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The Divinity of Christ
150. Deity of Christ. How
can Christ be said to be an express image of the Father if he is, in
many respects, infinitely different from God? May we not reasonably
believe that inasmuch as he is said to be his son and image, he is so in
the same respect that the son whom Adam begat in his own image, was his
son and image: that is one proceeding from him of the same kind with
himself.
154. Christ’s Divinity. It
is a good argument for Christ’s divinity, that he is to be the author of
the resurrection. The atoms and particles in one little finger, are
capable of so many removes, and such dispersions, that I believe it
would surpass any finite understanding, at two or three thousand years’
end, to tell what distinct particles of the universe belonged to it. It
would require a vast strength and subtlety of mind, to trace but one
atom so nicely, as to know that individual atom in the universe, after
so long a time; after it had been a particle of air, water, oil, or
animal spirit, etc. and had been transported with prodigious swiftness
from place to place, backwards and forwards, millions of times, amongst
innumerable others of the same kind. Especially, would it be exceeding
difficult, so narrowly to watch two of such at once. If so, what would
it be to follow every atom in a man’s body, yea, of all the bodies that
ever have died, or shall die? And at the same time, to have the mind
exercised with full vigor upon innumerable other matters, that require
an equal strength of understanding? And all this with such ease that it
shall be no labor to the mind?
633. The Divinity of
Christ. God would not have given us any person to be our redeemer,
unless he was of divine and absolutely supreme dignity and excellency,
or was the Supreme God; lest we should be under temptation to pay him
too great respect; lest if he were not the Supreme God, we should be
under temptation to pay him that respect which is due only to the
supreme, and which God, who is a jealous God, will by no means allow to
be paid to an inferior being. Men are very liable to be tempted to rate
those too highly, from whom they have received great benefits. They are
prone to give them that respect and honor, that belongs to God only.
Thus the Gentile world deified and adored such of their kings as did
great things for them, and others from whom they received great
benefits. So Cornelius was tempted to give too great respect to Peter,
he being the person that God had marked out to be his teacher and guide
in things pertaining to eternal salvation. So the apostle John could
scarce avoid adoring the angel that showed him those visions: he fell
down to worship him once and again. Though the first time he had been
strictly warned against it; yet the temptation was so great, that he did
it again: Rev. 19:10; 22:8. This being a temptation they were so liable
to, was greatly disallowed of by God. When Cornelius fell down before
Peter, he took him up, saying, “Stand up; I myself also am a man.” So
when the people at Lystra were about to offer divine worship to Paul and
Barnabas, when they heard of it, they rent their clothes, and ran in
among them, crying out, “Sirs, why do ye these things? We also are men
of like passions with you, and preach unto you, that ye should turn from
these vanities unto the living God, which made heaven, and the earth,
and the sea, and all things that are therein;” Acts 14. And when John
was about to adore the angel, how strictly was he warned against it!
“See thou do it not,” says he, “for I am thy fellow-servant, and of thy
brethren the prophets, that have the testimony of Jesus Christ: worship
God.” And God has always been so careful to guard against it, that he
hid the body of Moses, that it might be no temptation to idolatry. But
if any thing can be a temptation to give supreme respect and honor to
one that is not the Supreme Being, this would be a temptation, viz. To
have a person that is not the Supreme Being to be our redeemer, to have
such an one endure such great sufferings out of love to us, and thereby
to deliver us from such extreme and eternal misery, and to purchase for
us so great and eternal happiness. God therefore, in wisdom, has
appointed such a person to be our redeemer, that is of absolutely
supreme glory and excellency, that we may be in no danger of loving and
adoring him too much, and that we may prize him, exalt him for the great
things that he has done for us, as much as we will, nay, so far as his
love to us, his sufferings for us, and the benefits we receive by him,
can tempt us to, without danger of exceeding. Christ has done as great
things for us as ever the Father did. His mercy and love have been as
great and wonderful, and we receive as much benefit by them, as we do by
the love and mercy of the Father. The Father never did greater things
for us than to redeem us from hell, and bring us to eternal life. But if
Christ had not been a person equal with the Father, and worthy of our
equal respect, God would not have so ordered it that the temptation to
love and respect the Son, which results from favors that we have by
kindness received, should be equal with the inducements we have to love
and respect the Father.
1102. Elohim Signifying
Plurality. Not only is the word Elohim in the plural number, but it is
joined to a verb of the plural number, in Gen. 20:13, When God caused me
to wander from my Father’s house. The word hightnu, caused to wander, is
in the plural number. This is agreeable to the use of plural verbs,
adjectives, and pronouns, in Gen. 1:26; 3:22; and 11:7. See other
instances in Gen. 35:7; Exo. 32:2; 4; compared with Neh. 9:18, and Isa.
16:6.
1105. Elohim Signifying
Plurality. The very frequent joining of the word Elohim, a word in the
plural number, with the word Jehovah, a word in the singular number (as
may be seen in places referred to in the English concordance, under the
words, Lord God, Lord his God, Lord my God, Lord our God, Lord their
God, Lord thy God, Lord your God), seems to be a significant indication
of the union of several divine persons in one essence. The word Jehovah
signifies as much as the word Essence, and is the proper name of God
with respect to his self-existent, eternal, all-sufficient, perfect, and
immutable Essence. Moses seems to have regard to something remarkable in
thus calling Elohim, the plural, so often by the singular name, Jehovah;
especially in that remark which he makes for the special observation of
God’s people Israel, in Deu. 6:4, “Hear, O Israel, The Lord our God is
one Lord.” In the original, it is Jehovah Elohenu Jehovah Edadh; the
more proper translation of which is, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah. The
verb is is understood, and properly inserted between Jehovah Elohenu and
Jehovah Edadh, thus, Jehovah Elohenu is Jehovah Edadh; which is most
literally translated is thus, Jehovah Our Divine Persons is one Jehovah;
as though Moses, in this remark, had a particular reference to the word
Elohim being in the plural number, and would guard the people against
imagining from thence that there was a plurality of essences or beings,
among whom they were to divide their affections and respect.
1114. Elohim Signifying
Plurality. A further confirmation that the name Elohim, when used as the
name of the true God, signifies some plurality is that this same name is
commonly, all over the Hebrew Bible, used to signify the gods of the
heathens, when many gods are spoken of. See those places in the Hebrew
Bible, which are referred to in the English concordance, under the word
gods.
1174. Christ’s Human Soul.
I shall offer some reasons against Dr. Watts’s notion of the
pre-existence of Christ’s human soul. God’s manner with all creatures is
to appoint them a trial before he admits them to glory and confirmed
happiness. Especially may this be expected before such honor and glory
as the creating of the world and other things which Dr. Watts ascribes
to Christ’s human soul.
If the pre-existing soul
of Christ created the world, then, doubtless, he upholds and governs it.
The same Son of God that did one, does the other. He created all things,
and by him all things consist. And if so, how was his dominion confined
to the Jewish nation, before his incarnation, but extends to all nations
since? Besides, there are many things ascribed in the Old Testament to
the Son of God, in those very places, which Dr. Watts himself supposes
to speak of him, that imply his government of the whole world, and all
nations. The same person that is spoken of as King of Israel, is
represented as the Governor of the world.
According to this scheme,
the greatest of the works of the Son in his created nature, implying the
greatest exaltation, was his first work of all, viz. His creating all
things, all worlds, all things visible and invisible, whether they be
thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: and this before
ever he had any trial at all of his obedience, etc. At least, this work
seems much greater than judging the world at the last day; which the
Scripture often speaks of as one of the highest parts of his exaltation,
which he has in reward for his obedience and sufferings: and Dr. Watts
himself supposes his honors, since his humiliation, to be much greater
than before.
On this scheme it will
follow that the covenant of redemption was made with a person that was
not sui juris, and not at liberty to act his own mere good
pleasure, with respect to undertaking to die for sinner, but was obliged
to comply, on the first intimation that it would be well pleasing to
God, and as thing that he chose.
According to that scheme, the man Christ Jesus was not properly the son
of the virgin, and so the son of man. To be the son of a woman is to
receive being in both soul and body, in consequence of a conception in
her womb. The soul is the principal part of the man: and sonship implies
derivation of the soul as well as the body, by conception. Though the
soul is no part of the mother, and be immediately given by God, yet that
hinders not its being derived by conception: it being consequent on it,
according to a law of nature. It is agreeable to a law of nature that
where a perfect human body is conceived in the womb of a woman, and
properly nourished and increased, a human soul should come into being:
and conception may as properly be the cause whence it is derived, as
many other natural effects are derived from natural causes or
antecedents. For it is the power of God which produces these effects,
though it be according to an established law. The soul being so much the
principal part of man, a derivation of the soul by conception, is the
chief thing implied in a man’s being the son of a woman.
According to what seems to
be Dr. Watts’s scheme, the Son of God is no distinct divine person from
the Father. So far as he is a divine person, he is the same person with
the Father. So that in the covenant of redemption, the Father covenants
with himself, and he takes satisfaction of himself, etc. Unless you will
say that one nature covenanted with the other: the two natures in the
same person covenanted together, and one nature in the same person took
satisfaction of the other nature in the same person. But how does this
confound our minds, instead of helping our ideas, or making them more
easy and intelligible!
The Son of God, as a distinct person, was from eternity. It is said, Mic.
5:2, “His goings forth were of old, from everlasting.” So Pro. 8:23, “I
was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was.”
So he is called, Isa. 9:6, “The everlasting Father.” I know of no
expressions used in Scripture, more strong, to signify the eternity of
the Father himself.
Dr. Watts supposes the
world to be made by the pre-existent soul of Christ, and thinks it may
properly be so said, though the knowledge and power of this pre-existent
soul could not extend to the most minute parts, every atom, etc. — But
it is evidently the design of the Scripture to assure us that Christ
made all things whatever, in the absolute universality, John 1:3, “All
things were made by him, and without him was not any thing made that was
made.” Col. 1:16-17, “For by him were all things created, that are in
heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be
thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers; all things were
created by him, and for him: and he is before all things, and by him all
things consist.” Now if we suppose matter to be infinitely divisible, it
will follow that let his wisdom and power be as great as they will, if
finite, but a few of those individual things that are made, were the
effects of his power and wisdom: yea, that the number of the things that
were made by him are so few that they bear no proportion to others that
did not immediately fall under his notice, or that of the things that
are made there are ten thousand times, yea infinitely more, not made by
him, than are made by him: — And so but infinitely few of their
circumstances are ordered by his wisdom.
It is said, Heb. 2:8,
“Thou hast put all things in subjection under his feet. For in that he
put all in subjection under him, he left nothing that is not put under
him.” Here it is represented that God the Father has put every
individual thing under the power and government of another person,
distinct from himself. But this cannot be true of the human soul of
Christ, as it must be according to Dr. Watts’s scheme, let the powers of
that be never so great if they are not infinite. For things and
circumstances, and dependencies and consequences of things in the world,
are infinite in number; and therefore a finite understanding and power
cannot extend to them: yea, it can extend to but an infinitely small
part of the whole number of individuals, and their circumstances and
consequences. Indeed, in order to the disposal of a few things, in their
motions and successive changes, to a certain precise issue, there is
need of infinite exactness, and so need of infinite power and wisdom.
The work of creation, and so the work of upholding all things in being,
can, in no sense, be properly said to be the work of any created nature.
If the created nature gives forth the word, as Joshua did, when he said,
“Sun, stand thou still;” yet it is not that created nature that does it.
That being that depends himself on creating power, does not properly do
anything towards creation, as Joshua did nothing towards stopping the
sun in his course. So that it cannot be true in Dr. Watts’s scheme that
that Son of God, who is a distinct person from God the Father, did at
all, in any manner of propriety, create the world, nor does he uphold it
or govern it. Nor can those things that Christ often says of himself be
true, as “The Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” — “Whatsoever the
Father doth, those doth the Son likewise,” John 5:17, 19; it being very
evident, that the works of creating and upholding and governing the
world are ascribed to the Son, as a distinct person from the Father.
It is one benefit or
privilege of the Person of Christ, when spoken of as distinct from the
Father, to have the Spirit of God under him, to be at his disposal, and
to be his Messenger; which is infinitely too much for any creature, John
15:26; 16:7, 13, 14; Acts 2:33.
1197. Elohim Signifying
Plurality. In Exo. 20:2, 3 when it is said in the third verse, “Thou
shalt have no other gods before me.” The word is the same as in the
foregoing verse, where it is said, “I am the Lord thy God, which brought
thee out of the land of Egypt.” It is Elohim in both verses: I am the
Jehovah, thy Elohim: Thou shalt have no other Elohim. Yet the latter
Elohim is joined with an adjective of the plural number; which seems
naturally to lead the children of Israel, to whom God spake these words,
to suppose a plurality in the Elohim which brought them out of Egypt,
implied in the name Jehovah. Psa. 58:11, “Verily there is a God that
judgeth in the earth; Elohim Shophetim:” Which literally is, Elohim,
judges (in plural number).
1241. See the evident
distinction made between Jehovah sending, and Jehovah sent to the
people, and dwelling in the midst of them, in Zec. 2:8-11; and 4:8-11,
“For thus saith the Lord of hosts, after the glory hath he sent me unto
the nations which spoiled you: for he that toucheth you, toucheth the
apple of his eye.”
“For behold, I will shake mine hand upon them, and they shall be a spoil
to their servants: and ye shall know that the Lord of hosts hath sent
me.”
“Sing and rejoice, O daughter of Zion: for, lo, I come, and I will dwell
in the midst of thee, saith the Lord.”
“And many nations shall be joined to the Lord in that day, and shall be
my people: and I will dwell in the midst of thee, and thou shalt know
that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto thee.”
“Moreover the word of the Lord came unto me, saying, The hands of
Zerubbabel have laid the foundation of this house; his hands shall also
finish it; and thou shalt know that the Lord of hosts hath sent me unto
you.” “Then answered I, and said unto him, What are those two
olive-trees upon the right side of the candlestick, and upon the left
side thereof?”
1243. Elohim Signifying
Plurality. Josh. 24:19, “And Joshua said unto the people, Ye cannot
serve Jehovah; for he is a holy God, Elohim Kedhoshim.” He is the holy
Gods. Not only is the word Elohim properly plural, the very same that is
used, Jos. 24:15 the gods which your fathers served, etc. — but the
adjective holy is plural. A plural substantive and adjective are used
here concerning the True God, just in the same manner as in 1 Sam. 4:8,
“Who shall deliver us out of the hands of these mighty Gods.” And in
Dan. 4:8, “In whom is the Spirit of the holy Gods.” So verse 9, 18, and
Dan. 5:11. That the plural number should thus be used with the epithet
Holy agrees well with the doxology of the angels, “Holy, holy, holy,
Lord God of hosts,” etc. — Isa. 6 and Rev. 4.
1249. It is an argument
that the Jews of old understood that there were several persons in the
Godhead, and particularly that when the cherubim, in Isaiah 6, cried,
“Holy, holy, holy, lord of hosts,” they had respect to three persons:
that the seventy interpreters, in several places, where the Holy One of
Israel is spoken of, use the plural number; as in Isa. 41:16, “Thou
shalt glory in the Holy One of Israel;” in the LXX it is, ευφρανθηση εν
τοις αγιοις Ισραηλ. Isa. 60:14, “The Zion of the Holy One of Israel;” it
is σιων αγιων Ισραηλ. So Jer. 51:5, “Filled with sin against the Holy
One of Israel;” απω των αγιων Ισραηλ.
1349. The Divinity of
Christ. If the temptation to the children of Israel was so great, to
idolize the brazen serpent, a lifeless piece of brass, for the temporal
salvation which some of their forefathers had by looking on it, then how
great would be their temptation to idolatry by worshipping Christ, if he
were a mere creature, from whom mankind receive so great benefits! If
that brazen serpent must be broken in pieces, to remove the temptation
to idolatry, 2 Kings 18:4, shall so great a temptation be laid before
the world to idolize a mere creature, by setting him forth in the manner
that he is set forth in Scripture?
Must Moses’ body be
concealed, lest the children of Israel should worship the remains of him
whom God made the instrument of such great things? And shall another
mere creature — whom men, on account of the works he has done, are under
infinitely greater temptation to worship — be most openly and publicly
exhibited, as exalted to heaven, seated at God’s own right hand, made
Head over all things, Ruler of the universe, etc. in the manner that
Christ is? Was not this the temptation to all nations to idolatry, viz.
that men had been distinguished as great conquerors, deliverers, and the
instruments of great benefit? And shall God make a mere creature the
instrument of so many greater benefits, and in such a manner as Christ
is represented to be in the Scripture, without an infinitely greater
temptation to idolatry?
When the rich young man
called Christ Good Master, not supposing him to be God, did Christ
reject it, and reprove him for calling him so? He said, “There is none
good but one, that is God;” meaning that none other was possessed of
goodness that was to be trusted. And yet, shall this same Jesus, if
indeed not that God who only is to be called good, or trusted in as
such, be called in Scripture, He that is holy; He that is true? The
Amen, the faithful and true witness? The Mighty God, the Everlasting
Father, the Prince of Peace? The blessed and the only Potentate, the
King of Kings, and Lord of Lords? The Lord of life, that has life in
himself, that all men might honor the Son, as they honor the Father? The
Wisdom of God, and the Power of God? The Alpha and Omega, the beginning
and the end? God, Jehovah; Elohim, the King of glory? Compare Isa. 43:8;
Psa. 83:18; Isa. 45:20, 21, etc., “They pray unto a God that cannot save
— Tell ye and bring them near; let them take counsel together — There is
no God else beside me, a just God and a Saviour; there is none beside
me.” Yet it is said of Christ, that “He is able to save unto the
uttermost.” Yea, the Messiah, in this very book, is spoken of as mighty
to save; saving by his own arm, and by the greatness of his strength,
Isa. 63:1-6, compared with Rev. 19:15. And it is evident that it is his
character, in the most eminent manner, to be the Savior of God’s people;
and that with respect to what is infinitely the highest and greatest
work of salvation; the greatest deliverance from the most dreadful evil,
from the greatest, worst, and strongest enemies, and bringing them to
the greatest happiness. If follows, Isa. 45:22, “Look unto me, and be ye
saved, all the ends of the earth; for I am God, and there is none else.”
Here it is spoken of as the great glory of God, and peculiar to him,
that he is a universal Savior, not only of the Jews, but of all nations.
And this is the peculiar character of Jesus. He is the Savior of all
nations. The glory of calling and saving the Gentiles, is represented as
peculiarly belonging to him, so that he has this divine prerogative,
which is spoken of here as belonging to the one only God, and to none
else. And, which is more than all this, these very things are applied to
Christ in the New Testament, Phil. 2:10, 11, “That at the name of Jesus
every knee should bow, of things in heaven, of things in earth, and
things under the earth.” And the thing spoken of in the following
verses, as the peculiar prerogative of God, in distinction from all
other beings, as the only Savior, viz. having righteousness, and being
justified in him, are every where in the New Testament most eminently
ascribed to Christ, as in a most special manner belonging to him.
Being
the Savior of God’s people, is everywhere in the Old Testament mentioned
as the peculiar work of the Deity. The heathens are reproached for
worshipping gods that could not save, and God says to the idolatrous
Israelites, “Go to the gods whom ye have served, let them deliver you.”
See Isa. 43:3, 10-15, in which verses we have another clear
demonstration of the divinity of Christ. (See also: Hos. 13:4; Isa.
49:26; and Isa. 60:16; Deu. 33:29; Jer. 3:23; Jon. 2:8, 9; Psa. 3:8;
Isa. 25:9.) Trusting is abundantly represented as a principal thing in
that peculiar respect due to God alone, as of the essence of divine
adoration due to no other than God. And yet, how is Christ represented
as the peculiar object of the faith and trust of all God’s people, of
all nations, as having all-sufficiency for them? Trusting in any other
is greatly condemned, and is a thing, than which nothing is represented
as more dangerous, provoking to God, and bringing his curse on man.
And
how often is being the Redeemer of God’s people spoken of as the
peculiar character of the mighty God of Jacob, the First and Last, the
Lord of hosts, the only God, the Holy One of Israel! So Isa. 41:14; Isa.
43:14; Isa. 44:6, 24; Isa. 47:4; Isa. 48:17; Isa. 49:7, 26; Isa. 54:5,
and Isa. 60:16. And it may be observed, that when God has this title of
the Redeemer of Israel ascribed to him in those places, it is joined
with some other of the peculiar and most exalted names and titles of the
most high God: such as, the Holy One of Israel; so Isa. 41:14; Isa.
43:14; Isa. 47:4; Isa. 48:17, and Isa. 49:5, 7. The Mighty One of Jacob,
Isa. 49:26, and Isa. 60:16. The Lord of hosts, Isa. 47:4, and Isa. 44:6.
The God of the whole earth, Isa. 54:5, the First and the Last, besides
whom there is no God, Isa 44:6. The Jehovah that maketh all things, that
stretcheth forth the heavens alone, and spreadeth abroad the earth by
himself, Isa. 44:24. Yet the Messiah, in this very book, is spoken of as
the Redeemer of God’s people in the most eminent manner, Isa. 63:1-6.
God is careful that his
people should understand that their honor and love and praise for the
redemption out of Egypt, belongs only to him, and therefore is careful
to inform them, that he alone redeemed them out of Egypt, and that there
was no other God with him; and to make use of that as a principal
argument why they should have no other gods before him. See Deu. 32:12;
Exo. 20:3; Psa. 81:8-10; Hos. 13:4. The words in that place are
remarkable: “Yet I am the Lord thy God from the land of Egypt; and thou
shalt know no God but me; for there is no Saviour besides me.” If God
insisted on that as a good reason why his people should know no God
besides him, that he alone was their Savior to save them out of Egypt;
would he afterwards appoint another to be their Savior in an infinitely
greater salvation?
The works of creation being ascribed to Christ, most
evidently prove his proper divinity. For God declares, that he is
Jehovah that stretcheth forth the heavens alone, and spreadeth abroad
the earth by himself, Isa. 44:24. See also the next chapter, Isa.
45:5-7, 12. And not only is the creation of the world ascribed to Christ
often in Scripture, but that which in Isaiah is called the new creation,
which is here represented as an immensely greater and more glorious work
than the old creation, viz. the work of redemption, as this prophet
himself explains it, Isa. 65:17-19; is everywhere, in a most peculiar
and distinguishing manner, ascribed to Christ. 2 Peter 1:1, “Through the
righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ:” Εν δικαιοσυνη του
θεου ημων και σωτηρος Ιησου Χριστου Tit. 2:13, “Looking for the blessed
hope and glorious appearing of the great God, and our Saviour Jesus
Christ;” Του μεγαλου θεου ημων και σωτηρος Ιησου Χριστου. It is
agreeable to the manner of the apostle’s expressing himself in both
places, to intend one and the same person, viz. Christ, under two
titles: as when speaking of God the Father, in Eph. 1:3, “Blessed be the
God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” ο θεος και πατηρ. See Dr.
Goodwin’s Works, vol. 1, p. 93, 94.
That passage in Isa.
40:13, 14, “Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord?” proves Christ’s
divinity, for Christ directs the Spirit of the Lord. See John 16:13-15,
and many other places. Compare the following texts, set in opposite
columns: those in the first column are represented as belonging to God
only, which yet, in the second column, are given to Christ.
The name
GOD.
Isa. 45:5 John 1:1
Isa. 44:8 Heb. 1:8
Isa. 46:9 Rom. 9:5
The name JEHOVAH.
Psa. 102:25, etc. Heb.
1:10
Zec. 11:12 Mat. 27:9, 10
Zec. 12:10 John 19:37
Isa. 40:3 Mark 1:3
Hos. 1:7 Luke 2:11
Divine Perfections
1 Kin. 8:39 John 2:24,
16:30, Acts 1:24
Jer. 17:10 Rev. 2:3
Isa. 44:6 Rev. 1:17
Rev. 1:8 Rev. 22:13
1 Tim. 6:15 Rev. 17:14,
19:16
Isa. 10:21 Isa. 9:6
Rom. 10:12 Acts 10:36,
Rom. 9:5
Psa. 90:2 Pro. 8:22, etc.
Divine Works
Neh. 9:6 John 1:3, Col.
1:16, 17
Gen. 1:1 Heb. 1:10
Divine Worship
Exo. 20:3 Heb. 1:6
Mat. 4:10, John 5:23
Gal. 4:8
If Christ in the beginning
created the heavens and the earth, he must be from eternity. For then he
is before the beginning, by which must be meant, the beginning of time:
the beginning of that kind of duration which has beginning and
following, before and after, belonging to it. The beginning of created
existence, or the beginning of the creation which God created, as the
phrase is, Mark 3:19. In Pro. 8:22 it is said, “The Lord possessed me
before his works of old;” and therefore before those works which in
Genesis 1:1 are said to be made in the beginning. God’s eternity is
expressed thus, Psa. 90:2, “Before the mountains were brought forth, or
ever thou hadst created the earth and the world, even from everlasting.”
So it is said, Pro. 8:22, etc., “The Lord possessed me in the beginning
of his way, before his works of old. I was set up from everlasting, from
the beginning, or ever the earth was,” etc.
That the kingdom of the
Messiah is so commonly called the kingdom of heaven, is an evidence that
the Messiah is God. By the kingdom of heaven is plainly meant a kingdom
wherein God doth reign, or is King. The phrase, the kingdom of heaven,
seems to be principally taken from Dan. 2:44, “And in the days of these
kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom,” where the meaning
plainly is: after the heads of those four great monarchies have each one
had their turn, and erected kingdoms for themselves in their turn, and
the last monarchy shall be divided among ten kings. Finally, the God of
heaven shall take the dominion from them all, and shall set up a kingdom
for himself. He shall take the kingdom, and shall rule for ever. In this
book, Dan. 4:26, it is said, “After that thou shalt have known that the
heavens do rule.” The words in the foregoing verse express what is
meant: “Until thou know that the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of
men.” Therefore, by the kingdom of heaven which shall be set up, is
meant the kingdom wherein God himself shall be the king; not as reigning
and administering by other kings or judges, as he was king in the time
of the judges, and in the time of David and Solomon, Hezekiah and
Josiah, etc., and as he always does in the time of good kings: but he
shall set up his kingdom, in distinction from all kingdoms or states,
wherein the heavens shall rule, or God himself shall be king. And
therefore the kingdom of heaven is often called the kingdom of God, in
the New Testament. And it is abundantly prophesied in the Old Testament,
that in the days of the Messiah, God shall take to himself the kingdom,
and shall reign as king, in contradistinction to other reigning
subordinate beings. And that God himself shall reign on earth, as king
among his people, is abundantly manifested from many prophecies. (See
Psa. 93:1, Psa. 96:10, Psa. 97, at the beginning, and Psa. 99:1, Isa.
33:22, Isa. 40:9-11, Zeph. 3:14-15; Mal. 3:1-3.) And in this very
prophecy of Daniel (Dan. 7), where this kingdom, which the Lord of
heaven should at last set up (plainly this same kingdom), is more fully
spoken of, it is manifest that the Messiah is to be the king in that
kingdom, who shall reign as vested with full power, and complete kingly
authority. (See also Dan. 9:25; Gen. 49; Psa. 2; Psa. 89; and Psa. 45;
Isa. 9; and Isa. 11; Zec. 6; Jer. 23:5; Jer. 30:9; and Jer. 33:15; Eze.
34:23; and Eze. 37:24; Hos. 3:5; Zec. 6:12, etc. And in many other
places.)
God is several times called in Scripture, the Glory of Israel,
or of God’s people; and it is a title peculiar to him, wherein he
appears as especially distinguished from false gods, Jer. 2:11, “Hath a
nation changed their gods, which yet are no gods? But my people have
changed their glory for that which doth not profit.” Psa. 106:20, “Thus
they changed their glory into the similitude of an ox that eateth
grass.” But we find that Christ in the New Testament is spoken of as
“the glory of God’s people Israel.” Luke 2:23.
What is said in Job
19:25-27, “For I know that my Redeemer liveth,” etc. is a proof of the
divinity of Christ. For here, he whom Job calls his Redeemer, his God,
is God; “Yet in my flesh shall I see God.” But it is very manifest that
Christ is he who is most properly and eminently our Redeemer or God. And
here Job says that God shall stand at the latter day, at the general
resurrection, on the earth; when he shall see him in his flesh. But the
person that shall then stand on the earth, we know, is no other than
Jesus Christ. And how often, in other places, both in the Old Testament
and the New, is Christ’s coming to judgment spoken of as God’s coming to
judgment! Christ’s appearing, as God’s appearing! And our standing
before the judgment seat of Christ, as our standing before God’s
judgment seat!
Luke 1:16, 17, “And many
of the children of Israel shall he turn to the Lord their God; and he
shall go before him in the spirit and power of Elias, to turn the hearts
of fathers to the children, and of the disobedient to the wisdom of the
just; to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” Here John the
Baptist is spoken of as going before the Lord, and God of the children
of Israel, to prepare his way; agreeably to the prophecies; particularly
Mal. 3:1 and Mal. 4:5, 6.
But who is this person who
is called the Lord, the God of Israel, whose forerunner, John the
Baptist, is to prepare his way? Nothing is more manifest than that it is
Jesus Christ. See Mark 1:1-3, “The beginning of the gospel of Jesus
Christ the Son of God: as it is written in the prophets, Behold, I send
my messenger before thy face, who shall prepare thy way before thee. The
voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord,
make his paths straight,” (alluding to two prophecies, viz. Mal. 3:1 and
Isa. 40:3). Here is a distinction of two persons; the one speaking in
the first person singular, “Behold, I send my messenger;” the other
spoken to in the second person, “before thy face, which shall prepare
thy way before thee;” which makes it evident that the person spoken of,
and whose forerunner he was to prepare his way, was Jesus Christ. So
Mat. 11:10; Luke 7:27. See also how manifest this is by John 1:19. “And
this is the record of John.” John 1:23, “I am the voice of one crying in
the wilderness, Make straight the way of the Lord, as said the prophet
Esaias;” with the following verses, especially John 1:31. “And I know
him not, but that he should be made manifest to Israel; therefore am I
come baptizing with water.” So that it is evident, that Christ is he
that in the 1st of Luke (Luke 1) is called the Lord, or Jehovah the God
of Israel, as the phrase is in the original of the Old Testament, in
places from whence this phrase is taken. Therefore it is evident that
Christ is one God with the Father; for the Scripture is very express,
that Jehovah, the God of Israel, is but one Jehovah; as, Deu. 6:4,
“Hear, O Israel, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah.”
And if we look into
those prophecies of the Old Testament referred to in these places of the
evangelists, it is manifest, that what they foretell concerns a
forerunner to prepare the way for the only true and Supreme God; as Isa.
40:3, “The voice of him that crieth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the
way of Jehovah make straight in the desert a high way for our God.” This
is evidently the same that is spoken of in the following parts of the
chapter; as in Isa. 40:9-10, and following verses: “Say unto the cities
of Judah, Behold your God; behold, Jehovah God will come. — He shall
feed his flock like a shepherd. — Who hath measured the waters in the
hollow of his hand, and meted out heaven with a span, and comprehended
the dust of the earth in a measure, and weighed the mountains in scales,
and the hills in a balance? Who hath directed the Spirit of the Lord,
or, being his counselor, hath taught him? With whom took he counsel, and
who instructed him, and taught him in the path of judgment? Behold, the
nations are as a drop of the bucket, and are counted as the small dust
of the balance. Behold, he taketh up the isles as a very little thing.
And Lebanon is not sufficient to burn, nor the beasts thereof sufficient
for a burnt-offering. All nations before him are as nothing, and they
are counted to him less than nothing and vanity. To whom then will ye
liken God? Or what likeness will ye compare unto him?” — Isa. 40:22. “It
is he that sitteth on the circle of the earth, and all the inhabitants
thereof are as grasshoppers; that stretcheth out the heavens as a
curtain, and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in; that bringeth the
princes to nothing, and maketh the judges of the earth as vanity.” — If
the Supreme God is not spoken of here, where shall we find the place
where he is spoken of? If it be an infinitely inferior being, where is
God’s distinguishing greatness, and infinitely superior magnificence? It
here follows, Isa. 40:25, “To whom then will ye liken me, or shall I be
equal? Saith the Holy One.” A created being would not use such language,
or make such a challenge. He that is created himself, would not say, as
it follows in Isa. 40:26, “Lift up your eyes on high; behold, who hath
created those things?” So it is evident, that it is the one only God
that is spoken of, whose forerunner John was to be. Mal. 3:1-2, “Behold,
I will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before ME. And
Jehovah, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come into his temple.” Luke 1:76,
“And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest, υψιου; for
thou shalt go before the face of the Lord, to prepare his way.”
It is a great evidence
that Christ is one being with the Supreme God, that the Spirit of the
Supreme God is spoken of as his Spirit, proceeding from and send and
directed by him. The Spirit by whom the prophets of old were inspired is
spoken of as the Spirit of Christ: 1 Pet. 1:11, “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.” But it is very manifest, that this was the Spirit
of the one only living and true God; so that we must need understand,
that the word written by the prophets, is the word of the Supreme God.
See 2 Pet. 1:21, 2 Tim. 3:16. And that they spoke by inspiration of the
Spirit of the Supreme God, is manifest from Luke 1:69-70. “And hath
raised up an horn of salvation for us, in the house of his servant
David; as he spoke by the mouth of his holy prophets, which have been
since the world began.”…. The word Spirit, in the original languages,
signifies wind, and sometimes is used to signify breath. Therefore,
Christ breathed on his disciples, when he would signify to them that he
would give them the Holy Ghost: John 20:22, “And when he had said this,
he breathed on them, saying, Receive ye the Holy Ghost.” This plainly
teaches us that the Holy Ghost was his Spirit, as much as man’s breath
is his breath….
Again, it is evident that the Spirit of God is the
Spirit of Christ, as much as a person’s eyes are his own eyes. Rev. 5:6,
“And I beheld, and lo in the midst of the throne stood a Lamb as it had
been slain, having seven horns and seven eyes, which are the seven
Spirits of God sent forth into all the earth.” Alluding to Zec. 3:9,
“Upon one stone shall be seven eyes.” But these seven eyes, in the next
chapter, are spoken of as representing the Spirit of God, and the eyes
of Jehovah: Zec. 4:6, “Not by might nor power, but by my Spirit, saith
the Lord.” Zec. 4:10, “And shall see the plummet in the hand of
Zerubbabel, with those seven. They are the eyes of the Lord, which run
to and fro through the whole earth.”
Christ is spoken of as
sending the Holy Ghost, and directing him: John 16:7, “I will send him
unto you.” John 16:13-15, “Howbeit, when he, the Spirit of Truth, is
come, he will guide you into all truth, for he shall not speak of
himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, that shall he speak; and he shall
show you things to come. He shall glorify me, for he shall receive of
mine, and shall show it unto you. All things that the Father hath are
mine; therefore said I, that he shall take of mine, and shall show it
unto you.” But it is spoken of as the peculiar prerogative of God to
direct his Spirit. Isa. 40:13, “Who hath directed the Spirit of the
Lord?”
It is true that creatures are sometimes called god. The kings and
judges of God’s Israel, the ancient church, are called gods, but no
otherwise than as types of Christ. And the angels are called gods. Yet
it is very remarkable that in that only place where they are so called
by God, they are commanded to worship Christ, and in the same verse, a
curse is denounced on all such as are guilty of idolatry. Psa. 97:7
compared with Heb. 1:6.
God so often speaking of
himself as a jealous God — signifying that he will by no means endure
any other husband of his church — affords a clear evidence, that Jesus
Christ is the same God with the Father. For Christ is often spoken of as
that person who is, in the most eminent and peculiar manner, the Husband
and Bridegroom of his church. That God who is the Holy One of Israel, is
the Husband of the church, as appears by Isa. 54:5, “Thy Maker is thy
Husband, the Lord of hosts is his name; and thy Redeemer, the Holy One
of Israel.” Or, as the words are, “Thy Goel, the Holy One of Israel.”
The goel was the near kinsman, that married the widow who had lost her
husband, as appears by Ruth 3:9-12. But this Holy One of Israel is the
name of that God who is the Father, as appears by Isa. 49:7 and 55:5,
and so is the Lord of hosts, as appears by Isa. 44:6….
Christ is the Lord
mentioned in Rom. 10:13, “For whosoever shall call upon the name of the
Lord, shall be saved.” That it is Christ who is spoken of, is evident
from the two foregoing verses (Rom. 10:11-12); and also from verse 14.
But the words are taken from Joel 2:32, where the word translated Lord,
is Jehovah. See also 1 Cor. 1:2….
And 1 Cor. 10:9, “Neither let us tempt
Christ, as some of them also tempted.” By this, it appears, that Christ
was that God, that Holy One of Israel, whom they tempted in the
wilderness. 1 Cor. 10:22, “Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? Are we
stronger than he?” It is evident, that by the Lord here, is meant Jesus
Christ, as appears by the preceding context; and that therefore, he is
that being who says, “I the Lord thy god am a jealous God.”
Rev. 2:23,
Christ says, “I am he that trieth the reins and his heart, and will give
to every one of you according to his works.” This is said by the Son of
God, as appears by the 18th verse foregoing (Rev. 2:18). Compare this
with other passages of Scripture, where those things are spoken of as
the prerogative of the Supreme God. Parallel with it is John 21:17,
“Lord, thou knowest all things; thou knowest that I love thee.”….
It would be unreasonable
to suppose that there is one Being infinitely greater than all other
beings — so that all others are as nothing to him, and infinitely
beneath him in power — and yet, that there is no kind of works or
effects of his power, that is peculiar to him, by which he is greatly
distinguished from others. He that appeared sitting on the throne above
the cherubims and wheels in Ezekiel’s visions, Eze. 1:27 and other
places, was undoubtedly Christ, because he appeared in the shape of a
man, which God the Father never did. “No man hath see God, viz. the
Father, at any time:” but the person that there appeared, was
undoubtedly God. He is represented as one that has heaven for his
throne, and sits as Supreme Ruler of the universe. — This is undoubtedly
the same that rides on the heavens in the help of his people, and his
excellency on the sky; that rides on the heaven of heavens by his name
Jah, or Jehovah. And this is called the appearance of the likeness, or
image of the glory of the Lord; Eze. 1:28; 3:23, and 8:4. This, while it
shows him to be a person truly divine, also shows him to be Christ. For
what can this image of the Lord, with an appearance of brightness round
about, Eze. 1:27, 28 be, but the same which the apostle speaks of, who
is “the brightness of God’s glory, and the express image of his person?”
And this is evidently the same that sat on the throne in the temple,
which was called the Chariot of the Cherubims. And this person is called
the God of Israel, Eze. 10:20; and the whole that this person says to
Ezekiel from time to time shows, that he is truly God….
It is a great evidence of
the divinity of Christ that the Holy Ghost is so put into subjection to
him, as to become his messenger, even the Spirit of God, as the Holy
Ghost is often called, or the Spirit of the Father, as he is called,
Mat. 10:20. The same that is there called the Spirit of the Father, is
in Mark 13:11, called the Holy Ghost. — Now, certainly, it is
unreasonable to suppose that the Spirit of the Supreme God should be put
under the direction and disposal of a mere creature, one infinitely
below God. The only evasion here must be this: that the Holy Ghost is
also a created Spirit inferior to the Son. For if Christ be a mere
creature, it would be unreasonable to suppose that he should have the
Spirit of God subjected to him, on any other supposition, whether the
Spirit of God be supposed to be only the power and energy of the Most
High, or a superior created Spirit. But how does the Holy Ghost, being a
creature inferior to the Son, consist with Christ’s being conceived by
the power of the Holy Ghost? And his being honored by having the Holy
Ghost descending upon him? And being anointed with it, and working his
greatest miracles by the power of the Holy Ghost? And its being a great
honor done to Christ that the Spirit was given to him not be measure?
Besides, the Holy Ghost being a creature, not only infinitely inferior
to God, but inferior to the Son, is exceedingly inconsistent with almost
everything said of the Holy Spirit in Scripture: as his being called the
Power of the highest; his searching all things, even the deep things of
God, and knowing the things of God in the most distinguishing manner, as
the spirit of man within him knows the things of a man; the Scriptures
being the Word of God, as it is the word of the Holy Ghost; Christians
being the temple of the living God, as they are the temple of the Holy
Ghost; lying unto the Holy Ghost being called lying unto God; the chief
works of God being ascribed to the Holy Ghost as the works of creation,
and the forming of man in the womb: Ecc. 11:5; Job 33:4. Giving the
highest sort of wisdom, viz. spiritual understanding; forming the human
nature of Christ; being the author of regeneration and sanctification;
creating a new heart, and so being the author of the new creation, which
is spoken of as vastly greater than the old.
Blasphemy against the
Father is pardonable, but not against the Holy Ghost. It is unreasonable
to suppose that only the body of Christ was made by the Holy Ghost. It
is evident that the whole human nature, the holy thing that was born of
the virgin, was by the Holy Ghost, Luke 1:35. But the Son of the virgin
was a holy thing, especially with regard to his soul. The soul of Adam
was from the Spirit of God, from God’s breathing into him the breath of
life. But this breath of life signifies the Spirit of God, as appears by
Christ’s breathing on his disciples after his resurrection, saying,
“Receive ye the Holy Ghost.” The Spirit of God is called the breath of
God, Job 33:4, “The Spirit of God hath made me; the breath of the
Almighty hath given me life.” If God’s Spirit gives life to other men,
or mankind in general, doubtless he gave life to Adam. And if that
Spirit of God which gives life to mankind in general, be in doing that
work, called the breath of God, we may well suppose that when we find
that which gave life and soul to Adam, called God’s breath, thereby was
meant God’s Spirit….
How unreasonable must our notions be of the
creation of the world, on Arian principles! For it is manifest by the
Scripture that the world was made by the Spirit of God, as well as by
the Son of God. But the Son of God is, according to them, a created
Spirit, and the Spirit of God must therefore also be a created Spirit
inferior to him. — Therefore, we must suppose that the Father created
the world by the Son, and that the Son did not create the world by
himself, but by the Spirit of God, as his minister of instrument. So
that the Spirit of God herein must act as the instrument of an
instrument!
1358. The Divinity of
Christ. (Section 1)
1. It is evident that the same Word, the same Son of God, that made the
world, also upholds it in being, and governs it. This is evident, in
part, unto reason. For upholding the world in being, and creating it,
are not properly distinct works, since it is manifest that upholding the
world in being is the same with a continued creation, and consequently,
that creating the world is but the beginning of upholding it, if I may
so say — beginning to give it a supported and dependent existence — and
preservation is only continuing to give it such a supported existence.
So that, truly, giving the world a being at first, no more differs from
preserving it through all successive moments, than giving a being the
last moment, differs from giving a supported being this moment. And this
Scripture is as express, that the world is upheld by Christ, as that it
was created by him, Col. 1:16-17, “For by him were all things created,
and by him all things consist.” Heb. 1:2-3, “By whom also he made the
worlds, and upholding all things by the word of his power.” And it is he
that shall bring the world to an end. Heb. 1:10-12, “Thou, Lord, in the
beginning, hast laid the foundations of the earth, etc. They shall
perish, but thou shalt endure. As a vesture shalt thou change them, and
they shall be changed. But thou art the same, and thy years shall not
fail.”
But if these things are so, what shall we think of the upholding and
government of the world, while Christ was in his humbled state, and
while an infant, and when we are told that he was wearied with his
journey, and his strength in some measure spent, only with governing the
motions of his own body? Who upheld and governed the world at that time?
Doubtless it will be said that God the Father took the world out of the
hands of the Son for that time, to uphold and govern it, and returned it
unto his hands again at his exaltation. But is there any ground to
suppose such a mighty change as this, as to the author of the universe,
that it should have such different authors of its being and of all its
properties, natural principles, motions, alterations, and events, both
in bodies and all created minds, for three or four and thirty years,
from what it had even before or since? Have we any hint of such a thing?
Or have we any revelation of anything analogous? Has God ever taken the
work of a creature out of its hands, according to the ordinary course of
things?.
The Supreme God is doubtless distinguished by some works or other. As he
must be infinitely distinguished from all other beings in his nature,
so, doubtless, there are some manifestations or other of this vast
superiority above all other beings. But we can have no other proper
manifestations of the divine nature, but by some effects of it. The
invisible things of God are seen by the things that are made. The Word
of God itself is no demonstration of the superior distinguishing glory
of the Supreme God, any otherwise than by his works, and that two ways:
1. As we must have the perfections first proved by his works, in order
to know that his Word is to be depended on. 2. As the works of God,
appealed to and declared in his Word, make evident that divine greatness
and glory which the Word of God declares. There is a difference between
declaration and evidence. The word declares, but the works are the
proper evidence of what is declared.
Undoubtedly, therefore, the vastly distinguished glory of the Supreme
God is manifested by some distinguishing peculiar works of his. That the
Supreme God is distinguished very remarkably and most evidently from all
other beings, by some works or other, is certain by the Scripture. It is
often represented that he most plainly and greatly shows his
distinguishing majesty, power, and wisdom, and vast superiority to other
beings, by his works that are seen, and set in the view of the children
of men. So Psa. 86:8, “Among the gods there is none like unto thee,
neither are there any works like unto thy works;” see also verse 10.
Psalm 89:5, 8-10, “The heavens shall praise thy wonders: — for who in
heaven can be compared to the Lord? Whom amongst the sons of the mighty
can be likened unto the Lord? O Lord of hosts, who is a strong Lord like
unto thee, or to thy faithfulness round about thee? Thou rulest the
raging of the sea; when the waves thereof arise, thou stillest them.”
Deu. 3:24, “What God is there in heaven or in earth, that can do
according to thy works, and according to thy might?” Psa. 72:18,
“Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel, who only doth wondrous
things.” This is often added to the declarations of God’s works, “That
ye may know that I am the Lord, or that I am Jehovah:” and this, “That
ye may know that there is none like unto me,” etc. Exo. 8:10, 22; chap.
9:14, 16, and Exo. 10:2, and innumerable other places.
But now, what are these
distinguishing works of God? Or the works by which his distinguishing
dignity and glory are clearly manifested? What works are they that can
be named or thought of? Is it CREATING the world? Or is it the creating
of the spiritual, intellectual world, which undoubtedly is an
unspeakably greater work than creating the material world? Is it
PRESERVING and upholding the world? Or is it GOVERNING the world? Or is
it REDEMPTION and salvation, or at least some particular great
salvation? Was it the redemption out of Egypt, and carrying the people
of Israel through the wilderness, and giving them the possession of
Canaan? Or is it the greatest work of redemption, even salvation from
spiritual, total, and eternal destruction, and bringing to eternal
holiness and glory? Is it conversion, regeneration, restoring a fallen,
sinful creature, and making men new creatures, giving them holiness, and
the image of God? Or giving wisdom to the heart, the truest and greatest
wisdom? Is it the conversion of the Gentile world, and renewing the
whole world of mankind, as consisting of Jews and Gentiles? Or is it
conquering Satan and all the powers of darkness, and overcoming all
evil, even the strongest holds of sin and Satan, all God’s enemies in
their united strength? Is it searching the hearts of the children of
men? Is it working any particular kind of great miracles? Is it raising
the dead to life, or raising all in general at the last day? Is it
judging the world, angels and men, in the last and greatest judgment? Is
it bestowing on the favorites of God, both men and angels, their
highest, most consummate, and eternal glory? Is it destroying the
visible creation, and bringing all to their final period and
consummation, and to their most perfect and eternal state? Or are there
any other works greater than these, that can be thought of, which we can
find appealed to as clearly manifesting the most peculiar and
distinguishing glory of the Supreme God, in comparison of whom all other
beings whatsoever are absolutely as nothing? Yet all these are ascribed
to Christ.
The creation of the world
in general is often spoke of as the peculiar work of the Supreme God, a
work wherein he manifests his glory as supreme, and distinguished from
all other beings: Rom. 1:19-20, “Because that which may be known of God
is manifest in them; for God hath shown it unto them. For the invisible
things of him from the creation of the world, are clearly seen, being
understood by the things which are made, even his eternal power and
Godhead.” Doubtless it is the Supreme God who is here spoken of. And
what godhead is clearly to be seen by the creation of the world, but the
Supreme Godhead? And what can that invisible glory and power of this God
be, but that by which he is distinguished from other beings, and may be
known to be what he is? It is said, “that which may be known of God, is
clearly manifest by his works.” But doubtless, one thing, and infinitely
the most important, that may be known of God, is his supreme dignity and
glory, that glory which he has as Supreme God. But if the creation of
the world be not a work peculiar to him, how are these things so clearly
manifested by his work?
The work of creation is spoken of as one of the great wonders done by
him, who is God of gods and Lord of lords, who alone doth great wonders;
as in Psa. 136:2-9, “O give thanks unto the God of gods. — O give thanks
to the Lord of lords. — To him who alone doth great wonders. — To him
that by wisdom made the heavens. — To him that stretched out the earth
over the waters. — To him that made great lights, — The sun to rule by
day,” etc. — This is the work of the Supreme God, which he wrought
alone, Job 9:8, “Which alone spreadeth out the heavens.” And 2 Kin.
19:15, “O Lord God of Israel, which dwellest between the cherubims, thou
art the God, even thou alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth: thou
hast made heaven and earth:” 1 Chr. 16:24-26, “Declare his glory among
the heathen, his marvellous works among all nations. For great is the
Lord, and greatly to be praised. He is also to be feared above all gods.
For all the gods of the people are idols: but the Lord made the
heavens.”. Isa. 40:25-26: “To whom then will ye liken me, or shall I be
equal? Saith the Holy One. Lift up your eyes on high, and behold who
hath created these things.” How plain is it here that creating the world
is spoken of as a work of the Supreme God, most evidently showing that
none is like him, or to be compared to him? So Isa. 40:12 compared with
Isa. 40:18. God asserts the creation of the world to be his work, so as
to deny any associate or instrument; as in Isa. 44:24, “Thus saith
Jehovah, thy Redeemer, and he that formed thee from the womb, I am
Jehovah that maketh all things, that stretcheth forth the heavens alone,
that spreadeth abroad the earth by myself.” Isa. 45:5-7, “I am Jehovah,
and there is none else; there is no God besides me: that they may know
from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none
besides me; I am the Lord, and there is none else; I form the light and
create darkness.” Verse 12, “I have made the earth, and created man upon
it: I, even my hands, have stretched out the heavens.” Isa. 45:18, “Thus
saith Jehovah that created the heavens, God himself that formed the
earth and made it.” Verse 21, “I am Jehovah, and there is no God else
beside me; a just God and a Saviour, there is none beside me.” Yet these
works are applied to Christ.
God’s creating the world
is used as an argument to show the nations of the world the
reasonableness of forsaking all other gods, and worshipping the one true
God only. Rev. 14:7, “Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory
to him, and worship him that made heaven and earth, and the sea, and the
fountains of waters.” See also Acts 14:15 and Rev. 10:6. — The work of
creation is spoken of as the distinguishing work of the supreme only
living and true God, showing him to be alone worthy to be worshipped, as
in Jer. 10:6-12, “Forasmuch as there is none like unto thee, O Lord,
thou art great, and thy name is great in might. Who would not fear thee,
O King of nations? For to thee doth it appertain. Jehovah is the true
God, he is the living God, and an everlasting King. — Thus shall ye say
unto them, The gods that have not made the heavens and the earth, even
they shall perish from the earth, and from under these heavens. He hath
made the earth by his power: he stretched out the heavens by his
discretion.”.
But the creation of the
world is ascribed to JESUS CHRIST, in John 1:3; Col. 1:16; Heb. 1:10.
And his work in such a manner as to be a proper manifestation of his
greatness and glory, and so as to show him to be God, John 1:1-3. Is the
creation of the spiritual, intelligent world, consisting of angels, and
the souls of men, and the world of glory, a peculiar work of the Supreme
God? Doubtless it is so. Neh. 9:6, “Thou, even thou, art Lord alone.
Thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all their host: and
the host of heaven worshippeth thee.” Psa. 104:4, “Who maketh his angels
spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire.” And the creation of the
spiritual and intelligent world, in every part of it, is also ascribed
to Christ. For it is said, John 1:3, “The world was made by him, and
without him was not any thing made that was made.” And to him is
expressly ascribed the creation of the invisible world, and of the
angels in particular, even the very highest and most exalted of them;
and all the most glorious things in the invisible heaven, the highest
and most glorious part of the creation of God. Col. 1:16, “By him were
all things created that are in heaven and that are in earth, visible and
invisible” (these include the invisible things on earth, as well as in
heaven, even the souls of men); “whether they be thrones, or dominions,
or principalities, or powers; all things were created by him.”
Preserving the creation, is spoken of as the work of the one only
Jehovah, Neh. 9:6, “Thou, even thou, art Jehovah alone. Thou hast made
heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all their host; the earth, and all
things that are therein; and thou preservest them all.” Isa. 40:26,
“Lift up your eyes on high, and behold who hath created these things,
that bringeth out their host by number. He called them all by names, by
the greatness of his might; for that he is strong in power, not one
faileth.” Job 12:7-10, “But ask now the beasts, and they shall teach
thee; who knoweth not in all these, that the hand of Jehovah hath made
this, in whose hand is the soul of every living thing, and the breath of
all mankind?” See also Psa. 36:6-7.
But the preservation of
the creation is also ascribed to Christ; Heb. 1:3, “Who being the
brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and
upholding all things by the word of his power.” Col. 1:17, “By him all
things consist.”
Governing the creation is another thing often spoken of as the peculiar
work of God, as in Isa. 40:21 to the end. There, governing the world is
the manifest peculiar work of him to whom none is like and none equal.
And, in Isa. 45:1-13; governing the world, bringing to pass revolutions
in nations, etc.; are spoken of as the peculiar works of him who is
Jehovah alone. See 2 Chr. 29:11-12 and Psa. 22:28; 47:2, etc. But Christ
is often, in the New Testament, spoken of as the Governor of the world,
is prayed to as such, and spoken of as he whose will disposes all
events.
Sitting as king in heaven, having his throne there, and governing the
universe for the salvation of his people, are spoken of as peculiar to
the Supreme God. But how often and eminently are these things ascribed
to Christ! His having his throne in heaven; being exalted far above all
heavens; thrones, dominions, etc. being made subject to him; being made
head over all things to the church, etc.
Judging the world is
another thing spoken of as peculiarly and distinguishingly belonging to
the Supreme God (see 1 Sam. 2:3, 10; Job 21:22; Psa. 11:4-5; 75:6-7;
82:1, 8; Jdg. 11:27; Psa. 94:2). Psa. 50:1-7, “The mighty God, even
Jehovah, hath spoken, and called the earth from the rising of the sun
unto the going down thereof. Our God shall come; a fire shall devour
before him. He shall call to the heavens from above, and to the earth,
that he may judge his people: and the heavens shall declare his
righteousness; for God is Judge himself. Hear, O my people, and I will
speak; O Israel, I will testify against thee. I am God, even thy God.”
This 50th Psalm begins thus: EL ELOHIM JEHOVAH, “The God of gods,
Jehovah; or, the most mighty God, even Jehovah.” Who can believe that
these three most magnificent names of the Deity are thus united, to
signify any other than the Supreme God? (See also Psa. 9:7, 8; 1 Chr.
16:25-33; Psa. 96:4, 5-13; also Psa. 98.)
But it is apparent that
Christ is abundantly spoken of as eminently the Judge of all nations, of
all degrees, quick and dead, angels and men. We are particularly and
fully instructed, that it is his distinguishing office to judge the
world, John 5:22; 2 Tim. 4:8; Rev. 19:11 and many other places.
Destroying the world at
the consummation of all things is spoken of as a peculiar work of God;
Psa. 102, even of Jehovah, Psa. 102:1, 12, 16, 18, 21, 22; the Creator
of the world, Psa. 102:24, 25, 28. See also Psa. 97:1-6 and Nah. 1:4-6;
Jer. 10:6, 7, 10; Psa. 46:6; 104:32; 144:5; Isa. 65:1-3; Job 9:4-7. But
this is spoken of as the work of the Son of God, Heb. 1, latter end.
The wonderful alterations made in the natural world, at the coming out
of Egypt, the giving of the law and entrance into Canaan, are often
spoken of as the peculiar works of God, greatly manifesting the divine
majesty as vastly distinguished from all other gods: such as, dividing
the sea, drowning Pharaoh and his hosts there, causing the earth to
tremble, the mountains to quake at his presence, the heavens to drop,
the hills to skip like rams and lambs, Jordan being driven back, and the
sun and moon standing still, etc.
But these were infinitely
small things, in comparison with what shall be accomplished at the end
of the world, when the mountains and hills shall be thrown into the
midst of the sea, and not only some particular mountains shall quake,
but the whole earth, yea, the whole visible world, shall be terribly
shaken to pieces. Not only shall Mount Sinai be on fire, as if it would
melt, but all the mountains, and the whole earth and heavens shall melt
with fervent heat: the earth shall be dissolved even to its center. And
not only shall the Red Sea and Jordan be dried up for a few hours, in a
small part of their channels, but all the seas, oceans, and rivers
through the world shall be dried up forever. Not only shall the sun and
moon be stopped for the space of one day, but they, with all the
innumerable mighty gloves of the heavens, shall have an everlasting
arrest, an eternal stop put to their courses. Instead of drowning
Pharaoh and his host in the Red Sea, the devil and all the wicked shall
be plunged into the eternal lake of fire and brimstone, etc.
The former kind of effects
were but little, faint shadows of the latter. And the former are spoken
of as the peculiar, manifest, glorious works of the supreme one only
God, evidently manifesting his peculiar majesty and glory. But the
latter are the works of the Son of God, Jesus Christ, as is evident by
Heb. 1:10-12. It is here worthy to be remarked that — though the
Scripture teaches that Christ’s majesty shall at the last day appear to
be so great in his coming in power and great glory, yet — it is said,
when these things shall be, God alone should be exalted, in opposition
to men and to other gods, Isa. 2:10, to the end.
1358. The Divinity of
Christ. (Sections 2-10)
2. The work of salvation
is often spoken of as peculiar to God. It is said that the salvation of
the righteous is of the Lord, Psa. 37:39 and that salvation belongeth
unto the Lord, Psa. 3:8; Jon. 2:9. God’s people acknowledge him to be
the God of their salvation, Psa. 25:5; 27:1; and Isa. 12:2. Saving
effectually is spoken of as his prerogative, Jer. 17:14, “Heal me, and I
shall be healed; save me, and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise.”
Psa. 68:20, “He that is our God, is the God of salvation, and to the
Lord our God belong the issues from death.”
Salvation is spoken of as
being of God, in opposition to men, and to all creature helps, Jer.
3:23, “Truly in vain is salvation hoped for from the hills, and from the
multitude of mountains: truly the Lord our God is the salvation of
Israel.” Psa. 60:11, “Give us help from trouble, for vain is the help
(Heb. Salvation) of man.” Verse 16, “I, Jehovah, am thy Saviour.” Psa.
146:3, 5, “Put not your trust in princes, nor in the son of man, in whom
is no help (or salvation). Happy is he that hath the God of Jacob for
his help, whose hope is in the Lord his God.” Salvation in or by any
other is denied, Isa. 59:16, “And he saw that there was no man, and
wondered that there was no intercessor. Therefore, his arm brought
salvation unto him, and his righteousness it sustained him.”
It is
spoken of as his prerogative to be the rock of salvation, to be trusted
in by men. “Let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation.”
See Psa. 95:1; 62:2, “He only is my rock and my salvation; he is my
defence.” Verse 5-9, “My soul, wait thou on God alone, for my
expectation is from him. He only is my rock and salvation: he is my
defence: I shall not be moved. In God is my salvation and my glory; the
rock of my strength, and my refuge, is in God. Trust in him at all
times; pour out your heart before him: God is a refuge for us. Surely
men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie: to be
laid in the balance, they are altogether lighter than vanity.” (See Deu.
32:4; 2 Sam. 23:3; Psa. 18:2; 2 Sam. 22:1, 2, 31, 32; Psa. 18:2, 30, 31,
46; Isa. 26:4; Heb. 1:12.)
It is said that there is no other Savior
besides the one only Jehovah, Isa. 43:3, “I am Jehovah thy God, the
Saviour of Israel;” 43:11, “I, even I, am Jehovah, and besides me there
is no Saviour.” See Isa. 47:4; 54:5; and 45:15, “O God of Israel, the
Saviour.” Isa. 45:21, to the end; “I am Jehovah, and there is no God
else besides me. — Look unto me, and be ye saved, all ye ends of the
earth, for I am God, and there is none else.” Here observe that this is
given as a reason why all nations in the world should look to him only
for salvation that he only was God, taking it for granted, and as an
universally established point, that none but God could be a Savior. And
here salvation is claimed as the prerogative of the one only God, and
therefore exclusively of a secondary and subordinate god. It follows, “I
have sworn by myself, the word is gone out of my mouth in righteousness,
and shall not return, That unto me every knee shall bow, and every
tongue shall swear. Surely shall one say, In Jehovah have I
righteousness and strength. Even to him shall men come, and all that are
incensed against him shall be ashamed. In the Lord shall all the seed of
Israel be justified, and shall glory.” Hos. 13:4, “Yet I am Jehovah, thy
God from the land of Egypt: and thou shalt know no God but me; for there
is no Saviour besides me.”
God is so completely the only Savior of his
people, that others are not admitted to partake of this honor, as
mediate and subordinate saviors: Hos. 1:7. And therefore, the heavenly
hosts, in giving praise to God, ascribe salvation to him, as his
peculiar and distinguishing glory; Rev. 19:1, “I heard a great voice of
much people in heaven, saying, Alleluia; salvation, and glory, and
honour, and power, unto the Lord our God.”
But nothing is more evident,
by the express and abundant doctrine of Scripture, than that Jesus
Christ is most eminently and peculiarly the Savior of God’s people, and
the Savior of the world. In John 4:42, his very name is Jesus, Savior.
He is spoken of as the Author of eternal salvation, Heb. 5:9. And the
Captain of the salvation of his people, Heb. 2:10, a Prince and a
Savior. He is called Zion’s salvation, Isa. 62:11, “Behold, thy
salvation cometh.” He is spoken of, as saving by his own strength, and
able to save to the uttermost; one might to save, and therein
distinguished from all others; as in Isa. 63:1, “I that speak in
righteousness, mighty to save.” Verse 5, “I looked and there was none to
help; and I wondered that there was none to uphold. Therefore mine own
arm brought salvation unto me, and my fury it upheld me.” What is said
in this place is meant of Christ, as is manifest by comparing Isa. 63:3
with Rev. 19:15. And the very same things that are said of Jehovah, the
only God, as the only Savior in whom men shall trust for salvation, as
in Isa. 45:21, to the end, are from time to time applied to Christ in
the New Testament. And it is expressly said, Acts 4:12, “There is
salvation in no other, neither is there any other name given under
heaven amongst men, whereby we must be saved.” And the heavenly hosts,
in their praises, ascribe salvation to Christ in like manner as to God
the Father, Rev. 7:10, “Salvation to our God, which sitteth upon the
throne, and to the Lamb.” See also Rev. 5. Christ is a rock sufficiently
sure, and perfectly to be trusted, Isa. 28:16-17; 1 Cor. 10:4.
The
redemption from Egypt, and bringing the children of Israel through the
wilderness to the possession of Canaan, is often spoken of as a great
salvation, which was most evidently the peculiar work of the one only
Jehovah, greatly manifesting his distinguished power and majesty. — 2
Sam. 7:22-23, “Wherefore thou art great, O Lord God, for there is none
like thee; according to all that we have heard with our ears;” meaning
what they had heard of his great fame, or the name he had obtained by
his wonderful works, in bringing them out of Egypt, etc. As appears by
what follows; “And what one nation in the earth is like thy people, even
like Israel, whom God went to redeem for a people to himself, and to
make him a name, and to do for you great things, and terrible for thy
land, before thy people which thou redeemest to thee from Egypt, from
the nations and their gods?” The same work is mentioned as an evidence
that the doer of it is Jehovah, and that there is none like unto him,
and as that which makes known God’s name through the earth; Exo. 8:10,
22; 9:14, 16; and 10:2 — See also Exo. 15:6-11; 18:11; and 34:10; Deu.
3:24….
But it was Jesus Christ that wrought the salvation: Isa. 63:9-10,
“The angel of his presence saved them: in his love and pity he redeemed
them, and he bore them, and carried them all the days of old. But they
rebelled and vexed his Holy Spirit.” This rebelling and vexing of his
Holy Spirit is evidently the same thing with that spoken of, Psa.
95:8-10, “As in the provocation, and as in the day of temptation in the
wilderness, when your fathers tempted me, proved me, and saw my works.
Forty years long was I grieved with that generation.” But it is evident
that he whom they tempted, provoked, and grieved, was that God whose
great works they saw, and therefore was that God who wrought those
wonderful works in Egypt and the wilderness: as is evident by Psa. 95:3,
where he is called, “Jehovah, a great God, and a great King above all
gods.” And it is equally clear by that passage in Isa. 63 just quoted,
that it was the angel of God’s presence, and by 1 Cor. 10:9, “Neither
let us tempt Christ, as some of them also tempted.”
And as it is said,
Isa. 63 that the angel of God’s presence saved them, etc. So it is plain
by Exo. 23:20-33 that God’s angel, a different person from him who acts
as first in the affairs of the Deity, brought them into Canaan, etc. And
it is plain that the person that appeared in the bush, who said his name
was Jehovah, and I am that I am, was the angel of Jehovah: Exo. 3:2, 14;
6:3; and Acts 7:30. And nothing is more evident, by the whole history,
than that the same person brought them out of Egypt, and also that it
was the same angel which appeared and delivered the ten commandments at
Mount Sinai, conversed there with Moses, and manifested himself from
time to time to the congregation in the wilderness. Acts 7:38, “This is
he that was in the church in the wilderness, with the angel which spake
to him in the mount Sinai, and with our fathers; who received the lively
oracles to give unto us.” That angel doubtless was the same that is
called the angel of the covenant, Mal. 3:1, “Behold, I will send my
messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me; and the Lord whom ye
seek shall suddenly come into his temple, even the messenger of the
covenant, whom ye delight in. Behold he shall come, saith the Lord of
hosts:” and this messenger without doubt was Christ. — It is plain by
Heb. 12:25-27, that he who spoke at mount Sinai was Christ: “See that ye
refuse not him that speaketh,” etc.
Thus we see that however the work of
salvation be so often spoken of as peculiar to God, yet this salvation
out of Egypt, so much celebrated in Scripture, is not peculiar to God
the Father, but the Son wrought that work as well as the Father. And it
is true that the Scriptures abundantly speak of an infinitely greater
and more glorious salvation than that out of Egypt, viz. the salvation
of men from sin, Satan, eternal death and ruin, and bringing them to the
heavenly Canaan, to eternal life and happiness there. This is spoken of
as a far greater work than the other. So that in comparison of it, it is
not worthy to be remembered or mentioned. Jer. 16:14, 15, “It shall no
more be said, The Lord liveth,” etc. see also Jer. 20:6-8, Isa.
43:18-21, “Remember ye not the former things,” etc. But I need not stop
to show the reader how this great salvation is in Scripture ascribed in
a peculiar manner to Christ as the author.
We read in Scripture of two
creations: the first, that which Moses gives an account of in the first
chapter of Genesis; the other, a spiritual creation, consisted in
restoring the moral world, bringing it to its highest perfection, and
establishing it in its eternal felicity and glory; and the latter is
spoken of as most incomparably the greatest work; Isa. 65:17, 18; and
Isa. 66:22. Now, as creation is so much spoken of as a most peculiar
work of the Supreme God, one may well determine, that if the first
creation be not so, yet the second is, which is so much greater, and
evidently the greatest of all God’s works….
But this new creation,
which is the same with the work of redemption, is, in the most especial
manner, spoken of as the work of Jesus: for he is ever mentioned as the
great Redeemer and restorer. This work is committed to him: for this he
has a full commission. It is left in his hands, all things are committed
to him, all power in heaven and in earth is given him, that he may
accomplish this work, and bring it to its most absolute perfection. To
this end are subjected to him, thrones, dominions, principalities, and
powers, and he is made head over all things. And to this end, the world
to come, that is, all the affairs of the new creation, are put in
subjection unto him: and he, with regard to all the transactions
belonging to this new creation, that are written in the book of God, is
the Alpha and Omega, the First and the Last. Christ built the house, he
built all things, especially in this new creation, and therefore is God.
These things are plainly asserted in Heb. 3:3, 4, “For this man (rather
this person) was counted worthy of more glory than Moses, inasmuch as he
who hath builded the house hath more honour than the house. For every
house is builded by some man: but he that built all things is God.” —
Thus, the work of redemption, which is both the greatest work of
salvation, and the greatest work of creation (the two kinds of works
chiefly spoken of in Scripture as divine), is accomplished by the Son of
God….
The giving of spiritual and saving light is one chief part of the
new creation, as creating the light was a chief part of the old
creation. The causing of this spiritual light is spoken of as the
peculiar work of God. 2 Cor. 4:6, “For God, who commanded the light to
shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of
the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ,” etc. But
the giving of this light is especially ascribed to Christ, as the author
and fountain of it. He is called the Light of the world; the Light of
life; the true Light, that lighteth every man that cometh into the
world. He is the Sun of righteousness. No man knoweth the Father but the
Son, and he to whom the Son will reveal him, etc.
So calling men into
Christ’s fellowship and kingdom, is also ascribed to God. Rom. 8:30,
“Whom he did predestinate, them he also called.” Acts 2:39, “As many as
the Lord our God shall call.” 1 Cor. 1:9, “God is faithful, by whom ye
were called unto the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord.” 1
Thes. 2:12, “That ye would walk worthy of God, who hath called you unto
his kingdom and glory.” 2 Thes. 2:13, 14, “God hath from the beginning
chosen you to salvation; whereunto he called you by our gospel.” 2 Tim.
1:9, “According to the power of God, who hath saved us, and called us
with an holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his
own purpose and grace.” 1 Pet. 5:10, “The God of all grace, who hath
called us unto his eternal glory.”
But this is ascribed to Jesus Christ,
Rom. 1:6, “Among whom also ye are called of Jesus Christ.” 1 Cor. 7:17,
“As the Lord hath called every one.” John 10:3, “And he calleth his own
sheep by name, and leadeth them out.” Verse 16, “Other sheep have I,
which are not of this fold, them also I must bring in; and they shall
hear my voice.” Eph. 1:18, “That ye may know what is the hope of his
calling.”
Regeneration, or the
changing and renewing of the heart, is spoken of as the peculiar work of
God. John 1:13, “Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the
flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.” Jam. 1:18, “Of his own will
begat he us with the word of truth that we should be a kind of
first-fruits of his creatures.”
It is likewise ascribed to
Christ. Saints are born of him in their spiritual generation, and
therefore are called his seed, Gal. 3:29. It is Christ that baptizes men
with the Holy Ghost, which is called the washing of regeneration, and
renewing of the Holy Ghost, and a being born of water and of the Spirit.
Christ sanctifies and cleanses the souls of men, by the washing of
water, by the word; Eph. 5:26.
Justification, washing from sin,
delivering from guilt, forgiving sin, admitting to favor and to the
glorious benefits of righteousness in the sight of God, are often spoken
of as belonging peculiarly to God. Rom. 3:26, “That he might be just,
and the justifier of him that believeth in Jesus.” Verse 30, “Seeing it
is one God that justifieth,” etc. Rom. 8:30, “Whom he called, he also
justified.” verse 33, “It is God that justifieth.” Isa. 43:25, “I am he
that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake.” Psa. 51:2-4,
“Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin:
against thee, thee only, have I sinned.” Therefore the Jews said, Luke
5:21, “Who can forgive sins but God only?”
But Christ has power to
forgive sins, as it follows in the last-mentioned place; Luke 5:24. “But
that ye may know, that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive
sins,” etc. He washes us from our sins in his own blood; Rev. 1:5. And
he justifies those that know and believe in him; Isa. 53:11.
Overcoming Satan, and
delivering men from him, and giving his people victory over him, are
spoken of as the peculiar works of God’s glorious power. Isa. 27:1, “In
that day, Jehovah, with his great and strong sword, shall punish
Leviathan the piercing serpent, even Leviathan, that crooked serpent; he
shall slay the dragon that is in the sea.” Psa. 8:1, 2, “O Jehovah, our
God, how excellent is thy name in all the earth, who hast set thy glory
above the heavens! Our of the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou
ordained strength, because of thine enemies, that thou mightest still
the enemy and the avenger.”
But it is the special work
of Christ to bruise the serpent’s head, to destroy the works of the
devil, and that by his own strength. For he is represented as conquering
him, because he is stronger than the strong man armed, and so overcoming
him and taking from him all his armor wherein he trusted, and spoiling
his goods. It is he that has spoiled principalities and powers, and made
a show of them openly, triumphing over them. He is the spiritual Samson
that has rent the roaring lion as he would have rent a kid, and the
spiritual David that has delivered the lamb out of his mouth, and has
slain that great Goliath. He is that Michael who fights with the dragon
and casts him out, and at last will judge Satan, and will utterly
destroy him, and will inflict those everlasting torments on him spoken
of in Rev. 20:10. In the apprehension of which he now trembles, and
trembled for fear that Christ would inflict those torments on him, when
he cried out and fell down before him saying, “Art thou come to torment
me before the time?” and, “I beseech thee, torment me not.”
Should any
imagine that those parts of the work of redemption, which are initial,
and are wrought in this world, being more imperfect, may be wrought by
the Son of God, but that the more glorious perfection of it, which is
brought to pass in heaven, is peculiar to God the Father. In opposition
to this, it may be observed, it belongs to Christ to take care of the
souls of his saints after death, to receive them to the heavenly state,
and to give them possession of heaven. Therefore the Scriptures
represent that he redeems his saints to God, and makes them king and
priests. He has the key of David, the key of the palace, and the keys of
hades, or the separate state, and of death; and opens, and no man shuts;
and shuts, and no man opens. He is gone to heaven as the forerunner of
the saints. He has, in their names, taken possession of that inheritance
which he has purchased for them that he may put them in possession of it
in due time. He is gone to prepare a place for them, that he may come
and take them to himself, that where he is, there they may be also, and
make them sit with him in his throne. And therefore Stephen, when dying,
commended his spirit into Christ’s hands.
Or if any shall say that
the far more glorious salvation which shall be effected at the end of
the world, when all things shall be brought to their highest
consummation, shall be the peculiar work of God the Father, — I answer
that it is abundantly manifest from Scripture that the consummation of
all things shall be by Christ. He shall raise the dead by his voice, as
one that has power and life in himself. He shall raise up the bodies of
his saints in their glorious resurrection, making their bodies like to
his glorious body; John 5:25, 29; and 6:39, 40. He, as the universal and
final Judge, shall fully put all things to rights, and bring everything
to its last and most perfect state. He shall bestow that great gift of
eternal life, in both soul and body, on the whole church, and every
individual member in a state of most consummate glory, which is the
thing aimed at in all the preceding steps of the great affair of
redemption. He shall present his church to himself and to his Father a
glorious church, not having spot or wrinkle, or any such thing: all in a
perfect purity, beauty, and glory. And the glory which God has given him
he will give them, in the most perfect manner, that they may reign with
him forever and ever. And thus, he will cause the New Jerusalem to
appear in its brightest glory, as a bride adorned for her husband, and
will perfect the new creation, and cause the new heavens and new earth
to shine forth in their consummate and eternal beauty and brightness,
when God shall proclaim, It is done, I am Alpha and Omega, the First and
the Last. (John 11:25, and 5:22, 23, 27; Eph. 5:27; 1 Cor. 15:20-28;
Mat. 25:34; 2 Tim. 4:8; Luke 22:29-30; Mat. 24:47; Rev. 2:7, 10; and
3:21; Rev. 22:11, 17.) Christ is represented as being himself the light
and glory that enlightens the New Jerusalem, that fills with brightness
and glory the church of God, in its last, consummate, and eternal glory;
Rev. 21:23.
Concerning the name
JEHOVAH, see Neh. 9:6, “Thou art Jehovah alone; thou hast made heaven
and earth; the heaven of heavens, with all their host; the earth,” Deu.
6:4, “Hear, O Israel, Jehovah our God is one Jehovah.” 2 Sam. 22:32,
“Who is God, save Jehovah? Who is a rock, save our God? So Psa. 18:31; 1
Kin. 18:39, “Jehovah, he is the God; Jehovah, he is the God.” When God
proclaimed his name in mount Sinai, Exo. 34:5, 6, “He passed by and
proclaimed, Jehovah, Jehovah.” Jer. 10:10, “Jehovah is the true God; he
is the living God, and an everlasting King.” Exo. 15:11, “Who is like
unto thee, O Jehovah?” 1 Chr. 17:20, “O Jehovah, there is none like unto
thee.” Psa. 86:8. It might well be expected that in that abundant
revelation which God has made of himself, he would make himself known by
some one name at least, which should be expressly delivered as the
peculiar and distinguishing name of the Most High. And we find it to be
so: God has, with great solemnity, declared a certain name as his most
peculiar name, which he has expressly and very often spoken of as a name
that belongs to him in a most distinguishing manner, and belongs to the
Supreme Being only, and has expressly asserted that it belongs to no
other. But, notwithstanding all this, the Arians, to serve their
particular purpose, reject this name, as not being the distinguishing
name of the Supreme God.
King of kings and Lord of
lords, are titles peculiar to the Supreme Being. Deu. 10:17, “For the
Lord your God is God of gods, and the Lord of lords.” Psa. 136:3, “O
give thanks to the Lord of lords, for his mercy endureth for ever.” Dan.
2:47, “Of a truth it is that your God is a God of gods, and Lord of
kings.” 1 Tim. 6:14-16, “Until the appearing of our Lord Jesus Christ,
which in his times he shall show, who is the blessed and only Potentate,
the King of kings, and Lord of lords; who only hath immortality,
dwelling in light which no man can approach unto, whom no man hath seen,
nor can see; to whom be honour and power everlasting, Amen.” Rev.
19:11-16, “He whose name is called the Word of God, hath on his vesture
and on his thigh a name written, KING OF KINGS, and LORD OF LORDS.”
3. Christ’s eternity is
abundantly asserted. Psa. 102:24-27, “Of old hast thou laid the
foundations of the earth; and the heavens are the work of thy hands: but
thou art the same, and thy years shall have no end.” See Heb. 1:10-12;
Gen. 21:33; Deu. 33:27; Psa. 9:7; 104:31; Psa. 92:8; 135:13; Jer. 10:10;
Dan. 4:2-3. And Lam. 5:19 compared with Dan. 7:14; Rom 1:23, “The
incorruptible God.” 1 Tim. 6:16, “The King eternal, immortal.” Rev.
4:9-10; 5:14; 10:5-6; and 15:7; Heb. 7:3, “Having neither beginning of
days, nor end of life.”….
4. Many things make it
manifest that he that dwelt in the tabernacle and temple, between the
cherubims, was Christ. But it is evident that the God that dwelt there,
was the only true God. 2 Kin. 19:15, 19; 1 Kin. 8:6, 12, 13, 24, 27, 60.
5. All the angels worship
Christ. Heb. 1:6, “Let all the angels of God worship him.” But this is
the prerogative of the Supreme God. Neh. 9:6, “Thou, even thou, art
Jehovah alone: Thou hast made heaven, the heaven of heavens, with all
their host, and the host of heaven worshippeth thee.”
6. The supreme divinity of
the Son of God is most manifest from Heb. 12:24-26. Here I
observe:
First. It is plain that he who spoke, whose voice shook the
earth, meaning him that spoke at Mount Sinai, was the supreme and only
God.
Second. It is manifest that he that speaks to us from heaven now
under the gospel, is the same whose voice then shook the earth. This the
words directly express.
Third. If any should say that he who speaks to
us from heaven, is not the same with him who spoke on earth, whose voice
then shook the earth, yet they must allow him to be a Being either equal
or superior, though he that speaks to us from heaven, in his so speaking
is mentioned as much the most to be regarded.
Fourth. It is manifest
that by him that speaks to us from heaven, the apostle means Christ the
Mediator of the new covenant. This appears two ways: (1.) By the
connection of the 25th with the 24th verse (Heb. 12:24-25): in the
former of which, he speaks of Christ as of him that speaks good things
to us by his blood, and then immediately bids us beware that we do not
refuse him that speaks, and (2.) It is plain that he that speaks the
gospel to us from heaven, whose voice is so much more to be regarded
than the voice of the law at Mount Sinai, is Christ, by that parallel
place in the same epistle, Heb. 2:2-3.
7. There must be a vast
difference, not only in the degree, but in the kind, of respect and
worship due to the Supreme God as well as in other things, since there
is so infinite a difference between this being and all others. There is
a great difference as to the kind of respect proper for a wife to render
to her husband, and that which it is proper for her to render towards
other men. So it is with regard to the respect due to God. Otherwise
there would not be a foundation for that jealousy, which God exercises
on occasion of his professing people worshipping other beings.
In
addition to what has been observed of the works and worship of God, the
following savings of Christ are worthy to be observed. John 5:17, “My
Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” Verse 19, “What things soever the
Father doth, these also doth the Son likewise.” John 5:23, “That all men
should honour the Son, even as they honour the Father.” It is plain, God
is jealous in that respect, that no other being may share with him in
honor, that he alone may be exalted. It is expected that other beings
should humble themselves, should be brought low, should deny themselves
for God, and esteem themselves as nothing before him. And as he requires
that they should abase themselves, he would not set up others to exalt
them to a rivalship with himself. If men may pray to Christ, may adore
him, give themselves up to him, trust in him, praise him, and serve him,
then what king of worship is due to the Father, entirely distinct from
all this in nature and kind?
When Satan tempted Christ to fall down and
worship him, as one that had power to dispose of the kingdoms of this
world, and the glory of them, Christ replies, “It is written, Thou shalt
worship the Lord thy God, and him only shalt thou serve.” But the Arians
must suppose that we are required to worship and serve some other being
than this Lord god which Christ speaks of, as the disposer not only of
the kingdoms of this world, but of the kingdom of heaven and the glory
thereof. On the supposition of Christ’s being merely a creature, he
would much more properly be ranked with creatures exclusively, and never
with God (as being called by his name and titles, having ascribed to him
his attributes, dominions, etc.) However great a creature he might be,
he would be infinitely below God.
8. Concerning the grand
objection from that text, “Of that day and hour knoweth no man, nor the
angels in heaven, nor the Son, but the Father:” I would observe that
even the Arians themselves, with regard to some things said of Christ,
must make the distinction between his power or knowledge, as to his
inferior and superior nature: or if they do not allow two natures, then,
at least, as to his humbled state, and his state both before and after
his humiliation, as Mark 7:24, “And would have no man know it, but he
could not be hid.” This cannot mean that the person who created the
whole world, visible and invisible, etc. And by whom all things consist
and are governed, had not power to order things so, that he might be
hid.
9. Concerning the
attribute of eternity. This is ascribed to God, as a thing peculiar
distinguishing the only true God. Gen. 21:33, “And Abraham planted a
grove, and called on the name of Jehovah, the everlasting God.” Psa.
90:2 “From everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.” Isa. 63:16, “Thy
name is from everlasting.” 1 Tim. 6:16; Pro. 8:23; Heb. 7:3; Mic. 5:2.
Isa. 9:6.
10. It is observable that
Christ is frequently called God absolutely, θεος and ο θεος; by which
name even the heathens themselves always understood the Supreme God. Dr.
Cudworth, in his “Intellectual System,” abundantly shows that the
heathens generally worshipped but one supreme, eternal, universal,
uncreated Deity, but that their best philosophers maintained that this
Deity subsisted in three hypostases: though they had many created gods.
And in page 627, he says, “It now appears, from what we have declared,
that as to the ancient and genuine Platonists and Pythagoreans, none of
their trinity of gods, or divine hypostases, were independent; so,
neither were they creature-gods, but uncreated, they being all of them
not only eternal, and necessarily existent and immutable, but also
universal, i.e. infinite and omnipotent causes, principles, and creators
of the whole world. From whence it follows, that these Platonists could
not justly be taxed with idolatry, in giving religious worship to each
hypostasis of their trinity. And one grand design of Christianity being
to abolish the pagan idolatry or creature worship, it cannot justly be
charged therewith, from that religious worship given to our Savior
Christ and the Holy Ghost, they being none of them, according to the
true and orthodox Christianity, creatures, however the Arian hypothesis
made them such. And this was indeed the grand reason why the ancient
fathers so zealously opposed Arianism. We shall cite a remarkable
passage out of Athanasius, fourth oration against the Arians, to this
purpose, as follows:
Why, therefore, do not
these Arians, holding this, reckon themselves amongst the pagans or
Gentiles, since they do, in like manner, worship the creature besides
the Creator? — τη κτισει λατρευσι παρα τον κτισαντα Athanasius’s meaning
here, could not well be, that they worshipped the creature more than the
Creator; forasmuch as the Arians constantly declared that they gave less
worship to the Son than to the Father.
For though the pagans worship one
uncreated and many created gods, but these Arians only one uncreated,
and one created, to wit, the Son, or Word of God, yet will not this make
any real difference betwixt them, because the Arians’ one created god,
is one of those many pagan gods, and these many gods of the pagans or
Gentiles have the same nature with this one, they being alike
creatures.”
It is remarkable that in so many places, both in the Old
Testament and New, when Christ is spoken of, his glory and prerogatives
represented, and the respect due to him urged, that the vanity of idols
in the same places should be represented, and idolatry warned against.
See Psa. 26:4. It is manifest that it is the Messiah that there speaks.
— See also many prophecies of Isaiah and other prophets. 1 John 5:20-21;
1 Cor. 10:19-22.
There is not the least
intimation, where Christ is styled God, either in the texts themselves,
or contexts, that this is to be understood of his office, and not of his
person, as is the case where magistrates are styled gods, where the very
next words explain it, and tell us what is to be understood by it. And
when Moses and angels are called gods, no one who attends to the whole
discourse, could easily mistake the meaning, and not see that this term
God was there used in an inferior and metaphorical sense.” Letter to the
Dedicator of Mr. Emlyn’s Inquiry, etc. p. 7, 8. Mat. 19:17, “Why callest
thou me good? There is none good but one, that is God.” “Mr. Emlyn
affirms it to be evident, that Christ here distinguishes himself from
God and denies of himself what he affirms of God. But the truth of his
interpretation entirely depends upon the opinion which the young man had
of Christ, who received this answer from him.” Ibid., p. 17, 18….
That
Christ had divine omniscience, appears from his own words, Rev. 2:23,
“And all the churches shall know that I am he which searcheth the hearts
and the reins.” Now Solomon declares, 1 Kin. 8:39, “Thou, even thou
only, knowest the hearts of all the children of men.” And Jer. 17:10,
God says, “I, the Lord, search the heart; I try the reins.” And Christ
does not say, The churches shall know that I search the reins and the
heart; but that “I am HE,” etc. Which, if words have any force in them,
yea, if the expression is not altogether unintelligible, implies, “I am
he who is distinguished by this character; or the churches shall know
that I am the God who searcheth,” etc. Ibid. p. 43, 44.
That the eternal Logos
should be subordinate to the Father, though not inferior in nature, yea,
that Christ, in his office, should be subject to the Father, and less
than he, though in his higher nature not inferior, is not strange. It is
proper, among mankind, that a son should be subordinate to his father;
yea, subject in many respects, though of the same human nature; yea,
though in no respect inferior in any natural qualification. It was
proper that Solomon should be under David his father, and be appointed
king by him, and receive charges and directions from him, though, even
then in his youth, probably not inferior to his father.
The disciples of
Christ, or those that trusted in him, when here on earth, applied to him
as trusting in his ability, not only to heal all diseases of the body,
and to raise the dead, but as leaving their souls in his hands, and
being able to heal the diseases of their minds: as being the author and
fountain of virtue. So Luke 17:5, “The apostles said unto the Lord,
increase our faith.” So the father of the demoniac, Mark 9:24, “Lord, I
believe, help thou mine unbelief.”
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