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A85428 Christ set forth in his [brace] death, resurrection, ascension, sitting at Gods right hand, intercession, [brace] as the [brace] cause of justification. Object of justifying faith. Upon Rom. 8. ver. 34. Together with a treatise discovering the affectionate tendernesse of Christs heart now in heaven, unto sinners on earth. / By Tho: Goodwin, B.D. Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1642 (1642) Wing G1232; Thomason E58_2; Thomason E58_3; ESTC R8966 205,646 392

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abide upon him in heaven It must never be said The Spirit of the Lord is departed from Him who is the Sender and Bestower of the holy Ghost upon us And if the Spirit once comming upon his Members abides with them for ever as Christ promiseth Iohn 14. 16. then much more doth this Spirit abide upon Christ the Head from whom we all since Christ was in heaven receive that Spirit and by vertue of which Spirits dwelling in him he continues to dwell in us Therefore of him it is said Esay 11. 2. The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him Yea and in that storie of the holy Ghosts desending upon him at his Baptisme it is not onely recorded that He descended on him but over and above it is added And abode upon him Yea further to put the greater emphasis upon it it is twice repeated So Iohn 1. 32. I saw the Spirit sayes the Euangelist descending from heaven like a Dove and hee adds this also as a further thing observed by him and it abode upon him And then againe ver 33. I knew him not sayes he but he that sent me gave me this token to know him by Vpon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending and remaining on him the same is he And further as it is intimated there he rested on him to that end that he might baptize us with the holy Ghost unto the end of the world The same sayes he is he that baptizeth with the holy Ghost He at first descends as a Dove and then abides as a Dove for ever upon him and this Dove it selfe came from heaven first And therefore certainly now that Christ himselfe is gone to heaven he abides and sits upon him much more as a Dove still there Moreover let me adde this that although the Spirit rested on him here without measure in comparison of us yet it may be safely said that the Spirit in respect of his effects in gifts of grace and glory rests more abundantly on him in heaven then he did on earth even in the same sense that at his baptisme as was said he rested on him in such respects more abundantly then he did before his Baptisme during the time of his private life For as when he came to heaven he was enstalled King and Priest as it were anew in respect of a new execution so for the work to be done in heaven he was anew anointed with this oyle of gladnesse above his fellowes as Psal 45. 7. Which place is meant of him especially as he is in heaven at Gods right hand in fulnesse of joy as Psal 16. ult it is also spoken of him when also it is that he goes forth in his majesty to conquer as ver 4. of that 45. Psal And yet then Meeknesse is not far off but is made one of his dispositions in this heighth of glory So it followes in the fore-cited verse In thy majesty ride prosperously because of Truth and Meeknesse c. Therefore Peter sayes Acts 2. 36. that That same Iesus whom you Jews have crucified and who was risen and ascended God hath made both Lord and Christ Lord that is hath exalted him as King in heaven and Christ that is hath also anointed him and this Oyle is no other then the holy Ghost with whom the same Peter tells us he was anointed at his Baptisme Acts 10. 38. Yea and because he then at once received the Spirit in the fullest measure that for ever he was to receive him therefore it was that he shed him downe on his Apostles and baptized them with him as in that 2. of the Acts we reade Now it is a certaine rule that whatsoever we receive from Christ that he himselfe first receives in himselfe for us And so one reason why this oile ran then so plentifully downe on the skirts of this our High-priest that is on his members the Apostles and Saints and so continues to do unto this day is because our High-priest and Head himselfe was then afresh anointed with it Therefore ver 33. of that 2. of the Acts Peter giving an account how it came to passe that they were so filled with the holy Ghost sayes that Christ having received from the Father the promise of the holy Ghost had shed him forth on them which receiving is not to be only understood of his bare and single receiving the promise of the holy Ghost for us by having power then given him to shed him downe upon them as God had promised though this is a true meaning of it but further that hee had received him first as powred forth on himself and so shed him forth on them according to that rule that whatever God doth unto us by Christ he first doth it unto Christ all promises are made and fulfilled unto him first and so unto us in him all that he bestows on us he receives in himselfe And this may bee one reason why as Iohn 7. 39. the Spirit was not as yet given because Iesus was not as yet glorified But now he is in heaven he is said to have the seven spirits so Rev. 1. 3. which book sets him out as he is since he went to heaven Now those seven spirits are the holy Ghost for so it must needs be meant and not of any creature as appeares by the 4. ver of that Chap. where grace and peace are wisht from the seven spirits so called in respect of the various effects of him both in Christ and us though but one in person And seven is a number of perfection is therefore there mentioned to shew that now Christ hath the Spirit in the utmost measure that the humane nature is capable of And as his knowledge which is a fruit of the Spirit since his Ascension is enlarged for before he knew not when the day of Judgement should be but now when he wrote this book of the Revelation he did so are his bowels I speak of the humane nature extended all the mercies that God meanes to bestow being now actually to run through his hands and his particular notice and he to bestow them not on Jewes only but on Gentiles also who were to be converted after he went to heaven And so he hath now an heart adequate to Gods own heart in the utmost extent of shewing mercie unto any whom God hath intended it unto And this is the third demonstration from the Spirits dwelling in him wherein you may help your faith by an experiment of the holy Ghost his dwelling in your own hearts and there not only working in you meekenesse towards others but pitty towards your selves to get your soules saved and to that end stirring up in you incessant and unutterable groanes before the Throne of grace for grace and mercie Now the same Spirit dwelling in Christs heart in heaven that doth in yours here and always working in his heart first for you and then in yours by commission from him rest assured therefore that that Spirit
and Spirits are included in that flesh for it is caro vitalis living flesh and therefore hath Blood and Spirits that flow and move in it then why not the same affections also and those not stirring only and meerely in the soule but working in the body also unto which that soule is joyned and so remaining really humane affections The use of bloud and spirits is as to nourish which end is now ceased so to affect the heart and bowels by their motion to and fro when the soule is affected And why this use of them should not remaine and if not this we can conceive no other I know not Neither why this affection should be onely restrained to his spirit or soule and his corporeall powers not be supposed to communicate and partake in them That so as he is a true man and the same man that he was both in body as well as in soule for else it had not been a true Resurrection so he hath still the very same true humane affections in them both and such as whereof the body is the seat and instrument as well as the soule And seeing this whole man both body and soule was tempted and that as the Text sayes he is touched with a feeling in that nature which is tempted it must therefore be in the whole man both body and soule Therefore when as we reade of the wrath of the Lambe as Revel 6. 16. namely against his enemies as here of his pity and compassion towards his friends and members why should this be attributed onely to his Deity which is not capable of wrath or to his soule and spirit onely And why may it not be thought he is truly angry as a man in his whole man and so with such a wrath as his body is affected with as well as that he is wrathfull in his soule onely seeing he hath taken up our whole nature on purpose to subserve his Divine nature in all the executions of it But now how far in our apprehensions of this we are to cut off the weaknesse and frailty of such affections as in the dayes of his flesh was in them and how exactly to difference those which Christ had here and those which he hath in heaven therein lyes the difficulty and I can speak but little unto it Yet first this we may lay downe as an undoubted Maxime That so far or in what sense his Body it self is made spirituall as it is called 1 Cor. 15. 44. so far and in that sense all such affections as thus working in his Body are made spirituall and that in an opposition to that fleshly and fraile way of their working here But then as his Body is made spirituall not Spirit spirituall in respect of power and likenesse to a Spirit not in respect of substance or nature so these affections of pity and compassion doe work not onely in his Spirit or Soule but in his Body too as their seat and instrument though in a more spirituall way of working and more like to that of Spirits then those in a fleshly fraile body are They are not wholly spirituall in this sense that the soule is the sole subject of them and that it drawes up all such workings into it selfe so that that should be the difference between his affections now and in the dayes of his flesh Men are not to conceive as if his body were turned into such a substance as the Sun is of for the soule as through a case of glasse to shine gloriously in onely but further it is united to the soule to be acted by it though immediately for the soul to produce operations in it And it is called spirituall not that it remains not a body but because it remains not such a body but is so framed to the soule that both it selfe and all the operations of all the powers in it are immediately and entirely at the arbitrary imperium dominion of the soule that as the soule is pleased to use it and to sway it and move it even as immediately and as nimbly and without any clog or impediment as an Angel moves it selfe or as the soule acteth it selfe So that this may perhaps be one difference that these affections so far as in the body of Christ doe not affect his soule as here they did though as then under the command of Grace and Reason to keep their motions from being inordinate or sinfull but further the soule being now too strong for them doth as its owne arbitrement raise them and as entirely and immediately stir them as it doth it selfe Hence 2. these affections of pity and sympathie so stirred up by himselfe though they move his bowels and affect his bodily heart as they did here yet they doe not afflict and perturbe him in the least nor become they a burthen a load unto his spirit so as to make him sorrowfull or heavy as in this life here his pity unto Lazarus made him and as his distresses at last that made him sorrowfull unto death So that as in their rise so in their effect they utterly differ from what they were here below And the reason of this is because his Body and the blood and spirits thereof the instruments of affecting him are now altogether impassible namely in this sense that they are not capable of the least alteration tending to any hurt what ever And so his body is not subject to any griefe nor his spirits to any wast decay or expence They may and doe subserve the soule in its affections as they did whilst he was here but this meerly by a locall motion moving to and fro in the veynes and arteries to affect the heart and bowels without the least diminution or impaire to themselves or detriment to him And thus it comes to passe that though this Blood and spirits doe stir up the same affections in his heart and bowels which here they did yet not as then with the least perturbation in himselfe or inconvenience unto himselfe But as in this life he was troubled and grieved without sinne or inordinancie so now when he is in heaven he pitties and compassionates without the least mixture or tang of disquietement and perturbation which yet necessarily accompanied his affections whilst he was here because of the frailty in which his body and spirits were framed His perfection destroyes not his affections but onely corrects and amends the imperfection of them Passiones perfectivas to bee now in him the best of Schoolemen doe acknowledge Thirdly All naturall affections that have not in them Indecentiam status something unbefitting that state and condition of glory wherein Christ now is both Schoole-men and other Divines doe acknowledge to be in him Humanae affectiones quae naturales sunt neque cum probro vel peccato conjunctae sed omni ex parte rationi subduntur denique ab iis conditionibus liberantur quae vel animo vel corpori aliquo modo officiunt
person meerely and upon his owne bottome onely there had beene no occasion for such a speech and yet consider him as he stood in our stead there was for what need of such a Justification if he had not been some way neer a condemnation He therefore must be supposed to stand here in Esay at Gods Tribunall as well as at Pilates with all our sins upon him And so the same Prophet tels us Ch. 53. 6. God made the iniquities of us to meete on him He was now made sin and a curse and stood not in danger of Pilates condemnation only but of Gods too unlesse he satisfied him for all those sins And when the wrath of God for sin came thus in upon him his faith was put to it to trust wait on him for his Justification for to take off all those sins together with his wrath from off him and to acknowledg himselfe satisfied him acquited Therfore in the 22. Ps which was made for Christ when hanging on the Crosse and speaks how his heart was taken up that while he is brought in as putting forth such a faith as here we speak of when he called God his God My God my God then whēas to his sense he had forsaken him why hast thou forsaken me Yea he helped his faith with the faith of the Fore-fathers whom upon their trust in him God had delivered Our Fathers says he trusted in thee they trusted and thou didst deliver them Yea at the 5. v. we find him laying himselfe at Gods feet lower then ever any man did I am a worme sayes he which every man treads on and counts it a matter of nothing for to kill and no man as it follows and all this because he bare our sins Now his deliverance and justification from all these to be given him at his resurrection was the matter the businesse he thus trusted in God for even that he should rise again and be acquited from them So Psal 16. a Psalme made also for Christ when to suffer and to lie in the grave ver 8 9 10. The Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved Therefore my heart is glad my flesh also resteth in hope Or as in the Originall dwels in confident surenesse thou wilt not leave my soule in hell that is under the load of these sins and thy wrath laid on me for them neither wilt thou suffer thy holy One in my body to see corruption This is in substance all one with what is here said in this one word He is neere that justifies me for Christs Resurrection was a Iustification of him as I shall hereafter shew Neither 2. 2. A faith for the justifying of us did he exercise faith for himselfe only but for us also and that more then any of us is put to it to exercise for himselfe for he in dying and emptying himselfe trusted God with the merit of all his sufferings aforehand there being many thousands of soules to be saved thereby a long while after even to the end of the world He dyed and betrusted all that stock into his Fathers hands to give it out in Grace and Glory as those for whom he dyed should have neede And this is a greater trust considering the infinite number of his elect as then yet to come then any man hath occasion to put forth for himselfe alone God trusted Christ before he came into the world and saved many millions of the Jews upon his bare word And then Christ at his death trusts God againe as much both for the salvation of Jews and Gentiles that were to beleeve after his death In Heb. 2. 12 13 14 15. it is made an Argument that Christ was a man like us because he was put to live by faith like as we are which the angels doe not and to this end the Apostle brings in these words prophecied of him as spoken by him of himselfe I will put my trust in him as one proofe that he was a man like unto us Now for what was it that he trusted God By the Context it appeares to be this that he should be the salvation of his brethren and children and that he should have a seede and a generation to serve him and raise up a Church to God to praise him in For this is made his confidence and the issue of his sufferings in that fore-cited Psal 22. from ver 22. to the end How should the consideration of these things both draw us on to faith Vse To draw on to faith and encourage us therein and encourage us therein and raise up our hearts above all doubtings and withdrawings of spirit in beleeving For in this example of Christ we have the highest instance of beleeving that ever was He trusted God as we have seene for himselfe and for many thousands besides even for all his elect and hast not thou the heart to trust him for one poore soule Yea Christ thus trusted God upon his single Bond but we for our assurance have both Christ and God bound to us even God with his surety Christ for he is Gods Surety as well as ours A double Bond from two such Persons whom would it not secure If God the Father and God the Son thus mutually trusted one another for our salvation whom would it not induce to trust them both for ones own salvation when as otherwise they must be damned that will not 1. This example of Christ may teach and incite us to beleve For did Christ lay downe all his glory and empty himselfe and leave himselfe worth nothing but made a Deed of Surrendring all he had into his Fathers hands and this in a pure trust that God would justifie many by him as it is in Esay 53. and shall not we lay downe all we have and part with what ever is deare unto us afore hand with the like submission in a dependance and hope of being our selves justified by him Especially against the greatnesse of sinnes And withall 2. it may encourage us to beleeve Hast thou the guilt of innumerable transgressions comming in and discouraging thee from trusting in him Consider but what Christ had though not of his owne Christ was made as Luther boldly in this sense that we speak of him speakes the greatest sinner that ever was that is by imputation for the sins of all Gods chosen met in him And yet he trusted God to be justified from them all and to be raised up from under the wrath due of them Alas thou art but one poore sinner thy faith hath but a light and smal load laid upon it namely thy own sins which to this summe he undertook for are but as an unite to an infinite number God laid upon him the iniquities of us all Christ trusted God for his own Acquitance from the sins of all the world and when that was givē him he yet again further trusted him to acquit the world for his satisfaction sake But thou
ver 6. Otherwise as that woman said to Philip when she came to him for justice and he put her off Then cease sayes she to be a King So if Christ should deny any such soule to take its cause in hand he must then cease to be a Priest He lives to intercede He is a Priest called by God as was Aaron ver 6. Wherefore he ought to doe it in that it is his office 3. And if thy soule yet feareth the difficulty of its owne particular case in respect of the greatnesse of thy sinnes and the circumstances thereof or any consideration whatsoever which to thy view doth make thy salvation an hard suit to obtaine the Apostle therefore further addes He is able to save to the utmost what ever thy cause be and this through this his Intercession That same word to the utmost is a good word and vvell put in for our comfort Consider it therefore for it is a reaching vvord and extends it selfe so farre that thou canst not look beyond it Let thy soule be set upon the highest mount that ever any creature vvas yet set upon and that is enlarged to take in and view the most spacious prospect both of sinne and misery and difficulties of being saved that ever yet any poore humbled soule did cast within it selfe yea joyne to these all the objections and hinderances of thy Salvation that the heart of man can suppose or invent against it selfe lift up thy eyes and looke to the utmost thou canst see and Christ by his Intercession is able to save thee beyond the Horizon and furthest compasse of thy thoughts even to the utmost and worst case the heart of Man can suppose It is not thy having laine long in Sinne long under terrours and despairs or having sinned often after many enlightnings that can hinder thee from being saved by Christ Do but remember this same word to the utmost and then put in what exceptions thou wilt or canst lay all the barrs in thy way that are imaginable yet know thou that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against thee 4. Again consider but what it is that Christ who hath by his death done enough to save thee doth yet further for thee in Heaven If thou thoughtest thou hadst all the Saints in Heaven and Earth jointly concurring in promoving thy salvation and competitours unto God in instant and incessant requests and prayers to save thee how wouldest thou be encouraged shall I tell thee one word out of Christs mouth who is the King of Saints will do more then all in heaven and earth can doe and what is there then which we may not hope to obtain through his Intercession And wouldst thou know whether he hath undertaken thy cause and begun to intercede for thee In a word Hath he put his spirit into thy heart and set thy own heart on work to make incessant Intercessions for thy selfe with groans unutterable as the Apostle hath it Rom. 8. This is the Eccho of Christs Intercession for thee in Heaven 5. And lastly If such a soule shall further object But will he not give over suing for me may I not be cast out of his prayers through my unbeliefe Let it here be considered that he lives ever to intercede And therefore if he once undertake thy cause and getteth thee into his prayers he will never leave thee out night nor day He Intercedeth ever till he hath accomplisht and finished thy salvation Men have been cast out of good and holy mens prayers as Saul out of Samuels and the People of Israel out of Ieremies but never out of Christs prayers the smoak of his Incense ascends for ever and he will intercede to the utmost till he hath saved thee to the utmost He will never give over but will lye in the dust for thee or he will perfect and procure thy Salvation Onely whilst I am thus raising up your Faith to him upon the worke of his Intercession for us let me speak a word to you for him so to stir up your love to him upon the consideration of this his Intercession also You see you have the whole life of Christ first and last both here and in heaven laid out for you He had not come to earth but for you he had no other businesse here Vnto us a Son is born And to be sure he had not dyed but for you for us a Son was given and when he rose it was for your justification And now he is gone to heaven he lives but to intercede for you He makes your salvation his constant calling O therefore let us live wholly unto him for he hath and doth live wholly unto us You have his whole time among you and if he were your servant you could desire no more There was much of your time lost before you began to live to him but there hath beene no moment of his time which he hath not lived to and improved for you Nor are you able ever to live for him but onely in this life for hereafter you shall live with him and be glorified of him I conclude all with that of the Apostle The love of Christ it should constraine us because we cannot but judge this to be the most equall that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him who dyed for them and rose again and out of the Text I also adde sits at Gods right hand yea and there lives for ever to make Intercession for us FINIS THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven Towards SINNERS on Earth OR A TREATISE DEMONSTRATING The gracious Disposition and tender Affection of Christ in his Humane Nature now in Glory unto his Members under all sorts of Infirmities either of Sin or Misery By THO GOODWIN B. D. LONDON Printed for R. DAWLMAN M DC XLII THE TABLE OF The Heart of Christ in Heaven towards Sinners on Earth 1. Demonstrations of the gracious disposition of his Heart towards us Extrinsecall shewing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it is so Part 1. Intrinsecall shewing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Reasons why it must needs be so Part 2. 2. The Manner how his Heart is affected towards us and the way how it comes to passe that such affections are let into his heart Part 3. Part I. Containing Demonstrations Extrinsecall §. I. Demonstrations from Christs carriage at his last Farewell and his last Sermon John Chapters 13 c. and in his last prayer John 17. the scope of all which was to assure his Disciples of his being constant in his Affections towards them 5 1. From his carriage at his last Fare-well And this in foure things 6 2. From many passages in that his last Sermon in 5. things 13 3. From his last Prayer Joh. 17. which Prayer is a patterne of his Intercession in Heaven and so an expression of what his heart is there 22 §. II. Demonstrations from many passages and expressions after his Resurrection 24 This Resurrection
parting Sermon My peace I leave with you After this hee breathes on them and conveyes the holy Ghost in a further measure into them so to give an evidence of what he would doe yet more plentifully in heaven and the mystery of that his breathing on them was to shew that this was the utmost expression of his heart to give them the Spirit and that it came from the very bottome of it as a mans breath doth as well as that the holy Ghost proceeds from him as well as from the Father which was also the meaning of it And to what end doth he give them the Spirit not for themselves alone but that they by the gifts and assistance of that Spirit might forgive mens sins by converting them to him Whose sins soever ye remit namely by your ministery they are remitted to them His mind you see is still upon sinners and his care for the conversion of their soules And therefore in another Euangelist namely Mark his last words recorded are these Goe ye into all the World and preach the Gospell unto every creature and he that beleeveth shall be saved c. Chap. 16. 15. And in Luke Chap. 24. ver 46 47. his last words on earth there recorded are Thus it behoved Christ to suffer and to rise that repentance and remission of sinnes should be preached among all Nations And addes beginning at Hierusalem where hee had beene but a few dayes before crucified Of all places one would have thought he would have excepted that and have charged them to passe by it but he bids them begin there let them have the first fruit and benefit by my death that were the actors in it And to that end he also sayes Behold I send you the Promise of my Father c. ver 49. Another time he appeares to two of them and then indeede he rates them saying O ye fools and slow of heart but for what is it but onely because they would not beleeve on him for no other sinne not for that they had forsaken him so it follows O ye fooles and slow of heart to beleeve c. Luk. 24. 25. and this because he is glad when we beleeve as Iohn 11. 15. And after that he appeares to all the eleven and upbraids them the Text sayes but with what with their unbeliefe and hardnesse of heart still because they beleeved not so ver 14. No sinne of theirs troubled him but their unbeliefe Which shews how his heart stands in that he desires nothing more then to have men beleeve in him and this now when glorified Afterwards he meets with Thomas and scarce chides him for his grosse unbeliefe onely tels him it was well that having seene he beleeved but pronounceth them more blessed who though they have not seene yet beleeve and so he is reproved Iohn 20. 29. Another time he shews himselfe to his Disciples and particularly deales with Peter but yet tels him not a word of his sins nor of his forsaking of him but onely goes about to draw from him a testimony of his love to himselfe Peter sayes he lovest thou me Christ loves to heare that note full well doe those words sound in his eares when you tell him you love him though he knows it already as Peter tels him Thou knowest all things thou knowest I love thee Iohn 21. 15. and this Christ puts him thrice upon And what was Christs aime in drawing this acknowledgement of love from Peter to him but onely to put an engagement upon Peter that if he loved him as he professed and would ever shew it then to feed his lambs This is the great testimonie that he would have Peter to shew his love in when he should be in heaven and this is the last charge he gives him Which how great a testimony is it to shew how his owne heart was affected and what his greatest care was upon His heart runs altogether upon his Lambs upon soules to be converted He had said afore Sheep I have Iohn 10. 6. which are not of this fold them I must bring in and he left his Apostles to doe it but this here was a more moving and affectionate expression for sheep can shift for themselves but poore little Lambes cannot Therefore Christ sayes unto Peter Feed my Lambes even as Iohn to expresse the more love unto those he writes to calls them My little children And to what end doth the Euangelist record these things of him after his Resurrection One of the Euangelists that recorded them informs us In the 20. of Iohn ver 30. it is said that Iesus did many other signes namely after his Resurrection for in the middest of the story of those things done after his Resurrection hee speakes it which are not written in this Book but partly recorded by other Euangelists and partly concealed but these things are written that yee might beleeve that JESVS is the CHRIST that is that so you might come to him as to the Messiah the Saviour of the World and therefore the most of the things recorded tend to shew Christs heart and carriage towards Sinners that so wee might beleeve on him and that beleeving we might have life through his Name §. 3. Demonstrations from passages at and after his Ascension into heaven LEt us view him next in his very ascending his carriage then also will further assure our hearts of this Luke 24. 50. it is said He lifted up his hands and blessed them and to put the greater emphasis upon it and that we might the more observe it as having some great mystery in it ver 51. it is added And whilst he blessed them he was parted from them and carried up into heaven This benediction Christ reserved to be his last act and what was the meaning of it but as I have before shewne to blesse them as God blessed Adam and Eve bidding them Encrease and multiply and so blessing all Man-kind that were to come of them Thus doth Christ in blessing his Disciples blesse all those that shall beleeve through their word unto the end of the world I only adde this to the illustration of it this mystery is interpreted by Peter Acts 3. 26. when speaking to the Jews he sayes Vnto you first God having raised up his Sonne Iesus sent him to blesse you and how in turning away every one of you from his iniquities and so forgiving of them for Blessed is the man whose sin is forgiven Thus at his ascending In the next place let us consider what Christ did when he was come to heaven and exalted there how abundantly did he there make good all that he had promised in his last Sermon For First he instantly powred out his Spirit and that richly as the Apostle to Titus speakes and he being by the right hand of God exalted and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost hee hath shed forth this which you now see and heare sayes the Apostle in his first
that rested on him above measure and fitted him vvith a meek spirit for the vvorks of his mediation and indeed for this very grace sake of meeknesse did the Spirit come more especially upon him Therefore when he was first solemnly inaugurated into that office at his Baptisme for then he visibly and professedly entred upon the execution of it the holy Ghost descended upon him and how as a Dove so all the Euangelists joyntly report it But why in the shape of a Dove All apparitions that God at any time made of himself were not so much to shew what God is in himselfe as how he is affected towards us and declare what effects he works in us so here this shape of a Dove resting upon him vvas to shew those speciall gracious dispositions wherewith the holy Ghost fitted Jesus Christ to be a Mediator A Dove you know is the most innocent and most meek creature without gall without tallons having no fiercenesse in it expressing nothing but love and friendship to its mate in all its carriages and mourning over it in its distresses and was therefore a fit embleme to expresse what a frame and temper of spirit the holy Ghost did upon this his descending on him fill the heart of Christ with and this without measure that as sweetly as doves doe converse with doves sympathising and mourning each over other so may we with Christ for he thus sympathizeth with us And though he had the Spirit before yet now he was anointed with him in respect of such effects as these which appertained to the execution of his office with a larger measure and more eminently then before Therefore the Euangelist Luke notes upon it Chap. 4. 1. Iesus being full of the holy Ghost returned from Iordan And Peter also puts the like glosse upon it as appeares Act. 10. 37. for speaking there of the baptisme of Iohn he shews how after that his being baptized he began to preach and how God having anointed him with the holy Ghost namely at that baptisme of his hee went about doing good c. And that this was the principall thing signified by this descending of the holy Ghost as a Dove upon him even chiefely to note out his meekenesse and sympathizing heart with sinners vvrought in him by the holy Ghost is evident by two places vvhere Christ himselfe puts that very intendment on it The first presently after in the first Sermon that he preached after that his having received the holy Ghost in the same 4. of Luke where first it is noted ver 1. that he returned from being baptized full of the Spirit and so was led to be tempted then ver 14. it is said that hee returned from being tempted in the power of that spirit and after this is explained by himselfe the mystery of his having received the Spirit in the likenesse of a dove and this is the subject matter of the first Text which he opened in his first Sermon singled out by him on purpose by choice not chance out of Isaiah which he read to them ver 18. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poore that is in spirit the afflicted in conscience for sinne he hath sent me to heale the broken-hearted to preach deliverance to the captives and recovering sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised c. And when he had read so much as concerned the expressing the compassionate disposition of his spirit unto sinners whose misery he sets downe by all sorts of outward evils then he reads no further but closeth the Book as intimating that these were the maine effects of that his receiving the Spirit The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because he hath anointed me to preach the Gospel to the poore That is for this end or for this very purpose hath he given me his Spirit because I was designed or anointed to this work and by that Spirit also hath he anointed or qualified me with these gifts and dispositions suitable to that worke Another place that makes the fruit and end of his receiving the Spirit then at his baptisme to be these tender dispositions unto sinners is that in Mat. 12. 18 19 c. out of another place of Isaith Behold my beloved in whom my soule is well pleased I will put my Spirit upon him and he shall shew judgement to the Gentiles c. That seems to be a terrible word but be not afraid of it for by judgement is meant even the doctrine of free grace and of the Gospell that changeth and reforms men As in like manner according to the Hebrew phrase in ver 20. by judgement is meant the worke of Gods grace on mens hearts When he sayes He will send forth judgement unto victory the worke of grace being the counterpane of the Doctrine of grace And in preaching this Doctrine which in it selfe is good tidings the Prophet shews hovv he should carrie it vvith a spirit answerable and suitable thereunto even full of all meeknesse stilnesse calmnesse and modesty which he expresseth by proverbiall speeches usuall in those times to expresse so much by He shall not strive nor crie neither shall any man heare his voice in the streets that is he shall deal with all stilnesse and meeknesse without violence or boisterousnesse Iohn had the voice of a cryer he was a man of a severe spirit but Christ came piping and dancing all melodious sweetnesse was in his ministery and spirit and in the course of his ministery he went so tenderly to work he was so heedfull to broken soules and had such regard to their discouragements that it is said he would not break a bruised reed That is he would set his steps with such heed as not to tread on a reed that was broken in the leafe or he would walk so lightly and softly that if it lay in his way though he went over it yet he would not have further bruised it nor quenched either by treading out the smoaking flax which is easily done or vvith any rushing motion have raised so much vvind as to blow out a weike of a candle as some translate it smoaking in the socket which the least stirring of the aire puffes out All this is to expresse the tendernesse of his heart and this upon his receiving the Spirit and especially from the time of his baptizing for then you know those words were together therewith uttered This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased and they are the same words also which together with Gods giving him the Spirit are joyned in that 40. of Esay whence these words are taken So that he was filled with the Spirit to that end to raise up in him such sweet affections towards sinners Now for the second part that goes to make up this Demonstration It is as certaine that the same Spirit that was upon Christ and acted his spirit here below doth still
his first step to his glory and therefore this a certaine Demonstration 25 1. From the first gracious message which Christ after his Resurrection sent his Disciples who yet had forsaken him 26 2. From his carriage and speech at his first meeting with them 25 §. III. Demonstrations from passages at and after Christs Ascension into heaven 1. At his Ascension his blessing his Disciples 32 2. After he was come to heaven 1. Pouring out his Spirit on them as in his last Sermon he had promised which Spirit is to this day in our Preaching and an Argument of the fulfilling of this 33 2. All those works of Miracles and conversions of soules that accompanied the first preaching of the Gospel doe argue this as also the New Testament written since 34 3. Christs owne words spoken to Paul since himselfe was in heaven doe confirme it 35 4. The last words uttered in Scripture in the Book of the Revelation which was more immediately given unto John by Christ 37 Part II. Demonstrations Intrinsecall §. I. The first sort of Intrinsecall Demonstrations drawn from the Influence which all the three Persons have into the Heart of the Humane nature of Christ in Heaven 48 1. From God the Father Which Demonstration is made forth by two things 1. God hath given Christ a perpetuall command to love his Elect on earth and hath written a Law of love in his heart 49 2. This Law of love remaines for ever in his heart which is proved by two things 1. That it is a Law and that of Love 52 2. That by observing that Law it is that Christ continues in his Fathers love 53 2. From God the Sonne unto whom the Humane nature is united This disposition of grace is naturall to him as he is Gods naturall Sonne 54 Accordingly the Humane nature framed on purpose with dispositions of mercy and meeknesse above all other 55 3. From God the Holy Ghost who on earth filled him with meekenesse and grace above all other dispositions and now resteth upon him in Heaven more abundantly then ever 60 §. II. A second sort of Demonstrations from severall engagements now lying upon Christ in Heaven 70 1. Engagement The continuance of all his Relations and Alliances to us which no glory of his doth any thing lessen or alter ibid. Which relations were made chiefely for the other world and so must needes continue there 72 The Ground of this Engagement 76 2. His love is engaged and encreased by what he did and suffered for us 77 What a great obligation this is 78 3. His office of Priesthood which continues in Heaven doth further require all mercifulnesse and graciousnesse in him towards us sinners This Demonstration hath two parts 83 The 1. Shewing that the office of Priesthood was erected on purpose for grace and mercie ibid. Which is argued 1. By the Ends of it 2. By the Qualifications required for it 85 The 2. Shewing that by reason of this office an eternall duty lyeth upon him to shew grace and mercy and Christ is a faithfull High-Priest to performe that duty 90 Christs advancement can make no alteration in his heart for his Priesthood is his highest advancement And Grace did both Found and now upholds his Throne of Grace 94 4. His own Interest puts him upon these Affections of heart towards us His own joy happinesse and glory are encreased by shewing mercie to and comforting his children upon earth and it is more for his glory then for our good 98 Christ hath a double fulnesse of joy 1. Personall in his Father 2. Mysticall in his Members 99 How Christ rejoiceth in Heaven at our well-doing here on earth 101 5. His having the nature of man the same for substance in Heaven that he had on earth obligeth him to be mercifull unto men 104 The end of his Assuming mans nature was to qualifie him for mercie 105 Though it adds not to the greatnesse of mercie in God yet it addes a new way of being mercifull even as a man 106 Part III. §. I. Some Generals to cleare 1. How this is to be understood That Christs Heart is touched with the feeling of our infirmities 2. The way how our Infirmities come to be feelingly let into his heart 109 1. How this affection in Christ is to be understood This explained by these degrees 1. This affection of compassion is not wholly to be understood in a Metaphoricall sense as when God is said to be afflicted c. that is not meerely after the similitude of men but in a true and reall sense 111 2. These affections in Christs humane nature are more like to ours then those which the Angells have who notwithstanding have affections analogicall to ours 113 3 Christ having taken fraile flesh ere he went to Heaven this fits him yet more for having affections of mercie like unto ours 115 3. For the way how our miseries are let into Christs heart so as to affect it This explained by two things 1 The Humane nature hath the knowledge and cognizance of all that can or doth befall us here 118 2 He remembers how himselfe was once affected when he was under the like 119 §. II. A more particular Disquisition what manner of affection this is The seat thereof whether in his spirit or soule onely or in the whole humane nature Some Cautious added 121 This affection for our better conceiving it set forth three wayes 1. Negatively it is not in all things such as it was in the dayes of his flesh 2 Positively It is yet for substance the very same affection and the seat of it is his bodily heart as well as his soule 124 Foure Cautions or Positions about this 1. In what sense or so far as his Body is made spirituall so far are these Affections spiritualized as they are in his body 125 2. Hence though they move his Bowels yet they doe not perturbe or hurt him in the least 126 3. All naturall humane affections may be still in him that are not unbecomming his state glory And how much the having such affections are suteable to that state and relation wherein he is 128 4. Though a passionate suffering be cut off yet these affections are now more large and strong for the substance of them then they were on earth 130 3. Privatively If his heart suffers not with us under our Infirmities yet he hath lesse joy then his heart shall have when we are freed from all 131 How the Scripture attributes some kinde of Imperfection to some affection in him and in what sense §. III. This Scruple satisfied How Christs heart can bee feelingly touched with our sins our greatest infirmities seeing he was tempted without sinne 133 Foure answers given thereunto for our comfort Vses of all 137 FINIS THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven TO Sinners on Earth I. PART HAving set forth our Lord and Saviour JESVS CHRIST in all those great and most solemne actions of his his Obedience unto
hast set my heart upon them and hast loved them thy selfe as thou hast loved me and thou hast ordained them to be one in us even as we are one and therefore I cannot live long asunder from them I have thy company but I must have theirs too I will that they be where I am ver 24. If I have any glory they must have part of it So it follows in the fore-named verse That they may behold the glory which thou hast given me he speakes all this as if he had beene then in Heaven and in possession of all that glory and therefore it is an expression of his heart in Heaven which you have very good ground to build upon §. 2. Demonstrations from passages and expressions after his Resurrection THese Demonstrations have beene taken from his carriage and Sermon before his death even at his first breaking of his mind unto his Disciples concerning his departure from them Let us now take a view of our Saviour in his behaviour after his Resurrection whence a further Indicium of his heart how it would stand towards sinners when he should be in Heaven may be taken and his love demonstrated For his Resurrection was the first step unto his Glory and indeede an entrance into it when hee laid downe his bodie he laid downe all earthly weaknesses and passions of flesh and blood It was sown as ours is in weaknesse but with raising of it up again he took on him the dispositions and qualifications of an immortal and glorious body It was raised in power And The dayes of his flesh or frail estate as the Author to the Hebrews by way of distinction speaks were past and over at his Resurrection and the garment of his body was new dyed and endowed with new qualities and thereby it was made of a stuffe fit to beare and sustain Heavens Glory and therefore what now his heart upon his first rising shall appeare to be towards us will be a certain demonstration what it will continue to be in heaven And to illustrate this the more consider that if ever there were a tryall taken whether his love to sinners would continue or no it was then at his Resurrection for all his Disciples especially Peter had carryed themselves the most unworthily towards him in that interim that could be and this then when he was performing the greatest act of love towards them namely dying for them that ever was shewne by any And by the way so God often orders it that when hee is in hand with the greatest mercies for us and bringing about our greatest good then we are most of all sinning against him which he doth to magnifie his love the more You know how they all forsook him and in the midst of his Agonie in the Garden in which he desired their company meerly for a reliefe unto his sadded spirit they slept and lay like so many blocks utterly senslesse of his dolours which had they had any friendly sympathie of they could never have done Could you not watch with me one houre Then you know how foulely Peter denyed him with oathes and curses and after that when he was laid in the grave they are giving up all their faith in him We trusted it should have been he say two of them that should have redeemed Israel They question whether he was the Messiah or no Luke 24. 21. Now when Christ came first out of the other world from the dead cloathed with that heart and body which he was to weare in heaven what message sends he first to them we would all think that as they would not know him in his sufferings so he would now be as strange to them in his Glory or at least his first words shall be to rate them for their faithlesnesse and false-hood but here is no such matter for Iohn 20. 17. his first word concerning them is Goe tell my Brethren c. You reade elsewhere how that it is made a great point of love and condescending in Christ so to entitle them Heb. 2. 11. He is not ashamed to call them Brethren surely his brethren had beene ashamed of him Now for him to call them so when he was first entering into his glory argues the more love in him towards them He caries it as Ioseph did in the height of his advancement when hee first brake his minde to his brethren I am Joseph your brother sayes he Gen. 45. 4. So Christ sayes here Tell them you have seene Iesus their Brother I own them as brethen still This was his first compellation but what was the message that he would first have delivered unto them that I sayes he ascend to my Father and your Father A more friendly speech by far and arguing infinite more love then that of Iosephs did though that was full of bowels for Ioseph after he had told them he was their brother adds whom you sold into Egypt he minds them of their unkindnesse but not so Christ not a word of that hee minds them not of what they had done against him Poore sinners who are full of the thoughts of their own sinnes know not how they shall be able at the latter day to looke Christ in the face when they shall first meet with him But they may relieve their spirits against their care and feare by Christs carriage now towards his Disciples who had so sinned against him Be not afraid your sins will he remember no more Yea further you may observe that he minds them not so much of what he had been doing for them He sayes not Tell them I have been dying for them or That they little think what I have suffered for them not a word of that neither but still his heart and his care is upon doing more he looks not backward to what is past but forgets his sufferings as a woman her travaile for joy that a man-child is borne Having now dispatcht that great work on earth for them he hastens to heaven as fast as he can to doe another And though he knew he had businesse yet to doe upon earth that would hold him forty dayes longer yet to shew that his heart was longing and eagerly desirous to be at work for them in heaven hee speakes in the present tense and tels them I ascend and he expresseth his joy to be not onely that he goes to his Father but also that he goes to their Father to be an advocate with him for them of which I spake afore And is indeed Jesus our Brother alive and doth he call us Brethren and doth he talk thus lovingly of us whose heart would not this over come But this was but a message sent his Disciples before he met them let us next observe his carriage and speech at first meeting together When he came first amongst them this was his salutation Peace be to you ver 19. which he reiterates ver 21. and it is all one with that former speech of his used in that his
sayes Christ injuries and unkindnesses doe not so worke upon me as to make mee irreconcileable it is my nature to forgive I am meeke Yea but may we thinke he being the Sonne of God and Heire of Heaven and especially being now filled with glory and sitting at Gods right hand he may now despise the lowlinesse of us here below though not out of anger yet out of that heighth of his greatnesse and distance that he is advanced unto in that we are too meane for him to marry or bee familiar with Hee surely hath higher thoughts then to regard such poore low things as we are And so though indeed we conceive him meeke and not prejudiced with injuries yet he may bee too high and lofty to condescend so far as to regarde or take to heart the condition of poore creatures No sayes Christ I am lowly also willing to bestow my love and favour upon the poorest and meanest And further all this is not a semblance of such an affable disposition nor is it externally put on in the face and outward carriage onely as in many great ones that will seeme gentle and curteous but there is all this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the heart it is his temper his disposition his nature to be gracious which nature he can never lay aside And that his greatnesse when he comes to enjoy it in Heaven would not a whit alter his disposition in him appears by this that he at the very same time when he uttered these words tooke into consideration all his glory to come and utters both that and his meeknes with the same breath So ver 27. All things are delivered to mee by my Father and presently after for all this he sayes Come unto me all you that are heavie laden I am meeke and lowly ver 28 29. Looke therefore what lovely sweete and delightfull thoughts you use to have of a deere friend who is of an amiable nature or of some eminently holy or meeke Saint of whom you thinke with your selves I could put my soule into such a mans hands can comprimise my salvation to him as I have heard it spoken of some Or looke how we should have beene encouraged to have dealt with Moses in matter of forgivenesse who was the meekest man on earth or treated with Ioseph by what we reade of his bowels towards his brethren or what thoughts we have of the tender hearts of Paul or Timothy unto the soules of men in begetting and in nurturing and bringing them up to life being affectionately desirous of you we were willing sayes Paul to impart our own soules to you 1 Thes 2. 8. and this naturally as his word is 2 Phil. 20. even such and infinitely more raised apprehensions should wee have of that sweetenesse and candour that is in Jesus Christ as being much more naturall to him And therefore the same Apostle doth make Christs bowels the patterne of his Phil. 1. 8. Ge● is my witnesse how greatly I long after you in the bowels of Iesus Christ This phrase in the bowels of Christ hath according to Interpreters two meanings and both serve to illustrate that which I intend First in the bowels of Christ is taken causally as if he meant to shew that those bowels or compassions were infused into him from Christ and so longed after them with such kind of bowels as Christ had wrought in him and if so that Christ put such bowels into him hath he not them in himselfe much more Paul had reason to say in the bowels of Christ for in this sense I am sure he once had scarce the heart and bowels of a man in him namely when he was out of Christ how furious and Lion-like a spirit had he against the Saints and what havock made he of them being ready even to pull out their bowels And how came Paul by such tender bowels now towards them who gave him now such tender affections Even Jesus Christ it was he that of a Lion made him a Lambe If therefore in Paul these bowels were not naturall but the contrary rather were naturall to him and yet they so abounded in him and that naturally as himselfe speakes how much more must they needs abound in Christ to whom they are native and in-bred Or else secondly In the bowels is put for Instar Like the bowels or After the bowels according to the analogie of the Hebrew phrase And so then the meaning were this Like as the bowels of Jesus Christ do yerne after you so doe mine Bowels are a Metaphor to signifie tender and motherly affections and mercies so Luke 1. 78. Through the tender mercies In the originall it is The bowels of mercie Thus Paul when he would signifie how tender his affections were he instances in the Bowels of Jesus Christ he making Christ his pattern in this in all Be ye followers of me as I am of Christ Now how desirous was this great Apostle to beget men to Christ he cared not what else hee lost so he might winne some he counted not his life deare nay not his salvation deare but wisht himselfe accursed for his brethren who yet vvere the greatest enemies Christ then had on earth How glad was he when any soule came in how sorry when any fell off falling into a new travail he knew not how better to expresse the anxietie of his spirit for the Galatians till Christ was formed in them Hovv comforted vvas he vvhen he heard tidings of the constancie and encrease of any of their Faith 1. Thes 3. 6 7. and ver 8. he sayes for now we live if you stand fast in the Lord. Reade all his Epistles and take the character of his spirit this vvay and vvhen you have done look up to Christs humane nature in Heaven and thinke vvith your selves Such a man is Christ Paul vvarbles out in all these high strains of affections but the soundings of Christs Bowels in Heaven in a lower key Esay 63. They are naturall to Christ they all and infinite more are eminent in him And this is the second Demonstration taken from his own naturall disposition as Sonne of God A third demonstration shall bee taken from the Third Person of the Trinity the holy Ghost If the same spirit that was upon him and in him when he was on earth doth but still rest upon him now he is in Heaven then these dispositions must needes still entirely remaine in him This Demonstration is made up of two Propositions put together 1. That the holy Ghost dwelling in him concurs to make his heart thus graciously affected to sinners And 2. that the same spirit dwels and continues in and upon him for ever in Heaven For the first It was the Spirit who over-shadowed his mother and in the meane while knit that indissoluble knot betweene our nature and the second Person and that also knit his heart unto us It was the Spirit who sanctified him in the vvombe It vvas the Spirit
High-Priest as the former also he had done But thereby to shew that it is Christs duty also to mediate for all that come to him He ought to doe it Now then to enforce this consideration for the help of our faith herein If this office doth by Gods appointment thus bind him to it and if it be the duty of his place then certainly he will performe it most exactly for else he doth not doe his duty And our comfort may be that his faithfulnesse lies in being mercifull therefore you see they are both here joyned together Every one is to doe the proper duty of his place and exactly to see to that And therefore the Apostle Rom. 12. exhorting to the discharge of the duties of each office in the Church ver 7. he sayes Let him that hath a Ministery committed to him wait on his ministery and among others if his place of ministration be to shew mercy as ver 8. which was an office in the Church upon which lyed the care of the poore and sick he is to doe it with cheerfulnesse And so sayes Christ of himselfe Esay 61. 1 2. The Spirit of the Lord is upon me to bind up the broken hearted to open the prison doores to them that are bound to visit and relieve them and to preach good tidings to the meeke Such kind of soules are they that he hath the charge of He is the great Shepheard and Bishop of soules 1 Pet. 2. ult and the sick and the broken they are his sheep his charge his Diocese as Ezekiel hath it Chap. 34. 16. And to tend such as these he looks for ever upon it as his duty as his owne expression upon the like occasion importeth in Iohn 10. 16. Other sheep I have sayes Christ them I must bring c. Observe how he puts a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an I must upon it looking at it as his duty strictly laid upon him by his place of being a Shepheard And the proper duty of his place being to shew mercy he doth it with cheerfulnesse as the Apostle speaks For Mercie makes one doe what they doe with cheerfulnesse And Christ as he is the Bishop so the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Deacon also for he beares all offices to his Church as of the circumcision so of the uncircumcision also so he is called Rom. 15. 8. And these offices of High-Priest Shepheard Bishop c. he hath still in heaven for he continues a Priest for ever Heb. 7. 24. Now therefore to conclude this Head Never feare that Christs great advancement in heaven should any whit alter his disposition for this his very advancement engageth him the more For although he be entred into the heavens yet consider withall that it is here added to be an High-Priest there and so long feare not for his place it selfe will call for mercie from him unto them that treat with him about it And although in the heavens he be advanced far above all principalities and powers yet still his High-Priesthood goes with him and accompanies him For such an High-Priest became us as was higher then the heavens Heb. 7. 26. And further though he sits at Gods right hand and on his Fathers Throne yet that Throne it is a Throne of grace as the Text hath it upon which he sits And as the Mercie-seat in the Type was the farthest and highest thing in the Holy of Holies so the Throne of grace which is an infinite encouragement unto us is the highest seat in heaven So that if Christ will have and keep the greatest place in heaven the highest preferment that heaven it selfe can bestow upon him it engageth him unto grace and mercy The highest honour there hath this Attribute of Grace annexed to it in its very title A Throne of Grace And as Solomon sayes A Kings Throne is established by righteousnesse it continues firme by it so is Christs Throne by Grace Grace was both the first founder of his Throne or his raiser to it and also it is the establisher of it First it is the founder of it For the reason why God did set him up in that place was because he had more grace and mercy in his heart then all the creatures had or could be capable of All Favourites are usually raised for something that is eminent in them either beauty pleasantnesse of wit State-policie or the like Now if you aske what moved God to advance Christ to this high Throne it was his grace So Psal 45. 3. Grace is poured into thy lips and so dwels much more in his heart Therefore God hath blessed thee so it followes namely with all those glories in heaven which are Gods blessing to his Sonne And then secondly Grace is the upholder of his Throne so ver 4. of the aforesaid Psal 45. In thy majesty prosper thou as well because of meeknesse as of righteousnesse and also because of Truth that is the word of truth the Gospel of our salvation as Paul exegetically expoundeth it Ephes 1. 13. These are the pillars and supporters of his throne and majesty And there are two of them you see that are of grace meeknesse and the Gospel of our salvation unto one of justice or righteousnesse and yet that one is for us too And these establish Christs Throne So it followes verse 6. Thy Throne O God is for ever and ever And you know who applies this unto Christ Heb. 1. 8. Feare not then when as meeknesse supports his majesty and grace his throne and when as he holds his place by shewing these And thus much from that office that is laid upon Christ as he is a Priest A fourth engagement which added to the former may mightily help our faith in this is his owne Interest both in that our salvation is the purchase of his bloud and also that his owne joy comfort happinesse and glory are encreased and enlarged by his shewing grace and mercy in pardoning relieving and comforting his members here on earth under all their infirmities So that besides the obligation of an office undertaken by him for us there is the addition of a mighty interest of his owne coincident therewith to fixe his heart unto faithfulnesse for us in all that doth concern us We see that Advocates and Atturneys who plead for others although that they have no share in the estate for which they plead no title to or interest therein yet when they have undertaken a Clients cause if honest how diligent will they be to promote and carry it for that their Client simply because it is their office and the duty of their place and yet they have but a very small Fee given them in comparison of that estate which oft times they follow suit about How much more would their diligence be whetted if the Lands and Estates they sue for were their own or a purchase of theirs for their wives joynture or childrens portions Now such is the pardoning of our sins the salvation of
likewise is touched notwithstanding all his glory as also by his annexing the reason of it or shewing the way how it comes to passe in that in all points he was tempted like as we are Now in handling and opening these which is a matter full of difficulty I shall with all warinesse proceed to the discovery of what manner of affection in Christ this is and that by these steps and degrees 1. This affection of compassion or his being touched with the feeling of our infirmities is not wholly to be understood in a metaphoricall or a similitudinary sense as those speeches used of God in the Old Testament are to be understood when bowels of compassion are attributed unto him and his bowels are said to be rowled together or as when as it is said of God that he repented and was afflicted in all his peoples afflictions All which expressions were spoken of God as wee all know but meerely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after the manner of men so to convey and represent to our apprehensions by what affections use to be in parents or friends in such and such cases what provoke them unto such and such actions which like effects proceede from God towards us when he sees us in distresse And so they are spoken rather per modum Effectus then Affectus rather by way of like Effect which God produceth then by way of such Affection in Gods heart which is not capable of any such passions as these are Now towards the right understanding of this the first thing which I affirme is that barely in such a sense as this that which is here spoken of Christ is not to be understood and my reason for it is grounded upon these two things put together First that this affection of his towards us here spoken of is manifestly meant of his humane nature and not of his God head only for it is spoken of that nature wherein he once was tempted as we now are So expresly in the next words which can be meant of no other then his humane nature And Secondly That those kind of expressions which were used of God before the Assumption of our nature onely in a way of metaphor and similitude after the manner of men should in no further or more reall and proper sense be spoken of Christ and his humane nature now assumed when he is a man as truly and properly as we are I cannot imagine when I consider and remember that which I last insisted on that one end of Christs taking an humane nature was that hee might be a mercifull High-Priest for ever in such a way as he being God alone could not have beene I confesse I have often wondred at that expression there used Heb. 2. He tooke the seede of Abraham that he might he made a mercifull high-Priest which at the first reading sounded as if God had beene made more mercifull by taking our nature But this solved the wonder that this assumption added a new way of Gods being mercifull By meanes of which it may now bee said for the comfort and reliefe of our faith that God is truly and really mercifull as a man And the consideration of this contributes this to the clearing of the thing in hand that whereas God of himselfe was so blessed and perfect that his blessednesse could not have beene touched with the least feeling of our infirmities neither was he in himselfe capable of any such affection of pitty or compassion He is not as a man that he should pittie or repent c. He can indeed doe that for us in our distresse which a man that pitties us useth to do but the affections and bowels themselves he is not capable of Hence therfore amongst other ends of assuming mans nature this fell in before God as one that God might thereby become loving and mercifull unto men as one man is to another And so that what before was but improperly spoken and by way of Metaphor and similitude in the Old Testament so to convey it to our apprehensions might now be truly attributed unto him in the reality that God might be for ever said to be compassionate as a man and to be touched with a feeling of our infirmities as a man And thus by this happy union of both Natures the language of the Old Testament uttered onely in a figure becomes verified and fulfilled in the truth of it as in all other things the shadows of it were in Christ fulfilled And this is the first step towards the understanding of what is here said of Christ taken from this comparison with the like attributed unto God himselfe A second and further step to let in our understanding to the apprehension of this is by the like further comparison to be made with the Angels and those affections of love and pity that are certainly found in them In comparison of which these affections in Christs humane nature though glorified must needs be far more like to ours even more tender and more humane For in that Heb. 2. it is expresly said He therefore took not the nature of the Angels that he might be a mercifull High-Priest Part of the intendment of those words is to shew and give the reason not onely why he took our nature under fraile flesh though that the Apostle mentions ver 14. but why an humane nature for the substance of it and not the nature of Angels Because in his affections of mercy he would for ever come neerer to us and have such affections and of the same kind with ours Whereas otherwise in other respects an Angel would have been an higher and more glorious High-Priest then a man Now the Angels being fellow-servants with us as the Angel called himself Rev. 22. 9. they have affections towards us more assimilated unto ours then God hath and so are more capable of such impressions from our miseries then God is Although they be Spirits yet they partake of something analogicall or resembling and answering to those affections of pity griefe c. which are in us And indeed so far as these affections are seated in our soules and not drencht in the passions of the body unto which our soules are united they are the very same kind of affections in us that are in them Hence the same lusts that are in men are said to be in devils John 8. 44. and therefore the devils also are said to feare and tremble c. And so oppositely the same affections that are in men so far as they are spirituall and the spirit or soule is the seat of them they must needs be found in the good Angels But Christ having an humane nature the same for substance that ours is consisting both of soule and body although through glory made spirituall yet not become a Spirit A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have sayes Christ of himselfe after his Resurrection Luke 24. 39. therefore he must need have affections towards us yet
all I know thy workes thy labour and thy patience c. Rev. 22. He therewithall hath an act of memory and recalls how himself was once affected and how distressed whilst on earth under the same or the like miseries For the memory of things here below remaines still with him as with all spirits in either of those two other worlds heaven or hell Son remember thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evill c. sayes Abraham to the soule of Dives in hell Luke 16. 25. Remember me when thou commest into thy Kingdome said the good theefe to Christ And Revel 1. I am hee sayes Christ that was dead and am alive Hee remembers his death still and the sufferings of it and as he remembers it to put his Father in mind thereof so he remembers it also to affect his owne heart with what we feele And his memory presenting the impression of the like now afresh unto him how it was once with him hence he comes feelingly and experimentally to know how it is now with us and so affects himselfe therewith as Dido in Virgil Haud ignara mali miseris succurrere disco Having experience of the like miseries though a Queene now I know how to succour those that are therein As God said to the Israelites when they should be possessed of Canaan their own land Exo. 23. 9. Ye know the hearts of strangers seeing ye were strangers c. and therefore doth command them to pitty strangers and to use them well upon that motive So may it be said of CHRIST that he doth know the hearts of his children in misery seeing himselfe was once under the like Or as the Apostle exhorts the Hebrews Heb. 13. 3. Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them and them that suffer adversity as being your selves in the body and so ere you die may come to suffer the like So Christ the Head of the body which is the fountaine of all sense and feeling in the body doth remember them that are bound and in adversity having himselfe beene once in the body and so he experimentally compassionates them And this is a further thing then the former We have gained this further That Christ hath not onely such affections as are reall and proper to an humane nature but such affections as are stirred up in him from experience of the like by himselfe once tasted in a fraile nature like unto ours And thus much for the way of letting in all our miseries into Christs heart now so as to strike and affect it with them §. II. A more particular disquisition What manner of affection this is The Seat thereof whether in his spirit or soule onely or the whole humane nature Some Cautions added BUt concerning this Affection it selfe of pity and compassion fellow-feeling and sympathie or suffering with as the Text calls it which is the product result or thing produced in his heart by these there still remaines another thing more particularly to be inquired into namely What manner of affection this is For that such an affection is stirred up in him besides and beyond a bare act of knowledge or remembrance how once it was with himselfe is evident by what we find in the Text. The Apostle sayes not onely that he remembers how himselfe was tempted with the like infirmities that we are though that be necessarily supposed but that he is struck and toucht with the feeling of our infirmities to the producing of which this act of remembrance doth but subserve And he tels us Christ is able and his heart is capable of thus being toucht And the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a deep word signifying to suffer with us untill we are relieved And this affection thus stirred up is it which moveth him so cordially to helpe us Now concerning this affection as here thus expressed how far it extends and how deep it may reach I think no man in this life can fathome If Cor Regis the heart of a King be inscrutable as Solomon speaks the heart of the King of Kings now in glory is much more I will not take upon me to intrude into things which I have not seen but shall endeavour to speak safely and therefore warily so far as the light of Scripture and right reason shall warrant my way I shall set it forth three wayes 1. Negatively 2. Positively 3. Privatively 1. Negatively It is certaine that this affection of sympathie or fellow-feeling in Christ is not in all things such a kind of affection as was in him in the dayes of his flesh Which is cleare by what the Apostle speaks of him and of his affections then Heb. 5. 7. Who in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong cryings and teares was heard in that which he feared Where we see his converse and state of life here below to be called by way of difference and distinction from what it is now in heaven The dayes of his flesh By flesh meaning not the substance of the humane nature for he retaines that still but the fraile quality of subjection to mortality or passibility So Flesh is usually taken as when all flesh is said to be grasse It is spoken of mans nature in respect to its being subject to a fading wearing and decay by outward casualties or inward passions So in this Epistle Chap. 2. 14. For as much as the children we his brethren did partake of flesh and bloud that is the frailties of mans nature he himselfe also took part of the same And accordingly the Apostle instanceth in the following words of that 14. verse as in death which in the dayes of his flesh Christ was subject to so also in such fraile passions and affections as did work a suffering in him and a wearing and wasting of his spirits such as passionate sorrow joyned with strong cryes and teares both which he mentioneth and also feare in those words He was heard in that which he feared Now these dayes of his flesh being over and past for this was onely as sayes the Apostle in the dayes of his flesh hence therefore all such concomitant passionate overflowings of sorrow feare c. are ceased therewith and he is now no way capable of them or subjected to them Yet 2. Positively why may it not be affirmed that for substance the same kinde of affection of pittie and compassion that wrought in his whole man both body and soule when he was here workes still in him now he is in heaven If this Position be allayed with those due cautions and considerations which presently I shall annexe For if for substance the same flesh and blood and animall spirits remaine and have their use for though Christ in Luke 24. 29. mentioned only his having flesh and bones after his resurrection unto Thomas and the other Disciples because these two alone were to be the object of his Touch and Feeling yet Blood