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

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be libelled for sin though not for his own sin and what it was to be sentenced and to meet with wrath which gives to sinners a safe and refreshful shelter under him as under the shadow of a great rock in a weary land This is the great design of the Gospel to make proffer of the benefite of these sufferings to you and to pray you in Christs stead to be reconciled to God Now God himself perswade you to it SERMON XXIX ISAIAH LIII VIII Vers 8. He was taken from prison and from judgement and who shall declare his generation For he was cut off out of the land of the living for the transgression of my people was he stricken EVery step of Christs way to sinners and every word whereby it is exprest is wonderful And therefore it is no marvel that the Prophet doth by way of admiration cast in this word And who shall declare his generation We shew you that we conceive these words to be these that express the Prophets turning of himself from Christs Humiliation to his Exaltation He hath insisted long in setting out his wonderful abasement exinanition and humiliation which these words import He was brought from prison and from judgement Which look not only to his external imprisonment to his coming to judgement b●fore men but also and mainly and principally to the pinches and straits that he was brought into and his arraignment before Gods Tribunal and so to the cause of his suffering to wit for the transgression of his people as the words following hold out which was not the cause of his censure before men but the procuring cause of what he met with from and before God But though he was brought to prison and to judgement to death and to the grave yet they did not they could not detain him He was taken or as the word signifies he was lift up from prison and from judgement being the same word that followeth He was cut off out of the land of the living which supposes a turn and change from his Humiliation to his Exaltation and these words Who shall declare his generation Set out the unconceivable and unexpressible glory that Christ is exalted unto so Acts 8.33 35. Where these words are cited it 's said In his humiliation his judgement was taken away That is in his lowest step of his Humiliation his judgement or that to which he was adjudged was taken from him and he was declared free However since in these words our Lords Humiliation is implyed and his Exaltation expressed as following on it we think it safest to understand them so The words put together hold out the high degree of Christs glorious exaltation so as his generation cannot be declared He was taken from prison and from judgment and gloriously exalted in another manner and to another degree of glory then either Angels or Believers are or are capable to be For he that is exalted is God whose generation cannot be declared Death having no more dominion over him and he having the keyes of hell and of death In a word we take this Who shall declare his generation most immediatly to relate to Christ's Exaltation as Mediator and to the glory wherewith he was invested and to the dominion that he hath over all creatures yet considering that the Prophets scope is to set out this as wonderful and considering that the first step of his Exaltation is his Resurrection whereby as the Apostle speaks Rom. 1.4 he was declared to be the Son of God with power His Resurrection being singular in this respect that he rose by his own power and considering that Acts 8.35 Philip began to preach to the Eunuch Jesus Christ as the object of Faith We think it reasonable to conceive that he preached Christ to be God from this Text so as the Eunuch might have a solid foundation for his faith And this subserving the scope which is to set out the wonderfulness of Christs love to Elect sinners who being God yet condescended to come thus low for saving of them We may take in his God-head mediatly from which as the former steps of his Humiliation received worth and efficacy so he was thereby sustained and born up under all these sufferings whereby his people are saved From the first and second expressions put together we shall draw three Doctrines relating to three main Articles of our Faith The 1. whereof is this That our Lord Jesus had an out-gate from and victory over the lowest and most pinching pieces of His Humiliation and suffering so that though he was at prison and judgement yet he was lift up from both and had a glorious out-gate This takes in three things which the same grounds will confirm 1. That in his lowest state and step of Humiliation he was sustained and carried thorow so that all the assaults which he was put to endure and encounter with from all his enemies wicked Men and Devils did not overcome him 2. That as he in himself was born thorow and sustained So in respect of God's bar at which he was arraigned he was absolved and set free He so came thorow by paying of the debt that he had an Absolviture as it is 1 Tim. 3. ult Great is the mystery of godliness God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit Our blessed Lord Jesus being sustained by the power of his God-head was carried thorow in his sufferings payed the Elects debt and received the sentence of absolution even as a person to speak with reverence in such a subject having payed the debt for which he was imprisoned is absolved and set free 3. It takes in our Lords actual delivery he not only received the sentence of absolution but was actually set free so that as he was pleased to put himself in prison and in straits for us so he was brought from every step of his humiliation from prison and from judgement from death and from the grave He nailed the hand-writing which was against us to his cross as the Apostle saith Col. 2.14 15. And having spoiled principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it And as it is 1 Cor. 15. at the close He took the sting from death disarmed it and trode upon it And there was necessity for this even such necessi●y that it was impossible it could be otherwayes as we have it Acts 2.24 It was not possible that he could be holden of death This will be clear if we consider these things 1. The person that suffered he was not an ordinary nay nor a meer man but God-man As is clear Acts 2.27 cited out of Psal 16. where it is said Thou wilt not leave my soul in hell neither wilt thou suffer thy Holy One to see corruption 2. The end of Christs sufferings which was to satisfie for the debt of his people there having been no reckoning on his own score or account he being still in Gods favour and his Holy One
land of the living f●r the transgression of my people was he stricken THere is nothing that concerns us more than to be well acquainted with the doctrine of Christ Jesus and his Sufferings The Prophet hath therefore been much in shewing what Christ suffered in the former words and hath largely described his Humiliation to Judgment and Death for saith he he was cut off out of the land of the living In the words read he answers two important questions concerning his sufferings 1. To what end were all these sufferings he answers that they were for transgressions even to be a satisfaction to Justice for them The 2. Question is For whose sins were the sufferings of Christ to be a satisfaction It is answered expresly in the words for the transgression of my people was he stricken or the stroak was upon him it was for the sins of the Elect and of the Elect only for this is the Prophets scope who having spoken of Christs sufferings and death holds forth the meritorious and procuring cause and end thereof and this is the result design and sum of all even to be a satisfaction for Gods elect People for as we shew by Gods People are not meaned all men in the world nor the Jews only for Christ hath many sheep beside them but it 's Gods peculiar People in opposition to the multitude who are not his People The Doctrine or rather the branch of the Doctrine we left at was this and it 's exclusive that Christ's death is only intended to be a price for the sins of God's elect People and was laid down with respect to them his death and sufferings are to be looked upon and considered only as a price and satisfaction for their sins and for the sins of none other or thus Jesus Christ in his suffering and in the laying down of his life had a respect to the elect and intended the removing of the sins and transgressions of God's elect people only and of none other we know nothing that we can make of these words nor of the Prophets scope in them but this who as he hath been describing Christs sufferings in all other respects so doth he in this to wit in respect of the persons for whom he suffered and of the meritorious cause and end of his sufferings for says the Text for the transgressions of my people that is of Gods elect people was he stricken This branch of the Doctrine is of great weight and concernment in the whole strain of Grace for if this march-stone be lifted and removed Grace becomes common and as some call it universal and so to be in effect no grace at all for Grace hath a peculiar channel of its own wherein it runs towards a certain select number and not towards all I do not mean of grace taken in a large sense for so all men as they are partakers of any mercy or of common favours may be said to have grace extended to them but I mean God's special grace favour and good will which is extended only to the Elect for whose sins Christ suffered the right bounding of which Doctrine shews forth both God's soveraignty in the dispensing of grace and the freeness thereof in communicating and manifesting of it to whom he will and which thus considered is especially engaging of the hearts of them on whom he pleaseth to manifest it Ere I come to confirm this branch of the Doctrine take a word or two of advertisement in the entry 1. That Christ's death may be considered two ways 1. In respect of it self and as abstracting from the Covenant of Redemption wherein it is contrived as to all the circumstances of it in which sense as his death and sufferings are of infinite value worth so they are as Divines use to speak of value to redeem the whole world if God in his design and decree had so ordered and thought meet to extend it 2. We are to consider his sufferings and death as a price agreed upon in the Covenant or Bargain of Redemption wherein these two or three things concur 1. God's proposal 2. Christ's acceptation and design in laying down his life 3. The Fathers acquiescing therein and declaring himself well pleased therewith we speak not here of Christ's death in the first respect that is as abstracting from the Covenant for in that respect he might have laid down his life for few or moe for some or for all if it had been so intended but we speak of it in the second respect as it 's a price agreed upon in God's purpose and Christ's design and in God's acceptation and thus we say that his death is only intended as a satisfaction and recompence for the sins of the Elect and was laid down for them only 2ly We may consider Christ's sufferings and death in the fruits of it either as they respect common favours and mercies common gifts and means of grace which are not peculiar and saving but common to Believers with others being bestowed upon professors in the visible Church or as they are peculiar and saving such as Faith Justification Adoption c. Now when we say that Christ's sufferings and death are a price for the sins of his People we exclude not the Reprobate simply from temporal and common favours and mercies that come by his death they may have and actually have common gifts and works of the Spirit the means of Grace which are some way effects and fruits of the same Covenant but we say that the Reprobate partake not of saving Mercy and that Christs death is a satisfaction only for the Elect and that none others get pardon of Sin Faith Repentance c. by it but they only it was intended for none others and this we clear and confirm from and by these following grounds and arguments which we shall shortly hint at The 1. Argument is drawen from this same assertion of the Prophet thus If Christs death be only a satisfaction for the sins of Gods People then it is not a satisfaction for the sins of all but it 's a satisfaction only for the sins of Gods People therefore not for all for his People are not all men or all men are not his People but his People are a peculiar People separate from others in God's purpose and decree as we cleared before from John 17. Thine they were and thou gavest them me and the Text says expresly for the transgressions of my people was he stricken he respected the sins of God's People in accepting of the Bargain and in laying down his Life and for their sins only God accepted him yea the very mentioning of them thus here secludes all others and we must expone them exclusively as taking in none others and must look upon the things spoken of them as agreeing to no other even as it 's said Heb. 4. There remains therefore a rest to the people of God which is certainly exclusive of all others and hence when our Lord
the treasure precious Jesus Christ lyeth most obvious and open are certainly most pleasant and beautiful And amongst these such as hold forth his sufferings and himself as crucified most evidently before mens eyes have a peculiar and passing pleasantness and beauty in them If so then sure this fifty third Chapter of the Prophesies of Isaiah cannot but be lookt at as a transcendantly pleasant beautiful sweet-smelling and fragrant piece of Divine Scripture-field wherein the Evangelick Prophet discourseth of the sufferings of Christ as particularly and fully as plainly and pathetically even to the very life as if he himself had been a spectator and eye witness of them However this sweetest Chapter from beginning to end as also the three last Verses of the fore-going be by the greatly learned Grotius most miserably perverted while he industriously diverts it from the Messiah and by stretching and curtailing thereof at his pleasure as the cruel Tyrant Maezentius did the men he laid on his bed to make them of equal length with it wholly applyes it to the Prophet Jeremiah in the first place only not denying that it hath accommodation to Christ of whom too he takes but little or no notice in all his Annotations thereon The impertinencies and wrestings of which application are convincingly holden forth by famous Doctor Owen who looks on this portion of Scripture as the sum of what is spoken in the Old Testament concerning the satisfactory death of Jesus Christ that Mell of Socinians in his Vindiciae Evangelicae against Bidle and the R●covian Catechism who was a burning and shining light in the Reformed Churches though now alace to their great loss lately extinguished And indeed the dealing of that very learned man professing himself to be a Christian with this most clear and to all true Christians most comfortable Scripture is the more strange and even stupendious considering 1. That several passages in it are in the New Testament expresly applyed to Christ * Matth. 8.17 Mark 15.28 Luk. 22.27 Acts 8.28 c. 1 Pet. 2.22 and 24. but not one so much as alluded to in reference to Jeremiah 2. That the ancient Jewish Doctors and the Chaldee Paraphrast as Doctor Owen in the foresaid learned and savoury Book gives an account do apply it to him 3. That a late Doctor of great note and honour among the Jews Arabinel affirmeth that in truth he sees not how one Verse of the whole several of which he toucheth on can be expounded of Jeremiah and wonders greatly that any wise man can be so foolish as to commend let be to be the Author of such an Exposition as one Rabbi Gaon had been which is saith he so utterly alien and not in the least drawn from the Scripture 4. That several Jews do profess that their Rabbins could easily have extricated themselves from all other places of the Prophets a vain and groundless boast if Isaiah in this place had but held his peace as Halsius very late if not present Hebrew-Professor at Breda declares some of them did to himself 5. That a Rabbi by his own confession was converted from a Jew to a Christian by the reading of this 53. of Isaiah as the excellent Mr. Boyl in his delicate Discourses on the stile of the Holy Scriptures informs us yea that diverse Jews have been convinced and converted to the Christian Faith by the evidence of this Prophecy as learned and laborious Mr. Pool affirms in his lately published English Annotations on this Scripture 6. That the Socinians themselves have not dared to attempt the accommodation of the things here spoken of to any other certain and particular person then the Messiah though being so much tortured thereby they have shewed good will enough to it And 7. That himself had before written a Learned Defence of the Catholick Faith concerning Christs satisfaction against Socinus wherein also he improved to notable purpose several Verses of this same Chapter But in these later Annotations being altogether silent as to any use-making of them that way he as much as he can delivers that Desperado and his Disciples from one of the sharpest Swords that lyes at the very throat of their cause for if the Chapter may be applyed to any other as he applyes it wholly to Jeremiah no solid nor cogent Argument can be drawn from it for confirming Christs satisfaction and by his never re-inforcing of that defence of his against the assaults made upon it by the Socinian Crellius though he lived twenty years thereafter he seems for his part quite to have abandoned and delivered it up into the hands of these declared enemies of Christs satisfaction yea and of his God-head By which Annotations of his as by several others on other Scriptures how much on the matter at least great Grotius hath by abusing his prodigious Wit and profound Learning subserved the cursed cause of blasphemous Socinus and further hardened the already alace much and long hardened poor Jews And what bad service he hath done to our Glorious Redeemer and to his Church satisfied-for and purchased by his blood by his sad sufferings and fore soul-travel most clearly and comfortably discoursed in this Chapter let the Lord himself and all that love him in sincerity judge I wish I could and had reason to say no worse of this admirably learned person here then that Quandoque dormitat Homerus Which very many and various very great and most grievously aggravated Sufferings were endured by him not only in his Body nor only in his Soul by vertue of the sympathy it had with his Body from the in-time and strait union betwixt them But also and mainly in his blessed humane Soul immediatly since he redeemed satisfied for and saveth his Peoples Souls as well as their Bodies and the Soul having principally sinned and being the spring and source of Sin Sinners withall deserving punishment in their Souls as well as in their Bodies and being without the benefite of his Mediation to be punished eternally both in their Souls and Bodies and mainly in their Souls there is no doubt the same cogent reason for the Mediator's suffering in both parts of the Humane Nature assumed by him that there is for that Natures suffering which sinned Which his sad complaints of the exceeding trouble of his Soul putting him to say these strange and stupendious words What shall I say Joh. 12.27 Mat. 26.38 Mark 14.33 Luk. 22.44 Heb. 5.7 and of the great Sorrow and Heaviness thereof even to Death his Amazement strong Crys and Tears with his Agony and Sweat of Blood and that before any pain was caused to his Body by men and his conditionate deprecating of that bitter Cup put beyond all reach of ranional contradiction And to think or say that only the fear of his bodily sufferings quickly approaching him did make these sad impressions upon him and draw these strange expressions from him would make him who is Lord and Master to be of far greater
them to wit Sin therefore to such as he cured he says very often Thy sins be forgiven thee he studied to remove that in most of them he did deal with and so looking on our Lord as taking on our Sins complexly with the cause and as having a right to remove all the effects of Sin evidencing it self in the removing of these Diseases whereof Sin was the cause these words may be thus fulfilled and so they are clear and the Doctrine also We have here no meer exemp●ary Saviour that hath done no more but confirmed his Doctrine and given us a copy how to do and behave but he hath really and actually born our Sorrows and Griefs and removed our Debt by undergoing the punishment due to us for Sin Observe here 1. That Sin in no Flesh no not in the Elect themselves is without Sorrow and Grief Tribulation and Anguish are knit to it or it hath these following on it or take the Doctrine thus Wherever there is Sin there is the cause of much Sorrow and Grief no more can the native cause be without the effect then Sin can be without Sorrow and Grief it 's the plain assertion of Scripture Rom. 2.8 9. Indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish upon every soul of man that doth evil which one place putting the four words together says 1. That there is Sorrow most certainly and inseparably on every Soul that hath sinned And 2. That this Sorrow is exceeding great which may also be the reason why this Sorrow is set out in two words in the Text therefore four words are used by the Apostle to express it It 's not our purpose here to dispute whether God in his Justice doth by necessity of Nature punish the Sinner These three things considered will make out the Doctrine which is That there is a necessary connexion betwixt S●n and Sorrow and that this Sorrow must needs be very great 1. If we consider the exceeding unsuitableness of Sin to the holy Law of God and how it is a direct contrariety to that most pure and perfect Law 2. If we consider the perfectly holy Nature of God himself The righteous Lord saith the P●almist Psal 11.7 loveth righteousness and the Prophet Hab. 1.13 says He is of purer eyes then that be can behold evil and he cannot look upon iniquity and though we need no● to dispute Gods Soveraignty yet it is clear that he is angry with the wicked every day Psal 7.11 and he will by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34.7 and tha● there is a greater suitableness in his inflicting Sorrow and Grief on a Sinner that walks contrary to him then there is in shewing him Mercy and there is a greater suitableness in his shewing Mercy to a humbled Sinner that is aiming to walk holily before him 3. If we consider the revealed will of God in the Threatning who hath said the day thou eatest thou shalt surely die we may say there is as they speak in the Schools a hypothetick necessity of grief and sorrow to follow on Sin and that there is a necessary connexion betwixt them and this may very well stand with the Mediator his coming in and interposing to take that Grief and Sorrow from off us and to lay it on himself but it was once ours because of our Sin If it be ask●d w●at Grief and Sorrow this is We said it's very great and there is reason for it for though our act of Sin 1. As to the Subject that Sins Man And 2. As to the act of ●in it self a sinful thought word or deed that is soon gone be finit yet if we consider Sin 1. In respect of the object ●gainst whom the infinite God 2. In respect of the absolute purity of Gods Law a rule that bears ou● G●ds Image set down by infinite Wisdom and that may be some way called infinitely pure and Sin as being against this pure rule that infinite Wisdom hath set down And 3. If we consider it in no respect of its nature every sin being of this nature that though it cannot properly wrong the Majesty of God yet as to the intention of the thing and even of the Sinner it wrongs him Sin in these respects may be called infinite and the wrong done to the Majesty of God thereby may be called infinite as these who built Babel their intention in that work breathed forth infinite wrong to God as having a direct tendency to bring them off from dependance on him and so every Sin if it had its will and intent would put God in subordination to it and set it self in his room and therefore Sin in some respect as to the wrong against God is infinite 2. Observe That the real and very great Sorrow that the Sins of the Elect deserved our Lord Jesus did realty and actually bear and suffer as we have exponed the words and confirmed the exposition given of them ye have a clear confirmation of the Doctrine from them 1. Griefs and Sorrows in the plural Number shew intensness of Sorrow and Grief 2. That they are called ours it shews our propriety in them And 3. That it 's said Christ bare them These concur to prove the Doctrine that the same Sorrow which the Sins of the Elect deserved Christ bare It not only says that our Lord bare Sorrows but the same Sorrows that by the Sins of the Elect were due to them and so there was a proportionableness betwixt the Sorrows that he bare and the Sorrows they should have endured he took up the cup of Wrath that was filled for us and that we would have been put to drink and drank it out himself suppose that our Lord had never died as blessed be his Name there is no ground to make the supposi●ion the cup of S●rrow that the Elect would have drunken eternally was the same cup that he drank our for them It is true we would distinguish betwixt these things that are essentially due to Sin as the punishment of it and these things that are only accidentally due to it the former Christ bare but not the latter To clear both in a word or two 1. These things essentially due to Sin as necessarly included in the Threatning The day thou eatest thou shalt surely die and in the curse of the Law according to that Cursed is every one that abides not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them are Death and the Curse these are essentially the desert of Sin in which respect it was not only necessary that Christ should become Man and ●●ffer but that he should suffer to death or sh●uld die and not only so but that he should die the cursed death of the Cross as the Threatning and Curse put together hold out and as to all these things that he underwent and met with before and at his death they were the accomplishment of the Threatning due to us and fulfilled in and by him in our room
That this Word Justification is a Legal Forensick or Judicial Word and we are to conceive of God who is the party offended as the Judge and of the Sinner Arraigned and brought before His Tribunal to be Judged as a delinquent the Law gives in the Lybel or Inditement founds the Challenge or Accusation the Sinners Conscience and Actions are as so many Witnesses proving the breaking of the Law and him to be obnoxious to the Curse on that account In this we say that God is the efficient Cause and so we may take the Words By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many Actively and efficiently to look to Christ as having this Power as He is God which is proper to God alone as is clear Rom. 8.34 It is God that justifies 1 Cor. 4.4 Though I know nothing by my self yet I am not hereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord And this is a reason of the former to wit that no other can Absolve but God the party offended who is Judge We mark it for this practical Use which the Apostle makes of it which is to bid us lay less weight upon others thinking well of us or absolving us and on our own absolving of our selves the Lord chargeth some thus Luke 16.15 Ye are they which justifie your selves before men but God knows your hearts Paul will not justifie himself for that is Gods place and prerogative How many are there who take another persons testimony for Gods and think that since others love respect and commend them they are in a good condition and well enough but alace is that Person God Except mens testimony be founded on the grounds that are held forth in the Word and if so then it 's Gods Testimony it will not do the businesse nor avail you any thing except there be ● Sentence of Absolution pronounced and ●ast by Him their Sentence or your own will be recalled Though many of you do not down right professe this yet many of you practically fall into it alwayes remember that it is God that Justifies and that His Absolution is different from mens and from your own many may have good thoughts of you and so may ye of your selves when God may have none For the 2d To wit The final Cause it is clear here also by comparing the former verse with the Words going before in this same verse and ye may take it in this Observation That the Glory of God and of the Media or is the end that God hath before Him in the Justifying of Sinners Therefore it is called the Lords pleasure or delight and the Mediators satisfaction because He hath proposed to Himself therein the Glory of His Grace especially and also of others of His Attributs as His end and so hath a kind of longing desire and thirst after it for the Lord being Absolutely Glorious cannot but love His own Glory and being the infinitly Pure Alsufficient Good He cannot but love Himself and His own Glory and therefore for attaining of this end He Justifies and Absolves poor Sinners Now God is glorified here two wayes 1. He gets the Glory of His Grace that is exceedingly magnified thereby as is clear Ephes 1.5 Having predestinated us to the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his will to the praise of the glory of his grace It 's the Lords pleasure to glorifie His Grace and this proves to be to the Glory of His Grace when a Sinner lyable to Wrath is fully Justifyed and Intitled to Heaven 2. He gets thereby the Glory of His Justice and Righteousness which takes in the Glorifying of God's Holiness and Wisdom He is seen here to be a Holy God who will needs testifie His dislike at Sin where ever it is a just God that will needs punish it a gracious God that will pardon and such a wise God as finds out the way how both to punish and pardon without any the least Imputation either to His Justice or to His Mercy and Grace and so He shews Himself to be Infinitly Just Gracious Wise and Holy in the Justification of Sinners These we may see Rom. 3.24 25 26. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ There Justice and Grace shine clearly Justification is free yet there is a Price laid down and a Satisfaction made to Justice and the 26. verse shews the end to wit To declare his righteousness that he might be just and the justifier of them who believe in Jesus He hath indeed taken a way how to pardon Sin but so as it is through a Redemption or by the exacting of a Price that He may be seen to be Just who will not pardon Sin without a Satisfaction Justice kythes in this that Christ is put to pay a great Price and that He may be seen to be Gracious He hath laid down a way how the Price that was to be payed by Christ might be imputed to or reckoned on the account of the guilty Sinner and that He might thereby be Absolved And thus Justice and Grace kiss each other in this admirable contrivance And although none almost except Socinians deny the Justice of God in the Justification of Sinners yet as they do Doctrinally in Substance deny it So many of us who professe to abhore their Doctrine do practically deny it also And therefore as the 1. Use of it let me speak a little to unbelievers and ask you what think you will become of you ye must either betake your selves to Christs Satisfaction or ye must resolve to Satisfie for your selves Secure Hypocrits think of nothing but of Grace and that God will alwayes be Gracious and never suffer themselves think of the necessity of a Satisfaction to be made to His Justice and thus they slight and on the matter deny His Justice as if He were not to be Glorified in that Attribute as well as in His Grace and Mercy whereas there is no other way to declare God to be Just in the Justification of them that believe but this which brings them to Christs Satisfaction Use 2. It 's ground of notable Consolation and Encouragement to a poor exercised Soul sensible of Sin whereupon to expect Justification It 's Gods end in Justifying Sinners to set out the Glory of His Grace and is it not much that God should contrive such a way for glorifying of Himself as should carrie along in it good to us yea such a way as should resolve in our good which comes in as a subordinat end to the glorifying of His Grace as the ultimat end may not this be an encouragement to them to seek after Justification on these terms and for this end Use 3. It shews that as many as submit not to the way of this Righteousness and of Justification by Grace are thwarting with God's End they set themselves to hinder and obstruct it even that He should not be glorified
Believer is to beware least he be stollen off his feet and misken Christs Intercession for then he is ready to think that he cannot but be well and his prayers cannot but be heard because he gets liberty to put them up and it 's then often that there is hazard to lay least weight on Christs Intercession To improve Christs Intercession aright in such cases these Two are to be adverted to 1. That his Intercession be acknowledged as the fountain and procuring cause of that liberty and liveliness and so we are to carry a stoped mouth before God and not to boast of it For as we shew the pouring out of the Spirit is a special fruit of Christs Intercession It being by vertue thereof that gifts are given and grace to worship God in a spiritual manner 2. That we beware of thinking that our prayers are in a fitness or that they put us in a fitness of access to God because of that liberty except by vertue of Christs Intercession more then if we had not a word to say There is in our unbelief and presumption a secret inclination to lay the weight of our acceptance on our own liberty Whereas Revel 8. the prayers of all Saints must come up before God having the smoak of his incense to make them acceptable In which respect in a case of liberty Christs Intercession is made use of and improven when we are denyed to our own liberty and it is not made the ground of our confident application to God but Christs Intercession on●y Again 2. when the Believer is in bonds in some eminent manner so that he cannot pray he scarce hath a word to speak to God he goes it 's true about the duty but he comes not speed his prayer relishes not to himself he is like one speaking but not praying his heart is not warmed neither is there at least to his own apprehension any connexion betwixt his words whereupon he is ready to think that his prayer is as good as no prayer because of that inclination that is in all of us to rest on our own praying without making use of th● Intercession of Christ The reasons why in this case we would presse the use-making of his Intercession are these 1. L●a●t we faint and grow wear in prayer which cannot but befal us if his Intercession be not made use of 2. Least we loss the estimation of the excellent worth of Christs Intercession which is exceeding derogatory to him that is mighty to save and on whom help is laid and it is especially for such a time and case that he is holden forth for an Intercessour Now there is a twofold improvement of Christs Intercession called for in this case when the Believer is in bonds and cannot so much as sigh but it 's called in question whether it be accepted though yet the man is serious 1. There is an improving of it for obtaining of that which we have been aiming at though we cannot tell our own teal to speak so nor open our cause nor make known our requests to God yet to expect what we have been aiming at and seeking after by vertue of Christs Intercession for as ill set together as our prayer hath been because it is founded upon the Intercession of the Mediator and we expect a hearing on that account ala●erly it being his Intercession that makes our prayers acceptable it can make such a poor prayer acceptable also whereupon the Soul rests quiet and expects a hearing on this ground because as was said the prayers of all Saints go up from his Censer and with his Incense and none are cast back that are put up through him and by vertue of his Intercession Hence sometimes looks sometimes thoughts sometimes broken words and groans come up before God are acceptable and get a return The reason is because through the Intercession of the Mediator the prayers of all Saints are acceptable This is even as if a man should credit his able Advocat with the managing of his Cause although he cannot to speak so ●outh-band his own teal nor expresse himself satisfyingly to himself in it H●nce we have these words often John 14. and 16. Whatever ye ask in my name believing ye shall receive and whatever ye ask in my name I will do it that is when ye ground the expectation of your hearing and speed-coming in prayer on me and my mediation when folks because of their short-comings in prayer give over the expectation of a hearing and a return they give over in so far the laying of due weight on his Intercession only ye would remember the terms on which a person is warranted to make use of his Intercession for when we follow not his way in the improving of it we cannot expect to come speed or get good by it 2. A Believer in his bonds would expect a lousing through the vertue of his Intercession And this is another way how we would improve it in this case when we are bound up and to speak so langled that we cannot stir in prayer then we would have an eye to the efficacy of Christs Intercession that is of continual vigour and efficacy even when we are very dead indisposed and lifelesse for the attaining of liberty and liveliness This is indeed to cast a look to him and singly to improve the efficacy of his mediation when we cannot speak on word to work up our selves to a disposition for that work And these two go well together to be improving his Intercession for obtaining what we need for the time present and for the time to come and when we are in bonds to be improving it for liberty and freedom 2dly There is an use-making of Christs Intercession called for both when we aim to obtain any thing and when we have obtained that which we would be at 1. In our aiming to have or obtain we would improve it that our addresses to God may be in his name and our Faith of obtaining may be founded on Christs Intercession and not on our own and that our Faith may be stayed and fixed in expectation of the thing The improving of Christs Intercession in his respect leads us 1. To the right way of prosecuting our suits to God and 2. It quiets and fix●s us in expecting of an answer and when this is wanting Christians are either discouraged and know not how to pursue their cause or else they are carnally secure and presumptuous which is very ordinary for either as I have said we are under an anxious fear so that we know not how to go about dutie with any hope of success or else we grow secure and slack and careless in dutie 2ly There is an use-making of Christs Intercession when we have obtained any benefit which keeps the Soul in his common and debt and in acknowledging it self to be his Debtor This makes Christians when they have gotten any thing to be humble and helps them to a sanctified use of
the thing received whereas when this is forgotten though Persons may be seemingly humble when they are praying for a thing in his name yet when they have gotten it they grow carnal and some way wanton and he is forgotten as if the benefit had never come from him But on the other hand when there is an acknowledgement of Christs Intercession when any thing is obtained it keeps as I said the Person humble and holily afra●d when it hath gotten as well as when it was seeking and it makes warrie in using and fearful to abuse any benefit received least it be found a wrong and indignity done to Christ and his Intercession 3dly We may instance the improving of Christs Intercession both in a most sad and in a most cheerful condition In reference to both which we should make use of Christs Intercession and it being readily one of these conditions that we are in either a more sad or more cheerful one we would think our selves defective and faulty as to our duty when we suit and conform not our way to our condition 1. If it be a more sad condition whether we be spiritually sad the Soul being heavy and refusing to be comforted or whether we be under a temporal outward di●consolat condition there is an use-making of Christs Intercession called for in both For a Believer cannot be in any so disconsolat a condition but he may draw refreshing from this Fountain in reference thereto and when we make not use of his Intercession in each as it occurs either anxiety and discouragement grows or we turn to some unwarrantable and crooked mean or way for an out-gate from such a disconsolat condition Now to make use of and to improve Christs Intercession aright in such a disconsolat condition and case 1. The Soul would gather and compose it self to search and see what is useful in Christs Intercession for it's case seing that sad case cannot be imagined but Christs Intercession is a cordial for it upon which as a solid ground the Soul may be quiet that it cannot miscarry in that for which it is now in so much bitterness seing Christ Jesus hath the managing of it's case and cause Hence it may reason thus although I was unwatchful and this condition came on me unawars and I was surprised with it yet it 's not any surprise to him He was not sleeping though I was he knew what was coming though I knew not therefore this will not hurt nor prejudge my main cause because it comes through his hand 2. There is an improvement of his Intercession in this case when the out-gate though desperat as to us is yet hopeful by vertue thereof and when this is made the only or main ground of our hope to wit That there is a friend at the court of heaven who can order our cause and make such a thing work for our good It puts spirits in us to pray and actively to go about the use of the means whereas when we use not the means or use them without due respect to Christs Intercession the businesse becomes heartlesse hoplesse and desperat 2. If our condition be or seem to be more solacious and cheerful there would be an improving of Christs Intercession least our cheerfulnesse grow carnal which it cannot otherwayes be but when he is acknowledged to be the author of our solace and cheerfulnesse when he is depended upon for the continuance of it and when the praise of it is returned to him it bounds the heart that there is no acce●● to grow carnal in which respect these things wherein others grow carnal such as health strength meat drink apparel commodious dwelling the recovery of themselves of their children or of other neer relations or dear friends from sickness c. A●e thus spiritual●zed and made spiritually refreshing to the peop●e of God because there is an up taking of them as coming through Christs Intercession and a returning of thanks to him for for them Hence Heb. 13.15 It 's said By him therefore let us offer the sacrifices of praise to God There being the same access to praise in our spiritual cheerfulnesse that there is to pray in our heavinesse and difficulties He that is the ground on which we ought to found our prayers is also the ground on which we ought to bui●d our praise And it 's he that puts life in and value upon the one and the other 4ly We may instance it in this case when the Believer is under challenges it 's then a special season to make use of Christs Intercession and to put the Lybel in his hand to answer it which is done by Faith's resting on him as a Priest for the obtaining of an absolution from that charge although we cannot answer it our selves yet expecting an answer through him according to that famous place Rom. 8.34 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect Who will lybel them among other reasons of the interrogation which hath the force of a negation this is one It is Christ who died yea rather who is risen again who is at the right hand of God making intercession for us This furnisheth an Answer to the Charge put in their hand Or when the Believer is under calmnesse and tranquility his Intercession would be improven for there cannot be a sanctified calmnesse without depending on him by vertue of whose Satis●action and Procurement we have it and by vertue of whose Intercession it 's continued The Reaso●s why we have hinted at these things are 1. To hold out to you the concernment of Christs Intercession for we canno● be in that case but the Believer hath therein to do with it 2. To shew our great obligation to God who hath given us such an Interc●ssour for all these cases In this one word there is stored up a treasure of consolation for all cases that a Christian can be in 3. That we may be helped to our duty of improving and making use of him according to the several cases we are or may be in For though his Intercession be mainly to be made use of when we come to pray yet not only then but at other times and in other cases as when we fear any hazard when we need any good thing when we expect it or would be cheerful on the receipt of it and when we are in any difficulty and know not what to do we will find something called for from us in reference to his Offices and to this in particu●ar 4. Because this use making of Christs Intercession commends Christ and makes him lovely to us And indeed that which makes Believers think so little of him is in part at least the little improving of ●is Intercession which sh●uld be made use of in the least things if it were when we need any thing in our thought to look up to God through him and to found the hope of our getting it on this ground be-because there is an Intercessour If this