THE MYSTERIES OF The Christian Faith ASSERTED and VINDICATED: IN A SERMON Preached at S. Laurence-Jewry in London, APRIL the 7th. 1691.

By the Right Reverend Father in GOD, EDWARD Lord Bishop of Worcester.

LONDON, Printed by J. H. for Henry Mortlock, at the Phoenix in St. Paul's Church-Yard. 1691.

A SERMON Preached at S. Laurence-Jewry, APRIL the 7th. 1691.

1 TIM. I. 15.

This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the World to save Sin­ners, of whom I am chief.

IF these Words were to be understood without any Restriction or Limitation that Christ Jesus came into the World to save sinners, they would overthrow the great Design of the Gospel, and make its Excellent Precepts Useless and Ineffectual. For, to what purpose should men be put upon the se­vere Practise of Repentance, Mortification and a continued Course of a Holy Life, if the meer be­ing Sinners did sufficiently qualifie them for Salva­tion? This indeed would be thought a Doctrine worthy of all Acceptation by the greatest Sinners; but [Page 2] it could not be a faithfull saying, being not agree­able either to the Nature of God, or Revelation of his Will by Christ Jesus. But S. Paul speaks of such Sinners as himself had been; i. e. such as had been great Sinners, but had truely and sincerely repented. Of whom I am chief. What then? Must we look on him as the Standard and Measure of such Sin­ners whom Christ Jesus came to save? What will then become of all those who have been Sinners of a higher Rank than ever he was? It's true in the Verses before the Text, he sets out his Sins, as a humble Penitent is wont to do, with the worst Colours and deepest Aggravations, Ver. 13. Who was before a blasphemer and a persecutor, and injurious; but yet he adds, that he obtained Mercy because he did it igno­rantly, in unbelief. How then is S. Paul the Chief of Sinners? Are Sins of Ignorance and Mistake the greatest of Sins, for which Christ died? Is there no Expiation for any other by Jesus Christ? What will become then of all such who sin against Know­ledge and Conscience, and not in Ignorance and Un­belief? Can none of these hope for Mercy by Christ Jesus, although they do truely Repent? But the Blood of Christ is said elsewhere to cleanse us from all Sin; 1 Joh. 1.7. not, while we continue in them, but if we repent and forsake them. Ch. 2. v. 2. And Jesus Christ is said to be a Propitiation for our Sins; and not for ours on­ly, but for the Sins of the whole World. And there­fore [Page 3] this Expression of S. Paul notes his great Hu­mility and deep Sense of his own Sins; but doth not exclude others from the hopes of Pardon whose Sins have other Aggravations than his had. For, if we leave out the last words as peculiar to his Case, yet the other contain in them a true Proposition and of the greatest Importance to Mankind; This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the World to save sinners.

This, you may say, is a matter out of all doubt among all such who hope for Salvation by Christ Jesus; for all are agreed, that one way or other we are to be saved by him. But there is great Diffi­culty as to the Way of saving sinners by Christ Ie­sus; whether by the Doctrine and Example of the Man Christ Jesus, by the Power he attained through his Sufferings; Or, by the Eternal Son of God's assuming our Nature, and suffering in our stead in order to the Reconciling God to us and making a Propitiation for our Sins. These are two very different Hypotheses or Notions of Christ's coming to save Sinners; and the former seems more Easie to be understood and be­lieved; and the other seems to have Insuperable Difficulties in point of Reason; and to run our Religion into Mysteries, which expose our Faith and make Christianity appear Contemptible to Men of Sense and Understanding. Is it not there­fore much better to embrace such a Scheme of it, [Page 4] as will have the least Objection against it, that so Men of Reason may not be tempted to Infidelity, and Men of Superstition may not under the Co­lour of Mysteries bring in the most Absurd and Unreasonable Doctrines?

These are plausible Insinuations, and would be apt to prevail on considering Mens minds, if they were to form and make a Religion that might be most accommodated to the Genius and Humour of the Age they live in. And truely no Men (by their own Authority) can pretend to a Right to im­pose on others any Mysteries of Faith, or any such things which are above their Capacity to under­stand. But that is not our Case; for we all pro­fess to believe and receive Christianity as a Divine Revelation; and God (we say) may require from us the belief of what we may not be able to com­prehend, especially if it relates to Himself, or such things which are Consequent upon the Union of the Divine and Human Nature. Therefore our business is to consider, whether any such things be contained in that Revelation which we all own; and if they be, we are bound to believe them, although we are not able to comprehend them.

Now here are two Remarkable Characters in these Words, by which we may examin these diffe­rent Hypotheses concerning the way of Salvation by Jesus Christ.

[Page 5]I. It is a faithfull saying, and therefore must be contained in that Revelation which God hath made concerning our Salvation by Christ.

II. It is worthy of all Acceptation; i. e. most use­full and beneficial to Mankind.

Now by these two I shall proceed in the Exami­nation of them.

  • I. Which is most agreeable to the Revealed Will of God.
  • II. Which doth offer fairest for the Benefit and Advantage of Mankind.

I. Which is most, agreeable to the Revealed Will of God. For that we are sure is the most faith­full saying; since Men of Wit and Reason may de­ceive us, but God cannot. When the Apostles first preached this Doctrine to the World, they were not bound to believe what they affirmed to be a faithfull saying till they gave sufficient Evidence of their Authority from God, by the wonderfull Assistance of the Holy Ghost. But now this faith­full saying is contained in the Books of the New Testament, by which we are to judge of the Truth of all Christian Doctrines. And when two diffe­rent Senses of Places of Scripture are offer'd, we are to consider, which is most Reasonable to be preferr'd. And herein we are allow'd to Exercise [Page 6] our Reason as much as we please; and the more we do so, the sooner we shall come to Satisfaction in this matter.

Now according to Reason we may judge that Sense to be preferr'd,

(1.) Which is most plain and easie and agree­able to the most received Sense of Words; not that which is forced and intricate, or which puts improper and metaphorical Senses upon Words which are commonly taken in other Senses; especially when it is no Sacramental thing, which in its own Nature is Figurative.

(2.) That which suits most with the Scope and Design not only of the particular Places, but of the whole New Testament; which is, to magnifie God and to depress Man; to set forth, the Infinite Love and Condescension of God in giving his Son to be a Propitiation for our Sins; to set up the Wor­ship of one true God in Opposition to Creatures; to Represent and Declare the mighty Advantages Mankind receive by the Sufferings of Christ Jesus.

(3.) That which hath been generally received in the Christian Church to be the Sense of those pla­ces. For, we are certain, this was always look'd on as a matter of great Concernment to all Chri­stians; and they had as great Capacity of under­standing the Sense of the Apostles; and the Pri­mitive Church had greater Helps for knowing it [Page 7] than others at so much greater Distance. And therefore the Sense is not to be taken from modern Inventions, or Criticisms, or pretences to Revelation; but that which was at first deliver'd to the Christian Church and hath been since received and embraced by it in the several Ages; and hath been most strenuously asserted, when it hath met with Oppo­sition, as founded on Scripture and the general Con­sent of the Christian Church.

(4.) That which best agrees with the Characters of those Persons from whom we receive the Chri­stian Faith; and those are Christ Jesus and his holy Apostles. For, if their Authority be lost, our Reli­gion is gone; and their Authority depends upon their Sincerity and Faithfulness, and Care to inform the World aright in matters of so great Impor­tance.

(1.) I begin with the Character which the Apo­stles give of Christ Jesus himself; which is, that he was a Person of the greatest Humility and Conde­scension, that he did not assume to himself that which he might justly have done. For let the Words of S. Paul be understood either as to the Nature, or Dignity of Christ, it is certain that they must imply thus much, that when Christ Jesus was here on Earth, he was not of a vain assuming hu­mour, that he did not boast of himself, nor mag­nifie his own Greatness, but was contented to be [Page 8] look'd on as other Men; although he had at that time far greater and Diviner Excellency in him than the World would believe. Less than this, cannot be made of those Words of the Apostle, Who being in the form of God, Phil. 2.6, 7. he thought it not rob­bery to be equal with God, but made himself of no Re­putation and took upon him the form of a Servant.

Now this being the Character given of him let us consider what he doth affirm concerning him­self. For although he was far from drawing the People after him, by setting forth his own Per­fections; yet upon just Occasions, when the Jews contested with him, he did Assert such things, which must favour of Vanity and Ostentation, or else must imply that he was the Eternal Son of God. For, all Mankind are agreed that the highest de­gree of Ambition lies in Affecting Divine Honour, or for a meer Man to be thought a God. How severely did God punish Herod for being pleased with the Peoples folly in crying out, the Voice of God and not of Man? Act. 12.22. And therefore he could ne­ver have born with such positive Assertions and such repeated Defences of his being the Son of God in such a manner as implied his being so from Eternity. This in his Disputes with the Jews he Affirms several times, Joh. 6.32, 33. that he came down from Hea­ven, not in a Metaphorical but in a proper Sense, as appears by those words, 38.50.58.62. What and if ye shall see [Page 9] the Son of Man ascend up where he was before? In another Conference he asserted, Joh. 8.58. that he was before Abraham. Which the Jews so literally understood, that without a Metaphor they went about to stone him; v. 59. little imagining that by Abraham the calling of the Gentiles was to be understood. But above all, is that Expression which he used to the Jews at ano­ther Conference, I and my Father are one; Joh. 10.30. which they understood in such a manner that immedi­ately they took up stones to have stoned him. v. 31. What means all this Rage of the Jews against him? What? for saying that he had Unity of Consent with his Fa­ther? No certainly. But the Jews misunderstood him. Let us suppose it; would not our Saviour have immediately explained himself to prevent so dan­gerous a Misconstruction? But he asked them, what it was they stoned him for? They answer him directly and plainly, v. 32, 33. because that thou being a man makest thy self God. This was home to the purpose. And here was the time for him to have denied it, if it had not been so. But doth he de­ny it? Doth he say, it would be Blasphemy in him to own it? No; but he goes about to defend it; and proves it to be no Blasphemy for him to say that he was the Son of God; i.e. so as to be God, v. 36. as the Jews understood it. Can we imagin that a meer Man knowing himself to be such, should Assume this to himself; and yet God to bear witness to [Page 10] him not only by Miracles but by a Voice from Hea­ven, Matt. 3.17. wherein he was called his beloved Son in whom he was well pleased? Could God be pleased with a mortal, finite, despicable Creature, as the Jews thought him, that Assumed to himself to be God and maintained and defended it among his own People, in a solemn Conference at a very Publick Place in one of the Portico's of the Temple? And this he persisted in to the last. For, when the High Priest adjured him by the living God to tell, Matt. 26.63. whe­ther he were the Christ the Son of God, (for he, no doubt, had heard of the Result of this Conference in Solomon's Porch) Jesus said unto him, v. 64. Thou hast said. S. Mark, Mark 14.62. more expresly, Jesus said I am. And this was the Blasphemy, for which they put him to death; v. 64. as appears by the Evangelists. So that this ought to be a Dispute only between Jews and Chri­stians; Matt. 26.66. since it was the very point, for which they condemned him to death. And in his last most divine Prayer just before his Suffering, he owns the Glory which he had with the Father before the World had a being. Luk. 22.71. And now, O Father, glorifie thou me with the glory which I had with thee, Joh. 17.5. before the World was. Was this nothing but the Glory which God had designed to give him? This is so far from being peculiar to Christ, that it is common to all whom God designs to glorifie; and takes a­way the distinction between the Decree and the Exe­cution of it.

[Page 11](2.) As to the Apostles, the Reason we believe their Testimony is, that they were Men of great Sincerity and Plainness, and of great Zeal for the Honour and Glory of God. And according to this Character, let us examin what they say con­cerning Christ Jesus.

He that was most conversant with him, and beloved by him, and lived to see his Divinity con­tested by some, and denied by others, is most ample in setting it forth in his Admirable, Sublime, and Divine Introduction to his Gospel. Joh. 1.1, 2, &c. Which all the Wit of Mankind can never make tolerable Sense of, if they deny Christ's being the Eternal Son of God; and it is he, that hath preserved those Con­ferences with the Jews, wherein he asserts his own Divinity.

S. Paul was a Stranger to him while he lived; but at the same time when he was so zealous to perswade the Gentiles to the Worship of God and not of Creatures, he calls him God, Rom. 9.5. over all blessed for evermore. And when he saith, that the Eternal Power and Godhead are known by the Creation of the World, he attributes the Creation of all things to Christ, Rom. 1.20. Col. 1.16. applying to him those words of the Psalmist, Heb. 1.2, 10. Thou Lord in the beginning hast laid the Foundation of the Earth and the Heaven, the Work of thy hands. Which cannot be understood of any Metaphorical Creation.

[Page 12]And after the strictest Examination of Copies, those will be found the best, which have that Reading on which our Translation is grounded. And without Controversie great is the Mystery of God­liness, 1 Tim. 3.16. God was manifest in the Flesh. So that God's being manifest in the Flesh is made a great Part of the Mystery of Christianity.

But here arises a Difficulty, which deserves to be consider'd; i. e. ‘If there were nothing in the Christian Doctrine, but the Way of Saving sin­ners by the Doctrine and Example of Christ, there would be little Objection to be made to it; since the obtaining Eternal Life is certainly the best thing can be proposed to Mankind, and the Precepts of Christ are Divine and Spiritual, Plain and Easie to be Understood, and Agree­able to the Reason of Mankind; but many other things are imposed on Men as necessary to be believed concerning Christ Jesus, as to his Divinity, Incarnation, and the Hypostatical Union of both Natures, which perplex and confound our Understandings; and yet these things are not only deliver'd as Mysteries of the Christian Faith; but the Belief of them is required as necessary to the Salvation of Sinners; whereas, if they are Revealed they are no longer Mysteries; and if they are not Revealed, how come they to be made Articles of Faith? The Scripture knows of no [Page 13] other Mysteries of Faith but such as were hidden before the Revelation of them, but since they are Revealed they are plain and open to all mens Capacities; and therefore it is a great Injury to the Plainness and Simplicity of the Gospel to im­pose such incomprehensible Mysteries, as Neces­sary Articles of Faith; and it is Abusing the Cre­dulity of Mankind, to make such things neces­sary to be believed, which are impossible to be understood. But those who have ever loved to Deceive and Abuse the rest of the World, have been always fond of the Name of Mysteries; and therefore all such things are to be suspected, which come under that Name. For, all such Points which will not bear Examination, must be wrapt up and Reverenced under the Name of Mysteries, that is, of things to be swallow'd with­out being understood. But the Scripture never calls that a Mystery which is Incomprehensible in it self, Discourse of the Word Mystery, &c. p. 5. though never so much revealed.

This is the main force of the Objection, which I shall endeavour to remove by shewing,

(1.) That God may justly require from us in general, the Belief of what we cannot comprehend.

(2.) That which way soever the Way of Sal­vation by Christ be explained, there will be something of that Nature found in it; [Page 14] and that those who reject the Mysteries of Faith run into greater Difficulties than those who assert them.

(3.) That no more is required as a Necessary Article of Faith than what is plainly and clearly Revealed.

(1.) That God may justly require from us in general, the Belief of what we cannot comprehend. It is to very little purpose to enquire whether the Word Mystery in Scripture be applied to such parti­cular Doctrines, whose Substance is Revealed, but the manner of them is incomprehensible by us; for why may not we make use of such a Word whereby to express things truely revealed, but a­bove our Comprehension? We are certain the Word Mystery is used for things far less difficult and abstruse; and why may it not then be fitly applied to such matters, which are founded on Di­vine Revelation, but yet are too deep for us to go to the bottom of them? Are there not Mysteries in Arts, Mysteries in Nature, Mysteries in Providence? And what Absurdity is there to call those Mysteries, which in some Measure are known, but in much greater unknown to us? Although therefore in the Language of Scripture it be granted, that the word Mystery is most frequently applied, to things before hidden, but now revealed, yet there is no In­congruity in calling that a Mystery, which being [Page 15] revealed, hath yet something in it which our un­derstandings cannot reach to. But it is meer Ca­villing to insist on a Word, if the Thing it self be granted. The chief thing therefore to be done is, to shew that God may require from us the belief of such things which are incomprehensible by us. For, God may require any thing from us, which it is reasonable for us to do; if it be then reasonable for us to give Assent where the manner of what God hath revealed is not comprehended, then God may certainly require it from us. Hath not God revealed to us that in six days he made Heaven and Earth and all that is therein? But is it not reason­able for us to believe this, unless we are able to comprehend the manner of God's production of things? Here we have something revealed and that plainly enough, viz. that God created all things, and yet, here is a Mystery remaining as to the man­ner of doing it. Hath not God plainly revealed that there shall be a Resurrection of the dead? and must we think it unreasonable to believe it, till we are able to comprehend all the changes of the Par­ticles of Matter from the Creation to the General Re­surrection? But it is said that there is no Contradiction in this, but there is in the Mystery of the Trinity and Incarnation. Observati­ons on Dr. Wallis his four Let­ters, p. 4 It is strange Boldness in Men to talk thus of Monstrous Contradictions in things above their Reach. The Atheists may as well say, Infinite Power [Page 16] is a Monstrous Contradiction; and God's Immensity and his other unsearchable Perfections are Monstrous Pa­radoxes and Contradictions. Will Men never learn to distinguish between Numbers and the Nature of Things? For three to be one is a Contradiction in Numbers; but whether an Infinite Nature can com­municate it self to three different Subsistences without such a Division as is among Created Beings, must not be determin'd by bare Numbers, but by the Absolute Perfections of the Divine Nature; which must be owned to be above our Comprehension.

For let us examin some of those Perfections which are most clearly revealed and we shall find this true. The Scripture plainly reveals, that God is from everlasting to everlasting; Psal. 90.2. Revel. 1.4. c. 11. v. 17. that he was and is and is to come; but shall we not believe the Truth of this till we are able to fathom the Abyss of God's Eternity? Bifterfield. c. Grell. p. 50. I am apt to think (and I have some thoughtfull Men concurring with me) that there is no greater Difficulty in the Conception of the Tri­nity and Incarnation, Pet [...]v. de Trinit. l. 3. c. 9. §. 15. than there is of Eternity. Not, but that there is great Reason to believe it; but from hence it appears that our Reason may oblige us to believe some things which it is not possible for us to comprehend. We know that either God must have been for ever, or it is impossible he ever should be; for if he should come into Being when he was not, he must have some Cause of his [Page 17] Being; and that which was the first Cause would be God. But, if he was for ever he must be from himself; and what Notion or Conception can we have in our Minds concerning it? And yet, Athei­stical men can take no Advantage from hence; because their own most absurd Hypothesis hath the very same Difficulty in it. For something must have been for ever. And it is far more Reason­able to suppose it of an Infinite and Eternal Mind, which hath Wisdom and Power and Goodness to give Being to other things, than of dull, stupid and sensless Matter, which could never move it self, nor give Being to any thing besides. Here we have therefore a thing which must be owned by all; and yet such a thing which can be conceived by none. Which shews the narrowness and short­ness of our Understandings, and how unfit they are to be the Measures of the Possibilities of things. Vain men would be wise; they would fain go to the very bottom of things, when alas! they scarce un­derstand the very Surface of them. They will al­low no Mysteries in Religion; and yet every thing is a Mystery to them. They cry out of Cheats and Impostures under the Notion of Mysteries; and yet there is not a Spire of Grass but is a Mystery to them; they will bear with nothing in Religion which they cannot comprehend, and yet there is scarce any thing in the World which they can compre­hend. [Page 18] But above other things the Divine Perfecti­ons, even those which are most Absolute and Neces­sary are above their Reach. For let such Men try their Imaginations about God's Eternity, not meerly how he should be from himself, but how God should coexist with all the Differences of Times and yet there be no Succession in his own Being. I do not say there is such Difficulty to conceive a Rock standing still when the Waves run by it; or the Gnomon of a Dial when the Shadow passes from one Figure to another; because these are gross un­active things; but the Difficulty is far greater where the Being is Perfect and always Active. For, where there is Succession there is a passing out of not be­ing in such a duration into being in it; which is not consistent with the Absolute Perfection of the Divine Nature. And therefore God must be all at once what he is, without any Respect to the Difference of Time past, present or to come. From whence Eternity was defined by Boethius to be a perfect and complete Possession all at once of everlasting Life. De Consol. l. 3. But how can we form any Conception in our Minds of that being all at once, which hath such different Acts as must be measur'd by a long Succession of Time? As, the Creating and Dissol­ving the Frame of the World; the Promising and Sending the Messias; the Declaring and Executing a general Judgment; how can these things be con­sistent [Page 19] with a Permanent Instant, or a Continu­ance of being without Succession? For, it is im­possible for us in this Case, as to God's Eternity, to form a clear and distinct Idea in our Mind, of that which both Reason and Revelation convince us must be. The most we can make of our Conception of it is, that God hath neither Beginning of Being, nor End of Days; but that he always was and always must be. And this is rather a ne­cessary Conclusion from Reason and Scripture, than any distinct Notion or Conception of Eternity in our Minds. From whence it evidently follows, that God may reveal something to us, which we are bound to believe, and yet after that Revelation the Manner of it may be incomprehensible by us, and consequently a Mystery to us.

Hath not God Revealed to us in Scripture the Spirituality of his own Nature? That he is a Spi­rit and therefore will be worshipp'd in Spirit and in Truth; For, S. Joh. 4.24. that is a true Reason why Spiritual Worship should be most agreeable to him. Now, if we could have a clear, distinct positive Notion in our minds of God's Spiritual Nature, we might then pretend that there is nothing mysterious in this, since it is revealed.

But let such men Examin their own thoughts about this matter; and try, whether the utmost they can attain to, be not something Negative, viz. [Page 20] because great Absurdities would follow if we attri­buted any thing Corporeal to God; for, then he must be compounded of Parts, and so he may be dissol­ved; then he must be confined to a certain place, and not every-where present; he cannot have the Power of Acting and Self-Determining which a a meer Body hath not. For the clearest Notion we can have of Body, is, that it is made up of some things as parts of it, which may be separated from each other, and is confined to a certain place, and hath no Power to Move or Act from it self. But some of these men who cry down Mysteries and magnifie Reason, to shew how slender their pre­tences to Reason are, have asserted a Corporeal God, with Shape and Figure. It was indeed, well thought of by those who would make a Man to be God, to bring God down as near to Man as might be. But how to Reconcile the Notion of a Body with Infinite Perfections, is a Mystery to me, and far above my Comprehension. But if it be no Myste­ry to such Men, they must either deny God's Infi­nite Perfections or shew how a bodily Shape can be capable of them. But some men can confound Finite and Infinite, Body and Spirit, God and Man, and yet are for no Mysteries; whereas these things are farther from our Reach and Comprehension, than any of those Doctrines which they find fault with. But to proceed.

[Page 21]If we believe Prophesie, we must believe Gods fore-knowledge of future Events: For, how could they be fore-told if he did not fore-know them? And if he did fore-know those which he did fore-tell, then it was either because those only were re­vealed to him which is inconsistent with the Di­vine Perfections; or that he doth fore-know all o­ther Events and only thought fitting to Reveal these: But how can they Solve the Difficulties a­bout Divine Prescience? Is there no Mystery in this? Nothing above their Comprehension? What then made their great Master deny it, Socin. Prael. c. 11. as a thing above his Comprehension? Because nothing can be fore-known but what hath a certain Cause, and there­fore, if evil Actions be fore-told God must be the Cause of them, and Men will not be free Agents in them. And yet it is most certain, that the Suf­ferings of Christ by the Wickedness of Men, were fore-told. What then? Must we make God the Author of Sin? God forbid. Will the righteous Judge of all the Earth, punish Mankind for his own Acts, which they could not avoid? Then we must yield, that there is something in the manner of the Divine Prescience, which is above our Comprehen­sion. And the most Searching and Inquisitive Men have been forc'd to yield it at last, as to the Con­nection between the Certainty of Prescience and the Liberty of human Actions. Is it not then much [Page 22] better to sit down quietly at first, Adoring the In­finiteness of God's incomprehensible Perfections, than after all the huffings and disputings of Men to say, Cajetan. in 1. q. 22. art. 4. In Ignorantiâ solâ quietem invenio, as the great Schoolman did? Surely then, here is something plainly revealed, and yet the manner of it is still a Mystery to us.

I shall not now insist on any more of the par­ticular Attributes of God, but only in general I desire to know, whether they believe them to be finite or infinite? If to be finite, then they must have certain bounds and limits which they cannot exceed; and that must either be from the Imper­fection of Nature, or from a Superiour Cause, both which are repugnant to the very Being of God. If they believe them to be Infinite, how can they comprehend them? We are strangely puzzled in plain, ordinary, finite things; but it is madness to pretend to comprehend what is Infinite; and yet if the Perfections of God be not Infinite they cannot belong to Him.

I shall only adde, in Consequence to this Asser­tion, That if nothing is to be believed, but what may be comprehended, the very Being of God must be reject­ed too. And therefore I desire all such who talk so warmly against any Mysteries in Religion to consi­der whose Work it is they are doing; even theirs who under this pretence go about to overthrow all [Page 23] Religion. ‘For, say they, Religion is a Mystery in its own Nature; not this or that, or the other Religion; but they are all alike, all is Mystery; and that is but another Name for Fraud and Im­posture. What were the Heathen Mysteries but tricks of Priest-Craft; and such are maintained and kept up in all kinds of Religion. If there­fore these men, who talk against Mysteries under­stand themselves, they must in pursuance of their Principles reject one God, as well as three Persons; For, as long as they believe an Infinite and In­comprehensible Being, it is Nonsense to reject any other Doctrine, which relates to an Infinite Being, because it is Incomprehensible.

But yet these very Men, who seem to pursue the Consequence of this Principle to the utmost, must assert something more incomprehensible than the Being of God. For, I appeal to any man of common Understanding, whether it be not more agreeable to Reason to suppose Works of Skill, Beauty and Order to be the Effects of a Wise and Intelligent Being, than of Blind Chance and Unac­countable Necessity; whether it be not more agreeable to the Sense of Mankind to suppose an Infinite and Eternal Mind endued with all possible Perfections to be the Maker of this visible World; than, that it should start out from it self, without Contrivance, without Order, without Cause? Certainly such [Page 24] men have no Reason to find fault with the Myste­ries of Religion because they are incomprehensible, since there is nothing so Absurd and Incomprehensible, as their darling Hypothesis; And, there is nothing which can make it prevail, but to suppose Man­kind to be as Dull and Insensible as the first Chaos.

Thus I have shewn that it is not unreasonable for God to require from us the Belief of something which we cannot comprehend.

(2.) I now come to consider, whether those who are so afraid of incomprehensible Mysteries in our Faith, have made it so much more easie in the Way they have taken. And notwithstanding all the Hectoring talk against Mysteries and things incom­prehensible in Religion, I find more insuperable Difficulties in point of Reason in their Way than in ours. As for instance,

(1.) It is a more Reasonable thing to suppose something Mysterious in the Eternal Son of God's be­ing with the Father before the World was made by him; (as S. Iohn expresses it in the beginning of his Go­spel) than in supposing that although Iohn the Baptist were born six Months before Jesus Christ; that yet Christ was in Dignity before him. What a wonderfull Mystery is this? Can Men have the Face to cry down Mysteries in deep Speculations, and matters of a high and abstruse Nature, when they make such Mysteries of plain and easie things? [Page 25] And suppose the Evangelist in profound Language and lofty Expressions to prove a thing, which was never disputed, viz. that although Christ Jesus were born six Months after Iohn, yet he was in Dignity before him? Yet this was a Mystery, which, as I remember, Faustus Socinus glories in that his Uncle Laelius obtained by Revelation.

(2.) It is a more Reasonable thing to suppose that a Divine Person should assume human Nature, and so the Word to be made Flesh; than to say, that an Attribute of God, his Wisdom or Power is made Flesh, which is a Mystery beyond all Comprehen­sion; There may be some Difficulties in our Con­ception of the other, but this is a thing beyond all Conception or Imagination; For an Accident to be made a Substance is as absurd, as to imagin it to subsist without one.

(3.) It is more Reasonable to suppose that the Son of God should come down from Heaven and take our Nature upon him, than that a man should be rapt up into Heaven, that it might be said that he came down from thence. For in the former Suppo­sition we have many other places of Scripture to support it, which speak of his being with God, and having Glory with him before the World was; where­as there is nothing for the other, but only that it is necessary to make some tolerable Sense of those words.

[Page 26](4.) It is more Reasonable to believe that God should become Man by taking our Nature upon him, than that Man should become God. For in the former, there is nothing but the Difficulty of conceiving the Manner of the Union, which we all grant to be so between Soul and Body; but in the other there is a Repugnancy in the very Con­ception of a Created God, of an Eternal Son of Adam, of Omnipotent Infirmity, of an Infinite finite Being. In the former Case, an Infinite is united to a Finite; but in the other a Finite becomes Infinite.

(5.) It is more Reasonable to believe that Christ Jesus should suffer as he did for our sakes than for his own. We are all agreed that the Sufferings of Christ were far beyond any thing he deserved at God's hands; but what Account then is to be given of them? We say that he made himself a voluntary Sacrifice for Expi­ation of the Sins of Mankind; and so there was a great and noble End designed, and no Injury done to a willing Mind; and the Scripture as plainly ex­presses this, as it can do in Words. But others deny this, and make him to suffer as one wholly Inno­cent; for what Cause? To make the most Inno­cent Persons as apprehensive of Suffering as the most Guilty; and the most righteous God to put no difference between them, with Respect to Suffering?

(6.) It is more Reasonable to suppose such a Con­descension in the Son of God to take upon him the [Page 27] Form of a Servant for our Advantage; than that a meer Man should be Exalted to the Honour and Wor­ship which belongs only to God. For, on the one side, there is nothing but what is agreeable to the Divine Nature, viz. Infinite Love and Condescension and Pity to Mankind; on the other, there is the greatest Design of Self-Exaltation that ever was in Human Nature, viz. for a meer Man to have the most Essential Attributes and Incommunicable Honour which belongs to God. And whether of these two is more agreeable to the Spirit and Design of the New Te­stament, let any man of understanding judge. For as it is evident, that the great Intention of it is to magnifie the wonderfull Love of God in the sending of his Son; so it is as plain that one great End of the Christian Doctrine was to take Mankind off from giving Divine Worship to Creatures; and can we then suppose that at the same time it should set up the Worship of a meer Man with all the Ho­nour and Adoration which belongs to God ▪ This is to me an incomprehensible Mystery indeed, and far be­yond all that is implied in the Mysteries of the Tri­nity and Incarnation. For it Subverts the very Foun­dation of the Design of Christianity as to the Re­forming Idolatry then in being; it lays the Founda­tion for introducing it into the World again; for since the Distance between God and his Creatures is taken away, in the matter of Worship, there is [Page 28] nothing left but the Declaration of his Will; which doth not exclude more Mediators of Intercession but upon this Ground, that the Mediation of Redemption is the Foundation of that of Intercession. And it is far more easie for us to suppose there may be some things too hard for us to understand in the Mystery of our Redemption by Jesus Christ, than that at the same time it should be both a Duty and a Sin to worship any but the true God with proper Divine Worship. For if it be Idolatry to give it to a Crea­ture, then it is a great Sin; for so the Scripture still accounts it; but if we are bound to give it to Christ who is but a Creature, then that which in it self is a Sin, is now become a Necessary Duty; which over­throws the Natural Differences of Good and Evil, and makes Idolatry to be a meer Arbitrary thing. And I take it for granted, that in Matters of Religion, Moral Difficulties are more to be regarded than In­tellectual; because Religion was far more designed for a Rule of our Actions, than for the Satisfaction of our Curiosity. And upon due Examination we shall find that there is no such frightfull Appearances of Difficulties in the Mystery of the Incarnation, as there is in giving Divine Worship to a Creature.

And it ought to be observed, that those very Pla­ces which are supposed to exclude Christ from be­ing the true God; S. Joh. 17.3. must, if they have any force, ex­clude him from Divine Worship. 1 Cor. 6.6. For they are spoken [Page 29] of God as the Object of our Worship; but if he be not excluded from Divine Worship, then neither is he from being the true God; Socin. ad Eutrop. p 96 c. Wick. c. 11. Catech. Racov. p. 65. which they grant he is by Office but not by Nature.

But a God by Office who is not so by Nature is a new and incomprehensible Mystery. A Mystery hidden from Ages and Generations as to the Church of God; but not made known by the Gospel of his Son.

This is such a kind of Mystery as the Heathen Priests had, who had Gods many and Lords many, as the Apostle saith, i. e. many by Office although but one by Nature. 1 Cor. 8.5. But if the Christian Religion had owned one God by Nature and only one by Office, the Heathens had been to blame chiefly in the Number of their Gods by Office, and not in the divine Wor­ship which they gave to them. But S. Paul blames the Heathens for doing Service to them which by Na­ture are no Gods; not for doing it without Divine Authority, Gal. 4.8. nor for mistaking the Person who was God by Office, but in giving Divine Worship to them who by Nature were no Gods; which he would never have said, if by the Christian Doctrine, Di­vine Worship were to be given to one who was not God by Nature.

But these are indeed incomprehensible Mysteries how a Man by Nature can be a God really and truely by Office; how the Incommunicable Perfecti­ons of the Divine Nature can be communicated [Page 30] to a Creature; how God should give his Glory to another, and by his own Command require that to be given to a Creature, which himself had abso­lutely forbidden to be given to any besides himself. It is said by a famous Iesuit (I will not say how agreeably to their own Doctrines and Practices about Divine Worship) that the Command of God cannot make him worthy of Divine Worship, Smiglec. de Divin. Verb. In­carn. Nat. p. 45. who without such a Command is not worthy of it. And it is very absurd to say, that he that is unworthy of it without a Com­mand, can become worthy by it; for it makes God to command Divine Honour to be given to one who cannot deserve it. Nova Mon­stra, &c. p. 42. (For no meer Man can deserve to be made God.) But it is more agreeable to the Divine Nature and Will not to give his Honour to a Creature.

(3.) But after all the Invectives of these Enemies to Mysteries, we do not make that which we say is Incomprehensible to be a Necessary Article of Faith as it is Incomprehensible; but we do assert that what is Incomprehensible as to the Manner, may be a Necessa­ry Article as far as it is plainly Revealed. As in the Instances I have already mentioned of the Creation and Resurrection of the Dead; would they in earnest have Men turn Infidels as to these things till they are able to comprehend all the difficulties which relate to them? If not, why should this suggestion be allow'd as to the Mysteries which relate to our Re­demption by Jesus Christ? If it be said, the Case is [Page 31] not alike for those are clearly Revealed and these are not; this brings it to the true and proper Issue of this matter, and if we do not prove a clear Revelation, we do not assert their being Necessary Articles of Faith; but my present business was only to take off this Objection that the Mysteries were Incomprehensible and therefore not to be received by us.

II. And so I come to the second Way, by which, we are to Examin the several Senses of Christ Jesus coming to save Sinners: Which of them tends more to the Benefit and Advantage of Mankind; or which is more worthy of all Acceptation.

And that will appear by considering these things;

  • (1.) Which tends most to the raising our Esteem and Love of Christ Jesus.
  • (2.) Which tends most to the begetting in us a greater Hatred of Sin.
  • (3.) Which tends most to the strengthening our Hope of Salvation by Jesus Christ.

(1.) As to the raising in us a greater Esteem and Love of Christ. We are certain that the Infinite Love and Condescension of Christ Jesus in under­ [...]aking such a Work as the saving of Sinners makes [...] most worthy of all Acceptation. Some Men may please themselves in thinking that by taking away all Mysteries they have made their Faith more [Page 32] easie, but I am certain they have extremely lessen'd the Argument for our Love, viz. the Apprehensions of the wonderfull Love and Condescension of Christ in coming into the World to save Sinners. And yet this is the great Argument of the New Testament to perswade Mankind to the Love of God and of his Son: Joh. 3.16. God so loved the World that he gave his only be­gotten Son, &c. This is indeed a mighty Argument of Love, if by the only begotten Son be meant the Eternal Son of God, who came down from Heaven, as S. Iohn speaks just before; v. 13. but if no more be meant but only that God made a meer Man to be his Son, and after he had preached a while here on Earth and was ill used and crucified by his own People, he Exalted him to be God and gave him Divine At­tributes and Honours; this were an Argument of great Love to the Person of Christ, but not to the rest of Mankind. But Gods Love in Scripture is magnified with Respect to the World in the sending of his Son. In this was manifested, saith the Apostle, the Love of God towards us, 1 Joh. 4.9. because that God sent his only begotten Son into the World that we should live through him. v. 10. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son to be a Propitia­tion for our Sins. The great Love we still see is towards us, i. e. towards Mankind, but according to the other Sense it must have been, Herein was the Love of God manifested to his Son, that for his [Page 33] Sufferings he exalted him above all Creatures. He that spared not his own Son, saith S. Paul, Rom. 8.32. but deliver'd him up for us all. If he were the Eternal Son of God who came to suffer for us, there is a mighty force and Emphasis in this Expression, and very apt to raise our Admiration and our Love; But what not sparing his own Son is there, if nothing were meant but that he designed by Sufferings to Exalt him? For not Sparing him supposes an Antecedent Relation of the highest Kindness, but the other is only de­signing extraordinary Kindness for the sake of his Sufferings. Therefore, the Argument for the Love of God is taken from what his Son was, when he deliver'd him up for us all; he was his own Son; not by Adoption as others are; S. Iohn calls him, John 1.14. ch. 3. v. 16. Luk. 3.22. his only begotten Son; and God himself, his beloved Son in the Voice from Heaven; and this before his Sufferings, immediately after his Baptism, when as yet, there was nothing extraordinary done by him, as to the great Design of his coming. Which shews, that there was an Antecedent Relation between him and the Father; and that therein the Love of God and of Christ was manifested, that being the only begotten Son of the Father, he should take our Nature upon him and for our sakes do and suffer what he did. This is indeed an Argument great enough to raise our Admiration, to excite our De­votion, to inflame our Affections; but how flat [Page 34] and low doth it appear, when it comes to no more than this, that there was a Man, whom, af­ter his Sufferings, God raised from the dead and made him a God by Office? Doth this carry any such Argument in it for our Esteem and Love and Devotion to him as the other doth upon the most serious Consideration of it?

(2.) Which tends most to beget in us a grea­ter Hatred of Sin. For that is so contrary to the Way of our Salvation by Jesus Christ, that what tends most to our Hatred of it, must conduce most to our Happiness; and therefore be most wor­thy of all Acceptation. It is agreed on all hands, that Christ did suffer very much both in his Mind and in his Body. In his Mind, when it is said, that he was troubled in Spirit; Joh. 13.21. Matt. 26.37, 38. that he began to be sorrowfull and very heavy; and soon after, My Soul is exceeding sorrowfull, even unto death. S. Luke saith, Mark 14.33, 34. that he was in an Agony; wherein he not on­ly prayed more earnestly, but his sweat was as it were great Drops of Blood falling to the Ground. Luk. 22.44 What made this Amazement, and dreadfull Agony in the mind of the most innocent Person in the World? Was it meerly the Fear of the Pains of Death which he was to undergo? That is im­possible, considering the Assurance which he had of so glorious a Reward so soon following after; when so many Martyrs endured such exquisite [Page 35] Torments for his sake without any such Distur­bance or Consternation. But the Apostles give us another Account of it. S. Peter, 1 Pet. 2.24. saith he, was to bear our Sins in his own body on the tree; that Christ suffer'd for Sins, the just for the unjust. 3.18. S. Paul, 2 Cor. 5.21. that God made him to be Sin for us who knew no Sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him. Hereby we understand how so in­nocent a Person came to suffer; he stood in our Stead; he was made Sin for us; and therefore was to be treated as a Sinner; and to suffer that on our Account, which he could not deserve on his own. If he suffer'd on his own Account, this were the way to fill our Minds with perplexity concerning the Justice of Providence with Respect to his deal­ings with the most innocent and holy Persons in this World; If he suffer'd on our Account, then we have the Benefit of his Sufferings, and therein we see how displeasing to God sin is, when even his own Son suffer'd so much by taking the guilt of our Sins upon him. And what can tend more to the begetting in us a due hatred of sin, than to consider, what Christ himself suffer'd on the Account of it? What can make us have more dreadfull thoughts of it, than that the great and mercifull God, when he designed to Save sinners, yet would have his own Son to become a Propiti­ation for the Sins of Mankind? And unless we al­low [Page 36] this, we must put force upon the plainest Expressions of Scripture; and make Christ to suffer meerly to shew God's Power over a most inno­cent Person, and his Will and Pleasure to inflict the most severe Punishment without any Respect to Guilt. And surely such a Notion of God, can­not be worthy of all Acceptation.

(3.) Which tends most to strengthen our Hope of Salvation by Christ Jesus. If we believe that he suffer'd for our Sins, then we have great Reason to hope for the Forgiveness of them; although they have been many and great, if we sincerely Repent; because the most prevailing Argument for Despair will be removed; which is taken from the Iustice of God, and his declared Hatred of Sin and Displeasure against Sinners. If God be so much in earnest displeased with the Sins of Man­kind, and his Justice be concerned in the Punish­ment of Sinners, how can they ever hope to escape, unless there be a way for his Displeasure to be removed, and his Justice to be satisfied? And this the Scripture tells us is done by Christ, who died that he might be a Sacrifice of Atonement to Reconcile us to God by his Death; Rom. 5.10. 2 Cor. 5.19. Heb. 9.15. as S. Paul ex­presly affirms. And by this means, we may have strong Consolation from the Hopes of Forgive­ness of our Sins. Whereas, if this be taken away, either Men must believe that God was not in [Page 37] earnest displeased with the Sins of Mankind; which must exceedingly lessen our Esteem of the Holiness and Iustice of God; or if he were so dis­pleased, that he laid aside this Displeasure, without any Atonement or Sacrifice of Expiation. And so, as many as look on God's Iustice and Holiness as necessary and essential Attributes of God, will be in danger of sinking into the Depths of Despair, as often as they Reflect seriously on the Guilt of their Sins. But on the other side, if we believe that while we were Enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son; then we may have Peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ; and have Reason to believe that there will be no Con­demnation to them that are in Christ Jesus by a live­ly Faith and sincere Repentance; then they may with Comfort look up to God as a Reconciled Fa­ther, through Jesus Christ our Mediator; then they may with inward Satisfaction look beyond the Grave, and stedfastly hope for that Salvation which Christ purchased on Earth and will at last bestow on all such as Love and Obey him. To which God of his Infinite Mercy bring us all through Ie­sus Christ. For, This is a faithfull Saying and worthy of all Acceptation, that he came into the World to save Sinners.

FINIS.

Lately Printed for Henry Mortlock at the Phoenix in St. Paul's Church-Yard,

A Sermon Preached before the Queen at White-Hall, Febr. 22. 1688/9. upon 1. Pet. 14. verse 18.

A Sermon Preached before the King and Queen at White-Hall, March the 23d. 1689/90. upon Ecclesiastes 11. verse 9.

Christian Magnanimity: A Sermon Preached in the Ca­thedral Church at Worcester, at the Time of the Assizes, September 21. 1690. upon 2 Tim. 1. verse 7.

A Sermon Preached before the Queen at White-Hall, March the 1 st. 1690/1. on Luke 6. v. 46. All Four by the Right Reverend Father in God, Edward Lord Bishop of Worcester.

The Bishop of Worcester's Charge to the Clergy of his Diocese, in his Primary Visitation, begun at Worcester, Septemb. 11. 1690. Quarto.

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