The perfection of the evangelical revelation, a sermon preached at St. Martins in the Fields, Nov. 4. 1695 being the eighth and last of the lecture for that year, founded by the honourable Robert Boyle, Esquire / by John Williams ... Williams, John, 1636?-1709. 1696 Approx. 39 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 17 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2005-12 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A66407 Wing W2716 ESTC R11520 12929980 ocm 12929980 95631 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A66407) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 95631) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 991:27) The perfection of the evangelical revelation, a sermon preached at St. Martins in the Fields, Nov. 4. 1695 being the eighth and last of the lecture for that year, founded by the honourable Robert Boyle, Esquire / by John Williams ... Williams, John, 1636?-1709. [2], 28 p. Printed for Ri. Chiswell, and Tho. Cockerill, senr & junr ..., London : 1696. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. Half title: Dr William's last sermon at Mr. Boyle's lecture, 1695. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Church of England -- Sermons. Revelation -- Early works to 1800 -- Sermons. Sermons, English -- 17th century. 2005-01 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-03 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2005-04 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2005-04 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2005-10 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion D r WILLIAMS's LAST SERMON AT Mr. BOYLE's Lecture , 1695. ADVERTISEMENT . HAVING now finished the Course of Sermons for the Year 1695. Those of the Present Year belonging to the same Argument , will ( God willing ) be speedily Published in their Order , viz. Concerning the Rule of Scripture , and The Way of Interpretation . The Perfection of the Evangelical Revelation . A SERMON Preached at St. Martins in the Fields , Nov. 4. 1695. BEING THE Eighth and Last of the LECTURE For that YEAR , Founded by the Honourable ROBERT BOYLE , Esquire . By JOHN WILLIAMS , D. D. Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty . LONDON : Prin●ed for Ri. Chiswell , and Tho. Cockerill , Ser. r & Jun r : At the Rose and Crown in St. Paul's Church-Yard ; and at the Three Legs in the Poultrey . M DC XC VI HEB. 1.1 , 2. God who at sundry times , and in divers manners spake in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets , hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son , &c. IN which words ( as I have shewed ) there is . 1. A Description of Revelation , 't is God's speaking . 2. The Certainty of such a Revelation , God spake , 't is taken for granted . 3. The Order observed in it , it was at sundry times . 4. The Perfection and Completion of all ; God hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son. Under the Third , ( 1. ) I Have considered the several ways by which God did reveal himself , as Inspiration , &c. ( 2. ) Have shewed the difference between Divine Inspirations , and Diabolical Illusions , and Natural Impressions . ( 3. ) I am now to consider the several periods before the Law , under the Law , and under the Gospel , and the gradual progress of Revelation from first to last , from the lower to the higher degree , and the perpetual respect one had to the other . ( 4. ) I am to consider , why God did thus gradually and at sundry times proceed in revealing his Will to Mankind ; and why he did not at the first communicate his Will to them as fully and perfectly , as he did in the last daies by his Son. And then I am to conclude with the last General , viz. 4. General ; Where I am to shew the Perfection of the Gospel Revelation , and that there is not to be any other Revelation till the end of the World. I have here a large Field before me ; and many difficult Points to treat of ; but because this is the Concluding Lecture of the Year , I shall sum it up , and pass through the Particulars with as much brevity as the time will allow ; and with as much attention as I can ; though I must fall short of what the Subject and Nature of the things to be spoken of doth deserve , and might otherwise , be treated of . ( 3. ) I am now come to the Third Branch , and to consider the several Periods , viz. the Patriarchal before the Law , the Mosaical under the Law , and the Evangelical under the Gospel . The Patriarchal State , is that which extended from Adam to the Deliverance of the Israelites out of Egypt , and the giving the Law at Mount Sinai , which included in it the space of Two thousand five hundred Years , and upward . The Mosaical or Legal State , was that which extended from the delivery of the Law at Sinai , to the preaching of John the Baptist , with whom ended the time past , and the last daies began ; which included in it the space of One thousand four hundred Years , and upward . The Evangelical State , is that which began with John the Baptist , and is to continue to the Worlds end . In the consideration of these three States , we may observe , That there is a great difference between them , and a gradual ascent from the less perfect to the greater ; so that the Mosaical is superior to the Patriarchal , and the Evangelical to the Mosaical . When I speak of the Patriarchal , I intend to give it all the advantage , by looking upon it as a State of Revelation , and not a bare State of Nature ; for I have before proved , that there was a Revelation from the beginning , and derived down by a constant Pedigree and Succession , more or less . But what it was , we must in great part rather conjecture , than can certainly know ; especially as to the Antediluvian State. For the Flood having swept away the whole Stock of the ungodly Cainites , it was the design of Providence that their Memorial should perish with them : And so the Divine Penman contracted that State , and gives us only a Breviat of what passed before the Flood . We have there the History of the Creation , Fall , and Recovery of Man ; and may observe how seasonably Almighty God interposed for his Comfort and Relief , by the promise of the Seed of the Woman . We may observe further , how for the maintaining of his Authority , and the manifestation of his Justice and Holiness , and to imprint on the minds of Men a dread of offending for the future , and to keep up an expectation of the Son of God's appearing and becoming a Sacrifice in our Nature , God established from the very first a course of Sacrifices ; by the means of which Atonement Sinners might have a right Notion of Almighty God : when his Justice and Mercy were thus intermingled ; that they might not be encouraged to presume on one hand , nor be thrown into despair on the other . We may observe farther , how God provided for the preservation of Religion , and especially Revelation , by the Longaevity of the Patriarchs , and a Race of Holy Men , who were Prophets and Testifiers of his Will ; of whom there was a constant Succession ; that by a long Conversation between Father and Son , Progenitors and Successors , what was wanting in Records and Memorials , might be supplied . We may observe farther , how ineffectual this course proved in the Issue , how degenerate Mankind grew , so inflexible and incorrigible , that to purge out this pest of Impiety that had infected the whole Race , God took up a resolution of discharging the World of that impious Stock , and to raise up a new Seed from the Righteous Noah ; and that issued in the Flood . This is the short History of the first Sixteen hundred fifty six years of the World , the Antediluvian State. The Revelation , so far as it is handed down to us in Moses , was then obscure ; But a Revelation they had , and Prophets , and those of the higher Form : Insomuch , that some of the Jews hold , that Enoch , in particular , was endued with a higher degree of Prophecy than Moses and Elias . But whatever it was , the sum amounted to this , That God was reconciled to man after his Apostacy ; that he had established an Atonement ; and that in process of time the Son of God should in our Nature actually appear , and become a Saviour to us , and be a Propitiation for our Sins . But there is a farther branch of this Patriarchal State , which is the Post-Diluvian , after the Deluge . Here we are in part in the dark as before ; for there were no less than Three hundred sixty seven years , at the least , past ( for so long it was from the Flood to Abraham's departure out of Haran ) of which the Inspired Historian gives little account . All that we have , is the progeny of the Sons of Noah , and their dispersion , and the division of Tongues upon the foolish attempt at Babel . The reason of this seems to be much the same as before the Flood ; and that was the general depravation of Mankind , of which the said attempt at Babel was an Instance ; and the Call of Abraham out of the Land of the Chaldees an Evidence . For the reason of that Call of his , was the Idolatry then growing upon the World ; the infection of which , it seems , the Family of Sem had not altogether escaped : For this the Ancestors of Abraham are charged with , Josh. 24.2 , 14. And then it was in him that pure Religion began to lift up its head again ; and for that reason that he might become an eminent Instrument for preserving and promoting it , God revealed himself to that Holy Patriarch . And this is the Third Branch of the Patriarchal Period , which I may call the Abraamical State. The first Revelation of this was ( as aforesaid ) to Adam , which was , that it should be the Seed of the woman , ( whom the Serpent had seduced , and thought to have brought his ends about by ) . The next opening of this great secret of Divine Wisdom was , that this Seed , or Messias , should descend from the Stock of Abraham , viz. In thee shall all families of the earth be blessed , Gen. 12.3 . which the Apostle applies to Christ , Gal. 3.16 . and to which Abraham had a respect in the Birth of Isaac , when he gave him that Name , which signifies laughter , or rejoycing , Gen. 21.3 . Thus our Saviour interprets it in that allusion , Your father Abraham rejoyced to see my day , and was glad , John 8.56 . This was the reason why Moses did so carefully draw down the Pedigree of Sem , which terminated in Abraham ; passing slightly by the History of his Progenitors , and taking up that of this Patriarch , in whom the Holy Seed did more illustriously appear : And why also he so punctually set down the time when this promise to Abraham was first made , and which as the principal of all , God did several times repeat to him , and also to Isaac and Jacob , at the first time he is said to have appeared to them . So that though they had a standing Oracle , and had other Revelations , yet this of the holy Seed was the chief Revelation , and which was upon all solemn occasions renewed . But though Revelation did eminently conduce to the good of the world , where it was promulged and received , and afforded a much brighter and more certain light than Nature and Reason of it self did ; yet even here Revelation made , as it were , a pause , and the Patriarchal State gave way to another which we call , 2. The Mosaical , which had a manifold advantage of the other . As ( 1. ) That Religion here was National , and the People were entire and embodied into one Society ; whereas it was otherwise among the Patriarchs , as in the case of Terah in Mesopotamia ; Melchisedec , and even Abraham , in Canaan ; and Job in Arabia ; where Religion and the Church was rather Domestical than National . ( 2. ) The State of the Jews was a Theocracy , and the whole of it , whether as to matters Civil or Divine , was established by God's peculiar appointment , and under whose immediate Regiment they were ; having his Minister Moses their Mediator , Gal. 3.19 . and God making them his peculiar and propriety , Deut. 4.33 . 14.2 . ( 3. ) It was a typical State , under which one of greater excellency , and thereafter in process of time to succeed , was adumbrated , I mean , the Evangelical : So that their Rites , and particularly their Sacrifices under that Dispensation , had a peculiar respect to the great Sacrifice , the lamb said to be slain ( in God's Decree , and in the vertue of it ) from the foundation of the world : And which those Rites and Sacrifices were intended for the farther ratification , and for the preservation of in their minds . ( 4. ) I may add , there was an improvement made upon this Legal and Typical State , by the Prophetical ; which was enobled by the many illustrious Prophecies , more especially concerning the Messiah , as to the time of his Appearance , his Birth , and the Place of it , his Family , Sufferings , Miracles , Resurrection , Ascension , in abundance of circumstances relating thereunto . And when in the declension of the Jewish State , Prophecy might be expected should decay with it , it on the contrary increas'd , till on the sudden it wholly ceas'd , when the Revelation of that kind , and for that season , was sufficient : For what could have been more punctual than what was already Revealed ? ( 5. ) After this there was a long interval of above Four hundred years , and a cessation of that Prophecy and extraordinary Revelation which had continued in that Church for the space of above a Thousand years , from the time of Moses to that of Zechary and Malachi ; at the close of which it had been foretold , that by the coming of the Messiah , Prophecy and Revelation should revive , and a more plentiful effusion of the Holy Spirit should then be , than had been ever before . Now what should be the reason of this , but that there might be raised in that People the more earnest desire after the approaching of that happy Age ; and that they might thereby be convinced that their own Institution was not to continue for ever , and that there was a more perfect Dispensation which they were to expect , and which was to rise , as it were , out of the ashes of the other . And that is 3. The Evangelical State , which is the close and completion of all ; in which the Rites of the Law were completed , the Types answered by the Anti-Types , and the Prophecies were fulfilled and interpreted by the Event . So that the New Testament is the evidence and proof of the Old ; the one declaring what is to come , and the other shewing that it is come ; both bearing an exact correspondence to each other . I proceed to the Fourth Branch of the Third General ; where 4. I am to consider why God did thus gradually and at sundry times proceed in Revealing his Will to Mankind , and why he did not at the first communicate his Will to them as fully and perfectly , as he did in the last days by his Son ? So that there are Two Questions to be resolved . Q. 1. Why God did not communicate his Will at first ? Q. 2. Why in these last days ? A. ( 1. ) As to the former ; it may as well be asked , Why God did ever promise ? And why he did not actually give at the same time when he promised ? It may again be as well asked , Why there was such a thing as Prophecy , and that the things Prophecied of were not at the same instant accomplished , as they were predicted ? And if that be the question ; it may again as well be asked , Why there is such a thing as Succession ? Why there are Causes and Effects ? And why all things are not Existent at once ? And why all Acts are not done together ? For Promises and Prophecies imply Succession ; and to require there should be no Promises and no Prophecies , is , in effect , to require there should be no Succession . ( 2. ) A Promise on God's part , implies the certainty of the thing in its season , as well as a Prophecy . A Prophecy is certain because of God's infinite Power , Wisdom , and Knowledge , to foresee what will be the effect of such Causes , what the events of such Actions , or how he will order and accomplish them : And a Promise implies besides that , his Faithfulness , and that he will infallibly see to the accomplishment of it . And so whatever is Promised or Prophecied of by Almighty God , is as certain in its Causes , and shall be in the Event , as if it was now in being or now done , or that we had it in actual possession . ( 3. ) It is as much , if not more , for the Honour of Almighty God , that there should be a Succession of Beings , Actions , and Events , as if they were all Existent at once ; and consequently as much to order such Beings , Actions , and Events in Succession , as it is if they were present . ( 4. ) As there are in Nature a First and a Second , and so on in progression ; and all things appearing in their proper time , order , and course , till by degrees 't is raised to its highest Perfection : So it is as accountable for God to make known his Will to Mankind , to begin and carry it on , from a lesser to a higher degree , as he sees fit ; and upon a strict examination has as much Beauty and Order in it . And to have all Revelation at once , would appear as irregular as for all Mankind to have lived and died all at once . ( 5. ) Especially is this , where such Revelations are suited to the state of the World , and that the Dispensation of one Age would not suit the Temper and Circumstances of another ; of which we have an instance in the Jews , who were of that Temper , that a burdensome and Ritual Religion was more fit for them than another more Refined and Spiritual , and whose External and Gorgeous Form was accommodated accordingly to it , as under age , Gal. 4.1 . And therefore it is wisely observed by Theodoret , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ; That God suited his Instructions to every Age of the World. And we have good reason to believe this to be so , because there was such a gradual progress in Divine Revelation , as has been already shewn . ( 6. ) This is still the more accountable , if we consider that the Obligation of Mankind arises from the Notification of the Divine Will ; and that according as the Revelation of it is , so is the Obligation . And therefore those that have no Revelation , are not upon the same strict terms with those that have ; nor are those that live under the lower Dispensation , upon the same terms with those that have the higher : So the Apostle St. Peter , Of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons ; but every one that feareth God , and worketh righteousness is accepted of him . But this in part belongs to the next Question . Q. 2. From hence we may be able in part to resolve the other branch of the Question , viz. Why God did not at the first send his Son to deliver his Will to the world , as he did in the last days ? Celsus , a great Adversary to the Christian Religion , from the consideration of Christ's coming so late into the world for the Redemption of Mankind , compares God to Jupiter in the Comedy , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , as waking out of a long sleep . But this may as well be objected against any special act of Divine Providence ; and were there no other answer to be given , this were sufficient . But as there were many Prophecies concerning this state of things to be accomplished by the coming of Messiah , so we shall find sufficient reason for the Justification of Divine Providence in laying this Scene so remote from the first Ages of the world . For 1. By this means we see what a wonderful Concatenation there is in the Divine Operations , and how in an orderly course all Events succeed according to his determinate Will , and what he has foretold . For there is a History , as it were , of our Saviour before his Appearance ; and by the Description and Characters given of him in Scripture for Four thousand years together , we may be able to prove , that he is the Messiah . 2. It doth not seem that the world was prepared for it before . For if Christ had been Born and Died as soon as Adam had Sinned , there would not have been among Mankind the sense of their Condition , and of the need they stood in of a Redeemer , and of the Goodness of God in providing one for them ; nor of the Necessity of the Divine Power to rescue them , if they had not had a long experience of the ineffectualness of any other course or means for it . 3. We are to consider , that the benefit of Christ's Death , looked backward as well as forward , and took place from the first publication of the Promise . For ( 1. ) Immediately after the Fall , God did promise , That the seed of the woman should bruise the Serpent's head ; and this being a Promise made to Adam , he himself must consequently have the benefit of it : For what advantage or comfort could it have been to him , that Four thousand years after there should be a Descendent from him that should become a Saviour to them that were at that time in being , and that should then and afterward believe on him ? ( 2. ) We are to consider , that this Promise gave Adam as much a title to the benefit of such an atonement , and was to him as stable a ground of comfort , as if it had at the same time been actually executed ; or as it could be to any that lived in or after the time that this atonement was offered , and the promise in all respects punctually made good . Hence we read in St. Paul , of the grace that was in Christ Jesus before the world began , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , of ancient times , 2 Tim. 1.9 . But is now made manifest by the appearing of our Saviour ; and that not in decree only , but in fact ; so the same Apostle uses the phrase , the hope of eternal life , which God that cannot lye , promised , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , before the world began ; it 's a promise made in time , and which he there distinguishes from the manifestation of it . So the Gospel was preached before to Abraham , Gal. 3.8 . and who in the Faith of it , rejoyced and was glad , John 8.56 . This is implied Heb. 9.25 , 26. Then must he often have suffered since the foundation of the world ; which implies that all sin , since the foundation of the world , was forgiven with respect to that Atonement . So that when there was a promise of such a means for our Reconciliation to God , and in the vertue of which the Penitent might plead for pardon , it was equally as advantageous to them that believed in him that was to come , from the first publication of that Promise , as if they had then had a plenary possession : So that Christ might be well said to be the lamb slain from the foundation of the world , Rev. 13.8 . 4. I may say , in all appearance there was not a more proper time for the coming of our Saviour into the world , and for all the Events depending upon it , than that in which he appeared . And that if we consider , ( 1. ) The general expectation of it , in conformity to ancient Prophecies . This was notorious among the Jews : So Luke 19.11 . They thought the kingdom of God should immediately appear ; that is , the Kingdom of the Messiah . So we find Simeon and Anna , and others , waited for the consolation of Israel , Luke 2.25 , 38. of which number was Joseph of Arimathea , Mark 15.43 . Nay , this or something like it , was got among the Gentiles : So Tacitus , the Roman Historian , Many were perswaded , that it was contained in the ancient Writings of the Priests , that at that time it should come to pass , That the East should prevail , and that They should proceed from Judaea who should be Lords of all ; which was a Prophecy of Vespatian and Titus . Suetonius another Historian , saith , That it was an old and constant Opinion that had prevailed all over the East : This the Event , said he , shewed to be meant of the Roman Emperor ; but the Jews applying it to themselves , Rebelled . This is agreeable to what is said by Josephus , the Jewish Historian , who saith , That which stirred up the Jews , and brought final Ruin upon them , was the opinion they had from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , some doubtful Prophecy in the Sacred Writings , that at that very time there should arise from that Countrey one of themselves that should Govern the whole World. ( 2. ) It was a proper time , because as the world had all along the experience of the inability of all human means for reforming the Manners and Tempers of Men , so in that age more especially , when the Wisdom of the world was in its height both among Jews and Gentiles . When among the Jews they were at that time as averse to Idolatry , as ever their Ancestors had been inclined to it , and were in all the punctilio's of the Law as exact and scrupulous , as they were skilled in the Letter of it ; and yet our Saviour found matter enough to condemn and chastise them for , and their practice was a fit Comment on that of the Apostle , Rom. 8.3 . What the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh . So St. Hierom Comments upon it , Now the time was fulfilled , when through evil custom no man could keep the Law. And if we turn our selves to the Heathens , Learning is acknowledged to have flourished in the time of Augustus beyond any Age ; and yet that Age seemed to equal it self in Vice , not only as the Apostle describes it , Rom. 1.29 . but as it is confirmed by their own Historians : So St. Augustin describes it , I am not the first that report it , but their own Authors ; behold , before the coming of Christ , and after the destruction of Carthage , the manners of their Ancestors were neglected , not as before by little and little , but like a torrent by a strange precipitation ; so much was the truth corrupted by luxury and avarice . Now when the world was thus corrupted under the best human means , What could be a fitter season for our Saviour's Appearance ? And therefore the Fathers , as Origen and Tertullian , triumph'd over the Philosophers , and despis'd their artificial methods of Vertue , as too weak for so great and noble an undertaking . 3. It was a fit season , as way was made for the propagation of the Gospel by the dispersion of the Jews , and the success of the Grecian and Roman Arms. ( 1. ) By the dispersion of the Jews , &c. For as their Law did serve to introduce the Gospel , to which it had a Relation , and of which it was a proof ; so by their dispersion upon the Captivity ( whence many of them never returned ) and by other subsequent means , many of the prejudices which other Nations had against the Jewish Religion and Nation , were taken off . And this was much furthered by the Translation of the Old Testament into Greek ( which was then the General Language ) . From whence I am apt to think , that the Opinion mentioned by the abovesaid Roman Historians , did arise . It was , saith Tacitus , in the ancient Writings of the Priests : And indeed their ex Judaea prosecti qui rerum potirentur , out of Judaea should proceed those that should Rule the world , seems to be but the Latin of the Greek in Mic. 5.2 . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , Out of thee shall come a Governor , as it is in Matth. 2.6 : or in the Septuagint , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , that there should be a Ruler . And Tacitus's way of expressing it , that the East should prevail , is a manifest allusion to the same Translation , which renders the word , Netzar , the Branch ( the Name ascribed to our Saviour in the Prophets ) by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , the East ; so Jer. 23.5 . Behold the days come , saith the Lord , that I will raise unto David a righteous branch , or the East ; and a King , that King , shall reign and prosper , and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth . Now this Version having been in whole or in part , undertaken for the use , and at the request of Ptolomy Philadelphus King of Egypt , about Three hundred years before our Saviour , was in many hands ; and so such a material part as those Prophecies could not be overlook'd . And indeed with these Prophecies there may be a good account given of those fore-cited places in the Roman Historians , but otherwise they are unintelligible , as appears by their application of them to Vespatian and his Son Titus , for want of understanding the true intent of them , and the respect they had to the Messiah . ( 2. ) Another means was the success of the Grecian and Roman Arms ; the former of which by Alexander , and the latter by Pompey , Julius Caesar , and Augustus , had opened a way into most of the remote parts of the then known world ; and by which means , and the civilizing the most barbarous People , there was a freer commerce and access . It must be confessed , That the Power of God can conquer all difficulties ; and which we have an exemplification of in the Gospel , where the Barbarians and Scythians felt the wonderful power and prevalency of it , as well as the softer and better disposed Greeks and Romans : The Word preached with Power overcame all human Nature , saith Origen . But God doth in the most extraordinary cases , use sometimes ordinary means ; and especially was this observable , that at that very time of our Saviour's Birth , the Gates of the Temple of Janus at Rome were shut , which were only in the time of an universal Peace ; and which had happened but twice from the foundation of that City , till the Reign of Augustus ( though twice before this in his Reign , as I remember ) . And this was a very fit season for the Prince of peace to appear in , and what in this sence did verify the Angels Anthem at his Birth , Luke 2.14 . On earth peace , good will amongst , as well as towards men . And so I am brought to the Evangelical State ; where I am , 4th General , To shew the Perfection of the Gospel Revelation , and that there is not to be any other Revelation to the end of the world ; so it is here , hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son ; which implies , 1. The close and conclusion of all , it is in the last days . 2. The Perfection of the Gospel Revelation , it is by his Son. 1. The close of all , it is in the last days . To which all former Ages had a relation , and in which , being the last , they were to be consummated . Here , setting aside all subdivisions of time ; we may consider the world , as to Revelation , under a twofold Period , viz. the Former and , the Latter days . And so ▪ the Prophets speak of the last days , as different from what both were before , or what were in their own time . Now in these last days , there is a certain part of time circumscribed , which in reason is to have such characters belonging to it as it may be known by them when it was to commence , without which the Epocha was not to be determined . So that the first thing to be considered is , When these last days began , and what are the Characters by which that time is to be known ? And they are such as these . ( 1. ) The appearance of a Person , that from his spirit and temper , the Scripture calls Elijah , Mal. 3.2 . and 4.5 . who was to be the Forerunner of the Messiah , and to prepare the way for his reception . ( 2. ) The Restauration of the Spirit of Prophecy , which ceased among the Jews from the time of Zechary and Malachi , ( as has been before observed ) and was to be restored in the last days . Joel 2.28 . Acts 2.16 . ( 3. ) Many Impostors which were to appear ; and who did not appear till about the time of the last days , according to our computation of them ; so 1 John 2.18 . It is the last time ; and as ye have heard that Antichrist shall come , even now are there many Antichrists ; whereby we know that it is the last time . V. Matth. 24.5 , 24. ( 4. ) The last days were , when the Messiah himself did appear , called the fulness of time , Gal. 4.4 . and so it is express in the Text , hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son. To which we may add the Conversion of the Gentiles , Isa. 2.2 . and 63.1 , &c. From whence it is evident , that there is sufficient ground for these two Periods , viz. the Former and the Latter days ; and that the Latter began with our Saviour , and continue to the end of the world , whensoever that shall happen : And therefore as it is called the fulness of time , because it is the completion and consummation of all ; so it is called the close of the Ages , ( we translate it the end of the world ) or the last days , because there were none to come after the expiration of this ; and comprehends in it ( as aforesaid ) all the space of time from Christ's first , to his second Appearance . Heb. 9.26 . Acts 1.11 . And so there can be no other time , and so no other Revelation ; for as long as the last days hold , so long the present Revelation is to continue ; and then there can no more be any other Revelation , than there can be last days beyond the last . And this will be confirmed by the next Branch . 2. The Perfection of the Gospel Revelation , included in that phrase , God in these last days hath spoken to us by his Son. 'T is but reasonable to suppose , that since there has been a gradual Progression in Revelation from time to time , and from a lower to a higher degree ( as has been already proved ) that the honour of all in the close should be reserved for the Son of God ; to whom the Prophets were Harbingers , and the Angels themselves Ministers . This is the foundation of the Apostle's Argument , and the drift of his Discourse , in this Chapter , beginning with the Text , God who at sundry times — hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son , whom he hath appointed heir of all things — being made so much better than the Angels , as he hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name than they : for unto which of the Angels said he at any time , Thou art my Son , & c. ? Now as the Son is the last that appears , so beyond his there cannot be supposed to be any other Revelation , but that the Revelation must be like to himself , Perfect and Compleat ; and so there can be no other Gospel ; and whosoever pretends to another , falls under the Anathema of the Apostle , Gal. 1.8 , 9. If any preach any other gospel than ye have received , let him be accursed . For here it is ; 1. That we find the great Prophecies fulfilled in the Messiah ; whose Characters , though many , all center in our Saviour , as to Person , Time , Place , Qualifications , and Event . 2. In Him are all the Types fulfilled , and all the good things accomplished , which the Rites of the Law were the shadow of , Heb. 10.1 . 3. By Him is the most Perfect Revelation of the Will of God made known to the world , of all that God has promis'd and we may expect . 4. By Him have we the most Perfect Rule , the Highest Motives , most Noble Principles , and Glorious Rewards , and all things that conduce to the Perfection and Happiness of Mankind . So that to any one that reads and compares those several Dispensations before spoken of together , as he must acknowledge there is this Gradation , so that the Christian Institution is for the Matter and the Evidence of it superior to all ; and it will be as evident , that it can be exceeded by none . For it is as perfect as can or need to be ; for we cannot ascend higher in our Notions and Conceptions of things than we are there taught . We cannot exceed its Rules in our Practice , nor be defective in any necessary part of our Duty , if we advise with and observe it . Nor can we desire more excellent Encouragements and Rewards than are therein proposed , such as are Eternal . So that though the Law of Nature , or of Moses made nothing perfect , yet the bringing in of a better hope by the Gospel did . Heb. 7.19 . And now we have nothing farther to expect , no more another Revelation than another Messiah ; no more than another God to reward us , and another Heaven to reward us with . And with this I am to conclude , having passed , by God's Assistance , through the several Heads I at first proposed in the beginning of this Lecture . The Argument is the most Noble Subject in Religion ; what has been wanting in the Management of it , is to be ascribed to the Weakness and Imperfection of the Instrument : But if there has been any thing offer'd , which may tend to the farther Proof and Confirmation , the Illustration and Improvement of it ; it is to be ascribed to God , who is the giver of every good gift . From him must we wait for the Blessing and Success , and To Him be all Honour and Glory , &c. Finis . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A66407-e300 Gen. 18.18 . 22.18 . Gen. 26.4 . 28.14 . Gen. 25.22 , 23. Heret . Fab. l. 5. c. 11. Acts 10.34 . Origen . contr . Cels. 1.6 . Tit. 1.2 , 3. Hist. l. 5. c. 2. §. 8. Joseph . de Bell. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . De civ . dei l. 2. c. 19. Antiquis Sacerdotum literis . Vt invalesecret Oriens . V. Isai. 11.1 . Jer 33.15 , 16. Zech. 6.12 . Luke 1.78 . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Contr. Cels. l. 2. p. 68. Isai. 2.2 . Mic. 4.1 . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Heb. 9.26 .