THE SAINTS’ PRIVILEGE AND
PROFIT;
OR,
THE THRONE OF GRACE
by John Bunyan
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE
EDITOR.
The churches of Christ are very much
indebted to the Rev. Charles Doe, for the preservation and
publishing of this treatise. It formed one of the ten
excellent manuscripts left by Bunyan at his decease,
prepared for the press. Having treated on the nature of
prayer in his searching work on ‘praying with the
spirit and with the understanding also,’ in which he
proves from the sacred scriptures that prayer cannot be
merely read or said, but must be the spontaneous effusions
of the heart principally in private, or at the domestic
altar upon set times in the morning and evening, or more
publicly in social meetings for praise and prayer, or in
the public assembly of the church—all being
acceptable, only as it is offered up in spirit and in
truth—he now directs us to the proper medium which
our mental powers should use in drawing near to the Divine
Being. We have to approach the universal spirit, the
creator, the preserver, the bountiful benefactor of our
race; and, at the same time, the infinitely holy one, the
supreme judge and just rewarder or punisher of all
creatures. How shall we, who are impure and unclean by
nature and by practice, draw near unto him who is so
infinitely holy? Others of our race who were equally guilty
have held acceptable converse with God, and received
special marks of his favour. We all know that a talented
man, high in office, retired at certain times for prayer;
this gave offence, and a law was made, by which prayer to
God was interdicted for thirty days. He refused obedience
to a human law which interfered with the divine authority,
and for this he was cast into the den of lions; but they
hurt him not, although they devoured his persecutors. When
a beloved minister was seized and imprisoned for his love
to Christ, the church held a prayer meeting on his account,
and while they were praying God sent his angel to the
prison. In vain four quaternions of soldiers kept guard,
two of them in the prisoner’s cell, while the servant
of Christ, who was loaded with chains and doomed to an
ignominious death, slept sweetly between the armed men. The
angel awakes him, his chains fall off, no noise can awake
his guard, the prison doors open, and he was restored to
his beloved charge. They were yet imploring his
deliverance, when he stood in their midst to tell the
wondrous miracle, wrought in answer to their prayer. Again,
two of their much-loved ministers were seized and beaten,
and cast into jail, their feet being made fast in the
stocks. In the dark hour of midnight they prayed and
praised God, when an earthquake was sent, which shook the
prison and threw open its doors, and the jailor, with his
house, became converts to the faith. Millions of instances
might have been recorded of prayer heard and answered. The
child Samuel, and also Ishmael. The Magdalene. The thief on
the cross. Ananias, who was directed to relieve the
stricken persecutor Saul, for ‘behold he
prayeth.’ But innumerable prayers have been read and
offered up which have not been answered. What then is the
acceptable form, and what the appointed medium consecrated
for our access to God, by which prayer is sanctified and
accepted? If ye love me, saith the Saviour, keep my
commandments, and whatsoever ye shall ask IN MY NAME that
will I do. A sense of our want and unworthiness leads us to
God in that new and living way consecrated by Christ though
the veil, that is to say, his flesh (Heb 10:20). By that
way we can ‘come boldly,’ because it is
‘a throne of grace,’ and there and there only
we can ‘obtain mercy and find grace to help in time
of need.’ Wondrous throne! Blessed encouragement to
the poor pilgrim, traversing the desert surrounded by
enemies, his own heart by nature being one of the most
formidable of them!
It is of great importance to all, and
especially to the young, to attain correct definite ideas
of religious truths. Bunyan had remarkably clear views,
arising from his strong feelings and the rugged path by
which he was led to Christ. His definition of the
difference between grace and mercy is very striking:
‘Mercy signifies pitifulness to objects in a
miserable condition. Grace acts as a free agent, not
wrought upon by our misery but of God’s own princely
mind.’ Christ is the throne of grace—in him
dwells all the fulness of the Godhead, and yet he was found
in fashion as a man, he took on him the seed of Abraham,
and was made like unto his brethren, and offered himself up
as the sacrifice for sin. Thus he is the throne of grace on
the mercy-seat covering the law. Here he is an object of
worship to the angels on the right hand of God. In him the
uncreated glory, the dazzling effulgence of God, is so
veiled in his glorified body, that man, poor sinful man,
can lift up his eyes to behold the place where God’s
honour most richly dwelleth, and find acceptance and grace
to help in every time of need.
Take heed, sinner, this is your only access
to heaven. The mercy-seat and throne of grace is
God’s resting-place; the throne which governs his
church, and which eventually will govern all nations. This
throne, invisible to mortal eyes, is present at all times
and in all places. After the saints have been supplied with
all needful grace in this world, their glorified spirits
will see the great white throne, and hear the voice
proceeding from it, saying, Come, ye blessed of my Father,
inherit the kingdom prepared for you; while from that
throne the direful thunderbolts will be hurled upon the
despisers of divine grace, and they will hurry into
irretrievable misery. The safety of the Christian entirely
depends upon his being found ‘looking unto
Jesus’: his glorified human body is the throne of
grace—the source of all blessedness to his
worshippers—the gate of heaven—the way, the
truth and the life. Yes, proud nature, HE who was the babe
at Bethlehem, the poor carpenter’s son, who,
notwithstanding his miracles of wisdom, power, and mercy,
was despised and rejected of men, HIM hath God exalted to
be a prince and a Saviour, to give repentance and the
remission of sins, the only medium of access to heaven.
Before him every knee shall bow. Wonders of grace to God
belong. ‘Busy thyself, fellow christian, about this
blessed office of Christ. It is full of good, it is full of
sweet, it is full of heaven, it is full of relief and
succour for the tempted and dejected; wherefore, I say
again, study these things, give thyself wholly to
them.’ Reader, listen to these words of Bunyan, and
may the Divine blessing attend the reading of his
works.
GEO. OFFOR.
THE SAINTS’ PRIVILEGE AND
PROFIT
‘LET US THEREFORE COME BOLDLY UNTO THE
THRONE OF GRACE, THAT WE MAY OBTAIN MERCY, AND FIND GRACE
TO HELP IN TIME OF NEED.’—HEBREWS
4:16
This epistle is indited and left to the
church by the Holy Ghost, to show particularly, and more
distinctly, the high priesthood of Jesus Christ, and the
excellent benefits that his people have thereby. In which
both the excellency of his person, and transcendent glory
of his office, beyond either priest or priesthood of the
law, is largely set forth before us, in chapter 1:2,
&c.
Wherefore, in order to our beneficial
reading of this epistle, the Spirit of God calls upon us,
first, most seriously to consider what an one this
excellent person is: ‘Wherefore, holy
brethren,’ saith he, you that are ‘partakers of
the heavenly calling,’ consequently you that are
related to and that are concerned in the undertaking of
this holy one, ‘consider the Apostle and High Priest
of our profession, Christ Jesus’ (Heb 3:1). Consider
how great and how fit this man is for so holy and glorious
a calling. He being so high, as to be far above all
heavens; so great, as to be the Son of, and God equal with
the Father. Consider him also as to his humanity, how that
he is really flesh of our flesh; sinlessly so,
sympathisingly so, so in all the compassions of a man; he
is touched with, compassioneth, pitieth, loveth, succoureth
us, and feeleth our infirmities, and maketh our case his
own. Nay, he again, from the consideration of his greatness
and love, puts us upon a confident reliance on his
undertaking, and also presseth us to a bold approach of
that throne of grace where he continually abideth in the
execution of his office: ‘Seeing then,’ saith
he, ‘that we have a great high priest that is passed
into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast
our profession. For we have not an high priest which
cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities: but
was in all points tempted like as we are, yet
without sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne
of grace’ (Heb 3:14-16).
In the words we have, First, An
exhortation; [and] Second, An implication that we
shall reap a worthy benefit, if we truly put the
exhortation into practice. The exhortation is that we shall
come boldly to the throne of grace: ‘Let us therefore
come boldly unto the throne of grace.’ In all we have
an intimation of five things.
FIRST, That God hath more thrones than one;
else the throne of grace need not to be specified by name.
‘Let us come unto the throne of grace.’ SECOND,
That the godly can distinguish one throne from another. For
the throne here is not set forth by where or what signs it
should be known; it is only propounded to us by its name,
and so left for saints to make their approach unto it:
‘Let us come unto the throne of grace.’ THIRD,
The third thing is, the persons intended by this
exhortation, ‘Let us therefore come.’ Us: What
us? or who are they that by this exhortation are called
upon to come? ‘Let us.’ FOURTH, The manner of
the coming of these persons to this throne of grace; and
that is through the veil, boldly, confidently: ‘Let
us come boldly unto the throne of grace.’ FIFTH, the
motive to this exhortation; and that is twofold,
First, Because we have so great an high priest, one
that cannot but be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities: ‘Let us therefore come boldly unto the
throne of grace.’ And, second, because we are
sure to speed: ‘That we may obtain mercy, and find
grace,’ &c. I shall, as God shall help me, handle
these things in order.
[THAT GOD HATH MORE THRONES THAN
ONE.]
FIRST. For the first, That God hath more
thrones than one. He hath a throne in heaven, and a throne
on earth: ‘The Lord’s throne is in
heaven,’ and ‘they shall call Jerusalem the
throne of the Lord’ (Psa 11:4; Jer 3:17). He ruleth
over the angels; he ruleth in his church. ‘He ruleth
in Jacob, unto the ends of the earth’ (Psa 59:13).
Yea, he has a throne and seat of majesty among the princes
and great ones of the world. He ruleth or ‘judgeth
among the gods’ (Psa 82:1). There is a throne for him
as a Father, and a throne for Christ as a giver of reward
to all faithful and overcoming Christians: ‘To him
that overcometh, will I grant to sit with me in my throne,
even as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in
his throne’ (Rev 3:21).
There is also to be a throne of judgment, on
which God by Christ, at the great and notable day, shall
sit to give to the whole world, their last or final
sentence; from which, no, not, not by any means, they shall
never be released. This throne is made mention of in the
New Testament, and is called by Christ ‘the throne of
his glory,’ and ‘a great white throne’
(Matt 25:31; Rev 20:11). And his presence, when he sits
upon this throne, will be so terrible, that nothing shall
be able to abide it that is not reconciled to God by him
before.
Wherefore it is not amiss that I give you
this hint, because it may tend to inform unwary Christians,
when they go to God, that they address not themselves to
him at rovers, or at random; but that when they come to him
for benefits, they direct their prayer to the throne of
grace, or to God as considered on a throne of
grace.[1] For he is not to be found a God
merciful and gracious, but as he is on the throne of grace.
This is his holy place, out of which he is terrible to the
sons of men, and cannot be gracious unto them. For as when
he shall sit at the last day upon his throne of judgment,
he will neither be moved with the tears of misery of the
world to do any thing for them, that in the least will have
a tendency to a relaxation of the least part of their
sorrow; so now let men take him where they will, or
consider him as they list, he gives no grace, no special
grace, but as considered on the throne of grace: wherefore
they that will pray, and speed, they must come to a throne
of grace: to a God that sitteth on a throne of grace:
‘Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace,
that we may obtain,’ &c.
The unbeliever, the erroneous and
superstitious, consider not this: wherefore they speak to
God as their fancies lead them, not as the word directs
them, and therefore obtain nothing. Ask the carnal man to
whom he prays? he will say to God. Ask him where this God
is? he will say in heaven. But ask him how, or under what
notion he is to be considered there? and he will give a few
generals, but cannot direct his soul unto him as he is upon
a throne of grace, as the apostle here biddeth, saying,
‘Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace.’
Wherefore they come and go, or rather go and come to no
advantage at all: they find nothing but their labour or
words for their pains. For the right considering of God
when I go unto him, and how or where I may find him
gracious and merciful, is all in all; and mercy and grace
is then obtained when we come to him as sitting upon a
throne of grace.
[THE GODLY CAN DISTINGUISH ONE THRONE
FROM ANOTHER.]
SECOND. We will therefore come to the second
thing, to wit, that the godly can distinguish one thing
from another. And the reason why I so conclude, is, as I
said, because the throne here is not set forth unto us
here, by where or what signs it should be known; it is only
propounded to us by its name, a throne of grace, and so
left for saints to make their approach thereto: ‘Let
us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace.’
We will therefore take this conclusion into two parts, and
consider it under this double position. FIRST, That there
is a throne of grace. SECOND, That it is the privilege of
the godly to distinguish from all other thrones whatever
this throne of grace.
FIRST, There is a throne of grace.
This must be true, because the text saith it;[2]
also it is that of which the mercy-seat, so often made
mention of in the Old Testament, was a type, shadow, or
figure; nor is the terms of seat and throne of any strength
to make this supposition void. For it is common for the
antitype to be put forth in words unto us more glorious
than is the figure or shadow of that thing. And the reason
is, for that the heavenly things themselves are far more
excellent than the shadow by which they are represented.
What is a sheep, a bull, an ox, or calf, to Christ, or
their blood to the blood of Christ? What is Jerusalem that
stood in Canaan, to that new Jerusalem that shall come down
from heaven? or the tabernacle made with corruptible
things, to the body of Christ, or heaven itself? No marvel
then, if they be set forth unto us by words of an inferior
rank; the most full and aptest being reserved to set out
the highest things withal.
Before I proceed to give you a more
particular description of this throne of grace, as also how
it may be know, I will a little touch upon the terms
themselves, and show briefly what must be implied by
them.
[Import of the term
grace.]
First, By this word grace, we are to
understand God’s free, sovereign, good pleasure,
whereby he acteth in Christ towards his people. Grace and
mercy therefore are terms that have their distinct
significations; mercy signifies pitifulness, or a running
over of infinite bowels to objects in a miserable and
helpless condition. But grace signifies that God still acts
in this as a free agent, not being wrought upon by the
misery of the creature, as a procuring cause; but of his
own princely mind.
Were there no objects of pity among those
that in the old world perished by the flood, or that in
Sodom were burned with fire from heaven? doubtless,
according to our apprehension, there were many: but Noah,
and he only, found grace in God’s eyes; not because
that of himself he was better than the rest, but God acted
as a gracious prince towards him, and let him share in
mercy of his own sovereign will and pleasure. But this at
first was not so fully made manifest as it was afterwards.
Wherefore the propitiatory was not called, as here, a
throne of grace, but a mercy-seat, albeit there was great
glory in these terms also; for, by mercy-seat was showed,
not only that God had compassion for men, but that also to
be good was as his continual resting-place, whither he
would at length retire, and where he would sit down and
abide, whatever terrible or troublesome work for his church
was on the wheel[3] at present. For a seat is a
place of rest, yea, is prepared for that end; and in that
here mercy is called that seat, it is to show, as I said,
that whatever work is on the wheel in the world, let it be
never so dreadful and amazing, yet to God’s church it
shall end in mercy, for that is God’s resting-place.
Wherefore after God had so severely threatened and punished
his church under the name of a whorish woman, as you may
read in the prophet Ezekiel, he saith, ‘So will I
make my fury toward thee to rest, and my jealousy shall
depart from thee; and I will be quiet, and will be no more
angry.’ And again, speaking of the same people and of
the same punishments, he saith, ‘Nevertheless, I will
remember my covenant with thee in the days of thy youth,
and I will establish unto thee an everlasting
covenant.’ And again, ‘I will establish my
covenant with thee, and thou shalt know that I am
the Lord; that thou mayest remember and be confounded, and
never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame, when I
am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done, saith
the Lord God’ (Eze 16:42,60-63). These, with many
more places, show that mercy is God’s place of rest,
and thither he will retire at last, and from thence will
bless his church, his people.
But yet these terms, a throne, the throne of
grace, doth more exceed in glory: not only because the word
grace shows that God, by all that he doth towards us in
saving and forgiving, acts freely as the highest Lord, and
of his own good-will and pleasure, but also for that he now
saith, that his grace is become a king, a throne of grace.
A throne is not only a seat for rest, but a place of
dignity and authority. This is known to all. Wherefore by
this word, a throne, or the throne of grace, is intimated,
that God ruleth and governeth by his grace. And this he can
justly do: ‘Grace reigns through righteousness, unto
eternal life,[4] through Jesus Christ out
Lord’ (Rom 5:21). So then, in that here is mention
made of a throne of grace, it showeth that sin, and Satan,
and death, and hell, must needs be subdued. For these last
mentioned are but weakness and destruction; but grace is
life, and the absolute sovereign over all these to the
ruling of them utterly down. A throne of grace!
But this then God plainly declareth, that he
is resolved this way to rule, and that he pointeth at sin
as his deadly foe: and if so, then, ‘where sin
aboundeth, grace must much more abound’ (Rom
5:20).[5] For it is the wisdom and discretion of
all that rule, to fortify themselves against them that
rebel against them what they can. Wherefore he saith again,
‘Sin shall not have dominion over you; for ye are not
under the law, but under grace’ (Rom 6:14). Sin seeks
for the dominion, and grace seeks for the dominion; but sin
shall not rule, because it has no throne in the church
among the godly. Grace is king. Grace has the throne, and
the people of God are not under the dominion of sin, but of
the grace of God, the which they are here implicitly bid to
acknowledge, in that they are bid to come boldly to it for
help: ‘That we may obtain mercy, and find grace to
help; to help in time of need.’ For as from the hand
and power of the king comes help and succour to the
subject, when assaulted by an enemy; so from the throne of
grace, or from grace as it reigns, comes the help and
health of God’s people. Hence it is said again,
‘A glorious high throne from the beginning is
the place of our sanctuary’ (Jer 17:12). Here then
the saints take shelter from the roaring of the devil, from
the raging of their lusts, and from the fury of the wicked.
That also is a very notable place, ‘He will subdue
our iniquities; and thou wilt cast all their sins into the
depths of the sea’ (Micah 7:19). He speaks here of
God as solacing himself in mercy, and as delighting of
himself in the salvation of his people, and that without
comparison: ‘Who is a God like unto thee, that
pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the
remnant of his heritage? he retaineth not his anger for
ever, because he delighteth in mercy’ (Micah
7:18). Thus is mercy and grace got into the throne, reigns,
and will assuredly conquer all; yea, will conquer, and that
with a shout. ‘Mercy rejoiceth against
judgment’ (James 2:13). Yea, glorieth when it getteth
the victory of sin, and subdueth the sinner unto God and to
his own salvation, as is yet more fully showed in the
parable of the prodigal son (Luke 15). But this, briefly to
show you something of the nature of the terms, and what
must necessarily be implied thereby.
[What is to be inferred from the term
‘throne of grace.’]
Second. We will in the next place
show what is to be inferred from hence. And,
1. To be sure this is inferred, that
converted men are not every way, or in every sense, free
from the being of sin. For, were they, they need not betake
themselves to a throne of grace for help; when it saith
there is grace in God, it inferreth, that there is sin in
the godly; and when it saith, grace reigns, as upon a
throne, it implies, that sin would ascend the throne, would
reign, and would have the dominion over the children of
God. This also is manifest, when he saith, ‘Let not
sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should
obey it in the lusts thereof’ (Rom 7:12). And the
only way to prevent it is to apply ourselves, as by the
text we are directed, to the throne of grace for help
against it.
2. The text implies, that at certain times
the most godly man in the world may be hard put to it by
the sin that dwelleth in him; yea, so hard put to it, as
that there can be no ways to save himself from a fall, but
by imploring heaven and the throne of grace for help. This
is called the needy time, the time when the wayfaring man
that knocked at David’s door shall knock at ours (2
Sam 12); or when we are got into the sieve into which Satan
did get Peter (Luke 22:31); or when those fists are about
our ears that were about Paul’s; and when that thorn
pricks us that Paul said was in his flesh (2 Cor 12:7,8).
But why, or how comes it to pass, that the godly are so
hard put to it at these times, but because there is in
them, that is, in their flesh, no good thing, but
consequently all aptness to close in with the devil and his
suggestions, to the overthrow of the soul? But now here we
are presented with a throne of grace, unto which, as
presented with a throne of grace, unto which, as David
says, we must ‘continually resort’; and that is
the way to obtain relief, and to find help in time of need
(Psa 71:3).
3. As Christians are sometimes in imminent
dangers of falling, so sometimes it is so, that they are
fallen, are down, down dreadfully, and can by no means lift
up themselves. And this happeneth unto them because they
have been remiss as to the conscionable performance of what
by this exhortation they are enjoined to. They have not
been constant supplicants at this throne for preserving
grace; for had they, they should, as the text suggests,
most certainly have kept from such a fall; help should have
been granted them in their needful time. But that is it, of
which such are guilty, which is written in the prophet
Isaiah, ‘But thou hast not called upon me, O Jacob;
but thou hast been weary of me, O Israel’ (Isa
43:22). Therefore thou art profaned, therefore thou art
given to reproaches (Isa 43:28). Now, as they which are
falling are kept from coming down by coming to this throne
of grace, so those that are fallen must rise by the sceptre
of love extended to them from thence. Men may fall by sin,
but cannot raise up themselves without the help of grace.
Wherefore, it is worthy of our inquiry after a more
thorough knowledge of this throne of grace, whence, as we
may well perceive, our help comes, and by what comes from
thence we are made to stand. I therefore come now to a more
particular description of this throne of grace; and to show
how the godly know, or may know it, from other thrones of
God.
[What this throne of grace
is.]
First, then, this throne of grace is
the humanity, or heart and soul of Jesus Christ, in which
God sits and resteth for ever in love towards them that
believe in him. Forasmuch as Christ did, by the body of his
flesh, when here, reconcile them unto the Father.
‘The key of the house of David,’ saith God,
‘will I lay upon his shoulder; so he shall open and
none shall shut; and he shall shut and none shall open. And
I will fasten him as a nail in a sure place; and he
shall be for a glorious throne to his Father’s
house’ (Isa 22:22,23). For a glorious throne to his
Father’s house, that is, for his Father’s
house, to come to their Father by; for that they shall
always find him thereon; or, as another scripture saith, in
Christ reconciling them unto him, not imputing to them
their trespasses and sins (2 Cor 5:19). Nor is it possible,
that we lay aside the human nature of Christ, for us to
find any such thing as a throne of grace, either in earth
or heaven; for that then nothing can be found to be the
rest of God. ‘This is my beloved Son, in whom I am
well pleased,’ is God’s own language; but there
is none other of whom he hath so said (Matt 3:17).
Wherefore he resteth in him towards us, and in him only.
Besides, grace cannot be extended towards us but in a way
of justice; for that the law and our sin obstructeth
another way (Gen 3:24). But, lay the human nature of Christ
aside, and where will you find, THAT that shall become such
a sacrifice to justice for the sin of men, as that God, for
the sake of that, shall both forgive, and cause that grace
for ever should reign towards us in such a way? It reigns
through righteousness, or justice, by Jesus Christ, and no
way else. Christ Jesus, therefore, is this throne of grace;
or him, or that, by which grace reigns towards the children
of God (Rom 5:21).
That scripture also gives us a little light
herein, ‘And I beheld, and lo! in the midst of the
throne,’ &c., ‘stood a Lamb, as it had been
slain’ (Rev 5:6). This is to show the cause why grace
is so freely let out to us, even for that there stands
there, in the midst of the throne, and in the midst of the
elders, a lamb as it had been slain, or, as it was made a
sacrifice for our sin; for, as a slain lamb, he now lives
in the midst of the throne, and is the meritorious cause of
all the grace that we enjoy. And though it seems by this
text that the throne is one thing and the Lamb another, yet
the Lamb of God is the throne, though not as a lamb or
sacrifice, but as one that by his sacrifice has made way
for grace to run like a river into the world. The Son of
God, Jesus Christ, is ALL; he is the throne, the altar, the
priest, the sacrifice, and all: but he is the throne, the
priest, the altar, and the sacrifice, under divers
considerations. He is not the throne as he is the priest;
he is not the priest as he is the sacrifice; he is not the
sacrifice as he is the altar; yet is truly all these. Yea,
there is no throne of grace, no high priest, no
propitiatory sacrifice, &c., but he. Of all which we
may yet speak further before we conclude this treatise. I
conclude, then, that Christ Jesus, in his human nature, is
this throne of grace. In his human nature, I say, he has by
that completely accomplished all things necessary for the
making way for grace to be extended to men; and that that
is not only God’s place of rest, but that by and from
which, as upon a glorious throne, his grace shall reign
over devil, death, sin, hell, and the grave, for ever. This
human nature of Christ is also called the tabernacle of
God; for the fullness of the Godhead dwells in it bodily.
It is God’s habitation, his dwelling-place, his chair
and throne of state. He doth all in and by it, and without
it he doth not any thing. But to pass this, let us come to
the next thing.
[Where the throne of grace is
erected.]
Second. We will now come to discourse
of the placing of this throne of grace, or to discover
where it is erected. And for this we must repair to the
type, which, as was said before, is called the mercy-seat;
the which we find, not in the outward court, nor yet within
the first veil (Heb 9:3-5); which signifies, not in the
world, nor in the church on earth, but in the holy of the
holies, or after the second veil, the flesh of Christ (Heb
10:20). There then is this throne of God, this throne of
grace, and no where here below. And for as much as it is
called the throne of God, of grace, and is there, it
signifieth that it is the highest and most honourable.
Hence he is said to be far above all heavens, and to have a
name above every name. Wherefore he that will come to this
throne of grace, must know what manner of coming it is by
which he must approach it; and that is, not
personally,[6] but by runnings out of heart; not
by himself, but by his Priest, his High Priest; for so it
was in the type (Heb 9:7). Into the second, where the
mercy-seat was, went the high priest alone, that is,
personally, and the people by him, as he made intercession
for them. This then must be done by those that will
approach this throne of grace. They must go to God, as he
is enthroned IN Christ; BY Christ, as he is the High Priest
of his church; and they must go to him in the holiest, by
him.
But again, as this throne of grace is in the
Holiest, not in the world, not in the church on earth, so
it is in this Holiest set up above the ark of the
testimony; for so was the mercy-seat, it was set up in the
most holy place, above the ark of the testimony (Deut
10:1-5; 1 Kings 8:9; 2 Chron 5:10). The ark of the
testimony. What was that? Why it was the place of the law,
the ark in which it was kept: the testimony was the law,
the ark was prepared to put that in. This ark in which was
put this law was set up in the holiest, and the mercy-seat
was set above it, for so was Moses commanded to place them.
Thou shalt make an ark, saith God, ‘and thou shalt
make a mercy-seat’: the ark shall be called the ark
of the testimony, and there ‘thou shalt put the
testimony that I shall give thee,’ that is, the law,
‘and thou shalt put the mercy-seat above upon the
ark, and there I will meet with thee, from above the
mercy-seat between the two cherubims, which are
upon,’ that is, above, ‘the ark of the
testimony,’ ‘shadowing the mercy-seat’
(Exo 25:16-22; Heb 9:5).
Thus, then, were things of old ordained in
the type, by which we gather what is now to be minded in
our worshipping of God. There was an ark made, and the two
tables of stone, in which the law was writ, was put therein
(Deut 10:2-5). This ark, with these two tables, were put
into the holiest, and this mercy-seat was set above it. The
Holy Ghost, in my mind, thus signifying that grace sits
upon a throne that is higher than the law, above the law;
and that grace, therefore, is to rule before the law, and
notwithstanding all the sentence of the law; for it
sitteth, I say, upon a throne, but the law sits on none; a
throne, I say, which the law, instead of accusing,
justifieth and approveth. For although it condemneth all
men, yet it excepteth Christ, who, in his manhood, is this
throne of grace. Him, I say, it condemneth not, but
approveth, and liketh well of all his doings; yea, it
granteth him, as here we see, as a throne of grace, to be
exalted above itself: yea, it cannot but so do, because by
wisdom and holiness itself, which is also the Lord of the
law, it is appointed so to do. Here, then, is the throne of
God, the throne of grace, namely, above the ark of the
testimony; on this God and his grace sits, reigns, and
gives leave to sinners to approach his presence for grace
and mercy. He gives, I say for those sinners so to do, that
have washed before in the brazen laver that is prepared to
wash in first, of which we may speak more anon. Now, behold
the wisdom of God in his thus ordaining of things; in his
placing, in the first place, the law, and Christ the ark of
the testimony, and the mercy-seat, or throne of grace, so
nigh together; for doubtless it was wisdom that thus
ordained them, and it might so ordain for these
reasons—
[Why the law and the mercy-seat are so
near together.]
1. That we that approach the throne of grace
might, when we come there, be made still to remember that
we are sinners— ‘for by the law is the
knowledge of sin’ (Rom 3:20)—and behold just
before us is this ark in which are the two tables that
condemn all flesh: yea, we must look that way, if we look
at all; for just above it is the mercy-seat or throne of
grace. So then here is a memento for them that come to God,
and to his throne of grace, for mercy, to wit, the law, by
which they are afresh put in remembrance of themselves,
their sins, and what need they have of fresh supplies of
grace. I read that the laver of brass and the foot of it
was made of the looking-glasses of the women that assembled
at the door of the tabernacle (Exo 38:8), methinks to
signify, that men might see their smyrches[7]
when they came to wash; so here you see the law is placed
even with the mercy-seat, only that stood above, whereby
those that come to the throne of grace for mercy might also
yet more be put in mind that they are sinners.
2. This also tendeth to set an edge upon
prayer, and to make us the more fervent in spirit when we
come to the throne of grace. Should a king ordain that the
axe and halter should be before all those that supplicate
him for mercy, it would put yet an edge upon all their
petitions for his grace, and make them yet the more humbly
and fervently implore his majesty for favour. But, behold,
the mercy-seat stands above, is set up above the ark and
testimony that is in it. Here, therefore, we have
encouragement to look for good. For observe, though here is
the law, and that too in the holiest of all, whither we go;
yet above it is the mercy-seat and throne of grace
triumphant, unto which we should look, and to which we
should direct our prayers. Let us therefore come boldly to
the throne of grace, notwithstanding the ark and testimony
is by; for the law cannot hurt us when grace is so nigh;
besides, God is now not in the law, but upon the throne of
grace that is above it, to gave forth pardons, and grace,
and helps at a time of need.
This, then, may serve to inform some
whereabout they are, when they are in their closets, and at
prayer. Art thou most dejected when thou art at prayer?
Hear me, thou art not far from the throne of grace; for thy
dejection proceedeth from thy looking into the ark, into
which God hath ordained that whosoever looks shall die (1
Sam 6:19). Now if thou art indeed so near as to see thy
sins, by thy reading of thyself by the tables in the ark,
cast but up thine eyes a little higher, and behold, there
is the mercy-seat and throne of grace to which thou
wouldest come, and by which thou must be saved. When David
came to pray to God, he said he would direct his prayer to
God, and would look up (Psa 5:3). As who should say, When I
pray, I will say to my prayers, O my prayers, mount up,
stay not at the ark of the testimony, for there is the law
and condemnation; but soar aloft to the throne that stands
above, for there is God, and there is grace displayed, and
there thou mayest obtain what is necessary to help in time
of need. Some, indeed, there be that know not what these
things mean; they never read their sin nor condemnation for
it; when they are upon their knees at their devotion, and
so are neither dejected at the sight of what they are, nor
driven with sense of things to look higher for help at
need; for need, indeed, they see none. Of such I shall say,
they are not concerned in our text, nor can they come
hither before they have been prepared so to do, as may
appear before we come to an end.
[How the godly distinguish the throne
of grace.]
SECOND. And thus have I showed you what this
throne of grace is, and where it stands. And now I shall
come to show you how you shall find it, and know when you
are come to it, by several other things.
First, then, about the throne of
grace there is ‘a rainbow - in sight like unto an
emerald’ (Rev 4:1-3). This was the first sight
that John saw after he had received his epistles for the
seven churches. Before he received them, he had the great
vision of his Lord, and heard him say to him, I am he that
was dead and am alive, or ‘that liveth and was dead,
and behold I am alive for evermore, amen; and have the keys
of hell and of death’ (Rev 1:18). And a good
preparation it was for a work of that nature that now he
was called unto; to wit, that he might the more warmly, and
affectionately, and confidently attest the truth which his
Lord had now for him to testify to them. So here, before he
entereth upon his prophecy of things to come, he hears a
first voice, and sees a first sight. The first voice that
he heard was, ‘Come up hither,’ and the first
sight that he saw was a throne with a rainbow round about
it. ‘And immediately,’ saith he, ‘I was
in the Spirit; and behold a throne was set in heaven, and
one sat on the throne. And he that sat was to look
upon like a jasper, and a sardine stone, and there
was a rainbow round about the throne’ (Rev
4:1-3).
The firs time that we find in God’s
Word mention made of a rainbow, we read also of its
spiritual signification, to wit, that it was a token of the
firmness of the covenant that God made with Noah, as
touching his not drowning the earth any more with the
waters of a flood. ‘I do set,’ saith he,
‘my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of
a covenant between me and the earth. And it shall come to
pass, when I bring a cloud over the earth, that the bow
shall be seen in the cloud. And I will remember my covenant
which is between me and you, and every living
creature of all flesh: and the waters shall no more become
a flood to destroy all flesh’ (Gen 9:13-15). The
first use, therefore, of the rainbow, it was to be a token
of a covenant of mercy and kindness to the world; but that
was not the utmost end thereof. For that covenant was but a
shadow of the covenant of grace which God hath made with
his elect in Christ, and that bow but a shadow of the token
of the permanency and lastingness of that covenant.
Wherefore the next time we read of the rainbow is in the
first of Ezekiel, and there we read of it only with
reference to the excellencies of its colour; for that it is
there said to be exactly like the colour of the glory of
the man that the prophet there saw as sitting upon a throne
(v 28). The glory, that is, the priestly robes; for he is a
priest upon the throne, and his robes become his glory and
beauty (Zech 6:13). His robes—what are they but his
blessed righteousness, with the skirts of which he covereth
the sinful nakedness of his people, and with the perfection
of which he decketh and adorneth them, ‘as a bride
adorneth herself with her jewels’ (Exo 28:2;
Eze 16:8; Isa 61:10).
Now here again, in the third place, we find
a rainbow, a rainbow round about the throne; round about
the throne of grace. A rainbow—that is, a token of
the covenant, a token of the covenant of grace in its
lastingness; and that token is the appearance of the man
Christ. The appearance—that is, his robes, his
righteousness, ‘from the appearance of his loins even
upward,’ and ‘from the appearance of his loins
even downward’ (Eze 1:27); even down to the foot, as
you have it in the book of the Revelation (1:13). ‘As
the appearance of the bow that is in the cloud in the day
of rain, so was the appearance of the brightness
round about. This was the appearance of the likeness
of the glory of the Lord’ (Eze 1:28). The sum then
is, that by the rainbow round about the throne of grace
upon which God sitteth to hear and answer the petitions of
his people, we are to understand the obedential
righteousness of Jesus Christ, which in the days of his
flesh he wrought out and accomplished for his people; by
which God’s justice is satisfied, and their person
justified, and they so made acceptable to him. This
righteousness, that shines in God’s eyes more
glorious than the rainbow in the cloud doth in ours, saith
John, is round about the throne. But for what purpose? Why,
to be looked upon. But who must look upon it? Why, God and
his people; the people when they come to pray, and God when
he is about to hear and give. ‘And the bow shall be
in the cloud’; says God, ‘and I will look upon
it, that I may remember the everlasting covenant between
God and every living creature of all flesh that is
upon the earth’ (Gen 9:16). And, I say, as the bow is
for God to look on, so it is also for our sight to behold.
A rainbow round about the throne, in sight; in whose sight?
in John’s and his companions, like unto an
emerald.
We read of Solomon’s great throne of
ivory, that though there was not its like in any kingdom,
yet he was not willing that the bow of it should stand
before him. It was round behind (1 Kings 10:18-20). O! but
God’s throne has the bow before, even round about to
view, to look upon in sight. Solomon’s was but a
shadow, and therefore fit to be put behind; but this is the
sum and substance, and therefore fit to be before, in view,
in sight, for God and his people to behold. Thus you see
that a rainbow is round about the throne of grace, and what
this rainbow is. Look then, when thou goest to prayer, for
the throne; and that thou mayest not be deceived with a
fancy, look for the rainbow too. The rainbow, that is, as I
have said, the personal performances of Christ thy Saviour
for thee. Look, I say, for that, it is his righteousness;
the token of the everlastingness of the covenant of grace;
the object of God’s delight, and must be the matter
of the justification of thy person and performances before
God. God looks at it, look thou at it, and at it only (Psa
71:16). For in heaven or earth, if that be cast away, there
is nothing to be found that can please God, or justify
thee. If it be said faith pleases God; I answer, faith is a
relative grace; take then the relative away, which, as to
justification, is this spangling robe, this rainbow, this
righteousness of Christ, and faith dies, and becomes, as to
what we now treat of, extinct and quenched as
tow.
And a very fit emblem the rainbow is of the
righteousness of Christ; and that in these particulars. 1.
The rainbow is an effect of the sun that shines in the
firmament; and the righteousness by which this throne of
grace is encompassed, is the work of the Son of God. 2. The
rainbow was a token that the wrath of God in sending the
flood was appeased; this righteousness of Christ is that
for the sake of which God forgiveth us all trespasses. 3.
The rainbow was set in the cloud, that the sinful man might
look thereon, and wax confident in common mercy; this
righteousness is showed us in the word, that we may by it
believe unto special mercy. 4. The bow is seen but now and
then in the cloud; Christ’s righteousness is but here
and there revealed in the Word. 5. The bow is seen commonly
upon, or after rain; Christ’s righteousness is
apprehended by faith upon, or soon after the apprehensions
of wrath. 6. The bow is seen sometimes more, sometimes
less; and so is this righteousness, even according to the
degree or clearness of the sight of faith. 7. The bow is of
that nature, as to make whatever you shall look upon
through it, to be of the same colour of itself, whether
that thing be bush, or man, or beast; and the righteousness
of Christ is that that makes sinners, when God looks upon
them through it, to look beautiful, and acceptable in his
sight, for we are made comely through his comeliness, and
made accepted in the Beloved (Eze 16:14; Eph
1:6).
One word more of the rainbow, and then to
some other things. As here you read that the rainbow is
round about the throne; so if you read on even in the same
place, you shall find the glorious effects thereof to be
far more than all that I have said. But,
Second. As the throne of grace is
known by the rainbow that is round about it; so also thou
shalt know it by this, the high priest is continually
ministering before it; the high priest, or Christ as
priest, is there before God in his high priest’s
robes, making continual intercession for thy acceptance
there. Now, as I said before, Christ is priest and throne
and all; throne in one sense, priest in another; even as he
was priest, and sacrifice, and altar too, when he became
our reconciler to God.
As a priest here, he is put under the notion
of an angel, of an angel that came and stood at the altar
to offer incense for the church, all the time that the
seven angels were to sound out with trumpets the alarm of
God’s wrath against the anti-christian world; lest
that wrath should swallow them up also. ‘And,’
saith John, ‘another angel came and stood at the
altar, having a golden censer; and there was given unto him
much incense, that he should offer it with the
prayers of all saint upon the golden altar which was before
the throne. And the smoke of the incense which came
with the prayers of the saints, ascended up before God out
of the angel’s hand’ (Rev 8:1-4).
Here then you have before the throne, that
is, the throne or mercy-seat, the high priest; for there it
was that God appointed that the altar of incense, or that
to burn incense on, should be placed (Exo 30:1-7). This
incense-altar in the type was to be overlaid with gold; but
here the Holy Ghost implies, that it is all of gold. This
throne then is the mercy-seat, or throne of grace, to which
we are bid to come; and, as you see, here is the angel, the
high priest with his golden censer, and his incense, ready
to wait upon us. For so the text implies, for he is there
to offer his incense with the prayers of all saints that
are waiting without at his time of offering incense within
(Luke 1:10). So, then, at the throne of grace, or before
it, stands the high priest of our propitiation, Christ
Jesus, with his golden censer in his hand, full of incense,
therewith to perfume the prayers of saints, that come
thither for grace and mercy to help in time of
need.[8] And he stands there, as you see, under
the name of an angel, for he is the angel of God’s
presence, and messenger of his covenant.
But now it is worth our considering, to take
notice how, or in what method, the high priest under the
law was to approach the incense-altar. When he came to make
intercession for the saints before the throne, he was to go
in thither to do this work in his robes and ornaments; not
without them, lest he died. The principal of these
ornaments were, ‘a breast-plate, and an ephod, and a
robe, and a broidered coat, a mitre, and a girdle’
(Exo 28:4). These are briefly called his garments,
in Revelation the first, and in the general they show us,
that he is clothed with righteousness, girded with truth
and faithfulness, for that is the girdle of his reins to
strengthen him (Isa 11:5). And that he beareth upon his
heart the names of the children of Israel that are
Israelites indeed; for as on Aaron’s breast-plate was
fixed the names of the twelve tribes of Israel, and he was
to bear the weight of them by the strength of his
shoulders, so are we on the heart of Christ (Isa
22:21).
Thus therefore is our high priest within the
holiest to offer incense upon the golden altar of incense,
that is, before the throne. Wherefore, when thou goest
thither, even to ‘the throne of grace,’ look
for him, and be not content, though thou shouldst find God
there, if thou findest him not there, I suppose now an
impossibility, for edification’s sake, for without
him nothing can be done; I say, without him as a priest. He
is the throne, and without him as a throne, God has no
resting-place as to us; he is a priest, and without him as
such we can make no acceptable approach to God; for by him
as priest our spiritual sacrifices are accepted (1 Peter
2:5). ‘By him, therefore, let us offer the sacrifice
of praise to God continually, - giving thanks,’ and
confessing to and ‘in his name’ (Heb 13:15).
And for our further edification herein, let us consider,
that as God has chosen and made him his throne of grace; so
he has sworn, that he shall be accepted as a priest for
ever there. For his natural qualifications we may speak
something to them afterwards; in the meantime know, that
there is no coming to God, upon pain of death without
him.
Nor will it out of my mind, but that his
wearing the rainbow upon his head doth somewhat belong to
him as priest, his priestly vestments being for glory and
beauty, as afore was said, compared to the colour of it
(Rev 10:1; Eze 1). But why doth he wear the rainbow upon
his head; but to show, that the sign, that the
everlastingness of the covenant of grace is only to be
found in him; that he wears it as a mitre or frontlet of
gold, and can always plead it with acceptance to God, and
for the subduing of the world and good of his people.
But,
Thirdly, The throne of grace is to be
known by the sacrifice that is presented there. The
high priest was not to go into the holiest, nor come near
the mercy-seat; the which, as I have showed you, was a type
of our throne of grace, ‘without blood.’
‘But into the second went the high priest
alone once every year, not without blood, which he offered
for himself, and for the errors of the people’
(Heb 9:7). Yea, the priest was to take of the blood of his
sacrifice, and sprinkle it seven times before the Lord,
that is, before the mercy-seat, or throne of grace; and was
to put some of the blood upon the horns of the altar of
incense before the Lord (Lev 4:5-7, 16:13-15). So then the
throne of grace is known by the blood that is sprinkled
thereon, and by the atonement that by it is made there. I
told you before that before the throne of grace there is
our high-priest; and now I tell you, there is his sacrifice
too; his sacrifice which he there presenteth as amends for
the sins of all such as have a right to come with boldness
to the throne of grace. Hence, as I mentioned before, there
is said to be in the midst of the throne, the same throne
of which we have spoken before, ‘a lamb as it had
been slain’ (Rev 5:6). The words are to the purpose,
and signify that in the midst of the throne is our
sacrifice, with the very marks of his death upon him;
showing to God that sitteth upon the throne, the holes of
the thorns, of the nails, of the spear; and how he was
disfigured with blows and blood when at his command he gave
himself a ransom for his people; for it cannot be imagined
that either the exaltation or glorification of the body of
Jesus Christ should make him forget the day in which he
died the death for our sins; specially since that which
puts worth into his whole intercession is the death he
died, and the blood he shed upon the cross, for our
trespasses.
Besides, there is no sight more taketh the
heart of God, than to see of the travail of the soul, and
the bruisings of the body of his Son for our
transgressions. Hence it is said, He ‘is in the midst
of the throne’ as he died, or as he had been slain
(Rev 7:17). It is said again, ‘The Lamb which is in
the midst of the throne shall feed them.’ The Lamb,
that is, the Son of God as a sacrifice, shall be always in
the midst of the throne to feed and comfort his people. He
is the throne, he is the priest, he is the sacrifice. But
then how as a Lamb is he in the midst of the throne? Why,
the meaning in mine opinion is, that Christ, as a dying and
bleeding sacrifice, shall be chief in the reconciling of us
to God; or that his being offered for our sins shall be of
great virtue when pleaded by him as priest, to the
obtaining of grace, mercy, and glory for us (Heb 9:12). By
his blood he entered into the holy place; by his blood he
hath made an atonement for us before the mercy-seat. His
blood it is that speaketh better for us than the blood of
Abel did for Cain (Heb 12:24). Also it is by his blood that
we have bold admittance into the holiest (Heb 10:19).
Wherefore no marvel if you find him here a Lamb, as it had
been slain, and that in the midst of the throne of
grace.
While thou art therefore thinking on him, as
he is the throne of grace, forget him not as he is priest
and sacrifice; for as a priest he makes atonement; but
there is no atonement made for sin without a sacrifice.
Now, as Christ is a sacrifice, so he is to be considered as
passive, or a sufferer; as he is a priest, so he is active,
or one that hath offered up himself; as he is an altar, so
he is to be considered as God; for in and upon the power of
his Godhead he offered up himself. The altar then was not
the cross, as some have foolishly imagined. But as a
throne, a throne of grace; so he is to be considered as
distinct from these three things, as I also have hinted
before. Wouldst thou then know this throne of grace, where
God sits to hear prayers and give grace? then cast the eyes
of thy soul about, and look till thou findest the Lamb
there; a Lamb there ‘as it had been slain,’ for
by this thou shalt know thou art right. A slain Lamb, or a
Lamb as it had been slain, when it is seen by a supplicant
in the midst of the throne, whither he is come for grace,
is a blessed sight! A blessed sight indeed! And it informs
him he is where he should be.
And thou must look for this, the rather
because without blood is no remission. He that thinks to
find grace at God’s hand, and yet enters not into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus, will find himself mistaken,
and will find a DEAD,[9] instead of ‘a
living way’ (Heb 10:19). For if not anything below,
or besides blood, can yield remission on God’s part,
how should remission be received by us without our acting
faith therein? We are justified by his blood, through faith
in his blood (Rom 5:6-9). Wherefore, I say, look when thou
approachest the throne of grace, that thou give diligence
to see for the Lamb; that is, ‘as it had been
slain’ in the midst of the throne of grace; and then
thou wilt have, not only a sign that thou presentest thy
supplications to God, where, and as thou shouldst; but
there also wilt thou meet with matter to break, to soften,
to bend, to bow, and to make thy heart as thou wouldst have
it; for if the blood of a goat will, as some say, dissolve
an adamant, a stone that is harder than
flint;[10] shall not the sight of ‘a Lamb
as it had been slain’ much more dissolve and melt
down the spirit of that man that is upon his knees before
the throne of grace for mercy; especially when he shall
see, that not his prayers, not his tears, not his wants,
but the blood of the Lamb, has prevailed with a God of
grace to give mercy and grace to an undeserving man? This
then is the third sign by which thou shalt know when thou
art at the throne of grace: that throne is sprinkled with
blood; yea, in the midst of that throne there is to be seen
to this day, a Lamb as it had been slain; and he is in the
midst of it, to feed those that come to that throne, and to
lead them by and to ‘living fountains of
waters’ (Rev 7:17). Wherefore,
Fourth. The throne of grace is to be
known, by the streams of grace that continually proceed
therefrom, and that like a river run themselves out
into the world. And, saith John, ‘He showed me a pure
river of water of life, clear as crystal, proceeding out of
the throne of God and of the Lamb’ (Rev 22:1). Mark
you, here is again a throne; the throne of God, which, as
we have showed, is the human nature of his Son; out of
which, as you read, proceeds a river, a river of water of
life, clear as crystal. And the joining of the Lamb also
here with God is to show that it comes, I say, from God, by
the Lamb; by Christ, who as a lamb or sacrifice for sin, is
the procuring cause of the running of this river; it
proceedeth out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.
Behold, therefore, how carefully here the Lamb is brought
in, as one from or through whom proceeds the water of life
to us. God is the spring-head; Christ the golden pipe of
conveyance; the elect the receivers of this water of life.
He saith not here, ‘the throne of the Lamb,’
but ‘and of the Lamb, to show, I say, that he it is
out of or through whom this river of grace should
come.’ But and if it should be understood that it
proceedeth from the throne of the Lamb, it may be to show
that Christ also has power as a mediator, to send grace
like a river into the church. And then it amounts to this,
that God, for Christ’s sake, gives this river of
grace, and that Christ, for his merits sake, has power to
do so too. And hence is that good wish, so often mentioned
in the epistles, ‘Grace to you, and peace from God
our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ’ (Rom 1:7; 1
Cor 1:3; 2 Cor 1:2; Gal 1:3; Eph 1:2; Phil 1:2; Col 1:2; 1
Thess 1:2; 2 Thess 1:2; Phile 3). And again, ‘Grace,
mercy, and peace, from God the Father and the Lord
Jesus Christ’ (1 Peter 1:2; 2 Tim 1:2; Titus 1:4).
For Christ has power with the Father to give grace and
forgiveness of sins to men (John 5:21-26; Mark 2:10). But
let us come to the terms in this text. Here we have a
throne, a throne of grace; and to show that this throne is
it indeed, therefore there proceeds therefrom a river of
this grace, put here under the term of ‘water of
life,’ a term fit to express both the nature of grace
and the condition of him that comes for it to the throne of
grace.
It is called by the name of water of life,
to show what a reviving cordial the grace of God in Christ
is, shall be, and will be found to be, of all those that by
him shall drink thereof. It shall be in him, even in him
that drinks it, ‘a well of water springing up into
everlasting life’ (John 4:14). It will therefore
beget life, and maintain it; yea, will itself be a spring
of life, in the very heart of him that drinks it. Ah! it
will be such a preservative also to spiritual health, as
that by its virtue the soul shall for ever be kept, I say,
the soul that drinks it, from total and final decay; it
shall be in them a well of living water, springing up into
everlasting life.
But there is also by this phrase or term
briefly touched the present state of them that shall come
hither to drink; they are not the healthful, but the sick.
It is with the throne of grace, as it is with the Bath, and
other places of sovereign and healing waters, they are most
coveted of them that are diseased, and do also show their
virtues on those that have their health and limbs; so, I
say, is the throne of grace; its waters are for healing,
for soul-healing, that is their virtue (Eze 47:8,9).
Wherefore, as at those waters above mentioned, the lame
leave their crutches, and the sick [obtain] such signs of
their recovery as may be a sign of their receiving health
and cure there; so at the throne of grace, it is where true
penitents, and those that are sick for mercy, do leave
their sighs and tears; ‘and the Lamb that is in the
midst of the throne shall feed them, and shall lead them
unto living fountains of waters; and God shall,’
there, ‘wipe away all tears from their eyes’
(Rev 7:17). Wherefore, as Joseph washed his face, and dried
his tears away, when he saw his brother Benjamin, so all
God’s saints shall here, even at the throne of grace,
where God’s Benjamin, or the Son of his right hand,
is, wash their souls from sorrow, and have their tears
wiped from their eyes. Wherefore, O thou that are diseased,
afflicted, and that wouldst live, come by Jesus to God as
merciful and gracious; yea, look for this river when thou
art upon thy knees before him, for by that thou shalt find
whereabout is the throne of grace, and so where thou mayest
find mercy.
But again, as that which proceeds out of
this throne of grace is called ‘water of life,’
so it is said to be a river, a river of water of life.
This, in the first place, shows, that with God is plenty of
grace, even as in a river there is plenty of water; a pond,
a pool, a cistern, will hold much, but a river will hold
more; from this throne come rivers and streams of water of
life, to satisfy those that come for life to the throne of
God. Further, as by a river is showed what abundance of
grace proceeds from God through Christ, so it shows the
unsatiable thirst and desire of one that comes indeed
aright to the throne of grace for mercy. Nothing but rivers
will satisfy such a soul; ponds, pools, and cisterns, will
do nothing: such an one is like him of whom it is said,
‘Behold he drinketh up a river, and hasteth
not; he trusteth that he can draw up Jordan into his
mouth’ (Job 40:23). This David testifies when he
saith, ‘As the hart panteth after the water-brooks,
so panteth my soul after thee, O God’ (Psa 42:1).
Hence the invitation is proportionable, ‘Drink
abundantly’ (Cant 5:1), and that they that are saved,
are saved to receive abundance of grace; ‘they which
receive abundance of grace, and of the gift of
righteousness, shall reign in life by one, Jesus
Christ’ (Rom 5:17). And hence it is said again,
‘When the poor and needy seek water, and
there is none, and their tongue faileth for
thirst, I the Lord will hear them, I the God of Israel will
not forsake them.’ But, Lord, how wilt thou quench
their boundless thirst? ‘I will open rivers in high
places, and fountains in the midst of the valleys: I will
make the wilderness a pool of water, and the dry land
springs of water’ (Isa 41:17,18). Behold here is a
pool of water as big as a wilderness, enough one would
think to satisfy any thirsty soul. O, but that will not do!
wherefore he will open rivers, fountains, and springs, and
all this is to quench the drought of one that thirsteth for
the grace of God, that they have enough. ‘They shall
be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house, and
thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures,
for with thee is the fountain of life’; &c. (Psa
36:8,9).
This abundance the throne of grace yieldeth
for the help and health of such as would have the water of
life to drink, and to cure their diseases withal: it yields
a river of water of life. Moreover, since grace is said
here to proceed as a river from the throne of God and of
the Lamb, it is to show the commonness of it; rivers you
know are common in the stream, however they are at the head
(Judg 5). And to show the commonness of it, the apostle
calls it ‘the common salvation’; and it is said
in Ezekiel and Zecharias, to go forth to the desert, and
into the sea, the world, to heal the beasts and fish of all
kinds that are there (Eze 47:8; Zech 14:8). This,
therefore, is a text that shows us what it is to come to a
throne, where the token of the covenant of grace is, where
the high priest ministereth, and in the midst of which
there is a Lamb, ‘as it had been slain’: for
from thence there cometh not drops, nor showers, but rivers
of the grace of God, a river of water of life.
Again, as the grace that we here read of is
said, as it comes from this throne, to come as a river of
water of life; so it is said to be pure and clear as
crystal. Pure is set in opposition to muddy
and dirty waters, and clear is set in
opposition to those waters that are black, by reason
of the cold and icyish nature of them; therefore there is
conjoined to this phrase the word crystal, which all
know is a clear and shining stone (Eze 34:19; Job 6:15,16).
Indeed the life and spirit that is in this water, will keep
it from looking black and dull; and the throne from whence
it comes will keep it from being muddy, so much as in the
streams thereof. ‘The blessing of the Lord, it maketh
rich, and he addeth no sorrow with it’ (Prov 10:22).
Indeed, all the sorrow that is mixed with our Christianity,
it proceedeth, as the procuring cause, from ourselves, not
from the throne of grace; for that is the place where our
tears, as was showed you, are wiped away; and also where we
hang up our crutches. The streams thereof are pure and
clear, not muddy nor frozen, but warm and delightful, and
that ‘make glad the city of God’ (Psa
46).
These words also show us, that this water of
itself can do without a mixture of anything of ours. What
comes from this throne of grace is pure grace, and nothing
else; clear grace, free grace, grace that is not mixed, nor
need be mixed with works of righteousness which we have
done; it is of itself sufficient to answer all our wants,
to heal all our diseases, and to help us at a time of need.
It is grace that chooses, it is grace that calleth, it is
grace that preserveth, and it is grace that brings to
glory: even the grace that like a river of water of life
proceedeth from this throne. And hence it is, that from
first to last, we must cry, ‘Grace, grace unto
it!’[11]
Thus you see what a throne the Christian is
invited to; it is a throne of grace whereon doth sit the
God of all grace; it is a throne of grace before which the
Lord Jesus ministereth continually for us; it is a throne
of grace sprinkled with the blood, and in the midst of
which is a Lamb as it had been slain; it is a throne with a
rainbow round about it, which is the token of the
everlasting covenant, and out of which proceeds, as here
you read, a river, a pure river of water of life, clear as
crystal. Look then for these signs of the throne of grace,
all you that would come to it, and rest not, until by some
of them you know that you are even come to it; they are all
to be seen have you but eyes; and the sight of them is very
delectable, and has a natural tendency in them, when seen,
to revive and quicken the soul. But,
Fifth. As the throne of grace is
known and distinguished by the things above named,
so it is by the effects which these things have
wrought. There is about that throne ‘four and
twenty seats, and upon the seats four and twenty elders
sitting, clothed in white raiment, and they have on their
heads crowns of gold’ (Rev 4:4). There is no throne
that has these signs and effects belonging to it but this;
wherefore, as by these signs, so by the effects of them
also, one may know which is, and so when he is indeed come
to the throne of grace. And a little as we commented upon
what went before, we will also touch upon this.
1. By seats, I understand places of rest and
dignity; places of rest, for that they that sit on them do
rest from their labours; and places of dignity, for that
they are about the throne (Rev 14:13). ‘And the four
and twenty elders which sat before God on their seats, fell
upon their faces and worshipped God’ (Rev 11:16). And
forasmuch as the seats are mentioned, before they are
mentioned that sat thereon, it is to show, that the places
were prepared before they were converted.
2. The elders, I take to be the twelve
patriarchs and the twelve apostles, or the first fathers of
the churches; for they are the elders of both the churches,
that is, both of the Jewish and Gentile church of God; they
are the ancients, as also they are called in the prophet
Isaiah, which are in some sense the fathers of both these
churches (Isa 24:23). These elders are well set forth by
that four and twenty that you read of in the book of
Chronicles, who had every one of them for sons twelve in
number. There therefore the four and twenty are (1 Chron
25:8-31).
3. Their sitting denoteth also their abiding
in the presence of God. ‘Sit thou at my right
hand,’ was the Father’s word to the Son, and
also signifieth the same (Psa 110:1). It is then the throne
of grace where the four and twenty seats are, and before
which the four and twenty elders sit.
4. Their white robes are Christ’s
righteousness, their own good works and glory; not that
their works brought them thither, for they were of
themselves polluted, and were washed white in the blood of
the Lamb; but yet God will have all that his people have
done in love to him to be rewarded. Yea, and they shall
wear their own labours, being washed as afore is hinted, as
a badge of their honour before the throne of grace, and
this is grace indeed. ‘They have washed their robes,
and made them white in the blood of the Lamb, therefore are
they before the throne of God’ (Rev 7:14,15). They
have washed as others did do before them.
5. ‘And they had on their heads crowns
of gold’ (Rev 4:4). This denotes their victory, and
also that they are kings, and as kings shall reign with him
for ever and ever (Rev 5:10).
6. But what! were they silent? did they say,
did they do nothing while they sat before the throne? Yes,
they were appointed to be singers there. This was signified
by the four and twenty that we made mention of before, who
with their sons were instructed in the songs of the Lord,
and all that were cunning to do so then, were two hundred
fourscore and eight (1 Chron 25:7). These were the figure
of that hundred forty and four thousand redeemed from the
earth. For as the first four and twenty, and their sons,
are said to sing and to play upon cymbals, psalteries, and
harps; and as they are there said to be instructed and
cunning in the songs of the Lord; so these that sit before
the throne are said also to sing with harps in their hands
their song before the throne; and such song it was, and so
cunningly did they sing it, that ‘no man could learn
it, but the hundred and forty and four
thousand which were redeemed from the earth’ (Rev
14:3).
Now, as I said, as he at first began with
four and twenty in David, and ended with four and twenty
times twelve, so here in John he begins with the same
number, but ends with such a company that no man could
number. For, he saith, ‘After this I beheld, and lo,
a great multitude which no man could number, of all
nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues stood before
the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes,
and palms in their hands. And cried with a loud voice,
saying, Salvation to our God, which sitteth upon the
throne, and unto the Lamb. And all the angels stood round
about the throne, and the elders, and the four beasts, and
fell before the throne on their faces, and worshipped
God’ (Rev 7:9-11). This numberless number seems to
have got the song by the end;[12] for they cry
aloud, ‘Salvation, salvation to our God and to the
Lamb’; which to be sure is such a song that none can
learn but them that are redeemed from the earth.
But I say, what a brave encouragement is it
for one that is come for grace to the throne of grace, to
see so great a number already there, on their seats, in
their robes, with their palms in their hands, and their
crowns upon their heads, singing of salvation to God, and
to the Lamb! And I say again, and speak now to the
dejected, methinks it would be strange, O thou that art so
afraid that the greatness of thy sins will be a bar unto
thee, if amongst all this great number of pipers and
harpers that are got to glory, thou canst not espy one that
when here was as vile a sinner as thyself. Look man, they
are there for thee to view them, and for thee to take
encouragement to hope, when thou shalt consider what grace
and mercy has done for them. Look again, I say, now thou
art upon thy knees, and see if some that are among them
have not done worse than thou hast done. And yet behold,
they are set down; and yet behold they have their crowns on
their heads, their harps in their hands, and sing aloud of
salvation to their God, and to the Lamb.
This then is a fifth note or sign that doth
distinguish the throne of grace from other thrones. There
are, before that, to be seen, for our encouragement, a
numberless number of people sitting and singing round about
it. Singing, I say, to God for his grace, and to the Lamb
for his blood, by which they are secured from the wrath to
come. ‘And the four and twenty elders fell
down before the Lamb, having every one of them harps, and
golden vials full of odours, which are the prayers of
saints, and they sung a new song, saying, Thou art worthy
to take the book, and to open the seals thereof; for thou
wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, out
of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation; and
hast made us unto our God, kings and priests, and we shall
reign on the earth’ (Rev 5:8-10). Behold, tempted
soul, dost thou not yet see what a throne of grace here is,
and what multitudes are already arrived thither, to give
thanks unto his name that sits thereon, and to the Lamb for
ever and ever? And wilt thou hang thy harp upon the
willows, and go drooping up and down the world, as if there
was no God, no grace, no throne of grace, to apply thyself
unto, for mercy and grace to help in time of need? Hark!
dost thou not hear them what they say,
‘Worthy,’ say they, ‘is the Lamb that was
slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and
strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing. And every
creature which is in heaven,’ where they are,
‘and on the earth,’ where thou art, ‘and
under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that
are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, and honour, and
glory, and power be unto him that sitteth upon the
throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever’ (Rev
5:12,13).
All this is written for our learning, that
we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might
have hope; and that the drooping ones might come boldly to
the throne of grace, to obtain grace and find mercy to help
in time of need. They bless, they all bless; they thank,
they all thank; and wilt thou hold thy tongue? ‘They
have all received of his fulness, and grace for
grace’; and will he shut thee out? Or is his grace so
far gone, and so near spent, that now he has not enough to
pardon, and secure, and save one sinner more? For shame,
leave off this unbelief! Wherefore, dost thou think, art
thou told of all this, but to encourage thee to come to the
throne of grace? And wilt thou hang back or be sullen,
because thou art none of the first? since he hath said,
‘The first shall be last, and the last first.’
Behold the legions, the thousands, the untold and
numberless number that stand before the throne, and be bold
to hope in his mercy.
Sixth. [The throne of grace is known
by what proceeds from it.] As the throne of grace is
distinguished from other thrones by these, so ‘out of
this throne proceeds lightnings, and thunderings, and
voices.’ Also before this throne are ‘seven
lamps of fire burning, which are the seven spirits of
God’ (Rev 4:5). This then is another thing by which
the throne of grace may be known as an effect of what is
before. So again, chapter the eighth, it is said, that from
the altar of incense that stood before the throne,
‘there were voices, and thunderings, and lightnings,
and an earthquake’ (Rev 8:5). All these then come out
of the holiest, where the throne is, and are inflamed by
this throne, and by him that sits thereon.
1. Lightnings here are to be taken for the
illuminations of the Spirit in the gospel (Heb 10:32). As
it is said in the book of Psalms, ‘They looked unto
him,’ on the throne, ‘and were lightened’
(Psa 34:5). Or, as it is said in other places, ‘The
voice of thy thunder was in the heaven, the
lightnings lightened the world’ (Psa 77:18). And
again, ‘His lightnings enlightened the world, the
earth saw and trembled’ (Psa 97:4). This lightning
therefore communicates light to them that sit in darkness.
‘God,’ saith the apostle, ‘who commanded
the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ’ (2 Cor
4:6). It was from this throne that the light came that
struck Paul off his horse, when he went to destroy it and
the people that professed it (Acts 9:3). These are those
lightnings by which sinners are made to see their sad
condition, and by which they are made to see the way out of
it. Art thou then made to see thy condition how bad it is,
and that the way out of it is by Jesus Christ? for, as I
said, he is the throne of grace. Why then, come orderly in
the light of these convictions to the throne from whence
thy light did come, and cry there, as Samuel did to Eli,
‘Here am I, for thou has called[13]
me’ (1 Sam 3:8). Thus did Saul by the light that made
him see; by it he came to Christ, and cried, ‘Who art
thou, Lord?’ and, ‘What wouldst thou have me
do?’ (Acts 9:5,6). And is it not an encouragement to
thee to come to him, when he lights thy candle that thou
mightest see the way; yea, when he doth it on purpose that
thou mightest come to him? ‘He gives light to them
that sit in darkness, and in the shadow of
death,’ what to do? ‘to guide our feet into the
way of peace’ (Luke 1:79). This interpretation of
this place seems to me most to cohere with what went
before; for first you have here a throne, and one sitting
on it; then you have the elders, and in them presented to
you the whole church, sitting round about the throne; then
you have in the words last read unto you, a discourse how
they came thither, and that is, by the lightnings,
thunderings, and voices that proceed out of the
throne.
2. As you have here lightnings, so thereto
is adjoined thunders. There proceeded out of this throne
lightnings and thunders. By thunders, I understand that
powerful discovery of the majesty of God by the word of
truth, which seizeth the heart with a reverential dread and
awe of him: hence it is said, ‘The voice of the Lord
is full of majesty; the voice of the Lord breaketh
the cedars’ (Psa 29:45). The voice, that is, his
thundering voice. ‘Canst thou thunder with a voice
like him?’ (Job 40:9). And ‘the thunder of his
power who can understand?’ (Job 26:14). It was upon
this account that Peter, and James, and John, were called
‘the sons of thunder,’ because, in the word
which they were to preach, there was to be not only
lightnings, but thunders; not only illuminations, but a
great seizing of the heart, with the dread and majesty of
God, to the effectual turning of the sinner to him (Mark
3:16,17).
Lightnings without thunder are in this case
dangerous, because they that receive the one without the
other are subject to miscarry. They were ‘once
enlightened,’ but you read of no thunder they had;
and they were subject to fall into an irrecoverable state
(Heb 6:4-6). Saul had thunder with his lightnings to the
shaking of his soul; so had the three thousand; so had the
jailor (Acts 2, 9, 16). They that receive light without
thunder are subject to turn the grace of God into
wantonness; but they that know the terror of God will
persuade men (Rom 3:8; Jude 4; 2 Cor 5:11). So then, when
he decrees to give the rain of his grace to a man, he makes
‘a way for the lighting of the thunder,’ not
the one without the other, but the one following the other
(Job 28:26). Lightning and thunder is made a cause of rain,
but lightning alone is not: ‘Who hath divided a
water-course for the overflowing of waters? or a way for
the lightning of thunder to cause it to rain on the earth,
where no man is: on the wilderness wherein
there is no man?’ (Job 38:25,26).
Thus therefore you may see how in the
darkest sayings of the Holy Ghost there is as great an
harmony with truth as in the most plain and easy; there
must be thunder with light, if thy heart be well poised and
balanced with the fear of God: we have had great lightnings
in this land of late years, but little thunders; and that
is one reason why so little grace is found where light is,
and why so many professors run on their heads in such a day
as this is, notwithstanding all they have seen. Well then,
this also should be a help to a soul to come to the throne
of grace; the God of glory has thundered, has thundered to
awaken thee, as well as sent lightnings to give thee light;
to awaken thee to a coming to him, as well as to the
enabling of thee to see his things; this then has come from
the throne of grace to make thee come hither; wherefore
observe, where it is by these signs made mention of before,
and by these effects; and go, and come to the throne of
grace.
3. As there proceeds from this throne
lightnings and thunders, so from hence it is said voices
proceed also: now these voices may be taken for such as are
sent with this lightning and thunder to instruct, or for
such [instruction] as this lightning and thunder begets in
our hearts.
(1.) It may be taken in the first sense for
light and dread, when it falleth from God into the soul, is
attended with a voice or voices of instruction to the soul,
to know what to do (Acts 2:3-7). This it was in
Paul’s case. He had light and dread, and voices for
his instruction; he had lightnings, and thunderings, and
voices: ‘Good and upright is the Lord;
therefore will he teach sinners in the way. The meek will
he guide in judgment; and the meek will he teach his
way’ (Psa 25:8,9).
(2.) Or by voices you may understand, such
as the lightning and thunder begets in our hearts: for
though man is as mute as a fish to Godward, before this
thunder and lightning comes to him, yet after that he is
full of voices (2 Cor 4:13, 7:14). And how much more
numerous are the voices that in the whole church on earth
are begot by these lightnings and thunders that proceed
from the throne of grace; their faith has a voice, their
repentance has a voice, their subjection to God’s
word has a voice in it; yea, there is a voice in their
prayers, a voice in their cry, a voice in their tears, a
voice in their groans, in their roarings, in their
bemoaning of themselves, and in their triumphs! (1 Thess
1:2-8; Psa 5:3, 7:17, 20:2-5, 22:1, 138:5; Jer
31:18).
This then is an effect of the throne of
grace; hence it is said that they proceed from it, even the
lightning, and the thunder, and the voices; that is,
effectual conversion to God. It follows then, that if all
these are with thy soul, the operations of the throne of
grace have been upon thee to bring thee to the throne of
grace; first in thy prayers, and then in thy person. And
this leads me to the next thing propounded to be spoken to,
which is to show who are the persons invited here to come
to the throne of grace. ‘Let us therefore
come.’
[THE PERSONS INTENDED BY THIS
EXHORTATION.]
THIRD. Now the persons here called upon to
come to the throne of grace, are not all or every sort of
men, but the men that may properly be comprehended under
this word Us and We; ‘let Us therefore come boldly,
that We may obtain.’ And they that are here put under
these particular terms, are expressed both before and
after, by those that have explication in them.
They are called [in the epistle to the
Hebrews], 1. Such as give the most earnest heed to the word
which they have heard (Heb 2:1). 2. They are such as see
Jesus crowned with glory and honour (Heb 2:9). 3. They are
called the children (Heb 2:14). 4. They are called the seed
of Abraham (Heb 2:16). 5. They are called Christ’s
brethren (Heb 2:17).
So, chapter the third, they are called holy
brethren, and said to be partakers of the heavenly calling,
and the people of whom it is said that Christ Jesus is the
apostle and high priest of their profession (Heb 3:1-6).
They are called Christ’s own house, and are said to
be partakers of Christ (Heb 3:14). They are said to be the
believers, those that do enter in into rest, those that
have Christ for a high priest, and with the feeling of
whose infirmities he is touched and sympathiseth (Heb
4:3,14,15).
So, in chapter the sixth, they are called
beloved, and the heirs of promise; they that have fled for
refuge to lay hold on the hope set before them; they are
called those that have hope as an anchor, and those for
whom Christ as a forerunner hath entered and taken
possession of heaven (Heb 6:9,17-20). So, chapter the
seventh, they are said to be such as draw nigh unto God
(Heb 7:19). And, chapter the eighth, they are said to be
such with whom the new covenant is made in Christ. Chapter
the ninth, they are such for whom Christ has obtained
eternal redemption, and such for whom he has entered the
holy place (Heb 9:12,22). Chapter the tenth, they are such
as are said to be sanctified by the will of God, such as
have boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of
Jesus; such as draw near with a true heart, in full
assurance of faith, or that have liberty to do so, having
their hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and their
bodies washed with pure water; they were those that had
suffered much for Christ in the world, and that became
companions of them that so were used (Heb 10:10,19,22-25).
Yea, he tells them, in the eleventh chapter, that they and
the patriarchs must be made perfect together (Heb 11:40).
He also tells them, in the twelfth chapter, that already
they are come to Mount Zion, to the city of the living God,
the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of
angels; to the general assembly and church of the first
born which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of
all; and to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to
Jesus the mediator of the New Testament, and to the blood
of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that of
Abel (Heb 12:22-24).
Thus you see what terms, characters, titles,
and privileges, they are invested with that are here
exhorted to come to the throne of grace. From whence we may
conclude that every one is not capable of coming thither,
no not every one that is under convictions, and that hath a
sense of the need of and a desire after the mercy of God in
Christ.
[The orderly coming to the throne of
grace.]
Wherefore we will come, in the next place,
to show the orderly coming of a soul to the throne of grace
for mercy: and for this we must first apply ourselves to
the Old Testament, where we have the shadow of what we now
are about to enter upon the discourse of, and then we will
come to the antitype, where yet the thing is far more
explained.
First. Then, the mercy-seat was for
the church, not for the world; for a Gentile could not go
immediately from his natural state to the mercy-seat, by
the high priest, but must first orderly join himself, or be
joined, to the church, which then consisted of the body of
the Jews (Exo 12:43-49). The stranger then must first be
circumcised, and consequently profess faith in the Messiah
to come, which was signified by his going from his
circumcision directly to the passover, and so orderly to
other privileges, specially to this of the mercy-seat which
the high priest was to go but once a year into (Eze
44:6-9).
Second. The church is again set forth
unto us by Aaron and his sons. Aaron as the head, his sons
as the members; but the sons of Aaron were not to meddle
with any of the things of the Holiest, until they had
washed in a laver: ‘And the Lord spake unto Moses,
saying, Thou shalt also make a laver of brass, and
his foot also of brass, to wash in; and thou
shalt put it between the tabernacle of the congregation and
the altar, and thou shalt put water therein. For Aaron and
his sons shall wash their hands and their feet thereat.
When they go into the tabernacle of the congregation they
shall wash with water, that they die not; or when they come
near to the altar to minister, to burn offerings made by
fire unto the Lord. So they shall wash their hands and
their feet that they die not: and it shall be a statute for
ever unto them, even to him, and to his seed
throughout their generations.’ See the margin (Exo
30:17-21, 40:30-32).[14]
Third. Nay, so strict was this law,
that if any of Israel, as well as the stranger, were
defiled by any dead thing, they were to wash before they
partook of the holy things, or else to abstain: but if they
did not, their sin should remain upon them (Lev 17:15,16).
So again, ‘the soul that hath touched any such’
uncleanness ‘shall be unclean until even, and shall
not eat of the holy things,’ much less come within
the inner veil, ‘unless he wash his flesh with
water’ (Lev 22:4-6). Now, I would ask, what all this
should signify, if a sinner, as a sinner, before he washes,
or is washed, may immediately go unto the throne of grace?
Yea, I ask again, why the apostle supposes washing as a
preparation to the Hebrews entering into the holiest, if
men may go immediately from under convictions to a throne
of grace? For thus, he says, ‘let us draw near’
‘the holiest’ (Heb 12:19), ‘with a true
heart, in full assurance of faith; having our hearts
sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed
with pure water’ (Heb 12:22). Let us draw near; he
saith not that we may have; but having FIRST been washed
and sprinkled.
The laver then must first be washed in; and
he that washed not first there, has not right to come to
the throne of grace; wherefore you have here also a sea of
glass standing before the throne of grace, to signify this
thing (Rev 4:6). It stands before the throne, for them to
wash in that would indeed approach the throne of grace. For
this sea of glass is the same that is shadowed forth by the
laver made mention of before, and with the brazen sea that
stood in Solomon’s temple, whereat they were to wash
before they went into the holiest. But you may ask me, What
the laver or molten sea should signify to us in the New
Testament? I answer, It signifieth the word of the New
Testament, which containeth the cleansing doctrine of
remission of sins, by the precious blood of Jesus Christ
(John 15:3).[15] Wherefore we are said to be
clean through the Word, through the washing of water by the
Word (Titus 3:5). The meaning then is, A man must first
come to Christ, as set forth in the Word, which is this sea
of glass, before he can come to Christ in heaven, as he is
the throne of grace. For the Word, I say, is this sea of
glass that stands before the throne, for the sinner to wash
in first. Know therefore, whoever thou art, that art minded
to be saved, thou must first begin with Christ crucified,
and with the promise of remission of sins through his
blood; which crucified Christ thou shalt not find in heaven
as such; for there he is alive; but thou shalt find him in
the Word; for there he is to this day set forth in all the
circumstances of his death, as crucified before our eyes
(Gal 3:1,2). There thou shalt find that he died,
when he died, what death he died, why he
died, and the Word open to thee to come and wash in his
blood. The word therefore of Christ’s Testament is
the laver for all New Testament priests, and every
Christian is a priest to God, to wash in.
Here therefore thou must receive thy
justification, and that before thou goest one step further;
for if thou art not justified by his blood, thou wilt not
be saved by his life. And the justifying efficacy of his
blood is left behind, and is here contained in the molten
sea, or laver, or word of grace, for thee to wash in.
Indeed, there is an interceding voice in his blood for us
before the throne of grace, or mercy-seat; but that is
still to bring us to wash, or for them that have washed
therein, as it was shed upon the cross. We have boldness
therefore to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus,
that is, by faith in his blood, as shed without the gate;
for as his blood was shed without the gate, so it
sanctifies the believer, and makes him capable to approach
the holy of holies. Wherefore, after he had said,
‘That he might sanctify the people with his own
blood,’ he ‘suffered without the gate’
(Heb 13:11-15). Let us by him therefore, that is, because
we are first sanctified by faith in his blood, offer to God
the sacrifice of praise continually, that is, the fruits of
our lips, giving thanks in his name. Wherefore the laver of
regeneration, or Christ set forth by the Word as crucified,
is for all coming sinners to wash in unto justification;
and the throne of grace is to be approached by saints, or
as sinners justified by faith in a crucified Christ; and
so, as washed from sin in the sea of his blood, to come to
the mercy-seat.
And it is yet far more evident; for that
those that approach this throne of grace, they must do it
through believing; for, saith the apostle, ‘How shall
they call on him in whom they have not believed,’ of
whom they have not heard, and in whom they have not
believed? for to that purpose runs the text (Rom 10:14).
‘How then shall they call on him in whom they have
not believed,’ antecedent to their calling on him,
‘and how shall they believe in him of whom they have
not heard’ first? So then hearing goes before
believing, and believing before calling upon God, as he
sits on the throne of grace. Now, believing is to be
according to the sound of the beginning of the gospel,
which presenteth us, not first with Christ as ascended, but
as Christ dying, buried, and risen.[16]
‘For I delivered unto you first of all, that which I
also received; how that Christ died for our sins according
to the scriptures; and that he was buried, and that he rose
again the third day, according to the scriptures’ (1
Cor 15:3,4).
I conclude then, as to this, that the order
of heaven is, that men wash in the laver of regeneration,
to wit, in the blood of Christ, as held forth in the word
of the truth of the gospel, which is the ordinance of God;
for there sinners, as sinners, or men as unclean, may wash,
in order to their approach to God as he sits upon the
throne of grace.
And besides, Is it possible that a man that
passeth by the doctrine of Christ as dead, should be
admitted with acceptance to a just and holy God for life;
or that he that slighteth and trampleth under foot the
blood of Christ, as shed upon the cross, should be admitted
to an interest in Christ, as he is the throne of grace? It
cannot be. He must then wash there first, or die—let
his profession, or pretended faith, or holiness, be what it
will. For God sees iniquity in all men; nor can all the
nitre or soap in the world cause that our iniquity should
not be marked before God (Jer 2:22). ‘For without
shedding of blood is NO remission’ (Heb 9:22).
Nothing that polluteth, that defileth, or that is unclean,
must enter into God’s sanctuary; much less into the
most holy part thereof, but by their sacrifice, by which
they are purged, and for the sake of the perfection
thereof, they believing are accepted. We have
‘therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus,’ and no way else (Heb
10:19).
[HOW WE ARE TO APPROACH THE THRONE OF
GRACE.]
FOURTH. But this will yet be further
manifest by what we have yet to say of the manner of our
approach unto the throne of grace.
FIRST, then, we must approach the throne of
grace by the second veil; for the throne of grace is
after the second veil. So, then, though a man cometh into
the tabernacle or temple, which was a figure of the church,
yet if he entered but within the first veil, he only came
where there was no mercy-seat or throne of grace (Heb 9:3).
And what is this second veil, in, at, or through which, as
the phrase is, we must, by blood, enter into the holiest?
why, as to the law, the second veil did hang up between the
holy and the most holy place, and it did hide what was
within the holiest from the eyes or sight of those that
went no further than into the first tabernacle. Now this
second veil in the tabernacle or temple was a figure of the
second veil that all those must go through that will
approach the throne of grace; and that veil is the flesh of
Christ.
This is that which the holy apostle
testifies in his exhortation, where he saith, We have
‘boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of
Jesus, by a new and living way which he hath consecrated
for us through the veil, that is to say, his flesh’
(Heb 10:19,20). The second veil then is the flesh of
Christ, the which until a man can enter or go through by
his faith, it is impossible that he should come to the
holiest where the throne of grace is, that is, to the heart
and soul of Jesus, which is the throne. The body of Christ
is the tabernacle of God, and so that in which God dwells;
for the fulness of the Godhead dwells in him bodily (Col
2:9). Therefore, as also has been hinted before, Christ
Jesus is the throne of grace. Now, since his flesh is
called the veil, it is evident that the glory that dwells
within him, to wit, God resting in him, cannot be
understood but by them that by faith can look through, or
enter through, his flesh to that glory. For the glory is
within the veil; there is the mercy-seat, or throne of
grace; there sitteth God as delighted, as at rest, in and
with sinners, that come to him by and through that flesh,
and the offering of it for sin without the gate. ‘I
am the way,’ saith Christ; but to what? and how?
(John 14:6). Why, to the Father, through my flesh.
‘And having made peace through the blood of his
cross, by him to reconcile all things to himself; by him,
I say, whether they be things in earth, or
things in heaven. And you that were sometime alienated, and
enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath
he reconciled [but how?] in the body of his flesh, [that
then must be first: to what?] to present you holy and
unblameable, and unreprovable in his sight’ (Col
1:20-22). That is, when you enter into his presence, or
approach by this flesh, the mercy-seat, or the throne of
grace.
This therefore is the manner of our coming,
if we come aright to the throne of grace for mercy, we must
come by blood through his flesh, as through the veil; by
which, until you have entered through it, the glory of God,
and that he is resolved that grace shall reign, will be
utterly hid from your eyes. I will not say, but by the
notion of these things, men may have their whirling
fancies,[17] and may create to themselves wild
notions and flattering imaginations of Christ, the throne
of grace, and of glory; but the gospel knowledge of this is
of absolute necessity to my right coming to the throne of
grace for mercy. I must come by his blood, through his
flesh, or I cannot come at all, for here is no back door.
This then is the sum, Christ’s body is the
tabernacle, the holiest; ‘thy law,’ saith he,
‘is within my heart,’ or in the midst of
my bowels (Psa 40:7,8). In this tabernacle then God
sitteth, to wit, on the heart of Christ, for that is the
throne of grace. Through this tabernacle men must enter,
that is, by a godly understanding of what by this
tabernacle or flesh of Christ has been done to reconcile us
to God that dwells in him. This is the way, all the way,
for there is no way but this to come to the throne of
grace. This is the new way into the heavenly paradise, for
the old way is hedged and ditched up by the flaming sword
of cherubims (Gen 3:24). The NEW and LIVING way, for to go
the other is present death; so then, this ‘new and
living way which he hath consecrated for us through the
veil, that is to say, his flesh,’ is the only way
into the holiest, where the throne of grace is (Heb
10:20).
SECOND. We must approach this throne of
grace, as having our hearts, first, sprinkled from an
evil conscience. The priest that was the representator
of all Israel, when he went into the holiest, was not to go
in, but as sprinkled with blood first (Exo 29). Thus it is
written in t he law; ‘not without blood’; and
thus it is written in the gospel (Heb 9:7). And now since
by the gospel we have all admittance to enter in through
the veil, by faith, we must take heed that we enter not in
without blood; for if the blood, virtually, be not seen
upon us, we die, instead of obtaining mercy, and finding
the help of grace. This I press the oftener, because there
is nothing to which we are more naturally inclined, than to
forget this. Who, that understands himself, is not sensible
how apt he is to forget to act faith in the blood of Jesus,
and to get his conscience sprinkled with the virtue of
that, that attempteth to approach the throne of grace? Yet
the scripture calls upon us to take heed that we neglect
not THUS to prepare ourselves. ‘Let us draw near with
a true heart, in full assurance of faith, having our hearts
sprinkled from an evil conscience,’ to wit, with the
blood of Christ, lest we die (Heb 10:22, 9:14). In the law
all the people were to be sprinkled with blood, and it was
necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should
be purified with these, that is, with the blood of bulls,
but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices
than these, that is, with the offering of the body, and
shedding of the blood of Christ. By this then must thou be
purified and sprinkled, who by Christ wouldst approach the
throne of grace.
THIRD. Therefore it is added, ‘And
our bodies washed with pure water.’ This the
apostle taketh also out of the law; where it was appointed,
as was showed before. Christ also, just before he went to
the Father, gave his disciples a signification of this,
saying to Peter, and by him to all the rest, ‘If I
wash thee not, thou hast no part with me’ (John
13:8). This pure water is nothing but the wholesome
doctrine of the word mixed with Spirit, by which, as the
conscience was before sprinkled with blood, the body and
outward conversation is now sanctified and made clean.
‘Now ye are clean through the word,’ saith
Christ, ‘which I have spoken unto you’ (John
15:3). Hence, washing, and sanctifying, and justifying, are
put together, and are said to come by the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ, and by the Spirit of our God (1 Cor 6:11).
Thou must then be washed with water, and sprinkled with
blood, if thou wouldst orderly approach the throne of
grace: if thou wouldst orderly approach it with a true
heart, in full assurance of faith; or if thou wouldst, as
the text biddeth thee here, to wit, ‘come boldly unto
the throne of grace, to obtain mercy, and find grace to
help in time of need.’
To tell you what it is to come boldly, is
one thing; and to tell you how you should come boldly, is
another. Here you are bid to come boldly, and are also
showed how that may be done. It may be done through the
blood of sprinkling, and through the sanctifying operations
of the Spirit which are here by faith to be received. And
when what can be said shall be said to the utmost, there is
no boldness, godly boldness, but by blood. The more the
conscience is a stranger to the sprinkling of blood, the
further off it is of being rightly bold with God, at the
throne of grace; for it is the blood that makes the
atonement, and that gives boldness to the soul (Lev 17:11;
Heb 10:19). It is the blood, the power of it by faith upon
the conscience, that drives away guilt, and so fear, and
consequently that begetteth boldness. Wherefore, he that
will be bold with God at the throne of grace, must first be
well acquainted with the doctrine of the blood of Christ;
namely, that it was shed, and why, and that it has made
peace with God, and for whom. Yea, thou must be able by
faith to bring thyself within the number of those that are
made partakers of this reconciliation, before thou canst
come boldly to the throne of grace. But,
[What it is to come to the throne of
grace without boldness.]
First. There is a coming to the
throne of grace before or without this boldness; but that
is not the coming to which by these texts we are exhorted;
yet that coming, be it never so deficient, if it is right,
it is through some measure an inlet into the death and
blood of Christ, and through some management, though but
very little, or perhaps scarce at all discerned of the
soul, to hope for grace from the throne; I say, it must
arise, the encouragement must, from the cross, and from
Christ as dying there. Christ himself went that way to God,
and it is not possible but we must go the same way too. So,
then, the encouragement, be it little, be it much—and
it is little or much, even as the faith is in strength or
weakness, which apprehendeth Christ—it is according
to the proportion of faith; strong faith gives great
boldness, weak faith doth not so, nor can it.
Second. There is a sincere coming to
the throne of grace without this boldness, even a coming in
the uprightness of one’s heart without it. Hence a
true heart and full assurance are distinguished. ‘Let
us draw near with a true heart, in full assurance of
faith’ (Heb 10:22). Sincerity may be attended with a
great deal of weakness, even as boldness may be attended
with pride; but be it what kind of coming to the throne of
grace it will, either a coming with boldness, or with that
doubting which is incident to saints, still the cause of
that coming, or ground thereof, is some knowledge of
redemption by blood, redemption which the soul seeth it has
faith in, or would see it has faith in. For Christ is
precious, sometimes in the sight of the worth, sometimes in
the sight of the want, and sometimes in the sight of the
enjoyment of him.[18]
Third. There is an earnest coming to
the throne of grace even with all the desire of one’s
soul. When David had guilt and trouble, and that so heavy
that he knew not what to do, yet he could say, ‘Lord,
all my desire is before thee, and my groaning is not
hid from thee’ (Psa 38:1-9). He could come earnestly
to the throne of grace; he could come thither with all the
desire of his soul: but still this must be from that
knowledge that he had of the way of remission of sins by
the blood of the Son of God.
Fourth. There is also a constant
coming to the throne of grace. ‘Lord,’ said
Heman, ‘I have cried day and night before
thee, let my prayer come before thee, incline thine ear
unto my cry, for my soul is full of troubles: and my life
draweth nigh unto the grave’ (Psa 88:1-3). Here you
see is constant crying before the throne of grace, crying
night and day; and yet the man that cries seems to be in a
very black cloud, and to find hard work to bear up in his
soul; yet this he had, namely, the knowledge of how God was
the God of salvation; yea, he called him his God as such,
though with pretty much difficulty of spirit, to be sure.
Wherefore it must not be concluded, that they come not at
all to the throne of grace, that come not with a full
assurance; or that men must forbear to come, till they come
with assurance; but this I say, they come not at all
aright, that take not the ground of their coming from the
death and blood of Christ; and that they that come to the
throne of grace, with but little knowledge of redemption by
blood, will come with but little hope of obtaining grace
and mercy to help in time of need.
I conclude then, that it is the privilege,
the duty and glory of a man, to approach the throne of
grace as a prince, as Job said, could he but find it, he
would be sure to do. ‘O that I knew where I might
find him!’ saith he, ‘that I might come
even to his seat: I would order my cause
before him, and fill my mouth with arguments: I would know
the words which he would answer me, and understand
what he would say unto me. Will he plead against me with
his great power? No; but he would put
strength in me. There the righteous might dispute with
him: so should I be delivered for ever from my judge’
(23:3-7). Indeed, God sometimes tries us. ‘He holdeth
back,’ sometimes, ‘the face of his throne,
and spreadeth his cloud upon it’ (Job 26:9). And
this seems to be Job’s case here, which made him to
confess he was at a loss, and to cry out, ‘O that I
knew where I might find him!’ And this he doth for
trial, and to prove our honesty and constancy; for the
hypocrite will not pray always. Will he always call upon
God? No, verily; especially not when thou bindest them,
afflictest them, and makest praying hard work to them (Job
36:13).
But difficulty as to finding of God’s
presence, and the sweet shining of the face of his throne,
doth not always lie in the weakness of faith. Strong faith
may be in this perplexity, and may be hard put to it to
stand at times. It is said here, that God did hold back the
face of his throne, and did spread a cloud upon it; not to
weaken Job’s faith, but to try Job’s strength,
and to show to men of after ages how valiant a man Job was.
Faith, if it be strong, will play the man in the dark;
will, like a mettled horse, flounce in bad way, will not be
discouraged at trials, at many or strong trials:
‘Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him,’
is the language of that invincible grace of God (Job
13:15). There is also an aptness in those that come to the
throne of grace, to cast all degrees of faith away, that
carrieth not in its bowels self-evidence of its own being
and nature, thinking that if it be faith, it must be known
to the soul; yea, if it be faith, it will do so and so:
even so as the highest degrees of faith will do. When,
alas! faith is sometimes in a calm, sometimes up, and
sometimes down, and sometimes at it with sin, death, and
the devil, as we say, blood up to the ears.[19]
Faith now has but little time to speak peace to the
conscience; it is now struggling for life, it is now
fighting with angels, with infernals; all it can do now, is
to cry, groan, sweat, fear, fight, and gasp for
life.[20]
Indeed the soul should now run to the cross,
for there is the water, or rather the blood and water, that
is provided for faith, as to the maintaining of the comfort
of justification; but the soul whose faith is thus attacked
will find hard work to do this, though much of the
well-managing of faith, in the good fight of faith, will
lie in the soul’s hearty and constant adhering to the
death and blood of Christ; but a man must do as he can.
Thus now have I showed you the manner of right coming to
the throne of grace, for mercy and grace to help in time of
need.
[None but the godly know the throne of
grace.]
The next thing that I am to handle, is,
first, To show you, that it is the privilege of the godly
to distinguish from all thrones whatsoever this throne of
grace. This, as I told you, I gathered from the apostle in
the text, for that he only maketh mention thereof, but
gives no sign to distinguish it by; no sign, I say, though
he knew that there were more thrones than it. ‘Let us
come boldly,’ saith he, ‘to the throne of
grace,’ and so leaves it, knowing full well that they
had a good understanding of his meaning, being Hebrews (Heb
9:1-8). They being now also enlightened from what they were
taught by the placing of the ark of the testimony, and the
mercy-seat in the most holy place; of which particular the
apostle did then count it, not of absolute necessity
distinctly to discourse. Indeed the Gentiles, as I have
showed, have this throne of grace described and set forth
before them, by those tokens which I have touched upon in
the sheets that go before—for with the book of
Revelation the Gentiles are particularly
concerned—for that it was writ to churches of the
Gentiles; also the great things prophesied of there relate
unto Gentile-believers, and to the downfall of Antichrist,
as he standeth among them.
But yet, I think that John’s discourse
of the things attending the throne of grace were not by him
so much propounded, because the Gentiles were incapable of
finding of it without such description, as to show the
answerableness of the antitype with the type; and also to
strengthen their faith, and illustrate the thing; for they
that know, may know more, and better of what they know;
yea, may be greatly comforted with another’s dilating
on what they know. Besides, the Holy Ghost by the word doth
always give the most perfect description of things;
wherefore to that we should have recourse for the
completing of our knowledge. I mean not, by what I say, in
the least to intimate, as if this throne of grace was to be
known without the text, for it is that that giveth
revelation of Jesus Christ: but my meaning is, that a
saint, as such, has such a working of things upon his
heart, as makes him able by the Word to find out this
throne of grace, and to distinguish it to himself from
others. For,
First. The saint has strong guilt of
sin upon his conscience, especially at first; and this
makes him better judge what grace, in the nature of grace,
is, than others can that are not sensible of what guilt is.
What it was to be saved, was better relished by the jailor
when he was afraid of and trembled at the apprehensions of
the wrath of God, than ever it was with him all his life
before (Acts 16:29-33). Peter then also saw what saving
was, when he began to sink into the sea: ‘Lord, save
me,’ said he, I perish (Matt 14:30). Sin is that
without a sense of which a man is not apprehensive what
grace is. Sin and grace, favour and wrath, death and life,
hell and heaven, are opposites, and are set off, or out, in
their evil or good, shame or glory, one by another. What
makes grace so good to us as sin in its guilt and filth?
What makes sin so horrible and damnable a thing in our
eyes, as when we see there is nothing can save us from it
but the infinite grace of God? Further, there seems, if I
may so term it, to be a kind of natural instinct in the new
creature to seek after the grace of God; for so saith the
Word, ‘They that are after the flesh, do mind the
things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit,
the things of the Spirit’ (Rom 8:5). The child by
nature nuzzles in its mother’s bosom for the breast;
the child by grace does by grace seek to live by the grace
of God. All creatures, the calf, the lamb, &c., so soon
as they are fallen from their mother’s belly, will by
nature look for, and turn themselves towards the teat, and
the new creature doth so too (1 Peter 2:1-3). For guilt
makes it hunger and thirst, as the hunted hart does pant
after the water brooks. Hunger directs to bread, thirst
directs to water; yea, it calls bread and water to mind.
Let a man be doing other business, hunger will put him in
mind of his cupboard, and thirst of his cruse of water;
yea, it will call him, make him, force him, command him, to
bethink what nourishing victuals is, and will also drive
him to search out after where he may find it, to the
satisfying of himself. All right talk also to such an one
sets the stomach and appetite a craving; yea, into a kind
of running out of the body after this bread and water, that
it might be fed, nourished, and filled therewith. Thus it
is by nature, and thus it is by grace; thus it is for the
bread that perisheth, and for that which endureth to
everlasting life. But,
Second. As nature, the new nature,
teaches this by a kind of heavenly natural instinct; so
experience also herein helpeth the godly much. For they
have found all other places, the throne of grace excepted,
empty, and places or things that hold no water. They have
been at Mount Sinai for help, but could find nothing there
but fire and darkness, but thunder and lightning, but
earthquake and trembling, and a voice of killing words,
which words they that heard them once could never endure to
hear them again; and as for the sight of vengeance there
revealed against sin, it was so terrible, that Moses, even
Moses, said, ‘I exceedingly fear and quake’
(Heb 12:18-21; Exo 19; 2 Cor 3). They have sought for grace
by their own performances; but alas! they have yielded them
nothing but wind and confusion; not a performance, not a
duty, not an act in any part of religious worship, but they
looking upon it in the glass of the Lord, do find it
spaked[21] and defective (Isa 64:5-8). They have
sought for grace by their resolutions, their vows, their
purposes, and the like; but alas! they all do as the other,
discover that they have been very imperfectly managed, and
so such as can by no means help them to grace. They have
gone to their tears, their sorrow, and repentance, if
perhaps they might have found some help there; but all has
either fled away like the early dew, or if they have stood,
they have stunk even in the nostrils of those whose they
were. How much more, then, in the nostrils of a holy
God!
They have gone to God, as the great Creator,
and have beheld how wonderful his works have been; they
have looked to the heavens above, to the earth beneath, and
to all their ornaments, but neither have these, nor what is
of [or resulting from] them, yielded grace to those that
had sensible want thereof. Thus have they gone, as I said,
with these pitchers to their fountains, and have returned
empty and ashamed; they found no water, no river of water
of life; they have been as the woman with her bloody issue,
spending and spending till they have spent all, and been
nothing better, but rather grew worse (Mark 5). Had they
searched into nothing but the law, it had been sufficient
to convince them that there was no grace, nor throne of
grace, in the world. For since the law, being the most
excellent of all the things of the earth, is found to be
such as yieldeth no grace—for grace and truth comes
by Jesus Christ, not by Moses (John 1:17)—how can it
be imagined that it should be found in anything inferior?
Paul, therefore, not finding it in the law, despairs to
find it in anything else below, but presently betakes
himself to look for it there where he had not yet sought
it—for he sometimes sought it not by faith, but as it
were by the works of the law (Phil 3:6-8)—he looked
for it, I say, by Jesus Christ, who is the throne of grace,
where he found it, and rejoiced in hope of the glory of God
(Rom 9:29-31, 5:1-3). But,
Third. Saints come to know and
distinguish the throne of grace from other thrones, by the
very direction of God himself; as it is said of the well
that the nobles digged in the wilderness—they digged
it by the direction of the lawgiver, so saints find out the
throne of grace by the direction of the grace-giver. Hence
Paul prays, that the Lord would direct the hearts of the
people into the love of God (2 Thess 3:5). Man, as man,
cannot aim directly at this throne; but will drop his
prayers short, besides, or the like, if he be not helped by
the Spirit (Rom 8:26). Hence the Son saith of himself,
‘No man can come to me, except the Father which hath
sent me draw him’ (John 6:44). Which text doth not
only justify what is now said, but insinuates that there is
an unwillingness in man of himself to come to this throne
of grace; he must be drawn thereto. He setteth us in the
way of his steps, that is, in that way to the throne by
which grace and mercy is conveyed unto us.
Fourth. We know the throne of grace
from other thrones, by the glory that it always appears in,
when revealed to us of God: its glory outbids all; there is
no such glory to be seen anywhere else, either in heaven or
earth. But, I say, this comes by the sight that God gives,
not by any excellency that there is in my natural
understanding as such; my understanding and apprehension,
simply as natural, is blind and foolish. Wherefore, when I
set to work in mine own spirit, and in the power of mine
own abilities, to reach to this throne of grace, and to
perceive somewhat of the glory thereof, then am I dark,
rude, foolish, see nothing; and my heart grows fat, dull,
savourless, lifeless, and has no warmth in the duty. But it
mounts up with wings like an eagle, when the throne is
truly apprehended. Therefore that is another thing by which
the Christian knows the throne of grace from all others; it
meets with that good there that it can meet with nowhere
else. But at present let these things suffice for
this.
[MOTIVES FOR COMING BOLDLY TO THE THRONE
OF GRACE.]
FIFTH. I come now to the motives by which
the apostle stirreth up the Hebrews, and encourageth them
to come boldly to the throne of grace. FIRST. The first is,
because we have there such an high priest, or an high
priest so and so qualified. SECOND. Because we that come
thither for grace are sure there to speed, or find grace
and obtain it.
[The first motive, because we have
such an high priest there.]
FIRST. For the fist of these, to wit, we
have an encouragement to move us to come with boldness to
the throne of grace, because we have an high priest there;
because we have such an high priest there. ‘For we
have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the
feeling of our infirmities, but was in all points tempted
like as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore
come boldly unto the throne of grace.’ Of this high
priest I have already made mention before, to wit, so far
as to show you that Christ Jesus is he, as well as he is
the altar, and sacrifice, and throne of grace, before which
he also himself makes intercession. But forasmuch as by the
apostle here, he is not only presented unto us as a throne
of grace, but as an high priest ministering before it, it
will not be amiss if I do somewhat particularly treat of
his priesthood also. But the main or chief of my discourse
will be to treat of his qualifications to his office, which
I find to be in general of two sorts. I. LEGAL. II.
NATURAL.
[THE LEGAL qualifications of Jesus
Christ for the office of high priest.]
I. LEGAL. When I say legal, I mean, as the
apostle’s expression is, not by ‘the law of a
carnal commandment,’ but by an eternal covenant, and
‘the power of an endless life’ thereby; of
which the priesthood of old was but a type, and the law of
their priesthood but a shadow (Heb 7:16, 9:15,24). But
because their law, and their entrance into their priesthood
thereby, was, as I said, ‘a shadow of good things to
come,’ therefore where it will help to illustrate, we
will make use thereof so to do; and where not, there we
will let it pass (Heb 10:1). The thing to be now spoken to
is, that the consideration of Jesus Christ being an high
priest before the throne of grace, is a motive and
encouragement to us to come boldly thither for grace:
‘Seeing then that we have a great high priest that is
passed into the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold
fast our profession,’ and ‘come boldly
unto the throne of grace’ (Heb 4:14,16). Now, how he
was made an high priest; for so is the expression,
‘made an high priest for ever after the order of
Melchisedec’ (Heb 6;20).
First. He took not his honour upon
himself without a lawful call thereto. Thus the priests
under the law were put into office; and thus the Son of
God. No man taketh this honour to himself, but he that is
called of God, as was Aaron. So also Christ
glorified not himself to be made a high priest, but he that
said unto him, Thou art my Son, today have I begotten thee.
Wherefore he was ‘called of God an high priest after
the order of Melchisedec’ (Heb 5:4-6,10). Thus far,
therefore, the law of his priesthood answereth to the law
of the priesthood of old; they both were made priests by a
legal call to their work or office. But yet the law by
which this Son was made high priest excelleth, and that in
these particulars—
1. He was made a priest after the similitude
of Melchisedec, for he testifieth, ‘Thou art a
priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec’ (Heb
7:17). Thus they under the law were not made priests but
after the order of Aaron, that is, by a carnal commandment,
not by an everlasting covenant of God.
2. And, saith he, ‘inasmuch as not
without an oath he was made priest, for those
priests were made without an oath, but this with an oath,
by him that said unto him, The Lord sware, and will not
repent, thou art a priest for ever after the order
of Melchisedec’ (Heb 7:20,21).
3. The priesthood under the law, with their
law and sacrifices, were fading, and were not suffered to
continue, by reason of the death of the priest, and
ineffectualness of his offering (Heb 7:23). ‘But this
man, because he continueth ever, hath an unchangeable
priesthood’ (v 24). ‘For the law maketh men
high priests which have infirmity, but the word of the oath
which was since the law, maketh the Son, who is
consecrated for evermore’ (v 28). From what hath
already been said, we gather, (1.) What kind of person it
is that is our high priest. (2.) The manner of his being
called to, and stated[22] in that
office.
(1.) What manner of person he is. He is the
Son, the Son of God, Jesus the Son of God. Hence the
apostle saith, ‘we have a great high priest,’
such an high priest ‘that is passed into the
heavens’ (Heb 4:14). Such an high priest as is
‘made higher than the heavens’ (Heb 7:26). And
why doth he thus dilate upon the dignity of his person, but
because thereby is insinuated the excellency of his
sacrifice, and the prevalency of his intercession, by that,
to God for us. Therefore he saith again,
‘Every’ Aaronical ‘priest standeth daily
ministering and offering oftentimes the same sacrifices,
which can never take away sins: but this man,’ this
great man, this Jesus, this Son of God, ‘after he had
offered one,’ one only, one once, but one (Heb
9:25,26), ‘sacrifice for sins for ever, sat down on
the right hand of God; from henceforth expecting till his
enemies be made his footstool. For by one offering he hath
perfected for ever them that are sanctified’ (Heb
10:11-14). Thus, I say, the apostle toucheth upon the
greatness of his person, thereby to set forth the
excellency of his sacrifice, and prevalency of his
intercession. ‘Wherefore, holy brethren, partakers of
the heavenly calling, consider the Apostle and high priest
of our profession, Christ Jesus’ (Heb 3:1). Or, as he
saith again, making mention of Melchisedec, ‘consider
how great this man was’ (Heb 7:4), we have such a
high priest, so great a high priest; one that is entered
into the heavens: Jesus the Son of God.
(2.) The manner also of his being called to
and stated in his office, is not to be overlooked. He is
made a priest after the power of an endless life, or is to
be such an one as long as he lives, and as long as we have
need of his mediation. Now Christ being raised from the
dead, dies no more; death hath no more dominion over him.
He is himself the Prince of life. Wherefore it follows,
‘he hath an unchangeable priesthood.’ And what
then? Why, then ‘he is able also to save them to the
uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he ever liveth
to make intercession for them’ (Heb 7:24,25). But
again, he is made a priest with an oath, ‘the Lord
sware, and will not repent, thou art a priest for
ever.’ Hence I gather, (a) That before God there is
no high priest but Jesus, nor ever shall be. (b) That God
is to the full pleased with his high priesthood; and so
with all those for whom he maketh intercession. For this
priest, though he is not accepted for the sake of another,
yet he is upon the account of another. ‘For every
high priest taken from among men is ordained for men in
things pertaining to God,’ to make
reconciliation for the sins of the people (Heb 5:1,2). And
again, he is entered ‘into heaven itself, now to
appear in the presence of God for us’ (Heb 9:24). God
therefore, in that he hath made him a priest with an oath,
and also determined that he will never repent of his so
doing, declareth that he is, and for ever will be,
satisfied with his offering. And this is a great
encouragement to those that come to God by him; they have
by this oath a firm ground to go upon, and the oath is,
‘Thou art a priest for ever,’ shalt be accepted
for ever for every one for whom thou makest intercession;
nor will I ever reject any body that comes to me by thee;
therefore here is ground for faith, for hope and rejoicing;
for this consideration a man has ground to come boldly to
the throne of grace.
Second. But again, as Christ is made
a priest by call and with an oath, and so, so far legally;
so he, being thus called, has other preparatory legal
qualifications. The High Priest under the law was not by
law to come into the holiest, but in those robes that were
ordained for him to minister in before God; which robes
were not to be made according to the fancy of the people,
but according to the commandment of Moses (Exo 28). Christ
our high priest in heaven has also his holy garment, with
which he covereth the nakedness of them that are his, which
robe was not made of corruptible things, as silver and
gold, &c., but by a patient continuance in a holy life,
according to the law of Moses, both moral and ceremonial.
Not that either of these were that eternal testament by
which he was made a priest; but the moral law was to be
satisfied, and the types of the ceremonial law to be as to
this eminently fulfilled; and he was bound by that eternal
covenant by which he is made a mediator to do so.
Wherefore, before he could enter the holiest of all, he
must have these holy garments made; neither did he trust
others, as in the case of Aaron, to make these garments for
him, but he wrought them all himself, according to all that
Moses commanded.
This garment Christ was a great while
a-making. What time, you may ask, was required? And I
answer, All the days of his life; for all things that were
written concerning him, as to this, were not completed till
the day that he hanged upon the cross. For then it was that
he said, ‘It is finished; and he bowed his head, and
gave up the ghost’ (John 19:28-30). This robe is for
glory and for beauty. This is it that afore I said was of
the colour of the rainbow, and that compasseth even round
about this throne of grace, unto which we are bid to come.
This is that garment that reaches down to his feet, and
that is girt to him with a golden girdle (Rev 1:13). This
is that garment that covereth all his body mystical, and
that hideth the blemishes of such members from the eye of
God, and of the law. And it is made up of his obedience to
the law, by his complete perfect obedience thereto (Rom
5:19). This Christ wears always, he never puts it off, as
the [former] high priests put off theirs by a ceremonial
command. He ever lives to make intercession; consequently
he ever wears this priestly robe. He might not go into the
holy place without it, upon danger of death, or at least of
being sent back again; but he died not, but lives ever; is
not sent back, but is set down at God’s right hand;
and there shall sit till his foes are made his footstool
(John 16:10).
This is that for the sake of which all are
made welcome, and embraced and kissed, forgiven and saved,
that come unto God by him. This is that righteousness, that
mantle spotless, that Paul so much desired to be found
wrapt in; for he knew that being found in that he must be
presented thereby to God a glorious man, not having spot,
or wrinkle, or any such thing. This therefore is another of
the Lord Jesus’ legal qualifications, as preparatory
to the executing of his high priest’s office in
heaven. But of this something has been spoken before; and
therefore I shall not enlarge upon it here.
Third. When the high priest under the
law was thus accomplished by a legal call, and a garment
suitable to his office, then again there was another thing
that must be done, in order to his regular execution of his
office; and that was, he must be consecrated, and solemnly
ushered thereunto by certain offerings, first presented to
God for himself. This you have mention made of in the
Levitical law; you have there first commanded, that, in
order to the high priest’s approaching the holiest
for the people, there must first be an offering of
consecration for himself, and this is to succeed his call,
and the finishing of his holy garments (Exo 29:5-7,19-22).
For this ceremony was not to be observed until his garments
were made and put upon him; also the blood of the ram of
consecration was to be sprinkled upon him, his garments,
&c., that he might be hallowed, and rightly set apart
for the high priest’s office (Lev 8). The Holy Ghost,
I think, thus signifying that Jesus the Son of God, our
great high priest, was not only to sanctify the people with
his blood; but first, by blood must to that work be
sanctified himself; ‘For their sakes,’ saith
he, ‘I sanctify myself, that they also might be
sanctified through the truth’ (John
17:19).
But it may be asked, When was this done to
Christ, or what sacrifice of consecration had he precedent
to the offering up of himself for our sins? I answer, It
was done in the garden when he was washed in his own blood,
when his sweat was in great drops of blood, falling down to
the ground. For there it was he was sprinkled with his
blood, not only the tip of his ear, his thumb, and toe, but
there he was washed all over; there therefore was his most
solemn consecration to his office; at least, so I think.
And this, as Aaron’s was, was done by Moses; it was
Moses that sprinkled Aaron’s garments. It was by
virtue of an agony also that his bloody sweat was produced;
and what was the cause of that agony, but the apprehension
of the justice and curse of Moses’ law, which now he
was to undergo for the sins of the people.
With this sacrifice he then subjoined
another, which was also preparatory to the great acts of
his high priest’s office, which he was afterwards to
perform for us. And that was his drink-offering, his tears,
which were offered to God with strong cries (Exo 29:40; Num
28:7). For this was the place and time that in a special
manner he caused his strong wine to be poured out, and that
he drank his tears as water. This is called his offering,
his offering for his own acceptance with God. After
‘he had offered up prayers and supplications, with
strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save
him,’ he ‘was heard’ for his piety, for
his acceptance as to this office, for he merited his office
as well as his people (Heb 5:7). Wherefore it follows,
‘and being made perfect,’ that is, by a
complete performance of all that was necessary for the
orderly attaining of his office as high priest, ‘he
became the author of eternal salvation, unto all them that
obey him’ (Heb 5:9).
For your better understanding of me as to
this, mind that I speak of a twofold perfection in Christ;
one as to his person, the other as to his performances. In
the perfection of his person, two things are to be
considered; first, the perfection of his humanity, as to
the nature of it; it was at first appearing, wholly without
pollution of sin, and so completely perfect; but yet this
humanity was to have joined to this another perfection; and
that was a perfection of stature and age. Hence it is said
that as to his humanity he increased, that is, grew more
perfect. For this his increasing was, in order to a
perfection, not of nature, simply as nature, but of
stature. ‘Jesus increased in wisdom and
stature’ (Luke 2:52). The paschal lamb was a lamb the
first day it was yeaned; but it was not to be sacrificed
until it attained such a perfection of age as by the law of
God was appointed to it (Exo 12:5,6). It was necessary,
therefore, that Christ as to his person should be perfect
in both these senses. And indeed ‘in due time Christ
died for the ungodly’ (Rom 5:6).
Again, as there was a perfection of person,
or of nature and personage in Christ, so there was to be a
perfection of performances in him also. Hence it is said,
that Jesus increased in favour with God (Luke 2:52); that
is, by perfecting of his obedience to him for us. Now, his
performances were such as had a respect to his bringing in
of righteousness for us in the general; or such as
respected preparations for his sacrifice as a high priest.
But let them be applied to both, or to this or that in
particular; it cannot be, that while the most part of his
performances were wanting, he should be as perfect as when
he said, ‘The things concerning me have an end’
(Luke 22:37).
Not but that every act of his obedience was
perfect, and carried in it a length and breadth
proportionable to that law by which it was demanded. Nor
was there at any time in his obedience that which made to
interfere one commandment with another. He did all things
well, and so stood in the favour of God. But yet one act
was not actually all, though virtually any one of his
actions might carry in it a merit sufficient to satisfy and
quiet the law. Hence, as I said, it is told us, not only
that he is the Son of God’s love, but that he
increased in favour with God; that is, by a going on in
doing, by a continuing to do that always that pleased the
God of heaven.
A man that pays money at the day appointed,
beginning first at one shilling, or one pound, and so
ceaseth not until he hath in current coin told over the
whole sum to the creditor, does well at the beginning; but
the first shilling, or first pound, not being the full
debt, cannot be counted or reckoned the whole, but a part;
yet is it not an imperfect part, nor doth the creditor find
fault at all, because there is but so much now told; but
concludes that all is at hand, and accepteth of this first,
as a first-fruits: so Christ, when he came into the world,
began to pay, and so continued to do, even until he had
paid the whole debt, and so increased in favour with God.
There was then a gradual performance of duties, as to the
number of them, by our Lord when he was in the world, and
consequently a time wherein it might be said that Christ
had not, as to act, done all, as was appointed him to do,
to do as preparatory to that great thing which he was to do
for us. Wherefore, in conclusion, he is said to be made
perfect, ‘and being made perfect, he became the
author of eternal salvation to all them that obey
him’ (Heb 5:9).
It will be objected, then, that at some time
it might be said of Christ that he was imperfect in his
obedience. Answ. There was a time wherein it might have
been said, Christ had not done all that he was to do for us
on earth. But it doth not follow thereupon, that he
therefore was imperfect in his obedience; for that all his
acts of obedience were done in their proper time, and when
they should, according to the will of God. The timing of
performances adds or diminishes as to the perfection of
obedience, or the imperfection of it. Had these Jews killed
the passover three days sooner than the time appointed,
they had transgressed (Exo 12:6). Had the Jews done that on
the fourth day to Jericho, which was to have been done on
the seventh day, they had sinned (Josh 6:10-16). Duty is
beautiful in its time, and the Son of God observed the
time. ‘I must,’ saith he, ‘work the works
of him that sent me, while it is day,’ that is, in
their seasons. You must keep in mind that we speak all this
while of that part of Christ’s perfection, as to
duties, which stood in the number of performances, and not
in the nature or quality of acts. And I say, as to the
thing in hand, Christ had duty to do, with respect to his
office as high priest for us, which immediately concerned
himself; such duties as gave him a legal admittance unto
the execution thereof; such duties, the which, had they not
orderly been done, the want of them would have made him an
undue approacher of the presence of God, as to that.
Wherefore, as I said afore, by what he did thereabout, he
consecrated, or sanctified himself for that work, according
to God, and was accepted for his piety, or in that he
feared and did orderly do what he should do.
Fourth. The next thing preparatory to
the execution of this office of high priest was the
sacrifice itself. The sacrifice, you know, must, as to the
being of it, needs precede the offering of it; it must be
before it can be offered. Nor could Christ have been an
high priest, had he not had a sacrifice to offer.
‘For every high priest is ordained to offer gifts and
sacrifices; wherefore it is of necessity that this
man have somewhat also to offer’ (Heb 8:3). And I
bring in the sacrifice as the last thing preparatory, not
that it was last, as to being, for it was before he could
be capable of doing any of the afore-named duties, being
his body, in and by which he did them, but it was the last
as to fitness; it was not to be a sacrifice before the
time, the time appointed of the Father; for since he had
prepared it to that end, it was fit as to the time of its
being offered, that that should be when God thought best
also (Heb 10:5).
Behold then, here is the high priest with
his sacrifice; and behold again, how he comes to offer it.
He comes to offer his burnt-offering at the call of God; he
comes to do it in his priestly garments, consecrated and
sanctified in his own blood; he comes with blood and tears,
or by water and blood, and offereth his sacrifice, himself
a sacrifice unto God for the sin of the world; and that too
at a time when God began to be weary of the service and
sacrifices of all the world. ‘Wherefore when he
cometh into the world, he saith, Sacrifice and offering
thou wouldest not, but a body hast thou prepared me,’
thou hast fitted me; ‘in burnt-offerings and
sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure; then said
I, Lo I come, in the volume of the book it is written of
me, to do thy will, O God’ (Heb 10:5-7).
[Christ the sacrifice as well as the
high priest, and how he offered it.]
Thus you see our high priest proceeded to
the execution of his priestly office; and now we are come
to his sacrifice, we will consider a little of the parts
thereof, and how he offered, and pleads the same. The
burnt-offering for sin had two parts, the flesh and the
fat, which fat is called the fat of the inwards, of the
kidneys, and the like (Lev 3:12-16). Answerable to this,
the sacrifice of Christ had two parts, the body and the
soul. The body is the flesh, and his soul the fat; that
inward part that must not by any means be kept from the
fire (Isa 53:10). For without the burning of the fat, the
burnt-offering and sin-offering, both which was a figure of
the sacrifice of our high priest, was counted imperfect,
and so not acceptable.
And it is observable, that in these kind of
offerings, when they were to be burned, the fat and the
head must be laid and be burned together; and the priest
‘shall cut it into his pieces with his head and his
fat; and the priest shall lay them in order on the wood
that is on the fire which is upon the
altar’ (Lev 1:12). To signify, methinks, the feeling
sense that this sacrifice of his body and soul should have
of the curse of God due to sin, all the while that it
suffered for sin. And therefore it is from this that this
sacrifice has the name of burnt-offering, it is the
burnt-offering for the burning, because of the burning upon
the altar all night, until the morning; and the fire of the
altar shall be burning in it.
The fat made the flame to increase and to
ascend; wherefore God speaks affectionately of the fat,
saying, The fat of mine offerings. And again, ‘He
shall see of the travail of his soul and shall be
satisfied’ (Isa 53:10-12). The soul-groans, the
soul-cries, the soul-conflicts that the Son of God had,
together with his soul-submission to his Father’s
will, when he was made a sacrifice for sin, did doubtless
flame bright, ascend high, and cast out a sweet savour unto
the nostrils of God, whose justice was now appeasing for
the sin of men.
His flesh also was part of this sacrifice,
and was made to feel that judgment of God for sin that it
was capable of. And it was capable of feeling much, so long
as natural life, and so, bodily sense, remained. It also
began to feel with the soul, by reason of the union that
was betwixt them both; the soul felt, and the body bled;
the soul was in an agony, and the body sweat blood; the
soul wrestled with the judgment and curse of the law, and
the body, to show its sense and sympathy, sent out dolorous
cries, and poured out rivers of tears before God. We will
not here at large speak of the lashes, of the crown of
thorns, of how his face was bluft[23] with blows
and blood; also how he was wounded, pierced, and what pains
he felt while life lasted, as he suffered for our sins;
though these things are also prefigured in the old law, by
the nipping or wringing of the head, the cutting of the
sacrifice in pieces, and burning it in the fire (Lev 1).
Now, you must know, that as the high priest was to offer
his sacrifice, so he was to bring the blood thereof to the
mercy-seat or throne of grace, where now our Jesus is; he
was to offer it at the door of the tabernacle, and to carry
the blood within the veil; of both which a
little.
[Christ a willing and an effectual
sacrifice.]
1. He was to offer it, and how? Not
grudgingly, nor as by compulsion, but of a voluntary will
and cheerful mind: ‘If his offering be a
burnt-sacrifice of the herd, let him offer a male without
blemish; he shall offer it of his own voluntary will’
(Lev 1:3). Thus did Christ when he offered up himself, as
is manifest by that which follows. (1.) He offered a male,
‘himself,’ without blemish (Heb 7:27). (2.) He
gave himself a ransom; he ‘gave his life a
ransom’ (Matt 20;28). (3.) He laid down his life of
himself (John 10:18; Luke 12:5). (4.) He longed for the day
of his death, that he might die to redeem his people. (5.)
Nor was he ever so joyful in all his life, that we read of,
as when his sufferings grew near; then he takes the
sacrament of his body and blood into his own hands, and
with thanksgiving bestows it among his disciples; then he
sings an hymn, then he rejoices, then he comes with a
‘Lo, I come.’ O the heart, the great heart,
that Jesus Christ had for us to do us good! He did it with
all the desire of his soul.
2. He did it, not only voluntarily, and of a
free will, but of love and affection to the life of his
enemies. Had he done thus for the life of his friends, it
had been much; but since he did it out of love to the life
of his enemies, that is much more. ‘Scarcely for a
righteous man will one die, yet peradventure for a good man
some would even dare to die; but God commended his love
toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died
for us’ (Rom 5:7,8).
3. He did it without relinquishment of mind,
when he was in: no discouragement disheartened him; cry and
bleed he did, yea, roar by reason of the troubles of his
soul, but his mind was fixed; his Father sware and did not
repent, that he should be his priest; and he vowed, and
said he would not repent that he had threatened to be the
plague and death of death (Hosea 13:13,14).
4. He did it effectually and to purpose: he
hath stopped the mouth of the law with blood; he hath so
pacified justice, that it now can forgive; he hath carried
sin away from before the face of God, and set us quit in
his sight; he hath destroyed the devil, abolished death,
and brought life and immortality to light through the
gospel; he hath wrought such a change in the world by what
he has done for them that believe, that all things work
together for their good, from thenceforward and for
ever.
[Christ the altar.]
I should now come to the second part of the
office of this high-priest, and speak to that; as also to
those things that were preparatory unto his executing it;
but first, I think convenient a little to treat of the
altar also upon which this sacrifice was offered to
God.
Some, I conceive, have thought the altar to
be the cross on which the body of Christ was crucified,
when he gave himself an offering for sin; but they are
greatly deceived, for he also himself was the altar through
which he offered himself; and this is one of the treasures
of wisdom which are hid in him, and of which the world and
Antichrist are utterly ignorant. I touched this in one hint
before, but now a little more express. The altar is always
greater than the gift; and since the gift was the body and
soul of Christ—for so saith the text, ‘He gave
himself for our sins’—the altar must be
something else than a sorry bit of wood, or than a cursed
tree. Wherefore I will say to such, as one wiser than
Solomon said to the Jews, when they superstitiated the
gift, in counting it more honourable than the altar,
‘Ye fools, and blind, for whether is
greater, the gift, or the altar that sanctifieth the
gift?’ (Matt 23:18,19).
If the altar be greater than the gift, and
yet the gift so great a thing as the very humanity of
Christ, can it—I will now direct my speech to the
greatest fool—can that greater thing be the cross?
Is, was the cross, the wooden cross, the cursed tree, that
some worship, greater than the gift, to wit, than the
sacrifice which Christ offered, when he gave himself for
our sins! O idolatry, O
blasphemy![24]
Quest. But what then was the altar? Answ.
The divine nature of Christ, that Eternal Spirit, by and in
the assistance of which he ‘offered himself without
spot to God’; he, through the Eternal Spirit
‘offered himself’ (Heb 9:14).
1. And it must be THAT, because, as was
said, the altar is greater than the gift; but there is
nothing but Christ’s divine nature greater than his
human; to be sure, a sorry bit of wood, a tree, the stock
of a tree, is not.
2. It must be this, because the text says
plainly ‘the altar sanctifies the gift,’ that
is, puts worth and virtue into it; but was it the tree, or
the Godhead of Christ, that put virtue and efficacy into
this sacrifice that he offered to God for us? If thou canst
but tell thy fingers, judge.
3. The altar was it of old that was to bear
up the sacrifice until it was consumed; and with reference
to the sacrifice under consideration, the tree could not
bear up that; for our sacrifice being a man, consisting of
soul and body, that which could bear him up in his
suffering condition, must be that that could apply itself
to his reasonable and sensible part for relief and succour,
and that was of power to keep him even in his spirit, and
in a complete submissiveness to God, in the present
condition in which he was; and could the tree do this,
think you? Had the tree that command and government of the
soul and sense of Christ, of the reason and feeling of the
Lord Jesus, as to keep him in this bitter suffering, in
that evenness and spotlessness in his torment, as to cause
that he should come off this great work, without the least
smell or tang[25] of imperfection? No, no; it
was through the Eternal Spirit that he ‘offered
himself without spot to God.’
Quest. Wherefore then served the cross?
Answ. I ask, and wherefore then served the wood by which
the sacrifices were burned? The sacrifices were burned with
wood upon the altar; the wood then was not that altar, the
wood was that instrument by which the sacrifice was
consumed, and the cross that by which Christ suffered his
torment and affliction. The altar then was it that did bear
both the wood and sacrifice, that did uphold the wood to
burn, and the sacrifice to abide the burning. And with
reference to the matter in hand, the tree on which Christ
was hanged, and the sacrifice of his body, were both upheld
by his divine power; yet the tree was no more a sacrifice,
nor an altar, than was the wood upon the altar; nor was the
wood, but the fire, holy, by which the sacrifice was
consumed. Let the tree then be the tree, the sacrifice the
sacrifice, and the altar the altar; and let men have a care
how, in their worship, they make altars upon which, as they
pretend, they offer the body of Christ; and let them leave
off foolishly to dote upon wood, and the works of their
hands: the altar is greater than the gift or sacrifice that
was, or is, upon it.
[How Christ executes the office of
high-priest.]
We come now to the second part of the office
of this high-priest and to show how he performeth that. In
order to which, I must, as I did with reference to the
first, show you what things, as preparatory, were to
precede the execution of it. We have here, as you see,
‘our passover sacrificed for us,’ for our
encouragement to come to the throne of grace; and now let
us look to it, as it is presented in the holiest of all,
and to the order of its being so presented.
1. First, then, before there was anything
further done, I mean by this high-priest, as to a further
application of his offering, the judgment of God was waited
for by him, with respect to his estimation of what was
already done, to wit, how that was resented[26]
by him; the which he declared to the full by raising him
from the dead. For in that he was raised from the dead,
when yet he died for our sins, it is evident that his
offering was accepted, or esteemed of value sufficient to
effect that for the which it was made a sacrifice, which
was for our sins; this, therefore, was in order to his
being admitted into heaven. God, by raising him from the
dead, justified his death, and counted it sufficient for
the saving of the world. And this Christ knew would be the
effect of his death, long before he gave himself a ransom;
where he saith, ‘This also shall please the
Lord better than an ox, or bullock that hath horns and
hoofs’ (Psa 69:31). And again, ‘For the Lord
God will help me, therefore shall I not be confounded:
therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I know I
shall not be ashamed. He is near that justifieth me;
who will contend with me? Let us stand together; who
is mine adversary? Let him come near to me. Behold, the
Lord God will help me; who is he that shall
condemn me? Lo, they all shall wax old as a garment, the
moth shall eat them up’ (Isa 50:7-9). All this is the
work of the Lord God, his Father, and he had faith therein,
as I said before. And since it was God who was to be
appeased, it was requisite that he should be heard in the
matter, to wit, whether he was pacified or no: the which he
has declared, I say, in raising him up from the dead. And
this the apostles, both Paul and Peter, insinuate, when
they ascribe his resurrection to the power of another,
rather than to his raising of himself, saying, ‘this
Jesus hath God raised up’ (Acts 2:32). ‘God
hath raised’ him up ‘from the dead’
(3:15), ‘whom God raised from the dead,’ and
the like (4:10, 5:30, 8:56, 13:30). I say, therefore, that
God, by raising up Christ from the dead, hath said, that
thus far his offering pleased him, and that he was
content.
2. But lest the world, being besotted by
sin, should not rightly interpret actions, therefore God
added to his raising him up from the dead, a solemn
exposing of him to view, not to all men, but to such as
were faithful, and that might be trusted with the
communicating of it to others: ‘Him,’ saith
Peter, ‘God raised’ from the dead, ‘and
showed him openly, not to all the people, but to witnesses
chosen before of God, even to us who did eat and
drink with him, after he rose from the dead’ (Acts
10:40,41). And this was requisite, not for that it added
anything to the value and worth of his sacrifice, but for
the help of the faith of them that were to have eternal
salvation by him. And it is for this cause that Paul so
enlargeth upon this very thing, to wit, that there were
them that could testify that God had raised him up from the
dead, namely, that men might see that God was well pleased,
and that they had encouragement to come boldly by him to
the throne of grace for mercy (1 Cor 15:1-8). And this
exposing of him to view, was not for the length of a
surprising or dazzling moment, but days and nights, to the
number of no less than forty; and that to the self-same
persons, to wit, ‘the apostles whom he had chosen: To
whom also,’ says the text, ‘he showed himself
alive after his passion, by many infallible proofs, being
seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things
pertaining to the kingdom of God’ (Acts 1:2,3). Thus
God therefore being willing more abundantly to show him
unto the world, ordered this great season betwixt his
resurrection and ascension, that the world might see that
they had ground to believe an atonement was made for
sin.
3. But again, a third thing that was to
precede the execution of the second part of this his
priestly office was, the manner and order of his going into
the holiest; I say, the manner and order of his going. He
was to go thither in that robe of which mention was made
before, to wit, in the virtue of his obedience, for it was
that which was to make his way for him as now sprinkled
with his blood. He was to go thither with a noise which the
Holy Ghost calls a shout, saying, ‘God is gone up
with a shout, the Lord with the sound of a trumpet’
(Psa 47:5). This was prefigured by the bells, as I said,
which did hang on the border of Aaron’s garments.
This shout seems to signify the voice of men and angels;
and this trumpet the voice and joy of God; for so it says,
he shall descend: ‘For the Lord himself shall descend
from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel,
and with the trump of God’ (1 Thess 4:16). Even as he
ascended and went up; for Aaron’s bells were to be
heard when he went into, and when he came out
of, the holy place (Exo 28:33-35). But what men were to
ascend with him, but, as was said afore, the men that
‘came out of the graves after his
resurrection?’ (Matt 27:53). And what angels but
those that ministered to him here in the day of his
humiliation? As for the evil ones, he then rode in triumph
over their heads, and crushed them as captives with his
chariot wheels. He is ascended on high, he has ‘led
captivity captive, he has received gifts for men’
(Eph 4:8).
Thus then he ascended unto, into the holy
paradise, where he was waited for of a multitude of the
heavenly host, and of thousands of millions of the spirits
of just men made perfect. So approaching the highest
heavens, the place of the special presence of God, he was
bid sit down at his right hand, in token that, for his
sufferings’ sake, God had made him the highest of
every creature, and given him a name above every name, and
commanded that at the name of Jesus now all things in
heaven should bow, and promised, that at the day of
judgment, all on earth, and under it, should bow too, to
the glory of God the Father (Phil 2:6-11). Thus he
presented himself on our behalf unto God, a sacrifice of a
sweet-smelling savour, in which God resteth for ever, for
that the blood of this sacrifice has always with him a
pleasing and prevailing voice. It cannot be denied, it
cannot be outweighed by the heaviness, circumstances, or
aggravations of any sin whatsoever, of them that come unto
God by him. He is always, as I said before, in the midst of
the throne, and before the throne, ‘a Lamb as it had
been slain,’ now appearing in the presence of God for
us. Of the manner of his intercession, whether it was vocal
or virtual, whether by voice of mouth, or merit of deed, or
both, I will not determine; we know but little while here,
how things are done in heaven, and we may soon be too
carnal, or fantastical in our apprehensions. Intercession
he makes, that is, he manages the efficacy and worth of his
suffering with God for us, and is always prevalent in his
thus managing of his merits on our behalf. And as to the
manner, though it be in itself infinitely beyond what we
can conceive while here, yet God hath stooped to our
weakness, and so expressed himself in this matter, that we
might somewhat, though but childishly, apprehend him (1 Cor
13:11,12). And we do not amiss if we conceive as the Word
of God hath revealed; for the scriptures are the green
poplar, hazel, and the chestnut rods that lie in the
gutters where we should come to drink; all the difficulty
is, in seeing the white strakes, the very mind of God
there, that we may conceive by it.
But the text says he prayeth in heaven, he
makes intercession there. Again, it saith his blood speaks,
and, consequently, why may not his groans, his tears, his
sighs, and strong cries, which he uttered here in the days
of flesh? I believe they do, and have a strong voice with
God for the salvation of his people. He may then intercede
both vocally and virtually; virtually to be sure he does,
and we are allowed so to apprehend, because the text
suggesteth such a manner of intercession to us; and because
our weakness will not admit us to understand fully the
thing as it is, our belief that he maketh intercession for
us has also the advantage of being purged from its
faultiness by his intercession, and we shall be saved
thereby, because we have relied upon his blood shed, and
the prevalency of the worthiness of it with God for us;
though as to this circumstance, the manner of his
interceding, we should be something at a loss.
The Word says that we have yet but the image
of heavenly things, or of things in the heavens. I do not
at all doubt but that many of those that were saved before
Christ came in the flesh, though they were, as to the main,
right, and relied upon him to the saving of their souls,
yet came far short of the knowledge of many of the
circumstances of his suffering for them (Heb 10:1). Did
they all know that he was to be betrayed of Judas? that he
was to be scourged of the soldiers? that he was to be
crowned with thorns? that he was to be crucified between
two thieves, and to be pierced till blood and water came
out of his side? or that he was to be buried in
Joseph’s sepulchre? I say, did all that were saved by
faith that he was to come and die for them, understand
these, with many more circumstances that were attendants of
him to death? It would be rude to think so; because for it
we have neither scripture nor reason. Even so, we now that
believe that ‘he ever liveth to make intercession for
us,’ are also very short of understanding of the
manner or mode of his so interceding. Yet we believe that
he died, and that his merits have a voice with God for us;
yea, that he manages his own merits before God in way of
intercession for us, far beyond what we, while here, are
able to conceive.
The scripture saith that ‘all the
fulness of the Godhead’ dwells in him
‘bodily’ (Col 2:9). It also saith that he is
the throne of God, and yet again, that he sits ‘on
the right hand of the throne’ (Isa 22:23; Heb 12:2).
These things are so far from being comprehended by the
weakest, that they strain the wits and parts of the
strongest, yet there is a heavenly truth in all. Heavenly
things are not easily believed, no not of believers
themselves, while here on earth, and when they are, they
are so but weakly and infirmly.[27] I believe
that the very appearing of Christ before God is an
intercession as a priest, as well as a plea of an advocate;
and I believe again, that his very life there is an
intercession there, a continual intercession (Heb 9:24; Rom
5:10).
But there is yet something further to be
said: Christ, the humanity of Christ, if in it dwells all
the fulness of the Godhead bodily, how then appears he
before him to make intercession? or if Christ is the throne
of grace and mercy-seat, how doth he appear before God as
sitting there, to sprinkle that now with his blood? Again,
if Christ be the altar of incense, how stands he as a
priest by that altar to offer the prayers of all the saints
thereon, before the throne?
[How these mysteries are to be
learned.]
That all this is written is true; and that
it is all truth, is as true: but that it is all understood
by every one that is saved I do not believe is true. I
mean, so understood as that they could all reconcile the
seeming contradictions that are in these texts. There are
therefore three lessons that God has set us as to the
perfecting of our understanding in the mysteries of God. 1.
Letters. 2. Words. 3. Meanings.
1. Letters. I call the ceremonial law
so; for there all is set forth distinctly, everything by
itself; as letters are to children: there you have a
priest, a sacrifice, an altar, a holy place a mercy-seat:
and all distinct.
2. Words. Now in the gospel these
letters are put all in a word, and Christ is that
word, that word of God’s mind; and therefore the
gospel makes Christ that priest, Christ that sacrifice,
Christ that altar, Christ that holy place, Christ that
throne of grace, and all; for Christ is all: all these meet
in him as several letters meet in one word.
3. Meanings. Next to the word you
have the meaning, and the meaning is more difficult
to be learned than either the letters or the word; and
therefore the perfect understanding of that is reserved
till we arrive to a higher form, till we arrive to a
perfect man; ‘But when that which is perfect is come,
then that’ knowledge ‘which is in part, shall
be done away’ (1 Cor 13:10). Meantime our business is
to learn to bring the letters into a word, to bring the
ceremonies to Christ, and to make them terminate in him; I
mean, to find the priesthood in Christ, the sacrifice in
Christ, the altar in Christ, the throne of grace in Christ,
and also God in Christ, reconciling the world unto himself
by him. And if we can learn this well, while here, we shall
not at all be blamed! for this is the utmost lesson set us,
to wit, to learn Christ as we find him revealed in the
gospel: ‘I determined,’ saith Paul, ‘not
to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him
crucified’ (1 Cor 2:2). And Christians, after some
time, I mean those that pray and pry into the Word well, do
attain to some good measure of knowledge of him. It is life
eternal to know him, as he is to be known here, as he is to
be known by the Holy Scriptures (James 17:3). Keep then
close to the Scriptures, and let thy faith obey the
authority of them, and thou wilt be sure to increase in
faith; ‘for therein is the righteousness of God
revealed from faith to faith; as it is written, The just
shall live by faith’ (Rom 1:17,
16:25-27).[28]
Believe then that Christ died, was buried,
rose again, ascended, and ever liveth to make intercession
for thee: and take heed of prying too far, for in mysteries
men soon lose their way. It is good therefore that thou
rest in this, to wit, that he doth so, though thou canst
not tell how he doth it. A man at court gets by his
intercession a pardon for a man in the country; and the
party concerned, after he had intelligence of it, knows
that such an one hath obtained his pardon, and that by his
interceding, but for all that he may be ignorant of his
methods of intercession, and so are we, at least in part,
of Christ. The meaning then is that I should believe, that
for Christ’s sake God will save me since he has
justified me with his blood; ‘being now justified by
his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him’
(Rom 5:9). Through his intercession, or through his coming
between the God whom I have offended and me, a poor sinner:
through his coming between with the voice of his blood and
merits, which speaketh on my behalf to God, because that
blood was shed for me, and because those merits, in the
benefit of them, are made over to me by an act of the grace
of God, according to his eternal covenant made with Christ.
This is what I know of his intercession; I mean with
reference to the act itself; to wit, HOW he makes
intercession. And since all the fulness of the Godhead
dwells in him bodily, and sine he also, as to his humanity,
is the throne of grace; yea, and since he also is the
holiest of all, and the rest of God for ever, it has been
some scruple to me, whether it be not too carnal to imagine
as if Christ stood distinct in his humanity; distinct, I
say, as to space, from the Father as sitting upon a throne,
and as so presenting his merits, and making vocal prayers
for the life and salvation of his people. The more true
meaning in my apprehension is, that the presence and worth
of the human nature, being with the divine, yea, taken into
union with God for ever, for the service that was done by
God for it, in the world, in reconciling his elect unto
him, is still, and ever will be, so deserving in his sight
as to prevail—I know not how else to express
it—with the divine nature, in whom alone is a power
to subdue all impossibilities to itself, to preserve those
so reconciled to eternal life.
When I speak of the human nature, I mean the
man Christ, not bereft of sense and reasons, nor of the
power of willing and affecting;[29] but thus I
mean, that the human nature so terminates in the will of
the divine; and again, the will of the divine so
terminates, as to saving of sinners, in the merit and will
of the human, that what the Father would the Son wills, and
what the Son wills the Father acquiesces in for ever. And
this the Son wills, and his will is backed with infinite
merit, in which also the Father rests, that those, all
those whom the Father hath given him, be with him where he
is, that they may behold his glory (John 17:24). And now I
am come to the will and affections of the
high-priest.
II. NATURAL. [The natural
qualifications of Jesus Christ to be our high
priest.]
This leads me to the second head, namely, to
the natural qualifications of him. And,
First. This is one thing that I would
urge, he is not of a nature foreign to that of man;
the angels love us well, but they are not so capable of
sympathising with us in our distresses, because they are
not partakers of our nature. Nature hath a peculiar
sympathy in it; now he is naturally one with us, sin only
excepted, and that is our advantage too. He is man as we
are, flesh and blood as we are: born of a woman, and in all
points made like unto us, that excepted which the Holy
Ghost excepteth. ‘Forasmuch then as the children are
partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took
part of the same. For verily he took not on him the
nature of angels, but he took on him the seed of
Abraham’ (Heb 2:14,16). This doth qualify him much;
for, as I said before, there is a sympathy in nature. A man
will not be so affected with the hurt that comes to a
beast, as he naturally will with the hurt that comes to a
man: a beast will be more affected with those attempts that
are made upon its own kind to hurt it, than it will be with
those that are made upon man. Wherefore? Why, there is a
sympathy in nature. Now that Christ, the high priest of the
house of God, is naturally one with us, you see the
Scriptures plainly affirm. ‘God sent forth his Son,
made of a woman’ (Gal 4:4); he was ‘made of the
seed of David, according to the flesh’ (Rom 1:3);
from the fathers of whom, ‘as concerning the flesh
Christ came,’ &c. (Rom 9:5; 2 Tim 2:8). And this
must needs then to make him a well-qualified high priest
(Heb 2:14,15). We will not now speak of the necessity of
his taking upon him the human nature, to wit, that he might
destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the
devil, and deliver his people; for that would be here too
much beside our matter, and be a diversion to the reader.
We are now upon his High Priest’s office, and of
those natural qualifications that attend him, as to that;
and I say, nature is a great qualification, because in
nature there is sympathy; and where there is sympathy,
there will be a provocation to help, a provocation to help
with jealousy and indignation against those that afflict. A
bear robbed of her whelps is not more provoked than is the
Lord Jesus when there are means used to make them miss of
life eternal, for whom he hath died, and for whom he ever
lives to make intercession. But,
Second. As there is natural sympathy
in Christ to those for whom he is an High Priest, so
there is relative sympathy; he has not only taken to or
upon him our nature, but he is become one brotherhood with
us; now you know brotherhood will carry a man further than
nature; so then, when nature and relation meet, there is a
double obligation. ‘For both he that
sanctifieth,’ which is Christ, ‘and they who
are sanctified,’ his saints, ‘are all of
one,’ which is God; and they are all of God, as
children of a Father; ‘for which cause he is not
ashamed to call them brethren, saying, I will declare thy
name unto my brethren, in the midst of the church will I
sing praise unto thee’ (Heb 2:11,12). Now a relation
is much, and a natural relation most of all. Why, here is a
natural relation betwixt Christ the High Priest, and those
for whom ‘he ever liveth to make intercession’;
a natural relation, I say, and that with respect to the
humanity which is the nature subject to affliction and
distress; ‘Forasmuch then as the children are
partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took
part of the same’ (Heb 2:14). So then it is for a
brother that he is engaged, for a brother that he doth make
intercession. When Gideon knew by the confession of Zeba
and Zalmunna, that the men that they slew at Tabor were his
brethren, his fury came into his face, and he sware they
should therefore die (Judg 8:18-21). Relation is a great
matter. And therefore it is said again, ‘In all
things it behoved him to be made like unto his
brethren, that he might be a merciful High Priest’
(Heb 2:17). A brother is born for adversity; and a brother
will go far. This therefore is a second thing or another
qualification, with which Christ Jesus is furnished to be
an High Priest; he is a brother, there is a brotherly
relation betwixt him and us; therefore by virtue of this
relation he maketh intercession for us more
affectionately.
Third. There are other things in
Christ Jesus that makes him naturally of an excellent
qualification with reference to his priesthood for us, and
they are the temptations and infirmities wherewith he
was exercised in the days of his humiliation. It is
true, temptations and infirmities, strictly considered, are
none of our nature, no more are they of his; but yet, if it
be proper to say temptations and afflictions have a nature,
his and ours were naturally the same; and that in all
points too; for so says the text, ‘He was tempted in
all points, like as we are, yet without sin’
(Heb 4:15). Are we tempted to distrust God? so was he: are
we tempted to murder ourselves? so was he: are we tempted
with the bewitching vanities of this world? so was he: are
we tempted to commit idolatry, and to worship the devil? so
was he (Matt 4:3-10; Luke 4:1-13). So that herein we also
were alike; yea, from his cradle to his cross he was a man
of sorrows and acquainted with griefs, a man of affliction
throughout the whole course of his life.
And observe it, He was made so, or subjected
thereto by the ordinance of God; nay, further, it behoved
him to be made so, that is, to be made like unto us in all
things, the better to capacitate him to the work of his
priesthood, with the more bowels and compassion. We will
read to you the text; ‘Wherefore in all things it
behoved him to be made like unto his brethren, that
he might be,’ qualified to be, ‘a merciful and
faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to
make reconciliation for the sins of the people. For in that
he himself hath suffered being tempted, he is able to
succour them that are tempted’ (Heb 2:17,18). See
here how he is qualified, and to what end; he was tempted
as we are, suffered by temptations as we do, in all points
and things as we are; that he might be bowels, that he
might be a merciful and faithful High Priest, in things
pertaining to God, to make up the difference that is made
by sin between God and his people, to make reconciliation
for the sins of the people. Yea, he by being tempted, and
by suffering as he did, he is prepared and enabled so to
do; ‘for in that he himself hath suffered, being
tempted, he is able to succour them that are
tempted.’ Wherefore, I also call this qualification
both natural and necessary; natural, because in kind the
same with ours; that is, his temptations were the same with
ours; the same in nature, the same in design, the same as
to their own natural tendency; for their natural tendency
was to have ruined both him and us, but God prevented. They
also were necessary, though not of themselves, yet made so
by him that can bring good out of evil, and light out of
darkness; made so, I say, to us, for whose sakes they were
suffered to assault and afflict him, namely, that he might
be able to be merciful, faithful, and succouring to
us.
Fourth. Another qualification with
which our High Priest is furnished, for the better fitting
of him to make intercession for us, is, that we are his
members; to be a member is more than to be of the same
nature, or the nearest of relations, that excepted. So,
then, now he makes intercession for his own self, for his
own body, and for the several members of his body. The High
Priest under the law did use to offer up sacrifice for
himself; first ‘for himself,’ for his own sins,
and then ‘for the errors of the people.’
I will not say that Christ had any sin that was personally,
or by his act, his own; for that would be to blaspheme the
name of that Holy One; but yet I will say, he made the sins
of the people his own (Psa 69:5). Yea, God the Father made
them his; those also for whom he ever liveth to make
intercession, are united to him, made members of his body,
of his flesh, and of his bones; and so are any part of
himself (2 Cor 5:21).
But we are now about his natural
qualifications, and this is one; that they for whom he ever
liveth to make intercession are his members, the members of
his body; ‘we are members of his body, of his flesh,
and of his bones,’ so saith the Word (Eph 5:30).
Wherefore here is a near concern, for that his church is
part of himself; it is his own concern, it is for our own
flesh. ‘No man ever yet hated his own flesh, but
nourisheth and cherisheth it’ (Eph
5:29).—Things are thus spoken, because of the
infirmity of our flesh.—So that had Christ no love to
us as we are sinners, yet because we are part of himself,
he cannot but care for us, nature puts him upon it; yea,
and the more infirm and weak we are, the more he is touched
with the feeling of our infirmities, the more he is
afflicted for us: ‘For we have not an High Priest
which cannot be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities’ (Heb 4:15). He at no time loseth this
his fellow-feeling, because he always is our head, and we
the members of his. I will add, the infirm member is most
cared for, most pitied, most watched over to be kept from
harms, and most consulted for.[30]
I love to play the child with little
children, and have learned something by so doing; I have
met with a child that has had a sore finger; yea, so sore
as to be altogether at present useless; and not only so,
but by reason of its infirmity, has been a let or hindrance
to the use of all the fingers that have been upon that
hand, then have I began to bemoan the child, and said,
Alas! my poor boy, or girl, hast got a sore finger! Ah!
quoth the child, with water in its eyes, and hath come to
me to be bemoaned. Then I have begun to offer to touch the
sore finger. O! saith the child, pray do not hurt me: I
then have replied, Canst thou do nothing with this finger?
No, saith the child, nor with this hand either; then have I
said, Shall we cut off this finger, and buy my child a
better, a brave golden finger? At this the child has
started, stared in my face, gone back from me, and
entertained a kind of indignation against me, and has no
more cared to be intimate with me. Then have I begun to
make some use of that good sermon which this little child
has preached unto me; and thus have I gone on. If
membership be so dear, if this child has such tenderness to
the most infirm, the most useless of its members; if it
counts me its friend no longer than when I have a mouth to
bemoan and carriages that show tenderness to this useless
finger; what an interest doth membership give on in the
body, and what compassions hath the soul for such an
useless thing, because it is a member! and turning all this
over to Jesus Christ, then instead of matter and
corruption, there presently comes honey to me out of this
child’s sore finger; I take leave to tell you now how
I use to play. And though I have told this tale upon so
grave a truth, as is the membership of Christians with
their head, yet bear with me; no child can be so tender of
its sore finger as is the Son of God of his afflicted
members; he cannot but be touched with the feeling of our
infirmities.[31]
Ah! who would not make many supplications,
prayers, and intercessions, for a leg, for an eye, for a
foot, for a hand, for a finger, rather than they will lose
it? And can it be imagined that Christ alone shall be like
the foolish ostrich, hardened against his young, yea,
against his members? It cannot be.
Should he lose a member, he would be
disfigured, maimed, dismembered, imperfect, next to
monstrous. For his body is called his fulness, yea, the
fulness of him that fills all in all. This has naturally a
respect for those for whom he ever liveth to make
intercession; yea, an unfathomable respect for them,
because they are his members.
Fifth. But again, when nature,
relation, and membership is urged to show the fit
qualifications wherewith Christ is endued, I intend not to
intimate, as if the bottom of all lay here; for then it
might be urged that one imperfect has all these; for who
knows not that sinful man has all these qualifications in
him towards his nature, relations, and members? I have
therefore, as I said, thus discoursed, only for
demonstration-sake, and to suit myself with the infirmity
of your flesh. I might come, also, in the next place, to
tell you, that Jesus Christ our High Priest is thus, with
reference to other designs. We are his purchase and he
counts us so; his jewels, and he counts us so; his estate
real, and he counts us so (Psa 16:5,6). And you know a man
will do much, speak much, intercede much and long, for that
which he thus is interested in. But we will come to speak
more particularly of the exceeding excellency of his
natural qualifications, and show you that he hath such as
are peculiar to himself alone, and that we are concerned in
them.
[The peculiar natural qualifications
of Christ as our High Priest.]
1. He is holy, and so a suitable High
Priest. There is a holiness that sets further from, and a
holiness that brings one nearer to, and to be concerned the
more with the condition of those in affliction; and that
holiness is that which is entailed unto office. When a man
is put into an office, the more unholy he is, the worse he
performs his office; and the more holy, the better he
performs his office. For his holiness obliges him to be
faithful unto men, wherein he is concerned by his office.
Hence you read, that he is ‘a faithful High
Priest,’ because he is a holy one, and ‘such an
High Priest became us, who is holy,’ &c.
(Heb 2:17, 7:26). ‘Good and upright is the
Lord’ Jehovah, Christ Jesus, ‘therefore will he
teach sinners in the way’ (Psa 25:8). ‘He that
ruleth over men must be just, ruling in the fear of
God’ (2 Sam 23:3). I mention these texts to show you,
that holiness, when entailed to office, makes a man do that
office the better. Now then, Christ is holy, and he is
made, called, and made of God an High Priest, after the
order of Melchisedec, and is to manage that his office for
thee with God; that is to say, to continue to make
reconciliation for iniquity; for that iniquity that
cleaveth unto thee, and that spuriously breaketh, or
issueth from thy flesh after thou art called and converted.
For we are now upon the second part of the execution of the
priesthood of Christ; that which he executeth, I say; and
by executing takes away the iniquity of our holy things and
of our life, after our turning to God by him. Now he that
is to do this is holy, and so one that will make conscience
of performing that office for us, with which he is
intrusted of God. Hence he is set in opposition to those
high priests that had infirmities, that were not holy, and
upon this very account preferred above them. ‘For the
law maketh men high priests which have infirmity; but the
word of the oath, which was since the law, maketh
the Son, who is consecrated,’ perfected, or holy
‘for evermore’ (Heb 7:28). This therefore is a
great thing, to wit, that we have an High Priest that is
holy, and so one that will not fail to perform to the
utmost the trust committed to him in our behalf, to wit,
‘to offer both gifts and sacrifices for sins’
(Heb 5:1). This is one thing.
2. There is added to this of his holiness
another; and that is harmless. ‘For such an High
Priest became us who is holy, harmless’ (Heb
7:26). A harmful man, when he is in office, O how much
mischief may he do! Such an one is partial in doing his
office, such an one will put the poor by his right, such an
one will buy and sell a cause, a man, an interest, will do
or not do, as his harmfulness prompts him to it;
‘so is a wicked ruler over the poor
people’ (Prov 28:15). But now our Jesus, our High
Priest, is holy, harmless; he will wrong no man, he will
deprive no man, he will contemn no man, he will deny to no
man that comes to God by him, the benefit and advantage of
his blessed intercession; he respecteth not persons, nor
taketh reward. A harmful man will stomach, and hate, and
prejudice a man; will wait for an opportunity to do him a
mischief; will take the advantage, if he can, to deny him
his right, and keep from him his due, when yet it is in the
power of his hand to help him. O! but Christ is harmless,
harmless as a dove, he thinks no ill, intends no ill, doth
no ill; but graciously, innocently, harmlessly, makes
intercession for thee; nor will he be prevailed with to
prejudice thy person, or to forbear to take up thy name
into his lips, be thy infirmities, and weaknesses, and
provocations never so many, if thou indeed comest to God by
him. He is holy, and harmless, and so the more fit to
become our High Priest and to make intercession for
us.
3. But again, this is not all, he also is
undefiled; ‘For such an High Priest became us, who
is holy, harmless, undefiled.’ This term is put
in to show, that he neither is, nor can be found, neither
now, nor at any time, faulty in his office. A man that is
holy may yet be defiled; a man that is harmless may yet be
defiled. We are bid to be holy and harmless; and in a
gospel sense so every Christian is. O! but Christ is so in
a legal sense; in the eye of the law, perfectly so. This is
a great matter, for it shows, that as nothing done by us
can tempt him to be hurtful to us; so there is nothing in
himself that can tempt him so to be. A man that is defiled
has that within him that will put him upon using of his
office unfaithfully, though he should have no provocation
from those for whose good he is to execute his office; but
he that is undefiled—undefiled in a law
sense—as our Lord Jesus is, is such an one as doth
not only not do hurt, and not act falsely in his office,
but one that cannot, one that knoweth not, how to be
unfaithful to his trust. He is holy, harmless, undefiled,
this therefore is a great thing. He has not the original of
hurtfulness in him, there is no such root there; there is a
root of bitterness, springing up in us, by which not only
ourselves, but ofttimes others are defiled (Heb 12:15). O!
but our High Priest is undefiled, he is not corrupt, nor
corrupteth; he doth his office fairly, faithfully, holily,
justly, according to, or answering, our necessities, and
the trust reposed in him, and committed to him.
But,
4. This is not all; as he is holy, harmless,
and undefiled; so he is separate from sinners, both in his
conception, in his composition, and the place ordained for
him to execute this part of his High Priest’s office
in. He was not conceived in the womb by carnal generation;
he was not made up of polluted and defiled nature; he
officiateth not with those materials that are corrupt,
stained, or imperfect; but with those that are unspotted,
even with the spotless sacrifice of his own unblemished
offering. He, nor his offering, has any such tang, as had
the priests, and their sacrifices under the law, to wit,
sin and imperfection; he is separate from them in this
respect, further than is an angel from a beast. He has none
of the qualities, actions, or inclinations of sinners; his
ways are only his own; he never saw them, nor learned them,
but of the Father; the none upright among men, wherefore he
is separated from them to be a priest. Again,
5. As he is thus, so again, he is said to be
‘higher than the heavens.’ For such an High
Priest became us, who is holy, harmless, and
undefiled, separate from sinners, and made higher than the
heavens. The text saith, that neither saint, nor heavens,
are clean in God’s sight. ‘Behold he puts no
trust in his servants,’ he chargeth his angels with
folly; and again, ‘Behold he putteth no trust in his
saints, yea, the heavens are not clean in his sight’
(Job 4:18, 15:15). Wherefore, by this expression, he shows
us that our High Priest is more noble than either heaven or
angel: yea, more clean and perfect than any. It shows us
also that all the heavenly host are at his command, to do
as his intercession shall prevail with the Father for us.
All angels worship him, and at his word they become, they
all become ministering spirits for them who shall be heirs
of salvation.
Besides, by this word he shows, that it is
impossible that our High Priest should degenerate or decay;
for that he is made ‘higher than the heavens’;
the spirits sometimes in the heavens have decayed (2 Peter
2:4). The heavens themselves decay and wax old; and that is
the farthest that by the Word we are admitted to go (Heb
1:10-12). But as for him that is above the heavens, that is
made higher than the heavens, that is ascended up far above
all heavens; he is the same, and ‘his years fail
not’ (Heb 1:12). ‘The same yesterday, today,
and for ever’ (Heb 13:8). This therefore is added, to
show that Christ is neither as the angels, nor heavens,
subject to decay, or degenerate, or to flag and grow cold
in the execution of his office; but that he will be found
even at the last, when he is come to the end of this work,
and is about to come out of the holy place, as
affectionate, as full of love, as willing, and desirous
after our salvation, as he was the first moment that he was
made High Priest, and took upon him to execute that his
blessed office for us. Wherefore our High Priest is no such
one as you read of in the law (Lev 21:18). He is no dwarf,
hath no blemish, nor any imperfection; therefore is not
subject to flag or fail in due execution of his office, but
is able to save to the uttermost them that come unto God by
him, ‘seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for
them.’ And it is well worth our consideration, that
it is said he is made thus; that is, appointed, instituted,
called, and qualified thus of God; this shows the
Father’s heart as well as the Son’s, to usward,
to wit, that this priesthood was of him, and the glorious
effects thereof by him. ‘Let us therefore come boldly
unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and
find grace to help in time of need.’
[The second motive, we are sure to
speed.]
SECOND. I come now to the second motive, to
wit, that we may find grace and mercy to help in time of
need; or we shall find grace and mercy to help, if we come
as we should, to the throne of grace. In this motive we
have these three things considerable. First, That
saints are like to meet with needy times while they are in
this world. Second, That nothing can carry us
through our needy times but more, or a continual supply of
mercy and grace. Third, That mercy and grace is to
be had at the throne of grace, and we must fetch it from
thence by prayer, if we would, as we should, go through
these needy times.
First. For the first of these,
that saints are like to meet with needy times, or with
such times as will show them that they need a continual
assistance of the grace of God, that they may go rightly
through this world. This is therefore a motive, that
weareth a spur in the heel of it, a spur to prick us
forward to supplicate at the throne of grace. This needy
time is in other places called the perilous time, the evil
day, the hour and power of darkness, the day of temptation,
the cloudy and dark day (2 Tim 3:1; Eph 6:13; Luke 22:53;
Heb 3:8; Eze 34:12; Gen 47:9; Matt 6:34). And indeed, in
the general, all the days of our pilgrimage here are evil,
yea, every day has a sufficiency of evil in it to destroy
the best saint that breatheth, were it not for the grace of
God. But there are also, as I have hinted, particular
special times, times more eminently dangerous and hazardous
unto saints. As,
[Ten special times of
need.]
There are their young days, the days of
their youth, and childhood in grace. This day is usually
attended with much evil towards him or them that are asking
the way to Zion with their faces thitherward. Now the devil
has lost a sinner; there is a captive has broke prison, and
one run away from his master: now hell seems to be awakened
from sleep, the devils are come out, they roar, and roaring
they seek to recover their runaway. Now tempt him, threaten
him, flatter him, stigmatise him, throw dust into his eyes,
poison him with error, spoil him while he is upon the
potter’s wheel; any thing to keep him from coming to
Jesus Christ. And is not this a needy time; doth not such
an one want abundance of grace? is it not of absolute
necessity that thou, if thou art the man thus beset,
shouldst ply it at the throne of grace, for mercy and grace
to help thee in such a time of need as this? To want a
spirit of prayer now, is as much as thy life is worth. O,
therefore, you that know what I say, you that are broke
loose from hell, that are fled for refuge to lay hold on
the hope set before you, and that do hear the lion roar
after you, and that are kept awake with the continual voice
of his chinking chain, cry as you fly; yea, the promise is,
that they that come to God with weeping, with supplication,
he will lead them. Well, this is one needy time, now thy
hedge is low, now thy branch is tender, now thou art but in
the bud. Pray that thou beest not marred in the
potter’s hand.
2. The time of prosperity is also a time of
need, I mean of thy spiritual prosperity. For as Satan can
tell how to suit temptations for thee in the day of thy
want, so he has those that can entangle thee in the day of
thy fulness. He has his spiritual wickednesses in the high
and heavenly places (Eph 6:12). He can tell how to lay a
snare for thee in the land of Canaan, as well as in the
wilderness; in thy time of receiving good things, as well
as in thy hungry and empty hours. Nay, such times seem to
be the most dangerous, not in themselves, but through the
deceits of our heart. Hence Moses gives this caution to the
children of Israel, that when God had given them the
promised land, and vineyards, and wells, and olive trees,
and when they had eaten and were full,
‘Then,’ says he, ‘beware lest thou
forget the Lord which brought thee forth out of the land of
Egypt, from the house of bondage’ (Deut 6:10-13). And
again, he doubleth this caution, saying, ‘When thou
hast eaten and art full, then thou shalt bless the Lord thy
God, for the good land which he hath given thee. Beware
that thou forget not the Lord thy God in not keeping his
commandments, and his judgments, and his statutes, which I
command thee this day; lest when thou hast eaten and
art full,’ and thou in all good things art increased,
‘then thine heart be lifted up, and thou forget the
Lord thy God, which brought thee forth out of the land of
Egypt, from the house of bondage’; all this may be
applied spiritually (Deut 8:10-14). For there are, as I
said, snares laid for us in our best things; and he that
has great enjoyments, and forgets to pray for grace to keep
him humble then, shall quickly be where Peter was, after
his knowledge of the Lord Jesus by the revelation of the
Father.
3. Another needy time is a time when men are
low and empty, as to worldly good; this time is full of
temptations and snares. At this time, men will, if they
look not well to their doings and goings, be tempted to
strain curtesies both with conscience and with God’s
Word, and adventure to do things that are dangerous, and
that have a tendency to make all their religion and
profession vain. This holy Agur was aware of; so he prayed,
Let me not be rich and full, lest I deny thee; let me not
be poor, lest I steal, and take the name of my God in vain
(Prov 30:7-9). There are many inconveniences that attend
him that is fallen into decay in this world. It is an evil
day with him, and the devils will be as busy with him, as
the flies are with a lean and scabbed sheep. It shall go
hard but such a man shall be full of maggots; full of
silly, foolish, idle inventions, to get up, and to abound
with fulness again. It is not a time now, will Satan say,
to retain a tender conscience, to regard thy word or
promise, to pay for what thou buyest, or to stick at
pilfering, and filch from thy neighbour.[32]
This Agur was afraid of; therefore he prayed that God would
keep him from that which would be to him a temptation to do
it. How many in our day have, on these very accounts,
brought religion to a very ill savour, and themselves unto
the snare of the devil, and all because they have not
addicted themselves to pray to God for grace to help in
this time of need, but rather have left off the thing that
is good, and given up themselves to the temptations of the
devil, and the subtle and ensnaring motions of the
flesh.
4. Another needy time is the day of
persecution; this is called, as was hinted before,
‘the hour of darkness,’ ‘the cloudy and
dark day.’ This day, therefore, is full of snares,
and of evils of every kind. Here is the fear of man, the
terrors of a prison, of loss of goods and
life.[33] Now all things look black, now the
fiery trial is come. He that cannot now pray; he that now
applieth not himself to God on the throne of grace, by the
priesthood of Jesus Christ, is like to take a fall before
all men upon the stage; a foul fall, a fall that will not
only break his own bones, but also the hearts of those that
fear God and behold it: ‘Come therefore boldly unto
the throne of grace, that ye may obtain mercy, and find
grace to help in time of need.’
5. Another time of need is that time wherein
thou changest thy condition, and enterest into a new
relation. For here also the snares and traps lie waiting
for thee. There is a hopeful child goes to service, or to
be an apprentice; there is a young man, a young maid,
entereth into a married condition, and though they pray
before, yet they leave off to pray then. Why, these people
are oftentimes ruined and undone; the reason is, this
change is attended with new snares, with new cares, and
with new temptations, of the which, because through
unwatchfulness they are not aware, they are taken, drawn to
perdition and destruction by them. Many in my short day
have gone, I doubt, down to the pit, THIS way, that have
sometimes been to appearance the very foremost and
hopefulest in the place where they have lived. O how soon
has their fire gone out; has their lamps forborne to burn!
How quickly have they lost their love to their ministers,
by whom they were illuminated, and to the warmest
Christians, through communion with whom they used to be
kept awake and savoury! How quickly have they found them
out new friends, new companions, new ways and methods of
life, and new delights to feed their foolish minds withal!
Wherefore, O thou that art in this fifth head concerned,
‘Come boldly unto the throne of grace, to obtain
mercy, and find grace to help in time of
need.’
6. Another time of need is, when the
generality of professors are decayed; when the custom of
fancies and fooleries have taken away all gravity and
modesty from among the children of men. Now pray, or thou
diest; yea, pray against those decays, those vain customs,
those foolish fancies, those light and vain carriages that
have overtaken others, else they will assuredly knock at
thy door, and obtain favour at thy hand, the which if they
do, they will quickly bring thee down into the dirt with
others, and put thee in peril of damnation as well as
they.
7. Another time of need is, the time of
guilt contracted, and of the hiding of God’s face.
This is a dangerous time. If thou now shalt forbear to
pray, thou art undone, for the natural tendency of guilt is
to drive a man from God. So it served our first father; and
ofttimes when God hides his face, men run into desperation,
and so throw up all duties, and say as he of old,
‘What should I wait for the Lord any longer?’
(2 Kings 6:33). Now thy great help against this is prayer,
continuing in prayer. Prayer wrestleth with the devil, and
will overthrow him: prayer wrestleth with God, and will
overcome him: prayer wrestleth with all temptations, and
makes them fly. Great things have been done by prayer, even
by the prayer of those that have contracted guilt, and that
have by their sins lost the smiles and sense of the favour
of God. Wherefore, when this needy, this evil time has
overtaken thee, pray: ‘Come boldly unto the throne of
grace, to obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of
need.’
8. The day of reproach and slander is
another time of need, or a day in which thou wilt want
supplies of grace. Sometimes we meet with such days wherein
we are loaden with reproaches, slanders, scandals, and
lies. Christ found the day of reproach a burdensome day
unto him; and there is many a professor driven quite away
from all conscience towards God, and open profession of his
name, by such things as these (Psa 69:7). Reproach is, when
cast at a man, as if he was stoning to death with stones.
Now ply it hard at the throne of grace, for mercy and grace
to bear thee up, or thou wilt either miscarry or sink under
ground by the weight of reproach that may fall upon
thee.[34]
9. Another time of need is that wherein a
man’s friends desert and forsake him, because of his
gospel principles, or of those temptations that attend his
profession. This is a time that often happeneth to those
that are good. Thus it was with Christ, with Paul, with
Job, with Heman, and so has been with many other of
God’s servants in the day of their temptations in
this world; and a sore time it is. Job complained under it,
so did Heman, Paul, and Christ (John 6:66; 2 Tim 1:15; Job
19:13-19). Now a man is as forlorn as a pelican in the
wilderness, as an owl in the desert, or as a sparrow upon
the house-top. If a man cannot now go to the throne of
grace by prayer, through Christ, and so fetch grace for his
support from thence, what can he do? He cannot live of
himself (John 15:4). Wherefore this is a sore
evil.
10. Another time of need is the day of
death, when I am to pack up and to be gone from hence, the
way of all the earth.[35] Now the greatest trial
is come, excepting that of the day of judgment. Now a man
is to be stripped of all, but that which cannot be shaken.
Now a man grows near the borders of eternity. Now he begins
to see into the skirts of the next world. Now death is
death, and the grave the grave indeed! Now he begins to see
what it is for body and soul to part, and what to go and
appear before God (Eccl 12:5). Now the dark entry, and the
thoughts of what is in the way from a deathbed to the gate
of the holy heaven, comes nearer the heart than when health
and prosperity do compass a man about. Wherefore this is
like to be a trying time, a time of need indeed. A prudent
man will make it one of the great concerns of his whole
life to get, and lay up a stock of grace for this day,
though the fool will rage and be confident: for he knows
all will be little enough to keep him warm in his soul,
while cold death strokes his hand over his face, and over
his heart, and is turning his blood into jelly; while
strong death is loosing his silver cord, and breaking his
golden bowl! (Eccl 12:6). Wherefore, I say, this motive
weareth a spur on his heel, a spur to prick us on to the
throne of grace for mercy, and grace to help in time of
need. But,
[Continual supplies of grace essential
to our welfare.]
Second. I come now to the next thing,
which is, to show that nothing can carry us through our
needy times, but more or a continual supply of mercy and
grace. This the text fully implies, because it
directeth us to the throne of grace, for mercy and grace
for that very end. And had there been any thing else that
could have done it, the apostle would have made mention of
it, and would also have directed the saints unto it. But
forasmuch as he here makes mention of the needy time, and
directs them to the throne of grace for mercy and grace to
help, it followeth that mercy and grace, and that only, can
help us in the evil time. Now mercy and grace are to be
distinctly considered. 1. Mercy, for that by it we have
through Christ the continuation and multiplication of
forgivenesses, without which there is no salvation. 2.
Grace, for that by it we are upheld, supported, and enabled
to go through our needy times, as Christians, without which
there is no salvation neither. The first all will grant,
the second is clear: ‘If any man draws back,
my soul shall have no pleasure in him; but we are not of
them who draw back unto perdition, but of them that believe
to the saving of the soul’ (Heb 10:38,39).
1. Mercy is that by which we are pardoned,
even all the falls, faults, failings, and weaknesses, that
attend us, and that we are incident to, in this our day of
temptation; and for this mercy we should pray, and say,
‘Our Father, forgive us our trespasses’ (Matt
6:9-12). For though mercy is free in the exercise of it to
usward, yet God will have us ask, that we may have; as he
also saith in the text, ‘Let us come boldly unto the
throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy.’ Here then
we have one help, and that is, the mercy of God is to be
extended to us from his throne through Jesus Christ, for
our pardon and forgiveness in all those weaknesses that we
are attended with in the needy or evil times; and we should
come to God for this very thing. This is that which David
means, when he says, ‘Surely goodness and mercy shall
follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the
house of the Lord for ever’ (Psa 23:6). And again,
‘When I said my foot slippeth; thy mercy, O Lord,
held me up’ (Psa 94:18). Set me clear and free from
guilt, and from the imputation of sin unto death, by
Christ.
Nor can any thing help where this is
wanting; for our parts, our knowledge, our attainments, nor
our graces, cannot so carry us through this world, but that
we shall be guilty of that that will sink us down to hell,
without God’s pardoning mercy. It is not the grace
that we have received can do it, nor the grace that is to
be received that can do it; nothing can do it but the
pardoning mercy of God: for because all our graces are here
imperfect, they cannot produce a spotless obedience. But
where there is not a spotless obedience, there must of
necessity follow a continuation of pardon and forgiveness
by mercy, or I know what will become of the soul. Here,
therefore, the apostle lays an obligation upon thee to the
throne of grace, to wit, that thou mayest obtain mercy, a
continuation of mercy, mercy as long as thou art like to
live this vain life on the earth; mercy that will reach
through all thy days. For there is not a day, nor a duty;
not a day that thou livest, nor a duty that thou dost, but
will need that mercy should come after to take away thy
iniquity.[36] Nay, thou canst not receive mercy
so clearly, as not to stand in need of another act of mercy
to pardon weakness in thy no better receiving the last. We
receive not our mercies so humbly, so readily, so gladly,
and with that thankfulness as we should: and therefore, for
the want of these, have the need of another, and another
act of God’s sin-pardoning mercy, and need shall have
thereof, as long as evil time shall last with
us.
But is not this great grace, that we should
thus be called upon to come to God for mercy? Yea, is not
God unspeakably good, in providing such a throne of grace,
such a sacrifice, such a high priest, and so much mercy for
us, and then to invite us to come with boldness to him for
it? Nay, doth not his kindness yet further appear, by
giving of us items and intimations of needy times, and evil
days, on purpose to provoke us to come to him for mercy?
This then shows us, as also we have hinted before, that the
throne of grace, and Christ Jesus our High Priest, are both
provided upon the account of our imperfections, namely,
that we who are called might not be, by remaining
weaknesses, hindered of, but obtain eternal inheritance.
Weaknesses, such weaknesses remain in the justified, and
such slips and failings are found in and upon them, that
call for a course of mercy and forgiveness to attend them.
Farther, this also intimates, that God’s people
should not be dejected at the apprehensions of their
imperfections; I say, not so dejected, as therefore to cast
off faith, and hope, and prayer; for a throne of grace is
provided for them, to the which they may, they must, they
ought continually to resort for mercy, sin-pardoning
mercy.
2. As we are here to obtain mercy, so we are
here to find grace. They that obtain mercy, shall find
grace, therefore they are put together. That they may
obtain mercy and find grace; only they must find mercy
first; for as forgiveness at first goes before
sanctification in the general, so forgiveness afterwards
goes before particular acts of grace for further
sanctification. God giveth not the spirit of grace to those
that he has not first forgiven by mercy, for the sake of
Christ.[37] Also so long as he as a Father
forbears to forgive us as his adopted, so long we go
without those further additions of grace that are here
suggested in the text. But when we have obtained mercy to
forgive, then we also find grace to our renewing. Therefore
he saith, First obtain mercy, and then find
grace.
Grace here I take to be that grace which God
has appointed for us, to dwell in us; and that by and
through the continual supply of which we are to be enabled
to do and suffer, and to manage ourselves in doing and
suffering according to the will of God. ‘Let us have
grace whereby we may serve God acceptably with reverence
and godly fear’ (Heb 12:28). So again, ‘he
giveth more grace; wherefore he saith, God resisteth the
proud, but giveth grace unto the humble’ (James 4:6;
Prov 3:34; 1 Peter 5:5). The grace, therefore, that this
text intends, is grace given or to be given; grace received
or to be received; grace a root, a principle of grace, with
its continual supplies for the perfecting of that salvation
that God has designed for us. This was that which comforted
Paul, when the messenger of Satan was sent to buffet him,
it was said unto him by Christ, ‘My grace is
sufficient for thee’ (2 Cor 12:9). As who should say,
Paul, be not utterly cast down, I have wherewith all to
make thee stand, and overcome, and that is my grace, by
which thou shalt be supported, strengthened, comforted, and
made to live a triumphant life, notwithstanding all that
oppress thee. But this came to him upon his praying; for
this I prayed to God thrice, saith he. So again, ‘God
is able to make all grace abound toward you; that ye
always have all sufficiency in all things, may
abound to every good work’ (2 Cor 9:8). Thus you see,
that by grace in these places is meant that spirit, and
those principles of grace, by the increase and continual
supply of which we are inwardly strengthened, and made to
abound to every good work.
This then is the conclusion, That as there
is mercy to be obtained by us at the throne of grace, for
the pardon of all our weaknesses; so there is also grace
there to be found that will yet strengthen us more, to all
good walking and living before him. He giveth more grace,
and they receive one time or another abundance of grace
that shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ. This then
teaches us several things, some of which I will mention.
As,
[What this should teach
us.]
1. That nature, as nature, is not capable of
serving of God: no, not nature where grace dwells, as
considered abstract from that grace that dwells in it.
Nothing can be done aright without grace, I mean no part
nor piece of gospel-duty. ‘Let us have grace whereby
we may serve God acceptably.’ Nature, managed by
grace, seasoned with grace, and held up with grace, can
serve God acceptably. Let us have grace, seek for and find
grace to do so; for we cannot do so but by grace: ‘By
the grace of God I am what I am; and his grace which was
bestowed upon me, was not in vain; but I laboured more
abundantly than they all; yet not I, but the grace of God
which was with me’ (1 Cor 15:10). What can be more
plain than this beautiful text? For the apostle doth here
quite shut out nature, sanctified nature, for he indeed was
a sanctified man, and concludes that even he, as of
himself, did nothing of all the great works that he did;
but they were done, he did them by the grace of God that
was in him. Wherefore nature, sanctified nature, as nature,
can of itself do nothing to the pleasing of God the
Father.
Is not this the experience of all the godly?
Can they do that at all times which they can do at some
times? Can they pray, believe, love, fear, repent, and bow
before God always alike? No. Why so? they are the same men,
the same human nature, the same saints. Aye, but the same
grace, in the same degree, operation, and life of grace,
doth not so now work on that man, that nature, that saint;
therefore, notwithstanding he is what he is, he cannot do
at all times alike. Thus therefore it is manifest, that
nature, simply as such, is a great way off of doing that
which is acceptable with God. Refined, purified, sanctified
nature, cannot do but by the immediate supplies, lifts, and
helps of that spirit and principle of grace by the which it
is so sanctified.
2. As nature, even where grace is, cannot,
without the assistance of that grace, do anything
acceptably before God; so grace received, if it be not also
supplied with more grace, cannot cause that we continue to
do acceptable service to God. This also is clear by the
text, For he speaketh there to them that had received
grace; yea, puts himself into the number, saying,
‘Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we
may find grace to help in time of need.’ If grace
received would do, what need for more? What need we pray
for more? What need we go to the throne of grace for more?
This very exhortation saith it will not: present supplies
of grace are proportioned to our present need, and to help
us to do a present work or duty.[38] But is our
present need all the need that we are like to have, and the
present work all the work that we have to do in the world?
Even so the grace that we have received at present, though
it can help us to do a present work, it cannot, without a
further supply, help us to do what is to be done hereafter.
Wherefore, the apostle saith, that his continuing to do was
through his obtaining help, continual help of God:
‘Having, therefore,’ saith he, ‘obtained
help of God, I continue unto this day witnessing both to
small and great,’ &c. (Acts 26:22). There must be
a daily imploring of God for daily supplies from him, if we
will do our daily business as we should.
A present dispensation of grace is like a
good meal, a seasonable shower, or a penny in one’s
pocket, all which will serve for the present necessity. But
will that good meal that I ate last week, enable me,
without supply, to do a good day’s work in this? or
will that seasonable shower which fell last year, be,
without supplies, a seasonable help to the grain and grass
that is growing now? or will that penny that supplied my
want the other day, I say, will the same penny also,
without a supply, supply my wants today? The same may, I
say, be said of grace received; it is like the oil in the
lamp, it must be fed, it must be added to. And there, there
shall be a supply, ‘wherefore he giveth more
grace.’ Grace is the sap, which from the root
maintaineth the branches: stop the sap, and the branch will
wither. Not that the sap shall be stopped where there is
union, not stopped for altogether; for as from the root the
branch is supplied, so from Christ is every member
furnished with a continual supply of grace, if it doth as
it should; ‘of his fulness have all we received, and
grace for grace’ (John 1:16).
The day of grace is the day of expense: this
is our spending time. Hence we are called pilgrims and
strangers in the earth, that is, travellers from place to
place, from state to state, from trial to trial (Heb
11:13). Now, as the traveller at a fresh inn is made to
spend fresh money; so Christians, at a fresh temptation, at
a new temptation, are made to spend afresh, and a new
supply of grace. Great men, when and while their sons are
travellers, appoint that their bags of money be lodged
ready, or conveniently paid in at such and such a place,
for the suitable relief of them; and so they meet with
supplies. Why, so are the sons of the Great One, and he has
allotted that we should travel beyond sea, or at a great
distance from our Father’s house: wherefore he has
appointed that grace shall be provided for us, to supply at
such a place, such a state or temptation, as need requires:
but withal, as my lord expecteth his son should acquaint
him with the present emptiness of his purse, and with the
difficulty he hath now to grapple with; so God our Father
expects that we should plead by Christ our need at the
throne of grace, in order to a supply of
grace:[39] ‘Let us therefore come boldly
unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and
find grace to help in time of need.’
Now then, this shows the reason why many
Christians that are indeed possessed with the grace of God,
do yet walk so oddly, act so poorly, and live such ordinary
lives in the world. They are like to those
gentlemen’s sons that are of the more extravagant
sort, that walk in their lousy hue, when they might be
maintained better. Such young men care not, perhaps scorn
to acquaint their fathers with their wants, and therefore
walk in their threadbare jackets, with hose and shoes out
at heels! a right emblem of the uncircumspect child of God.
This also shows the reason of all those dreadful falls and
miscarriages that many of the saints sustain, they made it
not their business to watch to see what is coming, and to
pray for a supply of grace to uphold them; they, with
David, are too careless, or, with Peter, too confident, or,
with the disciples, too sleepy, and so the temptation comes
upon them; and their want like an armed man. This also
shows the reason why some that, to one’s thinking,
would fall every day; for that their want of parts, their
small experience, their little knowledge of God’s
matters, do seem to bespeak it; yet stand, walk better, and
keep their garments more white than those that have, when
compared with them, twice as much as they. They are praying
saints, they are often at the throne of grace, they are
sensible of their weakness, keep a sight of their danger
before their faces, and will not be contented without more
grace.
Third. And this leads me, in the
third place, to show you, that were we wise, and did we ply
it at the throne of grace for grace, as we should, O what
spotless lives might we live! We should then have always
help in time of need; for so the text insinuates,
‘That we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in
time of need.’ This is that which Peter means, when
he says, ‘And besides this,’ that is, besides
your faith in Christ, and besides your happy state of
justification, ‘giving all diligence, add to your
faith, virtue; and to virtue, knowledge; and to knowledge,
temperance; and to temperance, patience; and to patience,
godliness; and to godliness, brotherly kindness; and to
brotherly kindness, charity. For if these things be in you
and abound,’ and be continually supplied with a
supply from the throne of grace, ‘they make you
that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful
in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But he that
lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and
hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins.
Wherefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your
calling and election sure: for if you do these things, ye
shall never fall: for so an entrance shall be ministered
unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ’ (2 Peter
1:5-11).
The greatest part of professors now-a-days
take up their time in contracting of guilt, and asking for
pardon, and yet are not much the better. Whereas, if they
had but the grace to add to their faith, virtue, &c.,
they might have more peace, live better lives, and not have
their heads so often in a bag as they have. ‘To him
that ordereth his conversation aright, will I
show the salvation of God’ (Psa 50:23). To him that
disposeth his way aright; now this cannot be done without a
constant supplicating at the throne of grace for more
grace. This then is the reason why every new temptation
that comes upon thee, so foils, so overcomes thee, that
thou wilt need a new conversion to be recovered from under
the power and guilt that cleaves to thee by its
overshadowing of thee. A new temptation, a sudden
temptation, an unexpected temptation, usually foils those
that are not upon their watch; and that have not been
before with God to be inlaid with grace proportionable to
what may come upon them.
‘That ye may find grace to help in
time of need’! There is grace to be found at the
throne of grace that will help us under the greatest
straits. ‘Seek and ye shall find’; it is there,
and it is to be found there; it is to be found there of the
seeking soul, of the soul that seeketh him. Wherefore I
will conclude as I did begin; ‘Let us therefore come
boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy,
and find grace to help in time of need.’
[CONCLUSION. Some lessons to be
learned from this text.]
We will now speak something by way of
conclusion, and so wind up the whole.
First. You must remember that we have
been hitherto speaking of the throne of grace, and showing
what it is. That we have also been speaking of
Christ’s sacrifice, and how he manages his high
priest’s office before the throne of grace. We have
also here, as you see, been speaking of the mercy and grace
that is to be obtained and found at this throne of grace,
and of what advantage it is to us in this our pilgrimage.
Now, from all this it follows, that sin is a fearful thing:
for all this ado is, that men might be saved from sin! What
a devil then is sin? it is the worst of devils; it is worse
than all devils; those that are devils sin hath made them
so; nor could anything else have made them devils but sin.
Now, I pray, what is it to be a devil, but to be under, for
ever, the power and dominion of sin, an implacable spirit
against God? Such an one, from which implacableness all the
power in heaven and earth cannot release them, because God
of his justice has bound them over to judgment. These
spirits are by sin carried quite away from themselves, as
well as from God that made them; they cannot design their
own good; they cannot leave that which yet they know will
be everlasting mischievous to themselves. Sin has bound
them to itself so fast, that there can be no deliverance
for them, but by the Son of God, who also has refused them,
and left them to themselves, and to the judgment which they
have deserved. Sin also has got a victory over man, has
made him an enemy to God and to his own salvation; has
caught him, captivated him, carried away his mind, and
will, and heart, from God; and made him choose to be vain,
and to run the hazard of eternal damnation, with rejoicing
and delight. But God left not man where he left those
wicked spirits, to wit, under the everlasting chains of
darkness, reserved unto judgment; but devised means for
their ransom and reconciliation to himself; which is the
thing that has been discoursed of in the foregoing part of
this book (2 Sam 15:15). But, I say, what a thing is sin,
what a devil and master of devils is it, that it should,
where it takes hold, so hang that nothing can unclinch its
hold but the mercy of God and the heart-blood of his dear
Son! O the fretting, eating, infecting, defiling, and
poisonous nature of sin, that it should so eat into our
flesh and spirit, body and soul, and so stain us with its
vile and stinking nature: yea, it has almost turned man
into the nature of itself; insomuch as that sometimes, when
nature is mentioned, sin is meant; and when sin is
mentioned, nature is meant (Eph 2:3, 5:8). Wherefore sin is
a fearful thing; a thing to be lamented, a thing to be
abhorred, a thing to be fled from with more astonishment
and trembling than one would fly from any devil, because it
is the worst of things; and that without which nothing can
be bad, and because where it takes hold it so fasteneth
that nothing, as I have said, can release whom it has made
a captive, but the mercy of God and the heart-blood of his
dear Son. O what a thing is sin!
Second. As by what hath been said sin
appears to be exceeding sinful; so, from hence it also
follows, that the soul is a precious thing. For you must
know all this is for the redemption of the soul. The
redemption of the soul is precious (Psa 49:8,20). I say, it
is for the redemption of the soul; it was for this that
Christ was made a priest, a sacrifice, an altar, a throne
of grace; yea, sin, a curse, and what not, that was
necessary for our deliverance from sin, and death, and
everlasting damnation. He that would know what a soul is,
let him read in letters of blood the price and purchase of
the soul. It was not for a light, a little, an
inconsiderable thing, that Christ Jesus underwent what he
suffered when he was in the world, and gave himself a
ransom for souls. No, no! The soul is a great, a vast great
thing, notwithstanding it is so little set by of some. Some
prefer anything that they fancy, above the soul; a slut, a
lie, a pot, an act of fraudulency, the swing of a
prevailing passion, anything shall be preferred when the
occasion offereth itself.[40] If Christ had set
as little by souls as some men do, he had never left his
Father’s bosom, and the glory that he had with him;
he had never so humbled himself, so gave himself to
punishment, affliction, and sorrow; and made himself so the
object of scorn, and contempt, and reproach, as he did, and
all that the souls of sinners might live a life in glory
with him.
But methinks this is the mystery of all as
to this, that the soul should take that pains, contrive
such ways, and take such advantages against itself! For it
is the soul that sins, that the soul might die! O! sin,
what art thou? What hast thou done? and what still wilt
thou further do, if mercy, and blood and grace doth not
prevent thee? O silly soul! what a fool has sin made of
thee? what an ass art thou become to sin? that ever an
immortal soul, at first made in the image of God, for God,
and for his delight, should so degenerate from its first
station, and so abase itself that it might serve sin, as to
become the devil’s ape, and to play like a Jack
Pudding for him upon any stage or theatre in the world! But
I recall myself; for if sin can make one who was sometimes
a glorious angel in heaven, now so to abuse himself as to
become, to appearance, as a filthy frog, a toad, a rat, a
cat, a fly, a mouse, a dog, or bitch’s
whelp,[41] to serve its ends upon a poor mortal,
that it might gull them of everlasting life, no marvel if
the soul is so beguiled as to sell itself from God, and all
good, for so poor a nothing as a momentary pleasure is.
But,
Third. If sin and the soul are such
great things, then behold the love and care of God; the
love to souls, the care he hath taken to deliver them from
sin. Sin, as I have said, is such a thing as from which no
man can deliver himself; the soul is such a thing, so rich
and valuable in the nature of it, that scarce one in twenty
thousand counts of it as they should. But God, the lover of
mankind, and the greatest enemy to sin, has provided means
effectually to overthrow the one, and to save and secure
the other. Behold, therefore, the love of God, the care of
God for us; for when we neither loved nor cared for
ourselves, God both loved us and cared for us. God
commended his love towards us in sending his Son to be the
propitiation for our sins.
Let it be then concluded that ‘GOD IS
LOVE,’ and that the love that God hath to us is such
as we never had for ourselves. We have been often tried
about our own love to ourselves, and it has been proved
over, and over, and over, that sometimes even we that are
Christians could, and would, had it been possible, have
pawned ourselves, our souls, and our interest in Christ,
for a foul and beastly lust. But God, who is rich in mercy,
for his great love wherewith he loved us, would not suffer
it so to be. Now, if we are so fickle and uncertain in our
love to ourselves, as to value our salvation at so low and
so base a rate, can it be imagined that ever we should, had
it been left to our choice, have given the best of what we
have for the salvation of our souls? Yet God gave his Son
to be the Saviour of the world. I say again, if our love is
so slender to our own souls, can any think that it should
be more full to the souls of others? And yet God had such
love to us, as to give his only begotten Son for our sins.
Yet again, how should it be that we, who are usually so
affected with the conceit of our own happiness, since we
care no more for our own souls, do our best to secure the
souls of others? and yet God, who is infinitely above all
creatures, has so condescended, as to concern himself, and
to give the best of his flock, even his only beloved Son,
for very dust and ashes. Wherefore, ‘Herein is love,
not that we loved God,’ or our neighbour, ‘but
that God loved us, and sent his Son to be the
propitiation for our sins’ (1 John 4:10).
Fourth. Is sin so vile a thing? is
the soul so precious a thing? and is God’s love and
care of the salvation of the souls of sinners infinitely
greater than is their own care for their own souls? Then
this should teach those concerned to blush, to blush, I
say, and to cover their faces with shame. There is nothing,
as I know of, that more becomes a sinner, than blushing and
shame doth; for he is the harbourer, the nurse, and the
nourisher of that vile thing called sin; that so great an
enemy of God, and that so great an enemy to the soul. It
becomes him also, if he considers what a creature God has
made him, and how little he hath set by his own creation,
and by the matter of which God hath made his soul. Let him
also consider unto what base things he hath stooped and
prostrated himself, while things infinitely better have
stood by and offered themselves unto him freely; yea, how
he has cast that God that made him, and his Son that came
to redeem him, quite behind his back, and before their
faces embraced, loved, and devoted himself unto him that
seeks nothing more than the damnation of his
soul.
Ah, Lord! when will foolish man be wise, and
come to God with his hands upon his head, and with his face
covered with shame, to ask him forgiveness for that
wickedness which he has committed? which is wickedness
committed not only against holiness and justice, against
which also men by nature have an antipathy, but against
mercy and love, without which man cannot tell what to do.
Blush, sinner, blush. Ah, that thou hadst grace to blush!
But this is God’s complaint, ‘Were they ashamed
when they had committed abomination? Nay, they were not at
all ashamed, neither could they blush’ (Jer 8:12). It
is a sad thing that men should be thus void of
consideration, and yet they are so. They are at a continual
jest with God and his Word, with the devil and sin, with
hell and judgment. But they will be in earnest one day; but
that one day will be too late!
Fifth. Is it so that God, though sin
is so fearful a thing, has prepared an effectual remedy
against it, and purposed to save us from the evil and
damning effects thereof? (1.) Then this should beget
thankfulness in the hearts of the godly, for they are made
partakers of this grace; I say, it should beget
thankfulness in thy heart. ‘Thanks be unto God
for his unspeakable gift,’ said the apostle, when he
seriously thought of that which was much inferior to what
we have been a discoursing of (2 Cor 9:15). That was about
man’s willingness to do good; this is about
God’s. That was about men’s willingness to give
money to poor saints; this about God’s willingness to
give Christ Jesus his Son to the world. It was the thoughts
of this redemption and salvation that made David say,
‘Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within
me, bless his holy name’ (Psa 103:1). O! they
that are partakers of redeeming grace, and that have a
throne of grace, a covenant of grace, and a Christ, that is
the Son of God’s love, to come to, and to live by,
should be a thankful people. ‘By him therefore let us
offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, - giving
thanks in his name’ (Heb 13:15). How many obligations
has God laid upon his people, to give thanks to him at
every remembrance of his holiness. (2.) Study the
priesthood, the high priesthood of Jesus Christ, both the
first and second part thereof. The first part was that when
he offered up himself without the gate, when he bare our
sins in his own body on the tree. The second part is that
which he executeth there whither he is now gone, even in
heaven itself, where the throne of grace is. I say, study
what Christ has done, and is adoing. O! what is he adoing
now? he is sprinkling his blood with his priestly robes on,
before the throne of grace; that is too little thought on
by the saints of God: ‘We have such a high priest,
who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty
in the heavens, a minister of the sanctuary, and of the
true tabernacle, which the Lord pitched, and not man’
(Heb 8:1,2). Busy thyself, fellow-Christian, about this
blessed office of Christ. It is full of good, it is full of
sweet, it is full of heaven, it is full of relief and
succour for the tempted and dejected; wherefore, I say
again, study these things, give thyself wholly to
them.
Sixth. Since God has prepared himself
a lamb, a sacrifice, a priest, a throne of grace, and has
bid thee come to him, come to him as there sitting; come,
come boldly, as he bids thee. What better warrant canst
thou have to come, than to be bid to come of God? When the
goodman himself bids the beggar come to his house, then he
may come, then he may come boldly; the consideration of the
invitation doth encourage. That we have our friend at
court, should also make us come boldly. Jesus, as has been
showed, as sacrifice and high priest, is there, ‘in
whom we have boldness, and access with confidence by the
faith of him’ (Eph 3:12). Again, ‘By whom also
we have access by faith into this grace, wherein we stand,
and rejoice in hope of the glory of God’ (Rom 5:2).
Again, ‘We have boldness, brethren, to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus’ (Heb 10:19,20). What
can be more plain, more encouraging, more comfortable to
them that would obtain mercy, ‘and find grace to help
in time of need.’ It is a dishonour to God,
disadvantage to thee, and an encouragement to Satan, when
thou hangest back, and seemest afraid to ‘come boldly
unto the throne of grace.’ ‘Let us,’
therefore, ‘draw near with a true heart, in full
assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an
evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water; let
us hold fast the profession of our faith without
wavering, for he is faithful that promised, and let
us consider one another, to provoke unto love and to good
works’ (Heb 10:22-24). Farewell.
FOOTNOTES:
1. How many thousands rush into the presence
of God with unholy, thoughtless familiarity, by repeating
the form called the Lord’s prayer. His infinite
holiness should make us tremblingly apply to his throne of
grace. In the name of the Redeemer, and in his mediation
alone, the sinner can find access, and be emboldened
to draw nigh and receive grace to help in our everyday time
of need.—Ed.
2. ‘Though the phrase, “throne
of grace,” be only once named in the Bible, yet the
thing signified is so savoury, significant, and suitable,
that this form of speaking is become famous among
Christians, and will be used to the end of
time.’—Traill.—Ed.
3. This is an allusion to Jeremiah 18:1-10
the potter and his wheel, upon which he forms his vessels
of clay to honour or to dishonour as he pleaseth. So God
worketh all things according to his will, all tending to
the good of his church, because his resting-place is the
mercy-seat.—Ed.
4. Quoted from the Genevan or puritan
version.—Ed.
5. ‘Grace was poured so plentifully
from heaven, that it did not only countervail sin, but
above measure passeth it.’ Note to the Genevan
Bible.—Ed.
6. Not by the person or body, but mentally.
It matters little whether the body is sitting, kneeling, or
standing; riding, walking, or lying down; the throne of
grace is equally accessible, if the spirit is prostrate
before it—the spontaneous effusions of the soul in
sighs or groans, or joyful exclamations, or the pouring
forth of heart-felt words; but all must be under a sense of
the mediation of Jesus.—Ed.
7. Smutches or smudges. ‘And with a
kind of amber smirch my
face.’—Shakespeare.—Ed.
8. ‘In all our distresses,
infirmities, and darkness in this world, we should get up
to that mountain of myrrh and hill of frankincense,
Canticles 4:6;—the passion of Christ, which was
bitter like myrrh; and to the intercession of Christ, which
is sweet like incense.’—Dr.
Bates.—Ed.
9. How dreadful for a sinner to enter upon a
way, expecting it to be a living way to life and happiness,
and find it the dead way to death and eternal destruction.
O my soul, try thy way, and, by the assistance of the Holy
Spirit, ascertain whether it is the living way to
everlasting life, or the dead way to eternal
misery.—Ed.
10. Such was the opinion of naturalists in
the olden time, Bartolomeus, on the properties of things,
thus speaks of goats’ blood— ‘The
goat’s hot blood neshethe (softeneth) and carveth the
hard ardamant stone, that neither fire nor iron may
overcome.’ Book 18 cap. 60.—Ed.
11. What laid the cornerstone of this
throne, but grace? What brings in the inhabitants,
preserves them, perfects them, but
grace?—Traill.
‘Grace all the work shall
crown,
Thro’ everlasting days;
It lays in heaven the topmost
stone,
And well deserves the
praise.’—Rippon.
12. Perfectly impressed upon their
memories.—Ed.
13. From the Genevan
version.—Ed.
14. Bunyan here refers to the marginal note
in the Genevan bible, Exodus 30. The high priest’s
washing ‘signifying that he that cometh to God must
be washed from all sin and
corruption.’—Ed.
15. This sea was full of pure water, a
figure of the word, without mixture of men’s
inventions. See the typical meaning of the molten sea and
the laver, fully explained and illustrated by Bunyan, in
Solomon’s Temple Spiritualized of this
edition.—Ed.
16. Our first lesson is of sin,
righteousness, and judgment; second, Christ’s
obedience unto death for our salvation; third, Christ
ascended to God’s right hand, the Mediator and
Advocate. Thus the bitter comes before the sweet, to make
the sweet the sweeter.—Ed.
17. Alluding to these destructive operations
of nature, the whirlwind and the whirlpool, the first
whirling fancies that Christ saves from the punishment, and
not from the power of sin, takes them from the gospel hope,
and the second receives them into the vortex of misery. O
my soul, be watchful unto prayer at a throne of grace, for
who can withstand the whirlpool if once within its
influence?—Ed.
18. To see the fulness and freeness of the
treasures of grace in Christ—to see that we must
partake of it or perish—to be looking unto Jesus the
author and finisher of our faith, are indeed
powerful incentives to keep us near the throne of
grace.—Ed.
19. Probably a frightful military saying
heard by Bunyan, when serving in the debauched army of
Charles I, from some of Prince Rupert’s
cavaliers.—Ed.
20. How much this paragraph reminds us of
the experience of poor Christian in his fearful battle with
the fiend! ‘In this combat no man can imagine, unless
he had seen and heard as I did, what yelling and hideous
roaring Apollyon made all the time of the fight—he
spake like a dragon; and, on the other side, what sighs and
groans burst from Christian’s heart. I never saw him,
all the while, give so much as one pleasant look, till he
perceived he had wounded Apollyon with his two-edged sword;
then, indeed, he did smile and look upward; but it was the
dreadfullest fight that ever I
saw.’—Ed.
21. ‘Spaked’; marked with small
spots.—Ed.
22. Instituted, inducted, or
installed.—Ed.
23. Exposed to violence—blindfolded or
hoodwinked.—Ed.
24. Protestants can have little idea of the
idolatry used in the Church of Rome. Something may be
gathered from the following directions, given in a very
beautiful office for Good Friday, corrected by royal
authority, in conformity with the breviary and missal of
our holy father Pope Urban VIII, printed at Paris by
Posset:—
‘The priest having retired a little
behind the altar, the deacon takes the cross (a plain
wooden cross without the figure), covered with a veil, and
gives it to the priest, who turns to the people and shows
the top of the cross, before which they all prostrate
themselves and kiss the ground, singing Ecce lignum
crucis. He then removes the veil from the right limb of
the cross, and lifts it up, singing, still louder, Behold
the wood of the cross; again the people prostrate
themselves. The priest then comes to the middle of the
altar, and taking off the veil, exhibits the wooden cross
to be adored; then setting it down, he goes on his knees,
and rising, takes off his shoes and approaches the cross to
worship it, making three genuflections, and kisses it. All
the clergy who are present take off their shoes, prostrate
themselves, worship and kiss the cross in the order of
their dignity. All the officers of the church, and all the
people, follow in the same manner to adore it, while solemn
music and chanting attends and completes the
ceremony.’ Thus a wooden board, made into the shape
of a cross by some joiner, receives Divine honours. Talk
not of heathen idols. Who can wonder that honest John
Bunyan felt indignation, and exclaimed, ‘O idolatry!
O blasphemy!’—Ed.
25. An extraneous taste that leaves a sting
behind, as, ‘She had a tongue with a tang.’
‘The wine has a tang of the
cask.’—Ed.
26. This use of the word
‘resent’ has been long obsolete; it expressed a
deep sense or strong perception of good as well as evil; in
this place it means, ‘proved to have been
satisfactory or gratifying.’—Ed.
27. How sublime is the Christian system, in
its adaptation to all God’s intelligent creatures! So
lovely in its simplicity, that the child—nay, even
the poor Bushman of Africa, or the half-idiot native of New
South Wales—is able readily to comprehend how God,
for Christ’s sake, can blot out all iniquities and
transgressions; while the noblest intellect admires and
adores its vast and extensive ramifications of mercies.
Blessings numerous and unbounded are developed, reaching,
in their ultimate effects, far beyond the utmost stretch of
human perception, even when the most brilliant imagination
is enlightened and sanctified by the Holy Ghost. The
intentions of mercy commence in the purposes of God before
the creation—are infinite in extent—and eternal
in duration. How is Divine wisdom and mercy thus displayed
in the adaptation of the gospel to the personal inquiry and
reception of every individual of the human
race!—Ed.
28. The beginning, increase, and perfection
of life eternal, consists in holy knowledge; that God and
Christ are of the same nature, equal in power and glory. As
Christ is the most excellent object, therefore the
knowledge of Christ is, and must be the most excellent
knowledge; not only all the excellencies of the creatures
are found in him, but all excellencies, yea, the fulness of
the Godhead, dwells in him bodily. All learning, in
comparison of the knowledge of Christ, is the most
contemptible ignorance. He is the wisdom of God, and our
highest wisdom will be, with holy Paul, to part with
whatever is most dear and precious to us, that we may win
Christ, receiving him as he is revealed in the word of
truth.—Mason.
29. Power of exercising affection and
feeling.—Ed.
30. Bunyan’s daughter, Mary, was
blind, and thus became an object of his tenderest
solicitude. When he was sent to prison for preaching, he
felt for her far more than for all other worldly objects.
‘My poor blind child. O the thoughts of the hardship
she might go under would break my heart to
pieces.’—Grace Abounding, No. 320 and
329.—Ed.
31. It is a stupendous and unspeakably
blessed privilege that Christ and believers are one flesh.
Husband and wife, soul and body, are not so closely united
as Christ and believers are to each other. He has carried
their sorrows, borne their punishment, and procured
complete redemption for them. And eternal blessings on him!
he now ever liveth in heaven to act and intercede for them.
He there exercises a tender and compassionate spirit
towards his suffering children and servants here on earth.
His love and pity to every individual of his church,
infinitely exceeds that of the most affectionate parent
towards their offspring. Our extremity is his
opportunity—he is touched with the feeling of our
infirmities, will give consolation under, sanctify, and at
length deliver the godly out of all temptations and
afflictions.—Mason.
32. As this is Satan’s temptation in
the time of poverty, so the time of prosperity is equally
dangerous—the love of gain, when it possesses the
soul, is insatiable. Satan whispers into the ear, and the
heart too readily entertains the wicked thought—
‘Get money; if you cannot do it honestly, still get
money.’ The most contemptible meannesses have been
practised by the wealthy. O beware of that ruinous
idolatry, covetousness.—Ed.
33. Query, is this that part of a
Christian’s experience referred to in the
Pilgrim’s Progress, the second part of the Valley
of the Shadow of Death?—Ed.
34. No man could speak more experimentally
on the pain inflicted by slander, although utterly
unfounded, than John Bunyan. So eminent a man became a mark
for Satan and his emissaries to shoot at. He was charged
with witchcraft, called a highwayman, and every slander
that malice could invent was heaped upon him. His remedy,
his consolation, was the throne of grace—a specific
that never did, nor ever will fail.—Ed.
35. The late Rev. John Newton, who lived to
a good old age, in his latter days used to tell his
friends— ‘I am like a parcel, packed up and
directed, only waiting the carrier to take me to my
destination’; blessed tranquility under such solemn
circumstances.—Ed.
36. This is illustrated by the account of
Hopeful’s experience in the Pilgrim’s
Progress; he says, ‘If I look narrowly into the
best of what I do now, I still see sin, new sin, mixing
itself with the best of that I do; so that now I am forced
to conclude, that, notwithstanding my former fond conceits
of myself and duties, I have committed sin enough IN ONE
DUTY to send me to hell, though my former life had been
faultless.’—Ed.
37. Grace, mercy, peace, justification,
sanctification, and glorification, all flow from Christ the
propitiatory sacrifice, in whom, as his beloved, the Father
accepts us graciously, and loves us
freely.—Mason.
38. Spiritual strength, like bodily food,
must be renewed day by day. The necessity of daily food for
our bodies should remind us of that bread that cometh down
from heaven, and that water of life which, as a river,
maketh glad the city of our God. ‘As oft as ye do
this,’ eat and drink, ‘ye do show the
Lord’s death.’ O that such a recollection may
have an abiding influence upon our
souls!—Ed.
39. In those days travellers did well to
advance as far in a day as we now do in an hour. To make a
country tour, required then the same precautions, as to
supplies, as it now does to make the grand tour of Europe.
To have carried coin would have been a great encumbrance,
as well as risk from robbers. How accurately Bunyan knew
the mode used in such cases to secure supplies, and with
what beautiful simplicity it is
spiritualized.—Ed.
40. How truly and solemnly is the downward
road of a sinner here portrayed. 1. Drawn aside by lust. 2.
A lie to conceal his wicked folly. 3. Intoxication, to
drown his convictions and harden his conscience. 4. The
consequent ruin of his worldly prospects; and, 5. A vain
effort by fraud to keep up his
credit!!!—Ed.
41. It was in Bunyan’s time the
universally received opinion that Satan appeared in the
shape of animals to allure poor wretches into
sin—Shakespeare, Judge Hale, Cotton Mather, Baxter,
with all our eminent men, believed in these supernatural
appearances.—Ed.