Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n lord_n people_n word_n 2,775 5 4.0281 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

There are 21 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

to confirme his promises by sundry arguments some whereof we will here repeat because the ample promises of their returne and the repaire of the City and Temple doth give some light what Covenant the Lord made with them after their returne First God promiseth to deliver them because they had been beloved of him of old time I am the Lord thy God the holy One of Isai 43. 3 4 5 6. Isai 46. 3 4. Israel thy Saviour I gave Egypt for thy ransome Ethiopia and Seba for thee Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee therefore will I give men for thee and people for thy life Feare not for I am with thee I will bring thy seed from the East and gather thee from the West I will say to the North Give up and to the South Keepe not back bring my sonnes from farre and my daughters from the ends of the earth Even every one that is called by my Name for I have created him for my glory I have formed him yea I have made him Secondly The Lord hath not sold them for price or gaine therefore he might redeeme them without money Awake awake Isai 52. 1 2 3. fortem posce animum put on thy strength O Zion put on thy beautifull garments O Ierusalem the holy City for henceforth there shall no more come into thee the uncircumcised and the uncleane Shake thy selfe from the dust arise and sit down O Jerusalem loose thy selfe from the bands of thy necke O captive daughter of Zion For thus saith the Lord Ye have sold your selves for nought and ye shall be redeemed without money Thirdly By former experience he doth assure them of their future Isai 52. 4 5. return into their own place For thus saith the Lord God My people went downe aforetime into Egypt to sojourne there and the Assyrian oppressed them without cause Now therefore what have I here saith the Lord that my people is taken away for nought they that rule over them make them to howle saith the Lord and my Name continually is blasphemed Therefore my people shall know my Name therefore they shall know in that day that I am he that doth speake Behold it is I. Fourthly This shall be to the Lord for a name and glory For Isai 48. 11. and 42. 8. mine own sake even for mine own sake will I doe it for how should my Name be polluted and I will not give my glory unto another I will cause the Captivity of Iudah and the Captivity of Israel to return and will build them as at the first And I will cleanse them from all Jer. 33. 7 8 9. Ezek. 36. 22 23. their iniquity whereby they have sinned and whereby they have transgressed against me And it shall be unto me a Name of joy a praise and an honour before all the nations of the earth that shall heare all the good that I doe unto them and they shall f●are and tremble for all the goodnesse and for all the prosperity that I procure unto it c. Fifthly That they might not faint through the long and great calamity which went before deliverance the Prophet in the Name of the Lord setteth before them the glory and dignity of the Messiah which followed his humiliation Behold my servant shall deale prudently he shall be exalted and extolled and be very Isai 52. 13 14. high As many were astonied at thee his visage was so marred more than any man and his forme more then the sonnes of men so shall he sprinkle many nations the Kings shall shut their mouths at him for that which had not been told them shall they see and that which they had not heard shall they consider Another Prophet directing the faithfull how to behave themselves in that long and grievous Captivity scil to wait patiently for the accomplishment of the Promise because the vision would speake in its appointed season and not lie he doth unfold the Doctrine of free Justification by faith in Christ more plainely then formerly it had been expressed in the Law of Moses adding Behold his soul which is lifted up is not upright Hab. 2. 4. in him but the just shall live by his faith Whence the Apostle inferreth that we are justified by free grace and not by the works of the Law in the fight of God In the Originall Gal. 3. 11. it is The just shall live in his faith but that particle is oft very well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred by a Deut. 6. 5 Mar. 12. 30. Luke 10. 27. Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 11. Heb. 10. 38. Deut. 32. 21. Hos 12. 13. Psal 78. 2. Act. 17. 28. Psal 18. 30. Matth. 17. 21. Phil. 4. 13. Of or By and it is all one whether we reade it The just shall live by of or in faith the sense being The just shall live the life of grace here and of glory hereafter in or by faith That which the Prophet speaketh in generall of all the Promises of God that the godly might certainly and constantly hold in what thing they ought to rest in the midst of all stormes and tempests and whence they may live securely in the distresses of death that the Apostle doth specially interpret of Justification and life eternall which we obtaine by faith The Prophet and Apostle both speake of a lively faith which is effectuall to bring forth good works but we obtain life eternall by faith and not by works To live here is to obtaine life or glory not to leade our life according to the Law or rule of righteousnesse as the drift of the Prophet and Exposition of the Apostle opposing the life which is by faith to that which is by the works of the Law which could not be if to live by faith had been to direct our life according to the Law Though then the righteous man must exercise himselfe in righteousnesse yet he is justified and liveth that is obtaineth life eternall by faith and not by the works of faith Now the Lord the strong Redeemer of his people according Jer. 24. 6 7. and 50. 20 34. Ezek. 20. 34 35 37. to the word of his Prophets brought back their Captivity with joy in his time appointed planted them in their own Land brought them into the bond of his Covenant and set up his Tabernacle amongst them When the Lord saith the Psalmist brought back the Captivity of Zion we were like them that dreame Psal 126. 1 2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with singing then said they amongst the Heathen The Lord hath done great things for them And the Prophet Zachary As for thee also by the blood Zech. 9. 11. of thy Covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water By this great speciall late and new blessing the Lord did bind his Israel unto him more strongly then heretofore
profitable and pleasant answerable in some sort to the nature excellency and use of the thing known And in this case the heart is not over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truth seriously thought upon unto a practicall judgement This is the learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge Christ is not known if he be not acknowledged as he is propounded what perfect Si ignorare accipitur pro non attendere dici potest voluntatem humanam vix unquam peccare sine aliqua ignoratione quia quando vo●untas peccat intellectus ut plurimum aliud agit nec attendit ad regimen voluntatis knowledge doth perfectly that imperfect knowledge doth imperfectly As the end acknowledged cannot be refused by like right neither can the meanes acknowledged the meanes I say necessary only necessary and without which there is no possibility or likelihood to obtaine the end For will is a reasonable appetite and therefore doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented unto it with evidence certainty profit and delight as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of an humane soule and that both simply and in comparison for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to be free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally in a manner sutable to its owne condition If it be objected the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good The answer is that it is true the will must not only be moved but renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ But withall God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner without a speciall work of grace upon the soule whereby the will is framed and fashioned to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed The third help is a formall cause a free gracious disposition or Scimus non impetrari remissionem ante prece ●ed dic● decretam esse ante preces eam peti precibus quamvis sit decreta P. Malin de e●ect ex fide pag. 316. habite of faith by which the will is inclined agreeable to the disposition of it to come unto God This habite is necessary because without it the will being in bondage stained and defiled it is altogether unable to will or desire that which is spiritually good If there could be a will without such habite man might performe the act of a man spiritually alive before he was made alive So that the full answer to this question viz. what is that effectuall help whereby I come to God is this It is a mixt thing standing partly of that almighty power of his put forth for my good partly of that inward Word and inspiration by and with which his power is put forth partly in that spirit of faith and supernaturall life which his almighty power through his Word bringeth forth in my soule What was that help whereby Christ made Lazarus able to come to him out of the grave of naturall death The principall was Christs power the instrumentall his voyce the formall cause immediately helping to it or working it was the spirit of naturall life which the power of Christ by his Word restored to this dead corps which now was fallen And thus we have the effectuall help or grace by which we come actually to convert which are all given from Gods free grace and favour towards us And when God doth infuse the habite of faith into the minde of one of ripe age he doth cause him actually to beleeve as the nature of the thing it selfe and condition doth manifest For if the Spirit by inlightening the minde and renewing the heart doe perswade and move the soule effectually to embrace adhere unto and love the Lord Jesus Christ then the condition of the thing will not beare that grace should be given effectually but the act and motion of the soule must necessarily follow But though the connection of these two be indivisible yet the flexion or turning it selfe is not indivisible or in a point or moment but it may be sooner or slower more speedy in one more remisse in another The will is necessarily bowed or bended but more vehemently in one more slackly in another freely or willingly in all that are turned and yet necessarily And this first thing is well to be noted for from hence we may gather in what standeth the efficacy of grace effectuall to Conversion viz. In Gods effectuall power put forth to execute his intention which he hath of converting some actually before other some It Quaestio non est de irresistibilitate sed de insuperabilitate finali Nam quomodo traberemur gratia irresistibili cum id ipsum quod nolumus Deo resistere ●it ipsa Deigratia Illud ipsum velle resistere nihil ali●d est quam resistere doth not stand in any congruity or temperature of grace correspondent to our nature For this doth argue there is inward an incorrupted connaturall disposition to receive grace This maketh the effect of Conversion as much if not more to depend on the active capacity of the will as on the grace of God For it maketh the grace of God worke it morally and externally by perswasion only and the will of man from a power within it selfe which doth more inwardly enter the effect of Conversion then the other It may be questioned in what order doth the Spirit make us come unto God whether immediately or by some preparation going before wherein it is further to be considered what that preparation is or wherein it consisteth To the first branch of the Question it is truly answered that God doth use so to worke our comming to him by beliefe that he doth first for the most part prepare us thereunto As before we engraffe a Sciens we cut it and set it for incision and if a Timberlogg lie sunke in mudd men set to their tacklings first to draw it out of the mire before they lay it on a Cart to carry it away Thus God doth by his power often worke some preparative change in a sinner before he doth by his power and word worke the spirit of faith in them and make them come unto him So God by afflictions is said to boare the eare and prepare to conversion 2 Chron. 33. 11 12. Act 2. 37. When Manasseh was humbled in great misery he sought the Lord. Thus by conviction of sin others were pricked in heart and said What shall we doe to be saved and then speedily they received the Gospel beleeving Sometimes by extraordinary terrours rising from externall accidents yea hidden naturall causes God is pleased to bring men nearer unto him Thus the Jaylor Act. 16.
fall by whom not only the Elect but the whole frame of nature received benefit In the Creation God raised up a great Family wherein he made Adam the head and all his posterity inhabitors the frame of Heaven and Earth his domicile the creatures his servants this Family upon the fall was broken up the present Master turned out of his imployments the children beggered the servants returning to God their Soveraigne and the whole frame of the creature under attainder God thus defeated if I may so speake sets up a second Family called the Family of Heaven and Earth wherein Jesus Christ the womans seed Gen. 3. 19. is the Head Matth. 28. 18. Ephes 1. 22. Col. 1. 19 20. stiled the second Adam Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth and that with more soveraignty and amplitude of injoyment then ever the first Adam had the whole creature being put under his feet The children of this Family are the faithfull who be the adopted Brethren Rom. 8. 15. sometimes called the seed The servants be the wicked and those of two sorts either such as attend in the Church neerer about Christs person or further off as in farme-houses for baser offices The creatures by a second ordinance from their former Master free are stated upon Christ though they beare some brands of evill from the sinne of their former Master the domicile though not so beautifull returnes to Christ So the Covenant of Grace entring upon the breaking up of the former Family investeth Christ with all as purchaser of the lost creature from revenging justice and as Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth who freely conferreth the heavenly inheritance upon the adopted sonnes and brethren and vouchsafeth earthly blessings and some spirituall common gifts to the wicked which may be called servants both those that more neerly attend his person and those that be further off But of this more hereafter CHAP. III. Of the Covenant of Grace in generall THe Covenant of Grace is that free and gracious Covenant which God of his meere mercy in Jesus Christ made with man a miserable and wretched sinner promising unto him pardon of sinne and eternall happinesse if he will return from his iniquity embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfained and walke before God in sincere faithfull and willing obedience as becomes such a creature lifted up unto such injoyment and partaker of such pretious promises This Covenant is opposite to the former in kind so that at one and the same time man cannot be under the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of grace For he cannot hope to be justified by his perfect and exact obedience that acknowledging himselfe to be a miserable and lost sinner doth expect pardon of the free mercy of God in Iesus Christ embraced by faith The condition of the Law as it was given to Adam excludes the necessity of mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne and the necessity of making a new Covenant argues the former could not give life Heb. 8. 7. He that is under grace cannot at the same time be under the law and he that waites for Salvation of meere and rich grace to be vouchsafed cannot expect it as the deserved wages of his good worke from justice and not of mercy What then may some say is the Law abolished or is it lawfull for Christians to live as they list because they be not under the Law Not so but the Law hath a double respect one as the unchangeable rule of life and manners according to which persons in Covenant ought to walke before and with the Lord and in this sense it belongs to the Covenant of grace The other as it is propounded in forme of a Covenant as if he must necessarily perish who doth neglect or breake it in the least jot or tittle and in this sense the Covenant of grace and workes are opposite The matter of Evangelicall precepts and of the Morall Law is the same but the forme of promulgation is not the same the rule is one but the Covenants differ Materialy the Law that is the matter and argument of the Law as a rule stands in force but if formally it did continue as a Covenant there could be no place for repentance nor for the promise of forgivenesse or mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne or the quickning of them that be dead in trespasses The Covenant of workes is of justice the Covenant of grace is of grace and mercy which cannot agree and take place in one and the same subject for he that try●th justice perceiveth not the force of mercy è contra This might be common to both Covenants that God doth freely give reward because he was not bound unto it by any Law and that is done of grace which we are not tied unto by Law but in the Covenant of Grace he gives the reward of meere and rich grace and that to the creature which hath deserved Hell This Covenant entered immediately upon the fall and so may be called a Covenant of Reconciliation not of friendship At the very instant when God holy and true was pronouncing judgements upon the severall delinquents in the fall setting downe his sentence against the Tempter both in his instrument the Serpent and the maine Author Sathan he brings in the party who should execute the same in which execution is unfolded the Covenant of grace for the Salvation of the creature that the Serpent had destroyed that God might be knowne in wrath to remember mercy At the very fall and before judgement was pronounced upon the delinquents that were tempted the Covenant of mercy was proclaimed that by vertue of this Covenant God might prevent further waste of his creature which Sathan might haue wrought upon his new advantage in following his good successe and that the tempted might have some comfort before their judgement least they might have been swallowed up of wrath The Authour of this Covenant is God considered as a mercifull and loving Father in Iesus Christ as a Creator he strooke Covenant with Adam in his integrity as a Saviour he looked upon the poore creature plunged into sinne and misery by reason of sin The cause that moved the Lord to make this Covenant was not any worth dignity or merit in man for man never had ought which he had not received and now by his disobedience had deserved to be cast off for ever neither was the present misery into which he had cast himselfe the cause that moved the Lord to receive man into favour for the Angels more excellent by creation as miserable by their fall he hath reserved in chaines of darknesse The sole moving cause why God made this Covenant Bonitatis Dei donumest quod liberare nos voluit quod verò aliter quam tali modo liberare nos noluit p●ccatorum nostrorum est meritum was the love favour and mercy of the Lord. Deut. 7. 7 8. Only the Lord had a delight in thy fathers
is not justified by workes or through workes by the Law or through the Law opposing faith and workes in the matter of Iustification but not in respect of their presence faith I say and works not faith and merits which could never be without doubt he excludes the efficiency and force of the Law and workes in justifying But the particles By and of doe not in the same sense take Iustification from the Law and workes in which they give it to faith For faith only doth behould and receive the promises of life and mercy but the Law and works respect the Commandements not the promises of meere grace When therfore Iustification and life is said to be by faith it is manifestly signified that faith receiving the promise doth receive righteousnesse and life freely promised Obedience to all Deut. 7. 1● 10. 12. Ier. 7. 23. Lev. 19. 17 18. Luk. 10. 27 Mar. 12 30. Gods Commandements is covenanted not as the cause of life but as the qualification and effect of faith and as the way to life Faith that embraceth life is obedientiall and fruitfull in all good workes but in one sort faith is the cause of obedience and good workes and in another of Iustification and life eternall These it seeketh in the promises of the Covenant those it worketh and produceth as the cause doth the effect Faith was the efficient cause of that pretious oblation in Abell of reverence and preparing Heb. 11 4 7 c. the Arke in Noah of obedience in Abraham but it was the instrument only of their justification For it doth not justifie as it produceth good workes but as it receiveth Christ though it cannot receive Christ unlesse it brings forth good workes A disposition to good workes is necessary to justification being the qualification of an active and lively faith Good works of all sorts are necessary to our continuance in the state of justification and so to our finall absolution if God give opportunity but they are not the cause of but only a precedent qualification or condition to finall forgivenesse and eternall blisse If then when we speake of the conditions of the Covenant of grace by Condition we understand whatsoever is required on our part as precedent concomitant or subsequent to justification repentance faith and obedience are all conditions but if by Condition we understand what is required on our part as the cause of the good promised though only instrumentall faith or beliefe in the promises of free mercy is the only Condition Faith and workes are opposed in the matter of Justification and Salvation in the Covenant not that they cannot stand together in the same subject for they be inseperably united but because they cannot concurre or meete together in one the same Court to the Iustification or Absolution of Man For in the Court of Iustice according to the first Covenant either being just he is acquitted or unjust he is condemned But in the Court of Mercy if thou receive the promise of pardon which is done by a lively faith thou art acquitted and set free and accepted as just and righteous but if thou believe not thou art sent over to the Court of Justice Obedience is two-fold perfect in measure and degree this is so farre required that if it be not performed we must acknowledge our sinne in comming short And this God is pleased to exact at our hands that we might walke in humility before him strive after perfection and freely acknowledge his rich grace and mercy in accepting and rewarding the best service we can tender unto his Highnesse when in the Court of Iustice it deserveth to be rejected 2. Sincere uniforme and constant though imperfect in measure and degree and this is so necessary that without it there is no Salvation to be expected The Covenant of Grace calleth for perfection accepteth sincerity God in mercy pardoning the imperfections of our best performances If perfection was rigidly exacted no flesh could be saved if not at all commanded imperfection should not be sin nor perfection to be laboured after The faith that is lively to imbrace mercy is ever conjoyned with an unfained purpose to walke in all well pleasing and the sincere performance of all holy obedience as opportunity is offered doth ever attend that faith whereby we continually lay hold upon the promises once embraced Actuall good workes of all sorts though not perfect in degree are necessary to the continuance of actuall justification because faith can no longer lay faithfull claime to the promises of life then it doth vertually or actually leade us forward in the way to Heaven For if we say we have fellowship with God and walke in darknesse we lie and doe not the truth But if we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another 1 Joh. 1. 6 7. This walking in the light as he is in the light is that qualification wherby we become immediatly capable of Christs righteousnes or actuall participants of his propitiation which is the sole immediate cause of our justification taken for remission of sinnes or actuall approbation with God The truth of which Doctrine St John likewise ratifies in tearmes equivalent in the words presently following And the blood of 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Christ cleanseth us walking in the light as God is in the light from all sinne But of these things more largely in the severall degrees how this Covenant hath been revealed In this Covenant man doth promise to repent of his sinnes and repenting to cleave unto the promise of mercy made in Iesus Christ and in saith to yeeld willing cheerefull and continuall obedience In contracts amongst men one may aske more and the other bid lesse and yet they may strike agreement But it is altogether bootlesse for men to thinke of entring into Covenant with God if they be no● resolved to obey in all things The practise of all Gods people who ever made Covenant with his Highnesse doth expressely speake thus much when they solemnly entred into or renewed their Covenant for thus they promise Whatsoever the Lord saith that will we doe Exod 24. 3 7. The people said unto Joshua The Lord our God will we serve and his voice will we obey Josh 24. 23. And they entred into Covenant to seeke the Lord God of their Fathers with all their he art and with all th●e●r sou●e That whosoever would not se●ke the Lord God of Israel should be put to death whether small or great whether man or woman 2 Chron. 15. 12 13. And the King stood by the pillar and made a Covenant before the Lord to walke after the Lord and to keepe his Commandements and his Testimonies and his statutes with all their heart and all their soule to performe the words of this Covenant that were written in this booke and all the people stood to the Covenant 2 Chron. 34. 31. 2 Kings 23. 3. They entred into a Curse and into
in a more rude forme As the time of the Sunne approacheth neerer or if further off so is the light that goeth before it greater or lesser and as the time of the arising of the Sonne of righteousnesse is more remote or nigh at hand so was the revelation that went before more dimme or cleare It was meete and expedient that when the comming of the glorious King of peace and righteousnesse did draw nigh the hearts of men should be raised up in desire and expectation of him But the better they were acquainted with his person and office the more distinctly they understood the time of his comming the more lively tast they had of the benefits they should receive by him and the greater tokens they saw of his glory approaching the more their hearts would be enlarged to desire and expect him Moreover it was the good pleasure of God to manifest the riches of his grace not all at once but by degrees as he saw it most expedient for the glory of his great Name and the good of his people in severall ages and states of the Church of which we shall have occasion to speake largely in the Chapters following But here two things must be noted to prevent some doubts that may arise First that clearenesse of Revelation is twofold One on the part of the revealer when the revealer dealeth so that unlesse he have a rude hearer or altogether malitious it may be understood of the hearer what he meaneth The other cleare even on the part of the hearer when it is so great that the rudenesse of the hearer cannot hinder that he should not perceive what is spoken but his malice only In the first sence the revelation of Christ in the Covenant of the promise was cleare but the testimony concerning the Kingdome of Christ could not be understood of a rude hearer before the accomplishment If it be objected how then could they be saved In the second place i● is to be observed that Christ doth not save as clearly knowne but as he is sincerely acknowledged But when the Revelation was sparing and darke no man can deny that Christ was truly and unfainedly acknowledged in the Church of the Iewes The word of God is the measure of faith and that is true and saving faith which believeth all things which are revealed and in that manner wherein they are revealed and therefore the faith of the Fathers was sound and effectuall because they believed what God was pleased to reveale and after that manner wherein it was revealed of God A Third difference ariseth from this for Christ with all his benefits was proposed to the Israelites under types and figures As Exod. 24. 7. 8. Heb. 10. 1 Gal. 3. 16. Heb. 8. 1 2 9. 7 8 9 10 11. Rom. 3 25. 1 Iohn 2. 2. Heb. 3. 18. 4. 1. the Prtiests Altars Sacrifices Propitiatory were all types of Christ his Priest-hood and Sacrifice and the Land of Canaan a type of Heaven the Lord leading the Iewes by the help of earthly things to heavenly and spirituall because they were but young and tender which was one cause why the Covenant was more obscure heavenly things being wrapt up under earthly But in the new Covenant Christ is offered to be seene with open face the truth substance and body of the things themselves is exhibited and all vaile of figures removed our minds are streight directed to heavenly blessednesse 4. The variety of administration doth offer a fourth difference Gal. 4. 12. 3. 13 25. for the Apostle compares the Nation of the Iewes to an heire as yet an Infant that is under Tutours and Governours The Christian Church to an heire come to ripe yeares And from this ariseth a fifth difference That as an heire not Gal. 5. 1. come to yeares not differing from a servant the Church was held under the Ceremoniall Law from which they that believe in Christ are delivered after the expiration of the time of nourture appointed of the Father Sixthly they differ in the number of them that are called to the participation of the Covenant The Covenant of promise was at Deut. 30. 8. Math. 10. 1 6. 15. 24. first concluded within the Families of the Patriarkes the rest having excommunicated themselves and then within the confines or limits of Iudea that in the Iewes there might be a most illustrious type of Election and of rejection in the Gentiles that is of the Church of God and Sathan But the partition wall betwixt Iew Gentile being broken downe the Covenant of grace was made with all Nations Seventhly the efficacy of Christ promised is lesser then of Christ Gen. 2● 18. Deut. 19. 8 9. exhibited In the Covenant of promise certaine promises concerning corporall blessings were made unto the Fathers and externall blessings were more esteemed as Symbols of spirituall and heavenly But under the New Covenant blessings spirituall and the gifts and graces of the Spirit are in more ample and plentifull manner powred upon the Church Remission of sinnes though it was certaine with God was lesse felt under the Covenant of Promise because the cloud of the Law put betwixt the mercy of God and the eye of the sould the grace of God was more obscurely revealed and the meanes of expiating sinne by the death of Christ as also because remission of sinnes was not really obtained by our surety for as yet he had not made the satisfaction promised The Spirit was powred in lesse plenty upon the faithfull because Ioh 3. 34. Ioh. 1. 16. 7. 38 39. Ioel ● 28. that benefit was to be reserved to the times of Christ who was first to receive the Spirit above measure in his humane nature and thence to derive grace unto all us The Iewes as heires were partakers of the Spirit of Adoption bu tempered with the sprit of Servitude because they were Infants under the yoke of the Law Rom 8. 15. Gal 46. the way to heaven not as yet clearely manifested But the heire come to ripe yeares is altogether led by the Spirit of Adoption The sense of future glory was also more obscure because there is more obscure mention of it and of the way thereunto in the Old Testament If we speake of some particular persons under the first Covenant they were endued with greater gifts of the Spirit then many under the New but more light of knowledge and greater plenty and abundance of Grace is bestowed upon the Church in the time of the Gospell if we respect the body of the Church and faithfull in Generall Eighthly the seales of the Covenant of promise were in number more in signification more obscure in use painfull and burdensome peculiar to some people as the Covenant was and to continue only untill the time of reformation But the seales of the New Testament are in number few in signification cleare in use easy common to all nations and to endure for ever And from
God then made knowne to men And if we take the Land of Canaan properly and literally it was not the everlasting Inheritance of Israell absolute but relative not for ever but for a long time prescribed of God even untill the time of Reformation But if we looke to the thing signified it is an everlasting inheritance to the spirituall seed These promises were freely made of grace and of meere grace the blessings promised were conferred upon the seed Fot Abraham Josh 24. 2. himselfe was an Idolater when it pleased God to call him out of Vr of the Chaldees and to make these rich promises unto him And as Abrahams calling was of grace so are all the promises made unto him when he was first called The wages is due unto him Rom. 4. 4. that worketh upon desert but the inheritance was given to Abraham by promise Abraham believed God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse Gen. 15. 6. And if faith be reckoned to Abraham for righteousnesse he hath not to glory before God We reade indeed the Lord said unto Rom. 4. 2. Abraham for because thou hast done this thing and hast not with-held Gen. 22. 16 17 thy Sonne thine only Sonne That in blessing I will blesse thee c. But the same promise God had formerly made to Abraham and faith in these promises was the cause of his obedience therfore his obedience was not the cause why God gave the promise An occasion or antecedent it might be of the renewing of the promise at this time but it was no cause of the promise it selfe nor of the accomplishment For that whitout which and before which the promise was could not be a cause of the promise or the good promised Besides the basis and foundation of this promise is Christ whose incarnation could not be merited by Abrahams obedience The particle because is a note of order and consequence shewing to whom the promise did pertaine not of the cause why it was made or the good promised should be performed If it be said the good promised to Abraham is called a reward Gen. 15. 1 2. The answer is the word reward sometimes doth import nothing but an absolute and free gift of God though no action went before to which recompence was due as Gen. 30. 18. Leah saith God hath given me my reward because I have given my handmaid to my husband Psal 127. 4. Children are the Inheritance of the Genbrard in Psal 126. Lord and the fruite of the wombe is his reward There is a reward of a debt such as is due to the workeman for his labour upon desert and a reward of grace such as God giveth to them who labour in well-doing according to promise A reward is given to the worker of free grace but not for his worke as the procuring or deserving cause There is a relation of order and consequence betwixt the worke and the reward that the one goeth before and the other followeth but not a proportion of equiparancie price Ali● est compe●satio qu● pr●●no redditur aliud Alia qua propter unum redditur aliud Psal 18. 20. or degrees that the one should match or purchase the other A recompence is given to obedience as comfort and solace to them that suffer for well-doing but it is not given for their obedience as wages to the labourer or lands and possessions for the price paid in hand Reward is sometimes called retribution but in Scripture not only the reward of good or evill but simply good or evill done is thereby signified though nothing went before to deserve or procure it Thou hast shewed this day how thou hast dealt Gen. 50. 15. 1 Sam. 24. 18. well with me If I have rewarded evill unto him that was at peace with me The Lord hath dealt bountifully with me He hath Psal 7. ●● Psal 1● 6. Psal 103. 10. 116. 7. Psal 114. 17. 142. 7. Isa 3. 9. 2 Sam. 16. 36. Psal 103. 2. Judg. 9. 16. Verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quod vulgò redditur retribuere non semper significat parpari referre seu idem repon●re nimirum beneficium pro beneficio injuriam pro injuria sed etiam priorem con●erre in aliquem vel bonum hoc est benefacere c. Kinch ad vers 4 c. 3. Jo●l Mius in Psal 13. 6. not dealt with us after our sinnes nor rewarded us after our iniquities Deale bountifully with thy servant And if a benefit freely vouchsafed be called a retribution the retribution promised and of grace conferred upon the workers of righteousnesse doth not inferre dignity or worth in the work rewarded For when God doth performe his promise of meere grace he is said to retribute not that he oweth any thing to any man or that he can receive any that hath the reason of a benefit but because he doth good unto them according as of his rich grace he was pleased to promise And if God be said to render or repay a reward thence it will not follow that good works can merit ought at the hands of God for the word is of farre larger signification and imports no more sometimes but to restore to one that which was his own before as Matth. 22. 21. Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars Luk. 9. 42. It is said of the child that our Saviour healed he restored him to his father Luk. 4. 20. He gave againe the booke to the Minister Sometimes it is to give without respect to merit or desert as Matth. 27. 58. Pilate commanded the body to be given unto him Acts 4. 33. With great power the Apostles gave testimony of the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ Numb 3. 3. 36. 2. 2 Chron. 6. 23. where the Hebrew hath nothing but give the Septuagint translate it render or repay Moreover it signifieth to repay according to vow or promise as is to be seen in many places of Scripture Deut. 23. 21. Psal 22. 26. Psal 50. 14. 116. 12 17. Hos 14. 2. Joh. 2. 10. Nah. 1. 15. That a company of miscreant wretches should be beloved saved and a Sonne shine reason cannot reach it religion doth not desire it nature doth not require it justi●e doth not exact it only love hath done it In brief there is a retribution of justice strictly taken which is according to desert Jud. 1. 7. Jer. 32. 18. Exod. 22. 5 6. and there is a retribution of grace and bounty which is of favour according to promise as Ruth 2. 12. Prov. 13. 21. and 25. 22. not to adde that he that first doth good or evill is said to retribute Psal 137. 8. Psal 35. 12. So that if God be said to render or retribute according to our righteousnesse it is not in respect of the worthinesse of our deeds as if they deserved it but of his free promise and rich mercy whereby he hath bound himself to accept of our sincere obedience
snatchers by and by all that have judgement understand men of wicked life But when it is said that the Kingdome of Heaven suffereth violence and that Matth. 11. 12. the violent catch it away it is easie to know that this violence and catching falleth not into the lot of the wicked Likewise the word profane soundeth in all mens eares some foule and damnable thing but when it is said the Priests profane the Sabbath and Matth. 12. 5. are guiltlesse all know that it is no word of reproach But to reture to the matter to impute is either to acknowledge that which is truly in one to be his indeed and to attribute it to him or else to attribute that to one which indeed is not his In generall it is to transcribe or transferre and put over the cause of any thing to any one So Vlpian in lege 1. parag Item quaeritur de separat Sibi imputent quo minus idoncum fide jussorem acceperint id est ascribant tribuant Item apud jurisconsult Imputare significat acceptum seu expensum ferre ut imputare sibi debet qui credulus fuit Legum 1. § dolu●●ff ●o per quem factum To impute then is to ascribe a matter good or evill or the cause thereof to any one which he hath or hath not The imputation of an evill is two-fold just and due when the evill imputed or the cause thereof is in the subject to which it is imputed so sin is imputed to him that hath committed it and folly to him that hath not spoken that which is right Job 42. 8. and the debt is imputed to him that undertooke to make payment or give satisfaction Unjust or undeserved when the evill or cause thereof is not in the subject as when a fault is imputed to an innocent and punishment inflicted upon him that neither offended in his own person nor undertooke to be surety for the offendor 1 Sam. 1. 16. Gen. 38. 15. Plin. lib. 8. cap. 1. The imputation of a good thing is done three wayes by right grace and injustice because law justice and right is opposed to injustice and grace But here it must be noted that its one thing to say a man is reputed just another to say this or that thing is imputed for righteousnesse a man is reputed just but not imputed just reputation is spoken of the concrete imputation of the abstract imputation is the cause reputation the effect Imputation by debt or right is when that which is inherent in the subject or due to it is imputed as wages counted of debt to him that worketh But many things due cannot be said to be imputed unlesse the word imputation be taken improperly for giving or acknowledgement as we should improperly be said to impute glory to God for to give or acknowledge Imputation by injustice is when righteousnesse of quality or fact is imputed to an unjust man and he is acquitted contrary to law Imputation by grace when righteousnesse is imputed to them that be unjust in themselves and the guilty is acquitted not of debt but of grace yet not against justice but upon just and equall considerations Righteousnesse also is put either for some one individuall righteous act done after a manner pleasing and acceptable unto God which is called the righteousnesse of the fact or it is put for universall righteousnesse which is either the matter of justification or at least the thing required on our part to justification and is called the righteousnesse of the person which latter is here to be understood as is more at large to be shewed hereafter Now from all that hath been spoken it followeth 1. That perfect and strict righteousnesse of quality or work inherent is and ought to be imputed of justice to the subject in whom it is but by gracious estimation it cannot be imputed in the place or roome of righteousnesse inherent for what is accounted by grace that either is not in the subject or it is not really that in the roome and steed whereof it is accounted 2. Works of righteousnesse done in faith after a manner pleasing and acceptable unto God are of grace imputed to the doer for just and righteous actions the imperfections that cleave unto them being freely pardoned Not that works are able to beare the exact triall of the Law or can stand as the matter of justification before the Lord but that God in Christ is pleased to accept of our works as good and pleasant our persons being accepted in his beloved and the weaknesse of our works covered by his intercession Thus Phinehas his executing of judgement was imputed to him for righteousnesse Psal 106. 31. Deue. 6. 25. And thus we reade This shall be our righteousnesse before the Lord our God if we take heed to keepe all those Commandements Thou shalt restore him the pledge when the Sunne Deut. 24. 13. goeth downe that he may sleepe in his raiment and blesse thee and it shall be righteousnesse unto thee before the Lord thy God 3. Faith or beliefe may truly be imputed for or unto righteousnesse as it is the sole working instrument and relative action required on our part in the Covenant of grace unto free justification For by faith alone in Christ through the meere grace and mercy of God we obtaine full pardon and remission of all our sins and so our works come to be acceptable in Gods sight 4. The righteousnesse of one being of grace accepted for or imputed to another is righteousnesse imputative but this stands not in a bare opinion or naked estimation without reality or truth but in a reall donation and communicating of righteousnesse unto him that is esteemed just True it is righteousnesse imputative is not inherent in them unto whom it is imputed as in the subject but it is made theirs by right of donation 5. It may also be noted that the word Imputation hath reference to some other thing and commonly commeth in betwixt two things the one the thing which is imputed the other that Tertul. advers Gent. Cap. 30 Ita nomen ●mendationi imputatur Sen. ad Mart. Magno autori suo imputata Tacit. 1. Hist Otho Imp. Quis mihi plurimum imputet whereunto it is imputed so that imputation hath relation unto both And to make this manifest we may consider these three phrases The first is The obedience of Christ is imputed unto justification conformable to that saying of the Apostle By the obedience of one man many are made righteous The second phrase is Faith is imputed unto righteousnesse The third is Righteousnesse is imputed unto life The equivalent whereof we have Rom. 4. 11. 5. 17 18. In the first phrase imputation is betwixt Christs obedience as the thing which is imputed and justification as the end whereunto it is imputed and it hath reference In the second phrase imputation commeth in betwixt faith as the thing which is imputed and righteounesse as the
from all his sins and accepted of God as righteous unto life which is called righteousnesse of the person Faith is not imputed for righteousnesse in respect of the worth or dignity of faith either in habit or act but in respect of it's office whereunto it is ordained in the Covenant of Grace as it doth imbrace Christ and thereby we are made partakers of the merits of his free and willing and perfect obedience to the command of Grace Faith is accounted for righteousnesse in regard of the object and is a cause of that Justification which is of grace A cause I say not a bare condition without which the thing cannot be bu● a cause not meritorious or materiall but instrumentall only receiving Christ promised and offered in the word of grace For Rom. 3 22. Phil. 3. 9. howsoever our righteousnesse be called the righteousnesse of the faith of Jesus or by the faith of Jesus faith it selfe is never called our righteousnesse We reade that Christ is made unto us of God 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 5. 19. Rom. 10. 4. righteousnesse that by one mans obedience many are made righteous that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth that the believer is justified by him and by faith in him obtaineth remission of sins We find also by conference A● God did predestinate Christ of grace to this honour of being God in fellowship of person and of being the Prince of out salvation So God in the Covenant he did make with him and the commandment he gave him of laying downe his life did strike it and fulfill it of grace not requiring any thing of his Son more then duties of freeobedience which should of grace have acceptance c. Bain Col. 1. 19. of Scriptures that to be justified by faith and to be justified by Christ is in substance all one And what can be the sence of those places but this that Christ is the meritorious and materiall cause so to speake of our Justification faith the condition and instrument whereby we receive Christ made of God our righteousnesse The Apostle making comparison betwixt the first and second Adam sheweth that as sin commeth from Adam alone unto us all as he in whom we have all sinned So from Jesus Christ alone commeth righteousnesse to all that are in him as from him that hath satisfied the justice of God and performed gratefull obedience at the commandment of grace for them all In which comparison faith never hath the place of our righteousnesse but answers in our participation of righteousnesse in Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers in the sin of Adam For as we were one with Adam and in respect of orignall and nature were in him and one with him and so by being in him and one with him did all in him and with him transgresse the commandment of God even so in respect of faith whereby onely we are united unto Christ and spiritually made one with him and ingrafted into him we all in him did satisfie the justice of God or are made partakers of the fruit and benefit of his satisfaction Thus our union with Christ and meanes thereof is alwaies to be distinguished from our communion with him in the participation of his righteousnesse as the fruit thereof Like as our being in Adam and one with him is to be distinguished from the fruit thereof which is communion with him in the participation of his transgression If faith be only the hand whereby we put on Christ both as a justifier and sanctifier then it is not the garment of righteousnesse wherewith we are cloathed But it is only the hand whereby we put on Christ as a garment Gal. 3. 27. Rom. 13. 13 14. Faith justifieth as it imbraceth the righteousnesse of God But Christ only is the righteousnesse of God allowed and ordained of God to be our righteousnesse In the third to the Romans and elsewhere oft we meet with this phrase We are justified by faith Now in the fifth Chapter of that Epistle vers 17. it is said that we shall raigne in life through Jesus Christ and verse 19. that by his obedience we shall be made righteous What in the first place is called Justification and Salvation by faith that in the other is called making righteous and raigning in life through Christ and him believed on And so we reade that of faith and by faith and through faith we are justified but we never reade for faith we Rom. 3. 30. 5. 1. are justified Act. 3. 16. First Peter saith His name hath made this man sound through faith in his name And then the faith which is by him hath given to him this disposition of body Is it not plain here that ●aith hath healed him is as much as his name or Christ believed on hath healed him the one phrase expounding the other Christ brought in everlasting righteousnesse into the world Dan. 9. 24. But faith was in the world before the comming of Christ in the flesh Heb. 11. 2. And the Spirit of God in Scripture evidently distinguisheth betwixt faith and Christ apprehended by faith saying The Fathers who believed received not the promise that is Christ the matter of the promise and consequently of righteousnesse Faith they had received but the promise they had not received because Christ in whom their blessednesse was promised was not exhibited in their daies For all b● it by faith they apprehended Christ ●●●cified to come and the righteousnesse which he was to bring unto the world at his comming yet that righteousnesse in the substance and matter of it was never brought into the world So that the very designing of a precise time for the bringing in of our righteousnesse into the world declareth that that righteousnesse materiall is to be distinguished from faith which was in the world in all ages before it was brought in For faith was in the world and did apprehend righteousnesse which was to be brought into the world long before it came as well as now long after that righteousnesse performed it can lay hold upon it to justification For the faith of Gods children before the day of Christ and the faith of Gods children now after the day of Christ did never nor yet doth apprehend any other righteousnesse but that which in that day was brought into the world For it is as easie to faith to apprehend righteousnesse to come as it is to lay hold on righteousnesse past or by-gone like as our faith apprehendeth many things yet to come as our glorification Vorstius and his followers expound this Text in this sence Rom. 3. 28. Gal. 2. 16. Rom. 4. 5. Faith that is repentance conversion and new obedience is accounted for righteousnesse that is in the place or stead of legall righteousnesse or exact obedience though it be not so indeed And so they freely confesse Justification by works which the Apostle saith is
by faith without the works of the Law But that they might not seeme directly to crosse the Apostle they say we are not justified by the works of the Law that is exact and every way perfect whereunto wages is due by debt but by works of grace graciously esteemed for righteousnesse when in the rigour of the Law it is not exact and perfect righteousnesse But first we reade that God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation Rom. 3. 24 25. by faith in his bloud that by the faith of Jesus we might receive remission of sinnes but we find not that he hath ordained Christ to be a propitation through works that by works we should be saved And if God have not taught any such manner of Justification it is not for us to receive it We reade of two waies of Justification by faith and works but of a third manner by faith and works both as joynt causes or con-causes we find nothing in Scripture Secondly By the doctrine of faith we are bound to acknowledge and confesse that Christ Jesus by his eternall Priest-hood is not only the sole meritorious cause of all grace or righteousnesse inherent requisite to finall absolution but these presupposed in the party to be absolved he is likewise the sole immediate cause of finall absolution or justification Without observation in some measure to all the Commandments of God we cannot enter into the kingdome of heaven but we enter not for the obedience we have performed To what use then doth our inherent righteousnesse or observance of Gods commandements serve us If it hath been sincere and ●●fained though imperfect yet the faith that brought it forth will make a sincere and faithfull plea for mercy in the day of tryall in which he that hath been an hearer only and no doer of the Law or hath done in part what God would have done but not sincerely nor faithfully shall not be heard Our imperfect obedience then is not the immediate cause of our absolution but the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ By the immediate and next cause we understand such a cause as is necessarily accompanied by the effect and without whose participation the effect never doth nor can be-fall any such a cause as whosoever is partaker of is by participation of it forth-with absolved such a cause as who so can probably hope to be partaker of he may upon the same degrees of probability hope for finall absolution such a cause as who so doubts or feares least he shall never be partaker of in this life must upon the same termes doubt or despaire of his absolution or salvation But if workes be accounted for the exact righteousnesse of the Law unto us not the obedience of Christ received by faith but the works of holinesse in us are the absolute cause of remission of sins and acceptance unto life And what else doe the words sound as they be interpreted but that as exact obedience to the Law should have been the matter or cause of Justification from justice so sincere obedience by the estimation of grace is the matter of Justification by grace They will say I know faith and workes are onely the condition without which remission cannot be obtained but faith is not a bare condition without which the thing cannot be for that is no cause at all but an instrumentall cause and workes if they be any cause of Justification instrumentall they cannot be but the matter whereupon and for which we are justified or accounted righteous Workes doe not embrace Christ but if causes of Justification they must challenge to themselves and therefore how faith and workes should be conjoyned as con-causes in Justification it is impossible to conceive seeing the one that is faith attributes all In eo q●od solvimus est aliqu●●atio meriti to the free-grace of God the other that is workes challenge to themselves the one will aspire no higher but to be the instrumentall cause of free remission the other can sit no lower but to be the matter of Justification if any cause at all For if works be accounted to us in the roome or place of exact obedience in free Justification doe they not supply the place are they not advanced to the dignity of works compleate and perfect in Justification from justice 3. If faith with workes be accepted for righteousnesse to Justification then faith justifieth not as it imbraceth the promises of mercy and by it we partake in the merits of Christs death and obedience but as it doth give assent to the truth of the Gospell and adhere and sticke to the Commandements for in that sense it is an act or exercise commanded in the Gospell and not only as it doth receive Christ and the promise of forgivenesse But in Scripture every where faith in Christ in the Lord Jesus or the Gal. 3. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 24. bloud of Christ is said to justifie not faith in other promises threatnings or Commandements 4. How can it be proved that in the matter of Justification the Apostle doth oppose faith to workes exactly perfect and compleat only and not to the workes of grace done according to the prescription of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to be a rule how people in Covenant ought to walke To him that worketh Rom. 4. 4 saith he the wages is of debt but he that worketh is not only perfectly just but he that is mercenarie that is to him that worketh for his reward as if the reward should be given him for his worke For thus the Apostle argues When wages is given to an hireling or mercenary it is of debt But Justification or life is not given of debt but of grace Therefore it is not given to him that worketh or to the mercenary Properly God oweth nothing to him that fulfilleth the Law either exactly or sincerely when they doe nothing but their duty and there is no proportion betwixt God and them but because they seeke righteousnesse and life by workes if God should retribute to them a reward he should be thought to doe it as it were of debt The Law was given to be a rule of direction to them that be in Covenant and workes of the Law are workes done according to that prescription which the Apostle here excludes from being any cause of Justification though he that walkes according to this Law being not an hearer but a doer of the Law is blessed in his deed But of this more at large in the next Chapter 5. Consider the opposition which the Apostle makes betwixt his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law and the righteousnesse Phil. 3. 9. which is of God by faith I count all things saith he but as d●ng that I might winne Christ and be found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith If then the righteousnesse of
shall be joyned to the Lord in that day and shall be my people and I will dwell in the midst of them and thou shalt know that the Lord of Hosts hath sent me unto thee The Prophets describe the Psal 11. 1. Messiah to be the Sonne of David and Davids Lord The Lord said unto my Lord The Chaldee hath it The Lord said unto his Psal 110. 1. Word namely the Messiah or Christ who is the eternall Word of God by whom he made and doth conserve all things And in other places the Paraphrasts put the Word of God for God or Lord and that sometimes when the second person in Trinity is not necessarily to be understood and Isai 1. 14. my soul Targ. my word Jer. 1. 8. I am with thee Targ. my word Isai 45. 17. By the Lord. Targ. By the word of the Lord. Gen. 3. 8. The voice of the Lord. Targ The voice of the word of the Lord or the word the Lord Gen. 22 15 1● I have sworne by my selfe Targ By my word Psal 103. 13. The Lord. Targ. The word of the Lord. Psal 16. 1. In thee Chald. In thy word Psal 103. 18. The Lord hath Targ. The word of the Lord. Gen. 31. 24. God came to La●an Targ. The word came So Gen. 20. 3. Gen. 28. 15. I will be with thee Targ. my word shall be thy help Hos 1. 7. I will save them by the Lord their God Chald. I will redeeme them by the word of God their Lord. sometimes the word or promise they so render as Psal 119. 76. According to thy word unto thy servant where the Chaldee hath Memar And so Psal 130. 5. And in thy Word or promise I trust But if the second person be not ever meant by the word of God as the Paraphrast useth it yet certainly in many places it must be so understood and that this word was to be incarnate was most certainly fore-told Psalm 102. 11 26. Heb. 1. 10. For the very literall meaning of the Psalmist will enforce thus much that this place was to be meant of God not simply or absolutely but of God incarnate For the eternall duration of the God-head is not measurable by daies or yeares but the incarnation of the Sonne of God or his duration in the flesh may be accounted by number of yeares for the time past yet are his yeares as man to continue without end without any decay or diminution of that nature which he assumed And Psal 68. 19. Psal 103. 13 14 15 16 17. Tit. 3. 3 4 5 6 7. if out of any one place of the Psalmes where he doth intreat of the deliverance of the Church it doe appeare that the Messiah is true and very God by the same reason wheresoever he speaks of the deliverance of the Church God and the Messiah shall be the same But it is most certaine in sundry passages he that is God is also the Messiah And for that reason what is spoken of the mercy of God in the Psalme following may be understood not of the mercy of God absolutely or considered in the God-head only but the mercy of God to be incarnate to be made King and Judge of the earth which may be cleared by the very letter and circumstance of the text For the expected comfort whereupon this Psalmist pitcheth is this The Lord hath prepared his throne in the heavens vers 18. and his Kingdome ruleth over all And this is that Kingdom and that throne which Daniel fore-told that God long after his time would erect Da. 2. 44. To be born of God what is it but to Joh. 1. 12 13. be born of immortall seed what is that immortal seed wherof St Peter saith we are born again but the flesh and bloud of the Son of Isai 40. 6 7 ● man who is also the Son of God whose flesh is meat indeed whose bloud is drinke indeed which nou●isheth us not to a bodily but to 1 Pet. 1. 23 14. a spirituall and immortall life which presupposeth an immortall seed We are begotten and borne againe by the preaching of the Word as by the instrument or meanes and by the the eternall word that is by Christ himselfe as by the proper and efficient cause of our new-birth Thus much St Peters words in that place will enforce us to grant according to the letter For having before declared that the word of God by which we are borne againe doth live and endure for ever he thus concludes and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you 1 Pet. 1. 25. Moses also and the Prophets did fore-tell that the Messiah or mercifull one or gracious Saint as he is called Psal 16. 10. should Psal 8. 6. H●b ● 7. Psal 16. 10 Deut. 18. 15 16 17 18 19. Psal 110. 1 2 3. be made for a little time lower then Angels and after crowned with glory and honour and set over the works of the Lords hands that he should suffer death and rise againe be laid in the grave but not see corruption That he should be the great Doctour of the Church a Priest after the order of Melchisedech the King of Kings and Lord of Lords whom God would set upon his holy hill of Sion His death and resurrection Kingdome and Priesthood was prefigured by the Sacrifices and Serpent the Priest hood of Aaron and Kingdom of Israel But of these things more fully in the new Covenant This Covenant was made in Christ the promised Messiah in and through whom the faithfull obtained the blessings promised but according to the administration of this Covenant Moses was the Mediatour and herewith in this expression is embellished above the former The Law was ordained by Angels in the hand L●v. 26 46. Deut. 5. 5. 27. 28. of a Mediatour Gal. 3. 19. that is by the labour and ministery of Moses which though some do●●t of is yet confirmed from this that Christ reserves himselfe to be a Mediatour of a better Testament Heb. 8. 6. There is but one Mediatour true and spirituall scil Christ but Moses was a Mediatour only typicall The Mediation whereby men are truly and effectually united unto Christ cannot fall upon any person who is not endued with infinite power and vertue who is not God as well as man but the Mediation of Moses was of this use to shew what was the true manner of worshipping God but did not inspire force and power to follow it nor reconcile men to God but propound those things whence it might easily appeare that there is need of another reconciliation Moses an Israelite and part of that people with whom God made the Covenant was comprehended under the one part confederate but as he undertook the function of Mediatour imposed upon him of God he was not now simply an Israelite but a Mediatour interceding betwixt God and the people Israel that he might be a more illustrious type of Christ Moses was
called in as a Mediatour on both parts On Gods when he called him up to receive the Law and all that message which God sent unto the people on the peoples when they desired him to receive the Law and they would doe it Further never was mortall man more neer unto God to whom for this end he is said to appear face to face He called Abraham friend but Moses was Gods favourite Deut. 5 5 27. Againe no man either in love knowledge authority so neere the people which makes them idolize him unto this day Moses thus constituted a Mediatour did first as a Mediatour prevaile with God for the suspending of his justice that it should not breake out upon the people for their failing in highest degrees in morall obedience Secondly with the people he prevailed to bind them in Covenant unto God and make profession of that obedience Exod. 24. 4 5 6. which the Lord did require and call for Thirdly he was never denied any thing from God which was for the good of that people though God denied some of his requests for himself but what was needfull for the good of that people specially spirituall Deut. 9. 18 19 20 21. and 10. 10. and eternall that was procured by the bloud and mediation of Christ blessed for ever The Law was given to one Nation whom God did chuse to Ez●k 16. 8. Psal 147. 19 20. be his peculiar people scil Israel with whom God entred into Covenant and it became his He sheweth his Word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel He hath not dealt so with any nation and as for his judgements they have not knowne them Therefore they have not knowne the Judgements because God did not make them manifest unto them as we say a place is full of darknesse because the Sunne doth not enlighten it with his beames Not that God is the efficient cause of their darknesse but that he doth not hinder or remove the cause of their ignorance or he doth not shine upon them by the revelation of his Word That the earth is lightsome this it oweth to the Sunne but that it is darksome to it selfe God is the Authour of all good the cause of our faith but ignorance and infidelity are of our selves And these words He hath not dealt so doe import a meere negation and not a similitude they deny the thing it selfe and not the manner of Psal 76. 1. Rom. 3. 2. the thing alone as might be proved by many instances but this may plentifully suffice that in the whole Scripture we shall never find this phrase to note a negation of the manner of the thing but a negation of the thing it selfe So that this is the meaning of the Prophet He hath not dealt so with any Nation that is he hath not revealed his Statutes and Judgements unto them This Covenant God made not only with the Fathers whom he brought out of the Land of Egypt 〈◊〉 with their posterity Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord your God your Captaines Deut. 29. 10 11 12. of your tribes your Elders and your Officers with all the men of Israel your little ones your wives and thy stranger that is in thy campe from the hewer of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water That thou shouldest enter into Covenant which the Lord thy God maketh with thee this day Neither with you only doe I make this Covenant and this Oath ver 14 15. but with him that standeth here with us this day before the Lord our God and also with him that is not here with us this day And that it might be the better established he gave speciall charge and commandement that the words which he had spoken by Moses and the Prophets should be publikely read often inculcated and expounded unto them and that all his visitations of this people whether in mercy whilst they obeyed his voice or in judgement for their disobedience should be registred to remain Deut. 4. 10. and 6. 6 7 8. Psal 78. 6 7 8. upon record as so many ruled cases and presidents and published and rehearsed unto their children that they might learne to set their hope in God and not forget his Commandements But this Covenant was so made with the Jewes that if any stranger amongst them or neere adjoyning Heathen did turne unto the Lord he was not to be excluded When a stranger shall sojourne Exod. 12. 48. Deut. 23. 15 16. with thee and will keep the Passeover to the Lord let all his males be circumcised and then let him come neere and keep it and he shall be as one that is borne in the Land for no uncircumcised person shall eate thereof The good things promised in this Covenant are temporall or spirituall but the temporall as types of spirituall First God promised to give them the Land of Canaan for their inheritance and therein length of dayes riches and honour victory over their enemies protection and peace If ye shall diligently keep all these Deut. 11. 22 23 24 25. and 1. 8 39. Commandements which I command you to doe them to love the Lord your God to walk in all his wayes and to cleave unto him Then will the Lord drive out all these nations from before you and ye shall possesse greater nations and mightier then your selves Every place Deut. 4. 1 38. and 6. 18 19. whereon the soles of your feet shall tread shall be yours from the wildernesse and Lebanon from the river the river Euphrates even unto the utmost sea shall your coasts be There shall no man be able to stand before you for the Lord your God shall lay the feare of you and the dread of you upon all the Land that ye shall tread upon as he hath said Thou shalt keep therefore his Statutes and his Commandements which I command thee this day that it may goe well with thee and with Deut. 4. 40. thy children after thee and that thou maist prolong thy dayes upon the earth which the Lord thy God giveth thee for ever And it shall be and ● 33. and 6. 3. when the Lord thy God shall have brought thee into the Land which he sware unto thy Fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob to give Deut. 6. 10 11. thee great and goodly Cities which thou buildedst not and houses full of all good things which thou filledst not and wels digged which thou diggedst not Vine-yards and Olive-trees which thou plantedst not c. Wherefore it shall come to passe if ye hearken unto these judgements and keep and doe them That the Lord thy God shall keep unto Deut. 7 12 13 14 15. thee the Covenant and the mercy which he sware unto thy Fathers And he will love thee and blesse thee and multiply thee he will also blesse the fruit of thy wombe and the fruit of thy Land thy Corne and thy Wine and thine oile
his power kept them by faith unto Salvation Though the house of David lost the Kingdome and government in Israel yet God preserved his posterity untill Christ came in whom the throne of David was established for ever for this was absolutely promised But the temporall glory of Davids house and the peace of Israel was changed because they changed the ordinances neglected the charge and brake the Commandements of God If his sonnes forsake my Law and walke not in my Psal 89. 31 32 judgements If they prophane my statutes and keep not my Commandements Then will I visit his transgressions with the rod and his sin with scourges If ye turne away and forsake my statutes and my Commandements 2 Chron. 7. 19 20 21 22. which I have set before you and shall goe and serve other gods and worship them Then will I pluck them up out of my Land which I have given them and this House which I have sanctified for my Name will I cast out of my sight and will make it to be a Proverbe and a common talke among all people And this House which is most high shall be an astonishment to every one that passeth by it so that he shall say Why hath the Lord done thus to this Land and to this House And they shall answer Because they forsooke the Lord God of their Fathers which brought them out of the Land of Egypt and have taken Sep. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hould on other gods and have worshipped them and served them therefore hath he brought all this evill upon them Davids heart was not perfect with the Lord in the matter of Vriah and for that cause the sword of God never departed from his house When Solom●n waxed old and gave his heart to pleasure his outlandish wives inticed him to Idolatry and the Lord rent ten tribes from the house of David In after times the house of David fell away more and more the Priests neglected the charge of God and the people grew prophane obstinate impenitent and then the Lord abhorred his people was wroth with his heritage and gave his glory unto the enemies hand Jerusalem was laid wast and desolate the Temple burnt with fire the Princes led captive and made tributary the aged were despised the young men made slaves and bond men maidens d●floured and children dashed against the walles They were slaine with the sword burnt up with famine languished through oppression misery and sorrow had in contempt and derision daily but there was none to pittie or comfort them Neverthelesse the promise of God was firme and sure to all the seed in respect of the things absolutely promised for the infidelity of man cannot make the faith of God of none effect Hence we learne two things are to be considered in the Covenant 1. The persons in Covenant according to the externall administration or according to the effectuall purpose and internall administration 2. The good things promised not only temporall but spirituall For they are either such as are absolutely necessary to salvation or such as concerne the welfare of a Christian his peace joy chearfull and constant walking with God without offence and such like To the first sort the promises of the Covenant are made sincerely but conditionally If they doe well they shall be accepted if they consent and obey they shall inherit the good things of the Land To the other being effectually called all other promises are made absolutely or at least shall absolutely be made good because God will give them to doe what he requireth Effectuall calling is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy It is wrought freely effectually certainly but when where and as the Lord will not conditionally nor according to promise to this or that person God promiseth he will preserve his Church and uphold the seed of David but to this or that person God hath not promised that he shall be brought home or gathered to the flock The Covenant made presupposeth man called and taking hold of the Covenant it doth not promise that he shall be effectually wrought upon and powerfully drawne to lay hould upon the promise Faith is the gift of God which he giveth as he pleaseth but to the believer he assureth all other necessary good things with continuance in faith according to his free Covenant Of good things spirituall there be two sorts as was said some absolutely necessary as faith repentance pardon of sinne perseverance eternall life and these are all most certainly promised and assuredly conferred And though Justification and eternall life be conditionall promised unto and so bestowed upon the unfained beleever yet may they be called absolute because God giveth to the man in Covenant every thing necessary to Salvation Other things are good in themselves and profitable as joy and chearfulnesse of heart deliverance from scandalous and reproachfull evils wounding conscience and grieving the Spirit And these are not promised nor evermore bestowed upon the faithfull David may be an instance hereof He was not preserved from sinne-wasting conscience and staining the soul but was recovered from the danger thereof To repent of the sinne and to be pardoned of free grace was necessary to Salvation God therefore vouchsafed this sure mercy unto him To be kept from falling was not of that necessity God therefore suffered him to fall to cure pride of heart make him know himself and magnifie the riches of his grace in his recovery This is evident from this that in the Covenant as the Lord promised mercy which he performed so he threatned judgement and destruction against them that did disobey if they persisted obstinate and would not returne And therefore both in shewing mercy and inflicting punishment the Lord dealt according to promise Sometimes when the house of David sinned the Lord spared them but then he gave them hearts to humble themselves and so the judgement was prevented Thus saith the Lord Ye have forsaken me therefore have I also left you in the 2 Chron. 12. 5 6 7 8. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hands of Shishak Then the Princes of Israel and the King humbled themselves and said The Lord is just And when the Lord saw that they humbled themselves the word of the Lord came to Shemaiah saying They have humbled themselves therefore I will not destroy them but I will send them deliverance shortly and my wrath shall not be poured out upon Jerusalem by the hand of Shishak Neverthelesse they shall be his servants so shall they know my service and the service of the vers 12. Kings of the earth And because he humbled himself the wrath of the Lord turned from him that he would not destroy him altogether And also in Judah the things prospered Sometimes the Lord poured his wrath upon Judah and Jerusalem according as he threatned but he let them goe on in the stubbornnesse of their hearts
untill they had filled up the measure of their iniquity and till there was no remedy So he gave them into the enemies hand and suffered his Name to be polluted amongst the Heathen when he had tryed by all meanes to bring them home but they would not repent The Kingdome of David was for ever established and God preserved a Church and people unto himselfe according to his good pleasure for this was absolutely willed and foretold but performed according to promise of free grace and love Thus God is serious in all his Promises and Commandements according as he is pleased to give them and effectually brings to passe his own purpose of grace according to that which he hath promised With this promise they presse the Lord in their captivity Why dost thou forg●t Lam. 5. 20. 21. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 80. 4. Psal 126. 1 2. Psal 4. 7. us for ever and forsake us so long time Turn thou us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned renew our dayes as of old Turne us O God or restore us to wit from sorrow to joy from captivity to liberty cause thy face to shine that is to be light chearfull comfortable and we shall be saved CHAP. X. Of the Covenant that God made with Israel after the Babylonish Captivity WHen the people of Israel was almost cleane destroyed and wasted in the Babylonian Captivity the Lord by many ample promises did assure that he would deliver them out of the hands of their enemies and bring them again into their own land set up the tokens of his presence amongst them and delight in them to doe them good Comfort ye comfort ye my people saith Isai 4● 1 2. Gen. 34. 3. your God speake ye comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that h●r iniquity is pardoned for she hath received of the Lord double for all her sinnes that is she hath been punished enough and more then enough for her transgressions Jer. 1● 18. and 17. 18. Behold the Lord will c●me with strong hand and his arme will rule for him behold his reward is with him and his work before him He Revel 18. 6. Isai 40. ●0 1● shall feed his slock like a sheepherd he shall gather the Lambes with his arme and carry them into his bosome and shall gently leade those that are with young Feare not thou worme Jacob and ye men of Israel Isai 41. 14 15 16. I will help thee saith the Lord and thy Redeemer the holy One of Israel Behold I will make thee a new sharpe threshing instrument having teeth thou shalt thresh the mountaines and beat them small and shalt make the hils as chaffe Thou shalt fanne them and the wind Rev. 17. 14. and 19. 17. and 20. 8 9. shall carry them away and the whirlwind shall scatter them and thou sh●lt rejoyce in the Lord and shalt glory in the holy One of Israel When the poore and needy seek water and there is none and their tongue faileth for thirst I the Lord will heare them I the God of Israel will vers 18. 19. not forsake them I will open rivers in high places and fountaines in the midst of the vallies I will make the wildernesse a poole of water and the drie Land springs of water But now thus saith the Lord that created thee O Jacob and he that formed thee O Israel Feare not Isai 43. 1 2 3. for I have redeemed thee I have called thee by thy name thou art mine When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee and through the rivers they shall not overflow thee when thou walkest through the fire thou shalt not be burnt neither shall the flame kindle upon thee For I am the Lord thy God the Holy One of Israel thy Saviour I gave Egypt for thy ransome Ethiopia and Seba for thee Remember Isai 44. 21 22 23. these O Jacob and Israel for thou art my servant I have formed thee thou art my servant O Israel thou shalt not be forgotten of me I have blotted out as a thick cloud thy transgressions and as a cloud thy sinnes returne unto me for I have redeemed thee Sing O ye heavens for the Lord hath done it shoot ye lower parts of the earth breake forth into singing ye mountaines O Forrest and every tree therein for the Lord hath redeemed Jacob and glorified himselfe in Israel Th●● saith the Lord thy Redeemer and he that formed thee from the wombe vers ●4 I am the Lord that maketh all things that stretcheth forth the heavens above that spreadeth abroad the earth by my selfe That frustrateth 25. the tokens of the liars and maketh diviners mad that turneth wisemen backward and maketh their knowledge foolish That conf●rmeth the word of his servant and performeth the counsell of his messengers that saith to Jerusalem Thou shalt be inhabited and to the Cities of Iudah Ye shall be built and I will raise up the decayed places thereof That saith to the deep Be drie and I will drie up thy rivers That saith of Cyr●s He is my sheepherd and shall performe all my pleasure 〈◊〉 sayin Isai 45. ●● Jerusalem Thou shalt be built and to the Temple Thy foundation shall be laid Thus saith the Lord The labour of Egypt and merchandise Isai 45. 14 15. of Ethiopia and of the Sabeans men of stature shall come over unto thee and they shall be thine they shall come after thee in chaines they shall come over and they shall fall downe unto thee they shall make supplication unto thee saying Surely God is in thee and there is none else there is no God Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting ver 17. Salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Hearken unto me O house of Jacob and all the remnant of the house Isai 46. 3 4. of Israel which are borne by me from the belly which are carried from the wombe And even to your old age I am he and even to hoare haires will I carry you I have made and I will beare even I will carry and will deliver you I will bring neere my righteousnesse it shall not be vers 13. farre off and my Salvation shall not tarry and I will place Salvation in Sion for Israel my glory Goe ye forth of Babylon flee ye from the Isai 48. 20 21. Chaldean with a voice of singing declare ye tell this utter it even to the end of the earth say ye The Lord hath redeemed his servant Iacob And they thirsted not when he led them through the deserts he caused the waters to flow out of the rock for them he clave the rock also and the waters gushed out The promises to this purpose are very many and because it was an hard matter to perswade the faint and drooping spirit broken with long and grievous calamities the Lord is pleased
for then all must comprehend even those that sinne sins unto death amongst the rest unlesse we beleeve that there are no such sinners in the world and he had need be of a strong faith and have some extraordinary revelation that beleeveth that Then are we to pray for all and every Infidell obstinate rebellious person even the whole Kingdome of Antichrist that they might come to the knowledge of the truth but he must be a man of strong faith that can believe that God will give his Gospell to every of these in particular that they might come to the saving knowledge of the truth The distinction of antecedent and consequent will hath no place in this matter because such are to be understood as have most egregiously abused the common grace of God received Moreover we shall never find in Scripture that the faithfull ever made such prayers but as God hath signified his will and pleasure concerning the calling and gathering of his people Jews or Gentiles so they have prayed as we may pray for the fulnesse of the Gentiles and calling of the Jews wherein we doe not exclude any though Act. 5. 31. a●d 11. 18. we know God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and gives the grace of repentance and to repent also to whom he please the habituall grace serving for the one and the actuall and effectuall motion of Gods Spirit being requisite to the other Some pleade further The meanes to this end that men may have part in Christ are unlimited the word written Joh. 20. 31. and preached Act. 3. 24 25 26 27. yea a command to preach to every creature Mark 16. 15. which Paul understood and therefore warned every man and taught every man Col. 1. 18. to repent Act. 17. 30. and to beleeve Rom. 1. 5. But if all this be granted nothing will follow which is not freely granted For as on the one side no man will affirm that Christ died to this end namely to procure forgivenesse of sinne and Salvation to all and every one whether they beleeve or no so on the other side none will deny but that he died to this end that salvation and remission of sinnes should redound to all and every one in case they should beleeve and repent For this depends upon the sufficiencie of that price which Christ paid to God his Father for the redemption of the world No man denieth but God made a Covenant with Adam fallen and his posterity as now with the faithfull and their seed that all mankind had continued in this Covenant if they had not discovenanted themselves and their posterity that no man is deprived of the benefits of Christs death but through his own sinne and corruption that God is not the cause efficient or deficient of any mans infidelity but man himself That men are seriously invited to repent in the Ministery of the Word and that the promise of Salvation is faithfull and true so that he that beleeveth shall never perish These things be not questioned nor whether some effects or benefits of Christs death be common to all men but whether he died equally for all men to purchase actuall reconciliation for them on Gods part and set all Infants in the actuall state of salvation but to procure faith and beliefe for no man so that he had obtained the full immediate end of his death though no man had ever beleeved on him or been saved by him But that which is assumed in this argument is apparently false as it is applyed The Covenant of grace is revealed to some no man being shut forth by name but if he repent and beleeve he shall be saved but many thousands never heard of never had probable meanes to come to the knowledge of the Covenant The commandement to preach the Gospell to every creature was given to the Apostles in the dayes of grace upon the publication of which Covenant they which formerly served dumbe idols were bound to repent and beleeve but that commandement was peculiar to the Apostles not given till after the resurrection of Christ after such commandement the Apostles were injoyned to tarry for a time in Jerusalem nor could they possibly disperse themselves in a moment into every part of the world nor the world take notice of any such commandement given unto them or of the doctrine revealed by them Before that time the Lord suffered the Gentiles for a long time to walk in the vanity of their minds without the light of his truth and since that time divers nations have been cast off left to themselves as aliens from the Covenant and deprived of all meanes to come to the knowledge of God in Christ And if there were any force in this reason The meanes of grace be unlimited and command given to preach to every creature therefore Christ died for all men This must be of greater weight The meanes of grace be not vouchsafed unto all and every man therefore Christ died not for all and every man For if meanes necessary to Salvation be not propounded if they be not nor ever were called to the faith by the ordinary and only effectuall meanes ordained of God to bring men thereunto we speake of our selves and not according to Scripture if we affirme God gave Christ to die for their redemption Amongst many effects of Christs death reckoned up in this argument this is the most generall and all the rest depend upon it and if the meanes be not vouchsafed to all none of the rest can be common to every one It is a received principle amongst them that as God loved the world and Christ gave himselfe a ransome for all men or is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world so God willed that the Gospell concerning Christ should be published to all men in the world Corvin in Mol. cap. 31. sect 33. If then the Gospell be not published or God willed not that the Gospell should be published to all and every man in the world Christ died not for all and every man Adam and Noah having received the Covenant were bound to teach their children and so successively in all ages Psal 78. which had it been observed none had failed to have the same published unto him If this be applied to the present purpose they must teach only that Christ died for all and every man if they that be in Covenant shall carefully observe the charge and commandement of God And by the same reason they may conclude that God gave his Sonne to die and that with plenary purpose that no man should ever sinne by ignorance infirmity impenitency unbeliefe or any particular transgression that God purposed to give to every man the plentifull and effectuall meanes of grace and that every man should actually apply the death of Christ For if every man successively had obeyed the commandement given to Adam and fulfilled that charge the doctrine of salvation had been published to every man every man had been
by grace and adoption then he that was the Sonne of God by nature who fitter to repaire the Image of God decayed in us then he by whom at first man was made after the Image of God Thus Christ was a fit and equall middle person conjoyned by the bands of friendly society and peaceable agreement with both the parties God and men that he might be a Mediatour of reconciliation and peace betweene God and man He tooke unto him the sanctified nature of man that therein he might draw neere unto men and be the root of them that are sanctified and retained the nature of God that so he might not depart from God Here it is questioned according to which nature Christ is Mediatour whether as man only or as God and man That he is a Mediatour according to the concurrence of both natures in the unity of his person it is confessed by all for if he were not both God and man he could not mediate between God and man but whether he be a Mediatour according to both natures concurring in the worke of Mediation there be some that make question Our resolution is that Christ is Mediatour according to both natures the humane nature doing that which pertained to the humanity Bellar. de Christ lib. 5. cap. 7. § Potest tamen and the divine nature that which pertained to the divinity but the humane and divine both concurring to produce one act or work of Mediatorship As the divine and humane nature concurre to make one Christ so the acts of the divine and humane Plura principia ad operationem unam possunt concurrere Lun ibid. cap. 7. not 1. nature distinct in vertue and operation by co-operation concurre to make up the same work of Mediation Some of the works of Christ the Mediatour were the works of his humanity in respect of the thing done and had their efficacy dignity and value from his divinity in that they were the works of him that had the divinity dwelling bodily in him and some the works of his divinity the humane nature concurring only instrumentally as the remitting of sins the giving of the Spirit the raising of the dead and such like The works of Ministery the Sonne of God I●n cont 2. l. 5. cap. 5. not 29. performed them in the nature of man It was the Sonne of God and Lord of life that died for us on the Crosse but it was the nature of man not of God wherein he died The works of Authority and power were all performed by the divine nature yet not without an instrumentall concurrence of the nature of man Christ suffered as man but the divine nature did support and sustaine the humane He died as man as God he overcame death conquered and rose againe as man he was made an offering for our sins the worth and value of the Sacrifice was from the divinity The two natures in Christ be distinct in their essence and I●n Paral. lib. 3. in cap. 9. Hebr. properties and so in their operations that we must not imagine one action of both natures but as the natures be united in one person so the operations concurre to make up one work of a Mediatour Many chiefe necessary and essentiall acts concerning our Iun. animad in Bell. contr 2. l. 5. ca. 3. not 9 reconciliation with God are from the Deity of Christ as from the next proper immediate and formall beginning The Incarnation of Christ is from the Deity which did assume the humanity which when it was not could not assume it selfe The manifestation of God was a work truly divine from the humanity of Christ as an instrument from the Deity as the true cause Christ as Joh. 1. 18. Matt. 11. 27. man teacheth as an instrument and Christ the Word teacheth as Mediatour for he is not only Mediatour who supplyeth the roome of an instrument but the Deity did move the humanity as his instrument that is personally united and not as anothers Joh. 10. 18. To lay down his life passively belongs to the flesh to lay down his life or soule actively to the word The resurrection of Christ is Iun. ibid. cap. 6. not 1. Rom. 8. 34 and 4 25. Rom. 1. 4. Mar. 2. 10. Joh. 15. 26. and 16. 7. an essentiall part of our Redemption but Christ rose not by the propriety of his flesh but by the power of his Deity Christ as Mediatour performed many divine acts but the humanity alone cannot be the beginning of a divine act as Christ as Mediatour hath authority to forgive sins to send the holy Spirit not meritoriously alone as Bellarmine distinguisheth but efficiently to conjoyne us unto God and bring us to salvation Christ as Mediatour is the King and Head of his Church which dignity and office Meritum Me●●ation●● est Mediatio personae cannot agree to him that is meere man For the Head is to give influence of sence and motion unto the body and Christ gives supernaturall sence and motion unto his mysticall body and that both by way of efficiency and by way of disposition fitting us that an impression of grace may be made upon us He prepareth and fitteth men to the receipt of grace by the acts of his humanity A t●ta quidem Trinitate datur Spiritu● sed ad personam Mediatoris haec actio terminatur quoad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in which he suffered death and dying satisfied Gods wrath removed all matter of dislike procured the favour and acceptation of God and so made men fit to receive the grace of God and to enjoy his favour He imparteth and conferreth grace by the operation and working of his divine nature it being the proper worke of God to enlighten the understandings of men and to soften their hearts If it be alleadged that there is nothing that one person of the Trinity doth towards the creatures but they all doe it and consequently that those things which Christ did in his divine nature pertained not to the office of a Mediatour being common to all the Persons The answer is though the action be the same and the worke done by them yet they differ in the manner of doing it For the Father doth all things authoritativè and the Son subauthoritativè as the Schoole-men speake that is the Father as he from whom and of whom are all things the Son as he by whom are all things not as ●y an instrument but a principall efficient And in this sort to quicken give life and to impart the Spirit of Sanctification to whom he pleaseth especially with a kind of concurring of the humane nature meriting desiring and instrumentally assisting is proper to the Son of God manifested in our flesh and not common to the whole Trinity As the second person in Trinity did assume our nature and not the Father or the holy Ghost and as Christ is the Head of the Church not the Father or the holy Spirit so he
goe sin unpunished is simply the omission of a divine act the decree of God excepted not deficient or inconformable to any rule of Gods will but rather a peculiar exercise of divine mercy What absolutely God can will that he can justly will otherwise it might be that God can will a thing which is injust or that he can will injustly But it was possible for God to will to let sin goe unpunished it is not absolutely repugnant to his divine nature so to will If God cannot pardon sin without satisfaction Hae rationes tum demum locum obtinerent si ita De● putaretur agere ex necessitate naturae ut solo naturae impetu citra omnem intellectum voluntatis actum ageret veluti ignis calefacit ex necessitate naturae Windel de mundo Sect. 2. c. 2. Lex agendi necessitas 1. naturae 2. congruentiae Illa per quam agens ita agit ut per naturam non possit non agere estque vel sine cognitione vel cum cognitione Ista per quam agens non potest non congruenter suae naturae agere then it is necessary that he punish sin by absolute necessity or sin presupposed it is of absolute necessity that it be punished but it is not of absolute necessity that sin be punished for then God should punish it alwaies in one manner and as much as he can as naturall agents worke whereas we see by experience that God doth differently punish the sins of men in this life the lesser offendors most the greater least many times ever so as their punishments might be increased Neither can it be said that the greatnesse of punishment in this life doth lessen their punishment in the life to come for the punishments of the life to come being eternall can carry no proportion with the punishments of this life Then it was of absolute necessity that Christ should suffer so many stripes and no more be forsaken just so long and no longer continue in his agony so many houres and neither more nor lesse Sciendum est non sequi injustum ex quavis negatione justi etiam posi●is ●isdem circumstantij● Non est perpetuum ut id quod justè fiat non nisi injustè omittatur The bounty of God to reward obedience is essentiall as well as justice to punish iniquity and if God punish iniquity by absolute and naturall necessity of necessity he must reward obedience if he punish iniquity without divine constitution he must reward obedience in the same manner God may inflict a more mild punishment then sin deserveth therefore at least he may leave some degree of sin unpunished as also it is lawfull for God to men equall in sin to grant pardon to one to punish another according to his deserts To give reward above merit is not contrary to justice if it be given of our owne nor to punish mercifully and lesse then the fault deserveth if it be a fault committed against our selves And it seemes as much repugnant to justice Sunt quaedam Dei proprietates quarum exercitium tum quoad actum tum quoad tempu● modum actus imo etiam quoad objecti determinationem pendet a libera ipsus voluntate Ex promissione jus aliquod acquiritur ei cui facta est promissio at comminatione apertius dun●axat declaratur meritum poenae in peccante jus puniendi in comminante Cum bonitas misericordia Dei non minus proprietas ej●● sit quam justitia ac quamquam ex misericordia non ●gisset sed puniisset universos minimè eo mutabilis vel etiam immisericors potuerit dici similiter neque extra decreti considerationem mutabilem vel injustum dici potuisse quanquam ignovisset universis citra illam satisfactionem Quod is qui deliquit paenam meretur eoque punibilis est hoc ex ipsa peccati peccatoris ad superiorem relatione necessariò sequitur propriè naturale ut vero puniatur quivis peccator poena tali quae culpae respondeat non est necessarium simpliciter universaliter neque propriè naturale sed naturae satis conveniens Chamier panstrat Tom. 2. l. 5. c. 1● Parker de desc l. 3. Sect. 56. Wotton de Reconcil l. 1 c 4. V●ss respons ad Iud. Ravensperg cap. 28. Isa 53. 10. Psal 40. 8. Joh. 5. 19 30. to accept a surety as to pardon the punishment especially that the Son of God the party offended should take upon him our nature and make satisfaction for us And if God by absolute necessity must punish sin as it deserveth then it is simply impossible to renew the sinner by repentance or to annihilate him because then he doth not bear what punishmēt his sin doth call for from the hand of justice Justice is essentiall to God so is mercy bounty liberality but God sheweth mercy to whom he will doth good to whom he will freely not by absolute necessity only God hath obliged himselfe by righteousnesse of fidelity that is by promises and threatnings which must be fulfilled to doe this or that Sin though it hath an outward disagreement such as may be in a creature from the Creator yet it hath no inward positive repugnancy or contrariancy to Gods nature such as is betwixt fire and water for then should the divine nature inwardly in it selfe be worse for the being of sin and should necessarily nill it Sin is displeasing unto God he cannot approve it as good in it selfe but it is one thing to be displeased with or hate sin another to punish it of absolute and naturall necessity as it is one thing to approve obedience another to reward it of necessity It is most true that God doth not only hate but punish all sin but that he doth not by naturall necessity but by naturall congruity which may stand with the most free will of God determining to manifest his justice for the manifestation whereof the punishment of sin was necessary The hatred of sin and punishment thereof are joyned together as a free cause and effect not as a necessary cause and effect for God hateth sin at all times but punisheth it not ever but in his time or season But it is not materiall to dispute this matter in more words for seeing God hath determined that his justice shall take her revenge if by breach of Covenant she be wronged he cannot but punish sin according to its desert neither may he set us free from the same but so as wronged justice may receive satisfaction The decree of God is unchangeable and the sentence of God denounced against sin must stand firme for ever therefore punishment must be executed if the commandment be transgressed And the reasons of this decree be Omne agens quod agit naturaliter agit in objectum suae actionis naturaliter receptivum quare si punire esset naturale illa nimirum acceptatione quae secum sert necessitatem non possit actio
Isa 11. 9. 54. 13. 1 Cor. 1. 7. 2. 10. Joh. 6. 45. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 32. 28. 1 Sam. 8. 7. Eph. 6. 12. We wrestle not against flesh bloud i. only Act. 16. 14. 2 Cor. 3. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 22. God would pour upon his Church in the times of the new Testament leading the true children of the Church by his blessed Spirit into all truth necessary to Salvation The like phrases are often found in the Scriptures and the adversitive particle but is not put as exceptive But the anointing i. e. except as Internall Vocation is by the operation of the holy Spirit effectually inabling and drawing us unto Christ enlightening the minde and affecting the heart seriously to attend unto those things which are spoken and by faith to receive and embrace them The principall effectuall help which maketh us come to God by belief is the efficacy of Gods Almighty power put forth to such a purpose It is the effectuall working of Gods Almighty Col. 2. 12. 2 Cor. 4. 6. power which worketh faith in us to Salvation For the creating us anew in Christ is a greater work then giving us our naturall being in Adam and therefore may not be ascribed to any power Eph. 2. 1 ● Luk. 11. 20 21. 2 Tim. 2. 26. that is not almighty We are by nature dead in trespasses held in bondage by strong powers whom none but the strongest can over-master and by believing we are lifted up to an estate without comparison more excellent then that we formerly received Now to bring us from death under which so mightie ones held us captive to such a life so unutterably glorious must needs be the working of a power almighty Besides so farre as God doth intend to work so farre he putteth forth his omnipotent power to accomplish but God doth intend to make some before other some come unto him and therefore he doth stretch out the arme of his power to effect this A second helpe is the inward illumination and inspiration wrought in us by which as the internall Word God speaketh in the minde The conversion of sinners is called a conviction because it is ever wrought in us as we are reasonable and intelligent creatures the judgement going before is a directour what to chuse And if the minde of man were once throughly and in a spirituall manner as it becommeth such objects as are altogether spirituall Saepe fit intellectus haefitanter suadeat langu●de tractet habenas aut serò se ad judicandum applicet Ex adverso autem app●titus sensitivi saepe tam subitò tam ve●ementèr concitantur ut voluntas ab apperitu impulsa jubeat intellectum judicare ex appetitus imperio possessed of the adequate goodnesse and truth which is in grace and glory and did consider it deliberately both simply and in comparison with all circumstances and occurrences and did apply it selfe to the serious study and thought thereof the heart could not utterly reject them For humane liberty is not a brutish but a reasonable thing it consisteth not in contumacy and head-strongnesse but in such a manner of working as is apt to be regulated varied or suspended by the dictates of right reason and sound judgement if things be distinctly and certainly apprehended seriously weighed and pondered and the thought thereof preserved and kept in minde The only cause why men are not willing to submit unto Christ is because they are not throughly and in a manner sutable to the excellency of the things inlightened in their minde or they do not keep in minde and thought that which they are taught in the Word of God and cannot but know in some sort Sinners in Scripture are said to be blinde simple fooles brutish inconsiderate that remember not that God seeth them consider not their latter end Sinne is naturall not as nature is opposed to liberty but as nature is opposed to grace 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 8. 5 6. 2 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 14. And so without Christ and the holy Spirit miserable naturall or mortall men would sinne necessarily The first sinne of our first parents was an errour for whatsoever a man doth will that he doth will being led by certaine reason true or in appearance The act of willing hath in it power whatsoever is subject to it but it selfe is not in it own power but in the power of reason whose prescript it doth follow whether right or corrupt Necessarily good is preferred before evil and the greater good certainly and distinctly knowne before the lesser but not knowne it is not preferred with equall necessity The will is not enforced of it selfe either of it selfe resting or forcing it selfe for then it should be in act and not in act at one and the same time The will cannot bend into the direct contrary for then it might most willingly desire that condition which it certainly knew to be most miserable and refuse that condition which it most certainly and distinctly knew to be most blessed Nor suspend of it selfe without the intervention of the understanding because the will is not the mistresse of it selfe but of the act which depends upon the inferiour faculties They that know the gift of God they desire and aske it They that know God they will trust in him and keep his Commandements They that are taught of God they will come unto Christ and faith is lively and operative to draw men to the love of God and obedience to his precepts The act of judgement is two-fold 1. Naturall which ariseth from the sharpnesse or dulnesse of the wit 2. Morall according to which we are said to be good or evil There be two degrees of light 1. Directing and warning what is to be done 2. Perswading and effectually moving forward the will This perswasion is when with such force the holy Spirit doth accompany the Gospell that it doth not only move the will but move it effectually or throughly and beget faith lively and well rooted What the minde judgeth best the will followeth as best what lesse good the minde judgeth the will lesse followeth What the In singulis quidem actionibus vo●unt as regitur ab intellectu in genere tamen volu●tas ī aperat intellectui nec intellectus fe applicat ad intelligendum nisi jussut à voluntate 1 Cor. 8. 2. Joh. 17. 3. minde judgeth the greatest evil the will doth specially avoid what it judgeth a lesse evil it doth lesse flee from Unlesse the minde should either wax idle or loose the reines to the affections which must needs proceed from a most grievous and most perverse errour of the minde right reason would obtain not only by right but in deed and fact the command and rule Knowledge is either prescribing or perswading true and solid either of the thing simply considered or of the thing considered with all his circumstances certaine just
unto Israel And seeing repentance Act. 5. 31. Act. ●1 18. is not to desperation but to life and Salvation it cannot be without all respect of Christ in whom only we have deliverance from the condemnation and dominion of sin Repentance is the effect of Christs death and intercession As he hath purchased pardon of sin for us so repentance also otherwise we should be Isai 53. 5. partakers of some saving grace or blessing which Christ did not purchase for us The Spirit of God is not undeservedly called the Spirit of Christ as Mediatour convincing the Conscience of sin and unrighteousnesse and discovering unto the heart the grace of the Gospell The Word of the Kingdome or Covenant is the instrument of repentance as that which discovereth sin and holdeth forth hope of pardon and intreateth perswadeth and encourageth the weary and burdened to draw nigh to God by Jesus Christ FINIS A Table directing to some principall things in the foregoing Discourse A ABraham how the father of the faithfull page 50. who meant by Abrahams seed ibid. and p. 51 Adam whether to be translated into heaven if he had stood p. 10 Though he had been rewarded in justice yet not of merit ib. A double obedience required of Adam viz. naturall and symbolicall p. 10 why God forbade Adam the eating of the tree of knowledge ibid. whether Adams perfection in Innocency were naturall or supernaturall p. 11. Gods Covenant with Adam a Covenant of friendship not of reconciliation ib. Adam how he could be secure seeing his condition was mutable p. 13. Adam in Innocency whether he had power to believe p. 44 Adoption the Jewes partakers of it yet had it tempered with servitude p. 35 Acceptilation whether Christ satisfied not Gods justice fully but by divine Acceptilation only seeing he suffered but for a time 291 Affiance the ground of particular affiance is some word or promise made to a man not yet believing p. 229 Agony of Christ without any sinfull distemper 282. the effects of it 283 284. Betwixt his desires in his agony a diversity but no contrariety ib. All in Scripture sometime signifies neither all precisely nor the most part 208 B BEcause what it signifieth p. 57 The phrase from the beginning or the beginning what it imports p. 42 Believe whether every man be bound to believe that Christ died for him in particular p. 222 223. c. He that goeth on in an evil way is not immediately called to believe in Christ 223. Things that are true as promised it is not necessary that they be unless we believe 225. That man cannot believe is not through impotency of weakness but impotency of wilfulnesse 226. Belief that Christ died for all men cannot be the ground of justifying faith 228. what signe God gives of his willingnesse to have men believe when he gives them not power 245 Believers and Christs sheep how they differ 255 Bellarmine confuted who saith the faith whereby Abraham was justified was justice p. 72 But not ever an exceptive but oft an adversative 302 C CAnaan how said to be an everlasting possession p. 55 Caphar what it signifieth 279 Carnall Christians their priviledge 55 Carnall reasonings to be avoided in divinity 249 Cause an immediate or next cause what p. 70. A morall cause though not present in act yet if supposed future may have effects p. 31 Circumcision why with bloud and why ordained seeing both sexes not capable of it p. 90. what it was a seal of ibid. Circumcision not unprofitable to those that were not partakers of the spirituall blessings 91 Christ more darkly revealed in the Covenant of promise and why p. 32. Christ Mediator and Testatour both 203. for whom he died and rose again whether for all and every man with a purpose to save or for all in respect of the sufficiency of the price not efficiency 204 205 206 c. No man hindred from comming to him by any cause efficient or deficient out of himself 244. Both natures concurre in him necessarily as a formall beginning in the works of Mediation 269. How he is inferiour to the Father 271. our sins layd upon him 276 277. and he substituted for the sins of the faithfull 279. Satisfaction made by him and that reall and not by acceptilation ib. and 280 281. How the Church is said to have Christ 287. His appearing before his Father for us what it imports 296. How he is King 306. In Christs person a threefold fulnesse 317. How Christ was Mediatour before his Incarnation p. 27. Christ the common store-house in which every thing is first placed that is to be imparted to believers p. 38 Church members the Covenant externally made with every one parents and their children p. 24. 29 Church of the elect only one p. 30. sometimes the bounds of it narrower sometimes larger 203. In the latter dayes it is probable the bounds of it will be larger then heretofore ib. Commandment Gods Commandments shew whatour duty is not what God will work in every man 134 Conditions of two sorts 133 Conversion though not a bare morall perswasion yet not effected without perswasion 328. Conversion of a sinner called conviction and why 333. what is that effectuall help whereby a man comes to God 335. wherein stands the efficacie of grace effectuall to conversion 336. whether God a cause of mans non-conversion 344 Covenant severall derivations of the originall word p. 1. Covenant of salt what p. 2. Acceptions of the word Covenant p. 3 4. The essence of the Covenant wherein it consisteth 4. Covenant and law how differ ib. There may be a Covenant without verball expressions p. 5. yet there have been alwayes expressions in the Covenant with the reasonable creature ibid. The Covenant is one thing and the name of the Covenant is another p. 5. Causes why God is pleased to deal with the reasonable creature in a Covenant way p. 6. A Covenant with man in Innocency though the word Covenant not to be found p. 6. The Covenant betwixt God and man in generall described p. 7. The Authour of the Covenant God not God and man ib. The Covenant is of grace even where reward is promised of justice ib. p. 9. The subject of the Covenant is man and how 8. Covenant of works and grace no where in Scripture totidem syllabis 9. Covenant of God with man not one but manifold and sundry wayes whereby they are distinguished 8. Of the Covenant with man in Innocency p. 9. Covenant of works whether still on foot in the posterity of Adam in respect of temporall good things p. 13. Covenant of grace what 14. Impossible to be under the Covenant of works and grace at once 15. Covenant of grace divers in administrations one in substance 23. Covenant of nature and grace how they agree and differ ib. Covenant of grace to be considered as promised and as established p. 27. Covenant of promise what 28. Covenant of promise and the new
must accompany faith yet no cause of salvation 19 Revelation a double cleernesse of revelation 33 Reward how taken in Scripture 57 Right or upright by what words expressed in the originall 177 Righteousnesse diversly taken 62. Righteousnesse imputative is not putative 63. Righteousnesse of the fact and of the person 66 S SAcraments of the old Testament no types of the Sacraments of the new 30. Sacraments of the old and new Testament how they differ 35 Satan Gods indignation against him some cause of the Covenant of grace 17 Sacramentall phrases wherein the thing signified is given to the signe are ancient and familiar 91 Sacrifices what typified by the bloud of them 40. the fathers before the law that offered them had commandment from God for them 45. sin expiated in them by substitution 279 Satisfaction why God would not pardon sin without it 288 289. How free remission stands with satisfaction ib. How it could be necessary for those which were beloved of God 292. The word satisfaction not to be found in Scripture but the thing is 272. whether God could not have pardoned sin without satisfaction 273 274 c. Seed how variously taken in Scripture 36 Segullah what it imports 103 Serpents head how bruised by Christ and his members 39 40 Servitude double 141 Sheep of Christ spoken of two wayes in Scripture 257 Sin the discovery of it sweetens mercy and hence the law was more fully discovered by Christ then it had been afore 272. Though it hath an outward disagreement such as may be in a creature from the Creatour yet it hath no inward positive repugnancy to Gods nature such as is betwixt fire and water 275. Three things to be considered in sinne 291 Sincerity and Truth and Vprightnesse It is a comfort to a man in his greatest distresse 172. It puts an heroic all spirit into the people of God ib. The service of the sound Christian is acceptable ib. The degrees and nature of soundnesse or sincerity ib. c. The effects of a sincere heart 174. Nine signes of sincerity 174 175 c. Sit To sit what it imports in Scripture and what it is to sit at the right hand of God 303 304. Christs sitting at the right hand of God what 305. The place where he sits 308. Six things implyed in Christs sitting at the right hand of God 310. 321 Socinus the ground why he denied the prescience of God 248 Spirit The plentifull powring of it deferred till the glorification of Christ 330 Spirituall good things of two sorts 155 Sufferings of Christ two things to be considered in them viz. the substance and circumstances for substance they were what the law required but for the circumstances they were more 281. His sufferings were beyond measure grievous 281. punishments of sin of two sorts and which of them Christ suffered 282 T TAught of God what it meanes 332 Temporall blessings in a greater measure and spirituall in a lesse given to the naturall seed in the first ages 55 Testament old and new in what accidents they differ being for substance the same 163 164 165 c. Of Truth and uprightnesse 166. Truth what it imports ib. It presup poseth five things 167 168 169. Truth compared by the Apostle to a girdle in what respects 169 170 171 c. Time may be served 178 Trinity the doctrine of it obscure in the Old Testament 201. V VNion and communion with Christ how distinguished 43. Union severall sorts of union conjunction of one person with another 286. Union of the two natures in Christ cannot cause the humane to partake the properties of the divine 308. Vocation by it men are called into Christs kingdome It is free not depending upon any precedent condition persons called to fellowship with Christ who 324. The subiect or matter of vocatiō what 325. How men are said to be worthy of their Vocation or calling ib. and 326. It is partly externall and partly internall ib. Sometime it is wrought by the ministry of private persons 326. The instrument of Vocation 327. Internall Vocation how wrought 332. Vorstius confuted who saith that faith and repentance and new obedience is accounted for righteousnesse 69. Uprightnes necessary 80 81 82 83. See Integrity Uprightnes of heart and life 179 180. An upright heart is fixed in regard of the obiect 180. The effects of Uprightnes 183 184 185 c. The meanes whereby it may be attayned and strengthened 186 187. W TO Walk before God what 73 74. To walk in Chr. what 74. Wicked men what benefit they have by Christ 13 14. Will whether the efficacy of grace depend upon the liberty of the Will 340. They that are given to Christ comefreely yet necessarily 342. How men are said to sanctify and purge themselves 342. God determineth the Will to will and doe by his grace 343. Works and faith cannot be joyned as con-causes in justification 70. What Works be opposed to faith in justification 137. Word a morall instrument of conversion 328. It is not only preparatory as if there were another Word suggested by the spirit which might be called cōsummatory 329. Word signifieth the second person in many places of the old Testament 125 126. World to come what 207. world that Christ come to save what 210. Whether the whole world be reconciled to God by Christ 216 217. c. world is usually taken for men in the world indefinitely not every man in the world nor yet the greatest part 261.
John the Baptist put over his hearers to Christ Joh. 1. 26 27. Luke 3. 16. Mark 1. 7 8. Matth. 3. 11 12. Christ invites men to the Kingdome of Heaven that is the Evangelicall Government of the Church as future at hand but not yet present Matth. 4. 17. Mark 1. 15. Nay after he was risen from the dead although he professe openly and plainly to his Disciples that all power was given unto him in Heaven and earth and he command them to preach the Gospell to every creature Matth. 28. 18 19. yet he gives them a charge to tarry at Jerusalem to waite for the accomplishment of the promise concerning the solemne sending of the holy Ghost and to be endued with power from above Luk 24. 49. as if they were designed before but then to be inaugurated and by extraordinary gifts many hearing and beholding openly to be approved The dayes immediately following the death and resurrection of Christ were the dayes of the Churches widowhood wherein she sate for a while destiture and comfortlesse and barren having neither power to beare nor to bring forth children But within ten dayes after Christ the Lord the Bridegroome of the Church had ascended from earth to Heaven in glory the holy Ghost came downe upon the Apostles in visible shape in token that Christs Church was now betrothed unto him and had received strength to conceive and bring forth and breasts replenished with plenty of Milk to nourish and feed her children This was as the Solemnization of the Marriage and then did the barren begin to rejoyce that she should be the mother of many children From this time properly the New Testament tooke its beginning The nature of this Testament stands principally in three things 1. In the kinde of Doctrine plaine full and meerly Evangelicall 2. In freedome from the curse of the Law and freedome from Legall Rites 3. In the amplitude and enlargement of the new Church throughout all Nations of the world It may be described the free Covenant which God of his rich grace in Jesus Christ incarnate crucified dead buried raised up to life and ascended into Heaven hath made and plainly revealed unto the world of Jew and Gentile promising to be their God and Father by right of Redemption and Christ to be their Saviour to pardon their sinne heale their nature adopt them to be his Sonnes protect them from all evill that may hurt furnish them with all needfull good things spirituall and temporall and crown them with everlasting glory in the world to come if they repent of their iniquities beleeve in Christ and through or by Christ in him and walk before him in sincere constant and conscionable obedience which he doth inwardly sease by the witnesse of the holy Spirit who is the earnest of their inheritance in the hearts of the faithfull and ratifie and confirme by outward seales universall plain easie and perpetuall The Author of this Covenant is God in Jesus Christ for none can make these promises but God none can make them good but his Highnesse Therefore the Lord doth evermore challenge this unto himself that he is the maker of the Covenant And as it is Jer. 31. 1 31 32 33. called our Covenant in respect of the conditions required Zech. 9. 11. So it is called the Lords Covenant because he hath made and will establish it If ye can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night c. Then may also my Covenant be broken Jer. 33. 20 21. with David my servant Christ also as Mediatour is both the foundation and Author of this Covenant as he is appointed of the Father Lord and King advanced at the right hand of God to give repentance and remission of sinnes unto Israel and as Testatour Heb. 9. 16. he hath confirmed the Covenant by his death But of this in the next Chapters God is both the Author of this Covenant and one partie confederate Fathers we know seldome frame Indentures thereby to bind themselves what they will doe for their children if they will be obedient but by right of Fatherhood they challenge of them their best service Lords and great personages seldome indent with their free servants what preferment they shall expect after some terme of service and attendance but if they look for reward they must stand at their courtesie But our Lord and Master to whom we owe our selves by right of Creation who might take advantage against us for former disobedience is content to undertake and indent with us and by Indenture to bind himself to bestow great things and incomprehensible upon us if we will accept his kindnesse and bind our selves unto him in willing and sincere obedience If you demand a reason of this dealing none can be given but the meere grace and rich mercy and love of God Thus saith the Ezek. 36. 22. Lord God I doe not this for your sakes O house of Israel but for mine holy Names sake I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. And ye shall know Ezek. 20. 37. that I am the Lord when I shall bring you into the Land of Israel c. And there ye shall remember your wayes and all your doings wherein 42. 43. you have been defiled and ye shall lothe your selves in your own sight for all your evils that you have committed And ye shall know that I am the Lord when I have wrought with you for my Names sake not according to your wicked wayes nor according to your corrupt doings Man can doe nothing of himself to procure his spirituall good In spirituall things it fareth with him much what as with a child new borne into the world which being naked can neither provide cloathes nor being provided and laid by him can put them on for man destitute of all spirituall goodnesse can neither move to helpe himself untill it be freely bestowed nor manage and wield it well when it is of grace vouchsafed without direction and assistance from God And there is as little worth or dignity in man to move God to promise him help as there is ability in man to procure help There is nothing in man to move God to shew mercy but only misery which might be an occasion but can be no cause either why mercy is promised or salvation granted If man had not fallen from grace and state of Innocency God had never sent his Sonne to redeeme him nor shewed mercy reaching to the pardon and covering of his iniquity If he had not lost himself Christ had never come to find and restore him if he had not wounded himself he had not been healed and repaired of grace Man then is a subject on whom God bestowes grace and in whom he works it and his m●sery an occasion that the Lord took of manifesting his mercy in succouring and lifting him up out of that distresse but the free
grace and love of God is the sole cause of what the Lord hath promised in this new Covenant and doth give according to promise And though the old and new Covenant be of the same nature and from the same fountaine yet the new Covenant is preferred above the old as farre as Sunne-light before Torch light in this that God who makes the Covenant hath more fully manifested the riches of his grace and superaboundant love in Jesus Christ the brightnesse of his glory and engraven forme of his person to the federates of the new Testament In the old Covenant the Lord had made it knowne that he was mercifull and gracious slow to anger aboundant in goodnesse But in the new Covenant he doth most familiarly reveale himself to be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus and in him the Father of the faithfull which most sweet and pleasant name doth breathe out unspeakable love and tendernesse Again though the ancient federates had some knowledge of Gods Attributes as an introduction to the Covenant of Grace yet they never knew that transcendency of Gods love which is brought to light in the new mentioned in these and such like passages of Scripture Behold what manner of love the Father hath 1 Joh. ● 1. bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sonnes of God God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever Joh. 3. 16. beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life He spared Rom. 8. 3● not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things Who will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth For there is one God 1 Tim. ● 4 5. and one Mediatour betweene God and man the man Christ Jesus They that seek to stretch this speech of the Apostle to the furthest doe yet confesse it is spoken of the times of the Gospell and that appeareth evidently by the reason of the Apostle confirming that saying that God will that all men be saved from this that God is the God of all men by Covenant and Christ the Mediatour of all men in Covenant and by the Gospell the Word of truth the saving truth of God was brought unto all in Covenant Besides in the old Testament the Doctrine of the Trinity of persons in the unity of the God head was more obscurely taught but in the new Testament we are clearely and most comfortably assured that the Father Son and holy Ghost do sweetly conspire to perfect the Salvation of the Faithfull and confirme unto them the promises of the Covenant There be three that beare record in 1 Joh. 5. 7. Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one Goe ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them into the Matth. ●8 19. Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost If in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word must stand why should a Christian question or doubt of the promises of mercy made in the Covenant assured unto him by the Father Sonne and holy Ghost God the Father promiseth that in his only begotten Sonne he will be a mercifull Father to all Believers that he will give him to them for a Redeemer accept his satisfaction for them give them his Spirit and bestow upon them righteousnesse and salvation The Sonne doth promise that he will be Redeemer of the faithfull by doctrine merit and efficacy that he will deliver them from the power of Satan bring them into perpetuall favour with God wash them from all the filthinesse of their sins and be unto them as he is made of the Father Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption The holy Ghost doth promise that being redeemed by the bloud of Christ by the presence of his grace he will cleanse them from all inherent sinne and repaire the Image of God in them leade them into all truth and holinesse inable them to cry Abba Father seale them for the Lords and abide with them by his grace and comfort as an earnest of the inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession This Covenant was stricken with all Nations or the world in opposition to the Jewish Nation for now the promise made Gal. 3. 8. to Abraham was fulfilled In thee shall all Nations of the earth be blessed now the prophecies touching the calling of the Gentiles Isai 44. 6 and bringing them to the Sheep-fold of Christ were accomplished now the Apostles were sent forth to preach the Gospell to Matth. 28. 19. Mar. 16. 13. Rom. 1. 16. Col. 1. 6 23. Act 10. 45. every creature and God gave such a blessing unto the Word that by their preaching a great part of the habitable world was converted unto the faith Now upon the Gentiles was powred out also the gift of the holy Ghost Christ having broken down the partition wall betwixt Jew and Gentile and abolished in his flesh the enmity even the Eph. 2. 14 15. law of Commandements contained in Ordinances for to make in himselfe of twaine one new man so making peace The Covenant of promise was first made with Adam and his posterity not with him as the common parent of all mankind and so with every man that should come of his loines howsoever in all generations but with Adam as a beleever and his posterity untill by wilfull departure from the faith they should discovenant themselves and those that did proceed from them In like manner it was made with the Patriarchs with Noah and his posterity then with Abraham and his family afterwards with one selected Nation but under the Gospell all Nations are brought into the bond of the Covenant All nations I say but not every one in every nation nor every nation in all periods of that time For many nations have lived we know for a long time in infidelity without the Gospell without God in the world aliens from the Common-wealth of Is●ael and strangers from the Covenant of Grace And we find the Apostles to make a manifest 2 Cor. 6. 14 17. difference betwixt the people of God and unbelievers so that all in their dayes were not admitted into Covenant though the Gospell was preached unto them For they that be in Covenant are in phrase of Scripture the people of God that is such with whom God hath contracted Covenant and who in like manner have sworne unto the words of the Covenant God stipulating and they accepting the condition God as an absolute Soveraigne hath right and authority over all men but in a certaine and peculiar reason they are called his people who receive his Commandement and acknowledge him to be their Lord and Saviour And these be of two sorts for God doth make his Covenant with some externally calling them by his Word and sealing them by his Sacraments and they by profession of faith