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A36185 The nature of the two testaments, or, The disposition of the will and estate of God to mankind for holiness and happiness by Jesus Christ ... in two volumes : the first volume, of the will of God : the second volume, of the estate of God / by Robert Dixon. Dixon, Robert, d. 1688. 1676 (1676) Wing D1748; ESTC R12215 658,778 672

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them seeing that by this craft they get their living Let it not be grievous therefore for these high Lytae and stately Regents to stoop down to this inferiour Science as they deem it because it is more profitable for them than all their sublime Arts and Sciences can be without it and because it precedes all other wisdom even the sacred Scriptures themselves Quoad nos This strong Foundation well laid will bear up stoutly all that shall be fairly built upon it This plain Rule will try the truth of every Proposition There will be no tottering Hypotheses nor crooked Conclusions if the analogy and proportion of Natural truths be faithfully inspected and followed We may all agree in all main things if we would all look this way and fairly comply in these Principles Amphibologies Equivocations Distinctions Fallacies Tropes and Figures will be found as so many vizards and fucus's to cast a mist before the eye of the Mind and darken the clear light of the Understanding and so in time will be abandoned by all wise men This is the Light under God by which together with the Supernatural light thereupon I have wrote these things not without many failings God knows and by the same Lights they are to be examined and understood or not at all For I have had no other meaning than what is contained in natural and supernatural Revelations whatsoever is more than these is Error By these 't is safe to abide and as safe to be tried And so every man may judge and satisfie himself in his own and others Notions as well as he can and be content And this is all that can be done when all is done Do but bring all things to the common Test touchstone and standard of this Light of natural and supernatural Law and we shall all quickly meet agree kindly and pardon one anothers mistakes and be in a fairer way of mending all that is amiss every day more and more This is the way to truth and peace But alas Proud men strongly interested for honour favour and riches Ignorant men Self-conceited men Opiniators Flatterers and Lazy men that resolve to stick to their education and practice and the sentiments of their Ancestors with the Examples and Doctrines of their admired Masters will never go this way to work while the World stands There is therefore no remedy for these things but Patience The World it is to be hoped will grow older and wiser but still there must be errors and sects for the trial of steady and unbiassed Souls and the Truth at last will be no loser thereby Magna est veritas praevalebit THE CONTENTS OF THE First Volume of the Will of God To the Reader RIghts Laws Jural sense of Scriptures Title of Scriptures Distinction of old and new Testament Legists Hugo Grotius c. Will of God Superstition Fathers Schoolmen Rosicrucians Promises preached Pacification Means to understand Scriptures Mercurial spirits Principles Christianity unmixt Aspire to perfection Valn Sciences Right reasoning Sound Judgment Eloquence Demonstrations Confutations Papists Offences Two Testaments Quotations True Eloquence Prolegomena Title 1. Of Principles Theology and Laws Axioms Moral Entities Demonstrations Mathematicians Topicks Principles Aristotle Demonstrations The Authors Apology Compendiums Rules of Civil law Precepts of the law of Nature p. 1 Title 2. Of God Soul imperfect Soul under a Law Soul hath vast desires Works of God magnificent Works of God beautiful Works of God harmonious Idolatry p. 12 Title 3. Of Religion Natural Religion Supernatural Religion Revelation p. 17 Title 4. Of Scriptures Of Scriptures Writings Traditions Inspiration Testament Ethnick Theology p. 19 The First Book Of a Testament Title 1. Of Ownership Owners Proprietaries Power Gods absolute Propriety Gods disposition p. 23 Title 2. Of a Testament Testament Berith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Covenant Sanction Asseveration Title of Scriptures Other Covenants Old Covenant New Covenant Proofs for the title of a Testament Acts of a Testament Confirmation of a Testament Instrument Inheritance Dispositions Oath Testament to Christ. Law no disannulling of Testament Law given 430 years after Promise p. 25 The Second Book Of a Covenant Title 1. Of the Nature of a Covenant Definition Precept Penalty Promises Free grace All hope from Covenant God our God by Covenant Covenant advances the Creature above Nature p. 34 Title 2. Of a Covenant with God To give ones self to God To give our Souls to the Devil Claim by Covenant p. 36 Title 3. Of the distinction of Covenants First Covenant with Adam Second Covenant with Adam Resemblance of Covenants First Covenant inculcated from the Creation Second Covenant inculcated from the Creation Law written Spirit more plentiful in the Gospel Predestination of Rewards in Christ Men would be Gods to themselves Natural to have a God Natural to be in covenant with God p 38 The Third Book Of the Law or Old Testament Title 1. Of the Nature of the Law Definition of Law p. 53 Title 2. Of Moses Law Letter Spirit Promises Precepts Judgments Works Contract Revelation of Eternal life reserved Temporals prepare for Eternals Outward obedience Sufficient means under law Love of God Love of Neighbour Life Christ expounded the law p. 55 Title 3. Of the Weakness of the law Eternal life Rites troublesome and chargeable Permission Things not originally good Sacrifices Sacrifices first from men Imperfection Rigour p. 59 Title 4. Of the Deceit of the law Sin deceives Grace undeceives My Defect Fruition High understanding Ignorance True knowledge Means to discern Truth Rules Principles Authority Infallibility Will. My lust Vnderstanding Physical and Moral Agents Will. Casual Cause of sin Law p. 63 Title 5. Of Deceit without a law Law of Nature Law Positive p. 67 Title 6 Of Deceit with a Law By all good Law Lust a Law Law a Restraint Law an equivocal word Law of mind Law of Flesh Law of God Law of sin Grace a sole Remedy By all bad Law By one Law in the same law Words and sense of Law Letter and Spirit By one Law in another By the Law of God in the law of Man By the law of Man in the Law of God By one Moral law in another By the law of Nature in a Positive law By a pretended Law of God in a certain law of Man By a Private law in a Publick law By the Moral law in the Ceremonial law By the Ceremonial law in the Moral law By one Law in all other laws p. 69 Title 7. Of the Reasons of Deceit Deliberation by halves Judgment by likelyhood Ampliations and limitations of Law Weighing my action by one Law Suspense between two Laws Sin hath the casting voice Reason of Law p. 78 Title 8. Of slavery under the Law Transition Nature of slavery Tye of slavery p. 80 Title 9. Of the Seat of slavery The Soul Spirit 's free p. 81 Title 10. Of the Cases of slavery Restraint from proper end Restraint from proper guide Restraint from proper act Restraint from
proper rule Restraint from proper state Restraint from proper right Constraint to base actions p. 83 Title 11. Of the Subject of slavery The Sinner habitual p. 87 Title 12. Of the Reasons of slavery Restraint from proper end Restraint from proper guide Restraint from proper act Restraint from proper rule Restraint from proper state Restraint from proper right Captivity Constraint to base actions p. 88 Title 13. Of the Lord of slavery Sin Satan p. 91 Title 14. Of the Innocency of the Law Grace cannot deceive p. 92 Title 15. Of the Mystery of the Law Mystical Precepts Mystical Providences p. 96 Title 16. Of the History of the Law Writing in Tables Law lost Law found Law lost again Law restored Septuagints Translation Law burnt Maccabes Sects of Jews Christ's coming Law on Mount Sinai the same with that of Adam in Paradise The renewal of the Covenant of Works The equivocal word Law p. 99 The Fourth Book Of the Gospel or New Testament Title 1. Of the Reformation Law changed Priesthood changed Sacrifices Gospel a Covenant of Faith God may change the law Law advanced to Spirit Types Secret of Christ understood by degrees Divine Dispensations Creation Fall Promise Faithful Vnfaithful Gentiles feared God Law written Rites why commanded Civil law Rule Outward service trusted in Prophets sent Christ sent Jews Idolaters before Christ's time Jews destroyed Gentiles called Old Religion antiquated Aaron's Priesthood Christ's Priesthood Typical Redemption from typical sins Real redemption from real sins Salvation of all men No more Changes p. 105 Title 2. Of the Nature of the Gospel Few Disciples in Christ's time Resipicence True Wisdom p. 115 Title 3. Of the Gospel a Testament What the Old Testament contains What the New Testament contains Gospel a Testament rather than a Covenant p. 117 Title 4. Of a Testament the best Deed. Evidences Promises Earnest Oath Security Donation Testament a single Will A last Will. In force alone Confirmed by death Testament the Noblest deed Solemn Nuncupative Declarative Witnesses Plainness Heir Finishing by Hand and Seal In giving all In dying Testament most solemn Most liberal Marriage A near Vnion Acquisition of goods Love of God Love of Saints Communion Adoption Heir the most beloved Definition of the Gospel Definition of a Testament Testatour Appellative name of Believers Consent Testament of Father to Children Testamentum ad pias Causas No Praeterition No inofficious Testament p. 120 Title 5. Of the Grace of the New Testament Definition of Grace Nature Free-grace Right Nature Law Throne of Grace Wrath. Works Free grace Rich grace Assurance Jews loth to leave the law p. 128 Title 6. Of the Confirmation of the New Testament Writing Testimony Confirmation Execution Christ the Executor Executorship conditional Flesh and Blood Christ's Ascension Spirit 's Mission p. 132 Title 7. Of the Testament compared Spiritual Lively In force for ever Literal Deadly Abrogated for ever Consequences Cautions Instructions Exhortations p. 136 Title 8. Of Liberty Nature of Liberty Form Loosness from all Incumbrances Largeness p. 142 Title 9. Of the Seat of Liberty Soul p. 143 Title 10. Of the Terms of Liberty Recess from Evil. Access to Good p. 145 Title 11. Of the Cases of Liberty Loosness to proper end Loosness to proper guide Loosness to proper act Loosness to proper rule Loosness to proper state Loosness to proper right p. 146 Title 12. Of the Subject of Liberty God Christ Faithful Term of recess Bondage Term of access Sonship p. 149 Title 13. Of the Allegory of the two Covenants Ismael Isaac But two eminent Covenants State of Christian liberty p. 153 Title 14. Of the Minority and Majority of the Church Fulness of time Jews a childish people Time of Minority Redemption Adoption Plenage Gentiles exempted from Minority Popery Administration of both Testaments Idolatry Remedy against Idolatry p. 159 The Fifth Book Of a Mediatour Title 1. Of the Name and Thing Transition Mediatour Reconciliation Moses p. 167 Title 2. Of the Person of Christ Two Natures Vnion Incarnation p. 170 Title 3. Of the Mediatorship of Christ Christ sole Mediator God is one All Nations sinners Jews and Gentiles made one Christ a Soveraign Mediator Testament includes a Covenant Wherein Christ's Mediatorship consists Mediator and Testator how concurring p. 177 Title 4. Of Christ's Priesthood Christ's offering One God to mediate to One Man to mediate for One God and Man to mediate One Ransom to mediate by Christ a Man Christ the greatest and truest High Priest Christ offered Self p. 180 Title 5. Of the Dignity of Melchisedec A Priest A singular Priest A perpetual Priest Greater than Abraham Abraham paid Tithes to Melchisedec Melchisedec not of Aaron's Tribe Abraham blessed of Melchisedec Sacerdotal Blessing Levi paid Tithes to Melchisedec Actions of Fathers transmitted to Children Levi blessed of Melchisedec Melchisedec immortal p. 184 Title 6. Of the Order of Melchisedec Christ of that order Christ's pedigree Joseph's pedigree Maries pedigree Christ no Priest by birth Christ made a Priest by oath Christ a Royal Priest Christ Priest and Sacrifice Christ ministers in Heaven Tabernacle imperfect Sanctuary a worldly manufacture Ordinances arbitrary Way to Holiest not made Christ first enters the Holy place Faithful enter at the last day Services imperfect Christ's blood dedicates the Holy of Holies One offering Christ offers Self in heaven Christ reigns in heaven Melchisedec a type of Christ Of the offering of Christ Through the spirit Without spot Once In Heaven p. 189 Title 7. Of Christ's Humiliation Extent of Christ's obedience To all Law Above all Law Against all Law Extremity of Christ's obedience Rarity Shame Curse Reasons of Christ's obedience To confirm Testament To expiate sin and misery p. 202 Title 8. Of Christ's Exaltation Victory over sin Imputation of righteousness Jural righteousness Reasons of victory over sin Light conquers darkness Sin no native Propension in Nature to its proper state Genuine nature of the Spirit Superiour faculties predominate Active cooperation Christ's victory over Law Outward Covenant of Works Inward state of Mind Alive to sin Dead to Law Carnal liberty to sin Legal perfection Our victory over Law Grace stronger than Law Spirit of Grace stronger than spirit of Law God delights more in mercy than vengeance Man object of Gods love Christ's pleading undeniable to God Christ's victory over death Victory procured meritoriously by Christ's death Victory obtained by the spirit of Faith Our victory over death Sin conquered Law conquered Devil conquered Christ entred into the Holy of Holies p. 210 Title 9. Of mistakes of the effects of Christ's Humiliation and Exaltation Nothing for us to do Trust to outward Mortifications Superstition Natural complexion for Divine grace Rhetoricating Consequences of Christ's death and resurrection Material Cross Spiritual Cross Material resurrection Spiritual resurrection Material ascension Spiritual Ascension No oblation pleased God but Christ's Every one that comes to God must offer Christian Religion most spiritual and glorious No Mediatour but Christ End of
made These are Subtleties and true as to matter of outward action of Positive Law that cannot be intended by a man against himself or a Subject against his Prince in foro humano But nevertheless in plain truth and equity a man may be bound firmly to himself and a Prince to his Subjects by the Law of Nature and the action hold good in foro divino and God may require the obligation of his Creature and punish the neglect Because a Man by promising to take care of himself in tying up himself to any good is obliged to do it as he is the Servant of God and a Member of humane Society and be punishable by God and Men for not doing it As that Servant that shall disable himself from doing his Lords service or that Member of a Society that hath lamed himself or otherwise from doing his Country service is justly punishable by them both As was the Souldier that cut off his finger because he would serve no longer in War c. But to wave all niceties still this is evident and plain That in all Covenants to make them perfect there is required the Will of the Promisee and the Will of him to whom the Promise is made for where this is wanting and that this Party refuseth to accept of the thing promised though the other Party hath confirmed his Promise by an Oath yet the right of the thing so promised and sworn remains entirely with the Promiser because no man can be willing to obtrude his own Goods upon a Person that is unwilling to receive them it being alwaies a condition necessarily supposed That any man gives a thing no otherwise than if the Party for whom he intends it shall accept thereof Neither can any man be imagined so void of reason as simply to renounce his own Right and to leave those things pro derelictis at random for any body which he hath laid at the foot of the Refuser but they are his still as fully as ever The Third BOOK OF THE LAW OR Old Testament The CONTENTS Definition of Law TITLE I. Of the Nature of the Law A LAW is a publick Will Of the Nature of the Law universal and perpetual for all Persons to all Ages except necessity cause a change Definition of Law Laws and Ordinances of Men are often changed but Wills and Testaments of God or Man are never changed As a Testament is a private Will particular and temporal for one Person for his own time i. e. for the Executor so a Law is a publick Will for all Persons for all Ages As the Laws of England are the publick Will of the State for all Persons for all Ages for if the Will be not publick and perpetual it is a Testament and not a Law if not universal it is but a Decree if not perpetual it is but an Ordinance but God's Laws are publick universal and perpetual for all Men and all Ages God's Will is sometimes private concerning a single person as that Abraham should offer up his Son Isaac No Law God's Will is sometimes publick universal and perpetual concerning a whole Nation for all Ages as that of Circumcision for the Israelites God's Will is sometimes publick universal and perpetual concerning all Nations as the Law of Nature to all Mankind From this general and perpetual Law of Nature to all Mankind flow those particular Laws to some Nations but to all in those Nations intended to be perpetual but as emergencies may fall out changeable but still those Laws that succeed must be as the former agreeable to the universal Law of Nature to all Mankind which is the common fountain The Law of Moses was for the Moral part a draught of the lowest Laws of Nature which were in great part obliterated and forgotten by constant habits and examples of sin And for the Ceremonial and Judicial part sitted for that Nation at that place and time for signification of higher Rites and Rules of Perfection that were to come The Law of Christ is the perfection of the Law of Nature never revealed so fully before being the compleat and last Will of God for all to walk by for ever This new and royal Law of Christ did refine the Moral abolish the Ceremonial and Judicial Law of Moses for the weakness and unprofitableness thereof The Moral part was weak because it consisted of the meanest and lowest Laws of all and had no Spirit to give strength against the committing of sin but only to declare it and punish it without mercy And as for the Ceremonial part it was unprofitable because no part of Natures Law and only for the state of the Jews minority and was of its own nature to vanish as a shadow when Christ the great Law-giver came who was the substance of them all It is therefore called a New Commandment because it gave forth more spiritual and Coelestial Precepts and was established upon better Promises and endeared by new instances of infinite Love and gave more excellent graces and assistances by the gift of the Holy Ghost not abolishing the old matter of the Law of Nature by Moses but superadding thereunto and spiritualizing the same to the highest systeme of regularity and conformity with Christ The CONTENTS Letter Spirit Promises Precepts Judgments Works Contract Revelation of eternal life reserved Temporals prepare for Eternals Outward Obedience Sufficient means under Law Love of God Love of Neighbour Life Christ expounded the Law TITLE II. Of Moses Law AS therefore concerning the Law of Moses Of Moses Law the Subject now in hand That Law strictly taken is the whole body of Orders and Rules for life given to the Children of Israel containing 1. Promises of Blessings peculiar to that Nation 2. Precepts of Duties 1. Moral in nature as the Decalogue 2. Ceremonial in Gods pleasure 3. Judicial for their Polity or Government 4. Judgments and Punishments to the Transgressours The Law of Moses is taken at large for the Pentateuch and for all the Moral Historical and Prophetical Books of the Old Testament The Law of Moses was established by the death of Beasts because there must be blood in the case for all such Sanctions of Covenants and Testaments compare Exod. 24.5 6 7 8. with Hebrews 9.18 19 20. 2 Cor. 3.14 The Law because of the Precepts and Judgments thereof is called a Covenant of God for the observation of those Precepts and Judgments For unto Gods will to command was joyned the Peoples will to obey All that the Lord hath spoken we will observe and do Exod. 19. Exod. 24. Which agreement of Wills made up a Covenant This Law was Gods old and first Testament ordained to stand in force till the time of Reformation by the Gospel the second and everlasting Testament In this Law there is a Letter and a Spirit Ro. 2.29 the one is oldness and the other newness Ro. 7.6 the one is killing the other giving life 2 Cor. 3.6 I. The Letter
Christ's Mediation to bring us to God Cross to be gloried in Cross outward and inward Effect of Cross-crucifixion Procured by outward cross Philosophy Christianity Christ the Sacrifice and Priest Christians true Sacrifices and Priests Decrees Christ's doing and suffering our doing and suffering Corollaries Christ a Priest Christ quickened by his eternal spirit Christ a Prophet Christ a King p. 224 APPENDIX OR Application to the Clergy and Laity Title 1. Of the Clergie's Calling Word Sacraments Gospel-spirit p. 243 Title 2. Of the Clergie's Doctrine Precepts Promises Conditions p. 244 Title 3. Of the Clergie's Persons p. 246 Title 4. Of the Clergie's Study Law Law-terms p. 247 Title 5. Of the Laitie's Calling p. 251 Title 6. Of the Laitie's Doctrine ibid. Title 5. Of the Laitie's Persons p. 252 Title 8. Of the Genius of the Gospel Joy Fear Decrees Gospel dispensations Worship spiritual Ceremonies Difference of Mosaick and Christian Rites Church of Rome Perfection of Christianity Spiritual perfection Ritual worship abolished No other Rites to be superinduced No Rites ever pleased God Greater perfections in the Christian Religion Prayer and other duties are Relativi Juris p. 254 THE CONTENTS OF THE Second Volume of the Estate of God The First Book Of Rights Title 1. Of Things TRansition Testament Things Method God's Donation Things to be had Things to be done Free-will Right p. 287 Title 2. Of Persons Personality Forfeiture Freedom Falling Recovery p. 293 Title 3. Of Rights Transition Right Definition Instances Independency Indifferency Liberality Creation Donation Declaration Faction Reception Justification Private right Publick right Justice Rights to God Rights to body and soul Rights to wife Rights to children Rights to estate and honour Rights not to be violated Day of Judgment Shame To be right To make right To bestow right To have right To do right Collections Rather hurt self than others Moral honesty not doubted of Vse Reason Reason of Nature Equity of Conscience Tricks in law Severity of old in the Church Man's judgment Relations Friendship Possibility of law Fates Justice in God and Man Wrong none Truth evident Caution p. 295 Title 4. Of Actions Transition Intention Execution Free-will Imperfection Willingness Implicit faith Social actions Jussion p. 316 The Second Book Of Titles Title 1. Of a Sinner Transition Vnjust legally Vnjust morally Vnjust jurally Oppressed Blemished Distressed Tainted p. 322 Title 2. Of Original sin Rom. 5.12 explained Recapitulation Accounting Adam's will not ours Levi's paying of Tithes All mortal in Adam Righteous in Christ Immortal in Christ Every Individuum acts for it self Sinner legal Sinner moral Sinner jural Psal 51.6 explained Ephes 2.3 explained Soul a spirit Good most common Good lovely v. lib. 7. Tit. 3.2 Vol. Argumenta Laciniata p. 326 Title 3. Of a Just man Just Just legally Just morally Just jurally Right Accounting God righteous 349 The Third Book Of Justification Title 1. Of the Name of Justification The term Justifie Accounting Synonyma Bondage Freedom Burden Corporation Other names p. 357 Title 2. Of the form of Justification Imputation Logick Logistick Christ's Righteousness p. 364 Title 3. Of the Matter of Justification Right Corporation Impunity Liberty Provision Protection Audience Alliance Resurrection Jurisdiction Glory Rights of Christ Expectation Supplication Possession p. 371 Title 4. Of the Title of Justification Free grace Titles Birth Purchase Desert Favour Condemnation Gifts Impunity Election Glory Boasting Will of the Receiver Will of the Donor Free grace begins at God's will Free grace makes the Title stronger Free grace makes for God's grace and glory Justification is the best state of love All Rights are from Grace Donation Election Promise God justifieth Christ justifieth The wrong title Law Allegory of the two Covenants Ishmael and Isaac Hagar and Sarah Law a Covenant of bondage Gospel a Covenant of liberty Jacob and Esau Works p. 380 Title 5. Of the Continuance of Justification Relapse a revolt from God Breach of one Party disobligeth the other Mutability of Justification Kingdom of God Natural man Spiritual man Forfeiture Example of Israelites p. 398 Title 6. Of the Tenure of Justification Transition Works James 2.18 explained Works of love p. 405 Title 7. Faith Notions of Faith Credence Trust Promise given Promise taken Re-promise Courage Hope Covenant Faith in Christ Christ the conveyer of faith Christ the author of faith Declaring God's will Proving God's will Testament ad pias Causas Physical operation Moral operation Saving faith Means of faith A new heart 409 The Fourth Book Of Sanctification Title 1. Of the Spirit Transition Spirit the first Agent Hidden man Outward man Natural man Supernatural inspiration Penal and grievous Beneficial and gracious Holy spirit Spiritual man p. 421 Title 2. Of Conscience Definition Seat Vnderstanding Will Memory Reflection p. 424 Title 3. Of the disposition of Conscience To direct To urge To register To testifie To accuse Before the action In the action After the action p. 425 Title 4. Of the indisposition of Conscience Suspension of the offices of Conscience In good men In evil men Ignorance Learning Riches Poverty Self-love Idleness Prejudice Companions God 's not regarding Cross sins Success Satisfaction Want of a spiritual Clergy p. 431 Title 5. Of the restitution of Conscience Believe Conscience Not believe Conscience Self-examination Forsake sin Confess sin Collections p. 440 Title 6. Of a New Creature Transition Old man Old leaven Natural man Carnal mind New man New lump Spiritual mind New birth First resurrection Old creation Concurrency of God and man p. 444 Title 7. Of the Flesh and Spirit Transition Sensual and Spiritual life Mind and will of Flesh and Spirit Life in man threefold Spiritual senses and passions Life of Faith Corollaries Conclusion p. 450 The Fifth Book Of Assurance Title 1. Of the Nature of Assurance Transition Promises Publick Faith Spirit Waiting p. 455 Title 2. Of the Grounds of Assurance Matter of Fact Matter of Right Matter of Witness Spirit of Assurance Ability Sealed Earnest p. 460 Title 3. Of the Kinds of Assurance Names Species p. 465 Title 4. Of the Abuse of Assurance Doctrine of Masses Of no Salvation without the Pale of the Church Of lying still in sin Imputed Righteousness Collections Cautions Obstructions Rules Election p. 468 The Sixth Book Of Tenures Title 1. Of Allodium Transition Estates Allodium Lordship Model from the Goths Etymology Crown Lands Caution Apology p. 476 Title 2. Of Feudum Name Definition Promise Investiture Felony p. 481 The Seventh Book Of Christ's Church and Kingdom Title 1. Of a Feudal Kingdom Transition Feudal Customes Feudal Kingdoms best Goths and Vandals Goths honest Goths endowed the Church first with Lands and Lordships Jus Feudale Manners of Goths Resemblances of a Feudal Kingdom Blessedness Cursedness Church Militant Church Triumphant Tenure of Heaven conditional Holding of God Absolute dominion Feuds a middle government Christ sole Judge Customes in a Feudal kingdom Excellency of a Feudal government Collections Parables run not on all four Tenure of
and for everlasting Heb. 13.8 When St. Peter saies That the Prophets who foretold the Gospel searched against what time the Spirit of Christ that was in them declared and testified before hand the sufferings of Christ and the glorious things that followed 1 Pet. 1.10 When St. Paul saith That all Gods Promises are Yea and Amen in Christ 2 Cor. 1.20 Methinks it is strange that a Christian should imagine that there was not consideration of Christ in these promises under which they ran the race of Christians Nor could St. Paul say As by Adam all die so by Christ shall all be made alive 1 Cor. 15.22 Nor could the comparison hold between the first and second Adam Ro. 5.12 19. if that life which I have shewed Christ restores Christians to were given to the Fathers before Christ without consideration of Christ Nor could the Apostle otherwise say That Christ is the Mediatour of the New Covenant that death coming for the ransom of those transgressions that were under the old they that are called may receive the promise of an everlasting Inheritance Heb. 9.15 But because those sins which were redeemed only to a temporal effect by the sacrifices of the old Law as also those which were not redeemed at all by any were by the sacrifice of Christ redeemed to the purchase of the World to come Which is that which St. Paul tells the Jews Act. 13.29 That through Christ every one that believeth is justified from all things which they could not be justified of by the Law of Moses For as the Law did not expiate capital offences so it expiated none but to the effect of a civil promise And though we construe the words of St. John Apoc. 13.8 Whose names are not written in the book of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the World out of the same sense repeated Ap. 13.8 Not that the Lamb was slain from the foundation of the world but that their names were written in his book from the foundation of the world yet inasmuch as it is called the book of the Lamb that was foreknown from the foundation of the World 1 Pet. 19. When Moses demands not to be written in Gods book when mention is made of it in the New Testament it must be the book of Christ in the mystical sense And when St. Paul saith that Christ gaeve himself a ransom for all A testimony for due time what can he mean but that though he gave himself for all yet this was not to be testified till the proper time of the preaching of the Gospel And what is this but that though this is testified only by the preaching of the Gospel yet he was a ransom for all Which reason suffers not the same term All Heb. 2.9 Ro. 3.23 to be restrained from that generality which it naturally signifies Lastly when the Apostle argues that if Christ should offer himself more than once that he might more than once enter into the Holy of Holies he must have suffered oft from the foundation of the World that is before the end of the World in which he came indeed Heb. 9.25 26. he must needs suppose that he suffered for all that were saved before the Gospel For what pretence can there be that he should suffer for sins under the Gospel before the Gospel more than that the High Priest before the Law should expiate those sins which were committed against the Law by entring in to the Holie of Holies And here you may see that I intend not to affirm that all that were saved under the Law though in consideration of Christ did know in what consideration Christ should be their salvation as Christians under the Gospel do But to refer my self to the determination of St. Augustine and other Fathers and Doctors of the Church that they understood it in their Elders and Superiors the Prophets of God and their Disciples the Judges of Israel who were also Prophets and the Fathers of several ages of whom you read Heb. 11. Who being acquainted with the secret of Gods purpose were to acquaint the people with it so sparingly and by such degrees as the secret wisdom of God had appointed These things thus premised I do acknowledge and challenge the act of God in dispensing in the execution of his original Law and bringing the Gospel into effect instead of it not to be the act of a private person remitting this particular interest in the punishment of those sins whereby his Law was transgressed But the Act of a Master of a houshold or the Prince and Soveraign of a Commonwealth which you please disposing of Mankind as his Subjects or Houshold Servants c. Dr. Taylor Rule of Consc 2 Book p. 319. I do not here intend a Dispute whether Christ hath given us Laws of which neither before Moses or since there are no foot-steps in the Old Testament for I think there are none such but in the letter or Analogy they were taught and recommended as before But this I say that some excellencies and perfections of Morality were by Christ superadded in the very instances of the Decalogue These also were bound upon us with greater severity are indeared to us by special promises and we by proper aids are enabled to their performance And the Old Commandments are explicated by new Commentaries and are made to be Laws in new instances to which by Moses they were not obliged And some of those excellent saying which are respersed in the Old Testament and which are the dawnings of the Evangelical light are now part of the body of light which derives from the Sun of Righteousness In so much that a commandment which was given of old was given again in a new manner and to new purposes and to more eminent degrees and therefore is also called a New Commandments c. v. 3. Book c. 3. p. 555. Idem 2. B. c. 3. p. 469. In the Religion of the old World the Religion of Sacrifices and consumptive oblations it is certain themselves did not choose by natural reason but they were taught and enjoyn'd by God For that it is no part of a natural Religion to kill Sacrifices and offer to God Wine and Fat is evident by the Nature of the things themselves the cause of their institution and the Matter of Fact that is the evidence that they came in by positive Constitution For Blood was anciently the sanction of Laws and Covenants Sanctio à Sanguine say the Grammarians because the Sanction or establishment of Laws was that which bound the life of Man to the law and therefore when the Law was broken the Life or Blood was forfeited But then as in Covenants in which sometime the wilder people did drink Blood the gentler and more civil did drink Wine the blood of the Grape So in the forfeiture of Lands they also gave the blood of Beasts in exchange for their own Now that this was less than what was done is certain and therefore it
Birds and all sorts of Prodigies as Omens and Prognosticks of Casual contingencies in this life and the Futurities of another World as if by such absurd conveyances God had made a Divine discovery of Religious concernments The CONTENTS Of Scriptures Writings Traditions Inspiration Testament Ethnick Theology TITLE IV. Of Scriptures FOr the better settlement of all Mediums for ever in the concerns of true Religion God saw it most convenient That all his Will revealed by Moses for that Dispensation Temporal and by Christ for Reformation Eternal should both be assigned to Writing Writings because written Laws and Testaments are far more evident and lasting Monuments and Records than verbal or transient oral Traditions can possibly be 1. Because by oral Traditions when Men were few Traditions and their Ages long and Doctrines few they might the better be preserved but when Men were multiplied and their Ages cut short and Doctrines multiplied they must be the harder to continue and the sooner lost But by Writing notwithstanding Mortality the Monuments and Records might be immortal 2. Because there will be a failure of unwritten Traditions and vocal Reports by carelessness and contradictions of Delivery and Debauchery succeeding in the place of the simplicity and honesty of first Generations Hence it came to pass that the old Ethnick Laws were lost for want of writing and such as are preserved are fabulous and ridiculous for want of wit and honesty and men are lapsed thereby into Polytheisme and absurd filthy ceremonies of Religion Therefore it came to a necessity Inspiratio● to prevent a decay of Knowledge and divine Fear that some eminent Persons should be stirred up to commit the laws of Nature and other Positive laws of God to Writing by Divine Inspiration Which was done accordingly for matter of Fact and God himself first began to do this thing by writing his own Law with his own Finger upon two Tables of Stone and delivered them to Moses and commanded him to write other Statutes in a Book to be laid up altogether in the Ark for Posterity Till he should cancel that and make another and better Law which he did and delivered it to Christ who confirmed it by his Death so as to continue for ever by way of Testament which therefore was not of force till the death of the Testatour and therefore should never be disanulled because Testamen● Christ being dead from henceforth dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him And so we are given to understand according to the manner of Men That it can no more be changed than a mans Testament who being once dead and to live no more it is impossible he should alter his last Will having no Will after his Death because his Will died with him And for the preservation of this Testament after it was delivered by Christ to his Apostles by word of mouth They by inspiration from God committed it to writing in the Book of the New Testament as now it is preserved for us and transmitted to us I. A Testament barely nuncupative cannot be permanent 1. Because words spoken vanish into air and may be mis-heard and mis-understood or forgotten 2. Because the Hearers and Witnesses must die and then all is lost only by hear-say from others who must die also and so the farther the Testimony passes from one generation to another the more it loses or varies till at last it dies and comes to nothing II. A Testament Written is most permanent 1. Because Litera scripta manet and though errours in ignorant Souls may be committed yet the sense and comparing of Copies will direct to Orthography Thus the Testatour dies but his Will and Testament lives and never lives till he dies and ever lives after his death because none can put his Will to death but he that made it who is dead himself and therefore can have no will or power to do it 'T is true a Man may make Testaments and unmake them again as long as he liveth as God did the Law of Moses and as men may do to their Laws and Statutes but when a man dies his last Testament stands if there be a thousand before it they all fall and come to nothing And whereas Publick Laws may be changed by new Law-makers upon new occasions for a new People and are ambulatory in every Age yet the last Wills and Testaments of men which are private Laws can never be changed by their Heirs and Successours but must stand in force for ever because they are dead that made these Laws for their private Families to tie up them and their Heirs for ever For if it be but a mans Testament no man disannuls it For the fastening therefore of the Gospel for ever amongst men this is the way that God hath taken for men after the manner of men to settle his Commands and to settle his Estate upon men And all this is left written in a Book which is the Scriptures which no other Book can rival in this pretence of a Divine Will Ethnick Theology Ethnick Legislatours Poets Philosophers in all their writings of Mythick Politick or Natural Theology they and all became vain in their Imaginations and their foolish hearts were darkened 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they lost the seeds of God which were in them and though they knew God yet they glorified him not as God but deified the Creatures that might have led them to the Creatour Hence came Sabaisme and all the Oriental Idolatry in which Statesmen bore their part not a little pretending conversation with Numens for the better obtruding of their devices And Satan abused them all by Oracles from Oracular Priests and Pythian Virgins those mad organs of the Daemons and evil Spirits in those daies Poets they say were the first Authors of Ethnick Divinity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by these saies Plato God speaks unto us The same Philosopher saith that Philosophers were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 taught of God such were ranck Magicians who brought in prophane Dogms and impure Worship Ergo not Divine but Diabolical and Inhumane even to the sacrificing of their Sons and Daughters unto Devils If we look to the Alcoran six hundred years later than the New Testament it is answerable to the genius of the Arabians fertil of Dreams full fraught with carnal Precepts and sensual Rewards mixed with Heathenisme Judaisme and Christianity by Mahomet prompted by the Monk Nestorius and advanced by the Sword As for the Bible it is for Words plain for matter pure for stile clear in the Testamentary parts thereof The Prophesies thereof are fulfilled the History most ancient the Spirit of it most Majestick and convincing those Divine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neither is there any Eloquence like it without meretricious ornaments of Oratours and demagogues whose end was ostentation and faction The Harmony admirable the End the glorious restauration of Mankind the quality of the Pen-men venerable the Antiquity highest and
the Preservation and Increase of it against all oppositions in all Ages unparallel'd All which things speak it of more than Humane Original THE First Volume OF THE WILL OF GOD Concerning things to be done by Men. The First BOOK OF A TESTAMENT The CONTENTS Owners Proprietaries Power Gods absolute Propriety Gods Disposition TITLE I. Of Ownership EVery one that is a Testator must be an Owner Transition Owners 1. Of his Person free to dispose 2. Of his Power over others to command 3. Of his Honour to enoble 4. Of his Estate to enrich As for Wisdom and Holiness they are not devisable by men at all but by God they are altogether Such an one within his own Sphere can create Rights declare Rights bestow Rights destroy Rights or translate them from one to another And he or they that are or shall be the Heirs and Successours must be 1. Free in their Persons to receive 2. Subject to Power to obey 3. Capable to understand 4. Willing to consent 5. Able to keep enjoy and use both Honours Commands and Estates given and bequeathed They that have power over their own Persons Things and Actions internal or external or over the Persons Things or Actions of others corporeal or incorporeal Proprietaries as Owners Proprietaries and fole Possessours of them all are Sui juris and have free power over themselves and all that they have or can do to use what they have such right unto themselves or to dispose of them to others to become Usuaries Usufructuaries Emphytenciaries Vassals or otherwise and if they please to alienate and pass them over from themselves by investing others in the direct Dominion of them and that conditionally upon terms totally or in part for a time or absolutely and freely to convey them quite away fully and wholly for ever And this they may do not only in their life time but at their death so far as it is possible or as the Laws will give them leave in Licitic and honestis which things are only possible in Law Power So they that have Publick Power Rule Authority and Jurisdiction over the Persons Things or Actions of their Subjects may order and ordain such things to be had or done or lost or left undone or inflicted or suffered as are in their power by Command or Interdict for Possession Ejection or Restitution in integrum or otherwise by way of Reward or Punishment Especially they that have absolute Supream Power as Soveraign Princes who in this respect are justly stiled Gods having power of Life and Death to make alter and vnmake Laws for the Rule and Government of Mankind so imitating and resembling God for those God-like works of Guidance Protection Justice and Mercy Gods absolute Propriety And as this Power is given by God to the Sons of Men so it must be infinitely more in God himself who also is the sole absolute independent and true Proprietary or universal Owner and Ruler of all things both in Heaven and Earth Because he is All in himself from all Eternity and All in all in his Creatures without Himself which in time he hath made and therefore must have all Right in the Works of his own hands to possess or dispose of them how where when to whom how long and how often he pleaseth without all opposition or controll and all for his glory and their good Gods Disposition All Right therefore to all things for ever is originally in God and He maketh and disposeth what rights he pleaseth to all his Creatures to have and to hold during his good will and pleasure But the best of his Rights to the Best of his Creatures he disposes to the best of his Children after the Best way of Disposals even by his Last Will and Testament ratified and confirmed after the best manner of Ratification Death and that by the death of the Best Mediatour his Best beloved and only begotten Son Jesus Christ substituted to die in his stead This last Will and Testament contains his most perfect Laws and Commands to perform the most perfect Righteousness as well as his most perfect Grace to dispose the most perfect Holiness and Happiness and to impose the most perfect Punishments and Miseries in this and in the World to come The CONTENTS Testament Berith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Covenant Sanction Asseveration Title of Scriptures Other Covenants Old Covenant New Covenant Proofs for the Title of a Testament Acts of a Testament Confirmation of a Testament Instrument Inheritance Dispositions Oath Testament to Christ. Law no disannulling of Testament Law given 430. years after Promise TITLE II. Of a Testament THE Word Testamentum in the Latin as the Lawyers say Testament is as much as Testatio Mentis Because partly it doth actively testifie the Mind or Will of the Testator But more fully as I may humbly conjecture because passively it is a Deed solemnly testified by the Testimony of old of seven Testable Persons that are free men and worthy to be believed and who have themselves power to make a Will and that under their hands and seals altogether in one contexture of time The Hebrew Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith Berith the Septuagint do constantly translate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and never 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as most proper Berith being derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bara which signifieth to create ordain or constitute as every Law of God or Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a Divine or Humane Constitution The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies in like manner a general Disposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whether it be by Covenant or Testament but most especially by Testament This is my Blood of the New Testament c. Matt. 26.2 Mar. 14 2● Luk. 22 2● But the Hellenists or Jews that spake Greek as the Septuagint and others use it sometimes for a Covenant omitting the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is most genuine for a Covenant Other words there are that do indifferently signifie Agreements Contracts and Covenants but Berith is never interpreted by any other than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which well denotes the Constitution of an Everlasting Testament Thus this Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as generally it is used for a Publick Law Ordinance or Constitution of a Prince or Magistrate which may be changed so especially for that kind of Law or Ordinance which is made by the last Will and Testament of God or Man which cannot be changed And this is the private Law of a Testator concerning the disposal of his Estate after his own Death or one that is substituted to die for him if the Law should so allow it Hence the word Legatum and Legare is used i. e. to give any thing in Legacy by Will which by the Law of the Twelve Tables must stand as a Law Uti quisque Rei suae legassit ita Jus esto Covenant So the same General
the Donor and Abraham the Donee for so the saying of God runs in the Praeter-Tense Unto thy Seed I have given the Land whereas before he used the Future-Tense Unto thy Seed I will give the Land But a Covenant is not made by words of the Praeter-tense as of things already done and therefore the saying here imports not a Covenant but a Feoffment a Deed of gift or rather a Testament which is the noblest and strongest Feoffment that can be made by God or Man especially when it conveyeth Land of Inheritance St. Chrysostome though he doth call this Deed of God a Testament yet he rather supposeth it to be a Covenant because the Beasts were killed as was the custome in making Covenants But with reverence due to so great a Clerk by the same reason we may the better suppose it to be a Testament Confirmation of a Testament For in the time of Abraham it doth not appear that it was the general custome to confirm Covenants by death but rather the contrary For the Covenant which Abraham made with Abimelech at Beersheba was not confirmed by the death of any Creature but only by their mutual Oaths Gen. 21.31 Therefore the place was called Beersheba i. e. the Well of Oaths The like confirmation only had the Covenant between Jacob and Laban at Galeed where Jacob sware by the Fear of his Father Isaac Gen. 31.44 53. But in all Ages and amongst all Nations it hath been the constant custome of Men to confirm their Testaments by Death and this is so confest a Truth that it needs no proof The reason why God confirmed his Testament by his passage between the pieces of the dead Beasts is because this was an act of his Quasi-dying That God who is immortal and cannot die did appoint those Beasts to be his Substitutes to die for him Gen. 15.9 The Lord said to Abraham Take me an Heifer of three years old i. e. Take for me and for my use and in my stead And by this Quasi-death of the Everliving God Abraham was assured by God after the manner of Men in their last Wills of the conveyance of the Inheritance of the Land of Canaan given him by the Will of God Heb. 9.16 And as the Promissory part so by the same reason was the Mandatory part of Gods Testament dedicated or confirmed by Blood Heb. 9.18 Neither was the first Testament dedicated without Blood for when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the People according to the Law he took the Blood of Calves and Goats with Water and Scarlet-wool and Hysop and sprinkled both the Book and all the People saying This is the Blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you This is the confirmation of the Preceptory part of Gods Testament once but the Promissory and Legatary part thereof was the second time confirmed by a solemn Oath Gen. 22.16 By my self have I sworn saith the Lord for because thou hast done this thing and hast not withheld thy Son thine only Son Isaac whom thou lovest that in blessing I will bless thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy Seed as the Stars of Heaven and as the Sand which is upon the Sea-shoar A real Oath to perform that Testament which he had confirmed before by his Quasi-death Heb. 6.18 That by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong Consolation or full assurance who have fled for refuge to lay hold on the Hope set before us c. Objections Some Learned Writers account this a hard saying that God should make Testament who cannot die and therefore instead of the word Testament they use the word Covenant I Answer There is a Covenant in Gods Testament and therefore it is a Testamentary Covenant so we take in all truth Others rather chuse the word Instrument Obj. thinking thereby to mend the matter But that also amounts to the same sense with the former Answ for if it be an Instrument Instrument it cannot be meant of an artificial or material Tool used by any Mechanick but it must be a legal Instrument or deed And truly it is the best Instrument in Law creating the greatest settlement and assurance that can be made by God or Man Other words they cannot invent to call it by and these three Testament Covenant Instrument declare but one and the same thing The Covenant and Testament of the Law being the Covenant and Testament of Works and the Covenant and Testament of the Gospel being the Covenant and Testament of Grace and both these are Instruments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 declared and confirmed as Gods Acts and Deeds and so delivered to the Sons of men to remain upon record as their Assurances for ever And why should not these men be offended as well at the word Heir and Inheritance as well as at the word Testament Heir wherein lieth the same cause for an Heir is a Person who hath the right to succeed in the room of a person deceased If therefore God can have no Testament because he cannot die then by the same reason he can have no Heir and so consequently neither Christ nor Believers are or can be the Heirs of God The like may be said for the word Inheritance Inheritance which is a succession unto the whole Rights which a person deceased was invested with at the time of his death If therefore God can have no Testament because he cannot die then by the same reason neither Christ nor Believers have or can have any Right in or to the Inheritance of the kingdom of Heaven But God may ordain or confirm a Testament though he cannot die When man makes a just Disposition and Decree of things to be had or done after his own death Disposition● such a Disposition or Decree of man is called a Testament yet this is but a humane Testament after the manner of Men. But when God makes a ●●st Disposition or Decree for things to be had or done after anothers death what may we call such a Disposition or Decree of God or what better name can we give it than to call it a Testament For although it be not a humane Testament after the manner of Men yet it is a divine Testament partly after the manner of men and partly otherwise as God would have it to be and to be so called and hath called it so For as Men verily swear by one that is greater Oath but God swears by himself because there is no greater than himself to swear by So God makes a Testament partly after the manner of Men and partly otherwise because we confine their Testaments by their own death because they are mortal and can die but God confirmeth his Testament by the death of another because he is immortal and cannot die Besides the Text saith The Covenant or Testament Gal. 3.17 Testament Christ was confirmed before of
God in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. to Christ to wit to the use and benefit of Christ who is the principal Heir And the Promises of the Testament were made sure to Abraham and to his Seed which is Christ He saith not unto Seeds as unto many but as of one unto thy Seed which is Christ and so it becomes sure to all the Seed that are in Christ in whom all the Promises of God are Yea and Amen It is further said v. 19. That the Law was added because of Transgressions until the Seed should come which is Christ to whom the Promise was made And because the Promise of the Testament was made or instituted unto Christ therefore also the confirmation of it was made unto Christ that he being the Heir might receive the Inheritance ordained unto him in the Testament and Christ received it then when he was raised from the dead for then God fulfilled unto him that which he had promised and confirmed unto him Act. 13.32 as St. Paul declares it And we declare unto you glad tydings how that the Promise which was made unto the Fathers God hath fulfilled the same unto us their Children in that he hath raised up Jesus again Law no disannulling of Testament And whereas it was said That the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after could not disannul this Testament that it should make the Promise thereof of none effect By the Law is not meant Circumcision which was some years after the Testament but not so many but by the Law we understand the Law of Moses given by God upon Mount Sinai in Arabia which though considered by it self maketh up one entire Body composed of several Commandments Judgments and Statutes yet as it here standeth opposed to the word Testament and Promise so it makes but a part of that Old Testament that is the Ordinance or Decree whereof the other part is the Promise given to Abraham As therefore the Promise of the Old Testament proceeded by two Acts of God the Institution first and the Confirmation afterward so also the Law or Ordinance of the same Testament proceeded by two like Acts. For first the Law was instituted or enacted when God spake those Ten words to the Children of Israel Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord thy God which brought thee out of the land of Egypt c. And afterwards the same Law was confirmed ratified or established Exod. 24.7 When Moses took the Book of the Covenant and read in the audience of the People and they said All that the Lord hath said unto us we will do 〈◊〉 be obedient And then Moses took the Blood of the Covenant and sprinkled it on the People and said Behold the Blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning all these words Where we may observe first that the Promissory part of Gods Testament and the Mandatory part thereof were both confirmed by Blood or by Death as hath been intimated Secondly that the People by their acceptance of Gods Law and by their promise of Obedience thereunto advanced Gods Law into a Covenant between God and them for it was Gods will that the People should obey his Law and it was the Peoples will that they would obey So there was an agreement of Wills between God and the People and an agreement of Wills in several Parties maketh up the nature of a Covenant The Law was given to Moses 430 years after the Promise to Abraham And whereas St. Paul saith That the Law was given four hundred and thirty years after the Testament that was confirmed the Particle After must not be referred to the word Confirmed as if the Law had been instituted four hundred and thirty years after the Promise of the Testament was confirmed for such a sense cannot be warranted from the Scripture but the Particle After ought to be referred to the word Testament for the meaning of the Apostle is this That the Law was instituted four hundred and thirty years after that the Promise was instituted which Promise some few years after the Institution of it was confirmed For it is manifest that there passed some years between the Institution of the Promise and the Confirmation of it For the Promise was instituted before Abraham went down into Egypt to sojourn there Gen. 12.1 c. And from the time of Abrahams first sojourning in Egypt unto the time of the Israelites departure out of Egypt there passed just four hundred and thirty years to a day Exod. 12.40 Now the sojourning of the Children of Israel who dwelt in Egypt namely from the first sojourning of their Father Abraham there passed four hundred and thirty years And it came to pass at the end of four hundred and thirty years even in the self same day it came to pass that all the Host of the Lord went out from the land of Egypt If therefore the Promises were instituted the same year wherein Abraham went first to sojourn in Egypt and the Law was instituted the same year wherein the Israelites departed out of Egypt then it must follow that the Law was instituted four hundred and thirty years after the institution of the Promise By which account the Scriptures fully agree in the revolution of time though the Chronologers agree not in ordering the computation and in placing the period of it And this breeds not any defect or flaw in Gods Testament that one part of it namely the Mandatory was made four hundred and thirty years after the other part namely the Promissory for if any ordinary man who hath and holdeth the faction of a Testament may continue the making of his Testament all the time of his life and to the Legacies and Promises thereof may when he pleaseth add what Conditions or Commands he will much more may the Everlasting God assume to himself a matter of four hundred and thirty years for the making and finishing of his Testament seeing that a thousand years are in his sight but as yesterday and seeing that the Mandates or Commands of a Testament are no principal or necessary parts thereof but only parts accessory accidental and conditional which may be inserted at any time or may be wholly omitted as in Absolute Testaments and yet the Testament shall be valid and good without them The Second BOOK OF A COVENANT The CONTENTS Definition Precept Penalty Promises Free Grace All hope from Covenant God our God by Covenant Covenant advances the Creature above Nature TITLE I. Of the Nature of a Covenant Transition IN the Testaments of God there are included Covenants according to the nature of both Testaments the one of Works and the other of Grace I will therefore treat concerning the nature of a Covenant as I have done of a Testament for the forms of the Laws of God in Scriptures are not only Testaments but Covenants Definition of a Covenant A Covenant is a consent or agreement of two or
and saving Faith as shall be shewn hereafter Contrary unto this is our Covenanting with the Devil and the World To give our Souls to the Devil and the Flesh in giving away our Souls and Bodies for propriety and our Faculties and Estates for usufruct to these Enemies of God and our selves to our destruction and this is Infidelity and renouncing all Covenant or Communion with God So I give me and mine to God and God receives what I give and I am his So God gives Himself to me and I receive what he gives and He is mine And this is a perfect Covenant betwixt God and me and holds all the while I keep my Faith and true Allegiance unto him During the continuance of which Faith that maintains this League and Covenant betwixt God and my Soul Claim by Covenant I may claim all Gods Promises as my due with a holy boldness and he may challenge all mine and that we may first make and afterwards maintain and keep this our Covenant with God unto the end we have alwaies free access unto the Throne of his Grace for Grace sufficient to help us in the time of all our needs The CONTENTS First Covenant with Adam Second Covenant with Adam Resemblance of Covenants First Covenant inculcated from the Creation Second Covenant inculcated from the Creation Law written Spirit more plentiful in the Gospel Predestination of Rewards in Christ Men would be Gods to themselves Natural to have a God Natural to be in Covenant with God TITLE III. Of the distinction of Covenants Of the distinction of Covenants TO speak clearly and properly according to the Analogy of Faith concerning Gods two most eminent Covenants with Mankind Thus First Covenant with Adam I. The first Covenant that God made was with the first Man Adam in which was one Negative Commandment The Condition was to abstain from tasting of the Tree of Knowledge of good and evil The Promise was to eat of the Tree of Life in the earthly Paradise and by the help thereof to live for ever The Threatning was if he did break this Law he should pass his time in labour and sorrow be shut out of Paradise and at last die the death This is not the same Covenant with that of Moses Law 1. Because the Condition was diverse To obey all the Commandments which God then gave Ten whereof he wrote with his own Finger the rest he dictated to Moses and commanded him to write them in a Book 2. Because the Promises were diverse To enjoy long life honour Friends plenty peace and victory in the Land of Canaan 3. Because the Threatning was diverse Stoning scourging hanging c. Second Covenant with Adam II. The second Covenant that God made was with the first Man Adam The Condition was Love to the Seed of the Woman Enmity to the Seed of the Serpent The Promise was That the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head Thou shalt break his head The Threatning was That the seed of the Serpent should bruise the Womans heel And he shall bruise thy heel This may not be the same Covenant with that of God in Christ 1. Because the Condition was diverse viz. Faith and Love 2. Because the Promise was diverse viz. Eternal life and in order thereunto Remission of sins the Holy Spirit Resurrection and Ascension 3. Because the Threatning was diverse viz. Eternal death The first Covenant Resemblance of Covenants may in part resemble the Covenant of Works by the Law of Moses because of a prohibition from one thing and a permission of all the rest because of a promise of one Earthly Paradise because of the threatning of a Bodily Death The second Covenant may in part resemble the Covenant of Grace by the Gospel of Christ Because of the condition of Love to the true Seed of the Woman which is Christ and of Hatred to the true seed of the Serpent which is the Devil because of the true breaking of the true Serpents head which is the Devil by the true promised Seed of the Woman which is Christ And because of the true bruising of the true seed of the Woman by the true seed of the Serpent But though there were Promises many and Covenants many yet in the Scriptures it is evident that there are but two Covenants of God eminently and properly so called which are I. The Law of Moses which is the Old Covenant of Works The Condition was Obedience to the whole Law The Promise was the Land of Canaan and Rest therein The Threatning was Temporal punishments and Death without mercy The Mediatour was Moses The Duration was till Christ should come in the flesh II. The Gospel of Christ which is the New Covenant of Grace The Condition was Faith The Promise was Life eternal in Heaven The Threatning was Death eternal in Hell The Mediatour was Christ The Duration was till Christs second coming in Glory Yet no body can deny First Covenant inculcated from the Creation but that the first Covenant of the Old Testament was hinted from the Creation for the Precepts in the Law of Nature written in the heart and for the Promises and Rewards due to the obedience of a happy life on Earth never to have end and for the Threatnings of Calamities and Death never to end And so also the second Covenant of the New Testament was hinted from the Creation in the revelation in part of a Spiritual Law Second Covenant inculcated from the Creation to those that did obey the Law of Nature and in the obscure revelation of spiritual and eternal Promises to those that embraced the carnal and temporal ones But still there was no Law written in Tables till Moses and still there was no full Revelation of the spiritual Law and of spiritual and eternal Promises till Christ came and wrote them perfectly by his Spirit in the heart Law written Therefore when the writing of the Law of Nature upon the heart was almost quite worn out by habits and practices of unnatural Evils and the universal Examples of Wicked men turning from God to Idols and walking after the imaginations of their own hearts continually God made a Covenant with the Children of Abraham by Moses for the performance of Carnal duties and fruition of Carnal rewards to lead them on farther and prepare them to the practice of spiritual Services and enjoyment of eternal Rewards which to them as to Children were represented and shadowed out by several Rites and Ceremonies and temporal Prosperities These lesser and weaker Commands and Promises God gave unto them for that time of their Minority and reserved the manifestation of his higher and stronger Commands and Promises till the fullness of time when all things should be made perfect Spirit more plentiful in the Gospel Therefore God sprinckled a lesser portion of his Spirit upon some before and under the Law according to their present capacities But afterward when
any other name by which the World can be saved but only by the name of Christ who is the same yesterday to day and for ever in whom all the Promises of God are Yea and Amen There have been different Dispensations but the same Grace Yet still I say Believers were never under the Law as it was the Covenant of Works were allways under the Law as it was the Covenant of Grace St. Chrysostom expounds the History of the two Twins Hom. 42. in Gen. Gen. 38.30 which Thamar brought forth by her Father in Law Judah by the Mystery of Christians and Jews By God's appointment he that first put forth his hand was last born that thereby might be signified the entrance of the Law which yielded unto Faith For Abel Enoch Noah Melchisedec and Abraham before the Law pleased God as Christians do after the Law But that there might be some suppression of the over-flowings of sins in the world the Law was given which though it did not quite extinguish Sin yet it restrained it much by Terrible Punishments which in the last Place Faith utterly took away by most comfortable Mercies Come on therefore thou Covenant of Grace and we shall be saved by thee that could not be saved by the Covenant of the Law We have an holy boldness to appeal from the Throne of Justice unto the Mercy-Seat from Works to Faith from Law to Gospel from Bondage to Liberty from Death to Life This is the height of all perfection Behold I shew unto you the most excellent way God demonstrating his great kindness to the Sons of men he gave grace before more sparingly but now most largely and generally full measure pressed down and running over Grace for Grace This is the Standard of the Lord set up upon a hill Flie to it all ye Nations that are heavy laden with the burden of your sins and ye shall find rest for your Souls in the Dispensations of Righteousness Grace and Glory Why will ye groan under bondage and never look out for freedom Why will ye die O ye Sons of Men Come on let us leave Moses behind us and follow Christ Come O come to my Soul thou that art highly beloved of the Father full of Grace and Truth and of thy fullness we shall all receive grace for grace Come Thou Fairest of ten thousand to the Jew labouring under the costly Ceremonies and deadly Injunctions and relieve him into a spiritual Worship and a lively Commandment To the Gentile groping under darkness and stooping under Satan's load and give light and put thy easie burden upon his shoulders Trust not Thou Jew in thy Flesh and in thy Law for the Righteousness thereof but trust to the Spirit and to the Gospel for the Righteousness thereof Trust not Thou Gentile to thy Arts or Arms but trust to the saving knowledg and power of Christ and to the lively Oracles of God Let both Jew and Gentile come up to a better Rule approach to a higher Sun Ye were in Plato's care before and saw nothing but shadows Come forth now into the open Light and see the Beauties of the Substances themselves See what a Dispensation the Gospel is Heretofore a little Grace and a great deal of wrath Now all Grace and no Wrath Heretofore a little Rule a Law Form a Temporal Law of Wrath Now a vast Direction a high Tribunal an Eternal Law of Grace Heretofore Cursing now Blessing Heretofore Threatnings and Fears now Promises and Hopes Heretofore a Law that could wound now a Law that can cure A Law that could kill now a Law that can make alive Never such a Dispensation as this Nothing done by judgments and Fears but all by Mercies and Love that casteth out Fears Transition This is the Reformation that is so welcome to the World that for so many Ages was longed for The Consolation so long waited for The Hope of all the Ends of the Earth and of them that remain in the Broad Sea The Fourth BOOK OF THE GOSPEL OR New Testament The CONTENTS Law changed Priesthood changed Sacrifices Gospel a Covenant of Faith God may change the Law Law advanced to Spirit Types Secret of Christ understood by degrees Divine Dispensations Creation Fall Promise Faithful Vnfaithful Gentiles feared God Law written Rites why commanded Civil Law Rule Outward Service trusted in Prophets sent Christ sent Jews Idolaters before Christ time Jews destroyed Gentiles called Old Religion antiquated Aaron's Priesthood Christ's Priesthood Typical Redemption from typical sins Real Redemption from real sins Salvation of all Men. No more Changes TITLE I. Of the Reformation AND it was high time for a Reformation and it brought mighty Changes with it and all for the better 1. Because the Priesthood was changed Heb. 7.12 Law changed Priesthood changed there was a necessity of a change also of the Law for the Law made nothing perfect but the bringing in of a better Covenant did Of this the Prophets foretold Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will make a New Covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my Covenant they brake although I was a Husband unto them saith the Lord But this is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel After those daies saith the Lord I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People For they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother saying know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sin no more I will not reprove thee for thy Sacrifices Ps 50.8 c. or for thy burnt Offerings I will take no Bullock out of thine house Sacrifices nor Hee-goat out of thy fold c. Offer thy God thanksgiving and pay thy vows to the most High c. For thou desirest not Sacrifice else would I give it Ps 51.16 c. thou delightest not in burnt Offerings The Sacrifices of God are a troubled Spirit a broken and contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Sacrifice and Burnt offering thou didst not desire but mine eyes hast thou opened Ps 40.6 Burnt offering and Sin offering hast thou not required Then said I Loe I come in the volume of the Book it is written of me I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy Law is within my heart To what purpose is the multitude of your Sacrifices unto me Is 1.11 c. I am full of the Burnt offerings of Rams and the fat of Beasts and I delight not in the blood of Bullocks or of Lambs or of Hee-goats When ye
the World are blessed The CONTENTS What the Old Testament contains What the New Testament contains Gospel a Testament rather than a Covenant TITLE III. Of the Gospel a Testament FOR contemplation of this New Estate leaving the Wisdom of the Gentiles take but a short view of the Glories of the Old Testament so far out-shined by the lustre and brightness of the New The Old Testament held forth these things What the Old Testament contains 1. Legacies or Gifts devised thereby which were earthly and temporal as Canaan's Land with plenty peace honour and long life therein 2. Conditions Precepts or Laws such as were the Rites or Moralities therein 3. A Mediator or Executor who was Moses who dying before he had finished his office Joshuah succeeded him and gave the People possession of the Promised Land the People being first subdued by the Sword 4. Legataries Abraham and his Seed the Israelites 5. Publishing by Angels God's Representatives declaring his Will Act. 7.53 Gal. 3.19 6. Proof by Thunderings and Lightnings and the sound of a Trumpet with many Terrours upon the burning smoaking and trembling Mount Sinai to the heart-aking of all the Spectators and Hearers Exod. 19.16 Heb. 12.18 7. Writing of the Moralities of that Testament upon Tables of Stone by God Ex. 32.16 The Ceremonies and Penalties in a Book by Moses Ex. 24.4 8. Confirmation to be of force by the death of Calves and Goats Exod. 24.5 Heb. 9.19 For all Testaments are of force by the death of the Testator or some body for them if men should make such a Law as God did by the substitution of the blood of Beasts for that purpose The New Testament comprehends these things 1. Predestination or Purpose or good Pleasure of Will in God What the New Testament contains before the World to make a just Disposition of things to be or done in time and to be had and enjoyed to all Eternity 2. Declaration or Nuncupation to Jesus Christ the Son of God and Heir apparent of all things and sole Executor to his Father This Will I say was first Nuncupative or by Word of mouth declaring the full mind of the Testatour as a Will Parol made to Christ the Word and Wisdom of God that came from the bosom of the Father and revealed him Afterwards it was written by some of Christ's Apostles and other Divine Persons to whom he taught it on earth and from heaven as he had received it and they also preached what was revealed unto them to all the World 3. Legacy or Inheritance which is Blessedness and in order thereunto Forgiveness of sins the Gift of the Spirit and the Resurrection of the Body Which said Blessedness is a firm Estate in Heaven free from all Evil and full of all Good incorruptible reserved for us in the Heavens 4. Condition Resipiscence or Holiness possible and accepted though not perfect yet made perfect through Christ I say possible so made by God or else if the Condition had been impossible the Disposition had been void and unjust as all Impossible Conditions are and therefore such Testaments are null and void 5. Executor Jesus Christ who is a Mediatour between God and Man For every Executor mediates between the Testatour and the Legataries because the Legacies came from the Testatour first to the Heir or Executor as we now speak and by the means of the Executor they are conveyed to the Legataries who may not take them of their own accord with their own hands but must demand or sue for them from the hands of the Executor or otherwise they have no power no right to receive or enjoy them 6. Legataries instituted of God are All Believers In all Testaments for Pious causes the Legataries are instituted by appellative or common and not by their proper Names for then no Testament was able to contain them As when a Benefactour bequeaths such or such gifts to all the honest and laborious Poor in such a Town all that are honest and laborious Poor in that place may challenge their Legacies by virtue of that Devise neither can any of them so qualified be excluded or denied their dues It is therefore to be noted that this VVill of God is such a Will and that therein there is no Dereliction or Praeterition at all but that it is like an Universal Pardon proclaimed to all that will come in and accept thereof upon the Condition expressed Math. 12.18 Gal. 3.15 7. Proof by a Voice from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Hear ye him Besides many and great Miracles 8. Confirmation by the Death of Christ substituted to take Flesh and die for God who could not die This is my Blood of the New Testament Math. 26.8 v. Heb. 9.15 All which Dispensations afford just matter of wonder adoration and praise of the manifold Wisdom and Grace of God Gospel a Testament rather than a Covenant The Gospel therefore appears to be a Testament to all intents and purposes much rather than a Covenant or any other Deed as may be demonstrated by these Testimonies and Reasons The very words used by Christ himself are a sufficient proof if there were no more which he uttered a little before his death Math. 26 28. This is my Blood of the New Testament which was shed for many for the Remission of sins And the repetition of the sense of them by St. Paul 1 Cor. 11.25 This Cup is the New Testament in my Blood David in the Spirit Then said I Loe I come In the volume of the Book it is written of me that I should fulfil thy will O God I am content to do it Sacrifice and Burnt offering thou wouldest not have but a Body hast thou prepared me Then said I Loe I come to do thy will O God Heb. 10.5 7 c. he taketh away the First Covenant that he may establish the second v. 29. That great Shepheard of the sheep through the Blood of the Everlasting Covenant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used all along and the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 never in the Old or New Testament These are the two Covenants the one from the Mount Sinai which gendreth to bondage Gal. 44. c. This is the Covenant which I will make with the house of Israel I will put my Law c. In that he saith a New Covenant Heb. 8.10 c. he hath made the first Old now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away By so much was Jesus made Surety of a better Covenant Heb. 7.22 established upon better Promises Heb. 9.15 The Mediatour of the New Testament that by the means of Death for the redemption of the Transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the Promise of Eternal Inheritance For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the Death of the Testatour For a Testament
is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all while the Testatour liveth Whereupon neither the first Testament was dedicated without Blood for when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the People according to the Law he took the Blood of Calves and Goats with Water and Scarlet-wool and Hysop and sprinkled both the Book and the People saying This is the Blood of the Testament which God hath enjoyned unto you Moreover he sprinkled with Blood both the Tabernacle and all the Vessels of the Ministery And almost all things are by the Law purged with Blood v. Gen. 15.9 and without shedding of Blood there is no Remission c. Where note that here in this place and in Math. 26.28 1 Cor. 11.25 and 2 Cor. 3.6 the Translatours use the word Testament altogether but in the other places where the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is they translate it Covenant As for instance But now he hath obtained a more excellent Ministery Heb. 8.6 by how much also he is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better Promises Brethren I speak after the manner of men If it be but a Man's Covenant yet if it be confirmed Gal. 3.15 no man disanulleth or addeth thereto Zech. 9.11 By the Blood of thy Covenant I have sent forth thy Prisoners out of the Pit wherein is no Water v. Gen. 15.9 We are Ministers of the New Testament and not of the Old c. 2 Cor. 3.6 In all which places and many more of the Old Testament the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is constantly vsed by the Septuagint and as constantly by Christ and his Apostles in the New Testament which properly amongst all Authors signifies a Testament Disposition Law Institution but most properly a Testament and most improperly a Covenant Yet I have used and shall do all along the name of Covenant Testamentary Covenant because often so translated in our Bibles and because the New Testament or Gospel doth manifestly contain in it a Covenant as all Conditional Testaments do So that I contend not about words nor do I easily differ in substantial things but readily take in every Truth that the Analogy of Truth is able to bear giving every thing its due and fulfilling all Righteousness for Truth and Peace sake So the Gospel is confessed to be a Testament and a Covenant both that is a Testamentary Covenant and all is well The CONTENTS Evidences Promises Earnest Oath Security Donation Testament a single Will A Last Will. In force alone Confirmed by Death Testament the noblest Deed. Solemn Nuncupative Declarative Witnesses Plainness Heir Finishing by Hand and Seal In giving all In dying Testament most solemn Most liberal Marriage A near Vnion Acquisition of Goods Love of God Love of Saints Communion Adoption Heir the most Beloved Definition of the Gospel Definition of a Testament Testatour Appellative name of Believers Consent Testament of Father to Children Testamentum ad pias Causas No Praeterition No inofficious Testament TITLE IV. Of a Testament the best Deed. BUT still a Testament is the best Deed rather than a Covenant for these Reasons Because a Testament is the greatest Settlement and the strongest Deed for the Conveyance or Assurance of any Estate that can be made by God or Man Evidences Other Evidences and Assurances there are and may be As Promises 1. By Promise Thus the Inheritance is said to be by Promise unto which they have a true Right that believe or accept it as it is in all Promises till which acceptation they have no effect to the Offered neither is there any obligation upon the Offerer or Promiser 2. By Earnest Earnest Thus God gives the Earnest of his Holy Spirit for the future Inheritance In whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of Promise which is the Earnest of our Inheritance Eph. 1.13.14 until the Redemption of the purchased Possession unto the praise of his Glory Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God Eph 4.30 whereby ye are sealed unto the day of Redemption 3. By Oath When God made a Promise to Abraham Oath Heb. 6.13 c. because he could not swear by a Greater he sware by himself And men verily swear by the Greater and an Oath for confirmation is the end of all Strife God willing more abundantly to shew unto the Heirs of Promise the immutability of his Counsel confirmed it by an Oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong Consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us which hope we have as an Anchor of the Soul both sure and stedfast c. 1 Cor. 1.20 All the Promises of God in Christ are Yea and Amen 4. By Covenant or Convention between two Parties a League or Pact by mutual agreement upon terms 5. By Security or Satisdation Security by Pledge or Power to engage for the performance of Covenant 6. By Donation or Gift for Death's sake or otherwise Donation But still a Testament is the strongest Deed and in particular of more force than any Covenant can be SECTION I. 1. Because a Testament is the single will and pleasure of one Person Testament a single Will who is Dominus in solidum totius Patrimonii absolute Lord of the whole Patrimony who hath full right to convey without any leave or confirmation from another he being full Proprietary and having Jus Allodii dependent upon none But a Covenant is a double Will of two at the least whether Persons or Bodies Politick that have Partial or Concurrent Rights to convey to each other SECTION II. 2. Because a Testament is a Last Will A Last Will. and therefore presumed to be the best and to be of most force Non quod ultimo placuit illud amplius displicere non potest The Last Will is the true will and never to be altered So are not Covenants for they are not Last Wills but preceding Wills and are changeable every day and are as daily broken by them that made them which a Testatour cannot possibly do because being once dead he cannot disanul his Last Will which he hath confirmed by his Death Gal. 3.15 3. In force alone Because a Testament of all other Wills which were ambulatory doth only stand in force and all others repugnant thereunto do vanish and come to nothing Whereas Covenants though they be many yet all may remain in full force together SECTION III. Confirmed by Death 4. Because a Testament is confirmed by death only of the Testatour and no other way whereas Covenants are ratified by signing and sealing only before Witnesses and if Personal merely are voided by death SECTION IV. 2. Reas Testament the noblest Deed. Solemn The Scriptures are a Testament rather than a Covenant because
born of the flesh is flesh but afterwards they are made Spirit For that which is born of the Spirit is Spirit Joh. 3. And except a man be born again he cannot enter into the Kingdom of heaven which is the first Resurrection And again Christians must first die as all Flesh must do and afterwards must live as all Spirits must do And as the Soul is alwaies Spirit but not fully sanctified nor fully glorified till after the Bodie 's Resurrection so the Flesh is alwaies Flesh but yet made spiritual by Regeneration but not fully Spiritual till the full Regeneration of Glory after death which is the second Resurrection For thiis Mortal must put on Immortality and this Corruptible must put on Incorruption and this Earth must put on Heaven and this Flesh must put on Spirit and this Terrestrial must be made Coelestial for as we have born the Image of the Earthly so we shall also bear the Image of the Heavenly There are Natural Bodies and there are Spiritual Bodies but first that which is Natural and then that which is Spiritual So without Death Temporal we cannot be prepared for Life Eternal For except we fall we cannot rise and except we rise from the Earth we cannot ascend into Heaven and except we ascend into Heaven we cannot enter into the Inheritance of Glory SECTION I. Christ's Ascension Christ therefore after his death and burial ascended in his own Person far above all Heavens that he might as a King Priest and Prophet fully execute the Will of his Father and our Father which is in Heaven Now he that ascended Eph. 4.9 what is it but that he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth And he that descended is the same also that ascended up far above all Heavens that he might fill all things or more truly that he might fulfil all things that is by a Plenary Administration and discharging all the Gifts and Legacies devised by God For when he ascended up on high Eph. 4.8 he led Captivity captive and gave gifts unto men And for the preparation of his Church Militant that they may be Triumphant He from thence gave some to be Apostles Spirit 's Mission Eph 4.11 12. and some to be Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministery for the edifying of the Body of Christ till we all come in the unity of Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Now to do these things is to execute and fulfil the Will of God Wherefore it behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make Reconciliation for the sins of the People For in that he himself hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted Forasmuch then as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood Heb. 2.14 he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the Devil and deliver them who through fear of death were all their life time subject to bondage And for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the Transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the Promise i. e. the Promised Possession of Eternal Inheritance This Doctrine was taught by Christ himself Joh. 16.7 Nevertheless I tell you the truth it is expedient for you that I go away for if I go not away the Comforter will not come unto you but if I depart I will send him unto you And after his death he said Thus it is written and thus it behoved Christ to suffer and to rise from the dead the third day Luk. 24.46 And that Repentance and Remission of sins should be preached in his Name among all Nations beginning at Jerusalem Thus Christ died for the Testification Coroll Confirmation and Execution of the New Testament and consequently for the Remission of sins Mortification Justification Sanctification Resurrection and Glorification of all the Scripti haeredes whose Names are written in the Book of Life The CONTENTS Spiritual Lively In force for ever Literal Deadly Abrogated for ever Consequences Cautions Instructions Exhortations TITLE VII Of the Testaments compared THis last and greatest and best Disposition of God's Grace to all the World called the New Testament that we may yet the better understand let us compare it with the former and lower way of God's Disposition to the Jews only called the Old Testament as it was established by the Law given upon Mount Sinai in these two points The New Testament is Spiritual lively and in force for ever The Old Testament is Literal deadly and abrogated for ever SECTION I. Spiritual I. The New Testament is Spiritual lively and in force for ever 1. Spiritual 1. Because it is perfect agreeing to the Spirit of God which the other was not being imperfect and Carnal 2. Because it conveyeth Spiritual gifts and graces plentifully which the other did not 3. Because it was written by the Spirit in the Tables of the heart whereas the other was only in Tables of Stone Lively 2. Lively 1. Because it creates the life of Grace and Glory In force for ever 3. In force for ever Because it is God's last Will and ratified by the Death of Christ and therefore unalterable SECTION II. Literal II. The Old Testament is Literal deadly and abrogated for ever 1. Literal Because Carnal rigorous weak rude and beggarly as Rudiments and the lowest principles of Morality and Ritual worship 2. Deadly Deadly Because working nothing but wrath and death making sin appear to be exceeding sinful and affording no Remedy against it 3 Abrogated for ever Abrogated for ever Because ordained only for a time as being shadowy and typical of Substances to come The Law made nothing perfect Heb. 7.19 but the coming in of a better Hope did The Gospel is the only true Service with which God is well pleased For God is a Spirit Joh. 4.24 and they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in Truth God will now be served in the newness of the Spirit Ro. 7.6 not in the oldness of the Letter Say not in thine heart Ro. 7.6 Who shall ascend into Heaven to bring Christ down from thence or who shall descend into the Deep to bring Christ again from the dead For the word is nigh unto thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart Ro. 10.6 The words that I speak unto you they are Spirit and Life Joh. 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickneth the Flesh profiteth nothing The Law of the Spirit of Life hath made
had shewed them his last Sign of Rising from the dead and had given power to his Apostles to work Wonders when they left the World he sent no more Angels nor Prophets nor did no more Signs or Wonders nor left no more Oracles but the Scriptures and minds of the Faithful enlightned by his Spirit to lead them into all Truth and to be with them to the end of the World Therefore we may not expect any Angel or Prophet nor any Thundrings or Lightnings Sword Famine or Pestilence Peace Plenty Health or Prosperity particular or general Judgments or signal Deliverances upon any such account as formerly to manifest thereby God's special favour or wrath to particular Persons or Nations in general as to their Spiritual or Eternal condition For God goes another way to work more free easie natural and rational to the Souls of men and made sweetly convincing and attracting to a more sublime and holy Worship suitable and pleasing to the Majesty of Heaven and therefore we are not to be frighted by Judgments nor allured by Prosperities into Religion as Children but informed convinced and perswaded like men by sound reason and understanding through any good or bad condition in this life unto the hopes of a glorious and blessed Immortality It becometh not Christians adult that know their Fathers Will to be in fear and bondage all their life long because of temporal Plagues nor to be ravished with temporal Joys but to live above them all by faith and not by sight as Pilgrims and Strangers here declaring by their Conversation that they have no abiding City below but that they seek one that is above whose builder and maker is God Eternal in the Heavens The Fifth BOOK OF A MEDIATOR The CONTENTS Transition Mediator Reconciliation Moses TITLE I. Of the Name and Thing THE Dispositions of the Will and Estate in God's Testament are to pass through the hands of the Mediators or Executors of them both Transition who are Moses and Christ The word MEDIATOR is rarely Mediator if at all found in any Heathen Author being proper to the Holy Scriptures only Philo the Jew uses it whose form of writing resembles the Old Testament so familiar to that Nation The said Philo calls the High Priest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Jews had a High-Priest as a Mediator between two that by some middle Person they might appease God God dispenses his Graces to Men using as it were the Ministery and Subserviency of some certain Person Reconciliation CHRIST first obtained of God that to Mankind fallen into heinous Sins God would neither shut up the door of Repentance nor refuse to grant pardon to the Penitent which is that first Conciliation that was procured for all Mankind Rom 5.10 When we were Enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son All things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.18 19. and hath given to us the Ministery of Reconciliation to wit that God was in Christ reconciling the World unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them c. So Job was a Mediator to God for his two Friends My Servant Job shall pray for you for him will I accept Job 42.8 The great Benefits that accrue to the World by Christ are not only obtained by his Prayers but by his vast obedience unto death who gave himself a Ransom for all Eph. 1.10 11. to be testified in due time That in the Dispensation of the fulness of time he might gather together in one all things in Christ In whom also we have obtained an Inheritance being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will A Mediator therefore is an Arbiter Herald or Messenger that intervenes between two Persons to relate their mutual minds and meanings to each other and to propound Articles of peace and agreement between them that are at variance or to propose and declare Rules and Laws for both Parties to consent unto Moses Moses was the Mediator or Intercessor between God and the Israelites to make and finish up a Covenant between them and this Covenant was the Law Gal. 3.19 20. Ordained by Angels in the hand of this Mediator Now a Mediator is not a Mediator of one but God is one Note that though the Law was ordained by Angels yet it was not immediately delivered by them to the People but by the intervention or means of the Mediator Moses who passed between the Angels and the People God gave the inheritance of Canaan to Abraham immediately by Promise but the Law that was added because of Transgressions four hundred and thirty years after till the Seed should come to whom the Promise was made was delivered by the ordination of Angels and the Mediation of Moses 1. Because Law was a Terror but the Inheritance was a matter of Grace As is the manner of great Princes to bestow their Graces and Favours by themselves but to execute matter of Law and Justice by their Officers and Judges Moses was the Receiver of the Law from the Angels and the Repeater of it to the People three daies together for the Commandments thereof but the Judgments were published by Moses only upon the Peoples request because of the terror of the Angels voice who first wrote them in a Book and afterward read them openly to all the Congregation So for the Ceremonies Moses had a Pattern delivered unto him in the Mount Exod. 22. Exod. 25.9 Deut. 5 5. Act. 6.11 called therefore the Law of Moses and Moses We have heard blasphemous words against Moses ye have one that accuseth you even Moses in whom ye trust So the Archangel was the Minister of God to the People not the Mediator 2. Because the Archangel sustained the very Person and Majesty of God and therefore spake not as an Embassador or Messenger for every Embassadour distinguisheth his own Person from the Person of his Master that sent him and speaketh not in his own name but in the name of the Prince or State that imployed him whom he also represents But the Archangel spake as if God himself were present without other Angels to attend him Whereas it is said that the Commandments were delivered by the hand of Moses it is as much as to say by his Ministery because the Hand is the greatest Instrument of working Exod. 32.15 and 34.29 So the two Tables are said to be written by the Finger of God and were delivered into Moses's hand But the Judgments and Ceremonies which made up the greater bulk of the Law so passed through Moses's hand as that he wrote them in a Book The hand writing of Ordinances which was against us Exod. 24.4 Heb. 9.19 Deut. 31.9 10. Col. 2.14 and contrary unto us was nailed to the Cross of Christ So they were written by Moses the Mediator of the first Testament and cancelled by
about with Powder and Shot to a man of War Farewell THE Second Volume OF THE ESTATE OF GOD Concerning things to be had of God The First BOOK OF RIGHTS The CONTENTS Transition Testament Things Method God's Donation Things to be had Things to be done Free-will Right TITLE I. Of Things A Testament is a just Disposition of things to be had or done Transition Testament and the things disposed to be done are the conditions of the things disposed to be had And because the conditions or things disposed to be done are contingent for daily experience shews that many of them are not done therefore the Legacies or things disposed to be had are contingent for daily experience shews that they are not had Because where precepts or things devised to be done are not done there Legacies or things devised to be had are not had And this is a just Disposition The object of God's Predestination or purpose to dispose are not Persons only but things also with relation to persons and it is all one in effect to predestinate the person to have or do a thing and to predestinate a thing to be had or done by a person For there is no difference between these two dispositions I purpose such a Mannour for my Son John and I purpose my Son John to have such a Mannour SECT III. Things All Entities or Beings are Things Rights Persons and Actions that is things to be had or done or actually had or done i. e. Corporeal or Incorporeal things by all Persons The best Disposition that can be made by God or Man is of an Inheritance because an Inheritance is an universal right to the whole Estate of the Testator And such is the Inheritance of the Estate of God by Jesus Christ For the gift of God is Eternal Life through Jesus Christ our Lord in whom we are heirs and co-heirs for all things are ours and we are Christ's and Christ is God's and if God hath given us Christ How shall he not with him also freely give us all things Now because by the works of the Law which is the first Disposition by way of Testament no flesh living can be justified to the Inheritance of Eternal Life which was by promise therefore Justification is without the works of the Law by faith in the promises of the Gospel which is the second Disposition by way of Testament So then Legal Righteousness by works is altogether insufficient as to give us any Right or Titles to the Kingdom of Heaven and Evangelical Righteousness of Faith is the only means to obtain the Inheritance of Promise SECT IV. Method The Nature therefore and Differences of the Old and New Testament being understood a way is fairly laid open to the true understanding of the great and so much controverted point of Justification which is very easie in it self but hath been made obscure and grievous by the perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and reprobate as concerning the right apprehension of true and saving Faith First therefore to treat of Rights and then of justification to the best of Rights in the best Testament of God to the best Inheritance will be the natural method herein to be followed After this order we will now begin speaking first of Things then of Persons then of Rights belonging to them and last of all of the Actions of those Persons for the obtaining of those Rights in those things that belong to those Persons for an Estate consists not only of Material goods of Lands Persons Cattel or Utensils or things immoveable and moveable but of immaterial goods as Rights to Lands Persons Cattel or Utensils or things immoveable or moveable And Actions Pleas Services or Priviledges in all these which are both beneficiary and honorary and burdensome parts of mens Estates of all which they may make a voluntary Disposition SECT V. God is an Eternal Being of all things in himself God's Donation and from him all things have their being and by him they are preserved and governed All things beside God are either Spiritual or Corporeal with or without life have or have no end and they all serve for the glory of their Creatour These things thus framed upheld and ruled by God are the Heavens and the Earth with the Waters and all that belong unto them The use and benefit of them all together with the regiment of some he hath given to the Sons of men Besides all this he hath of his abundant grace and bounty given and granted eternal blessedness to them in his Son the Principal Heir of all things that by him they might be made the Sons of God and Heirs together with him of the Inheritance of the Kingdom of Heaven In order to this great donation we must consider the Things to be had by it and the Things to be done for it SECT VI. I. Things to be had The Things to be had by it are 1. Present all Spiritual and Temporal Things 2. Future all Celestial and Eternal Things For Godliness hath the promise of this life and that which is to come and all things are ours whether the world or life or death or things present or things to come and we are Christ's and Christ is God's and God is all in all SECT VII II. Things to be done The Things to be done for it are 1. Natural to understand desire remember put forth and exercise the faculties of Soul and Body in God's Service 2. Spiritual to receive and use higher illustrations affections memorials and aids for the exercising of Soul and Body in Divine Faith Hope and Love Now there is great reason that where there is something to be had there should be something to be done for it But especially in gifts of this nature where all things are to be had it is honourable for the giver and reasonable to the receiver that some small thing should be done which can no ways be commensurable nor proportionable to the liberality of the donor and those Temporal Spiritual and Eternal things bestowed by him yet at least in acknowledgment and gratitude they are justly and honourably expected and required by the benefactor at the hands of the beneficiary Obj. It is objected that all is given by the free-grace of God and nothing to be done by us Answ All things are given indeed freely because Christ is given but not absolutely without any condition for such a gift is not in wisdom and honour to give all and expect no return no not so much as of Love and Obedience As for Recompense and Requital there can be none in the Receiver nor is expected or needed from the Giver But every gift ought to be disposed prudently else it is no true bounty but waste and prodigality And all such gifts are thrown away from which there ariseth no true benefit to the Receiver nor honour to the Giver Now God doth all things most freely and with the greatest love imaginable
of Faith Hope Love c. for the applying those rights to our selves For all actions in Law are for acquiring particular or universal good things or for keeping and encreasing them and if lost to recover them in a judicial way But of these things the Law speaks at large Lastly Actions are considered as 1. Natural in the Body personal 2. Civil in the State or Society humane Social 3. Religious in the Church 1. Private for selves 2. Common in a Body publick The Second BOOK OF TITLES The CONTENTS Transition Vnjust legally Vnjust morally Vnjust jurally Oppressed Blemished Distressed Tainted TITLE I. Of a Sinner Transition WE have hitherto fairly arrived from the consideration of Rights disposed of by God's Testament to the Understanding of Titles that those Persons have to those Rights so bequeathed unto them The Title to justify the Legataries of God to their rights is Faith from whence they are denominated Faithful Righteous or Just and they that want Faith have no title to these Rights and are therefore called unfaithful unrighteous or unjust A Sinner is a person unjust or unrighteous three waies Legally Morally or Jurally SECT I. Unjust legally quoad leges that is a Sinner or transgressor Unjust legally that does not that right which he ought to do by the rules of the Laws and Statutes such a one hath no right Such Sinners were our first Parents who for their transgression of God's Law in Paradise were the first sinners such was David in the matter of Bathsheba and Uriah and Jeroboam that made Israel to sin such were all the Israelites that were idolaters and otherwise guilty of all the breaches against the Laws of Moses and such were the Gentiles as guilty of the breach of the unwritten Law of God And these kind of sinners who were transgressors of the Law are opposed to those who were legally righteous by doing that right which the Law required SECT II. Unjust morally quoad mores Unjust morally that is a Sinner or Unrighteous in not doing that right which he might should could or ought to do by the rules of Morality Equity Decency Charity and Mercy The fact that constitutes or makes a Man a sinner or morally unrighteous is not an act of his that is unlawful in respect of any Law but an act that is not honest and equitable in respect of Decency Charity and Mercy Such a sinner was Cham that discover'd and mocked at his Father's nakedness such a sinner was Nabal that was rude unthankful and unkind to deny provision being able to David and his Men that had protected him and his night and day Math. 18.28 such a sinner was the wicked servant who when his Lord had forgiven him a debt of ten thousand Talents would neither forgive nor so much as forbear his fellow-servant a debt of an hundred pence Thus he might do in Law but not in Conscience Morality Equity or Charity Such a sinner was Dives in being vastly profuse upon himself and the Rich and sordidly penurious to the Poor such sinners were the Priest and Levite Luc. 10.31 that neglected the Man stripped and wounded and half deed such sinners are the damned that neither entertained nor clothed nor visited the poor members of Christ that were strangers naked sick and imprisoned Math. 25.42 SECT III. Unjust Jurally quoad Jura that is a sinner or unrighteous Uniust Jurally because calamitous and miserable who either hath no right at all or not that right which he should have or might have had by being debarred or deprived of that right which others had and he might have and should have by Law and is condemned to be and remain in the state of an offender to suffer losse shame or pain which is not properly a punishment for no Man is to be punished for having no right or for quitting it much less for losing it against his will but a misery and affliction This woful and wretched person becomes so not by any act of his own but either by the act of some adversary that chargeth him with that sin whereof he is not guilty or by the act of some Law or curse that burtheneth him for that sin whereof some other person is guilty to suffer affliction for it as if he were guilty of punishment This Man is no reall but a quasi sinner not actively but passively sinfull Rom. 5.19 constituted and made a sinner i. e. imputed or accounted a sinner SECT IV. Of these Jural sinners there are four sorts Oppressed 1. The Oppressed who unjustly against Law and Justice are calumniated criminated and condemned as sinners and transgressors Thus after David's death in case Adoniah had prevailed Bathsheba and Solomon should have been accounted sinners Otherwise it shall come to pass when my Lord the King shall sleep with his Fathers that I and my Son Solomon shall be counted offenders or sinners as in the margin Thus Naboth de facto was made a sinner for really he was none yet by the Letter of Jezabel he was predestinated ordained and appointed to be a blasphemer 1 K. 21.9 For She wrote in the Letters saying Proclaim a Fast and set Naboth on high among the People and set two Men Sons of Belial before him to bear witness against him saying Thou didst blaspheme God and the King and then carry him out and stone him that he may die In dangerous times when the wicked lay wait to intangle the innocent a word may make a Man an offender Is 29.21 All that watch for iniquity are cut off that make a Man an offender for a word and lay a snare for him that reproveth Thus Christ though he were true God and true Man without all guile yet he was made a sinner and suffered as a transgressor He poured out his Soul unto death Is 53.12 and was numbred with the transgressors For what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his Son in the likeness of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh Rom. 8.3 For he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 SECT V. Blemished 2. The Blemished or tainted who justly according to the Law are disabled and debarred from the Common Rights and Priviledges of Men. As a Bastard who being no real transgressor against the Law is by an Act of the Law made a quasi Transgressor whereby he is debarred from the right of his birth and doomed for a sinner before he is born before he hath or could do good or evill And as soon as he is conceived he is conceived a sinner because his unlawful conception renders his Parents actually sinners or sinners legally for their unlawful copulation and himself a quasi Transgressor a sinner jurally to lose his Birth-right when he is born and by God's