CHAPTER 6.
REDEMPTION FOR MAN LOST TO BE SOUGHT IN CHRIST.
The parts of this chapter are, I. The excellence of the
doctrine of Christ the Redeemer--a doctrine always entertained by the Church,
sec. 1. II. Christ, the Mediator in both dispensations, was offered to the
faith of the pious Israelites and people of old, as is plain from the
institution of sacrifice, the calling of Abraham's family, and the elevation of
David and his posterity, sec. 2. III. Hence the consolation, strength, hope,
and confidence of the godly under the Law, Christ being offered to them in
various ways by their heavenly Father.
Sections.
1. The knowledge of God the Creator of no avail without faith in Christ
the Redeemer. First reason. Second reason strengthened by the testimony of an
Apostle. Conclusion. This doctrine entertained by the children of God in all
ages from the beginning of the world. Error of throwing open heaven to the
heathen, who know nothing of Christ. The pretexts for this refuted by passages
of Scripture.
2. God never was propitious to the ancient Israelites without Christ the
Mediator. First reason founded on the institution of sacrifice. Second reason
founded on the calling of Abraham. Third reason founded on the elevation of
David's family to regal dignity, and confirmed by striking passages of
Scripture.
3. Christ the solace ever promised to the afflicted; the banner of faith and
hope always erected. This confirmed by various passages of Scripture.
4. The Jews taught to have respect to Christ. This teaching sanctioned by our
Saviour himself. The common saying, that God is the object of faith, requires
to be explained and modified. Conclusion of this discussion concerning Christ.
No saving knowledge of God in the heathen.
1. THE whole human race having been undone in the person of
Adam, the excellence and dignity of our origin, as already described, is so far
from availing us, that it rather turns to our greater disgrace, until God, who
does not acknowledge man when defiled and corrupted by sin as his own work,
appear as a Redeemer in the person of his only begotten Son. Since our fall
from life unto death, all that knowledge of God the Creator, of which we have
discoursed, would be useless, were it not followed up by faith, holding forth
God to us as a Father in Christ. The natural course undoubtedly was, that the
fabric of the world should be a school in which we might learn piety, and from
it pass to eternal life and perfect felicity. But after looking at the
perfection beheld wherever we turn our eye, above and below, we are met by the
divine malediction, which, while it involves innocent creatures in our fault,
of necessity fills our own souls with despair. For although God is still
pleased in many ways to manifest his paternal favour towards us, we cannot,
from a mere survey of the world, infer that he is a Father. Conscience urging
us within, and showing that sin is a just ground for our being forsaken, will
not allow us to think that God accounts or treats us as sons. In addition to
this are our sloth and ingratitude. Our minds are so blinded that they cannot
perceive the truth, and all our senses are so corrupt that we wickedly rob God
of his glory. Wherefore, we must conclude with Paul, "After that in the wisdom
of God the world by wisdom knew not God, it pleased God by the foolishness of
preaching to save them that believe," (1 Cor. 1:21). By the "wisdom of God," he
designates this magnificent theatre of heaven and earth replenished with
numberless wonders, the wise contemplation of which should have enabled us to
know God. But this we do with little profit; and, therefore, he invites us to
faith in Christ,--faith which, by a semblance of foolishness, disgusts the
unbeliever. Therefore, although the preaching of the cross is not in accordance
with human wisdom, we must, however, humbly embrace it if we would return to
God our Maker, from whom we are estranged, that he may again become our Father.
It is certain that after the fall of our first parent, no knowledge of God
without a Mediator was effectual to salvation. Christ speaks not of his own age
merely, but embraces all ages, when he says "This is life eternal that they
might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent,"
(John 17:3). The more shameful therefore is the presumption of those who throw
heaven open to the unbelieving and profane, in the absence of that grace which
Scripture uniformly describes as the only door by which we enter into life.
Should any confine our Saviour's words to the period subsequent to the
promulgation of the Gospel, the refutation is at hand; since on a ground common
to all ages and nations, it is declared, that those who are estranged from God,
and as such, are under the curse, the children of wrath, cannot be pleasing to
God until they are reconciled. To this we may add the answer which our Saviour
gave to the Samaritan woman "Ye worship ye know not what; we know what we
worship: for salvation is of the Jews," (John 4:22). By these words, he both
charges every Gentile religion with falsehood, and assigns the reason--viz.
that under the Law the Redeemer was promised to the chosen people only, and
that, consequently, no worship was ever pleasing to God in which respect was
not had to Christ. Hence also Paul affirms, that all the Gentiles were "without
God," and deprived of the hope of life. Now, since John teaches that there was
life in Christ from the beginning, and that the whole world had lost it (John
1:4), it is necessary to return to that fountain; And, accordingly, Christ
declares that inasmuch as he is a propitiator, he is life. And, indeed, the
inheritance of heaven belongs to none but the sons of God (John 15:6). Now, it
were most incongruous to give the place and rank of sons to any who have not
been engrafted into the body of the only begotten Son. And John distinctly
testifies that those become the sons of God who believe in his name. But as it
is not my intention at present formally to discuss the subject of faith in
Christ, it is enough to have thus touched on it in passing.
2. Hence it is that God never showed himself
propitious to his ancient people, nor gave them any hope of grace without a
Mediator. I say nothing of the sacrifices of the Law, by which believers were
plainly and openly taught that salvation was not to be found anywhere but in
the expiation which Christ alone completed. All I maintain is that the
prosperous and happy state of the Church was always founded in the person of
Christ. For although God embraced the whole posterity of Abraham in his
covenant, yet Paul properly argues (Gal. 3:16), that Christ was truly the seed
in which all the nations of the earth were to be blessed, since we know that
all who were born of Abraham, according to the flesh, were not accounted the
seed. To omit Ishmael and others, how came it that of the two sons of Isaac,
the twin brothers, Esau and Jacob, while yet in the womb, the one was chosen
and the other rejected? Nay, how came it that the first-born was rejected, and
the younger alone admitted? Moreover, how happens it that the majority are
rejected? It is plain, therefore, that the seed of Abraham is considered
chiefly in one head, and that the promised salvation is not attained without
coming to Christ, whose office it is to gather together those which were
scattered abroad. Thus the primary adoption of the chosen people depended on
the grace of the Mediator. Although it is not expressed in very distinct terms
in Moses, it, however, appears to have been commonly known to all the godly.
For before a king was appointed over the Israelites, Hannah, the mother of
Samuel, describing the happiness of the righteous, speaks thus in her song, "He
shall give strength unto his king, and exalt the horn of his anointed;" meaning
by these words, that God would bless his Church. To this corresponds the
prediction, which is afterwards added, "I will raise me up a faithful priest,
and he shall walk before mine anointed for ever," (1 Sam. 2:10, 35). And there
can be no doubt that our heavenly Father intended that a living image of Christ
should be seen in David and his posterity. Accordingly, exhorting the righteous
to fear Him, he bids them "Kiss the Son," (Psalm 2:12). Corresponding to this
is the passage in the Gospel, "He that honoureth not the Son, honoureth not the
Father," (John 5:23). Therefore, though the kingdom was broken up by the revolt
of the ten tribes, yet the covenant which God had made in David and his
successors behaved to stand, as is also declared by his Prophets, "Howbeit I
will not take the whole kingdom out of his hand: but I will make him prince all
the days of his life for David my servant's sake," (1 Kings 11:34). The same
thing is repeated a second and third time. It is also expressly said, "I will
for this afflict the seed of David, but not for ever," (1 Kings 11:39). Some
time afterwards it was said, "Nevertheless, for David's sake did the Lord his
God give him a lamp in Jerusalem, to set up his son after him, and to establish
Jerusalem," (1 Kings 15:4). And when matters were bordering on destruction, it
was again said, "Yet the Lord would not destroy Judah for David his servant's
sake, as he had promised to give him alway a light, and to his children," (2
Kings 8:19).
The sum of the whole comes to this--David, all
others being excluded, was chosen to be the person in whom the good pleasure of
the Lord should dwell; as it is said elsewhere, "He forsook the tabernacle of
Shiloh;" "Moreover, he refused the tabernacle of Joseph, and chose not the
tribe of Ephraim;" "But chose the tribe of Judah, the mount Zion which he
loved;" "He chose David also his servant, and took him from the sheep folds:
from following the ewes great with young he brought him to feed Jacob his
people, and Israel his inheritance," (Ps. 78:60, 67, 70, 71). In fine, God, in
thus preserving his Church, intended that its security and salvation should
depend on Christ as its head. Accordingly, David exclaims, "The Lord is their
strength, and he is the saving strength of his anointed;" and then prays "Save
thy people, and bless thine inheritance;" intimating, that the safety of the
Church was indissolubly connected with the government of Christ. In the same
sense he elsewhere says, "Save, Lord: let the king hear us when we call," (Ps.
20:9). These words plainly teach that believers, in applying for the help of
God, had their sole confidence in this--that they were under the unseen
government of the King. This may be inferred from another psalm, "Save now, I
beseech thee O Lord: Blessed be he that cometh in the name of the Lord," (Ps.
118:25, 26). Here it is obvious that believers are invited to Christ, in the
assurance that they will be safe when entirely in his hand. To the same effect
is another prayer, in which the whole Church implores the divine mercy "Let thy
hand be upon the Man of thy right hand, upon the Son of man, whom thou madest
strong (or best fitted) for thyself," (Ps. 80:17). For though the author of the
psalm laments the dispersion of the whole nations he prays for its revival in
him who is sole Head. After the people were led away into captivity, the land
laid waste, and matters to appearance desperate, Jeremiah, lamenting the
calamity of the Church, especially complains, that by the destruction of the
kingdom the hope of believers was cut off; "The breath of our nostrils, the
anointed of the Lord, was taken in their pits, of whom we said, Under his
shadow we shall live among the heathen," (Lam. 4:20). From all this it is
abundantly plain, that as the Lord cannot be propitious to the human race
without a Mediator, Christ was always held forth to the holy Fathers under the
Law as the object of their faith.
3. Moreover when comfort is promised in
affliction, especially when the deliverance of the Church is described, the
banner of faith and hope in Christ is unfurled. "Thou wentest forth for the
salvation of thy people, even for salvation with thine anointed," says Habakkuk
(3:13). And whenever mention is made in the Prophets of the renovation of the
Church, the people are directed to the promise made to David, that his kingdom
would be for ever. And there is nothing strange in this, since otherwise there
would have been no stability in the covenant. To this purpose is the remarkable
prophecy in Isaiah 7:14. After seeing that the unbelieving king Ahab repudiated
what he had testified regarding the deliverance of Jerusalem from siege and its
immediate safety, he passes as it were abruptly to the Messiah, "Behold, a
virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Emmanuel;"
intimating indirectly, that though the king and his people wickedly rejected
the promise offered to them, as if they were bent on causing the faith of God
to fail, the covenant would not be defeated--the Redeemer would come in his own
time. In fine, all the prophets, to show that God was placable, were always
careful to bring forward that kingdom of David, on which redemption and eternal
salvation depended. Thus in Isaiah it is said, "I will make an everlasting
covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David. Behold, I have given him for
a witness to the people," (Isa. 55:3, 4); intimating, that believers, in
calamitous circumstances, could have no hope, had they not this testimony that
God would be ready to hear them. In the same way, to revive their drooping
spirits, Jeremiah says, "Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will
raise unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and prosper, and
shall execute judgment and justice in the earth. In his days Judah shall be
saved, and Israel shall dwell safely," (Jer. 23:5, 6). In Ezekiel also it is
said, "I will set up one Shepherd over them, and he shall feed them, even my
servant David; he shall feed them, and he shall be their shepherd. And I the
Lord will be their God, and my servant David a prince among them: I the Lord
have spoken it. And I will make with them a covenant of peace," (Ezek. 34:23,
24, 25). And again, after discoursing of this wondrous renovation, he says,
"David my servant shall be king over them: and they all shall have one
shepherd." "Moreover, I will make a covenant of peace with them; it shall be an
everlasting covenant with them," (Ezek. 37:24-26). I select a few passages out
of many, because I merely wish to impress my readers with the fact, that the
hope of believers was ever treasured up in Christ alone. All the other prophets
concur in this. Thus Hosea, "Then shall the children of Judah and the children
of Israel be gathered together, and appoint themselves one head," (Hosea 1:11).
This he afterwards explains in clearer terms, "Afterward shall the children of
Israel return, and seek the Lord their God, and David their king," (Hosea 3:5).
Micas, also speaking of the return of the people, says expressly, "Their king
shall pass before them, and the Lord on the head of them," (Micah 2:13). So
Amos, in predicting the renovation of the people, says "In that day will I
raise up the tabernacle of David that is fallen, and close up the breaches
thereof; and I will raise up the ruins, and I will build it as in the days of
old," (Amos 9:11); in other words, the only banner of salvation was, the
exaltation of the family of David to regal splendour, as fulfilled in Christ.
Hence, too, Zechariah, as nearer in time to the manifestation of Christ, speaks
more plainly, "Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion; shout, O daughter of
Jerusalem: behold, thy King cometh unto thee: he is just, and having
salvation," (Zech. 9:9). This corresponds to the passage already quoted from
the Psalms, "The Lord is their strength, and he is the saving health of their
anointed." Here salvation is extended from the head to the whole body.
4. By familiarising the Jews with these
prophecies, God intended to teach them, that in seeking for deliverance, they
should turn their eyes directly towards Christ. And though they had sadly
degenerated, they never entirely lost the knowledge of this general principle,
that God, by the hand of Christ, would be the deliverer of the Church, as he
had promised to David; and that in this way only the free covenant by which God
had adopted his chosen people would be fulfilled. Hence it was, that on our
Saviour's entry into Jerusalem, shortly before his death, the children shouted,
"Hosannah to the son of David," (Mt. 21:9). For there seems to have been a hymn
known to all, and in general use, in which they sung that the only remaining
pledge which they had of the divine mercy was the promised advent of a
Redeemer. For this reason, Christ tells his disciples to believe in him, in
order that they might have a distinct and complete belief in God, "Ye believe
in God, believe also in me," (John 14:1). For although, properly speaking,
faith rises from Christ to the Father, he intimates, that even when it leans on
God, it gradually vanishes away, unless he himself interpose to give it solid
strength. The majesty of God is too high to be scaled up to by mortals, who
creep like worms on the earth. Therefore, the common saying that God is the
object of faith (Lactantius, lib. 4 c. 16), requires to be received with some
modification. When Christ is called the image of the invisible God (Col. 1:15),
the expression is not used without cause, but is designed to remind us that we
can have no knowledge of our salvation, until we behold God in Christ. For
although the Jewish scribes had by their false glosses darkened what the
Prophets had taught concerning the Redeemer, yet Christ assumed it to be a
fact, received, as it were, with public consent, that there was no other remedy
in desperate circumstances, no other mode of delivering the Church than the
manifestation of the Mediator. It is true, that the fact adverted to by Paul
was not so generally known as it ought to have been--viz. that Christ is the
end of the Law (Rom. 10:4), though this is both true, and clearly appears both
from the Law and the Prophets. I am not now, however, treating of faith, as we
shall elsewhere have a fitter place (Book 3 Chap. 2), but what I wish to
impress upon my readers in this way is, that the first step in piety is, to
acknowledge that God is a Father, to defend, govern, and cherish us, until he
brings us to the eternal inheritance of his kingdom; that hence it is plain, as
we lately observed, there is no saving knowledge of God without Christ, and
that, consequently, from the beginning of the world Christ was held forth to
all the elect as the object of their faith and confidence. In this sense,
Irenæus says, that the Father, who is boundless in himself, is bounded in
the Son, because he has accommodated himself to our capacity, lest our minds
should be swallowed up by the immensity of his glory (Irenaeus, lib. 4 cap. 8).
Fanatics, not attending to this, distort a useful sentiment into an impious
dream,187 as if Christ had only a share of the Godhead, as a part
taken from a whole; whereas the meaning merely is, that God is comprehended in
Christ alone. The saying of John was always true, "whosoever denieth the Son,
the same has not the Father," (1 John 2:23). For though in old time there were
many who boasted that they worshipped the Supreme Deity, the Maker of heaven
and earth, yet as they had no Mediator, it was impossible for them truly to
enjoy the mercy of God, so as to feel persuaded that he was their Father. Not
holding the head, that is, Christ, their knowledge of God was evanescent; and
hence they at length fell away to gross and foul superstitions betraying their
ignorance, just as the Turks in the present day, who, though proclaiming, with
full throat, that the Creator of heaven and earth is their God, yet by their
rejection of Christ, substitute an idol in his place.
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