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A77775 The Gospel-covenant; or The covenant of grace opened. Wherein are explained; 1. The differences betwixt the covenant of grace and covenant of workes. 2. The different administration of the covenant before and since Christ. 3. The benefits and blessings of it. 4. The condition. 5. The properties of it. / Preached in Concord in Nevv-England by Peter Bulkeley, sometimes fellow of Johns Colledge in Cambridge. Published according to order. Bulkeley, Peter, 1583-1659. 1646 (1646) Wing B5403; Thomason E331_1; ESTC R200735 319,203 371

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thinke or whether a heavenly life and glory in both as some others thinke I will not determine it not being much materiall It 's enough to know that life and blessednesse was and is promised in both 5. There is in both C●venants a condition required on our part for the attaining of the life promised wee are not left to our libertie in either Covenants neither of the two Covenants promise life absolutely whether wee obey or no and whether we believe or no but under the condition of faith or obedience the promise of life is made 6. Both Covenants require a perfect righteousnesse of us that wee may have life no life is promised in either Covenants but upon the bringing in of a perfect righteousness● before God either of our owne or of anothers the covenant of grace as well as that of workes will make this good that no unrighteous person shall enter into the kingdome of God Hence Rom. 3. last the Gospel stablisheth the Law they agree herein and doe not crosse one another 7. Both Covenants are unchangeable never to be reversed or altered The covenant of grace is an unchangeable covenant it is an everlasting covenant more unchangeable then the covenant of the day and of the night more unmovable then mountaines that cannot be moved as Esa 54.10 Jer. 35.20 So likewise the covenant of workes is an unchangeable covenant Mat. 5.17 Heaven and earth shall passe away but not one j●t of the Law shall faile Though now in the estate of corruption no man attaines life by the covenant of workes yet this so comes to passe not because the covenant is changed but because we are changed and cannot fulfill the condition to which the promise is made the covenant stands fast but wee have not stood fast in the covenant but it is now become impossible to us that wee are unable to fulfill it as the Apostle speakes Rom. 8.3 yea it is the unchangablenesse and stabilitie of this covenant which condemnes all the world of sinfull and ungodly men The Law hath said Cursed is every one which continueth not in all things c. And the soule that sinneth and flies not to the covenant of grace shall dye This word takes hold upon them and condemnes them Nay more for the fulfilling of this Covenant the Lord Jesus Christ came downe from heaven and b●came man to fulfill that righteousnesse of the Law which was now bec●me impossible to us Rom. 8.3 So unchangeable is the covenant of workes that rather then it shall not be fulfilled the sonne of God must come downe to doe it Thus wee see the agreements between the covenant of workes and the covenant of grace But the principall and w●ightier consideration is to set downe the proper diff●re●c●s between th●m which some have gone about to darken and obs●ur● and doe make them agree too neare and so make a compound of both Covenants a● if one should mixe wine and water tog●●●●r whereby they doe disanull the nature of the Covenant of gr●●● and tu●●● it into a covenant of workes Herein t●●●●fore ●ee ●us● labour the more carefully to set downe the true and reall differences between them which being done wee shall see the nature both of the one and the other more distinctly and clearly The differences are many Differ 1 The first difference is in the condition of the Covenants the one requires doing the other believing the one workes the other faith The one saith Doe this and live the other saith Believe and thou shalt be saved the way of life which the Law propounds is Doe these things comprehended in the Law and doe them constantly and then thou shalt live as Gal. 3.12 The Law saith The man that doth these things c. But the condition of the Covenant of grace is faith Acts 16.31 Believe in the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved But here a twofold doubt may be moved Quest 1. Whether faith be not required in the Law in the Covenant of workes 2. Whether workes be not required in the covenant of grace If both these be required faith in the Covenant of workes and workes in the covenant of grace then how stands the difference between the two Covenants Answ For answer to the first when it is demanded whether faith be not required in the Covenant of workes I answer It is but first it is not the same faith secondly nor required for the same end as in the Covenant of grace To explaine this I say the Covenant of workes requires faith and that in a threefold act thereof 1. In regard of dependance upon God the fountaine and author of all good wee were not in our first and best being which wee had by creation wee were not I say so perfect but wee stood in need still to depend upon him that had created us for the continuance of that being which he had given us It is imprinted in the nature of every creature to depend for sustentation upon that from whence it had its beginning as the chicken upon the hen c. So the whole creation lookes backe unto him that made it for preservation in their being as Psal 104.21.27 Psal 145.15 And if it be so in these unreasonable creatures thus to depend upon their Creator then was the same in man much more the covenant of the Law required this faith of man in the beginning though now we be as Gods in our owne eyes selfe-sufficient depending upon our selves and none else for all the good wee hope for yet at the beginning it was not so But man was to depend upon God for his being and well-being 2. Another act of faith required in the Law was a perswasion that God was well pleased with him whilst he walked in the way of love and obedience to his creator he was to believe without feare and doubt that so long as he obeyed the will of the Lord he was well-pleased with him 3. He was to believe the blessing of life promised in that covenant and to expect it according to the promise In all these regards faith was commanded in the Covenant of workes It may here be demanded Object If faith be required in the covenant of workes why is it not expressed in plaine words as well as doing the Covenant of workes saith Thou shalt love the Lord thy God and serve him but it doth not call for any act of faith at all The reason thereof is Answ because when the Covenant of workes was made with man he was then in his integritie sinne was not yet come into the world and therefore there was no cause for man to doubt of Gods love and acceptation of him But having received so great benefits from God made after his image but little inferior to the Angels and having dominion given him over all the workes of Gods hands he was now to be put in minde of his dutie towards his creator and therefore was to be stirred up to love honour
in effect all one but we are Saints by calling and our calling is by the Gospel of Grace 2 Thes 2.14 and therefore our sanctification is from Grace also 5. We are sanctified by being in Christ whence are those expressions frequent in Scripture Saints in Christ Iesus sanctified in Christ and such like Now our implanting into Christ is onely from Grace and therefore so is our Sanctification also 6. Our sanctification is called a new Creation Create in me a cleane hear● O God saith David Psal 51. Psal 51. And in Ephes 2.10 Ephes 2.10 We are created unto good workes And in 2 Cor. 5. We become new Creatures in Christ Iesus And in Ephes 4.24 Ephes 4.24 The new man is created after God in holines c. All which imply that there must be a creating power put forth to the working of this new man in us We must therefore deifie the workes of the Law and make a God of them induing them with a creating power if we will ascribe such efficacy unto them as to worke true sanctification in us 7. We receive the Spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 therefore not by the workes of the law 8. Christ tells us plainly the world of unbelieve●s that are under the Law cannot receive the Spirit Ioh. 14.17 Iohn 14.17 whom the world cannot rece●ve 9. Sanctification is purchased for us by the bloud of Christ He gave himselfe for us to purge us c. Tit. 2.14 T it 2.14 And so in Ephes 5.25 26 27. He gave himselfe for his Church that he night sanctifie it The third Part. THE BENEFITS and BLESSINGS this Covenant brings THE Covenant of Workes presupposeth our sanctification but it promiseth it not It presupposeth it I say because there could have bin no place for a Covenant of Works if God had not first given Adam a spirit of holinesse to enable him thereunto First therefore God creates man holy and then makes a Covenant with him requiring of him to work according to that holiness of his nature which he was endued with but if he violated and brake this Covenant this Covenant doth not promise to renew him to holinesse again this promise belongs to another Covenant But especially consider the proper and immediate worker of our sanctication which is the Holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 for which cause the spirit is called the spirit of Grace Zach. 12.10 and the spirit of holinesse Rom. 1. Election is the immediate work of the Father Redemption the work of the Sonne Sanctification the work of the Holy Ghost All the whole Trinity working together in the work of our salvation yet every one in his owne order First the Father elects then the Sonne redeems and lastly the Spirit sanctifies Concerning these severall works of the three Persons we are to consider 1. That they are all of equall extent 2. That they doe all issue from the same spring and fountaine of Grace First they are of the same extent none larger nor narrower then another Those that the Father hath chosen those doth the Sonne redeem Those that the Sonne hath redeemed those doth the Spirit sanctifie The Father chooseth none but whom hee gives to the Sonne to be redeemed by him the Sonne redeems none but those that were so given him by the Father and so it holds also in the third place that the Holy Ghost sanctifies none but whom the Father had chosen and the Sonne redeemed Secondly as it is thus in the extent so it is also in respect of the ground and cause from which they issue and spring Look then as our Election is of Grace and not of works Rom. 11.6 and our Redemption is of Grace Rom. 3.24 so is our Sanctification also Tit. 3.4 5. Not according to the works which we had done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the Holy Ghost so that the same grace favour and good will which moved the Father to set his love upon us in our Election and caused the Sonne to give himselfe for our Redemption the same Grace sends or brings the Spirit into our hearts to renew us unto holinesse And thence it is that sometimes we are said to be chosen that we might be holy as in Eph. 1.4 sometimes said to be redeemed that we might be holy Luke 1.74 75. to the end that we might know that our sanctification and renewing unto holinesse doth come from the same grace as doe our election and redemption and therefore as our election is not of works but of grace and our redemption is not of works but of grace so it is also concerning our sanctification I conclude therefore that by the works of the Law no man being under the Law or Covenant of works can attaine to true sanctification and holinesse And if sanctification be not by the Law or Covenant of works then it necessarily and invincibly followes that for a man to try his estate in Grace by his sanctification is no turning aside to a Covenant of works Thus much we do not unwillingly assent unto namely that there is a kinde of outward sanctification improperly so called or rather an outward reformation which a man under the Covenant of Works may attayn unto The Law hath a power not only to irritate and provoke the lust that is within by its contrariety thereunto Rom. 7.11 but also to curb and restrayn the breaking of it forth into outward acts by the terrour of it Gal. 3.19 Exod. 20. And by this reformation thus wrought by the work of restraynt the unclean Spirit may seem to be cast forth Math. 12. but whatsoever reformation is thus wrought is as farre from true sanctification as earth is from heaven For though this reformation doth and may come from some inward work of the Spirit of God upon the spirit and soule of man as namely to convince and terrifie the conscience to stirre the affections and to awe the will also so that a man dares not commit the things he would yet the minde and will is still unrenewed the frame and disposition of the heart is still the same as it was before and therefore this reformation is not true sanctification That may be by the Law this is only by the Gospel and from Grace Object But in Hebr. 10.29 it is said of some who in respect of their inward estate never went beyond a Covenant of works yet of them it is said that they were sanctified by the blood of the Covenant which is the blood of Christ therefore such as are under a Covenant of works may be sanctified Answ There is a twofold sanctification one reall another in profession only As some men are said to beleeve when the work of faith is really wrought in the heart who are therefore said to be found in the faith Tit. 1.13 and 2.2 so others are said to beleeve only because they make a profession of faith as Iohn 2.23 Acts 8.13
condition must be such as may stand with grace but if works had been the condition this could not have stood with grace Rom. 11.6 Gods maine end in this Covenant is the mani●estation of his grace towards his chosen that his grace may be glorified in them Ephes 1.6 2 Thes 1.10 that nothing might be left unto man to glory in but that he which glorieth might glory in the Lord 1 Cor. 1. ult c. 4. It is faith that the blessing might be sure to those to whom it is promised Rom. 4.16 Adam had a promise of life but being made upon condition of working he never got the blessing by that Covenant when Adam first entred into Covenant with God it was uncertaine whether he should live by it or no in regard that it was uncertaine whether he would fulfill the condition and thereupon it was that he had one Sacrament of death as well as another of life to assure him of death in case he sinned as well as to assure him of life in case he obeyed but now the promise of life being made to us upon condition of faith it is thereby made sure to those that doe believe Christ is a sure foundation for them to rest upon Esay 28.16 the promise also is sure and faithfull 2 Sam. 23.5 and faith is as an anchor sure and stedfast Heb. 6.19 and Christ being so sure a foundation the promise sure and faith taking such sure hold upon both these three together are as a three●old cord not easily broken so that the blessing in the Covenant of grace now is not so uncertaine and doubtfull as in the Covenant of works but is sure to those that believe And hence it is that in this Covenant though we have two seales added unto it as well as in the Covenant of works yet there is no Sacrament or seale of death but they are both seales of life and salvation assuring us that if we believe in the name of the Lord Jesus we shall surely have everlasting life 5. Faith is sufficient to make us partakers of all the blessings of the Covenant Look back unto all those blessings before named and you shall see how faith doth possesse us of them all God promiseth to be a God unto us Jer. 31. but how comes he to be our God It is by faith Rom. 3.29 30. He promiseth forgivenesse of sinnes and to remember our iniquities no more and it is faith which maketh us partakers of this blessing also Acts 10.43 Rom. 3.24 25. By faith wee are made partakers of the Spirit of holinesse Gal. 3.14 faith purifies the heart Acts 15.9 26.18 By faith we are kept in the estate of grace unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 Rom. 11.20 we stand by faith 2 Cor. 1.24 By faith we are made heires and owners of all the good things of this life We are sonnes by faith Gal. 3.21 and being sonnes we are also heires Rom. 8.17 even heires of the world as Abraham was Rom. 4.13 and if by faich we be partakers of Christ then are we with him interested in all other things also Rom. 8.32 yea all things are ours whether things present or things to come all are ours we being Christs 1 Cor. 3. Lasty by faith we obtaine that great and last blessing of the Covenant even the blessing of eternall life Joh. 3.16 36. So that faith alone makes us possessors of all the blessings of the Covenant and therefore there needs no other condition but faith alone Object But may some say if faith alone be the condition of the Covenant and doe make us partakers of life and forgivenesse of sinne then what need is there of any obedience or works of holinesse faith alone is sufficient in stead of all Answ This was the old plea of loose Libertines in the Apostles times I have faith saith one and though I have no works yet my faith will save me But understand O thou vaine man saith the Apostle James chap. 3. that if thy faith be without works such faith is vaine but like a dead carkasse without soule or spirit it is dead in it selfe and leaves the soule in death wanting life in it selfe and yeelding no living fruit it cannot bring life unto the soule A good tree saith Christ is known by its fruit and so a right and sound faith Let a man believe in truth he cannot but love and if he love he cannot but seek to please God in well doing faith is as a tree of life which abounds with good fruit as therefore when a man desires to have good fruit in his orchard he doth not set the fruits themselves in it but plants the trees which use to beare the fruit as knowing that if the trees be good and kindly the trees will yeeld the fruit so God delighteth to see the fruits of righteousnesse in the lives of his Saints and for this end plants in their hearts the tree of faith as knowing where this tree is planted and takes root the fruit will and cannot but follow faith and holinesse can no more be separated then light can be separated from the Sunne such as say they have faith and hope to partake in the blessing of the Covenant and yet live loosely carnally unconscionably they doe but deceive themselves they may be in Covenant with hell and death but have no part of the Covenant of life and peace Quest 2. But whereas in speaking of faith wee speak sometimes of the habit sometimes of the act of it It may be demanded which of these is the condition of the Covenant whether is it the habit or the act of faith which is required of us Answ It is the latter that is the act faith acting and working towards the promise and from the promise and causing us to live by faith in the promise according to that in Gal. 2.20 the life which I now live I live by the faith of the Sonne of God the habit is freely given us and wrought in us by the Lord himselfe to inable us to act by it and to live the life of faith and then we having received the gift the habit then I say the Lord requires of us that we should put forth acts of faith both by waiting upon him to receive from him all the good which he hath promised and by walking in all obedience of faith in an humble submission to his will this work of faith the Apostle shews fully to have been in those Saints in Heb. 11. both in expecting the promise with patient suffering under the hope of it and in obedient submission to any Commandement of God and these acts of faith are implyed in that expression of walking by faith 2 Cor. 5. and the work of faith 1 Thes 1.3 and in that faith is said to work by love Gal. 5. all tending to shew that it is the act and work of of faith which is required on our part Reas 1. It is the act of faith which receives the promise
and Christ in the promise Joh. 1.12 Heb. 11.13 A man may have an hand and yet not have the gift which is offered him unlesse hee put forth his hand to receive it faith is the hand of the soule and the putting of it forth is the act by which wee receive Christ offered 2. Look as it was with Adam in that Covenant made with him he had an habituall righteousnesse within him but that was not the condition of the Covenant betwixt God and him but the acting of that inward habit in acts of obedience was the condition of the Covenant so here in the Covenant of grace first God puts into us the habit of faith and then requires of us act of faith to lay hold of the promise and to receive the grace which i● offered in the Covenant 3. It is not an habit of faith but a life of faith which is required of the Saints that are in Covenant with God it is the habit which enables and fits us to live by faith but the life of faith consists in the acts of faith put forth according to the severall occasions we meet withall Gal. 2.20 2 Cor. 5.8 Heb. 11. 4. There must needs be a difference betwixt that which God promiseth as a part of the Covenant on his part and that which he requires of us on our part now the habit is that which God promiseth to us when he saith I will give you a new heart c. and this he worketh in us in our effectuall calling and then the acting of that faith received is that which is required on our part Quest But what is that act or acts of faith by which we perform the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. First there is an act of faith by which we doe as it were first close with the Covenant revealed and offered unto us 2. There is also another act of it by which we are carried on to an answerable walking before God according to the Covenant made with him 1. For the former before we give a direct answer we must lay down these two grounds First That in the making up of the Covenant betwixt God and us God is first with us he is the first mover he begins with us before we begin with him we should never seek to be in Covenant with him if he did not allure us and draw us unto him Thus in Ezek. 20.37 I will bring them saith the Lord into the bond of the Covenant It is the Lord which brings them they doe not first offer themselves And first God prepares his own way for entering into Covenant with us and then he finisheth the work and in this preparation he doth these three things 1. He breaks us off from our Covenant with Hell and Death makes us sensible of our undone estate makes us see that we are without God without Christ without hope Ephes 2. that we are not under mercy that wee are not of his people 1 Pet. 2. 2. He opens unto us his minde and will shewing himselfe willing to receive us to grace and to enter into a new Covenant with us yet againe to take us to be his people and hee to be our God he goes into the streets and open places as it is in Prov. 1.20 21. and there makes publike proclamation Ho ho every one that will Come yee unto me and I will make an everlasting Covenant with you Esay 55.3 Esay 65.1 yea more he comes and beseeches us to be reconciled unto him 2 Cor. 5.20 and speaks to us as pittying us Jer. 3.12 and lamenting over us Ezek. 33.11 thereby to perswade us to come into a Covenant with him 3. By the hearing of these promises and offers of grace the Lord usually scattereth some little seeds of faith in the hearts of those that he will bring unto himselfe which seed being sown doth sometimes quickly put forth and acts towards the Covenant propounded and layes hold of it as we see in Lydia the Jaylor Zacheus and such others but sometimes and that most usually before that faith hath done any great thing in seeking after God to make a Covenant with him the Lord doth againe withdraw himselfe and goes away as Hoseah 5. end hiding himselfe as if he would regard us and look after us no more so that now if we will get into Covenant with him we must seek after him as he before sought after us and must sue unto him for grace to take us into Covenant with himselfe and herein faith begins to shew it selfe beginning to work and move towards the Covenant which the Lord offereth to make with us For though the Lord hath withdrawn himselfe yet he hath left such a touch of his Spirit upon the heart as makes the soule affectionate towards him so as now it cannot rest but feeling its own wo being without God and without Covenant and having heard of the Lords willingnesse to enter into a Covenant with us it now begins to seek after the Lord to be in Covenant wirh him This is the first ground that God is first he begins with us Secondly The second is that whatsoever faith doth in seeking to enter into Covenant with God it doth it alwayes in that way and according to that order in which the Lord hath gone before us in the offer of his Covenant unto us faith doth alwaies follow the Word and doth nothing but as it hath a word of Faith to guide its way it goes step by step as it hath the light of the word directing and going before faith doth not prescribe unto God it will not presume to appoint the conditions of the Covenant onely it answers and applyes it selfe to Gods offer taking conditions of peace but giving none It doth not seek to wind about the promise of grace to our own minde and will It doth not say I will have it thus thus it shall be or else I will admit of no conditions of peace but the soul now finding that the everlasting estate of it for weal or woe life or death stands at the meer good pleasure and mercy of God and knowing that either it must submit to that way of the Covenant and to those conditions which the Lord is pleased to set down or it must perish for ever it gladly comes in humbly accepting the offer of grace in the same way as it is tendred and offered unto us of God Here then that we may see how faith closeth with the Covenant propounded we must see first how God offers himselfe in his Covenant unto us Now in that main promise of the Covenant which is indeed the sum of all I will be thy God God offers himself unto us two wayes as hath been before shewed in the opening of that promise First he offers himselfe unto us as a God of mercy to pardon us as a God of blessing to blesse us with all sufficient blessings 2. As a God over us and above us to order us and to rule us
me to this faith assents also and carries us on in an answerable conversation thereby testifying before all the world that we have set up the Lord to be our God to command us and to rule us and that we have given up our selves to be his people And here are sundry acts of faith by which it inables us so to walk As 1. Faith hath alwayes an eye to the rule and command of God which he hath set before us to walke by it attends constantly to the Tables of the Covenant in things to be beleived it looks to the promise and in things to be practised it looks to the Commandement As in matters of faith it will beleeve nothing without a word of faith to rest it self upon so in matters of fact it will doe nothing without a word to command or warrant that which is done because without a word it cannot be done in faith and it is no act of faith which is not done in faith Rom. 14.23 Faith will present no strange fire before the Lord Levit. 10. It is inquisitive to understand what the will of the Lord is as knowing that he accepts nothing but what is according to his own will and word therefore it is that David prayes Teach me good judgement and knowl●dge for I have beleeved thy Commandements Psal 119.66 as if he should say I beleve and know that what thou commandest is good teach me to judge aright and know thy Commandements faith will be circumspect and fearfull till it see a word to direct and warrant its way but when it sees a plain word then it growes bold and confident as knowing that this way is right This then is the worke of faith to attend to the word of faith in every thing if we be to perform any act of worship unto God it will worship him not after the traditions and precepts of men but after the will of God if we bee to perform any office of love mercy or justice towards men it hath an eye to the word in all these to doe every thing according to the pattern set down in the word to walk without a word to direct us by is the work of unbeliefe not of Faith 2. As Faith takes direction from the true rule so it directs us to the right end it lifts us up above our selves and above our owne ends and aimes making God our highest and chiefest end for which we live and work as we are of him and live in him and by him so by faith we live to him and for him Rom. 14.7 8. 1 Cor. 10.31 1 Pet. 4.11 2 Cor. 5.15 Reason tells us we must be for our selves but faith tells us we must be for God this God claimes as his right and due and faith also assents unto God faith Thou shalt glorifie me Psal 50.15 Faith saith I will glorifie thee for ever Psal 66.12 3 Faith shields us against the hindrances and temptations which we daily meet withall in our Christian course sometimes we are tempted on the right hand by the baites and allurements of the world as Christ was Mat. 4. All this will I give thee saith the World if thou wilt be mine but here Faith overcomes the world 1 John 5.4 by setting before us better things then these even a better and more enduring substance Heb. 10. those earthly pleasures which seem so pleasing to the eye of sence are but empty and vain shaddowes in the eye of faith which looks at things afar off at things to come at things within the vaile where Christ the fore-runner is gone before to prepare a place for us Hebr. 6. Sometimes again we are tempted on the left-hand with crosses persecutions afflictions and sufferings for the Name of Christ by which Sat●n seekes to turne us out of the way and to make us falsifie our Covenant with God but here also our faith helpes us to overcome and makes us conquerors through Christ that hath loved us by setting before us the end of our patience and faith telling us that these short sufferings of this present time will bring unto us an eternall waight of glory 2 Cor. 4.17 and that all the sufferings of this present life are not worthy of the glory to be revealed Rom. 8.18 and thus faith makes us to despise the shame and the sorrow which we now suffer looking to the joy which is set before us Heb. 12.2 and thus faith is our victory by which we overcome the world and do continue faithful and stedfast in our Covenant unto the end 4. Faith incourages us unto well doing by perswading us that our services are accepted of God in Christ and by propounding unto us the promises of reward First it perswades us of acceptance that the Lord will have a gracious respect unto our services which we present before him Gen. 4. The Lord hath promised to accept our services which are done in faith Isai 56.7 and thereby faith encourageth us to every good worke The beleever knowes all his workes as they come from him to be full of imperfection yet considering withall that it is Gods good and acceptable will which he conformes himselfe unto and offering up his service in Christs name hence faith looks for acceptance according to that witnesse of the Apostle Acts 10.35 And this is no small incouragement to well doing when we believe what we doe shall be accepted graciously What will not a subject do if he know his King will take in good part the service which is tendred unto him sometimes they run themselves out of all to humour them Now faith assures us that there is not one prayer one holy desire one good thought or word or good purpose which is thought or spoken or done to the glory of God but God takes notice of it and accepts it in good part Mal. 3.16 Secondly faith assures us of a reward which shall be given us faith sees a recompence in the hand of God Heb. 11 2● as knowing that he will not forget our labour of love which we have shewed unto his name Heb. 6. but will one day say unto us come hither Well done good and faithfull servant enter into thy masters joy 5. Faith doth not onely encourage us unto well doing but it doth furnish us with strength and ability by which we may perfome Faith is a strengthening grace renewing our strength as the Eagles increasing power in our inward man Ephes 3.16 17. unbeleefe weakens the heart and makes the hands to hang down Heb. 12.12 and doth not onely discourage but also disable unto that which is good but faith makes us full of power and strength by the Spirit of the Lord Micah 3.8 to goe through the worke which is committed unto us so as if we want strength it is because we want faith or at least do not make use of our faith as we should do Now there is a twofold strength and power which we get by faith First a power inherent and dwelling
22. By these and such other promises faith encourageth us to return unto our God taking words unto our selves and pleading the Covenant of his grace towards us intreating him to receive us graciously Hoseah 14. This work of faith brought Peter back to Christ after his shamefull denyall of him it made him to lament his sinne and to look up unto him for grace and forgivenesse whereas Judas wanting this faith lies down in desperate sorrow never able to rise up nor recover himselfe any more And thus we see how faith doth act both in bringing us into Covenant with God and helps us also to walk in Covenant with him And thus we have shewed first That faith is the condition of the Covenant secondly Why faith is appointed to be the condition rather then works thirdly It is the act not the habit which is the condition on our parts fourthly What those acts of faith be by which it brings us into Covenant and inables us to walk in it Quest But here a further question is made by some what manner of condition faith is It 's granted will some say that faith is a condition but it is a condition only consequent to our Iustification and so to our being in Covenant with God but it s no antecedent condition wee are as they conceive in a state of Grace and salvation before faith and then faith comes and believes that Iustification and salvation which was before given Answ This is some of that new light which the old age of the Church hath brought forth which what it tends unto I know not unlesse it be to this that a man should not look at any habituall grace in himselfe whether sanctification or faith or any other in as much as these availe nothing according to them to a mans Iustification seeing wee are Iustified before faith They would have a man to see nothing in himselfe because as they think the Grace which is seene is temporall the Grace which is not seen is eternall though a man knows that he hath faith yet say they he is not thereby justified nor brought into the estate of grace but is justified before faith therefore never look at this or that in your selves all these are nothing to your Iustification or salvation This as I think is the end of this opinion In opposition whereunto I lay down this conclusion according to the Scripture That we are not actually justified nor in a state of grace and salvation before faith before we believe This I hope to prove by evidence of the word only before I come to the proof of it to prevent mistake observe how I speak of actuall Iustification whereas our Iustification may be considered either First as purposed and determnied in the minde and will of God Or secondly as impetrated and obtained for us by the obedience of Christ Or thirdly as actually applyed unto us so as we may be truely said to be actually just in the sight of God in the two former respects it is not denyed God purposed to justifie us before the world was and therefore much more before our faith And that atonement and obedience which Christ hath performed for us is also before our faith and before we were born But the question is whether this Righteousnesse wrought for us by Christ bee actually applyed to a sinner before hee believe whether one as yet not believing bee actually acquitted of his sinne and accounted just and righteous before God And this is that which I am now to prove against the Patrons of the former opinion sc that we are not actually justified before faith It s not a condition only consequent but antecedent to our actuall justification and being in state of grace before God Reas 1. To make our justification goe before faith is to place our justification before our vocation and calling and so inverts the order observed by the Apostle Rom. 8.30 who placeth our calling before our justification and if our calling be before our justification then is our faith also before it because we are not called effectually of which kinde of calling we now speak as the Apostle doth untill we believe faith therefore being comprehended in our calling and calling being before justification faith also of necessity must goe before our justification Reas 2. Consider the words of the Apostle in Rom. 3.22 where he saith That the righteousnesse of God is by the faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe In which words are three things first What is that righteousnsse by which we are justified namely not our own righteousnesse but the righteousnesse of Christ here called the righteousnesse of God secondly The persons upon whom this righteousnesse comes that they may be justified by it and that is upon those that doe believe thirdly The meanes by which it comes to be upon them and that is by faith the righteousnesse of God is by faith on them that doe believe justification is here limited to them that doe believe not extended to them that believe not and least any should evade by saying that they are called believers in regard of Gods prescience and foreknowledge not in respect of any present habit of faith actually dwelling in them in which sence some are called sheep Joh. 10.16 therefore to prevent this evasion the Apostle addes the meanes by which they come to have this righteousnesse of God upon them which is by faith though it had been enough to have said that it was upon them that believe yet to put this matter out of doubt he addes those words that it is by faith And if it bee by faith then not before faith but if it is by faith as the Apostle affirmes therefore not before faith If faith were a condition consequent to our justification not antecedent it could not bee said to be by faith In Psal 50.15 The Lord puts a double condition concerning our deliverance out of trouble one antecedent call upon me another consequent and thou shalt glorifie me in the midst of which two stands the deliverance promised so as the order is first we must call secondly then God delivers and then thirdly we must glorifie him now if our faith were a condition only consequent to our justification then it stands in no other place in respect of justification then doth our glorifying of God which followes our deliverance out of trouble and it so then we may as well be said to be delivered by our glorifying of God which follows our deliverance as to bee justified by faith which followes our justification Reas 3. From Num. 21.7 8 9. compared with Ioh. 3.14 15. I reason thus faith hath the same place and use in our justification as the Israelites looking had in their healing when they were stung with the fiery Serpents but they were not first healed and then to look and see what it was that had healed them but they were first to look upon the Brazen Serpent and then by
Eph. 2.8 9. ye are saved by grace through faith There is first the maine blessing of the Covenant yee are saved There is secondly the fountaine or cause of it by grace yee are saved by grace Then thirdly there is the condition through faith And if any should now ask how it could be by grace and yet depend upon the condition of faith the Apostle goes on and shews how that may be namely 1. Because faith is not of our selves but it is the gift of God and 2. Because faith doth not come to God boastingly to claime life by the works of righteousnesse which we have done but comes to him with an empty hand to receive what grace and mercy is willing to give such a condition as this doth no more derogate from the freenesse of grace then doth the beggers receiving of the almes given him derogate from the kindnesse of him that gave it 4. The grace of the Covenant is free notwithstanding the condition because we doe not put any condition as antecedent to the Covenant on Gods part whereby to induce and move the Lord to enter into Covenant with us as if there were any thing supposed in us which might invite and draw him to take us into Covenant with himselfe only we suppose a condition antecedent to the promise of life which condition we are to observe and walk in and in the observation thereof to expect the blessing of life which the Covenant promiseth If God had not purposed to have dealt with us after his rich grace he might have said to us when he saw us polluted in our bloud I will no more have mercy as it is in Hoseah 1.6 9. ye shall no more be my people neither will I be yours But yet he is pleased to over-look all our sinfull pollutions and to sprinkle clean water upon us and then to take us by the hand and to enter into Covenant with us here is grace free notwithstanding the condition of faith to which the promise is made In a word The Lord out of his free grace purposing life and salvation to his chosen then to make way for the accomplishment of his purpose in bringing us to life first he works in us renewing grace and puts within us a spirit of faith and so leads us on in the way of faith to the obtaining of that great blessing the salvation promised the one of these being antecedent and as a condition to the other 5. It s a good consideration which Doctor Ames hath in Coron Ar●ic 5. cap. 3. That eadem res absolutè promittitur quia certò efficietur cum conditione quia non aliàs efficietur nisi per media in illis mediis hominis ipsius exigitur cura thus forgivenesse of sinne is absolutely promised Esay 43. For mine own sake will I put away thy transgressions and yet it is promised also with condition 1 Joh. 1. If wee confesse our sins he is faithfull and just to forgive us our sinnes These promises are both of them promises of free grace the annexing therefore of a condition doth not impaire the free grace of the Covenant Vses And first from this that faith is the condition of the Covenant from whence first we may conceive how it is that even in the Covenant of grace life is promised unto good works and to well-doing as it is in Iohn 5.29 Luke 14.14 Gal. 6.9 1 Tim. 6.18 19. Hebr. 6. by all which it might seeme that works have the same place in the Covenant of grace as in the Covenant of works even to be proper causes of salvation but where we finde the promise of life made unto good works we must not look at them as works of the Law but as works and fruits of faith wrought by a beleever wrought forth by the power and by the life of faith which being a living grace cannot be idle and fruitlesse but will be working and fruitfull in well doing These kind of promises which promise life unto works are if I may so call them not casuall but declarative making manifest who be those true beleivers to whom the life promised in the Covenant doth belong In these promises workes are not set as the causes of our salvation but as evidences and signes of those that do beleeve unto life distinguishing betwixt beleevers and unbeleevers between those that are sincerely faithfull and seeming professors which professe and say they beleive but indeed their faith is but a dead faith and therefore vaine the promise is made to works not as the cause of our salvation but to note out the nature and quality of that faith which is the condition of life seeing faith is a grace more inward and that act of it by which it saveth is secret and cannot be seen for who knows our resting on or adhering unto Christ therefore this saving faith shews it selfe by some other acts of it setting love a worke which discovers it selfe by obedience in all righteousnesse and true holinesse and these fruits being seen do make knowne the tree from whence they come although therefore the promise of life is made sometimes to faith sometimes to workes yet this is not to note out a twofold condition of the Covenant as if the condition were partly faith and partly works but to note out the property and nature of that faith which hath the promise of life belonging to it not an idle but a working faith not a dead faith but living not ineffectual in word or tongue only but operative and effectuall making us carefull to shew forth good works Tit. 3.8 Otherwise if we look at workes by themselves as separated from faith to such works there is no promise of life made in the Covenant of grace The same work done by a beleever hath a promise of reward and the same work being done by an unbeleever hath no promise which shews that the promise is made rather to the worker or to the beleever thus working then to the worke it selfe and by this meanes the promise of life being made to this kinde of faith which doth thus work hereby the faithfull are enabled the better to see their own estate in the promise of life as having a good foundation of assurance thereby that they shall obtaine eternall life 1 Tim. 6.19 hereby also carnall professors who talk of saith but have no works walking unholily are convinced to have no part and right thereunto 2. This may let us see the kindnesse and love of God towards us in that he hath appointed such a condition of life unto us as through his grace is possible for us to fulfill To fullfill the righteousnesse of the Law is now become impossible through the infirmity of our flesh but it is not impossible to beleeve on him who hath fulfilled all righteousnesse for us Here is grace in appointing such a possible condition for though the Lord should have fully pardoned all our former breaches of Covenant with him and
at their coming out of Babylon Indeed some mixture there was of other people among the Jewes as is gathered Nehe. 13.3 and out of Ezra But that mixture was plainly condemned as sinfull and the Jewes were commanded to separate themselves from them But this gathering of the Nations unto them is here promised as a blessing But admit there was there some gathering and addition of other people unto them which was not sinfull some becoming Proselytes yet this was so little a scattering that it cannot be called a gathering of all Nations unto them for there is as much said before these times as this comes unto in Exod. 12.38 At their going out of Aegypt there was then a mixt multitude of other people and yet this was not the time of gathering the Nations to the Jewes but a time of separating the Jewes from other Nations as therefore no man will say that there was at their coming out of Aegypt an addition of all Nations unto them though they had then a mixt company joyning unto them so neither at this time of their returne from Babylon Nay if we consider the times before this Prophecy was uttered I suppose there were such a multitude of strangers joyned to the Jewes as was not to be found at this time of their returne from Babylon for wee read that in Solomons time there were found an hundred three fifty thousand and upwards as is expressed in 2 Chron. 2.17 Yet all this number was not a gathering of all Nations unto them Ob. Though this Prophecy was not fulfilled at their returne from Babylon yet it was ●ulfilled in the times of Christ and of the Apostles so that we need not extend it to the times yet to come Answ I grant it was in a gracious measure fulfilled then and yet so as to run along to have its full and finall accomplishment in the calling home of the Jewes First In the dayes of Christ some few of the Jewish Nation were converted to the faith though few yet some were and so there were some of the Gentiles also As those wise-men Mat. 2. the Centurion Mat. 8. the Syrophenician woman Mat. 15. a little number of both Secondly Afterwards when the Gospel was preached by the Apostles they preached first to the Jewes and many of them believed three thousand in Acts 2.41 and afterwards in Acts 5. five thousand and in Acts 21.20 Thou seest how many thousand Jewes believe Now mark a little answerable increase in the conversion of the Gentiles also As the sound of the Gospel went all over the world so the successe was answerable Rom. 10.18 Rom. 1.13 Rom. 15.19 so that there were many Churches of the Gentiles as is evident in the new Testament Thirdly But yet further as there shall be a more full degree of calling home the Jewes then was in either of the times mentioned before and they shall come in in more abundance Rom. 11.12 both Judah and Israel being called so shall the Gentiles come in in more plenty then hitherto And in this the Apostle is cleare and full in Rom. 11.12 where speaking of the calling of the Jewes he saith That if their fall was the riches of the Gentiles how much more shall their abundance be That is their calling which shall be in great abundance so that then most properly is the time wherein the Nations shall be gathered to Jerusalem namely when the multitude of the Jewes shall be called and all Nations then added unto them A third reason to prove this Prophecy not to be accomplished in their returne from Babylon is from the 17th verse also where the promise is that after the returne here spoken of they shall not walke after the stubbornnesse of their evill heart any more But if this be applyed to their returne out of Babylon wee may then say this promise was not fulfilled for certainly they never shewed more obstinacy and stubbornnesse then since that time as is evident in their malicious wickednesse against Christ in the dayes of his flesh So that it cannot be referred to those times but if wee refer this promise to the time of their last conversion it shall then be fulfilled because from that time they shall never any more turne away from God but shall continue faithfull with him for ever as is clearly promised to them in Esay 59.20 21. compared with Rom. 11. 26. This place then in Jer. 3.16 17 18. shews thus much that the promise being made to Judah and Israel together the accomplishment thereof was not at their returne from Babylon but is to be accomplished in their conversion to the faith of Christ Another place to confirme the same rule before named may be that in the Prophet Ezek. 37.16 17. And so to the end of the Chapter joyning together Judah and Israel resembled by the two stickes in his hand to be one people under one King But I will not st●y on this The summe is the promise here in my Text being made to Judah and Israel both therefore this prophecy belongs to the times yet to come when both of them shall be turned to the Lord. And this is the second Reason A third Reason is from the enemy spoken of to be destroyed by Judah and Ephraim together ver 13. When I have raised up thy sonnes O Sion against thy sonnes O Graecia meaning that God would by the strength of Judah and Ephraim together beate to powder the Prince of Grecia But who is he Some refer this to the successours of Alexander the mightie Prince of Graecia called the Goat Dan. 8.5 that ran over all with such speed and swiftnesse But thi● exposition cannot stand First Because these successours of Alexander did mightily afflict the Jewes but the Jewes were not made such a Gyants sword as to prevaile against them Secondly Because this conquering the Prince of Graecia followes the coming of Christ whereas those successours of Alexander that troubled the Jewes were long before Thirdly It cannot that I know be shewed that Ephraim or the ten Tribes had any thing to doe with these forces that were guided by the successours of Alexander as themselves also doe confesse that refer the story to those times and therefore to make their interpretation stand they take Ephraim and Judah for synonymaes for one and the same people which is contrary to all Scripture they being ever taken as two people ever since the division under Rehoboam onely at their calling home then they shall be reunited againe Therefore though I dare not be peremptory in such particulars yet with leave and submission to better light I suppose this Prince of Graecia is the great Turke which is Lord of Graecia at this day against whom Judah and Ephraim shall have a glorious victory and shall subdue this proud enemy Upon these grounds I conceive the Prophecy is to be referred to those times to come I will not omit what I conceive lies in that word also in my Text which
Simon himselfe beleeved also c. i.e. he professed to beleeve And as it is in faith so it is in sanctification also There is an holinesse of truth really wrought Eph. 4.24 and there is an holinesse of profession when we professe to carry the lamp of holinesse in our hands but want the oyle of grace in the vessell of our heart Mat. 25. 2 There is a sanctification externall reaching to the purifying of the flesh standing in the observance of the outward ordinances of the Church and there is another sanctification internall standing in the inward purging of the conscience from dead works by which wee are enabled to serve the living God Heb. 9.13 14. 3 There is a sanctification to men making us so to be esteemed by men and there is also a sanctification to God when we are so indeed in the sight of God Now this sanctification here spoken of was in profession externall in respect of men and in esteem of men but not reall inward and in respect of God so as to make them holy and blamelesse in his sight Object But they had reall gifts as illumination some delight in the word and such like Hebr. 6. therefore they were really sanctified Answ It followeth not because there may be some reall work wrought in the soule which yet may not reach so farre as to reall and true sanctification There may be some morall dispositions wrought in a man which are reall in their kinde and yet may come farre short of true sanctification Object As where there is the substance and being of a man there is a true man so where there is such a being of reall gifts there must needs be reall and true sanctification Answ Where there is the substance of a man there is a true man if true be taken for verum naturale which hath a true naturall existence and being and is not a meere spectrum a phantasm an image or shadow of a thing And thus taking true in this sence a rank theef is a true man But take true for verum morale for that morall truth which is required in the word then may there be the substance of a man head armes feet c. and yet this man may not bee a true man considered thus morally bring this man to the rule of the word try his actions by the truth which the word requires and then he which was found a true man in the former consideration will here be found a man false and deceitfull So here gifts may be really wrought in a man by a physicall work of the spirit and yet bring these same gifts and the actions produced by them to the rule of the word and try whether they will answer to the patterne of true sanctification which the word layes down and then their sanctification will be found false comming short of that holinesse of truth which is in the true Saints Object But these here mentioned are said to be sanctified by the blood of the Covenant that is the blood of Christ but the blood of Christ doth not sanctify only outwardly as touching the purifying of the flesh but it purgeth the conscience also within to serve the living God and therefore these here mentioned were inwardly and truly sanctified Answ The blood of Christ is taken either Properly or Sacramentally Properly as in 1 Iohn 1.7 where he saith the blood of Jesus Christ his Sonne clenseth us from all sinne the blood in the spirituall efficacy of it being applyed unto us doth indeed inwardly clense us from all sinne But sometimes the blood of Christ is taken Sacramentally and it is received Sacramentally only and thus the Water in Baptism and the Wine in the Supper is the blood of Christ Math. 26. 1 Cor. 10. and 11. Now this Sacramentall blood was sprinkled upon them they were washed with the Sacramentall blood of Christ in Baptism but the spirituall efficacy of the blood it selfe never touched their conscience though the sign of it might be sprinkled on the outward man And thus Paraeus Erat eorum sanctificatio non interna sed externa in professione fidei participatione sacramentorum externâ consistens They were sanctified that is sayth he they were by profession segregated from the Iewes and Pagans and were accounted for true Christians or for Saints To conclude the answer to the place alleadged the allusion is to that of Moses in Exod. 24.3 to 9. where Moses makes up the Covenant betwixt God and the people there Moses first rehearseth unto them the words of the Covenant to which they shew themselves willing to assent verse 3 then having taken order for the killing of the Sacrifice the blood whereof was to ratify and confirm the Covenant verse 4 5. next he takes part of the blood and sprinkles it upon the people verse 8. using these words behold the blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning all these things And now the people having thus farre accepted the terms and conditions of the Covenant and accepted the blood of the Covenant being willing to be sprinkled with it now I say this people was a sanctified and holy people a people in Covenant with God separated from the prophane people of the world and were now esteemed a peculiar and holy people though yet many of them were not inwardly sanctified but only thus farre in respect of externall confederation and profession so it is with these here spoken of they were content to accept the sprinkling of the sacramentall blood upon them and outwardly professed themselves willing as Israel did to become the people of God but yet all this while they were never in truth inwardly sanctified never washed with the washing of the new birth Tit. 3. This allusion I gather by the words of the Apostle calling the blood here mentioned the blood of the Covenant just the same expression as Moses used before Behold the blood of the Covenant Exod. 24.8 And look how the one blood was sprinkled so was the other and what sanctification was wrought by the one the same was also by the other namely an externall federall holinesse they having both one and other accepted the blood of the Covenant to be sprinkled upon them whereby they were sanctified thus farre as to become a separate people unto God So that notwithstanding all that which hath been objected or can be this stands good that sanctification is a blessing of the Covenant of Grace only And being so therefore to prove our justification by our sanctification is not to go aside to a Covenant of works Vse 2. Is our sanctification a benefit of the Covenant of grace and springs it from Grace what then can our works of sanctification merit for us at the hands of God what have wee herein which we have not received 1 Cor. 4. of his own hand doe we give unto him as David spake in another case 1 Chron. 29. but of this there will be fitter place to
of Noah for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more goe over the earth so have I sworr that I would not be angry with thee The mountaines shall remove and the hills shall fall down but my mercy shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace fall away saith the Lord that hath compassion on thee Plentifull is the Scripture in such promises as these In Hos 2.19 20. I will marry thee unto my selfe c when the Lord marrieth us to himselfe he doth it with a purpose to be ours for ever whom God loves once with this conjugall love hee loves them for ever unto the end Ioh. 13.2 And thence it is that those that are truly regenerate and sanctified are compared to Mount Sion which cannot be removed Psal 125.1 And to a tree planted by the river of water which continually flourisheth and withers not c. Psal 1.3 and to an house built upon a Rock Matth. 7. And hence is that glorious triumph of the Apostle setting all contrary power at a defiance Who shall separate us from the love of God c. Rom. 8.33 Neither heigth nor depth nor things present nor things to come shall ever separate us from the love of God wherewith he hath loved us in Christ Jesus and in 2 Tim. 4.8 Hence forth is laid up for me a crown of righteousnes And thence was that confident speech of the Prophet in Psal 73. Thou wilt guide me by thy counsell and afterward bring me to glory This benefit the Lord will fulfill unto his people when he hath begun the work of his Grace he will finish it unto the day of Christ Phil. 1.6 he will shew himselfe to be both the author and finisher of our salvation H●b 12. Arminians and Papists which reach a falling away from Grace know not the difference between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace Their Doctrine of the Apostacy of the Saints that those that are adopted sanctified and planted into Christ may fall away and perish is a doctrine contrary to the whole tenour of the Covenant of Grace injurious unto God and uncomfortable unto the Saints It is true that there is a kinde of seeming holinesse which may be lost a forme of godlinesse which may vanish and come to nought Heb. 6.4 6. 10.29 It s true also that Gods own people called and chosen may much damp quench the Grace of God which is in them and may shew much infirmity in particular falls which they are subject unto being sometimes so farre left unto themselves as we see in David and Solomon Peter c. Acts of grace may be interrupted in them for a season sense of it may be much lessened power of it weakned the degree of it abated but the habit cannot be utterly lost the life of it never goes out a man may be in a swoun and yet his life be in him still The certainty of the Saints perseverance is built upon these foundations 1. God is able to stablish them and therefore they shall be established He is able to keep us Iude 24. He is able to make us stand Rom. 16.25 and therefore we shall never be removed nor overthrown Object But this is a weak argument to reason from Gods power to his will Answ Then the Apostle himselfe argues weakly in Rom. 14.4 where speaking of the weak believer hee saith that such an one shall bee established and how proves he that because God is able to make him stand This is the Apostles Argument Indeed its true God will not doe all things which he can doe he can out of the stones and rocks raise up children unto Abraham but he neither doth it nor will doe it But though God will not doe all things which he can yet he will doe all things which he hath promised to doe Now this is Gods promise as we have seen before that he will preserve his people and therefore if he can doe it surely he will doe it because he hath promised it And hence it is that in Ioh. 10.28 29. Christ argues from the power of God doth by that argument prove the undoubted salvation of those that believe namely because God is in power greater then all and none is able to pull them out of his hand Indeed till we have a promise there is no arguing from Gods power no man can groundedly argue that God will out of stones raise up children to Abraham because he never promised it but when we have the promise then we may reason from his power And thus did Abraham reason I shall have a Sonne saith Abraham because though my body bee as good as dead yet God is able to doe it The argument was good because God had before promised to doe it So in the case in hand God hath said that he will keep us to his heavenly Kingdome and therefore if he can doe it he will doe it he hath engaged all his power and goodnesse to be for our salvation God is ours his power is ours to stablish and strengthen us that we fall not yea here are two immutable things to support us the power and will of God These two are as the two pillars before Salomons Temple Jachin and Boaz Boaz signifying in him is strength and Iachim he will stablish these two pillars stand together to establish all those that are ready to fall if there be strength in him he would have us to know that he will put it forth for our establishment that we might bee supported by his power his power and will stand together to support us 2. All the gifts of God which accompany salvation are given without repentance Rom. 11.29 Hos 13.14 God never repents him of the Grace he hath shewed to his people that he knew before Hence is that in 2 Sam. 7.14 when God promiseth to David that he would take of his seed and set upon his Throne after him and then saith the Lord I will be his Father and he shall bee my Sonne and my mercy will I not take away from him as I took a from Saul to teach us when hee hath once brought us into the state of Adoption to be his sonnes he will never cease to follow us with Fatherly love he will never take away his Fatherly mercy from us adde hereto that in Isai 46.3.4 and Mal. 3.6 3. It would shake the foundation of Gods election if those that are once sanctified should fall away and perish for those onely whom he knew before those onely doth he sanctifie If he hath in mercy drawn us unto himselfe it s a sign he hath loved us from everlasting Ier. 31.3 our calling and sanctification is according to his purpose Rom. 8.28.30 2 Tim. 1.9 Those that are sanctified justified and called are all first chosen And thence faith is called the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1. and those that are sanctified are said to be chosen unto it Eph. 1.3