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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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called one of the f Gal 5.22 2 Cor 4.13 fruits thereof and he called the g Spirit of Faith for indeed the word and letter is dead the Spirit quickneth and this powerfully and certainly yet sweetly making willing to beleive in the day of his power Psal 110.3 2 Cor 6.7 10.4 for it is not the Word of truth only but the power of God that made the Apostles warfare so victorious in subduing souls to the obedience of the Faith It is so great a thing to bring blind proud self-destroying man to own Gods way of Salvation by the righteousness of another to accept all from another and him a crucified Saviour that it is a great part of the great mystery of godliness 1 Tim 3.16 that Christ should be believed on in the world so that it needs an exceeding greatness of Divine Power Ephes 1.19 the working of a mighty power in them that beleive even such as raised Christ from the dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est facultas ipsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsius sese exerentis virtus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsisius effectus sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bez in loc though other sence is put upon that place yet by many judicious Expositors is this sence followed which we find in the Gr. Schol. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. None can come to the Son except the Father draw them Joh. 6.44 in which the Author and powerful manner of operation in causing Faith are contained And all this in effectual calling and regeneration before which is no part and degree no act and demonstration of spiritual life Ephes 2.1 Joh. 1.12 13. Act. 14.27 for we are dead which is not of him that willeth not of flesh and blood and the will of man but of God and this is spoken of the Believer to whom God opens the door of Faith 2. The actings and operations of Faith are from God as in him we live Joh. 15.5 so we move and without him can do nothing he worketh to will and to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Velle bonum aeque ac voluntatem bonam he worketh habit and principle and by supervening Grace exciteth to and assisteth in acting it 3. The continuance and perseverance of Faith are from above Christ causeth our Faith not to fail Luk. 22.32 1 Pet. 1.5 and we are kept by Gods mighty power through Faith unto Salvation and Faith is by the same preserved The a 1 Thess 5.23 24. faithful God that effectually calls will safely keep in b Jude 8. Jesus Christ c 1 Cor. 1.8 and confirm to the end for this is the d Joh. 17.11 12 24. desire of the Son unto the Father and e Joh. 6.39 Mar. 9.24 Luk. 17.5 will of the Father concerning the Son 4. The growth and increase of Faith are from God who giveth all increase and therefore it was well prayed for unto the Lord to help unbelief and to increase Faith 5. The perfection of Faith is from God and Christ Jesus is as the author Heb. 12.2 so the finisher of our Faith and this either by bringing it to its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and highest degree it can reach or is necessary for the Saints it should reach to in the world fulfilling all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of Faith with power Phil. 1.6 and because he hath begun perfecting it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or by perfecting it in vision 1 Pet. 1.9 for it's God that gives the end of our Faith Salvation Less Principal The Less Principal Efficient Causes are either Impulsive or Instrumental Impulsive The Impulsive or Moving Cause is either External or Internal The Inwardly moving Cause Proegumena is 1. On Gods part his free grace and love self-moving goodness in which sence it is called the a Ephes 2.8 gift of God and the b Rom. 11.7 election obtain it even those that are ordained to life believe Act. 13.48 Not improvement of Reason not use of means appointed for the attainment of Faith that merit this gift but God worketh all of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which appears in that not many noble and wise but poor receive the Gospel 2. On the sinners part who doth believe and being quickned moveth acted acteth and that freely the moving Cause is sence of misery and undonness without Christ and interest in the promise through Faith there being no other name Act. 4.12 Joh. 3.18 and he that believeth not being condemned So that here is the necessary condition and causa sine qua non of Faith sense of misery and inability in self and all creatures to recover a man out of his lost estate whence ariseth renouncing and throwing away all our own righteousnesses those filthy rags Isa 64.6 Phil. 3.9 not having or not depending upon our own righteousness or any thing short of Christ The outwardly Moving Cause Procatarctica 1. On Gods part to give Faith is Christ and his merit for every good gift is through Christ Omne donum gratiae Dei in Christo est Ambr. in Ephes 1. As from the father of lights so through the the Sun of righteousness none come to the Father nothing cometh from the Father but by him whom by this means the Father will make to be honored as himself Joh. 5.23 As salvation was purchased by Christ upon terms of believing so Faith also whereby we lay hold upon Christ for Salvation and therefore that Spirit which is called the Spirit of Faith is by Christ promised upon his purchase making and ascending to be sent to convince the world of that great sin of unbelief Joh. 16.9 2. The externally moving Cause to believe on the sinners part which may be called the Formal Object is twofold 1. As to God and his Word Gods Veracity and infallible truth Heb. 4.13 6.18 Titus 1.2 1 Thess 2.13 Joh. 3.33 Heb. 10.23 he can neither be deceived nor deceive God which cannot lye hath promised is joyned to Hope and therefore Faith He that believeth receiveth the Word of God as the word of God and seteth to his seal that God is true accounting him faithful that hath promised the ground of Faith being Gods faithfulness and the object the Promise God's having spoken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was enough to Abraham Rom. 4.17 18. in a difficult case Here is the Resolutio fidei into its stable foundadation Gods unquestionable Truth who is Prima veritas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Joh 5.10 so that the believer hath the witness in himself and his evidence is better and assent stronger as to his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 than any ones as to things apprehended by sence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore sometimes divine testimony is added to rational discovery
as in this point that there is another life c. because of the certainty and distinctness of knowledge by revelation above all other ways 2. As to Christ offered in and by the Promise for more full explanations sake I sever the consideration of God promising and Christ offered which otherwise I would always unite the moving Cause of Faith in the sinner Heb 7.25 is his power as an All-sufficient Saviour able to save to the uttermost being anointed with authority and abilities commission and qualifications for that work and his love to sinners having laid down his life for them Joh 6.37 he will in no wise cast them out that come to him by Faith These are the solid props of a true Christians Faith which make the former believing God and the Word not to be a wavering opinion and the latter believing in Christ not an adventurous hazard Instrumental Cause The Instrumental Cause of Faith is either the begetting or preserving Cause 1. The Instrument by which the Spirit of God produceth Faith is the Word of God in whatever way coming to us to be a Joh 5.38 Luke 2.19 51. considered and meditated on by us The Word b 1 Joh 3.15 read by us or to us the Word expounded and enforced by the Publick Ordinance preaching Ex Officio the private Ordinance conference ex fraternâ charitate By believing the soul answereth to Gods call which supposeth a Word Ro. 10.8 14 17 therefore it is called the Word and Doctrine of Faith and Faith cometh by hearing men cannot believe in him of whom they have not heard Christ must be preached 1 Tim 3.16 Rom 1.16 before believed on for by the Gospel preached God puts forth his power in making men believe to salvation the efficacy whereof it being accompanied with that spiritual and powerful demonstration 1 Cor 1.18 21 c. mentioned 1 Cor. 2.4 the Apostle to the Corinthians explaineth and extolleth God having in due time manifested his Word through preaching Tit. 1.3 Act 24.14 Now this Instrument is All the word of God not excluding the Law from being the means as well as the object of Faith Gal 3.21 22. for the Law is a useful Schoolmaster to prepare us for Christ driving us out of our selves and following us with the lashes of the Curse that we may run to the Grace of the Gospel and make mention of Christs righteousness only Psal 71.16 So that knowledge must alway go before Faith we must know whom what and wherefore we believe 2. Tim 1.12 Ephes 1.18 19 and give a reason of our faith and hope the eyes of the mind enlightning goes before the working of Gods power in our believing so Pauls sending was to turn from darkness to light before Faith in Christ is mentioned Act 26.18 Joh 6.40 every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him c. a seeing in Scripture light makes way In so much that the knowledge of the Word and Christ as the means to get Faith Joh 17.3 Isa 53.11 is highly advanced and called life eternal yea put for believing to which it leads by his knowledge Objectivè Or the knowledge of him shall my servant justifie many Secondly The Instrumental Causes of Faiths maintenance and encrease are 1. The Word of God Causa procreans conservans Ab iisdem nutrimur ex quibus constamus It is seed to beget 1 Pet 2.2 and milk for growth in babes yea strong meat for strong ones in Christ 2. Sacraments as Seals of the righteousness of Faith Tesserae and pledges of Gods love superadded to his promise They signifie and help to clear the understanding and so consequently promote Faith they seal and confirm seals are for this end to confirm the Faith of him to whom the Deed is delivered and 't is usually said by learned Divines they actually exhibit for our growth by feeding 3. Prayer as in that man Lord help mine unbelief Mark 9.24 2 Thes 1.10 11 and the Disciples Lord encrease our faith and St. Paul for the Thessalonians Quoties de Fidei constantia incremento agitur ad preces confugiendum est Calv. in Jud. 20. v. I might add another Ternary of means for the encrease of faith inferior to the former 1. The Cross Afflictions Temptations 1 Pet 1.7 Therefore the trial of Faith is called pr cious because it burnisheth and encreaseth precious Faith the trial of Faith worketh patience Jam 1.3 patience experience and that is a good ground for more Hope and Faith Rom 5.4 they are conjoyned 2 Thess 1.3 4. 2. By frequent actings and exercise Faith is encreased though Graces beginning is different yet their improvement is in great measure after the way of other habits 3. By seeing and considering the Example of others the cloud of Witnesses Heb. 12.1 2. Heb. 13.7 whose Faith the Apostolical command is that we follow Thus many were of weak made strong beholding the faith of the Martyrs and the eminent effects of it Material Cause For the Material Cause of Faith Genus habet rationem materiae that which is its general and common nature wherein it agrees with others is the matter of it Now as Saving Grace in the Description was the Genus wherein it agrees with other Graces so comparing true Saving Faith with other Faiths that may tolerably pretend to the name Assent is the common nature and matter of it even the nearest and immediate Genus Faith historical of miracles temporary all have Assent but not all Assent belongeth to true Faith There must not only be knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acknowledgement as necessary and essential to Faith Col. 2.2 2 Tim. 3.14 and that arising from the full assurance of understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There must be a Faith Doctrinal and Assertive as the foundation of Faith applicative and fiducial if I assent not to the promise of another as true I cannot rely upon the person for the good mentioned There is a double acknowledgement I mean not verbal profession 1. That the things revealed in Scripture and by us known are of God 2. That they are true which naturally floweth from the former and shall all be fulfilled Rom. 4.21 Abraham was perswaded before he trusted Now to this end that this full assent and acknowledgement of the mind which is a necessary ingredient of true Faith may be had The Divine Authority of the Scriptures confirmed by miracles and other characters is to be studied that we may build our Assent and thereby our Faith upon a stable foundation Formal Cause The Formal Cause which doth straiten the general nature of Faith and distinguish true Saving Faith from all other Faiths forma vel aliquid formae analogum ponitur differentiae loco in which may be Notitia Assensus is Fiducial receiving of Christ offered by God in the
in Faith without wavering is required and he that wavereth is bid not to think he shall receive any thing Yea Jam. 5.15 the efficacy of the prayer of Faith is by him asserted and throughout Scripture by remarkable expressions and instances abundantly confirmed and proved Fidelem si putaveris facies is true as to God Sen. as well as man And that of the Roman Historian Liv. Vult sibi quisque credi habita fides ipsam plerumque obligat fidem But it doth not produce this eminent effect as to Prayer only rendring it acceptable but also 5. Acceptance to the person in all services together with the distinction of and denomination of Good given to habits and actions flowes from Faith Heb. 11.6 vers 4. vers 5. Without Faith it is universally and utterly impossible to please God By Faith our Sacrifices become excellent and we with them we and they please God and therefore it is not without good reason usually accounted that Wedding garment which renders our presence welcome to the Lord in any Ordinance or service Mat. 22.11 Faith taketh away the savor of the flesh which whatsoever is born of the flesh hath and gives a divine tincture and relish it is like a vein of gold running through all duties which makes them precious though still they be somewhat earthly That it is Characteristically denominative of other Graces and distinctive of them f●om moral vertues those splendida vitia may appear if it be considered That even that eminent Grace of Love is nothing without Faith 1 Cor. 13.2 Gal. 5.6 as no Faith without it could be any thing and doth nothing without it Faith worketh by Love not Love but Faith by it Faith being first and chief in being and working Humility was eminent in the woman and Centurion Mat. 15.27 28 Mat. 8.8 10. yet not Humility but Faith was taken notice of this being the main tree that a sprig from its root receiving its excellency from it and by faith accompanying and overtopping it becoming true humility and not a degenerate meanness and abject lowness of Spirit Sorrow for sin would not deserve the name of Repentance nor Confession be ingenuous but for the hand of Faith laid on the head of the Scape-goat Faith believing Gods promise concerning the Moderation Sanctification removal of Affliction worketh in a way of Patience Jam. 1.3 and this Faith accompanying ennobles Christian Patience and makes it not to be Obstinacy or Insensibility So it makes a Christians contempt of the World not to be a Vain-glorious pretence or a sullen morose reservedness Thus might we run through many more 6. Conquest over Adversaries and hinderances in the way to heaven Isa 9.6 Heb. 2.10 Ephes 6.16 Faith in the mighty God the Captain of our salvation who hath led captivity captive disarmed the powers of darkness and triumphed over them and we in him our head makes couragious and that victorious for if we resist the General of the adverse party will flee Jam. 4.7 1. Pet. 5.9 only we must resist him stedfast in the Faith holding up that shield that will repel and quench all his darts For the life of sence in the lusts of the flesh and of the eye 2 Cor. 5.7 and the pride of life the life of Faith is diametrically opposite thereto by Faith not sight c. doth necessarily weaken it as we find in those Worthies Heb. 11. that by Faith denied themselves in so many things pleasing to flesh and blood and did and suffered so many things contrary thereto For the World as that same eleventh of the Hebrews giveth remarkable instance so St. John beareth testimony in most significant phrase to the power of Faith herein 1 Joh. 5.4 calling it the Victory whereby we overcome the world because certain victory attends and shall crown all that fight the good fight of faith against the World as the God and Prince of this world so the pleasures of the world the honors the profits the friendship of the World with their contrary troubles and the snares and temptations of both 7. Confession and profession of the Faith This is an inseparable adjunct and consequent of true Faith though I call it not a property because this may be where true faith is not but where Faith is this will be also all is not gold that glisters but that is not gold that doth not glister Can a man carry fire in his bosom and not discover it Can a man have the Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 5.13 and believe yet not speak The Apostolical command is not only that we stand fast in the Faith 1 Cor. 16.13 Heb. 10.23 Rom. 10.10 but also that we hold fast the profession of our Faith for as with the heart man believeth to justification so with the mouth confession is made to salvation Let our unchristianly and irrational deriders of Professors and Profession consider this 8. It giveth the soul a sight of things invisible Heb. 11.27 Joh. 1.18 Exod. 33.20 2 Cor. 4.18 and an enjoyment of things to come By Faith Moses saw him that is invisible Jehovah whom otherwise no man hath seen nor can see and live Yea by the same St. Paul and others of the faithful looked at those eternal good things which are not seen 5.7 for they walked by Faith and not by sight By this the Saints can look within the vail By Faith the soul takes a prospect of the promised Canaan this being the Pisgah of its highest elevation Joh. 8.56 By this Abraham saw Christs day and rejoyced It gives a present subsistence to certain futures and is the evidence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 and not seen for which cause the believers conversation will be in heaven where he seeth his treasure is and where therefore his heart is 9. Joy and Peace in some degree is an immediate effect of true Faith and no true Joy is without Faith though higher degrees flow through Assurance Rom. 15.13 There is joy and peace in believing and a joy of Faith especially when conjoyned with growth Phil. 1.25 It is expressed by leaning and staying upon the Lord which speaks support fixation quietation of mind For which cause a childe of God under desertions prefers his life of Dependance before the Worldlings life of enjoyment and findes some satisfaction in present unsatisfiedness hath some glimmerings of light in the dark night of unassuredness God hath promised to keep him in peace in peace translated perfect peace whose mind is staid on him 2 Isa 26 3. Ch ron 20.20 because he trusteth in him Believing in the Lord brings establishment not only as to the condition and state of the person but also as to the disposition and frame of the mind We finde it in other cases believing the promise and relying on the power and love of another affords a great calm and some secret joy to a mind
42.3 weak as a bruised reed through dimness and scantiness of knowledge as a building laid upon a weak or narrow foundation cannot be strong weakness of assent strength of temptations natural timorousness Rom 4.19 20. Act 6. suspiciousness and lowness of spirit In others it is strong and they are full of Faith as Steven having clear and large knowledge c. Both weaker and stronger may be considered either as Habitual in the root and principle or Actual as exercised toward Christ and the promises For the Definition or Description of Faith I shall not heap up words in mentioning many but take up with that full and excellent one of the late Judicious Assemb●y in their larger Catechism that Christians may with more readiness and safety entertain it Description Faith is a Saving Grace wrought in the heart of a sinner by the Spirit and Word of God whereby he being convinced of his sin and misery and of the disability in himself and all other creatures to recover him out of that lost condition not only assenteth to the truth of the promise of the Gospel but receiveth and resteth upon Christ and his righteousness therein held forth for pardon of sin and for the a cepting and accounting of his person righteous in the sight of God for salvation It hath here for its Genus or general and common nature a Grace it being compared with Love Hope c. they herein agree The word Grace distinguisheth it from other Habits even good and vertuous that are acquired this is a Grace or gracious disposition or habit infused A Saving Grace to distinguish it from and set it above common Grace and make it one of those better things that accompany salvation Heb 6.9 The Subject is twofold Subjectum Recipiens Occupans 2. Subject Subjectum recipi ns The first the Subject receiving it or in which it is most ordinarily called the Subject and this is The heart of man a sinner elected and called 1. It is Man that believeth not Angels for of their Faith we have no ground to speak It is Man not God and the Spirit in us but man through them Yea Man singularly not of another but of him that hopeth for life the Just shall live by HIS Faith not by anothers 2. It is the Heart of man with the heart man believeth Rom 10.10 the Heart includeth Will and Affections it is not the Vnderstanding onely nor so much though that necessarily makes way Coming to Christ is a spontaneous motion of Will and Affections renewed and this is beleiving there is assent to things revealed as true and acceptance of things offered as good receiving Joh 1.12 embracing with suitable affections to the Revealer and things revealed 3. The heart of a man a sinner for man upright is not capable of this Faith which is in God through a Mediator Believing the word of another concerning restoral and reparation speaketh loss and decay acceptance of alms poverty Indeed Adam might and must thus far exercise Faith in beleiving and trusting God it belongeth to the first commandment that he continuing upright there would be a continuation of Gods love and his happiness but Faith apprehending the promise of God of acceptation through the righteousness of another necessarily speaketh man a sinner Rom. 4.5 as Justification which is by Faith is of the ungodly Rom. 11.7 4. The heart of man a sinner elected the election obtained it the rest were hardned Tit. 1.1 and therefore is it called the Faith of Gods elect Remarkable is that expression As many as were ordained unto life beleived Act. 13.48 and our Lord saith all that the Father giveth him come unto him Joh 6.37 and the Jews not believing was because they were not his sheep and therefore heard not his voyce 5. The heart of man a sinner elected and called is the Subject of Faith Rom. 10.17 Faith is by hearing it is the souls answer to and compliance with Gods call God vailing his omnipotency under and putting it forth with words of command Uncalled and unbelievers are the same and therefore calling is one of the links of the golden chain of Salvation Rom. 8.28 30. and goeth before Justification by Faith in which Call the Terminus â quo is Satan sin misery death we are called from and the Terminus àd quem we are called to Christ God Holiness and Life Subjectum Occupans Materiale The Subject about which Faith is employed or Object that which and in which we believe is not God immediately though primarily Heb. 6.1 but Christ immediately and the Promises which are in him yea and amen 2 Cor. 1.20 and God through Christ 1 Pet. 1.21 he that believeth not in the Son believeth not in the Father and he that hath not the Son hath not the Father Act. 20.21 Repentance is peculiarly referred to God and Faith to the Lord Jesus Christ Faith also and the Promises Heb. 10.23 or God through Christ promising are Correlates and of all Promises those that concern righteousness and life through the blood of a Mediator are the peculiar object Act. 10.43 1 Joh. 5.10 11. Believing the witness of remission and the recrod of giving eternal li e is mentioned it is called beleeving the Gospel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glad tidings in the Gospel promises of remission and salvation Mark 1.16 It is true that Faith doth believe and apply every word of God Some things reductively and secondarily are the object of Faith in a sequacious Spirit credulous to whatever is contained in Scripture as that Abimelech had a wife c. Gen 20. Some things are more directly the Word of God expressed and asserted in the History of the Bible yet being believed have not an immediate connexion with Justification and Salvation thereby But the grand testimony of and through Christ Faith as saving principally respecteth and as assenting in the mind looks upon the Promise as accepting in the Will and Affections respecteth Christ The ground on which we believe Formale called the Formal Object of Faith shall be referred to the Externally moving Cause to believe of which afterwards Of all Four Causes I shall speak in order 3. Causes Efficient Principal and first of the Efficient which is either Principal or less Principal The Principal Cause may be considered as that from which the beginning acting continuance growth and perfection of Faith do proceed and this is the Blessed Trinity or God the Father through the Son by the Spirit 1. The beginning root and habit of Faith is from God if of every a Phil 1.6 good work and b Jam 1.17 gift then this and therefore it is called the c Ephes 2.8 gift of God and to you it is d Phil 1.29 given to believe e Heb 12.2 Jesus also is called the Author this is wrought by the Spirit it is
Gods part upon supposition of his institution 1. His Justice having received a valuable price for Salvation and this price being made the sinners own in the way of Gods own appointment so that believing sinners may humbly plead with God as a righteous Judge for their Crown 2 Tim. 4.8 Rom. 3.26 Gods justice being not only secured but obliged in a sense by Faith 2. His faithfulness having in his Word promised Salvation to Faith as hath been shown Secondly On Faiths part the reason why God hath conjoyned certain Salvation with it is because it giveth most glory to God of any thing Rom. 4.20 1 Sam. 2.30 therefore God entailes glory on it peculiarly it honoureth God and God will honour them that have it He that believeth sets to his seal that God is true John 3.33 and every way justifieth and advanceth him Properties and notes of Trial convertible with true Faith 5. Properties and reciprocal where Faith is there is this and that where this and that are there is Faith where Faith is not there these are not c. and farther differencing it from other Faith 2 Cor. 13.5 which is a needful work for there is true and false feigned and unfeigned alive and dead Of these some indeed belong to the former Head of Effects and some of them seem not altogether unsuitable to be referred to this Head The First shall be a more general Note True and saving faith receiveth a whole Christ upon judgement and choice on Gods term●s Lord to rule as well as Jesus to save the object of Faith in the Text no separating what God hath joyned and to have a divided Christ not a whole Christ salvation but not self-denial c. True Faith is a considerate thing that which hath least depth Mat. 13 5. springs up most suddenly the soul sits down and weigheth and casteth up all accompts and compareth all things together misery by sin undonnesse in self termes of salvation self-denial a fundamental one taking up the Crosse following Christ universally sincere obedience and what the world lust or Satan can say to the contrary and saith CONTENT to Gods terms and here the bargain is made the soul trusts God contentedly for his part even priviledge and resolvedly sets about its own part even duty Hence true faith proceeding deliberately upon Gods termes is willing to be tryed by the Word declaring those terms which farther tryal according to the Word follows Secondly True and saving Faith is ush●r'd in by godly sorrow and humility in a good degree though they are farther compleated afterward upon the sense of Gods pardoning and accepting love Ezek. 16.63 Mark 1.15 Acts 20.21 Then shalt thou be ashamed c. Repent and believe Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ this is Gospel order The inconsistency between Faith and Pride Hab. 2.4 is evident in that opposition of the souls lifting up and living by Faith and the hinderance of the Jews believing John 5.44 The Centurions and womans Faith were attended with eminent humility Did not humility and godly sorrow accompany and bring in faith the Law could not be our School-master to bring us to Christ This shutteth out that easie merry proud faith that springs up without the dunging of humility or watering of sorrow according to God Thirdly True and saving Faith is abiding and perseverant and this upon supposition of temptations and assaults for otherwise a mock-faith may have a continuance and men dye in a pleasing dream of ungrounded presumptuous confidence Now it must be such or cannot be saving for as it is said He that believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 Mat. 24.13 so he that endureth to the end shall be saved They that have true Faith have the seed of God abiding in them the prayer of Christ for them are kept by the power of God for he that hath begun a good work will finish it his gifts being without repentance Believing and sealing for security are conjoyned Eph. 1.13 The true believer is the wise man that built on the Rock Mat. 7.24 25. his house therefore stood the good ground that hath de●th of earth Mat. 13. Heb. 10.38 39. that what springs may not wither The just shall live by his faith continue therein and so believe to the saving his soul being rooted and established therein through Christ Col. 2.7 See more of this before under the efficient cause principal and instrumental Fourthly True and saving Faith is growing though this growth be not alway discernable or alike That prayer for encrease of Faith flowed from the very nature of Faith Luk. 17.5 it is the good fight which must be carryed on to a compleat conquest running a race 1 Tim. 6.12 2 Tim. 4.7 Prov. 4.18 speaking progresse to the finishing our course for the way of the just is as light that shineth more and more to a perfect day Whatever hath life hath growth till it reach a state of consistency 1 John 5.13 Saint John wrote to those that did believe that they might believe Vt credatis credere pergatis which belongs to the last Head fide crescatis Beza in loc i. e. grow in faith according to the general Apostolical precept of growing in all grace The same Author accounts this the most plain and natural interpretation of that of Paul from Faith to Faith Fide Rom. 1.17 quae quotidiè incrementum accipiat confirming it by that of Clement of Alexandria The Apostle speaks not of a double Faith but of one and that receiving growth and perfecting The Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 furtherance of faith Col. 2.7 Phil. 1.25 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 establishing and abounding in the Faith speak encrease and growth in root and branches more fixed habit more frequent acts They therefore that have believed ever since they were born and alway alike never believed at all truly Fifthly True and saving Faith is Purging Act 1 Rom 8.1 4 purifying their hearts by Faith Believing and walking not after the flesh are joyned where there is Faith and much more assurance of Faith there will be heart and body cleansed and washed Heb. 10.22 23 2 Cor. 7.1 1 Pet. 1.4 1 John 3.3 pollutions of flesh and spirit taken away by faith receiving the promise of the undefiled inheritance the believer will purifie himself as he is pure in whom he trusteth and hopeth Living flesh will purge out the Sanies and corruption in it a living Fountain the mud that 's stirred up so living faith And indeeed hereby it is permanent for purity preserveth pure Faith cannot be kept but in a good even a cleane conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Sixthly True and saving faith hath other graces accompanying it in a good measure with a proportionable encrease strength and activity I know some are more eminent for this others for that grace as Moses for meekness Job patience Abraham
apprehended as attainable by the new Covenant by it comes union to and interest in the person of the Mediator by it is the appropriation and application made of what he hath done and suffered in sinners behalf by it is acceptance given to Gods gracious offers in the Gospel What more meet and just and necessary are not Gods ways in requiring faith equal 4. Behold the danger of ignorance or mistake in this great fundamental point upon which salvation or damnation have such immediate and necessary dependance in other matters not so great danger How justly censurable then is the folly of those that cannot patiently hear the doctrine of faith but think of time laid out upon it as Judas of the ointments expence What needs this waste But truly if you are ignorant of Gods righteousnesse which is by faith in the Son of God you will take other ways in which ye cannot find salvation ye will ye will go about to establish your own righteousnesse Rom. 10.3 5. The usefulnesse and needfulnes of a Gospel-Ministry is hence manifest Faith cometh by hearing Rom. 10.14 15. How shall they believe on him of whom they have not heard and how shall they hear without a Preacher c. How beautiful upon the Mountains are their feet that bring the glad-tidings of salvation and as workers together with God build up precious souls in their holy Faith The second sort of Uses shall be made up of conjoyned Exhortation and Admonition Admonitory exhortations Exhort First Labour after this Faith Heb. 3.12 and take heed lest there be in you an evil heart of unbelief Evil it is to God it dishonoureth him and disappointeth him Evil to us deprives us of our offered happinesse and bringeth upon us swift destruction certain and aggravated condemnation take heed of this grosse self-murder of unbelief make use of the means before prescribed for the begetting and increase of Faith beware oppose those things that are Opposite unto faith This Exhortation is to al. Secondly To those that pretend they have faith Try wh●ther your faith be right or no and to th●s end make use of and apply those notes and properties of faith before handled Yet spend not so much time in trying whether you have it as in exercising it in this many weak Christians are very faulty and this will be the way to make all sure for you and in due time clear to you Thirdly To those that upon trial find they have this excellent grace of faith 1. Rejoyce and comfort your selves against all your sins fears the worlds troubles Satans temptations for as to all thou art more than Conquerour Rom. 5.2 If thou believest rejoyce in hope of the glory of God for he that believeth shall be saved 2. Bless God and boast not there 's no cause of boasting faith is the gift of God there 's cause of thansgiving it 's the hand to receive all other gifts If ye hope for salvation by faith be humble and glory not for boasting is excluded by the Law of Faith Rom. 3.27 the constitution of faith for the salvation of sinners thereby If ye stand by Faith be not high-minded if ye abound in Faith Col. 2.7 abound therein with thanksgiving for ye ow the more Rom. 1.17 3. Live by faith Paul from Habakkuk asserts the just shall live by faith and propounds his own example of living by the faith of the Son of God Be much in the actings and exercise of Faith and make your lives full of the fruit and efficacy of faith yea peculiarly exercise faith in dependance upon God for the support and perseverance of your faith Draw down to practice what you know of faith and ye shall know more satisfactorily the Doctrine of faith than the wisest in the world according to the letter Live by the Faith of the Son of God it is not notion but action not word but life and then wait till faith shall be turned into vision and being perfected be abolished having done its work and then at least ye shall be fully satisfied concerning it 2 Tim. 2.1 4. Labour to be strong in the grace of Faith that is in Christ Jesus not only for your own sakes to avoid those anxieties which weakness of faith causeth but for Gods sake that by strong faith ye may with Abraham the father of the faithful Rom. 4.20 give much glory to God who hath annexed glory to believing 5. Pity them that do not believe and labour to propagate your faith Whose soul that by faith are themselves secured would not bleed in consideration of the dangerous yea certainly miserable estate as before described of unbelieving friends relations acquaintance Warn them exhort them while it is called to day pray for them yea strengthen the weak in faith and offend them not by going to the utmost bounds of your Christian liberty 6. Esteem them precious that have this precious faith and have not the Faith of Christ with respect of persons Jam. 2.1 Verse 5. Let the poor of the world that are rich in faith and heires of the Kingdome be honourable in your esteem as they are in Gods REPENTANCE NOT TO BE Repented Plainly Asserted and Practically Explained Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and forgivenesse of sins REpentance being the Subject of this day in the course of this moneths exercise to be discussed I must wave the Coherence and Connexion of the Text only desire you to note that the Apostles assert the prerogative of Christ as their Apology for their disobedience to humane commands when they forbidden did proceed to preach and a reason thereof is demanded the answer is made in short Whether we obey God or man judge ye Jesus Christ is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour to subdue his enemies by Repentance and support his Subjects by Remission of sin The Text presents us with two parts considerable 1. A Donor Jesus Christ exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour 2. The Donation and that is double Repentance Remission of sin Answerable to the parts of the Text the Doctrines which might be inferred to our instruction would be two Doct. 1. Repentance and Remission of sinnes are the especial acts and advantages of Jesus Christ his exaltation Doct. 2. It is the sole prerogative of the Lord Jesus to give Repentance and Remission of sins But I must not insist on a formal discussion of either of these doctrines my work and intention being to unfold and practically explaine the nature of that most necessary at all times though now more especially grace of true Gospel-Repentance And therefore praetermitting the doctrines let me propound to your serious consideration these four things viz. the 1. Nature Of Gospel-Repentance 2. Necessity Of Gospel-Repentance 3. Notes or Characters Of Gospel-Repentance 4. Next way or means Of Gospel-Repentance First
composed of several Nations between whom there are great antipathies yet march in rank and order and with equal courage fight for the safety of a Kingdom we presently conclude there is a wise General who thus united them And is there not greater reason to believe that a Soveraign Spirit governs the Host of heaven and earth and unites them to maintain the peace of the World To assert that irrational creatures act for a general and unknown good without the motion of a higher cause is equally unreasonable as to say a curious Picture is drawn by a Pensil without the hand of the Painter which guided it in every line according to the Idea of his minde We must then of necessity infer that those particular causes which cannot conduct themselves are directed by an universal cause which cannot erre and thus we see the whole World is an entire and continual Argument of Gods Being and Attributes Secondly The second Argument is drawn from natural conscience which is a subordinate God and acts all things with respect to a higher Tribunal as Saint Paul speaking of those visible Testimonies which God hath exprest to men in the Creation saith Acts 14.17 that he left not himself without a witnesse giving them rain and fruitful seasons by the same proportion we may say God hath not left himself without an internal witnesse having planted in every man a conscience whereby he is dignified above the lower order of beings and made sensible of the supreme Judge to whose Tribunal he is subject now conscience in its double work as it accuses or excuses by turns upon good or bad Actions proves there is a God 1. Natural conscience being clear and innocent is the life-guard which secures from fears vertuous persons who have not offered violence to the light of conscience in times of danger as in a fierce storme at Sea or fearful Thunder at Land when guilty spirits are surprized with horrour they are not liable to those fears being wrapt up in their own innocency Parcus Deorum cultor infrequens insanientis dum sapientiae consultus erro nunc retrorsum vela dare atque iterare cursus cogor relictos Namque Diespiter igni corusco nubila dividens f●etumque per purum tonanteis egit equos volucremque currum Horat. ad 34. l. 31. the reason of their security proceeds from a belief that those terrible works of nature are ordered by an intelligent and righteous providence which is God 2. It gives courage and support to an innocent person when opprest and injured by the unrighteous the natural conscience so long as it is true to its self by adhering to honest principles it is victorious against all attempts whatsoever si fractus illabatur orbis if the weight of all the miseries in the world should come rushing upon him at once it would bear up under them all and stand unbroken in the midst of those ruines the spirit of a man is of strength enough to sustain all his infirmities as a Ship lives in the rough Seas and floats above them the waters being without it so a vertuous person rides out all storms and is preserved from sinking because the fury of worldly troubles cannot reach beyond his outward man the conscience which is the mans strength remains firme and unshaken yea as those Roses are usually sweetest which grow near stinking weeds so the peace joy and glory of a good conscience is then most sensible when a man is otherwise in the most afflicted and oppressed state now from whence proceeds this calmnesse and serenity this vigor and constancy of spirit but from the apprehension of a supreme Judge who at the last will vindicate their cause 2. We may clearly evidence there is a God from the accusations of a guilty conscience this is that never dying worme which if a sinner treads on it will turn again this is a temporal hell a spiritual Tophet what torments are there in the Regions of darknesse which an accusing conscience doth not inflict on a sinner in this life so intolerable are the stings of it that many have took Sanctuary in a Grave and run upon the first death to prevent the miseries of the second Now the shame horror despair and that black train of affections which lash an offender for his vicious acts discovers there is a principle within which threatens vengeance from a righteous and angry God This Argument will be more pressing if we consider that conscience attaches a sinner First for secret crimes which are above the cognizance of men conscience is Gods spy in our bosomes which mixes it self with all our thoughts and actions let a man therefore take what course he will to hide his offence let him sin in the closest retirement that humane policy can contrive where there is no possibility of legal conviction yet his Accuser his Judge his Hel is in his own bosome when the sin is most secret conscience brings in the evidence produces the Law urges the penalty passes the sentence begins the punishment so that the sinner is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-condemned for those sins which are not punishable by man yea sometimes a discovery of concealed sins though certainly bringing temporal death hath been extorted by the horror and anguish of an accusing conscience the reason of all is because in secret sins conscience appeals to Gods Omnisciency who is greater than our consciences and knows all things 1 John 3.20 And upon this account it is praejudicium judicii a kinde of antedated day of judgement a domestical dooms-day and brings upon a sinner the beginning of his sorrows 2. It stings with remorse for those sins which are above the power of man to revenge those who command Armies and by their greatnesse are secured from the penalties of the Law yet conscience sets their sins in order before their eyes and these as so many armed men charge them thorow and overwhelme them many instances there are Belshazzar in the midst of his cups and bravery how was he invaded by fear and horrour when he saw the hand-writing on the Wall the whole Army of the Persians could not discourage his spirit but when conscience revived his guilt and the apprehensions of Gods justice he sunk under the burden the hand-writing from without was terrible because conscience opened a hand-writing within Tiberius the Emperour who was doubly dy'd in unnatural lusts and cruelties could neither evade nor dissemble the horrors of his mind Nero after the barbarous murdering of his mother was always pursued by imaginary Divels his distracted fancy representing to him furies and flames ready to torment him How many Tyrants have trembled on the Throne when the condemned innocents have rejoyced in their sufferings from hence we may infallibly conclude the conscience of the most powerful sinner is under the feeling of a Deity for if there were no punishments to be feared but those the Magistrate inflicts in his own Dominions why are Soveraign
Secondly his Omnipotency can secure us from dangers The Creation is a standing Monument of his Almighty Power for what but Omnipotency could out of nothing produce the beautiful Fabrick of heaven and earth man cannot work without materials but God doth and that which exalts his power is that he made it by his Word he spake the Word and they were made saith the Psalmist Psal 33.9 There went no greater pains to the Worlds Creation than Gods command Moreover the World is preserved from perishing by the power of its Maker Certainly without the support of his mighty hand the World had long before this time relapfed to its primitive nothing Many instances we have of his power in those miraculous deliverances which he hath shewn to his people in their extremity sometimes by suspension of the Works of Nature his dividing the Red Sea and making it as a solid Wall that the Israelites might have a secure passage his stopping the Sun in its course that Joshua might have time to destroy his enemies his suspending the nature of the fire that it might not so much as singe the garments of the three Hebrews his shutting the mouth of the devouring Lyons and r turning Daniel in safety from that dreadful Den And are not all these and many others of this kind not only the pregnant testimonies of his love but the everlasting Characters of his Omnipotency Moreover that which expresses the power of God with as great a lustre is the turning of the hearts of many cruel enemies from their intended rage to favour his people thus did he change the heart of Esau who had resolved the death of his brother that instead of killing him he exprest the greatest tendernesse and the most endearing affections to him thus did he so sway the hearts of the Egyptians towards the oppressed Israelites that instead of securing them under bondage they encouraged their departure by enriching them with jewels of silver and of gold Exod. 12.35 Now our duty is to glorifie this power of God by placing our trust on him Psal 121.2 3. My help comes from the Lord who made the heavens and the earth he will not suffer thy foot to be moved by dependance on God the soul is composed in the midst of the most apparent dangers as the upper Region of the Aire is calme and serene whatever stormes are here below thus David expresses the same courage in all Estates when he was retired into a Cave to shelter himself from the fury of Saul he sung the 57. Psal which he then composed My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed Psal 57.7 I will sing and give praise and afterwards when he triumphed over Hadadezer the King of Zebah he composed the hundred and eighth Psalme and sung the same words O God Psal 108.1 my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise i● faith taught him the same song in the Cave and on the Throne in all our exigencies we should apply the power of God the cause of our perplexing fears is our low apprehension of Gods power and therefore when we are surrounded with difficulties and dangers then we are surprised with terror and dispondency whereas when there are visible means to rescue us we lift up our heads but our duty is in the greatest extremities to glorifie his power and to refer our selves to his goodnesse and though we cannot be certain that God will by miracles rescue us from dangers as he did many of his people in former Ages yet we are sure he will so abate the power and force of the most injurious enemies as they shall not conquer the patience nor break the hope of his people 4. We owe perfect obedience to Gods will vid. Subjection to his Commands and submission to his Providence 1. Subjection to his Commands As he is the first cause so he is the Supreme Lord he that gave us life must give us law God hath an absolute title to our service as Creator this made the Psalmist desire the knowledge of Gods Commandments in order to his obedience Psal 119.73 Thy hands have made me and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandments he may learn this from the universal obedience of all creatures those which are without reason sense or life inviolably observe his commands Esay 48.13 Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath span'd the heavens when I call to them they stand up together as prepared to execute his commands The insensible parts of the World are so compliant with his will as to contradict their proper natures to serve his glory fire descends from heaven at his command the fluid Sea stands up as a solid wall in obedience to him this upbraids our Degeneration and Apostasie that we who are most indebted to the goodnesse of our Creator should prove disloyal and rebellious when the inferiour creatures with one consent serve and glorifie him Lastly we owe submission to the will of his Providence there is no shadow of exception can be formed ag●i●●t his Sovereignty he may do by right whatever he can do by power therefore we should acquiesce in his dispensations this consideration silenc't David Psal 39.9 I held my tongue and said nothing because thou didst it as the presence of a grave person in authority quiets a disordered multitude so the apprehension of Gods supremacy composes our riotous thoughts and passions unquietnesse of spirit in troubles springs from the ignorance of God and of our selves by impatience we cite God before our Tribunal and do as it were usurp his Throne we set up an antiprovidence as if his wisdome should be taught by our folly and sometimes in afflictions we eye the next cause but do not look upward to the Soveraign Disposer of all things l ke Balaam who struck the Asse but did not see the Angel which opposed him thus from a brutish imagination we regard the visible instrument of our trouble but consider not the Providence of God in all from hence it is that our spirits are full of unquiet agitations we live continually upon self-created Racks Now the humble acknowledgement of Gods hand and the submitting of our selves to his will as it glorifies God so it gives ease to us as there is the greatest equity so policy in our willing stooping to him Rom. 14.11 As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God he engages his life and honor for this if there is not a voluntary there must be a violent subjection to him the wilful man never wants woe the spring of our daily misery as well as our sins is opposition to Gods will but the chearful resignation to his Providence what a blessed pill of rest is this to the soul what a Sabbath from all those sinful and penal disturbances which discompose our spirits 't is a lower heaven for as in the state of glory
losse of their lives Ye have not yet resisted unto blood saith the Apostle but how soon it may come to that ye know not Heb. 12.4 It 's your duty and will be your wisdome to prepare for such a black bloody day as that there are two things in the death of Christ that may animate and embolden us into a willingnesse to dye for him 1. A motive one good turne requires another 2. A pattern Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 Verbi verba sunt nobis Documenta verbi facta sunt nobis exempla August A place very much abused by the Socinians as though there were no more in the death of Christ then an example but one end of Christs death must not exclude another in the blood of Christ there 's both a price and a pattern he hath set us a Copy and upon his call we should be ready to write after him with our blood 6. By Faith and an hearty acceptance of Christ let us put in for a share and get an interest in the blood of Christ He hath it 's true dyed for sinners but without faith what is all this to you though ye be sinners Without blood Christ could not save you and without faith the blood of Christ cannot save you Rom. 3.25 Heb. 9.14 Acts 15.9 God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood the conscience is purged by his blood and the heart pur●fied by faith This precious blood of Christ doth no other way purifie than as applyed and sprinkled by faith Every man was under the Law to lay his hand on his burnt-offering of atonement Lev. 1.4 he must own it for his Sacrifice thou must stretch out an hand of faith and put it on the head of thy sin-offering owning Christ as thy Lord and Saviour for it is not Christs blood as barely shed upon the Crosse but as received into the heart that justifies and saves The Son of man is lifted up John 3.15 that whosoever believes on him should not perish Universal causes act not but by a particular application as Adams sin pollutes no child till applyed by the generation of the Parent The Sun though it enlightens the whole world helps no man to see till its light be received into the eye Suppose the blood of Christ were as extensive and universal a cause of salvation as any men pretend to and contend for it could produce no such effect till faith hath wrought a particular application a great gift enriches not the beggar in the rich mans hand but in his own having received it Use 3. Here 's abundant comfort to all them that have by faith applyed and interested themselves in Christ crucified here 's blood that will interpose between you and harmes Christs treading the Wine presse leads you into the Wine Celler though to him it was very painful to you it is very comfortable that which he felt as blood believers may taste as wine Never was there such a Cordial for drooping and disconsolate soules as that which came from Christs heart when his side was broacht and set running upon the Crosse Comfort in five particulars 1. Your enemies are foyled A Believer hath many enemies this blood of Christ hath either reconciled or disarmed them either made them friends or left them impotent enemies To give a short list of a few of them 1. The justice of God that 's satisfied out of Christ it hath a dreadful quarrel and implacable controversie and poor believers are many times afraid under their misapprehensions that exact and inexorable justice will either non-suit or give a verdict against them but they are more afraid than hurt this blood hath made justice their friend Being justified by faith Rom. 5.1 Rev. 4.3 we have peace with God and in Christ he now sits with a rain-bow about his Throne God once drowned the world in wrath but smelling a sweet savour of rest from Noahs sacrifice he purposed and promised never to do so any more and as a badge and token of his favour and the firmnesse of that Covenant of Peace he put his Rain-bow in the clouds If you can upon good grounds say that Christ is yours there 's a Rain-bow about Gods Throne his Bench of Judicature and condemnation is turned into a mercy-seat justice will set hand and Seale to your acquittance and be so farre from pleading against you that it turnes your Advocate Rom. 3.25 26. and Christ having shed his blood because God is just the believer must be justified 2. The Law is fulfilled To be under the Law is a state full of danger and terrour and Saints are many times afraid that it will be put in as a black bill of inditement against them but the blood of Christ hath scracht the curses out of the Rolle He hath Redeemed them from the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 Rom. 6.14 being made a Curs● for them they are not under the Law but under grace Not unde● the Law as to its invenomed curses inexorable severity and intolerable penalties The Law it self to every believer 1 Tim. 1.9 is as it were non-suited by the death of the Law-maker It is not made for a righteous man it was given to Adam when he was righteous and yet strongly obliges such as are righteous but it lies not against a righteous man so the word signifies as to his condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not laid as an Axe to the root of the tree Col. 2.15 3. Satan is subdued Christs bruised heele hath broken his head He spoyled principalities and powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Crosse The whole Host of Hell with all their traine of Artillery was led Captive by him on the Crosse and tyed to the Chariot-wheels of this triumphant Conquerour When the door-post was sprinkled with blood the destroying Angel passed away the blood of Christ sprinkled on the conscience is a choice Antidote and preservative against this devouring Abaddon not but that he still may be a Tempter and a troubler but he shall never be a conquerour never a tormentor Christopher Haasse a Swedish Senator being at the point of death the Devil appeared by his bed side with pen ink and paper Come quoth he reckon up thy sins in order as thou hast committed them that I may carry them in a Catalogue to Gods Tribunal whether thou art going Well Satan saith he if it must be so let the Catalogue be under this head and Title The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head and away flew the Devil in a great rage ah sirs had we but the right art of pleading the blood of Christ it would make this roaring Lion more to tremble than the Lion doth at the cock-crowing 4. Sin is abolished and that is a far worse enemy than the Devil Many a
afford matter for a whole Sermon Fifthly From the Vicegerency of Christs death Christ dyed 1. For our good 2. For ou● sins of both those you have heard 3. In our place of this I now come to Treat Briefly for I have been wonderfully prevented 1 Pet. 3.18 Christ suffered for sins the just for the unjust 2 Cor. 5.14 If one died for all then were we 〈◊〉 ●●d i. e. juridically we were all as dead condemned per●●●● because he died in our stead He is said to die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alwayes signifies a commutation saith the then famous but afterwards Apostate Grotius eye for eye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5.38 that is one instead of the other Matth. 2.22 Archelaus reigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the room of his Father Herod So 2 Sam. 18.33 Would God I had died for thee O Absalom i. e. in thy stead so that thou hadst lived Thus Christ died for us so John 11.50 Caiaphas said It is expedient fo● us that one man should die for the people i. e. in their stead to save their lives as a publick 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Gentiles being used in case of some great and common calamities threatning destruction to all to offer up some one man in the name and stead of all which was a shadow of that great truth of Christs dying for all And Socinus himself being put to it cannot deny this Even in Heathen Authours it is a common phrase To do a thing for another i. e. in his place Ego pro te molam I will grinde for you and you shall be free Christ is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ransome or Price a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is one Argument that his Blood was the price of our Redemption and a Ransome in our stead 1 Tim. 2.6 Who gave himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Ransome for all Gal. 3.13 Christ hath Redeemed us from the cu●se of the Law himself being made a curse for us i. e. he underwent that Curse due to us that Curse from which we are freed that Curse which others who receive not Jesus Christ shall undergo What a cluster of Arguments might be gathered here It is prodigious boldness in Socinians to turn this Article of Faith into a streame of Rhetorick Paulus amavit in voce execrationis argutus esse But Manum de tabula S●xthly And lastly From the peculiarity of Christs death It is undeniable that Christ died for us so as no man in the world ever did nor can do Therefore not in the Socinian sense not barely for the confirmation of our faith or excitation of our obedience or strengthning of our hope or encouragement of us in our sufferings for in this sense thousands have died for you Paul tells the Co 〈◊〉 he suffered for them i. i. for their good Col. 1.24 and yet ●●lls the Corinthians he did not suffer for them 1 Cor. 1.13 Was Paul crucified for you i. e. in your stead or for your sinnes And this for the first Head of Arguments where I see I must take up though I thought to have urged divers other Arguments from the Nature of mans justification and salvation But I will not be too tedious What hath been said may be enough to convince any indifferent man and others will not be convinced though they are convinced Thus much for the second particular the assertion of this truth The third should have been the vindication of it from the cavils of Socinians but I am cut off and it is not wholly necessary for if once a truth be evident from plain Scriptures we ought not to be moved with the cavils of wanton wits or the difficulty of comprehending those great mysteries by our reason when the Socinians can solve all the Phaenomena of nature which are the proper Object of mans Reason then and not till then we will hearken to their rational Objections And Aristotle somewhere lays down this Conclusion That when once man is well setled in any truth he ought not to be moved from it by some subtle Objection which he cannot well answer All this I speak not as that there were any insolubilia any insuperable Objections against this truth that I ever met with for though there are many things here which are hard to be understood yet nothing which cannot be answered As when they tell you he did not suffer eternal death which was due to us It is true he did not but a moment of his sufferings was equal in worth to our eternal sufferings the dignity of the person being always considerable in the estimation of the action or the suffering So when they say one man cannot dye for another it is false you heard David wish he had dyed for Absalom and Jehu threatens those who should let any of them escape That his life shall go for his life 2 Kings 10.24 and Histories tell us of one man dying for another So when they say it is unrighteous that God should punish the just for the unjust Answ It is not unjust if any will voluntarily undertake it volenti non sit injuria Besides that God gives Laws to us Deut. 24.16 but not to himself The fourth and last Head was by way of Application Is it so That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of our Justification and Salvation Vse 1. Hence see the excellency of Christian Religion which shews the true way to life and settles doubting consciences Heathens were miserably plunged they saw their sins their guilt and had terrors of conscience an expectation of wrath this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was written in their hearts that they which do such things are worthy of death They saw the need of atoning God reconciling God they saw the insufficiency of all their Rites and Sacrifices Ah nimium faciles qui tristia Funera caedis Tolli flumineâ posse putatis aquâ Some of them saw the necessity of a mans death and that sine humano cruore without mans blood the work could not be done but then that seemed an act of cruelty and the addition of a sin instead of the expiation of it and here they stuck they could go no further Now blessed be God who hath discovered those things to us which were hid from others who hath removed difficulties and made our way plain before us who hath given us a Sacrifice and accepted it and imputed it to us and thereby reconciled us and given us peace a solid peace as the fruit of that Reconciliation Vse 2. See the dreadfulnesse of Gods justice how fearful it is to fall into the hands of the Living God Christ himself must suffer if he be a sinner though but by imputation Use 3. It shews us the malignity of sin that could be expiated only by such blood Use 4. It shews us the stability and certainty of our Justification and Salvation It is
and never sheweth the strength that is in these godly streams till stopped by some temptation but then it roareth and swelleth and overfloweth its banks that all men may see the penitent is full of the Holy Ghost and this is alwayes a Note of Repentance Be zealous and repent is Christ his own Call sorrow must not be for sin as if we minded not to part with it but must manifest our fulnesse of resolution to be rid of it whatever it costs us Seventhly Revenge the due result of zeal by zeal we are carried with that vigor that the world concludes us mad for God 7. Concomitant of godly sorrow and for Religion especially when our indignation boiles into revenge upon our selves for our sins by self-castigations Acts 26.24 not of our body with whips and scourges as do the Papists but by the abatement of lust which stirreth in us buffetting the flesh and bringing it into subjection giving it the blew eye a blot in the face as the Greek word signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 withdrawing those lawful comforts which make it to wax wanton as Hilarion when he felt his lusts wax big and strong and wanton provoking to filthinesse Ego faciam Aselle ut non calcitres I will by abstinence keep this Asse for kicking and our Henry the second being inclined to incontinency prayed to God that he might rather have a constant weak body than so s●rong lusts this is that which carrieth the penitent to wreak his quarrel on the occasion and instruments of their impiety Exod. 38.8 as the daughters of Israel in dedicating their looking glasses by which they had offended unto the service of the Temple and as did the Ephesians burn their books before all men Act. 19.19 as holy Cranmer thrust his right hand which subscribed his recantation first into the fire revengefully crying out This unworthy right hand as long as he could speak and this revenge leads them to satisfaction for offences done either by publick confession unto open shame or ready restitution as Zacheus threefold to the injury done as penitent Bradford that parted with his whole estate to satisfie the wrong done by one dash of his pen when a servant so that revenge worketh all the disgrace dishonour disadvantage and destruction that is possible against sin thus then you have here the Notes and Characters of Repentance laid down by the Apostle the best looking glasse that can be by which to dresse your penitent souls Let it be to every of us a Use of Examination and clearly convince us that if we be strangers to sorrow or our sorrow be to the world not towards God godly sorrow we have not repented never let us think of celebrating a celestial Passeover without these soure herbs Again if under our sorrow we continue carelesse of required duty clamorous by continued guilt on the conscience fearless of common danger and dese●ved misery by the increase of sin foolishly pitiful towards our lusts to be rebuked with rage faint in our desires to be rid of sin luke-warme in our work of mortification or indulgent to our lusts not str king home whilst we smite at sinne we are not the Subjects of true Gospel-Repentance for these must alwayes accompany it Having laid before you the Characters of true Repentance I shall proceed very briefly to propound the fourth and last General head to be considered viz. The Next way and meanes to gain Repentance And herein I shall not insist on the method and order of procuring repentance which is hinted to you before or the lets and hinderances of repentance which are to be removed this would tire your patience on which I have already too much trespassed but I shall only give you some special directions which you must observe and carefully practice if ever you will obtain Repentance As 1. Help to repentance First Sit with care constancy and conscience under the Word of truth and Gospel of Grace Repentance you have already heard is the great work of the Word and loud call of the Gospel This was the voice of John the Baptist nay of Jesus Christ himself and his Apostles the Ministers of the Word are the Embassadours of Reconciliation and so Preachers of repentance hearing is prescribed of God the way to happinesse Isa 55.2 Heare and your soul shall live The Preaching of the Word is the power of God to salvation so long as God continueth the Word to a people they are in a possibility of repentance but where the vision failes the people perish Prov. 29.19 If ever God bring the Jews to Repentance it will be by the Preaching of the Gospel the lifting up of the root of Jesse as an ensign Isa 11.11 God sealeth up under impenitency by the withdrawing of his Word the removing of the Candlestick of the Gospel is the saddest doom can be denounced Rev. 2.5 Refusing to heare is the great reason of impenitency Psal 81.11 my people would not hearken is Gods complaint and We will not heare the language of the obstinate Jer. 6.17 Rejection of the Word pulling away the shoulder and stopping the eare the property of an hard heart Zach. 7.12 never did Foelix faile so much as when trembling at Pauls Preaching he sends him away and would heare no more of that matter nor did the Jews fall under final Apostacy untill they put the Gospel away from them the very Heathen concludes Repentance to be the result of audience and attention Invidus Iracundus iners vinosus amator Horace in Epist 2. Nemo adeo ferus est qui non mitescere possit Si modò culturae patientem accommodat aurem There is no prophanesse but it is curable by patient audience As ever you will repent hear the Word attend unto instruction abide the heart-shaking convictions of the word if you sleight the Ministry of the Word the sound of the Trumpet the call of the Gospel you are sealed up under impenitency the very cry of the Gospel-call to Repentance is Let him that hath eares hear Secondly Study the nature of God 2. Help to repentance God must be the object of Repentance we must sorrow towards God return to God it is a great inducement therefore to know God ignorance of God is the mother of impenitency the times of impenitency are denominated times of ignorance Acts 17.30 This is observed to be the very cause of obduracy the Gentiles walk in the vanity of their minds having their understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God by the ignorance which is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart Ephes 4.17 18. Ignorance of God was the very principle of Israels persistence and progresse in sin They proceed from evil to evil but know not me saith the Lord Jer. 9.3 6. The devil labours to keep all light out of mans soul that so he may sleep in sin and be locked up in impenitency he hinders the
Gospel from being Preached if possible he would blow out the light and hinder men from hearing but chiefly from understanding if our Gospel be hid it is hid unto them that perish the eyes of whose minde the god of this world hath blinded lest the light of the gl rious Gospel of Christ who is the Image of God should shine unto them 2 Cor. 4.4 And when God brings to repentance he breaks these barres of ignorance he pulls off these scales of blindnesse and begins with the understanding true grace begins alwayes at the renewing of the mind the transforming of the mind to know the good and acceptable Will of God is the formality of the Gospel-grace true repentance Rom. 12.2 And the knowledge of God being the princ●ple of it is put for repentance They shall know God Hos 2.20 and God will be known by the Egyptians Isa 19.21 are the promises of repentance There can be no conviction of a contrariety to God where there is not a right conception of God and affection must follow apprehension ignoti nulla cupido how can we fear God or his goodness if we do not know him what reason of return to God when men know not his holinesse offended justice provoked power irresistible mercy in pardoning iniquity It is a seeming faire Apology for Pharaohs obduracy Who is the Lord that I should let Israel go The work of the Gospel is to open the blinde eyes in turning from Satan unto God the enquiry of Saul is first Lord who art thou Act. 9. then What wouldest thou have me to do Did men know who it is they sin against they never durst be so bold Study therefore the nature of God acquaint your selves with his Attributes his Holinesse Power Justice Mercy and the like Your soules will never be drawn from sin or driven into a course of true repentance untill God become your dread 3. Help to repentance Thirdly Sit close to the work of self-scrutiny be serious in self-examination no man sits so fast in impiety as the stranger at home none so soon run upon their ruine as the regardlesse of their accounts This is a remedy of Gods immediate prescription Commune with your hearts is on your beds Psal 4.4 Search and try your wayes and turn unto the Lord Lam. 3.40 Judge your selves Mat. 7.1 When we approach his Table where we are eminently to act repentance the whole work of preparation is resolved into self-examination 1 Cor. 11.28 Nay this is a receipt transmitted to us with a probatum est thus by David Psal 119.59 I examined my wayes and turned my feet into thy Testimonies And when the Prodigals wits returned to consider his wickednesse he would home to be a servant where he had been and might have been a son Gods rod is but a calling us to reckon with our own souls he never reasons with any by correction that read their own estate in his instructions You have heard before that conviction must go before conversion mans conscience is a Register which will bring to remembrance and Judge that will clearly determine of mans wayes the worst of men by a short conference with their own soul would soon see a necessity of repentance censure others lesse and your selves more enquire not into other mens condition so much as your own Conversation let no day return without accounts be serious in self-examination Fourthly Sit loose to the world 4. Help to repentance the world is the great pull-back to heaven and hinderance of repentance you may observe the reason the Rebellion and impenitency of Ezekiels hearers was their hearts went after their covetousnesse Ezek 33.31 otherwise they took delight to hear That sad sentence A Camel may sooner go through the eye of a Needle than a rich man enter into the Kingdome of heaven was occasioned by a rich mans refusal of Christ his call to repentance Matth. 19.20 Riches choak the work and lift up the heart too high great men in the world think they live above all reproof for Tyrus-like they set their hearts as the heart of God Ezek. 28.6 and think to live without controle he that loves the world finds when called to repentance he is loth to leave pleasures it is hard to renounce riches it cuts deep to despise Wife Children Father Mother Friends and deare Relations he cannot but be dismayed at reproach and sufferings sin is the common property of the world the things of this world is the recompence of impiety they that sin highest ordinarily succeed most yet this is the great stumbling stone of the godly the world makes David almost repent his repentance Psal 73. They that will follow God must be strangers to the world true Penitentiaries must be pilgrims in the earth Fifthly See the shortnesse of life 5. Help to repentance and limitaton of the day of grace Hopes of long life and thoughts of repentance at pleasure help many a soul to hell our life we must consider is but a bubble a blast a shadow gone before it well appeare in which there is no certainty our time is in Gods hand he hath numbred our dayes but to which of us hath he declared the number hath he given any man a legible Lease of his life have the youngest strongest most healthful among us an assurance of to morrow and doth not eternity depend on the well-husbanding of this uncertain time is there any remembrance of God in the grave or repentance among the dead doth not death determine the eternal estate of men Dives eyes cannot disti●l one tear in hell though he call to Abraham for mitigation of torments never so much as begs the pardon of sin no that is too late see we not men pensive and sad at the thoughts of death Chrysostome hath told us the cause of the fear of death is because we live not in the austerity befitting Christianity but lead d●licate and voluptuous lives Could we make every day our dying day it would quicken us to repentance Hilarion never had a to morrow and when he comes to die he hath the comfort of it Oh my soul get thee out of this house of clay what dost thou fear Septuaginta pr pe annis servivisti Christo mortem tim s Hast thou served Christ almost seventy yeares and dost thou now feare death If we will live for ever we must die dayly if we will not defer repentance we must not determine to our selves any other time than the present Again if we know our time in nature who knoweth the date of the day of grace It is a limited day but the bounds thereof are not pub ished that to day whilst it is called to day we may hearken to his voice Heb. 4.4 7. lest he sweare in his wrath we shall not enter into his rest A season of salvation is allotted to the sons of men the old world had its day Jerusalem had her day every of us have our day
Christ said the poor Martyr but I can dye for Christ Love will say to the truth as she said to her Mother in Law Whether thou goest I will go and where thou lodgest I will lodge thy people shall be my people and thy God my God where thou diest I will die and there will I be buried the Lord do so to me Ruth 1.16 17. and more also if ought but death part me and thee Gen. 34.3 Love is the glue that makes the heart cleave to the Object as it is said of Shechem His soule clave unto Dinah the daughter of Jacob. Minuit Felix octa Love is the twist of soules Crederes unam animam in duobus esse divisam it is but one soul that informs Lovers Christians if you would hold fast the truth LOVE IT Love hates putting away 2 Thes 2.11 12 when ever your love begins to decay you are in danger of Apostacy For this cause God shall send them strong delusions to believe lies for what cause why because they received not the love of the truth Christians look to your standing there is much of this judicial blast abroad the generality of Professors have contented themselves w●th and rejoyced in the Light of the Truth and in the Notion of the Truth and in the expressions of the Truth but they have lost their love to the truth Parts without grace hath been the precipice of this evil and adulterous generation the foolish Virgins of this age have got Oyle only in their Lamps but none in their Vessels and so perish 2 Pet. 3.17 You therefore Beloved seeing ye know these things before beware lest you also being led away with the error of the wicked fall from your own steadfastness Let it be your care to receive the truth in the power of the truth in the impressions of the truth upon your hearts in the love of the truth Love the truth even when the truth seems not to love you when it makes against your Carnal interests when it calls for your right eye and your right hand The right eye of your sinfull pleasure the right hand of your dishonest gain when the truth comes to take away all your false Principles and to take away all your false evidences not to leave you worth a Duty or a Church-priviledge not to leave you so much as a Creed or a Pater-noster or a good meaning but casts you out of all which self and flesh hath counted your gain in point of salvation Ezech. 16.5 Phil. 3.7 to the loathing and abhorring of your persons c. Yet even then I say Receive the truth in the love of it God intends you more good in it then you are aware of and therefore say with young Samuel Ure se●a corripe ut ae●ernum parcas Bern. Speak Lord for thy servant heareth and with Bernard do Lord wound me scorch me slay me spare me not now that thou mayest spare me for ever Thirdly There is yet another means Ver. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that is in the verse next to my Text relating to the same duty though under a various expression That good thing which was committed to thee KEEP The good or excellent trust and depositum was either the Ministerial Office with the gifts and graces which Timothy received by Ordination for the edifying of the Church or else The form of sound words here committed to him in my Text whichsoever this duty is incu●cated upon Timothy again and again that he must keep it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 preserve it as under Lock and Key and saith Beza He keeps his depositum that improveth it so that the depositor findes no cause why he should take it away But how shall Timothy or any other Evangelical Minister or Christian be able so to keep it it followeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Occupatio est by the Holy Ghost The duty indeed is very difficult but by calling in the help of the Spirit of God Believers shall be enabled to do it and he is not far from every one of them Rom. 8.26 Col. 1.29 for so it follows by the Holy Ghost WHICH DWELLETH IN VS He is IN them as a Principle of life and power by his vertue and influence helping their infirmities and working in them mightily Great is the opposition that Believers meet withall and Satan and this present evill world hath been too hard for many not Professors only but Ministers also men that seemed to be stars of the first magnitude they have proved to be but falling-stars meer Comets that for a time make a great blaze but quickly extinguish They went on from us because they were not of us 1 Joh. 2.19 But real Saints true Believers shall hold out why because greater is he that is in them then he that is in the world 1 Joh. 4.4 keep by the HOLY GHOST THAT DWELLETH IN VS Christians walk in the Spirit and pray for the Spirit cry mightily to God for the continual presence and operation of the Holy Ghost and for your encouragement Luke 11.13 take along with you that blessed promise of our Saviour If ye then being evil know how to give good gifts unto your children how much more shall your heavenly Father give the holy Spirit to them that ask him Now to the King eternal immortal invisible 1 Tim. 1.7 the only wise God be honor and glory for ever and ever Amen FINIS Books Printed for Ralph Smith at the Bible in Corn-Hill THE works of that learned and laborious Divine John Weemse in four Volumes 4. Mr. Byfield on the Collossions fol. Mr. Thomas Edwards Gangraena four Volumes in 4. Ainsworths works fol. And his communion of Saints 12. Dr. Staughtons heavenly conversation 12. Bp. Downam on the Covenant of grace 12. Robins Essayes 12. Mr. Dicksons Exposition on Matthew Mr. Brinsley a learned Treatise of Christs Mediatorship and the souls implantion 8. Mr. Brinsley Brazen Serpent and Christs Membership Mr. Dicksons Exposition on the whole book of the Psalms one Volume 8. second edition Mr. Watsons works viz. 1. The Art of Divine Contentment the fourth edition 2. The Christians Charter shewing the priviledges of believers in this life and the life to come the fifth edition Mr. Ashes Sermon at Mr. Whitakers funeral Dr. Spurstow on the Promise second edition Retorford on the Covenant of grace Mr. Cottons Exposition on the book of Ecclesiastes and Canticles second edition A learned Treatise proving the Deity of the Holy Ghost by Mr. Estwick Mr. Gurnals Christian Armor third Edition Mr. Hutcheson on the Gospel according to St. John in fol. On the twelve small Prophets second edition Mr. Gurnals Christians Armour the second part Dr. Guile on the Canticles AN ALPHABETICAL TABLE Relating to the chief Heads handled in this TREATISE A. ADAM able of Creation to keep the Law p. 108 109. The one man by whom sin entred into the world p. 136.
in dignity offices and dominion the priviledge of Adoption 441. Love of God Father and Son manifest in the Covenant of Redemption 227. Love of Christ in his death 293. and union with Sinners 386. Love to God the evidence of Faith concerning his being 55 56 59. Losse of all good the paine of Hell Natural 625 626. Spiritual 625 626. Eternal 625 626. M Mans composure of body and powers of soul prove that there is a God 41. Man comprehends the whole species of such a creature 106. Man made mutable though holy and why 113. Man is depraved 〈◊〉 sinful 111. Mans misery by sin 173 174 175 p. 176. Man not Angels subjects of Faith 455. Mediator needful 263 264 265. Mediator of the Covenant of Grace who 241 261. Mediator one named man and why named Christ Jesus and why ib. Mediator is Christ and none but Christ 265 266 c. Mediator comfortable in all conditions giving man confidence of accesse to God 254 255. Misery inevitable to such as despise the Mediator ib. Merit of Christ the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. Method in Sermons necessary and profitable 22. Means of Repentance 546. Ministry needful unto Faith 483. Ministers must be burning and shining lights 1 2. Ministers must suffer affliction ib. Mixture of grace and sin is in the best men 167. Mutability the meer cause of mans sin 112. Mutability of mans created estate was just and necessary 113. Mutability attended mans Happinesse as well as Holinesse p. 114. Mutability and its sequel must lead us to God for confirmation 119. N Name of Christ part of his Exaltation 315 what it is 316. how it is above every Name 317 318 319 320. how Christs Name was given by God 320 321. Nature by three Arguments proveth that there is a God 30 31. Natural Agents by their operation proveth a God 42. Natural conscience proveth a God 43. Nature stained with Adams sin 151. Nature without Divine revelation discovereth not a Trinity nor yet opposeth it when revealed 77 78 79 80 81. Nature of God well studied a special help to repentance 547. New Covenant better than the old 243. Nobility no cause of boasting 145. Notes of repentance 539 540. O Object External could not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Object of New better than of the Old Covenant 251. Obedience in Subjection to Commands Submission to Providence The duty of such who believe God is 63 64. Offence at preaching Gods anger against sin is groundless 192 193. Offices of Christ fit him to be the only Mediator 271 272. Offices of Christ communicated to the Saints 441. Old Covenant abrogated 252. Opposition of Christ consistent with subjection to Christ how 327 328. Sin Originale originans discussed 135 c. Originale originatum discussed 150 151 c. Original sin is a defection 112. Original how said of mans pravity 155 156. Original sin is hard to be understood 134. Original sin confirmed by counsel 144. Acknowledged by Heathens ib. Original sin is called man and old man in what sense p. 157 158 159 160 161 162. a body and a body of sin 162 163 164. Original sin hath polluted mans nature 151 152 153. Original sin is to be subdued 170. Original sin to be conf ssed and bewailed 165. Original sin imbitters all worldly comforts 171. Ordinances argue original sin in mans nature 153. Ordinances means of union with Christ 383. P Pain in Christ his death 285 286. Pardon of sin freely given how 425 426. Parents beget their children in their own image 151. Parents good yet children by nature evil 152. Parents care for posterity quickned by the miscarriage of the first Parent of us all 147. Parents childrens looking glasses by which they dresse their lives ib. Penitent must be humbled and why 498 499 450. Peace a duty and blessing to be pursued 556. Peace an effect of Faith 47. Pelagius the first opposer of original sin p. 144. Person in the Godhead what it is 69. Persons in the Godhead three 70. Plurality of persons in the Godhead proved 71 72 73. Persons in the Godhead distinguished not divided 75. their order declared 76. Person promises properties and providences of Christ all belong to believers 393 394. Persecution of Saints a crimson sin 386. Perseverance of Saints certain 387. Pleading at Gods bar necessary to justification 404. Plea of not guilty can never procure justification at Gods bar 405. Popish Repentance false 515. Pravity and inbred corruption what it is 155. the parts of it 156. Pravity and a naughty nature is in every man 150. Pravity of the nature of man evidenced by Scripture 151 152 153. Salvation of Christ 151 152 153. Sacraments 151 152 153. Sad effects 151 152 153. Prayer an help to repentance 552. Prayer answered an effect of Faith 469. Prayer its extent and encouragement p. 262. Preparations of heaven how from the foundation of the world 660 661. Preparation to last Judgement characterised 617 618. Priestly office of Christ and its parts 272 273. Price of the soul of Christ his death 298. Price paid for man was not idem but tantundem 425. Principle and cause two distinct things 69. Principles good and bad two distinct blasphemous to assert 112. Promises were made to Christ on the account of his satisfaction for mans sin 209 300. Promises of Justification Sanctification Resurrection Eternal life The Promises of the better Covenant 240 241. Promises of temporal mercy better under the New than under the Old Covenant 248. Protestant doctrine of the imputation of Christs righteousness defended 387. Profane repentance what it is p. 516. Prosperity of profane no plea against Deity 50 51. Q Quakers repentance vile false and wicked 518 519. R Reason and sensation evince the Divine authority of the Scriptures 90. Revelation from God admitted by all and reason it should 88 89. Revelation not to be received untill cleared to be of God ibid. Rectitude is conformity to a Rule 107. Rectitude of Adam by Creation was of the whole man understanding will and sensitive appetite 109. Rectitude natural and not natural to man how 111. Regeneration explained 442. it s Synonimas 443. it is defined ib. Regeneration compared with natural generation 443 444. they agree in cause subject and manner of production ib. 445. disagree in properties 446. Religion making known Christs satisfaction most excellent 350. Relations of men subject to Gods wrath p. 187. Relation to God reason of comfort and duty 436. Repentance not to be repented explained 485. In its Nature 487. Necessity 520. Notes 539. Next way to it 546. Repentance defined 487. Repentance is a recession from sin and return to God 502 503 504 505. Return to God the second part of Conversion 506 507 508. Repentance seven false kinds 515 516 517 518. Repentance contemned when 334 335 336. Repentance neglected when and with what issue 537 538. Resurrection possible and credible 579 582 583 584 585. what it means ib. who to be