| I
shall now proceed to consider, the particular, special, and
important doctrines of the gospel, which express the grace of
Christ, and the blessings of grace by Him; and shall begin with
the incarnation of the Son of God. This is a very considerable
part of the glad tidings of the gospel, and which give it that
name: when the angels related to the shepherds the birth of
Christ, He said unto them; "Behold I bring you good tidings
of great joy" (Luke 2:10-11). The whole gospel is a mystery;
the various doctrines of it are the mysteries of the kingdom;
the knowledge of which is given to some, and not to others;
it is the mystery of godliness, and, without controversy, great;
and this stands the first and principal article of it; "God
manifest in the flesh" (1 Timothy 3:16). This is the basis
of the Christian religion; a fundamental article of it; and
without the belief of it no man can be a Christian; "Every
spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh,
is of God"; born of God, and belongs to Him, and is on
the side of God and truth; "And every spirit that confesseth
not that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh, is not of God"
(1 John 4:2-3).
The incarnation of Christ is a most extraordinary and amazing
affair; it is wonderful indeed, that the eternal Son of God
should become man; that He should be born of a pure virgin,
without any concern of man in it; that this should be brought
about by the power of the Holy Ghost, in a way unseen, imperceptible
and unknown, signified by His overshadowing; and all this in
order to effect the most wonderful work that ever was done in
the world, the redemption and salvation of men: it is a most
mysterious thing, incomprehensible by men, and not to be accounted
for upon the principles of natural reason; and is only to be
believed and embraced upon the credit of divine revelation,
to which it solely belongs. The heathens had some faint notions
of it; at least say some things similar to it. The Brachmanes
among the Indians, asserted, that Wistnavius, the second person
of the triune god with them, had nine times assumed a body,
and sometimes a human one; and would once more do the same
again; and that he was once born of a virgin [1]. Confucius,
the famous Chinese philosopher, who lived almost five hundred
years before Christ, it is said [2], foresaw that the Word would
be made flesh; and foretold the year in which it would be; and
which was the very year in which Christ was born: but this seems
to savour too much of the tale of a Christian in later times.
However, several of the deities and heroes of the heathens,
Greeks and Romans, are represented as having no father [3].
Now whatever notion the heathens had of an incarnate God, or
of a divine Person born of a virgin, in whatsoever manner expressed;
this was not owing to any discoveries made by the light of nature,
but what was traditionally handed down to them, and was the
broken remains of a revelation their ancestors were acquainted
with. Otherwise the incarnation of the Son of God, is a doctrine
of pure revelation; in treating of which I shall consider,
1. First, The
subject of the incarnation, or the divine Person that became
incarnate. The evangelist John says it was the Word, the essential
Word of God; "The word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us" (John 1:14). And therefore not the Father; for He is
distinguished from the "Word", in the order of the
Trinity (1 John 5:7). And, He is said to be the "Word with
God"; that is, with God the Father; and therefore must
be distinct from Him (Revelation 19:13; Acts 20:32; John 1:1).
Besides, the Father never so much as appeared in an human form;
and much less took real flesh; nay, never was seen in any shape
by the Jews (John 5:37). And though their ancestors heard a
voice, and a terrible one at Sinai, they saw no similitude (Deuteronomy
4:12). And wherever we read of any visible appearance of a divine
Person in the Old Testament, it is always to be understood,
not of the first, but of the second Person. And it may be further
observed, that the Father prepared a body, a human nature in
His purpose, council and covenant, for another, and not for
Himself, even for His Son, as He acknowledges; "A body
hast thou prepared Me" (Hebrews 10:5). To which may be
added, that that divine Person who came in the flesh, or became
incarnate, is always distinguished from the Father, as being
sent by Him; "God sending His own Son in the likeness of
sinful flesh" (Romans 8:3). And again; "God sent forth
His Son made of a woman" (Galatians 4:4), that is, God
the Father, in both passages; as appears from the relation of
the Person to Him, sent in the flesh, His Son. Once more, if
the Father had been incarnate, He must have suffered and died;
for that is the end of the incarnation, that the Person incarnate,
might obey, suffer, and die, in the room of sinners; so Christ
suffered in the flesh, and was put to death in the flesh. There
were a set of men in ancient times, who embraced the Sabellian
folly, and were called Patripassians, because they held that
the Father suffered; and, indeed, if there is but one Person
in the Deity, and Father, Son, and Spirit are only so many names
and manifestations of that one Person; then it must be equally
true of the Father as of the Son, that He became incarnate,
obeyed, suffered, and died. But this notion continued not long,
but was soon rejected, as it must be by all that read their
Bible with any care. Nor is it the Holy Spirit that became incarnate,
for the same reasons that the Father cannot be thought to be
so: and besides, He had a peculiar hand, and a special agency,
in the formation of the human nature, and in its conception
and birth: when the Virgin hesitated about what was told her
by the angel, she was assured by Him, that the Holy Ghost should
come upon her, and the power of the Highest should overshadow
her; and accordingly the birth of Christ was on this wise, when
Joseph and Mary were espoused, before they came together, "she
was found with child of the Holy Ghost"; and Joseph was
told, in order to encourage him to take her to wife, that what
was "conceived in her, was of the Holy Ghost"; and
therefore He Himself was not incarnate (see Luke 1:35 and Matthew
1:18, 20). It remains, that it is the second Person, the Son
of God, who is meant by "the Word that was made flesh",
or became incarnate; and, indeed, it is explained of Him in
the same passage; for it follows; "And we beheld His glory,
the glory as of the only begotten of the Father". And it
is easy to observe, that the same divine Person that bears the
name of the Word, in the order of the Trinity, in one place,
has that of the Son in another; by which it appears they are
the same (compare 1 John 5:7 with Matthew 28:19). When this
mystery of the incarnation is expressed by the phrase, "God
manifest in the flesh"; not God the Father, nor the Holy
Spirit, but God the Son is meant, as it is explained in 1 John
3:8 for "this purpose the Son of God was manifested";
that is, in the flesh; and as before observed, it was the Son
of God that was sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, and in
the fullness of time was sent forth, made of a woman (Romans
8:3; Galatians 4:4). He, therefore, is the subject of the incarnation,
or the divine Person that became incarnate.
Now the Logos,
the Word and Son of God, who is made flesh or become incarnate,
is not to be understood of the human soul of Christ; for this
Word was "in the beginning with God"; that is, was
with Him from all eternity (see Proverbs 8:22-30); whereas the
human soul of Christ is one of the souls that God has made;
a creature, a creature of time, as all creatures are; time is
an inseparable adjunct and concomitant of a creature; a creature
before time, is a contradiction: besides, this Word "was"
God, a divine Person, distinct from the Father, though with
Him, the one God; which cannot be said of the human soul. Likewise,
to it is ascribed the creation of all things; "All things
were made by Him"; not as an instrument, but as the efficient
cause; "And without Him was not anything made that was
made"; and since the human soul is what is made, being
a creature; if that is the Word and Son of God, it must be the
maker of itself, seeing nothing that is made is made without
it; which is too great an absurdity to be admitted. So the creation
of all things is elsewhere ascribed to the Son of God, who therefore
cannot be a creature (see Hebrews 1:1-2, 10; Colossians 1:16-17).
To which may be added, that the human soul of Christ is a part
of the human nature assumed by Him; it is included in the word
"flesh", the Word, or Son of God, is said to be made,
as will be shown presently; it is a part of that nature of the
seed of Abraham, in distinction from the nature of angels, which
the Word, or Son of God, a divine Person, took upon Him, and
into union with Him, and therefore cannot be the assumer; the
assumer and the assumed cannot be the same, but must be distinct
from each other (see Hebrews 2:14, 16).
Nor by the Logos,
or Word, made flesh, are we to understand the divine nature,
essentially considered, or the essence of God, as common to
the three divine Persons, Father, Son and Spirit; for then it
would be equally true of the Father and the Spirit, that they
are made flesh, or become incarnate, as of the Son; as it must
needs be, if the divine nature, so considered, was incarnated;
or the human nature was united to it as such: such phrases are
therefore unsound, unsafe, and dangerous; as that the man Christ
stands in the divine nature; and that the human nature is united
to Deity: this is not the truth of things; the human nature
is not united to Deity absolutely considered: but as that in
a distinct mode of subsisting, is in the second Person, the
Son of God; it was the Son of God, by whom God made the world,
and by Him speaks to men, in these last days, who is the brightness
of His Father's glory, and the express image of His person;
the Creator of angels, and the object of their worship and adoration;
and who upholds all things by the word of His power, who partook
of the same flesh and blood with the children, and has taken
upon Him, and assumed to Him, not the nature of angels, but
the seed of Abraham; He who was in the form of God, of the same
nature with Him, and thought it no robbery to be equal with
God, is He that took upon Him the form of a servant, the nature
of man in a servile state, was made in the likeness of man,
and found in fashion as a man, or really became man. I proceed,
2. Secondly, To observe, in what sense the Word, or Son of God,
was "made flesh", became a partaker "of flesh
and blood, came in the flesh", and was "manifest in
the flesh": all which phrases are made use of to express
His incarnation (John 1:14; Hebrews 2:14; 1 John 4:2-3; 1 Timothy
3:16) and signify, that He who is truly God really became man,
or assumed the whole human nature, as will be seen presently,
into union with His divine person. Socinus is so bold as to
say [4], that if any passages of scripture could be found, in
which it is expressly said that God was made man, or put on
and assumed human flesh, the words must be taken otherwise than
as they sound, this being repugnant to the majesty of God. The
contrary to this will soon appear; and though this is not to
be found in scripture just syllabically, the sense clearly is,
as in the scriptures referred to. But there is no dealing with
such a man who will talk at this rate; and who elsewhere [5]
says, on another account, that the greatest force must be used
with the words of the apostle Paul, rather than such a sense
be admitted, which yet is obvious. It will be proper to inquire,
both what is meant by flesh, and what by being made flesh.
2a. First, what
is meant by flesh, in the phrases and passages referred to.
And by it is meant, not a part of the human body, as that may
be distinguished from other parts, as the bones, nor
the whole human body, as that may be distinguished from the
soul or spirit of a man; as in Matthew 26:41 but a whole individual
of human nature, consisting of soul and body; as when it is
said, "There shall no flesh be justified in His sight":
and again, "That no flesh should glory in His presence",
Romans 3:20, 1 Corinthians 1:29 with many other passages; see
Genesis 6:12 and Luke 3:6 for such acts as being justified and
glorying, can never be said of the flesh or body, abstractly
considered; but of the whole man, or of individuals of human
nature, consisting of soul and body; and in this sense are we
to understand it, when it is used of the incarnation of the
Son of God, who took upon Him the whole nature of man, assumed
a true body and a reasonable soul, being in all things made
like unto His brethren; so His flesh signifies His human nature,
as distinct from the Spirit, His divine nature (Romans 1:3-4;
1 Peter 3:18).
2a1. He took
a true body, not a mere phantom, spectre, or apparition, the
appearance of a body, and not a real one; as some fancied, and
that very early, even in the times of the apostle John, and
afterward; and who imagined, that what Christ was, and did,
and suffered, were only seeming, and in appearance, and not
in reality; and hence they were called "Docetae":
and this they argued from His being sent in the "likeness"
of sinful flesh; and being found in fashion as a man; and from
the appearances of Christ before His coming; of which same kind
they supposed His appearance was when He came. As for the text
in Romans 8:3 "likeness" there, is not to be connected
with the word "flesh", but with the word "sinful";
He was sent in real flesh, but that flesh looked as if it was
sinful: it might seem so to some, because He took flesh of a
sinful woman, was attended with griefs and sorrows, the effects
of sin; had the sins of His people imputed to Him, and which
He bore in His own body on the tree; all which made His flesh
appear as if it was sinful, though it was not; and hindered
not its being real flesh. As to Philippians 2:7-8 there
is not a note of similitude, but of certainty; as in Matthew
14:5 and signifies, that Christ was really a man, as John was
accounted a real prophet, and not merely like one; and which
is evident by His being obedient unto death, as follows: and
as for the appearances of Christ in an human form, before His
coming in the flesh, the Scriptures speak of; admitting they
were only appearances, and not real, it does not follow, that
therefore His coming in the flesh, in the fullness of time,
was of the same kind; but rather the contrary follows; and since
these were preludes of His incarnation, that must be real; though
some of these previous appearances were not merely appearances,
but realities: real bodies were formed and animated, and made
use of for a time, and then laid aside; as seems to be the case
of the three men that appeared to Abraham, two of which were
angels, and the other the Lord, Jehovah, the Son of God; who
were clothed with bodies, capable of walking and traveling,
of talking and conversing, of eating and drinking in; so the
man that wrestled with Jacob, who was no other than the Angel
of the covenant, the promised Messiah; the body He appeared
in was not a mere phantom, spectre, and apparition, but palpable
flesh, that was felt and handled, and grasped, and held fast,
by Jacob; and which he would not let go till he had received
the blessing. However, it is certain that Christ partook of
the same flesh and blood as His children and people do; and
therefore, if theirs is real, His must be so. Likewise, His
body is called the body of His flesh, His fleshly body (Colossians
1:22) to distinguish it from the token of His body in the supper;
and from His mystical and spiritual body, the church: all His
actions, and what is said of Him from His birth to His death,
and in and after it, show it was a true body that He assumed;
He was born and brought into the world as other men are; and
when born, His body grew and increased in stature, as other
human bodies do: the Son of man came eating and drinking; He
traveled through Judea and Galilee; He slept in the ship with
His disciples; He was seen, and heard, and handled by them;
He was buffered, scourged, bruised, wounded, and crucified by
men; His body, when dead, was asked of the governor by Joseph,
was taken down from the cross by Him, and laid in His tomb;
and the same identical body, with the prints of the nails and
spear in it, was raised from the dead, and seen and handled
by His disciples; to whom it was demonstrated, that He had flesh
and bones, a spirit has not: yea, the very infirmities that
attended Him, though sinless, were proofs of His body being
a true and real one; such as His fatigue and weariness in traveling,
John 4:6 His tears at the grave of Lazarus, and over Jerusalem;
and His sweat in the garden (John 11:35; Luke 19:41, 22:44).
In short, it was through weakness of the flesh that He was crucified;
which was not in appearance, but in reality. The body He assumed
was mortal, as it was proper it should be, since the end of
His assumption of it was to suffer death in it; but being raised
from the dead, it is become immortal, and will never die more,
but will remain, as the pledge and pattern of the resurrection
of the bodies of the saints, which will be fashioned like to
His glorious body; and which will be the object of the corporal
vision of the saints after their resurrection, with joy and
pleasure, to all eternity.
2a2. Christ assumed
a reasonable soul, with His true body, which make up the nature
He took upon Him, and are included in the flesh He was made,
as has been seen; and is the flesh and blood He partook of;
which is sometimes understood of an individual of human nature,
as flesh is (see Matthew 16:17 and Galatians 1:16). The Arians
deny that Christ has an human soul; they say, that the Logos,
or the divine nature in Him, such a one as it is, supplied the
place of an human soul. This nature, they say, is not the same,
but like to the nature of God; that it was created by Him; which
they ground on Proverbs 8:22 and read, "He created me";
and they make this the first and principal creature God made,
and by which He created others; that it is a superangelic spirit,
and is in the room of an human soul to Christ. But Christ asserts,
that He had a soul; and which, He says, was exceeding sorrowful;
and which was an immaterial and immortal spirit; and which,
when His body died, and was separated from it, He commended
into the hands of His divine Father (Matthew 26:38 and Luke
23:46). Had He not an human soul, He would not be a perfect man;
and could not be called, as He is, the man Christ Jesus: the
integral parts of man, and which constitute one, are soul and
body; and without which He cannot be called a man; these distinguish
Him from other creatures: on the one hand He is distinguished
from angels, immaterial and immortal spirits, with which His
soul has a cognation, by having a body, or by being an embodied
spirit; whereas they are incorporeal: so, on the other hand,
He is distinguished from mere animals, who have bodies as well
as He, by His having a rational and immortal soul: and if Christ
was without one, He could not be in all things like unto us;
being deficient in that which is the most excellent and most
noble part of man. But that He is possessed of an human soul,
is evident from His having an human understanding, will, and
affections; He had an human understanding, knowledge, and wisdom,
in which He is said to grow, and which in some things were deficient
and imperfect (Luke 2:52 and Mark 13:32). He had an human will,
distinct from the divine will, though not opposite, but in subjection
to it (John 6:38 and Luke 22:42). And He had human affections,
as love (Mark 10:21 and John 13:23). And joy (Luke 10:21). Yea,
even those infirmities, though sinless passions, prove the truth
of His human soul; as sorrow, grief, anger, amazement, and consternation,
(Matthew 26:38; Mark 3:5, 14:33). Besides, if He had not had
an human soul, He could not have been tempted in all points
like as we are, Hebrews 4:15 since the temptations of Satan
chiefly respect the soul, the mind, and the thoughts of it,
and affect and distress that: nor could He have bore the wrath
of God, nor have had a sensation of that; which it is certain
He had, when the weight of the sins of His people lay on Him,
and pressed Him sore (see Psalm 89:38 and Matthew 26:38). Nor
could He have been a perfect sacrifice for their sins; which
required His soul as well as His body (Isaiah 53:10 and Hebrews
10:10); nor have been the Saviour of their souls; as He is both
of body and soul, giving life for life, body for body, soul
for soul (1 Peter 1:9).
2b. Secondly,
In what sense the Word, or Son of God, was "made"
flesh, and so became incarnate; the Word could not be made at
all, that is, created, since He is the Maker and Creator of
all things; and therefore He Himself could not be made or created:
nor was He, nor could be, made, converted, and changed into
flesh; the divine nature in Christ could not be changed into
human nature; for He is the Lord, that changes not; He is the
same in the "yesterday" of eternity, in the day of
time, and "for ever" to all eternity. By the incarnation
nothing is added to, nor altered in the divine nature and personality
of Christ. The human nature adds nothing to either of them;
they remain the same they ever were; Christ was as much a divine
Person before His incarnation as He is since; the union of the
human nature to the divine nature, is to it as subsisting in
the Person of the Son of God; so it is always to be understood,
whenever we speak of the union of the human nature to the divine
nature; for it is not united to the divine nature, simply considered;
or as that is common to the three Persons; for then each would
be incarnate; but as it has a peculiar subsistence in the Person
of the Son of God: and so the human nature has its subsistence
in His Person, and has a glory and excellency given it; but
that gives nothing at all to the nature and person of the divine
Word and Son of God. But, as other scriptures explain it, God
the Word, or Son, was made and became "manifest in the
flesh"; the Son that was in the bosom of the Father, the
Word of life, that was with Him from all eternity, was manifested
in the flesh in time, to the sons of men; and that in order
to take away sin, and destroy the works of the devil (1 Timothy
3:16; 1 John 1:1-2, 3:5, 8). And the incarnation of the Word
or Son of God, is expressed and explained by His partaking of
flesh and blood; and by a taking on Him the nature of man; or
by an assumption of the human nature into union with His divine
Person; so that both natures, divine and human, are united in
one Person; and there is but one Lord, and one Mediator between
God and man. The Nestorians so divided and separated these natures,
as to make them distinct and separate Persons; which they are
not, but one. And the Eutychians, running rate the other extreme,
mixed and confounded the natures together; interpreting the
phrase, "the Word was made flesh", of the divine nature
being changed into the human nature; and the human nature into
the divine nature; and so blended together as to make a third;
just as two sort of liquors, mixed together, make a third different
from both. But this is to make Christ neither truly God, nor
truly man; the one nature being confounded with and swallowed
up in the other. But this union of natures is such, that though
they are closely united, and not divided, yet they retain their
distinct properties and operations; as the divine nature to
be uncreated, infinite, omnipresent, impassible (the
human nature to be created, finite, in some certain place, passible,
at least the latter, before the resurrection of Christ).
But of this union, and the nature of it, more hereafter.
2c. Thirdly,
The causes of the incarnation, efficient and moving, or to whom
and what it is to be ascribed; and the final cause, for the
sake of whom, and what.
2c1. The efficient
cause of it, God, Father, Son, and Spirit; all the three Persons
have a concern in it, it being a work "ad extra".
The Father prepared a body for the Son in His purpose, and proposed
it to Him in council and covenant to assume it; and He sent
Him forth in the fullness of time, made of a woman, in the likeness
of sinful flesh (Hebrews 10:5; Galatians 4:4; Romans 8:3).
The Son having agreed to it, being sent, came in the flesh,
by the assumption of it; He took upon Him the nature of the
children, and partook of the same flesh and blood with them;
He took upon Him the form of a servant, and was found in fashion
as a man (Hebrews 2:14, 16; Philippians 2:7-8). The Holy Ghost
had a very great concern in this affair; for that which was
conceived in the Virgin was of "the Holy Ghost" (Matthew
1:20) not of His substance, nature, and essence; for then He
would have been the Father of it, which He is never said to
be; Christ, as man, was "without Father", and so a
proper antitype of Melchizedec (Hebrews 7:3). Besides, the body
of Christ would have been not human, but spiritual: but it was
of Him as the efficient cause of it; it was through His overshadowing
power and influence that it was conceived and formed (Luke 1:35).
Now, though all the three Persons in the Deity had an hand in
the wondrous incarnation, yet only one of them became incarnate;
only the Son assumed the human nature, and took it into union
with His divine Person; it is the Word only that was made flesh.
Some have illustrated this, by three virgins concerned in working
a garment; when only one of them puts it on and wears it.
2c2. The moving
cause of the incarnation of Christ, is the love of the Father,
and of the Son, to mankind. God so loved the world, that He
gave His only begotten Son to become man, obey, suffer, and
die for sinners; herein is love, and this love manifested, that
God sent His Son in human nature to be the propitiation for
the sins of His people, and save them from death, John 3:16
and 1 John 4:9-10. And such was the love and condescending grace
of the Son, that though He was in the form of God, of the same
nature with Him, and equal to Him; yet He took upon Him the
form and nature of man in a servile condition, humbled Himself,
and died in it. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ is well known;
who, though rich in His divine Person, became poor in human
nature, to make His people rich, Philippians 2:6-8 and 2 Corinthians
8:9.
2c3. The final
cause, or for whose sake, and for what the Son of God became
incarnate. It was for the sake of the elect of God; "To
us", or "for us", for our sakes, "a Child
is born; a Son is given": it was "unto all people";
or rather, "unto all the people"; for the sake of
the whole people of God among Jews and Gentiles, that Christ
was born a Saviour, or to be a Saviour of them; for which reason,
as soon as He was born, His name was called Jesus, because He
was to save His people from their sins; for which end He was
born and came into the world. But of this more hereafter (see
Isaiah 9:6; Luke 2:10-11; Matthew 1:21).
2d. Fourthly,
The parts of the incarnation are next to be considered, conception
and nativity.
2d1. First, Conception;
this is a most wonderful, abstruse, and mysterious affair; and
which to speak of is very difficult.
2d1a. This conception
was by a virgin; it was a virgin that conceived the human body
of Christ, as was foretold it should; which was very wonderful,
and therefore introduced with a note of admiration; "Behold,
a virgin shall conceive and bear a Son!" This was a "new
thing"; unheard of and astonishing; which God "created
in the earth", in the lower parts of the earth, in the
virgin's womb; "A woman compassed", or conceived,
"a man", without the knowledge of man (Isaiah 7:14;
Jeremiah 31:22). This was not natural, but supernatural;
though Mela [6] the geographer, speaks of some women in a certain
island who conceived without copulation with men; but that is
all romance; Plutarch [7] asserts, such a thing was never known.
This conception was made "in" the virgin, and not
without her; for so says the text; "That which is conceived
in her, is of the Holy Ghost"; this I observe to meet with,
and confute the heretical illapse, as it is sometimes called;
it was a notion of some of the ancient heretics, the Valentinians
[8], and of late, the Mennonites [9], that the human nature
of Christ was formed in heaven, and came down from thence into
the virgin, and passed through her as water through a pipe,
as their expression was; so that, according to them, He was
not conceived in her, nor took flesh of her: to countenance
this, it is observed, that the "second man" is said
to be "the Lord from heaven" (1 Corinthians 15:47).
But the words are not to be understood of the descent of the
human nature of Christ from heaven; but of His divine Person
from thence; not by change of place, but by assumption of the
human nature into union with Him; by virtue of which union the
man Christ has the name of the "Lord from heaven";
and not because of the original and descent of the human nature
from thence; and in this sense, and in this sense only, are
we to understand the words of Christ, when He says, "I
came down from heaven", John 6:38 namely, that He descended
in and by the human nature; not by bringing it down from thence,
but by taking it into union with His divine Person.
2d1b. This conception
was through the power and influence of the Holy Ghost, overshadowing
the virgin. His operations in this affair may be considered
in this manner, and after this order; He first took a part and
portion of the virgin, of her semen, or blood, and conveyed
it to a proper place; and purified and sanctified it, or separated
it, not from any moral impurity, which it was not capable of,
being an unformed mass; but from a natural indisposition in
it, which, had it not been removed, might hereafter have occasioned
sin; to prevent which this was done; and then He impregnated
it with a fructifying virtue, and formed the members of the
human body, in order, at once, and in a fitness (being properly
organized) to receive the human soul; for to consider its immediate
formation in such a state, is much more agreeable to the formation
of the first man, more becoming the workmanship of the Holy
Ghost, and more suitable to the dignity of the Son of God to
assume it into union with Himself, than to suppose it an unformed
and unshapen embryo. Yet this is to be understood, not as if
it was in such a state as not to admit of a future increase,
both before and after birth; nor to contradict its continuance
in the womb of the virgin the usual time of every man. Now though
this affair has been spoken of as in various processes, yet
must be understood as all instantaneously done by the almighty
power of the Holy Spirit: in the same instant the human body
was thus conceived, formed, and organized, the human soul of
Christ was created and united to it, by Him who "forms
the spirit of man within Him"; and in that very instant
the body was conceived and formed, and the soul united to it,
did the Son of God assume the whole human nature at once, and
take it into union with His divine Person, and gave it a subsistence
in it; so that the human nature of Christ never had a subsistence
of itself; but from the moment of its conception, formation,
and creation, it subsisted in the Person of the Son of God:
and hence the human nature of Christ is not a person; a person
is that which subsists of itself: but that the human nature
of Christ never did; therefore,
2d1c. It was
a nature, and not a person, that Christ assumed so early as
at its conception; it is called "the holy Thing",
and not a person; "The seed of Abraham", or the nature
of the seed of Abraham; the "form" and "fashion"
of a man, that is, the nature of man; as "the form of God",
in the same passage, signifies the nature of God (see Luke 1:35,
Hebrews 2:16, and Philippians 2:6-8). The Nestorians asserted
the human nature of Christ to be a person; and so made two persons
in Christ, one human and one divine; and of course four persons
in the Deity, contrary to 1 John 5:7 but there is but one Person
of the Son, one Son of God, one Lord of all, one Mediator between
God and man: if the two natures in Christ were two distinct
separate persons, the works and actions done in each nature
could not be said of the same Person; the righteousness wrought
out by Christ in the human nature, could not be called the righteousness
of God: nor the blood shed in the human nature the blood of
the Son of God; nor God be said to purchase the church with
His blood; nor the Lord of life and glory to be crucified; nor
the Son of man to be in heaven, when He was here on earth: all
which phrases can only be accounted for, upon the footing of
the personal union of the human nature to the Son of God, and
His having but one Person; of which these various things are
predicated. Besides, if the human nature of Christ was a person
of itself, what it did and suffered could have been of no avail,
nor of any benefit to any other but itself; the salvation wrought
out in it, and by it, would not have been the common salvation,
or common to elect men; but peculiar to that individual human
person; and the righteousness He is the author of, He would
only have had the benefit of it, being justified by it, and
accepted with God in it; whereas, it being wrought out in the
human nature, as in personal union with the Son of God, this
gives it an enlarged virtue, and spread; and so it comes to
be "unto all, and upon all them that believe".
I treat of the
union of the two natures, divine and human, in the person of
the Son of God, under the article of conception, and before
the birth of Christ, as it certainly was; hence when Mary paid
a visit to her cousin Elizabeth, before the birth of Christ,
and just upon the conception of Him, she was saluted by her
thus; "Whence is this to me, that the mother of my Lord
should come unto me?" Luke 1:43.
Wherefore, before
I proceed to consider the second part of the incarnation, the
nativity of Christ, I shall further observe some things concerning
the union, which took place at the conception; and of the effects
of it.
1. Of the union
itself; concerning which let it be observed,
1a. That though
Christ, by assuming the human nature, united it to His divine
Person; yet there is a difference between assumption and union
assumption is only of one nature; union is of both: Christ only
assumed the human nature to His divine Person; but both natures,
human and divine, are united in His Person: that He has two
distinct natures is evident; in that, according to the flesh,
or human nature, He is the Son of David; and according to the
Spirit of holiness, or the divine nature, He is the Son of God:
He was of the father's, according to the flesh, or human nature;
but, according to the divine nature, God over all, blessed for
ever: He was put to death in the flesh, in the human nature;
but quickened in or by the Spirit, the divine nature (Romans
1:3-4, 9:5; 1 Peter 1:18), yet but one Person.
1b. This union
is hypostatical, or personal; but not an union of persons: the
union of Father, Son, and Spirit in the Deity, is an union of
three Persons in one God; but this is not an union of two persons;
but of two natures in one person.
1c. This an union
of natures; but not a communication of one nature to another;
not of the divine nature, and the essential properties of it,
to the human nature; for though "the fullness of the Godhead
dwells bodily" in Christ (Colossians 2:9), that is, substantially
and really, not in shadow and type; yet the perfections of the
Godhead are not communicated to the manhood, as to make that
uncreated, infinite, immense, and to be everywhere; the properties
of each nature remain distinct, notwithstanding this union.
1d. This union
lies in a communication of, or rather in making the personality
of the Word, common to the human nature; or giving it a subsistence
in the Person of the Word or Son of God; hence because of this
union and community of person, it has the same name with the
Word; and is called, "the Son of God" (Luke 1:35).
And hence it appears, that the human nature of Christ is no
loser, but a gainer, and is not inferior, but superior to other
individuals of human nature, by its not being a person, subsisting
of itself; because it has a better subsistence in the Person
of the Son of God, than it could have had of itself; or than
any creature has, angel or man.
1e. This union
is indissoluble: though death dissolved the union between the
body and soul of Christ, it did not, and could not, dissolve
the union between the human nature and person of Christ; wherefore,
in consequence of this union, He raised up the temple of His
body, when destroyed, the third day, and thereby declared Himself
to be the Son of God with power (John 2:19; Romans 1:4).
2. The effects
of this union, both with respect to the human nature, and to
the Person of Christ. With respect to the human nature;
2a. Preeminence
to all other individuals of human nature; it is chosen and preferred
to the grace of union with the Son of God, above them all; it
has a better subsistence than they have, and has obtained a
more excellent name than they, and even than the angels; and
is possessed of glory, blessings, and privileges above all creatures;
as will appear from what will be further observed. All which
is not of any merit in it, but of the free grace of God.
2b. Perfect holiness
and impeccability: it is called, "the holy Thing";
it is eminently and perfectly so; without original sin, or any
actual transgression; it is not conscious of any sin, never
committed any, nor is it possible it should.
2c. A communication
of habitual grace to it in the greatest degree; it is, in this
respect, fairer and more beautiful than any of the sons of men;
grace being poured into it in great plenty; it is anointed with
the oil of gladness above its fellows; that is, with the gifts
and graces of the Holy Spirit; it has the Spirit given unto
it, but not by measure; the Spirit of God rests upon it, in
His several gifts and graces, in a most glorious and perfect
manner (Psalm 45:2, 7; John 3:34; Isaiah 11:2). And should
it be asked, if the same graces were in it, and exercised by
it, as love, faith, and hope, in the saints? it may be answered,
they were, and were exercised by it in its state of humiliation,
as its circumstances required: Christ trusted and hoped in God,
when upon His mother's breasts (Psalm 22:9-10). When in suffering
circumstances, He exercised faith on Him, that He would justify,
help, and deliver Him (Isaiah 50:7-9). When the time of His death
drew nigh, He expressed His love to God by a readiness to submit
to His will, and obey His command (John 14:31). And when His
body lay in the grave, He rested in hope of the resurrection
of it (Psalm 16:10).
2d. A very high
and glorious exaltation of it, after His death and resurrection
from the dead: it was highly exalted by being united to the
Person of the Son of God; and though it came into a state of
humiliation in it, yet being raised from the dead, is highly
exalted, far above all principality and power, and might and
dominion, and above every name that is named in this world or
in that to come; it is set down at the right hand of God, where
angels are never bid to come; and where angels, authorities,
and powers, are made subject to it (Ephesians 1:20-21; Philippians
2:9-10; Hebrews 1:13; 1 Peter 3:22).
3. With respect
to the Person of Christ, the effects of this union are,
3a. A communication
of idioms, or properties, as the ancients express it; that is,
of the properties of each nature; which are, in common, predicated
of the Person of Christ, by virtue of the union of natures in
it; for though each nature retains its peculiar properties,
and does not communicate them to each other; yet they may be
predicated of the Person of Christ: yea, He may be denominated
in one nature, from a property which belongs to another; thus
in His divine nature He is God, the Son of God, the Lord of
glory; and yet in this nature is described by a property which
belongs to the human nature, which is to be passable, and suffer;
hence we read of God purchasing the church with His blood; and
of the blood of the Son of God cleansing from all sin; and of
the Lord of glory being crucified (Acts 20:28; 1 John 1:7;
1 Corinthians 2:8). And on the other hand, in His human nature
He is called the Son of man; and yet as such, is described by
a property which belongs to the divine nature, which is to be
omnipresent, to be everywhere. So it is said; "No man hath
ascended to heaven but He that came down from heaven, even the
Son of man, which is in heaven" (John 3:13), who was in heaven
at the same time He was here on earth; which was true of His
Person, though denominated from His human nature; and thus what
cannot be said of Christ in the abstract, is true of Him in
the concrete, by virtue of this union; it cannot be said, that
the Deity of Christ suffered; or that the humanity of Christ
is everywhere: but it may be said, that God, the Son of God
suffered; and that the Son of man was in heaven when on earth,
or everywhere. It cannot be said, that the Deity is humanity;
nor the humanity Deity, nor equal to God: but it may be said,
that God the Word is man, and the man Christ is God, Jehovah's
Fellow; because these names respect the Person of Christ, which
includes both natures.
3b. A communion
of office, and of power and authority to exercise it in both
natures: thus by Virtue of this union Christ bears the office
of a Mediator, and exercises it in both natures; there is "one
Mediator between God and man, the Man Christ Jesus", 1
Timothy 2:5 but He is not Mediator only in His human nature,
and only exercises it in that; He took upon Him, and was invested
with this office before His assumption of human nature; and
could and did exercise some parts of it without it, as has been
shown in its proper place; but there were others that required
His human nature; and when, and not before it was requisite,
He assumed it; and in it, as united to His divine Person, He
is God-man, is Prophet, Priest, and King, Judge, Lawgiver, and
Saviour; and has power over all flesh, to give eternal life
to as many as the Father has given Him; and upon His resurrection,
had all power in heaven and earth given Him, to appoint ordinances,
and commission men to administer them; and had authority also
to execute judgment, both in the world and in the church; because
He is the Son of man (Matthew 28:18; John 17:2, 5:27).
3c. A communion
of operations in both natures, to the perfecting of the same
work; which, therefore, may be called "theandric",
or the work of the God-man; there being a concurrence of both
natures in the performance of it; which, when done, is ascribed
to His Person: thus, for instance, the sacrifice of Himself,
as the propitiation for the sins of men; as God-man and Mediator,
He is the Priest that offers; His human nature, consisting of
soul and body, is the Sacrifice; and His divine nature is the
altar which sanctifies it, and gives it its atoning virtue,
His blood was shed in the human nature, to cleanse from sin;
but it is owing to its union with the Son of God that such an
effect is produced by it. The redemption of men is by the ransom
price of the life and blood of Christ; but it is the divine
nature, to which the human is united, in the Person of the Son
of God, that makes it a sufficient one. The mission of the Spirit,
by Christ, is owing both to His intercession in the human nature,
and to His power and authority in the divine nature, according
to the economy of things settled between the divine Persons.
3d. The adoration
of the Person of Christ, having both natures united in Him,
is another effect of this union. The human nature of Christ
is not the formal object of worship; it is a creature, and not
to be worshipped as such; nor is worship given for the sake
of it, or as singly considered; but then the divine Person of
Christ having that nature in union with Him, is the object of
worship; the flesh of Christ is not worshipped, but the incarnate
God is; a whole Christ is worshipped, but not the whole of Christ.
"When He bringeth in the first begotten into the world",
which was at the time of the incarnation, "He saith, let
all the angels of God worship Him" (Hebrews 1:6). And upon
His resurrection from the dead, God has "given Him a name
which is above every name; that at the name of Jesus should
bow"; that is, in a way of religious (Philippians 2:9-10);
and though Christ, as man, is not the object of such adoration;
yet what He has done in the human nature, is a motive and argument
why blessing and honour should be given to His Person, having
both natures united in Him; "Worthy is the Lamb that was
slain, to receive power" (Revelation 5:12-13).
2d2. Secondly,
The birth, or nativity of Christ, the other part of the incarnation,
is next to be considered.
2d2a. Of whom
born; of a virgin, of the house of David, and of the tribe of
Judah.
2d2a1. Of a virgin:
this was hinted at in the first promise of "the seed of
the woman"; and is fully expressed by Isaiah; "A virgin
shall conceive and bear a Son"; to fulfill which prophecy,
before Joseph and Mary cohabited as man and wife, and so, while
she was a virgin, "she was found with child of the Holy
Ghost" (Matthew 1:18-23). And it was brought about in this
manner, that the human nature of Christ might be clear of original
sin, which it otherwise must have been infected with, had it
been conceived and born in the ordinary and natural way of generation;
for "whatsoever is born of the flesh, is flesh", carnal
and corrupt; but being produced in this extraordinary and supernatural
way, but the power of the Holy Ghost, that which was born of
the virgin is "the holy Thing"; free from all spot
and blemish of sin. This is most surprisingly accounted for,
by the more modern philosophy respecting generation, that every
man is born of an animalcule; which agrees with the sacred philosophy
[10] in Job 25:6 and that all the animalcula from which millions
of men spring in all ages, were originally formed by the great
Creator in the first man; which, as it accounts for the guilt
and pollution of all men in Him; so for the purity of Christ's
human nature, since that was not born of an animalcule, as other
men are; nor was it of man, nor of the seed of man [11]; but
was according to the first promise, the pure seed of the woman;
nor was it ever in Adam, in the first man; no, not in "animalculo",
as the rest of the individuals of human nature, according to
this hypothesis, and so was not represented by Him; nor did
He stand related to it, as a covenant head; nor did it descend
from Him by ordinary generation; but was conceived in the virgin
through the power of the Holy Ghost; and did not exist in any
respect before; no, not in "animalculo"; which lies
strongly against the preexistence of Christ's human nature in
any sense whatever; and so, being free from sin, was fit to
be a sacrifice for sin, since it could be offered up to God
without spot, by the eternal Spirit. Moreover, so it was, that
as the ruin of men came by means of a virgin; for the fall of
Adam was before He knew His wife; so the Saviour of men from
that ruin, came into the world by a virgin: and so it was ordered
by the wisdom of God, that Christ should appear to have but
one Father, having none as man, and so be but one Person; whereas,
had He had two fathers, there must have been two persons.
2d2a2. Christ
was born of a virgin of the house of David; as in Luke 1:27
for the phrase of the house of David, is equally true of the
virgin, as of Joseph, and may be connected with her. God promised
to David, that the Messiah should be of His seed; and accordingly,
of His seed He raised up unto Israel, a Saviour Jesus, who is
therefore called the Son of David; and is both "the root
and offspring of David"; the root of David, as God, and
David's Lord; and the offspring of David, as man, descending
from Him (Acts 13:23; Revelation 22:16).
2d2a3. He was
born of a virgin of the tribe of Judah; as she must be, since
she was of the house of David, which was of that tribe; and
it is manifest, as the apostle says, that our Lord sprung out
of the tribe of Judah, as it was foretold He should (Genesis
49:10; Hebrews 7:14).
2d2b. The birth
of Christ, or His coming into the world, was after the manner
of other men; His generation and conception were extraordinary;
but His birth was in the usual manner; He came into the world
after He had lain the common time in His mother's womb; for
it is said, "the days were accomplished that she should
be delivered"; she went her full time with Him, and brought
forth Him, her firstborn Son, as other women do; and no doubt
with pains and sorrow, as every daughter of Eve does: and presented,
Him to the Lord when the days of her purification were ended,
according to the law, as it is written, "Every male that
openeth the womb, shall be called holy to the Lord", Luke
2:6,22-23. So that in these respects Christ was made in all
things like unto His brethren.
2d2c. The place
of His birth was Bethlehem, according to the prophecy in Micah
5:2; here it was expected He would be born; and this was so well
known to the Jews, that when Herod inquired of the chief priests
and Scribes where Christ should be born; they, without any hesitation,
immediately reply, in "Bethlehem of Judea", and quote
the above prophecy in proof of it, Matthew 2:4-6 yea, this was
known by the common people (John 7:42); and so it was wonderfully
brought about in providence; that though Joseph and Mary lived
in Galilee, yet through a decree of Caesar Augustus to tax the
whole empire, they were both obliged to come to the city of
Bethlehem, the city of David, to be taxed, being of the lineage
and house of David; and while they were on that business there,
the virgin was delivered of her Son (Luke 2:1-7). Bethlehem signifies
the house of bread; a fit place for the Messiah to be born in,
who is the bread that came down from heaven, and gives life
unto the world.
2d2d. The time
of His birth was as it was fixed in prophecy; before the sceptre,
or civil government, departed from Judah: Herod was king in
Judea when He was born; before the second temple was destroyed;
for He often went into it, and taught in it: and it was at the
time pointed at in Daniel's weeks (see Genesis 49:10; Malachi
3:1; Haggai 2:6-7, 9; Daniel 9:24). The exact year
of the world in which He was born, is not agreed on by chronologers;
but it was about, or a little before or after the four thousandth
year of the world; nor can the season of the year, the month
and day in which He was born, be ascertained. However, the vulgar
account seems not probable; the circumstance of the shepherds
watching their flocks by night, agrees not with the winter season.
It is more likely it was in autumn, sometime in the month of
September, at the feast of tabernacles, which was typical of
Christ's incarnation; and there seems to be some reference to
it in John 1:14. "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt",
or "tabernacled" among us; the temple of Solomon,
a type of Christ's human nature, was dedicated at the feast
of tabernacles: and as Christ, the passover, was sacrificed
at the very time of the passover; and the Holy Ghost was given
on the very day of Pentecost, typified by the firstfruits offered
on that day; so it is most reasonable to suppose, that Christ
was born at the very feast of tabernacles, a type of His incarnation;
and which feast is put for the whole ministry of the word and
ordinances, to be observed in gospel times (Zechariah 14:16).
However, it was in the fullness of time, or when the time was
fully up He was to come, that God sent Him, and He came; and
in due time, in the fittest and most proper time, infinite Wisdom
saw meet He should come: God could have sent Him sooner; but
He did not think fit to do it; but He sent Him at the most seasonable
time; when the wickedness of men was at its height, both in
Judea and in the Gentile world; and there appeared a necessity
of a Saviour of men from it; and when the insufficiency of the
light of nature, of the power of man's free will, which had
been sufficiently tried among the philosophers; and of the law
of Moses, and of the works and sacrifices of it, to take away
sin, and save men from it, had been clearly evinced. To conclude,
it was in time, and not before time, that Christ became man.
To talk of the human nature of Christ, either in whole or in
part, as from eternity, is contrary both to scripture and reason;
nor can that man, or human nature, be of any avail or benefit
to us; but He that is the Seed of the woman, the Son of Abraham,
the Son of David, and the Son of Mary.
2e. Fifthly,
The ends of Christ's incarnation are many; there is a cluster
of them in the song of the angels at His birth; "Glory
to God in the highest; and on earth peace, good will towards
men" (Luke 2:14).
2e1. One end
of Christ's incarnation was, to show forth the glory of God
in it; the glory of His grace, kindness, and goodness to men,
in the mission of His Son in this way; the glory of His faithfulness
in fulfilling His promise of it; the glory of His power in the
miraculous production of Christ's human nature; and the glory
of His wisdom in bringing it into the world in such a manner
as to be free from sin, and so fit for the purpose for which
it was designed: and all this that God might be glorified in
these His perfections; as He was by the angels, by Mary, by
the father of John the Baptist, and by Simeon, at, or about,
the time of Christ's birth; and as He has been by saints in
all ages since.
2e2. Another
end of Christ's incarnation was, to make peace with God for
men on earth; to make reconciliation for sin, was the work appointed
Him in covenant; and to do this, was the reason of His being
made in all things like unto His brethren; and this end is answered;
He has reconciled sinners to God by His death, and made peace
for them by the blood of His cross.
2e3. Another
end of Christ's incarnation was, not only to show the good will
of God to men, but that they might receive the fruits of His
good will and favour towards them; even all the blessings of
grace, those spiritual blessings provided in covenant, and laid
up in Christ; and which came by Him our High Priest, and through
His blood, called therefore, the blood of the everlasting covenant.
2e4. Particularly,
Christ became man that He might be our God, our near kinsman,
and might appear to have a right to redeem us; and He was, in
the fullness of time, made of a woman, to redeem men from the
law, its curse and condemnation; and that they might receive
the adoption of children, and every other blessing included
in or connected with redemption; as peace, pardon, and justification;
for He was sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, that by the
sacrifice of Himself for sin, He might condemn it in the flesh;
and that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in
us, as represented by Him, and so be completely justified in
Him (see Galatians 4:4-5 and Romans 8:3-4).
2e5. Christ became
man, that He might be a Mediator between God and men; and the
better to perform each of the parts of His office as such, He
took upon Him the nature of man; that He might have something
to offer as a Priest to be a Sacrifice for sin, and that He
might make satisfaction for it in that nature that sinned; and
that He might be a prophet like unto Moses, raised up, as He
was, among His brethren; and having the Spirit of the Lord God
upon Him, might preach glad tidings to the meek; and that He
might appear to be a King taken from among His brethren, as
the kings of Israel were; and to be the Ruler, Noble, and Governor
that proceeded from the midst of them, as was predicted He should,
Jeremiah 30:21 and so sit and reign upon the throne of His father
David.
-
Huet. Quaest. Alnetan. l. 2. c. 13. p.
234. and c. 15. p. 241. See Philosoph. Transact. abridged,
vol. v. part 2. p. 168.
-
Martin. Sinic. Hist. l. 4. p. 131, 132.
Vid. Huet. ut supra, p. 235.
-
Hesiod. Theogon. v. 927. Apollodor. de
Deor. Orig. l. 1. p. 8. Vid. Huet. ut supra, c. 15, p. 237,
238.
-
Opera, tom. 1. De Christi Natura Disput.
p. 784.
-
Ibid. Ep. 2. ad Balcerovicium, p. 425.
-
De Situ Orbis, l. 3. c. 9.
-
Conjugial Praecept. p. 145.
-
Irenaeus Adv. Haeres. l. 1. c. 1. p. 29.
-
Socini Disput. Adv. Mennonitas in Oper.
tom. 2. p. 461.
-
"Omnia nimirum animalia, etiam perfecta
similiter ex vermiculo gigni", Harveus de Generat.
Animal, Exercit. 18. p. 144.
-
The animalcula are only "in semine
masculo;" see the Philosophical Transactions abridged,
vol. 2. p. 912, 913.
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