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B10086 The safety of appearing at the day of judgement, in the righteousness of Christ: opened and applied. By Solomon Stoddard ... Stoddard, Solomon, 1643-1729. 1687 (1687) Wing S5709; ESTC W22065 210,940 366

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no influence unto justification 2. To the second part of the Objection that promises of Salvation are made to Obedience I Answer 1. That the promises of eternal life are not made unto obedience as that which does merit eternal life and therefore the best of Gods servants do acknowledg themselves unworthy of any good Gen. 32.10 They shall walk with me in white for they are worthy Luk. 21.36 Watch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass and to stand before the Son of man but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred worthy often signifies no more than conveniency and suitableness so Eph. 4.1 walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called but the obedience of the people of God cannot merit eternal life there are two wayes of meriting neither of which can belong to the obedience of the Saints one is when men do merit a reward from absolute justice from the meer dignity of the work in this sence one man can merit from another but no man from God for whatever man does for God is but a due Debt and because no man can do any good but by the grace of God the work it self is the gift of God there is another way of meriting and that is according to the tenour of the Law when man keeps the Law he does deserve a recompence according to the tenor of it thus Jesus Christ has merited life for us Eph. 1.14 he has purchased the heavenly possession so the Angels merited blessedness for themselves but the Obedience of the Saints is not meritorious in this sense because it fails of legal exactness there be many sins mixed with their obedience and their best obedience is very imperfect and polluted and indeed it is upon the account of Christ that the obedience of the Saints is accepted 1 Pet. 2.5 We offer Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ 2. The promises of eternal life are not made to obedience as the proper condition of it because God is absolutely engaged to bestow eternal life upon Believers every Believer has already performed the condition of the Covenant and is under an absolute promise of life John 1 2. This is the promise that he hath promised us even eternal life and obedience is promised to them therefore cannot be properly a condition 3. The promises of eternal life are made unto obedience as the sign of it obedience is an evidence that a man is an heir of eternal life good works do declare that a man is one that shall be saved obedience is an evidence of the love of God it is from love that a man is enabled to live a life of obedience and they are an evidence that a man is a believer where there is obedience there is Faith also men are sanctified by Faith in Christ Acts 26.18 4. The promises of eternal life are made to obedience as wherein God has appointed to lead men to it God has purposed to lead men in a way of holiness unto happiness and wherever he begins to deliver men from sin here to deliver them perfectly hereafter this is the order wherein God has appointed to bestow salvation first to sanctifie and then to glorifie God has appointed to prepare all those for glory here that he does intend to bestow it upon hereafter he prepares them here for that holy place for that holy company for that holy work that is there though they shall be more fully prepared at the time of their dissolution this is the method that God has designed to save men in that they shall have their fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Rom. 6.27 3. To the third part of the Objection that Glory is called the reward of Obedience I Answer 1. That when Heaven is called a recompence the word is not taken for that which is deserved there is a plain difference in the way wherein God inflicts death and bestows life Rom. 6 23. the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. Heaven is not properly bestowed upon the Saints upon the account of their obedience as the condition of it it is upon the account of the obedidience of Christ as the meritorious cause and upon the account of their Faith as the condition of it their obedience is indeed the way wherein they do receive it and so it is a recompence of it they have heaven in a way of obedience and heaven will make an abundant recompence for all their labour and travail the people of God take pains undergo hardships undergo many temptations and conflicts in a way of obedience but heaven will make amends for all and abundantly recompence all their trouble in the way of serving God at the end of their journey they shall receive heaven and that will make amends for all their trouble 3. Saints when they go to heaven shall receive a recompence on the account of their good works their good works are the condition of an additional glory the essential glory of heaven is given on the account of Christs purchase and that God has promised to bestow in a way of obedience but besides those promises there are others wherein God has engaged further degrees of glory upon condition of obedience there will be a gracious reward by the covenant of grace given to every act of obedience performed by the Saints Mat. 10. ult God will take an account of all the good works of his Saints and recompence every one so that the more any Saint does for God the more glory shall be bestowed upon him Phil. 4.17 and hence it is as one Saint does more for God than another so the glory of one shall exceed the glory of another God will not overlook any thing that is done by his people though the obedience of the Saints be imperfect yet it is capable of being rewarded by the covenant of grace it is not properly the condition of enjoying heaven but it is the condition of enjoying further degrees of glory in heaven CHAP. VIII USE I. Reproof to those that seek salvation by their own righteousness VSE I. THe improvement we shall make of this truth is first to reprove those that are seeking acceptance with God and salvation by their own righteousness that neglecting the righteousness of Christ are seeking the favour of God by their own works this was the very spirit of the Jewish Nation in those declining times wherein Christ Jesus was upon the earth and this is one great part of the apostacy of the Antichristian Church that they teach Justification by works but besides these it is the ordinary practice of such whose consciences are awakened and terrified first to seek their peace and work out their reconciliation by their own righteousness when once the sinner is stung with the guilt of sin and under the awful apprehensions of Gods wrath the first way
why this sort of death should fasten a curse on a person more than any other legal death this Law makes the man that was hanged a ceremonial curse to typifie Christs having the moral curse Again it is clear be cause God punished Christ with death for sin and God does not punish sin but by the Law the death of Christ was on the account of sin Isai 58 6. The Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures Several things are here objected As 1. That Christ did not suffer spiritual death in sin the loss of the image of God which is a part of the penalty of the Law Ans Christ bore the essential parts of the curse not all the accidental there be many circumstantial parts of the curse wherein there may be great variety so one Reprobate does not bear all the pains diseases and afflictions that others do some Reprobates shall not endure bodily death as they which are alive at the coming of Christ so Christ did suffer some sorrows that were peculiar which indeed there was no absolute necessity of from the moral Law as he suffered a legal death from men died as a Malefactor with many aggravating circumstances there was no need that Christ should suffer the same in specie with reprobates it was sufficient that he suffered the same in pondere the death of the Soul in sin flows not from the curse absolutely considered but from the disposition of the patient it is a punishment fit for sinners but not for a Mediator 2. Obj. Christ did not suffer the torments of Hell which are a principal part of the curse Ans He did not suffer in Hell but he suffered the same for substance with them that are there as for the bodily punishments of Christ they were very great but he bare the punishment of Hell in his soul he bore the loss of the comfortable fruition of God Mat. 27 46. and he had the doleful sense of the wrath of God on his heart this is held out Psal 110.7 He shall drink of the brook in the way and as we have peace of conscience through imputed righteousness so he had torment of conscience from imputed sin what was it else that he conflicted with in his agony was it only the fears of temporal death which many Martyrs have born with triumph he grapled with the wrath of God that made him sweat drops of blood 3. Obj. Christ did not suffer eternal death and the eternity of the punishment is the great aggravation Ans T is tr●e he suffered but a few years and the extremity of his punishment was but for a few hours because the infinite dignity of his person made his short sufferings equivalent● to the everlasting punishments of the damned for an infinite person to suffer a temporal punishment is as much as for a finite person to suffer an eternal punishment it may be as severe justice to punish Christ with the like pains for a few hours as to punish a damned man with them for ever a less quantity of Gold equals a greater quantity of silver it seems to be as great a testimony of the holiness of God and a vindication of the honour of his Law to punish his dear Son with a temporal as sinners with eternal punishment The seventh thing to be considered is That Christ performed the righteousness of the Law for us it was performed on our account that we might be justified thereby 1. The active Obedience of Christ was performed upon our account whatever was done that way was done by him as our Mediator and Representative Rom 5.14 by the obedience of one many are made righteous and Christs Righteousness as distinct from his sufferings sis spoken of as a ground of faith 1 John 2.1.2 we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous who also is the propitiation for our sins so in Dan. 9.24 the bringing in of everlasting righteousness is spoken of as a distinct thing from finishing transgression and making an end of sin which are benefits to come by the Messiah neither does it any ways prejudice this truth that Christ owed Obedience unto God as he was man it being essential to man to owe obedience to his creator for Adams Obedience was a natural debt yet if he had obeyed all his posterity would have lived and tho Christ himself were rewarded for his obedience and sufferings as is held forth Phil. 2.7 8 9 10. that hinders not its usefulness for us the primary design of it was to accomplish our salvation which hinders not but that God might give some signal testimony of his acceptance of the love and service of Christ by recompensing him for the same 2. The sufferings of Jesus Christ were also upon our account and indeed there can no other account be given of these sufferings no other reason but this can be assigned of them his sufferings were exceeding great as appears by his being afflicted before hand about it by his heaviness and amazement by his prayer by his sweating drops of blood and no satisfactory reason can be given of these sufferings but only that he bore our curse it was not for any personal sin for he had none Heb 7.26 it was not to prevent any sin God sometimes Brings afflictions on his people to prevent their sinning 2 Cor. 12.7 but there was no danger of Christs sinning his nature was not tainted and the union of the divine nature with the humane was a sufficient security it was not meerly in a way of trial to try the patience and faith of Christ the Scripture gives in no evidence of that neither was it principally to give us an example of patience but he suffered to make an attonement for us and recencile us to God. The Scripture represents the sufferings of Christ under a three sold consideration all serving to clear up this point 1. It is represented as a price of redemption Mat. 20.28 The Son of man came to give his life a ransome for many Rev. 5.9 thou wast slain and hast Redeemed us to God by thy blood A Second consideration is of a sacrifice the sins of the people were typically laid upon the sacrifice and then it was slain so Christ was sacrificed for us Eph. 5 2. Christ hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God of a sweet smelling savour 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us the fruit of this is Reconciliation A third consideration of them is they are a punishment Jesus Christ took upon the guilt of our sins that is our obligation to punishment the demerit of sin whereby the sinner deserves punishment was not translated to him as the merit of his righteousness is not translated to us but the title to blessedness arising there from so Christ took upon himself our obligation to punishment and accordingly God inflicted the punishment of our
holiness the external acts of grace may be so imitated that no man can discern the difference though ordinarily the conversation of the saints be better than the conversation of other men yet others may attend the external part of godliness as much as any saint for 't is not grace that gives men power to do that which is externally good nature gives men the power to do the action and grace gives men power to do it in a right manner and for a right end and the corruption in natural men be strong to hinder them from the external acts of Religion yet that may be over-ruled natural men have a power to do the external duty and they may have a will too through some over-ruling consideration Paul tho a Pharisee may have a blameless conversation tho Vrith was not a faithful Priest yet he was a faithful Witness Isai 8.4 many a natural man is of chast conversation temperate in the use of meat and drink just in his dealings with men charitable to the poor strict in observing of the Sabbath he may be greatly instrumental in promoting the publick good abound in Fasting and Prayer fall in with the better party take much pains for the conversion of others yea the Apostle intimates that a man may give all his goods to feed the poor and his body to be burned and not have charity 1 Cor. 13.3 an opinion of merit is sufficient to make many men give all they have to the poor and men may suffer death in the cause of God that have no grace either from sturdiness of spirit some are men of high spirits and count it a disgrace to them to yield they scorn that others should get the day of them they will not disparage themselves nor humor their enemies so as to yield to them or from confidence of their salvation lotting upon it that if they dye in such a cause they shall surely go to heaven 2. They may attain unto great religious frames many carnal men have had very strong pangs of affection their hearts may overflow in a religious way many that have no principle of grace have had great impressions on their hearts from the Word of God the hearts of natural men have been considerably engaged in the wayes of God the Gallatians many of whom Paul was afraid of were formerly greatly affected with the Gospel Gal. 4.15 he that was not prepared to go thorow sufferings tells Christ in a pang he will follow him whither soever he goes Luk. 9.57 58. Saul has a great pang because God had wrought salvation in Israel 1 Sam 11.13 they sang Gods praise that soon forgat his works Ps 106.12 13. men may receive the word with joy yet not hold out in a day of persecution Mat. 13.21 men may bewail their miscarriages tho their hearts be not mended 1 Sam. 26.21 men may delight in Religion that are not sincere in it Job 27.9 10. men may abominate some sins though none be mortified 1 Chron. 21.6 the Kings word was abominable unto Joab men may be full of zeal that are strangers unto Christ Phil. 3.6 these pangs and religious frames are nothing else but the various workings of an enlightned conscience and self-love some men are enlightned to see their danger in a way of sin and the hopes of blessedness in a way of returning to God God puts a light into the mind whereby men come to see their present danger and hell and eternity and wrath seem real things unto them and after a while God gives many of them some special encouragements of the possibility of salvation natural men are sometimes under a common conviction of the glory of God a natural man is capable of some discoveries that way and these convictions work upon that natural principle of self-love and hence arise that fear joy hope thankfulness that many natural men do experience all those religious frames and dispositions that are in natural men are nothing else but the various shapings of self-love the same principle of self-love which made them before to follow the World and their pleasures does after conviction make them seek after holiness Christ and salvation 3. They may continue in the practice of Religion all their dayes tho many times they do not but fall away sometimes to Heresie sometimes to Prophaness and ordinarily if they live long they grow sapless and unsavoury so as to have little relish of Religion upon their hearts and generally those ta●ls which they have had of the good Word of God are lost after a while so as to have no enlivening impression on the heart these affections which sometime were in them wither away yet without question many of them do continue in the practice of Religion as long as they live if they may continue in the practice of Religion one year why not seven why not twenty why not as long as they live love of credit a compliance with the custom of the place where they live the workings of natural conscience may have such an influence upon them as to make them continue in the practise of Religion Christ indeed sayes of some that they believe for a time and in time of temptation fall away Luk. 8.13 but his meaning is that it is commonly so but experience shews that a temporary Faith may live under persecution all false Faith indeed may be called temporary because it is subject to perish in time it is not built upon such a foundation as to make it stand against all temptations true Faith is built upon firm foundations the power mercy and faithfulness of God and the perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ and in these things there is a bottom for Faith in the dismallest times that may come here is that which will answer all temptations 2 Thess 2.16 but a false Faith is built upon failing foundations the goodness of his frames mistakes about the love of God and hence his faith may fail though I know no condition that a false heart can be brought into except one wherein he may not continue to believe he may continue to believe under great afflictions from the hand of God under great persecutions from men in a dying day indeed if God do discover to him what an heart he has and shew him the plague of that his false Faith will die away for the foundation of it sc an opinion of his own goodness is taken away but yet even then he may continue in the practice of Religion 3. Let us consider what are the temptations that make men seek salvation by their own righteousness and certainly they must be great temptations that have so strong an efficacy upon the hearts of men godly men have much to do to restrain and subdue this spirit in themselves and generally convinced sinners are mightily carried away with this Spirit though God do so plainly witness against it in his Word yet multitudes of men are seeking life in this way so that we may