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

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him And this is the description of Paul the Pen-man of this Epistle The description of Titus to whom hee writes follows Hee is called Pauls own Son not according to the flesh but first after the common faith which hee received from the Doctrine of the Apostle whose Disciple hee also was and his continual auditor being alwayes in his company Again because hee had fully received the impression of the faith preached by the Apostle and expressed it to the life in his Doctrine Lastly because hee resembled Paul as it were an image in his manner of life and conversation Vers. 4. To Titus mine own son after the common faith Grace mercy and peace from God the Father and the Lord Iesus Christ our Saviour In his salutation hee blesses Titus from God through Christ wishing and applying to him First Grace i. e. That is the gifts of the Holy Ghost both necessary to his own salvation and his calling in the Ministry Secondly Mercy i. e. Remission of sins or infirmities in the exercise of the gifts bestowed upon him Thirdly Peace i. e. Happiness from the fountain of Grace by degrees to bee accomplished Vers. 5. For this cause left I thee in Crete that thou shouldest set in order the things that are wanting and ordain Elders in every City as I had appointed thee This Preface being premised that hee might instruct Titus about the choosing of Ministers in the first place hee repeats three general Precepts which he gave to Titus when hee went from Crete First That Titus finish in the Constitution of the Churches that which the Apostle had begun Then that hee appoint Elders i. e. all ordinary Governours of the Church in every City wherein the faithful lately converted dwelt Thirdly That in this business hee carry not himself after his own will but follow the rule set him by the Apostle as hee had ordained Vers. 6. If any bee blameless the husband of one wife having faithful children not accused of riot or unruly In the second place hee sets down three things requisite in Elders or Governours onely or of Teachers also 1 That they bee not defamed to the derogation of their Authority Again that they bee not guilty of Polygamy too frequent in those times And lastly That their whole family bee a mirrour of honest and chaste Discipline i. e. That their children bee brought up in the faith accustomed to temperance and frugality free from profuseness and luxury and patterns of obedience For hee esteemed it very necessary that the family of an Elder should bee rightly ordered if the wife and children understood that upon conjecture of their evil manners and conversations the Master of the Family might bee cast out of his Ecclesiastical Office Vers. 7. For a Bishop must bee blameless as the steward of God not self-willed nor soon angry not given to wine no striker not given to filthy lucre In the third place because amongst the Elders they that labour in the Word and Doctrine are the chief the properties of this Elder whom hee calls a Bishop are twelve whereof hee spake in the former Epistle to Timothy 1 Hee ought to bee free from any just blame lest his Authority be diminished yea so far from blame that nothing bee found in him unworthy the steward of God who ought to bee so much the more blameless by how much his office is more holy 2 Hee ought not to bee self-willed or such an one that obstinately pleases himself for hee that is too self-willed is ready to displease all others 3 Not soon angry for hee that is so cannot bear with the infirmities of the people of God or regard them 4 Not given to wine and drunkenness 5 Not contentious No striker 6 Not given to filthy lucre free from covetousness Vers. 8. But a lover of hospitality a lover of good men sober just holy temperate This hee confirms because it is requisite that according to his abilities hee bee ready to receive strangers or the banished servants of God 7 That hee esteem and love good men such as excel others For it is the sign of a man of little honesty to hate those that are good upon any pretence 8 That in all things hee bee modest sober of a sound minde or prudent 9 That hee bee just desirous to restore every man his own 10 That hee bee pious and holy who by his life and conversation may teach others 11 That hee bee continent and temperate having dominion over his affections 〈…〉 〈…〉 Holding fast the faithful word as hee hath been taught that hee may be able by sound Doctrine both to exhort and to convince the gain-sayers 12 That hee bee not a Divine onely but that by faith hee cleave to the truth not onely able to feed the flock but to stop the mouthes of barking Wolves The Second Part of the Chapter Vers. 10. For there are many unruly and vain talkers and deceivers especially they of the Circumcision The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee gives an account of what diligence and care ought to bee used in the choosing of Pastors viz. Because false Teachers did at that time abound Hee also describes those whom hee would have rejected from this Office whereof are 1 unruly or refractory who will not bee reduced into order casting off the yoak of subjection or of the Eldership or of any other lawful jurisdiction whether they bee such as withdraw themselves from obedience to Authority either Natural or Civil to whom they ought to submit in the Lord. 2 Vain talkers who given to vain boasting follow after vain subtilties or frigid and trifling speculations which conduce nothing to holiness and the fear of God 3 Deceivers or seducers of mens mindes who either by their corrupt Doctrine corrupt the Gospel or by their fair rhetorical speeches so inchant as it were the mindes of men that they will no longer admit the sound way of teaching Of which sort for example sake hee points out the Jews Doctors to bee who dwelt in Crete Vers. 11. whose mouthes must bee stopped who subvert whole houses teaching things which they ought not for filthy lucres sake Hee advises him that these are not onely to bee refuted but forbidden to preach either publickly or privately whereof hee gives seven Reasons Reas. 1. Because they draw whole Families from sound Doctrine and drive them to perdition and that either by teaching errours or by ill applying the general Doctrine to foment the lusts of men and that for filthy lucres sake Vers. 12. One of themselves even a Prophet of their own said The Cretians are always liars evil beasts slow bellies Reas. 2. Because they followed the disposition of their Nation lyars given to idleness serving their own intemperance and bellies like beasts which hee proves by the testimony of the Cretian Poet Calimachus or Epimenides to which Testimony Paul himself assents Vers. 13. This witness is true wherefore rebuke them sharply that they may bee sound
Satan viz. 1 If they would lay their foundation upon the most holy Doctrine of the Apostles which hath no mixture of humane inventions and would not depart any thing at all from it 2 If they would daily take care to carry on the superstructure and would strive unto perfection in the knowledge and beleef of the Truth revealed in the Word of God 3 If they were diligent in their prayers out of a sense of their necessities following the guidance of the Holy Spirit which helps the infirmities of the Saints and shews them for what and how they must pray according to the will of God Vers. 21. Keep your selves in the love of God looking for the mercy of our Lord Iesus Christ unto eternal life 4 If they indeavoured to love their brethren and neighbours out of a sense of the love of God towards them 5 If they would set the coming of the Lord before their eyes 6 If they apprehended eternal life 7 If against their own unworthiness they adhered to the mercy of Christ who is so to bee our Judge that hee will take the Gospel and the free benefit of our Redemption procured by himself for his rule From this it follows that wee ought to persevere in the Faith Vers. 22. And of some have compassion making a difference 23. And others save with fear pulling them out of the fire bating even the garment spotted by the flesh Arg. 9. Is propounded by way of precept because a reason is given of God to the Church whereby not onely they may persevere but they may reduce into the way those that wandred out and raise up those that were fallen To wit if they would handle every one according to his condition i. e. putting a difference between those that erre mercy and compassion was to be used towards those that were tractable and meek but if any one was stubborn and more securely shall indulge himself in his sin with fear and a more severe castigation they should endeavour to preserve him to wit by excommunication if otherwise hee could not be amended There are two Reasons given of this Reas. 1. Under a fit similitude for where wee see any one in danger to be burnt with fire we stick not to snatch him out by force So are they to be cured who repent not unless they be sharply handled who are to be rescued from hell and destruction even by the severest censures Reas. 2. By an allusion to a Legal type Levit. 15. Because where there is danger of infection and contagion as in obstinate offenders and such as lead the way to others their society is to be avoided and wee must depart from such Libertines given up to the pollution of the flesh As in times past under the Law there was a separation from Lepers and those that were pestilentially infected which is the consequence of excommunication Vers. 24. Now unto him that is able to keep you from falling and to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy The third part of the Epistle remains to wit the conclusion in which hee shews that all the praise of their perseverance is to be given unto God lest any man should ascribe too much to the power of man whose diligence in the use of means as to the premises is so much urged These five following Reasons shew that the praise of not perseverance is wholly to be attributed unto Christ. Is able Reas. 1. Because the power of preserving beleevers wholly abides in him that in this life they might not fall or faint in the course of holiness To present Reas. 2. Because there is power in him to present all his in the day of judgement unblameable in the sight of God with exceeding joy Vers. 25. To the onely wise God our Saviour bee glory and majesty dominion and power now and ever Amen Reas. 3. Because hee is the onely wise God that by his own waies and means hee may accomplish this whole business Saviour Reas. 4. Because hee is our Saviour by his merit office and efficacy it is necessary hee should accomplish what hee hath undertaken Glory Reas. 5. Because in every one of his works hee willeth the manifestation of his glory So that chiefly in this business he will have the glory of his Majesty appear his infinite power to be seen and his supream authority over all men and things to be eminently discovered and acknowledged both now and for ever Therefore you that are true beleevers shall persevere and all the glory of your salvation shall bee given unto God to whom of right it belongs and shall be ascribed for ever Amen THE END A Catalogue of Books printed for Francis Eglesfield Courteous Reader These Books following are to bee sold by Francis Eglesfield at the Sign of the Marygold in St. Pauls Church-yard Books of Divinity PIous and learned Annotations on the Bible with a large and useful Analysis in folio By the learned Iohn Diodate The Body of Divinity it being the sum and substance of Christian Religion Catechistically propounded and explained by way of Question and Answer By Bishop Usher The Holy Court in five Tomes written in French by Nicholas Causine and translated into English by Sir Thomas Hawkins and others The Works of that learned and pious Gentleman Sir Richard Baker Knight are these viz. 1 Meditations and Disquisitions on the Lords Prayer in 4o. 2 Meditations and Disquisitions on the first Psalm in 4o. 3 Meditations and Disquisitions on the seven penitential Psalms in 4o. 4 Meditations and Disquisitions on the seven Consolitory Psalms in 4o. 5 Ca●o Variegatus or Cato's Moral disticks translated and paraphrased with Variations of Expressings in English verse in 4o. 6 Motives to Prayer in 12. 7 The Apology for Laymens writing of Divinity together with the fall of Lucifer in 12. 8 Meditations and Disquisitions on the Creed a very useful book for these times in 12. 9 Soliloquies for the Soul in 12. A learned Commentary on the first Psalm in 4o. Both by Finneus Fletcher The Purple Island being poetical Miscellanies in 4o. Both by Finneus Fletcher Joy in Tribulation being a Consolation for afflicted Consciences by the same Author in 12. Five Sermons preached on several Occasions at the Court before the Kings Majesty By that Reverend and Learned Divine D. Preston in 4o. Riches of Mercy to men in misery very fit for these times of Atheism and Apostacy by the same Dr. Preston and approved of by Dr. Sibbs in 4o. His Remains containing three excellent Treatises namely Iudas Repentance the Saints spiritual Strength and St. Pauls Conversion by the same Author in 4o. A Commentary on the Divine Revelation of St. Iohn by David Parreus in folio Doomsday or a Treatise of the Resurrection of the Body delivered in 22 Sermons on the 1 Corinthians 15.16 by the Judicious Divine Dr. Day in 4o. Light from Heaven in 4. By Dr. Sibbs Lidas Conversion or the Riches of Mercy in 12.
put away his wife But if the wife pretending necessary causes of departing as danger of life or such like shall depart hee commands that either shee bee reconciled to her husband or abstain from new Marriage and by consequence much more from fornication and that hee commands both for the punishment of frowardness and impatience and the tryal of sincerity lest this liberty should bee drawn into licentiousness In the mean time hee commands the husband that hee put not away his wife or give her cause to depart Vers. 12. But to the rest speak I not the Lord If any brother hath a wife that believeth not and shee bee pleased to dwell with him let him not put her away 13. And the woman which hath an husband that believeth not and if hee bee pleased to dwell with her let her not leave him The other part of their enquiry follows wherein the question is concerning those that are married where the one is an Infidel whether Divorce is lawful Hee saith that hee will answer to this part from the authority of special revelation because God had not determined it in the Law what Christians should do in that case this is it which hee saith The Lord hath not determined it in the old Law but I viz. by special revelation from the Lord will determine it In the first part of his answer hee forbids that the unbelieving party should bee put away if shee desire not to leave him Vers. 14. For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband else were your children unclean but now are they holy Hee lays down five Reasons First Because an unbelieving person is sanctified though not in it self yet to the use of the Believer although not simply yet so far that Marriage is sanctified to the believing party and to the children brought forth Therefore let not the unbelieving wife bee put away if shee desire to tarry Else Reason 2. Confirming the former from the consequent absurdity because otherwise the children of Christians in such a case would not bee born under the Covenant they would not bee born Christians and dedicated to Christ in holiness the contrary to which is true Therefore let not the unbelieving wife bee put away if shee desire to tarry Vers. 15. But if the unbelieving depart let him depart A brother or a Sister is not under bondage in such cases but God hath called us to peace Before hee adds the reasons that are behind hee propounds another part of the answer If the unbelieving party will not co-habit but depart in this case hee declares the Marriage to bee void and the party believing to bee free To peace Reason 3. Proving that the unbelieving party is not to bee put away being willing to stay because Believers are called to maintain peace with all Therefore if the unbelieving party admits of equal terms of peace shee is not to bee put away Vers. 16. For what knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt save thy husband Or how knowest thou O man whether thou shalt save thy wife Reason 4. Because by dwelling together the unbeliever may bee gained Vers. 17. But as God hath distributed to every man as the Lord hath called every one so let him walk and so I ordain in all Churches Reason 5. Because every one in what condition soever ought to abide in that honest and lawful calling in which God by his Providence hath set them as the Apostle taught in all Churches Therefore wee must also abide in Marriage with an unbeliever being willing to stay For whereas Marriage hath been contracted in Heathenism God would not that the calling of one to the Grace of Christ Jesus should defraud the party not yet converted The Apostle prescribes the same Law to believing servants that they shake not off the yoke of an unbelieving Master who desired not to put away the servant converted to the Faith Vers. 18. Is any man called being circumcised let him not become uncircumcised Is any called in uncircumcisian let him not bee circumcised 19. Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing but the keeping of the Commandments of God Hee confirms the Reason fore-going by an Induction First of Circumcision and Uncircumcision neither whereof was to bee stood upon by a Christian but this only that in both states they observed the Moral Commandments of God Vers. 20. Let every man abide in the same calling wherein hee was called From hence because in one example of the Induction the fulness of it might easily bee apprehended hee infers a general position of abiding in that state wherein God had called him Vers. 21. Art thou called being a servant care not for it but if thou mayst bee made free use it rather Further hee adds another member of the Induction concerning bondage in which hee adviseth them to abide unless God had opened a door to their liberty Vers. 22. For hee that is called in the Lord being a servant is the Lords Free-man Likewise also hee that is called being free is Christs servant Hee gives a reason Because bodily servitude is no diminution to the spiritual liberty of Christians from the guilt of sin and wrath neither doth bodily liberty exempt and free us from the service of Christ. Vers. 23. Yee are bought with a price bee not yee the servants of men By the way hee admonisheth them that whether bond or free as to the body that they take heed they do not things unlawful in themselves by the command or will of men because that would bee to serve men against Christ who had bought them with a price that in all things they should do the Will of their Redeemer not of men Vers. 24. Brethren let every man wherein bee is called therein abide with God That no man might rashly depart from his Calling hee further inculcates a general Precept of abiding with God in the present condition of life in obedience unto God until it should seem good to him to change their condition Vers. 25. Now concerning Virgins I have no commandement of the Lord yet I give my judgement as one that hath obtained mercy of the Lord to bee faithful The third inquiry which the Corinthians made to Paul concerning Virgins Male and Female whether they might marry or not To which being about to give answer hee premiseth that hee had no special command whereby the state of Virginity was either injoyned or prohibited but that hee would faithfully give his advice and his opinion of the convenience as it became him to whom God had vouchsafed mercy to bee faithful Vers. 26. I suppose therefore that this is good for the present distress I say that it is good for a man so to bee 27. Art thou bound unto a Wife seek not to bee loosed art thou loosed from a Wife seek not a wife There are three parts of the answer First In the present necessity or the danger of persecution as
there are three chief parts In the first hee deals with the Galatians that they would renounce the errours which they had drunk in but by the way that hee might prevent those that accuse him hee couragiously asserts his Apostleship lest hee should give place to those three chief Apostles in his Apostolical authority In the first Chapter and the first part of the second In the second part hee purposely disputes of Iustification by Faith and of the temporary use and abrogation of the Mosaical Law in the latter part of the second Chapter also in the third and fourth Lastly In the third part his Exhortation for perseverance in Christian Liberty being premised hee counsels them to use it well and shews which are the true exercises of Christians lest either by a dissolute licentiousness or the superstitious observation of Ceremonies they should neglect the chief Christian duties In the fift and sixt Chapter CHAP. I. THere are three parts of the Chapter In the first is a Preface to vers 6. In the second hee begins to deal with the Galatians that they return into the way from their errour in observing the Levitical Law and that imaginary conjunction of Iustification by Works with Iustification by Faith as if this had been possible some Arguments to this end being propounded to vers 13. In the third part the Apostle confirms the last Argument from signs concerning the divinity of his Doctrine to the end Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Iesus Christ and God the Father who raised him f●om the dead The whole Preface is ordered for the preparing the mind of the Galatians to obey his Doctrine concerning the Grace of Christ. The scope may bee perceived in this or the like Proposition to the same sense Yee ought to beleeve and obey mee admonishing you of the true cause of Justification and Sanctification Eight Arguments are intimated to this end whereof some are contained in the inscription vers 1 2. Some in the salutation vers 3. Some in the description of Christ vers 4. Some in the doxology vers 5. An Apostle Argum. 1. I Paul which write these things unto you am an Apostle of supream authority in the ministery of the Church Therefore you must beleeve and obey mee Neither of men Argum. 2. My office is not of humane invention or is not founded in humane authority but God is the Author of it so that my Doctrine cannot bee contemned without injury done to God Therefore except you would reject God that sent mee yee must hearken to mee Neither by man Argum. 3. I am not mediately or by the Ministery of men called but immediately by God viz. Christ by him now raised from the dead and by God the Father who gave testimony to the Doctrine of his Son by raising him from the dead Therefore yee must beleeve and obey my Doctrine Vers. 2. And all the Brethren which are with mee unto the Churches of Galatia Argum. 4. I have called all the Brethren which are with mee to the society of this admonition written to you all the Brethren with mee which together with my self salute you will sometimes bee witnesses against you unless you obey my Doctrine Therefore yee ought to beleeve and obey mee Churches Argum. 5. Although yee bee infected with a dangerous errour yet I think you are to bee accounted in the number of the Churches Therefore recompence mee and acknowledge mee as an Apostle sent to the Churches to bee obeyed and believed Vers. 3. Grace bee to you and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Iesus Christ. Argum. 6. I according to the authority bestowed upon mee by the providence of God do not doubt to give you right to the blessing of the Gospel and to intreat Grace i. e. a more plentious acknowledgment sense and fruit of Gods free mercy reconciliation and forgiveness of sins and the other effects of the Grace of God conducing to sanctification Together with peace or a sound tranquillity of heart and other good things which appertain to your happiness that all things may bee derived to you from the God of Peace and from the Lord Christ the Mediatour the onely Fountain of Grace and Peace Therefore I ought to bee beleeved while I open to you the reason of this Grace and Peace communicated to you Vers. 4. Who gave himself for our sins that hee might deliver us from this present evil world according to the Will of God and our Father Hee makes a description of Christ from the work of Redemption that hee might shew that our whole salvation by the Grace of God comes to us through his merit from whence Argum. 7. Our salvation or redemption from that lost condition of the wicked who are of this world without Christ is obtained by the death of Christ alone and that by the decree and institution of God the Father who hath ordained this onely free cause of salvation Therefore I ought to bee beleeved and obeyed admonishing you that you would acknowledge this the alone cause of your salvation Vers. 5. To whom bee glory for ever and ever Amen Argum. 8. God is worthy and Christ also to whom for such a gift and ineffable Grace Glory should bee given by all for ever Therefore I ought to bee beleeved by you vindicating this glory of the Grace of Christ amongst you lest it should bee obscured or taken away by the merit of humane works The second Part. Vers. 6 I marvel that you are so soon removed from him that called you in the Grace of Christ unto another Gospel The second part of the Chapter follows wherein hee proves that the errour concerning that imaginary and impossible conjunction of justification by works and justification by Grace or by Faith in Christ must bee renounced in which errour now they were entangled by the false Apostles who taught the observation of the Mosaical Law to bee also necessary for the salvation and justification of those that beleeve in Christ The Arguments which hee urges that they may renounce this errour are nine Of whom some are used by way of reprehension others are openly brought in the disputation following I marvel Argum. 2. Your revolting O Galatians from the Grace of Christ to the merits of humane works Is to bee wondred that so soon as ever the Faith of Christ was admitted and Grace for your conversion received yee fell from it Therefore yee must renounce this errour Removed Argum. 2. By this your errour yee have forsaken God who hath called you into the Grace of Christ and have betaken your selves to humane works Therefore you must renounce this errour Removed away Argum. 3. By this errour yee are removed from the Gospel of Christ into another I know not what Gospel feigned by men Therefore you must renounce this errour Vers. 7. Which is not another but there bee some that trouble you and would pervert the Gospel of Christ. Arg. 4. There is
the office of an Apostle that I might wholly attend to the preaching of the Gospel separated from the world to this business who is it therefore that dares detract from my authority Vers. 13. Who was before a blasphemer and a persecuter and injurious but I obtained mercy because I did it ignorantly in unbeleef Reas. 4. Notwithstanding the wickedness and the evil deserts of my former life God is not hindred from taking mee into his service who was in times past an enemy Who therefore will disparage my authority upon the wickedness of my former conversation Ignorantly Hee prevents an Objection Some man might say how could so open an enemy of Christ obtain pardon Hee answers that his sin was out of ignorance and so hee proves that it was not that unpardonable sin against the Holy Ghost or a malicious insurrection against Christ which the devilish enemies of the Gospel knowingly practise in opposition to the Kingdome of Christ but sin committed out of ignorance while hee was yet an unbeleever Vers. 14. And the Grace of our Lord was exceeding abundant with Faith and Love which is in Christ Iesus Reas. 5. God hath vouchsafed mee more than an ordinary measure of Faith and Love and hath abundantly shewed forth his Grace in the bestowing of his saving gifts Therefore there is no reason that any one should detract from my Apostolick authority from my former conversation Vers. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Iesus came into the world to sav● sinners of whom I am chief Reas. 6. Christ through his eminent mercy towards mee hath effected this that being taught by experience I should bee drawn first as the chief of sinners in my o●n opinion to subscribe to that sentence of the Gospel concerning the person of Christ his office comming virtue merit and efficacy to save sinners so that I cannot but declare openly to the whole world the truth and benefit of that sentence for by experience I speak It is a faithful saying c. Therefoee no disparagement ought to bee offered to my authority who not onely beleeve my self what is committed to mee but I also preach what I have experience of Vers. 16. Howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy that in mee first Iesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a patern to them that should hereafter beleeve on him to life everlasting Reas. 7. The Lord hath set mee for an example of his long-suffering mercy goodness and admirable grace that sinners to the end of the world who shall hear of my wonderful conversion and the bounty of God towards mee may bee abundantly confirmed in the love of Christ and expect the like goodness towards themselves looking upon mee as a type and exemplar of unspeakable mercy Therefore am I most fit to bee made a Preacher of that grace and far bee it from any one to detract from my authority because of my former conversation while I was an unbeleever Vers. 17. Now unto the King eternal immortal invisible the onely wise God bee honour and glory for ever and ever Amen Th● Apostle now affected with the greatness of the benefit not satisfying himself in the amplification of it with a pathetick thanksgiving he concludes his speech with an illustrious celebration of Christ concerning whom hee produces four Epithites which are so agreeable unto Christ that they may also bee ascribed to the Father and to the Holy Ghost 1 God or Christ as God is King of ages i. e. by an Hebraism the eternal King that hee may bee distinguished from mundane and mortal Kings 2 Immortal because God is without all alteration change and corruption and alwayes the same like himself 3 Invisible because hee cannot bee comprehended by the eyes or any senses because their faculties are corporeal and circumscribed with narrow limits 4 Hee is onely wise because hee alone knows all things not by objects nor by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ratiocination but in and by and of himself as one in whom are all things as in their first efficient and their ultimate end Hence the Apostle ascribes honour to God or a testification to his eminency Glory a celebrious fame with praise which is eternally due unto God adding Amen as a seal of his faith and willingness to glorifie God The Third Part of the Chapter Vers. 18. This charge I commit unto thee son Timothy according to the Prophecies which went before on thee that thou by them mightest war a good warfare The third part contains his Exhortation to Timothy that hee would behave himself couragiously in his Ministry viz. That hee would war a good warfare or that hee would prepare himself to fight against all enemies and all impediments and would use all diligence that the Church might receive no detriment by any one According The Arguments of his Exhortation are two Arg. 1. Because certain things are foretold Prophetically of pious men by a kinde of divine instinct which afford great hope of famous actions to bee done by thee as appears out of Act. 16.2 Therefore war a good warfare Vers. 19. Holding fast faith and a good conscience which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwrack Hee explains his Exhortation by shewing the manner of warring to wit that hee would defend faithfully and profess sound Doctrine and by an holy life according to the truth preached by him that hee would maintain the light and peace of a good conscience which would inwardly acquaint him with his duty towards God and men if hee would attend to it and would administer comfort to him if hee suffered for defending the truth Which being put away Arg. 2. Because ●●less thou behave thy self with a good courage and observest this law of war concerning the joyning of a good conscience with the profession of the faith there is danger upon the loss of a good conscience that thou make shipwrack of sound Doctrine or the profession of the faith as some have done Therefore war a good warfare In the mean time hee casts in no scruple here to Timothy about the uncertainty of perseverance but uses the best and most effectual argument to perswade him to it For it makes nothing in Hypothetical propositions that the parts of it taken by themselves and Categorically may bee false or impossible It is sufficient to the truth of the rule annexed that the connexion of the parts is certain Vers. 20. Of whom is Hymeneus and Alexander whom I have delivered unto Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme The Apostle names two Apostates for example Hymeneus and Alexander whom hee had not long before delivered unto Satan i. e. excommunicated For they that are cast out from the face of God shining in the Church fall into the kingdome of Satan as to the condition of the outward man or the enjoyment of Church priviledges The end of this Excommunication hee shews to bee this That being led to repentance they might return
Circumcision 2. Much every way chiefly because unto them were committed the Oracles of God The first objection is from this Doctrine some might say then the Jew hath no prerogative above the Gentile nor is there any profit of Circumcision ver 1. Hee answers ver 2. that this is the principal and chief priviledge of the Jewes that the Covenant was made with the Jewes and this Nation had the custody of the holy Scriptures i. e. the Tables of the Covenant committed to them of God and the Jewes were made Depositaries Treasurers which was a singular benefit and a famous honour Vers. 3. For what if some did not believe shall their unbelief make the Faith of God without effect The second Object But they are fallen from that honour because they have not believed the Oracles of God and so the Faith of God given in that Covenant is made void to which hee answers four wayes First It follows not that the faithful Promises of God made to this Nation were void because some of them believed not Vers. 4. God forbid yea let God be true but every man a lyar as it is written That thou mightest bee justified in thy sayings and mightest overcome when thou art judged Secondly He answers by detesting the Objection because it is absurd to imagine that God should fail our Faith Thirdly He answers by laying down a most true assertion to the contrary that God is to bee avouched alwayes true and that every man by nature is a lyar Fourthly That the sins of men and their lyes are no hindrance to God in the performing of his Promise but rather serve to illustrate his Truth Mercy and Justice because by how much the greater and more the sins of men are so much the more is the Justice of God eminent when hee punisheth and his mercy and truth when hee spares which hee confirms out of Psal. 51.4 Where David in the Confession of his sins commends the truth of God and pronounceth God alwayes to overcome when hee judges as often as any one Undertakes to judge of what hee doth or saith Vers. 5. But if our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God what shall wee say Is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance I speak as a man The third Object From the words of the Psalm perverted to blasphemy If our sins illustrate the righteousness of God then God seems to be unrighteous who avenges those sins whereby hee is glorified This is objected by the Apostle in the person of a man ignorant of God Vers. 6. God forbid for then how shall God judge the world Hee answers 1 By rejecting the Objection as blasphemous God forbid saith hee 2 Hee answers by giving a reason why hee rejects the Objection Because it is impossible that hee which shall judge the world should be unjust Vers. 7. For if the truth of God hath more abounded through my lye unto his glory why also yet am I judged as a sinner 8. And not rather as wee bee slanderously reported and as some affirm that wee say Let us do evil that good may come whose damnation is just The fourth Objection urging the former If by my sin to wit my lye the truth of God is more glorified I am not only not to be condemned for sin but I may follow after it that the glory of God may bee more advanced In answer hee saith 1 They were malicious slanderers that thus charged the Apostles Doctrine Let us do evil that good may come of it Hee answers 2 That these calumniators and those that teach and follow this Doctrine doing evil that good may come were justly to bee condemned of God Vers. 9. What then Are wee better than they No in no wise for wee have before proved both Iewes and Gentiles that th●y are all under sin The fift Object But by this Doctrine wee Jewes have no preheminence of the Gentiles to wit in the matter of Iustification by Works which is the principal question Hee answers that in this respect the Jew is no better than the Gentile and hee renders a reason of it because hitherto wee have proved that both Jewes and Greeks are under sin The second Part. In the second part of the Chapter hee returns to prosecute the Dispute concerning Iustification not by works but by faith Vers. 10. As it is written there is none righteous no not one 11. There is none that understandeth there is none that seeketh after God 12. They are all gone out of the way they are together become unprofitable there is none that doth good no not one Argument 4. Concerning Justification not by works but by faith The Scripture witnesseth that all men are under sin and liable to condemnation to ver 20. therefore no man is justified by the works of the Law ver 20. The testimonies of Scripture are six 1 Out of Psa. 14.1 2 3. and Psalm 53.1 2 3. where the Prophet speaking of the unregenerate in his time and of all in their natural estate out of Christ pronounceth first that no man is righteous ver 10. Secondly that all are blind and ignorant of the things which make for their Salvation Thirdly that there were none which were affected with a desire of knowing or worshipping or having any communion with God ver 11. Fourthly that all were guilty of Original Apostasie from God and his known Will Fifthly that all were unprofitable polluted abominable by reason of the filthiness of their wickednesses Sixthly that there were none viz. of those that were unregenerated that did any good and by consequence that there was none but did evil and only evil for when hee does the work commanded not to God commanding being unregenerate hee serves himself and sacrificeth to his own idols Vers. 13. Their throat is an open sepulchre with their tongues they have used deceit the poyson of Aspes is under their lips The second testimony is from Psalm 5.9 wherein David under the type of his enemies condemns all unregenerate men or men not reconciled to God of impurity of heart from whence proceeds nothing but that which is abominable and loathsome unto God that the throat of every one is as a Sepulchre newly opened sending forth a pestilential smell of wicked thoughts out of whose mouth comes forth nothing but pestilent injurious and deceitful speeches Poyson The third testimony is from Psalm 140.3 In which the same is confirmed of Davids enemies which were types of persons unreconciled unto God in that they are alwayes ready to send out from their mouths as from a quiver poysonful speeches no less hurtful than the poyson of Aspes Vers. 14. Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness The fourth testimony is from Psalm 10.7 to the foresaid sense wherein the Psalmist complains of the natural man that his mouth is full of cursing and reproachful words whereby the glory of God and the fame of our Neighbour is wronged Vers. 15. Their feet are swift to shed blood 16. Destruction and
should boast against the root which bears them Therefore thou oughtest not to despise the Jews Vers. 19. Thou wilt say then the branches were broken off that I might bee graffed in 20. Well because of unbelief they were broken off and thou standest by Faith Bee not high-minded but f●ar Argum. 9. In answering the objection it is propounded It s true the Jews are rejected that upon this occasion thou mightest succeed them in the Church but seeing they for their unbelief are rejected and thou standest by Faith thou hast no reason to insult over and despise the Jews but rather to fear and to take heed to thy self that thou sin not and bee punished Therefore oughtest thou not to contemn the Jews as if altogether cast off Vers. 21. For if God spared not the natural branches take heed lest hee also spare not thee Argum. 10. Confirming the former If God spared not the proud Jews the natural branches of the holy Church hee will not spare the Romans or any insulting Gentiles to wit branches graffed in Therefore thou being a Gentile oughtest not to despise the Jews Vers. 22. Behold therefore the goodness and severity of God on them which fell severity but towards thee goodness if thou continue in his goodness otherwise thou shalt bee cut off Argum. 11. Unless thou continue in the Faith and obedience unto Christ considering the severity of God against the Jews and his goodness towards thee thou also shalt bee broken off and cast away Therefore unless thou wilt bee rejected keep thy self in the fear of God and despise not the Jews Vers. 23. And they also if they bide not still in unbelief shall bee graffed in for God is able to graft them in again Argum. 12. Even as thou unless thou continue in the Faith shalt bee cut off So the Jews if they continue not in unbelief they shall again bee graffed into the holy Church of the Patriarchs yea verily the restoring of the Jews according to the omnipotent goodness of God is not to bee despaired Therefore the Jews are not to bee despised by thee Vers. 24. For if thou wert cut out of the Olive-tree which is wild by nature and were graffed contrary to nature in a good Olive-tree how much more shall these which bee the natural branches bee graffed into their own Olive-tree Argum. 13. If God implant the Gentiles as branches out of the Covenant of Grace into the Church of the Patriarchs much more will hee restore the Jews which are natural branches of that Church Vers. 25. For I would not brethren that yee should bee ignorant of this mystery lest yee should bee wise in your own conceits that blindness in part is happened to Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles bee come in 26. And so all Israel shall bee saved as it is written Argum. 14. I open a mystery unto you and out of special Revelation declare that this hardning of the Jews was not universal nor of all but in part or of some only and that but for a certain time viz. till the fulness of the Gentiles was brought in Therefore ought you not to lift up your selves or contemn the Jews By the fulness of the Gentiles hee means that great multitude of the Gentiles such as was not before the conversion of the Jews with the coming in of which multitude to the true Religion Israel shall bee provoked to return unto the Lord Jesus Christ or to true Faith in the Messias from whom they had departed through unbelief and so all Israel i. e. the multitude of the Jews the body of that dispersed people shall bee converted Vers. 26. There shall come out of Sion the Deliverer and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob. 27. For this is my Covenant unto them when I shall take away their sins Hee confirms this Prophesie out of that of Isai. 29.26 and 27.3 Where hee fore-tells that the Messias should come of the Jews Church according to the flesh the true REDEEMER to redeem his Nation from the guilt and bondage of sin pardoning their sins and that hee should take them into the Covenant of Grace to the full abolishing of sin which when it should bee the Apostle hath now declared Vers. 28. As concerning the Gospel they are enemies for your sakes but as touching the election they are beloved for the Fathers sakes Argum. 15. Although the rejected Jews so much as concerns the Gospel refused by those reprobate Jews are accounted of God as enemies for your advantage yet in respect to the election of this people that they might above all other Nations bee esteemed the people of God and in respect to the Elect in this Nation the Jews are loved because of the Covenant betwixt God and their Fathers Therefore for the very same reason ought they not to bee despised but loved by you Vers. 29. For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Argum. 16. Preventing an objection Although this Nation by just desert may seem to fall from all its priviledges yet because of the gifts of special grace bestowed and in particular their calling according to his purpose whether upon any Nation above others or upon any man above others are unchangeable which God will never wholly cut off or re-call but will in the conversion of this people make it appear that they are firm Therefore this Nation ought not to bee contemned by you but to bee had in honor rather Vers. 30. For as yee in times past have not believed God yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief 31. Even so have these also now not believed that through your mercy they also might obtain mercy Argum. 17. It is every way to bee believed that God will manifest as much grace to the Jews by occasion of that mercy shewed to you Gentiles as hee hath shewed to you Gentiles heretofore disobedient by occasion of the stubbornness and unbelief of the Jews Therefore the Jews are not to bee despised as altogether cast off but their conversion is rather to bee endeavoured Vers. 32. For God hath concluded them all in unbelief that hee might have mercy on all Argum. 18. After this manner The most wise Providence of God hath so ordered the business of saving his own that all being found in sin and rebellion might have no matter of boasting and whoever should obtain Salvation might ascribe all to Divine bounty Therefore the Jews are not to bee despised as wholly cast off but the work of Divine mercy towards this people in the time appointed is to bee expected Vers. 33. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdome and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgements and his waves past finding out The Apostle shews a two-fold use of this argument as also of the fore-going Doctrine especially concerning the election of some and the reprobation of others The first is that wee may admire and celebrate the depth of the riches of the ineffable Wisdome of
God Another is That wee seek no further than is revealed touching the Counsels of God but even in things revealed wee bee wise to sobriety because the Counsels of God exceed our capacity and are indeed unsearchable glorifying God in all Vers. 34. For who hath known the mind of the Lord or who hath been his Counsellour Three Reasons hee adds of both those deductions Reason 1. No creature hath pierced into the mind of God none was ever of his Counsel Therefore the Counsels of God are past finding out wee ought not to search after them but admire and magnifie the riches of his Wisdome Vers. 35. Or who hath first given to him and it shall bee recompenced to him again Reason 2. God is in no mans debt or can bee no man merits at his hand no man can come forth and say that hee hath obliged God by any act of goodness in himself Therefore they cannot boast any of the Elect as if God was bound to them by any Law that hee should appoint them unto life neither can any of the Reprobates complain as though hee paid not what hee ought seeing hee is a debter to no man Vers. 36. For of him and through him and to him are all things to whom bee glory for ever Amen Reason 3. Confirming the former All things are of God as the first Author All things are upheld by him as the Preserver All things tend to him as the ultimate end Therefore when it seems good to him to promote his own glory in the rejection of the Jews or calling of the Gentiles in the Election of some and Reprobation of others all honor and glory ought to bee ascribed unto him by all men for ever Amen CHAP. XII WEE have had the first part of the Epistle of the way to Iustification the latter follows concerning the right ordering the life of those that are justified There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee exhorts to Sanctity in general to ver 3. In the second hee instructs Ministers of the Church particularly concerning the right use of gifts to ver 9. In the third hee gives common precepts concerning Christian virtues Vers. 1. I beseech you therefore brethren by the mercies of God that you present your bodies a living sacrifice holy acceptable unto God which is your reasonable service By an allusion made to the typical manner of sacrificing under the Levitical Law hee most friendly exhorts them to shew forth the fruit of free Justification granted to them by Christ. There are three branches of the Exhortation First That wee would present our bodies to God that is offer and consecrate our selves wholly not onely our souls but bodies also to God as a Sacrifice of thankfulness The reasons of the exhortation are five which also contain the properties of this sacrifice The first reason is contained in a vehement entreaty because the mercies of God before rehearsed to wit Election of his Mercy Redemption of his Mercy Calling of his Mercy and Justification of his Grace and Mercy require of you this gratitude and thankfulness Living Reason 2. Because this is a living Sacrifice wherein nothing is to bee slain but sin and you your selves shall live consecrated unto God and shall bee preserved unto eternal life Holy Reason 3. This Sacrifice is truly holy in the daily offering up whereof Holiness it self consists Acceptable Reason 4. Because this Sacrifice will not bee rejected of God as those many legal shadows offered up by hypocrites but accepted of God Reasonable Reason 5. Because the act whereby you offer up this Sacrifice to God is your reasonable or spiritual service pre-figured by that typical worship and so much above that as spiritual things are above carnal and the bodies of Saints to bee preferr'd before the carkasses of brute beasts Vers. 2. And bee not conformed to this world but bee yee transformed by the renewing of your mind that yee may prove what is that good that acceptable and perfect Will of God The second branch of the Exhortation That wee take heed in life and conversation that wee do not make the pleasure and manners of worldly men our Rule to which wee conform our selves This exhortation contains a Reason in it self because men of the world onely savour the honours pleasures and profits of this present world Bee yee transformed The third branch of the Exhortation That wee endeavour the transforming of our carnal mind into that which is spiritual by the daily renewing of our understanding and will Two Reasons hee gives of this Exhortation Discern yee Reason 1. Because the Law of God or his Will revealed in the Word is the Rule to which wee ought to conform 1. Good teaching and leading us to those things which are good and making us good 2. It is acceptable to God who accepts no obedience but what is prescribed in the Word 3. It is perfect comprehending all things which appertain to the worship of God and our salvation Therefore indeavour after renewing your minds Discern yee Reason 2. Because without a renewed mind and spiritual wee cannot discern the proper sense of the divine Will revealed in the Word and knowing it wee cannot approve and approving it wee can have no experimental knowledge how good acceptable to God and perfect it is in it srlf Therefore ought wee to endeavour after renovation of mind The second Part. Vers. 3. For I say through the Grace given unto mee to every man that is among you not to think of himself more highly than hee ought to think but to think soberly according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of Grace The second part of the Chapter follows wherein according to his Apostolical authority which hee calls Grace because granted to him out of ineffable Grace hee charges every one that was among them in any publick office or any excellency of gift that hee would not think of himself above his fellows or above the value of his talent or the measure of his knowledge but that hee would carry himself soberly and moderately in all things towards all The Reasons of this Exhortation are five Reas. 1. God hath distributed to every one not a fulness but a measure of Faith Therefore it is fitting that every one should modestly contain himself within that measure Vers. 4. For as wee have many members in one body and all members have not the same office Reas. 2. As in the natural body divers members are deputed to divers operations So in the Ecclesiastical body of Beleevers or the society of the Officers of the Church divers functions are designed to divers imployments Therefore it is fitting that each contain himself modestly in his office Vers. 5. So wee being many are one body in Christ and every one members one of another Reas. 3. Included in the same similitude as in the natural body many members constitute one body so in the Ecclesiastical body all the faithful in particular all Church-Officers
themselves fairly before men Onely Sign 2. That they compel the Galatians to admit of Circumcision not out of love but onely lest they should suffer persecution by the Jews for the Doctrine of the Cross or free justification by the death of Christ and not by the works of the Law Vers. 13. For neither they themselves who are circumcised keep the Law but desire to have you circumcised that they may glory in your flesh Sign 3. That although they were circumcised long since yet they little care for the observance of the Law which they required of others But desire Sign 4. That they seek occasion from the circumcision of the Galatians to glory amongst the Jews that they had converted many Proselytes to the Law Vers. 14. But God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Iesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto mee and I unto the world In the other part of the comparison the sincerity of the Apostle is shewn in these two things 1. That hee onely glories in his free Redemption by Christ crucified and in his sufferings for the Doctrine 2. That hee doth not affect earthly pomp but contemn the world with all its pomp and glory which persecuted and despised him for the Doctrine of the Cross sake and by the Cross learnt daily more and more to contemn the world Vers. 15. For in Christ Iesus neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature Hee gives four Reasons of his endeavour which are so many signs of his sincerity Reason 1. I know that in the Kingdome of Christ neither Circumcision nor Uncircumcision is respected by God but a new creature i. e. I know that it is necessary when any one is admitted by faith into the Kingdome of Christ and justified that hee should bee more and more renewed and sanctified but other priviledges are of no value without newness of life Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Vers. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace bee on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God Reas. 2. The rule of my intention is the summe of the whole Canonical Scripture to which as to one onely rule or one onely Canon the Doctrine and life of all is to bee conformable Therefore I will only glory in the Cross of Christ c. Peace Reas. 3. I am perswaded that whosoever shall order their faith and life by this rule they shall also obtain peace i. e. a sense of their reconciliation to God all kinde of blessings or an accumulation of good things and mercy or a remedy for the purging away all evills Therefore I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ. Israel Reas. 4. They are alone the true Israel of God that follow this Rule Therefore all things laid aside I will onely glory in the Cross of Christ by c. Vers. 17. From henceforth let no man trouble mee for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Iesus After the Comparison as a Conquerour hee triumphs over his Emulators forbidding them to make him any further work either by gain-saying his Doctrine or by detracting from his Authority because hee bare the ensign of his Felicity towards Christ viz. the mark of a servant most devoted to Christ i. e. Hee hath all the signes of an Apostle and a faithfull Witness clearly to bee seen in him Vers. 18. Brethren the Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with your spirit Amen Hee shuts up the Epistle with his accustomed seal wishing that the Grace of Jesus Christ manifested beleeved and effectual might abide in their mindes hearts and whole life that from thence they may draw consolation both in life and death to which Amen is subjoyned as a testimony of his vote and the faith of an Apostle and for a seal of the truth of the precedent Doctrine The Epistle of Paul to the EPHESIANS Analytically expounded The Contents THe City of the Ephesians was the Metropolis of Lesser Asia in which the Apostle two whole years preached the Gospel Act. 19. And when lastly hee went up to Jerusalem hee fore-told a change of the Church to the Ephesians Act. 20. Against which hee fortifies them by this Epistle when hee was now held captive at Rome and plainly despaired of his return hee endeavoureth diligently to confirm their minds in Faith and Truth There are two principal parts of the Epistle besides the Preface and the Conclusion The first is The Doctrine of Grace for the confirmation of their Faith to Chap. 4. The other is the Doctrine of gratitude and thankfulness tending to holiness of life to the end of the Epistle That which belongeth to the first part First of all hee shews that the whole reason of our salvation is free and solidly founded on Christ in the first Chapter Furthermore hee amplifies this Grace from the former misery of the Ephesians Chap. 2. Thirdly The scandal of the Cross lying upon him being taken away hee exhorts them to constancy and progress in the Faith by the glorious commendation of his Ministery and by manifesting the cause for which hee suffered Chap. 3. In the second part hee gives Precepts of keeping the unity of the Church of holiness of life as well in general as in particular in the shunning of evil and following after virtue by which the life of every one is ordered in a Christian manner Chap. 4. and in the former part of Chap. 5. After these hee descends to houshold duties to which and all other Christian duties that are to bee performed hee arms the faithful in the latter part of Chap. 5. and in the former part of Chap. 6. CHAP. I. THis Chapter besides the Preface contains two parts In the first is a thanksgiving tending to prove that the whole business of salvation both of Iews and Gentiles is meerly of Grace and wholly built on Christ to vers 15. In the other is a commemoration of the Apostles continual thanksgiving and prayer offered to God for the Ephesians tending to the confirmation of Faith the assurance of their salvation and of the perseverance of all truly faithful unto the end The Preface in the two first verses contains a direction of the Epistle and a salutation of the Ephesians which is very short because hee hath not to do here with envious persons or enemies but with conformable and obedient men to whom it would bee sufficient briefly to intimate his divine authority in writing this Epistle and the Apostles good will towards them and opinion of them Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Will of God to the Saints which are at Ephesus and to the faithful in Christ Iesus In the direction of the Epistle wee have the description of the Writer from his Name Office and Authority And then of those to whom hee writes from the condition in which they stood towards God and from the place which they did inhabit on the
and gave him to bee the Head over all things to the Church Argum. 11. All our enemies the Devil the wicked in the world Persecutors Hereticks and Impostors the power of sin in us prisons banishments all kinds of death are put under Christs feet that hee may order them and dispose of them to our good and put them under our feet Therefore c. The Head Argum. 12. Christ is appointed Head over all things in the Church that is the Father hath committed the full power and administration of all things unto him that hee onely should bee the most near Head of the Catholick Church for the illumination of the Church and all its members for the vivification exciting to all spiritual duties and preservation of spiritual life in them by the immediate presence and operation of his Spirit in the whole Church and its several members Therefore unless you will doubt of your Heads Wisdome Power and Faithfulness in his office you should bee strengthened in Faith Vers. 23. Which is his body the fulness of him that filleth all in all Argum. 13. The Church is the mystical body of Christ and all beleevers are his members Therefore you should not doubt but hee will look to and have a care of your salvation unless you will deny that Beleevers are his members The fulness Argum. 14. The Church is the fulness of Christ so far as hee is its mystical Head so that hee doth not judge himself to bee perfected and completed till all and every of the Elect bee gathered into one united to him have attained that full encrease suitable to and appointed for every member and till at last they enjoy with him a plenary happiness Therefore you should bee as sure of the perfecting of your salvation as you are that Christ will not suffer himself to bee incompleat imperfect and maimed Filleth Argum. 15. Christ filleth all in all that is according to every Creatures capacity as hee is the God of Nature hee works all things as hee is the Head of the Church hee perfects all things which belong to the Spiritual Life Sanctification and Salvation of Beleevers filling all his members by degrees Therefore it is not to bee questioned but hee will accomplish the begun work of Faith Sanctification and Salvation in you This that hee filleth all in all is adjoyned by way of correction or exposition to the former phrase of the fulness of Christ by the Church lest wee should conceive that Christs or our perfection depends upon any besides himself who of his own free love hath brought this necessity upon himself of communicating himself to us unworthy wretches who stirred up this desire of us in himself who himself hath the power to satisfie this his own desire and who by degrees fulfills his desire of sanctifying us and induing us with Faith and will proceed to fulfil it till hee hath performed all things necessary to the perfecting of salvation and that in all the faithful the greatest and least To him bee the glory of his Grace his power and his constancy for ever and ever Amen CHAP. II. THe Apostle proceeds to prosecute the same Argument proving sometimes in the Supposition that the beleeving Ephesians sometimes possitively that all Beleevers are saved by Grace The Proposition to bee made good is this you O Ephesians are saved by Grace or Beleevers are saved by Grace His Arguments are fifteen upon the last whereof hee insists to the latter end of the Chapter Vers. 1. And you hath hee quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins Argu. 1. If you O Ephesians are considered in the common State of Nature you will bee found to have been in that condition that you could not have recovered thence but by Grace There are seven parts of this Argument every one whereof heightens our first misery and proves Grace to bee the onely cause of salvation Dead 1 In the State of Nature you were not onely defiled with but dead in sin and not onely judicially dead because guilty of or liable to death but also really in effect spiritually dead so that the dead could as easily raise themselves to life or perform actions of being as you could free your selves from this death or do any good deed Therefore you are saved by Grace Vers. 2. Wherein in time past yee walked according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the Air the Spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience 2 In reference to this natural life you did wholly pass that in sin being wholly busied and walking in them or else waxing worse and worse Therefore c. Of this world 3 You walked in the waies of worldly and carnal men who favour this natural life onely and followed their manners and customes as the rule of life Therefore c. The Prince 4 You followed the Captain of this way the Devil the Prince of unclean spirits who with his Executioners or other evil Angels flying in the Air rules and governs effectually Which worketh 5 The Devil did reign and execute his will in you as now hee doth in the disobedient Therefore c. Vers. 3. Among whom also wee all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh fulfilling the desires of our flesh and of the mind and were by nature the children of wrath ever as others 6 You did fulfil the lusts of your flesh and wallowing in them did commit whatever your vain mind dictated whatever your corrupt appetite and affections of the flesh prescribed To these the Apostle adds himself before his conversion that they might see this Argument propounded in an Hypothesis would serve to confirm the general Thesis Children 7. By nature yee were children of wrath that is guilty of death and liable to divine wrath which God might justly pour upon us even to our utter destruction Hereunto hee joyns all other men as they are considered in the state of nature Therefore wee are beholding to Grace for our salvation Vers. 4. But God who is rich in mercy for his great love wherewith hee loved us Argum. 2. God out of his rich mercy and love hath delivered us who beleeve from this most miserable condition Therefore our salvation is of Grace The several parts of this Argument manifest the same God 1. Hee shews God to bee the sole Author of our deliverance who alone is meet for so great a work Rich 2. That Grace might appear the cause of our salvation is mentioned to bee the abundant or rich mercy of God whereby as it were touched with a sense of our miserie hee is moved to deliver us For his 3. The love of God wherewith he loved us from eternity is annexed as the cause both of mercy and salvation Us 4. It was of mercy that God was pleased to take us rather than others and choose us for his sons Therefore c. Ver. 5. Even when we were dead in sins hath quickened us
his neighbour for wee are members one of another Prec 2. In this hee doth particularly command them to lay aside the custome of lying and to speak the truth and alledges one reason for this exhortation or command viz. because we are as it were members one of another therefore as it is in the natural body where if the members should defraud one another it would bee a Monster so wee should account it in the Church when those that profess the faith deceive one another Vers. 26. Bee yee angry and sin not let not the Sun go down upon your wrath 27. Neither give place to the Devil Prec 3. Touching refraining from anger whether it bee unlawful or lasting Sin not by being angry that is bee not too soon or too long angry do not favour anger in your souls nor suffer it to sleep with you but bee sure to observe a measure even in lawfull anger and if any unlawfull anger chance to overtake you which indeed very often falls our I counsel you presently to forbear and leave it off To the Devil The reason of this Command is from the damage which they might otherwise receive If they did shew any liking to anger they would give way to the Devil to tempt and egge them on to sin more to whom they should not at all give place either in the allowance of this or any other sin Vers. 28. Let him that stole steal no more but rather let him labour working with his hands the thing which is good that hee may have to give to him that needeth Prec 4. Touching their laying aside the custome of stealing and fraudulent dealing And the reason of this Command is because it is far better they should betake themselves unto labouring with their hands that so they might bee able to help themselves and releeve others necessities than to steal Vers. 29. Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth but that which is good to the use of edifying that it may minister grace unto the hearers 30. And grieve not the holy Spirit of God whereby yee are sealed unto the day of Redemption Prec 5. To take heed of the faults of the tongue That they should not speak filthy hunful or unprofitable things which neither make for the glory of God nor for their own or others advantage and on the other side that they should speak those things which were honest and which did tend to the edification of their Neighbour And grieve not Hee adds the reason of the Command lest the Holy Ghost which dwelleth in you should bee grieved with your corrupt and filthy speeches Hee urges this reason and renders it more strong and weighty in that by the Holy Ghost they were sealed to the day of Redemption and by his presence they were in a manner noted and marked for Gods proper and peculiar ones that in the day of their perfected redemption which is the day of resurrection they may bee brought into Gods Mansion-place Therefore they ought to shew their thankfulness to this Spirit in another manner than by thus offending him with their uncleanness Vers. 31. Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamour and evill speaking bee put away from you with all malice Prec 6. In which hee forbids bitterness and rancour of minde and wrath and clamour and evill-speaking and all kinde of roughness and malice or frowardness towards their neighbour Vers. 32. And bee yee kinde one to anot●●● tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you Prec 7. In which on the contrary hee commands mutuall mercy friendship and forgiving one anothers faults To which is added the most weighty reason because God in Christ hath forgiven you your sins and hath shewn abundance of grace to you in Christ Therefore you should be bountiful and merciful to one another CHAP. V. THere are two parts of this Chapter the former contains nine general Precepts touching the practice of holiness which indifferently concern all beleevers to vers 21. The latter contains four more special Precepts touching Oeconomical or houshold offices unto the end Vers. 1. Bee yee therefore followers of God as dear children Precept 1. Touching holiness in general That they should study to imitate God in holiness The reason is because yee are the beloved Sons of God Therefore you should imitate God your Father who is holy Vers 2. And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Prec 2. That they should walk in mutual love hee adds the reason thereof because Christ hath so loved us that hee offered himself a sacrifice for us that God might forgive us our sins the power of this sacrifice appears in this that it hath pleased and appeased God towards us These two Precepts also may serve to confirm the preceding exhortation in the end of the former Chapter concerning forgiving one anothers faults Vers. 3. But fornication and all uncleanness or covetousness let it not bee once named amongst you as becometh Saints Prec 3. That they should beware and avoid fornication and all kinde of uncleanness and covetousness yea that they should not bee so much as named among them without detestation much less committed The reason thereof is because it becomes Saints thus to carry themselves who have devoted themselves to the service of the most holy God Vers. 4. Neither filthiness nor foolish talking nor jeasting which are not convenient but rather giving of thanks 5. For this yee know that no Whoremonger nor unclean person nor covetous man who is an Idolater hath any inheritance in the Kingdome of Christ and of God 6. Let no man deceive you with vain words for because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience Prec 4. That they should avoid filthiness of speech foolish talking and scoffing Of these two Precepts hee gives five Reasons Which are not Reason 1. Because filthy speech doth not at all become Saints But rather Reas. 2. Because wee have other matters of joy afforded us to take up our talk with viz. Thanksgiving for Gods benefits vers 4. This yee know Reas. 3. Because uncleanness and covetousness are excluded from the Kingdome of heaven which is called God the Fathers and Christs because it is a Kingdome common to both Idolater Reas. 4. Because covetousness is Idolatry substituting the creature in the place of the Creator Wee may understand the same of other vices vers 5. No man Reas. 5. Because whoever are addicted to these vices are reckoned among the sons of disobedience or Rebels against God and shall feel the most heavy wrath of God whatever Seducers may say to the contrary vers 6. Vers. 7. Bee not yee therefore partakers with them Prec 5. This hee adds as an inference wherein hee generally disswades them from partaking in these aforesaid vices and all others wherewith the sons of disobedience
poverty by idleness but by calamity lest they waxe sloathful in the actions of any vertue but go couragiously forward to do th●se things which are decent and excellent Vers. 14. And if any man obey not our word by this Epistle note that man and have no company with him that hee may bee ashamed Exhort 7. That they note the refractory and brand them that obey not the Apostolical doctrine that is that they excommunicate those which is manifest from this that hee commands that they have no society with him that is thus noted which is the consequent of excommunication and for this end commands that the excommunicate person segregated from the society of others being ashamed might enter into himself and repent Vers. 15. Yet count him not as an enemy but admonish him as a brother Hee expounds the Commandement that they bee not cruel toward the excommunicated person or esteem him as an enemy but to shew their hatred to his sin that the excommunicated person may understand that under that severe correction there is brotherly love and so hee may bee reduced into favour with God and the Church by repentance Vers. 16. Now the Lord of peace himself give you peace alwayes by all means The Lord bee wi●h you all The Epilogue remains whereof there are three Articles In the first hee praies the God of Peace so to direct their waies and bridle the turbulent spirits of the disobedient that they may injoy peace towards God and amongst themselves and with those that are without which work did require a divine hand Furthermore hee praies that God by his gracious presence would bee alwaies present with them all Vers. 17. The salutation of Paul with my own hand which is the token in every Epistle so I write Artic. 2. Contains the obsignation of the Epistle by the subscription of Paul himself who for the most part did use the help of Scribes in writing the body of every Epistle but hee subscribed the conclusion with his own hand that his genuine Epistles might bee known from the adulterate and counterfeit which were carryed about in the name of Paul and by Impostors thrust upon the Churches Vers. 18. The Grace of our Lord Iesus Christ bee with you all Amen Artic. 3. Contains the Apostolical vote set down by his own hand wherein hee wishes the eternal influence of the Grace of Christ as the fountain of all good things to them for their sanctification and salvation The First Epistle of Paul to TIMOTHY Analytically expounded The Contents THe Apostle departing from Ephesus into Macedonia did not think it sufficient to commit the Church of Ephesus now publickly founded to the care of ordinary Pastors but desired the Evangelist Timothy that hee would tarry there a while to establish the Church in all things that appertained to Doctrine and Discipline which work being accomplished the Apostle intended to call him back and imploy him for the confirming of other Churches as appears in the end of the Epistle and other places But because Timothy was young as yet and might seem not sufficiently furnished with authority for the restraining of unruly men which possibly might make insurrection against him in this Epistle hee doth not onely admonish him concerning his office as one that hee knew very well instructed already but all the Churches and their Governours are informed touching the Authority of Timothy and their own duties The special parts of the Epistle are six according to the number of the Chapters In the first Chapter hee laies down the manner of his preaching the Law and the Gospel duly and with profit In the second Chapter hee sets down how Pastors and Hearers Men and Women ought to behave themselves in their publick prayers and Ecclesiastical meetings In the third Chapter hee treats of the right institution of Pastors and Deacons and concerning the Heads of Doctrine whereof they were to take special care In the fourth Chapter hee speaks of avoiding the Apostacy that was comming and touching the diligence which ought to bee used by a faithful Pastor to that end In the fifth Chapter hee treats of private admonitions to bee performed by the Elders and how they ought to carry themselves toward Widows and other Elders In the sixth Chapter hee delivers Precepts to Timothy wherein hee is instructed what hee ought to teach concerning Christian duties as well of private persons as of Ministers CHAP. I. BEside● the Inscription which is contained in the two first verses There are three parts of the Chapter In the first hee enjoyns Timothy to observe the right method and course of teaching and to suppress the perverse Teachers of the Law to vers 12. In the second hee asserts his Apostleship that with authority it might bee avouched by Timothy as hee had commanded to vers 18. In the third hee encourages Timothy to carry himself stoutly in the discharge of his Ministery Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Commandement of God our Saviour and Lord Iesus Christ which is our hope The Inscription of the Epistle wherein 1 That hee might win authority to this Epistle Paul affirms that in writing of it hee fulfilled his Apostolical Embassage for Christ 2 Hee confirms his Apostleship by a special command from God the Father whom hee calls the Saviour because hee is the Author of our Salvation who had called him to the office of an Apostle and used him in the execution of his office about the present matter hee was in hand with 3 Hee confirms his Apostleship from the command of our Lord Jesus Christ whom hee calls our hope because the Author the meritorious cause the object and the finisher of our hope Vers. 2. Unto Timothy my own Son in the Faith Grace Mercy and Peace from God our Father and Iesus Christ our Lord. Timothy to whom this Epistle is written is called the Son of the Apostle not simply but in 〈◊〉 Faith because hee was his Disciple and as the Son represents the Father in face and manners so Timothy resembled Paul in Doctrine and an holy conversation In his salutation hee wishes to Timothy 1 Grace i. e. the renovation of the Image of God from the fountain of Gods free good will 2 Mercy i. e. free remission of sins because hee knew that the holy young man affected with the sense of his sins with many tears did daily prostrate himself before God 3 Peace i. e. Quietness of conscience and joy from the apprehension of divine favour and finally a compleat felicity in the life to come which is comprehended under peace Vers. 3. As I besought thee to abide still at Ephesus when I went into Macedonia that thou mightest charge some that they teach no other Doctrine The first part of the Chapter follows touching the right manner of teaching wherein after hee had confirmed to Timothy not an ordinary Episcopacy in the Church of Ephesus but a special temporary and extraordinary Commission hee repeats the command
to bee observed with the greatest fidelity Quickeneth Argum. 1. There is sufficient support in God that quickeneth all things to uphold thee under thy infirmity and to defend thee against the dangers of thine enemies Therefore nothing hinders but thou mayest faithfully observe all these commands Before Argum. 2. Christ in his example hath gone before thee who faithfully ope●ed his Doctrine for the salvation of the Church and at last asserted it before the Tribunal of Pilate sealing it with his voluntary death Appearing Argum. 3. Christ shall come the Judge of quick and dead that hee may give to every man according to his works Therefore all the former commands are faithfully to bee observed Vers. 15. Which in his times hee shall shew who is the blessed and onely Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords He insists upon this Argument and lest any one should take the delaying of Christs coming ill hee shews that hee will come at the time appointed at the most seasonable time Blessed Argum. 4. Christ or God the Father Son and Holy Spirit whose Ministery thou hast in hand is alone in himself Blessed and Powerful who can bless his own and destroy his and their enemies so that the friendships or enmities of all Kings compared with his favour or anger are nothing because all Kings and Emperors borrow their Empires from him depend upon and are ruled by him and stand or fall at his beck Therefore these his commands are to bee observed Vers. 16. Who onely hath immortality dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto whom no man hath seen nor can see to whom hee honour and power everlasting Amen Onely Argum. 5. Because eternal life is in the hand of Christ who is one God with the Father and the Holy Ghost because hee onely is of himself immortal and alone hath immortality in his power that hee may communicate it to whom hee will Therefore the former commands are to bee observed Whom no man hath seen Arg. 6. Although the reasons of his commands should not bee manifest to us yet for our Obedience and Faith it is sufficient to know that God in himself is a light which cannot bee approached and an hidden Majesty having his peculiar and proper essence which our understanding cannot apprehend nor see with a beatifical vision in this mortal life Therefore it becomes us to adore observe and extol the pleasure of his will rather than curiously to search into it To him bee honour and power for ever Vers. 17. Charge them that are rich in this world that they bee not high-minded nor trust in uncertain riches but in the living God who giveth us richly all things to enjoy Precept 6. Of admonishing the rich touching a two-fold duty which belongs to them The first is That as to the inward man they bee not puffed up because of their riches despising the poor in comparison with themselves nor trust in their riches but in the Living God of this duty hee gives three Reasons 1 Because riches are uncertain 2 Because not riches but God is the Author of life to them that trust in him 3 Because God gives and takes away riches at his pleasure as also all other things Vers. 18. That they do good that they bee rich in good works ready to distribute willing to communicate Another duty of rich men is this That as to external works they exercise liberality towards the poor and also study to abound generally in good works free to communicate the use of their possessions and goods unto others Vers. 19. Laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on eternal life The Argument to this duty is the promise of a free reward because by bestowing their uncertain riches they shall lay up for themselves in Heaven a more enduring and solid treasure and walking in the way of good works they shall lay hold upon eternal life Vers. 20. O Timothy keep that which is committed to thy trust avoiding prophane and vain bablings and oppositions of science falsely so called Precept 7. And last Wherein hee seriously commends to Timothy the Doctrine of the Gospel hitherto delivered that hee faithfully keep it as that which is committed to his trust and that hee restrain the prophane wranglings of sophisters about divine matters upon three reasons 1 Because true Doctrine is as precious as a treasure 2 Because wrangling disputations are vain and unworthy the name of Philosophy or Science Vers. 21. Which some professing have erred concerning the Faith Grace ●ee with thee Amen 3 Because it is found by experience that some Professors of Philosophical Sciences when they were weary of the truth and simplicity of the Gospel boasting of their skill erred from the scope of the Gospel yea even fell away from the Faith At length with an Apostolical vote hee concludes the Epistle commending the Grace of Christ to Timothy without which no spiritual work can bee undertaken or perfected no temptation of the Devil or the world can bee overcome The Second Epistle of Paul to TIMOTHY Analytically expounded The Contents THe intent of this Epistle is the same with the former not onely that Timothy may bee instructed and confirmed in the preaching of the Gospel but also that in his person all Teachers may learn how they ought to discharge the Ministery of the Gospel duly To which end having assured Timothy of his good will towards him hee subjoyns four Admonitions Chap. 1. and as many in the second Chapter Furthermore hee confirms and comforts Timothy against false Brethren and afflictions which hee must suffer for the defence of the Gospel in Chap. 3. Lastly As it were making his will hee most gravely charges Timothy that hee faithfully discharge the parts of his duty propounding divers Reasons to this end in Chap. 4. CHAP. I. AFter the Preface which is wholly designed to perswade Timothy of the Apostles good will towards him vers 6. Hee subjoyns four admonitions whereby hee might bee encouraged to a faithful discharge of his Ministery Vers. 1. Paul an Apostle of Iesus Christ by the Will of God according to the promise of life which is in Christ Iesus That the authority of this Doctrine might appear to all the Apostle premiseth his Name to his Epistle his Office Calling and the Authority immediately conferred upon him by God and lastly the summe of the Doctrine of the Gospel which hee preached which is the Promise of life eternal to them that beleeve in Iesus Christ according to the promises of the Prophets in the Old Testament Vers. 2. To Timothy my dearly beloved Son Grace Mercy and Peace from God the Father and Christ Iesus our Lord. That Paul might commend Timothy to whom hee writes to all the Churches Hee calls him beloved Son most especially because hee preached the Doctrine which hee had learned of Paul faithfully as Paul himself and resembled him as a Father in the whole
To come boldly to God in prayer for every thing whereof wee stand in need Then the Apostle alloweth unto the beleever 1. Certain perswasion of the acceptation of his person hee biddeth him Come boldly 2. Hee alloweth certain perswasions of the granting of his prayers in the matter namely of Grace and Mercy which includeth the remission of sins 2 The Throne of Grace or the Mercy-Seat was above the Ark within the Sanctuary and represented God in Christ reconciled to his people gracious and merciful unto them To this hee alludeth and by this means teacheth us 1. That the substance of that typical Mercy Seat is to bee found in Christ under the Gospel In him God is ever to bee found on his Throne of Grace 2. That the Veil of the Ceremonial Sanctuary is rent in Christs suffering and an open door made unto the holiest unto every Beleever and not for the Highest alone to enter in 3. That God layeth aside his terrour and rigour of justice when his own come to him in Christ and offereth access unto the Throne of Grace unto them 3. Hee will have us comming with boldness to obtain mercy including himself with the faithful and joyning the meanest of the faithful to whom hee writeth in the same priviledge with himself Then 1. Free liberty to expound all our mind to God as the word importeth without employing the mediation of Saint or Angel or any beside Christ is one of the priviledges of Christian Religion 2. This priviledge is common to the meanest of the faithful with the chiefest Apostles 3. There is mercy to bee had for such as come for removing of every sin and remedy of every misery 4. Hee setteth before them the hope of Grace to help in time of need Importing hereby 1. That albeit for the present possibly wee bee not touched with the sense of wants straights and difficulties yet wee are to expect that time of need will come 2. That it is good to foresee this and make provision in the time of grace in this acceptable day while God is on his Throne of Grace 3. That our prayers if they get not an answer presently yet shall they get an answer in the time of need When our need commeth then shall our help come also The Summe of Chap. V. I Have called Jesus the Son of God a great High-Priest because the Levitical Priests are but a resemblance of him and that in their imperfect measure For look what office they had vers 1. What properties were required in them vers 2 3. How they were called to their office vers 4. A fairer calling hath Christ and to an higher Priesthood vers 5 6. I called him a compassionate High Priest because hee took on our frail nature and had experience of such troubles as ours both outward and inward vers 7. For the measure of the Mediators obedience albeit Hee was the Son required actual and experimental suffering else the price had not actually been paid for us vers 8. And now being throughly fitted for his office by suffering hee is become the cause of the salvation of all that follow him vers 9. Authorized for that end of God after the order of Melchisedec which order is more perfect than Aarons vers 10. Of which mystery I must speak with greater difficulty for your incapacity vers 11. For yee have need yet more to bee catechised in the rudiments of Religion as babes vers 12. For such are they to whom easie Doctrine must bee propounded vers 13. But harder Doctrines are for riper Christians vers 14. The Doctrines of Chap. V. Vers. 1. For every High-Priest taken from amongst men is ordained for men in things pertaining to God that hee may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins 1. HEE setteth down the properties of the High-Priest that hee might shew the truth of them in Christ. First the peoples comfort did require that the High-Priest should bee a man So is Christ a Man chosen out from amongst men The Flower of all the Flock Therefore wee may come the more homely to Him 2. The High-Priest was ordained for men that is was appointed to imploy all his Office for mens good So doth Christ therefore may wee expect that hee will do for us as Mediatour what hee can and that is all that wee need 3. The High-Priests Office reached to all things pertaining to God to communicate Gods will unto the people and to lay before God the peoples Necessities So doth Christs Office to all the business betwixt God and us for working in us Repentance and Amendment and making our persons and service acceptable to God and therefore in nothing may wee pass by Him 4. In special the Priest behoved to offer Gifts and Sacrifices for sin for removing of wrath and obtaining of Favour So hath Christ done and fulfilled the type in this point also therefore by Him must wee obtain the good which wee crave and have the evil removed which wee fear Vers. 2. Who can have compassion on the ignorant and on them that are out of the way for that Hee Himself also is compassed with infirmity 1. Hee goeth on in the Comparison The typical High-Priest behoved to be compassionate on the Sinner So in truth is Christ even as the misery requireth proportionally as the word importeth 2. Hee maketh two sorts of Sinners Ignorants and Transgressours Then Though there bee difference of sinners yet no sinner that seeketh to Christ is secluded from His Compassion 3. Followeth a difference serving to advance Christ above the typical Priest The High-Priest typical was compassed with infirmities not onely sinless infirmities but sinful also and so behoved to pitty others Christ though not compassed with sinful infirmities but sinless onely yet doth pitty Sinners of all sorts Then Look what compassion one sinner might expect of another as much may wee expect of our sinless Saviour Vers. 3. And by reason hereof hee ought as for the people so also for himself to offer for sins Another difference The typical Priest had need of Remission of his own sins and the benefit of the true Sacrifice But Christ because without sin offered Sacrifice onely for our sins and not for His own Then All the Benefit of Christs Sacrifice commeth unto us Vers. 4. And no man taketh this honour unto himself but hee that is called of God as was Aaron Hee proceedeth in the Comparison The typical Priest entred by authority to his Calling and was honoured by his Calling So entred Christ. No man saith hee taketh this honour unto himself but Hee that is called as was Aaron Then 1. It is an honour to bee called to an Office in the House of God 2. The Calling is null if it have not God for the Author and Caller 3. If a man take an office not appointed of God or intrude himself into an Office without a lawful Calling it is no kind of honour unto him Vers. 5. So also Christ glorified not
sinfulness in mind and heart are Preparations to fit us and set us on to joyn in this Covenant wherein God undertaketh to help and remedy all these felt evils through His Christ by putting His Laws in our Mind and writing them in our Hearts For what is this else but t● illuminate our Mind more and more with the understanding of his will and to frame our hearts and affections to the obedience of the same 4. That by the Covenant comfort is provided for sinners who are humbled in the sense of their sins and no door opened for presumption nor room given to prophane persons to go on their ways blessing themselves For the maker of the New Covenant presupposeth two things First that his party renounce his own righteousness which he might seem able to have by the Old Covenant Next that he flee for relief to God in Christ to have the benefits promised in this New Covenant Which if he do it is impossible that he can either lean to his own merits or live in the love of his sinful lusts 5. That by this Covenant such an union is made betwixt God and the Believer that the Believer is the Lords adopted childe and the Lord is the Believers God all-sufficient for ever promising to be all to the Believer which to be our God may import and to make the Believer all that one of his people should be Verse 11. And they shall not teach every man his neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord For all shall know me from the least to the greatest 1. While he saith They shall not teach every man his neighbour he doth not mean that his Word and Ordinances and Ministry appointed by him or brotherly communion for mutual edification shall be mis-regarded or not made use of But by the contrary That he will himself be their Teacher in these his own means First giving his children a greater measure of the Spirit and a more neer communion with himself than of old 2. Making his children so wise unto salvation as they shall not hang their Faith upon mans authority but search by all means till they understand the minde of God the infallible Teacher as he hath revealed himself in his Word 3. So clearing the Truth which is outwardly taught unto them by his own Instruments after so sure and perswasive a manner by his Spirit inwardly that the outward Teaching shall be no Teaching in comparison of the inward concurrence according as we hear those Samaritans were taught who believed indeed the womans report that they might go to Christ But when they were come to him got so great satisfaction from himself that they said unto her Now we believe not because of thy saying for we have heard him our selves and know that this is indeed that Christ John 4.42 So will the Lord inwardly make his Truth powerful unto Salvation to his own that they may say to those that are his Instruments Now we believe not because of your saying but because we have heard him our selves Then 1. It is not Gods will that other mens belief should be the Rule of our belief but that we all search to understand the Scriptures and Gods will revealed therein 2. It is easie from this ground to answer that famous question How know you such and such grounds of Salvation We answer It is an Article of the New Covenant They shall be all taught of God 2. He saith They shall all know me from the least to the greatest Then 1. The New Covenant admitteth all Ranks and Degrees of persons and excludeth none high nor low that love to embrace it 2. It may be in sundry points of truth some of them be ignorant and mistaken more than other some But of the saving knowledge of God in Christ they shall all have light in a saving measure 3. The greatest as well as the meanest in whatsoever respect of Place or Gifts must be Gods Disciples in the study of saving Knowledge and hearty obedience Vers. 12. For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more 1. To make us believe the former Promises he addeth to a New Article of the Remission of sins because from the Conscience of those ordinarily do arise our doubts and difficulty of drawing near to God Then 1. The conscience of sin must not drive us away from God but rather force us to run unto God more humbly because onely to such as come unto him in his Christ is remission of sin promised 2. Whatsoever sort of sins they be unrighteousness or sin or inquity they shall not hinder God to be gracious to the penitent fleeing to this Covenant for refuge 2. In saying For I will be merciful 1. He maketh his mercy pardoning sin the reason of his bestowing the former good things His giving of one grace the reason of giving another even grace for grace 2. He maketh his mercy the ground of all this favour and nothing in the mans person or works or worthiness of his faith 3. The word Merciful is in the Original Pacified and doth import both Gods respect to the propitiatory sacrifice of Christ which pacifieth him towards us and also our duty in looking towards it as the price of our reconciliation 3. In that the Lord joyneth the promise of putting his Law in the minde and writing it in our heart with the promise of remission of sins he teacheth us That he will have every confederate soul that seeketh the benefit of this Covenant to joyn all these benefits together in their claim with remission of sin seeking to joyn the illumination of their minde renovation of their heart and life at least in their desires and endeavours and not to sever one of them from another but study in uprightness to have them all 4. While he saith He will remember their sins no more he teacheth 1. That he will never forgive sin nor forget it but set it ever in his sight till a man enter into this Covenant with him through Christ. 2. That when he hath forgiven sin he forgeteth sin also whatsoever he remitteth he removeth from his remembrance Vers. 13. In that he saith A New Covenant he hath made the first Old Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away From the name that the Lord giveth this Covenant in calling it New he draweth two consequences The first that the former Covenant by this word was declared old Next that as it was declared old it was so declared shortly after to be abolished Then 1. The least word that proceedeth out of Gods mouth is weighty and worthy of consideration 2. Whatsoever Gods word doth import by due consequence must be taken for Gods truth and Gods minde as if it were expressed 3. Seeing Christ is come and the time is now of this New Covenant we know that by Gods authority the Levitical ordinances and whole form of the Legal
the Law entred The comparison goeth thus 1. The Levitical High Priest entred into the material and artificial Sanctuary and a Typical sacrifice became him But Christ entred not into that Typical Sanctuary Therefore a Typical Sacrifice became not him 2. The Levitical High Priest entered bodily into the figurative Sanctuary But Christ did enter bodily into the true Sanctuary in Heaven it self 3. The High Priest entered in behalf of the people with the names of the twelve Tribes upon his breast and shoulders But Christ is entered in in behalf of us all his People to appear for us bearing the particular memory of every Saint in his Memory The High Priest entered in to appear for a short time and stayed not within the Sanctuary But Christ is entred in to appear now all the time from his Ascension unto this day and constantly still while it is called Now. Vers. 25. Nor yet that he should offer himself often as the High Priest entereth into the Holy Place every year with blood of others He proveth that he had offered a better Sacrifice than the Levitical because he behoved to offer an Offering not to be repeated as the Levitical and so a more perfect Offering The comparison goeth in dissimilitudes 1. The High Priest entered in with the blood of others But Christ entered in with his own blood 2. The High Priest made an Offering of other things than himself But Christ did offer himself Then the Offering of Christ is the personal action of Christ himself None can nor may offer him but himself For the Priest must be either better than the Sacrifice or as good at least as the Sacrifice But none can be so good as Christ nor be more excellent or better therefore none can offer Christ but himself 3. The High Priest offered his Sacrifice oftner But Christ offered not himself oftner than once Then to imagine an Offering of Christ often is both to give the lye to this Text and to make Christs Offering by repeating of it imperfect and like to the Levitical For if once offering of Christ be sufficient often offering is superfluous And if often offering be needful then that once offering was not sufficient and so was not perfect which were blasphemy to say 2. If any man pretend to offer Christ often it is not Christ that giveth him warrant so to do For here it is declared That he hath no hand in offering himself often Vers. 26. For then must be often have suffered since the foundation of the world But now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself He proveth That Christ cannot be often offered Because then saith he must he often have suffered Then 1. No Offering of Christ without the suffering of Christ His Passion and Death is inseparable from his Sacrifice If Christ were often offered he behoved to be often slain and put to death But that cannot be that he should suffer and be slain oftner therefore he cannot be offered up in a sacrifice oftener And they who will take upon them to offer Christ again and again take upon them to slay him and put him to new suffering again again 2. The offering of Christ in an unbloody sacrifice is a a vain imagination which the Apostle acknowledgeth not For if that were possible then were the Apostles words here false and his reasoning ridiculous which were blasphemy to say 2. Hee saith He behoved to have suffered often since the beginning of the World Because as often as new sins were committed and new Remission was to be bestowed as often behoved hee to have suffered to expiate these sins and to purchase the new Remission since the beginning of the World But this is impossible Therefore his Offering often is impossible Then 1. They who make it needful to offer Christ often make it needful also that Hee should have taken on flesh sooner than Hee did and been slain sooner than Hee was and slain as often as new sins were to be expiated and forgiven from the beginning of the world And so by this vain conceit they do ranverse all the wisdome of God about Christ and set to Him an Order and Course of their own making themselves wiser than God 2. It is by the Apostles estimation as vain a conceit and as impossible to offer Christ oftner than once now in the end of the world as to have offered Him before Hee came in the flesh since the beginning of the world 3. But now saith hee once in the end of the world hee hath appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself Then 1. No Sacrifice of Christ doth the Apostle acknowledge but such as is joyned with His bodily appearance in the world for that end Once hath Hee appeared and once onely hath Hee sacrificed Himself saith the Apostle 2. The Apostle understood no Offering of Christ but onely one and once to be offered for time fore-gone or time to come from the beginning of the world unto the end thereof 3. This one Offering once offered was sufficient to expiate the sins of the saved before it was offered and therefore must have force also to expiate the sins of the saved without repetition now after it is once offered 4. Whose sins Christ doth take away for those Hee appeared for those Hee made a Sacrifice of Himself And whose sins Hee doth not put away for those Hee appeared not Hee sacrificed not 4. In calling the time of Christs Suffering The end of the world hee giveth us to understand That there cannot be so much time betwixt Christs First and Second Comming as was betwixt the worlds beginning and his First Comming But a great deal of less time need force else were not that time the end of the world Vers. 27. And as it is appointed unto men once to dye but after this the Iudgement Another Reason to prove That Christ neither could nor should offer oftener than once from the Common Law laid upon man of Once dying Which Law Christ having once satisfied by dying when he offered up himself there is no reason he should offer himself again and so dye again 1. It is appointed saith hee for men once to dye Then 1. It is come by Gods just appointment that men should dye since His Law is broken by men 2. The Common Law of Nature appointeth but one death once to be suffered And though God by singularity of Miracles make some Exceptions yet the Common Law standeth for a rule beyond which no reason Christ should be tyed since his once dying is sufficient 3. Every man must take Dea●h to him and prepare himself to obey the Appointment 2. Hee saith After Death commeth Judgement Then 1. Every mans particular Judgement Day followeth his departure out of this life and general judgement abideth all at length 2 The time of Grace and mercy getting is onely in this life nothing but Justice remaineth either to absolve the
maintain the Truth against all fear of men Vers. 26. For if wee sin wilfully after that wee have received the knowledge of the Truth there remaineth no more Sacrifice for sins Another Motive to constancy in the Truth of Religion taken from the fearful case of wilful Apostates who sinning the sin against the Holy Ghost are secluded for ever from Mercy I say the sin against the Holy Ghost because wee shall finde the sin here described not to be any particular sin against the Law but against the Gospel Not a sin against some point of Truth but against Christs whole Doctrine Not of infirmity but wilfulness Not of rashness but of deliberation wittingly and willingly Not of ignorance but after Illumination and Profession Such as Iews turned Christians revolting from Christianity back again to their former hostility against Christ did commit It is true many who commit lesser sins get never grace to repent and many who make defection in some point of their profession may be secluded from mercy thereafter but this sin here described is a wilful rejecting of Christ and the Benefit of his Sacrifice after Illumination and Profession of the Faith of Christ. Then 1. As Apostacy from the true Religion lyeth nearest unto this sin so they who desire to be freed of this sin must be the more careful to be constant in the profession of every point of the Truth of the Gospel 2. If a man reject the Benefit of that once offered Sacrifice of Christ there is no other Sacrifice for sin after that nor any other mean to help him But if a man seek unto Jesus Christ and will not quit Him whatsoever hee may think of the hainousness of his own sins the Sacrifice which Jesus offered for sins remaineth whereby hee may be saved Vers. 27. But a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery Indignation which shall devour the Adversaries Having secluded the Apostate from Mercy hee goeth on in these words to shew his miserable estate Whereof wee gather 1. That the wilful Apostate from the Faith of Christ is also a wilful Adversary to Christ of the highest sort Partaker of Satans sin and Satans Profession 2. That every Apostate of this sort is destitute of Gods Peace self-condemned desperate of salvation hopeless of Relief without all purpose of Repentance or using means of help stricken with the fore-sight of the Wrath coming upon him and made to expect it although hee should dissemble it never so much 3. The Apostates fear shall come upon him judgement answerable to his sin the indignation and wrath of God yea fiery indignation the most terrible that can be thought upon which hee shall not escape but it shall devoute him swallow him up and feed upon his body and soul even for ever 2. In that hee maketh this the judgement of Christs Adversaries Wee learn That the soul which loveth Christ and cannot qui● Him cannot endure to think of a separation will not quit the true Religion nor any known point of Christs Truth and is using the means to get Gods Peace albeit it might seem to it self because of the present sense of wrath to be in the self-same estate that is here described yet it is ●ree as yet of the sin against the Holy Ghost and not to be reckoned amongst adversaries but amongst the friends and lovers of Christ how vehemently soever Satans suggestions bear in the contrary 3. In that by setting before them the fearful estate of Apostates from the known Truth of the true Religion hee Laboureth to strengthen them against the fear of persecution Whence wee learn That if Apostates before they make Apostasie from the true Religion did fore-see their own danger as after Apostasie they are made to fore-see their own condemnation all the terrour of all the torment which man could put them unto and all the allurements which this world could give them would not move them to quit the least point of the Truth of true Religion Vers. 28. Hee that despised Moses Law died without mercy under two or three witnesses 29. Of how much sorer punishment suppose yee shall hee be thought worthy who hath trodden under foot the Son of God and hath counted the Blood of the Covenant wherewith hee was sanctified an unholy thing and hath done despite unto the Spirit of Grace 1. Hee proveth the equity of their judgement by the proportion of their punishment who despised the Law of Moses Then As sins are greater so must the punishment be greater and the conscience being posed as here cannot but subscribe to the proportion 2. To make the sin appear the better hee pointeth out some particular sins involved within this great sin For clearing whereof it may be asked How can the Apostates tread the Blood of the Son of God under foot c. I answer They cannot indeed by physical action but by doing the equivalent sin they are accounted of God to do it by judicial interpretation Their Apostasie importeth their agreeing to do Christ as much indignity as if they did offer Him this personal violence Their deeds shew that they have this base estimation of Christ and His Blood and no better For what saith the Apostate of Christ by his deed but That Hee is not worthy to be professed or avowed or followed And what is this in effect but to tread Him under all these base things which the Apostate preferreth before Him And so is to be understood of the Blood of Christ and His Spirit Quest. But how can the Reprobate be said to be sanctified by the Blood of the Covenant I answer There is a sanctification to the purifying of the flesh and a sanctification to the purifying of the conscience from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.13 14. The sanctification external to the purifying of the flesh consisteth in the mans separation from the world and dedication unto Gods service by Calling and Covenant common to all the members of the visible Church and it is forcible thus far as to bring a man into credit estimation as a Saint before men and unto the common Priviledges of the Church whereupon as Men so God also speaketh unto him and of him as one of His People and dealeth with him in his external dispensation as with one of His own People In this sense all the Congregation of Israel and every one of them is called holy yea Core also and his followers Num. 16.3 The Sanctification internal by renovation consisteth in a mans separation from the state of Nature to the state of grace from his old conditions to be a new creature indeed By this latter sort a Reprobate cannot be called Sanctified but by the former hee may be called Sanctified and that by virtue of the Blood of the Covenant albeit hee should not get any further good thereby For as the Blood of CHRIST hath virtue to cleanse the conscience and renew the soul which commeth unto it truly and spiritually so it
joyned with meekness which remedies the evils and emulations of the tongue The proposition is propounded in this verse If any man will shew himself a prudent Christian he ought to shew it in works of innocency and meekness The Arguments are six Vers. 14. But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts glory not and lye not against the truth Argum. 1. If any man laying aside his meekness cherisheth contrary vices in his heart emulation and contention there is no matter of glorying but rather of shame Therefore ye ought to study the wisdome of meeknesse Lye Argum. 2. They that lay aside meekness and cherish in their hearts envying and strife are lyars against the truth i. e. they falsly boast themselves to be wise or to be Christians who indeed shew themselves to be wicked Therefore ye must study wisdom joyned with meekness Vers. 15. This wisdom descendeth not from above but is earthly sensual devillish Argum. 3. The wisdom of contention envying revenging of private injuries is not that which descends from Heaven from God but is earthly sensual and devillish having its original from corrupt nature and the Devil Therefore ye ought to study the wisdom of meekness Vers. 16. For where envying and strife is there is confusion and every evil work Argum. 4. Confirming the former where there is not wisdom with meekness but envy and contention there tumults seditions and every wickedness reigns Therefore we ought to endeavour after wisdom with meekness Vers. 17. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure and then peaceable gentle and easie to be entreated full of mercy and good fruits without partiality and without hypocrisie Argum. 5. From the eight proprieties of that heavenly wisdom which is joyned with meekness that wisdom which joyned with meek 1. Is pure and chaste i. e. holding fast truth and holiness lest it be any ways polluted 2. Peaceable and avoiding contentions 3. Endeavouring after equity 4. Easily giving place to right reason 5. Full of mercy towards those that erre and sin 6. Full of good fruits omitting nothing of those things which become a good and pious man 7. Not enquiring suspiciously into the blemishes of other men 8. Without hypocrisie wherein chiefly carnal wisdom is delighted Therefore we ought to endeavour after wisdom joyned with meekness Vers. 18. And the fruit of righteousness is s●wn in peace of them that make peace Argum. 6. They that endeavour after this wisdom joyned with meekness do the whilest endeavour to make peace or to be peaceable themselves 1. They are in peace 2. They work righteousness or encrease their holiness 3. They sow to themselves for time to come and for life eternal that they may reap the fruit of righteousness in due time Therefore ye ought to endeavour for this wisdom CHAP. IV. THis Chapter contains three Admonitions The first is for the curing the disease of carnal lusts to ver 11. The second is for the avoiding of the hurting or diminishing the fame of our brethren to vers 13. The third is for the correcting the contempt of Divine Providence in executing businesses and purposes Vers. 1. From whence come wars and fightings among you ●ome they not hence even of your lusts that war in your members As for the first The Arguments of Dehortation from carnal lusts are nine whereof the six fornier shew the evil the three latter contain the remedies Argum. 1. Out of your lusts which fight inwardly in your members as it were amongst themselves and war against the salvation of soul and body arise brawlings contentions wars amongst men such lusts are covetousness ambition fleshly lusts and such like Therefore ye ought to beware of them Vers. 2. Ye lust and have not ye kill and desire to have and cannot obtain ye fight and war yet ye have not because ye ask not Agum 2. Lusts weary you with unprofitable labours vex your mindes drive you into many dangers of life and draw you from God and lawful means by which ye might get something Therefore ye ought to beware of those Vers. 3. Ye ask and receive not because ye ask amiss that ye may consume it upon your lusts Argum. 3. If at any time ye use lawful and approved means as for example in praying to God your lusts obtrude themselves as the end of your prayers and defile them and all other means depriving you of all fruit Therefore ye must have a care of them Vers. 4. Ye adulterers and adulteresses know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God Argum. 4. Lusts stirring up the love of this world in you draw your souls into spiritual adultery and make you adulterers and adulteresses who are-consecrated to God in spiritual marriage Therefore beware of them Whosoever Argum. 5. Carnal lusts that are inward whilest they draw you into the love and friendship of this world they bring you into hatred and enmity with God For whosoever thinks to please himself or hath determined to ingratiate himself with worldly men by conforming himself to their manners he makes war against God and fights in the Camp of his adversaries Therefore you must beware of them Vers. 5. Do ye think that the Scripture saith in vain The spirit that dwelleth in us lusteth to envy Argum. 6. Confirming the former The spirit of the old man from whence all carnal lusts are stirred up which by nature dwells in us by its natural violence or by the impulse of the Devil is carried into envy and hatred both of God and our neighbour as the Scripture doth not in vain teach in many places speaking of the corrupt nature of man Therefore it follows that the friends of the world serving the lusts of the flesh are enemies to God and those carnal lusts also take their rice from the wicked spirit Vers. 6. But he giveth more grace wherefore he saith God resisteth the proud but giveth grace unto the humble Argum. 7. Now God viz. after ye were born again and converted to the faith of Christ gives more grace than that ye should be seduced into envy or hatred of God and your neighbour by the old spirit dwelling in you which he proves from the Scripture teaching that as God resisteth and is an adversary to the irregenerate proud and those that are acted by the old spirit so also he gives grace and help to the regenerate that repent and are humble that they may restrain their carnal lusts Therefore ye ought to shun carnal lusts This is the first remedy against fleshly lusts Vers. 7. Submit your selves therefore to God resist the Devil and he will flee from you Argum. 8. Propounded by way of Exhortation If as it becomes the regenerate ye embrace the friendship of God and subject your selves in humility to be ruled by him resisting the Devil who leads on the troop of ●leshly lusts warring against your souls it
Writer towards those to whom hee writ hee professes both his love and sincerity of it and also testifies concerning the love of all other beleevers that embraced the truth of the Gospel and had heard of this family Vers. 2. For the Truths sake which dwelleth in us and shall bee with us for ever That hee might manifest his sincere love hee affirms that the cause of it is the common Faith of the Truth of the Gospel wherein hee was confident that this Lady would persevere and her children with her and the rest of the faithful would enjoy the virtue and fruit of the truth of the Gospel for ever Therefore the whole Preface is intended for the confirmation of the Faith of this pious family 1 Because shee is an Elect Matrone 2 Because her children are faithful 3 Because they are beloved of the Apostle 4 Because they are beloved of all the Faithful 5 Because they are beloved rather for the Truth than the nobility of their stock 6 Because the Truth of the Gospel in them both as to the faith and the fruits of it would remain and indure in them for ever Vers. 3. Grace bee with you Mercy and Peace from God the Father and from the Lord Iesus Christ the Son of the Father in Truth and Love In the salutation or Apostolical blessing wherein is not contained a bare wish but also a certain applying of that wished good hee confirms them 1 Concerning the Grace or good will of God towards them whereby hee freely makes us acceptable to him and bestows upon us all things that may repair Gods Image in us 2 Further concerning the Mercy of God which if it be distinguished from Grace signifies the taking away our sinnes and miseries 3 Concerning the Peace of God which comprehends reconciliation peace of conscience and all the degrees both of inchoate and perfect felicity And because a blessing is expected in vain unless from the true fountain hee brings them to God the Father from whom the whole divine essence is communicated to the Son and the Holy Ghost and to Christ the Mediatour the second Person of the God-head incarnate invested with the office of salvation for us whom hee calls the Son of the Father in Truth and Love 1 Because hee is full of Truth and Grace together with his Father of the same nature or essence because hee is his most true and beloved Son Ioh. 1.14 2 Because the mind of the Father is no other nor his will no other towards us than hee is The same purpose of both is firm concerning us and the same love towards us 3 Because hee reveals the truth of the Fathers counsel and purpose to us and the love wherewith hee loves us hee brings it forth and derives it or communicates it to us and shews himself every way to bee the Son of the Father both in truth of Doctrine and effectual love towards us resembling his expresse Image Vers. 4. I rejoyced greatly that I found of thy children walking in the Truth as wee have received a commandement from the Father Here follows the body of the Epistle wherein hee exhorts this Matrone with her children to persevere in the obedience of the Gospel i. e. in Faith working by love towards God and the Brethren The Arguments of the Exhortation are nine The first is premised in this verse wherein hee confesses his joy that this family hitherto had continued in the obedience of the Gospel hee confirms them as to what was past and also stirs them up to persevere for the future Your constancy in the obedience of the Gospel will administer to mee and all the faithful who hear of you abundant matter of spiritual joy and consequently of thanksgiving to God Therefore persevere in the Faith Vers. 5. And now I beseech thee Lady not as though I wrote a new Commandement unto thee but that which wee had from the beginning that wee love one another From hence hee infers an Exhortation chiefly to the Matrone or Mother of the Family under whose tuition the children were together with the second Argument The commandement for the demonstration of the efficacy of your Faith in the love of the Brethren hath nothing new in it besides that which yee have learned by the gift of God from the beginning of your vocation and have accustomed your selves to viz. that from the Faith and love of Jesus Christ yee also love the Christian brother-hood Therefore go forward in the obedience of Faith working by love Vers. 6. And this is love that wee walk after his Commandements this is the Commandement that as yee have heard from the beginning yee should walk in it Argum. 3. There is no other true love either of our neighbour or of God besides that which consists in a constant indeavour of keeping all Gods Commandements and walking or going forward in that obedience Therefore or thus The command or the summe of the Doctrine delivered to us in the Gospel is that wee should keep faith and a good conscience that wee should beleeve in Jesus Christ and love our neighbour Therefore persevere yee in the obedience of faith or this commandement Vers. 7. For many deceivers are entred into the world who confess not that Iesus Christ is come in the flesh This is a deceiver and an Antichrist A●gum 4. There is danger lest yee bee deceived by reason of the multitude of seducers that are gone out into the world and impudently boast of themselves Therefore yee ought the more diligently to endeavour after perseverance But hee calls seducers not onely those who openly oppose the person of Christ his offices and power but also those who did not confess Christ nor ascribe all glory unto him which the Spirit of God in holy Scripture teaches us to ascribe unto him For whosoever hee was hee is so far forth Antichrist as hee doth neither confess nor acknowledge Christ such as hee hath shewn forth himself to us in his holy Doctrine Vers. 8. Look to your selves that wee lose not those things which wee have wrought but that wee receive a full reward Argum. 5. Unless yee constantly persevere in the true Faith of the Gospel or the obedience to it yee will lose all the fruit of that Faith which yee have hitherto professed and afflictions also which yee have suffered and the works which yee formerly performed because by your drawing back yee will manifest that your Faith was never sincere but a vain profession without truth Therefore yee ought to indeavour through perseverance to receive a full and plentiful reward promised to all those that faithfully cleave unto God Vers. 9. Whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the Doctrine of Christ hath not God Hee that abideth in the Doctrine of Christ hee hath both the Father and the Son Argum. 6. Whosoever transgresseth the Doctrine of Christ and doth not constantly abide in it i. e. hee that either teaches or receives a contrary Doctrine or doth not
Diotrephes who endeavours to have the preheminence over all the rest of his fellows may undervalue both mee and my Letters of commendation Vers. 10. Wherefore if I come I will remember his deeds which hee doth prating against us with malicious words and not content therewith neither doth hee himself receive the brethren and forbiddeth them that would and casteth them out of the Church The Apostle adviseth him that hee will deal with this ambitious lover of preheminence before the Church when hee comes and gives five reasons of his purpose Reas. 1. Because Diotrephes did many evil deeds 2. Because hee did prate against the Apostles with malicious words and namely against Iohn whom he knew to be an enemy to ambition and humane Episcopacy creeping into the Church through the ambition and devices of these kind of men 3. Because hee did neither entertain nor did bestow any kinde of respect upon the true Christians that held fast the Doctrine of the Apostles in all things 4. Because by his tyrannical injunctions and constitutions threatning excommunication and casting out of the Church hee prohibits who entertained and received those Preachers with all Christian offices that were 〈◊〉 by the Apostles if they did contrary to his commands 5. Because hee did imperiously excommunicate those that transgressed his commands and did entertain this kind of Brethren Vers. 11. Beloved follow not that which is evil but that which is good Hee that doth good is of God but hee that doth evil hath not seen God Argum. 9. Thou oughtest not to follow the evil carriage of thy Pastor Diotrephes or obey his wicked commands because this would bee evil and contrary to true Faith and love towards God but thou oughtest to follow that onely which is good and agreeable to sound Doctrine Therefore go on in exercising the duties of love Hee that doth good Argum. 10. Confirming the formee hee that indeavours to do good is born of God but hee that doth evil is void of the true and saving knowledge of God or faith in him Therefore go thou on to do good that thou mayest approve thy self to bee of God Vers. 12. Demetrius hath good report of all men and of the Truth it self yea and wee also bear record and yee know that our record is true Argum. 11. Thou oughtest rather to imitate Demetrius his kindness towards the Saints and poor strangers of whom all and the very truth of the thing shewing it self in deeds gives testimony and I my self who am not wont to affirm unless it be those things which are true and I know by experience do give testimony of his praise Therefore imitate him and go on in the duties of Charity Vers. 13. I had many things to write but I will not with Ink and Pen write unto thee 14. But I trust I shall shortly see thee and wee shall speak face to face The conclusion remains wherein are two Articles In the first hee excuses the shortness of his Epistle hoping to see and talk face to face with him Vers. 15. Peace bee to thee Our Friends salute thee Greet the friends by name In the second Article 1. Hee salutes Gaius by wishing peace to him i. e. the blessing of God in all things 2. Hee doth hearty commendations to Gaius from his friends viz. the Saints who were his true friends 3. Hee wills him to salute in his name particularly and by name all his friends i. e. who loved him The Epistle of IUDE the Apostle Analytically Expounded THE CONTENTS CErtain masters of Heresies arose who abused the grace of God to the liberty of the flesh and under the pretence of the Gospel let loose the reigns to all manner of wickedness and plainly mocked at the holy conversation of true Beleevers as of simple Idiots which were ignorant of true Christian liberty Against these pestilent inventions God stirred up Peter the Apostle and this Jude who is here and Act. 1. called the Brother of James the less called Alpheus Hee was the Kinsman of our Lord Mat. 13.55 who is named Lebbeus and Thaddeus Mat. 10.3 This our Apostle exhorts the Faithful to whom hee writes that they would constantly stand up for the defence of the Doctrine of the Gospel against false Teachers of whom Peter had warned them 2 Pet. 2. handling the very same Argument There are three parts of this Epistle A Preface vers 1 2. An Exhortation to contend for the true Faith against Impostors to vers 24. The Conclusion in the two last verses Vers. 1. JUde the servant of Iesus Christ and Brother of Iames to them that are sanctified by God the Father and preserved in Iesus Christ and called The Preface contains an inscription and salutation The inscription shews the direction of this Epistle from whom and to whom it was written The writer of this Epistle is 1 described from his name 2 from his Apostolical office under the name of a servant in which title hee more glories than in the natural relation which was betwixt him and Christ the Lord. 3 From the distinction of himself from Iudas the Traitor from whom not onely in his disposition but also in his name hee desired to bee differenced Those to whom hee writes are described from four properties of the Elect. 1 They are in God the Father i. e. reconciled by Christ they have communion or an holy fellowship with God 2 They are sanctified by the special operation and inhabitation of the Holy Ghost 3 Preserved by the gift of perseverance from Christ the Redeemer who suffers none of his to bee taken out of his hand 4 Called not onely with an outward call but with an inward and effectual calling Vers. 2. Mercy unto you and Peace and love be multiplied In his salutation by Apostolical authority hee does not onely wish but applies to the confirmation of their Fait● 1 The Mercy of God which heal● all our evils viz. our sin and misery 2 Peace which comprehends the parts of our Reconciliation and felicity 3 And Love which as the spring of all good things comprehends grace and all those effects which conduce to our sanctification and the compleating of our salvation Hee desires that all these may bee multiplied in respect to the degrees of increase and manifestation in other various effects such as the glory of God and their salvation should require Vers. 3. Beloved when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation it was needful for mee to write unto you and exhort you that yee should earnestly contend for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints The body and substance of the Epistle follows wherein hee propounds the cause and scope of his writing which hee further prosecutes Two Reasons of his writing hee sets down 1 His earnest desire not onely in respect to his office in preaching the Gospel wheresoever occasion was offered but also of writing concerning the common Salvation of the Elect obtained by Christ and by degrees
Reconciled or to condemn the unreconciled sinner Mens Devises for the Relief of the Dead are but Delusions of the Living Vers. 28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for Him shall Hee appear the second time without sin unto Salvation Hee applyeth the Common Law of dying once to Christ saying Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many Then 1. It is as unreasonable that Christ should offer Himself oftner than once as it is to exact of Him the laying down of His life oftner than once for that is to exact more than the severity of Gods Justice requireth of Him 2. Christs Death was not for any sin in Him but for our sins 3. Hee took not away the sins of every man in particular for many dye in their sins and bear their own judgement but the sins of many the sins of his own Elect People Mat. 1.21 Hee shall save his people from their sins 2. Hee saith That unto them that look for him hee shall appear the second time Then 1. After that once offering of Christ and ascending to Heaven Hee is not to be corporally present on earth again till the Day of Judgement The Apostle acknowledgeth corporal presence no oftner 2. To look for Christs corporal presence upon earth then and not till then is the property of true Beleevers 3. Corporal presence is joyned with Appearance the one is put here for the other 3. Hee will appear the second time without sin Then In his first comming hee was not without our sin yet lying upon him by imputation as his baseness and misery declared But the glorious manner of his second comming shall make evident That hee is without sin that is Fully exonored by that one Offering of the debt thereof which hee took upon him 4. In stead of saying That those who look for him shall be without sin hee saith That Christ shall appear without sin To teach us 1. That the defraying the Debt of the sins of such for whom Christ hath undertaken lyeth upon Christ and not upon the Beleevers for whom hee undertook 2. And that if his once sacrificing himself for them did not expiate their sins sufficiently then Sin should cleave unto Christ until His second comming 3. That Christs freedome from Sin shall evidence our freedome from Sin for whom hee became Surety 5. Hee will appear unto them who look for Him unto salvation Then 1. The full accomplishment of the salvation of the Beleevers shall not be until Christs second comming Though their souls be blessed before yet the full blessedness of soul and body is deferred till then 2. As Christs Glory shall testifie then that His once offering freed Him of the Suretiship for our sins So our salvation shall testifie that His Offering was sufficient to exonor us 3. They that love not his comming cannot look for salvation The Summe of Chap. X. THis once offering of Christ putteth the main difference betwixt this Sacrifice and those offerings of the Law which because they were repeated could never perfect the worshiper vers 1. For if they could have perfected the worshiper they should have ceased to be repeated vers 2. Now cease they did not but were repeated vers 3. Because they could not take away sin vers 4. Wherefore as the Scripture doth witness Psal. 40. Sacrifices of the Law were to bee abolished and Christ His Sacrifice to come in their room vers 5 6 7 8 9. By which Sacrifice once offered wee are for ever sanctified vers 10. And as their Sacrifice was imperfect so was their Priesthood also ever repeating the same Sacrifices which could not because they were repeated abolish sin vers 11. But Christ hath ended His Sacrificing in His once offering and entred to His Glory to subdue His Enemies vers 12 13. Having by that once offering done all to his Followers that was needful to perfect them vers 14. As the word of the New Covenant Ier. 31. proverb vers 15 16 17 18. Having spoken then of Christs Divine Excellency and of the Priviledges which the Faithful have in Him I exhort you to make use of it in special seeing wee have by Chris●● blood access unto Heaven vers 19. By so perfect a Way as is Christs Fellowship of our Nature vers 20. And so great Moyen by Christ before us there vers 21. Let us strengthen our Faith for the better holding of our Justification and Sanctification through him vers 22. And let us avow our Religion constantly vers 23. And help forwards one another vers 24. Neglecting no means publick nor private for that end as some Apostates have done vers 25. For if wee make wilful Apostacy from his known Truth no Mercy to be looked for vers 26. But certain Damnation of us as of his Enemies vers 27. For if the Despisers of the Law were damned to death without mercy vers 28. What Judgement abideth those who so abuse Jesus his Grace and Spirit as wilful Apostates do vers 29. For Gods threatning in the Law is not in vain vers 30. And it is a fearful thing to fall as a Foe in Gods Hand vers 31. But rather prepare you for such sufferings as you began to feel at your Conversion vers 32. Partly in your own persons and partly by your fellowship with Sufferers vers 33. Which you did joyfully bear in hope of a Reward vers 34. Therefore retain your Confidence vers 35. And be patient vers 36. God will come and help shortly vers 37. And till hee come you must live by Faith and not by sense But if you will not you shall bee rejected vers 38. But I and you are not of that sort that shall make Apostasie but of the number of true Beleevers who shall persevere and be saved vers 39. The Doctrine of Chap. X. THat hee may yet further show the impossibility of offering Christ oftner hee giveth the often repetition of Levitical Sacrifices year by year for a reason of their imperfection and inability to perfect the worshiper and therefore of necessity Christs Sacrifice could not be repeated except wee should make it imperfect like the Levitical and unable to perfect the worshiper as the Legal Sacrifice was The force of his reasoning is this The most solemn Sacrifice offered by the High-Priest himself Levit. 16. and lest subject to repetition of all the Sacrifices being offered not so often as each month or each week or each day as some Sacrifices were but once a year onely yet because they were repeated year by year they were declared by this means unable ever to make the commers thereunto perfect Therefore Christs Sacrifice could not be often offered lest for that same reason it should be found imperfect also And this is his drift in vers 1. Hee proveth his reason to be good thus If they could have perfected the commer then they should not have been repeated but ceased from being offered because