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Heaven
GENERAL OBSERVATIONS
ff. Union with Christ. By virtue of the believer’s union with Christ, he
does really possess all things. That we know plainly from Scripture. But
it may be asked, how he possesses all things. What is he the better for
it? How is a true Christian so much richer than other men? To answer
this, I will tell you what I mean by possessing all things. I mean that
God, three in one, all that he is, and all that he has, and all that he
does, all that he has made or done, the whole universe, bodies and
spirits, light, heaven, angels, men, and devils, sun, moon, stars, land,
and sea, fish and fowls, all the silver and gold, all beings and
perfections, as well as mere man, are as much the Christian’s as the
money in his pocket, the clothes he wears, or the house he dwells in, or
the victuals he eats. Yea, more properly his, more advantageously, more
his than if he commanded all these things mentioned to be just in all
respects as he pleased, at any time, by virtue of the union with Christ.
Because Christ, who certainly does here possess all things, is entirely
his, so that he possesses it all, more than a wife the property of the
best and dearest of husbands, more than the hand possesses what the head
does. All the universe is his, only he has not the trouble of managing
it. But Christ, to whom it is no trouble to manage it, manages it for
him a thousand times as much to his advantage as he could himself, if he
had the managing of all the atoms in the universe. Everything is managed
by Christ so as to be most to the advantage of the Christian. Every
particle of air or every ray of the sun, so that he in the other world,
when he comes to see it, shall sit and enjoy all this vast inheritance
with surprising, amazing joy. And how is it possible for a man to
possess anything more than so as shall be most to his advantage? And
then besides this, the Christian shall have everything managed just
according to his will, for his will shall so be left in the will of God,
that he had rather have it according to God’s will than any way in the
world. And who would desire to possess all things more than to have all
things managed just according to his will? And then besides, he himself
shall so use them as to be most to his own advantage in his thoughts,
and mediations, etc. Now how is it possible for anyone to possess
anything more than to have it managed as much as possible according to
his will, as much as possible for his own advantage, and for himself to
use it as much as possible according to his advantage? But it is certain
that so far shall the true Christian possess all things. It is not a
probable scheme, but absolutely certain. For we know that all things
will be managed so as shall be most agreeable to his will: that cannot
be denied, nor that it shall be most to his advantage, and that he
himself shall use it most to his own advantage. This is the kingdom
Christ so often promised. They shall be kings with a witness at this
rate: this is the sitting in Christ’s throne, and inheriting all things
promised to the victors in the Revelation, and the like in many other
places.
5. Love Between Glorified
Saints. There is no more reason why it should be a damp to the happiness
of some in heaven that others are happier, than that their happiness
should be damped by a bare possibility of greater happiness, supposing
them to be all equal. For if they were all equal and all full of
happiness, yet everyone would know that greater happiness is possible,
absolutely, and possible for them if God had but enlarged their
capacity. And why should not they who are actuated by pure reason desire
it, as much as if it were actually enjoyed by some beings? For barely
that it is enjoyed by other beings cannot possibly cause those that are
actuated by pure reason, and whose desires in every respect are
agreeable to reason to desire it, any more than if it was only possible
to be enjoyed, and were never actually enjoyed by any. But instead of
the superiority of some above others in happiness, being a damp on the
happiness of those that are inferior, there is undoubted reason why it
should be an addition to their happiness, and why it would rather be a
detraction from their happiness if it were otherwise. For most certainly
there is a pure, ardent, and inconceivably vehement, mutual love between
the glorified saints, and this love is in proportion to the perfection
and amiableness of the object loved. Therefore, seeing their love to
them is proportional to their amiableness, it must necessarily cause
delight when they see their happiness proportional to their amiableness,
and so to their love to them. It will not damp any to see them loved
more than themselves, for they shall have as much love as they desire,
and as great manifestations of love as they can bear, and they
themselves will love those that are superior in holiness as much as
others, and will delight to see others love them as much as themselves.
We are very apt to conceive that those that are more holy and more happy
than others in heaven will be elated and lifted up above them, whereas
their being superior in holiness implies their being superior in
humility, or having the greatest humility. For humility is a part of
holiness that is capable of degrees in the perfect state of heaven as
well as other graces, not that the holiest shall think more meanly of
themselves than the least holy. For they shall all be perfectly humble
and perfectly free from pride, and none shall think more highly of
themselves than they ought to think. But yet as they see further into
the divine perfections than others, so they shall penetrate further into
the vast and infinite distance there is between them and God, and their
delight of annihilating themselves that God may be all, shall be
greater. And besides, those that are highest in holiness, and so
necessarily highest in happiness (for holiness and happiness are all one
in heaven), instead of anything like despising those that are less holy
and happy, will love those that are inferior to them more than they
would do if they had not so much holiness and happiness, more than if
they were but equal with them, and more than those do that are equal
with them. This is certain: for the foundation of the saints’ love to
each other will be their love to the image of God which they see in
them. Now most certainly the holier a man is, the more he loves the same
degree of the image, so that the holiest in heaven will love that image
of God they see in the least holy more than those do that are less holy,
and that which makes it beyond any doubt that this superior happiness
will be no damp to them is this: that their superior happiness consists
in their great humility, and in their greater love to them, and to God,
and Christ, whom the saints look upon as themselves. These things may be
said of this, beside what may be said about everyone being completely
satisfied and full of happiness, having as much as he is capable of
enjoying or desiring, and also what may be said about their entire
resignation. For God’s will is become so much their own, that the
fulfilling of his will, let it be what it may, fills them with
inconceivable satisfaction.
105. Saints Increasing
Knowledge in Eternity. That the glorified spirits shall grow in holiness
and happiness in eternity, I argue from this foundation, that their
number of ideas shall increase to eternity. How great soever the number
of their ideas when they are first glorified, it is but limited. And it
is evident the time will come when they shall have lived in glory so
long that the parts of duration, each equal to a million million ages,
that they have lived, will be more in number than their ideas were at
first. Now we cannot suppose that they will ever entirely forget
everything that has passed in heaven, and in the universe, for a whole
million million of ages. It is undoubted that they never will have
forgot what passed in their life upon earth, the sins they have been
saved from, their regeneration, the circumstances which did heighten
their mercies, their good works which follow them, their death, etc.
They will without doubt retain innumerable multitudes of ideas of what
passed in the first seventy years, so also they shall retain to eternity
their ideas of what was done in the ages of the world, with relation to
the church of God, and God’s wondrous providence with respect to the
world of men. And can we then think that a whole million million ages of
those great and most glorious things that pass in heaven shall ever be
erased out of their minds? But if they retain but one idea for one such
vast period, their ideas shall be millions of times more in number than
when they first entered into heaven, as is evident, because by
supposition the number of such ages will be millions of times more in
number. Therefore, their knowledge will increase to eternity, and if
their knowledge, then their holiness. For as they increase in the
knowledge of God, and of the works of God, the more they will see of his
excellency, and the more they see of his excellency, cateris paribus,
the more will they love him, and the more they love God, the more
delight and happiness will they have in him. See Note on Psa. 89:1-2. It
will be objected that at this rate we might prove that the damned
increase in perfection. I answer, no. For though it is true that they
shall increase in knowledge, they will increase in odiousness in the
same proportion.
137. The Thoughts of
Glorified Saints. The saints in heaven will doubtless eternally exercise
themselves in contemplation. They will not want employ this way, not in
exercising their thoughts and study upon intricacies and seeming
repugnance, to unfold them and discover another further and further that
way, as it is here, but by viewing in their minds one thing after
another, as they will naturally be led, and sweetly drawn by love and
delight, and with such intenseness as the natural bent of their hearts
will cause. Their sight shall reach further and further, and new things
shall plainly present to their minds, without the mixture of any error.
It is error always from whence intricacy proceeds, and seeming
repugnance, and not from ignorance. The object of their thoughts shall
be the glory of God, which they shall contemplate in the creation in
general, in the wonderful make of it, particularly of the highest
heavens and in the wonders of God’s providence. It shall most clearly
and delightfully be manifested in the church of saints and angels, which
they shall discover more and more by their conversation, assisting one
another to discoveries in other things, and most of all mediate ways in
the man Christ Jesus. They shall employ themselves in singing God’s
praise, or expressing their thoughts to God and Christ, and also to one
another, and in going from one part of heaven and of the universe to
another, to behold the glories of God shining in the various parts of
it.
t it will be a very
delightful consideration to them, that Christ Jesus dearly loves the
other saints, and it will fill them with joy to see him manifesting his
love to them. They again shall see the other saints rejoicing that
Christ loves and delights in them.
Singing is amiable, because of the proportion that is perceived in it:
singing in divine worship is beautiful and useful, because it expresses
and promotes the harmonious exercise of the mind. There will doubtless
in the future world be that which, as it will be an expression of an
immensely greater and more excellent harmony of the mind, so will be a
far more lively expression of this harmony and shall itself be vastly
more harmonious, yea than our air or ear, by any modulation, is capable
of, which expressions and the harmony thereof shall be sensible, and
shall in a far more lively manner strike our perception than sound.
182. The Pleasures of
Heaven. How ravishing are the proportions of the reflections of rays of
light, and the proportion of the vibrations of the air! And without
doubt God can contrive matter so that there shall be other sort of
proportions that may be quite of a different kind, and may raise another
sort of pleasure in the sense, and in a manner to us now inconceivable,
that shall be vastly more ravishing and exquisite. And in all
probability the abode of the saints after the resurrection will be so
contrived by God that there shall be external beauties and harmonies
altogether of another kind from what we perceive here, and probably
those beauties will appear chiefly in the bodies of the man Christ Jesus
and the saints. Our animal spirits will also be capable of immensely
more fine and exquisite proportions in their motions, than now they are,
being so gross. But how much more ravishing will the exquisite spiritual
proportions be that shall be seen in minds, in their acts between one
spiritual act and another, between one disposition and another, and
between one mind and another, and between all their minds and Christ
Jesus, and particularly between the man Christ Jesus and the Deity, and
among the persons of the Trinity, the supreme harmony of all! And it is
out of doubt with me that there will be immediate intellectual views of
minds, one of another, and of the Supreme Mind, more immediate, clear,
and sensible than our views of bodily things with bodily eyes. In this
world we behold spiritual beauties only mediated by the intervention of
our senses, in perceiving those external actions which are the effects
of spiritual proportion. Hereby the ravishingness of the beauty is much
obscured and our sense of it flattened and deadened, but when we behold
the beauties of mind more immediately than now we do the colors of the
rainbow, how ravishing will it be! All that there wants in order to such
an intellectual view, is that a clear and sensible apprehension of what
is in mind should be raised in our own mind constantly according to such
and such laws: for it is no other way that we perceive with our bodily
eyes, or perceive by any of our senses.
Then also our capacities
will be exceedingly enlarged, and we shall be able to apprehend, and to
take in more extended and compounded proportions. We see that the
narrower the capacity the more simple must the beauty be to please.
Thus, in proportion of sounds, the birds and brute creatures are most
delighted with simple music, and in the proportion confined to a few
notes, so little children are not able to perceive the sweetness of very
complex tunes, where respect is to be had to the proportion of a great
many notes together, in order to perceive the sweetness of the tune.
Then perhaps we shall be able fully and easily to apprehend the beauty,
or where respect is to be had to thousands of different ratios, at once
to make up the harmony. Such kind of beauties, when fully perceived, are
far the sweetest.
188. Music in Heaven. The
best, most beautiful, and most perfect way that we have of expressing a
sweet concord of mind to each other is by music. When I would form in my
mind ideas of a society in the highest degree happy, I think of them as
expressing their love, their joy, and the inward concord, and harmony,
and spiritual beauty of their souls, by sweetly singing to each other.
But if in heaven minds will have an immediate view of one another’s
dispositions without any such intermediate expression, how much sweeter
will it be! But to me it is probable that the glorified saints, after
they have again received their bodies, will have ways of expressing the
concord of their minds by some other emanations than sounds, of which we
cannot conceive, that will be vastly more proportionate, harmonious, and
delightful than the nature of sounds is capable of. And the music they
will make will be in a measure capable of modulations in an infinitely
more nice, exact, and fine proportion than our gross airs, and with
organs as much more adapted to such proportions (see also M 95 and M
198).
206. Heaven. In heaven it
is the direct reverse of what it is on earth, for there by length of
time things become more and more youthful, that is, more vigorous,
active, tender, and beautiful.
263. The Senses in Heaven.
If the saints after the resurrection shall see by light, and speak and
hear by sounds, it is probable that the medium will be infinitely finer,
and more adapted to a distant and exact representation, so that a small
vibration in sound, though the undulations may proportionally decrease
according to the distance from their rise or fountain, yet may be
conveyed infinitely farther with exactness before they begin to be
confused and lost through the sluggishness of the medium, or through the
bulk, the roughness, or tenaciousness of the particles, and the
conveyance may likewise be with far greater swiftness. The organs also
will be immensely more exquisitely perceptive, so that perhaps a
vibration a thousand times less than can now be perceived by the ear,
may be distinctly and easily perceived by them. And yet the organs may
be far more able to bear a very strong vibration than ours in this
state, and through niceness of the organ they shall be able to
distinguish in the greatest multitude of sounds according to their
distance and direction, more exactly by the ear than we do visible
objects by the eye. And we know not how far they may clearly hear one
another’s discourses. So the eye may be so much more sensible, and the
medium of vision (the rays) so much more exquisite, that for ought we
know they may distinctly see the beauty of one another’s countenances
and smiles, and hold a delightful and most intimate conversation at a
thousand miles distance.
The light of the heavenly
regions shall be the brightness of glorified bodies, and especially in
the countenance, but chiefly that of the man Christ Jesus, and the glory
of God, if there shall be any visible appearance representing the
presence of the Deity. The light of the face of Christ will, for the
above-mentioned cause, be an infinitely more excellent and delightful
sort of refulgence than the light of this world. The brightness of the
saints shall far excel that, but the splendor of the Sun of
righteousness shall be immensely more sweet and glorious, except that
the light of the bodies of the saints shall be some way or other a
communication of the light of Christ, and then the difference will be
rather in degree than in kind of brightness, as the light which is
reflected from a lily is the same light, but less bright than that of
the sun. This world is pleasant to us because the light is sweet, and
the sensation is pleasant to the mind. How delightful a place then is
heaven with its light, so much more fine, more harmonious, more bright,
but yet easy and pleasant to behold! Vide Note on Rev. 21:11. Vide M
721, M 95, M 182.
371. Resurrection. The
addition of happiness and glory made to the saints at the resurrection,
it seems to me evident by the current of the Bible when it tells of
those things, will be exceeding great. It is the marriage of the Lamb
and the church. The state of things then is the state of perfection, and
all the state of the church before, both in earth and in heaven, is a
growing state. Indeed, the spirits of just men made perfect will be
perfectly free from sin and sorrow: will have inexpressible,
inconceivable happiness and perfect contentment. But yet part of their
happiness will consist in hope of what is to come. They will have as
much happiness as they will desire in their existing state, because they
will choose to have the addition at that time, and in that order, which
God has designed: it will be every way most pleasing, and satisfying,
and contenting to them that it should be so. Their having of perfect
happiness does not exclude all increase, nor does it exclude all hope,
for we do not know but they will increase unhappiness forever. The souls
of the saints may now have as much happiness as they, while separate,
desire, and such happiness as so answers their nature in its present
state, as to exclude all sort of uneasiness and disquietude, and yet
part of that happiness, part of that sweet rest and contenting joy,
consists in the sight of what is future. They do not desire that that
addition should be now, they know that it will be most beautiful, most
for God’s glory, most for their own happiness, and most for the glory of
the church, and every way most desirable, that it should be in God’s
order.
But the more properly perfect and consummate state of God’s people of
the church will be after the resurrection, and the whole is now only
growing and preparing for that state. All things that are now done in
the world, are but preparations for it.
The accession of happiness will consist partly in these things:
1. Then the saints will be in their natural state of union with bodies,
glorious bodies, bodies perfectly fitted for the uses of a holy
glorified soul.
2. Then the body of Christ will be perfect, the church will be complete:
all the parts of it in being, no part of it under sin or affliction, all
the parts of it in a perfect state, and all the parts of it together no
longer mixed with ungodly men. Then the church will be as a bride
adorned for her husband, and therefore the church will exceedingly
rejoice.
3. Then the Mediator will have fully accomplished his work, and will
have destroyed and will triumph over all his enemies. Then Christ will
fully have obtained his reward, then shall he have perfected the full
design that was upon his heart from all eternity, and then Jesus Christ
will rejoice and his members must needs rejoice with him.
4. Then God will have obtained the end of all his great works that he
had been doing from the beginning. Then all the deep designs of God will
be unfolded in their events, then the wisdom of his marvelous
contrivances in his hidden, intricate, and inexplicable works will
appear, the ends being obtained, and then God’s glory will more
abundantly appear in his works, his works being perfect. This will cause
a great accession of happiness to the saints who behold it. Then God
will fully have glorified himself, and glorified his Son, and his elect.
Then he will see that all is very good, and will rejoice in his own
works, which will be the joy of all heaven. God will rest and be
refreshed, and thenceforward will the inhabitants keep an eternal
Sabbath, such an one as all foregoing Sabbaths were but shadows of.
5. Then God will make more abundant manifestations of his glory, and of
the glory of his Son, and will pour forth more plentifully of his
Spirit, and will make answerable additions to the glory of the saints,
such as will be becoming the commencement of the ultimate and most
perfect state of things, and as will become such a joyful occasion as
the finishing of all things and the marriage of the Lamb. Then also the
glory of the angels will receive proportional additions, for the evil
angels are then to have the consummation of their reward. So that the
good angels will have the consummation of their reward. This will be the
day of Christ’s triumph, and the day will last forever. This will be the
wedding day between Christ and the church, and this wedding day will
last forever. The feast, and pomp, and entertainments, and holy mirth,
and joys of the wedding will be continued to all eternity.
372. Joy in Heaven. It
seems to be quite a wrong notion of the happiness of heaven that it is
in that manner unchangeable, that it admits not of new joys upon new
occasions. The Scriptures tell us that there is joy in heaven, and among
the angels of God, upon the conversion of one sinner; and why not among
the saints? And if there be new joy upon such an occasion, how great joy
have they upon the conversion of nations, and the spiritual prosperity
of the whole church on earth! It seems to me evident that the church in
heaven have received new joys from time to time upon new occasions, ever
since the first saint went to heaven. Their joy is continually increased
as they see the purposes of God’s grace unfolded in his wondrous
providences towards his church. Their happiness is increased as their
number increases, as it will be greatly for the happiness of the body of
Christ to be completed as it will be at the resurrection, so it is
increasing as the body grows towards perfection. The coming of Christ
Jesus, I believe, made an exceedingly great addition to the happiness of
the saints of the Old Testament, who were in heaven, and especially was
the day of his ascension a joyful day among them. Then Abraham, and
David, and holy men that lived under the Old Testament, “received the
promise,” which was matter of such joyful expectation to them when on
earth. When Christ arose, many bodies of saints of the Old Testament
that slept, arose and went to heaven with Christ, for it is unreasonable
to suppose they only arose for a few days to die again. The saints must
needs have new discoveries of God’s glory upon this occasion, as the
angels had, Eph. 3:10; Luke 2:13-14; 1 Pet. 1:12. It is evident by those
scriptures that the angels saw much more of the glory of God by these
things, and if they did, undoubtedly the saints also. It was a great
addition to the glory of heaven to have Jesus Christ God-man made their
head. They had then far more near admittance unto God, and more familiar
communication with him, and many other ways did this increase their
happiness and their happiness has been exceedingly greater ever since.
Thus the Old Testament prophecies of the glories and blessedness that
should attend the coming of the Messiah, I believe, not only aimed at
the glory that should be brought to the church on earth, by it, but to
that part of the church that was in heaven. Thus, the church of Israel,
those same saints to whom those promises were given, do receive them in
heaven.
I believe, also, that it
greatly contributes to the happiness of the saints in heaven to see the
success of the gospel after Christ’s ascension, and its conquering the
Roman empire, and that they greatly rejoice at the Reformation from
popery, and will exceedingly rejoice at the fall of antichrist and the
conversion of the world to Christianity. Those things seem clear to me
by many passages in the Revelation, and that their joy is increasing,
and will be increasing, as God gradually in his providence unveils his
glory, till the last day.
421. The Church in Heaven. It seems to me probable that that part of the
church that is in heaven have been from the beginning of the world
progressive in their light, and in their happiness, as the church on
earth has, and that much of their happiness has consisted in seeing the
progressive wonderful doings of God, with respect to his church here in
this world. Thus Moses with great joy saw the promises of God fulfilled,
in bringing the children of Israel into Canaan, with far greater
satisfaction than he would have seen it on earth, because he could much
better see the glorious ends God proposed by it, and his wonderful
wisdom in that work. So those saints, who die now, before the
accomplishment of the far more glorious things to the church that God
has foretold which are not yet fulfilled, and for which they have prayed
and waited, will see the fulfillment of them with greater satisfaction
than if they lived upon the earth till they were accomplished. The
church in heaven and the church on earth are more one people, one city,
and one family, than is generally imagined.
430. Heaven: Various
Offices. As there will be various members of different degrees in the
body of Christ in heaven, so it seems to me probable that there will be
members of various kinds and different offices, as it is in the church
on earth. 1 Cor. 10. That is, there will be some especially
distinguished for one grace, others for another; some of one manner of
the exercise of grace, others of another; some fitted for this work,
others for that. Everyone will have their distinguishing gift, one after
this manner, and another after that: the perfection of the saints in
glory nothing hindering. For that perfection will not be of such a kind
that one saint may not be more eminent than another in grace, or that
they shall not be capable of increasing, and so attaining to higher
degrees, nor that one grace in the same saint shall not have a more
remarkable and eminent exercise than others. And it is most probable, if
it be so, that they shall excel most in the same grace, and the same
kind of works, by which they were most distinguished on earth. God
rewarding their graces and works by giving of them grace more abundantly
of the same kind, as Christ has promised that “to him that hath shall be
given.” This difference will be for the beauty and the profit of the
whole: they will profit one another by their distinguishing graces. With
respect to those graces, they will not be beyond being profited by one
another, as well as delighted, as they will still be employed and
improving themselves.
431. Heaven: Degrees of
Glory. The exaltation of some in glory above others, will be so far from
diminishing anything of the perfect happiness and joy of the rest that
are inferior, that they will be the happier for it. Such will be the
union of all of them, that they will be partakers of each other’s glory
and happiness. 1 Cor. 12:26, “If one of the members are honoured, all
the members rejoice with it.”
432. The Saint’s Sorrow
for Sin. Though the saints in heaven will see their exceeding folly and
vileness in much of their behavior here in this world, and will see a
thousand times as much of the evil and folly of sin as they do now, yet
they will not experience any proper sorrow or grief for it. For this
reason: because they will perfectly see at the same time how that it is
turned to the best to the glory of God, or at least will so perfectly
know that it is so. And particularly they will have so much the more
admiring and joyful sense of God’s grace in pardoning them, that the
remembrance of their sins will rather be an indirect occasion of joy.
Sorrow and grief for sin is a duty, because we are not capable of having
so perfect views of those things. But that a right sense of the
odiousness and folly of sin will, under all circumstances, necessarily
cause grief, is not so clear. A sense of the great evil of sin is good,
absolutely considered, but grief for sin is so only in a certain
presupposed state and circumstance.
435. The Progressive State
of Heaven. The church now in heaven is not in its fixed and ultimate,
but in a progressive, subordinate, and preparatory state. The state
which they are in is in order to another. In the employments in which
they are now exercised, they look to that which is still future, to
their consummate state, which they have not yet arrived at. Their
present happiness is, in many respects, subordinate to a future, and God
in his dealings with them has a constant and perpetual respect to the
great consummation of all things. So it is both with respect to the
saints and angels: all things in heaven and earth and throughout the
universe, are in a state of preparation for the state of consummation.
All the wheels are going, none of them stop, and all are moving in a
direction to the last and most perfect state. As the church on earth is
in a state of preparation for the resurrection state, so is that part of
the church which is in heaven. It is God’s manner to keep things always
progressive, in a preparatory state, as long as there is another change
to a more perfect state yet behind. The saints in this world are
progressive, and all things relating to them are subordinate and
preparatory to the more perfect state of heaven, which is a perfect
state, in that it is a state of freedom from sinful and uneasy
imperfections. But when the saints are got to heaven, there is yet
another great change yet behind. There is yet another state, which is
that fixed and ultimate and most perfect state, for which the whole
general assembly both in heaven and earth are designed, and therefore
they are still progressive. Not but that I believe the saints will be
progressive in knowledge and happiness to all eternity. But when I say
the church is progressive before the resurrection, I mean that they are
progressive with a progression of preparation for another and more
perfect state. Their state is itinerary, viatory. Their state, their
employments, their glory and happiness, are subordinate and preparatory
to a future more glorious state.
So the state of the devils and damned spirits is thus: only in order to
a future state of more perfect misery. A criminal in a prison, or in a
dungeon, suffers misery, but it is only a subordinate misery, being in
order to his approaching execution: so they are spirits in prison, they
are bound in chains of darkness to the judgment of the great day. Much
of the misery of the devils and damned souls consists in fear. The devil
is dreadfully afraid of his approaching punishment, as appears by his so
crying out when he was afraid that Christ was going to execute it upon
him. He beseeches him not to torment him, and says, “Art thou come to
torment me before the time?” So much of the happiness of the saints and
angels in heaven consists in hope. The church in heaven, as to the
happiness it now has in Christ, compared with its ultimate happiness, is
as it were, in a betrothed state. The introducing of the glorious state
that succeeds the resurrection is like the marriage of the Lamb. The
glorification of the separate soul is a marriage compared with its state
in this world. The coming of Christ into the world, and introducing of
the gospel state of the church, is a marriage with respect to the state
of the church under the Old Testament. And the appearing of Christ
incarnate in heaven upon his ascension, together with the great access
of glory to the church, was like a marriage with respect to the state of
the glorified church before, and the glorious times of the church on
earth after the destruction of antichrist, will be like the marriage of
the Lamb. But these are but lower steps, and in comparison of the final
consummation, are but as betrothings, in order to that everlasting
marriage of the church with the Lamb, which shall be in the end of the
world.
Much of the happiness of the saints now consists in beholding and
contemplating the wonderful works of God, that are in order to the
consummation, the works of God in his church, both in this world and in
heaven.
529. The Saints Reign with
Christ. There can be no doubt but that the saints in heaven shall see
the flourishing and prosperity of the church on earth, for how can they
avoid it, when they shall be with the King himself, whose kingdom this
church is, and who as King manages all those affairs? Shall the royal
family be kept in ignorance of the success of the affairs of the
kingdom? They shall also be with the angels, those ministers by whom the
King manages those affairs. In the flourishing of Christ’s kingdom here
on earth consists much of Christ’s mediatorial glory, and of the reward
that the Father promised him for his performing what he did on earth in
the work of redemption. The happiness of the saints in heaven consists
much in that, that they are with Christ, and are partakers with him in
that glory and reward. The saints are not only with the King that reigns
over this kingdom, but they reign with him in the same kingdom: they sit
with him in his throne, and therefore it is said that they shall reign
on earth. That is, when the time of the flourishing and prosperity of
Christ’s kingdom comes on earth, when he shall reign here in such a
glorious manner in his kingdom of grace, they shall reign with him. So
they are said to reign with him a thousand years. Therefore doubtless
they are not ignorant of the flourishing of the church here on earth.
Can it be supposed that the saints in heaven had not notice of Christ’s
incarnation and did not know what he did here upon earth, and that they
had no notice when he was crucified and buried, and rose again. And if
not, why should they be ignorant of what succeeded, or of the pouring
out of the Holy Ghost at Pentecost, and how the kingdom, of which Christ
had thus laid the foundation, flourished? Why should their knowledge of
the affairs of Christ’s kingdom on earth cease, as soon as Christ was
ascended?
The saints in heaven are
under infinitely greater advantages to take the pleasure of beholding
how Christ’s kingdom flourishes than if they were here upon earth. For
they can better see and understand the marvelous steps that divine
wisdom takes in all that is done, and the glorious ends he accomplishes,
and what opposition Satan makes, and how he is baffled and overthrown.
They can see the wise connection of one event with another, and the
beautiful order of all things that come to pass in the church in
different ages, that to us appear like confusion. They will behold the
glory of the divine attributes in his works of providence infinitely
more clearly than we can.
The greatest objection
that I think of against this is the prayer of Simeon, who had it
revealed to him that he should not see death before he had seen the
Lord’s Messiah, and when he saw him, said, “Now lettest thou thy servant
depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation:” as though he
should have missed of the pleasure and satisfaction of seeing this
salvation, if he had died before. But shall we conclude from hence that
if Simeon had died before, he would not have known of Christ’s birth? He
surely at least would have seen this salvation then, when Christ
ascended into heaven. But the case was this: Simeon was now more willing
to die, more willing to venture his soul into another world, and could
die in much stronger hope, because his faith in God’s salvation was
abundantly strengthened by this sight. He had the greater assurance that
when he did depart, he should depart in peace for his eyes had actually
seen the salvation which God had provided for souls, and was therefore
more fully persuaded that his soul should be safe and happy in a future
state. Or if otherwise, it was because the state of separate souls in
that particular was not known to him.
Indeed it is desirable to
live to see the flourishing of God’s church upon this account: that
those saints who live to see it will probably be partakers in that
spiritual prosperity. Their souls will receive a portion of the Spirit
that is then plentifully poured out, and so will be increased in grace
and holiness. Their own souls will prosper and will be partakers of the
prosperity of the church. And besides, they will have a more glorious
opportunity to do good, in having a hand in promoting that public
prosperity.
An objection may be raised from Ecc. 9:6. The dead “have no more a
portion for ever in any thing done under the sun;” but see an answer in
my notes on the verse.
546. Heaven Contrasted
with Hell Torments. It may possibly seem strange that the torments of
the wicked should be so great, while they are only in prison, in order
to their judgment and punishment. But there is no difference in God’s
dealing with sinners in this respect, from the treatment of malefactors
by human judges and rulers, but what naturally arises from the
difference of the nature and qualifications of the judges, and the
difference of the ends of judgment. Men commit supposed malefactors to
prison, in order to a determination whether they are guilty or no, the
matter not being yet sufficiently determined. But God, who imprisons
wicked men, certainly and infallibly understands whether they are guilty
or not. They are not imprisoned that it may be determined whether they
are guilty, but because it is determined and known that they are. The
end of human judgment is to find out whether a man be guilty or no, but
the end of divine judgment is only to declare their guilt, and God’s
righteousness in their punishment. The guilt of wicked men is infallibly
determined when they die. It is fit therefore that they should be bound
in chains of darkness and misery. It is fit that God’s enemies, and
rebels against him, and the objects of his eternal wrath, should be
imprisoned in dark and dismal recesses while they are reserved for
execution. It is fit that the prison of the objects of divine wrath
should be a doleful horrid abode. So it is fit that those who are his
elect, whom he has chosen to make the objects of his love, should be
reserved in a paradise in order to that consummation. It is fit that the
church, which is the bride, the Lamb’s wife, should be reserved in a
blissful abode previous to the time of marriage. It is fit that in the
mean time it should have blessed communion and conversation with God.
The glorification of the souls of the saints at their death is a
marriage in comparison of their conversion, and their state of grace,
but it is a state of betrothment compared with the glory that shall be
after the resurrection. So the state of the damned separate spirits,
though it be inexpressibly doleful, is yet but as a confinement in
chains, and a dark dungeon in order to execution, in comparison of their
misery after the day of judgment. See Note on Mat. 18:34.
571. Heaven: Wisdom and
the Gloriousness of the Work of Redemption. When the saints get to
heaven, they shall not merely see Christ and have to do with him, as
subjects and servants with a glorious and gracious Lord and Sovereign,
but Christ will most freely and intimately converse with them as friends
and brethren. This we may learn from the manner of Christ’s conversing
with his disciples here on earth. Though he was the supreme Lord of the
disciples, and did not refuse, yea, required, their supreme respect and
adoration, yet he did not treat them as earthly sovereigns are wont to
do their subjects. He did not keep them at an awful distance, but all
along conversed with them with the most friendly familiarity as with
brethren, as a father amongst a company of children. So he did with the
twelve, and so he did with Mary, and Martha, and Lazarus. He told his
disciples that he did not call them servants, but he called them
friends. So neither will he call his disciples servants, but friends, in
heaven. Though Christ be in a state of exaltation at the right hand of
God, and appears in an immense height of glory, yet this will not hinder
his conversing with his saints in a most familiar and intimate manner.
He will not treat his disciples with greater distance for his being in a
state of exaltation, but he will rather take them into a state of
exaltation with him. This will be the improvement Christ will make of
his own glory, to make his beloved friends partakers with him, to
glorify them in his glory, as Christ says to his Father, John 17:22-23,
“And the glory which thou hast given me, have I given them, that they
may be one, even as we are one, I in them,” etc. For we are to consider
that though Christ be greatly exalted, yet he is exalted not as a
private person for himself only, but he is exalted as his people’s head,
and he is exalted in their name, and upon their account, and as one of
them, as their representative, as the first-fruits. He is not exalted
that he may be more above them, and be at a greater distance from them,
but that they may be exalted with him. The exaltation and honor of the
head is not to make a greater distance between the head and the members,
but the members and head have the same relation and union as they had
before, and are honored with the head.
When believers get to heaven, Christ will conform them to himself, and
he will give them his glory. They shall in their measure be made like to
him, and their bodies after the resurrection shall be conformed to his
glorious body.
Christ, when he was going
to heaven, comforted his disciples with that: that after a while he
would come and take them to himself, that they might be with him again.
And we are not to suppose when the disciples got to heaven, though they
found their Lord in a state of infinite exaltation, yet that they found
him any more retiring or keeping at a greater distance from them than he
used to do. No, he embraced them as friends, he welcomed them home to
their common Father’s house, and he welcomed them to their common glory:
those who had been his friends here in this world, that had been
together here, had lived here together, and partook of sorrows and
troubles. He now welcomed them to their rest to partake of glory with
him, and he took them and led them into his chambers, and showed them
all his glory, as Christ prayed, John 17:24, “Father, I will that they
also, whom thou hast given me, be with me where I am, that they may
behold my glory which thou hast given me.” And there ensued without
doubt a most pleasant and free conversation between Christ and his
disciples when they met together in their common rest and glory.
Christ did not behave with greater distance towards his disciples, after
they had seen his transfiguration, than before: no, nor after his
resurrection, nor will he in his highest exaltation in heaven.
Christ took on him man’s nature for this end, that he might be under
advantage for a more familiar conversation than the infinite distance of
the divine nature would allow of, and such a communion and familiar
conversation is suitable to the relation that Christ stands in to
believers, as their representative, their brother, and the husband of
the church. The church being so often called the spouse of Christ,
intimates the greatest nearness, intimacy, and communion with God.
Christ will conform his people to himself, and he will give them his
glory, the glory of his person. Their souls shall be made like his soul,
and their bodies like to his glorious body. They shall partake with him
in his riches, as co-heirs in his pleasures. He will bring them into his
banqueting house, and they shall drink new wine with him. They shall
partake with him in his dominion, and they shall sit with him in his
throne, and shall rule over the nations. They shall partake with him in
the honor of judging the world at the last day. When Christ shall
descend from heaven in the glory of his Father, in such awful and
dreadful majesty, with all his holy angels, and all nations shall be
gathered before the saints, at the same time shall they be as familiar
with Christ as his disciples were when he was upon earth. They shall sit
with him to judge with him. As Christ died as the head of believers, and
in their name, and was exalted in their name, so shall he judge the
world as their head and representative. It was God’s design in this way
to confound and triumph over Satan, viz. by making man, whom he so
despised, and envied, and thought to have had as a slave to lord it
over, and thought to have glutted his own pride, and malice, and envy
with his blood, and in his everlasting misery: — I say, by making man
his judge. It was God’s design that the elect of mankind should be
Satan’s judge, and therefore the head of them, the elder brother of
them, is appointed to this work in the room of the rest, and the rest
are to be with him in it. God gave Christ “authority to execute
judgment, because he is the Son of man,” John 5:27, partly upon this
account we have mentioned.
The conversation of Christ’s disciples in heaven shall in many respects
be vastly more intimate than it was when Christ was upon earth (vide
Note on John 20:17), for in heaven the union shall be perfected. The
union is but begun in this world, and there is a great deal remains in
this world to separate and disunite them, but then all those obstacles
of a close union and most intimate communion shall be removed. When the
church is received to her consummate glory, that is her marriage with
Christ, and therefore doubtless the conversation and enjoyment will be
more intimate. This is not a time for that full acquaintance, and those
manifestations of love, which Christ designs towards his people.
When saints shall see Christ’s divine glory and exaltation in heaven,
this will indeed possess their hearts with the greater admiration and
adoring respect. Yet this will not keep them at a distance, but will
only serve the more to heighten their surprise and pleasure, then they
find Christ condescending to treat them in such a familiar manner.
The saints being united to
Christ, shall have a more glorious union with, and enjoyment of, the
Father, than otherwise could be. For hereby their relation becomes much
nearer: they are the children of God in a higher manner than otherwise
they could be. For being members of God’s own Son, they are partakers of
his relation to the Father, or of his Sonship. Being members of the Son,
they are partakers of the Father’s love to the Son and his complacence
in him. John 17:23, “I in them, and thou in me: — thou hast loved them
as thou hast loved me;” and John 17:26, “That the love wherewith thou
hast loved me may be in them;” and John 16:27, “The Father himself
loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out
from God.” So they are, in this measure, partakers of the Sons’
enjoyment of his Father. They have this joy fulfilled in themselves, and
by this means they come to a more familiar and intimate conversing with
God the Father than otherwise ever would have been. For there is,
doubtless, an infinite intimacy between the Father and the Son, and the
saints being in him shall partake with him in it, and of the blessedness
of it.
Such is the contrivance of
our redemption. Thereby we are brought to an immensely more glorious and
exalted kind of union with God and enjoyment of him, both the Father and
the Son, than otherwise could have been. For Christ being united to the
human nature, we have advantage for a far more intimate union and
conversation with him than we could possibly have had if he had remained
only in the divine nature. So we being united to a divine person, can in
him have more intimate union and conversation with God the Father, who
is only in the divine nature, than otherwise possibly could be. Christ,
who is a divine person, by taking on him our nature, descended from the
infinite distance between God and us, and is brought nigh to us, to give
us advantage to converse with him. So on the other hand, we, by being in
Christ, a divine person, ascend nearer to God the Father, and have
advantage to converse with him. This was the design of Christ, to bring
it to pass that he, and his Father, and his people, might be brought to
a most intimate union and communion, John 17:21-23, “That they all may
be one, as thou, Father, art in me and I in thee, that they also may be
one in us, that the world may believe that thou hast sent me; and the
glory which thou hast given me have I given them, that they may be made
perfect in one.” Christ has brought it to pass, that those that the
Father has given him should be brought into the household of God, that
he and his Father and they should be as it were one society and one
family, that his people should be in a sense admitted into the society
of the Three Persons in the Godhead. In that family or household, God is
the Father; Jesus Christ is his only-begotten and eternal Son; the
saints, they also are children in the family, they have all communion in
the same Spirit, the Holy Ghost.
Corollary 1. Seeing that
God has designed men for such exceeding exaltation, it was but agreeable
to his wisdom to bestow in such a way as should abase man and exalt his
own free grace, and wherein man’s entire, and absolute, and universal
dependence on God should be most evident and conspicuous.
Corollary 2. It is easy to
observe the wisdom of God, that seeing he designed man for such a height
of glory, that it should be so ordered that he should be brought to it
from the lowest depths of wretchedness and misery.
Corollary 3. Hence we may
learn something how vastly greater glory and happiness the elect are
brought to by Christ than that which was lost by the fall, or even than
that which man would have attained to if he had not fallen. For then man
would never have had such an advantage for an intimate union and
converse with the Father or Son: Christ remaining at an infinite
distance from man in the divine nature, and man remaining at an infinite
distance from the Father, without being brought nigh by an union to a
divine person.
Corollary 4. Hence we may
see how God has confounded Satan in actually fulfilling that which was a
lie in him, wherewith he deluded poor man and procured his fall, viz.
that they should be as gods. When Satan said so, he did not think that
this would really be the fruit of it. He aimed at that which was
infinitely contrary, his lowest depression, debasement, and ruin. But
God has greatly frustrated him in fulfilling of it, in making the issue
of eating that fruit to be the advancement of the elect to such a union
with the persons of the Trinity and communion with them in divine honor
and blessedness. And particularly he united one of them, the head and
representative of the rest, in a perfect union with the Godhead, and so
to the honor, dominion, and work of God in ruling the world, judging it,
and particularly in judging the devils, in which all the rest of the
elect, according to their measure, partake with him.
639. Godly Friends Meet in Heaven. Whether the saints, when they go to
heaven, have any special comfort in their meeting with those that were
their godly friends on earth: I think that it is evident that they will,
by 1 Thes. 4:13-14, and the following verses, “But I would not have you
to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are asleep, that ye
sorrow not even as others, which have no hope. For if we believe that
Jesus died and rose again, even so them also which sleep in Jesus will
God bring with him.” Here,
1. It seems to me that
what the apostle mentions here as matter of comfort to mourners is not
only that their departed friends, though dead, shall be happy (they are
not so miserable in being dead as persons are ready to imagine, because
they shall rise again), but that they shall meet them and see them
again, seems to be intimated in the manner of expression, “God shall
bring them to them.” Christians mourn when their near friends are dead,
because they are departed and gone: they are parted from them. But when
they rise God shall bring them to them again, and this is further
confirmed by the following verses, especially the 17th and 18th, “Then
we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in
the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so shall we ever be with the
Lord: wherefore comfort one another with these words.” Where the apostle
may well be understood that they should comfort one another, when
mourners, with the consideration that they should be hereafter again
with their departed friends, and in a glorious and happy state.
2. I think it is evident hereby that there will be something else that
will be comfortable in meeting them in a future state than in seeing
other saints. The apostle doubtless mentions it as what may be a
comfortable consideration to them, that they shall again see and
converse with the same persons, implying that they will have a different
comfort in seeing them from what they would in seeing other saints.
Otherwise, why did the apostle mention it for their comfort, that they
should see them again, rather than any other saints that they had seen
or heard of? The apostle’s speaking thus to the Thessalonians, might
give them just ground to expect that that peculiarly dear affection
which they cherished for their departed friends, which was crossed by
their departure, would be again gratified by meeting them again, for
this crossing of that affection was the ground of their mourning. If the
Thessalonians knew that to see their friends again in another world
would be no gratification to their affection which they had to them as
their friends, and did no way think or conceive of it as such, then to
think of it would be no more comfort to them, or remedy to their
mourning, than to think that they should see any other saint that lived
and died in another country or a past age, and that because it would be
no remedy to the ground and foundation of their mourning, viz. the
crossing of their affections to them as their friends. And if it would
be no remedy to their mourning to think of it, it never would have been
mentioned to them by the apostle as a ground of comfort, or a reason why
they need not mourn. That was what they mourned for, viz. that they
should not have their affections towards them gratified by seeing of
them, conversing with them, etc. That was what the heathen, here spoken
of, that have no hope, mourned excessively for: that they should never
more have that affection gratified. The apostle here would inform them
that they have not this ground to mourn which the heathen had, because
they should have their affection gratified again.
Hence it follows that the
special affection which the saints have in this world to other saints,
who are their friends, will in some respect remain in another world. I
do not see why we should not suppose that saints that have dwelt
together in this world and have done and received kindness to each
other’s souls, have been assistant to each other’s true happiness,
should not love one another with a love of gratitude for it in another
world, and that the joy in meeting those and seeing their happiness is
part of that joy that is spoken of, 2 Cor. 1:14, “As also ye have
acknowledged us in part, that we are your rejoicing, even as ye also are
ours in the day of the Lord Jesus;” and 1 Thes. 2:19-20, “For what is
our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? are not even ye in the presence
of the Lord Jesus Christ at his coming? For ye are our glory and joy.”
Or why those that have loved one another with a virtuous love, and from
such a love have shown kindness one to another, should not love one
another the better for it in another world? God and Christ will reward
them and favor them the more for such love and all the fruits of it, to
all eternity, and I do not see why they should not love one another the
more for it. Neither do I see how it argues infirmity for a saint in
glory to have a special respect to another, because God made use of him
as an instrument to bring him into being and so is the remote occasion
of his eternal blessedness; or because he himself was the occasion of
bringing the other into being; or that the same agreeableness of temper,
which is the foundation of special friendship here, may be so also in
another world; or even that a former acquaintance with persons and their
virtues may occasion a particular respect in another world. They may go
to heaven with a desire to see them upon that account. The idea that
they have of them by their acquaintance here, may be what they carry to
heaven with them, and the idea we have of the proper object of our love
may be an occasion of the exercises of love, especially towards that
object, and more than towards another of which we have not the idea.
This should move us to lay
religion and virtue on the foundation of all our friendship, and to
strive that the love we have to our friends be a virtuous love, duly
subordinated to divine love, for, so far as it is so, it will last
forever. Death does not put an end to such friendship, nor can it put an
end to such friends’ enjoyment of each other.
678. Beatifical Vision. Whether there be any visible appearance or glory
that is the symbol of the divine presence, in which God manifests
himself in heaven, beside the glorified body of Christ: see of the
Beatifical Vision, in my sermon from these words, Rom. 2:10, “But glory,
honour, and peace, to every one that worketh good.”
889. Heaven: The Church’s
Eternal Abode. The house not made with hands is eternal in the heavens,
but if the saints’ abode in heaven be temporary as well as their abode
on earth, it would not be said so. Their house there would be but a
tabernacle as well as here. By the house eternal in the heavens, it is
evident there is some respect had to the resurrection body, which proves
that the place of the abode of the saints after the resurrection will be
in heaven as well as before.
If the saints were only to
stay in heaven till the resurrection, then they would be pilgrims and
strangers in heaven, as well as on earth, and the country that the
saints of old declared plainly that they sought, though they were in
possession of the earthly Canaan, will be but a temporary Canaan, as
well as the earth: and in some respects more so, because the earth is to
be their eternal abode (though changed), and not heaven.
We are directed to lay up treasure in heaven, as in a safe place, where
it will be subject to no change or remove. The names of the saints are
written or enrolled in heaven, and they have their citizenship in
heaven, as being their proper fixed abode where they belong, and where
they are to be settled. The inheritance incorruptible, is reserved in
heaven for the saints, and they are kept by the power of God to this
salvation, ready to be revealed in the last time, or at the day of
judgment. So that the inheritance in heaven is the saints’ proper,
incorruptible, and everlasting inheritance. And the saints shall be so
far from changing the place of their abode in heaven for an abode on a
renewed earth at the day of judgment, that this is the proper time of
the church’s being translated to this incorruptible inheritance in
heaven, and the whole army of Israel’s passing Jordan to that
inheritance. For that is the last time wherein this salvation shall be
revealed.
The Lord from heaven does not come to give his elect the country of the
earthly Adam only renewed to the paradisiacal state wherein the earthly
Adam enjoyed it. Col. 1:5, “For the hope which is laid up for you in
heaven.” The proper time of the reward of the saints is after the
resurrection, as is evident by Luke 14:14, “But thou shalt be
recompensed at the resurrection of the just.” And the proper place of
that reward is heaven, as is evident by Mat. 5:12, “Rejoice and be
exceeding glad, for great is your reward in heaven. “ Heb. 10:34, “Ye
have in heaven a better and an enduring substance.” And the time when
the apostle encourages them that they shall receive this enduring
substance in heaven, is when Christ comes to judgment, as is evident by
the three following verses.
Christ is entered into the
holiest of all, and is set down forever on the right hand of God in
heaven, and therefore will not eternally leave heaven to dwell in this
lower world in a renewed state.
Christ ascended into heaven as the forerunner of the church, and
therefore the whole church shall enter there, even that part that shall
be found alive at the day of judgment. Christ entered into heaven with
his risen and glorified body, as an earnest of the same resurrection and
ascension to the bodies of the saints. Therefore, when the bodies of the
saints shall rise, they shall also ascend into heaven. See M 743, No.
1184.
1122. Heaven Perfected.
The external heaven surrounds Christ, not merely as a house surrounds an
inhabitant, or as a palace surrounds a prince, but rather as plants and
flowers are before the sun that have their life and beauty and being
from that luminary, or as the sun may be encompassed round with
reflections of his brightness, as the cloud of glory in Mount Sinai
surrounded Christ there.
1126. Heaven Perfected,
After the Day of Judgment. Solomon’s temple was a great type of heaven,
and the prophet Haggai foretells that the glory of the latter temple
shall be greater than that of the former, because that the Messiah, “the
desire of all nations,” should come into it. Hag. 2:6-8, “For thus saith
the Lord of hosts, Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake the
heavens, and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land; and I will shake
all nations, and the desire of all nations shall come: and I will fill
this house with glory, saith the Lord of hosts. The silver is mine, and
the gold is mine, saith the Lord of hosts. The glory of the latter house
shall be greater than of the former, saith the Lord of hosts. And in
this place will I give peace, saith the Lord of hosts.” I suppose that
what was here foretold concerning that typical temple, was fulfilled
much more properly and amply concerning heaven itself, when the Messiah
entered into it at his first ascension. And it will be fulfilled to a
much more glorious degree still at his second ascension, at Christ’s
entrance into that heavenly temple, with his glorified and complete
mystical body, as well as his natural body, after God has in a literal
manner shaken the heavens, and the earth, the sea, and the dry land, and
shaken all nations.
The beautifying and
adorning the temple of Jerusalem so exceedingly but a little before
Christ came into it, seems to be some shadow of this, and I believe was
intended as a type of it, though not parallel in every circumstance, as
the beautifying of it not being at the very instant of Christ’s first
entering into the temple, and some other circumstances. This seems also
to be typified by the immensely more glorious abode that the ark had in
Solomon’s time than that which it had in David’s time. The carrying up
of the ark into Mount Zion in David’s time was a type of Christ’s first
ascension into heaven, as is evident from Scripture, and the carrying of
it up into Mount Moriah, into Solomon’s glorious temple, is a type of
his second more glorious ascension into a more glorious abode at the end
of the world. David’s militant reign till all the enemies of Israel were
subdued under them, was a type of Christ’s present reign in heaven, over
his church till the resurrection, which is a militant reign. For till
the end of the world he goes on fighting and will continue so to do till
all enemies are made his footstool. As yet we see not all things put
under him, and the last enemy that shall be conquered is death, which
shall be at the end of the world. Solomon’s glorious reign in perfect
peace and tranquillity, with all subdued under him, and settled in
subjection to him, is a type of the reign of Christ after the end of the
world. All enemies shall be subdued: and the place of the ark in his
reign, in this glorious and most magnificent temple, was a type of the
abode of Christ in heaven, in its advanced glory at the consummation of
all things. It is the same heaven, only sublimated and exalted to
exceeding greater glory, which is typified by the mountain of the
temple, being called by the same name after the ark was removed into it,
that the place of its former abode was called by, viz. Mount Zion. So
that the ark is represented as never changing its place from Mount Zion,
and when it was carried into Mount Zion, God said of it, “This is my
rest for ever, here will I dwell; for I have desired it.” Psa.
132:13-14.
There is a place somewhere
in the universe (perhaps in the central parts of the earth), that is
called hell. But hell will be made immensely more terrible after the day
of judgment, when instead of that fire in the center of the earth, all
the visible universe shall be turned into a great furnace. And probably
heaven will be made as much more glorious, after the day of judgment, as
hell will be made more terrible.
Thus the external new Jerusalem, or the
glorious and eternal abode of the church of God (which cannot be
excluded from the description in the two last chapters in Revelations,
because there is in the description often a distinction made between the
city and the saints that are the inhabitants). I say, thus the external
new Jerusalem will come down from God out of heaven, i.e. heaven, in
this new creation of it, shall come down from the infinitely high and
uncreated heaven, in which God had dwelt from all eternity, from which
God stoops and humbles himself to behold the things that are in heaven.
Thus that will be
fulfilled that is proclaimed in Rev. 21:5, “And he that sat upon the
throne said, Behold, I make all things new.” The whole creation,
external and spiritual, shall be altered, and new formed. And thus the
new creation will be parallel with the first creation that Moses gives
us an account of, to which it is spoken of as parallel in Scripture. And
all the elect creation, which is composed of all elect things in heaven
and in earth, shall be gotten together in Christ, and all made new, both
spiritual and external, i.e. all that appertains to the elect, not only
elect spirits, but their external habitations: their bodies, that are
the microcosm or their particular habitations, and macrocosm, that is,
the general habitation. There shall be collected all that is elect in
heaven or earth, being all perfectly purified by fire, and not mixed
with the reprobate part of the world, and all shall be made new, and so
is justly called “the new heaven and new earth.” There will be new
angels and new men, new bodies and new spirits. Things that are
originally of the earth made new, and things originally of heaven also
made new. Though the place of the church of Christ (for whose sake
chiefly all heaven and earth is made) be different from what it was
before, in that she dwells in another place instead of that heaven and
earth that was her habitation before, yet it is called by the same name,
but only new, as the ark when it moved from Zion to Mount Moriah carried
the name with it, only it was a New Zion.
When God has obtained his
end of the universe that he created in the beginning, when all things
are brought to issue into their end at the consummation of all things,
and God in the final event appears to be the OMEGA, as he was the ALPHA.
Then God will show his mighty power a second time towards the whole,
towards the reprobate part of the creation, in terribly destroying it,
and towards the elect part, in bringing it to its highest perfection.
The elect creatures, who are the eye and mouth of the creation, who are
made to behold God’s works, and to give him the glory of them, did not
behold the first creation. The angels did not behold the first creation
of heaven, that most glorious part of the creation, nor did they see the
creation of themselves, and men beheld no part of God’s work in
producing the creation. But the time will come when God will make all
things new by a new creation, wherein his power towards the whole will
be much more displayed than in the first creation. When God shall effect
this creation, men and angels shall see God perform it, and they shall
see God produce the new heaven and new earth by his mighty power. Men,
who saw the creation of nothing in the first creation, shall see the
creation of all, and even their own new creation, and angels shall see
the creation of heaven and of themselves. All shall see that creation
that shall be a work so much more wonderful, and so much greater than
the former, that the former shall not be mentioned, nor come into
mind.
Conflagration. Many suppose the fire of the conflagration will be
a purifying fire, by which the heavens and the earth will be refined in
order to their standing forth in new perfection and beauty. This is very
true, yet not in the manner in which many seem to understand. It will
indeed be the fire by which the whole universe shall be purified, i.e.
by which it shall be purged from its reprobate parts. All the filthiness
of the whole universe shall be gathered into it, there to be consumed.
The reprobate part of heaven was removed out of it to be cast into this
fire. The filthiness that once was there is consumed here, and so is all
that is reprobate and filthy in the earth. It is a purifying fire, as it
is the fire of God’s justice and holiness, but the justice and holiness
of God shall perfectly purify heaven and earth, and purge all the elect
creation from all manner of defilement or mixture of that which is
reprobate, whereby it will be fitted to be exalted to its highest beauty
and glory. And not only so, but such a wonderful and terrible display of
the holiness and justice of God, will be a great means of further
sanctifying all the elect universe, setting them at a vastly greater
distance from sin against this holy God, and a means of vastly exalting
the purity and sanctity of their minds.
Many have supposed that the
place of the residence of the saints after the day of judgment would be
different from what it is before, that the paradise in which the
departed souls of saints are now, is different from the heaven into
which they shall be admitted after the day of judgment, and that
paradise is only a place of rest in which the saints are reserved till
the judgment, when they shall be admitted into heaven. Here is a mixture
of truth with error. It is true that the habitation of the saints, after
the day of judgment, will be new and different, exceeding different,
from what it was before, but not in that manner that has been supposed.
Not that the place or situation will be different (there is no need of
that), but the habitation will be new created, and shall appear with
quite new and transcendently more excellent glory.
It may be objected
against what has been here supposed that Christ, at the day of judgment,
will invite his saints to “inherit the kingdom prepared for them from
the foundation of the world;” as though it were the same heaven, that
was made and prepared for them at the first creation, which they were
now going to inherit.
Answer. It is the same house then built, not taken
down, never shaken or removed, but only made more glorious: as they are
the same angels of heaven that were made for the saints, from the
foundation of the world, though they shall be so much more glorified
that they will be as it were new creatures. As it will be with the
angels of heaven, who are the principal part of the kingdom spoken of,
so it will be with the external habitation. It was prepared for them at
the foundation of the world — the foundation of it was laid then, and
has been preparing from the foundation of the world. From that time that
the foundation of the world was laid, it has been preparing ever since,
in all that has been done to it, and in it, and about it. And not only
the kingdom is prepared from the foundation of the world in creating
heaven, and in what has been done there from that time, but the creation
of the whole universe was made to prepare a kingdom for them, to lay a
foundation for their kingdom and dominion, and all that has been done in
providence, ever since, has been to prepare a kingdom for them. And
these words of Christ are a good argument, that the work of redemption
is the end and sum of all God’s works. It was the end of the creation of
the whole universe, and of all God’s works of providence in
it.
Question. By whom and at what time will this glorious work of God,
in making the highest heavens new, be accomplished. Will it be done by
God the Father in the absence of his Son, while he is here in this lower
world taken up in the concerns of the last judgment, to garnish heaven
or prepare it for his Son with his blessed bride against their coming?
Or will it be accomplished by the Son at his return into heaven with his
church?
Answer. Not by the former,
but by the latter; for the following reasons.
1. All communicated glory
to the creature must be by the Son of God, who is the brightness or
shining forth of his Father’s glory. And therefore when the eternal
world comes to receive its greatest brightness and glory, it will
doubtless be by him, and it will be by him as God man. For all that God
does by Christ, or the medium of communication between himself and the
creature since Christ became God-man, or at least since as God-man he
has been glorified and enthroned as Lord of the universe, he does by
Christ as God-man, in whom it has pleased the Father that all fullness
should dwell, and that in all things he should have the preeminence. As
he glorifies the angels and saints who are the inhabitants, so doubtless
it will be he who will glorify the habitation.
2. The old creation was by
him, the highest heavens were created by him, or without him was not
anything made that was made. It was said concerning him, “Thou, Lord, in
the beginning hast laid the foundations of the earth, and the heavens
are the work of thine hand,” Heb. 1:10. And not only the visible but the
invisible heavens were created by him, for his is the image of the
invisible God, the firstborn of every creature, and the beginning of the
creation of God. 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. So likewise the new creation will be by him, for by him God
makes the worlds, not only the visible but the invisible world, and not
only the present world, but the world to come: that new world, the new
heavens and new earth. For God has given him a name above every name
that is named, not only in this world but in that which is to come, Eph.
1:21. By the world to come in that place, the apostle seems to mean the
new world that shall follow when the age of this shall be at an end, for
the word is λιων, Age (this age), and that which is to come, and unto
Christ has God put in subjection the world to come. If God committed to
him the creation of the old world, much more would he commit to him the
creation of the new, for it is his business to renew all things. The
creation of the new heavens and the new earth is by the work of
redemption, which is his work, and it is a work that he works out as
God-man, and therefore as God man he will make the heavens new. All new
things are by Christ. The new creature, the new name, the new covenant,
the new song, the new Jerusalem, and the new heavens and new earth, are
all by Christ, God-man.
3. The destroying the
lower world, the reprobate part of the creation, is committed to him,
and therefore much more will the glorifying of the elect part of it be
his work, for this is his most proper business. The other is his
business more indirectly, and in subordination to this.
4. The creation is
certainly by him, as to the principal parts of it, viz. the glorifying
the saints and angels. He shall build the inner temple, and doubtless,
therefore, he will build the outer temple. The glorifying of that, which
is his temple the city in the highest sense is committed to him. And
therefore, doubtless, the glorifying of that which is the temple and
city in an inferior sense will be committed to him.
5. If Christ as
God-man shall be the author of this work, he will doubtless be so
visibly, for the work is committed to him for his honor. It is an honor
that the Father commits to him in reward of what he has done and
suffered. It shall therefore be visibly done by Christ, as God-man, and
therefore will not be effected in his absence here in this lower world.
But he shall be present when it is done, and shall visibly put forth his
power and communicate his influence and glory in order to it.
6. If this
work were wrought while Christ is here in this lower world judging the
world, then this new creation would not be seen by men and angels, which
is not to be supposed.
7. If this work be wrought in Christ’s absence,
then that world will not be glorified by the presence of the Sun of
righteousness, as the face of the earth is renewed and glorified by the
return of the sun in the spring.
The Lamb is the light, and glory, and
sun of the new Jerusalem, and therefore the new brightness and life,
vigor, bloom, and beauty, and fragrancy, and joy, of this world, will be
from him and from his presence.
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