Dr. John Owen (1616-1683)
The Death of Death, Book 1
THE
DEATH OF DEATH IN THE DEATH OF CHRIST
A TREATISE OF THE REDEMPTION AND
RECONCILIATION THAT IS IN THE BLOOD 0F CHRIST, WITH THE MERIT THEREOF,
AND SATISFACTION WROUGHT THEREBY.
John
Owen
BOOK
I
CHAPTER
I
In general of the end of the death of
Christ, as it is in the Scripture proposed. By the end of the death of
Christ, we mean in general, both,--first, that which his Father and
himself intended in it; and, secondly, that which was effectually
fulfilled and accomplished by it. Concerning either we may take a brief
view of the expressions used by the Holy Ghost:--
I. For the first. Will you know
the end wherefore, and the intention wherewith, Christ came into the
world? Let us ask himself (who knew his own mind, as also all the
secrets of his Father's bosom), and he will tell us that the "Son
of man came to save that which was lost," Matt. 18:11,--to recover
and save poor lost sinners; that was his intent and design, as is again
asserted, Luke 19:10. Ask also his apostles, who know his mind, and they
will tell you the same. So Paul, I Tim. 1:15, "This is a faithful
saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners." Now, if you will ask who these sinners are
towards whom he hath this gracious intent and purpose, himself tells
you, Matt. 20:28, that he came to "give his life a ransom for
many;" in other places called us, believers, distinguished from the
world: for be "gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us
from this present evil world, according to the will of God and our
Father," Gal. 1:4. That was the will and intention of God, that he
should give himself for us, that we might be saved, being separated from
the world. They are his church: Eph. 5:25-27, "He loved the church,
and gave himself for it; that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the
washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a
glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but
that it should be holy and without blemish:" which last words
express also the very aim and end of Christ in giving himself for any,
even that they may be made fit for God, and brought nigh unto him;--the
like whereof is also asserted, Tit 2:14, "He gave himself for us,
that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a
peculiar people, zealous of good works." Thus clear, then, and
apparent, is the intention and design of Christ and his Father in this
great work, even what it was, and towards whom,-- namely, to save us, to
deliver us from the evil world, to purge and wash us, to make us holy,
zealous, fruitful in good works, to render us acceptable, and to bring
us unto God; for through him "we have access into the grace wherein
we stand Rom. 5:2.
II. The effect, also, and actual
product of the work itself, or what is accomplished and fulfilled by the
death, blood-shedding, or oblation of Jesus Christ, is no less clearly
manifested, but is as fully, and very often more distinctly,
expressed;--as, first, Reconciliation with God, by removing and slaying
the enmity that was between him and us; for "when we were enemies
we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son," Rom. 5:10.
"God was in him reconciling the world unto himself, not imputing
their trespasses unto them," 2 Cor. 5:19; yea, he hath
"reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ," verse 18. And if
you would know how this reconstruction was effected, the apostle will
tell you that "he abolished in his flesh the enmity, the law of
commandments consisting in ordinances; for to make in himself of twain
one new man, so making peace; and that he might reconcile both unto God
in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby," Eph.
2:l5, 16: so that "he is our peace," verse l4. Secondly,
Justification, by taking away the guilt of sins, procuring remission and
pardon of them, redeeming us from their power, with the curse and wrath
due unto us for them; for "by his own blood he entered into the
holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us" Heb. 9:12.
"He redeemed us from the curse, being made a curse for us,"
Gal. 3:13; "his own self bearing our sins in his own body on the
tree," 1 Pet. 2:24. We have "all sinned, and come short of the
glory of God;" but are "justified freely by his grace through
the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God hath set forth to be a
propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness
for the remission of sins" Rom. 3:23-25: for "in him we have
redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins," Col.
1:14. Thirdly, Sanctification, by the purging away of the uncleanness
and pollution of our sins, renewing in us the image of God, and
supplying us with the graces of the Spirit of holiness: for "the
blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself to God,
purgeth our consciences from dead works that we may serve the living
God," Heb. 9:14; yea, "the blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us
from all sin," I John 1:7. "By himself he purged our
sins," Heb. 1:3. To "sanctify the people with his own blood,
he suffered without the gate," chap. 13:12. "He gave himself
for the church to sanctify and cleanse it, that it should be holy and
without blemish," Eph.5:25-27. Peculiarly amongst the graces of the
Spirit, "it is given to us," in-behalf-of Christ "for
Christ's sake, to believe on him," Phil 1:29; God "blessing us
in him with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places," Eph. 1:3.
Fourthly, Adoption, with that evangelical liberty and all those glorious
privileges which appertain to the sons of God; for "God sent forth
his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were
under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons," Gal
4:4, 5. Fifthly, Neither do the effects of the death of Christ rest
here; they leave us not until we are settled in heaven, in glory and
immortality for ever. Our inheritance is a "purchased
possession," Eph 1:14: "And for this cause he is the mediator
of the new testament, that by means of death, for the redemption of the
transgressions that were under the first testament, they which are
called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance," Heb.
9:15. The sum of all is,--The death and blood-shedding of Jesus Christ
hath wrought, and doth effectually procure, for all those that are
concerned in it, eternal redemption, consisting in grace here and glory
hereafter.
III. Thus full, clear, and
evident are the expressions in the Scripture concerning the ends and
effects of the death of Christ, that a man would think every one might
run and read. But we must stay: among all things in Christian religion,
there is scarce any thing more questioned than this, which seems to be a
most fundamental principle. A spreading persuasion there is of a general
ransom to be paid by Christ for all; that he died to redeem all and
every one,--not only for many, his church, the elect of God, but for
every one also of the posterity of Adam. Now, the masters of this
opinion do see full well and easily, that if that be the end of the
death of Christ which we have from the Scripture asserted, if those
before recounted be the immediate fruits and products thereof, then one
of these two things will necessarily follow:--that either, first, God
and Christ failed of their end proposed, and did not accomplish that
which they intended, the death of Christ being not a fitly-proportioned
means for the attaining of that end (for any cause of failing cannot be
assigned); which to assert seems to us blasphemously injurious to the
wisdom, power, and perfection of God, as likewise derogatory to the
worth and value of the death of Christ;--or else, that all men, all the
posterity of Adam, must be saved, purged, sanctified, and glorified;
which surely they will not maintain, at least the Scripture and the
woeful experience of millions will not allow. Wherefore, to cast a
tolerable color upon their persuasion, they must and do deny that God or
his Son had any such absolute aim or end in the death or blood-shedding
of Jesus Christ, or that any such thing was immediately procured and
purchased by it, as we before recounted; but that God intended nothing,
neither was any thing effected by Christ,--that no benefit ariseth to
any immediately by his death but what is common to all and every soul,
though never so cursedly unbelieving here and eternally damned
hereafter, until an act of some, not procured for them by Christ, (for
if it were, why have they it not all alike?) to wit, faith, do
distinguish them from others. Now, this seeming to me to enervate the
virtue, value, fruits and effects of the satisfaction and death of
Christ,--serving, besides,for a basis and foundation to a dangerous,
uncomfortable, erroneous persuasion-I shall, by the Lord's assistance,
declare what the Scripture holds out in both these things, both that
assertion which is intended to be proved, and that which is brought for
the proof thereof; desiring the Lord by his Spirit to lead us into all
truth, to give us understanding in all things, and if any one be
otherwise minded, to reveal that also unto him.
CHAPTER II
Of the nature of an end in general, and some distinctions
about it.
I. The end of any thing is that
which the agent intendeth to accomplish in and by the operation which is
proper unto its nature, and which it applieth itself unto,--that which
any one aimeth at, and designeth in himself to attain, as a thing good
and desirable unto him in the state and condition wherein he is. So the
end which Noah proposed unto himself in the building of the ark was the
preservation of himself and others. According to the will of God, he
made an ark to preserve himself and his family from the flood:
"According to all that God commanded him, so did he," Gen.
6:22. That which the agent doth, or whereto he applieth himself, for the
compassing his proposed end, is called the means; which two do complete
the whole reason of working in free intellectual agents, for I speak
only of such as work according to choice or election. So Absalom
intending a revolt from his father, to procure the crown and kingdom for
himself, "he prepared him horses and chariots, and fifty men to run
before him," 2 Sam. 15:1; and farther, by fair words, and glossing
compliances, "he stole the hearts of the men of Israel" verse
6; then pretends a sacrifice at Hebron, where he makes a strong
conspiracy, verse 12,--all which were the means he used for the
attaining of his fore-proposed end.
II. Between both these, end and
means, there is this relation, that (though in sundry kinds) they are
mutually causes one of another. The end is the first, principal, moving
cause of the whole. It is that for whose sake the whole work is. No
agent applies itself to action but for an end; and were it not by that
determined to some certain effect, thing, way, or manner of working, it
would no more do one thing than another. The inhabitants of the old
world desiring and intending unity and cohabitation, with perhaps some
reserves to provide for their safety against a second storm, they cry,
"Go to, let us build us a city, and a tower whose top may reach
unto heaven; and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon
the face of the whole earth," Gen. 9:4. First, They lay down their
aim and design, and then let out the means in their apprehension
conducing thereunto. And manifest, then, it is, that the whole reason
and method of affairs that a wise worker or agent, according to the
counsel, proposeth to himself is taken from the end which he aims at;
that is, in intention and contrivance, the beginning of all that order
which is in working. Now, the means are all those things which are used
for the attaining of the end proposed,--as meat for the preservation of
life, sailing in a ship for him that would pass the sea, laws for the
quiet continuance of human society; and they are the procuring cause of
the end, in one kind or another. Their existence is for the ends sake,
and the end hath its rise out of them, following them either morally as
their desert, or naturally as their fruit and product. First, In a moral
sense. When the action and the end are to be measured or considered in
reference to a moral rule, or law prescribed to the agent, then the
means are the deserving or meritorious cause of the end; as, if Adam had
continued in his innocency, and done all things according to the law
given unto him, the end procured thereby had been a blessed life to
eternity; as now the end of any sinful act is death, the curse of the
law. Secondly, When the means are considered only in their natural
relation, then they are the instrumentally efficient cause of the end.
So Joab intending the death of Abner, "he smote him with his spear
under the fifth rib, that he died," 2 Sam. 3:27. And when Benaiah,
by the command of Solomon, fell upon Shimei the wounds he gave him were
the efficient of his death, I Kings 2:46. In which regard there is no
difference between the murdering of an innocent man and the executing of
an offender; but as they are under a moral consideration, their ends
follow their deservings, in respect of conformity to the rule, and so
there is chasma megas between them.
III. The former consideration, by
reason of the defect and perverseness of some agents (for otherwise
these things are coincident), holds out a twofold end of things,--first,
of the work, and, secondly, of the workman; of the act and the agent:
for when the means assigned for the attaining of any end are not
proportioned unto it, nor, fitted for it, according to that rule which
the agent is to work by, then it cannot be but that he must aim at one
thing and another follow, in respect of the morality of the work. So
Adam is enticed into a desire to be like God; this now he makes his aim,
which: to effect he eats the forbidden fruit, and that contracts a guilt
which he aimed not at. But when the agent acts aright, and as it should
do,--when it aims at an end that is proper to it, belonging to its
proper perfection and condition, and worketh by such means as are fit
and suitable to the end proposed,--the end of the work and the workman
are one and the same; as when Abel intended the worship of the Lord, he
offered a sacrifice through faith, acceptable unto him; or as a man,
desiring salvation through Christ, applieth himself to get an interest
in him. Now, the sole reason of this diversity is, that secondary
agents, such as men are, have an end set and appointed to their actions
by Him which giveth them an external rule or law to work by, which shall
always attend them in their working, whether they will or no. God only,
whose will and good pleasure is the sole rule of all those works which
outwardly are of him, can never deviate in his actions, nor have any end
attend or follow his acts not precisely by him intended.
IV. Again; the end of every free
agent is either that which he effecteth, or that for whose sake he doth
effect it. When a builds a house to let to hire, that which he effecteth
is the building of a house; that which moveth him to do it is love of
gain. The physician cures the patient, and is moved to it by his reward.
The end which Judas aimed at in his going to the priests, bargaining
with them, conducting the soldiers to the garden, kissing Christ, was
the betraying of his Master; but the end for whose sake the whole
undertaking was set on foot was the obtaining of the thirty pieces of
silver: "What will ye give me, and I will do it?" The end
which God effected by the death of Christ was the satisfaction of his
justice: the end for whose sake he did it was either supreme, or his own
glory; or subordinate, ours with him.
V. Moreover, the means are of two
sorts:--First, Such as have a true goodness in themselves without
reference to any farther kind; though not so considered as we use them
for means. No means, as a means is considered as good in itself, but
only as conducible to a farther end; it is repugnant to the nature of
means, as such, to be considered as good in themselves. Study is in
itself the most noble employment of the soul; but, aiming at wisdom or
knowledge, we consider it as good only inasmuch as it conducteth to that
end, otherwise as "a weariness of the flesh," Eccl. 12: 12.
Secondly, Such as have no good at all in any kind, as in themselves
considered, but merely as conducing to that end which they are fit to
attain. They receive all their goodness (which is but relative) from
that whereunto they are appointed, in themselves no way desirable; as
the cutting off a leg or an arm for the preservation of life, taking a
bitter potion for health's sake, throwing corn and lading into the sea
to prevent shipwreck. Of which nature is the death of Christ, as we
shall afterward declare.
VI. These things being thus
proposed in general, our next task must be to accommodate them to the
present business in hand; which we shall do in order, by laying down the
agent working, the means wrought and the end effected, in the great work
of our redemption; for these three must be orderly considered and
distinctly, that we may have a right apprehension of the whole: into the
first whereof, sun theo, we make an entrance in [chapter third.]
CHAPTER III
Of the agent or chief author of the work of our redemption,
and of the first thing distinctly ascribed to the person of the Father.
I. The agent in, and chief author of, this great work
of our redemption is the whole blessed Trinity; for all the works which
outwardly are of the Deity are undivided and belong equally to each
person, their distinct manner of subsistence and order being observed.
It is true, there were sundry other instrumental causes in the oblation,
or rather passion of Christ but the work cannot in any sense be ascribed
unto them;--for in respect of God the Father, the issue of their
endeavors was exceeding contrary to their own intentions, and in the
close they did nothing but what the "hand and counsel of God had
before determined should be done," Acts 4:28; and in respect of
Christ they were no way able to accomplish what they aimed at, for he
himself laid down his life, and none was able to take it from him, John
10:17, 18: so that they are to be excluded from this consideration. In
the several persons of the holy Trinity, the joint author of the whole
work, the Scripture proposeth distinct and sundry acts or operations
peculiarly assigned unto them; which, according to our weak manner of
apprehension, we are to consider severally and apart; which also we
shall do, beginning with them that are ascribed to the Father.
II. Two peculiar acts there are
in this work of our redemption by the blood of Jesus, which may be and
are properly assigned to the person of the FATHER:--First, The sending,
of his Son into the world for this employment. Secondly, A laying the
punishment due to our sin upon him.
1. The Father loves the world,
and sends his Son to die: He "sent his Son into the world that the
world through him might be saved," John 3:l6,.17. He "sending
his Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, condemned sin in
the flesh, that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in
us," Rom. 8:3,4. He "set him forth to be a propitiation
through faith in his blood," chap. 3:25. For "when the
fullness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman,
made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we
might receive the adoption of sons," Gal. 4:4, 5. So more than
twenty times in the Gospel of John there is mention of this sending; and
our Saviour describes himself by this periphrasis, "Him whom the
Father hath sent," John 10:36; and the Father by this, "He who
sent me," chap. 5:37. So that this action of sending is appropriate
to the Father, according to his promise that he would "send us a
Saviour, a great one, to deliver us," Isa. 19:20; and to the
profession of our Saviour, "I have not spoken in secret from the
beginning; from the time that it was, there am I: and now the Lord God,
and his Spirit, hath sent me," Isa. 48:16. Hence the Father himself
is sometimes called our Saviour: I Tim. 1:1, "According to the
commandment of God our Saviour." Some copies, indeed, read it,
"of God and our Saviour;" but the interposition of that
particle "kai" arose, doubtless, from a misprision that
Christ alone is called Saviour. But directly this is the same with that
parallel place of Tit. 1:3, "According to the commandment of God
our Saviour," where no interposition of that conjunctive particle
can have place; the same title being also in other places ascribed to
him, as Luke 1:47, "My spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour."
As also I Tim. 4:10, "We trust in the living God, who is the
Saviour of all men, specially of them that believe;" though in this
last place it be not ascribed unto him with reference to his redeeming
us by Christ, but his saving and preserving all by his providence. So
also Tit. 2:10, 3:4; Deut. 32:15; 1 Sam 10:19; Ps. 24:5, 25:5; Isa.
12:2, 40:10, 45:15; Jer. 14:8; Micah 7:7; Hab. 3:18; most of which
places have reference to his sending of Christ, which is also
distinguished into three several acts, which in order we must lay
down:--
(1.) An authoritative imposition
of the office of Mediator, which Christ closed withal by his voluntary
susception of it, willingly undergoing the office, wherein by
dispensation the Father had and exercised a kind of superiority, which
the Son, though "in the form of God," humbled himself unto,
Phil 2:6-8. And of this there may conceived two parts:--
[1.] The purposed imposition of
his counsel, or his eternal counsel for the setting apart of his Son
incarnate to this office, saying unto him, "Thou art my Son; this
day have I begotten thee. Ask of me, and I shall give thee the nations
for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy
possession," Ps. 2:7, 8. He said unto him, "Sit thou at my
right hand until I make thine enemies thy footstool;" for "the
Lord swore, and will not repent, Thou art a priest for ever after the
order of Melchizedek," Ps. 110:1, 4. He appointed him to be
"heir of all things," Heb. 1:2, having "ordained him to
be Judge of quick and dead," Acts 10:42; for unto this he was
"ordained before the foundation of the world," 1 Pet. 1:20.,
and "determined, (horizo), to be the Son of God with
power," Rom. 1:4, "that he might be the first-born among many
brethren," chip. 8:29. I know that this is an act eternally
established in the mind and will of God, and so not to be ranged in
order with the others, which are all temporary, and had their beginning
in the fullness of time, of all which this first is the spring and
fountain, according to that of James, Acts 15:18, "Known unto God
are all his works from the beginning of the world;" but yet, it
being no unusual form of speaking that the purpose should also be
comprehended in that which holds out the accomplishment of it, aiming at
truth and not exactness, we pass it thus.
[2.] The actual inauguration or
solemn admission of Christ into his office; "committing all
judgment unto the Son," John 5:22; "making him to be both Lord
and Christ," Acts 2:36; "appointing him over his whole
house," Heb. 3:1-6;--which is that "anointing of the most
Holy," Dan. 9:24; God "anointing him with the oil of gladness
above his fellows" Ps. 45:7: for the actual setting apart of Christ
to his office is said to be by unction, because all those holy things
which were types of him, as the ark, the altar, etc., were set apart and
consecrated by anointing, Exod. 30:25-28, etc. To this also belongs that
public testification by innumerable angels from heaven of his nativity,
declared by one of them to the shepherds. "Behold," saith he,
"I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be unto all
people; for unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour,
which is Christ the Lord," Luke 2:10, 11;--which message was
attended by and closed with that triumphant exultation of the host of
heaven, "Glory be to God on high, on earth peace, towards men
good-will," verse 14: with that redoubled voice which afterward
came from the excellent glory, "This is my beloved Son, in whom I
am well-pleased," Matt.. 3:7, 17:5; 2 Pet. 1:7. If these things
ought to be distinguished and placed in their own order, they may be
considered in these three several acts:--First, The glorious
proclamation which he made of his nativity, when he "prepared him a
body," Heb. 10:5, bringing his First-begotten into the world, and
saying, "Let all the angels of God worship him" chap. 1:6,
sending them to proclaim the message which we before recounted.
Secondly, Sending the Spirit visibly, in the form of a dove, to light
upon him at the time of his baptism, Matt. 3:16, when he was endued with
a fullness thereof, for the accomplishment of the work and discharge of
the office whereunto he was designed, attended with that voice whereby
he owned him from heaven as his only-beloved. Thirdly, The
"crowning of him with glory and honour," in his resurrection,
ascension, and sitting down "on the right hand of the Majesty on
high." Heb. 1:3; setting "him as his king upon his holy hill
of Zion," Ps. 2:6; when "all power was given unto him in
heaven and in earth," Matt, 28:18, "all things being put under
his feet" Heb. 2:7, 8; himself highly exalted, and "a name
given him above every name, that at," etc., Phil. 2:9-11. Of which
it pleased him to appoint witnesses of all sorts; --angels from heaven,
Luke 24:4, Acts 1:10 ; the dead out of the graves, Matt. 27:52; the
apostles among and unto the living, Acts 2:32; with those more than five
hundred brethren, to whom he appeared at once, 1 Cor. 15:6. Thus
gloriously was he inaugurated into his office, in the several sets and
degrees thereof, God saying unto him, "It is a light thing that
thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and to
restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give thee for a light to
the Gentiles that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the
earth," Isa. 49:6.
Between these two acts I confess
there intercedes a twofold promise of God;--one, of giving a Saviour to
his people, a Mediator, according to his former purpose, as Gen. 3:15,
"The seed of the woman shall break the serpent's head;" and,
"The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from
between his feet, till Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of
the people be," chap. 49:10. Which he also foresignified by many
sacrifices and other types, with prophetical predictions: "Of which
salvation the prophets have inquired and searched diligently, who
prophesied of the grace that should come unto you; searching what or
what manner of time the Spirit of Christ which was in them did signify,
when it testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ, and the glory
that should follow. Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves,
but unto us they did minister the things which are now reported unto you
by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent
down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into," 1
Pet 1:10-12. The other is a promise of applying the benefits purchased
by this Saviour so designed to them that should believe on him, to be
given in fullness of time, according to the former promises; telling
Abraham, that "in his seed all the families of the earth should be
blessed," and justifying himself by the same faith, Gen, 12:3,
15:6. But these things belong rather to the application wholly, which
was equal both before and after his actual mission.
(2.) The second act of the
Father's sending the Son is the furnishing of him in his sending with a
fullness of all gifts and graces that might any way be requisite for the
office he was to undertake, the work he was to undergo, and the charge
he had over the house of God. There was, indeed, in Christ a twofold
fullness and perfection of all spiritual excellencies:-- First, the
natural all-sufficient perfection of his Deity, as one with his Father
in respect of his divine nature: for his glory was "the glory of
the only-begotten of the Father," John 1:14. He was "in the
form of God, and thought it not robbery to be equal with God,"
Phil. 2:6; being the "fellow of the LORD of hosts," Zech.
13:7. Whence that glorious appearance, Isa. 6: 3, 4, when the seraphims
cried one to another, and said, "Holy, holy, holy, is the LORD of
hosts: the whole earth is full of his glory. And the posts of the door
moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with
smoke." And the prophet cried, "Mine eyes have seen the King,
the LORD of hosts," verse 5. Even concerning this vision the
apostle saith, "Isaiah saw him, and spoke of his glory," John
12:41. Of which glory, he as it were emptied himself for a season, when
he was "found in the form" or condition "of a servant,
humbling himself unto death," Phil. 2:7, 8; laying aside that glory
which attended his Deity, outwardly appearing to have "neither
form, nor beauty, nor comeliness, that he should be desired," Isa.
53:2 But this fullness we do not treat of, it being not communicated to
him, but essentially belonging to his person, which is eternally
begotten of the person of his Father.
The second fullness that was in
Christ was a communicated fullness, which was in him by dispensation
from his Father, bestowed upon him to fit him for his work and office as
he was and is the "Mediator between God and men, the man Christ
Jesus," I Tim. 2:5; not as he is the "LORD of hosts," but
as he is "Emmanuel, God with us," Matt. 1:23; as he was a
"son given to us, called Wonderful, Counselor, The mighty God, The
everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace, upon whose shoulder the
government was to be," Isa. 9:6. It is a fullness of grace; not
that essential which is of the nature of the Deity, but that which is
habitual and infused into the humanity as personally united to the
other; which, though it be not absolutely infinite, as the other is, yet
it extends itself to all perfections of grace, both in respect of parts
and degrees. There is no grace that is not in Christ, and every grace is
in him in the highest degree: so that whatsoever the perfection of
grace, either for the several kinds or respective advancements thereof,
requireth, is in him habitually, by the collation of his Father for this
very purpose, and for the accomplishment of the work designed; which,
though (as before) it cannot properly be said to be infinite, yet it is
boundless and endless. It is in him as the light in the beams of the
sun, and as water in a living fountain which can never fail. He is the
"candlestick" from whence the "golden pipes do empty the
golden oil out of themselves," Zech. 4:12, into all that are his;
for he is "the beginning, the first-born from the dead, in all
things having the pre-eminence; for it pleased the Father that in him
should all fullness dwell;" Col. 1:18, 19. In him he caused to be
"hid all the treasurer of wisdom and knowledge," chap. 2:3;
and "in him dwelt all the fullness of the Godhead bodily (somatikos),"
substantially or personally, verse 9; that "of his fullness we
might all receive grace for grace," John 1:16, in a continual
supply. So that, setting upon the work of redemption, he looks upon this
in the first place. "The Spirit of the Lord God," saith he,
"is upon me; because the LORD hath anointed me to preach good
tidings unto the meek; he hath sent me to bind up the broken-hearted, to
proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them
that are bound; to proclaim the acceptable year of the LORD, and the day
of vengeance of our God; to comfort all that mourn," Isa. 61:1, 2.
And this was the "anointing with the oil of gladness" which he
had "above his fellows," Ps. 45:7; "it was upon his head,
and ran down to his beard, yea, down to the skirts of his
garments," Ps. 133:2, that every one covered with the garment of
his righteousness might be made partaker of it "The Spirit of the
LORD did rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the
spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of
the LORD," Isa. 11:2; and that not in parcels and beginnings as in
us, proportioned to our measure and degrees of sanctification, but in a
fullness, for "he received not the Spirit by measure," John
3:34;--that is, it was not so with him when he come to the full measure
of the stature of his age, as Eph. 4:13; for otherwise it was manifested
in him and collated on him by degrees, for he "increased in wisdom
and stature, and in favour with God and man," Luke 2:51 Hereunto
was added "all power in heaven and earth, which was given unto
him," Matt. 28:18; "power over all flesh, to give eternal life
to as many as he would," John 17:2. Which we might branch into many
particulars, but so much shall suffice to set forth the second act of
God in sending his Son.
(3.) The third act of this
sending is his entering into covenant and compact with his Son
concerning the work to be undertaken, and the issue or event thereof; of
which there be two parts:--
First, His promise to protect and
assist him in the accomplishment and perfect fulfilling of the whole
business and dispensation about which he was employed, or which he was
to undertake. The Father engaged himself, that for his part, upon his
Son's undertaking this great work of redemption, he would not be wanting
in any assistance in trials, strength against oppositions, encouragement
against temptations, and strong consolation in the midst of terrors,
which might be any way necessary or requisite to carry him on through
all difficulties to the end of so great an employment;--upon which he
undertakes this heavy burden, so full of misery and trouble: for the
Father before this engagement requires no less of him than that he
should "become a Saviour, and be afflicted in all the affliction of
his people," Isa. 63:8, 9: yea, that although he were "the
fellow of the LORD of host," yet he should endure the
"sword" that was drawn against him as the "shepherd"
of the sheep, Zech. 13:7; "treading the winepress alone, until he
became red in his apparel," Isa. 63:2, 3: yea, to be
"stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted; wounded for our
transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities; to be bruised and put to
grief; to make his soul an offering for sin, and to bear the iniquity of
many," Isa 53.; to be destitute of comfort so far as to cry,
"my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" Ps. 22:1. No
wonder, then, if upon this undertaking the Lord promised to make
"his mouth like a sharp sword, to hide him in the shadow of his
hand, to make him a polished shaft, and to hide him in his quiver, to
make him his servant in whom he would be glorified," Isa. 49:2, 3;
that though "the kings of the earth should set themselves, and the
rulers take counsel together, against him, yet he would laugh them to
scorn, and set him as king upon his holy hill of Zion," Ps. 2:2, 4,
6; though the "builders did reject him," yet he should
"become the head of the comer," to the amazement and
astonishment of all the world, Ps. 118:22, 23; Matt. 21:42, Mark 12:10,
Luke 20:17, Acts 4:11, 12, 1 Pet 2:4; yea, he would "lay him for a
foundation, a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner-stone, a sure
foundation," Isa. 28:16, that "whosoever should fall upon him
should be broken, but upon whomsoever he should fall he should grind him
to powder,' Matt. 21:44. Hence arose that confidence of our Saviour in
his greatest and utmost trials, being assured, by virtue of his Father's
engagement in this covenant, upon a treaty with him about the redemption
of man, that he would never leave him nor forsake him. "I
gave," saith he, "my back to the smiters, and my cheeks to
them that plucked off the hair: I hid not my face from shame and
spitting," Isa. 50:6. But with what confidence, blessed Savior,
didst thou undergo all this shame and sorrow! Why, "The Lord GOD
will help me; therefore shall I not be confounded: therefore have I set
my face like a flint, and I know; that I shall not be ashamed. He is
near that justifieth me; who will contend with me? let us stand
together: who is mine adversary? let him come near to me. Behold, the
Lord GOD will help me; who is he that condemn me? Lo! they shall all wax
old as a garment; the moth shall eat them up," verses 7-9. With
this assurance he was brought as a "lamb to the slaughter, and as a
sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth,"
Isa. 53:7: for "when he was reviled, he reviled not again; when he
suffered, he threatened not; but committed himself to him that judgeth
righteously," 1 Pet. 2:23. So that the ground of our Saviour's
confidence and assurance in this great undertaking, and a strong motive
to exercise his graces received in the utmost endurings, was this
engagement of his Father upon this compact of assistance and protection.
Secondly, [His promise] of
success, or a good issue out of all his sufferings, and a happy
accomplishment and attainment of the end of his great undertaking. Now,
of all the rest this chiefly is to be considered, as directly conducing
to the business proposed, which yet would not have been so clear without
the former considerations; for whatsoever it was that God promised his
Son should be fulfilled and attained by him, that certainly was it at
which the Son aimed in the whole undertaking, and designed it as the end
of the work that was committed to him, and which alone he could and did
claim upon the accomplishment of his Father's will. What this was, and
the promises whereby it is at large set forth, ye have Isa. 49:
"Thou shalt be my servent," saith the Lord, "to raise up
the tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also
give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation
to the end of the earth. Kings shall see and arise, princes also shall
worship, because of the LORD that is faithful." And he will
certainly accomplish this engagement: "I will preserve thee, and
give thee for a covenant of the people, to establish the earth, to cause
to inherit the desolate heritages; that thou mayest say to the
prisoners, Go forth; to them that are in darkness, Show yourselves. They
shall feed in the ways, and their pastures shall be in all high places.
They shall not hunger nor thirst; neither shall the heat nor sun smite
them: for he that hath mercy on them shall lead them, even by the
springs of water shall be guide them. And I will make all my mountains a
way, and my highways shall be exalted. Behold, these shall come from
far: and, lo, these from the north and from the west; and these from the
land of Sinim," verses 6-12=2E By all which expressions the Lord
evidently and clearly engageth himself to his Son, that he should gather
to himself a glorious church of believers from among Jews and Gentiles,
through all the world, that should be brought unto him, and certainly
fed in full pasture, and refreshed by the springs of water, all the
spiritual springs of living water which flow from God in Christ for
their everlasting salvation. This, then, our Saviour certainly aimed at,
as being the promise upon which he undertook the work,--the gathering of
the sons of God together, their bringing unto God, and passing to
eternal salvation; which being well considered, it will utterly
overthrow the general ransom or universal redemption, as afterward will
appear. In the 53rd chapter of the same prophecy, the Lord is more
express and punctual in these promises to his Son, assuring him that
when he "made his soul an offering for sin, he should see his seed,
and prolong his days, and the pleasure of the LORD should prosper in his
hand; that he should see of the travail of his soul, and be satisfied;
by his knowledge he should justify many; that, he should divide a
portion with the great, and the spoil with the strong," verses 10
12. He was, you see, to see his seed by covenant, and to raise up a
spiritual seed unto God, a faithful people, to be prolonged a preserved
throughout all generations; which, how well it consists with their
persuasion who in terms have affirmed "that the death of Christ
might have had its full and utmost effect and yet none be saved," I
cannot see, though some have boldly affirmed it and all the assertors of
universal redemption do tacitly grant, when they come to the assigning
of the proper ends and effects of the death of Christ. "The
pleasure of the LORD," also, was to "prosper in his
hand;" which what it was he declares, Heb. 2:10, even
"bringing of many sons unto glory;" for "God sent his
only-begotten Son into the world that we live through him," I John
4:9; as we shall afterward more abundantly declare. But the promises of
God made unto him in their agreement, and so, consequently, his own aim
and intention, may be seen in nothing more manifestly than in the
request that our Saviour makes upon the accomplishment of the work about
which he was sent; which certainly was neither for more nor less than
God had engaged himself to him for. "I have," saith he,
"glorified thee on earth, I have finished the work which thou
gavest me to do," John 17:4. And now, what doth he require after
the manifestation of his eternal glory, of which for a season he had
emptied himself, verse 5? Clearly a full confluence of the love of God
and fruits of that love upon all his elect, in faith, sanctification,
and glory. God gave them unto him, and he sanctified himself to be a
sacrifice for their sake, praying for their sanctification, verses
17-19; their preservation in peace, or communion one with another, and
union with God, verses 20, 21, "I pray not for these alone"
(that is, his apostles), "but for them also which shall believe on
me through their word; that they all may be one; as thou, Father, art in
me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us;" and lastly,
their glory, verse 24, "Father, I will that they also, whom thou
hast given me, be with me where I am; that they may behold my glory,
which thou hast given me." All which several postulata are no doubt
grounded upon the fore-cited promises which by his Father were made unto
him. And in this, not one word concerning all and every one, but
expressly the contrary, verse 9. Let this, then, be diligently observed,
that the promise of God unto his Son, and the request of the Son unto
his Father, are directed to this peculiar end of bringing sons unto God.
And this is the first act, consisting of these three particulars.
2. The second is of laying upon
him the punishment of sins, everywhere ascribed unto the Father:
"Awake; 0 sword, against my shepherd, against the man that is my
fellow, saith the LORD of hosts: smite the shepherd, and the sheep shall
be scattered," Zech. 13:7. What here is set down imperatively, by
way of command, is in the gospel indicatively expounded. "I will
smite the shepherd,: and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered
abroad," Matt. 26:31. "He was stricken, smitten of God, and
afflicted;" yea, "the LORD laid upon him the iniquity of us
all;" yea, "it pleased the LORD to bruise him, and to put him
to grief," Isa. 53:4, 6, 10. "He made him to be sin for us,
who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in
him," 2 Cor. 5:21. The adjunct in both: places is put for the
subject, as the opposition between his being made sin and our being made
righteousness declareth. "Him who knew no sin,"-that is, who
deserved no punishment,--"him hath he made to be sin," or laid
the punishment due to sin upon him. Or perhaps, in the latter place, sin
may be taken for an offering or sacrifice for the expiation of sin, (hamartia)
answering in this place to the word: CHATTATH in the Old Testament,
which signifieth both sin and the sacrifice for it. And this the Lord
did; for as for Herod, Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles, and the people
of Israel, when they were gathered together, they did nothing but
"what his hand and counsel bad determined before to be done,"
Acts 4:27,28. Whence the great shakings of our saviour were in his close
conflict with his Father's wrath, and that burden which by himself he
immediately imposed on him. When there was no hand or instrument
outwardly appearing to put him to any suffering or cruciating torment,
then he "began to be sorrowful, even unto death" Matt. 26:37,
38; to wit, when he was in the garden with his three choice apostles,
before the traitor or any of his accomplices appeared, then was he
"sore amazed, and very heavy," Mark 14:33. That was the time,
"in the days of his flesh, when he offered up prayers and
supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to
save him from death," Heb. 5:7; which how he performed the
evangelist describeth, Luke 22:43, 44: "There appeared an angel
unto him from heaven, strengthening him. But being in an agony he prayed
more earnestly: and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood
falling down to the ground." Surely it was a close and strong
trial, and that immediately from his Father, he now underwent; for how
meekly and cheerfully doth he I submit, without any regret or trouble of
spirit, to all the cruelty of men and violence offered to his body,
until this conflict being renewed again, he cries, "My God, my God,
why hast thou forsaken me?" And this, by the way, will be worth our
observation that we may know with whom our Saviour chiefly had to do,
and what was that which he underwent for sinners; which also will give
some light to the grand query concerning the persons of them for whom he
undertook all this. His sufferings were far from consisting in mere
corporal perpessions and afflictions, with such impressions upon his
soul and spirit as were the effects and issues only of them. It was no
more nor less than the curse of the law of God which he underwent for
us: for he freed us from the curse "by being made a curses,"
Gal 3:13; which contained all the punishment that was due to sin, either
in the severity of God's justice, or according to the exigence of that
law which required obedience. That the execration of the law should be
only temporal death, as the law was considered to be the instrument of
the Jewish polity, and serving that economy or dispensation, is true;
but that it should be no more, as it is the universal rule of obedience,
and the bond of the covenant between God and man, is a foolish dream.
Nay, but in dying for us Christ did not only aim at our good, but also
directly died in our stead. The punishment due to our sin and the
chastisement of our peace was upon him; which that it was the pains of
hell, in their nature and being, in their weight and pressure, though
not in tendence and continuance (it being impossible that he should be
detained by death), who can deny and not be injurious to the justice of
God, which will inevitably inflict those pains to eternity upon sinners?
It is true, indeed, there is a relaxation of the law in respect of the
persons suffering, God admitting of commutation; as in the old law, when
in their sacrifices the life of the beast was accepted (in respect to
the carnal part of the ordinances) for the life of the man. This is
fully revealed, and we believe it; but for any change of the punishment,
in respect of the nature of it, where is the least intimation of any
alteration? We conclude, then, this second act of God, in laying the
punishment on him for us, with that of the prophet, "All we like
sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the
LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all," Isa. 53:6: and add
thereunto this observation, that it seems strange to me that Christ
should undergo the pains of hell in their stead who lay in the pains of
hell before he underwent those pains, and shall continue in them to
eternity; for "their worm dieth not, neither is their fire
quenched." To which I may add this dilemma to our
Universalists:--God imposed his wrath due unto, and Christ underwent the
pains of hell for, either all the sins of all men, or all the sins of
some men, or some sins of all men. If the last, some sins of all men,
then have all men some sins to answer for, and so shall no man be saved;
for if God enter into judgment with us, though it were with all mankind
for one sin, no flesh should be justified in his sight: "If the
LORD should mark iniquities, who should stand?" Ps.130:3. We might
all go to cast all that we have "to the moles and to the bats, to
go into the clefts of the rocks, and into the tops of the ragged rocks,
for fear of the LORD, and for the glory of his majesty," Isa. 2:20,
21. If the second, that is it which we affirm, that Christ in their
stead and room suffered for all the sins of all the elect in the world.
If the first, why, then, an not all freed from the punishment of all
their sins? You will say, "Because of their unbelief, they will not
believe." But this unbelief, is it a sin or not? If not, why should
they be punished for it? If it be, then Christ underwent the punishment
due to it, or not. If so, then why must that hinder them more than their
other sins for which he died from partaking of the fruit of his death?
If he did not, then did he not die for all their sins. Let them choose
which part they will.
CHAPTER IV.
Of those things which in the work of redemption are
peculiarly ascribed to the person of the Son.
SECONDLY, The SON was an agent in this great work,
concurring by a voluntary susception, or willing undertaking of the
office imposed on him; for when the Lord said, "Sacrifice and
offering he would not: in burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin he had
no pleasure," then said Christ, "Lo, I come, (in the volume of
the book it is written of me,) to do thy will, 0 God," Heb. 10:6,
7. All other ways being rejected as insufficient, Christ undertaketh the
task, "in whom alone the Father was well pleased," Matt. 3:17.
Hence he professeth that "he came not to do his own will, but the
will of him that sent him," John 4:38; yea, that it was his meat
and drink to do his Father's will, and to finish his work, chap. 4:34.
The first words that we find recorded of him in the Scripture are to the
same purpose, "Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's
business?" Luke 2:49. And at the close of all he saith, "I
have glorified thee on the earth; I have finished the work which thou
gavest me to do," John 17:4; calling it everywhere his Father's
work that he did, or his Father's will which he came to accomplish, with
reference to the imposition which we before treated of. Now, this
undertaking of the Son may be referred to three heads. The first being a
common foundation for both the others, being as it were the means in
respect of them as the end, and yet in some sort partaking of the nature
of a distinct action, with a goodness in itself in reference to the main
end proposed to all three, we shall consider it apart; and that is,--
First, His incarnation, as usually it
is called, or his taking of flesh, and pitching his tent amongst us,
John 1:14. His "being made of a woman," Gal 4:4, is usually
called his incarnation; for this was "the mystery of godliness,
that God should be manifested in the flesh," 1 Tim. 3:16, thereby
assuming not any singular person, but our human nature, into personal
union with himself. For, "forasmuch as the children are partakers
of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that
through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that is,
the devil," Heb. 2:14. It was the children that he considered, the
"children whom the Lord gave him," verse 13. Their
participation in flesh and blood moved him to partake of the same,--not
because all the world, all the posterity of Adam, but because the
children were in that condition; for their sakes he sanctified himself.
Now, this emptying of the Deity, this humbling of himself, this dwelling
amongst us, was the sole act of the second person, or the divine nature
in the second person, the Father and the Spirit having no concurrence in
it but by liking, approbation, and eternal counsel.
Secondly, His oblation, or
"offering himself up to God for us without spot, to purge our
consciences from dead works," Heb. 9:14; "for he loved us, and
washed us from our sins in his own blood," Rev. 1:5. "He loved
the church, and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanse
it," Eph. 5:25, 26; taking the cup of wrath at his Father's hands
due to us, and drinking it off, "but not for himself," Dan.
9:26: for, "for our sakes he sanctified himself," John 17:19,
that is, to be an offering, an oblation for sin; for "when we were
yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly,"
Rom. 5:6;--this being that which was typified out by all the
institutions, ordinances, and sacrifices of old; which when they were to
have an end, then said Christ, "Lo, I come to do thy will."
Now, though the perfecting or consummating of this oblation be set out
in the Scripture chiefly in respect of what Christ suffered, and not so
much in respect of what he did, because it is chiefly considered as the
means used by these three blessed agents for the attaining of a farther
end, yet in respect of his own voluntary giving up himself to be so an
oblation and a sacrifice, without which it would not have been of any
value (for if the will of Christ had not been in it, it could never have
purged our sins), therefore, in that regard, I refer it to his actions.
He was the "Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the
world," John 1:29; the Lamb of God, which himself had provided for
a sacrifice. And how did this Lamb behave himself in it? with
unwillingness and struggling? No; he opened not his mouth: "He was
brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers
is dumb, so he opened not his mouth," Isa. 53:7. Whence he saith,
"I lay down my life. No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of
myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it
again," John 10:17, 18. He might have been cruciated on the part of
God; but his death could not have been an oblation and offering had not
his will concurred. "But he loved me," saith the apostle,
"and gave himself for me," Gal. 2:20. Now, that alone deserves
the name of a gift which is from a free and a willing mind, as Christ's
was when "he loved us, and gave himself for us an offering and a
sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour," Eph. 5:2. He does it
cheerfully: "Lo, I come to do thy will, 0 God," Heb. 10:9; and
so "his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree," I
Pet 2:24. Now, this oblation or offering of Christ I would not tie up to
any one thing, action, or passion, performance, or suffering; but it
compriseth the whole economy and dispensation of God manifested in the
flesh and conversing among us, with all those things which he performed
in the days of his flesh, when he offered up prayers and supplications,
with strong cries and tears, until he had fully "by himself purged
our sins, and sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high,"
Heb. 1:3, "expecting till his enemies be made his footstool,"
chap. 10:13,--all the whole dispensation of his coming and ministering,
until he had given his soul a price of redemption for many, Matt. 26:28.
But for his entering into the holy of holies, sprinkled with his own
blood, and appearing so for us before the majesty of God, by some
accounted as the continuation of his oblation, we may refer unto,--
Thirdly, His intercession for all
and every one of those for whom he gave himself for an oblation. He did
not suffer for them, and then refuse to intercede for them; he did not
do the greater, and omit the less. The price of our redemption is more
precious in the eyes of God and his Son than that it should, as it were,
be cast away on perishing souls, without any care taken of what becomes
of them afterward. Nay, this also is imposed on Christ, with a promise
annexed: "Ask of me," saith the Lord, "and I will give
thee the nations for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the
earth for thy possession," Ps. 2:8; who accordingly tells his
disciples that he had more work to do for them in heaven. "I
go," saith he, "to prepare a place for you, that I may come
again and receive you unto myself," John 14:2, 3. For as "the
high priest went into the second [tabernacle] alone once every year, not
without blood, which he offered for himself and the errors of the
people," Heb. 9:7; so "Christ being come an high priest of
good things to come, by his own blood entered once into the holy place,
having obtained eternal redemption for us," verses 11, 12. Now,
what was this holy place whereinto he entered thus sprinkled with the
blood of the covenant? and to what end did he enter into it? Why,
"he is not entered into the holy places made with hands, which are
the figures of the true; but into heaven itself, now to appear in the
presence of God for us," verse 24. And what doth he there appear
for? Why, to be our advocate, to plead our cause with God, for the
application of the good things procured by his oblation unto all them
for whom he was an offering; as the apostle tells us, "If any man
sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous," I John 2:1. Why, how comes that to pass? "He is
the propitiation for our sins," verse 2. His being a propitiatory
sacrifice for our sins, is the foundation of his interceding, the ground
of it; and, therefore, they both belong to the same persons. Now, by the
way, we know that Christ refused to pray for the world, in opposition to
his elect. "I pray for them," saith he: "I pray not for
the world, but for them thou hast given me," John17:9. And
therefore there was no foundation for such an interceding for them,
because he was not a propitiation for them. Again; we know the Father
always heareth the Son ("I knew," saith he, "that thou
hearest me always," chap. 11:42), that is, so to grant his request,
according to the fore-mentioned engagement, Ps. 2:8; and, therefore, if
he should intercede for all, all should undoubtedly be saved, for
"he is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by
him, seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them," Heb.
7:25. Hence, is that confidence of the apostle, upon that intercession
of Christ, "Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's elect?
It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that
died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of
God, who also maketh intercession for us," Rom. 8:33, 34. Where,
also, we cannot but observe that those for whom be died may assuredly
conclude he maketh intercession for them, and that none shall lay any
thing to their charge,--which breaks the neck of the general ransom; for
according to that, he died for millions that have no interest in his
intercession, who shall have their sins laid to their charge, and perish
under them: which might be farther cleared up from the very nature of
this intercession, which is not a humble, dejected supplication, which
beseems not that glorious state of advancement which he is possessed of
that sits at the right hand of the Majesty on high, but an authoritative
presenting himself before the throne of his Father, sprinkled with his
own blood, for the making out to his people all spiritual things that
are procured by his oblation, saying, "Father, I will that those
whom thou hast given me be with me where I am" John 17:24. So that
for whomsoever he suffered, he appears for them in heaven with his
satisfaction and merit. Here, also, we must call to mind what the Father
promised his Son upon his undertaking of this employment; for there is
no doubt but that for that, and that alone, doth Christ, upon the
accomplishment of the whole, intercede with him about: which was in sum
that he might be the captain of salvation to all that believe on him,
and effectually bring many sons to glory. And hence it is, having such
an high priest over the house of God, we may draw near with the full
assurance of faith, for by one offering he hath perfected for ever them
that are sanctified, Heb. 10:14. But of this more must be said
afterward.
CHAPTER V.
The peculiar actions of the
Holy Spirit in this business.
THIRDLY, In few words we may consider
the actions of that agent, who in order is the third in that blessed
One, whose all is the whole, the HOLY SPIRIT, who is evidently
concurring, in his own distinct operation, to all the several chief or
grand parts of this work. We may refer them to three heads:--
First, The incarnation of the
Son, with his plenary assistance in the course of his conversation
whilst he dwelt amongst us; for his mother was found with child,
"to have conceived in her womb of the Holy Ghost," Matt. 1:18.
If you ask, with Mary, how that could be? the angel resolves both her
and us, as far as it is lawful for us to be acquainted with these
mysterious things: Luke 1:35, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee,
and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that
holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of
God." It was an over shadowing power in the Spirit: so called by an
allusion taken from fowls that cover their eggs, that so by their warmth
young may be hatched; for by the sole power of the Spirit was this
conception, who did "incubare foetui," as in the
beginning of the world. Now, in process, as this child was conceived by
the power, so he was filled with the Spirit, and "waxed
strong" in it, Luke 1:80; until, having received a fullness
thereof, and not by any I limited measure, in the gifts and graces of
it, he was thoroughly furnished and fitted for his great undertaking.
Secondly, In his oblation, or
passion (for they are both the same, with several respects,--one to what
he suffered, the other to what he did with, by, and under those
sufferings), how "by the Eternal Spirit he offered himself without
spot to God," Heb. 9:14: whether it be meant of the offering
himself a bloody sacrifice on the cross, or his presentation of himself
continually before his Father,--it is by the Eternal Spirit. The willing
offering himself through that Spirit was the eternal fire under this
sacrifice, which made it acceptable unto God. That which some contend,
that by the eternal Spirit is here meant our Saviour's own Deity, I see
no great ground for. Some Greek and Latin copies read, not, as we
commonly, PNEUMA AIONIOS, but PNEUMA HAGIOS, and so the
doubt is quite removed: and I see no reason why he may not as well be
said to offer himself through the Holy Spirit, as to be "declared
to be the Son of God, according to the Spirit of holiness, by the
resurrection from the dead," as Rom. 1:4; as also to be
"quickened by the Spirit," I Pet. 3:18. The working of the
Spirit was required as well in his oblation as resurrection, in his
dying, as quickening.
Thirdly, In his resurrection; of
which the apostle, Rom. 8:11, "But if the Spirit of him that raised
up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the
dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth
in, you."
And thus have we discovered the
blessed agents and undertakers in this work their several actions and
orderly concurrence unto the whole; which, though they may be thus
distinguished, yet they are not so divided but that every one must be
ascribed to the whole nature, whereof each person is "in solidum"
partaker. And as they begin it, so they will jointly carry along the
application of it unto its ultimate issue and accomplishment; for we
must "give thanks to the Father, which hath made us meet"
(that is, by his Spirit) "to be partakers of the inheritance of the
saints in light: who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and
hath translated us into the kingdom of his dear Son: in whom we have
redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins," Col.
1:12, 13.
CHAPTER VI.
The means used by the
fore-recounted agents in this work.
OUR next employment, following the
order of execution, not intention, will be the discovery or laying down
of the means in this work; which are, indeed, no other but the several
actions before recounted, but now to be considered under another
respect,--as they are a means ordained for the obtaining of a proposed
end; of which afterward. Now, because the several actions of Father and
Spirit were all exercised towards Christ, and terminated in him, as God
and man, he only and his performances are to be considered as the means
in this work, the several concurrences of both the other persons before
mentioned being presupposed as necessarily antecedent or concomitant.
The means, then, used or ordained
by these agents for the end proposed is that whole economy or
dispensation carried along to the end, from whence our Saviour Jesus
Christ is called a Mediator; which may be, and are usually, as I
mentioned before,, distinguished into two parts:-First, his oblation;
secondly, his intercession.
By his oblation we do not design
only the particular offering of himself upon the cross an offering to
his Father, as the Lamb of God without spot or blemish, when he bare our
sins or carried them up with him in his own body on the tree, which was
the sum and complement of his oblation and that wherein it did chiefly
consist; but also his whole humiliation, or state of emptying himself,
whether by yielding voluntary obedience unto the law, as being made
under it, that he might be the end thereof to them that believe, Rom.
10:4, or by his subjection to the curse of the law, in the antecedent
misery and suffering of life, as well as by submitting to death, the
death of the cross: for no action of his as mediator is to be excluded
from a concurrence to make up the whole means in this work. Neither by
his intercession do I understand only that heavenly appearance of his in
the most holy place for the applying unto us all good things purchased
and procured by his oblation; but also every act of his exaltation
conducing thereunto, from his resurrection to his "sitting down at
the right hand of the Majesty on high, angels, and principalities, and
powers, being made subject unto him." Of all which his
resurrection, being the basis, as it were, and the foundation of the
rest ("for if he is not risen, then is our faith in vain," I
Cor. 15:13, 14; and then are we "yet in our sins," verse 17;
"of all men most miserable," verse 19), is especially to be
considered, as that to which a great part of the effect is often
ascribed; for "he was delivered for our offences, and was raised
again for our justification," Rom. 4:25;--where, and in such other
places, by his resurrection the whole following dispensation and the
perpetual intercession of Christ for us in heaven is intended; for
"God raised up his son Jesus to bless us, in turning every one of
us from our iniquities," Acts 3:26.
Now, this whole dispensation,
with especial regard to the death and blood-shedding of Christ, is the
means we speak of, agreeably to what was said before of such in general;
for it is not a thing in itself desirable for its own sake. The death of
Christ had nothing in it (we speak of his sufferings distinguished from
his obedience) that was good, but only as it conduced to a farther end,
even the end proposed for the manifestation of God's glorious grace.
What good was it, that Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and
people of Israel, should, with such horrid villany and cruelty, gather
themselves together against God's holy child, whom he bad anointed? Acts
4:27: or what good was it, that the Son of God should be made sin and a
curse, to be bruised, afflicted, and to undergo such wrath as the whole
frame of nature, as it were, trembled to behold? What good, what beauty
and form is in all this, that it should be desired in itself and for
itself? Doubtless none at all. It must, then, be looked upon as a means
conducing to such an end; the glory and lustre thereof must quite take
away all the darkness and confusion that was about the thing itself. And
even so it was intended by the blessed agents in it, by "whose
determinate counsel and foreknowledge he was delivered and slain,"
Acts 2:23; there being done unto him "whatsoever his hand and
counsel had determined," chap. 4:28: which what it was must be
afterward declared. Now, concerning the whole some things are to be
observed:--
That though the oblation and
intercession of Jesus Christ are distinct acts in themselves and have
distinct immediate products and issues assigned ofttimes unto them
(which I should now have laid down, but that I must take up this in
another place), yet they are not in any respect or regard to be divided
or separated, as that the one should have any respect to any persons or
any thing which the other also doth not in its kind equally respect. But
there is this manifold union between them:--
First, In that they are both
alike intended for the obtaining and accomplishing the same entire and
complete end proposed,--to wit, the effectual bringing of many sons to
glory, for the praise of God's grace; of which afterward.
Secondly, That what persons
soever the one respecteth, in the good things it obtaineth, the same,
all, and none else, doth the other respect, in applying the good things
so obtained; for "he was delivered for our offences, and was raised
again for our justiflcation," Rom,. 4:25. That is, in brief, the
object of the one is of no larger extent than the object of the other;
or, for whom Christ offered himself, for all those, and only those, doth
he intercede, according to his own word, "For their sake I sanctify
myself" (to be an oblation), "that they also might be
sanctified through the truth," John 17:19.
Thirdly, That the oblation of
Christ is, as it were, the foundation of his intercession, inasmuch as
by the oblation was procured every thing that, by virtue of his
intercession, is bestowed; and that because the sole end why Christ
procured any thing by his death was that it might be applied to them for
whom it was so procured. The sum is, that the oblation and intercession
of Jesus Christ are one entire means for the producing of the same
effect, the very end of the oblation being that all those things which
are bestowed by the intercession of Christ, and without whose
application it should certainly fail of the end proposed in it, be
effected accordingly; so that it cannot be affirmed that the death or
offering of Christ concerned any one person or thing more, in respect of
procuring any good, than his intercession doth for the collating of it:
for, interceding there for all good purchased, and prevailing in all his
intercessions (for the Father always hears his Son), it is evident that
every one for whom Christ died must actually have applied unto him all
the good things purchased by his death; which, because it is evidently
destructive to the adverse cause, we must a little stay to confirm it,
only telling you the main proof of it lies in our following proposal of
assigning the proper end intended and effected by the death of Christ,
so that the chief proof must be deferred until then. I shall now only
propose those reasons which may be handled apart, not merely depending
upon that.
CHAPTER VII
Containing reasons to prove the oblation and intercession of
Christ to be one entire means respecting the accomplishment of the same
proposed end, and to have the same personal object.
1. Our first reason is taken from
that perpetual union which the Scripture maketh of both these, almost
always joining them together, and so manifesting those things to be most
inseparable which are looked upon as the distinct fruits and effects of
them: "By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many,
for he shall bear their iniquities," Isa. 53:11. The actual
justification of sinners, the immediate fruit of his intercession,
certainly follows his bearing of their iniquities. And in the next verse
they are of God so put together that surely none ought to presume to put
them asunder: "He bare the sin of many" (behold his
oblation!), "and made intercession for the transgressors;"
even for those many transgressors whose sin he bears. And there is one
expression in that chapter, verse 5, which makes it evident that the
utmost application of all good things for which he intercedes is the
immediate effect of his passion: "With his stripes we are
healed." Our total hearing is the fruit and procurement of his
stripes, or the oblation consummated thereby. So also, Rom. 4:25,
"He was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our
justification." For whose offences he died, for their justification
he rose;-- and therefore, if he died for all, all must also be
justified, or the Lord failed in his aim and design, both in the death
and resurrection of his Son; which though some have boldly affirmed, yet
for my part I cannot but abhor the owning of so blasphemous a fancy.
Rather let us close with that of the apostle, grounding the assurance of
our eternal glory and freedom from all accusations upon the death of
Christ, and that because his intercession also for us does inseparably
and necessarily follow it. "Who," saith he, "shall lay
any thing to the charge of God's elect?" (It seems also, that it is
only they for whom Christ died.) "It is God that justifieth. Who is
he that condemneth? It is Christ that died," (shall none, then, be
condemned for whom Christ died? what, then, becomes of the general
ransom?) "yea rather, who is risen again, who is even at the right
hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us," Rom. 8:33, 34.
Here is an equal extent of the one and the other; those persons who are
concerned in the one are all of them concerned in the other. That he
died for all and intercedes only for some will scarcely be squared to
this text, especially considering the foundation of all this, which is
(verse 32) that love of God which moved him to give up Christ to death
for us all; upon which the apostle infers a kind of impossibility in not
giving us all good things in him; which how it can be reconciled with
their opinion who affirm that he gave his Son for millions to whom lie
will give neither grace nor glory, I cannot see. But we rest in that of
the same apostle: "When we were yet without strength, in due time.
Christ died for the ungodly;" so that, "being now justified by
his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him," Rom. 5:6,
9;---the same between the oblation and intercession of Christ, with
their fruits and effects, being intimated in very many other places.
II. To offer and to intercede, to
sacrifice and to pray, are both acts of the same sacerdotal office, and
both required in him who is a priest; so that if he omit either of
these, he cannot be a faithful priest for them: if either he does not
offer for them, or not intercede for the success of his oblation on
their behalf, he is wanting in the discharge of his office by him
undertaken. Both these we find conjoined (as before) in Jesus Christ: I
John 2: 1, 2, "If any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous: and he is the propitiation for our
sins." He must be an advocate to intercede, as well as offer a
propitiatory sacrifice, if he will be such a merciful high priest over
the house of God as that the children should be encouraged to go to God
by him. This the apostle exceedingly clears and evidently proves in the
Epistle to the Hebrews, describing the priesthood of Christ, in the
execution thereof, to consist in these two acts, of offering up himself
in and by the shedding of his blood, and interceding for us to the
utmost; upon the performance of both which he presseth an exhortation to
draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, for he is "come
an high priest of good things to come, not by the blood of goats and
calves, but by his own blood he entered into the holy place, having
obtained eternal redemption for us," Heb. 9:11, 12. His bloody
oblation gave him entrance into the holy place not made with hands,
there to accomplish the remaining part of his office, the apostle
comparing his entrance into heaven for us with the entrance of the high
priest into the holy place, with the blood of bulls and goats upon him,
verses 12, 13 (which, doubtless, was to pray for them in whose behalf he
had offered, verse 7); so presenting himself before his Father that his
former oblation might have its efficacy. And hence he is said to have
"an unchangeable priesthood", because he continueth for ever,
chap. 7:24; so being "able to save to the uttermost them that come
unto God by him, verse 25: wherefore we have "boldness to enter
into the holiest by the blood of Jesus," chap. 10:19-22. So, then,
it is evident that both these are acts of the same priestly office in
Christ: and if he perform either of them for any, he must of necessity
perform the other for them also; for be will not exercise any act or
duty of his priestly function in their behalf for whom he is not a
priest: and for whom he is a priest he must perform both, seeing he is
faithful in the discharge of his function to the utmost in the behalf of
the sinners for whom he undertakes. These two, then, oblation and
intercession, must in respect of their objects be of equal extent, and
can by, no means be separated. And here, by the way (the thing being by
this argument, in my apprehension, made so clear), I cannot but demand
of those who oppose us about the death of Christ, whether they will
sustain that he intercedeth for all or no;---if not, then they make him
but half a priest; if they will, they must be necessitated either to
defend this error, that all shall be saved, or own this blasphemy, that
Christ is not heard of his Father, nor can prevail in his intercession,
which yet the saints on earth are sure to do when they make their
supplications according to the will of God, Rom. 8:27; 1 John 5:14.
Besides that, of our Saviour it is expressly said that the Father always
heareth him, John 11:42; and if that were true when he was yet in the
way, in the days of his flesh, and had not finished the great work be
was sent about, how much more then now, when, having done the will and
finished the work of God, he is set down on the right hand of the
Majesty on high, desiring and requesting the accomplishing of the
promises that were made unto him upon his undertaking this work! of
which before.
III. The nature of the
intercession of Christ will also prove no less than what we assert,
requiring an inseparable conjunction between it and its oblation; for as
it is now perfected in heaven, it is not a humble dejection of himself,
with cries, tears, and supplications; nay, it cannot be conceived to be
vocal, by the way of entreaty, but merely real, by the presentation of
himself, sprinkled with the blood of the covenant, before the throne of
grace in our behalf. "For Christ," saith the apostle, "is
not entered into the holy places made with hands, but into heaven
itself, now to appear in the presence of God for us," Heb. 9:24.
His intercession there is an appearing for us in heaven in the presence
of God, a demonstration of his sacred body, wherein for us he suffered:
for (as we said before) the apostle, in the ninth to the Hebrews,
compares his entrance into heaven for us unto the entrance of the high
priest into the holy place, which was with the blood of bulls and goats
upon him, verses 12, 13; our Saviour's being with his own blood, so
presenting himself that his former oblation might have its perpetual
efficacy, until the many sons given unto him are brought to glory. And
herein his intercession consisteth, being nothing, as it were, but his
oblation continued. He was a "Lamb slain from the foundation of the
world," Rev. 13:8. Now, his intercession before his actual oblation
in the fullness of time being nothing but a presenting of the engagement
that was upon him for the work in due time to be accomplished, certainly
that which follows it is nothing but a presenting of what according to
that engagement is fulfilled; so that it is nothing but a continuation
of his oblation in postulating, by remembrance and declaration of it,
those things which by it were procured. How, then is it possible that
the one of these should be of larger compass and extent than the other?
Can he be said to offer for them for whom he doth not intercede, when
his intercession is nothing but a presenting of his oblation in the
behalf of them for whom he suffered, and for the bestowing of those good
things which by that were purchased.
IV. Again: if the oblation and
death of Christ procured and obtained that every good thing should be
bestowed which is actually conferred by the intervening of his
intercession, then they have both of them the same aim, and are both
means tending to one and the same end. Now, for the proof of this
supposal, we must remember that which we delivered before concerning the
compact and agreement that was between the Father and the Son, upon his
voluntary engaging of himself unto this great work of redemption; for
upon that engagement, the Lord proposed unto him as the end of his
sufferings, and promised unto him as the reward of his labours, the
fruit of his deservings, every thing which be afterward intercedeth for.
Many particulars I before instanced in, and therefore now, to avoid
repetition, will wholly omit them, referring the reader to chapter III
for satisfaction: only, I shall demand what is the ground and foundation
of our Saviour's intercession, understanding it to be by the way of
entreaty, either virtual or formal, as it may be conceived to be either
real or oral, for the obtaining of any thing. Must it not rest upon some
promise made unto him? or is there any good bestowed that is not
promised? Is it not apparent that the intercession of Christ doth rest
on such a promise as Ps. 2:8, "Ask of me, and I will give thee the
heathen for thine inheritance," etc? Now, upon what consideration
was this promise and engagement made unto our saviour? Was it not for
his undergoing of that about which "the kings set themselves, and
the rulers took counsel together against him," verse 2? which the
apostles interpret of Herod and Pontius Pilate, with the people of the
Jews, persecuting him to death, and doing to him "whatsoever the
hand and counsel of God had before determined to be done," Acts
4:27, 28. The intercession of Christ, then, being founded on promises
made unto him, and these promises being nothing but an engagement to
bestow and actually collate upon them for whom he suffered all those
good things which his death and oblation did merit and purchase, it
cannot be but that he intercedeth for all for whom he died, that his
death procured all and every thing which upon his intercession is
bestowed; and until they are bestowed, it hath not its full fruits and
effects. For that which some say, namely, that the death of Christ doth
procure that which is never granted, we shall see afterward whether it
do not contradict Scripture, yea, and common sense.
V. Further: what Christ hath put
together let no man presume to put asunder; distinguish between them
they may, but separate them they may not. Now, these things concerning
which we treat (the oblation and intercession of Christ) are by himself
conjoined, yea united, John 17; for there and then he did both offer and
intercede. He did then as perfectly offer himself, in respect of his own
will and intention, verse 4, as on the cross; and as perfectly intercede
as now in heaven: who, then, can divide these things, or put them
asunder? especially considering that the Scripture affirmeth that the
one of them without the other would have been unprofitable, I Cor.
15:17; for complete remission and redemption could not be obtained for
us without the entering of our high priest into the most holy place,
Heb. 9:12.
VI. Lastly, A separating and
dividing of the death and intercession of Christ, in respect to the
objects of them, cuts off all that consolation which any soul might hope
to attain by an assurance that Christ died for him. That the doctrine of
the general ransom is an uncomfortable doctrine, cutting all the nerves
and sinews of that strong consolation which God is so abundantly willing
that we should receive, shall be afterward declared. For the present, I
will only show how it trencheth upon our comfort in this particular. The
main foundation of all the confidence and assurance whereof in this life
we may be made partakers (which amounts to "joy unspeakable, and
full of glory") ariseth from this strict connection of the oblation
and intercession of Jesus Christ;---that by the one he hath procured all
good things for us, and by the other he will procure them to be actually
bestowed, whereby be doth never leave our sins, but follows them into
every court, until they be fully pardoned and clearly expiated, Heb. 9:
26. He will never leave us until he hath saved to the uttermost them
that come unto God by him. His death without his resurrection would have
profited us nothing; all our faith in him had been in vain, I Cor.
15:17. So that separated from it, with the intercession following,
either in his own intention or in the several procurements of the one or
the other, it will yield us but little consolation; but in this
connection it is a sure bottom for a soul to build upon, Heb. 7:25.
"What good will it do me to be persuaded that Christ died for my
sins, if, notwithstanding that, my sins may appear against me for my
condemnation, where and when Christ will not appear for my
justification?" If you will ask, with the apostle, "Who is he
that condemneth?" "It is Christ that died," it may easily
be answered, Rom. 8:34. "Why, God by his law may condemn me,
notwithstanding Christ died for me!" Yea, but saith the apostle,
"He is risen again, and sitteth at the right hand of God, making
intercession for us" He rests not in his death, but he will
certainly make intercession for them for whom he died: and this alone
gives firm consolation. Our sins dare not appear, nor any of our
accusers against us, where he appeareth for us. Cavilling objections
against this text shall be afterward considered; and so I hope I have
sufficiently confirmed and proved what in the beginning of this chapter
I did propose about the identity of the object of the oblation and
intercession of Jesus Christ.
CHAPTER VIII
Objections against the former
proposal answered
By what was said in the last chapter,
it clearly appears that the oblation and intercession of Christ are of
equal compass and extent in respect of their objects, or the persons for
whom he once offered himself and does continually intercede, and so are
to be looked on as one joint means for the attaining of a certain
proposed end; which what it is comes next to be considered. But because
I find some objections laid by some against the former truth, I must
remove them before I proceed; which I shall do "as a man removeth
dung until it be all gone."
The sum of one of our former
arguments was,---That to sacrifice and intercede belong both to the same
person, as high priest; which name none can answer, neither hath any
performed that office, until both by him be accomplished. Wherefore, our
Saviour being the most absolute, and, indeed, the only true high priest,
in whom were really all those perfections which in others received a
weak typical representation, doth perform both these in the behalf of
them for whose sakes he was such.
I. An argument not unlike to this
I find by some to be undertaken to be answered, being in these words
proposed, "The ransom and mediation of Christ is no larger than his
office of priest, prophet, and king; but these offices |