JESUS CHRIST, as God-man, in this chapter, prayeth to God. His
prayer is first for himself, and then for his members. In all things he to have
the pre-eminence, as being infinitely of more worth and desert than all. His
prayer for himself is to be glorified, which he enforceth and explaineth. He
enforceth it by sundry reasons; the last that he pleaded was, that he had done
his work, and therefore, according to the covenant and agreement that was
between them, he sueth out his wages. In the suit, he explaineth how he would
be glorified: 'I have glorified thee on earth, and now, O Father, glorify thou
me with thyself, with the glory which I had with thee before the world
was.'
For the opening of this request, I shall propound several questions :_
1. According to what nature this is spoken?
2. What is this glory?
3. Why he seeketh of the Father, the first person? Could he not glorify
himself?
4. Why is he so earnest for his own glory?
Quest. 1. According to what nature is this spoken, the divine or
human?
The reason of the doubt is, because to the divine nature nothing could be
given, and the human nature cannot be said to have this glory which Christ had
before the world was, for then it would remain no longer human.
I answer - The request is made in the person of the mediator. God-man is
distinctly and separately to be applied to neither nature, but to the whole
person. The person of Christ was hitherto beclouded during the time of his
humiliation; now he desireth to he glorified, that is, that the divine majesty
may shine forth in the person of the mediator; and that laying aside the form
of a servant, he might return to the form of God, and that he might appear in
his whole person, the human nature not excluded, as he was before the
foundation of the world.
Quest. 2. The next question is, What is this glorifying?
I answer - There is a twofold glorifying - (l.) Per gloriae
manifestationem; (2.) Per gloriae collationem; by way of
manifestation, and by way of gift and collation. Both are intended; the
manifestation concerneth both natures, and the collation or gift only the human
nature. It must be understood according to the properties of each nature.
Quae in tempore Christo dantur, secundum humanam naturam dantur.
1. For the divine nature, Christ prayeth that it may be glorified by the
clearer manifestation of his godhead, for that cannot receive any intrinsecal
improvement or glory. It is antarkhv kai ametayhtov
; but so far as it was humbled, so far it was glorified. Now Christ
humbled himself, not by putting off his divine glory, but by suffering it to be
overshadowed; as the light of a candle in a dark lanthorn, there is a light in
it, but you cannot see it till the cover be taken away. Now Christ desireth
that the cover and veil may be taken away. His glory was not lessened, but
beclouded ; the divine essence that was hidden under the weakness of the flesh
was now to be manifested and made known to all men. But you will say, it is
para patri, not para
anyropoiv, he desireth the glory he had with him might be restored,
not the glory with men.
I answer -
[1.] The glory which he had with him may be more clearly manifested to the
world; he had it with the Father, yet beggeth it of the Father.
[2.] I answer again - There is somewhat more than manifestation in the world,
for he saith, para seautw, 'with thyself'.
The Father was glorified by the Son, epi thv
ghv, 'upon the earth;' but now 'glorify thou me,'
para seautw, 'with thyself.' So John xiii.
32, 'If God be glorified in him, God shall also glorify him in himself,' or
with himself. So that he beggeth a full use and exercise of the divine power,
from which he had abstained in the time of his humiliation and abasement. Now
that time being finished, he prayeth that it may be restored, that he may be
exalted in the full manifestation and exercise of his divine power; that his
whole person might be exalted again at the right hand of majesty.
2. For his human nature. The flesh was not yet glorified, and taken up to God's
right hand, that is, exalted to the fruition of eternal glory, as afterwards it
was above all creatures in heaven and earth. The human nature was to have as
much glory as it is capable of, by being united to the divine person,
immortality, power, clarity, knowledge, grace; but not to have the properties
of the divine nature really transfused, for then it would no longer be finite,
nor remain a creature. It was to be raised to the full fruition of the glory of
the divine nature, and freed from those infirmities to which, by the exigence
of Christ's office upon earth, it was subjected. Thus what this glorifying is;
but I shall speak more fully to it by and by.
Quest. 3. Why he seeketh it of the Father?
Could he not glorify himself, and exalt his own person and human nature?
I answer - He could, but would not.
1. The Father is the fountain of the divinity; he is first in order, and so all
such actions are ascribed to him. However, to show the unity of essence, Christ
is said to do it as well as the Father: John v. 19, 'What things soever the
Father doth, these doth the Son likewise.' The Father is said to 'sanctify the
Son,' John x. 36, and the Son is said to 'sanctify himself.' The Father raiseth
the Son from the dead. Eph. i. 10; and Christ saith, John ii. 19, 'Destroy this
temple, and in three days I will raise it up again.' The Father placeth the Son
at his right hand, Eph. i. 20; and the Son is said to 'sit down at the right
hand of the Father.' However, because Christ came into the world to glorify the
Father, and to show him to be the original and fountain of the divinity,
therefore he saith, 'Father, glorify thou me with thyself.'
2. Because the Father is to be looked upon as judge and chief in the work of
redemption. Man is the debtor, Christ the surety, and the Father the judge,
before whose tribunal satisfaction is to be made. Therefore God the Father,
after the price and ransom was paid, was to give Christ power and leave to rise
from the dead, to ascend into heaven, and to govern and judge the world. And
yet he raised himself by his own power. There is potestas and
potentia, dunamiv, and
exousia, authority, leave, and power. Christ
had power in himself, but he had leave from the Father: John x. 18, 'I have
power to lay it down, and I have power to take it up again.' Potentiam
resurgendi Christus habet a seipso, sed potestatem a patre. In this whole
business, Christ is to be considered as the surety, that took our whole
business upon himself, and rendered himself liable to the judgment of God so
long, till the Father should declare himself to be satisfied, and so dismiss
Christ from punishment. After full satisfaction, he was to raise him from the
power of death, and to glorify him. As the Father delivered him for us, so the
Father dismissed him, raised him again; he was not to break prison, but
honourably to be brought out and rewarded by the judge.
Quest. 4. Why is he so earnest for his own glory?
I answer - All Christ's mediatory acts were for our sake, and so are his
prayers.
1. To comfort his disciples against his sufferings; they were dejected, and
therefore Christ in their hearing prayeth for divine glory: John xvii. 13, 'And
these things I speak in the world, that they might have my joy fulfilled in
themselves.' There is not a more excellent way of gaining upon others than to
commend them to God in prayer for that which they desire.
2. To give the world an instruction, that suffering for God is the highway to
glory: 2 Cor. iv. 17, 'Our light affliction, that is but for a moment, worketh
for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory,' as a necessary
antecedent. We may suffer more for men than they are able to recompense, but
there is nothing lost for God: 2 Peter i. 11, 'An entrance shall be ministered
unto you abundantly into the kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.' The
whole scriptures witness the sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should
follow; according to the measure of afflictions, there shall be a suitable
weight of glory. There are notable passages in the story of Christ, to show the
coupling of the cross and glory. The same disciples, Peter, James, and John,
were the witnesses of his agonies, Mat. xxvi. 37, and of his transfiguration,
Mat. xvii. 1. So where Christ began his passion there he began his ascension:
Luke xxii. 39, 'He went out to the Mount of Olives, and his disciples followed
him;' and Acts i. 12, he ascended from Mount Olivet.
3. For the advantage of his members. Christ knew it could not go well with the
church unless it went well with himself; it was for our profit. The holy
ointment was first poured on the head of the high priest, then on his members,
Ps. cxxxiii.3. His glory and grace is an argument of ours. He is endowed with
the Spirit without measure, that we might have an unction from the Holy One. We
are glorified with him, and are said to ascend with him: Eph. ii. 6, 'He hath
raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ
Jesus.' Christ's glorification is a pledge of ours; he is gone thither as our
forerunner, to seize on heaven in our right: Heb. vi. 20, 'Whither our
forerunner is for us entered;' and to 'prepare a place for us,' John xiv. 2. In
heaven he is at God's right hand, and can procure it for us, and administereth
and governeth the world for our good. He is in a greater capacity to do us
good. He is our intercessor and the world's governor; all things necessary to
salvation can better be despatched by his intercession and power.
These things premised, the words will be easily opened.
'Father, glorify thou me with thine own self;' that is, suffer me to return to
the glory which I had in common with thee in the divine nature, by the
resurrection of my body, ascension, and sitting down at thy right hand.
Para seautw, is opposed to
edoxasa se epi thv ghv, it is with thy self:
John xiii. 31, 32, 'Now is the Son of man glorified, and God is glorified in
him. If God be glorified in him, God shall also glorify him in himself, and
shall straightway glorify him.' God was glorified by Christ as a servant, with
an extrinsic glory in the view of the world. And now Christ prays to be
glorified in or with the Father himself, with his own proper essential glory,
the Godhead being restored to its full use and exercise, and the humanity being
raised to the full fruition of the comfort of it.
'Which I had with thee before the world was.' - Grotius and others say, Non reali possessione, sed divina praedestinatione, that is, by thy decree, in thy purpose and predestination. But that is not all, because he speaketh here of that infinite and essential glory, which is one and the same in all the persons, and so Christ had it as God blessed for ever ; and Christ having abstained from the use and exercise of it in a way proper to itself, now craveth a restitution.
The points are :-
Doct. 1. That Christ is God, true God, and hath an eternal co-equal
glory with the Father before the world was. Before the world there was nothing
but the eternal infinite essence, that was common to the Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost. The Socinians seem to grant that he is of God, but not eternal God by
nature; but here is a clear proof, 'Which I had with thee before the world
was.'
Doct. 2. We may plead to God his own promises in deep and weighty cases:
'Put me in remembrance,' saith God, Isa. xliii. 26; as when death approacheth,
or difficulties come upon us. Christ himself takes this course.
Doct. 3. The ground of all sound hope is what was done before all
worlds. Christ had glory actually, and we have a grant of it: 2 Tim. i. 9,
'According to his own purpose and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus,
before the world began.' There was a grant of heaven and grace, and Christ
received it for us. So Titus i. 2, 'In hope of eternal life, which God, that
cannot lie, hath promised before the world began.' There was a solemn promise,
which Christ received on our behalf. The frame of grace was ancient; God sealed
up a large charter, and indented with Christ before ever there were any men in
the world. Let us not look for our happiness in this world; our comforts do not
depend upon the standing of it; when the world is no more, you may be happy.
Doct. 4. The chief point which I shall handle is, that Christ, in the
economy or dispensation of grace, was reduced to such an exigence that he
needeth to pray to be glorified: 'Father, glorify thou me with thyself, with
the glory which I had with thee before the world was.' It is a matter of
weighty consideration that Christ should pray his Father to bestow on him the
glory which he wanted.
But how could Christ want glory, who was God-man in one person?
To clear this, I shall a little state both his humiliation and his exaltation.
First, How far he humbled himself and wanted glory; what was, indeed,
the utmost of his humiliation.
Here I shall show -
(I.) What glory he retained in the midst of it;
(2.) What he wanted. Certainly though in his outward appearance he had no form
and comeliness in him, yet inwardly he was the fairest of men; Isa. liii. 2,
compared with Ps. xlv. 2.
1. What glory he was possessed of at the present. Christ had a double glory - the glory of his person, and the glory of his office.
2. What he wanted, that he should pray to be glorified. The glory of his person and office was yet but imperfect.
Secondly, His exaltation.
What Christ prayed for might be known by the event. His exaltation begun at his
resurrection, and received its accomplishment by his sitting at God's right
hand. His exaltation answered his humiliation, his death was answered by his
resurrection, his going into the grave by his ascending into heaven, his lying
in the grave by his sitting at God's right hand, which is a privilege proper to
Christ glorified. In the other we share with him, we rise, we ascend, but we do
not sit at God's right hand. By his grave, though his body was freed from
corruption, his human nature was discovered, but his body had not those
glorious qualities as afterwards at his ascension.
Therefore, leaving his resurrection, let us speak of his ascension, and sitting on the right hand of God.
1. His ascension. Three things happened to Christ at his ascension.
2. The next thing we are to speak of in the glorification of Christ is his sitting at God's right hand: Ps. cx. 1, 'The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, till I make thine enemies thy foot stool.' It is Christ's welcome as soon as he came to heaven. The angels guarded and attended him, and they brought him near the ancient of days: Dan. vii. 13, 'I saw in the night visions, and behold, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the ancient of days, and they brought him near before him.' They, that is, the angels did it, they are his ministers: Heb. i. 6, 7, 'When he bringeth in the first- begotten into the world, he saith, And let all the angels of God worship him. And of the angels he saith, Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a flame of fire.' He cometh royally attended. Then the Father welcometh him with, 'Ask of me, and I will give thee the heathen for thy inheritance, and the utmost parts of the earth for thy possession,' Ps. ii. 8. As mediator, Christ was to have a grant of the kingdom by pleading his right, and then God seateth him on the throne, 'Sit thou on my right hand,' Ps. cx. 1. God doth, as it were, take his Son by the hand, and seat him on the throne. This sitting on God's right hand implieth -
The uses of the whole.
Use 1. In that Christ prayeth for glory, it presseth us -
1. To take heed of dishonouring Christ, now he prayeth to be glorified. It
was a great sin that the Jews crucified the Lord of glory; but they have some
excuse, in that they knew not what they did: 1 Cor. ii. 8, 'Whom none of the
princes of this world knew; for had they known it, they would not have
crucified the Lord of glory.' His glory was not easily seen in his exinanition
and abasement. But now we know more, and we cross his prayers, if we 'crucify
him again afresh, and put him to open shame,' Heb. vi. 6. We cannot indeed
crucify Christ really, but we may draw the guilt of his enemies that crucified
him upon us. By your scandalous lives, you do in effect, as to your intentions,
deprive him of his glory, and approve the act of the Jews against him; you live
as if no such thing had been done to Christ as his translation into heaven.
2. Since Christ so earnestly sued for his glorification, it is our duty, by all
means, to procure and further his glory. We cannot do anything as his Father
doth; we cannot bestow anything upon him but praise, and magnify him by a
steadfast faith, and by a holy life. Mortified Christians are the glory of
Christ.
3. It is comfort against the reproaches and oppositions of men as to the
kingdom of Christ. Though the Jews scorn it, the Turks blaspheme it, heretics
undermine it, yet Christ's prayers will do more than all their endeavours;
still he will appear God manifest in the flesh. Christ's glory cannot be
hindered, he hath prayed for it.
Use 2. In that Christ was glorified (for he cannot be denied what ever he demands), it is useful for our comfort, for our instruction.
1. For our comfort.
2. For our instruction. It teacheth us to seek heavenly things: Col. iii. 1, 'If ye then be risen with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God;' Phil. iii 20, 'Our conversation is in heaven, from whence also we look for the Saviour, our Lord Jesus Christ.' We should imitate Christ; whatever he did corporally, we must do spiritually. There is our treasure; if you are the children of God, he is your delight. There is our head; the inferior parts never do well when they are severed from the head. All that we expect cometh from thence, and therefore a natural desire of happiness carrieth the saints thither.