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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57159 A sermon preached before the King upon the twenty eighth of March, 1669 by Edward Lord Bishop of Norwich. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1669 (1669) Wing R1284; ESTC R36786 19,736 44

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legal obedience was necessary unto life by the first Covenant made with Adam Do this and live Rom. 10.5 by which since the fall no man can be saved 2. By way of a final perpetual Decree never to be altered Such is the Covenant of Grace in the Gospel confirmed by an oath to shew the immutability thereof for Christ offered one sacrifice for sin for ever upon rejection whereof there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin If ye believe not that I am he ye shall dye in your sins saith our Saviour Ioh. 8.4 Again one thing may be necessary to another two ways 1. Necessitate causae as that which giveth it its being and foundeth a right unto it So the payment of a price is necessary to a purchase and foundeth that right which the Purchaser hath thereunto 2. Necessitate viae without the which I cannot come to the possession of the thing purchased For though the price procure me the property yet I must go the way which will bring me unto it before I can be personally possessed of it The only cause of salvation is the free Grace of God and price of the bloud of Christ deriving a property thereunto upon us as one by faith with the Purchaser by regeneration descending from him by adoption joynt heirs with him But we cannot come to the actual possession of that inheritance without running that race of Evangelical holiness which is the way thereunto From these things thus distinguished we gather this conclusion that although the Gospel were not originally necessary unto blessedness by the Law of Primitive Creation another Covenant having been made with Adam in order unto life yet upon supposition of the fall of man and of the unchangeable sanction of God whereby the Covenant of Grace is made perpetual so the Gospel is indispensably necessary unto salvation called in the Scripture the Gospel of Salvation the Power of God unto Salvation the Grace of God which bringeth Salvation yea by the name of Salvation it self 1. The sacrifice of Christ necessary Ad acquisitionem to the purchasing of blessedness for us called by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by an Hypallage as some think 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A purchase of Salvation of glory of Redemption The bloud of Christ was both a price of ransome whereby we were Redeemed out of misery He gave his life a ransome for many Matt. 20.28 and a price of purchase of that eternal Glory unto which though it were his own he could not ascend so as to take possession thereof for us which was one principal business of his Ascension I go to prepare a place for you Joh. 14.2 until first he had suffered as himself telleth us Ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter into his glory Luk. 24.26 for Christ having a double right unto glory a natural right as the Son of God and a purchased right as the Saviour of the world reserveth the former unto himself and bestoweth the latter upon the Church 2. The gracious Acts of Divine Love in Iustification and Adoption necessary unto the Ius ad rem or deriving a title upon us For sonship hath a right accompanying it If sons then heirs Gal 4.7 The inheritance it self is sometimes called by the name of Adoption Rom. 8.23 Gal. 4.5 3. Faith and Repentance which two Evangelical graces Christ hath honoured in the business of Salvation above others because they are humbling graces the one teaching us to judge and abhor our selves the other to go out of our selves for righteousness these necessary ad Statum to that condition wherein we are capacitated to receive the conveyance of that inheritance so purchased for us and derived upon us Repent and be converted that your sins may be blotted out Act· 3 19· He that believeth in him shall not perish but have eternal life Joh· 3 15. 4. Evangelical obedience necessary to the Ius in Re to the Actual possession of this Inheritance as the onely way which leads thereunto For without holiness no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12.14 It is a gradus and an inchoation of Glory Thus we see the absolute necessity of the Gospel wherein we finde Christ meritoriously purchasing God graciously conveying Repentance humbly disposing Faith comfortably receiving and sincere obedience gradually conducting us unto eternal salvation In the next place let us observe the All-sufficiency of the grace of the Gospel unto the effecting of that blessedness whereunto it is so necessary In sickness Physick is necessary but when Death comes it is not sufficient to withstand it But there is a Plenipotency in Evangelical grace to consummate our Salvation for us Christ is able to save to the uttermost those that come to God by him Heb 7.25 Every thing which he did corporally for us he will do the same spiritually by his Grace in us So that though we be yet imperfect in our selves yet we are complete in him Col. 2.10 And as there was a consummatum est pronounced upon his work on earth whereby he wrought Redemption for us It is finished Joh. 19.30 So there will be a consummatum est pronounced upon his work in Heaven whereby he applyeth Redemption unto us It is done Rev. 21.6 He will perfect every good work which he begins and be the finisher of what he is the Author unto us And this is a further demonstration of the excellencie of the Gospel That as it is an onely so it is an all-sufficient means unto that blessedness which is therein tendred unto us Lastly the excellency of the Gospel will appear if we consider the infinite value and pretiousness of the things therein concerned 1. The preciousness of the subject by the grace thereof Redeemed It is true by sin our bodies are become vile and our souls cursed and might both be justly made vessels of dishonour But if we view them in their primitive integrity made after the Image of God in the Grace and Glory whereof they are capable in the immortal condition whereunto they are reserved in the honourable accompt which God hath of them when he hath once formed them for himself a people for his Name in whom he will be admired in these respects we may truely say that there is nothing which a man can give in exchange for his soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The preciousness of the price whereby we were purchased the bloud of God as the Apostle calls it Act. 20.28 3. The preciousness of the condition whereunto we are by the Gospel called To be justified from the guilt of innumerable sins To have the peace of God which passeth understanding the joy of salvation which is unspeakable and glorious the Favour of God which is better then life shed abroad upon the Soul To have the sting of Death pulled out the fire of Hell quenched the worm of conscience killed the sentence