Friday, January 30, 2009

Section 4: Of the Essence of the Holy Ghost.

Book 2 Part 1 Chapter 2 Section 4 (p. 42-43)
Of the Essence of the Holy Ghost.

That the Holy Ghost is Eternal, and consequently of the Essence of the Father, and so God by Nature, is evident from Heb. 9.14. "Who through the Eternal Spirit, offered himself", &c. Here the Holy Spirit is openly said to be Eternal, and though his word Eternal (I acknowledg) is often used to express the Duration of that which one had a Beginning, yet being referred to the Godhead, it must also respect from Eternity to Eternity; or, as the Psalmist hath it, from everlasting to everlasting, Psal. 90.1. And that in this sense, it agrees to the Holy Spirit, may be gathered from these Grounds: 1. Because he is expressly called God, Acts 5.3, 4, 9. where the false dealing of Ananias is said to be a tempting of the Holy Ghost, or a lying unto God, and not to Men. 2. The work of Creation is ascribed to the Holy Ghost, Gen. 1.1, 2, 3. "And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the Waters. And God said, Let there be Light, and there was Light." Psal. 104.30. "Thou sendest forth thy Spirit, and they are created." And hence we gather the Eternity of the Godhead of the Holy Spirit, because God is no where said to create the World, or any part thereof by Angels, or any other created Thing. 3. Because the Holy Ghost is said to proceed, and come forth from the Father, John 15.26. Not by Order, or Designation only, for so the Angels, or Men, many be said to proceed and come forth from God; but here the procession of the Holy Ghost, is evidently distinguished from his sending: "But when the Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you, from the Father; even the Spirit of Truth, which proceedeth and cometh forth from the Father." And therefore can have no meaning so fitly as this, viz. To proceed and come forth of the same Essence, or Substance, of the Father. A like passage we have, concerning Christ's coming forth from the Father, John 16.28, 30. "I came forth from the Father, and am come into the World; again, I leave the World, and go to my Father." Upon this the Disciples reply, "Now are we sure thou knowest all things, and needest not that any Man should ask thee; by this we believe, that thou comest forth from God." The Disciples here cannot into only this, that they believed Christ was sent from God, for seeing this their Belief is grounded upon the Omniscience of Christ, it must needs follow that they there acknowledg him to be of the very Nature and Essence of God; and so they seem to take our Saviours words to signifie, in ver. 28. which now they profess to receive believingly. In like manner, the proceeding of the Holy Ghost from the Father, John 15.26. is better understood of the Nature whereof he is, than of the Commission by which he comes unto us; otherwise, it were not a matter of such special remark. For either Christ, or the Holy Spirit, to come forth from God by Legation, or Appointment only, sith both Angels and Men have frequently received such Authority, and accordingly are said to come from God: For instance, of John the Baptist, it is said, "There was a Man sent from God, whose name was John." 4. Because the Holy Ghost is one with the Father, as the Son is one with the Father, 1 John 5. "These three are one." If therefore the Son be of the Nature of the Father, and so one with him (as that we have proved) then it followeth, from the like Unity between the Father and the Holy Spirit, that he is of the same Essence, and so God Eternal. 5. The Holy Ghost is called the Finger of God, Luke 11.20. Mat. 12.28. Not as an Instrumental Cause may be termed so, for so this should be no special Prerogative, seeing even wicked Men are said to be the Hand of God in such a sense as that, Psal. 17.14. but as the Power, or Strength of God, by which his Works are wrought; and so it is taken, Exod. 8.19. We may therefore conceive by this Phrase, the Finger of God, that the Holy Spirit is of the Essence, Nature, or Substance of God, even as the finger of a Man, is of the substance and nature of his Body; which is the Metaphor here used, to set forth the Unity between the Father and the Holy Spirit. 6. And lastly, Either we must hold, that the Holy Spirit is Eternally God, or else a Created Being: but of the latter, there is not the least intimation in the Word of God, and therefore no way safe to espouse such an Opinion.

Now whether these three, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, thus one God, as hath been shewed, may fitly be called three Persons, I shall not determine; only this, I say, I see no inconveniency that can attend it, for sith the Father is openly called a Person, Heb. 1. and the Son, the express Character of his Person, or Substance; it may seem no way inconvenient to allow the same to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. But for as much as we may, perhaps, have further occasion to touch these things, when we come to the defence of Christianity in the parts opposed, we shall now proceed to speak of the Essence of this One God, who is Blessed for ever. Amen.

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