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A29699 Paradice opened, or, The secreets, mysteries, and rarities of divine love, of infinite wisdom, and of wonderful counsel laid open to publick view also, the covenant of grace, and the high and glorious transactions of the Father and the Son in the covenant of redemption opened and improved at large, with the resolution of divers important questions and cases concerning both covenants ... : being the second and last part of The golden key / by Thomas Brooks ...; Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2 Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing B4953; ESTC R11759 249,733 284

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Mordecai's name was Registred in the Chronicles of Persia Ejih 6. 1 2 3. And Iamerlane had always by him a Catalogue of his best Servants and their good deserts which he daily perused Judge But Sixthly and lastly There is a Book of Life Rev. 20. 12. And another book was opened which is the book of life the Book of Life is the Book of all those that were elected and redeemed to life through Christ Jesus This Book of Life containeth a Register of such particular persons in whose Salvation God from all Eternity determined to have his mercy glorified and for whom Christ merited Faith Repentance and perseverance that they should repent believe and be finally saved The book of life shall be opened that is to say the Decrees of God will be then published and made known which now are sealed up in his breast and locked up in his Archives Then it will be seen who are appointed to life for the glorifying of God's free rich and Soveraign Grace and whom he purposed to leave in their sins and to perish for ever for the exaltation of his Justice 'T is called A Book of Life not that God hath need of a Book but to note the certainty of Predestination viz. that God knows all and every of the Elect even as men know a thing which for memory's sake they set down in writing This Book of Life shall be opened in the great day because then it shall appear who were Elect who Reprobates who truly believed in Christ who not who worshipped God in spirit and in truth and who not who walked with God as Noah and who not who set up God as the object of their fear who not who followed the Lamb whither ever he went and who not who were sincere and who not who preferred Christ above ten thousand worlds and who preferred Barrabas before Jesus and their Farms and their Oxen and their Mat. 25. 32. Swine yea their very Lusts before a Saviour a Redeemer Ezek. 9. 4 6. who are Sheep and who are Goats who are Sons and who are Slaves who have mourned for their own sins and the sins of the time and who they are that have made a sport of sin c. Of this Book of Life you read often in Scripture Phil. 4. 3. And I intreat thee also true yoke-fellow help those women which laboured with me in the Gospel with Clement also and with other my fellow-labourers whose names are in the book of life Vorstius thinks it a speech taken from the custome of souldiers or Cities in which the chosen Souldiers or Citizens are by name written in a certain Book or Roll. This Book or Roll is called here The Book of Life because therein are written all the Elect who are ordained to Eternal Life Rev. 3. 5. He that overcometh the same shall be cloathed in white raiment and I will not blot out his name out of the book of life In this Book of Life all the just that live by faith are written The Elect are certain of Joh. 10. 28 29 30 31. eternal life they shall never perish nor none can ever pluck them out of the Father's hand nor out of Christ's hand God is said to have Books Metaphorically The Holy God by an Ambr●pepatheria speaketh to our capacity for he doth all things without the help of Books he needs no Books to help his Memory he does all things by his infinite Wisdom Eternal Foreknowledge Counsel Government and Judgment but thus men cannot do for whatsoever is done in their Councils Cities Families Contracts c. for memory's sake is set down in writing that so as there is occasion they may look it over and call to mind such things as they desire Mark not to have our names blotted out of the Book of Life is to have them always remain therein that is to enjoy Eternal Glory and what can the soul desire more The names of the Elect are written in the Book of Life they do not obtain Salvation by chance but were elected of God to life and happiness before the Foundation of the World Now their names being once written in the Book of Life they shall never never be blotted out of that Book In the Book of Predestination there is not one blot to be found the Salvation of the Elect is most sure and certain Rev. 13. 8. And all that dwell on the earth shall worship him whose names are not written in the book of life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world The names of the Elect are said to be written in the Book of Life by an usual Metaphor for we commonly write down the names of such as are dear unto us that we may continually remember them So God having in his Eternal Council elected some to Salvation hath written their names in the Book of Life as our Saviour tells us Rejoyce because your Luk. 10. 20. names are written in heaven Some understand the Metaphor of the Sonship of the Elect so that to be written in the Book of Life shews that they are heirs of Glory for we know that such are to inherit whose names are written in the last Will and Testament of men Of this Book of Life you may further read Rev. 17. 8. Rev. 20. 15. Rev. 21. 27. Rev. 22. 19. Now from this Book of Life that shall be opened in the great day when the other Books shall be opened as hath been shewed every sincere Christian may form up this Eleventh Plea as to the Ten Scriptures that are in the Margin that refer to the great Eccles 9. 11. cap. 12. 14. Mat. 12. 14. cap. 18 23. Luk. 16. 2. Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. H●b 9. 27. cap. 13. 17. 1 Pet. ● 5. Dan. 9. 24. Coles 2. 14. day of account or t 〈…〉 man's particular account Most Holy and Blessed Lord cast thine eye upon the Book of Election and there thou wilt find my name written Now my name being written in that Book I am exempt from all condemnation and interested in the great Salvation my name being written in the Book of Life I am secured from coming into the Judgment of Reprobation or Condemnation Joh. 5. 14. Revel 21. 27. Jesus Christ who hath written my name in the Book of Life hath made up my acounts for me he hath satisfied thy Justice and pacified thy Wrath and born the Curse and purchased my Pardon and put upon me an everlasting Righteousness and given me my Quietus est he has crost out the black lines of my sins with the red lines of his blood he has cancelled all the Bonds wherein I stood obliged to Divine Justice I further plead O Blessed Lord That there is an immutable Connexion betwixt being written in this Book of Life and the obtaining of Eternal Life and if the Connexion betwixt being written in this Book of Life and the obtaining of Eternal Life were not peremptory what reason could there be of opening this Book in the day of Judgment The Book of Life is a Book of Sovereign Grace upon which lies the weight of my Salvation my happiness my all and therefore by that Book I desire to stand or fall Well saith the Lord I cannot but accept of this Plea as holy honourable just and righteous and therefore enter thou into the ioy of thy Lord inherit the Kingdom prepared for thee Mat. 25. 21 34. Thus by Divine Aslistance and by a special and a gracious hand of Providence upon me I have finished those select and important Cases of Conscience which I designed to speak to Soli Deo Gloria in Aeternum
gathered them And in the New Testament Christ sends his hearers to the Scriptures Joh. 5. 39. Search the Scriptures for in them ye think ye have eternal life and they are they which testifie of me The Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is here rendred search signifies a strict narrow curious diligent search we must search the Scripture as we would search for Gold or for some Precious Stones which we would f●in find we must search the Scriptures as Hunters seek and search out their Game The Scripture is so perfect a Rule that the most specious observances the most glorious performances the most exact worship is no way acceptable unto God if not directed in his word They may have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Colos 2. 23. A shew of Wisdom in Will-worship to the pleasing of men not to the honour of God God gave Moses a pattern for Exod. 25. 9. the making of the Tabernacle and David for the Temple and all Heb. 8 5. things were to be ordered and regulated according to this pattern God hath set us a perfect Rule of Worship in his Word and no Service pleaseth him but what is according to this Rule As our Joh. 4. 20 21. 22. Saviour told the woman of Samaria concerning the Samaritan Worship at Mount Gerazim and the Jewish Worship at Jerusalem That the Samaritans worshipped they know not what the Jews knew what they worshipped for Salvation was of the Jews Why so because the Jews had God's special direction and appointment of God's Word for their Worship and Service which the Samaritans had not All our Worship must be regulated by God's Will not our own Non ex arbitrio Deo servi●ndum sed ex imperio Not according to our own fancy but God's Command and Prescription I say of all humane invented Will-worship of God as Tertullian of the Heathen Worship Ex religione super s●itio compingitur eo irreligiosior quanto Ethnicus paratior Men in this are no better than laboriously superstitious taking pains to be irreligious And so the Apostle sends his hearers to the Scriptures 2 Pet. 1. 19 20 ●● as to a surer word than that of the Revelation all which speaks out the sufficiency of the Scripture to direct us in all matters of Divine Worship and in what ever else may help on the internal and eternal welfare of our precious and immortal souls That which bred the Popish Religion Superstition Idolatry and Pompous Worship was men's departing from the word and not cleaving to the word as a sufficient rule to direct them in all matters of worship and what woful mischiefs and miseries have been brought upon the people of the Lord in this Land and else where by men that make not the word the rule of their worship but cry up an outward pompous worship I have no mind to enumerate at this time But how will these vain men that accuse the holy Scriptures of insufficiency blush be ashamed and confounded when in the great day the Lord shall plead the excellency and vindicate the Sufficiency and Authority of his blessed Book in opposition to all the mixtures of men's Traditions with Divine Institutions Now they that suffer for asserting the holy Scriptures to be a sufficient rule to order guide and direct them in all matters of worship they have a good Cause and they suffer as Christians for well doing But They that are Assertors of the true God in opposition to the Idols of the Nations have a good Cause and they that suffer upon this account suffer as Christians for well doing Upon this foot the Christians under the Heathen Emperours in the primitive times suffered great things and are there none that suffer this day upon this account by the Romish Powers But Fifthly They who assert that God will not bear with mixtures in his worship and service but revenge himself upon the corrupters of his worship they have a good cause and they that suffer upon that account suffer as Christians for well doing All mixtures Isa 29. 13 14. Mat. 15. 3 6 8 9. debase the worship and service of God and makes the worship a vain worship as the mixing of water with wine is the debasing of the wine and the mixing of Tin with Silver or Brass with Gold is debasing of the Silver and Gold so for men to mix and mingle their Traditions and Inventions with God's Institutions is to debase the worship and service of God and to detract from the excellency and glory of it You know that the Kings and Princes of the world have most severely punished such who by their base mixtures have imbased their Coyn. And assuredly there is a day a coming when the King of Kings will most severely punish all such who have imbased his worship and service by mixing Humane Inventions and Romish Traditions with his holy Institutions Rev. 22. 18. For I testifie unto every man that heareth the words of the Prophecie of this book if any man shall add unto these things God shall add unto him the Plagues that are written in There will come a day when Jews Turks Papists shall pay dear for adding to the Scriptures this book And no wonder for what horrible pride presumption stoutness and baseness is it in foolish man to be so bold with the great God as to dare to mix any thing of his own with his worship and service which according to Divine Institution is so perfect and compleat God will never bear it to see men lay their Dirt upon his Gold and to put their Rags upon his Royal Robes Ah Christians 't is best to stand up for holy Ordinances and pure worship in opposition to all mixtures whatsoever Oh do not touch a polluted worship do not plead and contend for a polluted worship but let Baal plead for Baal and though all 1 King 18. 21. Rev. 13. 3 4. 6 17. cap. 14 9 11. the world should wander after the Beast yet do not you wander after the Beast and though every forehead should have the mark of the Beast upon it yet do you abhor his mark and whatever else it be that does but smell and savour of the Beast 'T is a very dangerous thing for any Mortals to be adding to God's worship and word there is a horrible curse that hangs over the heads of all such that add or detract from the blessed Scriptures If falsifiers of Coin are liable unto the Civil Curse of the Law how much more shall the Anathema of Eternal Damnation be inflicted upon the corrupters of God's word and worship To them that add thereto God will add all the Plagues of this book to wit the seven last Plagues and cast them into the lake of sire and brimsion● Rev. 19. with the Dragon the Beast and the false Prophet Now they that suffer for asserting that God will not bear with mixtures in his Worship and Service but revenge himself upon
by choice persons chosen out one by another and about choice matters and upon choice conditions chosen out and agreed upon by both parties Secondly because in making of Covenants commonly sacrifices were stricken and slain for confirmation and solemnity Of old God sealed his Covenant by sacrifices of beasts slain divided and cut asunder and the choice fat and other parts offered upon the Altar And in making of great and solemn Covenants men in old time were wont to kill and cut asunder sacrificed beasts and to pass ●e● 15. 9 10 17. Je● 34. 18 19 20. Lev● 26. 25. weigh well these two Scriptures 〈◊〉 breakers may well look ●pon them as flaming swords is terrible thunder-bolts between the parts divided for a solemn testimony or for the confirmation of the Covenants that they had made And as learned men have long since observed that the very Heathen in their covenanting used sacrifices and divided them passing between the parts and this they did as some conjecture in imitation of God's people This third is the common opinion about the Original of this name and therefore preferred before all other So this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith Covenant seems to sound as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Kerith a smiting or striking because of sacrifices slain in covenanting Hence the word Covenant is often joyned witst 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Karath which signifies striking of Covenant An example of this beyond all exception And Riven in Gen. 31. Exerci●at 135. saith my Author is in that sacrifice wherein God by Moses made a Covenant with all the people of Israel and bound them to obey his Law the description of it is in Exod. 24. 4 5 6 7 8. And Moses wrote all the wards of the Lord and rose up early in the morning and builded an Altar under the hill and twelve pillars according to the twelve tribes of Israel And he sent young men of the children Anciently Co●enants were made with blood to be taken con●●an y in the covenant e●en to the the● 〈…〉 of blood loss of life of Israel which offered burnt offerings and sacrificed peace-offerings of oxen unto the Lord. And Moses took half of the blood and put it in basons and half of the blood he sprinkled on the Altar And he took the book of the Covenant and read in the audience of the people and they said all that the Lord hath said will we do and be obedient And Moses took the blood 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 I shall not Rup●rtus Ambr●se Cajetan c. trouble my reader with that mystical and too curious a sence that some of the Ancients put upon these words the historical sense is here more fit For in this Ceremony of dividing the blood in two parts and so besprinkling the Altar with the one half which represented God and the people with the other between whom the Covenant was confirmed the old use in striking of Covenants is observed For the ancient custom was that they which made a League or Covenant divided some beast and put the parts asunder walking in the midst signifying that as the beast was divided so they should be which brake the Covenant So when Saul went against the Ammonites coming out of the field he hewed two Oxen and sent them into all the coasts of Israel expressing the 1 Sam. 11. 7. like signification that so should his Oxen be served that came not forth after Saul and Samuel After the same manner when God made a Covenant with Abraham and he had divided certain beasts as God had commanded Gen. 15. 12. to the 19. him and laid one part against another a smoaking ●ir●brand went between representing God signifying that so he should be divided which violated the Covenant So in this place not much unlike the blood is parted in twain shewing that so should his blood be shed which kept not the Covenant Fourthly some derive the word Berith from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bara to create and the reason they give for this derivation is this because the first state of creation was confirmed by the Covenant which God made with man and all creatures were to be upheld by means of observing of the Law and condition of the Covenant and that Covenant being broken by man the world made subject to ruine is upheld yea and as it were created anew by the Covenant of grace in Christ Fifthly some derive the word Berith from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berath which signifies firmness sureness because Covenants are firm and sure and all things agreed on are confirmed and made sure by them God's Covenant is a sure Covenant Deut. 7. 9. The Lord thy God he is the faithful God or the God 〈…〉 31. 31 23 35 ●6 37. ●s●l 19. 7. Rev. 3. 14. Isa 54. 10. of Amen which keepeth covenant with them that love him Psal 89. 34. My covenant will I not break Hebrew I will not profane nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips All God's precepts all God's predictions all God's menaces and all God's promises are the issue of a most just faithful and righteous will There are three things that God cannot do 1. He cannot die 2. He cannot lie Tiius 1. 2. In hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the world began 3. He cannot deny himself Now the derivation of Berith from the several roots specified and not from one only doth give much light to the point under consideration and doth reconcile in one all the several opinions of the learned and justifies their several derivations without rejecting or offering any wrong or disgrace to any Secondly The Greek name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diatheke A Covenant or a Testament By this Greek word the Septuagint in their Greek Translation do commonly express the Hebrew word Berith and it is observeable that this is the only word by which the Hebrew word Berith is rendered in the New Testament This Greek word Diatheke is translated Covenant in the New Testament about Heb. 8. 6 7 8 9 10 cap. 1. 4. Luk. 1. 72. Rom. 9. 4 c. Mat. 26. 28. Luk. 22. 20 c. twenty times and the same word is translated Testament in the New Testament about twelve times Wherever you find the word Covenant in the New Testament there you shall find Diatheke and wherever you find the word Testament in the New Testament there you shall find Diatheke so that it is of importance for us to understand this word aright Now this Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diatheke is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diatithemai which hath divers of the significations of the Hebrew words of which Berith is derived for it signifies to set things in order and frame to appoint orders and make Laws to pacifie and make satisfaction and to
Let us consider the promise which the father engageth to perform on his part the son must ask and the father will give He will give him the heathen for his Psal 2. 8. inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession An allusion to great Princes when they would shew great affection to their Favourites they bid them ask what they will as Ahasuerus did and as Herod did that Es●● 5. 3. Ma● 6. 23. Isa 49 6. M●t. 28. 18. ●al 2. 10 11. Psal 40. 6. 7 8. is he shall both be the Lord's salvation to the ends of the earth and have all power given him in heaven and earth so that all knees shall bow to him and every tongue shall confess him to be Lord. In the other Text before mentioned Psal 40. Christ declares his compliance to the agreement and his subscribing the Covenant on his part when he came into the world as the Apostle explains it Heb. 10. 5. c. Mine ears saith he hast thou digged or pierced Lo I come to do thy will as if he had said oh father thou dost engage me to be thy servant in this great work of saving sinners Loe I come to do the work I here covenant and agree to yield up my self to thy disposing and to serve thee for ever it seems to be an allusion to the master's boring through the servants ear Exod. 21. 6. Among the Jews only one ear was bored but in this Psal 40. 6. Here are ears in the plural number a token of that perfect and desirable subjection which Christ as Mediator was in to his father But for a more clear distinct and full opening of the Covenant of Redemption or that blessed compact between God the father and Jesus Christ which is a matter of grand importance to all our souls and considering that it is a point that I have never yet treated of in pulpit or press I shall therefore take the liberty at this time to open my self as clearly and as fully as I can And therefore thus If you ask me what this Covenant of Redemption Qu. is I answer in the general That a Covenant is a mutual Ans agreement between parties upon articles or propositions on both sides so that each party is tied and bound to perform his own conditions This description holds the general nature of a Covenant and is common to all Covenants publick and private divine or humane But Secondly and more particularly I answer The Covenant of Redemption is that federal transaction or mutual The Covenant of Redemption defined stipulation that was betwixt God and Christ from everlasting for the accomplishment of the work of our Redemption by the mediation of Jesus Christ to the eternal honour and unspeakable praise of the glorious grace of God Or if you please take it in another form of words thus It is a compact bargain and agreement between God the father and God the son designed Mediator concerning the conversion sanctification and salvation of the Elect through the death satisfaction and obedience of Jesus Christ which in due time was to be given to the father But for the making good the definition I have laid down I must take lieve to tell you That there are many choice Scriptures which give clear intimation of such a federal transaction between God the father and Jesus Christ in order to the recovery and everlasting happiness and salvation of his Elect. I shall instance in the most considerable of them The first is this Gen. 3. 15. And I will put enmity between The first Proof thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise its heel Here begins the book of the Lord's Wars God's battels The Scriptures are called the book of the Battels of the Lord. Numb 21. 〈◊〉 This is spoken of that holy enmity that is between Christ and the Devil and of Christ's destroying the Kingdom and power of Satan For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood 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 Heb. 2 14. God by way of threatning told Satan that the seed of the deceived woman should overmatch him at last and should break in pieces his power and crafty plots he gives Satan lieve to do his worst and proclaims an open and an utter enmity between Christ and him From this Scripture some conclude that Christ covenanted from Eternity to take upon him the seed of the woman and the sinless infirmities of our true humane nature and under those infirmities to enter the lists with Satan and to continue obedient through all his afflictions temptations and trials to the death even to the death of the cross And Phil. 2. 8 9. that God the father had covenanted with Christ that in case Christ did continue obedient through all his sufferings temptations and trials that then his obedience to the death should be accounted as full satisfaction to divine justice for all those wrongs and injuries that were done to God by the sins of man Christ must die or else he could not have been the Mediator of the new Covenant through death Heb. 9. 15 16. But The Second Sripture is that Isa 42. 6. The Lord hath The second Proo● called thee in righteousness and with hold thine hand and will keep thee and give thee for a Covenant of the people f●r a light of the gentiles Thus God speaks of Christ In this Chapter we have a glorious Prophecy of Christ our Redeemer here are four things proph●cied of him 1. The Divine call whereby he was appointed to the work of our Redemption vers 1. Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soul delighteth I have put my spirit upon him he shall bring forth judgment to the gentiles Jesus Christ would not yea he could not he durst not thrust himself upon this great work or engage in this great work 'till he had a clear call from heaven 2. Here you have the gracious carriage and deportment of Christ in the work to which he was called this is fully set down vers 2 3 4. He shall not cry nor lift up nor cause his voice to be heard in the street He shall come clothed with majesty and glory and yet full of meekness A bruised reed shall he not break and the smoaking flax shall he not quench he shall bring forth judgement unto truth In the words there is a Meiosis he will not break that is he will bind up the bruised reed he will comfort the bruised reed he will strengthen the bruised reed Christ will acknowledg and encourage the least degrees of grace he will turn a spark of grace into a flame a drop into a sea c. He shall not fail nor be discouraged These words shew his Kingly courage and magnanimity
cast away their transgressions as Ephraim did his Idols saying Hos 14. 8. what have I any more to do with you Fourthly You have the way and manner of the Elect's delivery and that is not only by paying down upon the nail the price agreed on but also by a strong and powerful hand as the original Rom. 11. 26. Isa 59. 20. Ru●mends 〈◊〉 imports in the Scriptures cited in the margin The Greek word that is used by Paul and the Hebrew word that is used by Isaiah do both signifie delivering by strong hand to rescue by force as David delivered the Lamb out of the Lyon's paw Fifthly you have the special blessings that are to be conferred upon the Elect viz. Redemption conversion saith repentance reconciliation turning from their iniquity all comprehended under that term the Redeemed Sixthly You have the Lord Jesus Christ considered as the head of the Church from whom all spiritual gifts viz. sanctification salvation and perseverance do flow and run as a precious balsom upon the members of his body My spirit that is in me saith God the Father to Christ the Redeemer and my word which I have put into thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed c. In these words God the father engages that his spirit and word should continue with his Church to direct and instruct it and the children of it in all necessaries throughout all ages successively even unto the world's end But The Seventh Scripture is that Zach. 6. 12 13. And The 7. Proof speak unto him saying thus speaketh the Lord of hosts saying behold the man whose name is the Branch and he shall grow up out of his place and he shall build the temple of the Lord. Even he shall build the temple of the Lord and he shall bear the glory and shall sit and rule upon his throne and he shall be a priest upon his throne and the counsel of peace shall be between them bot 〈…〉 ●ow that the business of man's Redemption was transacted betwixt the father and the son is very clear from this text And the counsel of peace shall be between them both that is the two persons spoken of viz. the Lord Jehovah who speaks and the man whose name is the Branch Jesus Christ This counsel was primarily about the reconcilation of the riches of God's grace and the glory of his justice What ever Socinians say 't is most certain that Recon●iliation is not only on the sinner's part but on God's also the design and counsel both of the father and the son was our peace The counsel of reconciliation how man that is now an enemy to God may be reconciled to God and God to him this counsel or consultation shall be betwixt them b●th that is Jehovah and the Branch There were blessed transactions between the father and the son in order to the making of peace between an angry God and sinful men I know several learned men interpret it of Christ's offices viz. of his Kingly and Priestly office for both conspire to make peace betwixt God and man Now if you will thus understand the text yet it will roundly follow that there was a consultation at the counsel-board in heaven concerning the reconciliation of fallen man to God which reconciliation Christ as King and Priest was to bring about Look as there was a counsel taken touching the creation of mankind between the persons in the blessed Trinity Let us make man after our Image so there was a consultation held concerning Gal. 1. 26. Col. 3. 10. Eph. 4. 24. the restauration of mankind out of their lapsed condition The counsel of peace shall be between them both Certainly there was a Covenant of Redemption made with Christ upon the terms whereof he is constituted to be a Reconciler and a Redeemer To say to the prisoners Go forth to bring deliverance to the captives and to proclaim the year of release or Jubile the acceptable year of the Lord as it is Isa 61. 1 2. But The Eighth Scripture is that Psal 40. 6 7 8. Sacrifice The eighth proof and offering thou didst not desire mine ears hast thou opened burnt offering and sin offering hast thou not required Then said I lo 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 Heb. in the midst of my bowels compared with that Heb. 10. 5 6 7. Wherefore when he cometh into the world he saith sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared for me In burnt offerings and sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure Then said I lo I come in the volume of the book it is written of me to do thy will O God In these two Scriptures two things are concluded 1. The impotency of Legal Sacrifices vers 5 6. 2. The all sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice vers 7. There is some difference in words and phrases betwixt the Apostle and the Prophet but both agree in sence as we shall endeavour to demonstrate Pen men of the New Testament were not Translators of the Old but only quoted them for proof of the point in hand so as they were not tied to syllables and letters but to the sence That which the Prophet speaketh of himself the Apostle applieth to Christ say some this may be readily granted For David being a special type of Christ that may in history and type be spoken of David which in mystery and truth is understood of Christ But that which David uttered in the aforesaid text is questionless uttered by the way of Prophecy concerning Christ as is evident by these reasons First In David's time God required sacrifices and burnt offerings and ●ook delight therein for God answered 1 Chron. 21. 26. 1 Sam. 26. 19. David from heaven by fire upon the Altar of burnt-offering and David himself advised Saul to offer a burnt offering that God might accept of it Secondly David was not able so t● do the will of God as by doing it to make all sacrifices void therefore this must be taken as a Prophecy of Christ Thirdly In the verse before namely Psal 40. 5. such an admiration of God's goodness is premised as cannot fitly be applied to any other evidence than of his goodness in giving Christ in reference to whom it may be truly said That eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither have entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him 1 Cor. 2. 9. Fourthly These words used by the Apostle when he cometh into the world he saith are meant of Christ which argue that that which followeth was an express prophecy of Christ These things being premised out of the Texts last cited we may observe these following particulars that make to our purpose First That the holy spirit opens and expounds the Covenant of
But what amazing love what matchless love is this for a man to engage his person and life for his friend when as skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life and yet according to the Covenant of Redemption Jesus Christ has done all this and much more for us as is evident if you will but cast your eye back upon the Articles of the Covenant or consult the Scriptures in the Margin If a friend to free a J●● 2. 4. Jo● 1● 11 15 17 18 28 R●m 5. 6 〈◊〉 Eph. 1. 5 6 7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 13 14 15 Heb. 2. 13 1● 15. captive or one condemned to death should put himself into the state and condition of him whom he freeth that would be an evidence of love beyond all comparison But now if the dignity of Christ's person and our unworthiness if the greatness of the debt and kind of payment and if the benefit which we reap thereby be duly weighed we shall find these evidences of love to come as much behind the love of Christ as the light of a candle cometh short of the light of the Sun Christ's Suretiship according to the Covenant of Redemption is and ought to be a prop of props to our faith It is as sure a ground of confidence that all is well and shall be for ever well between God and us as any the Scriptures does afford by vertue hereof we have a right to appeal to God's Justice for this Surety hath made ful satisfaction and to exact a debt which is fully satisfied is a point of injustice Christ knew very well what the Redemption of fallen man would cost him he knew that his life and blood must go for it he knew that he must lay by his Robes of Majesty and be cloathed with flesh he knew that he must encounter S●lus Amo● nes●it difficultates men and Devils he knew that he must tread the Wine-press of his Father's wrath bear the Curse and make himself an offering for our sins for our sakes for our salvation yet for all this he is very ready and willing to bind himself by Covenant that he will redeem us whatever it cost him Oh what tongue can express what heart Eph. 3. 18 19. Look where thou wilt thou art surrounded with flames of his love and it were strange if thou shouldest not be set on fire if not sure thou must needs be a Diabolical Salamander say● Cu●anus can conceive what soul can comprehend the heights depths bredths and lengths of this love Oh blessed Jesus what manner of love is this that thou shouldest wash away my scarlet sins in thine own blood that thou shouldest die that I may live that thou shouldest be cursed that I might be blessed that thou shouldest undergo the pains of hell that I might enjoy the joys of heaven that the face of God should be clouded from thee that his everlasting favour might rest upon me that thou shouldest be an everlasting Skreen betwixt the wrath of God and my immortal soul that thou shouldest do for me beyond all expression and suffer for me beyond all conception and gloriously provide for me beyond all expectation and all this according to the Covenant of Redemption what shall I say what can I say to all this but fall down before thy grace and spend my days in wondering at that matchless bottomless love that can never be fathomed by Angels or men Oh Lord Jesus saith one plusquam B●rnard mea plusquam meas plusquam me I love thee more than all my goods and I love thee more than all my friends yea I love thee more than my very self 'T is good to write after this copy But The Eleventh and last Plea that a Believer may form up as to the ten Scriptures that are in the Margin that Eccles 11. 9. cap. 12. 14. ●●at 12. 14. cap. 18. 23. Luk. 16. 2. Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. H●b 9. 27. cap. 13. 17. 1 Pet. 4. 5. refer to the great day of account or to a man's particular account may be drawn up from the consideration of the Book of Life out of which all the Saints shall be judged in the great day of our Lord Rev. 20. 11. And I saw a great white throne and him that sat on it from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away and there was found no place for them Vers 12. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God And the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Vers 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it And death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them And they were judged every man according to their works Vers 14. And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire this is the second death And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire In the 11. verse John describes the Judge with his preparation in the 12. verse he describes the persons that should be judged and then he describes the process and sentence and lastly he describes the execution of the sentence viz. the casting of the reprobates into the Lake of fire and the placing and fixing of the Elect in the heavenly Jerusalem vers 13 14 15. In the five last verses cited you have a clear and full description of the last General Judgment as is evident by the native Context and Series of this Chapter For having Rev. 2● 1 2 3. Jude vers 6. spoken of the Devil's last Judgment which by Jude is called The judgment of the great day It is consentaneous therefore to understand this of such a Judgment whereby he is judged And indeed the expressions are so full and the matter and circumstances so satisfying and convincing that they leave no place for fears doubts or disputes This Scripture that is under our present consideration runs parallel with that Dan. 12. 1 2 3. and several other places of Scripture where the day of Judgment is spoken of and let him that can shew me at what other Judgment all the dead are raised and judged and all Reprobates sent to hell and all the Elect brought to heaven and death and hell cast into the Lake all which are plainly expressed here He shall be an Apollo to me that can make these things that are hero spoken of to agree with any other Judgment than the last Judgment Let me give a little light into this Scripture before I improve it to that purpose for which I have cited it And I saw a great white throne and him that sat on it a lively description of the last Judgment A Great Throne Great because it is set up for the General Judgment of all for the universal judgment of the whole world Before
this deliverance of the Creature that our Apostle speaks of shall not be by a reduction into nothing but by an alteration into a better estate But I must hasten to a close Vers 12. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God The Judge before whom all do appear is our dear Lord Jesus who hath the keys of hell and death in Rev. 1. 18. Act. 17. 30 31. his hands and who is designed and appointed by God the Father to be the Judge of quick and dead he hath Authority and a Commission under his Father's hand to sit and act as Judge Here you see that John calleth the Judge absolutely God but Christ is the Judge therefore Christ is God absolutely and he will appear to be God in our nature in that great day The Parties judged who stand before the Throne are 1. Generally the dead all who had died from Adam to the last day he calls them the dead after the common Law of Nature but then raised from death to life by the Eph 2. 5. Colos 2. 13. power of God he speaks not of men dead in sins and trespasses but of such as died corporally and now were raised up to judgment But shall not the living then be judged Oh yes For we must all appear before the Judgment-seat 2 Cor. 5. 10. Rom. 149 10. of Christ That he may be Judge of the quick and the dead and be Lord both of the dead and the living Under this phrase the dead are comprehended all those that then shall be found alive By the dead we are to understand the living also by an Argument from the lesser If the dead shall appear before the Judgment-seat how much more the living But the dead alone are named either because the number of the dead from Adam to the last day shall be far greater than those that shall be found alive on earth in that day or because those that remain alive shall be accounted as dead because they shall be 1 Cor. 15. 52. changed in the twinkling of an eye Secondly he describes them from their age and condition for the words may be understood of both Great and small which takes in all sorts of men Tyrants Emperours Kings Princes Dukes Lords c. as well as Subjects Vassals Slaves Beggars rich and poor strong and weak bond and free old and young all and every one without exception are to be judged for the Judgment shall be universal no man shall be so great as to escape the same nor none so small as to be excluded but every one shall have justice done him without respect of persons as that great Apostle Paul tells us We must all appear before the Judgment-seat 2 Cor. 5. 10. of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his body according to that he hath done whether it be good or bad I am no admirer of the School-men's notion who suppose that all shall be raised about the age of Lum lib dist 44 33. which was Christ's Age but do judge that that perfection which consisteth in the conforming them to Christ's glorious body is of another kind than to respect either age stature or the like Stand before God that is brought to Judgment the Joh. 3. 18. guilty standing ready to be condemned and the Saints standing ready in Christ's presence to be absolved and pronounced blessed And the books were opened Christ the Judge being set on his Throne and having all the world before him the books are opened 1. In the general the books are said to be open 2. Here is a special book for the Elect The book of life was opened 3. Here you have sentence passed and pronounced according to what was written in these books and according to their works And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Here the Judicial Process is noted by imitation of Humane Courts in which the whole Process is wont to be drawn up and laid before the Judge from whence the Judge determineth for or against the person according to the Acts and Proofs that lie open before him The Equity Justice and Righteousness of Christ the Judge that sits on his white Throne is set forth by a Metaphor taken from Humane Courts where the Judge pronounceth sentence according to the written Law and the Acts and Proofs agreeing thereunto All things are Heb. 4. 13. Rev. 1. 14. naked and bare before him whose eyes are as a flame of fire But to shew that the Judgment shall be as accurate and particular in the trial and just and righteous in the close as if all were registred and put on Record nothing shall escape or be mistaken in its circumstances but all things shall be so cleared and issued beyond all doubts and disputes as if an exact Registre of them had been kept and published in all which there is a plain allusion unto the words of Daniel speaking thus of this Judgment The Dan. 7. 10. Judgment was set and the books were opened We find six several books mentioned in the Scripture First The Book of Nature that is mentioned by David Psal 139. 16. Thine eyes did see my substance yet being unperfect and in thy book all my members were written which in continuance were fashioned when as yet there was none of them 'T is a Metaphor from curious work men that do all by the The world saith Clemens Alexandrious is De● Scriptura the first Bible that God made for the instruction of Man Book or by a Model set before them that nothing may be deficient or done amiss Had God left out an eye in his common place Book saith one thou hadst wanted it The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy work The Psalmist looks upon that great Volume of heaven and earth and there reads in Capital letters the Prints and Characters of God's glory This Book saith one was imprinted at the New Jerusalem by the finger of Jehovah and is not to be sold but to be seen at the sign of Glory of every one that lifts up his eyes to heaven In this Book of nature which is made up of three great leaves Heaven Earth and Sea God hath made himself visible yea legible even his eternal power and Godhead So that all men are left without Rom. 1. 20. excuse Out of this Book the poor blind Gentiles might have learned many choice lessons as First that they had a maker Secondly That this Maker being before the things made is eternal without beginning or ending Thirdly That he must needs be Almighty which made all things out of nothing and sustained such a Mass of creatures Fourthly The order variety and distinction of creatures declare his marvellous Wisdom Fifthly In this Book they might run and read the great goodness and the admirable kindness of God to the sons of men in making
all the creatures for their good for their service and benefit Sixthly and lastly In this Book they might run and read what a most excellent what a most admirable what a most transcendent workman God was What are the Heavens the Earth the Sea but a sheet of Royal Paper written all over with the Wisdom and Power of God Now in the great day of account this Book shall be produced to witness against the Heathen World because they did not live up to the light that was held forth to them in this Book but crucified that light and knowledge by false ways of worship and by their wicked manners whereof the Apostle gives you a Bead-roll or Catalogue from vers 21. to the end of that 1. of the Romans But Secondly there is the Book of Providence wherein ● all particulars are registred even such as Atheists may count trivial and inconsiderable Mat. 10. 30. But the very hairs of your head are all numbred And where is their number summed up even in the Book of Providence The three Worthies were taken out of the fiery furnace Dan. 3. 27 with their hairs in full number not one of them singed Paul encouraging the Passengers to eat who were in fear and danger of death tells them that there should not an Act. 27. 34. hair fall from the head of any of them And when Saul 1 Sam. 14. 45. would have put Jonathan to death the people told him That there should not a hair of his head fall to the ground Christ doth not say that the hairs of your eye lids are numbred but the hairs of your head where there is the greatest plenty and the least use Though hair is but an excrement and the most contemptible part of man yet every hair of an Elect person is observed and registred down in God's Books and not one of them shall be lost Nor the Holy Ghost doth not say the hairs of your heads shall be numbred but the hairs of your head are all numbred God has already booked them all down and all to shew us that special that singular care that God takes of the smallest and least concernments of his chosen ones This Book of Providence God will produce in the great day to confute and condemn the Atheists of the World who have denied a Divine Providence and whose hearts have swelled against his Government of the world according to the counsels of his own heart But Thirdly There is the Book of men's afflictions this some account an entire Book of it self Psal 56. 8. Thou tellest my wandrings put thou my tears into thy bottle are The Septuagint for my wandrings or flit●ings have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 my L●fe to teach us saith one that our life is but a flitting they not in thy book God told all those weary steps that David took in passing over those two great Forrests when he fled from Saul or thou cypherest up my flittings as the words may be read whilst David was hunted up and down like a Partridge and hushed out of every bush and had no certain dwelling place but driven from post to pillar from one Countrey to another God was all this while a noting down and a numbering of his flittings and a bottleing up his tears and a booking down his sighs Put thou my tears into thy bottle Heb. my tear that is every tear of mine let not one of them be lost but kept safe with thee as so much sweet water God is said in Scripture to have a Bag and a Bottle a Bag for our sins and a Bottle for our tears and Oh that we would all labour to fill his bottle with our tears as we have filled his bag with our sins and certainly if the white tears of his servants be bottled up the red tears of their blood shall not be cast away if God keep the tears of the Saints in store much more will he remember their blood to avenge it and though Tyrants burn the bones of the Saints yet they cannot blot out their tears and blood out of God's Register Are they not in thy book are they not in thy Register or Book of Accounts where they cannot be blotted out by any time or Tyrants i. e. yes certainly they are thou dost assuredly book them down and wilt never forget one of them according to the usual Interrogatory that was used among the Hebrews when they affirmed a thing past all doubt Let the great Nimrods and oppressors of the Saints look to themselves for God books down all the afflictions sufferings and persecutions of his servants and in the great day he will bring in this Book this Register to witness against them Ah sinners sinners look to your selves in the great day of account the Lord will reckon with you for every rod that he hath spent upon you he will reckon with you not only for all your mercies but also for all your crosses not only for all your sweets but also for all your bitters not only for all your cordials but also for all your corrasives In this Book of Afflictions there is not only Item for this mercy and that but Item also for this affliction and that this sickness and that this cross and that this loss and that And will not the opening of this Book of the Saints afflictions and sufferings and of sinners afflictions and sufferings be as the hand-writing upon Dan. 5. 5 6. the wall to all the wicked of the earth in the great day of account surely yes for as they cannot answer for one mercy of ten thousand that they have enjoyed so they cannot answer for one affliction of ten thousand that they have been exercised with But Fourthly There is the Book of Conscience Conscience saith Philo is the little Consistory of the soul Conscience R●m 2. 14 15. is Mille Testes A thousand Witnesses for or against a man Conscience is God's Preacher in the bosom Conscience hath a good memory saith one The chief Gen. 41. 9. Butler forgot the promise that he had made to Joseph but Conscience told him of it Fama propter homines conscientia propter Deum saith Augustine A good name will carry it amongst men but it is a good conscience only that can acquit us before God In this great day the Book of every man's Conscience shall be opened for their conviction The Conscience is a Domestick and true Tribunal saith Nazianzen●● wherein they shall read their guilt in legible Characters for that is a Book of Record wherein men's actions are entred and although now it be shut up close and sinners will by no means be brought to look into it ●and though many things that are written in this Book seem to be so greatly obliterated and blotted that they can hardly be read Yet in that great day of Accounts God will refresh and recover the lustre of those Ancient Writings and sinners in that day shall find that