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less, undefiled, and separate from sinners, Heb. vii. 26. And, in order to his being born of a Virgin, there was an extraordinary instance of the power of God; and therefore it is said, The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Highest shall overshadow thee, Luke i. 35.

His being born of a Virgin, was an accomplishment of that prediction which we read of in Isa. vii. 14. The Lord himself shall give you a sign; Behold, a Virgin shall conceive, and bear a Son, and shall call his name Immanuel. This text being so convincing a proof of Christianity, and, as such, referred to in the New Testament, Matt. i. 22, 23. the Jews, and many of the modern Deists, have endeavoured to weaken the force thereof, which renders it necessary for us to illustrate and explain it, agreeably to the scope and design of the prophecy, contained in the context; which we shall endeavour to do, in the folJowing Paraphrase. Says God to the prophet, " Go to Ahaz, "and bid him not be faint-hearted, by reason of the threatened "invasion by the confederate kings of Israel and Syria; but let "him ask a sign for the confirmation of his faith, that I may "hereby assure him, that they shall not be able to do him any "hurt: but I know, before-hand, his unbelief, and the sullen"ness of his temper, that he will refuse to ask a sign; therefore, when thou goest to meet him, take thy young son Shearjashub in thine hand, or in thine arms, from whom thou may66 est take occasion to deliver part of the message which I send "thee with to him; tell him, that though he refuse to ask a sign, "nevertheless, the Lord shall give thee a sign, to his people, "whom thou shalt command to hear this message, as well as "Ahaz, they being equally concerned herein; therefore let them "know, that, though their obstinate and wicked king calls a compliance with my command a tempting me, and therefore will "not ask a sign, I will not give him any other sign, than what "the whole house of Israel shall behold, in future ages, which, "though it cannot be properly called a prognostic sign, yet it "will be, when it comes to pass, a rememorative sign †, and that shall be a glorious one; for, Behold a Virgin ‡ shall conceive,

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*So the Hebrew word ought to be rendered, rather than therefore; for so it is understood in other scriptures, particularly in Jer. xxx. 16.

This is a just distinction relating to signs mentioned in scripture; in which, sometimes a sign did not take place till the thing signified, or brought to remembrance thereby, had been accomplished. See Exod. iii. 12. 1 Sam. ii. 34. Isa. xxxvİL. 30. Jer. xliv. 29, 30. as Bishop Kidder well observes. See Demonstrat. of the Messias, Part II page 105, in Fol.

+ The Hebrew word hy is truly rendered a Virgin, as it is translated by the LXX. [» mapôevos] who well understand the sense of it, in this and other places, where we meet with it; as also doth the Cualdee Paraphrast thus understand it, and the Suriac, Arabic, and vulgar Latin versions: and this sense agrees with the grammatical construction of the word, which is derived from abscondit, and it altudes to the custon used among the Jews of keeping their virgins concealed till theg

and bear a Son, and thou shalt call his name Immanuel. When this wonderful thing happens, a thing new and unheard of, "which shall be created in the earth, that a woman should com"pass a man, as it is said elsewhere, Jer. xxxi. 22. then the "house of David shall understand the reason why I have not "suffered these two kings to destroy Judah, so that it should "be broken, that it be not a people, as Ephraim shall, within "threescore and five years, [ver. 8.] for then the Messiah could "not come of the house of David; and what he shall do for "them, when he comes, is the ground and reason of all the tem" poral deliverances that I work for them, and particularly of "this from the intended invasion of these two confederate kings. "Tell them, moreover, that as this shall be a rememorative sign, "so I will give them to understand, at present, that they shall "be delivered in a little time; for before this Child, which thou "hast here brought with thee, shall know to refuse the evil, and "chuse the good, or shall know the difference between moral "good and evil, that is, in two or three years time, The land "that thou abhorrest shall be forsaken of both her kings; or "those two kings, which thou dreadest, shall be driven, by the "king of Assyria, out of their own land. And inasmuch as my people may be afraid, that, before these two years are expir"ed, they shall be brought into such straights, through famine, "or scarcity of provisions, which generally attend sieges, that "6 they shall want the necessaries of life; let them know that "this child, meaning Shear-jashub, shall not want butter and "honey, that is, the best and most proper food for it, that he may know, or rather, until he know to refuse the evil, and "chuse the god, that is, till these two kings, Rezin and Pekah, "be utterly destroyed."

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Thus having considered our Saviour's being born of a Virgin, there is one thing more that is to be observed under this head, namely, that he was of her substance, which is particularly mentioned in this answer, with a design to fence against an

were married; therefore as a learned writer well observes, by Notat statum sofitarium domi delitescentium ideoq; cælebum & virginum; and in those two pla ces, in which it is objected by the Jews, that the word does not signify a virgin, but a young woman, namely, Prov. xxx. 19. and Cant. vi. 8. In the former, as one observes, Promptissimum est intelligere vincula amoris quibus virgo incipit adstringi futuro sponso suo; and therefore it may be understood of a virgin, in the literal sense of the word. Vid. Cocc. Lexic. in Voc. The LXX. indeed, render it, ardpes ev veral, and the vulgar Latin version, Viri in adolescentia; but the Chaldee Paraphrast renders it, Viri in virgine. And as for the later scripture, in which it is said, there are threescore queens, and fourscore concubines, and virgins without number, it is plain, the word virgins is not opposed to young women, for such were many of them that are called queens and concubines, but to persons defloured; therėfore we may conclude, that the word always signifies a virgin, and therefore is righttranslated in the text, under our present consideration.

So the word is properly rendered by the Chaldee Paraphrast.
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ancient heresy, maintained by the Gnostics in the second cen tury, and hath been defended by others, in later ages, who supposed, that our Saviour did not derive his human nature from the Virgin Mary, but that it was formed in heaven, and sent down from thence; and that the Virgin's womb is only to be considered as the first seat of its residence in this lower world, which they found on those scriptures which speak of his coming down from heaven, John iii. 13, 14. which they understand concerning his human nature; whereas, nothing is intended thereby but the manifestative presence of his divine nature, in which respect God is, in other scriptures, said to come down into this lower world, Gen. xi. 5, 7. And another scripture, which they bring to the same purpose, is that, in which, they suppose, he denies his relation to his mother, when he says, Who is my mother? and who are my brethren? Whosoever shall do the will of my Father, which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother, Mat. xi. 48. 50. in which he does not deny his natural relation to them, but designs to shew, that his regard to persons in the exercise of his public ministry, was principally founded on their doing the will of his Father. And whereas they farther suppose, that if his human nature had, in any respect, been derived from the substance of the Virgin, either she must be concluded immaculate, as the Papists do, or else he must have been born a sinner; this hath been already proved to be no just consequence, inasmuch as the formation of his human nature, though it were of the substance of the Virgin, was in an extraordinary and miraculous way, whereby he was exempted from the guilt of original sin.

There is another opinion maintained by some of the schoolmen, which, though it be not generally received, seems, to me, not altogether improbable, namely, that Christ's human body, though formed in the womb of the virgin, and a part of her substance, yet, as to the manner of its formation, it differed from that of all other human bodies, inasmuch as the matter, of which they consist, receives its form in a gradual way, and they cannot properly speaking be styled human bodies, till organized and fitted to have their souls united to them; whereas these suppose that the body of Christ, in its first formation, was rendered fit to receive the soul, which was, in an instant united to it; and both soul and body, at the same time, without having any separate subsistence, were united to the divine nature. This account of the formation of Christ's human body, though I think it most adapted to the union of his soul and body with the divine nature, in the very instant of its formation, and therefore cannot but conclude it a more probable conjecture than what is generally received, yet I do not lay it down as a necessary article of faith; nor would I, from hence, be supposed to deny

that the body of Christ grew in the womb like other human bodies, after the soul is united to them; nor would I set aside the account the scripture gives of the virgin's accomplishing the full number of days, in which she should be delivered, Luke ii. 6. Gal. iv. 4. Thus we have considered our Saviour, as having a true body and a reasonable soul, and both united to the divine nature, whereby he is denominated God incarnate, in this

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6. Our Mediator is farther said to have been incarnate, in the fulness of time; and it is added, he shall continue to be both God and man for ever.

(1.) Let us consider what is meant by Christ's becoming man in the fulness of time. The human nature could not be united to the divine from all eternity; since it is inconsistent with its being a created nature, that it should exist from eter- ́ nity; notwithstanding he might, had it been so determined, have assumed this nature in the beginning of time, or immediately after the fall of man, who then stood in need of a Mediator; but God, in his sovereign and wise providence, ordered it otherwise, namely, that there should be a considerable distance of time between the fall of man and Christ's incarnation, in order to his recovery, which is called, in scripture, the fulness of time, Gal. iv. 4. that is, the time foretold by the prophets, and particularly Daniel, Dan. ix. 24, 25. whose prediction had an additional circumstance of time annexed to it, which gave occasion to the Jews to expect his coming at the same time that he was incarnate.

That there was an universal expectation of the Messiah at this time, appears from the disposition of many among them to adhere to any one, especially if he pretended himself to be a prophet, or that he would make some change in their civil affairs; and the Jewish historian * tells us of many tumults and seditions that were in that age. Some of their ring-leaders he styles magicians; and persons pretending to be prophets, though, indeed, he does not expressly say that they assume the character of Messiah, yet he observes, that the time in which this was done, gave occasion hereunto † ; by which he means that it being at that time that the Jews expected that the Messiah, their king, should come, they thought it a fit opportunity to make these efforts, to shake off the Roman yoke; and they were so far from concealing the expectation they had thereof, that it was well known by the heathen, who were not without jealousies concerning them, with respect to this matter; so that some celebrated writers among them observe, that it was generally

See Joseph. Antiq. Lib. XVIII. cap. 1. & Lib. XX. cap. 2. & de Bell, Jud. Lib. II. cap. 6.

* Βασιλείαν ο καιρός, ανέπειθε.

received throughout the east, according to some ancient predictions, that, at that time, the Jews should obtain the empire ; * and there are several expressions, in scripture, which intimate as much: thus Gamaliel speaks of one Theudas, who boasted himself to be somebody, by which, it is probable, he means the Messiah, to whom a number of men, about four hundred, joined themselves, and were slain, Acts v. 36, 37. which some think to be the same person that Josephus mentions, the name being the same; though others are rather inclined to think that it was another pretender to this character, from some critical remarks they make on the circumstance of time referred to by Gamaliel, being different from that which is mentioned by Josephus. f However, this does not affect our argument; for it is plain, from hence, that, about that time, the Jews were disposed to join themselves to any one who endeavoured to persuade them that he was the Messiah.

And this farther appears, from what our Saviour says, All that ever came before me, are thieves and robbers, John x. 8. by which, doubtless, he means, several that pretended to be the Messiah, in that age, before he came ; and it is said elsewhere, Luke xix. 11. a little before our Saviour's crucifixion, that they, that is, the Jews, generally thought that the kingdom of God, and consequently the Messiah, whom they expected, should immediately appear; and he also foretels, that between this and the destruction of Jerusalem, that is, before that age was at an end, many false Christs, should arise, and warns his followers not to adhere to them, Mat. xxiv. 24-26.

Moreover, had not the Jews expected that the Messiah would appear at that time, they would never have sent in so formal a manner, as they are said to have done, to enquire, Whether John the Baptist, when he exercised his public ministry amongst them, was he? John i. 19-21. And, when he had convinced them that he was not the Messiah, but that our Saviour would soon appear publicly amongst them, who had the only right to this character, he found it no difficult matter to persuade them to believe it; and accordingly Jerusalem and all Judea, that is, the people almost universally attended on his ministry, and were baptized, making a profession of this faith, and of their expectation of, and willingness to adhere to him; and it was the report, that the wise men, who came from the east, had received from the Jews, who were conversant with them, that this was the time that the Messiah should appear, that brought them to

Vid. Sueton in Vespas. Percrebuerat oriente toto, ventus & constans opinio, esse in fatis; ut eo tempore Judea, profecti, rerum potirentur; & Tacit. Histor. Lib. V. Pluribus persuasio inerat, antiquis sacerdotum literis contineri, eo ipso tempore fore ut valesceret, Oriens, profectiq; Judea rerum potirentur,

† See Lightfoot's works, Vol. I. Pag. 763, 766.

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