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

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looking forward backward If we look forward Ver. 13. there is the blessed hope the full consummation whereof we receive at the glorius appearing of the g eat God the coming of Christ to judgment ver 13. Ver. 13. and there we have three grand Articles of faith asserted 1. Heaven 2. The day of judgment 3. The Godhead of Christ If we look backward we are obliged to obedience not only out of hope but from gratitude or the great benefit of redemption by Christ ver 14. and in that we have asserted 1. Christs willingnesse to dye for he gave himself Ver. 14. 2. The purpose or end of his death to redeem us from all iniquity 3. The foundation of an holy life in our regeneration And hath purified us unto himself 4. The nature of a Church to be a peculiar people 5. The necessity of good works in the last clause zealous of good works ver 14. So that in this short Map you have a compleat summary of all that fundamental doctrine which doth animate and quicken to the life of holinesse The next body of Divinity according to the exact method of the Palatine Catechisme is in chap. 3. ver 3.4 5 6 7 8. Chap. 3. where you have 1. Mans misery by nature ver 3. 2. His Redemption by Christ ver 4. set forth 1. By the spring or first moving cause the kindnesse and love of God ver 4. 2. The false cause removed not by works of righteousnesse which we have done ver 5. 3. By the effects justification justified by his grace ver 7. Sanctification Ver. 5. he hath washed us in the laver of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Ghost ver 5. Ver. 7. The consummation of all in glory heires according to the hope of eternal life ver 8. Ver. 8. 3. The thankful life in a fruitful course of holinesse and good works ver 8. Affirme constantly that they which believe in God may be careful to maintain good works Another systeme of practical divinity you have in the second Epistle of Saint Peter chap. 1. ver 5.6 7. Ver. 5. Adde to your faith vertue c. By vertue is meant the study of holinesse which there is set forth by its furniture and subjective parts or branches Ver. 5. 1. The furniture of vertue it is rooted in FAITH guided by KNOWLEDGE Ver. 6. armed on the Ver. 6. Right-hand by TEMPERANCE or an holy moderation in the pleasures and comforts of the world On the Left-hand by PATIENCE against the crosses and inconveniencies thereof 2. The branches or subjective parts of this vertue are Ver. 7. GODLINESSE a grace that guideth us in our immediate commerce with God BROTHERLY KINDNESSE a grace that directeth us in our duties to our fellow-Saints CHARITY helping us in the duties we owe to all men In many other places do the Apostles lay the Doctrine of God in one intire view before our eyes lest the minde should be distracted by various and dispersed explications or by dwelling too much upon one part we should neglect the other Second end of such Platforms to obviate errour A SECOND SORT OF MODULES Or A second end and design of such Modules is to obviate errors and to Antidote Christians against the poyson and infection of rotten pernicious principles for no sooner had the good Husbandman sowed his field with good seed but the envious man went out after him and began to scatter tares 2 Pet. 2.1 In opposition whereunto the Apostles in their several Epistles were careful to furnish the Churches with such Modules and Platforms of truth as might discover and confute those damnable heresies 2 Pet. 1.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hence the Apostle Saint Peter calls them PRESENT TRUTHS that is Principles of the Christian Faith most seasonable for those times wherein they were writ as every Church and age had its present errors and false doctrines whereby the false Apostles did labour to undermine the truth and to seduce the Professors of it so the Apostles in that zeal to the truth and compassion to the souls of men did bestir themselves to Countermine those Seducers and to stablish the Churches in the faith of Jesus Christ by collecting some special heads and points of Gospel Doctrine opposite to those errors and sending them to the several Churches where they had planted the Gospel These the Apostle calls the Present truth Thus Saint Paul among other places in his first Epistle to Timothy chap. 4. from the first verse to the ninth verse The Apostle Peter in his second Epistle chap. 2. throughout St. Jude spends his whole Epistle upon the same design But above all the Apostle Saint John is very large and distinct upon this account His first Epistle consists specially of a two-fold Module or Platform i. e. 1. A form or table of Gospel Principles Admodum artificiosa est hujus epistolae methodus n●m ad modum catenae Christiana fidei mysteria axiomata connectuntur c. Dicson 2. A form or table of Gospel-Evidences both of them in opposition to the false teachers of those times those Antichrists of whose numerous increase he gives them that solemn notice 1 Epistle 2. chap. 18. verse Little children it is the last time and as ye have heard that Antichrist shall come even now are there MANY ANTICHRISTS To Antidote Christians against the plague of the false doctrines which such Sectarian Antichrists had disseminated doth the Apostle lay down 1. An 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or PATTERN of Gospel-principles Ex. gra 1. That God is a God of an infinite universal perfection and holinesse Chap. 1. ver 5. God is light and in him is no darkness at all This against them that most blasphemously asserted (a) The Carpocratians taught that men must sin and do the Divels will or else they could not enter into heaven Epiphanius Simon Magus and after him Florinus Blastus Apelles Hermogenes Valentiani Marcionitae c. Priscillianistae Deum affirmant mendacem Aug. de haerres c. 70. GOD TO BE THE AUTHOUR OF SIN c. against whom also Saint James contends Jam. 1. ver 13 14 15 16 17 18 2. That conformity to God is an inseparable concomitant of communion with God This against them that were not afraid to (b) Eo tempore fuerunt quí ●●m di●imi societatem cum Deo propter peccata censebant The Gnosticks Ebionitae c. ambulantes in tenebris jactitabant se Deo placere falsitas doctrinae turpitudo morum tunc vigebat non solum in philosophorum scholi● sed apud haereticeos Cypr. affirm that justified persons being elected let them live never so impurely do remain in the favour of God c. as some amongst us and such as would be accounted Stars of the first Magnitude that a man might have as much communion with God in sinne as in the duties of Religion If any man say c. It
made righteous in Law Righteousnesse is a conformity to the Law he that fulfills the Law is righteous in the eye of that Law he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within the protection of it as he that transgresseth the Law is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guilty in the eye of the Law and without the protection of it Now the Law of the New Covenant runs thus He that believeth shall not perish so that a Believer keeps and fulfills this Law and therefore faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.22 23 24. because faith is the keeping of the New Covenant which therefore is called the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 in opposition to the Old Covenant called there by the Apostle the Law of Works As therefore innocency or perfect obedience would have justified Adam had he stood by vertue of the Law of Works or Old Covenant whose tenor is Obey and live for then he had fulfilled that Law and as his Disobedience actually condemned him by vertue of the same Law Disobey and dye for it Gen. 2.17 So now believing in Christ justifyeth by vertue of the Law of faith for it is the keeping and fulfilling of the Gospel-Covenant whose tenor is Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And again unbelief actually condemneth by vertue of the same Law He that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the Name of the only begotten Son of God Joh. 3.18 That is because the unbeliever is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the protection of the Gospel or Law of faith he cometh not up to its righteousnesse he is condemned already as a sinner by the Law of Works and yet once more with a witnesse condemned as an unbeliever as a monster that hath twice been accessory to his own murder first in wounding himself and secondly in refusing to be healed The Law of works includes us all under sin we are all dead our case was desperate but God who is rich in mercy through his great love wherewith he hath loved us Ephes 2.4 John 3.16 his immense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when we were dead in sins and trespasses hath sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And this is that Law according to which he will judge the world according to my Gospel saith Paul Rom. 2.27 Every Believer therefore though he wants the righteousnesse of the Law of Works viz. innocency yet he shall not be condemned because he hath the righteousnesse of the Gospel viz. faith which is the New Law in force according to which God now dealeth with us and shall judge the world at the last day And here it will be richly worth our very heedful Observation that although a Believer hath not the righteousnesse of the Law of Works i●herent in himself for if he had he were not a sinner but should be justified by that Law yet by faith he lays hold upon Christs satisfaction which in the very eye of the Law of Works is an unexceptionably perfect an infinitely glorious righteousnesse So that faith justifieth us even at the Bar of the Law of Works Ratione objecti as it lays hold on Christs satisfaction which is our Legal righteousnesse it justifieth us at the Bar of the Gospel or Law of faith formaliter ratione sui as it is Covenant-keeping or a fulfilling of the Gospel Law For he that keeps a Law is righteous where that Law is Judge the Law-Maker by his very making of the Law makes him righteous and the Judge that pronounceth according to the Law for a Judge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will infal●ibly pronounce him so But that with all requisite distinctnesse we may apprehend this great affair let us take a view of some of the most considerable and important causes which concur to the producing this excellent effect the discharge and justification of a sinner and state their several interests and concernments in their respective influences upon and contributions towards it 1. How free grace justifieth And first The free grace of God is the first wheel that sets all the rest in motion It s contribution is that of a proegumenal cause or internal motive disposing God to send his Son John 3.16 That sinners believing might be justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus Rom. 3.24 For Christ dyed not to render God good he was so eternally but that with the honour of his justice he might exert and display his goodnesse which contriv'd and made it self this way to break forth into the world 2. How Christs satisfaction Secondly Christs satisfaction is doubly concern'd in our Justification 1. In respect of God as a procatartick cause of infinite merit and impetrative power for the sake of which God is reconciling himself unto the world in Christ not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Cor. 5.19 2. In respect of the Law of Works Christs satisfaction justifieth us formally as our proper Legal righteousnesse I call it our righteousness because it becomes imputed to us upon our believing faith being our Gospel title by pleading which we lay claim to all the benefits accruing from the merit of Christs performance to a●l effects uses and purposes as if it had been personally our own I call it our Legal righteousnesse because thereby the Law of God owns it self fully apaid and acquiesceth in it as in full reparations and amends made unto it for the injury and dishonour received by the sin of man We must plead this against all the challenges and accusations of the Law Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 And thus our Legal righteousnesse required in the first Covenant that of Works is wholly without us in our Redeemer yet imputed upon our account Thirdly The Gospel justifieth quâ Lex lata 3. How the Gospel as it is the Law of faith for the very tenor of the Gospel-Covenant is Believe and thou shalt be saved Fourthly Faith justifieth vi Legis latae 4. How faith as it is our Evangelical righteousnesse or our keeping the Gospel-Law for that Law suspends justification upon believing Faith pretends to no merit or vertue of its own but professedly avows its dependance upon the merit of Christs satisfaction as our Legal righteousnesse on which it layeth hold nor can it shew any other title to be it self our Evangelical righteousnesse but only Gods sanction who chose this act of believing to the honour of being the justifying act because it so highly honoureth Christ So that as a most judicious pen expresseth it the act of believing is as the silver but Gods Authority in the Gospel-sanction is the Kings Coyne or Image stamp't upon it which gives it all its value as to justification Without this stamp it could never have been currant and if God had set this stamp on
steps 312 313 314. F Faith commended p. 455 456. Faith distinguished into its kinds 456 457. Faith defined 449. By its genus and subject 460. causes 461 462 463 464 465 466 467. Effects 468 469 470 471 472 473 474. properties 475 476 477 478. and opposites 479. 480 481. Faith if saving receiveth whole Christ on judgement and choice 475. Faith groweth and persevereth and purifieth 477 478 479. Faith and salvation how connexed 473 474. Faith strengthned by the Covenant of Redemption 228. Faith how it justifieth 421. Faith greatly opposed 480. Faith goeth before Repentance in order of nature as its cause 490. Faith in its essential acts without its reflexions is the cause of Repentance 491. Faith of Scriptures authorities to be strengthened 103 104. False Repentance seven kinds viz. Popish 515. Pagan 516. Profane ibid. Legal 517. Slaves ibid. Sullen p. 518. Quakers Repentance ibid. 519. Fall of man was from his own mutable self-determining will 111. Federal transaction did pass between God the Father and Son and that from all eternity 219 226. Fear of God the duty of such who believe God is 58 59. Fear accompanieth true Repentance 542. Filiation to God is by Adoption and Regeneration 447. Filial priviledges Believers comforts 451 452 453. Flesh an enemy to Faith 480. Flesh crucified by union with Christ 391 392. Forme of sound words to be held fast 670. By Magistrates how 674 675 676 677. By Ministers how 678 679. By the People how 680 681. Freedome of God Father and Son in transacting the Covenant for mans Redemption 224. Free-grace the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 477. Fruitfulnesse a note of union with Christ 392 393. G God is p. 30 31. Gods being is evident in nature 31. 48. and Scripture 48 49. Gods being consistent with the adversity of the just and prosperity of the wicked and evidenced by them 45 50 51. God is the only efficient of Faith 461 462. God could not be the original of sin 111. Gods glory the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. God as Judge justifieth how and when 122. God the object of beatifical vision 654 655. Gospel a good cause 3. Gospel-means to work Faith 465. and call loudly to Repentance 525. Gospel how it justifieth 421. Gospel-Covenant better than the Legal 245 246 247 248. Gosepl-Manner of propounding Repentance is by way of duty and priviledge 426 Gospel-Arguments perswading Repentance most pregnant and moving 527 528. Gospel-Helps to Repentance most powerful and operative p. 533. Grace of God magnified by mans fall 213 214. First cause impulsive of justification 420. Graces are the fruits of the Spirit 390. Grudge not the prosperity of the wicked 645. H Of Hell 621. the wicked turned into it 623. its name explained ibid. nature described 624. its pain ibid. The Properties of its punishment Extremity 628 629. Eternity 628 629. Hell discerned by the Heathen 635. Hell proved by Equity 636 637 638 639 640 641. Merit 636 637 638 639 640 641. No Bar or hinderance 636 637 638 639 640 641. Heresie an hindrance to Faith 480. Heresies and Errors disbanded when we come to heaven 649. Hearing must be fixt and constant 22. So it will help Repentance p. 545. Heart the subject of Faith 459. and seat of Holinesse 558. Heaven 647. it is a Kidgdome how 649. Hindrances to the understanding Scripture what they are and how removed 100 101. Holding fast what it meaneth 5. Holinesse 554. a state trade habit and disposition 555. Holinesse defined 556. Holinesse the designe of God in all his acts 559 560. Holinesse constitutes a Christian or Saint 561 562. Holinesse spreads over the whole man 558. Holinesse changeth a man 557. Holinesse necessary unto communion with God 563. Holinesse its properties 567. Companions peace righteousnesse unblameablenesse 268. its opposites filthinesse of flesh of spirit over-reaching and hypocrisie 569 570. Holinesse of the Publisher proveth the Scripture to be the Word of God 94. And so doth the holy matter pressed in it 91 92. and its holy Arguments 93. Humility the effect of sensible impotency p. 214. Humiliation of Christ 278. three steps of it 280 281. the manner of it 287. Humanity of Christ a miracle of humiliation 280. Humility must go before honour 333. I Ignorance inconsistent to Faith 479. dangerous 483. Impotency of man since the fall very great 202 203. Impossible to recover of himself 204. Impotent in respect of the Law 205. Of the Gospel 206. 207. Impotency determined in Scripture ibid. Impotency no bar to the demand of duty direction of means or infliction of punishment 210 211 212 213. Impotency is to be seen and known 214. Infants distempers and death an effect and evidence of original sin 143. So is their aptitude to evil and backwardness to good 144. Inheritance of Saints hath no corruption succession or division p. 441. Inheritance why heaven so called 661. Inherited by Adoption 662 663. Donation 662 663. Redemption 662 663. Inspiration what it imports 87. Inventions and many inventions what they signifie 106. Indignation accompanieth Repentance 442. Judgements of God prevented 521 522. and removed by Repentance 523 524. Last Judgement provokes holiness 563. and perswades to Repentance 531 532 533 Judge whom 608. Manner of his coming 610. Last Judgement its day 605. It is particular and general 606. why it must be and when 607. its method and order 609. Justice of God satisfied by the death of Christ 301. Justification its nature opened 402 c. Differeth from Sanctification ib. Justified implies guilt plea and acquittance p. 403. Justified persons are acquitted on their plea. 419. Justification its causes Gods free grace 421 422. Christs satisfaction 421 422. The Gospel 421 422. Faith 421 422. God Law-giver 421 422. God Judge 421 422. Works 421 422. Spirit 421 422. Justification by what plea procured 406. Justification not from Eternity 423. Justification procured by Christs death 341. is evident by the Possibility 342 343 344. Necessity 342 343 344. Nature 342 343 344. Cause 342 343 344. Vicegerency 342 343 344. Peculiarity to this end 342 343 344. Justification doth manifest the wisdome holinesse and mercy of God 428. Justification the priviledge of the Gospel-Covenant 140. Justification the ground of comfort p. 429. to be sought by sinners 430. prized by Saints 432. K Kingly Office of Christ what it is and how executed 255 256. Kingly Office the Saints priviledge by Adoption 441. L Law Regulans 110. Law Regulata 110. Law of God the rule of rectitude ib. Law given Adam in Creation was partly natural partly positive 108. Law requireth duty exacts penalty terrifieth and stupifieth 204 205. Law general and special obeyed by Jesus Christ 223 224. Law fulfilled in Christ his death 301. Law given in Paradise was not executed or abrogated but released and dispensed with p. 413 414 415. Light burning and shining 1. Likenesse of sinful flesh what it means and how Christ was found in it 281 282. Likenesse to God
shewed the expiation of sin and therefore their Sacrifices were killed and the blood shed and sprinkled Heb. 9.22 23. 2. The Covenant at Mount Sinai was not made with all without exception as Adams was but only with a select people even with Israel 3. Because the Lord still puts them in minde of his promise to Abraham which included Christ and faith in him Gal. 3.16 17. and was not null by the Law Quest 5. The last question is how long this Covenant lasted and whither any be under a Covenant of Works Answ Most strictly it was but to the giving of the first promise for then the Covenant of Grace began but was more largely and clearly revealed till the coming of Christ by the Law and the Prophets but was most perspicuously and fully by Christ himself in his doctrine and death and by the abundant pouring out of his Spirit Howbeit all along and to this day every natural man is under a Covenant of Works because out of Christ therefore under the Law and the curse of it for which cause the Covenant of Works is by some called the Covenant of nature Faedus naturae Again all they which look for righteousnesse and salvation by the power of their wills by the strength of nature and by performance of duties as Jews Turks Philosophers Papists Socinians Gal. 4.24 25. Pelagians these are all under a Covenant of Works they are not under grace they are of Hagar the Bond-woman of Mount Sinai which answers to Jerusalem which now is which is in bondage with her children as the Apostle speaks in his elegant Allegory I come now to draw some Corollaries from this doctrine of the Covenant of Works thus propounded in a practical way of application and that briefly Corol. 1. It serves for admiration to wonder with a holy astonishment at the Lords infinite condescending love in making a Covenant with poor man 1. Because it was a free act in him to do it he lay under no compulsion to it Rom. 9.15 16. nothing of merit or profit in a despicable worme appears as a motive to it it was a royal act of glorious grace from the King of heaven to vile creatures O wonderful 2. Because as it was free for him to do it so he bound his hands by it and as it were lost his freedome by it for his truth holds him fast to it Hebr. 6.18 by which its impossible for him to change O wonderful 3. He made the first offer he prevented us by his grace he loved us first 1 John 4.10 19. all this appeared in the first Covenant with us Bullinger de f●●dere Dei unios aeterno in vouchsafing us to make any at all with him Ineffabilis misericordiae Divinae Argumentum quod ipsum numen ipse inquam Deus Aeternus faedus ipsum primus offert nullis ad hoc hominum meritis adactus sed merâ nativâ bonitate impulsus nec scio an humanum ingenium hoc mysterium vel plenè toncipere vel dignis laudibus evehere possit Unspeakable mercy that the eternal God should first offer to league with us moved to it by no merit in us but by his own native goodnesse only a mystery which the minde of man cannot conceive nor his tongue praise to the worth of it thus a grave Authour which will the more inhance the love of God if we 4. Consider that he makes Covenant upon Covenant after breaches and forfeitures renews them again and ratifies them stronger than ever as he did the new Covenant after the old was broken by our high and hainous provocation in the fall and which he doth to every elect soul in the Sacraments and after grosse and grievous Apostasies See Jerem. 3.1 Ezek. 16.60 61 62 63. Hos 2. O admire and adore this love Corol. 2. Seeing there are two Covenants on foot one of Works another of grace and very many yea the farre greatest part of the world are under a Covenant of Works which is a most sad and doleful estate because a state of wrath and death a most wretched and accursed condition O try under what Covenant thou art for if thou art in the state of sinful nature a sprowt of old Adam never yet cut off from his root of bitternesse nor graffed into Christ thou art undone to be under such a Covenant is to be an enemy to God and to be lyable to all his plagues O make haste then and flee as a Post and as the young Roe into Christs Armes For consider how thou canst stand before the Bar of God in thy sins in thy nakednesse Adam fled away from the presence of God afraid and ashamed hiding himself in the Thicket because he was naked but where wilt thou hide thy nakednesse in that dreadful day of the Lord there will be no shelter in that day for a sinner Corol. 3. Labour to understand and discern aright the nature tenour and termes of both Covenants 1. Because they are easiiy mistaken and many do mistake them Rom. 10.2 3. 2. Because the mistake is dangerous like a man in the dark as he travels findes two wayes one way is wrong Prov. 14.12 yet it seems as good and safe as the other he goes on in the wrong which leads him to a Rock where he falls down headlong and breaks his neck so many a poor soul imagines he is under a Covenant of Grace and in a safe way to heaven when alas he is yet under a Covenant of Works and in the high-way to hell Labour then to discern the difference search Scriptures and thy own heart go to the Lord by prayer Job 33.23 and to his M nisters that they may shew thee thy way lest thou go on to thy destruction And therefore Corol. 4. Improve the Covenant of works for the conviction of sin righteousness and judgement for till the Lord lets thee see what it is to be under such a state thou wilt never see the evil of it nor ever desire to change it Corol. 5. Renounce thy Covenants with sin Satan and creatures or else thou wilt never be admitted into Covenant with God if thou break not with them God will never close with thee if thou be a Covenant-servant to them thou art no Covenant-servant of the Lords for how canst thou serve those two Masters Matth. 6.24 1 Joh. 2.15 16. God and Mammon both which crave thy whole man and thy whole work and which are utterly inconsistent with each other Corol. 6. Labour to relieve thy self under thy greatest straits and sears by Covenant promises I mean the promises of the new Covenant which are called better promises Hebr. 8.6 10 11 12. Joh. 15. because absolute pr●mises because they work that in us and for us which God requires of us when of our selves we can do nothing As the new Covenant is the best Covenant and the promises of it the best promises Isa 55.3 Acts
verse Having in the 19. verse asserted Christs fitness for that work it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell c. Besides that infinite fulness which he had as God by natural and necessary generation there was another unmeasured fulness depending upon Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and good pleasure and thereby imparted unto Christ Now he comes to shew his work described First By its nature To reconcile to himself to make peace Secondly By its instrument that is the blood of the Cross by him Thirdly The object of it which are All things whether they be things in earth or things in heaven By which learned Davenant understands the Angels spoken of as the things in heaven and so many others supposing that the Elect Angels wer● confirmed in their estate by Christ But with submission to better judgements I conceive 1. that there is not sufficient evidence in Scripture to shew that the holy Angels had their confirmation from Christ nor doth it seem to be necessary forasmuch as it is commonly acknowledged that Adam who was under the same Covenant with the Angels if he had continued in the observation of Gods precepts for so long time as God judged meet he should have been confirmed by vertue of the Covenant of Works some other way And therefore it was rather to be thought that the Angels have their confirmatiom from Christ as God and Head over all things than as Mediatour The actions of Christ as Mediatour supposing a breach according to that place Gal. 3.20 A M●diatour is not a Mediatour of one i. e. of two parties which are one politically i. e. which are agreed in one but of parties at variance 2. Howsoever if the Angels had been confirmed by Christ yet surely they were not reconciled by Christ for Reconciliation implies a former enmity as these things in heaven are said to be And therefore I rather understand it of departed Saints Patriarchs Prophets c. who as they went to Heaven not to any Limbus so this expression is used to insinuate that they were saved by the grace of Jesus Christ even as we as it is Acts 15.11 and that the blood of Jesus Christ did expiate not only those sins which were committed after his death but those also which were long since past Rom. 3.25 as Sol nondum conspictus illuminat orbem The light and influence of the Sun is dispersed among us before the body of the Sun doth appear above our Horizon So then here you have mans Reconciliation Justification and Salvation described together with the procuring cause of it set forth 1. More generally By him 2. More specially By the blood of his Cross by the shedding of his blood for us by his death and passion compleated on the Cross The doctrine I intend to handle is this That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans justification and salvation Amongst all those heresies which God hath suffered to spring among us that they that are approved may be manifest none are more dangerous than those which concern the person and office of Christ of those many streams of errour which run into the dead Sea of Socinianism these are two They deny the Godhead and the satisfaction of Christ and so indeed subvert the whole Fabrick of the Gospel This latter I shall here endeavour to discuss and shall proceed in this Method 1. I shall explain it 2. Assert 3. Defend 4. Apply it 1. For the Explication of this great Gospel-mystery which truly if it fall we are without hope and so of all creatures most miserable I shall lay down these steps First God made the world and man in it for his own service and glory And this end he cannot be disappointed in but must have it one way or other Secondly Man by sin thwharted Gods end and cast dirt upon his glory and so doth every sinner Every sin is a reflection upon Gods Name a blot in Gods Government of the world so that some make it a pretence for their Atheism saying That if there were a God he would not suffer sin to be in the world Thirdly God is inclined by his Nature and obliged by his interest to hate sin and punish the sinner and so to recover his glory 1. I say God is inclined by his nature to hate and punish sin I do not positively conclude that he is absolutely obliged I shall not here meddle with that nice question Whether God was so far obliged to punish it by his nature that he could not pardon sin without satisfaction but this is manifest look upon man as a sinner and so Gods Nature must needs be opposite unto him The Scripture describes God in such manner not only in regard of his Will but also in respect of his Nature Hab. 1.13 Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil and canst not look on iniquity c. Exod. 34.6 where the nature of the Divine Majesty is represented among other parts of the description this is one He will by no meanes clear the guilty Psalme 11.5 The wicked his soul hateth and the reason is added from Gods Nature ver 7. For the righteous Lord loveth righteousnesse his countenance doth behold the upright And it may further appear that here punishment of sin is not an act of Gods Will but of his Nature Because the Actions of Gods Will are only known by Revelation not by reason or the light of Nature but that God should and would punish sin this was known by natures light to such as were unacquainted with Revelation-light Hence came the Conclusion Acts 28.4 This man is a Murderer whom though he hath escaped the Sea yet Vengeance suffereth him not to live Vengeance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a supposed Goddesse but indeed nothing else but Divine Justice 2. God is obliged by his interest to punish him as he is the Ruler of the world By sin there comes a double mischief 1. God is wronged 2. The world is wronged by a bad example and hardned in sin so that if God might pardon sin as it is a wrong to himself yet he is in a manner obliged to punish it to right the wronged world and to make such sinners patterns of severity that the world may not make them examples of ungodlinesse even as King James might pardon the Powder-Traytors so far forth as his Person was concerned but if you look on it as a wrong to the whole Nation to the Protestant Religion so he was obliged to punish them to make them warnings to others in the like cases so that you see mans punishment was necessary for Gods glory and the Worlds good Fourthly The punishment to be inflicted must be sutable to sins Nature and Gods Majesty and therefore an infinite punishment for this is justice to observe an exact proportion between sin and punishment Fifthly The only way whereby this punishment might be suffered and yet man saved was by the incarnation and
passion of God-man Man being every other way finite must have suffered infinitely in regard of duration even to eternity And none but Christ who was infinite in regard of the subject and dignity of his person as he was God could have so speedily and effectually delivered us from this punishment by suffering it himself whereby Gods justice was satisfied his hatred against the sinner removed and his mercy at liberty to act in the pardon of the sinner Sixthly This passion of Jesus Christ God was graciously pleased to accept for us and impute to us as if we had suffered in our persons and so he receives us into mercy And this is the substance of the Doctrine of the Gospel about mans salvation So much for the first thing the Explication of the point 2. I now come to the Assertion or Demonstration of it that you may receive this Doctrine as a Truth not built upon the traditions of men but revealed in the Word of God Now to prove this point viz. That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans Justification and Salvation I may use two sorts of Arguments First Some from the consideration of Christs death Secondly Some from the consideration of mans Justification and Salvation 1. From the consideration of Christs death I shall offer six Arguments 1. It s Possibility 2. Necessity 3. Nature 4. Cause 5. Vicegerency 6. Peculiarity First From the possibility Let me be bold to assert had it not been for this purpose it had not been possible for Christ to dye as it was not possible for Christ to be holden of death Acts 2.24 the price being paid and so the Prisoner of course to be released so it had not been possible because not just Id tantum possumus quod jure possumus to put him into a prison if it had not been to pay a debt And a debt of his own he had none he was a Lamb without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.19 Holy blameless undefiled separate from sinners Hebr. 7.26 He knew no sin 2 Cor. 5.21 which I the rather mention because S●cinus hath the impudence to lay down this blasphemous Assertion That Christ like the Jewish High Priest did offer for himself as well as for the people You have seen he had no debt no sin of his own he professeth of himself that he did alwayes those things which pleased his Father John 8.29 and therefore he must needs dye for our debts it is plain that Adam had he continued in integrity should not have dyed death is not the effect of nature then the Saints in glory must dye again for they have the same nature but the fruit of sin death entred into the world by sin Rom. 5.12 And the Apostle proves the sin of Infants expressed by that Periphrasis such as have not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression from the death of Infants and in Adam all dyed i. e. by his sin 1 Cor. 15.22 Therefore Jesus Christ being purified from the guilt of Adams sin by his holy birth and no lesse perfect than Adam should have been could never have dyed if not for our sakes Secondly From the necessity of Christs death it was necessary for our Salvation and Justification without which end it had been in vain The Socinians mention two other reasons and ends of Christs death the one to be an example of obedience but such we have many others upon far less charge the other to be a ground of hope for the remission of sin and the fulfilling of Gods promises but properly it is not the death but resurrection of Christ which is the ground of our hope 1 Cor. 15.14 If Christ be not risen your faith is vain so that those ends are improper and insufficient And to strike it dead I urge but one place Gal. 2.21 If righteousnesse come by the Law Christ is dead in vain What can be more plain if righteousnesse be not by Christ that the death of Christ be not the procuring cause of our Justification Christ is dead in vain to no end or as Grotius and others rather understand without any meritorious cause i. e. our sins however all comes to one Thirdly From the nature of Christs death it is a Sacrifice this consists of two Branches 1. Sacrifices did expiate sin 2. Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice 1. I say Sacrifices did expiate sin Levit. 1.4 He shall put his hands upon the head of the burnt-offering and it shall be accepted for him and many such places And this they did typically which strengthens the cause we have in hand as representing and fore-signifying Christ without which it was not possible for the blood of Buls and Goats to take away sins Hebr. 10.4 And the sins pardoned under the Old Testament were pardoned thorough Christ and not through any vertue of their Sacrifices Christ being a Mediatour for the Redemption of the Transgressions that were under the first Testament Hebrewes 9.15 2. And this brings in the second Head that Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice if either the names or nature of it may be regarded for the names and titles proper to Sacrifices they are attributed to it and God doth not give flattering titles nor false names but such as discover the nature of things it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Oblation or offering up of himself Ephes 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.25 to omit others and for the nature by vertue hereof sin is atoned he is our High Priest for this end to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being by an Enallage put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pacifie God reconcile God turn away his wrath You meet with all things in Christ which concurre to the making of a Sacrifice The Priest he is our High Priest the Sacrifice himself Christ was once offered the shedding of blood and destroying of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being the essential part of a Sacrifice Add to these 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passeover is Sacrificed for us where is a double Argument 1. That Christ is expresly said to be Sacrificed 2. That he is called a Passeover which at the best seems to have been both a Sacrifice and a Sacrament Now then Christs death being a Sacrifice it appeares that it appeased Gods wrath procured his favour Fourthly From the cause of Christs death I might urge a double cause 1. The inflicting cause it was Gods displeasure Nothing more plaine than that he had a very deep sense of and sharp conflict with Gods wrath from those dreadful horrours in the Garden where his soul was exceeding sorrowful unto death not certainly at the approach of an ordinary death which many Martyrs have undergone with undaunted courage but at the apprehension of his Fathers anger and upon the Cross where he roared out that direful complaint My
one entire Fabrick and Creation God saw every thing that he had made Gen. 1.31 and behold it was VERY GOOD Such a rare piece are Gospel-truths in their variety and uniformity not lesse glorious a d admirable than heaven and earth Sunne Moon Starres Elements in all their order and ornament Secondly 2. Help to knowledge Such types and Exemplars of divine truths are of great help to the understanding As the Collection of many beams and luminaries makes the greater light so it is in tne judgement A constellation of Gospel-principles shining together into the understanding fills it with distinct and excellent knowledge 2 Cor. 4.6 It gives us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. One truth doth irradiate and expound another The truths of the Gospel in their method and series are interpretative one to the other while the understanding by means hereof hath the advantage of dwelling upon them the object and comparing spiritual things with spiritual things as the Apostle speaks 1 Cor. 2.13 The truth is he knows but little of the truth that knows it only within it self he understands it aright that knows it in its connexion and correspondence with other truths of the Gospel That Christ dyed to save sinners is a most precious truth 1 Tim. 1.15 but he knoweth TOO LITTLE of it that knows it alone as most of ignorant Christians do who perish with their knowledge he knoweth this truth to purpose that knows it in its connexion with a lost estate that knows it in its references to the fall the wounds and bruises and death contracted by it he knows Redemption by Jesus Christ aright that knoweth it in order to the GUILT and POWER of sin and mans total impotency to save himself from either He knows salvation aright that knows it in the extent and vertue of all Christs OFFICES King Priest and Prophet that understands salvation to be a saving of the poor creature from the REIGN of sin by the Kingly Office of Jesus Christ a saving of a man from IGNORANCE ERROR and those false rotten principles which are naturally radicated in the understanding by the Prophetical Office of Jesus Christ as well as a saving him from HELL and WRATH TO COME by the Priestly Office of Jesus Christ He knows aright the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ not that knows it singly and nakedly only in the story and notion of it but that knoweth it in the effectual application of it by the Spirit for mortification and vivification that knoweth it in its connexion with and influence into justification and sanctification c. He that thus knoweth Christ and him crucified knoweth him as the truth is in Jesus His understanding is full of light Alas the ignorance and misery of our times is not that people are totally destitute of the principles of Christian Religion but that they know them singly only and apart and so they know them but by halfes yea not so much for I dare be bold to say the better half of every truth consists in its method and necessary coherence with other truths without which therefore the knowledge men have of them must needs be but dark and lifelesse Thirdly Such Patterns and Platforms whether of larger or of lesser compasse Advantage help to memo●y are a great help to memory In all Arts and Sciences order and method is of singular advantage unto memory We do easily retain things in our mind when we have once digested them into order It is not so much multitude of objects as their variousnesse and independency which is burdensome to memory when once the understanding apprehends them in their natural union and fellowship one upon another the memory comprehends them with much more sweetnesse and facility Hence it is that NUMBER and PLACE are of such rare use in the art of memory The reason why people generally remember no more of the Sermons they hear is for want of Catechizing whereby they might come to know the principles of Religion in their order and methodical contexture Usually in Sermons truths are delivered single and apart and the ignorant hearer knows not where the Minister is nor what place the doctrine delivered obtains in the body of divinity nor how they are knit together and so the memory leaks them out as fast as they are dropt in order is the very glue of memory Method in a single Sermon when the hearer is acquainted with it gratifieth the memory as well as the understanding while it doth not only lodge things in their own place but locks the door upon them that they may not be lost When things are knit and linckt in one with another as in a chaine pull up one link and that will pull up another so that the whole chaine is preserved But we may have occasion to speak again of this point And therefore Fourthly such Modules serve to quicken affection 4. Advantage to quicken affection Sympathy and Harmony have a notable influence upon the affections The sounding of a single string makes but little musick let a skilfull hand touch them in their musical consent and symphonie and it affects the hearer to a kinde of ravishment So it is with evangelical truths place them in their proper rooms that a man may behold them in their mutual correspondencies and apt couplings together and truly the Seraphims themselves answering one to another and ecchoing to another make not a sweeter harmony in their celestial Hallelujahs Fifthly It is a marvelous Antidote against errour and seduction Gospel truths in their series and dependance are a chain of gold to tie the truth and the soul close together People would not be so easily trapand into heresie if they were acquainted with the concatenation of Gospel-doctrines within themselves As for instance men would not certainly be so easily complemented to worship that Idol of free-will and the power of nature were they well principled in the doctrine of the fall The design of God in permitting of it held out in Scripture in such large and legible Characters that he which runs may read Psal 51.4 1 Cor. 1.29 30 31 c. If they did with sobriety of Spirit observe what the Scripture pr●claimes concerning the impotency of the lapst and ruined creature mans helplesse condition in himself Rom. 5.6 Ephes 2.1 Of the absolute necessity of the quickening helping and stablishing influence of the Spirit of Christ c. When a chaine of pearls is broken a single jewel is easily lost divine truths are mutually preservative in their social embraces and coherence Sixthly 6. Advantage growth in grace Growth in grace is one blessed fruit of such systems and tables of divine truths When ●oundations are well laid the superstructures are prosperously carried on want of distinct knowledge in the mysteries of Religion is a great obstruction to the growth of grace The great cause of the believing Hebrews non proficiency was
their defect in the foundation the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first principles of the Oracles of God Heb. 5.12 unskillfulnesse in the word of righteousnesse made them that they were but babes in grace ver 13. Vse Use Vse 1. In the first place it serves to justifie the practice of the Churches of Jesus Christ which have their Publick Forms and Tables of the fundamental Articles of the Christian faith drawn up by the joynt labour and travel of their learned and godly Divines after much and solemn seeking of God by fasting and prayer in the solemn profession whereof they all consent and agree Such were those antient publick Creeds The Athanasian Creed The Nycene Creed and that which is commonly called the Apostles Creed which justly merits that title if not because compiled by the twelve Apostles every one casting in their Symbole or Article as tradition goes yet because collected out of the Apostles writings and is as it were a brief form or abridgement of the Doctrine taught by Christ and his Apostles An Epitomy of the Christian faith And such are the Confessions which most of the Reformed Churches have drawn up for their own use comprehending the most necessary and fundamental Articles of the Christian faith to be generally owned and asserted by all within their Associations and Jurisdictions whither Ministers or people That Confession of faith which was compiled by the Reverend and Learned Divines of the late Assembly at Westminster and presented to the two Houses of Parliament as their Advice in matters of Religion was of this nature and obtains the primacy amongst all the Confessions of the Reformed Churches in the judgement of many Learned Orthodox Divines Such Formes and Modules are of excellent use in the Churches Partly to be a bank or bulwark to keep error and heresie from breaking into the Church of God Partly to prevent dissents and dissentions which are very apt to rise amongst the Pastours and Teachers as well as amongst the private members of such Congregations where every one is left at liberty to preach and practice to hold and hold forth what is right in their own eyes Partly to preserve the truth in its integrity and beauty and the professors of it in unity and uniformity Isa 4.5 the glory of the Churches and the defence upon that glory Use 2. It serves to shew us the benefit and advantage of publick Chatechismes whither larger containing a more general collection of Gospel truths for the use of such as are of larger understandings young or old or lesser containing only some few of the most necessary principles of Religion in the most facile and familiar way for the help of meaner capacities amongst which although there be some hundred several forms extant in the Reformed Churches yet those two forms or Modules drawn up by the late Reverend Assembly their larger and shorter Catechism obtain the general vote both abroad and at home for their excellency and usefulnesse And it is the wish of very learned and judicious men that there were yet some shorter and more easie form drawn up that might be reduced to a few heads of the first and most necessary points of Christian faith for the institution of babes The great advantage of such forms of Chatechistical doctrine is that thereby a Minister of the Gospel may acquaint his people with more of the necessary and saving truths of the Gospel in a few months than he can well preach over in many years and by the brief and frequent running over the principles of Religion people of all sorts and ages would be incomparably prepared for the Word preached and profit more by one Sermon than unprincipled hearers commonly do by twenty Use 3. Hence also I might commend to young Students in Divinity the reading of systems and compendious Abstracts and Abridgements as an excellent entrance and manuduction unto their Theological studies before they lanch into the larger tracts and treatises in that vast and immense ocean of Divine knowledge of which we may say almost to desparation Ars longa vita brevis The Shipwright that is to build a large and stately Vessel doth first shape his work in a very small Module And he that is to travel into the remote parts of the world shall render his labour much more fruitful by reading Maps and Globes at home for by that means he shall know where he is when he comes abroad his eye and his understanding will mutually interpret one to the other thus your curious workwomen do first make their borders and trails and then fill them Use 4. It serves to commend Methodical preaching that Minister that is wise and judicious to observe method in his Sermon and method between Sermon and Sermon a Scriptural connexion as much as may be between subject and subject doctrine and doctrine omne tulit punctum he is a Preacher indeed he shall not only profit but delight his hearers and make them not only knowing Christians but distinct and judicious Use 5. It commends not least constant and fixed hearing especially when people sit under a judicious and methodical Ministry Varia lectio delectat animum certa prodest Sen. loose hearing may please but the fixed will profit skipping hearing for the most part makes but sceptical Christians when people hear at randome have a snatch here and a snatch there here a truth perhaps and there an errour here a notion and there a novelty c. such mixt hearing makes up the garment of knowledge but just like a beggars Cloak full of patches they are never able to bring their knowledge into any form or method ever learning but never able to come to the knowledge of the truth their knowledge is like an heap of pebbles upon which a man can never raise a superstructure whereas they that sit under a fixed Ministry one that is Master of his Art they are acquainted with the way and course and project of his preaching as the Apostle tells Timothy 2 Epist 3.10 But thou hast fully known my doctrine purpose c. i. e. the designe and method of my Ministry Such hearers if judicious can follow their Teacher through the series and deduction of his Ministery from Subject to Subject and from Text to Text and from Head to Head till at length they have before they take notice of it an hypotyposis or collection of Gospel-truths formed in their understanding Such an hearer begins where he left the last time and so from time to time is still going on shining and growing and enlightning unto the prepared day Prov. 4.18 from faith to faith from knowledge to knowledge and from truth to truth till he comes in the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Ephes 4.13 Various hearing makes variable Christians St. James his professors for the most part double-minded men unstable