SERMON IV
And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only
true God,
and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.
JOHN XVII. 3.
DOCT. 2. The next proposition is, that this God is but one, 'Thee the only
true God.'
Deut. vi. 4, 'Hear, O Israel; the Lord thy God is one Lord.' The heathens
multiplied gods according to their own fancies: they 'had lords many and gods
many.' Austin in one of his epistles speaketh of one Maximius, a heathen, who
excuseth the polytheism of the gentiles, that they worshipped but one supreme
essence, though under divers names. Ejus quasi quaedam membra variis
supplicationibus prosequimur, ut totum colere valeamus- that they had
several deities, that they might, as by so many several parcels, adore the
whole divine essence. The truth is, nature hath some sense of it; for as it
showeth there is a God, so it showeth there is but one God. Socrates was a
martyr to this truth. The Platonics worshipped one supreme essence, whom they
called ho basileus. The philosophers sometimes called God to on,
that being; sometimes to en, that one thing. Tertullian proveth that the
soul was naturaliter christiana, as he speaketh, O testimonium animae
naturaliter christianae; which he proveth from the forms of speech then in
use. Deus videt, etc. - what God shall award; God seeth; let God
determine of me, and for me. And in troubles they cried out, O God! and in
straits they did not look to the Capitol, the imagined seat of such gods as the
Romans worshipped, but to heaven, the seat of the living God. Thus it is with
the soul, saith he, when recovered out of a distemper. The truth is, it was the
dotage and darkness of their spirits to acknowledge many gods, as drunkards and
madmen usually see things double, two suns for one. But besides the consent of
nations, to give you reasons: There is a God, and therefore but one God; there
can be but one first cause, and one infinite, one best, one most perfect, one
omnipotent. If one can do all things, what need more gods? If both be
omnipotent, we must conceive them as agreeing or disagreeing; if disagreeing,
all would be brought to nothing; if agreeing, one is superfluous. God hath
decided the controversy: Isa. xliv. 8, 'Is there a God besides me? Yea, there
is no God, I know not any.' As if he said, If any have cause to know, I have,
but I know none.
This point is useful, not only to exempt the soul from the anxious fear of a
false deity, and to confute the Manichees, Marcion, Cerdo, and others, that
held two sorts of gods, and those that parted the god-head into three essences,
and the pagan fry. But practically -
Doct. 3. The next proposition is, that this God is one in three persons.
This also is collected from the text. 'To know thee,' that is, the Father,
with all the co-essential persons. They are undivided in essence, though
distinguished in personality. Take a place of scripture: 1 John v. 7, 'There
are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost,
and these three are one.' Let me a little open the doctrine of the Trinity by
some short observations.
This is a mystery proper to the scriptures. Other truths are revealed in
nature, but this is a treasure peculiar to the church. There are some passages
in heathens that seem to look this way; as Plato speaketh of nous, logos,
pneuma, mind, word, and spirit; and Trismegistus, prota theos, etc.
But these were either some general notions, received by tradition from the
Jews, and by them misunderstood, for they dreamed of three distinct separate
essences, or else passages foisted into their writings by the fraud and fallacy
of some christians, who counted it a piece of their zeal to lie for God. It is
not likely that God would give the heathens a more clear revelation of these
mysteries than he did to his own people, the church of the Jews. We find it but
sparingly revealed in the Old Testament, though I might bring many places where
it is sufficiently hinted; but more distinctly in the New, after the visible
and sensible discovery of the three persons at Christ's baptism: Mat. iii. 17,
'The Spirit of God descended like a dove, and lighted upon him, and lo, a voice
from heaven, saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.'
Voce Pater, Natus corpore, Numen ave. The whole Trinity were present at
that solemnity. Some darkness there is still upon the face of this deep; we
shall have more perfect knowledge of it in the heavens: John xiv. 20, 'At that
day ye shall know that I am in my Father, and you in me, and I in you.' Trinity
in unity and unity in trinity still troubleth the present weakness of reason;
but when we shall see God face to face, our knowledge shall be more
satisfactory and complete. For the present, we must come to this truth with a
sober mind, and adore it with a humble piety, lest we puzzle faith while we
would satisfy and inform reason. There are many words which the church hath
used in the explication of this mystery, as unity, trinity, essence, person,
consubstantial; which though they be not all found in the scriptures, yet they
are the best that we can use in so deep a matter, and serve to prevent the
errors and mistakes of those who would either multiply the essence, or abolish
the persons. Some terms must be used, and these are the safest. They be three,
and yet one; and the most commodious way to solve it to our understandings is,
one in essence and three persons; for there being three in the divine essence,
the Father, the Word, and the Spirit, each having the whole divine essence, and
yet the essence undivided, there must be some words to express the mystery.
God, being one, cannot be divided in nature and being; and there being three,
every one having the whole godhead in himself, distinguished by peculiar
relative properties, what term shall we use? Three ways of existence there are
in the nature of God, because of those three real relations - paternity,
filiation, and procession. One they are, and distinct they are really. There is
and must be a distinction, for the essence and particular way of existence do
differ. Whatever is said of the essence is true of every person. God is
infinite, eternal, incomprehensible; so is the Father, Son, and Spirit. But
now, whatever is said of the existence, as existence, cannot be said of the
essence; every one that is God is not Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. I say, then,
there being a distinction between the nature and particular existences, there
must be some terms to express it. The Greek Church in the Nicene Council, some
three hundred and sixty years after Christ, worded it thus: The occasian was
this, some heretics said, If Christ be God, of the same substance and being
with the Father, then, when Christ was incarnate, the Father was incarnate
also. No, say the orthodox, though the ousia, the substance or essence
be the same, it is not the same hupostasis; the same subsistence in the
godhead; and then began the public and received distinction of ousia and
hupostasis; ousia signifying the nature or substance;
hupostasis, the several manners of existence. And the determination of
the church was, that these were the fittest terms to explicate this mystery.
Not but that these words were used before in this matter; as may appear out of
divers authors that lived and wrote before that famous Nicene Council, but they
were not so accurately distinguished, nor so publicly received. And indeed,
though the word ousia, essence, be not in scripture, yet
hupostasis is. There is ground for ousia, for when the nature of
God is expressed, it is expressed by a word equivalent to essence, 'I Am that I
Am,' Exod. iii. 14. So 'ho on, ho ein, kai erchomenos,''He that was, and
is, and is to come,' Rev. i.4. Then for hupostasis, Christ is called,
Heb. i. 3, characteir teis hupostaseos autou, 'The express image of his
person.' It cannot be rendered essence, but subsistence; for then
Arius would have carried the day, and Christ would be only homoiousios.
And the Father's essence cannot properly be said to be impressed on the Son,
since the very same individual essence and substance was wholly in him, as it
was wholly in the Father; and the Son cannot be said to be like: but now 'the
express image of his subsistence;' or, as we now render it 'person,' doth
provide for the consubstantiality of the Son; against Arius; and for the
distinction of the subsistences, against Sabellius. Thus for a long time it was
carried in the terms of substance and subsistence. But how came
the word person in use? I answer - The Latin Church expressed it by
'person,' upon these grounds: partly because they would have a word in their
own language that might serve for common and vulgar use, and the right
apprehension of this mystery; partly because hupostasis and
subsistence were ambiguous, and of a doubtful signification, being both
often in common acceptation put for the same thing; and the Latin fathers,
timidius usi sunt eo vocabulo, were shy in using that word; partly
because this word is very commodious, as being proper to particular, distinct,
rational substances. Whatever is a person must be a substance, not an attribute
or accident, as white or black; a particular substance, not a general essence
or nature. It must be living; we do not call a book or a board a person. It
must be rational; we do not call a tree or a beast a person, though they have
life; but only man. And it must not be a part of a man, as the soul; it must
not be that which is sustained in another, but subsisteth of itself. So the
humanity of Christ is not a person, because it hath no subsistence in itself,
but is sustained by the godhead. Now a person in the godhead is an
incommunicable subsistence in the divine essence, or the divine essence or
nature distinguished by its incommunicable property; or more plainly, a diverse
and distinct subsistence in the godhead. And the word is not to be taken in the
extreme rigour, to infer any separation or division in the godhead. Three
persons among men make three separate essences, three men; but not here three
Gods; for in the godhead the persons are not separate and divided, but only
distinguished by their relative properties; they are co-eternal, infinite, and
may be in one another, the Father in the Son, the Son in the Father, both in
the Spirit. We are material, and though we communicate in the same nature, yet
we live separate. In short, the word person is used to show that they are not
only three acts, offices, attributes, properties, qualities, operations, but
distinct subsistences, distinguished from one another by their unchangeable
order of first, second, and third - Father, Word, and Spirit - and their
incommunicable properties of paternity, filiation, and procession, or
unbegotten, begotten, and proceeding, and by their special and personal manner
of operation, creating, redeeming, sanctifying. Creation is by the Father,
redemption by the Son, sanctification by the Spirit. More may be said, but when
shall we make an end?
Let us apply it.
Use. Let us bless God that we have such a complete object for our
faith.
We can want nothing that have Father, Son, and Spirit, the co-operation of all
the persons for our salvation; that we can consider the Father in heaven, the
Son on the cross, and feel the Spirit in our hearts; yea, that the whole
Godhead should take up its abode, and come and converse with us: 2 Cor. xiii.
14, 'The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of
the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen.' Oh! what a treble privilege is this!
Grace, love, and communion; election, merit, and actual grace. This is a
mystery, felt as well as believed. We have a God to love us, a Christ to redeem
us, and a Spirit to apply all to the soul: 1 Peter ii. 3, 'If so be ye have
tasted that the Lord is gracious.' Our spiritual estate standeth upon a sure
bottom; the beginning is from God the Father, the dispensation from the Son,
and the application from the Holy Ghost. The Father's electing love is engaged
by the merit of Christ, and conveyed by the power of the Holy Ghost. There was
a purpose by the Father, the accomplishment was by the Son, and exhibition is
by the Spirit; it is free in the Father, sure in the Son, ours in the Spirit;
the Father purposeth, the Son ratifieth, the Spirit giveth us the enjoyment of
all. Oh! let us adore the mysterious Trinity; we are not thankful enough for
this glorious discovery.
Doct. 4. That God, who is one in three persons, is the only true God,
se ton aleithinon theon, 'Thee the only true God; 1 Thes. i. 9, 'Ye
turned to God from idols, to serve the living and true God.' All others are but
idols and false gods; they are not able to avenge the contempt of them that
wrong them, or to save those that trust in them: Gal. iv. 8, 'Then when ye knew
not God, ye did service to them that by nature were no gods.' An idol is
nothing but what it is in the valuation and esteem of men. Oh! then, let us not
look upon religion as a mere fancy. God is, whether we acknowledge him or no.
Usually, in great turns and changes, many turn atheists. Some turn short from
gross idolatry to rest in superstition; others turn over, and lay aside
religion itself, as if all were fancy and figment. Oh! consider, a God there
is; who else made the world? And then, 'who is a god like unto the Lord our
God? Go, search abroad among the nations. It is some advantage sometimes to
consider what a God we serve, above the gods of the Gentiles. God alloweth you
the search for settlement and satisfaction: Jer. vi. 16, 'Thus saith the Lord,
Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good
way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls.' If you will make
a serious comparison, see where you can anchor safer than in Christianity.
Where can you have more comfortable representations of God than in the
christian religion? And where can you have a purer representation of the
christian religion than in the churches of the Protestants? All else is as
unstable as water. Here God is represented as holy, yet gracious; and here you
may meet with a strict rule of duty, and yet best for your choice. Let it
confirm you in your choice; and bless God for the advantages of your birth and
education. If you had been born among heathens, you had been liable to their
darkness: 'The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart,' Ps xix.
10.
Secondly, Now we come to speak to the second head of christian
doctrine, what is to be known concerning Jesus Christ? I shall not wander and
digress from the circumstances of the text.
Here are three things offered to our consideration :- (1.) That he is sent;
(2.) That he is Jesus, or a saviour; (3.) That he is Christ, or an anointed
saviour.
First, That he is sent. I in part opened this in the explication; now
I shall open it more fully. It implieth -
Use. It showeth three things: -
Secondly, The next thing in the text is that he is Jesus: Mat.i.21,
'Thou shalt call his name Jesus, for he shall save his people from their sins.'
It is there interpreted to signify a saviour; an angel himself is the
expositor. So here Christ is sent to be a saviour; that is a principal object
of faith, to look upon Christ as the Saviour of the world. A saviour properly
is one that delivereth from evil. Now Christ doth only deliver us from evil,
from sin, the wrath of God, the accusations of the law, and eternal death, but
positively he giveth us grace and righteousness and eternal life. He is a
saviour to defend us, and a saviour to bless us: Ps. lxxxiv. 11, 'The Lord God
is a sun and a shield; he will give grace and glory, and no good thing will he
withhold from them that walk uprightly.' The mercies of the covenant are
privative and positive. Many enter into a league that they will not hurt one
another; but God is in covenant with us to bless us. If Christ had only
procured some place for us, unacquainted with pain or pleasure, it had been
much; but we have not only a ransom, but an inheritance; instead of horrors and
howlings, everlasting joys. Again, many are called saviours either because of
their subordinate subserviency to Christ, instruments in inward and outward
salvation; but these saviours needed a saviour. Christ is the true Jesus, who
saveth as an author of grace, not as an instrument and means of conveyance. Now
Christ is a saviour partly by merit, partly by efficacy and power; he doth
something for us and something in us: for us, he prevaileth by the merit of his
death; in us, by the efficacy of his Spirit; all his work is not done on the
cross. Both are necessary, partly in regard of the difference of the enemies;
God and the law are in a distinct rank from sin and death, Satan and the world.
God was an enemy; ho cannot be overcome, but must be reconciled; the law an
enemy that could not be disannulled, but must be satisfied. Sin, the world, and
Satan assault us out of malice, they make themselves our enemies; the law and
God are made enemies out of our rebellion; therefore Christ must satisfy as
well as overcome. To reconcile God, he shed his blood on the cross. Justice
must have a sacrifice and the law satisfaction; the curses of the law are not
to fall to the ground; somebody must be made a curse to keep up the authority
of the law; the law was an innocent enemy, and therefore not to be relaxed or
repealed. Partly in regard of the different fight of the other enemies, that
are enemies out of malice. Satan is not only a tempter but an accuser. As a
tempter, so Christ was to overcome him by his power; as an accuser, by his
merit. When Satan condemneth, Christ is to intercede and represent his own
merit; the plaster must be as broad as the sore; so far as Satan is an enemy,
so far must Christ be a aaviour and redeemer, by his power against the
temptations, by his merit against the accusations of Satan. As the devil is an
accuser, Christ is an advocate. Partly because Satan hath a double power over a
sinner - legal and usurped. Legal, as God's executioner, by the ordination of
God's justice: Heb. ii. 14, 'That through death he might destroy him that had
the power of death, that is, the devil.' Christ is to die to put Satan out of
office usurped, as the god of this world. God made him an executioner, we a
prince: John xii. 31, 'Now shall the prince of this world be cast out.' Christ
rescueth prisoners: Isa. xlix. 9, 'That thou mayest say to the prisoners, Go
forth.' He will rescue and recover the elect when by their own default they put
themselves in Satan's hands. Partly for our comfort. By his own obedience and
merit Christ giveth us a right and title, but by his efficacy and power he
giveth us possession. He is to buy our peace, grace, comfort, and then to see
that we are possessed of it.
Well, then, own him as Jesus, as the only Saviour. Acts iv. 17, the apostles
were charged 'not to preach any more in the name of Jesus.' Rest upon his
merit, and wait for his power.
Thirdly, The next thing is that he is Christ, an anointed saviour.
This fitly followeth the former. Jesus signifies his divinity, and
Christ his humanity. We are not only to know his person, but his office:
John i. 41, 'We have found the Messias, which is, being interpreted, the
Christ, or anointed. This is often expressed in scripture: Ps. xlv. 8, 'He is
anointed with the oil of gladness above his fellows;' Isa. lxi. 1, 'The Spirit
of the Lord is upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good
tidings unto the meek.' So Acts iv. 27, 'Against thy holy child Jesus, whom
thou hast anointed, both Herod, and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles, and the
people of Israel were gathered together.' So Acts x. 38, 'How God anointed
Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power.' Out of all which places
we see that Christ's anointing is not to be understood properly, but by a
trope; the sign is put for the thing signified.
Use 1. Let us receive Christ as an anointed saviour. Christ is set
over us by authority; let us come to him as a prophet, denying our own reason
and wisdom; as a priest, seeking all our acceptance with God through his merit.
Let us plead, Lord, thou hast anointed Christ to offer himself a sacrifice for
me. As a king, let us give up ourselves to the authority and discipline of his
Spirit. God's anointing is the true reason and cause why we should come to
Christ.
Use 2. Comfort; we are anointed too. Christ's ointment is shared
amongst his fellows; he was anointed more than we, but we have our part: Ps.
cxxxiii. 2, 'Like the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down upon the
beard, even Aaron's beard, that went down to the skirts of his garment;' 1 John
ii. 27, 'The anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you.' We are
made prophets, priests, and kings; prophets meet to declare his praises,
priests fit for holy ministering, kings to reign over our corruptions here, and
with Christ for ever in glory, as the queen is crowned with the king.
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