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A41197 A brief exposition of the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by James Fergusson. Fergusson, James, 1621-1667. 1659 (1659) Wing F772; ESTC R27358 577,875 820

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life And they are said to have been quickned with Christ though not in their own persons for they were so quickned a long time after Christ's resurrection in their effectual calling but they were then quickned in their head and atturney Jesus Christ whose quickning after death was a sure pledge that they every one in his own time should be quickned also 1 Cor. 15. 20. and that the vertue purchased by Christs death Rom. 8. 11. and to be applyed unto them by Him who is now alive and liveth for evermore for that end Heb. 7. 25. And therefore the Apostle expresseth Gods bestowing of this spiritual life upon them by His quickning them with Christ. And before he mention the other pieces of their delivery he doth in the close of this vers ascribe the whole work of their salvation to Gods free grace which is the same in effect with His mercy and love spoken of ver 4. Only it further expresseth the freedom of those in opposition to any merit or worth in the persons to be saved which might procure their salvation Doct. 1. The Ministers of Christ would not only inculcate the doctrine of sin and misery but having insisted so much upon this subject as may serve to bring down that high conceit which people naturally have of their own righteousnesse and to convince them of their need of Jesus Christ a Saviour Then is it timous for them to open up the riches of Gods free grace and good will to save the vilest of sinners and what He hath freely done for bringing about salvation to their hand for the Apostle having set forth unto the life the natural misery of those Ephesians doth now openup the rich treasures of Gods free grace in Christ But God who is rich in mercy 2. The Lords Ministers when they fall upon this subject of Gods delivering lost sinners from their natural state of sin and misery through Christ they would labour to speak to it so fully affectionatly sensibly and with such life and power as that they may not only inform the understandings of the Lords People in those truths but also inflame their affections with love to them and admiration at the wisdom mercy goodnesse and other attributes of God manifested in this work for so doth the Apostle speak of this purpose not simply by saying God hath quickned us but God who is rich in mercy according to His great love and so forward in the two following verses 3. There is nothing contributeth more to inable a Minister to speak to the commendation of God's free grace in the salvation of sinners with that fulnesse sense life and affection as he ought than a deep insight in his own misery and the great need which he himself doth stand in of God's mercy for Paul in the third verse fore-going doth shew how sensible he was of the depth and breadth of his own misery hence he doth here speak so fully and movingly to the present purpose But God who is rich in mercy c. 4. The quickning of sinners and drawing them out of nature unto grace is only God's work there being no lesse required for bringing this about than omnipotent creating power See ver 10. And there being not only no principle left in man who is by nature dead in sins and trespasses whereby he might work or concur with God in working towards his own quickning Rom. 9. 16. but also much to oppose and resist it 2 Cor. 10. 5. So that in the first instant of his conversion and untill a new heart be given him and the seeds and habits of saving graces infused in him he is wholly passive as to any actual influence upon the effect which is wrought Jer. 31. 33. for Paul here condescending upon the cause of their quickning doth pitch not upon their own free will in whole or in part but upon God only while he saith But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 5. This attribute of mercy in God whereby without any grief or perturbation of mind which accompanieth men in the exercise of mercy he hath a propension and inclination to do good to the sinfull and miserable so far as His wisdom seeth convenient is the only thing in opposition unto all that is in a mans self which moveth God to quicken and bestow grace upon dead and gracelesse sinners for the Apostle speaking of God's quickning of those Ephesians describeth Him from His mercy to shew it was not their worth but His own mercy which moved Him to quicken them But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 6. As God is rich and overflowing in the exercise of this attribute of mercy which will appear if we consider that there is no creature towards which He doth not exercise His mercy Psal. 104. 24. and that mercy is exercised not only without but also often contrary to the deserving of those upon whom it is exercised Ezek. 36. 21 22. so there is nothing wherein God doth more manifest the riches and abundance of His mercy than in the work of quickning dead sinners and of carrying-on the work of grace in them untill it be perfected in glory The misery Ezek. 16. 3 c. and bad deservings of the object Jer. 14. 7. the great good things which are bestowed upon those miserable objects Luke 12. 32. the course taken for satisfying divine justice that so those good things might be without wronging of justice bestowed Joh. 3. 16. and the multitude of sins which mercy covereth in those objects not only before their conversion Isa. 55. 7. but also after it Prov. 24. 16. All these and many considerations besides these do manifest God to be rich in mercy in quickning of dead sinners But God who is rich in mercy hath quickned us 7. The highest cause which moveth God to manifest this His rich and special mercy upon any of lost mankind and from mercy to quicken them and bestow His saving graces on them was His love towards them which is no other than His will and resolution to impart those good things unto them together with His hearty acquiescence in the thing as that wherewith He is well pleased He did it because He would do it resolved to do it and had pleasure in the doing of it for saith he God who is rich in mercy for His great love hath quickned us 8. As God's love towards those whom He converteth doth not begin when they are converted but is of a more ancient even an eternal rise chap. 1. 4. So it is not an ordinary but a great love wherewith He loveth them The infinit distance betwixt Him and them Psal. 8. 4. His loving them when they were yet enemies Rom. 5. 8. the great things bestowed by His love Rom. 5. 6 7 8. and His unchangeablenesse in His love even notwithstanding of great provocations to the contrary Psal. 89. 33. All these and many besides these do abundantly declare that this love is a great
meaning from that which we gave of almost the same words chap. 5. ver 6. because his scope there is somewhat different from what it is here Vers. 16. And as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God HE addeth a second reason whereby he commendeth not only that glorying in the sufferings and satisfaction of Christ as the only sure ground to build our Faith for salvation upon spoken of ver 14. but also the study of piety and of becoming a new creature whereof ver 15. as the only rule according to which all ought to walk in their several imployments And secondly doth excite all men to walk according to this rule by a most sure prediction and promise of a double fruit to be reaped thereby even Peace that is peace with God peace with their own conscience and so much of peace one with another and of sanctified prosperity which also goeth under the name of peace Gen. 28. 21 as God should see convenient for them Psal. 84. -11. and Mercy that is God's favour the fountain of the former peace which should furnish them with a timous remedy to all their evils and misery And thirdly because the false Apostles did glory much themselves and boulstered up their followers much with this That they were the only true Israelites as being joyned to the People of God by Circumcision to whom those promises did belong he sheweth that they who followed this rule though they were not Israel according to the flesh Rom. 2. 28. yet they were the Israel of God the only true Israelites Joh. 1. 47. as being the children of Abraham by faith chap. 3. 7. for the particle and in this place must be exegetick of one and the same thing as Eph. 1. 3. and not copulative of diverse Doct. 1. The rule of a Christian man's walk whether in relation to faith or manners is not left indifferent for every man so as he may choose what rule pleaseth him best neither is it left arbitrary unto any man to impose a rule of walking upon others but there is a fixt determinate rule condescended upon by God for all which no man may either add to or take from for saith he As many as walk according to this rule meaning a determinate fixed rule The word in the original is borrowed from Architectors who try their work by rule and square now whatever is defective and requireth addition or superfluous and requireth diminution is not a perfect and just measure or rule 2. Though this rule and canon of faith and manners be the whole Word of God contained in Scripture 2 Pet. 1. 19 20 21. Yet the grace of Faith in Jesus Christ and repentance unto life are a doctrinal sum of this rule if we mean the Doctrine of Faith and Repentance or a practical sum if we mean the graces themselves there being no point of Truth taught and no duty pressed in the whole Scripture which one way or other relateth not to one of these two for while he saith As many as walk according to this rule it is all one upon the matter whether by the rule he mean the Doctrine contained in the whole Epistle which is one and the same in substance with the rest of Scripture or the graces of Faith in Christ called ver 14. glorying in the crosse of Christ and of repentance unto life called ver 15. the new creature although it be more probable he mean the latter 3. This rule of faith and manners contained in the Scripture is unchangeable and ever to remain as that to which all men in all ages to the end of the world ought to make themselves conform for the word rendred walk in the original is in the future tense as relating to all time As many as shall walk according to this rule 4. So accurate and orderly is this rule in it self Psal. 119. 96. So ignorant are we of it in many particulars relating both to faith and manners Psal. 119. 18. And so many and subtil are those tentations which Satan setteth on foot to make us transgresse and flight this rule Eph. 6. -11. that there is great necessity of circumspection accuracy and attention unto those who would rightly walk according to this rule for the word rendred walk signifieth to walk orderly attentively as Souldiers when they keep rank As many as walk according to this rule 5 Even those who walk according to this rule are not so much freed from sin and misery but they stand in need of mercy yea all their receipts do come in the way not of merit but of undeserved mercy for mercy relateth to sin misery and to them that walk according to this rule there is a promise not only of peace but also of mercy and of peace flowing from mercy Peace shall be upon them and mercy saith he 6. As tender walkers according to this rule may expect sufficient encouragement and reward even in this life and such as may counterballance all contrary discouragements and hardships which usually occur in that way So their encouragements are not from the world but from above descending from Heaven and therefore such as cannot be hindred by the malice of men for peace shall be upon them and mercy saith he the word rendred upon them is emphatick and importeth that those blessings fall down upon them from above 7. It is not sufficient for a Minister of Christ who would comfort and incourage weak Christians who are otherwise apt to be discouraged through multitude of tentations in their Christian course Heb. 12. 12. that he find out and apply such precious Promises as are pertinent to their case but he must also endeavour their satisfaction in this that they are in the number of those to whom such promises do belong and who with God's allowance may lay hold upon them and draw out that comfort which is contained in them otherwise the discouraged person will look upon it as presumption to apply any of those precious Promises Psal. 77. -2. though otherwise he most gladly would for the Apostle sheweth that those who walk according to this rule and to whom he promiseth peace and mercy are the Israel of God to whom such Promises were made and do appertain And upon the Israel of God saith he Vers. 17. From henceforth let no man trouble me for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus THe Apostle having now sufficiently vindicated his Doctrine and justified his practice especially from those calumnies which were spread of him as if he had preached Circumcision chap. 5. 11. doth here by his Apostolical Authority discharge any whomsoever to occasion further trouble to him or unnecessary diversions from the great work of the Gospel whether by speaking against his Doctrine or by spreading or entertaining calumnies and slanders of him especially that formerly spoken of and this because the manifold sufferings which he had endured from the Jews
wonderfull and matchlesse love for saith he For His great love wherewith He loved us 9. The Lord hath love to the Elect even when they are children of wrath and liable in the course of justice to the stroke of His vindictive anger for although God could not with safety of His own justice bestow Heaven upon them when they were actually such yet nothing hindereth why He might not love them being such that is have a will and fixed resolution even when they were liable unto wrath to bestow Heaven upon them having first from that same love given His own Son to deliver them from that state of wrath that so what eternal love had resolved to give them might be actually bestowed upon them without doing injury to divine justice for ver 3. he sheweth they were children of wrath and here that God loved them and both these before He quickned them Wherewith He loved us saith he even in the by-past time 10. The doctrine of our natural misery and spirituall death through sin is a lesson most necessary to be learned which we have no great pleasure to learn and which we are prone to forget as to a deep and lively impression of it even when it is learned for the Apostle's repeating this doctrine almost in the same words by which he had expressed it ver 1. doth hint at all these Even when we were dead in sins saith he 11. There is no application of the doctrine of God's mercy in order to our delivery from sin and misery except the doctrine of sin and misery be first applied and taken with for Paul being to apply God's mercy in quickning sinners unto himself and his country-men the believing Jews he doth first apply the doctrine of natural sin and misery unto them while he doth now speak of himself and the Jews also whereas ver 1. he spoke of the Gentiles only as appeareth by the change of the person Even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us 12. Whatever a man be before his conversion as to the point of civility and right use of his natural parts yet he is looked upon by God when He cometh to quicken him as one dead in sins who can neither help himself nor merit help at God's hand for therfore doth the Apostle assert that they were dead in sins immediatly before yea and in the act of God's quickning of them while he saith Even when we were dead in sins He hath quickned us 13. The state of grace which sinners dead by nature are brought unto at their conversion and wherein they continue untill death is a state of life the sentence of eternall death which they were liable unto ver -3. being taken off Rom. 8. 1. there being also new principles and powers infused in them at their effectuall calling whereby they are enabled to do those actions of a spiritual life Ezek. 36. 26 27. which powers are also continually actuated and excited to their work by renewed influence from the Spirit of God Philip. 2. 13. and accompanied oftimes in their actings with assurance of God's love Rom. 8. 16. peace of conscience Rom. 5. 1 2. and joy unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1. 8. whereby also they have not only a right unto Joh. 3. 16. but also the first fruits and begun possession of eternall life Joh. 17. 3. for the Apostle expresseth God's bringing them to and continuing them in the state of grace by His quickning of them hath quickned us saith he 14. Though love and mercy in God do set Him on work to quicken dead sinners yet this work cannot be brought about or accomplished without the intervention of Christ's merit and intercession who behoved to satisfie divine justice and thereby acquire unto us those things which love and mercy had prepared for us Isa. 53. 5. seing they were all lost in Adam Rom. 5. 15 16. and who being now exalted doth also apply them to us Act. 5. 31. for notwithstanding of what was said ver 4. of God's mercy and love as the inward impulsive causes moving God to quicken them yet the Apostle here sheweth that their actual quickning had a necessary dependance upon Christ's merit and mediation while he saith He hath quickned us together with Christ. 15. That Jesus Christ behoved of necessity to strike-in with His merit and mediation hereby to acquire and apply saving grace and salvation unto us doth in nothing hinder but that notwithstanding our compleat salvation from the first step unto the last doth wholly flow from God's free grace seing it was of grace that the Father did send the Son to die for us Joh. 3. 16. It was of grace that the Son did undertake Joh. 15. 12 13. And it is no lesse grace that what He did or suffered should be accepted in our name Rom. 3. 24 25. So that all is of grace and free good-will as to us for the Apostle having pointed at the necessity of Christ's mediation in order to their quickning doth presently adde as in a parenthesis by grace are ye saved 16. There is an infallible connexion betwixt converting grace and salvation so that all those who are now converted and quickned shall be undoubtedly saved for what the Apostle calleth quickned in the former part of the verse he calleth saved in the close so that he taketh the one for the other He hath quickned us By grace are ye saved Vers. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us fit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus HEre are the other two branches of their delivery to wit first The raising of their bodies at the last day for their spiritual resurrection from the death of sin to newnesse of life was mentioned ver 5. Secondly Their glorification in Heaven both which are yet to come 2 Tim. 2. 18. Mat. 25. 34. And yet he speaketh of them as already past when the Father raised and glorified Christ because seing Christ in His resurrection and entering of heaven did sustain a publick person representing all the Elect as their Head and Atturney-generall Job 10. 15. Therefore He was judicially looked upon by God in those actions as if all the Elect had risen when He rose and taken possession of Heaven when He did enter it Hence it is that in the close of the verse it is added in Christ to shew we are not yet raised and glorified in our own persons but in Christ our Head And the Spirit of God doth choose to set forth their future resurrection and glorification by shewing these are already accomplished in Christ their Head rather than by saying God shall raise them up and glorifie them that he may with one and the same labour point out the dependencie which their resurrection and glorification have upon Christs as the effect upon the cause the thing promised upon the pledge thereof as also the undoubted certainty that those shall come to passe a certainty greater than that of a simple prediction and
A BRIEF EXPOSITION OF THE EPISTLES of Paul TO THE GALATIANS AND EPHESIANS BY JAMES FERGUSSON Minister at Kilwinning Isa. 28. 10. For precept must be upon precept precept upon precept line upon line line upon line here a little and there a little Col. 3. 16. Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another c. LONDON Printed for the Company of STATIONERS Anno Dom. 1659. To the Right Honourable and noble Lords Alexander Earl of Eglintoun c. AND Hugh Lord Montgomery his Son And to the Right Honourable noble Lady The Lady Mary Lesley Lady Montgomery RIGHT HONOURABLE IT is decreed in Heaven That we must through much tribulation enter the Kingdom of God Act. 14. -22. God only wise hath so resolved that by means of sanctified trouble the Heirs of glory may be weaned from earth and learn to place their chief contentment and happinesse not upon their enjoyments below which are uncertain empty and perishing but upon things above an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in Heaven for them How hard were it to make even those who are born of God long to be dissolved and bid adieu to all their sublunary contentments except the Lord in mercy did place a prick in every one of those roses and make their most promising earthly comforts within a little to prove as streams of brooks that passe away Job 6. 15 And how should this conciliate love to a sad and suffering lot and make the Lord's People who are strangers and pilgrims delight in the way which leadeth to such an home as Heaven is It is indeed our unacquaintance with Scripture and with what the Word of Truth holdeth forth to be the mind of God while He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth which doth occasion so much proud rising of spirit or base dejectedness of mind when the Lord doth not carve us out such a satisfying lot in all things as we would How often do we mistake our way and little lesse than quarrel with God only because He hedgeth us in with thorns of affliction that we cannot find out our lovers and therefore that man is truly blessed whom the Lord doth not only chastise but also instruct out of His Law Ps. 94. 12. and thereby make him understand and hear the voice of the rod and of Him who hath appointed it Mica 6. 9. And herein indeed the Lord doth greatly manifest His marvellous loving kindnesse and in wrath remembreth mercy that He joyneth instruction with correction and doth furnish His afflicted People with abundant means by which they may take up the mind of God for good unto them under His saddest dispensations even that the fruit of affliction is to take away their sin Isa. 27. 9 that He doth punish them seven times more and yet seven times more untill their uncircumcised hearts be humbled and they accept of the punishment of their iniquity Levit. 26. 24 28 41. that though He visit their transgression with the rod and their iniquity with stripes Nevertheless His loving kindnesse will He not utterly take from him Psal. 89. 32 33. and that when they are judged they are chastened of the Lord that they should not be condemned with the world 1 Cor. 11. 32. All this and much more to this purpose hath the Lord made known by His Word and doth daily inculcate and make more and more known by His sent Ministers who according to their Commission do open up and apply the rich treasure of holy Scripture unto the Lords People of their charge And as if all this were not sufficient He hath besides stirred up the spirits of many of His Servants in every age to 〈…〉 mit their Labours upon Scripture unto writing for the more publick use of the Church of God not only in the present but also the succeeding generations As for my self I ingenuously professe that being conscious of mine own weaknesse I did much incline to rest satisfied with expressing my Commission by word only in preaching to and conferring with my Flock and those of my charge But being earnestly requested and in a manner commanded by some Reverend Brethren whom I honour and reverence in the Lord to draw up briefly in writ a plain Analysis a short and sound Exposition of and the chief Observations grounded upon such Scriptures as I had either largely preached upon or more briefly opened-up to the Lords People of my charge I shewed them some of my weak endeavours of that kind to be disposed upon at their pleasure which when they were pleased to publish and to call for more work of the same nature expressing their confidence that what I had already done was acceptable to all that love the Truth and would be edifying to the present and after-ages and being thereunto also encouraged by diverse faithfull and understanding persons I have in obedience to their desires given-out this other Piece to be disposed of by them as they should see good And seing they have advised the publishing of it To whom could I with more confidence and conscience of duty dedicate these my mean labours than to your Honours considering that God hath appointed me to watch for your souls as one who must g 〈…〉 n account and that your Honours have endeavoured for your parts to encourage me to go about all the parts of my Ministery with joy and not with grief My Lords when I called to remembrance how long each of you was detained these years by-past from enjoying the benefit of my publick Ministery by your necessitated abode elsewhere I thought the best way to give you an account and to make you reap some fruit of my labours in your absence was to present these my weak endeavours to your Honours and what you have heard from me upon these Scriptures in publick when you were permitted to be my hearers I hope this little piece shall conduce to bring it to your remembrance and the Lord Himself convey it into your hearts there to remain to make your Honours more and more wise to salvation that in the day of the Lord Jesus ye may be matter of joy and a crown of rejoycing to those who have laboured among you and spoken the Word of God unto you And for you Madam who hath had liberty to be my hearer more frequently and constantly than my noble Lords as I trust your Honour will observe there is a good harmony betwixt that which I taught in the Congregation and which I now publish to the world and that this little piece shall according to your usuall diligence in searching Scripture and in keeping fellowship with God in the practice of all commanded duties be improved by your Honour for your further edification and encouragment to walk worthy of the Lord unto all well-pleasing So when I consider how refreshfull it hath been often unto me to behold your sweet submission under the Lord's hand your truly
of the Son of God who loved me and gave Himself for me HEre is a third Reason to the same purpose with the former shewing more fully that justified persons are most strictly tyed to mortify sin and lead an holy life if so they walk according to the prescript of the Doctrine of Justification which was taught by Paul for he and by consequence all real Believers were crucified with Christ to wit the old man of their indwelling corruption Rom. 6. 6. it did receive the stroke of death by His death He having by death redeemed them from the slavery of it Tit. 2. 14. which crucifixion with Christ doth not destroy the natural life of Believers for so Paul sheweth he did live only the old man of corruption doth not live in them so as to act them in what they do but Jesus Christ doth live in them He being united to them as the root to the branches or head to the members and furnishing them with spiritual life and motion whereby the very natural life which they live and those things which concern that life are ordered and gone about by vertue of strength drawn from Christ by Faith in Him and the consideration of Christ's love to them and His dying for them because he loved them is a great inducement unto justified persons so to live Now this being true in Paul and in some measure in all Believers and seing the principles of the Doctrine of Justification did bind all to this It is evident that to affirm this Doctrine did tend to foster sin is but a foulforged calumny Doct. 1. As Jesus Christ did die a most shameful painful and cursed death upon the crosse Gal. 3. 13. so in His dying He did stand not as a private but as a publick person in the room and place of all the Elect for He was their surety Heb. 7. 22. and died for them Job 11. 50. so that when they lay hold upon Him by Faith and thereby are made one with Him Eph. 3. 17 the crosse and passion of Christ as to all those benefits which were purchased by it whether in order to the removal of the guilt of sin Mat. 26. 28. or to the subduing of its strength and quickning of them in the way of holinesse 2 Cor. 5. 15. or to the purchasing of life eternal for them Joh. 3. 16. is as verily made theirs as if they had been crucified in their own persons for Paul saith of himself as an instance of all Believers I am crucified with Christ. 2. The former confideration of the Believer's right to Christ's purchase in order to the subduing of sin layeth a strong engagement on him and giveth a great encouragement unto him to oppose resist and set about the mortification of sin in himself for Paul maketh this an argument to prove that the Doctrine of Justification in its own nature is no friend to sin because according to the principles thereof the justified person is crucified with Christ. 3. God's infinit wisdom hath found out the way whereby the threatning of death Gen. 2. 17. is fulfilled in the Elect so that they die and yet their lives are spared they die and yet they live for they are reckoned in Law to have died when Christ their Surety died for them so that He was taken and they go free Joh. 18. 8. thus is that riddle solved which is here propounded by Paul I am crucified with Christ yet I live 4. Though notwithstanding of fulfilling the threatning of death upon the Elect they do live yet upon their believing in Jesus Christ the old man of corruption and power of sin is so far weakened in them that it doth not bear the chief sway in their heart to command execute and order all their actions as formerly it did Gen. 6. 5. for thus is that other riddle solved which is here propounded Nevertheless I live yet not I to wit the old I the body of death and corruption did not live in him but was mortified and the dominion thereof removed Rom. 6. 14. Dost 5. The Doctrine of Justification by Free-grace revealed in the Gospel layeth on strong obligations upon the justified person to set about the whole duties of Sanctification not only those which relate to the mortifying of sin but also to his quickning in the way of grace both those must go together and the justified man is obliged to both and furnished with help and encouragement from the Doctrine of Justification to set about both for Paul sheweth they were both conjoyned in himself the first while he saith Not I live the second while he saith Christ liveth in me whereby is meant his following the motions of Christ's Spirit as the guide of his life Rom. 8. 1. and this he speaketh of himself as a thing that he was obliged unto and furnished for by the Doctrine of Justification which he taught otherwise he should not have refuted the calumny of his adversaries 6. That Christians may live the spiritual life of grace they must 1. be united to Christ and have Christ dwelling in them by Faith Eph. 3. 17. for speaking of the spiritual life which he lived he supposeth Christ to be in him But Christ liveth in me 2. Besides this union with Christ there must be a communication of influence from the Spirit of Christ to excite them unto Cant. 5. 2. enable them for John 15. 5. make them persevere Philip. 1. 6. and effectually to order and direct them in Philip. 4. 13. the practice of every thing that is spiritually good for this is to have Christ living in them to wit as the head in the members or root in the branches which do furnish the members and branches with all things necessary for life and growth and Christ's quickning of Believers in the way of grace is frequently see forth by similitudes drawn from those Col. 2. 19. Joh. 15. 5. 3. The Believer if so he would live this spiritual life must not only have the habit of Faith in his heart but also must keep it in daily exercise so as first thereby to try what he is to do if so it be warranted by the Word of Truth and how it is to be circumstantiated Rom. 14. 23. Secondly thereby to draw furniture from the Spirit of Christ for exciting enabling and directing him in the way of duty 2 Cor. 3. 5. And thirdly to apply pardoning mercy for covering the defects of duty when he hath gone about it and for removing the guilt of all his other sins Mat. 6. 11. for this is to live by the Faith of the Son of God or in the Son of God which Paul speaketh of as a necessary ingredient in this spiritual life 4. This spiritual life and life of Faith must be extended not only to spiritual duties and of God's immediate Worship but also to all the actions of our natural and temporal life in so far as they fall under a Command even to our eating and drinking 1 Cor.
and no more spared than if we our selves who sinned had been in His place for the Text saith He was not only accursed but made a curse in the abstract to shew how greatly he was accursed in death neither was this execration only in respect of man who indeed did judge Him execrable Isa. 53. 3 4. but also in respect of God as appeareth by the testimony alleaged out of Deut. 21. 23. for though the Apostle intending the sense only and not the words omitteth the mentioning of God Yet in the place cited we have it thus He that is hanged is accursed of God 10. The malefactor among the Jews who was adjudged to end his life by hanging on a tree was pronounced by God to be a curse or accursed not as if every one who died that death even notwithstanding of their repentance had been rejected of God and condemned Luke 23. 39 43. but partly because that was a most odious and infamous death in it self as being aflicted only for atrocious and heinous crimes and partly because it was fore-ordained of God that Christ our Surety should end His life by that kind of death in order to our redemption and delivery from the Law 's deserved curse for which cause mainly God was pleased to pronounce that kind of death accursed above any other as appeareth from the Apostle's alleaging this Scripture to clear that Christ was made a curse for us It is written saith he Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree From Vers. 14. Learn 1. So wonderfull is God in working especially in that great work of our Redemption that He bringeth about one contrary by another He giveth life by death and the blessing by the curse and frequently in His way of working our choicest mercies do come through greatest miseries for Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 2. The blessing promised to Abraham and to the Nations in Abraham or rather in Christ Abraham's seed Gen. 22. 18. was not of temporall things only as of Corn and Wine of a fat and rich soile these were only the shell but the kernell of that Promise were blessings of another sort even spiritual such as Grace here and Glory hereafter which appeareth from this that before this blessing could be conveyed to Abrahams believing seed a price of infinite value behoved to be paid for it a price too precious to purchase any temporal blessing by for even Christ was made a curse that the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles 3. The spiritual blessing of Grace here and Glory hereafter promised to and in Abraham as it was purchased by Christ at a dear rate so it resideth and is exstant in Him who is as it were the storehouse wherin the blessing is laid up Col. 2. 3. and the dispenser of it unto Abraham's seed Act. 5. 31. in whom Believers are truly blessed Gen. 22. 18. and from whose fulnesse we do all receive and Grace for Grace Joh. 1. 16. for saith the Text That the blessing of Abraham might come upon the Gentiles through Jesus Christ or as it is in the Original in Jesus Christ So that this blessing is still in Him as the fountain and dispenser of it 4. Though Jesus Christ was the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. -8. in so far as remission of sins and life eternal were bestowed upon Believers under the Old Testament through the merit of His death even before He actually died Rom. 3. 25. it being sufficient in order to these effects that it was transacted between the Father and the Son that He should die Isa. 53. 10. and that it was certainly known by God that He would die Act. 15. 18. Yet there were some effects of His death and those of great advantage to the Church both of Jews and Gentiles which were keeped in store and in Gods wise dispensation not to be actually bestowed untill the time of His death As first in relation to the Gentiles the real making-over of Abraham's blessing unto them whereby they were made one actual seed unto Abraham with the believing Jews was to follow upon Christ's death God having so provided and not to go before it for Christ was first made a curse by being hanged on a tree before the blessing of Abraham did come upon the Gentiles Secondly in relation to both Jew and Gentile the Covenant-promise made to Abraham and his seed Gen. 17. 7. which before Christ's death was vailed over with many carnal Ceremonies and lay hid under the many reiterated Promises of temporal blessings and an earthly Canaan Gen. 15. 7 c. was after Christs death to be made more clear the vail of Ceremonies and earthly blessings to be removed and the promised blessings of Righteousness and life everlasting to be held forth in their spiritual beauty and lustre for upon Christ's being made a curse he saith We to wit not only the Gentiles but the Jews also of whom Paul was one do receive the promise of the Spirit that is after the manner of speaking used by the Hebrews the spiritual promise in opposition to those external rites and shadows under which it did formerly lurk Doct. 5. Though by the grace of saving Faith a Christian believeth to be true whatever he knoweth to be revealed in the Word Act. 24. -14. and is in some measure especially when Faith is lively affected and doth practise according to what each Truth calleth for yeelding obedience to the Commands Rom. 16. 26. trembling at threatnings Isa. 66. -2. and imbracing the Promises of God for this life Psal. 23. 1. and that which is to come Heb. 11. 13. Yet the principal acts of Faith as it is saving and justifying are the accepting and receiving of the Promise and of Christ's satisfaction to the Father's justice held forth in the Promise for Paul speaking of Faiths part in Justification setteth forth the exercise of it thus That we might receive the promise by Faith 6. Faith doth justifie and make us blessed not for any worth in it self as if the work and merit of Faith were reckoned to us for righteousnesse but because it is the instrument and as it were the hand of the soul whereby we receive the Promise and Christ in the Promise whose satisfaction alone is our only righteousnesse before God Rom 5. -19. for that Paul is to be understood thus all alongs this dispute appeareth from these two Verses wherein he ascribeth our delivery from the curse and partaking of Abraham's blessing to Christ's merit or to His being made a curse for us giving unto Faith only the receeiving and imbracing of that satisfaction as it is offered in the Promise That we might receive the Promise through Faith saith he Vers. 15. Brethren I speak after the manner of men though it be but a mans Covenant yet if it be confirmed no man disanulleth or addeth thereto 16. Now to Abraham and his seed were
works of that kind So it is lawfull for Christians to have an eye to this reward as a motive whereby to work up their backward hearts unto a willing complyance with expensive duties of that sort providing first it be not looked at as a thing to be merited by their good works Rom. 6. 23. Nor secondly as the only or chief motive 2 Cor. 5. 14. for the Apostle by this similitude doth minde them of the promised reward as an argument exciting them unto beneficence Whatsoever a man soweth that shall be also reap Vers. 8. For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting VVHat the Apostle spoke generally concerning that proportion which shall be betwixt a man's future reward and his present work he doth now following the same metaphor of sowing and reaping make it more clear by distinguishing several sorts of sowers seeds grounds and several sorts of harvests answerable to each of those The plain meaning whereof is 1. That carnal and unregenerate men who take no other care but to spend their wit strength time and particularly their means upon the service of their own fleshly lusts such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 19 20. they shall at last reap no fruit thereby but corruption that is eternal perdition for corruption is here opposed unto eternal life and this they shall reap from the flesh that is their own inbred corruption which with the sinfull effects thereof is the true seed of death and perdition And secondly that renewed and spirituall men who imploy their whole life study and labour and particularly their worldly substance for advancing the works of the Spirit whether in themselves or others such as are reckoned forth chap. 5. 22. and particularly for upholding the Gospel and a painful Ministry they shall receive the reward of eternal life and this from the Spirit that is the grace of God in them which is the true seed of eternity not by way of merit as destruction and corruption follow upon the flesh but from God's mercy and free gift as the Apostle doth in plain and proper terms put the difference Rom. 6. 23. according to which this metaphorick allegory must be expounded and may not be set in opposition to it Doct. 1. The whole world are comprized in one of two ranks they are either sowing to the flesh living in their unregenerate state and in slavery to their lusts whose end shall be perdition or they are sowing to the Spirit truly regenerate and imploying themselves for the advancing of things spiritual whose end shall be eternal life There is no neutral or midstate for Paul distinguisheth all in these two He that soweth to his flesh and he that soweth to the Spirit 2. It may be frequently observed that they who have not an heart to part with any thing of their temporall goods for God and pious uses but plead present poverty necessity and fear of future want when God doth call them to any thing of that kind are notwithstanding most profuse and lavish in spending their means to make provision for the flesh and to uphold the beastly lusts thereof for he that soweth not to the Spirit soweth to his flesh 3. Though carnal men do think their own way the only wisest while they spend their wit and substance for attaining present profit pleasure and preferment and do judge the way of the Godly but meer folly while they imploy their strength and means for things spiritual and such as God's honour is mainly concerned in and are not attended with an income of worldly advantage but rather of losse and detriment yet the end shall prove that those who thought themselves only wise men and gainers have been but meer fools and greatest losers and that those others whom they looked upon as mad-men and bad managers of their worldly affairs have been the greatest gainers and wisest adventurers for he that soweth to his flesh shall reap corruption but he that soweth to the Spirit shall reap life everlasting 4. The state of the wicked after death is a state of corruption wherein though the substance of their soul and body shall not be annihilated but shall be upheld unto all eternity by the mighty power of God in the midst of unutterable torments Mark 9. 44. yet all their glory pleasure and gain wherein they placed their happinesse and for attaining whereof only they spent their time and strength Psal. 49. 11. shall then be consumed 2 Pet. 3. 10. and they themselves made to languish and pine away under the wrath of an highly provoked and then unreconciliable God 2 Thess. 1. 9. for saith he The wicked shall reap corruption meaning their state after death 5. The state of the Godly after death shall be a state of life the life of Grace being then swallowed up and perfected in the life of Glory which consisteth in perfect freedom from sin and misery Eph. 5. 27. in unconceivable joys Psal. 16. 11. and the full enjoying of God 1 Joh. 3. 2. which happy state of theirs shall be eternal they shall never weary nor yet be deprived of it for saith he the Godly shall reap life everlasting 6. Whatever sin a man committeth it is most properly his own work as flowing from the root of his own corrupt flesh but the good which he doth is not so properly his own as Gods in so far as it floweth from the Spirit of God and habits of Grace which were wrought in him by the self-same Spirit Philip. 2. 13. Col. 3. 10. for speaking of the flesh he setteth it forth by the appropriating Pronoun his He that soweth to his flesh but not so while he speaketh of the Spirit He that soweth to The Spirit not to his spirit Vers. 9. And let us not be weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not THe Apostle from what he hath presently spoken of the reward of eternal life attending those who sow in the Spirit inferreth the former exhortation propounded ver 6. and enlargeth it by recommending unto them according to the sense given of the former similitude the study of good works and especially of beneficency in the general under the name of well-doing whereby he meaneth not only the outward work but also the doing of it in a right manner Mat. 6. 1. c. and that they would persevere to the end in that study notwithstanding of all contrary discouragements without base and cowardly ceding unto them and inforceth the exhortation by putting it above all question that they shall gather the fruit which God had promised though not presently yet in the due time that is the time which God doth judge most convenient but withall he addeth a condition of reaping in due time required on their part to wit if they continued constant in well-doing even the same unto which he had exhorted them in the former part
of the verse Doct. 1. As all men by nature are exceedingly backward from entring the course of well-doing and especially of exercising beneficency towards those whom God hath ordained to be objects of it Mark 10. 21 22 23. So considering the many discouragements which occur to a man while he is in this course of beneficency what from his own corruption what from the unworthinesse ingratitude and multitude of objects and what from the coldrife disposition and bad example of others who are equally if not more able there is no small propensnesse in all to sit up in that course and to give it over immediately or soon after they have entred it for Paul supposeth such a propensity and guardeth against it while he saith Let us not be weary of well-doing 2. It is not enough that men do so far subject themselves to the authority of God speaking in His Word as once to enter the way of obedience and to endure for a season Mark 4. 17 until possibly they attain to a name for piety Rev. 3. -1. or meet with some unexpected discouragement or tentation Mark 4. -17. But they must also persist in their begun course so long as they have any being Psal. 104. 33. for saith he Let us not be weary in well doing 3. That Christians may eye the promised reward and with what provisions they may have their eye upon it as a motive to obedience and peseverance See ver 7. doct 8. for the Spirit of God doth encourage them from this that in due time they should reap 4. Though God hath promised a rich reward from free-grace unto His Peoples sincere and willing obedience yet He hath reserved the date and time for the actual bestowing of that reward unto Himself So that though it be long delayed yet they have not ground to challenge Him for breach of promise as sometimes even His dearest Saints under a violent tentation have gone very near to do Psal. 77. -8. for saith he Ye shall reap but when not presently but in the due and proper time to wit that which God doth judge to be such 5. Though God as said is doth not limit himself to a determinate time when He will make His People enjoy the wished-for fruits and comfort of their laborious expensive and long persisted-in obedience yet the time made choice of by Him for His so doing whether in this life or immediatly after death is alwayes the due and proper time and hath a fitnesse in it in some respects all circumstances being well considered for the bestowing of that mercy beyond any other time for he saith Ye shall reap in due or proper time the word rendred time signifieth properly an opportune time the very article or point of time which determineth the fittest opportunity for doing any businesse and the epithet added doth intend the signification as if he had said an opportune opportune time or most opportùne time 6. That a man may upon just grounds and with confidence expect the good thing offered and contained in a conditional promise he must of necessity come up in his practice to that condition and qualification which is called-for in the promise Hence the Apostle exhorteth them not to weary because the promise of a reward includeth their not wearying as a condition Ye shall reap if ye faint not where by fainting we must not understand every slackning and remitting somewhat in our course for this befalleth sometimes the choicest Saints of God Psal. 73 2 c. but such a fainting as maketh the fainter totally and finally abandon the wayes of God which is not incident to the real childe of God Mat. 24. 24. Vers. 10. As we have therefore opportunity let us do good unto all men especially unto them who are of the houshold of faith HE doth yet again repeat and so closeth the former exhortation unto beneficency as a conclusion drawn from the former arguments And first he presseth the use-making of the present opportunity which they had of exercising this grace which relateth 1. mainly to the whole time of this life as that which being ended all opportunity of doing good by those who did ever untill then neglect to do good doth end with it And 2. to some parts of that time in which there is more ready accesse unto duties of that kind than at other times And secondly he sheweth the persons unto whom they should do good first to all men whomsoever next and especially unto those who being conjoyned by the ty of one common Confession of Faith in Jesus Christ are Members of His Church which is as it were His Houshold 1 Tim. 3. 14. Doct. 1. The Minister of Christ who would speak pertinently and edifyingly unto his hearers must not hand-over-head deliver every Truth as it cometh to his mind without any method or dependance of purposes but having such a scope proposed unto himself to aim at whether the illustration and confirmation of a truth or the inforcing of a duty or the reproving of sin or confutation of error he would digest in his mind and accordingly deliver in preaching all his other purpose so as it may be best subservient unto that scope whether as illustrations confirmations from Scripture and Reason or as motives helps cautions or arguments c. Yea and for the better help of peoples memory and better carrying along of their attention with the threed of his whole discourse he would frequently inculcate and re-assume that which is principally intended by him in his discourse and to which all the other pieces of it are subservient for so doth the Apostle propose ver 6. the inforcing of beneficency as the scope he aimeth at making all he hath said in the following verses one way or other subservient unto it and doth frequently reiterate the exhortation it self ver 6. ver 9. and here As we have opportunity let us do good 2. The servants of Jesus Christ should so presse the duties of beneficency upon others as not to exoner and keep themselves free from that duty who ought to be examples unto the Lord's People as in every duty so chiefly in those of beneficency 1 Tim. 4. 12. because People being more averse from such expensive duties than from any other do more readily snatch at every thing which may excuse their neglect and will judge no excuse more plausible than that even their Ministers do neglect all duties of that kind therefore the Apostle both in the former verse and in this includeth himself in the exhortation Let us not weary and let us do good saith he 3. As there are some fit opportunities offered unto us by the providence of God for doing our duty in any kind and especially for this duty of beneficency such as our meeting with convenient objects whose necessity calls for our help Isa. 58. 7. and our being fitted with abilities to do them good 2 Cor. 8. 14. So because those opportunities are in passing and being
to a stately edifice founded upon Christ ver 20 21. And shewing they were a part of this building ver 22. Vers. 1. ANd you hath He quickened who were dead in trespasses and sins THe Apostle being yet further to establish those Ephesians in the doctrine of salvation by free grace in Christ and for this end to set forth the happinesse of that estate in which free grace had placed them sheweth the misery of their former estate before conversion even that they were dead not naturally but spiritually there being nothing of that spiritual life in them which consisteth in the union of the soul with God Joh. 5. 40. and in a vertue and power of the soul flowing from this union to do those things which are spiritually good and acceptable unto God Joh. 15. 5. even as the natural life consisteth in the union of the soul with the body whereby the man is inabled to move speak and do such other actions as are competent to that life so that their spiritual deadnesse doth speak a separation from God Psal 53. 3. and total inability to do any thing which is spiritually good Rom. 8 7. The efficient and formall cause of which death he sheweth to have been their sins and trespasses whereby under two words used indifferently in Scripture to expresse one and the same thing and both of them in the plural number is set forth the multitude of sins under which they lay in this their dead condition as their original sin their actual sins sins of omission commission and especially their manifold idolatries which are chiefly pointed at as those sins wherein not only the Ephesians but the world in general did wallow before Christ came in the flesh Act. 17. 29 30. Hence Learn 1. It is not sufficient that the Servants of Jesus Christ do only preach priviledges and hold-forth unto Believers that happy estate unto which they are lifted-up through Christ It is necessary also that joyntly herewith they be calling them to minde their wofull miserable and lost estate by nature that the one being set foregainst the other both may more clearly appear in their own colours and that those dangerous rocks of growing vain because of what they now are 2 Cor. 12. 7. and of turning discouraged and diffident because of what they once were Psal. 25. 7. may be eschewed for the Apostle in the preceeding chapter having spoken much of those high priviledges unto which the Ephesians were advanced by Christ he doth here minde them of that miserable state wherein God found them And you who were dead in sins and trespasses 2. There is nothing contributeth more to commend the doctrine of free grace to peoples consciences and so to commend it as to make them closely adhere unto it both in profession and practice than the serious perpending of mans wofull and altogether hopelesse estate by nature This alone would do much to scatter all that mist whereby humane reason doth obscure the beauty of this truth by extolling man's free will as a co-worker with grace Rom. 3. 19 20. and would necessitate the lost sinner to imbrace it and to venture his otherwise hopelesse salvation upon it 1 Tim. 1. 15. for this is the Apostle's scope through this whole Chapter even from the consideration of the wofull estate of those Ephesians before conversion to illustrate this doctrine of salvation by free grace and to confirm them in it And you who were dead in sins and trespasses 3. Believers in Jesus Christ are not to look upon their lost and miserable estate by nature separately and apart from but joyntly with God's free grace and mercy which hath delivered them from that misery for otherwise the thoughts of sin and misery may if God should give way swallow them up Mat. 27. 4 5. Hence is it the Apostle hath so contrived his discourse here that all-alongs while he speaketh of their misery in the first three verses the mind of the Reader is kept in suspense without coming to the perfect close of a sentence untill God's mercy in their delivery from this misery be mentioned ver 5. for the Original hath not these words he hath quickened in this verse but the Translators have taken them from ver 5. to make up the sense without suspending the Reader so long untill he should find them in their own proper place And you who were dead c. 4. Every man by nature and before conversion is dead not to sin for that is proper to the Regenerate only See Rom. 6. 2. where the grammatical construction is the same in the Original with that which is here only the sense is much different but in sin whereby he is wholly deprived of all ability and power to convert himself Rom. 9. 16. or to do any thing which is spiritually good Rom. 8. 7. for while he saith the Ephesians were dead in sins before God did quicken them he speaketh of a thing common to them with others and therefore he reckoneth himself and the other believing Jews with them ver 3. And you who were dead in sins 5. As the fountain-cause of this spiritual death was Adam's sin in whom all have sinned Rom. 5. 12. through the merit of whose sin imputed to us we are deprived of original righteousness Rom. 7. 18. and a perverse inclination unto all evil hath come in its place Gen. 6. 5. So every mans own particular actual sins do lay him lower under this state of death and make his delivery from it more difficult Jer. 13. 23. for saith he Ye were dead in sins and trespasses under which are comprehended as we shew both their original and actual sins Vers. 2. Wherein in time past ye 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 HE proveth they were thus dead in sins and trespasses from their walking in and making a daily trade of sin without striving against it or any through remorse for it which wofull walk of theirs he doth illustrate from two guides which they followed and by which they were carried-on and incouraged in their sinfull course The first was the universal corrupt course and custom of the world that is of wicked men in the world Psal. 17. 14. in all ages which had become a Law for them to walk by The second guide was Satan who is here called a prince not only because there being a number of those unclean spirits they are joyned as one politick body among themselves under one who is as prince and head of the rest Mat. 12. 24. and 25. 41. but also and mainly because of that power which all the Devils and chiefly their head and prince have over wicked men in the world Joh. 14. 30. 2 Cor. 4 4. even over the children of disobedience which princely power of his is described from the place where by God's permission he doth exercise it to wit the
or other they followed the lusts of the flesh Among whom also we all had our conversation in the lusts of the flesh 3. They who in their unconverted estate have led a blamelesse life before the world and therefore have thought their condition abundantly good Philip. 3. 7 will when converting grace cometh see themselves to have been as vile and wretched as any They will not only see that nothing they did was truly good and acceptable to God as not being done in saith Heb. 11. 6 but also that the root of all sin was in them budding out without any check or restraint except from respect to self-interest credit pleasure or advantage Mat. 14. 5. and that the more blamelesse they were before the world spiritual pride did abound the more Philip. 〈◊〉 7 and so were more loathsom to God Iam. 4. 6. for Paul whose life even in his unrenewed estate was blamelesse Philip. 3. -6. being now converted affirmeth of himself as well as of others Among whom also we all in time past bad our conversation in the lusts of the flesh 4. As the unregenerate man is powerfully tempted by Satan and strongly encouraged by the common custome and example of others to sin against the Lord So there is a corrupt nature within him which maketh him readily entertain those external incitements yea and which would make him do mischief though there were not a devil to tempt nor any evil example to be followed and therefore none of those allurements and temptations to sin from without though never so strong doth excuse the sinner seing they are no more ready to tempt than corrupt nature in him is willing to be tempted for the Apostle having spoken of two guides of a natural man's sinfull course which are without him the custom of the world and Satan's suggestions ver 2. he addeth here a third which is within him and as forward as any of the former We saith he had our conversation in the lusts of the flesh 5. The whole man both soul and body is infected with sin by nature so that not only the sensual part but even his will and understanding are corrupted by it there being not only ignorance but also mistakes of God and good in the understanding 1 Cor. 1. 23. a crooked perversnesse and aversnesse from that which is spiritually good in the will Rom. 8. 7. for Paul reckoneth even the mind to wit as it is corrupted to be a part of flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind 6. There are several degrees of sin whereof as the latter doth carry sin a step further on towards the height than the former so the former maketh way for the latter for first there is flesh or the very inbred corruption of our natures Secondly Lusts of the flesh these are the first motions of inbred corruption towards unlawfull objects and such as go before deliberation and advice and are forbidden in so far as they relate to our neighbour in the tenth Command Thirdly the desires or wills of the flesh which are somewhat more even the hearts through-consent to the sinfull motion and a fixed resolution to act it after deliberation and advice and is that kind of lust spoken-of Matth. 5. 28. And lastly the fulfilling those wills and desires of the flesh that is the actual committing of sin so resolved upon 7. Every unregenerate man come to age and discretion is a slave to sin in all the fore-mentioned degrees for Paul affirmeth here of himself the Jews and Gentiles before conversion that not only flesh was in them which did lust after unlawfull objects but that those lusts did come the length of fixed resolutions and desires yea and that they did fulfill and accomplish them for though civilians do not fulfill the lusts of the fleshly appetite yet they fulfill the desires of the mind by their pride vanity of spirit self-seeking and such like We all had our conversation in the lusts of the flesh fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind 8. As all men are guilty of original sin by nature and from the first moment of their conception Psal. 51. 5. and therefore in the course of divine justice liable to the stroke of God's vindictive wrath and anger and this by nature also So the misery of unregenerate men is never sufficiently seen untill it be traced up to this bitter root and fountain even the sin and misery wherein they were born for his saying they were children of wrath by nature implyeth they were also sinners by nature seing wrath doth alwayes follow upon sin and this he reserveth last as that which was the root fountain and head-stone of all their misery And were by nature the children of wrath 9. Though those who are borne within the visible Church have a right to Church-priviledges even from their birth and by nature which others have not See Gal. 2. Ver. 15. Doct. 1. yet all men whether born within or without the Church are alike by nature as to the point of original sin inherent in all and the desert of God's wrath following upon that sin which wrath is due to all for saith he speaking of the Jews We were by nature the children of wrath even as others by which others he meaneth the unchurched Gentiles Vers. 4. But God who is rich in mercy for His great love wherewith He loved us 5. Even when we were dead in sins hath quickned us together with Christ by grace ye are saved THe Apostle having already set forth that miserable state wherein both Jew and Gentile were by nature and before conversion he doth in the second place hold forth their delivery from that wofull state and that in such a lively ravishing and comprehensive strain of speech as might not only inform their judgments but also work upon their affections to imbrace and adhere unto those truths which he here delivereth according to his intended scope And first ver 4. he declareth God to have been the prime author and efficient cause of their delivery whom he calleth rich in mercy to shew that He was acted herein not from their worth but His own abundant mercy which attribute of mercy doth speak His favour and good-will with relation to His Peoples miserie And withall he sheweth that it was only His great and ancient love towards them which set His mercy on work in order to their delivery Next vers 5. having resumed what he spoke of their miserable case ver 1. but so as he applyeth what was there spoken of the Gentiles only unto himself and the other Jews according to what was held forth ver 3. he propoundeth the first branch of their delivery to wit God's quickning of them together with Christ whereby is meaned the Lord's work of regeneration and bestowing upon them a spiritual life of grace in opposition to that spiritual death formerly spoken of together with all those benefits which accompany and flow from regeneration in this
promise even such certainty as the giving of a pledge and holding forth of an effectuall and necessary cause do give for performance of the thing promised for Christs resurrection is both a pledge 1 Cor. 15. 20. and cause of our resurrection Rom. 8. 11. which holdeth also in His glorification Doct. 1. The fruits and effects of Gods eternal love and mercy and of Christs merit toward the Elect are not confined within this present life but are in a great part to have their accomplishment after time when the bodies of Believers shall be raised up in glory at the last day and they perfectly glorified with Christ in Heaven for ever for those two fruits of the Fathers love and of Christs merit even the Resurrection and Glorification of Believers are here expressed while it is said and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places 2. Those and those only shall partake of the resurrection of the just which is to life everlasting Job 5. 29 And shall be glorified hereafter whom God doth quicken by converting grace here for those three parts of the delivery of lost sinners are of equal latitude He hath quickened us raised us up and made us sit in heavenly places 3. As it is a thing full of difficulty to be believed that after worms have consumed this flesh of ours it shall be raised up in glory and that we who are heirs of hell and children of wrath shall one day reign with Christ for ever so those are things not only sure in themselves but which the Lord would have converted and quickened Believers assured of that so their comfort under crosses might be more abounding 2 Cor. 4. 14. with 16 17 18. and their courage against death more strong 1 Thess. 4. 18. and that they in all things may live as becometh those who not only shall rise and take possession of glory in their own persons but also are already risen and glorified with and in Christ their Head Col. 3. 1 even by having their conversation in Heaven while they are yet upon earth Philip. 3. 20. for that they might be perswaded of their future resurrection and glorification the Spirit of God doth speak of them as already done viz in the sense given in the exposition He hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places Vers. 7. That in the ages to come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindnesse towards us through Christ Jesus THe Apostle thirdly propoundeth the final cause or the end intended by God to be brought about by His gracious working formerly mentioned towards those Ephesians and first Converts among the Jews even that in all ages succeeding the present unto the end of the world God might give an evident proof and infallible demonstration for so much doth the word rendred shew signifie of the exceeding riches of His grace that is how far the abundance of His mercy and favour toward sinners doth exceed all expression and created comprehension the setting forth whereof to the following ages was intended by God not only for His own glory as chap. 1. 12. ●14 but also for the encouragement of all vile sinners unto the worlds end to draw nigh unto God for mercy in Christ as being animated hereto by this example and infallible evidence of the exceeding riches of Gods grace for so doth the Apostle more fully explain his own meaning 1 Tim. 1. 16. And in the close of the verse he sheweth wherein that convincing evidence doth lye by giving a short comprehensive sum of all he hath spoken from the beginning of the Chapter even in God's kindnesse that is all those effects formerly mentioned of His mercy love and free grace flowing from His good gentle and bountifull disposition and this towards them whose misery was formerly described and through Christ as the purchaser and applier of all those Doct. 1. As there is grace yea riches and abundance of grace in God even such as exceed all expression 2 Sam. 7. 20. all comprehension Isa. 55. 9. yea and all the sins of creatures Rom. 5. 20. So the more a man doth dwell upon this sweet subject his thoughts and apprehensions of it will be the more enlarged and his expressions also will in some measure go alongs with his thoughts for the Apostle having before ver 4. expressed it under the name of riches in mercy and falling here upon the same subject again his thoughts of it are more enlarged and his expression doth rise accordingly so that it is now not only riches but exceeding riches of his grace 2. As it is a matter full of difficulty for those who are sensible of their own vileness to believe the exceeding riches of Gods grace towards lost sinners and to believe it especially with application unto themselves Act. 2. 37. So the particular instances and examples of Gods mercy and grace tow 〈…〉 ds others have a peculiar fitnesse and efficacy in them to convince us how exceedingly gracious God is and so to convince us as we may be encouraged to draw nigh to that same fountain of rich grace for pardon and life unto our selves 1 Tim. 1. 16. a fitnesse beyond what is in the simple doctrinal declaration of those riches of grace in so far as those instances and examples do speak not only that mercy and grace may be had but that it hath been attained unto and by those who in all respects did judge themselves and were really as unworthy of it as unable to lay hold upon it in the mean time and to make good use of it afterwards as we do judge our selves so that the yce is broken and the foord ridden before us for the Apostle sheweth that God gave such instances of mercy and grace in those primitive Christians that he might shew forth as it were by demonstration and evidence the exceeding riches of His grace and this in order to the encouragement of others to venture their salvation upon that same grace as we shew in the Exposition 3. The more sinfull miserable and wretched they are to whom the Lord is gracious there is the more convincing proof given of the exceeding riches of His grace and so a greater encouragement for those who are yet in their gracelesse state to roll themselves over upon this His rich grace and to expect good from it for it was the quickening of such vile sinners whose misery is described ver 1 2. 3. which did tend to shew forth the exceeding riches of His grace which the Apostle also hinteth at while shewing wherein that convincing evidence did lye he saith his kindnesse towards us the word us is emphatick as to the purpose in hand 4. It was a thing resolved upon by God revealed to His servants and accordingly made known by them to the Church that the glorious light of the Gospel though opposed by the fury and industry of men and devils yet should never
the rule of good works in His Word Psal. 119. 9. and by examples also which make the rule more easie to be followed Heb. 12. 1. He reneweth their wills and furnisheth them with inward power and ability to do these works Ezek. 36. 27. and exciteth and actuateth that power by His renewed influence thereby making it to work Philip. 2. 13. In all which respects good works may be said to be prepared by God as the word rendred fore-ordained may also read which God hath fore-ordained or prepared that we should walk in them Vers. 11. Wherefore remember that ye being in time passed Gentiles in the flesh who are called uncircumcision by that which is called the circumcision in the flesh made by hands HEre beginneth the second part of the Chapter where the Apostle for the further establishment of those Ephesians in the Doctrine of salvation through free grace in Christ doth more largely insist upon the former purpose contained in the first part of the Chapter with a more particular application of it to the Ephesians and in them to all the Gentiles And first by exhorting them to remember their former misery while they were in Gentilisme he giveth in this and the following verse a most lively description of their then miserable state as first that they were in the flesh that is the flesh of their foreskine not being cut off by circumcision they were not only destituted of that ordinance but also of all other soul-saving ordinances of Gods Worship unto the enjoying whereof circumcision gave a right and entrance Exod. 12. 44. Secondly This their miserable estate was matter also of their reproach the Jews making their want of Circumcision a continuall upcast unto them which he hinteth at by shewing that the carnall Jews who were only circumcised in the flesh by the hands of men but not in their hearts by the Spirit of God did not cease to reproach the converted Christian Gentiles with uncircumcision even at that present time when circumcision and the rest of those Leviticall ordinances were now abrogated Doct. 1. Even Believers having attained to the sense of Gods mercy in Christ are very prone to forget that wo and misery which they were under before their delivery from it for the watchword here given to those Ephesians supposeth so much Wherefore remember saith he 2. Those who are converted ought frequently to remember and call to mind their sin and misery under which they were before God shew them mercy though not to take pleasure in the remembrance of it Ezek. 23. 19. 21. nor to despair of or question Gods mercy in order to their delivery from it Isa. 1. 18. yet that hereby they may be provoked to pity towards others who are yet in that state Tit. 3. 2 3. to greater fruitfulnesse in good works for the time to come Rom. 6. 19. and to magnifie the riches of Gods mercy in their delivery from that wofull state 1 Tim. 1. 13. 14. and that they may be kept humble under their present enjoyments Ezek. 20. 43. for therefore doth the Apostle exhort those Ephesians to remember their former sin and misery Wherefore remember saith he that in times past ye were 3. Christians in order to the more effectual bringing about of the forementioned ends ought not only remember that sin and misery which was common unto them with others but also and chiefly would search out and call to mind wherein their sin and misery did exceed the sin and misery of others for Paul biddeth them here remember that misery which in a great part was peculiar unto themselves as Gentiles and which they had more than the Jews Wherefore remember that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh 4. The consideration of Gods rich grace through Jesus Christ whereby alone He carrieth on the salvation of lost sinners in all its steps may be a great encouragement and a strong argument to inforce this duty of searching out and calling to mind our matchlesse sin and misery and that because this rich grace hath not only a remedy for all our sin and misery in it Rom. 5. 20. but also it is most perceived and felt in its sweet and lively effects when the soul is most affected with the sense of its own vilenesse Luk. 15. 21 22. for the Apostle having spoken of Gods rich grace whereby we are saved through faith in Christ he inferreth as a conclusion thence Wherefore remember that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh 5. Though it is now under the New Testament no more but much lesse miserable to be born a Gentile than to be born a Jew Rom. 11. 20. Yet to have been born a Gentile and not of Abrahams race was once to wit before Christ came in the flesh a sad and miserable lot for when he is calling to mind their former misery he biddeth them remember that they were in time past Gentiles 6. Those who are born without the bounds of the Church and live not under the drop of divine Ordinances are in a poor and wofull case as being not only under wrath and destitute of any actuall interest in the blessing which piece of misery is common to them with all the unregenerate whether within or without the visible Church See ver -2. but destitute also of all those means whereby the blessing useth to be conveyed Rom. 10. 14 15. so that their salvation is not in an ordinary way possible for while he is calling to mind their former misery he biddeth them remember they were Gentiles in the flesh that is destitute of Circumcision the leading ordinance and consequently destitute of all Ordinances having no part nor communion with Gods Church neither outwardly nor spiritually as he explaineth himself ver 12. 7. As the contemning even of outward Ordinances is no small sin before God 1 Sam. 2. 17. with 24. So it is matter of just shame and reproach before men which did hold especially in the contempt of Circumcision under the Old Testament it being then a seal of the Covenant Gen. 17. 10. the outward badge of the Lords people Gen. 17. 14. and a leading Ordinance giving right and entrance to the enjoyment of all other Ordinances Exod. 12. 44. and it doth no lesse hold in Baptism under the New Testament seing the Sacraments of the New Testament are of as much worth as the Sacraments of the Old and Baptism serveth for the same ends now which are presently mentioned to have been the uses for which Circumcision did serve then for although Paul doth only mention expresly that uncircumcision was unjustly cast up to the Christian Gentiles by the carnall and hypocriticall Jews in the present time wherein he wrote yet hereby he would have them to remember how this was matter of just reproach and upcast unto them even from the godly Jews in former times when Circumcision stood in force and that this disgrace and reproach was a part of their former misery See 1
the actual possessing of which or present right unto which are the priviledges of reall Believers or if we look to that which giveth them a right each one to their respective priviledges to wit the grace of faith and a mysticall and saving union with Christ upon the part of real Believers and a profession of the doctrine of faith either personally or parentally and an external and politicall union with Christ upon the part of visible Church-members I say which of those be looked unto we will find so much of likenesse and proportion betwixt what belongeth to the visible Church and what belongeth to the invisible that both may safely and without ambiguity be taken up as intended by the Spirit of God to be expressed in one and the same Scripture though the one more principally and the other secondarily and as it were by proportion As for example here seing the nighnesse and happinesse which visible Church-members enjoy is only comparative and with respect had to the greater misery of those who are wholly without the Church and that it is but a misery and distance being compared with that state of nighnesse and happinesse which the truely Regenerate are brought unto Therefore I conceive that what is mentioned of the delivery and blessed state here spoken of was verified mainly and fully in the Regenerate and invisible Church of Believers among them and but proportionally only and in part in the visible Church of professors and therefore I shall only collect such doctrines as arise from it being so considered Hence Learn 1. The more nigh the consideration of our miserable and happy state be set together in opposition the one to the other before the eye of the soul it commendeth and sweetneth our happy state through grace the more for the Apostle's scope being to set forth the happinesse of that state wherein free grace had placed them he compriseth all their misery in one word They were sometimes far off and all their happinesse in another they were now made nigh And so giveth a joynt view of them both at once 2. The People of God are not so to remember by past sin and misery as to make them question the fruits of Gods mercy already received or to despair of receiving more in time to come for having exhorted them ver 11. to remember their former misery in the first place he exhorteth them here to remember that happy estate wherein mercy had placed them in the next But now ye are made nigh 3. As it is the duty of Converts frequently to remember their former sin and misery See Vers. 11. Doct. 2. So also to call to minde and confidently avow that gracious change which free-grace hath wrought upon them in their conversion because as misbelief is ready to call it in question Isa. 50. 10 So the remembrance and avowing of it is most profitable in order to our own comfort against the sense of bypast or present sin and misery 1 Cor. 6. 11. in order to our incitement to the duty of walking suitably chap. 4. 1. and to our incouragement against the fear of all imaginary difficulties which may occur in our way to heaven and glory Philip. 1. 6. and in order to our thankfulnesse unto God for His so rich mercy manifested in our delivery 1 Pet. 2. 9. for the Apostle exhorteth them to remember this in the second place That ye who were sometimes far off are now made nigh 4. As converting grace falleth often upon those who are most gracelesse and at greatest distance from God from Christ and His Church So it bringeth those upon whom it falleth into a state of nearnesse to all those because of these many nigh relations under which they stand to God as of servants Rom. 6. 22. of friends Col. 1. 21. and sons Joh. 1. 12. and to Christ as of His Spouse Cant. 4. 8. members Eph. 5. 30. brethren c. Heb. 2. 11. And because of these sweet influences for the life and comfort of grace which they receive daily from Him as the members from the head Col. 2. 19. because of that near accesse which they have unto God in Christ both as to their state and performances whereof ver 19. And because of that union and communion which they have with the invisible Church of Believers the congregation of the first-born See Vers. 12. Doct. 5. for with relation mainly to this gracious change which was wrought upon reall Believers among them in their regeneration he saith But now yee who sometimes were far off are made nigh 5. As this excellent state of nearnesse to God and His Church wherein the truely regenerate do stand and all those excellent privileges which flow from it were purchased for the Elect by no lesse price than the bloud of Christ whose bloud was the bloud of God Acts 20. -28. and therefore of infinit value So none of those are actually bestowed upon and applied unto the Elect untill they be united to Christ and in Him by saving faith as the branches are in the root from which they draw sap and nourishment for saith he in Christ Jesus ye are made nigh by the bloud of Christ they were in Christ by faith before they attained that state of nearnesse which was purchased by His bloud Vers. 14. For He is our peace who hath made both one and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us 15. Having abolished in his flesh the enmity even the law of Commandments contained in Ordinances THe Apostle being next more largely to explain and prove what he hath briefly asserted that the Gentiles were made nigh to God and His Church by the bloud of Christ doth first confirm it by an argument taken from Christ's Priestly office according to which He is not only the Mediator for peace and peace-maker betwixt God and man and among men themselves but He is also our peace as being the propitiatory sacrifice and having purchased this peace with His own bloud Isa. 53. 5. and so the very cause and reason of this peace is in Himself and nothing extrinsicall to Himself Secondly he doth prove that Christ was their peace by the effect produced by Him and the matter of working this effect The effect it self is that where before the Jews and Gentiles were irrecoverably separated by reason of their different Religion and religious Rites He had now united them in one and the same Church which is said to have been then done because it was in part done for the rejecting of Israel is only in part Rom. 11. 25 but the full accomplishment of it shall be when all Israel and the fulnesse of the Gentiles shall be called Rom. 11. -25 26 The manner of working this effect is set down in three phrases all signifying one thing though different in regard of diverse considerations First He broke down the middle wall of partition whereby as he explaineth himself in the following verse is meaned the ceremonial Law and
he compareth the whole Church and especially the invisible Church of true Believers unto a City and sheweth that those believing Ephesians had a right unto all the priviledges and immunities of that city the chief whereof are freedom from Gods curse Rev. 22. 3. and a right unto eternal life Rev. 22. -5. And this they had equally with all the other citizens and free members of that City for the chiefest Saints were but their fellow-citizens In the second similitude he compareth the same Church unto an houshold or family and calleth it Gods houshold affirming that all of those believing Ephesians did belong to this houshold So that he doth hereby expresse a greater degree of nearnesse to and communion with God and His Church which they had attained unto than was set forth by the former similitude there being a straiter ty of familiarity and friendship between the members of one family among themselves and with the master of the house than is between the members of one city whether among themselves and with their Magistrates and Rulers Doct. 1. So apt are even good men to be exalted above measure with the excellent things of God bestowed upon them 2 Corinth 12. 7. that it is not safe at any time to think upon those things except our former misery and vilenesse be joyntly thought upon also that so we may be keeped humble for the Apostle while he is of purpose to set forth their excellent priviledges doth not obscurely present their former misery unto their view also by saying ye are no more strangers and forreigners which implieth they were once so 2. As it is not an easie matter to convince sinners of their lost and miserable estate by nature So it is no lesse difficulty when they are once made truely sensible of sin and misery to convince them throughly of these riches which are in Gods mercy and of that blessed estate which they are brought unto by Gods free grace in Christ for therefore the Apostle findeth it necessary not only to assert there was a gracious change wrought in them ver 13. but also in the following verses to shew forth all the causes of this most blessed change from which he doth here by an undeniable consequence lay down this conclusion Now therefore ye are no more strangers and forreigners 3. That we may highly prize and think aright of Gods mercy in Christ manifested to Believers we would look upon it both in the privative and positive effects thereof both in those evils of sin and misery which He delivereth from and those saving blessings whether relating to grace here or glory hereafter which He doth confer and bestow for so doth the Apostle here set forth the rich effects of Gods grace towards those Ephesians both negatively and positively ye are no more strangers but fellow-citizens 4. Though Believers be strangers in the world as to their outward condition some having no certain place of abode but driven from their own habitations 1 Pet. 1. 1. and all of them being disposed to look upon earth as a strange countrie and the contentments thereof as uncertain perishing and therefore not their own Heb. 13. 14. Yet they are not strangers unto but citizens of that city not made with hands even the blessed society of the Saints in which they live Philip. 3. 20. unto whose priviledges they have a right and shall at last be brought to the full possession of all its outmost blessings and immunities in heaven Joh. 14. 2. 3. for it is in this respect he faith ye are no more strangers and forreigners 5. The state and priviledges of Gods Church consisting of all true Believers are such as fitly may be represented by some great Incorporation or City which is a society of people joyned together under one Magistracy ruled by the same Laws enjoying the same common priviledges and immunities and strongly defended by walls and bulwarks In like manner all Believers are united under Christ their supream Magistrate and Head Eph. 1. -21. living under one common Law the will of God revealed in Scripture which is also written in their hearts by that one Law-giver Jer. 31. 33. enjoying one and the same common priviledges not only accesse to divine Ordinances but of Justification Rom. 8. 30. Adoption Eph. 1. 5. Sanctification Eph. 5. 26. peace of conscience Rom. 5. 1. and a right to heaven the inheritance of the Saints Joh. 3. 16. and all of them having Gods special protection Psal. 91. 1. yea and salvation for walls and bulwarks Isa. 26. 1. for this similitude whereby the Church is compared to a city is implyed while it is said Ye are fellow-citizens with the Saints 6. Though those who are federally holy and externally Saints See upon Philip. 1. ver 1. doct 5. are members of this City as it speaketh a society of visible professors Psal. 48. 8. yet only those who are inherently holy their natures being renewed the seeds of saving grace implanted and growing up unto good works only such I say are free members of this City as it speaketh the society of the Church invisible who enjoy immunity from Gods wrath and curse with an actual right unto eternal life for that the Saints only are free members of this City is implyed while he saith Fellow-citizens with the Saints 7. Whatever differences are among Believers as to their worldly condition Eph. 6. 5 9. their severall functions in the Church visible 1 Cor. 12. 28. and their different degrees of gifts and graces Rom. 12. 6. Yet all of them do enjoy an equall right to all those saving blessings of the Covenant of Grace the Charter of this Incorporation Isa. 56. 4. which are of absolute necessity to the life of grace here or of glory hereafter Psal. 84. 11. and without which none can be a free Burgesse of this City for he maketh the believing Ephesians fellow-citizens with the Saints even the chiefest of them as having the same right with them unto all such immunities and priviledges 8. As the whole society of the invisible Church chiefly is Gods own great houshold and family in a peculiar manner and is therefore admitted to a most near and intimate communion with Him such as a man hath with his own domesticks Rev. 3. 20. yea and is in a speciall way provided and cared for by Him 1 Tim. 5. 8. So whenever a man is reconciled to God by the bloud of Jesus Christ he becometh a member of this holy and blessed family and enjoyeth all the priviledges thereof whereof this is one in which it differeth from other families that in this houshold there are no mercenary servants but all the domesticks are sons and heirs Joh. 1. 12. Col. 3. 24. for by the houshold of God he meaneth the catholick Church affirming that those Ephesians upon their reconciliation with God became members of it And of the houshold of God saith he Vers. 20. And are built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets
admiration at and extolling of the riches of Gods mercy and free grace towards such an unworthy wretch as he is for both these were in Paul unto me who am lesse than the least of all Saints is this grace given 6. The Lord in deepest wisdom doth often bestow the rarest gifts and graces upon such as by reason of their former wickednesse are most conscious to themselves of their own unworthinesse yea and sometimes will employ them in most eminent pieces of His service as knowing such have somewhat to keep them humble and make them ascribe the glory of what they do unto God 1 Cor. 15. 9 10. whereas others would readily take the glory unto themselves being puffed up with their gifts and successe and so should fall in the condemnation of the devil 1 Tim. 3. 6. for God's dealing with Paul in giving him such excellent gifts and the Apostolick office from grace proveth so much unto me who am lesse than the least of all Saints is this grace given 7. The more unworthy that any is upon whom the Lord bestoweth grace and sheweth mercy the glory of His grace is so much the more set forth and shineth the more brightly whileas where sin hath abounded grace doth much more abound Rom. 5. -20. for Paul commendeth the dignity of his calling and the worth of that grace by which he was called to that office from his own basenesse and unworthinesse unto me who am lesse than the least of all Saints is this grace given 8. It concerneth a Minister much as to be deeply affected with the sense of his own unworthinesse so seriously and frequently to ponder the weight and dignity of that trust which is put upon him and what are the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints the dispensing whereof is committed unto him that so with greater fear and reverence care and diligence he may take heed to his Ministery which he hath received in the Lord to fulfill it Col. 4. 17. for Paul considereth also the worth of that message which he was intrusted with while he saith that I should preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. 9. Though others of the Apostles besides Paul were intrusted to carry the Gospel unto the Gentiles yet considering that he was so fully instructed in the knowledge of this mysterie of the rejection of the Jews and calling of the Gentiles ver 3. and Rom. 11. and had a perpetuall conflict with the Jews through the whole course of his life in the defence of this truth as is clear from the Acts of the Apostles as also that he hath committed more unto sacred Writing to this purpose for the use and benefit chiefly of the Gentiles than any of the other Apostles Therefore is it that Paul doth seem to have been intrusted in a peculiar manner with the charge of preaching the Gospel unto and being the Apostle of the Gentiles which appeareth as from other places Act. 26. 17 18. 1 Tim. 2. 7. so from this unto me is this grace given that I should preach among the Gentiles 10. Offices and competencie of gifts for discharging any office are given of God to those who have them and especially to Ministers not to keep them without use-making Matth. 25. 27. or to make use of them only for gaining applause or advantage to themselves 2 Cor. 4 5. but that they may employ them for the glory of God and the good of others for this grace was given to Paul that he might preach among the Gentiles 11. As Jesus Christ with all that rich store and copious abundance of created graces and divine perfections which are in Himself and of satisfactory fulnesse which is in those many good things purchased by Him should be the main subject of a Ministers preaching whatever he preacheth besides of legall threatnings or duties being made to relate some one way or other unto Him So Jesus Christ and the riches of the Gospel are so large a field and subject that the most gracious and able Ministers will find daily purpose and fresh matter furnished of new whereof to preach concerning it yea and never will be able to go through it for Paul made Christ and the Gospel the main subject of his preaching and did find them unsearchable that I should preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. 12. Though those hid treasures of wisdom and knowledge in Christ and the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the Saints and of all those other good things purchased by Him and offered in the Gospel go beyond the reach of all created understanding to know them fully yet it is the duty both of Pastors and people to search into them there being as much knowledge of those unsearchable riches attainable even here as may encourage all to search Hos. 6. 4. and nothing being more sweet upon earth than to be swallowed up and overwhelmed in this deep and bottomlesse gulf of the unsearchable riches of Christ when penury of thoughts and want of enlarged hearts to comprehend that incomprehensible subject necessitate the soul sometimes to succumb under the weight to stand still wonder and exclaim O the depth of the riches c Rom. 11. 33. for though those riches are unsearchable yet Paul did search in them for he preached them and consequently they to whom he preached were obliged to search into them also That I should preach the unsearchable riches of Christ. Vers. 9. And to make all men see what is the fellowship of the mysterie which from the beginning of the world hath been hid in God who created all things by Jesus Christ. HE doth here first more fully expresse what he presently spoke of his preaching among the Gentiles as also extoll and magnifie his office fifthly from the great good and benefit which was by his conscientious discharge thereof to accresce unto men even the making evident unto all men without any such distinction of nations or persons as was keeped under the Ministery of the Old Testament Gal. 3. 28. what that mysterie of the union and association of Jews and Gentiles in one body was whereby they have joynt interest in the Covenant of Grace in Christ the Cautioner and in all those spirituall blessings purchased by Him Next he giveth a reason why he called this communion and fellowship a mysterie and secret because it was a thing hid untill the times of the Apostles in Gods decree and not revealed at least so fully and clearly as then it was See ver 5. doct 4 and having made mention of God he describeth Him from His work of creating all things by Jesus Christ the eternal word of the Father Joh. 1. 1. and this most appositly to the present purpose to wit the calling of the Gentiles as intending hereby to shew that none hath reason to wonder why God should save the Gentiles as well as the Jews by Christ seing He hath equal interest in them as having created them both and that
do find himself inclined and constrained to improve in his station and according to his measure all his receipts whether of saving graces or common gifts to the spirituall advantage of others and chiefly for the common good of the whole body he may the more certainly conclude that he hath the grace of sincere love and charity rooted in his heart and is acted by it for he maketh love the impulsive cause why the severall members do improve all their receipts for promoving the edification of the whole Church while he saith it maketh increase to the edifying of it self in love Vers. 17. This I say therefore and testifie in the Lord that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles walk in the vanity of their mind THe Apostle being in the second part of the Chapter to dehort them from all impiety and profanity in the general contrary to that walking worthy of their vocation pressed ver 1. giveth an example of that wickednesse from which he dehorteth them in the conversation of those other Gentiles who were yet unconverted and living in paganism And first while he doth most seriously and under a grave obtestation by the Lord Jesus Christ as they would answer to Him and evidence their esteem of Him dehort them from walking as those other Gentiles he giveth a short sum of that godlesse conversation of theirs calling it a walking in the vanity of the mind that is a following and practising of whatsoever their unrenewed understanding and mind did teach and prescribe to which he ascribeth vanity and calleth the mind of unrenewed men vain because it is empty of the knowledge of God in Christ 1 Cor. 2. 14. and what knowledge it hath of God or of right and wrong is nothing but evanishing notions Rom. 1. 21. and wholly unprofitable as to the attaining of life and salvation Rom. 1. -20. for a vain thing according to the common and scripture-use of the word is an empty thing Isa. 41. 29. an evanishing thing Prov. 31. 30 and a thing unprofitable to attain the end intended Psal. 33. 17. Doct. 1. To live in a course of profanity and to be a member of Christs mystical body drawing life nourishment and growth from Christ the head are wholly inconsistent if the one be the other cannot be seing profanity of life is not only directly opposit to that new life of grace which all the members of that body do live but also doth wholly obstruct the passages betwixt the head and the members whereby spiritual influence for life and growth should be conveyed 1 Joh. 1. 6. for the Apostle from what he spake of influence for life and growth conveyed from Christ the head to all the members doth infer here that therefore and as they would evidence themselves lively members of that body so they would abandon profanity while he saith This I say therefore that ye walk not as other Gentiles 2. Ministers ought to be serious in pressing the duties of sanctification upon the Lords people not only simply exhorting but sometimes most gravely obtesting them by that which is dearest to them whereby the Lords people may know that their obedience to what is pressed is no trifling matter but such as their eternal welbeing is most highly concerned in for therefore doth Paul not only say and exhort them but also testifie and obtest them in the Lord that they walk not henceforth as other Gentiles 3. Our long continuance in sin already is so far from being an argument in reason to make us hold on in that course for the time coming that upon the contrary this very same consideration should be a strong argument to shame us from it for so much is implyed in his saying that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles as if he had said Ye have done so hithertils therefore do no more so See 1 Pet. 4. 3. Doct. 4. Our turning to God in earnest to expect life and salvation from Him through Jesus Christ doth call for and will be attended with an other sort of conversation than what we formerly had before conversion or that naturall men dead in sins and trespasses for the present have for Paul exhorteth these converted Ephesians not to walk as they themselves somtimes did nor as the unconverted Gentiles at present did I testifie saith he that ye hence-forth walk not as other Gentiles walk 5. Sense of mercy received from God is a strong incitement unto dutie toward God for he doth not obscurely hint at Gods mercy in separating them from the common lot of other Gentiles that so they may be the more incited to eschew what might dishonour Him that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles 6. The vilenesse of sin is such that it cannot be sufficiently expressed and so expressed as to make us abhor it by doctrine or word-speaking therefore it is sometimes profitable to take a look of it in its vilenesse power and tyrannie as it manifesteth it self in the lives of unrenewed men who are captive slaves unto it providing we so look to it as to make us abhor it and carry at a greater distance from it for therefore doth Paul hold forth a map of that wickednesse which he deborteth them from in the example of those unconverted Gentiles that by seeing of it they might the more abhor it That ye hence-forth walk not as other Gentiles walk 7. The conversation of all men unrenewed is vain and fruitlesse as spending their money for that which is not bread and their labour for that which satisfieth not Isa. 55. 2. for he speaketh of all the unconverted Gentiles that they walk in vanity 8. Whatever vanity or wickednesse is in the outward conversation of a naturall man it doth wholly flow from the vanity of the mind and understanding within and as the mind is so will the conversation be and therefore even the mind it self the chief seat of reason is corrupted and vain and so vain that from thence doth flow corruption and vanity to the whole man for he ascribeth the vanity of their walking to the vanity of their mind As other Gentiles walk in the vanity of their mind saith he Vers. 18. Having the understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart NExt that the Apostle may the more effectually deter them from walking as these other Gentiles did he doth more largely and distinctly set forth that vain and godlesse conversation of theirs by shewing severall branches and degrees thereof both inward in their understanding and affections and outward in their life and conversation And first he sheweth that their understanding and knowing part or that part of it whereby men do reason inferring one thing from another for so the word signifieth was wholly blind and darkened to wit as to those things which relate to God and heaven 1 Cor. 1. 21. whatever was their understanding and quicknesse of judgement in
done to our selves and that in the manner mentioned in the preceeding doctrine yet we have not power to dispense with the injury done to the Justice of God nor to the publick Laws of the Land yea in some cases the Law of God alloweth that we pursue the party before the Judge and notwithstanding of our forgiving him to seek that the Law may strike against him Deut. 21. 18 c. Even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven you CHAP. V. THe Apostle in the first part of this Chapter having first confirmed the precept given in the last words of chap. 4. by pressing upon them to imitate God in forgiving one another from the fountain of love ver 1 2. doth yet exhort them unto such duties as belong unto all Christians in generall And first he forbiddeth six vices all of them almost contrary unto chastity because first they are uncomely for Saints ver 3. Secondly inconvenient ver 4. Thirdly they exclude from Gods Kingdom ver 5. And fourthly they bring down Gods wrath ver 6. Secondly he dehorteth from partaking with wicked men in their sins ver 7. because of that blessed change wrought in them from darknesse to light ver 8. The force of which consequence is proved from the fruits of light ver 9. and having pointed at the rule of right walking ver 10. and explained the precept set down ver 7. by discharging all accession to the sins of the wicked and enjoyning them to reprove them ver 11. he enforceth yet further the duty so explained first from the abominable filthinesse of those sins ver 12. Secondly from the good following upon reproof even the conviction of the sinner ver 13. And thirdly from Gods own example who reproveth the world of sin and thereby conveyeth light unto them ver 14. Thirdly he exhorteth to circumspect walking ver 15. which consisteth mainly in redeeming the time ver 16. and in order hereto that they would acquaint themselves with Gods revealed will ver 17. Fourthly he exhorteth them to eschew drunkennesse And fifthly to be filled with the Spirit ver 18. and to vent that fulnesse of the Spirit first in melodious singing of praises unto God ver 19. Secondly in giving of thanks for all things ver 20. In the second part of the Chapter The Apostle having premitted a generall exhortation unto all to submit themselves one to another ver 21. doth presse those duties which belong to Christians as they are members of Families And first the duties of wives under the name of submission set forth by the manner of it as unto the Lord ver 22. Secondly by the ground or reason of it the husbands headship illustrated from Christs ver 23. Thirdly by the pattern of it the Churches subjection to Christ. And fourthly by the extent of it to all things ver 24. Next he presseth the duty of husbands under the name of love 1. from Christ's love to His Church giving Himself for her ver 25. and that for two ends to wit the sanctification ver 26. and glorification thereof ver 27. Secondly from the near union betwixt husband and wife they being one flesh and therefore he ought to love her ver 28. Because 1. all men care for their own flesh 2. Christ careth for His Church ver 29. because of the strict union betwixt Him and the Church ver 30. And thirdly the ancient law of Marriage doth expresly enjoyn so much ver 31. And because he hath spoken of the union betwixt Christ and the Church he declareth it to be a great and unsearchable mysterie ver 32. and so concludeth the purpose by summing the duties of husbands and wives in two words love and reverence Vers. 1. BE ye therefore followers of God as dear children THe Apostle being to insist further in exhorting to such particular vertues as do belong to all Christians in general of whatsoever rank or station doth first illustrate the sixth and last precept given chap. 4. whereby he enjoyned the exercise of mutual kindnesse and mercy in forgiving one another because of Gods example in forgiving them for Christs sake Which precept he doth illustrate first by reinforcing the duty together with the motive to it from Gods example while 1. he commandeth them to be followers of God to wit in the exercise of kindnesse mercy and forgivenesse for according to the present scope the imitation of God here enjoyned seemeth to be astricted unto those particulars as Matth. 5. 44 45. and Luk. 6. 35 c. though otherwise it may be extended and elsewhere is extended unto all those divine vertues whereof some representation and shadow at least ought to be in us 1 Pet. 1. 16. And secondly he giveth a reason why they should imitate God thus even because they were His children by Adoption and not only children but dear children and dearly beloved by God their Father All of them did at least professe themselves to be such Mal. 1. 6 and the better part of them really were such Joh. 1. 12. and therefore they were to imitate Him in the exercise of those vertues as they would evidence themselves to be of His children Doct. 1. One and the self same action of God and chiefly His works of mercy towards Believers are more than one way advantagious unto them in so far as thereby not only they are freed from sin and misery but also have an argument and motive furnished both unto them on whom He sheweth mercy whereby they may be incited to their duty of shewing mercy unto others and to others also to shew mercy unto them for he sheweth that God in forgiving them had cast a copy to be followed by them in their forgiving one another while he saith Be ye therefore followers of God 2. Though we neither ought nor can imitate God in His works of creation and providence Isa. 14. 13. 14. neither may we presume to imitate Him in any thing further than His revealed will prescribeth as our duty Isa. 8. 20. yet what ever attributes or actions of His have in them any proportion or resemblance with any vertue or duty prescribed unto us we ought to look upon such as our copy and pattern to be followed by us for he saith Be ye followers of God with relation to His forgiving them for Christs sake 3. It is not sufficient to do the same things to others which God hath done to us except we endeavour to imitate and follow Him in the way and manner wherein He doth them So as that we do them not from any base or inferiour motive or for any wrong end but from a desire to be conform unto Him and unto what is required of us in the Word by Him for this following and imitating of God here enjoyned implyeth a purpose and endeavour to conform our selves to Him Be ye therefore followers of God 4. Gods example in such things as are imitable by us is the only un-erring pattern to be absolutely followed and