Of The Complacency And Delight God Had In
Himself, And The Divine Persons In Each Other,
Before Any Creature Was Brought Into Being
John Gill
Having finished what I had to
say concerning the internal acts of God, and the eternal
transactions between the three divine Persons, before any creature, angel or
man, was made; I should now have entered upon the external acts and works of
God in time, but that I thought it might be proper, first, to observe the
complacency, delight, and satisfaction God had in himself, in his own nature
and perfections, before any creature existed; and would have had, if none had
ever been brought into being: as also the pleasure he took
in the foreviews of his eternal purposes and decrees being executed in time;
and of the success of those transactions, which were between the divine Persons
in God, in the council of peace, and covenant of grace; and especially the
mutual delight and complacency each divine Person had in one another, when
alone, in a boundless eternity, and all of them had in the chosen vessels of salvation.
1. First, The complacency,
delight, and satisfaction, which the divine Being had in himself, in his own
nature and perfections, before the existence of any creature; and would have
had the same if no creature had ever existed: in his nature, in the contemplation of the unspeakable glories of Deity, and in the
special properties and mutual relations of the three persons to each other, and
in the perfections of his nature. God is a most perfect being, entire and
wanting nothing; he is El-shaddai, God all-sufficient, who has a sufficiency in
and of himself, and needs nothing from creatures; he is the blessed one, God
blessed for evermore; completely happy in himself, as has
been proved, when his perfections were considered; whatever perfection or
excellency is in creatures, angels or men, it is all from him, and is in him to
the highest degree, and therefore as in them can add nothing to his pleasure
and happiness: the perfections of God are indeed displayed in the creatures in
a glorious manner; the heavens declare his glory, and the earth is full of it;
but then these displays are made not for his own sake, but
for the sake of others, that they may understand his eternal power and Godhead,
or be left without excuse; and though his perfections are very brightly
displayed herein, yet they are clearer in himself, and so can give him no new
pleasure and satisfaction, nor add anything to his felicity and blessedness;
for though it is said, "For thy pleasure they are and were
created", #Re 4:11 "pleasure" there does not signify delight but
will; and so it should be rendered by thy will, or according to it, "they
are and were created"; and though when they were made, and he had reviewed
them, they appeared to him all very good, and he expressed his well pleasedness
in them; yet this raised no new joy in him, nor added anything to his
happiness, complete in himself; which would have been the
same if a creature, or any of the works of creation had never been made, nor if
any of the sons of men had ever been redeemed; for the benefit arising from the
redemption of men by Christ, and the satisfaction made for them by him,
redounds not to God, but to the redeemed, and for whom the satisfaction is
made; "My goodness extendeth not to thee", says Christ, "but to
the saints that are in the earth, and to the excellent in
whom is all my delight", #Ps 16:2,3 nor does he need the worship and
obedience of angels or men; nor does he receive any additional pleasure and
happiness from them; what are the highest and loudest praises of angels, to him
who is exalted above all blessing and praise? or the prayers and petitions of
indigent creatures? the benefit from them is to them, and not to him; what is all the righteousness, and what are the best works done
by men to him? "Is it any pleasure to the Almighty that thou art
righteous? or is it gain to him that thou makest thy ways perfect? If thou be
righteous, what givest thou him? or what receiveth he of thine hand? Can a man
by all this be profitable to God?" No, he cannot; when the best of men
have done all they can, they must own they are but "unprofitable
servants", with respect to him. "Who hath first given to him, and it
shall be recompensed to him again; for of him, and through, him, and to him are
all things?" #Job 22:2,3 35:7 Lu 17:10 Ro 11:35,36. Since then nothing in
time, in and from creatures, add anything to the essential glory, bliss, and
happiness of the divine Being; it clearly appears, that his going forth in the
works of creation, did not arise from necessity of nature,
but was according to his sovereign will; and that he had infinite delight,
pleasure, and complacency in himself, before any creature was made, and would
have had the same, if they had never been.
2. Secondly, As Jehovah took
delight and pleasure in himself, in his own nature, and the
perfections of it, so in the internal and eternal acts of his mind; his purposes
and decrees, formed in his eternal mind, according to the good pleasure of his
will; these concern all things done in time, from the beginning to the end of
the world; the formation of the heaven, earth, and sea, and all that are in
them; everything that has been, is, or shall be, since the world began to the
consummation of all things; for there is a purpose for
everything under heaven, and a time for every purpose, #Ec 3:1. And these all
lay before God, at once and together, in his all-comprehending mind; he saw the
end from the beginning, and every intervening thing; "Known unto God are
all his works from eternity", #Ac 15:18 and he delighted in them, as he
saw them in himself, in his mind and will, and in the foreviews of the accomplishment of them in time; who calls things that are not,
as though they were; they stood all before him in his view, as if really in
execution; nor does the execution of them add any new joy and pleasure to him:
particularly all those purposes and resolutions of his mind, concerning the
redemption, conversion, and salvation of his chosen ones, and the state and
condition of his church, in all the periods of time, were
viewed within himself, with the utmost delight and pleasure; the plan of their
peace and reconciliation, drawn in the council of peace, and everything
respecting their salvation, settled in the covenant of grace. These
transactions gave him infinite pleasure and satisfaction; and on these his
thoughts have ran ever since, with the utmost delight, in the foreviews of all
things, taking place in time and to eternity, according to
these ancient settlements. But what I would chiefly attend unto is,
3. Thirdly, The delight and
complacency which each divine Person had in one another, before any creature
was in being; with respect to two of the divine Persons, this is strongly
expressed in #Pr 8:30. "Then I was by him, as one brought up with him, and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before
him": when all this was, may be learned from the preceding verses; when
there were no depths, no fountains abounding with water; before the mountains
were settled, while as yet he had not made the earth, &c. #Pr 8:24-29 and
the third Person is not to be excluded.
3a. First, The delight and complacency of
the Father in the Son, is declared in the following expressions; which are
borrowed from the delight and pleasure parents take in their children; being
"by" them, "brought up" with them, "nursed" up by
them, "playing" before them; which must be understood with a decency
becoming the divine Persons, and not be strained beyond their general design,
which is to express the mutual delight of the Father and
the Son in each other: "Then I was by him", from eternity, or before
the world was; I, a person, as the pronoun is expressive of; not a nature, not
the human nature of Christ, which is no person; and still less a part of it,
the soul of Christ, which then had no existence; but I, a divine Person, the
eternal "Logos", the Word and Wisdom of God, who is all along speaking from #Pr 8:12. "I Wisdom", &c. to this
very passage, the same with the Word John speaks of, and much in the same
language, #Joh 1:1. "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God"; to which Word he ascribes the creation of all
things, and therefore must be before thine, as well as be a divine Person; and
he is in both places represented as a distinct Person, as
he must be, from him, by whom, and with whom, he was a Person eternally
existing; being not only before Abraham, but before Adam, or any creature was
in being; a Person co-existing, as a Son with the Father, being co-essential
and co-eternal with his Father; and was by him, and at his side, on a level
with him; Jehovah's fellow, equal to him, possessed of the same perfections;
and being by him, and in his presence, was infinitely
delighted in by him; and was "as one brought up with him", as a Son
with a Father, and so denotes his relation to him, being begotten of him, his
own Son, the Son of the Father, in truth and love; and the Father's tender
regard of him, and delight in him; being, as some render the word, "nursed
up" by him, and carried in his bosom, as a nursing Father bears the
sucking child; so to express the exceeding great tenderness
of the Father to the Son, and his delight in him, the only begotten Son, he is
said to be "in the bosom of the Father", #Joh 1:18. Though the phrase
may also have respect to Christ, in his mediatorial capacity, who was
foreordained and constituted as Mediator by his Father, and trained up in his
office, and to whom he pointed out the work he was to do as such; to bring Jacob again, to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and
restore the preserved of Israel; and be his salvation unto the ends of the
earth, #Isa 49:5,6. "And I was daily his delight"; day by day, or
every day; not that there are, properly speaking, days in eternity; but the
phrase is expressive of the constant and invariable delight the Father had in
his Son; as well as the greatness of it is signified by the word in the plural number, "delights"; he was his exceeding
great delight, superlatively delightful to him; and so he was, as he was his
Son, a Son of delights, the dear Son of his love; whom he loved before the
foundation of the world, with a love of complacency and delight; he was always
his beloved Son, in whom he was well pleased; partly because of his likeness to
him, being the image of the invisible God, the express
image of his Person; as every like loves its like; and partly because of the
same nature with him, having the same perfections, even the whole fulness of
the Godhead in him: he was also his delight, considered in his office as
Mediator; "Behold my Servant, whom I uphold; mine Elect, in whom my soul
delighteth", #Isa 42:1. He delighted in him, as engaging in covenant to be
the Mediator and Surety of it; as with admiration, so with
the utmost pleasure and delight, he said, "Who is this that engaged his
heart to approach unto me, saith the Lord?" #Jer 30:21 to strike hands
with me, and become a Surety for my people. And with equal pleasure did he
behold him acceding and assenting to his proposals in covenant, saying,
"Lo, I come to do thy will, O my God!" #Ps 40:7,8. He delighted in
him as the God-man; being fit, as such, for the work he
assigned unto him; and whereas he proposed to him in covenant, to assume human
nature in time, for that purpose, and he agreed unto it, he viewed him
henceforward as the God-man; and he bore the repute of it with him, and
considered him under this character; he delighted in the foreviews of his
future assumption of human nature; and a little before the time, by Zechariah,
one of the last of the prophets, expressed his joy at the
near approach of it; "Behold, I will bring forth my Servant, the
Branch"; that is, speedily, in a very short time; and again, "Behold
the Man, whose name is the Branch, he shall grow up out of his place",
#Zec 3:8 6:12 which is signified to be future, yet near. And he delighted in
the foreviews of that obedience to his will his Son should yield in that nature,
by which the law would be magnified and made honourable;
and of his sufferings and death in it, whereby full satisfaction would be given
for the sins of his people; and of his glorification at his right hand in that
nature he had promised him; and of his own glory displayed in the salvation of
men by him, and a full accomplishment of that; an affair his heart was so much
set upon from everlasting. In the foreviews of all this was
Christ as Mediator, Redeemer, and Saviour, as well as God's own Son, the object
of his infinite delight and pleasure from everlasting.
3b. Secondly, The Son of God
also had the same delight and pleasure in his divine Father, before the world
was; and when there was no creature in being, he was then "rejoicing
always before him"; rejoicing in being possessed of the same nature and
perfections his Father was, being like and equal to him in all things; and
rejoicing that he stood in such a relation to him as a Son to a Father; with
what exultation does he repeat the words of his Father to him, declaring this
relation; "The Lord hath said unto me", and that was in eternity,
"Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee",
#Ps 2:7. He delighted in the foreviews of his future incarnation, as being
agreeable to his Father's will; "A body hast thou prepared me", #Heb
10:5 which he spoke with pleasure, and as being willing and desirous to assume
it; in which he should do his Father's will and work, and which would be his
meat and drink, and accomplish the salvation of his people, which was the
"joy set before him"; and he rejoiced in the
foreviews of his Father being glorified by it, and of his own glory upon it,
#Joh 13:31,32 17:1,4,5.
3c. Thirdly, Though the third
Person, the Holy Spirit, is not mentioned in the passage in Proverbs; yet as
the Father delights in the Son, and the Son in the Father, so
both of them delight in the Spirit, as proceeding from them, and he in them;
for these Three are One, of the same nature and perfections, and have a mutual
in being in each other, and so a complacency in one another; for as the Father
is in the Son, and the Son in the Father, #Joh 10:38 14:10 so the Spirit is in
them, and they in him; and in consequence must have a mutual delight in each
other: the Spirit, as he is of the same nature with the
Father and the Son, always took infinite delight in his own nature and
perfections; and as he was privy to all the thoughts, purposes, and counsels of
God, which are the deep things he searches and reveals; he must have taken
pleasure in them, and in the foreviews of the execution of them; and as he
approved and assented to all the articles in the council and covenant of peace,
he must have had infinite delight in the view of the
accomplishment of them, as well as of those things which he himself in covenant
undertook to perform.
3d. Fourthly, This mutual delight and complacency which each
Person had in one another, lay in and arose from the perfect knowledge they had
of each other; "As the Father knoweth me", says
Christ, "so know I the Father", #Joh 10:15 and the Spirit knows them
both, and the things that are in them, #1Co 2:10,11 and hence arises mutual
love to each other; the Father loves the Son, and the Son loves the Father,
#Joh 3:35 5:20 14:31 and the Spirit proceeding from them both, loves them both;
and it cannot be otherwise, since there is such a nearness to, and mutual in being in each other. Moreover,
4. Fourthly, The three divine
Persons had from eternity, and before any creature was in actual being, the
utmost delight and complacency {2} in the elect of God, and in the foreviews of
their salvation and happiness. The joy and delight of the Son in them are strongly expressed in #Pr 8:31. "Rejoicing in
the habitable part of his earth, and my delights were with the sons of
men"; that is, from everlasting; before ever the earth was made, or any
creature in it; then was the Son of God "rejoicing in the habitable part
of the earth"; in the foreviews of those spots of ground, houses, and
cottages, where it was known the chosen vessels of mercy would dwell: for God has "determined the times before appointed, and the
bounds of their habitation"; and Christ knew beforehand in what places he
should have a people, and in which this and that man should be born again, #Ac
17:26 18:10 Ps 87:4-6 and as lovers express their love to the objects of their
love, by saying they love the ground on which they tread; so Christ having
loved his people with a love of complacency and delight,
rejoiced in the foresight of those parts of the habitable world, where he saw
their habitations would be: the church of God on earth may be called the
habitable part of his earth, being the dwelling place which he has chosen for
himself as such, and where he delights to dwell, and they were from everlasting
his Hephzibah and Beulah. Some respect may be had to the new earth, or the
second Adam's earth; in which only righteous persons will
dwell; and where the tabernacle of God will be with men, his chosen ones; and
where he will dwell with them a thousand years; and in this also the Son of God
was rejoicing in the foreviews of: nor am I averse to take in the human nature
of Christ, into the sense of the words; who though with respect to his divine
Person, and mediatorial office, is the Lord from heaven; yet, as to his human nature, he was "curiously wrought", by the
power and skill of the Holy Ghost, "in the lowest parts of the
earth", in the womb of the Virgin, and therefore called "the fruit of
the earth", being born of an earthly woman, #Ps 139:15 Isa 4:2 and which
human nature is a tabernacle God pitched, and not men; a tabernacle for the
eternal Word to dwell in, and where the fulness of the Godhead dwells bodily; and in the views of this the Son of God was rejoicing before
the world was; and in time expressed his desire of it, and delight in it,
before it became his habitation; as may be concluded from his frequent
appearances in an human form, before his incarnation, as forshadowing it; as to
Adam, Abraham, Jacob, and other patriarchs; he rejoiced in the foreviews of it,
as it would be of the same kind with that of the children
given him, and he had undertook to redeem and save; and as it would be the
produce of the holy Spirit, and so free from sin; and as it would be filled and
adorned with his gifts and graces; and as after he had done the will of God in
it, it would he crowned with glory and honour, and set down at the right hand
of God: and all this joy and delight were with a peculiar respect unto the
elect of God, as follows; "And my delights were with
the sons of men", the posterity of Adam, fallen creatures, the chosen of
God among them, who sinned in him, and on whom judgment came unto condemnation,
and who are conceived and born in sin, and are by nature children of wrath as
others; and yet the delights of Christ, his exceeding great delight, expressed
by the plural number, were with them as they were loved by his
Father, chosen in him, and given to him; and as he viewed them redeemed by him,
washed in his blood, and clothed with his righteousness; and as he saw them in
the glass of his Father's purposes and decrees, in all the glory he designed to
bring them to, even to be a glorious church without spot or wrinkle, or any
such thing. Now not only the Son of God took delight and complacency in the
elect of God, before the world was; but the Father and
Spirit also; for God the Father of Christ loved them, and chose them in him,
before the foundation of the world, #2Th 2:13 Eph 1:4. And this love was a love
of complacency and delight; because he delighted in them, therefore he chose
them to be his peculiar people, as he did Israel of old, in a national sense,
#De 10:15. And from the same delight in them arose the council held
by him with the other two Persons concerning them; and the covenant of grace he
entered into with them. And so the Holy Spirit, his delights were with the same
Persons, as they were chosen in Christ, through sanctification by him; and in
the foreviews of their being temples for him to dwell in; and in whom he should
abide as the earnest and pledge of their future glory; and as the sealer of
them to the day of redemption; and as they should be
sanctified and made meet by him for eternal glory and happiness.
Thus we see what delight and
complacency, satisfaction and happiness, God had in himself before any creature
existed; and would have continued the same, if none had ever
been created: so that he needed not for his own sake, to go forth in acts of
power, to bring creatures into being, since he would have been as happy without
them as with them; wherefore the production of them into being is purely the
effect of his sovereign will and pleasure; and we see what the thoughts of God
were employed about, and chiefly concerned in, in eternity; and the whole
furnishes an answer to those curious questions, if it is
proper to make them; What was God doing in eternity? what did his thoughts
chiefly run upon then? and wherein lay his satisfaction, delight, and
happiness?
{2} Of the love of delight and
complacency of God towards the elect, see a Treatise of
mine, called the Doctrines of God's Everlasting Love to his Elect, &c. p.
52, &c.