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A81890 Christ crucified, or, The marrow of the gospel, evidently holden forth in LXXII sermons, on the whole 53. chapter of Isaiah wherein the text is clearly and judiciously opened up ... / by ... James Durham. Durham, James, 1622-1658. 1683 (1683) Wing D2799; ESTC R229132 829,417 572

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may the sinner apply it Answer Not only because it 's free and freely offered but by gripping to it by Faith as the Prophet doth here It 's not only to apply it simply but to step in and rest upon it in the terms it is made offer of so that as on the one part Jesus Christ became really lyable to suffering and satisfied for our sins when he said Lo I come in the volume of thy book it is written of me I delight to do thy will So upon the other part the believing sinner comes to apply the price payed by imbracing the price and acquiescing in the satisfaction and gripping to it as his own and by his being brought to say in Faith Let his wounding be my pardon let his chastisement be my peace and let his stripes be my healing By this means as the Law had a right to Christ for his paying the Elects debt so they by believing get a right to the promise of pardon and healing For if the bargain was ficker on the one side to procure wounding to Christ as if he had been the sinner himself so on the other side the bargain is as sure The Believer is set free and may be as really comforted as if he had a righteousness of his own or had never had sinned Use 2. Therefore there is here wonderful matter of consolation to Believers that what was Justice to Christ is Grace and Mercy to us that which was pain to him is pleasure to us His sorrow our comfort his wounding our pardon his stripes our healing c. Use 3. As ye would not prejudge your selves of these benefites which Christ hath purchased make your peace with God through Christ If your pardon and peace be not obtained this way ye will never get it but ye shall be made to pay your own debt and be lyable to wrath eternally because of inability to pay your debt to the full Therefore step to and make the offer welcome how sinful and undone soever ye be The more sensible ye be ye are the more welcome This is the particular use of the Doctrine O! Let these things sink in your hearts that ye are sinners great sinners under wrath and at feud with God that Jesus Christ is the Saviour of lost sinners and that there is no way to pardon and peace but by closing with him and saying hold on his satisfaction That ye may be drawn to cast your selves over on this everlasting Covenant for obtaining the benefits that Christ hath purchased 〈◊〉 ●d himself bless what hath been sp●ken for this end and use SERMON XXIII ISAIAH LIII V Vers 5. But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed IT were no small progress in Christianity to know and believe the truths that are implyed and contained in this same verse The Lord by the Prophet is giving a little compend of the work of Redemption by his saving of sinners from death through and by the wounding of the Mediator We did a little open the meaning of the words and gave a sum of the Doctrines contained in them at least of some of them which do contribute to this scope The Prophet is here speaking of Christ's sufferings with a respect to the cause of them and the effect that followed them and shews how this was indeed the mistake and blasphemous imputation that we had of and were ready to put on him even to judge him smitten and plagued of God for his own sins whereas God hath another design He was altogether without sin but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities We were at feud with God and he took on him the chastisement of our peace And this is the effect to procure healing to us We shall now speak a word to three Doctrines further beside what we spoke to the last day which are these 1. That there was an eternal design plot and transaction betwixt God and the Mediator as to Christs suffering for the redeeming of elect sinners before he actually suffered This the Prophet speaks of as a thing concluded For the cause of his sufferings was condescended on and the end and fruit of them was determined which implyes an antecedamus transaction betwixt the Father and him for putting him in the room of sinners And by this transaction Justice hath access to exact the payment of this price He interposed and the Father exacts of him the payment of their debt and seeks satisfaction from him for all that he bargained for 2. That this transaction or design concerning the Redemption of elect sinners is in respect of Christs suffering and satisfying of Justice fully and actually performed he undertook to be wounded and bruised and he was accordingly actually wounded and bruised The transaction as to the engagement in it and efficacy of it took place in Isaiah's time and before his time but as to the actual performance of what the Mediator engaged himself to suffer it is spoken of prophetically by him as a thing done because to be done and now it is done and indeed long ago 3. That the satisfying of Justice by the Mediators Sufferings according to his engagement proves as effectual to absolve justifie and heal these even the grossest Sinners that come under this Bargain and Transaction as if they had actually suffered and payed and satisfied their own Debt themselves these Sins are pardoned through his Sufferings their deadly Wounds are healed by his Stripes as if they had never had a wound their Compt is dashed and scored as clean out as if they had never had any Debt they are acquitted and set free as if they had never been guilty These three Doctrines ly very near the life of the Gospel and the Prophet in this Chapter and particularly in this Verse is often on them Our purpose is only shortly to explicate them to you as a short sum and compend of the tract of the Covenant of Redemption The first of them shews the rise of the work of Redemption The second shews the mids by which it is executed The third holds out the effect and consequence and the end of all For the first then There is we say an eternal transaction betwixt God and Jesus Christ the Mediator concerning the Redemption of Sinners his actual redeeming by being wounded and bruised supposeth this for the Son is no more lyable to suffering not to speak of his suitableness then any other of the Persons of the blessed God-head had there not been an antecedent transaction there was no obligation nor ty on him to be wounded and to enter into the room of Sinners as their Cautioner for payment of their Debt if there had not been a prior engagement neither could his wounding and bruising have proven useful or have brought healing to us if this prior engagement had not been And this is it which
them to wit Sin therefore to such as he cured he says very often Thy sins be forgiven thee he studied to remove that in most of them he did deal with and so looking on our Lord as taking on our Sins complexly with the cause and as having a right to remove all the effects of Sin evidencing it self in the removing of these Diseases whereof Sin was the cause these words may be thus fulfilled and so they are clear and the Doctrine also We have here no meer exemp●ary Saviour that hath done no more but confirmed his Doctrine and given us a copy how to do and behave but he hath really and actually born our Sorrows and Griefs and removed our Debt by undergoing the punishment due to us for Sin Observe here 1. That Sin in no Flesh no not in the Elect themselves is without Sorrow and Grief Tribulation and Anguish are knit to it or it hath these following on it or take the Doctrine thus Wherever there is Sin there is the cause of much Sorrow and Grief no more can the native cause be without the effect then Sin can be without Sorrow and Grief it 's the plain assertion of Scripture Rom. 2.8 9. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil which one place putting the four words together says 1. That there is Sorrow most certainly and inseparably on every Soul that hath sinned And 2. That this Sorrow is exceeding great which may also be the reason why this Sorrow is set out in two words in the Text therefore four words are used by the Apostle to express it It 's not our purpose here to dispute whether God in his Justice doth by necessity of Nature punish the Sinner These three things considered will make out the Doctrine which is That there is a necessary connexion betwixt S●n and Sorrow and that this Sorrow must needs be very great 1. If we consider the exceeding unsuitableness of Sin to the holy Law of God and how it is a direct contrariety to that most pure and perfect Law 2. If we consider the perfectly holy Nature of God himself The righteous Lord saith the P●almist Psal 11.7 loveth righteousness and the Prophet Hab. 1.13 says He is of purer eyes then that be can behold evil and he cannot look upon iniquity and though we need no● to dispute Gods Soveraignty yet it is clear that he is angry with the wicked every day Psal 7.11 and he will by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34.7 and tha● there is a greater suitableness in his inflicting Sorrow and Grief on a Sinner that walks contrary to him then there is in shewing him Mercy and there is a greater suitableness in his shewing Mercy to a humbled Sinner that is aiming to walk holily before him 3. If we consider the revealed will of God in the Threatning who hath said the day thou eatest thou shalt surely die we may say there is as they speak in the Schools a hypothetick necessity of grief and sorrow to follow on Sin and that there is a necessary connexion betwixt them and this may very well stand with the Mediator his coming in and interposing to take that Grief and Sorrow from off us and to lay it on himself but it was once ours because of our Sin If it be ask●d w●at Grief and Sorrow this is We said it's very great and there is reason for it for though our act of Sin 1. As to the Subject that Sins Man And 2. As to the act of ●in it self a sinful thought word or deed that is soon gone be finit yet if we consider Sin 1. In respect of the object ●gainst whom the infinite God 2. In respect of the absolute purity of Gods Law a rule that bears ou● G●ds Image set down by infinite Wisdom and that may be some way called infinitely pure and Sin as being against this pure rule that infinite Wisdom hath set down And 3. If we consider it in no respect of its nature every sin being of this nature that though it cannot properly wrong the Majesty of God yet as to the intention of the thing and even of the Sinner it wrongs him Sin in these respects may be called infinite and the wrong done to the Majesty of God thereby may be called infinite as these who built Babel their intention in that work breathed forth infinite wrong to God as having a direct tendency to bring them off from dependance on him and so every Sin if it had its will and intent would put God in subordination to it and set it self in his room and therefore Sin in some respect as to the wrong against God is infinite 2. Observe That the real and very great Sorrow that the Sins of the Elect deserved our Lord Jesus did realty and actually bear and suffer as we have exponed the words and confirmed the exposition given of them ye have a clear confirmation of the Doctrine from them 1. Griefs and Sorrows in the plural Number shew intensness of Sorrow and Grief 2. That they are called ours it shews our propriety in them And 3. That it 's said Christ bare them These concur to prove the Doctrine that the same Sorrow which the Sins of the Elect deserved Christ bare It not only says that our Lord bare Sorrows but the same Sorrows that by the Sins of the Elect were due to them and so there was a proportionableness betwixt the Sorrows that he bare and the Sorrows they should have endured he took up the cup of Wrath that was filled for us and that we would have been put to drink and drank it out himself suppose that our Lord had never died as blessed be his Name there is no ground to make the supposi●ion the cup of S●rrow that the Elect would have drunken eternally was the same cup that he drank our for them It is true we would distinguish betwixt these things that are essentially due to Sin as the punishment of it and these things that are only accidentally due to it the former Christ bare but not the latter To clear both in a word or two 1. These things essentially due to Sin as necessarly included in the Threatning The day thou eatest thou shalt surely die and in the curse of the Law according to that Cursed is every one that abides not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them are Death and the Curse these are essentially the desert of Sin in which respect it was not only necessary that Christ should become Man and ●●ffer but that he should suffer to death or sh●uld die and not only so but that he should die the cursed death of the Cross as the Threatning and Curse put together hold out and as to all these things that he underwent and met with before and at his death they were the accomplishment of the Threatning due to us and fulfilled in and by him in our room
have be taken themselves to him may be justified pardoned and received in favour friendship and fellowship with God that Believers may be keeped from tentation that tentations may be prevented and they made to persever That Satan may not make their Faith to fail them as he designs and the Lord gives account of his design Luke 22.32 Satan hath sought to winnow you but I have prayed that th● faith fail not That they and their prayers and service may be accepted that the suits and supplications that they present and put up in his name may get a hearing That they may be armed against the fear of death That they may be carried on in the gradual advances of Sanctification to the end of their Faith the salvation of their Souls that they may be glorified and be where he is to behold his glory In a Word he interceeds for every thing needful and for every thing promised to them his Intercession being as broad as his Purchase 5ly How doth he perform this part of his Priestly Office for his People it's performed by his entrie into the most holy place in our nature and name as having satisfied Justice and vanquished death where he appears before God for us So that we are to look to Christ's being in heaven not simply as glorifying himself or as glorified in himself for himself but as our head and forerunner to answer all that can be said against his Elect for whom he suffered and satisfied as it is Heb. 9.23 24. It was therefore necessary that the patterns of things in the heavens should be purified with these but the heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices for Christ is not entered into the holy places made with hands which are the figures of the true but into heaven it self now to appear in the presence of God for us So that our Lord Jesus by his entry into heaven doth declare I mean materially declare his victory in our name and appears there as a publick and not as a privat person His entry into heaven is not to be looked on as the entry of Moses or of Elias but as the entry of him who is head of the Elect whose entry there is a Declaration of what he would be at As by the power of his God-head he conveyed himself in thither So he hath taken possession in our name and according to the Covenant declares that these whose room he sustains may and must be admitted to glory And we must conceive an special efficacy in his being there for procuring to them what he hath purchased 2. His Intercession is performed through the efficacy of his blood and satisfaction flowing from the nature of the Covenant which hath a moral real cry for making effectual what he by his death hath procured As the Apostle speaking of Abels Blood and of making application of Christs Blood Heb. 12.24 Saith It speaketh better things then the blood of Abels For Abels Blood had a dmereit in it to cry guilt and could not but have a Curse following it because God had cursed the shedder of Blood But Christs Blood considered as the price of Redemption for the Elect hath an invaluable and unconceivable merit and worth in it and must have a cry for the blessings purchased to them by it 3. He performs this his Intercession by his constant care and by his continual willingnesse and actual willing that what he hath purchased for his Elect people may be applyed to them that such and such persons may be brought to believe that upon their believing they may be pardoned delivered from snares and tentations keeped in favour with God may be accepted in their performances c. For he had that prayer John 17.20.24 And he continues to have that same Sympathy His way on earth was alwayes sinless but now is glorious and majestick suited to his glorified state He continues to interceed according as he intended and his actual willingness is a main part of his Intercession which is not in renewing of acts to speak so but in his continuing desire willingness that what good he hath purchased may be conferred according to the Covenant For Christ in heaven is still a true man and hath a will as he had on earth continuing to seek that they may be glorified with him for whom he satisfied and this actual willing desiring and affecting that such a thing should be is called his Intercession because it cannot but be so esteemed as to have the effect to follow according to the Covenant as he sayes John 11.41 42. I thank thee Father that thou hast heard me and I know that thou hearest me alwayes This as to his actual willing cannot but be in heaven However we are sure that he is there and in our name and that his death and blood shed hath an efficacy to bring about what he hath purchased and that his will and affection are the same and have an efficacy with them and the effect certainly following so as nothing can go wrong there more then the man that hath a just cause in a Court of Judicature and an able Advocat with much moyen to agent and plead it before a Just Judge can be wronged or loss his Cause 6ly The grounds of his Intercession are 1. The excellency of his person who though he be man yet is he God also equal with the Father the brightness of his glory and the express image of his person and upholding all things by the word of his powe● As it is Heb. 1.2 Which cannot but add weight to his Intercession as well as to his Satisfaction the Person that interceeds being God The 2. is his Satisfaction which is the ground of his Intercession for upon his Satisfaction he maketh Intercession even as if a Cautioner would say I have payed such a mans Debt and therefore he ought to be absolved Therefore 1 John 2.1 2. These two are joyned We have an advocat with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sins So Rom. 8.34 They are joyned It 's Christ that died who is at the right hand of God and maketh intercession for us 3. The Covenant of Redemption is the great ground on which his Intercession is founded Such and such persons are given to Christ and such priviledges and benefits offered to be conferred upon them on condition the Mediator would undertake and satisfie for them and he having undertaken and payed the price there is good ground for his interceeding for the making application of the purchase Therefore he sayes John 17. Thine they were and thou gavest them me c. This gives him right to plead and interceed for them seing he hath endured Soul-travel for them he ought to see his Seed and to have many Justified and fred from the curse and condemnation that they were obnoxious to as the fruit of that sore Soul-travel In and from the consideration of these we may gather what is the
to God I shall only say further here that though we cannot tell how he interceeds to satisfie our selves fully yet this is clearly held forth to us that whatsoever is needful by his being in heaven we may confidently expect it will be performed from the man Christ from him who is God-man in one Person and so his Intercession with the Father is his actual procuring and doing such a thing and that not as God simply but as Mediator Therefore these two words are put in the forecited expressions Whatsoever ye ask in my name I will do it that the Father may be glorified in the Son and wh●m the Father will send in my name That is by vertue of my procurement by vertue of my Sacrifice and Intercession and the sending of the Comforter shews that it is performed by him that is God-man out of the respect he hath to his members and on the account of his Office which he pursues for their edification And so there is enough to answer the question and abounding consolation to his people which is the next Ufe Use 2. To shew the notable consolatioon that flows from this part of Christs Office O! What savourinesse and unsearchable riches are in this part of his name That our Lord Jesus as Intercessour appeares in the presence of God for us We shall speak here to these Five things 1. Wherein this is comfortable or to the extent of it 2. To the advantages that follow on it 3. To the grounds of this consolation which are confirmations of it 4. To this at what times and particular occasions the People of God may and ought in a special manner to make use of and comfort themselves in it And 5. on what terms this consolation is allowed that they grow not vain and proud of it For the First Our Lords Intercession gives a Fourfold extent of consolation that makes it wonderful 1. In it's universality as to the persons to whom it 's extended Not indeed to all men in the World but to all that will make use of it And though it were simply of universal extent to all men in the world yet it would comfort none but such as made use of it And that vanity of the Arminians that extends Christs Death and Intercession to all can truly say no more for so in comfort for they are forced to say that Christ died and intended his death for many that will never get good of him but we say all that he intended should get good of his death do get the intended good of it yea we say that whoever will make use of him shall get good both of his Death and of his Intercession So Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through him Though the cause seemed to be desperat and the sentence pronounced Cursed is he that continues not in all things written in the law yet he is able to save them Therefore 1 John 2.2 It 's said If any man sin O! strange word We have an Advocat what an Advocat for any man yea for any man that will make use of him For as we shew before though it 's true that his Intercession is bounded to his Elect yet it 's as true that he refuses no cause that is honestly given him to plead If any man sin we have an advocat He will not say to such poor Souls I will not be for you I have done all that I may but it is gone against me neither will he prig to say so with you he will not say I will have this or that ere I undertake your cause for you but if any man sin If any man see his need and will imploy him whether he be a great man or mean man whether he be poor or rich bound or free whether he be an old sinner that his lived long in security hypocrisie or prophanity or be a sitten up professour whether he be young or old If any of you all that are here will come to him he will not refuse to be imployed by you By him therefore as the Apostle exhorts Heb. 1● 15 let us offer praise to God continually And as praise so the sacrifices of other duties and they shall be accepted as the offer o● the Gospel runs on an universality and excludes none but these that by their unbelief exclude themselves So his Intercession runs on an universality If any man sin and will imploy him he is an Advocat at hand And seing it is Christ and Christ as Intercessour for transgressours that we are speaking of as the ground of Sinners consolation let me in passing desire you to remember that he is pointing at you men and women and if there be any of you that have a broken cause to plead any debt that ye would fain be fred of any Sin to be pardoned or your peace to be made with God here is an Advocat and the very best offering himself to be imployed Such an Advocat as said John 11. I thank thee Father for that I know thou hearest me alwayes This was true while he was on earth and will be true to the end of the world 2. The extent of this consolation appears in respect of all cases as his Intercession secluds no person that wil make use of him so it secluds no case though it looked like a lost cause and though the conscience had pronunced the Sentence God is greater then the Conscience and can louse from it though the Act were past in the Law he can cancel it And here comes in the triumph Rom. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that justifies Will the Devil the Law the Conscience or any thing lay ought to the charge of the man whom God justifies No why so It is Christ that died But that is not all alas may the Soul say How will I get good of Christs death I cannot apply it and make use of it He answers that He is also risen again and sitten down at the right hand of God and there maketh intercession for us to wit that his purchase may be applyed and there needs no more ye will get no more ye can seek no more and that closes the triumph There is no sin before nor after Conversion no sin of ignorance no sin against light no enemy no tentation whatever it be but that word answers all Who can lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect Where Christ takes the sinners case in hand who will stand up against him he is too strong a partie If Satan stand at the High Priests hand it 's the Lord that rebukes him Zach. 3. That as it were boasts him from the bar 3. The extent of this consolation appears in respect of the degree and hight of the perfection of the Salvation that comes by Christs Intercession to all that make use of him in all cases Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost
a Marriage contract especially when it 's so full free and rich on the Proposer and Suiters part but either that Folk think it is not fit for them or that they think nothing of it at all and this is it that hinders closing with Christ Matth. 22. They made light of it and went away c. and Psal 81. My people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me 2. When any thing is made equal to Christ much more when any thing is preferred to him he is undervalued and not esteemed of when he gets little or none of Folks care and labour little of their time little of their love and delight few or none of their thoughts c. but they are quite carried away after other things for where the treasure is there the heart will be also and were Christ our Treasure and precious in our esteem our Hearts would be more set on him but it 's strange sad and even astonishing to think how little our Spirits are exercised with the thoughts of Christ how little they are taken up with longing for him and delighting in him and yet we will think that we esteem him 3. Our Lord is undervalued when he is not made use of and imployed and lippened to as an able and sufficient Saviour If there be a learned and skilful Physician in a City in all or most Diseases or an able Lawyer to plead all Causes if Folk have Diseases to be cured and Causes to be pleaded and yet do not imploy such a Physician or such a Lawyer but go to some other though far less skilful and able they undervalue him It is even so here when Folks have many Sins and they seek not to him for Pardon many not only Temporal wants but also and mainly many Spiritual wants and do not acknowledge him in them neither seek to him for supply of them many predominant Evils and they seek not to him to mortifie them many Snares and Temptations and they do not make use of him to prevent and lead them by them and many Spiritual Causes to be pleaded before God or at his Bar and they do not imploy him as Advocate to plead for them 4. He is undervalued when Folk think not themselves happy enough in him nor sicker enough in bargaining with him and when he doth not satisfie and fully content them as if he were yea and nay and as if all the promises were not yea and amen in him when he is not credited intirely and rested upon he is not esteemed of hence he complains John 5. Ye will not come to me that ye might have life and Matth. 23. How often would I have gathered you and ye would not he would to say so with reverence fain do them a good turn but they will not lippen to him O! how much undervaluing of Christ is there even among believers when they hold and draw with him intertain jealousies and suspitions of him scarcely credit him and when they do at any time credit him are in a manner ready to take back their word again How often are Creature-comforts overvalued by them And how often are the consolations of God small with them These and many other wayes are they even they in some considerable measure and degree guilty of undervaluing of Christ Use 2. Take with this sin acknowledge and seek pardon for it It were a good token of some tenderness to be mourning for enmity against Christ and for undervaluing of him as well as for Drunkenness Fornication Theft or any other gross sin And where that gracious and right mourning that is spoken of Zech. 12.10 comes it will be in special for this undervaluing of Christ to the hight of piercing of him We would ask any of you that think ye repent if this sin of slighting him hath pierced you as it did these Acts 2 It may be some think themselves so cleanly and perfect that they have not many sins to mourn for O! dreadful mistake But though ye had no more is not this enough that ever there should have been enmity in your bosome at Christ And should not this prick you at the very heart that ever ye should have so undervalued him But readily they that see fewest sins in themselves will see and take with least of this sin Use 3. It serves to be a warning to all men in nature to consider what their condition is Do ye that have this enmity and are undervaluers of Christ know what is in your hearts And do ye consider what posture ye will be found in if Grace make not a change in the day of Christ ye will be found amongst these despisers and haters that would not have him to reign over them How will you dar to appear or in what posture will ye appear before him when he whom ye despised shall come in the glory of his Father with all the holy Angels with him and shall sit upon the Throne of his glory And yet appear ye must How will the conscience then gnaw and the heart be affrighted How will challenges waken yea sting and prick you on this ground that the Son of God the Heir of all things the Lord of lords and King of kings who proposed Marriage to you was undervalued and Marriage with him made light of and that a thing of nought was put in his room and place Will not this be a horrible challenge in that day And if ye would consider what will be their posture that mocked and buffetted him and plucked off his hair that nodded with the head and cryed Aha and bade him come down from the Cross that did scourge him and hang him up upon the Cross betwixt two Thieves Such a posture will all of you be in who have despised and disesteemed him ye will meet with that same sad sentence Bring out these mine enemies that would not that I should reign ever them and slay them before me O! what a strange punishment suppose ye will that be when the Saviour of sinners shall stand by and look on till he see vengeance execute on sinners that despised him Think on it for there is such a day coming when ye will all appear before him and when your reckonings will be cast up suffer not your selves to be cheated into an opinion that it will be accounted a little sin to be found under this guilt of despising Christ and let not one of you put it off himself and over upon another they will be found despisers of him that would never let it light nay even many that have Preached him and that would have been angry at prophanity in others as may be gathered from Mat. 7.22 The 4. Use serves to commend this to you as a piece of your duty to study to know Christ and to have the suitable impression of Christ and of his worth as the great mean contributive to the bringing you to credit him and believe on him and to the
esteemed him not even because of his lowness In the words now read and forward the Prophet sets himself to remove the offence that men took at our Lords Humiliation by shewing them that although he became so low yet he was not to be the less esteemed of for that And the ground which he layes down to remove the offence is in the first words of the Text which in sum is this that there was nothing in himself wherefore he should have been brought so low there was no sin in him neither was there any guile found in his mouth but he was graciously pleased to take on him that which we should have born and therefore men ought not to stumble and offend at his stooping to bear that which would with its weight have crushed them eternally and thereby to make their peace with God in the 6. vers he shews how it came to pass that he stooped so low All we saith he like sheep have gone astray and turned every one of us to our own way and the Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all We had lost our selves and God in the depth of his eternal wisdom love and good-will found out the way to save us wherein to speak so a Covenant was transacted betwixt God and the Mediator who becomes Cautioner for our sins which are transferred on him From the 7. vers to the 10. vers he goes on in shewing the execution of this transaction and how the Cautioner performed all according to his engagement And from the 10. vers to the close we have the promises made to him for his satisfaction The scope is as to remove the scandal of the Cross so to hold out our Lords pursuing the work of satisfaction to the Justice of God for elect sinners and the good success he had in it In the 4 and 5. verses we have three things 1. This ground asserted Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows 2. Mens enmity aggreged from this yet we did esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted In the very mean time that he condescended to stoop so low for us and to bear that which we should have born we esteemed but little of him we looked on him as a plagued man 3. This is more fully explained vers 5. But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities He was so handled for our sins and the chastisement of our peace was on him that which made our peace with God was on him By his stripes we are healed the stripes that wounded and killed him cured us We have here then rather as it were a sad narration then a Prophesie of the Gospel holding out a part of our Lords sufferings yet a clear foundation of the consolation of the people of God it being the ground of all our Faith of the pardon of sin of our peace with God and of our confident appearing before him that our Lord was content to be thus dealt with and to give his back to the smiters and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair We shall clear the words in the assertion which will serve to clear the words of the whole Chapter and also of the Doctrines to be drawn from it 1. The thing that Christ bare is called griefs and sorrows by which we understand the effects that sin brings on men in the world for its the same that in the 5. vers is called his being wounded for our transgression and bruised for our iniquity It 's a wounding that iniquity causeth and meritoriously procureth It 's not sin it self but the effect of sin to wit the punishment the sorrow and grief that sin brings with it called griefs and sorrows Partly because grief and sorrow is necessarily joyned with sin partly to shew the extremity and exceeding greatness of this grief and sorrow and the bitter fruits that sin hath with it 2. How is it said that Christ hath born and carried their griefs and sorrows By this we understand not only Christs removing of them as he removed sickness and diseases as it is said Matth. 8.16 17. But also and mainly his actual and real enduring of them as the phrase is frequently used in Scripture That man shall bear his iniquity or he shall bear his sin Levit. 5. and many other places It sees out a real inflicting of the punishment that sin deserves on him 3. That it is said our griefs and our sorrows it is not needlesly or superfluously set down but to meet with the offence that men take at Christs humbling himself so low As if he had said What aileth you to stumble at Christs coming so low and being so afflicted It was not for his own sins but for ours that he was so handled And they are called our griefs and sorrows 1. Because we by our sins procured them they were our deserving and due to us the debt was ours though he as our Cautioner took it on himself 2. Because though the Elect have distinct reckonings and peculiar sins some moe some fewer some greater some lesser yet they are all put on Christs account there is a combination of them a gathering of them all on him as the word is vers 6. He hath laid on him or made to meet on him the iniquities of us all The meaning then of the assertion is this Surely this is the cause of Christs Humiliation and this makes him not only to become Man but to be a mean poor Man and to have a comfortless and afflicted life in the World that he hath taken on him that Punishment Curse and Wrath that was due to us for our Sins and therefore he ought not to be offended and stumbled at Now because Socinians the great Enemies of Christs satisfaction and of the comfort of his People labour to elude this place and to make Christ only an exemplary Saviour and deny that he really and actually did undergo these Griefs and Sorrows for the Sins of his Elect We shall a little clear and confirm the exposition we have given the question is not about the taking away of Sin but about the manner of removing it They say that it is by Gods pardoning of it without a Satisfaction We say it is by Christs Satisfaction So the difficulty in expounding the words is whether to expound them of Christs removing our Sorrows and Griefs from us or of his bearing of them for our Sin and so really taking it away And that this Scripture means not of a simple removing of them as he did remove Sickness Matth 8.17 but by a real taking them on himself and bearing of of them in order to the satisfaction of the Justice of God for our Sins We shall give these Reasons to confirm it 1. Because these words are to be understood of such a bearing of Sorrows and Griefs as made Christ to be contemptible and despised before others This is clear from the scope for they are given as a reason
why Christ was rejected and despised as a Man of Sorrows and acquainted with Grief and why Men should not stumble at him for all that because it was for them now if he had only removed Sorrows from them as he did Sicknesses it had not been a cause of his Sorrow and Grief nor of any Mans stumbling at him but had been rather a cause of his exaltation in Mens esteem But it s given here as a cause of that which went before in the first part of the 3. Verse and also as a reason why Men should not stumble at him and withall as an aggravation of their guil● who did stumble at him Now it 's clear that the ground of the Jews despising and mocking of him was nor his removing of Sicknesses and Diseases but his seeming to be given over unto Deaths power 2. Because that which is called here bearing of sorrows and griefs is in the words following called a being wounded for our transgressions which imports not only that h● was wounded but that our Iniquities were the cause of his being wounded and that the desert of them was laid on him 3. This wounding is holden forth to be the stripes whereby we are healed and all we like sheep have gone astray and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all we did the wrong but he made the amends and it was such a wounding as proves a cure to us and makes way for our peace and reconciliation with God and such as without it there is no healing for us for by his stripes we are healed it 's by his swallowing up of the river and torrent of Wrath that was in our way and would have drowned us eternally had not he interposed for us that we escape 4. Consider the parallel places to this in the New Testament and we will find that this place holds our Christs re●l and actual bearing of our Sorrows and and Griefs I shall only name three The 1. Is that of the 2 Cor. 5.21 He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him which can be no other way exponed but of Christs being made an Offering and Sacrifice for our Sins he not being a Sinner himself but becoming our Cautioner and engaging to pay our Debt and to tell down the price for the satisfaction of Divine Justice he is reckoned to be the Sinner and our Sins are imputed to him and he is dealt with as a Sinner A 2d place is that of Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law by being made a curse for us as it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree The Sorrows and Griefs that Isaiah says here he should bear are there exponed by the Apostle to be his being made a Curse or his bearing of the Curse that we should have born it 's not meant simply of his removing the Curse from us but it also sets out the manner how he removed to wit by his own bearing of it himself being nailed to the Cross according to the threatning given out before The 3d. place is that of 1 Pet. 2.24 Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree where there is a direct reference to this place of Isaiah which is cited for confirmation of what the Apostle saith and every word is full and hath a special signification and emphasis in it He his own self bare the same word that is here and our sins and in his own body and on the tree intimating the lowest step of his Humiliation by whose stripes ye were healed for ye were as sheep going astray c. by his bearing of our Sins the burden of Sin was taken off us and we are set free I know that place of Matth. 8.17 hath its own difficulty and therefore I shall speak a word for clearing of it he hath spoken vers 16. of Christ's healing all that were sick and then subjoyns in the 17. vers That it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaias the prophet saying himself took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses whereupon these enemies of Christ would infer that this place of Scripture hath no other nor further meaning but of Christ's curing of some sick Folks and of the deputed or committed power which he hath to pardon sins but we suppose that the reasons which we have already given make it clear that this cannot be the meaning of the place to which we shall add first A Reason or two and secondly Give you the true meaning of it The Reasons why one cannot be the meaning of the place are 1. Because Acts 8.32 this Scripture is spoken of as being dayly a fulfilling by Christ and therefore it could not be fulfilled in these few days wherein he was in the Flesh upon Earth 2. Because this bearing of our Griefs and Sorrows is such a piece of Christs Humiliation as thereby he took on all the Griefs and Sorrows of all the Elect at once both of these who lived in Isaiah his time and of these who lived before and since his time and therefore cannot be restricted to the curing of Temporal Diseases in the days wherein he was on Earth nay not to the pardoning of the Sins of the Elect then living there being many El●ct before and since comprehended in this his Satisfaction which was most certainly a Satisfaction for the Sins of the Elect that were dead and to be born as well as for the Sins of them that were then living 2. For the meaning of the place 1. We are not to look on Christ's curing of Sicknesses and Diseases Matth. 8 16. as a proper fulfilling of this place Isa 52.4 but as many Scriptures are spoken by way of allusion to other Scriprures so is this there is indeed some fulfilling of the one in the other and some resemblance betwixt the one and the other and the resemblance is this even to shew Christs tenderness to the outward condition of Folks bodies whereby he evidenced his tenderness and respect to the inward sad condition of their immortal Souls whereinto they were brought through their Sin the great thing aimed at by the Prophet 2. If we consider the Griefs and Sorrows that Christ bare and suffered complexly in their cause and eff●cts he in healing of these Diseases and Sicknesses bare our Griefs and carried our Sorrows because when he took on our Debt he took it on with all the consequences of it and so though Christ took on no Disease in his own Person for we read not that he was ever sick yet in taking on the Debt in common of the Elect he virtually took on all Sicknesses and Diseases or what they suffered in all Diseases or should have suffered he took it on together and hereby he had a right to speak so to the carrying of all Diseases and in carrying of them he had respect to the cause of
little or no ground for application of his satisfaction but it 's kindly like when wrongs done to Christ affect most 2. When not only challenges for sin against the Law but for sins against Christ and Grace offered in the Gospel do become a burden and the greatest burden 3. When the man is made to mind secret enmity at Christ and is disposed to muster up aggravations of his sinfulness on that account and cannot get himself made vile enough When he hath an holy indignation at himself and with Paul counts himself the chief of sinners Even thou h the evil was done in ignorance much more if it hath been against knowledge It 's no evil token when souls are made to heap up aggravations of their guilt for wrongs done to Christ and when they cannot get suitable expressions sufficiently to hold it out as it is an evil token to be soon satisfied in this There are many that will take with no challenge for their wronging Christ but behold here how the Prophet insists both in the words before in these and in the following words and he can no more win off the thoughts of it then he can win off the thoughts of Christs sufferings 6. While the Prophet saith when Christ was suffering for his own and for the rest of his peoples sins We esteemed him not but judged him smitten of God Observe briefly because we hasten to a close that Jesus Christ is often exceedingly mistaken by men in his most glorious and gracious works can there be a greater mistake then this Christ suffering for our sins and yet judged smitten and plagued of God by us Or more home even Christ Jesus is often shamefully mistaken in the work of his Grace and in the venting of his love towards them whose good he is procuring and whose iniquities he is bearing The Use of it serves 1. To teach us when we are ready to pass censure on Christs work to stand still to animadvert on and to correct our selves lest we unsuitably construct of him He gets much wrong as to his publick work as if he were cruel when indeed he is merciful as if he had forgotten us when when indeed he remembers us still And as to his privat work in particular persons as if he did fail in his promise when he is most faithful and bringing it about in his own way And 2. which is of affinity to the former it 's a warning to us not to take up hard constructions of Christ nor to misconstruct his work wh●ch when misconstructed himself is mistaken and misconstructed How many think that he is breaking when he is binding up that he is wounding when he is healing that he is destroying when he is humbling Therefore we would su●pend passing censure till he come to the end and close of his work and not judge of it by halves and then we shall see there was no such ground for miscons●ructing of him who is every day holding on in his own way and steddily pursuing the same end that he did from the beginning And let him be doing so To him be praise for ever SERMON XXII ISAIAH LIII V Vers 5. But he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed IT 's hard to tell whether the Subject of this Verse and almost of this whole Chapter be more sad or more sweet It 's indeed a sad Subject to read and hear of the great Sufferings of our blessed Lord Jesus of the despiteful usage that he met with and to see such a speat of Malice spued and spitted out on that glorious face so that when he is bearing our Griefs carrying our Sorrows we do even then account him plagued smitten of God and afflicted and in a manner look upon it as well bestowed Yet it 's a most sweet Subject if we either consider the love it comes from or the comfortable effects that follow it that hath been the rise the cause and the occasion of much singing to many here below and is the cause and occasion of so much singing among the redeemed that are this day before the Throne of God and as the Grace of God hath overcome the malice of Men so we are perswaded this cause of rejoycing hath a sweetness in it beyond the sadness though often we mar our own Spiritual Mirth and know not how to dance when he pipes unto us These words are an explication of the 4th Verse where it is asserted that Christs Sufferings were not for himself but for us from and by which the Prophet having aggreged Mens malice who notwithstanding thereof esteemed him not yea judged smitten of God he comes again for furthering and carrying on of this Scope to shew more particularly the ground end and effects of Christs Sufferings where ye would remember what we hinted before in general that Folks will never think nor conceive of Christs Sufferings rightly till they conceive and take him up as suffering for them and when we consider this we think it no wonder that the most part esteem but little of the Sufferings of Christ because there are so few that can take him up under this notion as standing in their room and paying their debt and as being put in Prison for them when they are let go free In this 5th Verse We have these three 1. A further expression of Christs Sufferings 2. The cause of them or the end that he had before him in them 3. The benefites and fruits or effects of them There are in the words four expressions which I shall clear 1. He was wounded to shew the reality that was in his Sufferings he was actually pierced or as the word is rendered in the Margin tormented and the cause is our transgressions and while it is said He was wounded for our transgressions he means 1. That our Transgressions procured his wounding And 2. That his wounding was to remove them and to procure pardon to us 2. He was bruised that is pressed as Grapes in a Wine-press he under-went such a wounding as bruised him to shew the great desert of Sin and the heaviness of wrath that would have come on us for it had not he interposed and the cause is our iniquities And these two words transgressions and iniquities shew the exceeding abominableness of Sin Transgressions or Errings pointing at our common Sins Iniquities or Rebellions pointing at greater guilt 3. The chastisement or as the words bear the discipline of our peace was upon him It supposes first That we by nature were at feud with and enemies to God Secondly That before our peace could be procured there behoved to be a satisfaction given to Justice the Mediator behoved to come under discipline and chastisement 4. And by his stripes we are healed he was so whipped that to say so the marks of the rod remained behind the first benefite looks to pardon of Sin and
suffering and of his suffering for sinners that he was wounded and bruised c. In this Verse the Prophet proceeds to clear how this came to pass that Christ Jesus was made to suffer for the Elect the Seed that God had given him which he doth by laying down the Occasion and Fountain-cause whence it proceeded 1. The Occasion of it in these words All we like sheep have gone astray All the Elect as well as others had wandered and every one of us had turned to our own way We had denuded our selves of all right and title to eternal life and had made our selves liable to Gods curse and wrath through our sinning 2. The fountain-Fountain-cause is The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all When we had all strayed Jehovah took our Lord Jesus as the Sacrifices under the Law were taken and put him in our room and laid on him the punishment due to us for our sins and actually pursued him for our debt So the words are an answer to that question How comes it to pass that our Lord Jesus suffered thus for sinners It 's answered The Elect had made themselves lyable to the wrath and curse of God through their straying and to keep them from that wrath God designed and provided his Son Jesus Christ to be the Redeemer and according to the Covenant of Redemption laid on him the punishment due to them for their iniquities In a word their sin and God's appointing him to be Cautioner made him liable to satisfie for all their debt The first part of the words holds out our natural disease The 2. part holds out Gods gracious cure and remedy In the first part we have these three 1. The natural state and condition of all Men and Women even of the Elect themselves who are mainly to be look'd on here All we have gone astray 2. This is illustrat by a similitude We have gone astray like sheep 3. It is amplified Every one of us hath turned to his own way Several words being put together to set out the desperat sinful condition whereinto the Elect as well as others had brought themselves 1. Our natural state and condition is set down in this word straying To stray is to wander out of the way to go wrong to be be wildered For God hath set a rule to men to walk by in the way to life the rule and way of holiness and whoever walk not in that way do go astray and wander out of the right way 2. This is as I said illustrat by a similitude of sheep The comparing of the Elect to sheep here is not at all to extenuat the sinfulness of their straying though sometimes the innocency of that Creature in some other comparisons is insinuated But it is to hold out the witlessness spiritual silliness ad bruitishness of their straying the Scripture usually pointing out that Beast to be disposed and given to wandering And both Nature and Experience tells us that in a Wilderness where there is greatest hazard they are readiest to run on the hazard such is their silly and to speak so foolish inclination Just so are the Elect by Nature 3. It 's amplified by this That every one hath turned to his own way Before it was collectively set down A●l we have gone astray But now lest any should exeem himself it is distributively set down Every one even Isaiah Jeremiah and others such not one excepted This turning to our own way holds out two things 1. It 's called our own way to distinguish it from Gods way as it is Psal 81.11 He gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own counsels That is in their own inventions or according to their own will humour and inclination 2. While it is said that every one turns to his own way it 's to shew this that beside the common way that all sinners have to turn away from God distinguished from God's way every sinner hath his own particular and peculiar way whereby in his way he is distinguished from another sinner There is but one way to Heaven but many ways to Hell and every one hath his different way some have one predominant lust some another But they all meet here that every one turns from God's way and every one takes a wrong way of his own Considering the scope we shall shortly and passingly point at two general Observations whereof the 1. is this that it contributes much for folks conceiving and considering of Christs sufferings aright to be well acquainted with their own sinful nature and disposition Men will never look rightly on Christs sufferings nor suitably esteem of him nor make him and the Doctrine that holds him and his sufferings forth cordially welcome except they have some sense of their sinful nature and di●position Hence it was that many of the Pharisees and Hypocrites of that time wherein the Lord exercised his Ministry amongst the Jews never welcomed him nor prized his sufferings whereas among the Publicans and Sinners many were brought to get good of him Not to insist in the Use of this only in a word see here a main reason why Jesus Christ is so meanly thought of and the respect of his sufferings is so little welcomed and esteemed even because so few walk under the due sense of this that like lost sheep they have gone astray The 2d general Observation from the scope putting both parts of the Verse together is this that we should never look on Christ's sufferings but with respect to the Covenant of Redemption and God's transacting with him as our Cautioner Therefore the last part comes in The Lord hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all For albeit we know that Christ hath suffered much yet if there be not an eye to and some acquaintance with the Covenant the rise of his sufferings and God's hand and end in his sufferings it will be to no purpose Therefore when Peter is to speak of his sufferings Acts 2.23 He premits these words Him being delivered by the determinat counsel and fore-knowledge of God and then subjoyns his being crucified Looking on Christ's sufferings with respect to the Covenant 1. It lets us know that Christ's sufferings come not by guess but by the eternal counsel o● God and by vertue of that transaction betwixt the Father and the Son and this takes away the scandal off them which the Prophet sets himself here to remove 2. It gives Faith access to make use of his sufferings when we look on him as purposely designed for this end 3. It holds out the love of God Father Son and Spirit towards Elect Sinners That howsoever God looked angry like on the Mediator as personating them and sustaining their room yet that Jehovah had the devising and designing of these sufferings and that he sent his Son to suffer thus it holds out wonderful love 3. And more particularly from the first part of the words which is the main
love ye wouldflee to Jesus Christ and give him employment for making your peace with God and taking away your sin and sanctifying of you O but this be suitable to Sinners and if ye think your selves Sinners prejudge not your selves of the benefite of a Saviour This should be a distinct Sermon EVery expression that the Ptophet useth to set forth the grace of God in Jesus Christ to sinners by is more wonderful then another because indeed every thing that he expresseth is more wonderful then another And there is so much grace and infinite love in the way of the Gospel that it 's hard to know where there is most of it whether in its rise or in its execution whether in the decree of God or in Christs satisfaction whether in the benefits that we enjoy or in the way by which we are brought to enjoy them Sure all together make a wonder passing-great a most wonderful wonder even a world of wonders It is a wonder that as it is vers 5. he should be wounded for our transgressions bruised for our iniquities that the chastisement of our peace should be on him and that by his stripes we should be healed And when here he comes to explain this and to shew how it came to pass that Jesus Christ suffered so much he holds out another new wonder All we like sheep have gone astray c. As if he had said would ye know how it came to pass that the Mediator behoved to suffer and suffer so much All we the Elect People of God had gone astray like so many wandring sheep as well as others not one excepted And there was not another way to recover and reclaim us but this The Lord Jehovah laid on him the iniquity of us all To recover us when we were lost Jesus Christ was substituted in our room by the eternal Decree of God and the iniquities of all of us who are his Elect people as to their punishment were laid upon him This then is the scope to shew the rise of Christs sufferings and how it came to pass that our Lord suffered and suffered so much the occasion of it was the Elects sin and the Fountain cause the Fathers laying of their sin on him by an eternal Decree and making him to answer for it according to that Decree with his undertaking which was the Covenant of Redemption whereof Christ's suffering was the execution Thus we have the Fountain whence our Lord's sufferings flowed He is in the Covenant of Redemption substitute judicially enacted the Elects Cautioner and takes on their debt and being substitute in their room Justice pursues the Claim and Sentence passes against him for making him answerable and liable to the debt of their sins Which sets out as it were a Judge on the Throne Jehovah and two Parties at the Bar We and Him We the Principal Debtors and Him the Cautioner Jesus Christ in our room and place The Law by which the Judge proceeds is the Covenant of Redemption And we the Principal Debtors not being Law-biding he is made liable to the Debt and on this ground the Sentence passes against him for satisfying what we were owing and hereupon followed his sufferings So then the rise of his sufferings is that it was so transacted by the Wise Just and Gracious God and thus this vers comes well in to explain and further to clear what he asserted in the former vers Though the words be few yet they are a great compend and sum of the Gospel How therefore to speak of them so as to unfold them aright is not easie And because the Devil who seeks by all means to marr the beauty of the Gospel doth more fiercely assault where most of its beauty shines and hath therefore stirred up several sorts of enemies to wrest these words and to obscure the beauty of grace that may be clearly seen in them We shall a little open the few words that are in this last part of the verse And the Lord hath laid on hIm the iniquity of us all Having spoken to the former part of it the last day In these few words then we have 1. something spoken of iniquity which three Parties have some acts about to wit 1. The Elect us all 2. Him to wit the Mediator 3. The Lord to wit Jehovah Then we have the express act of the Lord to wit his laying on Him the Mediator the iniquity of us all 1. As for this word iniquity by it is meant sometimes 1. Sin formally taken as it hath a disconformity to the Law of God and supposeth a spot and defect and so it is commonly taken when we pray for pardon of sin And when David says Psal 51. My sin is ever before me And Psal 38. My iniquity is gone over my head And so it is the transgression of the Law of God 2. It is sometimes taken for the effect that sin procureth and so it 's in effect the punishment of sin as Levit. 7. the 18 and 20. verses being compared together vers 18. it 's said He shall bear his iniquity which vers 20. is He shall be cut off and so it is clearly meant of the punishment of iniquity For to bear his iniquity and to be cut off are the same thing there And that word of Cain Gen. 4.14 My iniquity or punishment is greater then I can bear hath a manifest respect to Gods curse inflicted on him for his sin and is as if he had sald I will not get lived under the punishment that is inflicted upon me for every one that finds me will cut my throat and sometimes it is translated punishment as in that of Gen. 4.13 The Question then is Which of these two is understood here in this Text whether iniquity or sin formally taken or iniquity taken for the punishment thereof These who are called Antinomians plead that it is to be understood of sin formally taken But though it be hard so much as to mention this it being so blasphemous-like to assert that our blessed Lord Jesus should be formally a sinner and have the spots and defilementt of sin on him which we wonder that any Christian should dare to assert or presume to maintain Yet because this Scripture is alleadg'd for it we shall clear that iniquity is not here to be taken for sin formally but for sin in the punishment of it And the 1. reason that we give shall be drawn from the plain scope of the words the Prophet having in the 5. vers said that he was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities The scope of this vers is to shew how it came to p●ss that Christ suffered and suffered so much which he doth by declaring that it could not be otherwise because the punishment of all the sins of the Elect was laid upon him And that which was called wounding and bruising in the former vers is here called on the matter a bearing of their iniquities for if they
undergoing the Curse and Suffering that which the Elect should h ve suffered for It is not the work of a Court to pass a sentence but also to see to the execution of the sentence not only are orders given to the sword to awake and smite but the sword falls on and smites him actually and though from the apprehension of the anger of God as Man and without the sensible and comforting manifestation of his Fathers love and his seemingly forsaking him for a time He prayed Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me yet it will not be and he submits most sweetly to it and not only is the cup put in his hand but the dregs of wrath are as it were wrung out into it and he must needs drink it up all which manifestly kythes in his agony in the garden when he is made to sweat blood and in his complaint if we may so call it My soul is exceeding sorrowful and what shall I say and in these strange words uttered by him on the Cross My God my God why hast thou forsaken me all which tell us plainly that not only was he enacted Sure●y and had the sentence past on him but that really he satisfied and had the sentence executed on him that in his Soul he was really pierced and wounded and that with far deeper wounds then these were which the Souldiers by the spear and nails made in his Body before the Elects discharge of their Debt could be procured and obtained What it was more particularly that he suffered the following words hold out But here it 's clear that he suffered really and suffered much that not only he undertook to pay but that he was actually pursued and made to lay down to the least Farthing whatever was due to Justice by the Elect And this is the cause why these words are brought in as the reason why he suffered so much even because so many and so great sins with all their aggravations were laid upon him and if his sufferings were not great and undergone for this end to satisfy for the Elects Debt that they might be set free the Prophets scope would not be reached neither would there be a suitable connexion betwixt the latter and the foregoing words As for the 2d To wit some Reasons of the Doctrine we shall shortly give you these three why the Elects sins were laid on Christ and put on his account and why he was made to underly the compleat punishment of them by vertue of the Covenant of Redemption 1. Because it did much contribute to the glory of God for he had designed in his eternal Council that his Grace should be glorified in the salvation of the Elect and that his Justice should also be glorified in punishing of sin either in themselves or in their Cautioner and as free Grace and Mercy must be glorious in saving the Elect and Justice in being satisfied for their sins so it 's to that end that since the Elect cannot pay their own Debt that their Cautioner pay it and pay it fully that the Lord in exacting satisfaction from him in their name may be known to be just 2. This way makes much for the confirmation of the Faith of the believing Elect and for their consolation for the confirmation of their Faith for what can Justice demand that it hath not gotten it is fully satisfied and then for their consolation seing the Father put his own Son to suffer and to so great suffering for them what is it that they may not confidently expect from such a Fountain 3. This serves to hold out the wonderful great obligation of the Elect to God and to the Mediator for the greater their sin was the more he suffered the greater their Debt was the more he payed and they are the more in his common and the greater Debters to him and ought the more to love him and their duty for his sake as it is said of the woman Luk. 7. She loved much for much was forgiven her so this way of paying the Elects Debt calls and strongly pleads and also makes way for much warm and tender love in them to Jesus Christ In the 3d. place We come to the Uses of the Doctrine To which I shall premit this word of desire to you That ye would not look on these things as tasteless or unsavoury for had we not had these precious truths to open up to you we should have had no meetings to this purpose no ground to speak of life to you nor any the least hope or expectation of life And indeed it may be sadly regrated that amongst a multitude of professing People these substantial truths of the Gospel are so wersh and little relishing to the most part which too evidently appears in the unconcerned wearying and gazing posture of some in the slumbering sleeping of others in our publick Assemblies If our hearts were in a right frame half a word to say so to this purpose would be a wakening and allaruming to us However this is a great priviledge in it self Heathens may and do know something of moral duties but it 's a priviledge which we have and they want that the fundamental truths of the Gospel are amongst us and not amongst them The 1. Use serves to let us see the brightness of the Glory of Grace and Truth of Mercy and Justice shining clearly here Can there be any greater mercy and more pure mercy than this that the Lord should be gracious to sinners and to great sinners rhat had turned every one of them to their own way in providing a Mediator and such a Mediator in providing such a help for them and laying that help upon one that is mighty and that he should have done this of his own head so to speak with reverence when the Elect were in their sins and when th●re was nothing to be the impulsive or meritorious cause of it And that the Father should have laid this weight of punishment on Christ the Son of his love and pursued him at this rate of holy severity for sinners debt O! what grace and mercy shines here And 2. The spotless Justice of God doth also here wonderfully manifest it self O! How exact is Justice when it will not quite a farthing even to the second Person of the Godhead when he became Man and man's Surety But since he hath put himself in the room of sinners The L●ed maketh all their iniquities to meet on him This is matter of admiration to Men and Angels to consider how Justice and Mercy run in one Channel and shine in one Covenant the one of them not incroaching upon the other Use 2. We may gather from this same insight and clearness in the very great sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ For these things are here put together 1. That he suffered for all the Elect Us all 2. For all the sins of all the Elect and for all the sins of all
the Elect in their highest and most aggravating circumstances the particular reckoning of them all as it were being cast up they are all put on his score 3. All these meet togcther in a great Sea and shock upon him at one time as they came from several Airts like so many Rivers Or they were like so many Regiments or rather Armies of men all meeting together and Marshalled to fall pell mell to say so on him One sin were enough to condemn the many sins of one is more but all the sins of all the Elect is much more They deserved to have lyen in Hell eternally but he coming in their room all their sins met as the violent preass of Waters on him What then behoved his sufferings to be when he was so put to it for all the sins of all the Elect and that at once Use 3. We may gather hence a just account of the truth of Christ's satisfaction and a ground of refutation of the Socinian error a blasphemy which is most abominable to be once mentioned as if our Lord had suffered all this only to give us an example and as if there had not been a proportionable satisfaction in his sufferings to our debt nor an intention to satisfie Justice thereby Every verse almost not to say every word in this Chapter refutes this If he had not satisfied for our sins why is he said to be here on the matter put in our room And if his sufferings had not been very great what needed the Prophet to shew the reason of his great sufferings in all the sins of all the Elect their meeting on him There was sure a particular respect had to this even to shew that the meeting of all these sins of all the Elect together upon Christ did cause and procure great and extream sufferings to him He suffered the more that they had had so many sins seing their many sins are given for the cause of his so much suffering Use 4. Here is great ground of consolation to believing sinners Out of this eater comes meat and out of this strong comes sweet The more sharp and bitter these sufferings were to Christ the report of them is in some respect the more savoury and sweet to the Believer whose effectual Calling discovers his Election And indeed I cannot tell how many grounds of consolation Believers have from this Doctrine But 1. If they have sinned there is here a Saviour provided for them 2. This Saviour hath undertaken their debt 3. He hath undertaken it with the Fathers allowance 4. As he hath undertaken it so the Father hath laid on him all their iniquity 5. All the Elect come in here together in one Roll and there is but one Covenant and one Mediator for them all The sin of the poor body of the weakest and meanest is transacted on him as well as the sin of Abraham that great friend of God and Father of the Faithful and the Salvation of the one is as sure as the Salvation of the other All Believers from the strongest to the weakest have but one Right of Charter to Heaven but one holding of the Inheritance 6. The Lord hath laid on him all the iniquities of all the Elect with a particular respect to all their aggravations and to all the several ways that they have turned to sin Their Original sin and all their actual transgressions with their particular predominants as to their punishment And there is reason for it because the Elect could not satisfie for the least sin And it is necessary for the glorifying of Grace that the Glory of the work of their Salvation be not halfed but solely and singlely ascribed and given to God therefore the satisfaction comes all on the Mediators account and none of it on theirs 7. All this is really done and performed by the Mediator without any suit or request of the Elect or of the Believer at least as the procuring cause thereof He buyes and purchases what is needful for them and pays for their discharge And they have no more to do but to call for an extract and to take a sealed remission by his blood The application whereof the Uses that follow will give occasion to speak to Use 5. Since it is so then none would think little of sin which checks the great presumption that is amongst men and women who think little and light of sin and that it is an easie matter to come by the pardon of it They think there is no more to do but barely and ba●chly to confess they have sinned and to say God is merciful and hence they conclude that God will not reckon with them But did he reckon with the Mediator and that so holily rigidly and severely too and will he think ye spare you If he dealt so with the green tree what will become of the dry Be not deceived God will not be mocked And therefore 6ly As the close of all see here the absolute necessity of sharing in Christs satisfaction and of having an interest therein by this Covenant derived unto you else know that ye must count for your own sins And if so woe eternally to you Therefore either betake your selves to the Mediator that by his Eye-salve ye may see that by his Gold ye may be inriched that by his Garments ye may be cloathed that the shame of your nakedness do not appear And that ye may by being justified by his knowledge be free from the wrath to come or otherwayes ye must and shall ly under it for ever Thus ye have the fulness of Gods Covenant on the one side and the weightiness and terribleness of Gods wrath on the other side laid before you If ye knew what a fearful thing his wrath were ye would be glad at your hearts to hear of a Saviour and every one would run and make haste to be found in him and to share of his satisfaction and to be sure of a discharge by vertue of his payment of the debt and they would give all diligence to make sure their Calling and Election For that end the Lord himself powerfully perswade you to do so SERMON XXVII ISAIAH LIII VII Vers 7. He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth He is brought as a Lamb to the slaughter and as a Sheep before her shearers is dumb so he opened not his mouth THough the news of a suffering Mediator seem to be a sad subject yet it hath been is and will be the great Subject of the Gospel and of the gladest tidings that ever sinners heard This being the great thing that they ought in a special manner to know even Jesus Christ and him crucified The Prophet here takes a special delight to insist on it and in one verse after another hath some new thing of his suffering Having in the former verse spoken to the occasion ground and rise of his sufferings to wit the Elects straying like sheep their wandering and turning
it down for either the Elect behoved to die or he himself and since it is so as if he said then behold here is my life take it and I will lay it down that they poor things may go free and therefore does my Father love me says he because I lay down my life for my sheep not because it 's taken from me against my will but because I wi●lingly and of my self lay it down and when he is brought before Pilate and Herod and they lay many things to his charge Mat. 26.63 and Mark 15. He held his peace so that it 's said that Pilate marvelled Mark 15. he knew that he could not but have much to say for himself as all men in such a case use to have but he answered nothing or as it 's in the Text yet he opened not his mouth the reason was because he would not divert the course of Justice nor mar the Lords design in the work of the Elects Redemption through his death and sufferings He came not into the world to accuse Pilate or the Jews and to justifie himself though now and then for the conviction of enemies and for his own necessary clearing he did let a word fall but being engaged for the Elect he wil needs perform all that Justice called for And in this willingness he hath a respect to two things 1. To the Fathers satisfaction for his willing suffering is that which makes it a Sacrifice acceptable and well-pleasing to him 2. To the Elects consolation that they may know th●y had a willing Saviour that had no necessity laid on him to satisfie but satisfi●d willingly And from these two arises a third even the glory of the Mediators satisfaction for herein his love to the Elect shines brightly I lay down my life for my sheep this is the heart-wa●ming commendation of his sufferings that with delight and pleasure he underwent them as if he had been purchasing a kingdom to himself Now to come to the Use of all these Doctrines when they with the things contained in them are laid together we profess we cannot tell you what excellent Uses they yield Would to God we were all in such a frame as the Eunuch was in when he read this Scripture as t●e divine History gives us an account Acts 8. ver 32. and forward who when Philip had begun to preac● to him on this excellent su●ject was so taken that before the Sermon or Discourse was at an end be ng holily impatient at any longer delay he says to Philip Here is water what hinders me to be baptized I say again would to God we were all in such a frame and that this were the fruit of such a Doctrine as this to many of you nay to all of you Use 1. Wonder Believers at the extensiveness and infinitness of the Grace of God and at the heart-affecting and soul-ravishing love of the Mediator at Grace in God that spared the Debtor and exacted payment from the Cautioner the Son of his love at love in the Mediator that payed so much and so willingly and cheerfully If any subject of thoughts be pertinent for us while we are about to celebrate the Sacrament of the Lords Supper certainly this were pertinent concerning a crucified Christ in stating himself in our room to pay our Debt and doing this of his own accord without the solicitation or interposing of any Creature and doing it withall so frankly and cheerfully Was ever the like of this love heard tell of for one and more especially for such a one to suffer so much and so cheerfully unrequired we would have you confirmed in the Faith of this great and sweet Truth that he had never better will nay never so good will to eat his Dinner then and as he had to suffer and satisfie Justice for you though at a dear rate He says John 4. It was his meat to do the fathers will that sent him and to finish his work Have ye suitable thoughts of his love when ye read the Gospel have ye in the Word seen him standing before Pilate in your room not answering when he is accused and Pilate marvelling at his silence and did Pilate marvel knowing and being convinced of his innocency and have ye never marvelled or marvelled but very little sure your little marvelling at his silence is the more sadly marvellous that the cause of his silence when he was charged with your iniquities with such and such a piece of your miscarriage with such a vain and roaving heart with such a wanton look with such a profane or idle word of yours with the horrid sin of your having so abused slighted and neglected him c. that the cause I say of his silence at such a terrible accusation and charge and not vindicating of himself or saying these faults miscarriages and transgressions are not mine as he might have done was pure love to you O! is not this strange and yet most true wonder then more at it Use 2. Here is strong consolation to Believers and wonderful wisdom in the rise and convey of it in uniting Justice and Love out of which the consolation springs Justice exacting upon and distressing the Son of God and he satisfying Justice so fully that though all the Elect had satisfied eternally in Hell it had not been made to shine so splendidly and gloriously Justice also on the Mediators side in yielding and giving satisfaction though it should oppress and break Soul and Body And yet love both on the Father and Mediators side on the Fathers side love in finding out this way of satisfaction to his own Justice when there was no cure but by wounding of his own Son and yet he was content rather to wound him than that the Elect should suffer and be wounded eternally and love on the Mediators side who willingly yields and undergoes their Debt and will not hide his face from shame and spitting what may not the Believer expect from God when he spared not his own Son for him and what may he expect from Christ who spared not himself for his sake and who is that good Shepherd that laid down his life for the Sheep and held his tongue and quarrelled not with those that smote him will he quarrel with a poor Sinner coming to him and pleading for the benefite of satisfaction no certainly but as the word is Zeph. 3.17 He will rest in his love or as the word signifies He will be silent or dumb in his love he will not upbraid thee nor cast up thy former miscarriages he will not say reproachfully to thee where wast thou so long playing the Prodigal he is better content with thy recovery than ever he was discontent or ill-pleased with all the wrong thou didst unto him Use 3. This word of Doctrine lays down the ground whereupon a sinner sensible of sin may build his expectation of peace with God The transaction concluded and agreed upon is the ground of his coming
other people that are not his as Joh. 10 26 27. Ye believe not because ye are not of my sheep my sheep hear my voice and I know them which supposeth that some are his and others not so his and so my people cannot be all the world Neither 2. Can it be meant of the whole visible Church who in respect of the external administration of the Covenant are sometimes called his people as all Israel are There is a narrower march or boundary drawn John 10.26 Where the Lord speaking of them that were only externally in Covenant with him sayes Ye art not my sheep to shew that his reckoning there must not go upon external profession And vers 16. Some that were not for the time professing themselves to be his people are reckoned Other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring in Nor 3. Can it be limited to them that were actually converted and Believers for he says as I iust now hinted that he hath other sheep that are not yet brought in and he is said to gather together into one the children of God that were scattered abroad John 11.52 So then by my people must be understood these who in G●d's eternal purpose are separat by the Decree of Election to be his own even these whom he hath chosen to glorifie himself in and by them through his Grace and to glorifie them with himself Even these spoken of John 17.6 Thine they were and thou gavest them me They are the people who were transacted for in the Covenant of Redemption and that were given by the Father to the Son to be redeemed by him It was for their sins even for the sins of the Elect that our Lord Jesus was stricken As for the 2d What is it to be stricken for their transgression The meaning is the meritorious cause of their stroak was on Christ which intimats to us that his sufferings and death were procured by the sins of the Elect of God His stroak or the stroak that was upon him as the word is was the amends that Justice got for their sins In a word the stroak that the Elects sins procured and merited Took him out of or away from the land of the living brought him to prison and to judgement and made his soul an offering for sin Neither can this be otherwayes understood For it is not said that for their good or for their behove only or to be an example and pattern of patience only to them he was stricken as some grossly erroneous and prophane men expound the words but for their transgressions was he stricken That is it was their guilt which he having undertaken and engaged to satisfie for which made him lyable to this stroak In this part of the words thus opened up we have two notable Points concerning the Covenant of Redemption 1. The Party for whom it is contrived and intended and that is the Elect or God's People It is not all the World nor all Visible-Church-members that God transacted for in the bargain with the Mediator but my people the Elect of God they were so considered in the transaction and in the execution 2. The great price that was sought or required that was offered and that was agreed upon for the Redemption of the Elect to wit the death of the Mediator even his dying the cursed death of the Cross This is the sum for the transgressions of God's people the stroak was upon him God's design being to glorifie his grace in the salvation of so many sin having interveened to bring them under the curse There is upon the one side the Lord 's giving of them to the Mediator to be redeemed by him and upon the other side the Mediators accepting of them on the terms proposed he is content to satisfie for them to take the stroak on himself deserved by them that they may go free each of these may be considered several wayes for furnishing of sweet Doctrines 1. From the first of these Observe that there are some differenced from others in respect of God's purpose some chosen of God for his people beside all the rest of the World For some are here God's people ere they be born and ere Christ die for them John 17.16 Thine they were and thou gavest them me They are supposed to be God's people in some peculiar respect ere they be given to Christ to be redeemed by him In a word the Lord hath an elect people or a people chosen to salvation in his eternal purpose and decree an elect people or a people chosen out of the world which in this respect are not his people or are not elected There are four qualifications or properties in this Doctrine which will serve to clear it 1. When we say there is such a decree of Election we say that it is a discriminating or differencing decree wherein or whereby there is a taking of some and not all a taking of one and leaving another a taking of Isaac and a leaving of Ishmael a taking of Jacob and a leaving of Esau as it is Rom. 9. And this discrimination or differencing hath these four steps 1. There is a differencing in Gods purpose in respect of the end while all men are alike before him some are designed to erernal life others not therefore Mat. 25.34 it 's said Come ye blessed of my Father inherite the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world and in this respect the Book of Life is said to be opened Revel 20.12 2. This differencing is in respect of God's offering and giving of them to the Mediator in the Covenant of Redemption wherein some not all are given to Christ John 17 2. That he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him out of the world Where it is clear that so many are given to him in reference to whom he is to exercise his offices 3. There is a differencing in respect of Christ's undertaking and executing his Offices for them he accepts of them John 17.9 For their sakes I sanctifie my self I have separated my self to the Office of Mediator and do offer my self for them that they also may be sanctified And I pray for them I pray not for the world it 's of them that he maketh that sweet account John 6.39 This is the Fathers will that sent me that of all that he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day And of whom he saith John 10.28 29. I give unto them eternal life and they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand He answers and is accountable for them and for them only he will count for no other as being redeemed by him and to be made partakers of his glory 4. This differencing is in respect of the promises made upon Gods part to the Mediator in favours of the Elect and of the benefits that flow to them from the
Covenant He hath not promised to justifie all nor to make all believe but some only He as it were saith to the Mediator these I give thee to be redeemed by thee and on the laying down of thy life and satisfying for them I promise to make them believe and that through faith in thee they shall be justified therefore saith Christ John 6.44 Murmure not among your selves no man can come unto me except the Father who hath sent me draw him And who are they that shall believe on him See v. 37. All that the Father hath given me shall come unto me and him that cometh I will in no wise cast him out but will make him dearly welcome And vers 45. Every one that hath heard and learned of the F●ther cometh unto me And John 17.2 That he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him Thus ye see what we mean when we call this a differencing Decree 2. We say that it is a definite Decree both in respect of tho number numbered that is about so many and no moe and not all and in respect of the number that numbers such a man and such a woman in particular in such a place and not such an other person They are all particularly designed and are therefore said to be written in the Lambs Book of Life It is not all who are foreseen to believe who are elected as if election did follow believing as the cause of the Decree But it 's such a number whom the Lord ingageth to the Mediator to draw to teach and make them believers 3. We say it is a Decree that is free as to all merit in them whom it reacheth and it 's free in these three respects 1. In respect of any thing in the person or persons elected who are supposed to be lying as the rest of the World therefore it 's said of Jacob and Esau Rom. 9 11. The children being not yet born neither having done good or evil that the purpose of God according to election might stand c. That is God respected not the doing good or evil in his electing of the one and passing by of the other 2. In respect of Christ's satisfaction and redemption which presupposeth this Decree to be and is the mids by which it is accomplished so that we are redeemed because we are elect●d The Elect were Gods people when Christ did undertake and engage for them and in this respect election is a Foun●ain-grace and Christ's death is not the cause of Election though it be the cause of all the benefits that follow upon it 3. It 's free in respect of God's absolute Soveraignty who acts herein according to the purpose of his own will having no reason without himself as it is clear Matth. 11. Ev●n so Father because it seemed good in thy sight And Eph. 1.11 Being predestinate according to the purpose of him who worketh all things according to the counsel of his own will As the Potter hath power over the Clay and makes of the same lump on Vessel to honour and another to dishonour as he pleaseth So the Lord acts most Soveraignly in the Decree of Election 4. We say that this Decree is absolute and peremptory Which is not so to be understood as if it admitted of no midses in the execution of it But this is the meaning that the performing and bringing about thereof depends on nothing without God neither can it be possibly frustrated These sheep can never be plucked out of his hand neither can they ever perish but must needs all and every one of them actually enjoy that which is decreed for them by this Decree else they could not be called God's people if they might not be his Thus ye see wh●t is the meaning of these words my people ●hat is his Elect people in or by the Decree of Election I shall shortly give you some few grounds from Scripture to clear and confirm this truth The 1. whereof is taken from the names that the people of God get and from the expressions that are used in making mention of them in Scripture which will infer all that hath been said as namely they are called my sheep John 10. his Sheep that he knows as it were by head-mark by name and sirn●me which cannot but be his they are call d the election of Grace Rom. 11.5 at this present time there is a remnant according to the election of grace and vers 7. the election hath obtained and the rest were blinded it 's impossible but the Elect must obtain there being an inseparable connexion betwixt the decree and the end thereof they are said to be written in the Lambs book of life before the foundation of the world before there was any mention of themselves or consideration of ought in themselves they are said to be loved and beloved and ordained to eternal life Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed where believing is made a fruit and effect of this decree of election it s so far from being a cause thereof they are called blessed of the Father Matth. 25. and these whom he blesseth cannot but be blessed they are called such as are given to Christ holding forth a peculiar differencing of them from others they are called the people whom he foreknew and predestinated Rom. 8.29 whom he did foreknow them he did p ea●stinate c. and Rom. 11.2 God hath not cast away his people whom he foreknew every one was not so foreknown for Christ will s●y to many at the great day depart from me I never knew you Titles and names of this kind are frequent in the Scripture whereby God differenceth some from others which hath its rise from Gods purpose and decree of election A 2d ground is taken from the opposition which the Scripture maketh betwixt the Elect and others who are not elected which shews clearly that election cannot be understood of all as if there were a general and conditio●al election hence it 's said Jacob have ●●loved and Esau have I hated the electing of the one is laid foregainst the r●jecting of the other so John 10 the Lord say● of some that they are his sheep and of others they are not my sheep and Rom. 9. the Apostle speaks of some vessels of mercy which are before prepared for glory and of som● vessels of wrath fitted for destruction and 2 Tim. 2.21 some are said to be vessels of honour some of dishonour some are ordained to eternal life Acts 13. and some are ordained of old to that destruction as Jude speaketh some are written in the Lambs book of life and some not Revel 20. and wherefore is all this spoken but to let us know that God hath freely and soveraignly in his decree put a difference betwixt some and others which as it began to speak so in God's eternal purpose so it will continue in the event Which is a 3d. ground of confirmation and it will be
one in Hell Who made thee to differ or what hast thou O man that thou hast not received it's election that makes the difference and it 's sure for their salvation is founded on Gods purpose and decree which is the solid rest of a Believer kindness began not on our side but on Gods as Christ says Ye have not chosen me but I have chosen you John 15.16 4ly It says this That all of you had need to make your calling and election sure that is the very hinge of Believers consolation even to have the proof of it in your Conscience that ye are inrolled here to get out the extract of this decree that ye may see and read your names in it Hence many streams of consolation flow out if it be so with you then ye were given to Christ Christ undertook to satisfie Justice for you ye shall get Faith and more Faith ye shall get Repentance and Sanctification and ye shall get Heaven and Glory at the end of your course If it be said this is much how shall it be brought about we answer it 's not impossible and to make it out take but two words that are both directions and marks the practice whereof will give a solid proof of your inrolment in Gods book whence all these great and glorious things have their rise 1. Where there is a yielding to Christs call in the Gospel a closing with him that evidenceth election for it is certain that none shall nor can come to Christ and believe in him but the Elect and whoever are elected must and shall come sooner or later John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me and John 10.4 His sheep follow him and know his voice they accept of and make welcome Christs call in the Gospel and they that accept of it are elect So that there is no need of any new revelation about the matter neither needs there any torturing anxiety to know how to come by thy name in the roll of the Elect try it by this if thou hast given obedience to the call of the Gospel if thou hast in the sense of thy need of a Saviour fled unto ●esus Christ and on his own terms closed with him by this thy tenure or holding is sure and by this thou hast an evidence that thou art an elect for his Sheep come unto him and hear his voice and as many of you as soundly believe on him and have betaken your selves to him for life and salvation have the seal and witness in your selves that your names were in Gods roll and book before the World was But if this be not debate dispute question as ye will about it whatever may be afterwards ye have no evidence for the time of your election 2. Where there is real Holiness or a real study and endeavour to be holy and more holy it is an evidence of election and of a persons being inrolled in the volumn of the book of Gods decree because Holiness is a fruit of election as is clear Eph. 1.4 According as he hath chosen us before the foundation of the world that we should be holy never a person is really holy but such as God designed should be holy to this purpose the Apostle having 2 Tim. 2.21 spoken of election The foundation of the Lord stands sure having this seal the Lord knows who are his and let every one that names the name of Christ depart from iniquity but in a great house are not only vessels of gold c. he subjoyns If a man therefore purge himself from these he shall be a vessel unto honour sanctified c. not that election dependeth on mans Holiness but by his holiness he shall be manifested to be and accompted an elect Vessel and may warrantably conclude himself to be such so that true holiness brings folk to be acquainted with the great secret of Election and gives them boldness to make the application of it There is nothing that men readily desire more to know than this whether they be elected or not here is a sure way to come by the knowledge of it even to study to believe and to be holy and then we may be confident that our names were written in the Lambs book of Life but if we slight faith in Christ and Holiness whatever may be in God's purpose about us we have for present no ground to conclude our election upon God himself fixus in these things that have such mighty consequents depending on them SERMON XXXI ISAIAH LIII VIII Vers 8. He was taken from prison and from judgement and who shall declare his generation For he was cut off out of the land of the living for the transgression of my people was he stricken THE Prophet hath been long in describing Christs Sufferings and hath showen what height they came to even to prison and to judgment and to death it self He was cut off out of the land of the living now he casts in a word to shew wherefore all this was or what was the procuring cause that brought all this suffering and sorrow on Christ which also was the end that he had before him in it in these words for the transgression of my people was he stricken we shew that by my people here was not meant all men and women in the world nay not all men who are externally called in the visible Church but his Elect only these whom he hath chosen to be his People and separated from others by an eternal decree of Election we shew also that these words for the transgression of my people was he stricken do not contain only a reason of Christ's extream suffering even of his being brought to prison and to judgment before men but also and mainly of his being brought so before God and of his being cut-off for the sins of Gods People are not laid to his charge before men but before God they are and so it does imply an influence that the sins of the Elect had upon Christs Sufferings and a respect that his Sufferings had to their sins the Elects sins procured these Sufferings to him and his Sufferings were undergone by him for the satisfying of Justice for their sins and for the removing of them I shall not insist further in the exposition of the words having opened them up the last day but shall hint at a few Doctrines from them and because they are general and more doctrinal I shall be the shorter in speaking to them though it may be ye think not so much of them yet they are not a little for your edification and if ye were suitably sensible of sin and of your hazard there is no Doctrine concerning the Covenant of Redemption but it would be useful and refreshing to you There are several things implyed here concerning the efficacy of the price of Christ's death and concerning the extent of it as it 's laid down as a price for the sins of the Elect which
the riches of the free grace of God there being a Decree of Election for saving so many and for bringing them to Glory And they being under sin there is another decree and threatning that goes forth for cursing the sinner and these two seeming to be altogether irreconciliable the Question comes in on the one hand how is it possible that a sinner under the curse can be saved And upon the other hand how is it possible that an Elect of God can be damned The wisdome of God looseth the knot Spotless Justice is satisfied by taking hold of and falling on the Cautioner Wonderful Grace and Love vent themselves in pardoning the sinner and in accepting of a ransome for him And manifold wisdome manifests it self in knitting these two together so as none of them can want its effect But all returns to the manifestation of the Glory of Grace in the up-shot It cannot be that the Elect shall be damned Yet here stands the threatning of a just God and his curse ready to be execute but here is the reconciliation The curse is execute on the Mediator whereby God shews himself to be a hater of sin and an avenger of the wrong done to his Justice And the Elect sinner is pardoned whereby God manifesteth the freedome of his grace and his wonderfully condescending love But now we come to a 9th Doctrine which is more directly held forth in the words and it hath two Branches that our Lord Jesus his death and sufferings is a proportionable price and satisfaction laid down for the sins of the Elect and for them only This is in the express words of the Prophet If the Question be asked Wherefore suffered Christ all this He answers he suffered it as a price for transgression If it be asked again for whom or for whose transgression did he suffer He answers not for all Men and Women in the World but for the transgression of my people was he stricken or the stroak was on him for their transgressions The first Branch of the Doctrine is to this purpose that Christs suffering is intended to satisfie for the transgression of Gods elected people and with respect to satisfying for their sins did he suffer And if we take these to be truths that we marked before as implyed in the words this will natively and necessarily follow If he engaged to be Cautioner and Surety for the Elects debt then his laying down his life must be on the same account and for the same end Now when we speak of Christs laying down a price to satisfie for the transgressions of the Elect we mean not only this that his sufferings and death have a value in themselves to satisfie for their sins but that they are so intended by him in undergoing of them and that they are so accepted of God according to his purpose and according to the transaction that past betwixt Jehovah and the Mediator They are not only as Socinians say to be a confirmation of the Doctrine which he preached and to be a rule and example to us of patient suffering and of giving obedience to the death as he did But it 's also and mainly to satisfie the Justice of God for our debt So then this wicked Tenet of the Socinians is exceeding derogatory to the sufferings of Christ and to the matchless love that shined in them yea and even to the whole design of Redemption For if Christs sufferings be not a satisfaction to Justice we are left without all just plea and apology for our selves at Gods Bar and if we have none then that curse looks the wakened sinner full in the face The day thou eats thou shalt surely die And however men in their security may please themselves with such dreams and think that a satisfaction to Justice is not needful yet if the conscience be once wakened it will not be quieted without one And if mens Faith give not credit to Gods threatnings they can have but little or rather no comfort at all in his promises There is therefore a necessity of a satisfaction and if Christs sufferings be not the satisfaction there is not another and so the whole work of Redemption is overturned So then though Christ in his sufferings hath left us a Copy how we should suffer yet that is not the only nor the principal end of them but it is contrived in the Covenant of Redemption and intended by the Medi tor and withall accepted by Jehovah that they should be the meritorious cause of procuring pardon to the Elect and the price of their Redemption This may be further cleared and confirmed 1. From the phrase that is ordinarily made use of in Scripture He suffered for the sins of his people And in the Text For the transgression of my people was he stricken Their sins had a peculiar influence in bringing the stroak on him And what influence I pray could they have but as they procured the stroak to him And if his stroaks were procured by our sins then the desert of them was laid on him and his sufferings behoved to be the curse that we elect sinners should have suffered So when he is called their Cautioner it tells that he undertook their debt and his laying down of his life is the performance and fulfilling of his undertaken Suretyship and Cautionry And considering that their debt was exacted of him and that he was arraigned before Gods Tribunal as their Surety in their room and that this could be for nothing else but to answer for them as being their Cautioner His sufferings behoved to be intended as a satisfaction for their sins For the Elects sins were not the cause why Pilate the people of the Jews and the Scribes and Pharisees pursued him to death but for our sins he was sisted before God's Tribunal and being our Cautioner he was called to reckon for them and they were put upon his account or score 2. It 's clear also from the names that his sufferings get in the Scripture where they are called the price of our Redemption a buying of us a propitiation for our sins that pacified God Rom. 3.25 and 1 John 2.2 A Sacrifice often and Ransome Matth. 20.28 The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many that is for all his Elect people to relieve them from the bondage they were under which plainly shews the resp●ct that his sufferings had to our sins that they were a propitiation for them to God 3. It 's clear if we consider that Christs death as to its object is for the transgressions of all Gods people of all the E●ect that lived before he suffered whether they died in their infancy or at age and for all that lived or shall live and die after his suffering to the end of the world Now what benefite could redound to them that died ere Christ came in the flesh by his sufferings if it were as Socinians say for his death could not sure be a pattern
land of the living f●r the transgression of my people was he stricken THere is nothing that concerns us more than to be well acquainted with the doctrine of Christ Jesus and his Sufferings The Prophet hath therefore been much in shewing what Christ suffered in the former words and hath largely described his Humiliation to Judgment and Death for saith he he was cut off out of the land of the living In the words read he answers two important questions concerning his sufferings 1. To what end were all these sufferings he answers that they were for transgressions even to be a satisfaction to Justice for them The 2. Question is For whose sins were the sufferings of Christ to be a satisfaction It is answered expresly in the words for the transgression of my people was he stricken or the stroak was upon him it was for the sins of the Elect and of the Elect only for this is the Prophets scope who having spoken of Christs sufferings and death holds forth the meritorious and procuring cause and end thereof and this is the result design and sum of all even to be a satisfaction for Gods elect People for as we shew by Gods People are not meaned all men in the world nor the Jews only for Christ hath many sheep beside them but it 's Gods peculiar People in opposition to the multitude who are not his People The Doctrine or rather the branch of the Doctrine we left at was this and it 's exclusive that Christ's death is only intended to be a price for the sins of God's elect People and was laid down with respect to them his death and sufferings are to be looked upon and considered only as a price and satisfaction for their sins and for the sins of none other or thus Jesus Christ in his suffering and in the laying down of his life had a respect to the elect and intended the removing of the sins and transgressions of God's elect people only and of none other we know nothing that we can make of these words nor of the Prophets scope in them but this who as he hath been describing Christs sufferings in all other respects so doth he in this to wit in respect of the persons for whom he suffered and of the meritorious cause and end of his sufferings for says the Text for the transgressions of my people that is of Gods elect people was he stricken This branch of the Doctrine is of great weight and concernment in the whole strain of Grace for if this march-stone be lifted and removed Grace becomes common and as some call it universal and so to be in effect no grace at all for Grace hath a peculiar channel of its own wherein it runs towards a certain select number and not towards all I do not mean of grace taken in a large sense for so all men as they are partakers of any mercy or of common favours may be said to have grace extended to them but I mean God's special grace favour and good will which is extended only to the Elect for whose sins Christ suffered the right bounding of which Doctrine shews forth both God's soveraignty in the dispensing of grace and the freeness thereof in communicating and manifesting of it to whom he will and which thus considered is especially engaging of the hearts of them on whom he pleaseth to manifest it Ere I come to confirm this branch of the Doctrine take a word or two of advertisement in the entry 1. That Christ's death may be considered two ways 1. In respect of it self and as abstracting from the Covenant of Redemption wherein it is contrived as to all the circumstances of it in which sense as his death and sufferings are of infinite value worth so they are as Divines use to speak of value to redeem the whole world if God in his design and decree had so ordered and thought meet to extend it 2. We are to consider his sufferings and death as a price agreed upon in the Covenant or Bargain of Redemption wherein these two or three things concur 1. God's proposal 2. Christ's acceptation and design in laying down his life 3. The Fathers acquiescing therein and declaring himself well pleased therewith we speak not here of Christ's death in the first respect that is as abstracting from the Covenant for in that respect he might have laid down his life for few or moe for some or for all if it had been so intended but we speak of it in the second respect as it 's a price agreed upon in God's purpose and Christ's design and in God's acceptation and thus we say that his death is only intended as a satisfaction and recompence for the sins of the Elect and was laid down for them only 2ly We may consider Christ's sufferings and death in the fruits of it either as they respect common favours and mercies common gifts and means of grace which are not peculiar and saving but common to Believers with others being bestowed upon professors in the visible Church or as they are peculiar and saving such as Faith Justification Adoption c. Now when we say that Christ's sufferings and death are a price for the sins of his People we exclude not the Reprobate simply from temporal and common favours and mercies that come by his death they may have and actually have common gifts and works of the Spirit the means of Grace which are some way effects and fruits of the same Covenant but we say that the Reprobate partake not of saving Mercy and that Christs death is a satisfaction only for the Elect and that none others get pardon of Sin Faith Repentance c. by it but they only it was intended for none others and this we clear and confirm from and by these following grounds and arguments which we shall shortly hint at The 1. Argument is drawen from this same assertion of the Prophet thus If Christs death be only a satisfaction for the sins of Gods People then it is not a satisfaction for the sins of all but it 's a satisfaction only for the sins of Gods People therefore not for all for his People are not all men or all men are not his People but his People are a peculiar People separate from others in God's purpose and decree as we cleared before from John 17. Thine they were and thou gavest them me and the Text says expresly for the transgressions of my people was he stricken he respected the sins of God's People in accepting of the Bargain and in laying down his Life and for their sins only God accepted him yea the very mentioning of them thus here secludes all others and we must expone them exclusively as taking in none others and must look upon the things spoken of them as agreeing to no other even as it 's said Heb. 4. There remains therefore a rest to the people of God which is certainly exclusive of all others and hence when our Lord
to the curse of God for the transgressing of His Law which had said The soul that sins shall die and curs●d is every one that continueth not in all things written in the book of the law to do them 2. Add to this the supposition of Christ's undertaking to be the Elects Cautioner and to satisfie for their Debt whereby he steps into their room takes on their Debt And as the word is 2 Cor. 5. ult Becomes sin for them Is content to be lyable to and to be pursued by Justice for their Debt and though here there be a relaxation in respect of the Persons of the Elect for whom the Cautioner stands good yet in respect of the Curse and Death due to them there is no relaxation but the same thing due to them is laid on Him as it is Gal. 3. He hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us In every thing He was put to pay the equivalent for making up the Satisfaction due to Justice and these two being put together that Elect Sinners were obnoxious to Wrath and that our Lord came in their Room He behoved to be put to sad and sore Soul-suffering 3. Consider God's end in the Work of Redemption which is to point out the inconceivableness of His wonderfully condescending Grace and Mercy in exacting of satisfaction from the Cautioner and in setting the Sinner free that His Grace may be so Glorified as their shall be a proof given of His Justice and Soveraignity going along with it and Infinit Wisdom being set on Work to glorifi● infinit Grace and Justice there is a nec●ssity for the promoving of this end that the Mediator shall thus satisfie and the more full the Satisfaction be the more conspicuously do the Grace and Justice of God shine forth and are Glorified according to that word Rom 3.26 To declare his righteousn●ss that he might be just and the justifier of him that shall believe in Jesus This is the end of Christ's being made a Propitiation that God may be manifested to be Spotlesse and Pure in His Justice as well as Free and Rich in His Mercy and Grace who having given a Law to Man will not acquite the transgression thereof without a condigne Satisfaction 4 Consider that it is indeed a great thing to satisfie Justice for Sin that it 's more to satisfie Justice for all the Sins of one Person which all the Angells in Heaven and Men on Earth cannot do and therefore the punishment of the Damned in Hell is drawn out to Eternities length and yet there is never a Compleat Equivalent Satisfaction made to Justice but it is most of all to satisfie Justice for all the Sins of all the Elect who though they be few in comparison of the Reprobat World yet simply considered they are many yea even innumerable And our Lord having taken all their Sins on Him He is peremptorly required to satisfie for them all And if this withall be added that He is to satisfie for all the Sins of all the Elect at once in a very short time and hath the Curse and Wrath of God due to them Mustered and Marshaled in Batallie against Him and as it were in a great Body in a most formidable manner marching up towards Him and seriously charging Him and all the Wrath which they should have drunken through all Eternity which yet would never have been drunk out nor made the less put in one Cup and propined to Him as the Word is Psal 110. He shall drink of the brook in the way The Wrath of God running like an impetuous River must be drunk up at once and made dry by Him These being put together do clearly and convincingly shew that it could not but be an inexpressible and inconceivable Soul-travell and Suffering that our Lord Jesus was put to The Use of this Doctrine is large and the 1. Use is this T●at ye would take it for a most certain Truth which the Scriptures doth so Frequently and Significantly hold forth That our Lord Jesus in performing the Work of Redemption had much sad Soul-travell and sorrow The Faith of this is very usefull to demonstrat the great love of God and of the Mediator For doubtless the more Suffering be undergone by the Mediator the more love Kythes therein to the El●ct 2. It serves to hold out the Soveraignity and Justice of God and the horribleness of Sin 3. In respect of God's People it 's usefull that they may be through and clear in the Reality and Worth of Christ's Satisfaction He having no other End in it but to satisfie Justice for their Sin 4. It 's usefull to shew the Vanity and Emptinesse of Mens Supposed and Fancied Merits and of any thing that can be alleadged to be in Mans Suffering or doing for the satisfying of Divine Justice seing it drew so deep on Christ the Cautioner And here two gross Errours come to be Refuted and Reprobated One of the Socinians who seek quite to overturn Christ's Satisfaction And another of the Papists that minish His Satisfaction and Extenuat and Derogat from the great Priviledge of the Pardon of Sin as if any thing could procure it but this Satisfaction of Christ by His Soul-travell both which are aboundantly refuted by this Text. But to speak a word more particularly to the First For clearing of which ye will ask What could there be to affect the Holy Humane Soul of our Lord Or what was that wherein His Soul-sufferings did consist But before we speak to this we would premit this Word of Advertisement in the entry That there are two sorts of Punishments or Penal Effects of Sin The 1. Sort are such as are simply Penal and Satisfying as proceeding from some extrinsick cause The 2d sort are sinfull One Sin in the Righteous Judgement of God drawing on another And this proceeds not simply from the nature of Justice but from the nature of a meer sinfull Creature and so from an intrinsick cause of a Sinful Principle in the Creature Now when we speak of the Soul-sufferings of Christ which He was put to in Satisfying for the Sins of the Elect We mean of the former that is Sufferings that are simply Penall For there was no intrinsick Principle of Corrupt Nature nor ground of Chal●enge in Him as there is in Sinfull Creatures And therefore we are to conceive of His Soul-sufferings as of some thing inflicted from without and are not to conceive of them as we do of Sinfull Creatures or that have Sin in them whereof he was altogether free Having premitted this we shall speak a little to these two 1. To that wherein this Soul-suffering did not consist 2. To that wherein it did consist For the former wherein it was not 1. We are not to suppose or imagine any actuall separation betwixt His God-head and His Man-head as if there had been an interruption of the Personall Union not so for the Union of the
Curse as if he had never had Sin But the difference lyeth here that this last acception of the Word absolves a Man though he have Sin in himself by the interposing of a Surety and Cautioner who payes his D●bt and procures the Sentence of Absolution to him And in this Sense Justification is as if a Man were standing at the Bar of Gods Tribunal Guilty and having a witness of his Guilt in himself and God out of Respect to the Mediator His Satisfaction and Payment of His Debt which He hath laid hold upon by Faith does pronunce that sinfull Person to be Free Absolved and Acquitted from the Guilt and Punishment of Sin and doth accordingly Absolve him upon that accompt So then Justification is not to be considered as Gods Creating and Infusing of gracious habits in us but the declaring of us to be Free and Acquitted from the Guilt of Sin upon the account of Christs Satisfying for our Debt This we will find to be very clear if we consider how the Word is taken both in the Old and new Testament as namely Isaiah 5.23 Woe unto them that justifie the wicked for a reward and take away the righteousnesse of the righteous from him And Prov. 17.15 He that justifieth the wicked and he that condemneth the just even they both are abomination to the Lord. Where the plain meaning of the Word can be no other then this that when a Judge pronounces a man to be Just although he be unjust it is a wicked thing which the Lord abhores And so Psal 51.4 That thou mightest be justified when thou speakest That is that thou might be declared to be so And Matth. 11.19 Wisdom is justified of her children 2. We will find this meaning of the Word to be clear if we consider Justification as distinguished from Sanctification For in that Popish sense they are both made one and the same but they are distinguished in Scripture As 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified Where he looks on these two Benefits of Justification and Sanctification as disti●ct and distinguisheth the one of them from the other now Sanctification being the Grace that renews our nature and makes an inward spiritual change Justification must needs be that Act of Gods Grace that takes away the Guilt of Sin and makes Sinners to be friends with God through Christs Righteousness and so is a relative change of their State 3. It will be clear if we consider to what it is opposed in Scripture it is not opposed to sinning as Sanctification is but to these two 1. To the charging of a Sinner with somewhat unto Condemnation And 2. To the Act of Condemning now the opposit to Condemnation is Absolution as is clear Rom. 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifies who shall condemn c. Gods Justifying is put in as opposit to the Charging and Lybelling of the Elect and to the Condemning of them therefore none of these can be and so Justification there looks both to the part of an Advocat pleading and declaring a man to be Free and to the part of a Judge pronouncing him to be Absolved and Justified which well agrees to Our Lord Jesus who Justifies His People both wayes 4. It may also be cleared from parallel Scriptures where Justifying is called Reconciling As 2 Cor. 5.18 19 20. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses unto them and hath committed to us c. And how that comes to pass is told in the last v. For he made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him So that to be made the Righteousness of God is to be Justified and to be Justified is to be made friends with or to be reconciled to God and that not by working a moral Change but upon the account of Christ's Satisfact on bringing us into friendship with God So Eph. 1.6 Where to be Justified is exponed to be made accepted in the Beloved And what else is that but to be in good terms with God to have him passing by all quarrels as having nothing to say against us but accepting us through Christ as Righteous So Acts 13.38 39. Be it known unto you that through this man is preached unto you forgiveness of sins and by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could be justified by the law of Moses A place that clearly holds forth that as all the Elect are naturally chargable by the Law as being Guilty of the breach thereof and that they cannot be absolved from it by ought in themselves so they are through Faith in Jesus Christ freed from it As if the Lord had said ye are fred from the Sentence of the Law because through Christ is preached unto you Remission of Sins and there is away laid down for your Absolution who believe from the Guilt of Sin and from all the consequents of it 5ly It 's clear from the Text because it 's such a Justifying as hath in it Christs being Sentenced in our Room as the cause of it now He was Sentenced in our Room not by having Sin infused in Him which were Blasphemous to think but by having our Sin imputed to Him and therefore our Justification must be our Absolution by having His Righteousnesse imputed to us As is clear throughout this Chapter Therefore it s said He hath carried our sorrows and born our griefs He was wounded for our transgressions He was bruised for our iniquities by his strips we are healed He laid on him the inquitie of us all And in these words By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities It 's a Justification that comes to us by Christ's taking on our Debt And this we cannot imagine to be otherwayes but by a Legal Change or by a Change of Law-rooms He coming as Surety in our Room and we having Absolution by vertue of His Satisfaction So that the meaning of the Words in short is As if the Prophet had said would ye know what we have by Christ's Sufferings Even this to wit That many as many as whose iniquities He bore and satisfied for shall be Acquitted and Absolved from the Guilt and Punishment of their Sin through His Satisfaction They shall be fred from the Sentence and Curse of the Law which they deserved And shall be declared Righteous through the Righteousnesse of their Cautioner which they have laid hold upon by Faith Hence Observe 1. That all Men and Women even all the Elect themselves are by nature lyable to an arraignment before the Justice-seat of God That they are Justified supposes a bringing of them as it were before His Tribunal ere they can be Justified and have the Sentence of Absolution past in their favours The Apostle takes this for granted
other Fruits of it were uselesse it will avail but little to be a Member of the visible Church to be Baptized and to be admitted to the Lords Supper to have Litural knowledge of the principles of Religion to have a Gift of Preaching or of Prayer c. these will not Justifie The peculiar thing aimed at in Christs Death and that which His People aim at and have to rejoyce in is Justification through his knowledge which is alwayes to be understood without prejudice to the study of Holinesse 2. It gives us this Use whoever would have Absolution before God would know that this was the very thing ingaged for to Christ and His intendment in His Death That Sinners believing on Him might be Absolutely and Actually Justified by Him it was not simply to propose Justification to them but that Absolutely they might be Absolved from the Curse of God due to them for Sin And now may I not ask whether this is more encouraging to Sinners to have Christ procuring Justification only conditionally to them or to have the thing absolutely conferred upon them This is a ground whereupon believing Sinners lift up their heads confidently and expect Justification through His Righteousnesse It is this that was promised to Christ and it is this that is the native fruit of His Death without which it will be fruitlesse And this may remove the great obstruction that readily a Sinner when he is serious seeth lying in his way to wit the want of Righteousnesse and the fear of not being Absolved the want of inherent Righteousnesse in himself which makes him lyable to the Curse of the Law when he seeth upon what terms Christ died First To procure a Righteousnesse to them that wanted Righteousnesse And 2. Upon these terms that Sinners through faith in Him might he Justified and fred from the Guilt of Sin as if they never had Sin themselves Considering this to be his intendment according to the terms of the Covenant of Grace what have they or what can they have to skar or fright them from expecting the fulfilling of this Promise Because the contryvance of the Covenant of Redemption is to buy Justification absolutely and not the possibility of it only nor to buy Grace to us whereby to Justifie our selves but Ju●●ification it self so as we may be beholden to Him alone for it Again 2dly When we say that the Justification of a Sinner is the proper result of Christ's Death it may be thus understood That the Righteousnesse whereby a Sinner is Justified is immediatly Christ's Death and Purchase as to the meritorious cause thereof to that if we look to what Justifies a Sinner as to the meritorious cause of it the knitting of these two together He shall see of the travel of his soul and shall be satisfied and By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many doth hold it forth to be Christ's Death and Purchase The travel of His Soul is and must be the ground on which a lost Sinner is Justified before the Throne of God This both confirms what we formerly proposed concerning this Doctrine and also shews that the Justification of a Sinner is not by inherent Holinesse whence comes it I pray that makes a Sinner acceptable before God It is not from habitual nor actual inherent Grace but from Christs Righteousness laid hold on by Faith that grippeth and adhereth to it But from the latter part of the Words we will have more particular occasion to speak to this where these two are knit together By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquity therefore we do now passe it The Object of this benefit is many many ordinarily in Scripture implyes these two things 1. A great number and so it shews the extent of the Object that is that Christ shall purchase and redeem many or by His Death procure Justification to many 2. A restriction and thus many is opposed to all and so the meaning is There shall many be Justified by Christ's Death but not all and therefore as none can from these Words plead for an universality in Justification So neither can they in Redemption for he only bare their iniquities whom by His knowledge He Justifies Looking on these many in these twofold considerations we may take these Observations from it 1. Taking it extensively Observe 1. That the Righteousnesse of Christ is of it self able to Justifie many It 's a Righteousnesse that can Satisfie for the Sins of many or thus That in the Covenant of Redemption there is an intended Application of Christ's Righteousness and Purchase to many 2. That there are many who shall indeed partake of Christ's Righteousnesse and be Justified by it It 's not one or two or a thousand but as it was intended to Justifie many so it shall be actually applyed to many for their Justification 3. Comparing the former Words He shall see of the travel of his soul and shall be satisfied with these Words By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many Observe That Christ is not satisfied for the Travel of His Soul except many be Justified Or thus It is Christ's Satisfaction how many there be that make use of Him and that by making use of Him come to be justified by Him as afterward we will see These many are all these that believe all these that have this true and saving knowledge of Him and do rightly acknowledge Him The making out of one of these Doctrines will make them all out That Christ's Righteousnesse is able to Justifie many that many shall be Justified by it and that it is His S●tisfaction and Delight that many be Justified and get this good of it It 's said Matth. 20.28 That he came to lay down his life a ransome for many And Rom. 5.15 That the gift of grace which is by one man Jesus Christ hath abounded unto many and v. 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shal● many be made righteous Let but these Four things be put together and considered and it will be found that there is no just ground to quarrel these Doctrines 1. The native worth and intrinsick value that is in the Satisfaction of Christ It 's the blood of God of the Person that is God It 's an Offering that flows from a willing and cheerful Giver which makes it the more acceptable He was content with delight to pay the Price there cannot be a limiting or bounding of this Worth and Value because there cannot be any bounding or limiting of the Person that gives the Value to it if it be considered in it self 2. Consider the freeness of the Offer which takes in many Our Lord communicats very freely what He hath bought very dear and it 's done with respect to His taking in of many to take away all exceptions from the poor and needy and from them that want money 3. As the terms are
Justification before God seclude his own Righteousnesse and betake himself to Christ's Righteousnesse alone as Contra-distinguished to his own 4ly We say That Christ's Righteousness is in Him and imputed to us or made ours by imputation is the alone Meritoritorious Cause of our Justification and Salvation so as that which He hath purchased is reckoned and accounted the Sinners as if it were His own inherently and personally This I also gather from the Words By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities Would ye know as if the Prophet had said how Christ is the Meritorious Cause of Justification Thus it is because He shall bear their iniquities if He hath taken on the burden of their Sins and had their Sins imputed to Him then it will follow by proportion that they are Justified by the imputation of His Righteousnesse to them and there is nothing that the Scripture doth more inculcat then this That we are Justified by the Righteousnesse of Christ without us and imputed to us or reckoned ours we by Faith laying hold upon it and Gods accepting of it for us mak s it become ours and yet there is nothing that we do more particular●y erre in and which Papists do more sco●n and flout at wholly enervating the way and contrivance of Grace by excluding and shouldering out the Righteousnesse of Christ calling it in derision a Putative or meerly fancied and ●maginary Righteousnesse as if there were ●o reality in it and by bringing in and establishing their own Righteousnesse though it be very clear from this and many other Scriptures that Christs Righteousnesse must be ours by imputation because He ●are our iniquities He became our Righteousnesse by paying of our D●bt as our Cautioner and no otherwayes the Scripture never speaks of His being our Righteousnesse by procuring ability to us to pay our own Debt I shall clear this 4th Branch a little further because it will serve to clear the rest That is th●t Christ's Righteousnesse as it is in Him and imputed to us is he only Meritorious Cause of our Justification And if we consider 1 The way of Justification that is used among men this will be the more plain There being two Covenants by the one of which Life was once attainable and by the other of which it is only now attainable 1. The Covenant of Works which absolves a man that never brake it which is as when one among men or before mens Court is declared to be free because he was never o●ing the Debt 2. The Covenant of Grace that provides a Cautioner to pay the Sinners Debt upon whose payment thereof had recourse to by Faith there is access in Law to the Sinner to call for absolution even as it is in mens Courts though the principal Debter hath nothing to pay yet if the Cautioner pay the Debt it is the principal Debtors cl●aring and if he should be again charged to pay the Debt his immediat de●ence would be that the Cautioner had payed it already So is it here the Lord hath borrowed and made use of this way that is used among men to make the Mystery of Justification which passeth in the Court of God the more clear to us it is as if one should alleadge that such a Person is owing so much and he should say I cannot be charged with it and upon what ground Not because I was not owing the Debt but because such anone has payed it for me So sayeth the Apostle Rom. 8.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is God that justifies who shall condemne it is Christ that died c. The defence proposed before the Tribunal of God is Chritis dying and that is as much as he hath payed the Price or Debt who then can charge it on the principal Debtor And the frame and contexture of the words shews that it is a judicial precedour for they suppose a charge or lybel and a sentence and the Meritorious Cause of the Sentence of Absolution is that Christ hath died 2ly If we consider the nature of the two Covenants and compare them together it will be clear the Papists confound the two Covenants For works to them is the condition of both Covenants making use of that place Matth 19.17 2● Keep the commands if thou will be perfect sell all thou hast and give to the poor quite contrary to the scope of it for therein Christ is putting the man to a thing impossible to himself to bring him to see the necessity of a Mediator and discover his unsoundnesse when he will not forgoe his great Poss●ssions for him But the Sc●ipture doth so clearly dif●ere●ce the Covenant of Grace and ●he Covenant of works that they are opposed For the Covenant of works sayeth do this and live and the Covenant of Grace sayeth If thou shall believe with thy heart in the Lord Jesus and con●●sse with thy mouth thou shalt or saved And therefore the account of ones being Ju●●ified in t●e Covenant of Grace must be different from the account whereon one is Justified in the Covenant of W●rks otherwayes they would not be opposit The Covenant of Works respects inh●rent Righteousnesse as the condition The Covenant of Grace respects Faith taking hold of the Righteousnesse of Christ and therefore H s Righteousnesse must Justifie as being in Him without us and as imputed to us it cannot be our Righteousnesse within that Justifies for so it should be the same with the Covenant of Works for though Christ did procure inherent Righteousnesse to us it makes no difference in the condition it self which is works 3ly It will be clear if we consider how the Scripture speaks of Christ's Righteousnesse becoming ours even as our Sins became Christ's and was the cause if we may so speak of His condemnation that is as He became lyable to the Curse that as He stood a Legal Person in our Room He became guilty and lyable to the payment of our Debt For otherwayes it is abominable once to speak of His condemnation and if His Righteousnesse become ours as our Sin became His then certainly His Righteousnesse is the cause of our Justification as it is in Him inherently and in us by imputation only The blasphemy of Antinomians is most detestable and not at all pleaded for even by Papists and therefore we stand not on it here Now our Sin became Christ's by imputation therefore His Righteousnesse must be ours the same way If it then were asked How we are Justified The Text answers He shall justifie many because he shall bear their iniquities The Prophet makes his Sufferings to be the antecedent whereof our Justification is the consequent for His bearing of our iniquities is given as the reason of our Justification this is also clear 2 Cor. 5. ult He was made sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him In which words the Spirit of
their own as to the removal of temporal plagues and the taking them out of Purgatory and if they grant that there may be an imputation of the Merits of Saints why deny they the imputation of the Merits of Christ as to the removal of eternal Wrath is there any probability that there can be any imputation of the one and not an imputation of the other 3. They allow an imputation of Christs Merits as to the procuring of the first Grace without all Faith apprehending Him and if by their own Doctrine it be not absurd to speak of Christ's Merit as to the infusing of Grace at first why shall it be thought absurd to speak of Christ's Merit as to the procuring of Glory 4. They grant that there is an imputation of Christs Righteousnesse as to the procuring of Glory in a higher degree though they say that it is a far better Life which comes by our own works and why not as to the procu ing of Glory in a lower degree yea both of Grace and Glory and of every good Thing We have insisted on this the more 1. Because it 's the main foundation of our Faith and the end of it and the great scope of the Gospel 2. Because there are so many mistakes about this and a grosse mistake in this is remedilesse when we come before God Even before the Tribunal of men if we make a wrong defence it hazards our cause So is it here for to have a hiding place in Christ and under the covert of His Righteousnesse is our only defence before the dreadful Tribunal of God 3. Because it serves much to clear this Truth for we would have you knowing that it 's not enough to speak of Christ's Merit as the cause of our friendship with God a Papist will do that who yet leaneth not to Christs Merits alone but to his own at least in part and in conjunction with Christ's and therefore we would now and then speak of this because there is such horrible ignorance of it though a fundamental Truth How many gay honest folks as they are called and accounted are there among us that cannot tell how they came to be Justified or what is the ground which they have to rest on if they were going to die Is it not absurd that men should be called Protestants and live so long under the clear light of the Gospel and y●t be i●norant of this main point of the Protestant Religion Therefore 1. make this Use of it to inform your selves in the causes of your Justification and to turn them over into Questions and Answers to your selves ●o that if ye ask what is the efficient cause of Justification It 's God the party offended What is the final cause of it It is H●s Glory what is the M●ritorious Cause It is Christ's Merits or His Righteousnesse impu●●d to us what is the inward instrumental Cause It 's Faith c. According to the solid answer given in our Chatechisme to that Question what is Justification It is an Act of Gods free grace wherein he pardoneth all our sins and accepteth us as righteous in his sight only for the righteousnesse of Christ imputed to us and received by faith alone Where the efficient cause is Gods free Grace Christ's Righteousness the only Meritorious Cause and the only inward instrumental Cause Faith alone The formal Cause Gods pardoning our Sin and accepting of us as Righteous Remember well that it is not Christ's Righteousnesse as having a Merit in it to procure inherent Righteousnesse but as it is imputed unto us and accounted ours that Justifies us Thus ye will remember the difference betwixt Christ's Right●ousnesse and our own and as for the external instrumental Cause it is holden out in these Words of our Catechisme in the discription of Faith as he is offered to us in the Gospel All these Causes must in ordinary dispensation concur to our Justification and the pardoning of our Sins The 2d Use Serves to teach us to be on our guard against the Popish Error of Justification by Works though we here are mercifully keeped free yet the Land is tempted in several corners of it to shuffle by Christs Righteousnesse and to bring in mens own Righteousnesse or holinesse as the ground of their acceptation before God There are some spottings of it with in a few myles to this place and since this Error draws Souls away from that which is their right and only defence before God that is Christ's Righteousnesse it cannot but ruine them which should make you all to look well about you and upon this account to abhor it It as one of the great Delusions of the man of Sin which being once admitted will with your own consent bring you again in bondage to a Covenant of Works Use 3. Follow this way in your practice in your seeking after Justification renunce your own Righteousnesse and lean to Christ's Righteousnesse alone What better are many of us in our Practice then Papists If ye ask many what is it that satisfies the Justice of God Some will answer 1. Their good Prayers or their good Works and if they have done a fault they shall make amends 2. Others will say that they have a good heart to God and they mind well though it 's but little they dow do 3. Others will thank God that they have ●e●n keeped from grosse evils and that he hath helped them to pray and to wait on ordinances and though they have no Righteousnesse of their own yet God hath helped them to do many good things and thus all that they lean to is still within the● 4. Others will say we warrand you we can merit nothing but we hope through Christ's R ghteousnesse our Holi●esse and Prayers will be accepted not as Duties or Fruits of Faith but they think to make these two concur as the ground of their Justification to wit Christ's Righteousnesse and their own performances together And what is all this but black and abominable Popery And yet if we go through the generality of Professors great Folk and mean Folk we will find few but by one or other of these wayes they delude themselves and that but very few have Christs Righteousnesse as the immediat ground of their Justification and Defence before God Be ashamed therefore that ye are so ignorant of this Point and be exhorted to study it as the main thing if ever ye think to stand before God's Tribunal and to carrie your cause be exhorted I say to be clear in this Defence which only will be found relevant before God and nothing but this to wit the Satisfaction of Christ taken hold of and rested on by Faith The 4th Use Serves for notable Consolation to a poor Sinner that hath no Righteousnesse of His own and who without this would never have peace what would any of you think or say if ye had your Prayers and good Works to hold up to God for the ground of your
Faith comes by hearing as it is Rom. 10.17 and hearing by the word of God and in the same Chap. v. 14 15. How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard and how shall they hear without a preacher and how shall they preach except they be sent Where the Apostle clearly and convincingly in●●rt the necessity of a lawfully called Ministry for preaching of the Gospel and for carrying on the Work of Justifying and S●ving Faith The reason is because if their be a necessity of Faith and if no Faith can ●e without Knowledge then there must necessarily be something to reveal it I spe●k here of the ordinary way of Gods revealling Himself what He may do ●xtraordinarly towards Dumb and Deaff Persons to Idiots and Young Children I midle not with that but leave it to Himself as a Secret which He thinketh not fit to impart to u I call the Gospel the external mean of promoving our Just●fication in Four respects 1. Because it layes before us the Object of our Faith for in it as it is Rom. 1.17 is the righteousness of God revealled c. and Rom. 11.21 22. it 's said Now the righteousnesse of God without the law is manifested c. We would never know the way how a Sinner comes to be at peace with God and to be Justified without the Gospel 2. Because it not only reveals the Object of Faith but it makes offer of it and hereby a Sinner that hears the Gospel hath warrand to imbrace and make use of Jesus Christ's Righteousnesse and to rest upon it and therefore if tentation should say to the Sinner though Christ dyed what is that for thee Faith hath this to reply The Gospel calls me and that warrands me to come to Him and to make use of His Death the Promise as it is Act. 2. Is to as many as the Lord our God shall call And in this respect the Promise is our Right and Evident whereby we come to have a claim to Christ 3. Because God makes use of the Word preached for ingaging of Sinners to Christ and for making them to take hold of Him It 's true that it is not powerful of it self and without the Spirit yet it 's the ordinary mean that God maketh use of Therefore sayeth the Apostle 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warefare are not carnal though they be weak in themselves yet they are mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds And in this respect the Gospel not only offers Life but through Gods blessing as a mean begets Life and by the Spirit accompanying it Sinners are ingaged to take hold of Christ and to rest on Him for Salvation 4ly Because this Word being taken hold of and closed with contains the pronuncing of the Sinners Absolvitor of His absolving Sentence when it sayes If thou believest thou shalt be justified and saved upon supposition of believing the Sentence stands good to the Believer Thou art past from death to Life There being no condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus The 1. Use Serves to clear that which we hinted at before in naming this for a cause of Justification though it be the external instrumental cause yet it is a Cause The 2. Use Serves to teach you to put a Pryce on the Gospel It 's the bane both of prophane secure Sinners and of a sort of vain and giddy People among us that they prize not the Preaching of the Gospel as the external instrumental Cause that concurres in the Justification of Sinners but if ever ye be absolved ye will be beholden to this preached Gospel I will not say alwayes to the Preaching but sure to the Gospel that is Preached This on the one hand reproves these who will be ready to say that they have Faith who yet never knew the Gospel to do them good and such also who seldom come to hear and who never care for preaching And upon the other hand it reproves these who when they fall a Tottering Reeling and wavering and begine to incline to error cast at the preaching of the Gospel having it may be slighted it before in their hearts whether when Satan once gets them he tosses them in a great measure as he pleases and makes them so giddy by frequent turning about that they scarcely leave to themselves a foot-broad of Scripture-ground to stand upon But as ye respect the glory of Christ the good of your Souls and your absolution before God esteem much of the Gospel For it 's the power of God to salvation And if ever ye ye come to Heaven it will be by this Gospel as the external mean These Nations that never heard it will think you to be most desperatly wicked and miserable who have had it and yet so unworthily slighted it For pressing of this Use a little Take Two or Three Directions in reference to it 1. Walk under the Convictions of the necessity of the Gospel For there is no absolution without it It is true God might have taken another way but on the supposition that He hath appointed Faith to be a mids to Justification and that Faith supposes Knowledge then certainly Knowledge doth suppose a necessity of hearing the Gospel ye will never value Preaching nor any other Ordinances of Christ if ye see not a necessity of them and know them not to be for your good 2. Study to know what is the main End and Design of and what is the advantage that is to be had by the Ordinances many come to the Preaching of the Gospel to hear and learn some Lesson for informing their Judgement some come to get Directions in ref●rence to some particular Dutie some to get a doubt loosed none of which are to be dissallowed in themselves but rather in so far to be commended but how few come to it as to a mean to carry on and bring about their Justification and to bring them out of Black N●ture into a State of Grace It 's the sum of Pauls Preaching and the end of it as the Divine Historian shews Act. 26.18 To open blind eyes to turn them from darkness to light and from the power of satan unto God that they may receive forgivenesse of sins and an inheritance among them that are sanctified by faith that is in him 3. Aim in your practice to carry on this Design even to put a close to the Treaty anent Justification betwixt God and you when ye come to the Preaching and hears us declare in the name of the Lord that a believing Sinner hath accesse to have his Sin taken away and to be Justified through the imputation of Christs Righteousnesse ye would step to hearing this Proclamation made of the pardon of Sin by one of Christs Ambassadors in His Name and accept of embrace and cordially close with it if it were just now at this very occasion 4. This would be the great design both of Preachers and Hearers Of Preachers to follow
that way of Preaching most that layes open the mistery of Faith in Christ and of Hearers to love that way of Preaching best not so much that which fills the head with Notions as that which serves to help to close a Bargain betwixt God and you This was Pauls great design in Preaching as we see 1 Cor. 2.2 and 1 Cor. 1.23.24 He no doubt ta●ght other things but he compended all in this or levelled all at this as the scope and this was his main Design in his Preaching and Pressing of other things The 3d. Use Serves To make a sad discovery of many of you is this Gospel the external mean of Justification Then see if ye ever knew any benefit ye got by it ye will belike say that ye are in friendship with God but how I pray you came ye by it There is little ch●nge to the better in your Knowledge and as little odds in your Practice ye are as much given to Covetousnesse Tipling Lying Swearing Pride Vanity c. as ev●r and are these think ye the Fruits of Justification do ye think that to be Justification which is neither from the Word nor conform to it If God would commend this to your hearts I think it might alarm you to more serious thoughts of your Condition I put it to your Conscience if ye can conceive any difference betwixt you and these that never heard the Gospel ye are baptized and hear preachings c. But alace it 's none of these that Justifies they are only useful as they lead you forward to the use making of Jesus Christ Again let me ask you what effect hath Preaching upon you H●th it convinced you of Sin ●o how then can it convince y●u of Righteousnesse Therefore if ye would make sure Justification indeed try it by the Word 1. What was it that put you to seek after Righteousnesse and Justification was ye ever convinced of the need of it and if ye have been convinced was it by Preaching of the Word 2. If ye have been convinced of your Sin and misery where sought ye for a remedy was ye led in through the Word to seek a Plaister to heal that wound of Conviction 3. What was it that warranted you to take hold of that Word or that gave you right to it I know that ye will say that it was Christ holden out in the Word that ye did betake your selves to but what weight laid ye on Gods call in the Gospel warranding you to lay hold on the Promise of Righteousnesse and Pardon of Sin through Christ I know there are many who though there had not been a call from God would have confidently stepped forward to the Promise but were ye ever like to Peters hearers pricked in your hearts and made to say men and brethren what shall we do Or being some way pricked was it Gods call holding out the Promise to be to you and your children and to as many as our God shall call that brought you to rest on the Promise God hath designed preaching for this end and ye would try if ever ye was put to it to look to Gods call that g●ve you warrand to believe for there is nothing more certain then this that wherever Faith is sicker and well built it 's grounded on Gods call and doth take His Fai●hfulnesse for it's Back-bond to say so and warrand More particularly we come to speake of this Word as it respects the inward mean or the inward instrumental cause of Justification which is Faith for there is this order and method 1. The Sinner is convinced and made sensible of Sin and brought to reckon for it in his own Conscience before God 2. There is Christs being holden forth interposing himself to take on Sinners Debt and satisfy●ng the Ju ●ice of God for it which is the meritorious Cause 3dly There is Gods Offer in the Gospel holding our Christs Righteousnesse to lost Sinners and calling them to make use of it 4ly Upon this there is Faith's receiving of the Offer and resting upon Christ and His Righteousnesse for Life which to speak so is the inward instrumental Cause taking hold of the external and as I said of Christ in it 5. And lasty follows Gods imputing the Righteousnesse of Christ to the Sinner and absolving him by vertue of that Righteousnesse from the guilt of his Sin as if he had never Sinned In speaking of this inward instrumental Cause Five things would be cleared which we suppose are implyed in the Words 1. The necessity of Faith holden out as the Mean by which Justification is come by 2. The immediat Object of Justifying Faith and that is Christs Sufferings or Jesus Christ as Suffering Travelling in Soul and paying our Debt 3. The Act of this Faith on this Object which is not a bare speculative Knowledge or a meer Historical Faith but something that really Acts on Christ with respect to His Sufferings 4. The effect of this Faith taking hold on Christ and His Sufferings and that is Justification which is not the making a Sinner to be Just by inherent Righteousnesse but the Actual absolving of him from the Guilt of Sin and from God's Curse the changing of his State and the bringing him from under the Curse into good terms with God 5. The manner how Faith concurres in proceeding or bringing about this effect wherein we have this general That Faith hath a peculiar influence in the Justification of a Sinner that no good work nor any other Grace hath There is none of all these things but it is in this miserably declined generation wherein the Devil sets himself mightily to obscure Tru●h as the Lord by the Gospel doth clear it contraverted I shall only endeavour to clear the positive part and let you see what is Truth in these things whereby ye may be brought to discover and abhore the errors that are contrare thereto The 1. Doctrine than is this That before a man can be Justified and Absolved from the Curse of God due to him for Sin there is a necessity of Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ This is clear from the Words and from what hath been said in the opening of them up If it be by his knowledge or the knowledge of him that many are justified then it cannot be that they are Justified before they come to the Knowledge of Him or from Eternity only in passing take two or three words of Advertisement and then we shall confirm the Doctrine 1. When we speak of Justification it 's in respect of our being absolved and fred not from the pollution of Sin but from the guilt of it as it makes us obnoxious to the Curse the clearing of the effect will clear this more 2. When we speak of Faith it 's not to be understood as it were a Declaration or Manifestation of our Justification Or it is not to be understood of Faith in the hight of full assurance and as it is a plezophory but of
comprehended the way of a Sinners Justification in the Gospel Covenant and promises and makes offer of it to all that hear of it saying He that believes in the Son shall not perish but have eternal life and all that believe on him shall be justified from all things whereby they could not be justified by the law of Moses This is the external instrumental cause of Justification that holds out the way to Life which supposes the former 4. When this is made offer of in the Gospel there is the o●eration of Gods Spirit on the Soul illightning the Mind of the Sinner convincing him of his hazard chasing him to Christ and powerfully perswading him to take hold of His Righteousnesse made offer of to him whereupon the Soul comes to put forth the Act of Faith and to rest upon His Righteousnesse as when it was said by Philip to the Eunuch Act. 8. If thou believest thou mayest justified The Soul answers I believe in Christ the Son of God whereupon it becomes a bargain and this is the inward mean or instrumental cause of Justification 5. Follows Gods imputing to that Sinner that receives Christ as He is offered and rests upon Him by Faith His Righteousnesse and Christs payment and satisf●ction to Justice is counted his and according to this his Sins are pardoned for the merit of that Righteousness and he himself is accepted accounted Righteous as if he had never sinned and he hath such a sentence past on him as is held forth in these words of Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose transgression is forgiven whose sin is covered to whom the Lord imputs to iniquity and in these Rom. 8.1 There is therefore now no condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus c. Even as before he fled to Christ there was a Curse standing against him And this is an Act of God the Soveraign and efficient Cause To declare his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of him that believes in Jesus as it is Rom. 3.26 which is the final cause We may confirm this either as to the positive part that by believing a Sinner is Justified or as to the negative part that there is no other way possible whereby a Sinner can be Justified but by believing So that this great Effect follows from a sensible Sinners taking hold of Christs Righteousnesse by Faith Ye may look upon a few Scriptures to this purpose as namely Gal. 2.16 Where the Apostle entering in the debate layes down this conclusion Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the faith of Christ as if he had said we have taken this way for the attaining of this end believing that we might be justified The Apostle speaks here 1. Of a Justification by Faith which is opposit to Works and as he ascribes it to Faith so he denyes it to Works 2. He makes it exclusive and will have no other thing to concur in the manner at least but Faith Knowing saith he that a man is not justified by works but by faith 3. He holds out his own and other Believers practice Even we have believed that we might be justified As if he said we took this way of Faith to be absolved before God which by the Law or the Works of the Law would never have been See also to this purpose the Epistle to the Romans 1 2 3 4. and 5. Chapters especially the 3 and 4. In the 3d. chap. v. 25. When he is summing the Doctrine of Justification into a compend he sayes Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sins c. Where Christs Righteousnesse is called a Propitiation through faith and Faith is holden out as the Channel in which Justification runs and in the words following the Believer is holden out as the Object of it So Chap. 4. It 's holden out in the instance of Abraham particularly v. 5. To him that worketh not but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse Where the Apostle propones Two wayes of a persons aiming to be Justified The 1. whereof is when a man works or worketh not on that account to be Justified by them and on that account seeks to be Justified and that way is rejected The 2. is when a man hath no works but by Faith betakes himself to Christ's Satisfaction and that way is established for that mans Faith is counted for Righteousnesse and is the ground of his peace before God we gave some Scriptures before for this and shall not therefore now insist There is also good reason why it cannot be otherwayes 1. If we consider what man is in himself ungodly rebellious having nothing to present unto God but when a Righteousnesse is presented to him by way of offer and he is through Grace brought to accept of the offer of Righteousnesse of another nothing can be conceived to be brought to receive it but his Faith and i● Christs Satisfaction be his Justification and if it be Faith that takes hold of it we have a clear reason why Justification is attributed as to Faith 2. Consider That this contributs most to Gods end which is to glorifie himself especially in his Grace in the Justification of Sinners even to hold forth the manifold riches of His Grace and nothing contributs to this so much and so well a● that which speaks the Sinner to be empty and nothing empties the Sinner more then Faith it being the great Act of Faith to bring the Soul of it's own bottom and to stop all boasting to drive it out of it self to be found in Him Therefore it 's said to be of faith that it might be of grace Rom. 14.16 As if he had said if it were by any other thing it could not be by Grace but Faith claims nothing but the Righteousnesse of Christ to rest on He hath payed the price and made the Satisfaction and that Satisfaction is mine saith Faith because it was offered to me and I have been brought to lay hold on it and the nature of this pleading stops the mouth of the creature and proclaims Justification to be alone the effect of Gods Grace and of Christs procurement 3. Consider That if it depended on any other thing our Justification could never be perfit when we speak of Justification and call it perfite It is not so to be understood as if Faith were perfite but Christs Satisfaction which is our Righteousnesse and which Faith layes hold on is perfite ●hough our Faiths grip be weak Hence it is that the weak Believer is Justified as well as the strong all who look unto Christ though with a weak sighted eye yet Salvation through him as well as Abraham because His Righteousnesse is perfite which weak Faith takes hold of as well as
becoming ours The Uses are several 1. For information and conviction and we would 1. be informed in and understand well the meanining of this Doctrine when we say that Faith is necessary to Justification and concurreth in attaining of it as no other thing doth that ye may give it it 's right place and may make no confusion of these things that are distinct 1. We deny not Works notwithstanding of all that we have said to be necessary more then we do Faith but the great difference is anent the giving of Faith and Works or Faith as it is a work on equal share in respect of causality in our Justification And therefore we would beware with Papists to attribute a sort of condignity to Faith as if it merited eternal Life which flowes from their ignorance of Gods Covenant For they think that since He commands us to believe and promiseth Life to believing that there is a merit in believing as they fancie there is in Prayer Almes-deeds and others Duties or good Works but in this respect as it is a Work in us the Apostle excludes Faith and makes our Justification free whereas if Faith in Justification were considered as a Work meriting our Justification it should not be free and although there be no Papists in profession here amongst us yet it may be there are some and that not a few that think God is obliged to them because they believe and that expect Heaven and life Eternal on that ground even as when they pray they think they should be heard for their Praying and when they give Almes that they should be rewarded for the same as a meritorious Work 2. Neither do we understand when we say that Faith is necessary to Justification and concurreth in the attaining of it That by believing we are disposed to be holy and so more enabled to Justifie our selves which is also a Popish Error wherein I fear many professors of the Gospel amongst us ly who think they are obliged to their Faith because it disposes them to hear read pray and the like and so enableth them to work out a Righteousnesse to themselves whereby they expect to be Justified This is another fault and Error to be guarded against For though we give Faith a radical vertue to keep Life in other Graces yet so considered it is still a piece of inherent Holiness and pertains to Sanctification and not to Justification 3. When we say that Faith concurres in the attaining of Justification we do not say that it concurres in the same manner that Repentance Prayer and good Works do concur But it may be said here seing we grant that good Works and Duties are necessary what then is the difference I answer in these two 1. Faith is the proper and peculiar condition of the Covenant of Grace and not our Works or Holiness whereof Faith considered as a Work is a part Works is the condition of the Covenant of works for it sayes in this manner The man that doth these things shall live by them but the Covenant of Grace in opposition to it sayes If thou believe with thy heart in the Lord Jesus and confess with thy mouth that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved as it is Rom. 10. What Works is in the one Covenant Faith is in the other Covenant and that as it is opposed to Works and to Faith it self as it is a Work in us 2. There is a peculiarness in Faith's concurring for the attaining of Justification in respect of it's instrumentalness in taking hold of Christ for our Justification or in receiving and resting upon Him as we said before for that end For when Christ is offered in the Gospel Faith flees to Him receives Him takes hold of Him and rests on Him neither Repentance nor Prayer nor any good Work hath an aptitud and fitness to receive Christ and present His Satisfaction to God as the ground of the Sinners defence as Faith hath And therefore it 's so often said by Divines according to the Scripture that Faith is the instrumental cause of our Justification which we shall clear in two or three similitudes which the Scripture makes use of 1 Christ compares Himself to the brazen Serpent lifted up in the wildernesse John 3.14 Man by Sin is stung deadly as the Israelites were by the fiery Serpents Christ Jesus as suffering and hung or lifted up upon the Cross is proposed to our Faith to look upon as the brazen Serpent was proposed to them that were stung and put up on a poll for that end and as there was no healling to the stung Israelites except they looked to it and the cure followed to none but to these who did behold it So Christ Jesus proposed as the Object and meritorious Cause of Justification Justifies none but such as look to Him by Faith and although they were to look to the Brazen Serpent yet their look gave no efficacy to the cure but it flowed from Gods ordaining that as a mean of their Cure even so it is not from any efficacy in Faith considered in it self that Sinners are Justified but it is from Jesus Christ the Object that Faith eyeing Him lifted up as the Saviour of the elect and His Satisfaction as appointed of God for that end doth Justifie and therefore it may well be called an instrumental cause because it is not Christ abstractly considered that Justifies more then it was the Serpent considered abstractly without their looking to it that did cure but Christ considered and laid hold on by Faith and in this respect Faith is said to Justifie even as the e e looking to the Brazen Serpent put them in capacity of the Cure though the Cure flowed from Gods appointment and not from their looking So is it in Faith's concurring for the attaining of Justification A 2d Similitude is that of miraculous Faith We find it often said by the Lord in His working such Cures Thy faith hath made the whole There was no efficacy in Faith it self for producing the Cure but it was the mean by which the Cure was transmitted to the Person under such a disease So it is in believing in order to our Justification It is by believing on Christ that our Spiritual Cure in Justification is transmitted to us and we are said to be Justified by Faith as they were said to be cured by Faith because by Faith it is convoyed to us A 3d. Similitude for clearing that Faith may well be called the instrumental Cause of Justification may be this even as the Advocats pleading may be called the instrumental Cause of the Clients absolving As suppose a man whose Cautioner had payed his Debt were cited to answer for the Debt his Advocat pleads his absolution and freedom from the Debt because his Cautioner hath payed it although the Debt was payed yet the man had not been absolved if it had not been so pleaded on this behalf So the concurrence of Faith in the
in against us else what needed we to have an Advocat and Intercess●ur if our Plea were just and good as from our selves we needed not one to undertake for us the Judge would absolve us but the defects that are in us give access to this part of his Office which supposes us to have infirmities else we needed not an high Priest if we were like Adam in his innocency for he needed not an Intercessour and therefore in the Text it is for the transgress●urs that he makes Intercession and 1 John 2.2 If any man sin we have an advocat c. 2. All the weight of Christs Intercession and the grounds whereon he pleads are in himself and therefore none need to stand a back because there is nothing in themselves We have an advocat with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation Christ hath in him a fulnesse to pay the Debt himself and he pleads on that and on nothing in the creature He sayes not let them be pardoned because they have not sin nor because they have such and such qualifications but because I have been a propitiation for them I have payed their Debt Therefore he is called the righteous because he hath reason for that which he seeks He hath payed for what he seeks and therefore it cannot but be granted 3. There is a freedom in the application of all the application is free Grace every way and that is clear from the parable of the barren fig-tree what could the tree say when Justice pleaded it should be cut down There is nothing in it to procure a delay but the Gardner stands up and bids spare it and he will take pains on it and apply what is needful causes are not here cast back because the partie is poor nor because he hath much Debt on his score No If any man sin he hath an advocat the thing is obtained without money and without price would ye then have a Priest that suits you well ye shall have him and have him freely if ye imploy him to undertake for you he will do it freely and it 's his honour so to do 4. It 's free and effectuall It cannot misgive for who pleads is it not the Son before whom pleads he It 's before his own Father who heareth him alwayes for whom doth he plead It 's for them who are the Fathers own Elect and his also Thine they were and thou gavest them me and all mine are thine and thine are mine It 's for them whom the Father loves as well as he wha● does he seek and plead for for that which is covenanted and he pleads for it according to the terms of the Covenant Therefore it 's sure that though heaven and earth may be mixed and overturned yet none can louse a link here It 's impossible but what he interceeds for he must obtain and for whom he interceeds he prevails and that 's for all that imploy him 4ly For Advertisement or caveat It may be asked here may all comfort themselves in Christs Intercession Some will think that were good but in truth it would make the consolation of all unsure Therefore there are Four qualifications of a person that may and only may warrantably take the consolation whereof we have spoken 1. It 's a Person that hath betaken himself to Christs satisfaction for there are two parts of the Priestly Office His Satisfaction and his Intercession and there is no dividing of them nor making use of them but in the right order First he satisfies and then he i●terceeds and he must be taken and m●●e use of in this order 1. In his Satisfaction to divine Justice and it 's on this ground that we must found our righteousnesse and plead for absolution and who●ver ha●e 〈◊〉 thi● 〈◊〉 of his ●●●faction may 〈…〉 ●●●●selves in his 〈…〉 ●●●ed on his Satisfaction 1 John 〈…〉 he interceeds for these he is a 〈◊〉 and he is a propitiation for all who by 〈◊〉 have betaken themselves to him This is the very hinge of our Consolation 〈◊〉 to take with our Debt and to betake 〈◊〉 selves to him according to the 〈◊〉 lippening for salvation on that ground 〈◊〉 It 's these who are essaying and practising themselves in the duties of holinesse wrestling with a body of death and exercising themselves to Godlinesse that they may warrantably comfort themselves in Christs Intercession as Paul who Rom. 7. being put to it in the conflict with his corruption comforts himself thus I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord Though they be sorly harassed with a corrupt nature yet they may expect an outgate through vertue of his Intercession Therefore Revel 8. Christs incense as I have often said and the Saints Prayers go and go up together Lazinesse and security hath not this consolation but if a person be praying and be serious though weak in it he hath an Advocat who when it comes to he asked what shall be thought of such an ones Sacrifice pleads that it may be accepted 3. It 's the person that not only is aiming and minting to do dutie but is denyed to it laying no weight on it disparing ever to get victory over corruption in his own strength or to come by the hearing of his prayers through any worth that is in them and not daring to step forward his alone but leaving all he does at Christs feet to make it acceptable which leads to the 4th thing requisit viz. when persons whether their doing and duties be of worth or not Jesus Christ is made by them the upshot of all they lay weight on him to get them done and to get them accepted when they are done and without him all would be desperat in their esteem this was typified in the peoples giving the Sacrifices to the Priest to be offered and though it were but two Turtle doves or two young Pigions they were brought to the Priest as well as other Sacrifices But such as consider not the enimity and sinfulnesse that is in themselves and adventure to step into God without him cannot lay claim to this consolation which runs alwayes on this ground Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through him Seeing he ever lives to make intercession for them Is there not then ground of Consolation here and such as there is reason to bestow a preaching upon it to teach us how to clear our selves in it and make use of it and how to chear our selves in it Ye that seclude your selves from this Consolation O! but ye spil and mar a good life to your selves and hazard your own cause that will most certainly go against you because ye put it not in the right hand which the Lord give you wisdom to amend and give us all the right use of this through Jesus Christ SERMON LXVIII ISAIAH LIII XII Verse 12. And made intercession for the transgressours IT were a very great Consolation and a
for our righteousnesses but for thy great mercies That is an improving aright of Christs intercession not to pray directly to him as a distinct party but to pray for mercy upon the account of his Intercession For what is for mercies sake in the latter is for the Lords sake in the former viz. because by him and by vertue of his Intercession mercy comes out unto us And this is a main use to be made of Christs Intercession to wit to have upon that ground an expectation of a hearing or to found our expectation of a hearing on that account and let it bear the weight of it as well it can 3. The right improvement of Christs Intercession hath this act of Faith That although there seem to be many difficulties and long off puting yet Faith upon the account of his Intercession will continue it's expectation of a hearing and it's looking for of what the person hath sought and stands in need of whatever cross dispensations thwart it's expect●tion and whatever signes of anger appear in the way of it's obtaining it wai●s on for all that Though Jonah be in the belly of the W●ale and the weids wrapped about his head yet will he look towards his holy Temple So though a Soul have no life nor sense no inward ●●isting nor arguments in the mouth yet acting on Christs Interc●ssion by Faith it will not leave nor give over it's suite considering that though it hath no ground of expectation of good from it self yet from Christs Intercessi●n it hath which is the improvement of that Heb. 7.25 He is able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God through him c. If there were never so strong objections from unbelief and carnal reason and if it should be suggested ye have such and s●ch difficulties that cannot be overcome lying in the way of your Salvation and there is nothing in you concurring to make out your Salvation yet Faith sayes He is able to save to the uttermost or as the word i● he can save to the full or to the yond mos●● and what is the ground because he ever lives to make intercession And this is the main thing to be taken notice of in improving of his Intercession when the sinner hath presented his suit or request to God through the Mediator to get his mind quieted on the account of Christs Intercession that it shall be answered even as a man who having a Cause to plead and geting an able Advocat who sayes to him I will warrand your cause quiets himself because of his undertaking So proportionably there is a weight laid on Christs Intercession by Faiths lippening to him which maketh the Soul to be without anxiety And this continued act of Faith doth not at all fo●ter sin but strengtheneth rather to oppose sin quiets the mind and makes more humble and keeps a tranquillity in the Soul in bands as well as in liberty because it layes the weight of it's coming speed with God not on i●'s own argumenting but on the Mediators Intercession For as we shew from Revel 8. The prayer● of all Saints go up from his censer the weakest as well as the strongest because it 's his incense that makes them savoury 4. There is an improvement of Christs Intercession when any thing is obtained whether it be a mercy in preventing such and such a stroak or the bestowing of such and such a favour and that is when Faith derives not that mercy from nor attributs it to it 's own praying though it did pray and pray somewhat seriously but derives it from and attributs it to the vertue and efficacy of Christs Intercession and counts it self obliged to that as the rise of all the persons good and again by him returning thanks to God for it And this is a little proof of improving Christs Intercession Sometime when we want what we would have and are restrained we will improve all means to obtain yet when we have obtained there is but little acknowledgment of him therein which acknowledgment is our duty insinuat John 14.13 14. Whatsoever ye ask in my name I will do that the Father may be glorified in the Son And in this sense we ought to walk in the use of every mercy as be●●i●g the acknowledgment of C●●ists Intercession and to be affected with love to God and should withal have a new impression of it's obligation to be forthcoming for God upon the account of his Intercession Whereas the most part of fo●k take their mercies and think not themselves to be in his common for them neither do they own him with thankful acknowledgment of them when they have gotten them even as a man who had gotten a favour through the mediation of another and should forget him would be very ingrate The making use of Christs Intercession in this respect is the improving of it for the awaking of our thankfuln●ss and the confirming of our obligation to him If we look through our life is there any day or hour but we will need something and be injoying something and the improving Christs Intercession thus would make the thoughts of Christ always fresh and lovely to us but we seek and get and enjoy as if a Mediator were not in heaven but as we acknowledge him in praying to him when we have need so when any thing is gotten we should acknowledge that we have received it and do enjoy it on the account of his Intercession who obtained it for us 3dly We said That this may be illustrat by similitudes And there are these Three whereby it may be illustrat The 1. is if we may call it a similitude the comparing of the use-making of his Intercession with the use-making of his Satisfaction wherein there is a resemblance we make use of his Satisfaction when we are convinced of our natural sinfulnesse and enimity and that we cannot make our own peace our selves yet hearing of his Satisfaction and having an offer of it and believing that His able to do our turn we hazard 〈◊〉 that ground to close with God in the Covenant And through the sense of peace come not for a long time yet we with confidence wait for it because the ground we lean on for it cannot fail proportionably to this we 〈◊〉 use of Christs Intercession when under a challenge we are convinced of a 〈◊〉 and da● not approach to God yet hearing tell that there is an Intercessou● in heaven who will undertake for them that imploy him we hazard confidently on that ground to propose our suits unto God and notwithstanding of difficulties expect and wait for an answer It may be Objected here that it seems there is no difference betwixt the improving of his Satisfaction and the improving of his Intercession Answer There is no difference in respect of the things fought nor in respect of the acts of Faith whereby we make use of the one and of the other nor in respect of the grounds whereupon
we know not whither thou goest and how can we know the way And the Lord turns it over to him and sayes that they have both known him and the way As also Believers may sometimes through want of clearnesse and distinctness in this what it is to make use of Christs Intercession or because they want that measure of distinctnesse they would be at think that they are doing nothing as to the use-making of his Intercession and yet the work of Gods Spirit though they know it not well may be leading them For it 's in this as it is in use-making of his Satisfaction a Believer may be making use of Christs Sa isfaction and be justified by it when he knows not that it is so or possibly cannot well tell what it is to make use of it which may quiet any risings and reasonings that may be in their mind about this matter 4. We answer that explicite thoughts of Christs Intercession are not alwayes necessary nor requisit for the use-making of it even as we are to design Gods Glory as our main end in all our undertakings so we are to pray in the name of Christ but as it is not requisit that there be alwayes and all along the action an actual minding of Gods Glory but that being laid as our principle which we walk by and the strain of our walk and conversation tending to that end it is and will be accepted before God although there be not in and along every thing we do explicit thoughts of His Glory So it it in our praying in Christs name and in improving of His Intercession there may be a virtual though not an actual and explicit resting on it the Soul having laid down that for a ground and principle that it 's not for any thing in me that I do expect a hearing but it 's through Christ and all the confidence that I have to be heard it 's through him 5. We answer That a poor Soul that wotes not well what to do in this case would eye Gods promise to be guided in the use-making of Christs Intercession without anxiety as it is John 16.26 In that day ye shal ask in my name As if he had said It hath been you fault that ye have not hitherto prayed in my name at least with that distinctness that ye ought but I give you my word for it ye shall pray in my name and when through confusion we are ready to faint we would eye this promise to be guided in the use-making of his Intercession 6. We would learn rather to hold us in our worshipping of God with that which is practical and serves to bring us under an awe and reverence of the Majesty of God then give our selves to that which doth indispose and disquiet us And I shall close all with this word that we would even admire how Souls are carried and brought to heaven that we should be suffered to pray and that God breaks not out upon us and we would study to be deeply humbled for our ignorance of God and of Christ and would think our selves to be much in his debt and common for teaching us to make right use of Him seing we are so ready to miscarry even when we desire and endeavour to make use of him SERMON LXXI ISAIAH LIII XII Vers 12. And he made intercession for the transgressours THe greatest priviledges that we have by the Gospel do often hold forth the greatest aggravations of our Sin as being against so great and excellent priviledges Now that the Lord hath given us a Mediator and that this one part of his Mediation to wit to make Intercession for Transgressours or Sinners is one of the great priviledges of the Gospel is beyond all doubt and therefore we had need to fear least by our abusing and not improving aright of this priviledge it prove an aggravation of our guilt And this is the last thing that we would speak a word to from these Words That seeing our Lord Jesus is invested with this Office to be an Intercessour then it must be a ground of expostulation with and reproof of these who shall be found slighters of His Intercession For if it be a Duty to improve his Intercession and if it be a Mercy that we have it and if many advantages be gotten by it then it must be a grievous Sin a matter of just challenge and great shame that Sinners should have such an Advocat and Intercessour provided for them to take and plead their cause so freely and to manage it so dexterously as He doth and yet to slight Him and not to put that trust in Him as to commit their cause to Him In prosecuting of this Use we shall 1. Shew that there is such a Sin as not improving of Christs Intercession and how it is fallen into 2. The causes of it or whence it comes that folks so much misken this part of Christs Office 3. The great inconveniences that follow on it and the prejudices that are sustained by it 4. We shall hint at some symptomes and evidences where this Sin is And 5. speak a word to the remedies in opposition thereunto For the First That there is such a Sin it may be clear from a few Considerations that may be obvious to every one of us 1. It may be clear from the effect what is the cause that so many come so little speed in prayer that they pray and yet get not a hearing so that in the day of Judgement it will be found that many prayed and that their prayers were cast back as dung upon their faces They sought to enter and were not able as it is Luke 13. And this will be found to be the reason of it that they went to God but misken'd or took not notice of him who is is the way the truth and the life For where Christs Intercession is improven there is an effect following For God hath laid it down for a solid ground that whosoever believeth in him shall not perish and Whatsoever ye ask in my name it shall be granted And therefore where there are many Petitions put up to God and no answer at all There is sure a crack and default in folks making use of Christ For God is faithful and will perform His promise 2. And more particularly all the Members of the visible Church may be reduced to these Three Ranks and we will find a defect as to the use-making of Christs Intercession in them all though not of the same degree or rather not of the same kind 1. Either they are profane and have not so much as a form of Religion and such do slight Christ and his Intercession altogether Or 2. They are Hypocrites that make a fashion of prayer but come not to God by Him but at the short cut proudly step forward and put up their suits upon the account of their own righteousnesse As they ground their Justification on it and not on Christs Satisfaction so
they put up their prayers to God on the account of their own righteousnesse and not on the account of Christs Intercession Or 3. They are such as have something of God in them and so are Believers and even in such there is often a great defect as to this as Christ sayes to the Disciples John 16.24 Hitherto ye have asked nothing in my name He chargeth them not simply for not praying he grants that but ye have not asked in my name That is ye have not made use of my Intercession as ye should have done although there be not such a defect in them as there is in the former two sorts yet there is a great short-coming and not an improving of Christs Intercession as they should And therefore 3. It will be more clear if we consider the particular cases incident to Believers wherein we will find that but very scarcely Christs Intercession is improven in any of them As 1. If the Believer hath liberty in prayer he is ready to sit down on it and to conclude that he cannot but be heard because he hath liberty and there is not so single an eye had to Christs Intercession and of●en it 's more difficult to hold off this Sin when liberty is injoyed then when it is wanting because though liberty be good and desirable in it self yet through our corruption and pride it 's often abused even as when Christians win to some good measure of holiness it is in some respect more difficult to rest upon Christs Righteousness then if that measure were not attained So is it here more difficult some way to rest upon Christs Intercession when we have liberty in prayer then when we are in bonds and under restraint 2. Upon the other hand if we look to a Believer when he is straitned and it goes not well with him in prayer there is then ordinarly a great defect in making use of Christs Intercession as if it could not in that case avail us and upon this follows anxiety and fretting and the Believer is ready to conclude he will be nothing the better of prayer and that it is better to pray none then to pray so whereas an eye to Christs Intercession would give the mind some quietness 3. If there be an ill and very necessitous case or if there be challenges and some commotion discomposure and disquiet be in the spirit there is readily little respect had to Christ If quietness and calmnesse be there is also hazard of sitting down on that and we readily forget that we hold it of him And indeed it will be found difficult either to have or to want and in either the one case or the other to be making right use of his Intercession Now when I speak of this Sin it not only reproves them that pray none at all which smells of grosse Atheism but also these who shuffle by Christ and step forward at the nearest as if they were not to come to God by him As it is Heb. 7.25 and John 14.6 2. The Causes of this Sin and whence it comes to passe that folks so slight the use-making of Christs Intercession 1. There is a great difficulty in the thing it 's tickle 2. There is an natural aversnesse from and enmity at that thing in us 3. There is a readiness to pitch on some other thing and to misken and over look this now let all these Three be put together and we will see the reason and way how folk slide and fall into this fault 1. I say There is a difficulty in the thing It being one of the most purely spiritual sublime and denyed things in all the Gospel one of the greatest exercises of Faith and we know that all such things have to our nature a great difficulty 1. It 's a difficulty to bring a man to be but formal in Religion 2. There is a difficulty when he is made formal to make him serious even in a legal manner and to be any thing affected in the exercise of Repentance and of other duties So that he be not grosly dessembling 3. When he is made thus serious it 's a difficulty to bring him over that seriousness and to draw him from resting on these duties which he hath been drawn to I say it 's a great and difficult work to get a man brought to the performance of holy Duties and as great a work to get him brought over them and from resting on them to rest on Christ's Righteousnesse for his Justification and on Christs Intercession for the acceptance of his prayers And therefore when the Lord hath once gotten His Disciples to pray and honestly yoaked and ingaged therein He trains them on to pray in His Name and so to get their prayers rightly qualified 2. If we consider our nature we will find that there is an aversness backwardness therein to it as there is an aversnesse in us to all things that tend to the making us deny our selves and lay the weight of every thing on Christ That which thwarts with our pride stands and sticks at our stomacks to speak so and goes not well down with us of such nature is this For our use-making of Christs Intercession implyes that we of our selves are at a distance with God that we have broken Covenant and are not to be trusted without a Mediator and there is in our nature a secret sort of disdain at this We cannot naturally indure it Hence Rom. 10. It 's said of the Jews that being ignorant of Gods Righteousnesse they did not submit nor stoop to the same but sought to establish their own Righteousnesse 3. There is a readinesse to pitch and condescend almost on any other Sin rather then on this And therefore folks may be longer under it then under many and yet not be challenged for it They will readily be challenged for Lying Swearing Sabbath-breaking and the like but they sleep more securely in this Sin then in most others It is a Sin easily fallen into and a Sin not easily recovered from or win out of Because it is a Gospel-sin that the light of nature reacheth not and that the Conscience hath not such an aw i● convincing of It 's against natures light to neglect prayer or to take Gods name in vain but this runs in the Channel of the Gospel to pray in the name of Christ and to make all our addresses to God through Him The sinful neglect whereof cannot be discovered but by Gospel-light And we find by experience that many will be convinced of and have challenges for out-breaking Sins who yet wil have no challenges for the neglect of this duty Even as it is easier to convince folks of a breach of the Law then of not believing in Christ many will grant that ignorance of God is a Sin and that irreverence and wandering in prayer are Sins who yet will stand and stick at this and cannot be gotten convinced but that they still believe in Christ
and make use of his Intercession For the Third To wit the inconveniencies and prejudices of this evil they are very many we shall only hint at them for they are dierectly opposit to the good that comes by the improving of Christs Intercession 1. It makes many prayers to be fruitless and frustranious though folks should weary themselves in prayer yet it is all but lost labour and the Lord will say as it is Isaiah 1. Though ye make many prayers yet I will not hea● them if Christs Intercession be neglected but one word put up in Christs name hath a gracicious hearing 2. It makes many prayers and other duties also to be lifelesse No duty goes with folks neither can it go with them when Christ is slighted Seing it is by Faith in Him that we have Life derived to us whereby we are made lively in every thing 3. It hath much anxiety following on it To be praying and to have no expectation nor ground of expectation of a hearing For if we look no further than to something in our selves it is but a poor foundation of quietnesse and peace 4. It hath this prejudice that it inures habituats and accustomes us to a low esteem of Christ and makes us want many sweet experiences that we might have of his usefulnesse and worth and it fosters a disrespect to Christ whereas the use making of his Intercession keeps alwayes up an esteem of him and m●kes the thoughts of him fresh and it is ever well with the Soul while he is esteemed of and it is impossible it can be well when he is not in request Now ye may easily gather what all this aims at even that ye may not satisfie your selves wi●h the form of Dutie but that ye may look that it be rightly discharged so as Christ in his Offices and particularly in His Priestly Office and more particularly in this part of it be made use of It may be there are some here that have been called Christians these 20 30 or 40. years But I would inquire at you what use have ye made all the while of Christs Intercession The neglect of this is a Sin against mercy a Sin against your own Souls and the cause of many other Sins therefore take it among your reproofes that not only ye have neglected prayer lived in ignorance and taken his name in vain but that ye have also long professed Faith in Christ and yet have not made use of Christs Intercession This will be amongst your saddest challenges when ye come to sickness and to your death-beds and ye will have it heavily charged on you That there hath been great slighting and miskening of Christ even when ye thought what ye were praying to him In the 4. place To clear it yet further we shall 1. Hint at some symptomes or evidences of neglecting of Christs Intercession 2. At some Characters of a Person that is making use of Christs Intercession aright 3. At some Directions that may help to the suitable performance of this duty And 4. At some Motives and Incouragements to it First For the Symptomes or Evidences of miskening and slighting of Christs Intercession 1. This is one when there is little walking under the impression of the need of His Sacrifice when folks walk whole-heartedly to speak so and without due conviction of the distance that is betwixt God and them For Christs Intercession flows from His Satisfaction and the improving of His Satisfact on flows from the conviction of our natural distance from God when folks are not sensible of their enmity and of their vileness and see not their need of washing when they have a heal heart few challenges little exercise of repentnce and of self-loathing it 's a great evidence that there is little or no use made of Christs Intercession The 2d Symptome is deep security and much self-confidence where these are Christs Intercession is little or not at all made use of When a Soul makes no question of nor nor hath any doubt about it's own peace or about it's praying or getting a hearing This is indeed self-confidence and does flow from the former to wit Ignorance of our distance from God which is clear both from experience and from Scripture They that make least use of Christs Intercession and have most carnal confidence have readily fewest challenges Thus the Pharisee stands Luke 18. and prayes saying Lord I thank thee c. The greatest part of such folks prayers is thanksgiving on carnal grounds Whereas the poor Publican dare not come near but when the Pharisee comes boldly forward He stands a far off and sayes Lord be merciful to me a sinner Who as if he had said have a respect to the Covenant of Grace and so to the improving of Christs Intercession It 's certainly an ill token when folks sit down with confidence to their prayers and rise up from them without all fear of being denyed and said nay A 3d. Symptome of not making use of Christs Intercession is when folk have too much anxiety which is a fault that a Believer may easily fall in when he hath no ground from himself to propose to God for a hearing and when he cannot answer his own challenges and is therefore discouraged which sayes that he lippens not much to Christ and to His Intercession A 4th Symptome is When duties of worship become burdensome when it wearieth folk to pray to sanctifie the Lords Day c. when these are fashions and cumbursome to them The reason wherof is because they take the burden wholly or mostly on themselves and lay it not over on Christ Whereas were he rightly made use of it would be found to be a truth That His yoke is easie and his burden light as himself saith Matth. 11.30 A 5th Symptome is When folks are not thankful for any mercy they receive and are not wondring how it comes that they get such mercies as they have when they think little of their dayly bread of Ordinances of access to Pray c. Souls that are improving Christs Intercession think much of any mercy because the least mercy is quite without the reach of the merit of ought they can do and must come to them by the Mediation of another Thus every mercy becomes a double mercy as it is considered in it self and as it comes to them by vertue of Christs Intercession therefore the Believer Improving Christs Intercession wonders at every thing he meets with from God that he is admitted to pray or to praise for he knows that it 's from free-grace thus admitting Sinners through and by a Mediator As to the 2d To wit The Characters or evidences of a persons making use of Christs Intercession The 1. may be this A constant use-making of Christs Satisfaction when the Soul is never quiet but when it hath a respect to that And this use-making of Christs Satisfaction hath in it always either more implicity or more expresly an use-making of his Intercession
no dominion over him he had a glorious out-gate He was taken out and set free from the prison or straits wherein he was held And from these judgements that past upon him The reason of the Exposition is drawn from the plain meaning of the words which must run thus He was taken from judgement the very same which is in the following expression He was cut off out of the land of the living that being the ordinary signification of the preposition from the meaning must be this that he was taken out of the condition wherein he was It agrees also best with the scope of the very next words Who shall declare his generation Wherein he proposeth an admirable aggravation of this delivery The 2d thing hath a connexion with the former and therefore take a word or two for clearing of it What to understand by Generation here is somewhat difficult to determine the word in the Original having several meanings yet generally it looks to one of two as it is applyed to Christ 1. Either to the time past and so it 's used by many to express and hold forth Christ's God-head and so the meaning is though he was brought very low yet he was and is the eternal Son of God Or 2. as commonly it is taken it looks to the time to come and so the meaning is who shall declare his duration or continuance Generation is often taken thus in Scripture for the continuance of an Age and of one Age following another successively as Joshua 22. This Altar shall be a witness to the generations to come So then the meaning is he was once low but God exalted him and brought him thorow and who shall declare this duration or continuance of his exaltation As it is Phil. 2.8 9. He humbled himself c. Therefore God highly exalted him As his humiliation was low so his exaltation was ineffable it cannot be declared nor adequatly conceived the continuance of it being for ever There is no inconsistency betwixt these two Expositions His duration or continuance after his suffering necessarily presupposing his Godhead brought in here partly to shew the wonderfulness of his suffering it being God that suffered for the man that suffered was God Partly to shew Christ's glory who notwithstanding of his suffering was brought thorow and gloriously exalted And these reasons make it evident 1. Whatever these words Who shall declare his age or generation do signifie certainly it is something that can be spoken of no other but of Christ and that agrees to him so as it agrees to no other Now if we look simply to the eternity of his duration or continuance that agrees to all the Elect and will agree to all men at the Resurrection Therefore the Prophet must look here to his continuance and duration as he is God 2. Because Who shall declare his genaration is brought in here to shew the ineffableness of it and so to make his sufferings the more wonderful it was he who suffered whose continuance cannot be declared 3. It 's such a continuance as is brought in to shew a reason why death could not have dominion over him nor keep him according to that Rom. 1.4 He was declared to be the Son of God with power according to the spirit of holiness by his resurrection from the dead And the reason subjoyned to this will someway clear it for he was cut off out of the land of the living for the transgression of my people was he stricken Thereby insinuating that because of the great work which he had to do there behoved to be some singularness in the person that had the work in hand who notwithstanding of the greatness and difficultness of it came thorow and was hereby exalted However it be the Prophets scope being to set out Christ's Humiliation and Exaltation his Humiliation before and his Exaltation after which is as we said ordinary in Scripture We conceive the meaning we have given is safe and agreeable to the Prophets scope We may observe three things from the first part of the words 1. That our Lord Jesus Christ in his performing the work of Redemption was exceedingly straitned or pinshed or held in as the word is elsewhere rendered bound up and hemmed in as men are who are in Prison and by these straitnings we mean not only such as he was brought into by and before men whereof we spoke before but especially these that were more inward and these being amongst the last steps of his Humiliation more immediately preceeding his Exaltation and spoken of as most wonderful we conceive they look to these pressures that were upon his spirit and we shall instance several places of Scripture that serve to hold them out the first is that of John 12.27 28. Now is my soul troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this hour here our blessed Lord is troubled in Spirit and so pinshed and hedged in as in a Prison that he is holily non-plussed what to say The 2d Scripture is Matth. 26.38 My soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death which is like the expressions used by the Apostle 2 Cor. 11.8 We were pressed above measure above strength in so much as we despaired of life and we had the sentence of death in our selves there was no outgate obvious to humane sense and uptaking so is it here wherein we are not only to consider his Soul vexation but that his Soul vexation was very great extreamly pinshing vexing and in a manner imprisoning to him The 3d Scripture is Luke 22.44 He being in an agony prayed more earnestly and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground there was such a striving wrestling and conflicting not with man without him but with inward pressures on his spirit that he is like one in a Barrace or Cockpit or engaged in a Duel with a mighty Combatant sore put to it very far beyond ought that we can conceive of so that he swat great drops of blood and says father if thou be willing remove this cup from me nevertheless not my will but thine be done it is in Matthew if it be possible and thereafter if it be not possible which says there was no winning out of the grips of the Law and Justice till they were fully satisfied and these dreadful words uttered by him on the Cross My God my God why hast thou forsaken me hold out that from the sinless humane nature of Christ the comfortable and joyful influence of the God-head for a time was in a great measure suspended though the sustaining power thereof was exercised mightily on him so that he looks on himself some way as forsaken and left in the hand of the Curse To clear this a little we would consider these pressures that were on our Lords Spirit 1. In respect of their cause 2. In respect of their effects 1. In respect of their cause There is upon the one side his undertaking for
the Elect as their Surety and Gods Justice pursuing and holding him in on the other side so that he cannot decline being sisted at the Bar of Justice because as it is vers 6. the sins of all the Elect met upon him and he having as it is vers 7. the bitter cup in his hand which by his engagement he was obliged to drink he stands there by the Decree of God and by the Covenant of Redemption tying him to satisfie and being pursued by Wrath and Justice the words come out Father if it be possible let this cup depart from me yet not my will but thine be done his engagement hemming him in and wrath pursuing him he stands betwixt these two as a prisoner and upon these two the Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all and he was exacted upon and answered for them follows well the third that he was put in prison for in these Verses the steps of our Lords Humiliation are followed out in a legal way as before the bar of Gods Tribunal 2ly This being our Lords posture we shall consider the effects of this pressure of spirit which we may draw to these four heads 1. He was under the sense of great Soul-pain sorrow and trouble for the cup of the wrath of God being bitter which he was to drink it could not but deeply sting his holy humane nature which was the procuring cause of his agony and that which made his soul sorrowful and brought out the bloody sweat 2. Beside his grief and dolour there was a holy horrour and considering the party that he had to do with it was impossible it could be otherways impossible for a finit though a sinless creature to look on an angry God and on wrath poured forth into the cup which it must needs drink and not to have a horrour at it it were not becoming the sinless humane nature of our blessed Lord not to be affected with a holy and sinless horrour at that most bitter cup which brought out that sad cry Father let this cup depart from me which did not proceed from any dislike he had to fulfil his engagement or from any rewing or unsuitable resentment that he had so engaged himself but from an apprehended sinless disproportionableness to speak so in his finit sinless humane nature to encounter with the wrath of his Father to which though he most willingly yielded yet in it self it was dreadful 3. There was a pinshing and straitning of holy fear as if there had been in him a sinless dispute or debate what will become of this can a man win thorow this though he was God as well as man how will this be gotten born This looks as if death would get the victory Thus it 's said Heb. 5.7 In the days of his flesh he offtred up strong crys and supplications with tears and was heard in that which he feared he put up strong crys to be delivered not from dying but from the power of death and was heard in that which he feared to shew a holy care to prevent death could that have been and a sinless fear of it lest it should swallow him up 4. There was a pinshing and straitning from love to the Father and to the doing of his Will and from love to the Elect and to their Salvation which pushed him forward to perform and fulfil his engagement accordingly Luk. 12.41 he says I have a baptizm to be baptized with and how am I straitned till it be accomplished and hence it was that these words were uttered by him Father not my will but thine be done and therefore though he had power to command twelve legions of Angels for his relief yet to speak so love binds his hands that he will not use his power for his own liberation But to guard this Doctrine from mistakes take a fourfold advertisement concerning this inward soul-pinshing which will help to clear somewhat of his Soul-suffering that followeth And. 1. Think not that there was any sinful or unsuitable confusion or perturbation of mind in our Lord such as useth to be in us there being no dreg of corruption in his mind to jumble or discompose his holy humane nature 2. Beware of thinking that there was any fretting or anxiety in him or any discontentedness with the Bargain his expressions shew forth the contrary for saith he I could command twelve legions of angels yet he would not do it 3. Think not that there was any jealousie in him of the Fathers love though there was a suspension of the comfortable and joyful sense of it yet there was not the least lousing of the faith of it as is clear by his doubling of these words My God my God when in his saddest pinsh he cried out as b●ing forsaken 4. Ye would not look on this as holding out any distrust as to the event I have saith he power to lay down my life and I have power to take it up again and I will rise again the third day he knew that the Covenant of Redemption betwixt the Father and him stood firm and sure But it 's the consideration of God's now coming as his Party to exact the Elects Debt of him and his standing at the Bar to answer for it which puts him in this agony and though considering Christ as man personally united to the God-head whereby he was keeped from sinking he had no distrust to be carried thorow yet considering him as Man suffering and that to speak so with reverence in such a divine subject there was an eclipse of that sensible joy that proceeded from the two natures together It 's not possible to conceive of Christ in this posture but wrath and anger behoved to be some-way dreadful or terrible to him The Uses are 1. To evidence the truth of what our Lord suffered and how severely he was pinshed and straitned It was not the Scribes and Pharisees pursuing him nor the Souldiers buffeting and mocking of him and carrying him to the high Priest's hall and from Pilate to Herod and back again that so much troubled him but there was a higher H●nd that he had to look to and a Judge and Court to which he was now answering that was very far above theirs And therefore as a 2d Use of the Doctrine Think it not such a light thing as many do to satisfie Justice or to give God a ransom for Souls ye see how it pinshed the Cautioner and put him as in a prison unspeakably deceived are they who think that two or three formal words will make their peace with God and that they will slip in to Heaven so Be not carried away with this delusion but consider seriously what will become of you if ye be put to answer for your own Debt when he handled the Cautioner his own Son so roughly ye that will sleep on and scorn to let any word pick at you or prick you the Justice of God shall prick you and put you to