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A49329 Look unto Jesus, or, An ascent to the Holy Mount to see Jesus Christ in his glory whereby the active and contemplative believer may have the eyes of his understanding more inlightned to behold in some measure the eternity and immutability of the Lord Jesus Christ ... : at the end of the book is an appendix, shewing the certainty of the calling of the Jews / written by Edward Lane. Lane, Edward, 1605-1685. 1663 (1663) Wing L332; ESTC R25446 348,301 421

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was before the Creation thereby setling him upon the Throne making him co-eternal with God and to be of the same nature with him and the first begotten of every creature by which words he puts the Crown upon his head giving him the Sovereignty and Dominion over the whole Creation The length in that he is before all things and that by him all things consist The bredth in that he is the head of the body the Church extending his Influences Wisdom Care and Providence as the head useth towards all his Members The depth in that he became in time the first begotten also from the Dead that as he was the Creatour and Lord of all Living so when poor Creatures had by their rebellion against him brought themselves under the power of Death even then did he by his dying and triumphant rising again become their Restorer and Deliverer also that so in all things saith the Text he might have the preheminence Now then when the Apostle is in so high an elevation taken up with such a glorious description of the Lord Jesus ascribing unto him his several Excellencies according to his several Relations wherein he standeth to his Father to his Church to the whole Creation is it fit for low-spirited men loaden with lumpish thoughts of the creature to force him to stoop unto them by obtruding a sense upon him which never entred into his thoughts once to imagine Yea which would make him contradict himself as we say in the same breath for to be the uncreated everlasting Image of the invisible God and to be a Creature in one and the same Nature are teto Coelo directly opposite each to other as the East is to the West But without controversie there is truth in the Apostles words and no lye at all Whereas therefore he saith of Christ That he is the Image of the invisible God the first begotten of every creature He makes the latter Clause the consequent of the former connecting the whole in this manner The right of Primogeniture is in Christ because he is the Image of the invisible God and in that regard do all Creatures visible and invisible derive their Being from him some having more noble impressions of his Image upon them then others according to their rank and order in the Creation as it hath been contrived and established by the wisdom of the most High For example such as have life in them by an internal principle of Nature are in a higher degree of honour by their conformity unto Christ then those Creatures that are without life for life in whatsoever subject it be whether intellectual rational sensitive or vegetative is a Rivolet springing from that divine Fountain that is in Christ amongst which sorts of living creatures there is also a gradual Propinquity to the Fountain according to which propinquity they have all their several quicknings and vital operations The Evangelist S. John intimates so much when he saith In him was life and the life was the light of men John 1.4 Haec vita est lux non Brutorum c. ad quae il●a non pertinet sed hominum Sic Musculus That is that Christ had a special care and respect towards Mankind and that the life which is in him is not so gloriously manifested toward the other creatures that are inferiour to man And now to speak freely my poor judgment concerning this Primogeniture of Jesus Christ by way of instance as it hath respect to Angels and Men. Whereas Christ is called the first born doth it not imply that he is Intellectus Primogenitus the first begotten Intellect in reference to the Angelical Nature becoming thereby the first Mover thereof and giving it a Being according to the counsel of his own Will Doth it not signifie also that he is Ratio Prin ogenita the first begotten Reason in order to the Rational in which respect it may be probable he is called by the Holy Ghost in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Reason rather then the Word displaying his Beauts in every particular Soul as seemeth good unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 1.10.14 Which Intellect and Reason were indeed originally of the Essence of God derived unto Christ by an eternal and unconceivable Generation the Image whereof was from him devolved upon Angels and Men though not in that manner as was upon Christ himself the Essence of God being that way incommunicable to any creature for as he is the first begotten of every creature giving unto every Species his proper portion of Entity Rom. 8.29 John 1.18 and the first begotten among many brethren giving them the priviledge of Children so is he the onely begotten of the Father reserving to himself his own natural Interest and peculiar Prerogative According to this sense which I have here given the Apostle is I conceive to be understood in the fore-cited place of the Epistle to the Colossians to which I confess I do the more willingly incline because the Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not only to be rendred first born or first begotten but by a transposition only of the Accent as appears here in the Margine which is allowable it doth signifie also The first Bringer forth of every creature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pario making Christ thereby as he is indeed the Ens entium the Original of all Beings in the world and to be as he is called Rev. 3.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The efficient Principle or Authour as the word also means of the Creation whereof more shall be said hereafter And now to conclude let that which hath been said suffice to shew the invalidity of this Objection also drawn from the mis-construction of the Apostles words concerning the Primogeniture of Jesus Christ I grant there are some Writers both ancient and modern who to avoid this Objection which hath been here alledged maintain it to be meant of Christs Humane Nature but the truth is it is not so to be understood as it hath been here made to appear but of the Divine for Christ is not properly the Son of God according to the flesh and therefore never in that sense said to be begotten and yet notwithstanding the aforesaid Heretical Cavil over-thrown likewise Thus briefly as I was able poorly enough God knoweth yet according to the grace given unto me have I insisted upon this great Mystery Let us now improve it for our edification A threefold improvement may be made of this Doctrine considering it 1. With a reference unto Christ himself 2. With a reference unto his People 3. With a reference unto his Enemies First In respect of himself it concerns us to be very wary and to keep our distance not presuming to speak of what we have not seen Therefore as for Yesterdaies work what was done before the foundations of the World were laid it is not expedient doubtless to search into Clouds and thick
as well as the Law of the Gospel in which respect it is also called the Law of Christ Gal. 6.2 And the Prophets who were the best Expounders of the Law Gal. 6.2 did alwaies in their several Generations derive from thence the said Evangelical Doctrine Again As the Legislative Power was Yesterday in Christ so in like manner was the Punitive and Vindictive both for the correction of his People when they offended and for the punishment and cutting off his Enemies when they grew implacable in their rage and incorrigible under his Judgments A Lawgiver we know will be of no account unless he be a Judge and he that is a King unless he be a Judge and a Lawgiver both he may have an aiery style of Majesty given unto him and please himself with the sight of a Crown and Scepter but as to true and real power he shall as hath been said and we have found it by experience to our shame and misery too too true remain but the out-side but the Picture but the sign of a King If then the Lord Jesus Christ hath been the Lawgiver of his Church of old and consequently the King it must necessarily follow that he was the Judge also both to interpret the meaning and to execute the penalty of his Law Thus therefore we finde those Offices linked together as is before said with a reference to Jesus Christ under the Law Es 33.22 The Lord is our Judge the Lord is our Law-giver or Statute-maker the Lord is our King he will save us And the Apostle S. James saith There is one Lawgiver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and Judge Jam. 4.12 as it is added in some Manuscripts and so Jerom renders it who is able to save and to destroy Now this Judge hath been no other at all times but the Lord Jesus Christ for he himself saith Joh. 5.22 Joh. 5.22 The Father judgeth no man that is immediately but hath committed all judgment unto the Son Musculus according to his usual wont observeth here It is not said judgment alone but all judgment and in that it is said all it plainly sheweth that his power is of so large an extent that it reacheth unto all that ever were in the world For when was it that the Father gave this power of Judicature unto the Son When but Quando cum genuit say some Orthodox Ancients very pertinently Chrysostom Hilarius Theophilact though they mistook in their computation of this Quando limiting it unto Eternity as Pererius noteth when he begat him which is not to be understood of his Divine Generation because in that respect the Father and the Son judge both alike after the same manner being equal in power from everlasting to everlasting But here it is said the Father judgeth no man having devolv'd that power wholly upon the Son How then It must surely be meant of the time when Christ was begotten of the Father to be Mediatour and when that was hath been before said which being so Christ was the Judge from the beginning and consequently the King of the Church from the beginning also Furthermore the exercise of this power wherewith the Lord Jesus Christ was vested from the beginning was in like manner alwaies manifested by him in the executing of judgment for as he addeth again John 5.27 The Father gave him Authority to execute judgment also John 5.27 because he is the Son of man which Scripture though it may be applied and that properly to the last judgment when Christ shall visibly appear as a Judge yet it is not to be limited to that sense but hath a measure that reacheth unto the Church in all Ages wherein Christ hath according to the Authority given him of the Father executed judgement If it be now objected that these words because he is the Son of man do imply that Christ did not execute this power till he took upon him our Nature I shall answer First If Christ was the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world though notwithstanding he was not actually slaughtered till about the eighteenth year of Tiberius what hinders but that he might be also the Son of man before his Incarnation Sure we are the Prophet Daniel speaks of him under that notion And some there are that apply that of the Psalm unto him Dan. 7.13 Ravanel Ius c. Ps 80.17 In his Acts and Monuments Let thy hand be upon the man of thy right hand upon the Son of man whom thou madest strong for thy self Secondly I answer with learned Bishop Mountague that this stile wherewith Christ was pleased very frequently to denominate himself Son of Man is to be understood with a reference to that original Promise the first of all made unto Mankinde The Seed of the Woman shall bruise the Serpents head and not unto any persons whatsoever to whom Christ might be related according to the flesh And hereby saith Epiphanius did the Lord intimate that himself was the Party meant in that Promise and that the virtue of his Merits should be and was diffused to all Nations in the world Jews and Gentiles originally alike descended of the woman who both had a like interest in the woman and her Seed though the Jews did and might challenge greater propriety in the Seed of Abraham then the Gentiles could This Title then upon this account doth rather confirm the matter in hand then in the least Iota appear against it But I do further offer to consideration Did not Christ call himself the Son of man that he might thereby intimate to the Sons of men for their comfort that there was some kinde of Affinity between him and them he being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the essential Reason from all Eternity as is before said and they men endued with reason also through his good hand upon them in their Creation and therefore he would delight in that Appellation since he had undertaken to be their Mediatour which might even in their apprehension advance that Affinity Which if it be so Christ doth not call himself the Son of man so much for his being a Descendant from Mankinde But Son of man he is that is by an Hebraism Man per excellentiam 1 Tim. 2.5 as the Apostle also calls him as one that was Superiour to them all and from whom they all being reasonable Creatures have derived their distinction from other Species in the World about them From all which it may appear that Jesus Christ might be called the Son of man before his Incarnation and therefore as such did execute that Authority which the Father had given unto him He executed judgment on Cain when he excommunicated him out of his Church as may be gathered from the Sentence of Malediction which he pronounced upon him viz. That he should be a Fugitive and a Vagabond in the Earth Gen. 4.12 and from Cain's own desperate and dogged confession whereby he did in a sullen
again rather then to joyn with your Brethren in things that are indifferent It was a sweet and Christian resolution of devour Saint Bernard when he saw differences arise that might cause a breach between him and others with whom he had formerly held a brotherly correspondency He wrote unto them in these Words Adharebo vobis etsi nolitis adharebo vobis et si nolim ipse Epi. 252. I will be of you though you be unwilling I will be of you though I be unwilling my self O if there were in you brethren but this meekness of wisdom to bear and forbear and such a zeal for the publick peace which you are bound in Conscience to promote it would surely more adorn your Christian Profession then all your cariering with Spear in Rest against the established Orders of the Church in Polemical argutations If it be so that you have any peculiar priviledge granted unto you from heaven above others to go in untrodden paths by your selves to disavow that order and government under which the Church hath flourished in former times and to dissolve all ancient bonds of unity and Christian society in the publick worshipping of our God as some by their violent Impulses of spirit others by their Enthusiasms have pretended to have let it be produced that we may believe you But as the Apostle puts the question so may we Is Christ divided How is he then the Same 1 Cor. 1.13 Hath he been with his Church ever from the beginning exercising his Power in the establishment of order and government in it without which I say again it could not well have been so long preserved promising also that he will be with it for that end and purpose to the end of the world And hath he given a countermand or a connivence unto some to separate themselves from the said order and government yea to do what lyeth in them utterly to disanul it Verily it must not it cannot be imagined that he who is the Same yesterd●y to day and for ever should at all prevaricate or swerve so diametrally from his purpose and practice wherein he hath always manifested himself to be the Same If the consideration of these things will not bring on a composure of our differences and allay the sha●pness of contradicting spirits I know not what will And if when men see what the Lord hath done and hear what God the Lord that is God which is the Lord Psal 85.8 viz. Jesus Christ doth speak who doth use to speak peace unto his people and to his Saints to speak it as a Comforter and to speak it as a Counsellour for it hath always been the earnest desire of his soul to see his people live peaceably one with another they will neither acquiesce in his doing nor follow his counsel What shall we judge of them but that they are willing not onely to turn but to run after folly and that they delight in vain janglings which do minister endless debates rather then godly edifying Lastly this will afford strong consolation for all that do live godly in Christ Jesus both in respect of themselves and their posterity First for themselves When we sinde much uncertainty in Creature-Comforts about us This may be our rejoycing and our refuge that Christ will be the Same unto us for ever Though friends may fail though means may fail though health may fail though heart may sail yet Christ will never fail Look what Peter spake but did not perform Christ hath spoken and will surely make good Though all forsake thee yet will not I. Let therefore that sweet and precious Promise be laid up in the heart of every true believer as a cordial to comfort it in all changes and troubles whatsoever that may arise written not onely by the Apostle Heb. 13.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13.5 but in sundry other places of Scripture for our greater confirmation I will never never never never never leave thee or forsake thee Secondly for posterity We may rejoyce in this that the Lord Jesus Christ will have as tender a care of them as he hath had of us before them because he is the Same for ever He will be the Same to instruct and teach them the Same to defend and protect them the Same to save them from their sins and to bring them to glory Thus argueth the Prophet Psal 102.27 28. Heb. 1.10 Psal 102.27 which the Apostle applieth unto Christ Hebr. 1.10 c Thou art the Same and thy years shall have no end The children of thy servants shall continue under thy protection and provision and their seed shall be established before thee Shortly then Is not this exceeding great comfort to godly parents in all ages That Christ will be a guardian to their children after their decease They shall not be left as we say to the wide world neither shall such parents be like unto him of whom the Psalmist speaketh who should have none to favour his fatherless children But because Christ is the Same for ever he will as he hath done ever take care of his people that are in Covenant with him not onely making his Work appear unto his Servants but his Glory also unto their Children For he remembreth his Covenant for ever the Word which he commanded viz. his Angels to observe in the preservation of his people Ps 105 8. or the blessing which he hath decreed and issued out with such Authority that it shall prevail against all opposition to a thousand generations Leave therefore your fatherless children unto him he will preserve them alive for with him the fatherless shall ever finde mercy CHAP. IV. Sheweth how JESUS CHRIST is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Same unto his Church in her Triumphant estate unto all Eternity HItherto have we seen Jesus Christ the Same unto his Church yesterday to day and for ever in all the Generations that have been are or shall be in this world while she abideth in her Militant estate which hath given occasion of sundry Instructions that may through the good blessing of God be profitable and seasonable for these last times But what then may some say Will Christ forsake his Church when she is in her triumph and cease to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same unto her when he hath finished his whole work and presented all her children before his Father in glory I answer still Jesus Christ will be the Same for ever unto his Church that is to say Not onely in this world but in that also which is to come To this purpose let us briefly consider two things First the full sense and utmost extent of the Apostles words here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Ever Secondly how Christ will be the Same unto his Church in the world to come As touching the First We must know that the Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is as much as to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Always
and our Vision of him For when we shall see him as he is we shall be like him to the full extent of our susceptibility of his Likeness and the immediate irradiation of his Light and Power shall overshadow us and transform us into the same Image both in soul and body This this I say is the complement of our future happiness the perfection of our eternal glory And this the Apostle clearly testifies concerning our vile bodies that even they shall be made like unto his glorious body Phil. 3 21. Phil. 3.21 From whence we may safely collect that as the Image of Christs body shall possess our bodies so shall the Image of his soul possess our souls and the Image of his spirit our spirits Whereupon it will follow we shall be wholly possessed with his Glory when we shall see him as he is in the Glory of the Father He shall then be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Same in himself respecting his Existence which as I have said will infinitely tend to the advancement of the Saints happiness and then also the Same to his Church respecting his Power though in the exercise and administration of it he be not the Same His Power I say both over us and in us Over us he is now as our Head to guide and govern us so he will be then for his Headship over his Church as his preheminence over the creatures he will not relinquish neither will the Father deprive him of it even when God shall be all in all And this I conceive to be undeniable though it may sound strangely unto some for the Humane nature of Christ being eternally united to the Divine it is not to be imagined that as Man he should be in an equality with the Saints but have a superiority over them and to be the Head of that Triumphant Church unto all Eternity without doing any office that belongs unto that Honour is inconsistent with the dignity and wisdome of the Sonne of God If any should now require an account of the particulars wherein Christ will hereafter do the office and exercise the authority of a head over the Church Triumphant in Heaven I must tell them They are to stay for an answer to their too curious question till in Heaven we come to see him as he is for then and not before shall we know even as we are known 1 Cor. 13.12 1 Cor. 13.12 Nevertheless in the generall this we know for the present Jesus Christ shall then be the head of his Church alone without any Power subordinate unto him as now For saith the Apostle All Rule and all Authority and Power both Celestial and Terrestrial shall then be taken away 1 Cor. 15.24 No humane Ordinance or Government of whatsoever Creation it be shall there be of any use no nor the Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though now as some conceive they have divers offices assign'd unto them according to the diversity of their names and titles for the discharge of their Ministery to which they are appointed of God 1 Pet 2.13 for those who shall be heirs of Salvation Hebr. 1.14 yet when all the heirs are settled in their Inheritance they shall then be devested of all their Rule Authority and Power Bruno their very Titles of distinction utterly cancelled and disannulled for to the Angels shall not be put in subjection the world to come and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day Furthermore As a Head he will preserve and uphold all the members of his mysticall Body in their glorious Being for as all things visible and invisible both in Heaven and in Earth were made by him and for him so by him must they consist Col. 1.16.17 Col. 1.16.17 Again As a Head he will keep them in a perfect unity together that they may be one according to the Divine Patterne before them As the Father is in him and he in the Father Joh. 17.21 Joh. 17.21 Lastly As a Head he will shew unto them those glorious Mysteries which for the present are beyond their reach and capacity so as they shall be plain and obvious unto them To which particular Saint Augustine whose judgment in the Interpretation of holy Scripture is worthy of all acceptation beareth his witness whom I find giving the sense of our Saviours words in his Prayer to his Father Joh. 17.26 in this manner Clarificavi illis nomen tuum c. I have Declared unto them thy name that is saith he In this World so far as they are able to receive it And I will Declare it that is saith he In the world to come more perfectly Yea give me leave to add one Meditation more touching this weighty matter which I confess I received long since from a Divine of eminent Note in his writing unto me In Glory saith he The Relation of Head and members between Christ and us shall not cease but shall be rather perfected by the enjoyment of that for which God did appoint it which is the shedding abroad of his love upon those that are made conformable to the Image of his Son Rom. 8.29 For the end and aime which God hath in the decree of Election is to make those whom he did fore-know and predestinate to be conformable to the Image of his Son that he might be the first-born among many Brethren Now when God shall have accomplished this aime and we shall be fully conformable to the Image of his Son then shall we be susceptible of the Love wherewith he loveth his Son as he is Man for the love wherewith he loveth him as God none can partake of but he alone and when by this conformity to his Image we shall be susceptible of this Love then the brother-hood between Christ and us shall not cease or be made void nor shall then his Prerogative of being the first-born among many Brethren be taken from him but it shall rather be most gloriously compleated when not onely the Fathers Love wherewith he loveth the first-born shall be extended to all those that are fully conformable unto his Image but also the Love of the first-born himself shall have its full and glorious Influence upon his younger Brethren By all which it is clear Jesus Christ will be over his Church Triumphant in Heaven as he is now over his Church Militant here on Earth Again As he will be then over us so likewise he will be in us In us he is now by Faith but Faith which gives him entertainment in our hearts and Hope which attends upon him there shall vanish with this Life and expire in their Service as being of no use in Heaven for Faith is of things not seen and therefore ceaseth when vision cometh Hope also if it be seen is not Hope onely Love remaineth to be the constant Bond of an eternal Union betwixt Christ and us and by love it is that he will take Possession of our hearts
what it is for the Son to deliver up the Kingdom to the Father It is even that which the Apostle saith Phil. 2.10 then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him that God may be all in all whence it followeth that this subjection is the same with the delivery up of the Kingdom An interpretation therefore here seems to be necessary that the Son may be acknowledged to be subject to the Father and yet nevertheless that he may be said to have an everlasting Kingdom which may be called the Kingdom of the Son because then at the Name of Jesus every knee must bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the Earth When all things do confess the Lord Jesus and are made subject unto him whether it be by constraint or by consent then shall the mystery of one God be made manifest unto all and all praise shall redound unto the Father of whom are all things that so when preaching that is the creatures service in proclaiming the Name of God shall cease the one onely God may be known in the mystery of the Trinity For when all rule and all authority and power shall bow the knee to Christ then shall the Son manifest himself that it is not he of whom are all things but that he is his Son and that in him he himself is to be seen according to his own words Joh. 14.10 Joh. 14.10 This then is the subjection and the yeilding up of the Kingdome Christ subjecteth himself unto the Father proclaiming the Father to be he of whom are all things confessing also that he himself is of him For so great Majesty and Glory will appear in the comming of the Son that all the powers of Heaven and company of Angels may possibly look upon him as God alone But our Saviour when he shall say I am not he that is the Father but his Son he delivers up the Kingdome to the Father and yet continueth to be King still Herein then I say is manifested both his subjection and his delivery up of the Kingdome because when he professeth that he himself is of the Father he confesseth that whatsoever he hath is of the Father ascribing unto him the glory of being the complement of all things Besides this the same Saint Austin adds yet another sense concerning Christs delivery up of the Kingdome to the Father interpreting the said Kingdome for the people of the Kingdome that is his charge of the Elect Saints which he received of the Father not suffering one of them to be lost Ad Oro. Cont. Priscillia cap. 7. tom 6. Cum tradiderit Regnum Deo Patri id est cum perduxerit sanctos suos ad contemplationem Patris c. He shall deliver up the Kingdome to the Father that is when he hath brought all his Saints to behold the Glory of the Father and his own Glory which he had with the Father before the World was Now whether we understand the Apostle in this sense or that other before either of which we may safely adhere unto and unto one or both of them without question must the words of the Apostle be reduced we may conclude infallibly that Christs delivery up of the Kingdome to the Father shall not deprive him of that power and authority which he had before over his Church but that he shall continue to be King thereof unto all eternity August eodem loco Quod autem dicit Apostolus deinde finis cum tradiderit Regnum Deo Patri ibi finem non consumentem sed perficientem significat And whereas the Apostle saith then cometh the end when Christ shall deliver up the Kingdome c. That is not to be understood of the end bringing with it destruction and dissolution but rather that which bringeth perfection wherein shall be a clearer demonstration of Christs Power and Wisdome in the governing of his Church then is possible now to be discerned For as Luther upon these very words of the Apostle saith well Est idem hic in Terris regnum quod postea in Coelis futurum erit nisi quod jam contectum oculis nostris non pateat It is the same Kingdome here upon Earth which shall be hereafter in Heaven but that we are not able now abiding in this mortal and sinful estate to perceive it being hidden from our eyes I could multiply Authours both Ancient and Modern who do all agree in this that when Christ delivers up the Kingdome to the Father he then onely layeth down his Mediatorial Office not continuing any longer the Fathers Deputy in the governing of his Church but that his Kingdome notwithstanding shall everlastingly be the Same The same in the manifestation of his Wisdome Power Love Goodness towards his redeemed people to all eternity Onely how and wherein he will exercise the Authority of a Head over his Church otherwise then is before related there is none that is wise unto sobriety that will speak of it or be inquisitive after it Such knowledge is too wonderful for us it is high we cannot attain unto it Now therefore let all the ends of the Earth that is Application all the Inhabitants of the World farre and near Look unto Jesus and be saved Consider him in his Divine Nature Es 45.22 as he is begotten of the Father from eternity to eternity consider him also in the several works of creation continual preservation and future restauration of all things look unto him in his relation to his Church what he hath been is and eternally will be without any variableness or shadow of turning you 'll finde him in all that which the Apostle here proclaims him to be the same yesterday to day and for ever Look unto him then I say that you may more and more long after his apperance love him and delight in him Look unto him that you may follow his example an example equivalent with all Rules of righteousness in those things which he did and commanded though not altogether in those things which he did but commanded not What better object can you have to fix all the thoughts of your hearts upon He is the pattern set for your imitation according to the depth of Divine Wisdome He is the gift of God to the World 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 4.10 a greater gift then which though God be great in power and infinite in love he hath not to give Eph. 1.6 He is the beloved in whom the Father is well pleased deliciae Dei humani generis the darling of the Almighty Hag. 2.7 Ps 45.2 Cant. 5.10 and the desire of all Nations fairer then the children of men white and ruddy the chiefest of ten thousand white in his Divine Nature according to the sense of some late Expositours which was the brightness of his Fathers substance and red in his humanity being of the same substance with
for the whole number But because there are some amongst us who with much pertinacy do affirm that the Jews shall never be a people again so long as the World endures which assertion doth thwart the Doctrine of Christs Immutability which we have here maintained hear therefore what the spirit speaketh of it to the Churches out of the New Testament For even therein also have we a full and clear testimony from the mouth of Jesus Christ himself and his Apostles to assure us of this truth against all Cavils whatsoever First Luk 21.23 24. Then see what the Lord saith Luk. 21.23 24. There shall be great distress in the Land and wrath upon this people and they shall fall by the edge of the sword and shall be led away Captive into all Nations and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled See here how in wrath the Lord remembreth mercy saith venerable Bede upon the place Quia non in perpetuum donec tempora Nationum impleantur the judgement here written is not to be perpetuated till time be no more but onely to continue till the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled Concerning which times though it be true that the Father hath reserved them to himself as a secret not fit to be imparted to the World in which regard it hath been and will be too much boldness to prescribe the very instant of their expiration yet we may safely say of them the words of our Saviour here importing no less that whensoever they do expire Jerusalem shall be delivered from her bondage and consequently that light and gladness joy and honour shall come upon the Jewish Nation Let us then for this end make a little enquiry into them and consider what is meant by these times of the Gentiles Sundry constructions are given of them by Interpreters nevertheless I doubt not but that which hath a tendency to our present purpose we shall finde to be most genuine Two Expositions I have met with which though the Authours thereof be of great note in the Church are not in my poor judgement to be allowed the one reaching beyond the sense of the Holy Ghost the other coming short of it as it shall here evidently appear First That which goeth too far makes the filling up of the times of the Gentiles to be contemporary with the final Consummation of all things and so consequently holdeth that neither the Jews nor Jerusalem shall ever be restored again Thus the Lutheran Expositors generally understand it But against this it may be Objected First We no where finde in Scripture that the fulfilling of the times of the Gentiles is rendred in such a sense viz. For the end of the World and in such cases the Holy Scripture hath been still wont the wisdom of God so ordering it to explain it self by some reiterations and paralel places to the end that the Church might in a form of sound words fully know the minde of the spirit Secondly It is inconsistent with the Prophecies that went before concerning the Gentiles that in the time of the Gospel they should generally submit unto the Church of the Jews as we have before undeniably proved when Jerusalem shall be again inhabited and made a praise in the earth Thirdly it is plain that our Saviour in this 21 of Saint Luke puts a difference between the desolation of Judea Vide Albertum magnum super locum and the dissolution of the world making the former a portentous omen and sad prefiguration of the latter As therefore the dissolution of the world shall be seconded with an eternity of rest to all Believers so that the type may sute the Anti-type shall the desolation of Judea be also attended with a sweet peace and happy deliverance to Gods antient people the inhabitants of that Land even in this World before the dissolution thereof All which considered this cannot be the meaning of our Saviour in this place The other exposition which I mentioned that cometh too short is given by a late learned and industrious writer amongst us Doctour Hammond by name who affirmeth that the times of the Gentiles here fore-told by our Saviour are already past having had their full end at that last and notable destruction both of the City Jerusalem and the people which was brought upon them by Aelius Adrianus sixty five years after the burning of the Temple by the Romans under the conduct of Titus the Son of Vespasianus All which time of the Romans possessing the City he makes the full extent of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 untill and will have it reach no farther For then saith he Adrian rebuilt a part of the City and called it by his own name Aelia inhabiting it with Gentiles whereupon it followed that as all the Jews remaining such in opposition to the Christians were utterly banisht the City c. So the believing Christian Jews returned thither again from their dispersions and inhabited it again and joyned and made one Congregation one Church with the Gentiles which had there by that time received the faith also and till then continued a distinct Church from the Jews Thus he But against this novel conceit for so it may Salvo honore Docti defuncti Authoris well be called which as I said cometh short of the sense of our Saviour in the fore-cited place some just exceptions offer themselves to our consideration First If we examine the story upon which the said Authour groundeth his assertion we shall finde that the truth of this Prophecy concerning the treading down of Jerusalem by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles were fulfilled was so far from receiving its final accomplishment at that remarkable change under Adrian that it might well be thought it did then more then ever before begin most eminently to appear The story of which times related both by Ethnick and Christian Authours in short is this The Emperour Adrian being willing it seems to vex the Jews caused an Idolatrous Temple to be erected in Jerusalem dedicating it to Jupiter and commanding withall a certain number of Romans and other Foreiners devoted to that Idol to dwell in the City that they might resort unto his Temple whereat the Jews who till then had a toleration both for the exercise of their Religion and their abode in that Countrey being thereby much provoked and because as some report the Emperour had issued out an Edict against their Circumcision They brake out into open Rebellion whereunto they were stirred up by a Seditious person who called himself by the name of Barchochebas that is the Son of a Star pretending thereby and making the Jews believe that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent to be as a light from Heaven unto them according to the Prophecy of Balaam and that he would deliver them out of their present bondage To him they are easily perswaded to yeild their Consent being deluded by
to the people of that Nation as Saint James also did yet withall he is very cautious herein to put them in minde of their duty to their own peculiar Guides that had the rule over them which we see he doth once and again in this 13 Chapter vers 7.17.24 But the truth is as it is said these reasons are but conjectural that which is to satisfie us in this point is this even so it seemed good to the Holy Ghost And thus I have given a large and clear resolution of this doubtful matter which indeed was but fit to be done because I do here oftentimes speak of the said Apostle as the sure and certain Authour of that Epistle Secondly Whereas there are sundry branches of this Treatise which do seem to have no affinity with the sense of the Apostle in the Text and consequently not to be connatural with the main Doctrine that is here insisted upon I answer First As Jesus Christ himself is according to the Apostles word All and in All Col. 3.11 That sea of living waters by whom all springs and rivulets of divine truth have their rise and original and unto which they must return again so is this Text as it is here interpreted not onely comprehensive of the whole mystery of Christ but also of the whole duty of man towards him And therefore that which is here written in order thereunto should not be accounted as an impertinent digression Secondly it is no new thing to finde corollaries and collateral intersertions superadded in a way of subserviency to the principal subject handled in Tractates either of a Theological or meer Humane Alloy For it is with Books as one very well makes the resemblance as it is with Trees these have some Masters and chief Branches in which the main Sap of the Root is carried but they have also some under-spriggs and water-boughs which by the vegetation of the principal Shootes do prosper the better and are made to serve both for ornament and fecundity to the whole Body Those have commonly some eminent subject into which their whole strength and stream runs but they have likewise sundry Parerga of less consequence annexed thereto which though abstractedly considered may seem to be at a wide distance yet being Methodically linked together have a coalescency imparting each to other both illustration and confirmation So is it here sundry resultancies and inferences do occasionally spring up in this Book as there do in all our Sermons that we undertake when the bloud and juyce of it runs chiefly into the Apostles sense of the Text viz. the Doctrine of the Eternity and Immutability of the Lord Jesus Christ which giveth life unto all the rest So that what the Evangelist Saint John spake of his Gospel which he wrote the same may I say of all that is contained in this Book These things are written that you might believe that Jesus is the Christ and that believing you might have life through his name But I hear what is further objected as that I multiply Quotations borrow the help of sundry Authours and do but actum agere bring the same crambe of words repeating what hath sufficiently been imparted to the World by others who have at large and with much perspicuity and serenity of spiritual Wisdome wri●ten of this subject Now though I have hinted at this before yet I conceive a necessity is laid upon me to rejoyn unto this Charge a full and clear Vindication First then this I say I know not of any that hath written of this subject so largely before me But this I know that both for the matter and manner of handling it as it is grounded upon that foundation which is precedaneous unto it I am alone without any competitours or pretenders whatsoever Secondly I do yield that I have in the carrying on of this Work consulted with Writers both Ancient and Modern and have thereupon not without good cause been the bolder to offer my conceptions to publick view though possibly in some places they may not be well resented finding them confirmed by those that have been worthily reputed burning and shining Lights of the Church in their several Generations who have born the burden and heat of the day in the Lords Vineyard and upon whose Labours we are now happily entred Yea more I have not onely consulted them but frequently made use of their Testimony rendring it in their own words sometimes to put by Imputations of Collusion otherwhiles for the Conviction of Adversaries alwayes to give full satisfaction to those who shall diligently apply themselves to a religious perusal hereof Nor am I at all ashamed to acknowledge what I have done in this kinde nor need I fear to be taxed with any Plagiary superinducements of other mens Labours though indeed as I have gone thorough my Neighbours Fields the Owners whereof I do for the most part signifie by name I have here and there plucked some Eares of Corn and fitted them for my purpose which by a natural propriety is challenged of all as a common right yet I have no where put in my Sickle and so can plead a justification in that particular Howbeit this I may without arrogancy make my Plea viz. My borrowing whatsoever it hath been is fully counter-ballanced with my lending again which though it be to be reckoned but as a poor Mite cast into the Lords Treasury yet it is secundum mensuram donationis Christi ac moderationem Spiritus dividentis singulis prout vult and may through Gods blessing be to the furtherance of the Gospel especially in regard of those interpretations of Scripture which I have here given to which no Expositors of Holy Writ nor any Authours whatsoever could lay any claim nor any of their Assertours can at this day for them All which I do humbly commend to the Churches Examination a List whereof I conceive fit here to present unto you though the Table at the latter end of the Book will give directions by Asterisks to the places where they are to be found Exodus 33.18 I beseech thee shew me thy Glory Exodus 33.19 And he said I will make all my goodness c. Exod 34.6 And the Lord passed by before him and proclaimed the Lord the Lord God c. Deut. 32.7 Remember the dayes of old consider the years c. Deut. 32.8 When the most high divided to the Nations c. Deut. 32.12 The Lord alone did lead him c. Deut. 33.5 And he was King in Jeshurun c. Psalm 2.7 I will declare the Decree c. Psalm 8.3 When I consider thy Heavens c. Psal 74.12 For God is my King of old c. Daniel 9.24 Seventy Weekes are determined c. Amos 5.18 Woe unto you that desire the day of the Lord c. Amos 5.19 As if a man did flee from a Lyon c. John 1.10 He was in the World and the World was made c. John 1.11 He came unto
time of the Old Testament with all the legal Ordinances attending upon it is a day that is set and expired being yesterday and therefore not to be brought into our account neither are we to walk in the light of it p. 118. Proved by sundry instances ibid. Whereupon followeth The conviction of those who in this day will grope after the obscure light of yesterday these are First the Jews p. 121. Secondly they that seek to be justified by the works of the law p. 126. Thirdly the Papists p. 128. Fourthly they that now-a-days pretend to Oracles and wait for Miracles p. 129. Where is to be seen What we are to judge of the pretended Visions and Revelations of these times ibid. And what Miracles are now to be regarded in the time of the Gospel p. 132. A second Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ was the Saviour of his Church in the time of the Old Testament even as n●w in the time of the New p. 134. Proved ibid. A Question resolved How Christ could be a Saviour before he was in a capacity to suffer death by taking our nature upon him for the expiation of sin p. 135. Jesus Christ was a Prophet from the beginning p. 136. Jesus Christ was a King from the beginning p. 138. Jesus Christ was a Priest from the beginning p. 149. A difference observed in respect of the dispensation and manifestation of Christ to the Fathers and us p. 155. Examples of sundry of the Fathers believing in Christ Adam Abraham Job Daniel c. p. 156. Moses's intercourse with Jesus Christ upon the Mount p. 159. Whereupon followeth 1. An exhortation to the Jews to look unto Jesus p. 164. 2. A warning to take heed of despising the ages before us p 166. 3. Our religion proved to be the onely true Religion p. 169. 4. The Limbus Patrum of the Church of Rome proved to be an absurd forgery p. 170. 5. To hold that the object of the faith of the Patriarchs of old was not Jesus Christ is a gross errour p. 175. 6. And as gross is it to maintain that we are not now justified by the Object but by the Act of Faith p. 176. Of the second course or computation of time viz. To day Wherein first this Doctrine is propounded viz. The time of the Gospel is a time of light p. 180. It is a true light p. 181. It is a great light ibid. It is a marvellous light ibid. It is an invincible light p. 182. Whereupon follow The duties of those who are the children of this day 1. To rejoyce and be glad in it p. 184. An Objection But this day is a day of trouble of rebuke and blasphemy p. 186. Answered ibid. 2. To let the light of this day shine in upon their souls p. 188. A Question put viz. What is this light p. 189. Answered 1. It is the light of Life ibid. 2. It is the light of the glorious Gospel of Jesus Christ p. 190. 3. It is the light of the knowledge of the glory of God ibid. 3. To walk in this light p. 191. A two-fold walk 1. Walk in the Commandments of the Lord ibid. Motives hereunto 1. It is the great design of Almighty God this day to save his people from their sins p. 192. 2. We are to walk worthy of our calling p. 194. 3. Consider the length of our way p. 195. 4. This day will have an end p. 196. 2. Walk in the Ordinances of the Lord p. 199. Let then the world be awakened that lyeth asleep in the darkness of sin and ignorance p. 202. Let the Ignorant be roused p. 202. Let the profance be alarum'd p. 203. A Question put viz. How cometh it to passe that wo and misery falls so inevitably upon profane people this day p. 207. Answered 1. The sin of such persons is found out by the light of this day ibid. 2. Their sin doth finde out them p. 208. Application p. 209. Another Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ is the Same to his Church now in the time of the Gospel which he was before under the Law p. 212. Proved by Scripture p. 213. An Objection But we see there is a change to day from what was yesterday in the form of Divine worship How then can Jesus Christ be the Same p. 215. Answered ibid. Inferences thereupon First the Imputations of Novelty upon those Churches which adhere to this foundation charged on them by the Church of Rome cannot be just p. 217. The said Imputations justly retoried upon the Romish Church ibid. Secondly an Exhortation to let the same minde be in us which was in Christ Jesus that is to be the Same in things pertaining to God p. 220. An Application hereof to us of this nation with a free and plain discovery of our late inconstancy p. 222. An Objection Shall we then be the Same which we have been in profaneness and superstition p. 227. Answer God forbid ibid. 1. The bad Old Cause did not preserve us from either p. 228. 2. The League and Covenant though contrived to strengthen the said Cause yet as it was illegal in it self so was it treacherously carried on p. 229. It is objected But is there not a return to Superstition when the Lyturgie Ceremonies and Episcopacy are restored p. 233. It is answered ibid. Where 1. The Lyturgie and Ceremonies are vindicated p. 234. Particularly 1. Our bowing at the name of Jesus p. 235. 2. Our bowing at our entrance into and departure from the Congregation p. 236. 3. Our Lyturgie and Ceremonies are acknowledged to be a will-worship which is plainly manifested to be in some respects lawful p. 238. But that they are extracted from Romish Missals is a slanderous untruth p. 242. 2. Episcopacy is clearly proved by the Scripture to be of Divine Right Sensu Primario p. 248. An Exhortation to the Jews p. 262. Matter of rejoycing to the Gentiles p. 268. An Application hereof to our own Nation p. 270. A serious Expostulation with Anabaptists ibid. Of the third course or computation of Time viz. For ever p. 273. A Doctrine propounded In the midst of the various changes and chances that may come upon the Church to the end of the world Jesus Christ will be unto it still the Same Ibid. Proved by Scripture p 274. Inferences from hence 1. Assurance may be had of the Churches perpetuity p. 275. 2. A remedy to cure the sad distempers of our Church about Order and Church-Government p. 276. 3. An Exhortation and Christian Advice given to those who pretend they cannot for conscience sake submit to Church-Government by Bishops p. 277. 4. Comfort to all who live goldy in Christ Jesus both in respect of themselves and their posterity p. 281. Another Doctrine propounded viz. Jesus Christ will be the Same unto his Church in her Triumphant and Glorious estate in heaven unto all Eternity p. 282. Wherein first The full sense is given of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 283. Secondly how
Jesus Ch●ist w●ll be the Same in the world to come is in part declared with a Caution premised p. 284. 1. He will continue to be the Same for ever in the Hypostatical union of his two Natures Divine and Humane p. 285. 2. He will continue to be the Same for ever in his mystical Vnion with his Church p. 286. Where is to be seen First How Christ will be over his Church then as a Head 1. As a Head alone without any subordinate power Celestial or Terrestrial ibid. 2. As a Head he will preserve and uphold the members of his mystical Body in their glorious Being p. 287. 3. As a Head he will keep the members of his said mystical Body in a perfect Vnion ibid. 4. As a Head he will shew unto them those glorious mysteries which in this life are beyond their reach and capacity ibid. Secondly Jesus Christ will then be in his people by love p. 288. The Doctrine proved by Scripture p. 290. And by the Testimony of Divines Ancient and Modern ibid. An Objection taken out of the Apostles words 1 Cor. 15.24.28 concerning Christs delivery up of the Kingdome to God even the Father c. Answered at large p. 291. An Exhortation to look unto Jesus p. 295. In the Appendix these following Scriptures proving the certainty of the Calling and Conversion of the JEWS are Quoted and Expounded DEut. 4 30 31. p. 300. Esaiah 11.11 12. p. 301. Esaiah 43.5 6. p. 302. Jeremiah 3.18.23.4 p. 303. Jer. 30.3.31.1.4 ibid. Ezekiel 37.21 22. ibid. Daniel 9.24 p. 306. Hosea 1.10 p. 316. Hosea 3.4 5. p. 318. Luke 21.23 24. p. 319. Acts 1.6 7. p. 324. Rom. 11. p. 328. An Objection answered viz. The Calling of the Jews shall not be till the very instant of the Consummation of all things p. 342. Another Objection answered viz. Their Pertinacy in despising the Gospel makes them the Object of Gods perfect hatred p. 344. Another Objection answered viz. They are enemies unto God not onely in a Passive sense but in an Active also p. 3●● Another Objection answered viz. The Jews are now so embodyed with other Nations that it is impossible they should ever any more become a Nation distinct from the Gentiles p. 350. Another Objection answered viz. To maintain this Doctrine of the Jews Restauration is to put the world into a carelesse security concerning the end p. ibid. A word of Exhortation to all the Churches of the Gentiles to pray earnestly unto God for the conversion of the Jews and to eschew those sins among our selves which may probably be a hinderance to the bringing on of so glorious a work p. 352. AN ASCENT TO THE HOLY MOUNT To see JESUS CHRIST in his Glory OR A PERSPECTIVE to help the Weak Sight to behold the Eternity and Immutability of the Lord Jesus Christ Taken out of the words of S. Paul Hebr. 13.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesus Christ the same Yesterday to Day and for ever Adsis O JESV JESVS CHRIST whom we still preach unto you and in whom you do believe else our preaching is vain and your faith is also vain The Lord Jesus Christ I say as he is the Object of your Expectation in this Service we are now about So is he you see by my Text the subject of my intended Business at this time When my Discourse therefore shall answer your expectation you will I hope afford your diligent attention thereunto The words at first sight seem to be the sudden efflux of the Spirit added here in the close as the result of that which had been said before and as the Total Sum of the Epistle shutting up the whole as in a Parenthesis implying that all that was written amounted unto this viz Jesus Christ the same yesterday to day and for-ever Or else they are inserted as a reviving Cordial to the poor Hebrews who might seeing the Gentiles were received into Covenant with God fear themselves to be quite cast off from Grace because their Nation had so generally with much pertinacy refused that great Salvation which was brought unto them Upon which account the Apostle inferreth this short and sweet Epiphonema to comfort them with now at parting Jesus Christ is the sams yesterday to day and for ever As much as to say Jesus Christ is the same to you as he was from the beginning who as he was at first sent to seek and to save the lost sheep of the house of Israel so now also notwithstanding former unkindnesses and though his grace is not to be confin'd as it hath been but must extend to all Nations yet he abideth still a Saviour unto you if you abide in the faith and he will be so likewise to the end of the world Thus may this Verse seem to carry this sense within its own Verge not having any intercourse with the Contexture bordering upon it But it is generally conceived by Expositours that these words are coincident with those immediately before-going where an Exhortation is given to the Hebrews to be mindful of their Guides who had taught them the way of God truly not according to the Mosaical but Evangelical Pattern and to imitate them in the holiness of their lives and in their constancy to the faith which they sealed with their death The words are these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Remember them which have the rule over you or are your Guides who have spoken unto you the word of God whose faith follow considering the end of their conversation The force of example we all know is very great to induce likeness of Manners and the greater the example is the greater power it hath to draw to similitude It was wont to be said Facile transitur ad plures We are easily moved to go after a Multitude but it may well be added Facile transitur ad majores It is no hard matter to make us imitate great Authorities be the patterns good or bad for the vices of Rulers are commonly the rule of Vices and the vertues of Leaders will also lead unto Vertue Hereupon it is that the Apostle proposeth unto the Hebrews the example of their Leaders to the end that they might not as he saith V 9. be carried about with divers and strange Doctrines where they had their instruction there also they might receive establishment by their imitation in whose example Quiddam memorabile designat Apostolus saith Calvin the Apostle noteth some memorable matter worthy of their saddest thoughts implying thus much that their Teachers had in defence of that Word which they had spoken unto them gone through much affliction not loving their lives unto death for that was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the issue and Exit of their Conversation which the Hebrews should consider that when they saw how stedfast and invincible their Leaders were in the faith their example might the better move them And now to set an edge upon this Exhortation the Apostle sheweth in the words of my
Text that the ground and foundation of their faith to which they did so constantly adhere was no novelty nor yet such as did fail them or expire with them but being the rock of Ages was co-equal with the Church from the beginning and would be also the only sure foundation for all the faithful to the end of the World and that is Jesus Christ the same yesterday to day and for ever Understand it thus It is as if the Apostle should have said They well knew whom they believed and you may also know him too if you will do as they did for Jesus Christ who is the unchangeable God blessed for ever as they made him their strength and their support so he never failed them Be you therefore followers of them looking unto Jesus who as he led them into all truth and preserved them in it so will he likewise do the same unto you and to all others that shall come after you who believe in his Name for he is the same Yesterday to day and for ever We may now glean up by the way some Doctrinal conclusions which shall be but named that so we may come without any further protraction to taste of the sweetness that springeth abundantly from the Fountain of the Text. 1. We learn hereby That people ought to be followers of their Teachers as they follow Christ and no otherwise 2. The way to abide stedfast in the faith is to stick to the Foundation that is Jesus Christ who is still the same 3. Whosoever they be that make a sincere profession of the Gospel of Jesus Christ shall never be ashamed of it for Christ will constantly without any change own and maintain that faith which hath once and but once been delivered by him to his Saints being first and last like himself This was Preached Decem. 26. These things premised let us now come to the Text whereof if I should undertake to speak any thing in order to this time of Solemnity which yesterday to day and some daies following is held up and continued among us as if it had reference unto it I should then indeed declare myself to be but of yesterday and to know nothing at least to know nothing of my Text as I ought to know But the words in their genuine sense will not lead us unto any such matter It is Insignis locus as Mr. Calvin calls it a most excellent and remarkable Scripture speaking out the Lord Jesus Christ in his due Altitude making the World and every creature in all Ages subject unto him It is the Argument of both the Testaments and to use the words applied by a Religious and Reverend Bishop of our times to another Scripture like unto this Dr. John King Bishop of London It is the staff and supportation of Heaven and Earth they would both sink and all their joynts be severed were it not that Jesus Christ were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same yesterday to day and for ever And what shall I more say as the Apostle said Hebr. 11. When he had spoken much and there was much more behind but that time failed him Rather what should I not say For our Theatre at this time is not only within the narrow bounds of the World but extends beyond it and our Meditations in handling of this Subject are to reach from Eternity to Eternity Let us then duly poize it and with the good blessing of God make use of it for our Edification A three-fold interpretation may be given First Jesus Christ may be said to be The same yesterday to day and for ever in respect of his Divine Nature Secondly This may be applied unto him with a reference to the whole Creation Thirdly It may so likewise with a more especial respect unto his Church and People And here because it may seem strange that I should give so many several interpretations of this Text Give me leave to premise an Apology for my understanding herein I would not be too vehement in forcing a Text to carry a sense which is not directly or by warrantable deduction to be found within the compass thereof And it is a great wrong that is done unto Divine Truths when Scriptures are produced for their foundation that are not Homogenial with them As for this three-fold interpretation which I have here given of this Text though the last be commonly accounted the most proper as being consonant to the scope of the Apostle yet the other two are not to be rejected as inconsistent with the sense of the Holy Ghost therein Nay is there not a greater latitude then ordinary to be allowed unto it when it is propounded as a Divine Theorem cutting asunder the thread as it were of the former Discourse that the eyes and thoughts of all men that read it may in a singular manner be fixed upon it as on a general Sentence or Proposition comprehensive of more then might alonely have reference to the preceding Verse Surely there is somewhat extraordinary to be found in it Therefore as I have already prescribed my Method so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I shall now prosecute it The first Interpretation of the Text. THe first sense then or interpretation that is given of the Text is this Jesus Christ is the same yesterday to day and for ever in respect of his Divine Nature that is as he is God equal with the Father begotten of him from eternity to eternity And herein I am not alone but I find the Text so rendred both by Modern and Ancient Expositours Francis Junius writeth of it to the same purpose Hoc quarto ut Logicis l●quamur medo proprium Deitatis est This is a most transcendent property of the Godhead to be the same yesterday to day and for ever And from this very Text saith the same Authour do the Primitive Fathers in the purest times prove Jesus Christ to be the true and eternal God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consubstantial and coessential with the Father and the Holy Ghost some instances of whom shall be given in the prosecution of this point Having then the concurrency of others that are sound and Orthodox whose Works praise them in the gates Let us consider how this Text may represent this great Mystery unto us in the several parts of it It is a most certain truth that the Divine Generation is that which gives unto the Son of God his personal Being which Generation is acknowledged by all that are sound in the faith to be from all eternity This is that which in the Text if it referreth at all to the eternal personality of Jesus Christ as it undoubtedly doth and will be here made to appear must be understood by Yesterday Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The same or The only He yesterday that is begotten of the Father from all eternity As the word Hodie to Day Psal 2.7 Psal 2.7 is by Expositours truly rendred not only for the Day
been willing to insert to give full satisfaction to those that are Scepticks in this point and for the confirmation of their faith that are sound and orthodox Object 2 Secondly They object that which the Angel speaks to the Virgin Mary Luke 1.35 The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Highest shall over-shadow thee therefore that Holy Thing that shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God Therefore also say they he was not the Son of God before his Incarnation Unto this also we may answer sundry waies Answ First The inference which the Angel produceth from his premises was to let the blessed Virgin see that the fruit of her Womb should be according to the Prophecy that went of him not of an ordinary Extraction because the Holy Ghost not a mortal man was to be the efficient thereof therefore that Holy Thing that should be born of her should be the Son of God and not of any man yet since the Nature that was produced Non Gene r●t one ●ed 〈◊〉 benedictione was not after the similitude of the Nature and Essence of the Holy Ghost for Christ was not conceived of the substance but through the power of the Spirit we may conclude infallibly that Christ had not this denomination of the Son of Gost first given him at the time of his Incarnation Secondly Qui pascun ter ex Aqua sp sancto non ided aquae filios eos recte quispiam dixcrit Pet. Lom If it were so the Holy Ghost should by a proper right be called the Father of Christ which he never is in Scripture neither indeed did ever any that truly professed the Christian Faith acknowledge him in any respect to be for he is not the principle of the subsistence of the second person in the Trinity and therefore not the cause of the Divine eternal Sonship neither was there a new person conceived at his unconceivable over-shadowing of the Virgin and therefore he could not be the Father of Christ in respect of any inferiour filiation so that we must seek out some other sense of the Angels words then that which these Dreamers have foolishly imagined Thirdly The words therefore of the Angel may well be conceived to have reference to the Prophecy of Isaiah unto which he seems to have respect in the 31. Verse of this first of S. Luke the words of the Prophet are these Es 7.14 Mat. 1.23 Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bare a Son and shall call his name Immanuel which Immanual is being interpreted God with us Implying he shall be called both the Son of God and the Son of man and though the Angel makes mention only of the first of these Denominations V. 35. yet it is not to be taken exclusively of the other for he said before V. 31. Thou shalt call his name Jesus whereby he meaneth that he should be called also the Son of man In a word the Particle Therefore Luke 1.35 wherein the stress of this Objection lieth is not to be referred to the conception of Christ by the Holy Ghost as the cause of his Sonship but to the Prophecy that went before both of the Mother and the Son wherein they were both concern'd viz. That that should be fulfilled Fourthly Whereas it is said He shall be called the Son of God it is to be understood after the manner of the Hebrews Pro vere manifestabitur He shall be truly manifested and declared to be the Son of God as where it is said He shall be called Immanuel it is not meant He shall be called by that name but declared to be such as that name imports and acknowledged to be so among his people so by these words He shall be called the Son of God is meant he should be acknowledged to be the Son of God when he was born into the World not implying a Beginning of what he was not but that then he should begin to be manifested and acknowledged what he was Or else lastly He which was ever the Son of God in respect of his Godhead should now be called the Son of God existing in the Manhood or God manifested in the flesh as the Apostle phraseth it 1 Tim. 3.16 1 Tim. 3.16 Object 3 Thirdly They harp much upon that place of the Apostle Col. 1.15 where Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The first born or first begotten of every creature Whence they will infer that he must needs be a Creature for as the first begotten say they amongst brethren is to be reckoned one of their number and of the same nature with them so the first begotten of every creature must also be connatural with the creatures and therefore cannot be begotten from Eternity but is a creature having a temporal beginning of existency even as they Thus do these Christomacho fighters against Christ shew their teeth though they cannot bite and shoot out their bolt wherewith they let fly nothing but their own folly But let them if they will Marcion enjoy their priviledge to be of his brotherhood who deservedly was called Primogenitus Diaboli the first begotten of the Devil In the mean time that their folly may be made manifest unto all men as his also was and that all who love the Lord Jesus Christ may have their faith confirmed and their affections enlarged towards him let these following answers be taken into consideration Answ First It would be observed that Christ is not called here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is The first Created as it should indeed be rendred if their sense should pass for currant but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is The first begotten of every creature which signifieth that he was begotten 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Before all the Creation as appeareth by what is presently added by the Apostle V. 16. For by him were all things created which clearly distinguisheth him from those things that are made giving him also the priority before all things V. 17. which must conclude his Generation to be Eternal Secondly If the Apostle must be taken in such a sense as that his words here should make Christ and the Creature Correlatives each to other it will not necessarily follow that he from his original was a creature too And now to make it clear that the Apostles meaning is of a higher aim and strain I shall undertake with all due reverence and sobriety to speak of this great Mystery according as God hath dealt to me the measure of faith and the Lord give us a right understanding therein Saint Paul seems here to be raised up by the Holy Ghost into a spiritual rapture setting forth the Glory of the Lord Jesus Christ as I may say in all its Dimensions the height and length and bredth and depth thereof The height in that he is the uncreated everlasting Image of the invisible God for in that sense it must be taken in regard he
the Philosopher saith most truly the very Soul of the World without which it would be nothing but a deformed Lump no more active to the glory of the Creatour then a dead body is to any vital operations The Angels are called the Heavenly Host which implies that there are Degrees amongst them Luke 2.13 for we know if Order be withdrawn from an Army it hath no good composition And if there be Order among the reprobate Angels much more surely is there among the Elect. Mat. 12.24 26 27. Mat. 25 41 The Creatures likewise in their kind exercise Authority and have their Superiours and Inferiours in every several Species even upon this account Nature teaching every thing to seek its own preservation If we search into the Deep Hab. 1.14 though the Fishes there have no Ruler that is as may be conceived Humane as the Creatures on Earth have we shall find among the Inhabitants there a Leviathan as being the Prince of the rest of whose parts and power and comely proportion implying his excellency and superiority above others we may read at large Job 41. If we survey the Earth we may see the Lion which is the strongest among Beasts and turneth not away for any Pro. 30.30 to have obtained the preheminence majesty sitting enthroned in his very looks and when he roars all the Beasts of the Forrest do tremble Behold the princely Eagle making his Nest on high Ales Jovis for quickness of sight and swiftness of wing and nobleness of nature advanced above other Birds Yea the Cranes Birds of a subordinate feather as the natural Historians writes of them choose out among themselves a Leader whom they use constantly to follow Even among Trees hath Nature put a kind of order some by a sympathy flourishing most when they are contiguous others by an antipathy not prospering at all when they are planted together some not enduring to stand under the shadow of others as being contrary to that order which was at first prescribed unto them Annosae Quercus The ancient Druides c. great Admirers of the Oak and others choosing to thrive best under the shadow of their Superiours Amongst them all the Royal Oak hath most right to the Precedency for largeness strength and long continuance But especially to instance in the Bees who though they may seem to be but almost the shadow rather then the substance of a very small living Creature so Pliny calls them yet may be exemplary to the world both in their order and industry Of them we may say inverting the words spoken of the Locusts Pro. 30.27 They have a King and go forth all of them by bands to whom they yield a most exact obedience It hath been observed by experience that if by his voice he bids them go they immediately swarm if being abroad he dislike the weather or lighting-place they quickly return home again while he cheereth them to the battel they fight when he soundeth a Retreat they retire into their Castle while he is well Rege mortuo maret Plebs non Cibos con vehit non procedit Tristi tantum murmure Glomeratur circa corpas ejus they are cheerfull about their work if he droop and die they will never after enjoy their home but either languish there until they be dead with him or else yielding themselves to the Robbers fly away with them In their work every one hath his office some trimming the Honey some working the Wax divers watching at the Gates to keep out enemies others correcting the Drones some hew others polish and that so artificially that as one saith Daedalus could not with greater art or excellency better dispose the orders measures proportions distinctions joynts and circles In the night they take their rest and when the day is sprung Noctu qui●s in matutinum donec una excitat gemino ant Triplies Bombo ut Buccino aliquo Pliny they have an Officer to call them up with humming twice or thrice as with the sound of a Trumpet All this and much more doth Pliny in his Natural History report of these little Birds We may then go to the Bees consider their waies and be wise in this particular viz. That God hath appointed government and order to be amongst his Creatures for their preservation But I have gone too far with this admirable Creature though indeed such is the excellency and sweetness of it that if a man undertook to go with it a mile I cannot see how he could choose but he must go with it twain A Digression I confess but I hope no transgression unless it be in transcribing a little of what some Authours have written and possibly somewhat out of their own experience and observation To return therefore from whence we have digressed if both Scripture and Nature which I call the written and unwritten Word of God do so clearly dictate unto us that Government and publick Authority is an Ordinance of Divine Appointment men had best beware how they trample upon it least they be found fighters against God Yea we may moreover from hence also infer that that form of Government which is most honourable ought to be best esteemed and chiefly desired by men to be set up over them even upon this account that the Ordinance of God might have its due lustre and that the Divine Wisdom in the establishment thereof might be the more magnified before the Sons of men Meet it is that God should be honoured with the best as the purest Oyl the finest I lower the fattest Cattel were of old the fittest for God So in like manner is the best Magistracy And if the Powers that be are not only ordained of God but are his Representatives also to the people as undoubtedly they are then surely that which is the highest and most honourable is the most proper representation of his glorious Majesty that can be of that nature in the World The Regal Power is without all question the most eminent in the World yea it is so in the account of the Holy Ghost himself for when the Lord in the 16 of Ezekiel had reckoned up many blessings wherewith he had enriched his people which though they may carry in them a spiritual sense yet they do withal plainly express that outward splendour and dignity which they had among other Nations at length he brings in that which he judg'd to be the height of their glory in these words Ezek. 16.13 And thou didst prosper into a Kingdom Implying that beyond this they could not aspire neither had he himself ordained for a people upon earth any higher honour Add unto this that Promise which God made unto Abraham viz. That there should be Kings of his Race Gen. 17.6 which no sober minded man will deny but that it was intended for him as one of the greatest temporal blessings that he could be capable of Briefly to insist upon no more because this Point
our poor Nature And thus have we done with the second part of my second Interpretation of the Text viz. That Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the only He in the great work of Preservation I shall only add a word or two of Apology in the closure hereof I confess this latter Corolary in the Branches of it may for the most part seem to have a more proper reference to the third Interpretation of the Text that followeth as being a Consequent that might arise upon the consideration of Christs Immutability towards his Church Nevertheless I conceive it doth not bear the guilt of an unpardonable Incongruity to insert it in this place However if it be misliked by any they may if they please in their thoughts transfer it and make use of it accordingly CHAP. III. How the Text is Applicable to Christ in the work of Restauration THe third Particular in this second Interpretation of the Text viz. With a reference unto the Creatures is this Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the work of Restauration the same from first to last exercising the same Wisdom Goodness Power as in the Creation and Preservation Rev. 21.5 6. so in the Restauration of the World for he shall restore all things That which the first Adam had and lost by sin shall be restored again by the second Adam Jesus Christ because he is immutably the same not to be diverted from his course either by Sin or Satan The Apostle S. Peter Act. 3. tells us of times of refreshing Act. 3.19.21 and of restitution of all things which shall be at the last yea and not only he but as he saith God hath spoken it by the mouth of all his Prophets since the world began As much as to say God is very constant in the Asseveration of this Doctrine and if God hath spoken it and spoken it so unmovably without Retractation first by his Prophets his holy Prophets yea all his holy Prophets since the World began and again asserted ratified it by his Apostles what ever men do deem of it it will be found to be a Truth built upon a sure Foundation and therefore we are not to be shy in the profession thereof That well known place of the Apostle Rom. 8.21 Rom. 8.21 runneth with a full strength in a tendency hereunto The Creature saith he shall be delivered from the bondage of Corruption into the glorious liberty of the Children of God That is as our Reverend Bishop Reynolds renders the sense Upon the Creatures shall be conferred a Glory which shall be in the proportion of their Natures a sutable Advancement unto them as the glory of the Children shall be unto them And of this Advancement the Apostle in the same place saith The Creature is in hope and expectation which hope and expectation Christ will not suffer to be frustrated he being the beginning of the Creation of God and therefore co nomine in point of his own honour so engaged unto it as not to sleight the fervent desire thereof in any thing that may really tend to its well-being But before we proceed any further it will not be out of our way a little to take into consideration according to our poor measure that obscure and intricate Scripture in its whole latitude that we may see from thence what just cause we have to extoll and magnifie the Lord Jesus Christ in this as well as in any thing else that hath been spoken in order to the Creatures The words are these For the earnest expectation of the Creature waiteth for the manifestation of the Sons of God for the Creature was made subject to vanity Rom. 8.19 not willingly but by reason of him who hath subjected the same in hope 20 because the Creature it self also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption 21 into the glorious liberty of the children of God 22. for we know that the whole Creation groaneth and travelleth in pain together untill now Four things are especially to be taken notice of in these words upon the discussion whereof we may through Grace come to discern somewhat of the Minde of the Spirit of God therein And they are these First The Creature is subject unto Vanity and under the bondage of Corruption Secondly The Creature waiteth and groaneth to be delivered from this Vanity and Bondage Thirdly The time of its Deliverance is when the Sons of God are manifested Fourthly The manner of the Deliverance It shall be into the Glorious Liberty of the Children of God First The Creature is subject to Vanity c. The Creature What 's that Much Controversie there is amongst Writers who this Creature should be But it is not my purpose to enter into the many tortuous and oblique Maeanders of that Debate as to tell you what some conceive of the Angels in order hereunto Nor what others say of men indefinitely Others of the Godly only Others of the Gentile World in opposition to the Jews Dr. Hammond c. For in so doing I should but lead you into doubtful Disputations which the Holy Ghost forbiddeth Rom. 14.1 and perplex the present Doctrine with more difficulty and obscurity Better it is to lay down the sense plainly which I humbly conceive and that is this By the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is here rendred Creature and afterwards V. 22. translated the Creation is to be understood Mundi Machina the whole Frame Engine and Fabrick of the World consisting both of Celestial and Elementary Regions not troubling our selves with any inquiry after those Creatures that have their Being in this Elementary part Whether they shall be interessed in that glorious Deliverance that is to come or no though they be subject unto Vanity and under the bondage of Corruption as the place of their Habitation is And this I believe will be the sasest way for us to take in this Difficulty wherein also we shall not leave the Apostle who is our Guide and Conduct in this Labyrinth but have his concurrency with us This Creature saith the Apostle is subject unto Vanity under the Bondage of Corruption This Creature so beautiful so excellent as hath been before described in the forming whereof the Omnipotent God hath shewn forth his Wisdom Power Goodness is now strugling under a miserable Thraldom and that which aggravates the Misery is that i● should be brought into this woful plight by one who was taken out of its own Bowels and advanced to the Rule and Dominion over all the rest of her Off-spring round about him whose folly as it began this mischief so it is still laying on more and more load insomuch that unless the great and wise Creatour interpose his powerful Arm by removing this Tyrant or altering his Nature that Work whereby he sought for ever to Glorifie will in time come to nothing But let us more particularly observe the great Misery that this poor Creature is
as he is But I hope I may without offence give in my poor Judgment as I have done concerning this Scripture considering it is not inconsistent at all with the scope of the Holy Ghost therein and being guided hereto by some certain Probabilities First They are Angels we know and a great multitude of them who did at the Birth of Jesus Christ proclaim Peace to the Creature as well as Good-will towards men the Creature therefore may be in expectation of the manifestation of the Angels that this Promise or Salutation given by them might be made good and perfected Secondly It is not without some reason that the Holy Ghost doth use the different terms of Sons and Children in this Scripture viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sons in the 19 Verse and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Children in the 29 Verse especially considering that that which is predicated of each carrieth with it also a great difference too for the manifestation of the Sons of God answers the expectation of the Creature But the Deliverance of the Creature is not there to be terminated but only by the liberty of the Children of God Now there seemeth to me to be some probability that the varying of the terms should imply also in this place a varying of persons viz. The first to be understood of the Angels of God and the latter of the Saints the latter word also being comprehensive of the first and not the first in a true propriety of speech of the latter considering withall what hath been before said that the Creature must have the Angels employed in working their Deliverance but not the Saints Sons being also fitter then Children in the bringing to pass so great a Work as delivering the Creature out of Bondage is like to be More might be added but this shall suffice for the third Observation from this Scripture viz. The time of satisfying the Creatures expectation that is at the manifestation of the Sons of God Fourthly That which is next offered to our View is the manner of the Deliverance of the Creature or to what it shall be reduced at the expiration of its Bondage it shall be delivered into the Glorious Liberty of the Children of God For it is but subjected saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in hope or under hope of a happy change to a better Estate and though this hope deferred maketh the poor Creature to faint yet the patient abiding thereof shall not perish for ever For hope maketh not ashamed especially when it is fixed upon such a sure Foundation Rom. 5.5 as Gods Eternal Purpose which cannot be disanulled A Deliverance therefore shall undoubtedly arise unto the Creature even as there shall be to the Children of God for as in this corrupt estate wherein they are involved for the present by the first Adam they are both together fellow-sufferers so shall they together in their several Capacities be set at liberty and have their Pristine Excellencies restored yea much more enlarged unto them by Jesus Christ the second Adam who being the Alpha and Omega the Beginning and the End of the Creation the same yesterday Rev. 21.5 6. to day and for ever is of power sufficient to make all things new It is indeed upon the Childrens account that the Creature shall be Interessed in that glorious Deliverance for as the Apostle speaks in another case Doth God take care for Oxen So may we say doth God so respect the Creature that is the frame of Nature that he will vouchsafe for its own sake to beautifie it when it is deformed Or doth he altogether for our sakes that are his Children For our sakes no doubt shall this glorious Work be accomplished that even the Creature it self also may in a free and liberal manner which is earnestly desired by it be subservient unto his Glory And thus we finde the Preposition here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated into is taken by some as carrying the force of another viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Propter which signifieth for so reading the word thus The Creature shall be delivered from the Bondage of Corruption for the Glorious Liberty of the Children of God that is That the Childrens Liberty might by their service be the more Glorious For as God made the Creature in the beginning for Man and because of him subjected it likewise unto Vanity that so it might not even in the daies of Vanity be superiour to him for whom it was created So will he deliver it again for Man's sake that is for the Accumulation and Illustration of his childrens Glory Though I confess upon the Creature also it self as it is said before shall be conferred a Glory which shall be in the proportion of its Nature a sutable Advancement unto it as the glory of the children shall be unto them And this I conceive in short to be the sense of the Apostle as to this Particular whereby we may see clearly that there shall be a Restauration of the Creature that is as saith S. Peter 2 Pet. 3.13 Now Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth Righteousness Which words of new Heavens and new Earth as they are used in a certain place by the Prophet Isaiah being spiritually understood Es 65.17 are I confess appliable to the state of the Church in the times of the Gospel under the Kingdom of Christ when it should be so renewed that it should seem to be as 't were a new World old things being done away 2 Cor. 5.17 Types and shadows removed yea the whole Service of the former Tabernacle abolished and all things made new 2 Cor. 5.17 So that in this sense this Prophecy is already fulfilled Nevertheless though the words of the Prophet may be so taken yet we are not to confine the Spirit of God thereunto especially when he hath declared his meaning elsewhere to be of a larger extent as he hath done in this very particular for the Apostle S. Peter in the forecited place Commenting upon the Prophet speaks of the new Heavens and the new Earth as not so much to be seen in this World as in that which is to come his whole Scope in the said Chapter tending thereunto Let then the spiritual sense be acknowledged by us yet that hinders not but that the other sense viz. That there shall really be new Heavens and a new Earth at the last Day may be acknowledged also even as Glory is said to be begun here in those Graces that are shed abroad by the Holy Ghost in the hearts of the Elect which shall notwithstanding shine forth in its full Splendour in the Kingdom of Glory Objection I hear what is objected unto this viz. That in the Day of the Lord 2 Pet. 3.10 The Heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and pass away with a great noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the Earth also and the works that are therein shall
them their own Mercies choose Death rather then Life they shall most assuredly reap the fruit of their own Option in the latter end unless they will learn betimes to be wiser and make a better choice For what else can be expected when Christ hath prepared so Glorious an Inheritance for men in whom he professeth to have a peculiar Interest John 1.11 Mat. 25.41 and they shall lightly regard it And when there is a fire an everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and his Angels whom his Soul abhorreth and men shall wilfully plunge themselves into it O foolish people and unwise who hath deluded you A wretched Covetousness you will undoubtedly finde it to be in the end to be intruders upon the Devil a wosul ambition to be Usurpers upon Damnation and a folly not to be parallel'd unless it be by the reprobate Angels to leave your own Habitation so Gloriously repaired for you by Jesus Christ who not only Created you but Bought you at a dear Rate everlastingly to dwell in Surely it were much better for you to stand your ground and to preserve your Interest with all your strength preparing your selves against the time when an entrance shall be ministred unto you abundantly into that everlasting Kingdom Rom. 8.23 waiting for the Adoption a Glory above the Creatures expectation viz. The redemption of our body when Body and Soul shall be reunited again and all things shall be ours in their perfectest Beauty purged throughly from that dross and corruption which now sticks upon them This I say should be our chiefest Ambition next unto God's Glory and if we were wise would be our utmost endeavour for then shall we be with Christ which is best of all then shall we experimentally finde the blessed effects of his immutable love towards us unto all eternity then shall the Creature yield unto us not a groaning Subjection but a willing and a cheerful Subjection rejoycing that it hath somewhat in it that shall conduce to the advancement of our Glory O let the consideration hereof work in us a holy Indifferency towards the things of this present life What though some be poor and of low account in the eyes of the world yet let not the hearts of such be troubled at it for our Lord when he comes if he finde them doing his will will make them as well as others who abound in wealth Rulers over all that he hath If Riches encrease Ps 62.10 Pro. 23.5 let us not set our hearts upon them Or if they decrease and take to themselves wings and flie away let us not be guilty of such folly as to let our hearts flie after them Bishop King upon Jonas but as Fabritius the Roman a late learned and laborious Bishop made the Comparison told King Pyrrhus who one day tempted him with Gold and another day terrified him with an Elephant which he had never seen before Plutarchus in vita Pyrrhi Vtimur mundo fruimur Deo Aug. Yesterday I was not moved with thy Money nor to day with thy Beast So whether we be tempted with gain or terrified with the loss of these worldly Commodities we do not trouble our selves either way Knowing that we have in Heaven a more enduring substance Heb. 10.34 And thus have we done with the second Interpretation of our Text viz. That Jesus Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same in reference to the whole Creation The Third Interpretation of the TEXT is this Jesus Christ is the same yesterday to day and for ever With a more especial Respect unto his Peculiar People Adsis O JESV JEsus Christ is the same unto his Church from first to last that is from the first man that was created to the last that shall be born in this World or from the first Evangelical Promise given in Paradise viz The Seed of the Woman shall break the Serpents head unto the last Sentence that shall be pronounced at the great Day Gen. 3.15 viz. Come ye Blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world Mat. 25.34 The same King and the same Priest and the same Prophet of his Church throughout all Ages the same in his Power over them the same in his Satisfaction and Intercession for them the same in his Doctrine unto them Semper idem alwaies the same And now that we may understand more fully the Sense of the Holy Ghost in this excellent Scripture according to this Third Interpretation of it let us confider distinctly the several Courses or Periods of Time here specified viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Yesterday to Day and for ever And in them all observe the Immutability of the Lord Jesus Christ towards his Church from Generation to Generation By 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Yesterday must according to this sense be meant all the time of the Old Testament By 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is To day is understood the time of the New Testament By 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ever the continuance of that time unto the end and that Eternity in order to the fruit and benefit of Christ's Immutability towards his Church when Time shall be no more CHAP I. Of Yesterday and the Benefit that the Church enjoyed by Christ's Oeconomy therein TO begin then with Yesterday which as it is said must in this sense which we are now upon be taken for all he time of the Old Testament that is from the Minority of the Church in her first springing unto her maturity in that fulness of Time when Christ came into the World In which long Tract of time notwithstanding he was the same in the Exercise of his Mediatory Office towards his selected People which he is to Day in the time of the Gospel when he was made Flesh and visibly appeared among us Two things are here to be considered by us 1. The Denomination of the Time 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yesterday 2. What is predicated of that time viz. Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The only He or the same Yesterday Both which will afford unto us their several Instructions From the first we may learn that which will be of some use for us to know and that is this The Time of the Old Testament with the Legal Ordinances attending upon it is a Day that is set and expired being Yesterday and therefore not to be brought into our account neither are we to walk in the light of it I say not that the Old Testament it self Quoad scripturam vel spiritualem veritatem as it is a part of God's Revealed Will unto his Church is now at this time quite out of date for even Jesus Christ who is the Sun that shineth gloriously in this our Day was the Doctrine of the Prophets as well as of the Apostles and he commandeth us in the New Testament to enquire of him in the Old Search the Scriptures John 5.39 Luke 16.29 that
of the world viz. the Moral Law All which Laws were enacted by him as a King over his Church and People being according to his Office provident and careful for their security and happiness both temporal spiritual and eternal Answerable to that of the Prophet Es 33.22 which place Calvin applieth to Jesus Christ The Lord is our Judge Cal. Inst lib 2. cap. 11. Sect 5. Es 33 22. the Lord is our Lawgiver the Lord is our King he will save us If this sufficeth not let us consider that as S. Paul saith 1 Tim. 2. There is one Mediatour So S. James saith Jam. 4.12 There is one Lawgiver who is able to save and to destroy 1 Tim. 2.5 Jam 4 12 Now this one Lawgiver must undoubtedly be that one Mediatour because when man had by his disobedience violated the first Law given him by God himself he was immediately thereupon become an Exlex an accursed Out-law and so should have continued given up to confusion and every evil work had not the Mediatour in whom the Father was pleased all fulness should dwell then instantly appeared exercising his Regal Authority in reducing man into some order both for his quiet and peaceable living here in this world and to make way for him into everlasting Happiness hereafter Which work I say was alwaies the proper work of the Mediatour for it was not consistent with Divine Justice to give a Law any more to such a Rebel but rather to let him alone to perish for ever in his Apostacy which must certainly have followed if Christ had not interposed his Mediation the virtue whereof as in some sort it extended to all Mankinde yea to the whole Creation so it was chiefly fixed upon that People whom God had elected to himself for his peculiar Inheritance In order hereunto did this great King the Father having Anointed him to that end shew forth his absolute and Sovereign Authority in giving Law to his People as it is said in the Second Psalm when he was set up to be King immediately follows the Publication of his Law And what Law but that whereof the Lord had said unto him Thou are my Son this day have I begotten thee Ps 2.7 That is the Law which was the efflux of his Mediation unto which Office he was begotten of the Father that day in which he first entred upon it Which Scripture being thus Interpreted that which follows will be very apposite thereunto as being the gracious Dignation of the Father unto his Son in this Office Ask of me saith he and I shall give thee the Heathen for thine Inheritance Ps 2.8.9 and the uttermost parts of the Earth for thy Possession Thou shalt break them with a Rod of Iron thou shalt dash them in pieces like a Potters Vessel That is Do thou perform the part of a Mediatour and I do promise thee that the most Refractory in the world shall be made subject unto thee yea the Scepter of thy Government shall be accompanied with such a mighty and irresistible Authority that thou shalt subdue all adverse power that riseth up against thee I am bold I confess to render these my poor Conceptions concerning this Scripture as I have done of many other in this Treatise so different from Interpretations that have been formerly given but it is with modesty and submission and therefore I hope I do not offend those that are wise and godly being desirous to cast in my Mite into the Treasury of God if it may at least be any way useful and to improve my small Talent to my Masters advantage Once It is manifest that this Scripture is not limited to a particular sense but doth carry with it a various signification To say nothing of that Application of it which is made by some especially one of very eminent note in the Church to the Birth of Christ Bishop Andrews when he took upon him our Nature deriving the Warrant thereof from Act. 4.25 c. We finde the Apostle S. Paul himself Heb. 1.5 Heb. 1.5 alledging this place to prove the Deity of Christ as one whose nature was far above far more excellent then the Angels for to which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Signifying the Fathers eternal prepetually-constant and present Generation of his Son which sheweth him to be very God We finde also the same Apostle applying it to the Resurrection of Christ Act. 13.33 in these words He that is God hath raised up Jesus again as it is written in the Second Psalm Thou art my Son Act. 13 33 this day have I begotten thee So that in this sense the Prophet's word there Hodie to Day signifies the Day of Christ's Resurrection wherein he was begotten from the Dead for so he is denominated Col. 1.18 The first begotten from the Dead Col. 1.18 And in the other before the very same word Hodie implies that Eternity which properly hath neither beginning of Daies nor end of Time Since therefore the word of the Holy Ghost here is comprehensive of various Interpretations we may safely without relinquishing those which the Apostle hath given render this also which hath been here inserted unless we will entertain that Novel and Jeiune Opinion of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 no more but one meaning of one Text viz. That Jesus Christ was begotten of the Father to be the Mediatour the very day that he first entred upon his Office that is at that instant time when the first Promise was made viz. The Seed of the Woman shall break the Serpents head Clearly then Jesus Christ was Yesterday the King of his Church as well as to Day because he was the Lawgiver from the beginning yea upon Mount Sinai that Law which was written in Tables of stone by the Finger of God was the Act and Deed of this King himself Quid enim est digitus Dei nisi Spiritus Dei saith S. Augustine What is the Finger of God but the Spirit of God as may appear by comparing Mat. 12.28 Luke 11.20 And whatsoever was done by the Spirit to the people of God was also done by Christ as Mediatour His Act it was and in his Custody or Register was it also kept being laid up in the Ark under the Propitiatory which was a most singular and illustrious Type of Jesus Christ and so altogether under his ordering and disposing as seemed good unto him Now let me not be mistaken herein I do not say that Christ as Mediatour gave any Law at all as it may have a consonancy with the Covenant of Works which indeed the Law hath unto all those who will not be brought into the Bond of the new Covenant But this I say The Gospel of the Law which the faithful people of God have alwaies found therein that is the Doctrine of Faith and Repentance was undoubtedly as I hop-hath been made clearly to appear given by Christ
had these Customes of Yesterday their Tendency unto Christ and their spiritual accomplishment in him And thus had Job a respect unto him when he gave this Testimony of his Faith saying I know that my Redeemer liveth And thus did the Prophet Daniel in like manner Yesterday betake himself to the same Refuge Dan. 9.17 when he prayed that he might be heard for the Lord's sake Implying that he could not expect a gracious Answer to his Supplication but through the Mediation of Jesus Christ who is Lord of all as the Apostle calls him Act. 10 36. from first to last and whom the glorious Angels at his first appearance in the flesh acknowledged to be the Lord Luk. 2.11 thereby ascribing unto him that Title of Honour which was in all Ages due unto him In short that Synopsis or Cloud of Witnesses as it is called which is by the Apostle presented unto us in one view Heb. 11. may encompass us about with convictions enough concerning this Truth Eph. 5.23 1 Cor. 15.45 viz. That the people of God Yesterday that is in all the Generations of old expected and obtained Salvation no other way but by Faith in Jesus Christ who is the Saviour of the Body that is the Church ever since it had a Being by the spirit of quickning wherewith it hath been Acted from the Beginning for when the first Adam fell under the Power of Death the Second became immediately a quickning spirit This was the Faith of Believers Yesterday who by a spiritual Logick as the term 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Apostle useth doth imply came to discern Heb. 11.1 and make Demonstrations to themselves of the good things to come without those ocular and sensible Manifestations which have since appeared Mr. Jer. Dyke And this indeed is the true Nature of Faith For look how it is said of God as one well makes the Comparison that he calls those things that be not as if they were so doth Faith make things to be which are not that is which are not to sense For as Faith gives a Nullity to things that are viz. to the Afflictions Miseries and Mortality of this Life making them to be as if they were not according to the Apostles Word 2 Cor. 6.9 10 As dying 2 Cor. 6.9 10. and yet behold we live at chastned and yet not killed as sorrowful yet alway rejoycing as poor yet making many ri●h as having nothing yet possessing all things so on the contrary for it is able to overthrow the whole Course of Nature it gives a subsistence to things not being and makes those things to be which are not Thus are we by Faith already in Heaven though here yet on Earth For our Conversation saith the Apostle our civil interest and society Phil. 3 20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our trading and employment is in Heaven And thus did the Faith of Believers under the Old Testament make Christ to be unto them a full and compleat Saviour before he himself had a corporal being upon Earth He was to their Faith a Sacrifice Crucified from the beginning of the World who was not indeed Crucified till the latter end of the World In them was fulfilled that which was spoken by the Prophet He that believeth shall not make haste though they did earnestly long for the Coming of the Messiah Es 28 16 yet they did not charge God foolishly as being slow and slack in his performances but with Faith and Patience were contented to Wait in the mean time living comfortably upon that Dispensation of Grace which God in his great Wisdom and Mercy had appointed for them Yea though the Law come forth in its time for the aggravating of Sin which as the Apostle saith Gal. 3.12 is not of Faith crying out unto all with a Loud and Terrible Voice Do this or you shall Die yet for all that their Faith did not fail neither was it made void by the Law as the law was not afterwards made void by Faith for according to their Faith so was it done unto them Christ the Mediatour they not onely expected but relied upon according to the Tenour of the New Covenant and Christ as Mediatour did always appear for them to guide them in their Way and to guard them in their need to grant them their Desires and to obtain grace with God in their behalf This hath been largely proved before and therefore we need not stand much upon it now I will onely add one instance more whereby we shall see the gracious Indulgence of the Almighty in that time of Yesterday dispensed in and through Jesus Christ the Mediatour towards a poor Creature who was then Ambitious as I may say to have a Discovery made unto him of the glorious Presence of God beyond the Capacity of his weak nature and whereto a consenting according to his asking must undoubtedly have proved his inevitable ruine This poor Creature was Moses whom I so call in comparison of him with whom he had then to do though otherwise A man of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ps 90. Title the Viceroy of Jesus Christ in Jeshurun who when he perceived the Lord's favourable condescension so as to entertain Familiar Conference with him and upon his request to renew unto him a Grant of his Presence in the Conduct of his people to the Land of Canaan he thereupon according to the manner of us all growth more bold aspiring to such a knowledge of God that never any of the Sons of Adam had attained unto yea such as was altogether inconsistent with frail Mortality I beseech thee saith he shew me thy Glory It is Ex. 33.18 by our late Expositours denied that Moses was now desirous to see the Essence of God for that is Invisible 1 Tim. 6.16 Neither was Moses its like ignorant of it but for my part I leave it undetermined howsoever it is very evident that he desired to see that of God which in much mercy was not granted unto him and therefore it might very well be said of him as it was of the Sons of Zebedee he knew not what he asked For who alas among us can dwell with devouring fire who among us can dwell with everlasting burnings But as Peter when he was present at Christ's Transfiguration Luk. 9.32.33 was so taken with that exceeding Glory which he then saw yet such a Glory probably as the weakness of man might well beare that he spake at random not knowing what he said of building Tabernacles c. In like manner Moses is now so transported with the apprehension of his present Happiness and Priviledge above all men that though he was not unmindful of his Charge I mean the people of Israel but was importunate with God not to leave them yet he forgets his own mortal Estate wherein he was to abide and desires to see that Manifestation of God's presence which is reserved for another Life Ex. 33 19.
but what saith the Answer of God unto him I will make all my Goodness pass before thee and I will proclaime the Name of the Lord before thee And what could a poor Creature in this World desire more Oh what admirable Honour is this that the Lord vouchsafeth unto his Beloved Favourite what an incomparable Priviledge is This Moses now partaker of above his Brethren But it is the Lord who may do what he pleaseth for so he saith I will be Gracious to whom I will be Gracious and I will shew Mercy on whom I will shew Mercy Nevertheless we may with Modesty enquire how and by what means this glorious Goodness came to be presented unto Moses and that we shall finde to be even by this good old Way which we have here been speaking of viz. the Mediation of Jesus Christ I go not about to wrest this excellent Scripture by forcing upon it a sense which may not agree with the minde of the Holy Ghost therein That be far from me what I have to say concerning it I shall leave to the Judgement of the Wise and Godly First I shall by the way take this for granted because it hath been already proved that Moses had to do with Jesus Christ as the rest of the people had while He and they were together in the Wilderness And it must be confessed that there was as much need of the help and interposition of a Mediatour in this matter that we are speaking of as in any thing els which I say was in great Mercy dispensed unto Moses as is manifest First by the Preparation that preceded this glorious Appearance Secondly by the Form and Method of the Proclamation of the Name of the Lord at the time of that appearance As for the Preparation which is mentioned in the three last Verses of this thirty third Chapter the particulars thereof are very remarkable viz. concerning the place that is said to be by the Lord Ex. 33.21 22 23. and the Lord 's putting Moses into the cleft of the Rock and covering it with his Hand which that we may the better understand and see how apposite they are to our present purpose it will be needful for us to take into Consideration that whole intercourse between the Lord and Moses First Moses prayeth unto the Lord V. 13. in these words Shew me now thy Way What is that Thy Way say some that thou meanest to take with this people in bringing them to the Land which thou didst promise to give unto their Fathers I will not deny but that this might be in the minde of Moses now when the Lord was pleased to admit him into his presence because he was ever zealous for the peoples good But there are some Circumstances which follow that do incline me to another sense at least to joyn another with this both which may be allowed together being not inconsistent each with other but tending both to one and the same end It seemeth unto me that Moses here prayeth that the Lord would reveal himself unto him out of the Cloud in some shape and form as he might be visible unto his bodily sight which he therefore calleth his Way because he had been wont to do so to the Patriarchs before him whom he likewise knew by Name And I do the rather conceive this to be the sense because of the ground and reason of his desire which is added by him in the words following Lord saith he Shew me thy way that I may know thee and that I may find grace in thy sight True it is the Lord promiseth him immediately after this that his Presence should go with him as being an Answer to his request in the behalf of the people the necessity whereof Moses also urgeth and insisteth upon V. 15 16. Yet doth the Lord give him a further Answer in the Words that follow V. 17. as to a thing somewhat differing from that which concerned the people I will saith he do this thing also that thou hast spoken for thou hast found grace in my sight and I know thee by Name Now since the Lord had before consented that his Presence should go along with him in the Conduct of the people and that Moses had given his Restipulation thereunto resting him fully satisfied with what the Lord had promised to what purpose is this other Consent now superadded and that with a note of difference from what had passed before if it be not this which I have here declared viz. that the Lord would according to his desire Visibly appear unto him out of the Cloud in a humane shape as he had been accustomed to do to others whom he knew by Name which sense being admitted how clear will the Circumstances following that are preparatory to the great discovery of God in the next Chapter be unto us which otherwise will prove very intricate and obscure Behold saith the Lord there is a place by me and thou shalt stand upon a Rock and it shall come to pass while my Glory passeth by that I will put the in a Cleft of the Rock Now what place upon Earth can be said to be neerer to the Lord then another seeing he filleth Heaven and Earth with his presence And what Rock or Cleft of a Rock could be able to secure Moses from the danger of being consumed by that excellent Glory which did appear seeing the Rocks are cloven to pieces Nah. 1.6 and thrown down before him How then could these things be It is in vain now to produce an Anthropopathy and so stretch it so far as to make it level with every Circumstance for doubtless there was a Reality in this matter and every particular of it was done and effected to Moses sense and to the full satisfaction of his expectation so far as might stand with the safety of his Life Granting therefore that Jesus Christ appeared unto Moses as a Man there might then be a place said to be according to the ordinary course of Nature neerer to him in that Mount where the Lord was wont to meet this his servant then another elsewhere he might also put Moses into the Rock and cover him with his Hand to preserve him from the imminent Danger and then take away his Hand that so Moses might see some glimpse of that Glory that passed by Yea more it is said Exod 34.5 that the Lord Descended in a Cloud and stood with him there and proclaimed the Name of the Lord and yet in the sixth verse it is said The Lord passed by before him and proclaimed to stand still with Moses proclaiming and to pass by before him proclaiming too seemeth in reason not to hold well together the true meaning therefore undoubtedly is this Jesus Christ who is Jehovah the Mediatour came down upon the Mount in a Cloud and then after he was descended appears visibly unto Moses according to his former Promise and stood with him there to protect him from Danger while
a time of clearer Light coming which when the shadows were removed and that old Tabernacle taken down should make the way plainer to those that should walk in that Light for the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth certainly signifie this kind of manifestation by Light as we may see in sundry places of Scripture and not such an Apertio portarum an opening of the gates of Heaven as these Popish Phantasticks vainly imagine who do hereby onely manifest their gross Ignorance in that whereas the Apostle saith the way to Heaven was not manifest in regard of knowledge They will against all sense and reason maintain that the way to Heaven was not open in regard of Entry as if the way could not be open to enter because it was not manifesty known Upon which account as one well observeth they may shut out our Christian Infants at this day who do not onely not manifestly but not at all know the way to Heaven and if the way to Heaven be open to them for entry although it be shut in regard of knowledge how much more was it open to the faithful under the Law who as to sufficiency knew the way to Heaven although not so manifesty as we do As for that which hath been Objected out of our Common Liturgy viz. When thou hadst overcome the sharpness of Death thou didst open the Kingdom of Heaven to all Believers I answer they are much mistaken who render the sense of the said words in that manner to the derogation of Christ's merit for if they be interpreted aright they do rather advance the honour of the Lord Jesus in that way and kinde that we have here insisted upon And as Athanasius used them who was the Authour of them then in the least degree detract from it the genuine meaning of them as we use them being this Jesus Christ after his death did open the Kingdome of Heaven to all Believers viz. to the Gentiles as well as to the Jews whereas before it was open onely unto the Jews Lastly Where as it is said by some that though the Fathers were not shut up in Limbo as the Papists fondly dream but immediately after Death were carried up into Heaven yet they were not admitted to that Vbi that place of Glory wherein they have been ever since our Saviour's Ascension I Answer till such time as we can see some constat for this in Scripture we must take leave to declare our Judgment against it rather because the Holy Scripture is so clear that Jesus Christ was the same Yesterday which he is to day we may admire that the least scruple should arise in the thoughts of any that the power of his Resurrection could not put forth the same Virtue to the Saints of old so as to make them Quoad statum separationis as perfectly happy as it doth unto those that have and shall come after We are not to be regulated by the Opinions of Men in this matter whether Antient or Modern though in some other points that are not of so great concernment we may happily afford a willing compliancy In this case we will call no man Father upon Earth for one is our Father which is in Heaven To the Law therefore and to the Testimony whosoever speaks not according to this Word in Order to Christ's Glory and the Salvation of his Church it is because there is no Light in them And now when I was even about to leave this point so to proceed unto that which followeth I have met with a spoke in my way upon which I must stop a little being well assured notwithstanding that my Text will bear down all Opposition that may be raised against it There have been we know in these late times certain strange Opinions scattered about such as have been of pernicious consequence to Religion And if amongst the rest I meet with any which strike at the Honour of our Lord Jesus Christ which our present Text ascribeth unto him I hope I may take liberty to bear Witness against them of how great Name soever the Authours thereof may be that have maintained them I shall forbear to nominate any Persons but doe heartily wish they would seriously consider with themselves how they may for the Church's sake retract that which they have of this Nature so unadvisedly written It hath been maintained and published by one Authour especially of great and eminent Note That the Object of the faith of the Patriarchs and Fathers of old was not Jesus Christ the Mediatour but God alone that is God the Father And that such efficacy as the expiatory sacrifices of the Law had was not so much in reference to the sacrifice to be made of Christ as extrinsecal and affixed by the Divine ordinance and institution of Almighty God Yea that the very Heathen did in those times without Christ even by the light of Nature attain unto such a Knowledge of God as was enough for their everlasting Salvation That these Cockatrice Eggs were hatched by Hereticks of old is well known The Church was much pestred with these Pelagian vermine in former times But that after they have been crushed with the hammer of Divine truth in the hands of Holy Antients and Servants of Christ of late that they should I say be now brought to Light again perking up with such boldness as they do and that among us in this Church who have been taught by terrible things in righteousness to set up and adore the Lord Jesus Christ in his Throne It is and will be surely too great a provocation of God's jealousie against us Having therefore mett with such Assertions as these so destructive to the Piety of the times and so diametrically contrary to the Doctrine that hath been insisted upon being derogatory to the Merits of the Lord Jesus making them useless to the World before the time of his coming I conceive a necessity is laid upon me to protest against them It hath been the great design of Satan at all times to bring the world to be as little beholding to Christ as may be and to that purpose hath he bewitched men with strong delusions one while suggesting to their minds prejudicate opinions concerning the ways of Christ that they are greivous unprofitable and unreasonable ways another while infusing into them Principles of self-sufficiency that so long as they have materials enough of their own to finish their building what need they go to seek in another's Quarry sometimes perswading them that the Saints in Heaven must be his Coadjutours in office to obtain grace for his people here and to help them in time of need again making them believe that after this Life is ended their souls must lie down in Purgatory for a time before they can be carried up into Heaven And why is all this and much more attempted by this grand Adversary the Devil but because as I said he would draw men to have as little dependance upon Christ
of love which was foretold to be in the last times and is now too palpably to be discerned in the World doth plainly demonstrate the setting of our Sun to be very neere Yea and Satan also hath great wrath because hee hath but a short time to work for his Kingdom knowing well that the end of this day will be concluding of his whole design against the Kingdom of Christ Do not these things I say signifie to us that the day goeth away and that the shadows of the evening are stretched out That our Sun is declining and his race even almost at an end Work therefore now for your lives if ever you will do it the night cometh wherein no man can work Could we speak to the light of this day as Joshua did unto the Sun to stand still and make it slay our leisure we might then take our own time But as all our times so especially this is in the hand of God and as no worldly or infernal power can precipitate this day or cut short the hours thereof so can none protract it beyond that measure which the grave and wise antient of dayes hath appointed unto it The day is his and the night is his saith the Psalmist the day I say of the gospel and the expiration of it as well particular to some Persons and Nations as universal at the end of the World are in his power under his irreversible decree to be ordered according to the good pleasure of his Will and therefore out of our reach to be interrupted in their course by any thing that we can do Arise then and walk Up and be doing least dreadful darkness seize upon you before you be aware It is reported by Historians of Titus Vespasianus entituled by them deliciae humani generis because he delighted to do good unto all that when he had spent a day without doing somewhat whereby the Common-wealth or some private persons might be benefited by him he was wont to say Diem perdidi the day is lost O let us consider the day is well nigh spent and the night is at hand If now we stand idle and will do nothing or if we be slothful in the multitude of businesses Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Lord hath set us not Serving the time with that fervency of spirit as is fit for the day we also may say hereafter when it will be too late Perdidimus diem we have lost the day and are lost in the night without any remedy What therefore the Preacher saith in his sense Ec. 9.10 the same say I in this Whatsoever thine hand findeth in the word to do do it with all thy might for there is no work nor device nor Knowledge nor wisdome in the grave whither thou goest That being as one saith Seculum Mercedis not Seculum Operis not a time of work but of wages and your wages shall surely be according to your work To Conclude Let us according to the Advice of the Apostle walk honestly Rom. 13.13 that is Decently as in the Day in all the Commandments of the Lord doing that which is good in his sight for this is indeed that honest decency which adorns a believer and sets a beautiful lustre upon his holy profession In which Adviso the Apostle seems to allude to the civil Customes and Manners of people that are modest in the World who are wont both in their apparel and deportment to demean themselves decently in the day time and will while they are in the light be ashamed that any thing dishonest and unseemely should be found upon them or acted by them whereupon he would have us also that believe to learn and remember to bear such a respect unto this day of the Gospel and the light shining about us as to have our Conversation honest and to do nothing uncomely in it No Rioting or drunkenness no Chambering or Wantonness nor other the like dishonest works of Darkness should be seen amongst us which in this day will cover us with shame to the loathing of our persons in the Eyes of God and his Holy angels Away with them therefore and let us walk honestly And now for a close of this Exhortation I shall take liberty to speak a word unto you in season If you be Children of the day beware of the deeds of darkness in this time wherein you pretend to remember the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ It is not my work to argue against the solemnity which Yesterday to Day and some Dayes following is still held up and continued among us neither will I undertake as the manner is to judge any man here present in the freedom of his Conscience for his observing this Anniversary Festival yea though his observation of it be accompanied with a more then ordinary use of the good Creatures of God provided that he doth as the Apostle speakes observe it to the Lord. But I beseech you Is this to celebrate the Nativity of the Lord to run into excess of Riot and to let loose the reins into all manner of disorder and Licentiousness Is this to Commemorate the Birth of Christ to spend the time in gourmardizing and swinish Drunkeness Siccine exprimitur publicum gandium per publicum dedecus Haeccine solennes dies decent quae alios non decent Will you so testisie your publick rejoycing as to make your selves a publick shame Do such things become these festival dayes which are scandalous and unbecoming those that profess the name of Christ upon other days It was the complaint of Tertullian in his time and we have too much reason to make use of it now O my Brethren beware I fay again of the unfruitful works of darkness at this time if you be the Children of the Day And a needful Caveat it is for I think it hath been too truely said God hath been more dishonoured in many places of this land by Rioting and Drunkenness and other Abominations in the twelve dayes then in all the twelve months following Let us therefore I say again walk honestly as in the Day and as becomes Children of the day in all the Commandments of the Lord. I have I confess been somewhat large in handling this subject But the day will not fail us though we take a turn or two more then ordinary in walking this round I mean in meditating upon this holy walk and in exhorting one another while it is called to day to bestir ourselves in it Let us now pass on to the other side of this walk that is the ordinances of the Lord for they indeed are the excellency and glory of this day and methinks it should be our endeavour yea it should be our Ambition to exercise our selves in this walk also more frequently then we do What greater happiness can there be in this world then to walk with God and to hold a sweet correspondency with him To pour out our complaints before him to
some according to the original word here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 correcting disorders and Ordaining Ministers both which plainly argue Episcopal authority for no single Presbyter was ever allowed even by our Antiepiscopal men to manage such a power Now as according to the Apostles word Heb. 7.7 the less is blessed of the better so must the correction of what is amiss and the power of conferring an Ecclesiastical office upon any be in a Superiour also I know well what is usually objected here viz. That Titus was an Evangelist that is say some an Assistant to the Apostle in his peregrinations among the Churches and therefore was endowed with an extraordinary power insomuch that his office was not capable of a Succession My answer hereto is this It is granted that Titus for some time removed from place to place with the Apostle as the exigency of his work required one while at Jerusalem another while at Crete from thence to Nicopolis he is ordered by the Apostle to come unto him after that he is sent to Corinth from whence he is expected at Treas and met with Paul in Macedonia whence he is sent again to Corinth c. as some have traced him in his several Stages Yet nevertheless though he was such a temporary Itinerant with the Apostle and if they will needs have it so though he executed the office of an Evangelist in so doing It followeth not that his first Commission for Crete was thereby revoked But that he did the office of an Evangelist while he attended the Apostle may be granted as he did while he was resident in Crete that is by labouring in the Word and Doctrine For after all that can be said other Evangelist Titus never was nor can he ever be proved to be Add hereunto Neither can it be found that ever Titus had such a peculiar charge given unto him in any of those places where he either accompanied the Apostle or was employed by him as he had in Crete For was he ever appointed to such a work either in Jerusalem or in Corinth or in Macedonia or in Dalmatia or in any place else besides Crete Surely it cannot be imagined but that these places might need the care and vigilancy of a Titus as well as that to which he was consign'd If therefore such an office of Government fixed upon one person in one place over a numerous Clergie was for the advancement of the Gospel of such nacessity in the dayes of the Apostles who were not at all wanting in the discharge of their duty without all contradiction it is at least as necessary now unless we will say that the care of the Churches well-fare was confin'd unto those Primitive Times and not to be extended to after-ages All which considered It is more then probable that the Apostle did devolve a power upon Titus not of an Evangelist in the late upstart sense but that which is indeed Episcopal superiour to that of an ordinary Presbyter and not onely so but that this was to be a president for the Government of the Churches to the end of the world Especially when we look upon the reason which the Apostle annexeth to the seventh verse in these words For a Bishop must be blameless c. Which for my part I conceive to be the ground of the Apostles own act in leaving Titus at Crete for the ends and purposes there premised knowing him to be a fit instrument for such a weighty employment and not at all to shew the qualification of the persons whom he should ordain as it hath been commonly understood Such qualification the Apostle had described in the sixth verse saying If any be blameless that is as a late Writer glosseth upon it approved by the testimony of the Church to be under no scandalous sin The husband of one wife that is One who lives not with a second wife after putting away the first Having faithful children that is such if he have any as have all received the Faith For if he bring not up his own children to be Christian what hope is there that he will be fit to convert others Not accused of riot or unruly that is who live temperately and regularly Meaning that Titus should not ordain any but those that are thus qualified in respect of their own vertuous living the Christian education of their children But now if he should again in the seventh verse repeat the same qualification of unblameableness as referring to the same persons his words would border too much upon an uncomely tautology which was never incident to that spirit by which he wrote As I said therefore before so I say again when the Apostle had declared how the persons should be qualified whom Titus should ordain he proceedeth to give Titus himself a reason implying withal the justification of his own Act why he left him in Crete about such an important business as to correct disorders and to ordain Elders For saith he A Bishop that is one who must be employed in these things must be as I have found thee to be blameless as the steward of God not self-willed c. Otherwise with what face can he lay hands upon any looking for such qualifications as are just and fit for such offices if they be wanting in himself Or how can he correct disorders in others if he himself be blame-worthy Knowing therefore thee to be in all points fitted for this great work I left thee in Crete c. So that the intent of the Apostle here plainly is this partly to satisfie Titus concerning his leaving him there as being for a purpose of an extrordinary concernment but chiefly to shew the qualifications of the persons to be employed in correcting and ordaining upon whom he sets an honourable mark of distinction for his works sake calling him BISHOP whereas the persons or dained he had before distinguished by a title proper to their office calling them Presbyters This is one interpretation of the Apostles meaning which I humbly submit to the judgement of the Church It is clear without any wrest or ambiguity and upon which it plainly follows that Bishop and Presbyter are not one and the same but distinct in their offices and it is hereby as plain likewise that the office of Bishop distinct from that of a Presbyter is of divine inslitution If this sense will not be allowed by our Opponents as for my part I know not why it should be rejected Let them consider a second Whereas the Apostle saith that He left Titus in Crete to ordain Elders in every City shewing in the sixth verse how they should be qualified viz. That they be blameless c. And thereupon alledgeth his reason in the seventh verse For a BISHOP must be blameless c. He implieth the great care that Titus should have in ordaining Elders because from among them BISHOPS were to be chosen for the Government of the Churches whom it concern'd in regard of their power
and authority above all others to be blameless as the Stewards of God not self-willed c. From whence I collect that the office of BISHOP and Presbyter are not one and the same Some Objections possibly will be made against this interpretation also but let judicious and sober-minded men judge whether they be of such weight so as to carry the Apostles sense against it I confess great is the confidence that hath been built upon this imaginary Identity from whence hath sprung much trouble to the Church of God and none have exceeded therein so much above measure as those persons who with a strange kinde of affectation called themselves by that Uncouth name of Smectymnuus For they led on with this Errour that BISHOP and Presbyter are one and the same take upon them to tax the Apostles reasoning as inconsequential and his demand as they call it Unjust unless he subscribe to their opinion Which censure they are likewise pleased to stretch out further by a similitude according to their fancy If a Chancellour say they in one of our Vniversities should give order to his Vice-Chancellour to admit none to the degree of a Bachelour in arts but such as were able to preach or keep a Divinity-Act for Bachelours in Divinity must be so what reason or equity were in this So if Paul leaving Titus in Crete should give order to him not to admit any to be an Elder but one thus and thus qualified because a Bishop must be so Had a Bishop been an Order or Calling distinct from or superiour to a Presbyter and not the same this had been no more rational or equal then the former Thus They. But the sense of the Apostle being rendred as before which for ought that I can see may very well be so Their similitude or somewhat alike unto it may be retorted upon them in this manner If a Chancellour in one of our Universities should give order to his Vice-Chancellour to admit none to the degree of a Bachelour in Divinity but such as were learned in the Scriptures of good report and of a grave and sober conversation for Doctours in Divinity who are to be taken out of that lower degree must be so there would be both reason and equity in such a Command so when the Apostle gives order to Titus not to admit any to be a Presbyter but one that is blameless because a BISHOP who is to be chosen out of the Presbytery must be so I hope the Divine spirit of this Doctor gentium may pass without control and not have an imputation of irrationality any more put upon him though it be affirmed as the truth is that the office of a BISHOP is here distinguished by him from that of a Presbyter and made Superiour unto it Let none now think of me that because of this my free manner of writing I have design'd thereby to make way for a Polemical dispute with some persons of note that are contrary minded in this case they would mistake me much that should judge so of me I am not willing to be reckoned among the disputers of this world And I do confess my self the unfittest of many upon sundry accounts for such an undertaking besides there hath been too much wrangling already among us Animosities have encreased to the great decay of brotherly-Love in the management of this controversy occasioned chiefly by this pretended Identity Jam. 1.20 But the wrath of man saith the Apostle worketh not the Righteousness of God And what have all the Jehu-like sallies and furious heats of the adversaries of Episcopacy at length produced What I say whereby Gods name may be honoured or his Church edified Is not the shame of their nakedness made bare to the view of all men Oh that God would now give repentance unto all those that are conscious to themselves of a guilt herein Even those very persons that I mentioned before who were the Ring leaders in this difference have reason sadly to lay it to heart if they be yet living who had they but followed that Counsel themselves which they gave unto that Reverend BISHOP with whom they did contend their offense had not been so great viz. To have written more cautiously and to have given less scope to their luxuriant pen for as they did let it run into causeless aggravations it did certainly bring too great a scandal upon Religion and made good their adversaries charge against them But since things that are past cannot be wholly recalled Oh that they would give glory to God in confessing their Errour and endeavour to repair again those breaches which their inadvertency hath made by a publick retractation They are men that pretend much to tenderness of Conscience and therefore I presume are not of that proud Cardinal's spirit who confessed there was need enough to reform the abuses of the Romish-Church but he could not endure that Luther a poor beggarly Friar as he call'd him should give the first Onset unto it I hope better things of these men as to this case in their capacity and that they will not disdain for this once to receive a word of Exhortation from one that is least esteemed in the Church because they know well that the more inconsiderable the person is as to his outward estate that gives them an advice of such concernment as this they may the more magnifie God's name in a ready consenting thereunto But to return to our purpose I have here offered my conceptions in the expounding of this Scripture which hath been so much controverted of late humbly presenting them to the judgment of the Church not knowing that ever yet any expositour Antient or Modern hath rendred the sense of it so before If the glory of God may hereby be advanced and the Churches peace promoted I have my aime and it shall be the Crown of my rejoycing to my dying day But as to the Objection that hath thus let out my thoughts so far towards this subject I will be confident that either of these interpretations that are here given will sooner be received by those that are wise and moderate then our adversaries wrest which hath hitherto created so much trouble unto us The result will be this Episcopal Government is warranted by the word of God therefore it is no superstition to have it reestablished in our Church nor no transgression of the Law of Christ to yield subjection unto it And now to finish this matter whereas there hath been a Cry made Away with Superstition and Away with Idolatry Away made Away with Superstition and Away with Idolatry Away with Liturgy and Away with Bishops we may clearly see by what is here written that this clamour is altogether causeless Poor people that are thus wosully deluded the Lord pitie them and the Lord forgive them for they know not what they say Much more reason surely is there to cry out with a shout Blessed be God for Liturgy and Episcopacy whereby we
the earth Then with glory to God on high and peace upon earth but hereafter with Vae Vae Vae habitatoribus terrae Thrice wo to them that dwell upon the earth Then to gather the lost sheep of the house of Israel into the sheep-fold now to sever the Sheep from the Goats Then to embrace both Jew and Gentile now to divide between servant and Servant at the same Mill between man and wife in the same bed between Jacob and Esau in the same womb and to pronounce the one of them blessed and the other accursed Repent therefore we say unto you for this kingdome of God is at hand to deface all kingdomes to root up the nations to consume the earth with her works and the people with their sins This is the kingdome and no other that is now to be looked for and our Lord is gone to receive it for himself But whosoever they be that will not have him to reign over them whiles he swayeth the scepter of his Grace which is so despicable in the eye of the world Luk 19.12 when he returneth he will have such Rebels and Traytours dragg'd into his presence and see them executed before him Oh then let not the Serpent beguile you any longer with the expectation of a sools paradise Rather come I beseech without any further delay O ye children of Israel and children of Judah together and seek the Lord your God Jer. 5.4 5 who hath promised to be found of you Ask the way to Zion with your faces thitherward and we for our parts will give you the best directions we can Say as it is written of you you shall say Come let us joyn our selves to the Lord in an everlasting Covenant that shall never be forgotten Too long alas have you been unmindful of the Rock that begat you and forgotten your God that formed you And will you still continue to be a froward Generation children in whom is no faith Is the Lord Christ a stumbling-block unto you because of the reproach that is cast upon his kingdome by a sinful world A world that accounteth the things of the Spirit of God but foolishness which things it cannot know nor receive because they are spiritually discern'd And will you conform your selves to the guise of the world You that have heretofore with so much zeal declared your abhorrency of it Will you now joyn in a confederacy with it to your shame in that which is so contrary to the concurrent predictions of all your Prophets concerning the kingdome of the Messiah Some of whom I confess do speak of his glory and great atchievements but that must be understood in a spiritual sense as that he will bring the world under the power of his grace And those that do resist it he will by his Word and Spirit most righteously condemn Else how will you free those other Prophets from falshood and errour who speak as much of his poor base and contemptible estate under many miseries and afflictions yea of his death and passion As for that dream of two Messiasses to come the one Ben Joseph of the Tribe of Ephraim who is to suffer and undergo those indignities the other Ben David of the Tribe of Judah who must redeem deliver and restore Israel to their former inheritance and gather them together out of all the earth who must vanquish subdue and make tributary all Princes and Potentates of the world who never must dye but live and reign everlastingly in temporal Glory who shall raise again the dead Israelites unto life and amongst them Messiah Ben Joseph It is so sottish an absurdity that I believe you your selves are ashamed of it The Messiah whom you have expected is the Rock of Ages the Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending Would you have him then to vary the form of his Government which he hath alwayes exercised over his Church in a spiritual way to a worldly compliancy with the Princes of the earth What a shameful inconstancy would this be unsutable to his Honour and no whit conducible to the work the great work of Messiah in destroying the kingdome of Satan Yea what fruit would thereby redound unto you in carrying you safely through your pilgrimage here that you might sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the kingdome of God For us We profess this to be our earnest desire in our own behalf and if you be indeed the children of Abraham it would be your ambition to obtain it rather then any earthly glory Did the Lord ever in all the time of yesterday exercise a temporal Power over the Kings and Princes of the earth Where was his Throne erected What mettal was his Crown made of When Pharaoh kept his people in Egypt What armies of men did he muster up for their deliverance When Amal●k came out against them Moses his Deputy betakes himself to prayer whilst Joshua fights the Lords battels But what need the one pray and the other fight if the Lord himself who is the Lord of Hosts not onely of his subjects but of his enemies too was to have exercised such a Power And how ill did the Lord take it of your forefathers when they thus mutinied against him saying Nay but we will have a King over us 1 Sam. 8.7 that we also may be like unto other nations They have saith he rejected me that I should not reign over them meaning in his spiritual mediatory Power as I have before observed which though he still in great mercy continued as formerly during that regal Government which they then chose and which should in time have been mercifully establisht among them had they not been so precipitant in requiring it yet was his Spirit grieved at that their rebellion against him Oh know for certain It is a far greater rebellion against the Lord your God that you are this day guilty of In that you do so causelesly out of a vain affectation of conformity to other nations unwarranted by Moses and the Prophets reject the Anoynted of the most high God that he should not be your King according to that form of Government which is devolv'd upon him by the Father But Non obstante your obstinacy against him hitherto he hath reigned and reign he will still as he hath done Malgrè all the gates of hell He is the breath of our nosthrils and the life of our souls under his shadow we do live and rejoyce yea and we will rejoyce more and more And as for you because of your unkinde refusal of him hath not this our Lord according to his oath hitherto with a mighty hand Ezek. 20.33 and stretched-out arm and fury poured out ruled over you Whence otherwise hath it come to pass that so deep a stain hath been brought upon all your excellency and that your glory is thus eclipsed That you are scattered over the world and whereas you were the head you are now become the tail of
Being literally signifies an Age which English word is observed to have some affinity with that Greek termination and an Age of what extent soever it be hath an uninterrupted being Now this word being here put in the plural number may probably intend the several ages of both worlds First of this present world together with the sundry revolutions that are in it one generation passing another succeeding And secondly of the world to come This sense I conceive with submission may be allowed for where the word is put in the singular number there is often intended the one world or the other Sometimes it is put for this world as Luke 20.34 Matth. 28.20 Sometimes again it is written for the world to come as Joh. 6.51.58 But being here rendred in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it may well be said to comprehend the several ages of both worlds Joh. 6.51.58 I confess the world to come is often in Scripture per se rendred in the plural number 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and with an amplification too in sundry places of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but where the sense will bear a further latitude as it doth here too narrow a confinement is not to be set unto it v. g. Consider we the place of the Apostle 1 Tim. 1.17 1 Tim. 1.17 the Lord is there called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The King of Ages or Worlds that is of all Ages in this world and of that everlasting Age in the world to come because indeed as the Psalmist speaketh His Dominion endureth throughout all Ages both here and hereafter So in the Doxologie affixed to the Lords Prayer as Dr. Hammond observeth The same words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must intend both Ages or Worlds the present and the future For the Kingdome the Power and the Glory is the Lords not onely in this world but in the world that is to come And therefore we do well in that to ingeminate the words in our English Translation proverbially For ever and ever that is for this world which is one for ever and for the next which is another for ever The same sense and meaning very probably do the words of our Text likewise carry for the Mediatorship of the Lord Jesus Christ to which they do referre hath and shall have its virtual operation between God and his Saints for ever in this world and as we shall presently shew for ever in the world that is to come Let the words then have their utmost extent and full latitude comprehending both worlds viz. This world till time hath spun out it self to the very last m●nute And that which follows with all those years of Eternity that shall never cease The second thing to be considered is How Jesus Christ will be the Same to his Church for ever in the world to come For seeing as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.24.28 He must reign till all enemies are put under his feet and That when all things are subdued unto him he shall deliver up the kingdome to God even the Father that so God may be all in all we may inferre that there shall be a change in him and conclude that therefore he cannot be the Same But let us not be too forward to conclude before we have understood the premises aright as we ought to do First therefore to allude unto what I said before As Jesus Christ is the Same to day under the Gospel which he was yesterday under the Law but in a different way of the dispensation of the mysterie of Godliness so he will be the Same to his Church for ever in heaven but not after the same manner As Moses delivered up his dispensation unto Christ when the mystery of God was translated from the shadow to the Substance from the letter to the Spirit so will Christ deliver up the kingdome to the Father when by his Spirit he hath done all that the Father appointed him to do Yet as he was under Moses the Same in effect to his Church which he is now so will he be under the Father Not indeed so darkly with such glimpses of his appearance and secret illapses of his Light and Love into the hearts of his people as now but with a more free and full manifestation of his own and his Fathers glory without the least interposition of any let or hinderance whatsoever For now saith the Apostle we see through a glass darkly but then face to face c. Which Beatifical Vision as Christ hath here obtained for us by his Merit so will he for ever hereafter be the efficient cause of the uninterruptible continuance thereof unto us by his being in us But that I may not seem to deliver any thing in so important a matter without my warrant let us search the Scriptures and see what Testimony they give of Jesus herein It is not expedient to enquire after or to speak of those things which we have not seen It doth not yet appear saith the Evangelist what we shall be much less can we be able fully to discern what the Lord Jesus Christ shall be either in his Subjection to his Father or in his Relation to us when God shall be all in all Good therefore is it for us to be wise unto sobriety and to content our selves with what is revealed First then this we may assert for a most infallible truth that Jesus Christ will for ever be the Same in the Hypostatical union of his Humane nature with the Divine even then when he hath delivered up the kingdome to God even the Father And in this respect shall he then be subject to God For otherwise 1 Cor. 15.28 according to the word of the Apostle seeing he subsisteth ever in the real essential Form of God so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 2.6 is to be understood as it is taken in the same place Phil. 2 6. where the Apostle speaks of the Form of a servant he shall as he hath ever been according to his proper right without any injurious encroachment upon the Father be equal with him Though I confess his subjection to the Father is not limited to this sense as we shall see hereafter From which Hypostatical Union of his two Natures so inseparably to be continued unto all Eternity Joy unspeakable and full of Glory will undoubtedly arise to all those who are of the same Humane nature with him that shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world O what a happiness will it be to behold this our Lord and Redeeming Kinsman sitting at the right hand of the Throne of God exalted sarre above all Principalities and Power and Might and Dominion and every Name that is named Yea and from hence it will come to pass that the Divine nature whereof by Christ we have been made partakers in the state of Regeneration shall never cease to have a being in us but shall be perfected rather by his Presence
will afford us the like Suffrage herein as the other Prophets have done But before we enter hereupon give me leave to premise a word or two It is not my purpose here to launch out too ventrously into this deep I foresee the danger that attends upon it many of late having lost themselves in so doing by a too much confidence of their skill and strength that I may not therefore fall under the guilt of rashnes and inadvertency in this kinde with others who have been peremptory in stating and determining the Epoche's and Periods of times mentioned in this Book and that of the Revelation which have appeared to their shame to be of a larger extent then those limits which they have set unto them I shall onely offer what I have to say to the judgement and examination of the Church not daring to determine in a point of such difficulty and uncertainty as that is which I am now about to insist upon The place which I have singled out for my purpose is in the ninth Chapter of this Prophecy and the twenty fourth verse Where the Angel who is before called the Man Gabriel because he appeared in a humane shape speaks unto Daniel in this manner Seventy weeks as it is translated are determined upon thy people Dan. 9.24 and upon thy Holy City to finish the Transgression and to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for Iniquity and to bring in everlasting righteousness and to seal up the Vision and Prophecy and to anoint the most Holy In the exposition of which words I finde Interpreters do gene rally run upon this foot of account making these seventy weeks as they are called to be seventy times seven years and to begin at one of those four Edicts mentioned in Ezra and Nehemiah that came forth from those Persian Monarchs Cyrus Darius and Artaxerxes for the restoring and returning of the people and for the building of the Temple and City wherein they do much vary one from another and are at a great loss in their computations because not onely the Scripture doth not afford help in this matter not expressing the full years of the reign of those Princes nor yet the series of their succession but those Historians also that have been of old who as a learned Antiquary observeth having so many Bishop Mountague and so great helps at hand which we want of the Persian Babylonian Assyrian Egyptian Writers who at large related the acts of those Princes with whom in their times the state of the Jews did concur and who were abundantly furnished with Histories of the Seleucidan and Lagidan Princes of the Macedonian race with whom the Jews after the Captivity had great negotiations have left unto us so very poor or none at all helps for direction herein in so much that we have little or no cause to thank them for it Upon which consideration I say none of our Expositours before us could nor can any man else to this day conclude precisely upon a certain root of time for the beginning of these years according to this account nevertheless it is the concurrent judgement of writers that at one of these forementioned Edicts must these seventy weeks take their Commencement and Beginning the final Period whereof which must be as uncertain as the Beginning they make to be either at the coming of the Messiah or at his Baptisme or at his Death or at the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple the amounty of which time say they makes up 490 years and are afterwards by the Angel branched out into several parcels where every part hath some Cardinal thing of special remarke fixed unto it that should happen within that time But I shall now crave leave to lay down my conceptions of this Scripture differing from the ordinary interpretation of it believing there is enwrapped in it the whole purpose and determination of God concerning his Israel from first to last beginning at some notable Epoche and to be continued untill the final restauration of that Nation which is yet to come This I confess may seem strange at first sight because of the novelty of it But by that time we have duely considered the words as they are delivered by the Angel it may happily be adjudged not altogether impertinent and may give occasion unto some of a more diligent search and enquiry after a further meaning of the Holy Ghost in this Scripture then as yet hath been thought upon Observe then the Prophet understanding by books as he saith in the second verse the number of years whereof the Word of the Lord came to Jeremiah that he would accomplish seventy years in the desolations of Jerusalem which years were then expired he setteth himself as ver 3. to seek the Lord God by prayer and supplication in the behalf of his people and the Holy City that mercy might at length be shewed unto them in their deliverance Whereupon this answer is presently returned unto him by Gabriel but what answer is it Not punctually positive to his prayer which was for the aforesaid deliverance so much desired by him now after the expiration of the terme appointed for the Babylonish Captivity that seems to be the least part of the Angels errand at this time but because Daniel was a man greatly beloved the Angel hath a matter of greater import here to reveal unto him in which he might be assured that the deliverance which he prayed for should also be included But what is this business of greater import Is it the happy consequents which should follow upon their deliverance Thus indeed hath it been conceived But rather is it not as I have said and which I shall undertake here to prove to be the purpose of God concerning his delivering this people out of all their troubles especially those which they endured in Egypt and Babylon and now also in their dispersion into all Lands where they are scattered to this very day from the very time when they were first brought into a preparatory way of being formed into a Nation As for the Holy City that onely is inserted in this answer because the Prophet had mentioned it in his prayer and the Angel speaks more particularly of it in the verses following This with submission of my judgment of the Holy Catholike Church and of my Mother the Church of England I conceive to be the genuine sense of that Scripture and what I have now to say to it I desire may be considered without prejudice My supputation of the time here mentioned is after this manner These 70. Weekes as they are called I take for 70. Jubilees each of which being 49. years they together make up 3430 years Now if we reckon from the time of Jacobs going down into Egypt which is the Epoche that I six upon the reason whereof I shall shew hereafter there will not at this time want much of compleating these seventy Jubilees For from that time to
that Age and to the apprehension of the Prophet though the Judaical observation of Jubilees was to cease long before the expiration of the time that he was insisting upon But enough of this Let us proceed The time of Jacobs going down into Egypt is as hath been said before very remarkable and may be esteemed a fit Epocha for the beginning of these seventy Jubilees The grounds and reasons of which conjecture I do now here offer to consideration First when Jacob went down into Egypt God promised him to make him a great Nation Gen. 46.3 And withall designed that very place for the performance of his word which was there fulfilled For thus Moses tells the people Deut. 10.22 Thy fathers went down into Egypt with threescore and ten persons and now the Lord thy God hath made thee as the Stars of Heaven for multitude Whence we may collect this journey into Egypt was the beginning or providential occasion of forming this people into a Nation and whereby God did visibly fore-lay his design of proving himself unto them to be the great Jehovah in giving a being to his Promise made before unto Abraham Therefore very fit to be the Epocha of the Vision and Prophecy concerning this people Secondly Egypt was the place where Israel was first as a Childe trained up under his Fathers discipline and for the sins wherewith they there sinned God made them there to pass under the rod and brought them first into the bond of the Covenant Lev. 17.7 Josh 24.14 Ezek. 23.3 so that in all likelihood there did the time of Jacobs trouble begin which in the purpose of the Almighty was as the Angel here speaketh cut out and pared for this people And as they continued in their undutifulness forgetting the God that formed them so was their trouble also continued afterwards by sundry punishments inflicted on them in their several Generations but especially in the Babylonish Captivity and to this day lengthned out in their present dispersion into all Lands where the Lord hath scattered them And have we not good reason then to suppose that Jacobs going down into Egypt at the commandment of the Lord was eminently subservient to these ends that God might enter upon his work his great work which he had determined concerning this people Somewhat surely there is in it that the Spirit would have us to take special notice of because we find it so often mentioned in the Scripture see Gen. 46.6 Deut. 10.22 Deut. 26.5 Josh 24.4 Psal 105.23 Act. 7 15. It may be said Abraham also went down into Egypt two hundred and sixteen years before Jacob this account therefore of Jubilees may as well begin from that time as from Jacobs going thither A negative answer must hereunto be given For first though Abraham went into Egypt yet it was not at the commandment of the Lord Ps 105.14.15 but as a traveller from one Country to another as his affairs called him and it was but for a short time for he went up from thence again and which is remarkable All that he had he brought away with him Gen. 13.1 But as for Jacob he went not thither but at the express word of the Lord and there he continued till the day of his death and his Posterity removed not from thence till the Lord led them forth with a strong hand and stretched-out arm Secondly when Abraham went thither God had not made known unto him the afflictions that his Posterity should endure in that Land and therefore he might be at his liberty before to go thither or not as seemed good unto him but when once this was revealed unto him Gen. 15. there must then be no more journeying into Egypt by these Patriarchs till the very beginning of that time came which is here by the Angel said to be cut out for this people that is as I have said for their growing up into a Nation and suffering such chastisements which the Divine Wisdome had appointed for them Gen. 26.2 And hence it was very probably that an express inhibition was given unto Isaac that he should not go down into Egypt as his Father Abraham had done though it seems a necessity lay upon him to relieve himself and his family at that time by the plenty of Egypt being put to as hard a strait by reason of a second famine in the Land of Canaan as his Father Abraham was Thirdly Jacobs going into Egypt was a Type of our Saviours going thither one resembling the other in sundry notable circumstances and in that regard is the greater notice to be taken of it To instance First Jacob went thither at the commandment of the Lord so was Jesus carried thither by a Message from Heaven Secondly Joseph was a means of bringing Jacob into that Land so did another Joseph carry Christ into it Thirdly Jacob went down into Egypt that being the Countrey chosen of God for Israels infancy for he grew a lovely Childe there God taught Ephraim to go taking them by their arms Hos 11.1.3 So was the Holy Child Jesus carried into Egypt to be there for a while kept at nurse as I may say with his mother and during his * Sabellicus Historiographus scribit Josephum cum Maria puero Jesu in Aegypto 7. annos exulasse tantum scil temporis debuit implendae Herodis malitiae Minority to have that education as was meet and convenient for him Fourthly Jacob went thither to preserve his life from the Famine Gen. 45.5.7 And Jesus was carried thither to keep him out of harms-way and to preserve his life from those that sought to destroy it Fiftly Jacob and his posterity were to stay there till the time came which the Lord had set for their dismission from thence so Jesus was not to be brought out of Egypt till he was called according to the saying of the Prophet Hos 11.1 Out of Egypt have I called my Son and word brought by the Angel for that very purpose Matth. 2.13.19 These things being so may we not infer that the time of Jacobs going into Egypt was a time of great remark in Scripture and that it is the fittest of all other to make an Epocha from whence these seventy Jubilees are to derive their commencement and beginning Another argument there is yet to be considered for the confirmation of this sense of the Angels words taken from the end or final cause for which these 70 sevens were determined which is here said To finish the transgression and to make an end of sinnes and to make reconciliation for iniquity that is that no unrighteousness of what kinde or degree soever whether that single transgression of Jacob in the sinful manner of supplanting his brother Esau or that unnatural cruelty of his ten sons against their brother Joseph or the numberless multitude of sins whereof they have since been guilty or their most execrable iniquity against the Lord of life and his Gospel sent among them
tell who knows but that by the Commandment may be understood the Word which the Angel spake of before unto the Prophet vers 23. that came forth from God himself at the beginning of his supplications to restore and build Jerusalem rather then an Edict from those Persian Princes whom Expositors have severally fancied to themselves to have issued out for that end without warrant uncontroulable from the Spirit of God Yea and some other sense might yet be rendred of these words more then hitherto hath been thought upon by any which upon trial may possibly endure the Test as well as those that have formerly pass'd for currant amongst us But I approve of that sage advice which an Ancient hath long since given viz. It is best at some time to say nothing at every time to say enough but at no time to say all Go we on therefore to the next that is the Prophecy of Hosea In the first Chapter whereof we finde that when the Lord pronounceth Loammi against his people which should be the last Abdication of them even in this their present dispersion according to the concurrent judgement of sundry Expositors making no other account of them then as of a heathen Nation Hos 1.10 The Prophet notwithstanding upon this angry word which sounds terribly to all that hear it addeth immediately a word of comfort again saying Yet the number of the children of Israel shall be as the sand of the sea which cannot be measured nor numbred It will be said that this word of comfort hath reference to the Israel of God among the Gentiles I answer Be it so yet I say here again the holy Ghost hath not set any such limitation as if the posterity of Jacob were to be quite excluded For let me ask with an inversion of the Apostles words Is God the God of the Gentiles onely Rom. 3.29 Is he not also of the Jews Yes of the Jews also otherwise how should the children of Israel and the children of Judah be gathered together as it is said they shall vers 11. after this ultimate abdication and appoint themselves one Head to be their Governour which being yet to be done it followeth that this Prophecy also is not yet fulfilled Yea and if it be true that that vast and large part of the world called now America hath been the receptacle and hiding-place for the ten Tribes ever since their exile out of their own land as of late it hath with very great probability been conjectured to be some conceiving the same to be fore-signified by the Prophet Obadiah vers 20. Obad. v. 20. The captivity of Jerusalem shall possess the cities of the South that is of America so scituate or the dry Cities that Countrey being much under the Torrid Zone Others construing that Prophecy Esa 66.19 as fore-telling the same thing Esa 66.19 I will send those that escape of them unto the Nations to Tarshish Pul and Lud that draw the Bow to Tubal and Javan to the Isles afarre off that have not heard my fame neither have seen my glory c. Then also shall that be fulfilled in them which followeth Hos 1.11 And they shall come up out of the Land where they have all this while layen hid and where the Lord hath shut them in But how shall they come up will some say seeing they are now ever since their entrance there environ'd round with the sea Shall the sea give them way again as it did when they came up out of Egypt So indeed some are of opinion taking their guess from 2 Esa 13.47 Or shall the Angels be sent to be their Convoy with some unwonted miracle through the ayr I answer First it is questionable whether that other world as it is called be divided from this by the sea some Writers of very good note think otherwise and if both be still contiguous What hinders hut this people may return the way that they went But put case that Time and the Sea two insatiable devourers have through Gods permission made a separation to the end that this banished Nation might be there shut up till the time of their Enlargement be fully come then may that of the Prophet Esay be verified concerning the manner of their return Esa 60.9 Esay 60.9 The ships of Tarshish that is of the Mediterranean sea for so is Tarshish in that place to be taken shall be first ready being of the nearest vicinity to the land of Canaan to bring these Sons of God from far c. unto the Name of the Lord their God Hos 1.11 and to the Holy One of Israel c. At which time great shall be the day of Jezreel saith the Prophet in the fore-cited place that is It shall be a day of great admiration unto all by reason of the gathering together of the Israelites which before seemed rather to be Jezreel that is a people dispersed by God then an Israel that had power with God and prevailed Again in the third Chapter of this Prophecy of Hosea Hos 3.4 vers 4. it is foretold of this people in this manner The children of Israel shall abide many days without a King and without a Prince and without a Sacrifice and without an Image and without an Ephod and without Teraphim As much as to say They should live like a company of salvage Indians no government Ecclesiastical or Civil no form of Religion to be found among them either according to the law of Moses or according to the corrupt Exemplar of their fore-fathers All which hath come upon the ten Tribes in these latter days But mark now what the Prophet addeth Vers 5. vers 5. Afterwards shall the children of Israel return and seek the Lord their God and David their King that is as it is confessed on all hands the Messiah Davids sonne according to the flesh and shall fear that is worship the Lord and his goodness manifested in the Messiah without Types and Shadows much more without the least mixture of Idolatry old or new in the latter days If then this judgement here written be executed upon this people to the uttermost undoubtedly their Restauration and Return both from their sin and their captivity shall according to the words of this Prophecy be fulfilled and in the determined time brought to pass also Thus have we hitherto seen the Prophets as with one voyce testifying and proclaiming the purpose and counsel of God concerning the Calling and Conversion of the Jews in the latter dayes More Testimonies of the like nature might be produced out of the other Prophets to this purpose But the time or at least the patience of some would fail if we should undertake to shew further what David and the rest have Prophecyed and written hereof We shall therefore forbear to insist upon any more and seeing that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word is established the Prophets already mentioned may suffice
of the first of the Acts sixth and seventh verses Act. 1.6.7 The words are these When they therefore were come together they asked of him saying Lord wilt thou at this time restore again the Kingdom to Israel And he said unto them It is not for you to know the times or the seasons which the Father hath put in his own p●wer I know well the Apostles have been and are to this day charged here with an errour common among the Jews as it is reported of them namely That the time should come when the Messiah should reign as Lord and King upon the Earth according to the manner of the world and that all Nations should in that kinde be subject unto him and because the Jews were to have the preheminence among them therefore doth the Apostle speak here of his Dominion in this man●er calling it the kingdom of Israel But I must crave leave to enter my dissent unto this charge because it runs on too fast in the world without a warrant yea I cannot but account it too much rashness to impute a fault unto those eminent servants of Christ where the Holy Ghost in Scripture hath not given a clear demonstration thereof A fault indeed here is whereof they were too guilty in busying themselves about the knowledge of a time wherein they were not concerned and for which the Lord rebukes them But that they should now as for what they had done formerly in that kinde it is not here Material look for such a temporal Kingdome of the Messiah as the Jews generally did and do still expect this I confidently deny The grounds of which confidence will appear when I shall have proved that this discourse between Christ and his Apostles is a clear confirmation of the point in hand That we may understand a●ight the sense of this Scripture let us consider distinctly three things First the occasion of this Question Secondly the persons that put the Question Thirdly the Answer unto it First the occasion from whence the Question did arise is couched in this word therefore when they therefore were come together they asked of him c. By which word of connexion it is manifest that their Question was not suddainly started as of a thing impertinent to the purport of Christs Doctrine which he had been pressing upon them in those fourty dayes since his Resurrection but rather was produced by them as a result very consonant thereunto He had been speaking to them as it is said vers 3. of the things pertaining to the Kingdome of God that is of the future estate of his Church for as for the Doctrine of Salvation he had fully made that known unto them before as appears Joh. 15.15 Where he saith All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you So that probable it is the Subject of his discourse now was as I have said concerning his Church giving instructions for the planting and governing of it and premonitions also what dangers and difficulties it was like to suffer and how it should prosper and prevaile over them all in the latter end And herein the Lord manifests his provident care and tender compassion which he had of his Church resembling thereby good old Jacob his Type in this very particular who when he was about to leave the world calls upon his sons to gather themselves together that he migh shew unto them what should befall them in the latter dayes G●n 49 1. Whereas therefore the Lord Jesus Christ had been speaking to his Apostles of these things pertaining to the Kingdome of God and they thereupon enquire of him concerning the restoring the Kingdome to Israel is it not past all gain-saying that some at least of the things which he spake had reference to this restauration Especially when as it is well observed by Grotius In his Annota Luk. 21.24 non negat se id facturum sed quo id futurum esset tempore noluit ab ipsis inquiri he doth not deny that such a thing he would do but onely was not willing to be enquired of by them when it should be done Much was to be done as the sequel now proveth before this which they so hastily sought for could come to pass which they thought not of for it could never have entred into their hearts to conceive unless it had been revealed unto them wherein nevertheless they and their Successours for many Ages should be employed as servants and co-workers with Christ to the end that this much desired restauration might by the bringing in of others also to the faith of the Gospel be attended with the greater glory And hence it is that the Lord commands them that they should not depart from Jerusalem because from thence was the word of life to go out into the world till they were baptised with the Holy Ghost which was the promise of the Father whereby they were to be endued with power extraordinary as being the chief intruments under Christ for so great a work and to authorize others in an ordinary way to be their co-agents in it Secondly consider the persons that put the Question First it was the Apostles men not to be despised such as were legati à latere whom Christ had chosen above all others to be his witnesses of what he did and taught and to be his Embassadours to carry his name into all the world Who did eate and drinks with him after he arose from the dead Act. 10. Secondly the Apostles who though they were not yet baptised with the Holy Ghost according to the promise of the Father yet had received the Holy Ghost by Christs breathing on them whereby they had not onely power given them more then ordinary but knowledge also more then ever they had to discern what might be most conducible to the advancement of their Masters honour and so knew more of his minde in order thereunto then any others could or can possibly attain unto Thirdly the Apostles altogether not one or two of them separated from the rest desirous to winde themselves into their Masters favour above their fellows as it had unhappily fallen out in former time but the eleven with one consent joyned as one man to put this Question unto him for when they were come together it is said they asked of him saying Lord wilt thou at this time restore again the Kingdome to Israel Which Kingdome if it were never any more to have a being in this World as a thing inconsistent with the manner of Christs Spiritual Kingdome their general agreement about it would doubtless have been adjudged no better then a conspiracy against the Dignity and Prerogative Royal of their Lord and Master and consequently had not gone without a severe check no more then their precipitant disquisition after the time did for which they are reproved Thirdly consider the answer that the Lord giveth It is not saith he for you to know the times or
that should not be wholly spent before this obduration of theirs should be wholly removed from them and when that shall be the Apostle here tells us when the fulness of the Gentiles is come in If any shall demand what this fulness of the Gentiles is I must answer with Origen Quaerit ista plenitudo gentium unus solus not it unigenitus e●us c. What this fulness of the Gentiles shall be is known onely unto God and to his onely begotten Son and to those to whom the Son will reveale it Possibly it may be a great multitude of Gentiles such as was not the like in all the generations of old that should flock together to the Church like Doves to their windows by the accession of which multitude to the faith the Jews shall be provoked through a holy emulation to acknowledge Christ to be the true Messiah repenting themselves of their so long estrangement from him or possibly because the Jews shall hereafter have their peculiar fulness according to what is said before of them v. 12. in opposition to their present failing therefore hath God also appointed a certain fulness for the Gentiles unknown as yet what it shall be that when it is come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So rendred 1 Cor. 6.3 neither of them should have cause to despise each other any more In sine this I think we may safely say of it that this word of the Apostle hath some affinity with the word of our Saviour Luk. 21.24 before insisted upon viz. When the times of the Gentiles as they are in the hand of God shall be fulfilled so that when God hath finished all his predeterminate counsel concerning the Gentiles and the depth of his wisdome issued forth such a spiritual and ecclesiastical fulness among them as may be for the advancement of the Gospel and Kingdome of Christ then shall the mystery of God concerning his Israel be finished also 2 Cor. 3.16 The vaile shall be taken off from them their occallation wholly cease and they shall according to the Prophecy of Zachary Look upon him whom they have pierced and mourn for him as one mourneth for his onely Son c. And then saith the Apostle all Israel shall be saved All Israel that is not as it is construed by some the whole Israel of God throughout the world consisting of Jews and Gentiles for that neither was any mystery to those unto whom this Epistle is written who knew full well by dayly experience that multitudes of the Gentiles together with some of the Jewish Nation were converted to the faith and by consequence should undoubtedly be saved yea if this construction should be admitted the Apostle had receded from his scope which he aimed at throughout this whole Chapter which was to suppress the insolency of the Gentiles against the Jews and to quicken the poor Jews with some lively hope of their restauration Laying aside therefore this mistake though it be fathered by many who carry a great name amongst us in the interpretation of Scripture By Israel here is undoubtedly meant Children of the flock of Abraham sprung out of the thigh of Jacob those whom the Apostle calls before v. 14. His own flesh Concerning whom a Question likewise is started by Expositors upon the occasion of this Note of Universality all whether thereby is meant all none excepted or many that is the greatest number of the Jews that shall be saved Which needless Question I shall not stand upon onely deliver in short my poor conceptions concerning the Apostles sense in this particular with submission to the Church By all Israel is meant not Judah alone which then dwelt in the Land of Canaan but all the twelve Tribes of Israel that were scattered abroad in the world all of them saith the Apostle shall be saved that is delivered from their sin and consequently from their captivity and brought again as they were before into a state of salvation wherein they shall abide for ever so long as the world endu●eth This in truth is the bottome of the mystery that is here intended and this sense I am prone to give of it being inclined unto it by the word of the Prophet as it is alledged by the Apostle viz. There shall come out of Sion a deliverer and shall turn away ungodliness from Jacob for this is my Covenant with them when I shall take away their sin In which words three things are of special remark First the Apostles varying from the Prophet in the allegation of his testimony for this will be of singular use to our present purpose The Prophet had said a Redeemer shall come the Apostle saith there shall come a Deliverer a Redeemer shall come to Sion saith the Prophet there shall come a Deliverer out of Sion saith the Apostle to those that turn from ungodliness in Jacob saith the Prophet to turn away ungodliness from Jacob saith the Apostle And why is there so much disparity may some say between them Should not the Apostle since he will corroborate his assertion from what is written by the Prophet produce his testimony exactly without any alteration I answer the spirit of truth alwayes One and the Same wherewith these Actuaries and Pen-men of Holy Writ were guided knew best in what termes to express the purpose and counsel of God concerning his people both in the times of the Law and of the Gospel Distingue tempora concordabunt scripturae Hence it is that the Apostle is here made the Prophets interpreter rendring his sense in evangelical termes according to the intent and purpose of the Spirit therein That therefore which the Prophet speaks of the comming of Christ in the flesh is extended by the Apostle to a blessed effect that shall follow thereupon which he might in reason warrantably do for causâ proximâ positâ necesse est poni effectum the effect will undoubtedly follow the cause and that coming of the Messiah was certainly the immediate cause of all the happiness that at any time was to come upon the Church to the end of the World Here is then no contradiction in this disparity but a sweet and melodious harmony rather the eccho whereof to my apprehension soundeth in this manner This Redeemer or redeeming Kinsman of Israel Christ Jesus being come unto Sion shall out of Sion that is from his Church where he hath his dwelling and abode by his spirit cause a deliverance to arise for his kindred Israel in restoring them again to their spiritual estate which being lost by their unbelief he had purchased again for them And because the Redeemer was to slay the murderer of his kindred as well as to re-enfeoffe them in their Land and livelihood therefore shall this deliverer also turn away that is utterly destroy ungodliness their murderous enemy out of Jacob which being his act for them they also by right of propinquity and nearness of kindred may be said themselves to be active
season All which considered I appeal unto all men that are able to discern whether the Apostles words are not hereby clearly confirmed viz. that the gifts and calling of God are to the Jews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the word is reported to be rendred unchangeable and not to be repented of For my part I take it to be undeniable and therefore do also infer that undoubtedly there is a time before the end cometh wherein they shall most certainly be restored If it should be yet objected that the Jews are not onely Gods enemies in a passive sense but in an active as not obeying his Gospel nor believing his Son whom he sent among them and thereupon will conclude that there is no hope of their conversion because he that casteth away the remedy makes his disease incurable Sol. The Apostle gives an answer hereto likewise v. 30.31 For as ye in times past have not believed God yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief even so have these also now not believed that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy Which words seem to be written by the Apostle in forme of a Prolepsis to preoccupate the aforesaid objection by a clear demonstration in themselves that should obtrude it being as much as to say Learn of your selves that the Jews Conversion is not altogether hopeless notwithstanding their present enmity against God in their disobedience to his Gospel For if you who were sometimes foolish and disobedient living in malice and envy even as bad as the Jews hating of God and hateful unto him have yet nevertheless obtained mercy why should you doubt but that the Jews though they be now a stubborn and refractory people may obtain mercy with God also especially seeing mercy hath happily come unto you upon the occasion of their contumacy but to them it shall come in a far more excellent way viz. Through your mercy that is by beholding of that mercy which God hath manifested unto you Gods aim and purpose we see is the exaltation of his mercy though men be merciless in judging and condemning one another for saith the Apostle v. 32. God hath concluded all in unbelief that he might have mercy upon all Where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all is commonly interpreted with a reference unto both Jews Gentiles that neither side may have whereof to boast before God but that both these and those may be saved by mercy which sense I willingly subscribe unto as not contrariant to the Apostles scope in this place But I demand may it not be understood as referring to the Jews onely so as that the word of universality all might be taken for all Israel as it is before meaning all the tribes of Israel whom God had shut up in unbelief that he might have mercy upon them all Certain it is the original hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth not stand as an idle cypher to signifie nothing but is put as a relative to distinguish this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all from some other and may be as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it is said before of the article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and therefore doth our English translation bring in the word them God hath concluded them all in unbelief as implying the Jews onely in this argument though from the thing it self the Gentiles are not exempted But I leave this criticisme to the examination of the judicious The conclusion notwithstanding from hence also will follow That the Conversion of the Jewish Nation shall for the magnifying of Gods mercy in due time most certainly come to pass Obj. Some yet do further object that the Jews are so embodied with other people and so mingled with other Nations that there is an utter impossibility that they should ever any more become a Nation distinct from the Gentiles But if there be any found that are distinct they shall not be formed into a Nation but those that are in Spain shall be called Spanish Jews and those that are in Italy Italian and those in Germany Germans c. Sol. I answer Let not impossibilities be objected to the Omnipotent God He that can out of stones raise up Children unto Abraham can easily make good his word which he hath spoken concerning the restauration of his Israel And albeit it were so that they are indeed embodied with other people of the world which yet is not true for the generality of them as we have before shewed yet shall that word spoken by the Prophet Amos be herein verified of them Lo I will command Amos 9.9 saith the Lord and I will sift the house of Israel among all Nations like as corn is sifted in a sieve yet shall not the least grain fall upon the earth Amos 9.9 Obj. It is moreover objected that to maintain this Doctrine of the Jews restauration is to put the world into a careless security concerning the end for if this must be before the end cometh will not many people who are too much negligent already in preparing for the great day take occasion thereby to grow more remiss therein and so consequently may that day come upon them unawares as the Scripture often speaketh which if it should finde them in their sins will undoubtedly prove a black and dismal day unto them Sol. I answer First the uncertainty of the time of every mans particular dissolution may suffice to take away all such carnal presumption For as I said before alluding to that of the Psalmist Ps 19.2 Day unto day uttereth speech The day of death gives an infallible testimony to the day of judgement of every mans final estate whether it be good or bad whether it shall be to the resurrection of life or the resurrection of damnation And according to that information so shall the judgment be as death leaves us so judgment shall finde us Secondly We that are Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the manifold grace of God must not be afraid to make known the counsel of God in Scripture least ungodly people should make an ill use of it What ever the consequents be of our sidelity in the discharge of our Ministery we are to leave them to the wisdom and determination of the Almighty who will order all things for his own glory as seemeth good unto him Even in this very case touching the end of the world the Apostle Saint Paul though he had in his first Epistle to the Thessalonians written of the sudden and unexpected coming of the Lord yet when he perceived that some false teachers were like to take occasion by what he had written thereof to make those people believe that the day of Christ was then at hand thinking thereby as it is probable to carry on a pernicious design against the whole doctrine of the Gospel he thereupon tells them plainly in his second Epistle 2 Thes 2.2.3