken Mr Bayne on Eph. ● ver 4. pa. 39. love of them is like his love of him immutable Thou hast loved them as thou hast loved me saith Christ Joh. 17.23 If the head be alwaies the beloved the members can never be hated The fruits therefore of this love the gifts and callings of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 If the naturall sonne of God be daily his delight and that as well unto as from eternity Therefore with everlasting kindnesse he will have mercy on his adoptive sonnes The mountaines shall depart and the hils be removed But my kindnesse shall not depart from them neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on them Isai 54.8,10 But now if he should not uphold and establish them by his spirit Psalm 51.12 if he should not continually support and underprop their graces but suffer them totally and finally to decay and wither this would be a palpable withdrawing of his loving kindnesse and a shutting up his tender mercies in anger Besides the sonnes love of them resembleth the fathers love of him Joh. 15.9 As the father hath loved me so have have I loved you Now there is no change in the fathers love of him therefore neither in his love of them And therefore we may conclude that as it is their duty so it shall be their priviledge and happinesse to continue in his love The Apostle Paul professeth in the behalfe of all believers that nothing can divorce them from the love of God in Christ that is for Christ I am perswaded saith he that neither death nor life nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord Rom. 8.38,39 In those last words which is in Christ Jesus our Lord The Apostle layeth downe the ground of the perpetuity of God's love of his children 'T is not in themselves but in Christ Jesus that is it is for his sake for that unalterable affection which he beareth unto him Lastly from the eminency of God's favour unto Christ his members may with confidence expect the perfect and full glorification of their soules and bodies hereafter in heaven For our Saviour himselfe in that prayer of his Joh. 17. having petitioned for the glory of all that were to believe on him he inforceth this his petition by representing unto the Father the love that he hath borne unto him as man from all eternity Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with mee where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given mee for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world ver 24. Is is as if he had said That love which thou bearest unto me expresse unto those that are mine As thou loved'st mee invest them with that glory which thou hast decreed unto my humanity Believers then may as confidently expect their owne glory as they are assured of the Fathers affection unto Christ and this assurance should digest all their sorrowes and miseries here in this life From Consolations I proceed unto Exhortations and they shall be directed either unto the enemies or members of Christ 1. Then for enemies and aliens they may hence be exhorted 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against Christ 2. Unto a serious and earnest endeavour after reconciliation and union with him 1. Unto humiliation for their past enmity against him and his his members ministers and other ordinances Who dare almost oppose the Minions of earthly Princes for History presents us with plentifull instances of such whom their very frownes have ruined O then the hatred of heavens favourite must needs be infinitely more fatall and unfortunate Because he is able to crush his most potent adversaries tremble then to consider that all thy life long thou hast hated the beloved loathed and abhorred God's darling been averse from the Son of his love rejected his elect servant in whom his soule delighteth been a most disaffected and malignant Antagonist unto him in whom the Father is well-pleased 2. Because Christ is so highly graced with God all his enemies may be exhorted to doe what lieth in them for the future for reconciliation and union with him by application of themselves unto the diligent use of such meanes and ordinances as God hath sanctified and set apart for that purpose For those that are not united with him cannot expect so much as a good look from God because God is reconciled onely in him 2 Cor. 5.19 he accepts none but in the beloved Ephes 1.6 He is well pleased with none but such as are in him Those that are out of him lye under the displeasure and wrath of God which is a consuming fire In terrene courts how ambitious are men to be related unto the grand favourite as knowing that he is the channell of all considerable preferments Should it not then be the utmost ambition of men to have relation unto Christ for through him onely God dispenseth all saving favours unto the sonnes of men We may say of him in reference unto God as Tacitus did of Sejanus the powerfull favourite of Tiberius ut quisque Sejano intimus ita ad Caesaris amicitiam validus Contrà quibus infensus esset metu ac sordibus conflictebantur He that was an intimate of Sejanus needed not with any great labour search for honours He that had him his enemy languished under dispraise and misery None had any honour without his favour Neither without him could any keep any place of either profit or credit with security Besides
and gracious unto them for Christ Psalm 34.8 1 Pet. 2.3 A practicall and experimentall full knowledge then and assurance of Gods love of Christ implieth in the result knowledge and assurance of Gods love of us so that they who are doubtfull and distrustfull of Gods love of themselves fall short in a due apprehension of Gods love of Christ The reason for this coherence of these two assurances is the connexion betwixt their objects Gods love of Christ and Gods love of us For 1. If wee looke upon the act of each as considered in God so they are one and the same decree of election Gods election of Christ and his members are not different acts à parte rei à parte rationis in our manner or way of conceiving they are as Dr Twisse often sheweth coordinate and simultaneous as being parts of one formall compleat decree de mediis 2. If we compare the fruites of each love so the fruits or effects of God's love of us all the good we enjoy for the present or expect for the future depend upon the effects of Gods love of Christ the habituall grace of his humane nature the satisfaction and merit of his obedience c. This assurance and feeling that believers have of Gods love of Christ and of themselves for Christ is amplified here from the cause and from a concomitant of it 1. From the cause of it manifestation of the name and revelation of the arme of the Lord Isai 53.1 I have declared unto them thy name and will declare it that the love wherewith thou hast loved mee may be in them By the name of God is meant the x Cyrilli interpretationem magis probo nomen hoc loco pro gloria positum esse ut apud Solomonem cùm dicit melius est nomen bonum quam divitiae multae Hoc ita esse ex eo perspicuum est quod pro eodē accipiat glorificare Patrem id est ejus declarare apud homines gloriam nomen ejus hominibus manifestare Continet ergò hoc loco nomē Dei quicquid in Deo gloriosum quicquid beneficum quicquid hominibus salutare est quale imprimis fuit quod ita mundum dilexerit ut filium suum unigenitum daret ut omnis qui credit in eum non pereat sed habeat vitam aeternam Maldonate glory of God even as the name of men is taken for that credit estimation and regard which they are in There is a glory of God which the very creatures declare Psal 19.1 Rom. 1.20 The glory of his power wisdome and generall love as he is the creatour preserver governour of the world But now the glory which is the name of the Lord of which Christ here is the revealer is that of especiall saving and redeeming love and mercy which shineth in the Gospell covenant of grace The heavens and firmament declare not so much glory as the crosse of Christ What glory of God can be cōparable unto his so loving the world that lieth in wickednesse as to give for it his only begotten son Joh. 3.16 And therefore this glory doth most eminently merit to be intitled his name Well you see the knowledge sence of Gods love of Christ and of us in Christ is the maine end and drift of Christs manifesting this name this glory of God by his word and Spirit And therefore we should give all diligence to make this love sure to have a due and deep taste and feeling of it to have it shed abroad in our hearts If believers have not attained hitherto they walke as yet below the revelation of Gods name and arme in the Gospell But now the first manifestation of Gods name at our first conversion will not serve the turne I have declared unto them thy name and will declare it c. I have manifested it in their first illumination and I will manifest it in the further growth and progresse of their knowledge Hence then we may observe that to raise believers unto such an height as the due assurance of this love there will be continuall need of new fresh farther and fuller discoveries or manifestations of Gods name in the Gospell And therefore let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisedome Col. 3.16 Watch daily at the gates of wisdome waiting at the posts of her doores Prov. 8.34 Narrownesse in the manifestations of Gods name is ever followed with weaknesse and feeblenesse in our assurance of his love They to whom the arme of the Lord is revealed but in a small measure may presume much but they know but little of the love wherewith God loveth Christ and his members 2. We have this assurance of believers amplified from the concomitant of it growth in their union with Christ That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them The meaning of those last words and I in them is that I may dwell more and more in their hearts by faith The increase of our union with Christ is inseparably connexed with our assurance of Gods love of us for Christ as a necessary effect thereof And this may serve both for comfort and triall 1. For Comfort For what an unspeakable Comfort and advantage doe believers reape by their assurance in that it thus promoteth their union with Christ by knowledge and assent by love and adherence It begets more clearenesse and evidence in their knowledge of more certainty in their assent unto the promises of the Gospell It workes fulnesse in their love of and firmnesse in their adherence unto Christ and so every way in every regard it knits and unites more closely unto him and increase of our union with him enlargeth our communion with him in all the blessings flowing therefrom and depending thereon 2. This may serve for tryall of the soundnesse and sincerity of believers assurance of Gods love wheresoever it is there is a progresse in their union with Christ he dwelleth more and more in their hearts by faith He doth not onely knock at the doores of their hearts as a passenger but he comes in unto them and makes his abode with them Joh. 14.23 He dwels in them He doth not onely dwell in their tongues and in their understandings but he dwelleth in their hearts Ephes 3.17 He hath his throne in their wills and affections Those that grow in such an union as this with Christ they have fruitfulnesse for their character assigned by Christ himselfe Joh. 15.5 He that abideth in mee and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit He in whom Christ hath his abode is no barren professour but is filled with the fruits of righteousnesse which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God Phil. 1.11 2. Christ as a man was the subject of a fulnesse of grace He had a twofold grace the grace of his favour towards us the grace of his spirit in himselfe and of both there was
in him a fulnesse A fulnesse 1 of the grace of his favour love and mercy towards us The Apostle ascribes unto him riches of this grace and affirmeth that therein he hath abounded unto us Ephes 1.7,8 neither is this barely affirmed but as strongly confirmed from the effects or fruits thereof 1. In our justification In whom we have redemption the forgivenesse of sins according unto the riches of his grace c. both of which are plenary Psal 130.7 In him there is plenteous redemption He will abundantly pardon Isay 55.7 or he will multiply to pardon as it is in the margent 2. In our vocation In the riches of his grace he hath abounded towards us in all wisdome and prudence ver 8. Thus also Rom. 10.12 the Lord is said to be rich to wit in mercy love and favour Ephes 2.4 Vnto all that call upon him Where by Lord saith Diodati is meant Jesus Christ who by his death resurrection hath gotten himselfe a title over all men to be their Lord master to be the head of the elect amidst all Nations And he is said to be rich in the fruits and effects thereof For as Calvin and Estius upon the place observe rich is here taken actively for bountifull liberall or gracious The bounty and liberality of men may be disenabled by extensivenesse unto too many but it cannot be so with the grace love and favour of our Lord Jesus Christ for he hath unsearchable riches Eph. 3.8 that cannot be impaired by communicativenesse He cannot be impoverished though he be rich unto all that call upon him This fulnesse of Christs love is to the full displayed in the Song of Solomon and that both in the Churches confessions and Christs owne professions of it 1. In the Churches confessions of it and that both to Christ and others 1. She makes a gratefull acknowledgement of it unto Christ himselfe Thy love saith she is better then wine Cant. 1.2 Next she celebrates and reports it unto others chap. 3.9,10 King Solomon that is Christ made him a chariot that is framed assumed unto himselfe an humane nature the midst or innermost whereof his heart being paved with love of the daughters of Jerusalem that is the elect of God the children of Jerusalem the mother of us all In Isay 49.16 Zion is said to be engraven upon the palmes of his hand but here to be as it were written upon his heart y But as the heart signifieth inward love so the arme of Christ signifieth his outward manifestation of love by helping bearing supporting her in all her infirmities through his power Psal 77.15 89.10 Esa 40.10,11 Ainsworth She was in his heart to live and dye for her 2 Corin. 7.3 Againe chap. 7.10 His desire saith she or desirous affection is towards mee As it said of the woman Gen. 3.16 that her desire should be unto her husband Next we have Christs owne profession of this great love of his unto his Church He termeth her his love his dove his spouse his sister his beloved his friends Chap. 5. v. 1. He acquaints her that in expression of his love unto her he had endured much trouble and misery for her My head saith he is filled with dew and my locks with the drops of the night Chap. 5.2 Unto the Churches confession and Christs owne profession of this fulnesse of love we joyne also the Churches petition for it Cant. 8.6 Set me as a seale upon thy heart as a seale upon thine arme This was a prayer dictated unto and penned for the Church by the Holy Ghost himselfe and therefore if she put it up with faith and confidence it cannot be successelesse From it then we may conclude that the Church is very precious in Christs esteeme graven as the graving of a seale upon his heart And this his estimate of her he will manifest by wearing her as a signet upon his right hand The high priest Exod. 28. was to beare the names of the children of Israel engraven upon twelve precious stones and set in gold in the breast-plate of judgement upon his heart when he goeth in unto the holy place for a memoriall before the Lord continually vers 17 18 19 20 21 29. Herein the exceeding and wonderfull care and love of Christ unto his members is plainly typified and that in diverse particulars 1. The names of the children of Israel were engraven upon twelve precious stones set in gold to shew that the people of Christ are very deare and precious unto him as it were his jewels and precious stones Mal. 3.17 2. Besides there was curious art bestowed upon the engraving of these names It was like the engraving of a signet ver 21. And this might figure the curiosity of Christs workmanship in creating and engraving holinesse the image of God upon the spirits of his people which farre exceeded that which was used in the framing of those glorious and celestiall bodies the sunne moone and starres And the curiositie of this his workmanship in the beautifying of his members is a demonstration of his extraordinary affection unto them 3. His care of them and affection to them is not onely joynt and generall but particular and severall of one by one * Babington in locum The High priest was to have in his brest-plate the twelve stones with the particular names of the Tribes 4. Christ beareth his members not onely on his shoulders vers 12. by his protection of them and patience unto them but in his breast and heart by his singular and most tender affection towards them While he was here on earth his heart was so set upon them as that he shed his heart blood for them And now he is gone into the holy place they are still upon and in his heart he is still mindfull of and deeply sollicitous for promoting their salvation He even now rejoyceth in the habitable part of his earth and there will never be a period in his delights with the sonnes of men Prov. 8.31 the twelve stones are termed Exodus 25.7 lapides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is stones of fulnesses or filling stones Perhaps thinks Altingius loc com part 2. pag. 1. because the breast plate was filled with them and this might signifie that the breast or heart of Christ was even filled with his members in regard the love of his heart was fully placed upon them more then on all the rest of the creatures 5. The High Priest was to beare the names of the children of Israel for a memoriall before the Lord continually And this might denote that Christ is ever mindfull of his people Can a woman forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the sonne of her wombe yea they may forget yet will not I forget thee saith the Lord Christ unto his Zion Isay 49.15 Christ remembreth all his people even when as man he seeth them not And this might be imported by the High
of it's owne or the Churches safety seeing the head of the Church who hath the key of David openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth that is governeth and protecteth his Church irresistably if we take the word irresistably in opposition unto a final complete and victorious resistancy why should we feare the malice and enmity of weak men as long as we have the love and favour of so potent a Saviour if he be our friend no matter though we have all the world for foe If he be with and for us who can be against us Rom. 8.31 In that terrible invasion of Israel by Shalmanaser which ended in the utter ruine desolation and captivity of the whole nation described Isay 8. ult to be a time of trouble and darknesse and dimnesse of anguish far surmounting their former troubles though very great and grievous cap. 9.1 yet the prophet goeth to support the sinking spirits of the believing and penitent party with the promise of comfort and liberty v. 2 3 4. the ground of all which he makes to be Christs soveraignty vers 6. though the remnant of Christs people amongst the captiv'd Israelites walked in darknesse and dwelt as it were in the shadow of death yet they shall see a great light vers 2. the light of sprituall comfort and deliverance shall shine upon them they shall joy according to the joy of harvest vers 3. they shall be freed from the bondage of their spirituall enemies the yoke of their burden the staffe of their shoulder the rod of their oppressours shall be broken as in the day of Midian vers 4. for unto us a child is borne unto us a son is given upon whose shoulders the government of the Church the whole world is cast vers 6. And this government is managed as by unconceivable wisdome He is the wonderfull Counsellor so by unspeakable love the Zeale of the Lord of Hostes will performe this And the ground of this assertion is his relation unto us He is our everlasting Father v 6. If the Church be full of disorder and Confusion 1 Cor. 14.32 if the Spirits of the prophets be not subject to the prophets 1 Cor. 12.17 if the whole body affect to be the eye and the hearing why his government is upon the throne of David and his king dome to order it if the Church be in a weake and tottering condition his government is upon the throne of David and upon his Kingdome to establish it vers 7. We find Psal 80. that when the hedges of the Church of Israel were broken downe the hedge of discipline the hedges of God and the Magistrates protection vers 12 13. so that all they which passe by the way did pluck her The Beare out of the wood did wast it and the wild beast of the field did devoure it Why then the alone refuge and Sanctuary of her genuine members was the exaltation of Christ vers 17 18. Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand upon the son of man whom thou madest strong for-thy selfe So will we not go● back from thee As if the Psalmist should have said if our blessed Saviour be highly exalted a name given him above every name and hath all power given unto him in heaven and earth why then we may wax confident of our perseverance for he wil imploy this his power and authority to preserve us from Apostacy and defection the shipwrack of faith and a good conscience so that we shall never draw back unto perdition Heb. 10.39 And this will satisfy and compose our spirits let the world goe how it will let all things be turned topsy turvy so as we goe not back from thee O Lord of Hostes so long as there is not in us an evill heart of unbeliefe we hope we shall possesse our soules in patience Though the vineyard of the Lord be burnt with fire and cut downe though there be scarce left among us so much as the face of a Church visible men may throw us out of our earthly enjoyments they may shut us up in a deep and darke dungeon and there exclude the light of the Sunne from us but in such a condition the power of our Mediatour should uphold our spirits He hath the Key of David and openeth and no man shutteth if he open heaven gates unto us not all the men in earth not all the Devils in hell are able to shut or barre them against us If we be cast upon a time of trouble such as never was since there was a nation even to that same time why at that time Michael shall stand up the great Prince which standeth for the children of thy people and at that time thy people shall be delivered every one that shall be found written in the booke Dan. 12.1 This place of Daniel you may expound by Revel 12.7 where we have a warre raised in heaven that is in the Church of God by the Dragon and his Angels that is Satan and his adherents but they are encountered by Michael and his Angels who give them a totall rout and overthrow vers 8. They prevailed not neither was their place found any more in heaven They had no more power to tyrannize over the Church And it is observable that the Instruments of this great victory are none but poore martyrs for such as these were the Angels of Michael that is Christ described to be vers 11. They loved not their lives unto death The strongest weapons of their warfare are their sufferings The victory that overcometh the world is the faith and patience of the Saints 1 John 5.4 The shedding of their blood drawes blood from their adversary and their death puts life into the cause which they dye for so that we may say of them as of the King of Sweden at the Battell of Lutzen they conquer when they are killed If that befall our Church which Paul foretold of the Church of Ephesus that grievous wolves enter in among them not sparing the flock Act. 20.29 If foxes spoyle the vines and tender grapes Cant. 2.15 If hereticks false teachers seduce weake Christians especially new converts why he is the great shepherd of the sheepe and is able to represse them and chase them away If never so malitious potēt adversaries assayle the house the Church of God why Christ is the Lord of the house and he is faithfull to him that appointed him Heb. 3.2 therefore there is no need of any other garrison for it's protection then his power and care Psalm 2.1,2,3,4,9 the Kings of the earth set themselves the rulers take counsell together against the Lord against his anointed saying Let us breake their bands asunder and cast away their cords from us He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh the Lord shall have them in derision Thou shalt breake them with a rod of Iron thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potters vessell If ten Kings
that have one mind and have given their strength and power unto the Beast make warre with the Lamb the Lamb shall overcome them for he is Lord of Lords and King of Kings Rev. 17.13,14 To conclude this first branch of this use of consolation The Apostle Paul having spoken largely of the Soveraignty confer'd upon Christ in his exaltation Heb. 2.5,6,7,8 in the end of the eight verse he moveth a doubt against it but now we see not yet all things put under him we see it indeed with an eye of faith but not with an eye of sense and carnall reason we may say of that as the Apostle doth of the future state of the Saints of God it doth not yet appeare what we shall be but we know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is Joh. 3.2 but though it doth not yet appeare yet we believe it and faith is an evidence of things not seen Heb. 11.1 And the Apostle in his answer unto the doubt layeth downe a very good argument for the strengthening of our faith herein But we see Jesus who was made a little lower then the Angels for the suffering of death crowned with honour and glory vers 9. seeing he is crowned with glory and placed at the right hand of God and then hath all power given unto him in heaven and earth he will exercise this his power and authority for the good of his Church and overthrow of his enemyes and at the last day he will put all either persons or things that oppose him absolutely under his feete he will subdue them and trample upon them as upon a footstoole It is said of him Heb. 10.12,13 He sate downe on the right hand of God from henceforth expecting till his enemies be made his footstoole If he our Soveraigne waits patiently till this worke be done it would be very bad manners in us his subjects to be impatient and not contented to wait the Lords Leisure I proceede unto a second benefit accrewing unto believers by the fulnesse of Christs authority and that is positive subserviency of all things to their salvation seeing he hath all power in heaven and in earth therefore he can make all creatures in heaven and earth to promote the glory and happinesse of his people Are not the Angels all ministring spirits sent forth to minister for them who shall be heires of salvation All believers are joint heires with Christ Rom. 8.17 Now he is the heire of all things Heb. 1.3 therefore they share with him in this his inheritance and are in a way of subordination to him heires of all things too All things are yours * Nota omnia vestra sunt non quasi omnia bona sint commania uti erant in statu innocentiae aut quasi justi omnium rerum sint propriè domini c. sed vestra sunt non possessione sed fine usu quia scilicet vobis in ministerium auxilium salutis deputata data sunt ita Anselm Amb. Theodoret. S. Thom. Chrysostom data inquam ad usum vel realem vel mentalem qui est in omnibus creaturis agnoscere laudare creatorem hoc est quod vulgò dicitur fideli totus mundus divitiarum est Corn. à Lapide in Locum Universalem enumeratione illustrat Vestri sunt omnes ministri summi infimi c. Vestrae sunt omnes res totus inquam mund us c. Vestra omnis conditio vita mors c. Vestri denique omnes eventus presentes in hac vita prosperi et adversi vel futuri in altera vita Omnia inquit vestra sunt Anabaptistae abutuntur hoc loco ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 facultatum probandam Apostolus verò non loquitur de possessionibus civilibus sed de ordine divino quo omnia debent servire utilitati Ecclesiae quia omnia sunt condita ad piorum salutem communicationem officiorum charitatis quae non tollit justitiam sicut nec Evangelium tollit politias Nec loquitur Apostolus de omnibus individuis sed de omnibus speciebus rerum Pareus in Locum See also Reynold's vanity of the creature pag. 27 28. saith the Apostle speaking of believers 1 Cor. 3.21 not in regard of propriety or possession but only in regard of end or use that is All things so farre as their need and occasion shall be usefull helpfull and serviceable unto the salvation of your soules and this is that which is meant by that usuall saying quoted out of Aug. fideli t●tus mundus divitiarum est The Apostle illustrates the universall by an enumeration of particulars vers 22. whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours Of which words I shall out of Pareus give you this short following Paraphrase All ministers are yours the highest and the lowest Paul Apollo Cephas All things are yours the whole world All conditions are yours life and death All events are yours present and future things present or things to come things present in this life whether prosperous or adverse Rom. 8.28 And we know that all things worke together for good to them that love God to them who are the called according to his purpose Things to come that is all the glory of the new Jerusalem Rev. 21. Lastly upon this fulnesse of Christs authority we may ground exhortations unto severall duties and that regarding either God Christ or our brethren First we may hence be exhorted unto thankfulnesse towards God for that he hath vouchsafed such dignities unto our nature in the person of his sonne Psal 97.1 The Lord reigneth let the earth rejoyce let the multitude of Isles be glad thereof When the multitude saw the cure of the man sick of the Palsy they marveiled and glorified God which had given such power unto men Math. 9.8 How should we marvell and glorify God for the giving of all power in heaven and earth unto the man Christ Jesus for that his head is as the most fine gold Cant. 5.11 * Aynsworth that is his head-ship regiment and kingdome is most glorious like splendent gold Because he is the head of the corner the Psalmist our Saviour himselfe would have us to acknowledge the Lords doing and that it should be marveilous in our eyes Ps 118.22 Math. 21.42 The Apostle Paul entertains it with stupor and admiration what is man sayth he that is the man Christ Jesus that thou art mindfull of him or the Son of man that thou visitest him that thou crownest him with glory and honour and didst set him over the workes of thine hands that thou put'st all things under his feet Heb. 2.6,7,8 In Cant. 3.11 we have an exhortation unto an heedfull and gratefull observation and contemplation of Christ in his exaltation Go forth O daughter of Zion and behold King Solomon with the crowne wherewith his Mother
Eph. 2.20 in which he will dwell and walke The high and lofty one that inhabiteth eternity who dwelleth in the high and holy place would never have dwelt and tabernacled amongst us Joh. 1.14 never have dwelt in the flesh unlesse it had been his gratious purpose to dwell with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit To revive the spirit of the humble and to revive the heart of the contrite ones Isay 57.15 The personall union you see considered single by it's selfe is a very high demonstration of Christ's love unto mankind But it is capable of farther amplification and exaggeration by comparison with his actions and sufferings in our nature Hereby perceive we the love of God because he laid downe his life for us 1 Joh. 3.16 Because Christ who was God laid downe his life for us because he in whom dwelled all fulnesse of the Godhead bodily submitted himselfe unto the shamefull and painfull death of the crosse unto the curse of the law and the wrath of God and that for us that harboured nothing but thoughts of hostility against him This therefore speaks such a matchlesse eminency of love as is beyond the comprehension of either men or Angels To distrust the constancy and future expressions of such a love is a high piece of ingratitude Seeing a person so infinitely great and glorious hath done and suffered so much for the purchase of our salvation we may therefore collect that it was his absolute decree to apply and conferre the salvation thus purchased and consequently to accomplish all things requisite for the compleating thereof He will make knowne the riches of his glory on the vessels of mercy which he had afore prepared unto glory Rom. 9.23 Thirdly from the personall union we may be dehorted from embasure of our natures by sin The relative presence of God in the midst of his people was used as an argument against not only Morall but also Leviticall and Ceremoniall uncleannesse Defile not the land which ye shall inhabit wherein I dwell for I the Lord dwell amongst the Children of Israel Num. 35. ver 34. And the Lord said unto mee Son of man the place of my throne and the place of the soles of my feet where I will dwell in the midst of the children of Israel for ever and my holy name shall the house of Israel no more defile neither they nor their Kings by their whoredome nor by the carcasses of their Kings in their high places Ezek. 43.7 And the Lord spake unto Moses saying Command the Children of Israel that they put out of their camp every leper and every one that hath an issue and whosoever is defiled by the dead c. that they defile not their camp in the midst whereof I dwell Num. 5.1,2,3 Now this relative presence is nothing almost in comparison of that substantiall and personall presence of the Godhead in Christ's humane nature and therefore that is a more effectuall disswasive from the pollution of sin There can be no greater grace shewed towards man then that God should vouchsafe to unite to mans nature the person of his only begotten son Hooker p 297 We should then be very mindlesse of and unthankfull for Gods thus gracing and exalting of our nature if we should by sinfull lusts corruptions defile our natures which are for sort or kind the same with that of the only begotten son of God 4. From this doctrine of the personall union we may first be exhorted unto the worship of Christ 2. Directed in our worship of God 1. We may hence be exhorted unto a divine worship and a religious adoration of him Revel 1.5,6 Chapt. 5.8,12,13,14 Chapt. 7.9,10 the fulnesse of the Godhead in him is the ultimate formall and adequate object of divine worship and calls for a divine faith and trust in him Joh. 6.29 John 14.1 John 16.9 As also for such an height of love as cannot be given unto a meere creature without Idolatry Luk. 14.26 Because he is the Lord therefore serve him with feare and rejoyce with trembling He is the son therefore kisse him least he be angry and ye perish from the way when his wrath is kindled but a little Psalm 2. v. 11 12. He is thy Lord and worship thou him Psal 45.11 He is the Lord of Hosts therefore sanctify him and let him be your feare and your dread Isai 8.13 He is God and none else therefore let every knee bow unto him let every tongue swear by him Isai 45.22,23 He thought it not robbery to be equall with God Phil. 2.6 And therefore let us honour him even as we honour the father Joh. 5.23 He is God over all and therefore let him be blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 He is the mighty God Isai 9.6 therefore let us humble our selves under his mighty hand 1 Pet. 5.6 He is worthy to receive glory honour and power for he hath created all things Revel 4. ult 2. From the personall union we may take direction for our worship of God The Israelites under the old testament were to bring all their holy thinges their offerings and sacrifices before the Altar and Tabernacle and afterwards the Temple the habitation of Gods howse and the place where his honour dwelt Levit. 16.13,14 Deut. 12.5,6 They were to pray and worship towards the city which God had chosen and towards the howse the holy temple which God had built for his name 1 Kings 8.35,44,48 Psalm 5.7 Dan. 6.10 But now the Arke tabernacle and temple were but types of Christ's manhood and the presence of God in them was but typicall In the manhood it selfe there is a personall presence of the Godhead And therefore we should bring all our duties and services all our acts of worship unto Christ man and present them in his name and through his mediation that is in our performance of them we should eye Christ man as the instrument and morall cause meriting of and interceding for their acceptation From above the mercy seate where God dwelt typically betwixt the Cherubims Psalm 80.1.2 Kings 19.15 there God communed with Moses and met with his people Exod. 25.22 Exod. 29.42,43 Numb 7.89 And this was to teach that all the approaches of Gods people unto him and all acts of their communion with him in faith hope love prayers prayses hearing of the word and receiving of his sacraments should be in Christ our alone mercy seate or propitiation 1 Joh. 2.2 as the way and means of their acceptance For in him onely dwelleth all-fulnesse of the Godhead bodily and therefore in him alone for his sake meerely will God be well pleased with our persons and services all the worship and honour that we tender him For farther application of this point I shall referre the reader unto what I have said on Joh. 1.14 and for the present I shall onely dispatch the consideration of those inferences that the Apostle himselfe drawes from it in this place in the words foregoing and
me said unto me I will shew thee what these be And the man that stood among the myrtle trees answered and said These are they whom the Lord hath sent to walke to and fro through the earth Zech. 1. vers 8 9 10. Here we have the then low and depressed condition of the Church set forth by diverse particulars It was night with her a darke and sad time she was in a valley or bottome And this bottome was covered with the shadow of black and thick trees It was in the bottome among the myrtle trees But now the King and protector of the Church is ready for her succour and reliefe And therefore he is said to be riding And he is like a consuming fire all in a flame with anger against her enemies and therefore he is said to ride on a red horse He is wayted and attended on by Angels whom he employeth in his errands They walke to and fro through the earth vers 10. And they give up their account unto him vers 11. Behind him were there red horses speckled and white They were behind him as souldiers following their captaine and there were some for all dispensations Junius Red horses ad praestanda judicia for execution of his judgments White horses ad beneficia ejus praestanda for conveyance of his benefits And speckled horses ad utrunque conjunctim for actions of a mixt nature partly for protection of his Church and partly for punishment of her adversaries Christs soveraignety over the Angels is you see a very comfortable doctrine unto the people of Christ As it is usefull for their consolation so farther it may serve for dehortation of them from the adoration and invocation of Angels which perhaps the Apostle particularly aymed at against the Gnosticks and other seducers that urged the worship of Angels vers 18. Suppose they be most excellent and powerfull creatures Principalities and Powers yet they are still the subjects and servants of Christ our mediatour He still is their head and soveraigne and therefore it were a very foolish part to forsake him and flie unto their mediation I shall conclude all that I have to say on these words with that of Calvin in locum Sed interim tenendum est sursum deorsum cancellos nobis circundari ne à Christo vel tantillum divertat fides nostra This one thing must be kept in remembrance that the Apostle here sets us limits up-wards and down wards Upwards towards the Angels Principalities and powers And down-wards towards philosophy and vaine deceit after the tradition of men and after the rudiments of the world that so our faith may not swerve a jot from our head and redeemer Christ Jesus in whom dwelleth all fulnesse of the Codhead bodily In Christ as man Secondly there was a fulnesse of grace There was in Christ saith Pererius upon Joh. 1.14 a threefold fulnesse of grace For there was in him habituall grace the grace of headship and the grace of union and in all these three he had a fulnesse 1. The habit uall grace concreated with the soule of Christ was most full because it was in the highest degree and in the highest manner and in the greatest excellency wherein it could be had secundum rationem gratiae and according unto the end whereunto grace was ordained which is the union of an intellectuall nature with God He was full of grace having every vertue grace gift operation effect of grace 2. The grace of headship was most full in Christ as reaching unto all the elect not onely men but angels also 3. The grace of union was in him not onely full but * He meaneth terminatively as it is terminated unto an infinite person For formally in it felfe the union is finite infinite Because the union was made in the person of the word which was of infinite perfection and vertue He nameth also another cause for which this grace of union may be said to be most full Because the word hath assumed into the unity of it's person not onely the soule of man but also his body and all the parts thereof All things whatsoever that appertaine unto either the verity or integrity of the humane nature Neither is this union of them with it for a certaine determinate time but for perpetuity so that they never are to be separated therefrom Thus Pererius For the fuller opening of this branch of Christs fulnesse I shall handle these two following particulars Christ as man was 1. the object 2 the subject of a fulnesse of grace 1. He was the object of a fulnesse of grace taking grace for the love and favour of God And to shew this Solomon a type of Christ was by the command of the Lord himselfe tearmed Jedidiah Cornell Alapide that is beloved of the Lord 2 Sam. 12.24 and Ephes 1.6 He is tearmed absolutely and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Beloved Because he is beloved above all others and none are beloved but in and for him Because it is he whom the father loveth and hath loved from everlasting not for any other but for himselfe as being his naturall sonne in whom there is a perfect resemblance of him Agreeable unto this is that which Christ under the name of wisdome speakes of himselfe in Prov. 8.30 Then was I by him as one brought up with him and I was dayly his delight c. Two things are here remarkable unto our present purpose 1. in the Hebrew 'tis in the plurall number * The new Annotations delights to signify that he was his greatest delight And 2. we have the connexion of this delight of the father in the sonne and that on both the fathers and the sonnes part 1. It is connexed on the fathers part with his creation of all things Then was I dayly his delight that is when he prepared the heavens when he set a compasse upon the face of the depth when be established the clouds above when he strengthned the fountaines of the deepe when he gave to the sea his decree that the waters should not passe his commandement When he appointed the foundations of the earth vers 27 28 29. And the reason of this connexion of the fathers complacency in the sonne with his creation of the heavens the fountaines of the deepe the sea the foundations of the earth was to intimate that the father tooke more pleasure in his sonne then in the view of all his creatures then in all the glory and beauty that was in heaven and in earth Next we have the connexion of it on the sonnes part and that 1. naturall and necessary with his owne delight in the father Rejoycing alwaies before him vers 30. 2. gratuitous and voluntary with his complacency in the sonnes of men Rejoycing in the habitable part of his earth and my delights were with the sons of men vers 31. The great and wonderfull interest he hath in his father's love is as some conceive set forth by
may dearely affect and yet they may be displeased with them But Christ is such a sonne in whom his father delighteth and with whom he is fully contented This is my beloved sonne in whom I am well pleased The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a fulnesse of approbation an infinitenesse of affection without any mixture of displeasure and such an height of delight complacency and contentment as is unexpressible This is my beloved sonne in whom I am well-pleased that is of whom I have an high estimate unto whom I bare singular good-will and affection and in whom I wonderfully delight and rejoyce The Demonstrative * Pareus on Math. 17.4,5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this especially Math. 17.4,5 distinguisheth him from Moses and Elias and all other saints as the Lord from the servants He is exalted above the prophets as a sonne as a lord above the servants He is nearer and dearer unto the father then they are or can be In Col. 2.13 He is tearmed the sonne of his love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Where the Apostle useth an Hebraisme whereby the genitive case is put in the roome of an epithete So that the son of his love is as much as his beloved or deareson his most beloved sonne Looke as filius perditionis is filius perditissmus that is most worthy to be destroyed destinated to destruction desperately perishing or notoriously wicked Joh. 17.12.2 Thes 2.3 So Christ is tearmed the sonne of Gods love because he was transcendently beloved by God As also because he was most worthy to be beloved Because he was designed unto all the the possible expressions of love Beza illustrates this Hebraisme by Psalm 15.1 where the mountaine or hill of Gods holinesse is as much as his holy hill or mountaine And Conelius A lapide paralelleth it with Prov. 5.19 Where the hind of loves is as much as the most beloved hind A second particular in Christ that deserveth a fulnesse of grace and favour with God is his service of him and obedience unto him both active and passive And hereupon is it that in Math. 12.18 the Evangelist applieth unto Christ that of the propher Isaiah Chapt. 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soule delighteth God had chosen him to be his servant a mediatour betwixt himselfe and man and because he hath discharged this his office therefore he is his beloved in whom his soule is well-pleased Therefore doth my father love me saith Christ himselfe John 10.17 Because I laid downe my life c. Suitable unto this is that analysis which ſ Sicut priore clogio personam fili● unigenici asseruit pater ita hoc altero commendat ejus officium docens hunc unum esse nobis datum mediatorem servatorem in quo velit nobis esse propitius in quo nos salutem quaerere oporteat sicut testantur Apostoli non est in alio salus nec est datum aliud nomen in quo possimus servari c. Pareus makes of these words this is my beloved sonne in whom I am well pleased The former part of of the words This is my beloved sonne concerneth his person The latter in whom I am well pleased regardeth thinks he his office as he is mediatour our Saviour and surety in and for whom God is propitious to us and reconciled with us Because he was his only begotten sonne therefore he was beloved by him because he would faithfully discharge his office therefore he was well-pleased with him And hereupon it was that his voyce was heard from heaven as at his Baptisme which was a publick inauguration of him for the publicke performance of all his offices so also in his transfiguration which was a private preparation of him for the finall discharge of so much of his office as was to be performed here upon earth But this is not the fulnesse meant here in the text Col. 1.19 For Gods love of and favour towards Christ respected Christ onely objectively and extrinsecally as his adjunctum occupatum terminated unto him Whereas the fulnesse in the text regarded him subjectively and intrinsecally as adjunctum receptum dwelling and inhering in him This fulnesse therefore of Gods grace and favour towards Christ I shall passe over as soone as I have made some briefe use and application thereof The first use is of information The fulnesse of Christs grace and favour with God compared with the fulnesse of his afflictions that he suffered by the decree of God do clearely evince that an height of love and favour is consistent with a depth of affliction Christ was an object of a fulnesse of grace and yet the subject of a fulnesse of sufferings It pleased the Lord to bruise his naturall sonne Isai 53.10 Therefore it is no marvell that he scourgeth every adopted son whom he receiveth Heb. 12.6 If the darling of the father the first borne among many brethren our elder brother were all his life long a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefe Isai 53.3 oppressed and afflicted ver 7. If he suffer'd before he enter'd into his glory Luk 24.26 The rest of the brethren then must not thinke it strange if their way lieth through much tribulation unto the Kingdome of God Act. 14.22 Christ was the beloved son of God even when he hung upon the crosse even then was the Father well pleased with him And therefore to ro●… in a prison to expire in an ignominious way at a stake or upon a scaffold or under a gallows is not in it selfe a marke of Gods displeasure unto his children The Sonne of Gods love cryed out that he was sorsaken of God Mat. 27.46 that is deprived of the sense of all consolation and therefore spirituall desertions are not alwayes an argument of disfavour Gods dearest children may for a long time walke in darknesse and see no light Isai 50.10 A second use is of consolation For this fulnesse of grace unto Christ reflecteth in some measure upon his members It is impossible that God should hate or abhorre those that are so neerly related unto the Son of his love If he delight in him he cannot be averse from them If the name of Christ be Jedidiah beloved of the Lord His spouse's name is Hephzibah because the Lord delighteth in her Isai 62.4 The God of heaven cannot looke upon the members as enemies as long as the head is his favourite If he be gracious they cannot be disgracious Because he is in the bosome of the Father therefore they are not strangers unto the father but he will carry them in his bosome too as a nursing father beareth the sucking child Numb 11.12 If the first borne be beloved by way of eminency the rest of the brethren are beloved too in a way of subordination If he be the primary object of Gods love They are the Secondary If he be God's elect servant in whom his soule delighteth Isai 42.1 then he hath chosen us
I shall yet farther propound by way of motive to stirre up unto this union this following difference betwixt the Court of Heaven and those of earth Though men do not shine and glitter in earthly Courts they may be safe in a retired privacy But now in the Court of Heaven there is no middle betwixt the two extreams of intimacy and hatred They are all either enemies or intimates Those are under a cloud that are not in grace and favour All they are rejected that are not accepted in the beloved And therefore in disunion from Christ there is nothing to be expected but rejection disgrace shame everlasting contempt and confusion I passe on unto those exhortations that concerne the members of Christ and they are seven 1. If we compare the transcendency of Gods love of Christ with the greatnesse of his sufferings for their sins this will afford a strong argument unto an hatred of and sorrow or humiliation for sinne For nothing can more lively discover the hainousnesse of sin and the terrour of Gods wrath against it Christ was an object of a fulnesse of grace and favour and withall he was the object of a fulnesse of wrath as our sins were charged upon him as our surety He was wounded for our transgressions bruised for our iniquities Isai 53.5 For the transgressions of my people was he stricken ver 8. He made his soule an offering for sinne ver 10. God would never have used such a rigour and extremity of severity towards his deare Sonne for sinne imputed to him if sinne had not beene a thing which he infinitely abhorred O what horrour is there in that for which God was u Irae autem hujus objectum fuit Christus non absolute sed tantummodo quoad paenam quae per iram infertur quam ille tanquam sponsor noster subivit Ames med Theol. lib. 1. c. 22. sect 9. angry with the son of his love for which for a while he deserted him in whom he was well pleased which turned the favourable countenance of a loving father into frownes against a beloved sonne 2. They may hence be exhorted unto a fulnesse in their love of Christ If he be the beloved of God it is fit that he should be their beloved too that they may say unto him as the Church Cant. 1.7 O thou whom our soule loveth He is in the bosome of the Father therefore he should be no stranger unto our bosomes We should alwaies lodge him in our hearts thoughts and affections We should not be cold and remisse in our love of the Sonne of Gods love He ever was is and will be the delight of God and therefore our complacency should be in him above all the creatures God hath set his whole love upon him and therefore we semblably should set our whole hearts upon him also and not divide them betwixt him and the creature betwixt him and our corruptions 3. The members of Christ may hence be provoked unto thank-fulnesse and that both unto the father and unto Christ himselfe 1. Unto the father and that in regard of two considerations 1. Because his love of him is the Originall of his love of us 2. The giving of a person so highly beloved unto the death for us is a most evident demonstration of the unmeasurablenesse of his affection unto us 1. Then let us glorify him for the fulnesse of his love unto Christ as man and mediatour because it is the Originall of all the love that he bareth unto his Children if we speake of Gods love quoad effectum that is it is the fountaine of all the good decreed unto them Christ's election is the cause of our election non quoad actum eligentis not of the act of election for that being in God is the same with God himselfe and therefore independant and without a cause but quoad res electione praeparatas as touching the grace and glory unto which we are by election designed All the fruits and effects of our election are derived unto us from Christ's election And if Christ as man had not been elected unto the grace of personall union a fulnesse of habituall grace and perfection of glory we had been for ever rejected from the presence and favour of God If he had not beene the sonne of Gods love we had all of us been for ever Children of wrath and sonnes of perdition and therefore is it that John the Baptist in his testimony of Christ ascribes unto him the comming of grace or favour unto men The law was given by Moses but grace c. came by Jesus Christ Joh. 1.17 If Jesus Christ had not come in the flesh the grace of God that bringeth salvation had never appeared unto the sonnes of men Tit. 2.11 but they had all of them for ever layne under the curse and condemnation of the Law In that benediction of the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.14 grace is appropriated unto Christ and that not onely as God but also as man The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ He was in himselfe the principall object of Gods grace and favour he was the meritorious cause of it's derivation unto us He purchased and procured all the grace and favour we enjoy with God Hence also is it that the Angels in their doxologie averre that the good will of God accrewed unto men by Christ incarnate Luk. 2.14 After the fall all the expressions of Gods good will unto mankind were for the merits of his beloved In him alone he was well pleased Our Saviour himselfe Joh. 17.24 prayeth for the glorification of believers upon the account of his Fathers love of him Father I will that they also whom thou hast given mee be with mee where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given mee for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the world This sufficiently intimates that they owe all their glory unto Gods love of Christ as man and mediatour for otherwise there were little congruence in bringing this as an argument to back his prayer for that If God then had not loved Christ before the foundation of the world lapsed man could never have been glorified never have seen the face of God in heaven God hath blessed us saith the Apostle with all spirituall blessings in Christ Eph. 1.3 that is for Christ's sake All the sweet and precious promises of the Gospell are as so many beames of Gods love and that they shine upon us it is onely by reflection from this Sun of righteousnesse If the light of Gods countenance had not shined upon him we had still sate in darknesse and in the shadow of death Not so much as one promise of the Gospell had ever shone upon our poore soules for all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen that is they are all made and performed for him 2 Cor. 1.20 2. The dearnesse of Christ unto the Father compared with the Fathers exposall of him unto death for us
Priests bearing the names of the children of Israel upon his two x Quod verò spectat usum Ephod seu amiculi debuit reliquis vestibus summi Sacerdotis superindui eidem pectorale inseri in gemmis quae humero aptarentur habere nomina duodecim filiorum Israel ut significaret Christum Ecclesiam ejusque membra omnia semper in memoria habere etiam obverso tergo propter amorem ardentissimum quo eos prosequitur ac propter ipsos coram Deo semper apparere Heb. 7.16 Rivet in locum shoulders for a memoriall as well as on his breast plate ver 12. His heart is towards them when his face is not I shall close all these testimonies with that of the Apostle Paul Ep. 3.18,19 then which no one place of Scripture more fully expresseth the transcendency of Christs love unto us 1. Vers 18. He ascribes unto Christ's love one dimension more then Naturalists attribute unto bodies not onely length breadth depth but also height a Dickson in locum Length in regard of it's eternity breadth in respect of it's extent unto all ages and orders of men unto the Catholique Church scattered over the face of the whole earth depth in regard of it's condescension unto a deliverance of us out of an abysse of sinne and misery Height in regard of it's exaltation of us unto an heavenly happinesse Aquinas as Estius informeth mee thinkes that the Apostle here alludeth unto Job 11.8,9 It is as high as heaven what canst thou doe Deeper then Hell what canst thou know the measure thereof is longer then the earth and broader then the sea But now in vers 19. we have this immensity of Christ's love set forth more plainly The love of Christ passeth knowledge that is cannot be perfectly fully and exactly knowne either by men or Angels The Apostle thinks b Videri potest Apostolus respice real Gnosticos qui hoc superbo nomine sese nuncupaverunt à scientia quam sihi peculiariter venditabant utitur enim vocabulo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Atqui longè majus est scire charitatē Christi ●…pote quae universam Gnosticorum omniúmque Philosophorum scientiam excedit quia mysterium charitatis Christi quâ semetipsum pro nobis tradidit in cor hominis cujusquam non ascendit sicut in genere de hujusmodi mysteriis sapientiae Christianae testatur Apostolus 1. Cor. 2.9 Estius seems to have regard unto the Gnosticks who called themselves by this proud name from that knowledge which they pretended unto above others To take them off from this overweening conceit the Apostle tels them that the love of Christ is so incomprehensible as that it surpasseth all the capacity of our wits fully to conceive it in our minds and therefore it is able to puzzle and non-plus them and all others that vainly boast a knowledge of darke and hidden mysteries Unto these testimonies I shall adde two other arguments of the fulnesse of Christs love 1. The freenesse of it And 2. the unmeasurablenesse of it's fruits or effects 1. The absolute freenesse of it It was neither for his advantage as an end nor for our deservings as a motive He first loved us 1 Joh. 4.19 While we were sinners Christ died for us Rom. 5.8 When we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Sonne vers 10. As it is unmerited so secondly its fruits and effects to wit his purchase and application of our redemption are unmeasurable by our understandings here in this life 1 His purchase of our redemption not by corruptible things as silver and gold but with the precious bloud of Christ 1 Pet. 1.18,19 did so farre exceed humane reason as that it became thereunto a rocke of offence Greater love saith our Saviour hath no man then this that a man lay downe his life for his friend Joh. 15.13 But he himselfe hath given us a greater expression of his owne love He hath laid downe his life for enemies for traytours and rebels and besides this life that he laid downe cannot be equalled by the lives of the greatest of all the sons of men For it was the life of the Son of God and therefore of peerelesse and inestimable value 1 Joh. 3.16 2. As for his application of our redemption if we endeavour to search it unto the bottome it will be found farre to surmount humane reach Is not the originall of it our election one of the most mysterious points in all Divinity are not the parts of it vocation justification adoption sanctification glorification all matters of perplext difficulty Alas how endlesse intricate are the disputes of most learned Theologues touching their nature order and distinction And we should but flatter our selves to expect a decision of these disputes fully and clearely satisfactory as long as we remaine cloathed with corruptible flesh To make now some briefe application of this fulnesse of Christ's love unto us 1. It yeilds abundant consolation unto all true believers That may be said of them which was prophesied of Naphtali Deut. 33.23 They shall be satisfied with favour and full of the blessing of the Lord. The earth is full of the goodnesse of the Lord Psal 33. ●5 Therefore much more the Church Riches of patience long suffering and forbearance are extended unto vessels of wrath Rom. 9.22 Rom. 2.4 therefore undoubtedly the c Divitias gloriae pro gloriofissimas Hebraismus Pareus riches of glory that is glorious grace or the most glorious riches of grace Rom. 9.23 shall be heaped and poured upon vessels of mercy If Christ as a private person out of Charity unto the humane nature as * Dr Twisse some hold did commiserate the impenitent Jewes and wept over them Luk. 19.41 O then what yearning of bowels what tendernesse of compassion is there in him by vertue of his office as he is mediator towards those whom his father hath given him If our hearts be sad and disconsolate our spirits weary wounded and heavy laden with the sense of sinne Why Christ's love saith the Church is better then wine Cant. 1.2 Wine is a very comfortable creature making glad the heart Psal 104.15 and the life merry It maketh the needy and those that are of heavy heart to forget their poverty and remember their misery no more Prov. 31.6,7 and therefore may very well by a synecdoche be put for all worldly delights The words then may be thus paraphrased Thy love is sweeter more comfortable pleasant and rejoycing the heart then the choicest of earthly pleasures If we are assayled by our Corruptions within by temptations afflictions and persecutions without why Christ's love is a banner over us animating us to quit our selves as becommeth the souldiers of the Lord of Hosts for the use of a banner standard or ensigne is as to draw and keepe souldiers togeither Isay 5.26 and 11.10 So also to encourage them Psal 60.4 thou hast given a
our dayes in the fruits and offices of love so that all our actions flow from love be mana●…d in love and end in love 2. The Apostle directs us to conforme our selves herein unto Christs love of us Walke in love as Christ hath loved us There be foure things especially wherein our love of our brethren should be conformable unto Christs love of us 1. Constancy 2. Freenesse 3. Selfe-denyall and humility 4. Reality of expressions 1. Constancy As God he hath loved us from everlasting Prov. 8.30 As man he loveth his owne in the world unto the end Iohn 13.1 That is for ever Our love of our Brethren should therefore be perpetuall and not be altered interrupted or abated by their petty unkindnesses much lesse by the greatest and most miserable change of their outward condition Prov. 17.17 2. Freenesse He died for the ungodly and for sinners Rom. 5.6,8 He loved us in the very height of our rebellion How did he weep over Jerusalem and bemoane its sad fate though it were a place replenisht with persons that breathed nothing but hostility against him Luk. 19.41,42 c. And at his death how fervently prayed he for the pardon of his rageing and insulting crucifyers Luk. 23.34 If we will walke by this patterne of Christs love we must exercise some love unto the most impious and undeserving wretches imaginable We must love our enemies blesse them that curse us doe good to them that hate us and pray for them which despitefully use us and persecute us Math. 5.44 3. Our love must be conformable unto Christs love in the selfe-denyall and humility of it 2 Cor. 8.9 Phil. 2.5,6,7,8 His love was so humble as that it condescended unto the very washing of his disciples feet Iohn 13. We must so farr deny our selves in our love as to shew it though it make nothing unto our advantage nay though it make much unto our disadvantage though it be with the hazard of peace reputation wealth and in some cases of life We must stoop unto the lowest and meanest offices of love especially to promote the good of soules Lastly we should imitate Christs love in the reality of its expressions He went about all his life doing good Act. 10.38 and at last sacrificed 〈◊〉 life for us and therefore we should love not in word neither in tongue but in deed and in truth 1 Ioh. 3.18 Iam. 2.15,16 There should be a labour and worke of our love 1 Thes 1.3 Heb. 6.10 that is our love should be laborious and working ministering unto the saints Christs love was so liberall as that he gave himselfe his blood his life his soule for us and he communicates unto us the satisfaction and merit of his sufferings the graces of his spirit and all his communicable prerogatives There should be likewise such a franke disposition in our love as that we should impart what we hold dearest for the good of Gods Church and people We should lay downe our lives for some brethren 1 Iohn 3.16 Thus Aquila and Priscilla for the life of Paul laid downe their owne necks Rom. 16.3,4 Christ expressed his love in forgiving those that offend as well as in giving those that want He forgiveth us ten thousand talents infinite treasons and rebellions we should not therefore be inexorable unto our brethren for a debt of an hundred pence Math. 18. from verse 24. unto the end of the chapter I proceed unto the second fulnesse of grace that dwelleth and inhereth in Christ's humanity The fulnesse of the grace of the spirit which shall be by me with all possible brevity and plainnesse 1. explained and cleared 2. confirmed 3. applied 1. For explication In the words of the Apostle under this sence we have an adjunct grace set forth unto us 1. By its extent and excellency 2. By its subject 3. By its inhesion in that subject 4. By its cause and originall 1. The extent and excellency of it is expressed in two severall gradations It was 1. A fulnesse 2. An all-fulnesse of grace 2. It s subject was Christs humane nature in him that is in Christ as man 3. We have the inhesion of this adjunct grace in this subject him dwelleth Of which terme I conceive choice is made to denote that this all-fulnesse was in Christ after a permanent and fixed manner it dwelled in him Sutable to which expression is that of the Prophet Isaiah chap. 11. ver 2. And the spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him Vbi verbum requiescit saith Suarez ibi indicat permanentiam per modum habitus The word rest signifieth the permanency and constancy of abode that the spirit was to make in him it was habitually to rest in him 4. Lastly we have the cause of all of all this fulnesse dwelling in him the decree of the father It pleased the father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Christ owed it not either to his owne or others merits but solely to the free purpose and independant pleasure of heaven Indeed the word father is not found in the Originall yet it is understood and therefore rightly supplied by Erasmus who herein is followed by the best translations All that I shall say in farther unfolding these words as understood of Christ's habituall grace shall be in giving satisfaction unto these two questions 1. What is meant by this fulnesse of grace in Christ 2. How an all-fulnesse of grace can be said to be in his humane nature 1. What is meant by this fulnesse of grace in Christ Antonius Delphinus upon John 1.14 puts a difference between these two expressions To be full of grace and to have the fulnesse of grace A river nay a pit or pond the least vessell or measure may be full of water only a fountaine the sea hath in it a fulnesse of water A starr a beame nay a glasse inlightned by the Sun may be full of light only the Sun hath in it the fulnesse of light Even so divers of the saints the virgin Mary Iohn the Baptist Zacharias Elizabeth and Stephen are in Scripture said to be full of the holy Ghost and grace full as vessells as streames full as starrs as beames But Christ only had in him the fulnesse of grace he was full of grace as a fountaine as a sea as a sun He was not only full of grace but the fulnesse of grace dwelled in him so that in his grace there was an all-sufficiency an indeficiency 1. An all-sufficiency sufficient it was for ornament unto himselfe and for influence upon others He had so much as was requisite for the dispensation of all his offices and for transacting all businesses belonging to his Church and as was necessary for his filling up all the emptinesse of grace expelling all the fulnesse of sinne and supplying all the defects and wants possible in his members 2. An indeficiency It will never faile Chrysostome in the beginning of his 13. Homily upon the first of John illustrates this by the
those that have will easily appeare to him that shall compare the 9 10 11 12. verses togeather 2. From the words immediatly foregoing v. 11. unto you it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdome of heaven c. for whosoever hath unto him shall be given c. Now here would be no proofe at all unlesse by those that have be meant such as resemble the Apostle in piety and holinesse unlesse they be as they elect and regenerate 3. From the following words which are of them an illustration by way of Antithesis or opposition But whosoever hath not from him shall be taken away even that he hath Hence I thus argue By those that have not are understood the unregenerate and therefore by those that have are meant the regenerate That by whosoever hath not are understood the unregenerate is evident because these words whosoever hath not from him shall be taken away even that he hath are urged by our Saviour as an Argument to prove that clause in the precedent verse But unto them it is not given Which in Mark 4.11 is thus varied But unto them that are without all these things are done in parables Now by such as are without our Saviour understands Aliens such as are not inwardly and effectually called such as are not members of the Church in regard of spirituall communion However they may have place therein in regard of outward profession This engagement of our Saviour is made 2. in the parable of the Talents unto the diligent faithfull and holy use of the gifts and graces both of edification and sanctification Math. 25.29 And then it may be thus glossed Whosoever useth his gifts and talents well in a sanctified manner for his masters service the advancement of Gods glory the promotion of Christ's Kingdome unto him besides the reward mentioned vers 21 23 at the last day shall be given even here in this life an abundant improvement of these gifts and talents and the great enlargment of their gracious use for the edification of others A 5th argument is from the relations of this progressive fulnesse 1. From the relation of an effect towards spirituall and heavenly wisedome The wisedome that is from above is saith Jam. chap. 3.17 full of mercy and good fruites Full of mercy and that erga egenos th●se that are wanting as also erga errantes and peccantes those that are faulty and straying and full of good fruits that is of all offices of humanity and love as Pareus expounds the words And if it be full of mercy and good fruits towards men it is also full of Religion and acts of worship towards God For between the graces and duties of the first and second table there is an inseparable coherence 2. From the relation it hath of a consequent and end unto Christs ascension 1. Then it is related unto Christs ascension as the consequent thereof Whereas the Psalmist Psalm 68.18 mentioning the effect or fruit of Christs ascension in regard of his members saith that he received gifts for men The Apostle in his quotation of this place Ephes 4.8 expresseth the passage thus He gave gifts unto men Which variation sheweth as Fulke observeth in pag. 12. of his answere to the preface of Martin against the English translations of the bible wherefore Christ received gifts viz to bestow them on his Church To receive and give are different actions But yet when receiving or taking is designed unto a farther giving it is an usuall Hebraisme to expresse the latter by the former In the words of the Psalmist there is as Beza Piscator and Rivet observe an Ellipsis which may be supplied thus Thou having received gavest gifts unto men So that by a Metalepsis the Consequent is understood by the Antecedent Christs receiving of gifts is put for his giving of gifts Because as it is noted by A lapide he received them not to keep them unto himselfe but to impart and distribute them unto those whom God hath given him among the sonnes of men There be two things amongst many others that discourage poore believers and make them doubtfull of their shares in the fulnesse of Christ 1. The lownesse and meannesse of their condition 2. The sinfulnesse and rebellion of their natures and lives Now those words of the Psalmist Psalm 68.18 Thou hast received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also hold forth comfort against both these particulars 1. It comforts against the lownesse and meannesse of our condition Thou hast received gifts for men indefinitely Gentiles as well as Jewes poore as well as rich unlearned as well as learned deformed as well as beautifull No sinlesse abasure whatsoever is any bar unto the bounty of Christ Yea but saith the distressed conscience I am not onely a despicable worme but a sinfull and rebellious wretch and what thoughts of favour can Christ have to such an one Why thou hast received gifts for men saith the Psalmist yea for the rebellious also Every man is even from the wombe a rebell against the command grace and spirit of God And therefore the rebellious here are denominated from more then an ordinary height of rebellion contracted by custome in sinning and superadded unto that naturall contumacie which is common unto all the sonnes of Adam No degree of rebellion renders uncapable of benefit by the fulnesse of Christs gifts and graces but what carrieth along finall impenitency with it Thou hast received gifts for the rebellious also that is for even the worst of penitent rebels such as have beene notorious and desperate fighters against God Children of disobedience or rebellion foolish deceived serving diverse lusts and pleasures Tit. 3.3 What a plentifull portion of gifts and graces did Christ poure upon Saul when he was in the very ruffe and greatest heat of his rebellion when he breathed out threatnings and slaughter against the disciples of the Lord. By this you see that one consequent of Christs Ascension after his victories upon the Crosse Col. 2.12 regarding his favourites and loving subjects was a distribution of Spirituall gifts unto them As it was the custome of Generals when after a victory in a forraigne warre they returned in triumph unto their owne country to send presents and portions unto their friends and to cast gifts among the poore multitude 1 Sam. 30.26,27 c. Esther 9.19,22 Joh. 7.38,39 Joh. 16.7 But now ver 10. of the fourth chapter of the Ephesians the Apostle affirmeth this communication of gifts unto the Church to be not a meere consequent but further the very and it selfe of Christs ascension He ascended farre above all heavens that he might fill all things that is all his members with all graces necessary unto them either in a generall way as they were members of the Church or in a more peculiar consideration if they were officers of the Church The universall particle all is to be limited by the matter that is for the present handled Now it is manifest by