Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n act_n action_n active_a 26 3 8.6108 4 false
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
A25241 Looking unto Jesus a view of the everlasting gospel, or, the souls eying of Jesus as carrying on the great work of mans salvation from first to last / by Isaac Ambrose ... Ambrose, Isaac, 1604-1664. 1680 (1680) Wing A2957; ESTC R33051 999,188 563

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

ruddy Cant. 5.10 the chiefest of ten thousands As in the fairest beauty there is a mixture of these two colours white and ruddy so in Christ there is a gracious mixture and compound of all the graces of the Spirit there is in him a sweet temper of gentleness purity righteousness meekness humility and what not In him are hid all the treasures of Wisdom and Knowledge Col. 2.3 and I may add of all other gifts and graces not a grace but it was in Christ and that in an higher way than in any Saint in the World and therefore he is called fairer than all the children of men Observe There was more habitual grace in Christ than ever was or is or shall be in all the Elect whether Angels or Men. He received the Spirit out of measure there was in him as much as possibly could be in a creature and more than in all other creatures whatsoever As the Sun is the Prince of Stars as the Husband is the head of the Wife as a Lion is the King of the Beasts so is this Sun of Righteousness this Head of the Church this Lion of the Tribe of Judah the chiefest of ten thousands if we look at any thing in Heaven or Earth that we observe as eminently fair by that is the Lord Jesus in respect of his inward beauty set forth in Scriptures he is the Sun of Righteousness the bright Morning-Star the Light of the World the Tree of Life the Lilly and the Rose fairer than all the Flowers of the Field than all the precious Stones of the Earth than all the Lights in the Firmament than all the Saints and Angels in Heaven You will say What 's all this to us Certainly much every way the Apostle tells you That the Law of the Spirit of Life which is in Jesus Christ Rom. 8.2 hath freed me from the Law of sin of Death let us enquire into these words the law of the Spirit of life the Spirit of life is here put for life as else where After three dayes an half Rev. 11.11 the Spirit of life coming from God shall enter into them Now life is that whereby a thing acteth and moveth it self and it is the cause and beginning of action and motion and this Spirit of life or life it self being here applied to Christ it is that in Christ which is the beginning and cause of all his holy actions and what was that but his Original holiness or the holiness of his humane Nature But why is the holiness of Christs nature called the Spirit of life I answer 1. Because it was infused into his manhood by the Spirit of God The holy Ghost shall come upon thee therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee Luke 1.35 shall be called the Son of God 2. Because it is a most exact and absolute and perfect holiness the Scripture-phrase setting out things in perfection or fulness usually adds the word Spirit unto them as the spirit of pride the Spirit of truth and the Spirit of error so then the meaning of the Spirit of life is all one with the most absolute and most perfect purity and holiness of the nature of Christ It is briefly as if the Apostle had said the law of the Spirit of life or the power of the most absolute and perfect holiness of the nature of Christ hath freed me from the law of sin and death hath acquitted me from the power of my sinful nature and from the power of death due to me in respect of my sinful and corrupt nature We might draw from hence this conclusion that The benefit of Christ's habitual righteousness infused at his first conception is imputed to believers to their justification As the obedience of his life and the merit of his death so the Holyness infused at his very conception hath its influence into our justification it is by the obedience of his life that we are accounted actually holy and by the purity of his conception or habitual grace that we are accounted personally holy But I must not stay here Thus much of the Holiness of Christ's Nature SECT IV. Of the Holiness of Christ's Life Rom. 5.19 2. FOr the holiness of Christs life the Apostle tells us that by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous here 's the obedience of Christ and its influence on us 1. The obedience of Christ is that whereby he continued in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Matth. 5.17 John 8.29 Acts 3.14 Observe Christ's life was a visible commentary on Gods Law For proof Think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets saith Christ but to fulfil them And the Father hath not left me alone saith Christ for I do alwayes those things that please him Hence Christ in Scripture is called Holy and Just and the Holy One Acts 2.27 The most Holy Dan. 9.24 by his actual holiness Christ fulfilled in act every branch of the Law of God he walked in all the Commandments of God he performed perfectly both in thought word and deed whatsoever the Law of the Lord required I do not cannot limit this obedience of Christ to this last year of his Ministry for his whole life was a perpetual course of obedience he was obedient unto death Phil. 2.8 saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even until his death and yet because we read most of his holy actings this year and that this was the year wherein both his active and passive obedience did most eminently shine and break forth the year wherein he drew up all the dispersions of his precepts and cast them into actions as into sums total therefore now I handle it and I shall make it out by the passages following only in this one year As 1. Now he discovered his charity in feeding the hungry as at once five thousand men with five Loaves and two Fishes John 6.9 10 11. John 6.9 10 11. and at another time four thousand men with seven Loaves and a few small Fishes Matth. 15.32 Matth. 15.32 2. Now he discovered his self-denial and contempt of the World in flying the offers of a Kingdom when the people were convinc'd that he was the Messiah from that miracle of feeding five thousand men with five Loaves presently they would needs make him a King but he that left his Fathers Kingdom for us he fled from the offers of a Crown and Kingdom from them John 6.15 as from an enemy When Jesus perceived that they would come and take him by force to make him a King he departed again into a Mountain himself alone 3. Now he discovered his mercy in healing the Womans Daughter that had an unclean spirit Mar. 7.26 27. the Woman was a Greek a Syrophenician by Nation and in that respect Christ called her a Dog and yet Christ gave her the desire of her soul O the
Obedience God hath ever the first work as first Jer. 31.33 Eze. 36 26 31 Ezek. 36.25 Ezek. 36.27 Zech. 12.10 I will be your God and then ye shall be my People first I will take away the stony heart and give an heart of Flesh and then you shall loath your selves for your iniquities and for your abominations first I will sprinkle water upon you and then ye shall be clean from all your filthiness first I will put my Spirit into you and cause you to walk in my Statutes and then ye shall keep my Judgments and do them first I will pour out my Spirit of Grace and supplication upon you and then ye shall mourn as a man mourning for his only Son first I will do all and then ye shall do something A perplexed troubled spirit is apt to cry out O! alas I can do nothing I can as well dissolve a Rock as make my heart of stone a heart of flesh Mark now how the Covenant stands well ordered like an Army I will do all saith God and then thou shalt do something I will strengthen and quicken you and then ye shall serve me saith the Lord. 4. It is well ordered in respect of the end and aim to which all the parts of the Covenant are referred Eph. 1.6 the end of the Covenant is the praise of the Glory of his Grace the parts of the Covenant are the Promise and the Stipulation the Promise is either Principal or Immediate and that is God and Christ or secondary and consequential and that is Pardon Justification Reconciliation Sanctification Glorification and the Stipulation on our parts are Faith and Obedience we must believe in him that Justifies the ungodly and walk before him in all well pleasing Observe now the main design and aim of the Covenant and see but how all the streams run towards that Ocean God gives himself to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace God gives Christ to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace God gives pardon justification sanctification salvation to the praise of the Glory of his Grace and we Believe we Obey to the Praise of the Glory of his Grace and good reason for all is of Grace and therefore all must tend to the Praise of the glory of his grace it is of Grace that God hath given himself Christ pardon justification reconciliation sanctification salvation to any Soul it is of grace that we believe By grace ye are saved through faith Eph. 2.8 not of your selves it is the gift of God O the sweet and comely order of this Covenant All is of Grace and all tends to the praise and glory of this grace and therefore it is called a Covenant of grace Many a sweet soul is forced to cry I cannot believe I may as well reach heaven with a finger as lay hold on Christ by the hand of faith but mark how the Covenant stands like a well marshalled army to repel this doubt Phil. 1.29 if thou canst not believe God will enable thee to believe to you it is given to believe O the Covenant of Grace is a gracious Covenant God will not only promise good things but he helps us by his Spirit to perform the condition He works our hearts to believe in God and to believe in Christ all is of Grace that all may tend to the praise of the glory of his grace 5. Wherein is the Covenant sure I answer it is sure in the performance and accomplishment of it Isa 55.3 Hence the promises of the Covenant are called the sure Mercies of David not because they are sure unto David alone but because they are sure and shall be sure unto all the Seed of David that are in Covenant with God as David was the Promises of Gods Covenant are not Yea and Nay various and uncertain but they are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.20 sure to be fulfilled Hence the stability of Gods Covenant is compared to the firmness and unmovableness of the mighty Mountains nay Mountains may depart and the hills be removed by a Miracle but my kindness shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed Isa 54.10 saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee Sooner shall the Rocks be removed the Fire cease to burn the Sun be turned into darkness and the very heavens be confounded with the earth than the promise of God shall fail psal 19.7 The testimony of the Lord is sure saith David Christ made it and writ it with his own blood to this very end was Christ appointed and it hath been all his work to ensure Heaven to his Saints Some question whether it be in Gods present power to blot a name out of the Book of Life We say no his deed was at first free but now it is necessary not absolutely but ex Hypothesi upon supposition of his eternal Covenant Hence it is that the Apostle sayes If we confess our Sins He is Faithful 1 John 1.9 and Just to forgive us our Sins It is Justice with God to pardon the Elect's Sins as the Case now stands Indeed Mercy was all that saved us primarily but now Truth saves us and stands engaged with Mercy for our Heaven And therefore David prayes Send forth Mercy and Truth and save me We find it often in the Psalms as a Prayer of David Ps●l 57.3 Ps 31.1 3 24. 119.40.143.1 Deliver me in Thy Righteousness and Judge me according to Thy Righteousness and Quicken me in Thy Righteousness and In Thy Faithfulness answer me and In Thy Righteousness Now if it had not been for the Covenant of Grace surely David durst not have said such a word The Covenant is sure in every respect Isa 55.3 I will make an Everlasting Covenant with you saith God even the sure Mercies of David 6. Whether is Christ more clearlier manifested in this Breaking-forth of the Covenant than in any of the Former The Affirmative will appear in that we find in this Manifestation these Particulars 1. That He was God and Man in One Person David's Son and yet David's Lord The Lord said unto my Lord Sit Thou on My Right Hand Psal 110.1 until I make Thine Enemies Thy Foot-stool 2. That He suffered for us and in His Sufferings How many Particulars are discovered As first His Cry My God My God Why hast Thou forsaken Me Secondly Psal 22.1 Mat. 27.46 Psal 22.8 Mat. 27.43 Ps 22.16 17 18. Mat. 27.35 Psal 16.10 Acts 2.31 Psal 68.18 Ephes 4.8 The Jews Taunts He trusted on the Lord that He would deliver Him let Him deliver Him if He delight in Him Thirdly The very Manner of His Death They pierced My Hands and My Feet I may tell all My Bones they look and stare upon Me they part My Garments among them and cast Lots upon My Vesture 3. That He Rose again for us Thou wilt not leave My Soul in Hell neither wilt Thou suffer Thine
fire which hath a most vehement flame SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that Respect WE must hope in Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation in a way of Covenant now what is hope but a good opinion of enjoying its object indeed a good opinion is so necessary for hope that it makes almost all its kinds and differences as it is greater or lesser so it causeth the strength or weakness the excess or defect of this passion hope This good opinion is that which renders hope either doubtful or certain if certain it produceth confidence or presumption presumption is nothing but an immoderate hope without a ground but confidence is that assurance of the thing hoped for in some measure as if we had it already in hand Hence it is that we usually say we have great and strong and good hopes when we would speak them assured which hath occasioned some to define it thus Hope is a certain grounded confidence that the desired good will come not to insist on this all the question is Whether those promises contained in the Covenant of grace belong unto me and what are the grounds and foundations on which my hope is built If the grounds be weak then hope is doubtful or presumptuous but if the grounds be right then hope is right and I may cast Anchor and build upon it In the disquisition of these grounds we shall only search into those qualifications which the Scripture tells us they are qualified with with whom the Lord enters into a Covenant of grace and these we shall reduce 1. To the condition of the Covenant 2. To the promise of the Covenant As 1. If thou art in Covenant with God then hath God wrought in thee that condition of the Covenant Acts 16.31 Rom. 10.9 a true and lively and soul-saving and justifying faith Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved If thou believest thou shalt be saved The promise of life contained in the Covenant is made onely to believers This is so sure a way of tryal 2 Cor. 13.5 that the Apostle himself directs us thereunto Examine your selves whether ye be in the Faith Ay But how shall I examine for there are many pretenders to faith in these dayes Why thus 1. True faith will carry thee out of thy self into Christ Gal. 2.20 I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me a faithful man hath not his life in himself but in Christ Jesus he hath his spiritual being in the Father and in his Son Jesus Christ he is joyned to the Lord and is one Spirit he seeth the Father in the Son and the Son within himself and also the Father within himself through the Son 2 Cor. 13.5 John 14.20 Joh. 17.22 23. Know ye not that Christ Jesus is in you except ye be reprobates Ye shall know me saith Christ that I am in the Father and you in me and I in you By faith we enjoy the glory of union The glory which thou hast given me I have given them that they may be one even as we are one I in them and thou in me though we have not the glory of equality yet we have the glory of likeness we are one with Christ and one with the Father by faith in Christ 2. True faith will carry thee beyond the world a believer looks on Christ over-coming the world for him and so by that faith he overcomes the world through him 1 John 5.4 Rev. 1.12 This is the Victory that overcometh the world even your faith Hence it is that the Saints are said To be cloathed with the Sun and to have the Moon under their feet when through faith they are cloathed with The Son of Righteousness the Lord Jesus then they trample upon all sublunary things as nothing worth in comparison of Christ 3. True faith is ever accompanied with true love if once by faith thou apprehendest Gods love and Christs love to thee thou canst not but love that God and love that Christ who loved thee and gave himself for thee 1 John 4.19 We love him because he first loved us he that loveth not God hath not apprehended Gods love to him if ever God in Christ be presented to thee for thy justification 1 John 4.8 it is such a lovely object that thou canst not but love him He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love 4. True faith purifies the heart and purgeth out sin When God discovers this that he will heal back-sliding and love freely and turn away his anger then Ephraim shall say What have I any more to do with Idols Hos 14.8 if ever Christ reveal himself as the object of our Justification he will be sure to present himself as the pattern of our Sanctification the knowledge of Gods Goodness will make us in love with holiness they shall fear and tremble for all the goodness and for all the prosperity Jer. 33.9 that I procure unto them saith the Lord The golden chain of Mercy let down from Heaven doth bind us faster to the service of our God 5. Above all observe the rise true faith if it be true it is ever bottomed upon the sense and pain of a lost condition spiritual poverty is the nearest capacity of believing this is faiths method be condemned to be saved be sick and be healed Faith is a flower of Christ's own planting but it grows in no Soul but onely on the margin and bank of the Lake of fire and brimstone in regard there 's none so fit for Christ and Heaven as those who are self-sick and self-condemned to Hell They that be whole need not a Physician saith Christ but they that are sick Mat. 9.13 This is a Foundation of Christ that because the man is broken and hath not bread therefore he must be sold and Christ must buy him and take him home to his fire-side and cloath him and feed him there I know Satan argues thus Thou art not worthy of Christ and therefore what hast thou to do with Christ but Faith concludes otherwise I am not worthy of Christ I am out of measure sinful I tremble at it and I am sensible of it and therefore ought I and therefore must I come to Christ this arguing is Gospel-logick and the right method of a true and saving-faith for what is faith but the act of a sinner humbled weary laden poor and self-condemned Oh take heed of their doctrine who make faith to act of some vile person never humbled but applying with an immediate touch his hot boyling and smoaking Lusts to the bleeding blessed Wounds and Death of Jesus Christ 2. If thou art in Covenant with God then hath God fulfilled in some part the promises of this Covenant to thy Soul As 1. Then hath God put the Law into thy inward parts and writ it in thy heart look as Indenture answers to Indenture or as a face in the glass answers to a
of this World or of that World to come Here is an Object of Faith and Love and Joy and Delight here is a Compendium of all Glories here is one for a heart to be taken with to all Eternity O lay thy mouth to this Fountain suck and be satisfied with the brests of his Consolation Isa 66.11 Milk out and be delighted with the brightness of his Glory 2. From the sutableness of this Object Christ Incarnate is most sutable for our Faith to act upon We are indeed to believe on God but God essentially is the utmost Object of Faith we cannot come to God but in and through Christ alas God is offended and therefore we cannot find ground immediately to go to God hence you heard that Faith must directly go to Christ as God in our Flesh O the infinite condescentions of God in Christ God takes up our Nature and joins it to himself as one person and layes out that before our Faith so that here is God and God suited to the particular state and condition of the sinner Oh now with what boldness may our souls draw nigh to God Why art thou strange poor soul Why standest thou afar off as if it were death to draw nigh Of whom art thou affraid Is God come down amongst men and canst thou not see him lest thou die and perish Oh look once more and be not discouraged See God is not come down in fire God is not descended in the Armour of Justice and everlasting burnings No no he is cloathed with the Garments of Flesh he sweetly desires to converse with thee after thine own form he is come down to beseech thee to see with thine own eyes thy eternal happiness q. d. Come poor Soul come put in thy hands and feel my heart how it beats in love towards thee O the wonder of Heaven it is the cry of some poor souls Oh that I might see God! loe here God is come down in the likeness of man he walks in our own shape amongst us it is the cry oft others O that I might have my heart united to God! Why he is come down on this very purpose and hath united our nature unto himself Surely God hath left all the World without excuse Oh that ever there should be an heart of unbelief after these sensible demonstrations of Divine Glory and Love Why soul wilt thou now stand off Tell me what wouldst thou have God do more Can he manifest himself in a more taking alluring sutable way to thy condition Is there any thing below flesh wherein the great God can humble himself for thy good Come think of another and a better way or else for ever believe Methinks it is sad to see Believers shy in their approaches to God or doubtful of their acceptance with God when God himself stoops first and is so in love with our acquaintance that he will be of the some nature that we are O let not such a Rock of strength be slighted but every day entertain sweet and precious thoughts of Christ being incarnate enure thy heart to a way of believing on this Jesus as he carries on the great Work of thy Slavation at his first Coming or Incarnation 3. From the Gospel-tenders and offers of this blessed Object to our Souls As Christ is come in our natue to satisfie so he comes in the Gospel freely and fully to offer thee terms of Love therein are set out the most rich and alluring expressions that possibly can be therein is set out that this Incarnation of Christ was Gods own acting out of his own Love and Grace and Glory therein is set out the Birth and Life and Death of Christ and this he could not do but he must be Incarnate God takes our Flesh and he useth that as an Organ or Instrument whereby to Act he was Flesh to suffer as he was Spirit to satisfie for our sins Methinks I might challenge Unbelief and bid it come forth let it appear if it dare before this Consideration What is not God Incarnate enough to satisfie thy Conscience Come nigh poor Soul hear the Voice of Christ inviting Mat. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden with Sin and O let these rich and glorious openings of the heart of Christ overcome thy heart Suppose the case thus what if God should have done no more than this Had he only looked down from Heaven and hearing sinners cry out O wo wo unto us for ever we have broke Gods Law incurr'd the penalty damned our own souls O who should deliver us Who will save us from the Wrath to Come Who will keep us out of Hell our deserved Dungeon where the fury of the great Judge burns in a fiery Brimstone and his revenge boyls in a fiery Torrent limitless and unquenchable In this case if God hearing sinners thus crying out had he I say only looked down and told them in sweet Language Poor souls I will pardon your Sins by my own Prerogative I made the Law and I will dispense with it fear not I have the Keyes of Life and Death and upon my word you shall not perish What soul would not have been raised up even from the bottom of Hell at this very voice I know a poor soul would have scrupled at this and have said What then should become of infinite Justice shall that be dishonoured to save my Soul This would have been a scruple indeed especially considering that great controversie as we have heard of Mercy and Truth and Righteousness and Peace but to remove all controversies God hath not only spoken from Heaven by himself but he himself is come down from Heaven to Earth to speak unto us O see this Miracle of Mercy God is come down in Flesh he is come as a price he himself will pay himself according to all the demands of his Justice and Righteousness before our eyes and all this done now he offers and tenders himself unto thy soul Oh my soul why shouldest thou fear to cast thy self upon thy God I know thy Objection of vileness notwithstanding all thy vileness God himself offers himself to lead thee by the hand and to remove all doubts God himself hath put a price sufficient in the hands of Justice to stop her Mouth or if yet thou fearest to come to God why come then to thy own Flesh go to Christ as having thy own nature it is he that calls thee How Go to Flesh Go to thy own Nature What can be said more to draw on thy trembling heart If God himself and God so fitted and qualified as I may say will not allure must not men die and perish in unbelief What O my soul give me leave to chide thee Is God come down so low to thee and dost thou now stand questioning whether thou shouldst go or come to him What is this but to say all that God is or does or sayes is too little to perswade me
Psal 2.11 Psal 112.1 spiritual rejoycing may consist with trembling And blessed is the man that feareth the Lord that delighteth greatly in his Commandments the fear of God may consist with these spiritual delights in the Commandments of God 3. If it be spir●●ual pleasantness it is our strength The joy of the Lord is our strength saith Nehemiah Nehem. 8.10 nothing animates souls more in duties than joy doth it carries on the soul more fully it is as oyl that causeth the wheels of Christian practise to go on more freely we may be naturally pleasant and then coming to spiritual duties our hearts are dead but if out pleasantness be spiritual our hearts will be strengthened in the wayes of God 4. If it be a spiritual pleasantness it will bear up the heart in want of all outward pleasantness Although the Fig-Tree shall not Blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines Heb. 3.17 18. the labour of the Olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yes I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation When all is dark abroad in the World the soul in this frame will rejoyce in God alone on the contrary the soul that hath only a natural pleasantness of Spirit when affliction comes it is all amort and down I appeal to you that have the most delightful spirits when you have friends and means and all you like you are jocund and merry but when affliction comes how quickly are your spirits down surely your pleasantness is not spiritual for if so it would bear up your hearts joyful in affliction And now again the Passover a Feast of the Jews was nigh John 6.4 our English Annotations on these words can tell us that this seems to be * So Aretius and others the third Passover after Christ's baptisme And therefore here I conclude the third year of Christ's Ministry there is but one year more before Christs death to which now I come and to some passages therein most observable in reference to our Souls salvation CHAP. IV. SECT I. Of the fourth Year of Christ's Ministry and generally of his Actings in that Year THis was the last year of Christ's ministry in which were thousands of passages The Evangelist John relates more of Christ this year than in all the former and if I studied not brevity we might dwell more on his actings for us this year than hitherto we have done from the beginning of his ministry Now it was that he was tranfigured now it was that he instituted that Sacrament called the Lords Supper now it was that after supper he made his farewell Sermon rarely mixt of sadness and joyes and studed with mysteries as with Emeralds now it was that after Sermon he blessed his Disciples and prayed for them and then having sung an Hymn he went out into the Mount of Olives where in a Garden he began his sufferings On these passages I had thought to have enlarged but I see the Book swells under my hands and now that I am drawing near Christ's sufferings I shall only touch one point which hitherto I have pretermitted and is the most comprehensive of any passage I can touch Many Questions are about the Holiness or Righteousn●ss or Obedience of Christ As whether it belong to us And whether it be the matter of our justification And whether Christ was bound to observe the law of works as a Mediator or only as a meer man And whether we are not justified by the passive Righteousness of Christ only and seeing now we are discovering Christs actings in reference to our souls salvation we cannot pass this main business whereof much relates to Christ's life as well as to his conception or birth or death or sufferings SECT II. Of the distinctions or several divisions of Christ's Righteousness FOr the better understanding of Christ's Righteousness we usually distinguish that Christ's Righteousness is either that righteousness inherent in him or performed by him the righteousness performed by him is either his fulfilling the Commandments or his satisfying the curse of the Law The same distinction is given by others in these terms Christ's Righteousness is either his original conformity or his active and passive obedience unto the Law his original conformity is that gracious inherent disposition in Christ from the first instant of his conception whereby he was habitually conformable to the Law and this original righteousness answered for our original unrighteousness his active obedience is his doing of legal obedience unto the command and his passive obedience is his suffering of punishment due unto us for our sins I shall yet a little further enlarge this distinction of the righteousness of Christ and give it in thus viz. The righteousness of Christ is either negative if I may so speak or positive by the negative I understand the absence of all sins and vices forbidden in the Law by the positive I mean both a presence of all vertues and duties required to the perfect fulfilling of the Law as also a voluntary suffering of the penalty to satisfie the commination and curse of the Law 1. The negative righteousness is that which we call the innocency of Christ we read often in Scriptures that he was both blameless and spotless 1. Blameless free in himself from all imputation of sin to this purpose Christ challenged the Jews Which of you convinceth me of sin John 8.46 In all his life he was unblameable and unreproveable and therefore now towards the end of his life he asks the people with whom he had conversed Which of you convinceth me of sin 1 Pet. 1.19 Heb. 7.26 Spotless free from all infection of sin Peter calls him a Lamb without blemish and without spot and Paul an high Priest Holy Harmless and Vndefiled 2 Pet. 2.22 one who never did evil nor spake evil he did no sin saith the Apostle neither was guile found in his mouth one who never offended so much as in thought but was absolutely and in all respects 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 4.15 with out all sin 2. The positive Righteousness of Christ is twofold his perfect fulfilling of all things commanded and his perfect satisfying of the punishment threatned The former is the holiness of Christ this also is twofold the holiness of his nature and the holiness of his life and conversation the former is that we call his habitual Righteousness the latter is that we call his actual obedience And thus much of the distinction of the Righteousness of Christ SECT III. Of the Holiness of Christ's Nature NOw in the first place for the holiness of his Nature the Psalmist tells us Thou art fairer than the Children of men and grace is poured into thy lips Psal 45.2 Which is all one with that description of Christ by the Spouse My beloved is white and
me 10. Now he discovered his obedience to his Father in preaching the Gospel up and down He foresaw that the night drew on in which no man could work and therefore now he hastned to do his Fathers business now he pours out whole Cataracts of holy Lessons and still the people drew water from this Fountain which streamed out in continual emanations he added wave to wave and line to line and precept to precept and at last he gave them his farewel Sermon which is the most spiritual and comfortable piece that ever was uttered it comprehends the intentions of his departure to prepare places for his Saints in Heaven and in the mean while he would send them the holy Ghost to supply his room to furnish them with proportionable comforts to enable them with gifts to lead them into all truth and to abide with them for ever In conclusion of all he gave them his blessing and prayed for them and then having sung an hymn he goes away and prepares for his sufferings Rom. 5.19 2. Hitherto of the obedience of Christ what was it but a visible commentary of Gods Law but now for its influence on us By the obedience of one many shall be made righteous Observe The righteousness of the Law fulfilled and fully accomplished in the person of Christ is as truly ours if we believe in Christ as if it were in our selves or as if the Law had been fulfilled in our own persons Rom. 10.4 Thus Christ is the end of the Law saith the Apostle for righteousness to every one that believeth Christ hath not only determined and put an end to the Ceremonial Law but he is also the end of the moral Law he hath perfectly in his own person accomplished the Moral Law and that not for himself but for righteousness to every one that truly believes in him Rom. 8.4 And God sent his Son that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us These words in us much trouble Interpreters for though we believe yet are we imperfectly holy how then should the Law be fulfilled in us But 't is answered that the righteousness of the Law is fulfilled in us not by inhesion or sanctification but by imputation and application i.e. in our nature which Christ took upon him it was in Christ and is imputed unto us and so the righteousness of the Law is fulfilled in us It is well observed of Beza that the Apostle saith not That the Righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled by us or of us or by any Righteousness inherent in our own persons but in us because it is to be found in Christ whose members we are who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit The point is sweet but I cannot stay on it In reference to what I have spoken of the righteousness of Christ habitual and actual a great controversie is risen in our dayes of which in the next Section SECT V. Of the great controversie whether we are not justified by the passive righteousness of Christ only without any consideration had to the righteousness of Christ either inherent in him or performed by him FOr my part I am for the negative upon these well known grounds Argu. 1 1. By what alone the Law is not fully satisfied by that alone we are not justified but by the passive obedience of Christ alone the Law is not fully satisfied therefore by his passive obedience only we are not justified Thus far I grant that the Law is fully satisfied by his passive obedience in respect of the penalty therein threatned but not in respect of the Commandment for the obtaining of the blessedness therein promised and the righteousness of the Law is thus described Rom. 10.5 that the man which doth these things shall live by them Against this are divers exceptions of the Adversaries As 1. That the Law is satisfied either by doing that which is commanded or by sufferring the punishment which is threatned Answ It is true in respect of the penal Statutes of men but not in respect of the Commandments of God in which there is not only a penalty threatned but a blessedness promised if man had continued in his integrity the Law might have been satisfied by obedience only but being fallen into a state of disobedience two things are necessarily required to the fulfilling of the Law i.e. the bearing of the penalty and the performing of the Command the one to escape Hell and the other to obtain Heaven 2. They except that whosoever are freed from Hell are also admitted to Heaven Answ The reason thereof is because Christ who did bear the punishment to free us from Hell did also fulfil the Commands to bring us to Heaven but howsoever these two benefits of Christ do alwayes concur in the party justified as the causes thereof concurred in Christ who not only did both obey and suffer but in obeying suffered and in suffering obeyed yet both the causes between themselves and the effects between themselves are carefully to be distinguished for as it is one thing to obey the Commandment and another thing to suffer the punishment so it is one thing to be freed from Hell by Christ his suffering the penalty and another thing to be intitled to Heaven by Christ his fulfilling the Commandments 3. They except that God is a most free Agent and therefore he may if he will justifie men by the passive righteousness of Christ only without fulfilling of the Law Answ What God may do if he will I will not dispute but sure I am that he justifieth men according to his will revealed in his Word and there we find that as we are justified from our sins by the Blood of Christ so also we are made just by the active though not only by the active obedience of Christ For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous And if when we were enemies Rom. 5.19 we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Rom. 5.10 by his life which he lived before his death and by his life which he lived and doth live after his death by the acts of his life before his death meritoriously and by the acts of his life after his death as by his resurrection ascension session and intercession effectually Christ is made unto us of God saith the Apostle both redemption and righteousness redemption to deliver us from sin 1 Cor. 1.30 Dan. 9.24 and righteousness to bring in everlasting righteousness 4. They except that if we are justified by Christ his fulfilling the Law then we are justified by a legal righteousness but we are not justified by a legal righteousness but by such a righteousness as without the Law is revealed in the Gospel Answ The same righteousness by which we are justified is both legal and evangelical in divers respects
legal in respect of Christ who being made under the Law that he might redeem us who were under the Law perfectly fulfilled the Law for us and evangelical in respect of us unto whom his fulfilling of the Law is imputed And herein stands both the agreement and difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel the agreement in that both require the perfect fulfilling of the Law unto justification the difference in that the Law requireth perfect obedience to be performed in our own persons but the Gospel accepts of perfect obedience perfomed by Christ our surety and imputed to us and so it is all one as if it had been performed in our own persons 2. If Christ by his conformity to the Law fulfilled the Law for us then are we justified by his habitual and actual righteousness and not meerly by his passive but Christ by his conformity to the Law fulfilled the Law for us for so we read He was born for us Luke 2.11 Luke 2.11 He was made subject to the Law for us Gal. 4.4 5. Gal. 4.4 5. and for our sakes he sanctified himself John 17.19 John 17.19 and for our sakes he did the Will of God Then said I loe I come to do thy will O God by the which Will we are sanctified Heb. 10.7 10. Heb. 10.7 10. Against this are divers exceptions As 1. That Christ obeyed the Law or conformed to the Law as need was for himself Christ say they as he was a man was bound to obey the Law for himself Answ This Assertion detracts from the merit of his obedience and from the dignity of his Person 1. From his merit for if his obedience were of duty then it were not † Debitum non est meritum meritorious Luke 17.10 and if this be true then have we no title to Heaven 2. From the dignity of his Person as if he needed either to obey for himself or by his obedience were any way bettered in himself O that these men would remember that the Person who did obey the Law was and is not only man but God also Christ fulfilled the Law not only as man but as God-man Mediator and therefore as his blood was Gods blood so his obedience was the obedience of God Who being in the form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God And being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death Acts 20.28 Phil. 2.6 8. or until death We find him here God-man and from hence we conclude that all the legal actions of Christ from his Incarnation to his Passion inclusively were the actions of Christ God-man Mediator and Surety for us in a way of covenant and consequently they were not performed of duty nor for himself 2. They except that if Christ obeyed the Law for us that by his obedience we might be justified then shall not we our selves need to obey the Law but the Consequent is absurd therefore the Antecedent Answ We need not to obey the Law to that end that we may be justified thereby for this is impossible to us by reason of the flesh and therefore our Saviour fulfilled it for us and yet it follows not but that we may endeavour to obey the Law for other ends as to glorifie God to obey his Will to testifie our thankfulness to edifie our Brethren to assure our selves of our justification and so to make our calling and election sure in this Study and Practice of Piety consisteth our new obedience which we must therefore be careful to perform though Christ as to justification hath performed it for us 3. They except that if Christ by his active obedience fulfilled the Law for us and that so we are justified from all kind of sin both original and actual then Christ's suffering was in vain Answ Christ's active obedience is an essential part of our justification but not all our justification the material cause of our justification is the whole course of the active and passive obedience of Christ together with his original righteousness or habitual conformity unto the Law I say together with his original righteousness because many Authors express no more but only Christ's active and passive obedience but they are to be understood as asserting his original righteousness implicitely the act presupposing the habit And here observe the difference betwixt the Law in case of innocency and the Law in case of sin the Law in case of innocency required only doing but the Law in case of sin cannot be satisfied without doing and suffering Gal. 3.10 Gen. 2.17 Original justice and active obedience was sufficient to justifie man in his innocency but not to justifie man fallen and therefore we do not separate these the original the actual and the passive righteousness of Christ as to the matter of justification but we imply all Argu. 3 3. We read in Scripture of two parts of justification viz. the absolving of a believing sinner from the guilt of sin and death and the accepting of a believing sinner as righteous unto life The former is wrought by the sufferings of Christ imputed as a full satisfaction for sin the other by imputation of Christ's perfect obedience as a sufficient merit of eternal life by the former we are freed from Hell by the latter we are entitled to the Kingdom of Heaven Rom. 5.9 19. of them both the Apostle speaks We are justified by his blood Rom. 5.9 and we are made righteous by his obedience Rom. 5.19 Our Adversaries deny these two parts of justification saying that it consists wholly in remission of sin But we reply in every mutation though it be but relative we must of necessity acknowledge two terms terminum a quo terminum ad quem the denomination being commonly taken from the latter as in justification there is a motion or mutation from sin to justice from which term justification hath its name from a state of death and damnation to a state of life and salvation but if justification be nothing else but bare remission of sins then is there in it only a not imputing of sin but no acceptation as righteous a freedom from Hell but no title to Heaven They say indeed that to whom sin is not imputed to them righteousness is imputed and we grant that these things do alwayes concurr but yet they are not to be confounded for they differ in themselves and in their causes and in their effects 1. In themselves for it is one thing to be acquitted from the guilt of sin and another thing to be made righteous as we see daily in the pardon of Malefactors 2. In their causes for the remission of sin is to be attributed to Christ's satisfactory sufferings and acceptation as righteous unto life to Christ's meritorious obedience 3. In their effects for by remission of sin we are freed from Hell and by imputation of Christ's obedience we have right unto Heaven I will not deny
suffer but also to do for he both satisfied the Curse and fulfilled the Commandments O remember this as Christ and as Christ in the flesh so Christ in the flesh made under the Law is principally to be in the eye of of our Faith If we put all together our first view of Faith is to look on Christ God in the flesh made under the Law 4. Faith going to Christ as God in the flesh and as made under the Law it is principally to look to the end and meaning of Christ as being God in the flesh and as fulfilling the Law Now if we would know the meaning of Christ in all this the Apostle tells us of a remote and of a more immediate end 1. Of a remote end God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law Gal. 4.4 5. to redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the adoption of Sons This was Christ's meaning or the remote end of Christ Alas we were strangers from the Adoption and we lay under the Law as men whom sentence had passed on Now from this latter we are redeemed he was under the Law that we might be redeemed from under the Law nor is that all but as we are redeemed so are we adopted the Children of God And this end I rather attribute to the Life of Christ that we might receive the Adoption i.e. from the estate of Prisoners condemned that we might be translated into the estate of children adopted O the mercy of God! who ever heard of a condemned man to be afterwards adopted would not a condemned Prisoner think himself happy to escape with Life But the zeal of the Lord of Hosts hath performed this we are in Christ both pardoned and adopted and by this means the joy and glory of Gods heavenly inheritance is estated upon us O let our Faith look mainly to this design and plot of Christ he was made under the Law yea and under the directive part of the Law by his life he fulfilled every jot and title of the Law by his active obedience that we might be entitled to glory that we might be adopted to the inheritance of the Saints in glory 2. For the more immediate end of Christ the Apostle tells us Christ was made under the Law Rom. 8.4 or fulfilled all Righteousness that the Law might be fulfilled in us In Christ's life were we represented and so this fulfilling of all righteousness is accounted ours that the Law might be fulfilled in us O my soul look to this Herein lies the pith and the marrow of thy Justification of thy self thou canst do nothing that good is but Christ fulfilled the Law in thy stead and if now thou wilt but act and exercise thy Faith thou mayst thereby find and feel the vertue and efficacy of Christ's righteousness and actual obedience flowing into thy own soul But here is the question how should I manage my Faith or how should I act it to feel Christ's righteousness my righteousness I answer 1. Thy way is to discover and discern this righteousness of Christ this holy and perfect life of the Lord Jesus Christ in the whole and in all the parts of it as it is laid down in the written Word Much hath been said of it in those four years of Christ's Ministry but especially in the last year I shall say more anon in our conformity unto Christ whither also thou mayst have recourse 2. Thy way is to believe and to receive this discovery as sacred and unqestionable in reference to thy own soul as intended for thee for thy use and benefit 3. Thy way is to apprehend apply and to improve this discovery according to that judgment and proposal to those uses ends and benefits to which thou believest they were designed Yea but there lies the question how may that be done I answer 1. Setting before thee that discovery that perfect life of Christ in the whole and all the parts of it thou must first endeavour to be deeply humbled for thy great inconformity thereto in whole and in part 1. Still keeping thy Spirit intent on the Pattern thou must quicken provoke and encrease thy sluggish and drowsie soul with renewed redoubled vigilancy and industry to come up higher towards it and if it were possible compleatly to it 3. Yet having the same discovery rule and copy before thee thou must exercise faith thereupon as that which was performed and is accepted on thy behalf And so go to God and there represent offer and tender Christ's holy life and active obedience unto him And that first to fill up the defects of thy utmost endeavour Secondly to put a righteousness price value and worth upon what thou dost and attainest to Thirdly to make Christ's righteousness thy own that thou may'st say with the Psalmist in way of assurance O God my righteousness O my soul if thou would'st thus live by Faith or thus act thy Faith on Christ's Life Christ's Righteousness Christ's active obedience what a blessed life would'st thou live then mightst thou find and feel Christ's righteousness thy righteousness I say thy Righteousness in respect of its efficacy but not in respect of its formality for so sinners would be their own Mediators But of some of these Particulars I shall speak more largely in our conformity to Christ's holy Life 2. For encouragements to bring on souls thus to believe on Christ consider 1. The fulness of this Object Christ's life is full it is very comprehensive it contains holiness and happiness sanctification and justification if Christ's Garments were healing how much more so main and essential a part of Christ even the half of Christ as it were for so is Christ's Life It is vehemently to be suspected that the true reason why so much is said of his Death and so little in comparison of his Life it is either because we understand not the fulness of his life or because we are carnal and selfish affecting freedom from hell more than holiness on earth some benefit by Christ more than conformity to Christ O come see the fulness of Christ's life in reference to our sanctification was it not an exact model of perfection a most curious exemplification of Gods whole Word an express Idea Image Representation of the whole mind of God a full president for all others to walk by to work by to live by and in reference to justification is not Christ's life the object of Faith and justifying nay is not Christ's life the object of justifying faith as well as Christ's death resurrection ascension session intercession The assertors of Christ's active and passive obedience for us can tell us of two things in the Law intended one principal viz. Obedience and another secondary viz. malediction upon supposition of disobedience so that sin being once committed there must be a double act to justification the suffering of the Curse and the fulfilling of Righteousness anew the one is satisfaction for
yet had it greater strength in it than the Eastern wind or the voice of Thunder for God was in that still voice and it struck them down to the ground O the Power of Christ they come to him with clubs and staves and swords and he does no more but let a word fly out of his mouth and presently they stagger run backward John 18.6 and fall to the ground Oh if we cannot bear a soft answer of the merciful God how dare we so provoke as we do the wrath of the Almighty Judge and yet he suffers them to rise again and they still persist in their inquiry after him he tells them once more I am he he offers himself he is ready and desirous to be sacrificed only he sets them their bounds and therefore he secures his Apostles to be witnesses of his sufferings In this work of redemption no man must have an active share besides himself he alone was to tread the Wine-Press If therefore ye seek me John 18.8 saith Christ let these go their way thus he permits himself to be taken but not his Disciples And now they have his leave Oh with what fierce and cruel countenances with what menacing and threatning looks with what malicious and spightful minds do they invade and assault our Saviour they encompass him round then they lay their wicked and violent hands upon him in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a violent taking One speaks the manner of his apprehension in these words † Quidam apprehendebant vestes ejus alii mittebant manus in capillos capitis c Homil. Joh. Carthag Hispan Some of them lay hold on his Garments others on the h●ir of his head some pluck him by the beard others struck him with their impious fists and being enraged that with a word he had thrown them backwards on the ground they therefore throw him on his back and basely tread him under their dirty feet Another Author gives it thus † Sicut Leo rugiens rapiens trahit praedam per terram lacerat laniat c. Jacob de Valenti in Psal 21. As a roaring ramping Lion draws along the Earth his prey and tears it and pulls it so they haled Christ all along the Earth spitting buffetting pulling him by the hair Another in like manner thus † Omnes impetum faciunt in eum c. Psal 22.12 13 they all rush violently upon him they fling him to the ground they kick him tear him spurn him pull off the hair both off his Head and Beard Of every of these passages we find Scriptures full Many Bulls have compassed me strong Bulls of Bashan have beset me round they gaped upon me with their mouths as a ravening and roaring Lion Vse We are apt to cry out on Judas and the Jews and we think Oh if we had been in their stead we should never have done thus but lay aside a while those Instruments and look we at the principal cause had we not an hand in all these actings did not we conspire his Death and Apprehension in reference to it Oh my sins my sins these were the Band the Captain and the Officers these were the multitude a multitude indeed if I should tell them I might tell a thousand and yet not tell one of a thousand these were the Souldiers that beset him round the Bulls that compassed him about the roaring Lions that gaped upon him with their mouths O my heart why shouldest thou rise up against the Jews when thou findest the Traytor and the whole rout of Officers in thy self Oh that thou wouldest turn the edge of thy detestation into its right stream and Channel E●ek 20.43 Oh that thou wouldst remember thy own wayes and all thy doings wherein thou hast been defiled and that thou wouldst loath thy self in thy own sight for all the evils that thou hast committed John 18.12 3. For Christ's binding the Evangelist tells us that the Band and the Captain and the Officers of the Jews took Jesus and bound him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they bound his hands with cords a Type of this was Samson whom Dalilah bound with ropes so they bound him with ropes or cords foreshewing hereby that he must die they never using to bind any with ropes or cords but those whom undoubtedly they purposed to crucifie Some add the Circumstances of this binding that they bound him with three cords and that with such violence that they caused blood to start out of his tender hands certainly they wanted no malice and now they wanted no power for the Lord had given himself into their hands Binding argues baseness It is storied of Alexander that when some Arrow that was shot into him was to be drawn out his Physitians advised to bind him for that the least motion as they said would do him hurt but he answered † Non decet vinciri regem cum libera sit regis semper salva potestas Bern. Serm. de Pas Mat. 26.55 Phil. 2.7 Kings were not fit to be bound the power of a King was ever free and safe And David in his Lamentation over Abner said Died Abner as a Fool dieth thy hands were not bound nor thy feet put in fetters 2 Sam. 2.33 34. Fools and Slaves were accustomed to be bound and so were Thieves they that open their hands to receive others goods it is fit their hands should be bound and tied up but is our Saviour numbred amongst any of these O yes In that same hour said Jesus to the multitude are ye come out as against a Thief with Swords and Staves he made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant O wonderful condescention of Christ O admirable exinanition he that was eminently just is reputed a thief he that was equal with God is become a Servant he that was stronger than Samson and could have broken his cords from off his arms like a thred he is bound with cords and as a poor Lamb he continues bound for the slaughter and thus began our Liberty and Redemption from slavery and sin and death and cursings But besides these cords the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a binding with chaines Mak. 5.3 4. And some are of opinion that they shackled both his hands and feet pedicis catenis vinctus Mark 5.4 Mark 5.3 4. And others say that they put about his neck † Quidam existimaverunt catena ferrea collum ejus alligasse quod mihi certe incredible non est Hom. Joh. Carthag Act. 21.33 Mat. 26.48 Mark 14.44 a Chain of Iron and it is not altogether improbable but they might be as cruel to the Master as to his Servants I cannot think they were so enraged against Peter as they were against Christ and yet they laid on him two Chains Acts 12.6 Nor can I think they were so enraged against Paul as they were against Jesus and yet the chief Captain
without great pain after his sore whipping his blood congealed and by that means stuck to his scarlet mantle so that in pulling off the robe and putting on his own rayment there could not but be a renewing of his wounds 2. They led him away Some say they cast a Rope or Chain about his neck Mat. 27.31 by which they led him out of the City to Mount Calvary and that all along the way multitudes attended him and a Cryer went before him proclaming to all hearers the cause of his death namely that Jesus Christ was a Seducer Blasphemer Negromancer a Teacher of false Doctrines saying of himself that he was the Messias King of Israel and the Son of God 3. He bore his Cross So John relates before it bears him he must bear it John 19.17 and thus they make good their double cry Crucifie him Crucifie him first Crucifie him with it as a burthen and then crucifie him with it as a Cross those shoulders which had been unmercifully battered with whips before are now again tormented with the weight of his Cross As a true Isaac bears the wood for the sacrifice of himself or Vriah-like he carries with him the very Instrument of his own sad death O the cruelty of this passage they had scarce left him so much blood or strength as to carry himself and must ●e now bear his heavy Cross yes till he faint and sink so long he must bear it and longer too did they not fear that he should dye with less shame and smart than they intended him Matth. 27.32 Mark 15.21 which to prevent they constrained one Simon a Cyraenean to bear his Cross after him How truly do they here again swallow the Cammel and strain at a Gnat the Cross was a Roman death and so one of their abominations hence they themselves would not touch the tree of infamy lest they should have been defiled but to touch the Lords anointed to Crucifie the Lord of Glory they make no scruple at all but why must another bear the Cross but to consign this duty unto man that we must enter into a fellowship of Christ's sufferings Mat. 16.24 1 Pet. 2.21 If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me And therefore Christ hath suffered for us leaving us an example that we should follow his steps 4. He comforted the woman who followed weeping after him as he went along And there followed him a great company of people and of Women Luke 23.27 28. which also bewailed and lamented him but Jesus turning to them said Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but weep for your selves and for your Children In the midst of his misery he forgets not mercy in the midst of all their tortures and loudest out-cryes of contumely of blasphemy of scorn he can hear his following friends weeping behind him and neglect all his own sufferings to comfort them Weep not for me He hath more compassion on the Woman that follow him weeping than of his own mangled self that reels along fainting and bleeding unto death he feels more the tears that drop from their eyes than all the blood that flows from his own veins we heard before that sometimes he would not vouchsafe a word to Pilate that threatened him nor to Herod that entreated him and yet unaskt how graciously doth he turn about his blessed bleeding face to these weeping women affording them looks and words too both of compassion and of consolation Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves and yet observe he did not turn his face to them until he heard them weep nor may we ever think to see his face in glory unless we first bathe our eyes in sorrow It is a wonder to me that any in our age should ever decry tears remorse contrition compunction how many Saints do we find both in the Old and New Testament confuting by their practises these gross opinions the Promise tells us that They that sow in Tears shall reap in Joy he that follows Christ Psal 126.5 6. or goeth forth weeping bearing precious seed shall doubtless come again with rejoycing bringing his sheaves with him But what 's the meaning of this Weep not for me may we not weep for the death of Christ Deut. 34.8 Acts 8.2 do we not find in Scripture that all the People wept at the death of Moses that all the Church wept at the death of Stephen that the Woman lamented the death of Dorcas and if all Christ's actions be our instructions I mean not his miraculous or meritorious but his moral ones did not Christ himself weep for Lazarus and for Jerusalem nay is he not here weeping showers of blood all along the way and may not we drop a tear for all those purple streams of his O what 's the meaning of this Weep not for me but weep for your selves I answer the words are not absolute but comparative Christ doth not simply forbid us to weep for our friends but rather to turn our worldly grief into godly sorrow for sin as sin Christ herein pointed the women to the true cause and subject of all their sorrow which was their sins and thus we have cause to weep indeed Oh! our sins were the cause of the sufferings of Christ and in that respect Oh that our heads were fountains and our eyes rivers of tears Oh that our tears were as our meat and drink Oh that we could feed with David on the Bread of tears and that the Lord would give us plenteousness of tears to drink Oh that the Lord would strike as he did at Rephidim these rocky hearts of ours with the rod of true remorse that water might gush out Oh that we could thus mourn over Jesus whom we have pierced and be in bitterness for him Zach. 12.10 as one that is in bitterness for his first-born Mat. 27.34 5. No sooner he was come to the place of Execution but they gave him Vinegar to drink mingled with Gall in that they gave him drink it was an argument of their humanity this was a custom amongst Jews and Romans that to the condemned they ever gave wine to drink Prov. 31.6 Give strong wine unto him that is ready to perish and wine unto those that be of heavy heart But in that they gave him Vinegar mingled with Gall it was an argument of their cruelty and envy Theophil in Mar. Theophylact speaks plainly that the Vinegar mingled with Gall was poysonous and deadly and therefore when Christ had tasted it he would not drink chusing rather the death of the Cross to which he was destinated by his Father than any poysonous death Vse Ah brethren are not we apt to think hardly of the Jews for giving Christ so bitter a potion at his time of death and yet little do we think that when we sin we do as much See but how God himself
that he is both our justification and sanctification Physitians tell us that about the heart there is a film or skin like unto a purse wherein is contained clear water to cool the heat of the heart and therefore very probable it is that that very skin or pericardium was pierced through with the heart and thence came out those streams of blood and water O gates of Heaven O windows of Paradise O Palace of refuge O Tower of strength O Sanctuary of the Just O flourishing bed of the Spouse of Solomon methinks I see water and blood running out of his side more freshly than those golden streams which ran out of the garden of Eden and watered the whole world Here if I could stay I might lengthen my Doctrine during my life oh it were good to be here it were a large field and a blessed subject 4. About five which the Jews call the eleventh and the last hour of the day Christ was taken down and buried by Joseph and Nicodemus But enough I must not wear out your patience altogether Thus far we have propounded the blessed object of Christ's suffering and dying for us our next work is to direct you as formerly in the art or mystery how you are to look unto him in this respect CHAP. III. SECT I. Of knowing Jesus as carrying on the great work of our salvation in his death 1. LEt us know Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation during his sufferings and death This is the high point which Paul was ever studying on and preaching on and pondering on For I determined not to know any thing among you 1 Cor. 2.2 save Jesus Christ and him crucified Christ crucified is the rarest piece of knowledge in the world the person of Christ is a matter of high speculation but Christ further considered as cloathed with his garments of blood is that knowledge which especially Paul pursues he esteems not reckons not determines not to make any profession of any other science or doctrine than the most necessary and only saving knowledge of Christ crucified O my soul how many dayes and months and years hast thou spent to attain some little measure of knowledge in the Arts and Tongues and Sciences and yet what a poor skill hast thou attained in respect of the many thousands of them that knew nothing at all of Jesus Christ and what if thou hadst reached out to a greater proficiency couldst thou have dived into the secrets of Nature couldst thou have excelled the wisdom of all the children of the East country and all the wisdom of Egypt 1 Kings 4.33 and the wisdom of Solomon who spake of beasts of fowls of fishes of all trees from the Cedar tree that is in Lebanon even to the hyssop that springeth out of the wall yet without the saving knowledge of Christ crucified Christ suffering bleeding and dying all this had been nothing see Eccles 1.18 only that knowledge is worth the having which refers to Christ and above all that is the rarest piece of Christ's humiliation which holds him forth suffering for us and so freeing us from hell sufferings Come then and spend thy time for the future more fruitfully in reading learning knowing this one necessary thing Study Christ crucified in every piece and part O the precious truths and precious discoveries that a studying head and heart would hammer out here much hath been said but a thousand-thousand times more might yet be said we have given but a little scantling of that which Christ endured Volumes might be written till they were piled as high as heaven and yet all would not serve to make out the full discoveries of Jesus's sufferings Study therefore and study more but be sure thy study and thy knowledge be rather practical than speculative do not meerly beat thy brains to learn the history of Christ's death but the efficacy vertue and merit of it know what thou knowest in reference to thy self as if Jesus had been all the while carrying on the business of thy souls salvation as if thou hadst stood by and Christ had spoke to thee as sometimes to the women Weep not for me but for thy self thy sins caused my sufferings and my sufferings were for the abolition of thy sins SECT II. Of considering Jesus in that respect 2. LEt us consider Jesus carrying on this great work of our salvation during his sufferings and death Zach. 12.10 Heb. 12.2 They shall look upon me whom they have pierced saith the Prophet i.e. they shall consider me and accordingly is the Apostle looking unto Jesus or considering of Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith who for the joy of our salvation set before him endured the cross and despised the shame Then indeed and in that act is the duty brought in it is good in all respects and under all considerations to look unto Jesus from first to last but above all this Text relates firstly to the time of his sufferings and hence it is that Luke calls Christ's passion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a theory or sight And all the people that came together to that sight Luke 23.48 smote their breasts and returned Not but that every passage of Christ is a theory or sight worthy our looking on or considering of Christ in his Fathers purpose and Christ in the promise and Christ in performance Christ in his birth and Christ in his life O how sweet what blessed objects are these to look upon but above all consider him saith the Apostle that endured such contradiction of sinners against himself Heb. 12.3 Ver. 2. Consider him who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross and despised the shame of all other parts acts or passages of Christ the holy Ghost hath only honoured Christ's passion his sufferings and his death with this name of theory and sight Why surely this is the theory ever most commended to our view and consideration O then let us look on this consider of this As in this manner 1. Consider him passing over the Brook Cedron it signifies the wrath of God and rage of men the first step of his passion is sharp and sore he cannot enter the door but first he must wade through cold waters on bare feet nor must he only wade through them but drink of them through many tribulations must he go that will purchase souls and through many tribulations must they go that will follow after him to the Kingdom of Glory Consider him entring into the Garden of Gethsemane in a garden Adam sinned and in this garden Christ must suffer that the same place which was the nest where sin was hatched might now be the child-bed of grace and mercy into this garden no sooner was he entred but he began to be agonized all his powers and passions within him were in conflict Consider O my soul how suddenly he is struck into a strange fear never was man so afraid of the torments of
ones And I looked saith John and behold a door was open in Heaven and the first voice I heard was as it were of a trumpet talking with me which said come up hither Rev. 4.1 and no sooner was he in the Spirit and entred in but he heard the new song of the four beasts Rev. 5.9 and four and twenty Elders saying to Christ Thou art worthy to take the book and to open the seals thereof for thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood Come now and gather in all these several particulars there is in Christ's blood inclusively the person of Christ the price of souls a merit and satisfaction a copious and full satisfaction remission of sins reconciliation with God immunity from dangers a passage into glory I might add all other priviledges benefits dignities of the soul for they all flow from the blood of Jesus and they are all contained either expresly or vertually in the blood of Jesus and is not all this worth the looking after O my soul where is thy languor and fainting towards this blessed object Shall Ahab eagerly desire after Naboth's vineyard yea so eagerly desire it that his desire shall cast him upon his bed and is not Christ's blood better than Naboth's vineyard how is it O my soul that thou art not sick on thy bed in thy desires after Jesus when David desired strongly after God's Law he expressed his longings by the breaking and fainting of his soul Psal 119.20 81. My soul breaketh for the longing that it hath to thy judgment at all times and my soul fainteth for thy Salvation Oh where be these breakings and faintings 2 Cor. 5.2 strength of desire is expressed by the Apostle by groaning which is the language of sickness Oh where be these groanings after Christ's death when I call to mind that Christ's death is my ransome that Christ's wounds are my salves that Christ's stripes are my cures that Christ's blood is my fountain to wash in and to be clean how should I but pray in this sence His blood be upon us and on our children Oh I am undone except I have a share in this blood why it is only this blood that can heal my soul it is only this Fountain opened to the house of David and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem that can quench my thirst and now I have seen the Fountain opened how should I but thirst and cry out with the woman of Samaria O give me this water that I thirst no more John 4.15 But alas I say it I only say it Oh that I could feel it Oh my Jesus that thou wouldst breed in me ardent desires vehement longings unutterable groans mighty gaspings O that I were like the dry and thirsty ground that gapes and cleaves and opens for drops of rain when my spirit is in right frame I feel some desires after Christ's blood but how short are these desires how unworthy of the things desired come Lord kindle in me hot burning desires and then give me the desirable Object SECT IV. Of hoping in Jesus in that respect 4. LEt us hope in Jesus carrying on the great work of our Salvation in his sufferings and death Heb. 6.11 By this hope I intend only that which the Apostle calls full assurance of hope The main question is Whether I have any part in Christ's sufferings they are of excellent use and of great value to believers but what am I the better for them if I have no part in them or if I say I hope well Oh but what grounds of that hope it is not every hope that is a well grounded hope full assurance of hope is an high pitch of hope and every Christian should strive and endeavour after it now that we may do it and that we may discern it that our hope is not base but right-born that the grounds of our hope in Christ's death are not false but of the right stamp I shall lay down these signs 1. If Christ's death be mine then is Christ's life mine and converse if Christ's death be mine then is Christ's life mine Christ's active and passive obedience cannot be severed Christ is not divided we must not seek one part of our righteousness in his birth another in his habitual holiness another in the integrity of his life another in his obedience of death They that endeavour to separate Christ's active and passive obedience they do exceedingly derogate from Christ and make him but half a Saviour Heb. 7.22 was not Christ our Surety Heb. 7.22 and thereupon was he not bound to fulfil all righteousness for us i.e. as to suffer in our stead so to obey in our stead oh take heed of opposing or separating Christ's death and Christ's life either we have all Christ or we have no part in Christ now if these two be concomitants well may the one be as the sign of the other search then and try O my soul hast thou any share in Christ's life canst thou make out Christ's active obedience unto thy own soul if herein thou art at a stand peruse those Characters laid down in the life of Christ the many glorious effects flowing out of Christ's life into a Believer's soul we have discovered before 2. If Christ's death be mine then is that great end of his death accomplished in me viz. By the sacrifice of himself he hath put away sin even my sin and Heb. 9.26 Eph. 1.7 Dan. 9.24 in him I have redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sins As on this account he suffered to finish the transgression to make an end of sins and to make reconciliation for iniquity so if his death be mine I may assuredly say my sins are pardoned and mine iniquities are done away Come then and try by this sign canst thou assure thy self that thy sins are forgiven thee hast thou heard the whispers of Gods Spirit Son or Daughter be of good comfort thy sins are remitted there is no question then but thou art redeemed by his blood thou hast part in his sufferings Indeed this very Character may seem obscure assurance of pardon is the hidden Manna the white Stone which no man knoweth saving he which receives it and feels it and yet if thou diligently observest the Spirit 's actings even this may be known remission of sin and repentance for sin are twins of a birth those two God in Scripture hath joined together If we confess our sins 1 John 1.9 Acts 8.22 Acts 5.31 Luk. 24.46 47 he is faithful and just to forgive our sins And repent and pray if the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee And Christ is a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins And thus it is written and thus it behoved Christ to suffer That repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his Name In this way David assured himself I said I will confess my Transgressions unto
its swinge and breaking out the heart that lodged it abhors its self in dust and ashes cries mightily unto God for mercy and pardon repairs the breach with stronger resolution and more invincible watchfulness against future assaults but a Lust unmortified possesseth it self and rules and reigns in the heart and soul it abides there and will not away I shall not deny but there may be a cessation of its actings for a time but that is not any want of good will as they say but only of matter means opportunity enticement company provocation or the like and after such cessation or forbearance the heart usually entertains it again with more greediness it lies and delights in it as much as ever it hardens it self most obstinately in it as if it were impossible to leave it or live without it with any kind of comfort 4. True mortification is a painful work The very word imports no less to kill a man or to mortifie a member will not be without pain hence it is called a crucifying of the flesh Gal. 5.24 Mat. 5.29 30. and a cutting off the right hand a plucking out the right eye they that are Christ's have crucified the flesh if thy hand offend thee cut it off and if thy eye offend thee pluck it out in this respect this death unto sin carries with it a likeness to the death of Christ it is attended with agonies and soul-conflicts both before and after our conversion 1. Before conversion before the first wound be given it why then ordinarily there is some compunction of Spirit some pricking of heart what a case do we find the Jews in when after Peters Sermon they were pricked at their hearts and what an agony do we find the Jailor in when he came trembling in and falling down at the Apostles feet and crying out Sirs What shall I do to be saved With such agonies as these Acts 2.7 Acts 16.30 is the beginning of mortification usually attended I do not say that they are alike in all whether for degree or continuance but in ordinary true and sound conversion is not without some of these soul-conflicts 2. After conversion after the first round there are some agonies still for though a Believer be delivered of sin in respect of the guilt and reigning power yet he hath still some remainders of sinful Corruption left within him which draw many a groan and many a sign from his trembling heart Rom. 8.23 we also have the first-fruits of the spirit even we our selves groan within our selves waiting for the adoption to wit the Redemption of our bodies such are the groans of mortifying Saints Saints dying unto sin like the groans of dying men whose souls being weary of their bodies do earnestly desire a dissolution and thus Paul groaned when he said O wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliver me from the body this death Oh what a Touchstone is this how will ihis discover true mortification from that which was counterfeit Some may think they are dead unto sin when in deed and in truth they are not dead but asleep unto sin and it appears by this because there were no pangs in their death you know this is a difference betwixt death and sleep there are pangs in the one but not in the other O my soul examine what pangs were there in thy death unto sin what agonies what soul-conflicts hast thou felt what compunction of heart what affliction of Spirit hast thou endured for sin what trouble hast thou had to find such a law in thy members rebelling against the law in thy mind Rom. 7.23 and bringing thee into captivity to the Law of sin why surely thou art not so mortified as to be freed wholly from the power of sin it may be it doth not rule in thee as a Prince yet certainly it tyrannizeth over thee it oft-times carries thee contrary to the bent of thy regenerate mind to the omittting of what thou wouldst do and to the committing of what thou wouldst not do and is not this an affliction of Spirit doth not this cause frequent conflicts in thy spirit if not thou mayest well suspect that sin is not dead but asleep or if it be dead to thee yet thou art not dead to it I confess death-pangs are not all alike in all some have a more gentle and others a more painful death so it is in this Spiritual death unto sin and that herein there may be no mistake I shall propound this question What is the least measure of these pangs these soul-agonies and conflicts that are necessarily required to true mortification I answer 1. There must be a sense of sin and of Gods wrath due unto sin such a sense we find in Jesus Christ he was very sensible of the weight and burden of those sins and of the wrath of God that lay upon him which made him cry out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me thus souls in the act of Mortification sometimes cry out O my sins and Oh God's wrath 2 There must be sorrow for Sin Such an affection we find also in Jesus Christ My soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 7.10 he was beset and surrounded with sorrows so every mortified sinner at one time or other he feels an inward sorrow and grief even that Godly sorrow which the Apostle speakes of a sorrow according to God i. e coming from God well-pleasing to God and bringing to God back again 3. There must be a desire of being freed and delivered from sin Luke 12.50 such a desire we find also in Jesus Christ I have a Baptism to be Baptised with and how am I straitned until it be accomplished A regenerate soul earnestly desires to be freed not only from the guilt but also from the power of sin O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me c 4. There must be answerable endeavours in effectual strivings against sin Heb. 12.4 Ye have not resisted unto blood striving against sin How did our Saviour wrestle in the Garden offering up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears Heb. 5.7 so will a regenerate soul wrestle with God about t●● death of sin praying watching going out in the strength of God and engaging in a continual war a deadly fewd against it and these are the least of those soul-conflicts wherewith this mortification or death unto sin is attended Now try we the truth of our Mortification by these signs Doth it spring from a right root of Faith is it general and universal in respect of all sins is it accompanied with combates doth the flesh lust against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh and in this combate doth the spirit at last prevail and triumph over the flesh do we find it a painfull work both before and after conversion why then may I say with the Apostle now I know Christ
are not barely to consider the History of Christ's death but the aim of Christ in his death Many read the History and they are affected with it there is a principle of humanity in men which will stir up compassion and love and pity towards all in misery whilst Christ was suffering the women followed after him weeping but this weeping not being spiritual or rais'd enough he said to them Daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but for your selves The way of Faith drawing virtue out of Christ's death it is especially to look to the scope and drift of Christ in his sufferings As God looks principally to the meaning of the Spirit by Prayer so doth faith look principally to the meaning of Christ in his sufferings mistake not my meaning is not that we should be ignorant of the History of Christ's death or of the manner of Christ's sufferings you see we have opened it largely and followed it close from first to last but we must not stick there we should above all look to the mind and heart of Christ in all this some observe that both in the Old and New Testament we find this Method first the History and then the Mystery first the Manner and then the Meaning of Christ's sufferings as in the Old Testament We have first the History in Psal 22. written by David and then the Mystery in Isa 52. written by Isaiah And in the New Testament we have first the manner of his sufferings written at large by all the Evangelists and then the meaning written by the Apostles in all their Epistles Now accordingly are the acts of Faith we must first look on Jesus as lifted up and then look at the end and meaning why was this Jesus thus lifted up Well but you may demand what was the end the plot the great design of Christ in this respect I answer some ends were remote and others were more immediate but omitting all those ends that are remote his Glory our Salvation c. I shall only answer in these Particulars 1. One design of Christ's death was to redeem us from the slavery of Death and Hell He hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us Gal. 3. as it is written Cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Hence it is that we say that by his sufferings Christ hath redeemed us from Hell and by his doings Christ hath given us a right to heaven he was made under the Law Gal. 3.4 5. that he might redeem them that were under the Law Alas we were carnal sold under sin whereupon the Law seized on us lock'd us up as it were in a dungeon yea the sentence passed and we but waited for execution now to get us rid from this dismal damnable estate Christ himself is made under the Law that he might redeem us Redeem us how not by way of entreaty to step in and beg our pardon that would not serve the turn sold we were and bought we must be a price must be laid down for us it was a matter of Redemption but with what must we be redeemed surely with no easie price ah no it cost him dear and very dear Ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and Gold 1 Pet. 1.18 but with the precious blood of Christ his precious blood was the price we stood him in which he paid when he gave his life a ransome for many Mat. 20.28 the case stood thus betwixt Christ and us in this point of Redemption we all like a crew or company of Malefactors were ready to suffer and to be executed now what said Christ to this Why I will come under the Law said Christ I will suffer that which they should suffer I will take upon me their execution upon condition I may redeem them now this he did at his death and this was the end why he died that by his death we might be redeemed from the slavery of Death and Hell 2. Another Design of Christ's death was to free us from sin not only would he remove the effect but he would take away the cause also Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation for the remission of sin Rom. 3.25 John 1.29 2 Cor. 5.21 Heb. 9.26 1 John 1.7 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Once hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself And the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin This was the plot which God by an ancient design aimed at in the suffering of Jesus Christ that he would take away sin And thus Faith must take it up and look upon it When Peter had set forth the hainousness of the Jews sin in killing Christ he tells them at last of that design of old All this was done said he Acts 2.2 by the determinate counsel of God His meaning was first to humble them and then to raise them up q. d. It was not so much they that wrought his death as the Decree of God and the agreement of God and Christ there was an ancient contrivement that Jesus Christ should die for sin and that all our sins should be laid on the back of Jesus Christ and therefore he seems to speak comfort to them in this that howsoever they designed it yet God and Christ designed a further end in it than they imagined even to remission of sins Who was delivered to death for our sins Rom. 4.25 and rose again for our justification The death of Christ as one observes was the greatest and strangest design that ever God undertook and therefore sure he had an end proportionable to it God that willeth not the death of a sinner would not for any inferior end will the death of his Son whom he loved more than all the world besides it must needs be some great matter for which God should contrive the death of his Son and indeed it could be no less than to remove that which he most hated and that was sin Here then is another end of Christ's death it was for the remission of sin one main part of our justification 3. Another design of Christ's death was to mortifie our members which are upon the earth Not only would he remit sin but he would destroy it kill it crucifie it he would not have it reign in our mortal bodies Rom. 6.11 1 Pet. 2.24 that we should obey it in the lusts thereof This Design the Apostle sets out in these words he bare our sins in his own body upon the Tree that we being dead unto sin should live unto righteousness Christ by his death had not only a design to deliver us from the guilt of sin but also from the power of sin God forbid that I should glory Gal. 6.14 save in the
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world Paul was a mortified man dead to the world and dead to sin But how came he so to be why this he attributes to the Cross of Christ to the death of Christ the death of Jesus was the cause of this death in Paul How much more shall the blood of Christ purge our Consciences from dead works to serve the living God Heb. 9.14 There is in the death of Christ first a value and secondly a vertue the former is available to our justification the latter to our sanctification now sanctification hath two parts mortification and vivification Christ's death or passive obedience is more properly conducible to the one his life or active obedience to the other Rom. 6.5 Hence Believers are said to be engraffed with Christ in the likeness of his death there is a kind of likeness betwixt Christ and Christians Christ died and the Christian dies Christ died a natural death and a Christian dies a spiritual death Christ died for sin and the Christian dies for sin this was another end of the death of Christ there issues from his death a mortifying vertue causing the death of sin in a Believer's soul one main part of our sanctification O my soul look to this herein lies the pith and marrow of the death of Christ and if now thou wilt but act and exercise thy faith in this respect how mightest thou draw the vertue and efficacy of his death into thy soul But here is the question how should I manage my Faith or how should I act my faith to draw down the vertue of Christ's death and so to feel the vertue of Christ's death in my soul mortifying crucifying and killing sin I answer 1. In prayer meditation self-examination receiving of the Lord's Supper c. I must propound to my self and soul the Lord Jesus Christ as having undertaken and performed that bitter and painful work of suffering even unto death yea that of the Cross as it is held out in the History and Narrative of the Gospel 2. I must really and steadfastly believe and firmly assent that those sufferings of Christ so revealed and discovered were real and true undoubted and every way unquestionable as in themselves 3. I must look upon those grievous bitter cruel painful and with all opprobrious execrable shameful sufferings of Christ as very strange and wonderful but especially considering the spiritual part of his sufferings viz. the sense and apprehension of God's forsaking and afflicting him in the day of his fierce anger I should even be astonished and amazed thereat what that the Son of God should lay his head on the block under the blow of divine Justice that he should put himself under the wrath of his heavenly Father that he should enter into the combat of Gods heavy displeasure and be deprived of the sense and feeling of his love and mercy and wonted comfort how should I but stand agast at these so wonderful sufferings of Jesus Christ 4. I must weigh and consider what it was that occasioned and caused all this viz. Sin yea my Sin yea this and that Sin particularly This comes nearer home and from this I must now gather in these several Conclusions As 1. It was the Design of Christ by his sufferings to give satisfaction to the infinite Justice of God for sin 2. It was intended and meant at least in a second place to give out to the world a most notable and eminent instance and demonstration of the horridness odiousness and execrableness of sin sith no less than all this yea nothing else but this would serve the turn to expiate it and atone for it 3. It holds forth again as sin is horrid in its self so it cannot but be exceeding grievous and offensive to Christ Oh it cost him dear it put him to all this pain and Torture it made him cry out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me how then should it but offend him above all above any thing in the world 4. If therefore there be in me any spark of love towards Christ or any likeness to Christ or if I would have Christ to bear any affection love regard or respect unto me it will absolutely behoove me by all means to loath sin and cast it away from me to root it up to quit my hands and to rid my heart of it The truth is I cannot possibly give forth a more pregnant proof of my sincere love entire affection respect conformity resemblance sympathy to and with Christ than by offering all violence usually all holy severity against sin for his very sake Now when the heart is thus exercised God by his Spirit will not fail to meet us our desire and endeavour of our soul to weaken and kill sin in the soul is not without its reward but especially when sin hath in this way and by this means lost the affection of the soul and is brought in hatred and disesteem it decayes and dyes of it self for it only liveth and flourisheth by the warm affections good thoughts and opinion that the soul hath of it So that matters going thus in the heart the influence that should nourish and maintain sin is cut off and it withers by degrees till it be finally and fully destroyed Thus for directions now for the encouragements of our faith to believe in Christ's death consider 1. The fulness of this object Christ crucified there is a transcendent all-sufficiency in the death of Christ in a safe sense it contains in it universal redemption it is sufficient for the redemption of every man in the world yea and effectual for all that have been are or shall be called into the state of grace whether Jews or Gentiles bound or free I know some hold that Christ dyed for all and every man with a purpose to save only thus they explicate 1. That Christ dyed for all men considered in the common lapse or fall but not as obstinate impenitent or unbelievers he dyed not for such as such 2. That Christ dyed for all men in respect of the request or impetration of salvation but the application thereof is proper to believers 3. That Christ dyed not to bring all or any man actually to salvation but to purchase salvability and reconciliation so far as that God might and would salva justitia deal with them on terms of a better covenant 4. That Christ hath purchased salvability for all men but faith and regeneration he hath merited for none because God is bound to give that which Christ hath merited of him although it be not desired or craved I cannot assent to these positions but thus far I grant that Christ's death in it self is a sufficient price and satisfaction to God for all the world and that also it is effectual in many particulars to all men respectively in all the world every man in one way or other hath
is that of Paul I now rejoyce in my sufferings for you Col. 1.24 and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church One would wonder how Paul should fill up that which is behind of the sufferings of Christ were Christ's suffeings imperfect and much Paul add to them no surely for by one offering Christ hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified I shall not insist on many Commentaries Heb. 10.14 I suppose this is the genuine sense and meaning of the Spirit Now rejoyce I in my sufferings for you whereby I fulfil the measure of those tribulations which remain yet to be endured of Christ in his mystical body which I do for the bodies sake not to satisfie for it but to confirm it or strengthen it by my example in the Gospel of Christ The sufferings of Christ are either personal or general his personal sufferings were those he endured in his own body as Mediator which once for ever he finished his general sufferings are those which he endures in his mystical body which is the Church as he is a Member with the rest and these are the sufferings Paul speaks of and which Paul fills up But wherein is the conformity betwixt our sufferings and the sufferings of Christ I answer 1. Negatively 2. Positively 1. Negatively our sufferings have no conformity with Christ in these two things 1. Not in the Office of Christ's sufferings for his were meritorious and satisfactory ours only ministerial and for edification 2. Not in the weight and measure of Christ's sufferings for his were bitter heavy and woful such as would have pressed any other Creature as low as Hell and have swallowed him up for ever but ours are but in comparison light and tollerable There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man 1 Cor. 10.13 for God is faithful who will not suffer you to be tempted above that you are able 2. Positively our sufferings must have conformity with Christ 1. In the cause of them Christ's sufferings were instrumentally from Satan and wicked men we must look to suffer by the enemies of Christ if we have any share in Christ the enemy continues still Gen. 3.15 I will put enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed This was primarily meant betwixt the Devil and Christ but if we conform to Christ we must expect the very same conditions 2. In the manner of undergoing them we must suffer with a proportion of that humility and patience and love and meekness and obedience which Christ shewed in his very sufferings 3. In respect of the issue of them we must look upon Christ's issue and expect it to be ours Ought not Christ to have suffered these things Luke 24.26 Rom. 8.17 2 Tit. 2.12 and so enter into Glory And if so be that we suffer with Christ we shall be glorified together with Christ If we suffer with him we shall also reign with him By reason of this conformity we have that communion and association with Christ in all these particulars as 1. We have Christ's strength to bear sufferings 2. His Victories to overcome sufferings 3. His Intercession to preserve us from falling away in sufferings 4. His Compassion to moderate and proportion our sufferings to the measure of strength which he hath given us 5. His Spirit to draw in the same yoke with us and to hold us under all sufferings that we sink not 6. His Graces to be more glorious by our sufferings as a Torch when it is shaken shines the brighter 7. His Crown to reward our sufferings when we shall have tasted our measure of them For our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of Glory O my Soul study this conformity and be content with thy portion yea comfort thy self in this condition of sufferings must we not drink of our Saviour's Cup what not of our Master 's own Cup We read of Godfrey of Bullein that he would not be crowned in Jerusalem with a Crown of Gold where Christ was crowned with a Crown of Thorns because he would not have such a great disproportion betwixt him and Christ and we read of Origin that when Alexander Severus the Emperor sent for him to Rome and that he might take his choice whether he would ride thither on a Mule or in a Chariot that he refused them both saying he was less than his Master Christ of whom he never read that he rode but once O the sufferings Christ endured he was called a Wine-bibber a Samaritane a Devil he was pursued entrapped snared 2 Tim. 3.12 slain And surely they that will live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer persecution Never wonder that thou art hated of men or persecuted of men why I tell thee if Christ himself were now amongst us in the form and fashion of a servant in that very condition that sometimes he was and should convince men of their wickedness as searchingly as sometimes he did I verily think he would be the most hated man in all the world It 's plain enough what carnal men would do by these very doings of the carnal Jews 3. We must conform to Christ in his death carrying in us a resemblance and representation of his death But what death is this I answer in a word a death unto sin so the Apostle Rom. 6.10 11. Rom. 6.5 in that he died unto sin likewise reckon ye your selves to be dead indeed unto sin There is a likeness betwixt Christ's death and our death in this respect we are planted together in the likeness of his death True Mortification carries a similitude a likeness a resemblance of the death of Christ As for instance See Mr. Brinsley at large mystical implantation John 10.17 18 Psal 100.3 1. Christ's death was a voluntary death I lay down my life that I may take it again no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again not all men on earth nor all Devils in Hell could have enforced Christ's death if he had not pleased his death was a voluntary death a spontaneous act so is our mortification Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power many may leave their sins against their wills but this is not true mortification it bears not in it the likeness of Christ's death for he died willingly it may be thou hast a clamorous Conscience which continually dogs thee and therefore thou leavest thy sin thus Judas came in with his thirty pieces of silver Mat. 27.5 and cast them down in the Temple at the High Priest's feet but no thanks to Judas for they were too hot for him to hold or it may be there is some penalty of the Law or some temporal judgment that
suffered 5. For what end he suffered 6. With what mind he suffered Every one of these will make some discoveries either of his Graces or of his gracious actings in our behalf and who can tell how far this very Look may work on us to change us and transform us into the very image of Jesus Christ 3. Let us humbly bewail our defect exorbitancy irregularity and inconformity either to the graces sufferings or death of Christ As thus Lo here the profound humility wonderful patience fervent love abundant mercy admirable meekness constant obedience of Jesus Christ Lo here the tortures torments agonies conflicts extream sufferings of Christ for the spiritual immortal good of the preciou● souls of his redeemed ones Lo here the death of Christ see how he bowed the head and gave up the Ghost why these are the particulars to which I should conform But Oh alas what a wide vast utter distance disproportion is there betwixt me and them Christ in his sufferings shined with graces his graces appeared in his sufferings like so many stars in a bright winter's night but how dim are the faint weak Graces in my Soul Christ in his sufferings endured much for me I know not how much by thine unknown sorrows and sufferings felt by thee ' but not distinctly known to us said the ancient Fathers of the Greek Church in their Liturgy have mercy upon us and save us his sorrows and sufferings were so great that some think it dangerous to define them but how poor how little are my sufferings for Jesus Christ I have not yet resisted unto blood and if I had what were this in comparison of his extream sufferings Christ in his sufferings died his passive obedience was unto death even to the death of the Cross he hung on the Cross till he bowed his head and gave up the Ghost Rom. 6.10 he died unto sin once But alas how do I live in that for which he died To this day my sin hath not given up the Ghost to this day the death of Christ is not the death of my sin O my sin is not yet crucified the heart-blood of my sin is not yet let out Oh wo is me how unanswerable am I to Christ in all these respects 4. Let us quicken provoke and rouze up our Souls to this conformity let us set before them exciting Arguments ex gr The greatest glory that a Christian can attain to in this world is to have a resemblance and likeness to Jesus Christ Again the more like we are to Christ the more we are in the love of God and the better he is pleased with us It was his voice concerning his Son This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased and for his sake if we are but like him he is also well pleased with us Again a likeness or resemblance of Christ is that which keeps Christ alive in the world As we say of a child that is like his Father This man cannot die so long as his Son is alive So we may say of Christians who resemble Christ that so long as they are in the world Christ cannot die he lives in them and he is no otherwise alive in this nether world than in the hearts of Gracious Christians that carry the picture and resemblance of him Again a likeness to Christ in his death will cause a likeness to Christ in his Glory If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death Rom. 6.5 we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection As it is betwixt the Graft and the Stock the Graft seeming dead with the Stock in the winter it revives with it in the Spring after the Winter's death it partakes of the Spring 's resurrection so it is betwixt Christ and us if with Christ we die to sin we shall with Christ be raised to Glory being conformed to him in his death we shall be also in his resurrection Thus let us quicken and provoke our souls to this conformity 5. Let us pray to God that he will make us conformable to Jesus Christ Is it Grace we want let us beg of him that of that fulness that is in Christ we may in our measure receive grace for grace Is it patience or joy in sufferings that we want let us beg of him that as he hath promised he will send us the comforter that so we may follow Christ chearfully from his cross to his crown from earth to heaven Is it mortification our souls pant after this indeed makes us most like to Christ in his sufferings and death why then pray we for this mortification But how should we pray I answer 1. Let us plainly acknowledge and heartily bemoan our selves in God's bosom for our sins our abominable sins 2. Let us confess our weakness feebleness and inability in our selves to subdue our sins we have no might may we say against this great company that come against us 2 Chr. 20.12 neither know we what to do but our eyes are upon thee 3. Let us put up our request begging help from heaven let us cry to God that vertue may come out of Christ's death to mortifie our Lusts to heal our Natures to stanch our bloody issues and that the Spirit may come into helps us in these works Rom. 8.13 for by the Spirit do we mortifie the deeds of the body 4. Let us press God with the merits of Christ and with his promises through Christ for he hath said Sin shall not have dominion over us for we are not under the Law but under Grace Rom. 6.14 Rom. 8.2 and Paul experienced it The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ hath freed me from the Law of sin and death 5. Let us praise God and thank God for the help already received if we find that we have gotten some power against sin that we have gotten more ability to oppose the lusts of the flesh that we are seldom overtaken with any breaking forth of it that we have been able to withstand some notable temptations to it that the force of it in us is in any measure abated that indeed and in truth vertue is gone out of the death of Christ Oh then return we praises to God let us triumph in God let us lead our captivity captive and sing new songs of praises unto God and even ride in triumph over our corruptions boasting our selves in God and setting up our Banners in the name of the most High and offering up humble and hearty thanks to our Father for the death of Christ and for the merit vertue and efficacy of it derived unto us and bestowed upon us 6. Let us frequently return to our looking up unto Jesus Christ to our believing in Christ as he was lifted up How we are to manage our Faith to draw down the vertue of Christ's death into our souls I have discovered before and let us now be in the practice of those rules certainly
exalted without some preceding decent and humiliation Ephes 49. That he ascended saith the Apostle what is it but that he descended first into the lower parts of the earth 4. In respect of our evidence and assurance this is the sign that Christ hath finished the work of our redemption upon the earth first he was to act as our Surety and then he was to ascend as our Head our Advocate as the first-fruits the Captain the Prince of life the Author of salvation the forerunner of his people 4. That he might throughly convince the world of believers of their perfect righteousness The Spirit when he comes saith Christ shall convince the world of sin and righteousness and of judgment of sin because they believe not on me of of righteousness because I go to my Father and ye see me no more John 16.8 9 10. If Christ had not fulfilled all righteousness there had been no going to heaven for him nor remaining there certainly God would have sent him down again to have done the rest and the disciples should have seen him with shame sent back again but his ascension to heaven proclaims openly 1. That he hath compleatly finished the work he had to do for us here that no more was to be done in this world for us that the satisfactory work to justice was in it self finished 2. That God was well pleased with Jesus Christ and with what he had done and suffered for us yea God was so infinitely taken with him and his oblation after his sufferings as that he thinks it not fit to let him stay above forty days longer in this world he cannot be without him in heaven but he takes him up into glory and gives him a name above every name 3. That we have our share in heaven with him he went not up as a single person but vertually or mystically he carried up all the Elect with him into glory or otherwise how should the Spirit convince the world by his ascension of their righteousness or otherwise how should the Son of God convince his Father by his Ascension of his righteousness I look upon Jesus Christ going into Heaven as a confident Debtor after payment going into a Court and saying Who hath any thing to lay to his charge all is paid let the law take his course when Christ entred into heaven he seemed thus to challenge Justice Make room here for me and mine who should hinder hath the law any thing to say to these poor souls for whom I dyed if any in heaven can make objection Rev. 8.1 here I am to answer in their behalf Methinks I imagine a silence in heaven as John speaks at this speech only Mercy smiles and Justice gives in the Acquittance and God sets Christ down at his right hand 4. That he hath a new design to be acted in heaven for us he is taken up into glory that he may act gloriously the second part of out righteousness I mean that he might apply it and send down his Spirit to convince us of it He acted one part in the flesh in the habit of a beggar cloathed with rags but now he is gone to act the person of a Prince in robes of glory and all this to manage our salvation in the richest way that may be Three great things Christ acts for us now in glory First he is in place of an advocate for us He liveth to intercede for us Heb. 7.25 He is always begging of favour and love for us he lyes there to stop whatever plea may be brought in against us by the devil or Law yea he is there to get our fresh pardons for new sins Secondly he is the great provider and caterer for us John 14.2 he is laying in a great stock and store of glory for us against we come there In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you Jesus Christ went before to take up God's heart for us and now he is drawing out the riches of love from God his Father and laying them in bank for us Phil. 4.19 which made the Apostle say My God shall supply all your need according to his riches in glory by Christ Jesus Thirdly he sends down his Spirit to convince us that Christs righteousness is ours indeed the means of procuring this was the life and death of Christ but the means of applying this righteousness are those following acts of Christ's Resurrection Ascension Session Intercession c. By his death he obtained righteousness for us but by his Ascension he applies righteousness to us now it is that in especial manner he convinceth us of righteousness Because he is gone to his Father and we shall see him no more 5. That he might receive his Kingdom over us in the place appointed for it look as Kings are crowned in the chief Cities of their Kingdoms and keep their residence in their palaces near unto them so it was decent that our Saviour should be Crowned in Heaven and there sit down at Gods right hand which immediatly follows after his Ascension to which we now come SECT IV. Of God's right hand and of Christ's Session there 2. FOr the Session of Christ at God's right hand which is a consequent following after his ascension into Heaven I shall examine 1. What is God's right hand 2. What is it to sit there 3. According to what nature doth Christ sit there 4. Why is it that he sits at the right hand of God his Father in Glory 1. What is this right hand of God I answer 1. Negatively it is not any Corporal right hand of God if we speak properly God hath neither right hand nor left hand for God is not a body but a spirit or spiritual substance 2. Positively the right hand of God is the Majesty Dignity Dominion Power and ●l●●y of God The right hand of the Lord is exalted Psal 118.15 Exod. 15.6 Psal 89.13 Isa 48.13 the right hand of the Lord doth valianity Thy right hand O Lord is become glorious in Power thy right hand O Lord hath dashed in pieces the enemy Thou hast a mighty arm Strong is thy hand and high i● thy right hand Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath spanned the Heavens I know some of our Divines make this right hand of God something inferior to God's own power but others speak of it as every way equal and I know no absurdity to follow on it 2. What is it to sit at the right hand of God I answer it is not any corporal Session at Gods right hand as some picture him with a crown of gold on his head sitting on a Throne as if he had no other gesture in Heaven but sitting still which Stephen contradicts Acts 7.56 saying I see the heavens opened and the Son of man standing on th● right hand of God The words sitting or standing are both metaphorical and borrowed
suffered upon earth it had been ineffectual unto us had he not entred into heaven Heb. 9.24 to appear there in the presence of God for us Surely this Intercession is that which puts life into the death of Christ this Intercession is that which strikes the last stroak during this World in the carrying on of our souls Salvation Goodwin Christ set forth Rom. 8.34 and makes all sure It is a witty observation that one makes of these several steps of Christs actings for us as first there was an all-sufficiency in his death who shall condemn it is Christ that dyed 2. A rather in his Resurrection yea rather that is risen again 3. A much rather in his life and session at God's right hand for if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of Christ much rather being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Rom. 5.10 4. The Apostle riseth yet higher to a saving to the utmost and puts that upon his intercession wherefore he is able to save us to the utmost Heb. 7.25 seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for us If in the former were any thing wanting this intercession of Christ supplies all it is the Coronis which makes all effectual it saves to the uttermost for it self is the uttermost and highest step on earth Christ begins the execution of his office in heaven he ends it in his life and death Christ was the meritorious cause but by his intercession Christ is the applying cause of our souls salvation In this very Intercession of Christ is the consummation and perfection of the Priest-hood of Christ O then how requisite and necessary must this needs be 4. It is gracious and full of bowels Christ his intercession and indeed Christ's Priestly office is erected and set up on purpose for the relief of poor distressed sinners There is no mixture of terror in this blessed office of Jesus Christ and this doth distinguish it from his other offices Christ by his Kingly office rules over the Churches and over the World but all obtain not mercy whom he thus rules over Christ by his prophetical office comes to his own but many of his own received him not but now wherever the Priestly office of Jesus Christ is let forth upon a Soul that soul shall certainly be saved for ever O this Priestly office of Christ is an office of meer love and tender compassion Heb. 4.15 Christ saith the Apostle is such an high-Priest as cannot be but touched with the feeling of our infirmities Oh he is a merciful Heb. 2.17 and a faithful high Priest in things partaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the People He is mercifull and exceeding compassionate in all our afflictions he is afflicted Isa 63.9 and in his love and in his pity he Redeemed us and in his love and pity he intercedes for us SECT VIII Wherein the Intercession of Christ consists 8. WHerein more especially doth the Intercessions of Jesus Christ consist some suppose that Christs very being in heaven and putting God in mind of his active and passive obedience by his very presence is all that intercession that the Scripture speaks of But I rather answer is these particulars As 1. Christs intercession consists in the presenting of his Person for us he himself went up to heaven and presented himself the Apostle calls this an appearing for us Christ is not entered into the holy place made with hands but into heav●n now to appear in the presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 I believe there is an Emphasis in the Word appearing for us But how appears he for us I answer 1. In a publick manner whatsoever he did in this kind he did it openly and publickly he appears for us in the presence of God the Father he appears for us in the presence of his Saints and Angels heavens eyes are all upon him in his appearing for us 2. He appears for us as a Mediator he stands in the middle betwixt God and us hence it is that he is God-man that he might be a Mediator betwixt God and man 3. He appears for us as a Sponsor and a pledge surely it is a comfort for a man to have a friend at Court at the Princes elbow that may own him and appear for him but if this friend be both a Mediator and Surety a Mediator to request for him and a Surety to engage for him Phil. 9.10 ver 18 19. Oh what comfort is this thus Christ appeared in every respect he is a Mediator to request for us and he is a Surety to engage for us as Paul was for Onesimus a mediator I beseech thee for my Son Onesimus and a Sponsor if he hath wronged thee or owe thee ought put that on my account I will repay it So is Jesus Christ for his Saints he is the Mediator of a better Covenant Heb. 8.6 Heb. 8.6 and he is a Surety of a better Testament Heb. 7.22 Heb. 7. ●2 4. He appears as a Solicitor to present and promote the desires and requests of his Saints in such a way as that they may find acceptance with his Father He is not idle now he is in Heaven but as on earth he ever went about doing good so now in glory he is ever about his work of doing good he spends all his time in Heaven in promoteing the good of his people as from the beginning it was his care so to the Worlds end it will be his care to solicite his Father in the behalf of his poor Saints he tells God thus and thus it is with his poor Members they are in want in trouble in distress in affliction in reproach and then he presents their sighs sobs prayers tears and groans and that in such a way as that they may become acceptable to his Father 5. He appears as an Advocate if any man sin 1 John 2. ● we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous An Advocate is more than a Solicitor an Advocate is one that is of Counsel with an other and that pleadeth his Case in open Court and such an advocate is Jesus Christ unto his people 1. He is of Councel with them that is one of the Titles given him by the Prophet Isaiah Wonderful Councellour Isa 96. He councells them by his Word and Spirit 2. He pleads for them and this he doth in the high Court of Heaven at the Bar of God's own Justice there he pleads their case and answereth all the accusations that are brought in by Satan or their own Consciences but of this anon 6. He appears as a publick agent or Ledger-Embassadour what that is some tell us in these particulars 1. His work is to continue peace and surely this is Christ's work he is our peace saith the Apostle that is the author of our peace Eph. 2.14 he purchased our peace and he maintains our peace with
and God be Omnipotent that he can do and can have whatsoever he pleases then Christ being one God with his Father he must needs prevail it is but ask and have let him ask what he will 5. That Christ is God's darling upon this very account because he intercedes for his People Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life John 10.17 that I might take it again I lay it down by suffering and I take it again by rising ascending up into heaven and interceding there and therefore doth my Father love me O the love of God to Christ and of God in Christ to all his Saints God so loved the world that he gave his Son and Christ so loved the world that he gave himself and now again because Christ gave himself and his gift is as a sweet smelling savour unto God therefore God loves Christ O what a round of love is here God loves Christ and Christ loves us and the Father loves Christ again for loving of us there is not an act of Christ in his work of our redemption but the Father looks on it with love and liking Mat. 3.17 Isa 53.11 at his baptism lo a voice came from Heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased at his death He seeth of the travel of his soul and he is satisfied at his ascension he heareth of the intercessions of his soul and he is delighted Christ's intercessions are God's musick and therefore as sometimes Christ spoke to his Spouse Cant. 2.14 so God speaks to Christ Let me see thy countenance let me hear thy voice for sweet is thy voice and thy countenance is comely Now Christ's intercessions must needs prevail when God love's Christ for his intercessions sake if before the world was made Prov. 8.29 30. the Son was his Fathers darling for it is said When he appointed the foundations of the earth then I was by him and as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight In the Original delights intimating that the eternal Son was variety of delights to his Father O then what delights what variety what infinite of delights hath God in Christ now interceding for us what a dear darling is Christ to God when not only he stands by him but he represents to him all the Elect from the beginning to the end of the World q. d See Father look on my breast read hear all the names of those thou hast given me as Adam and Abraham and Isaac and Jacob of the Twelve Tribes and of the Twelve Apostles of all the Martyrs Professors and Confessors of the Law and Gospel I pray for them I Pray not for the World but only for them for they are mine methinks I hear God answer What my Son and what the Son of my womb and what the Son of my vows hast thou begotten me thus many Sons and are all these mine why then ask what thou wilt and have what thou pleasest I am as strongly inclined and disposed to give thee grant as thou wouldst have it it is my joy my delight my pleasure to save these souls and surely the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in thy hands 6. That Christ is God's Commander I speak it with reverence as well as petitioner it is a phraze given to the servants of God command ye me and may we not give it to the Son of God Christians God is as ready to do us service as if we had him at command Isa 45.11 1 John 5.14 This is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will he heareth us and in this sense we may boldly say that God the Father is as ready to hear Jesus Christ as if he had him at command not that in deed and reality he commands God but that in deed and truth he commands all below God and he commands all in the stead of God And to this purpose is that voice of God I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion Psalm 2.6 and why my King I dare not say he is God's King as if God were Christ's inferior or Christs subject God forbid why then my King I answer he is God's King because appointed by God or he is God's King John 5.22 because he rules in the stead of God The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all Judgment unto the Son God hath given away all his prerogatives unto Jesus Christ so that now the King of Saints can do what he will with God and with all the world only it follows Ask of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance as if the Father should have said I cannot deny thee and yet O my Son I would have thee ask do what thou wilt in Heaven Earth and Hell I have not the heart indeed I have not the power to deny thee any thing onely acknowledg this power to be originally in my self that all that honour the Son may honour the Father and all that honour the Father may honour the Son These are the terms betwixt God the Father and God the Son Oh then how powerfull and prevailing are Christs intercessions with his Father if he ask who hath power to command there is little question of prevailing in his suit We have heard in our days of a suit managed with a petition in one hand and a sword in the other and what the effect is all now can tell As a King who sues for peace backt with a potent Army able to win what he intreats for must needs treat more effectually so Christ sueing to his Father for his Saints with a power sufficient to obtain what he sues for he must needs effect what his desires may be it is well observed that Christ is first said to sit at God's right hand and then to intercede he treats the salvation of sinners as a mighty Prince treats the giving up of some Town which lyes seated under a Castle of his that commands the Town or he treats the salvation of sinners as a Commander treats the surrendring of a person already in his hands it is beyond God's power I speak i● with submission to deny his Son in any thing he asks Exod. 32.10 if the Lord sometimes cryed out to Moses like a man whose hands are held Let me alone how much more doth Christ's intercession bind God's hands and command all in Heaven Earth and Hell hence we say that God the Father hath divested himself of all his power and given the keys into Christ's own hands I am he that liveth and was dead Rev. 1.18 and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the keys of hell and death there is no man goes to Hell but he is lockt in by Jesus Christ and there is no man goes to Heaven but he is lockt in there by Jesus Christ he hath the keys of all men's eternities hanging
in reading pardons for his redeemed ones or in presenting petitions from them and pleading for them Surely he is still interceding every day it is his present work for our souls O desirable work 2. In this present transaction lies the application of all Christ's former actings whether of his habitual righteousness or of his active and passive obedience All those passages of Christ's incarnation conception circumcision birth life and death which more especially we look upon as the meritorious causes of our salvation had been nothing to us if they had not been applyed by Christ they were the means of impetration but Christ's intercession is the means of application Christ purchased salvation by those precedaneous acts but he possesseth us of our salvation by this perfective and consummate act of his intercession The order of this is laid down by the Apostle Heb. 5.8 9 10. in that first He learned obedience by the things which he suffered and then being made perfect he became the Author or applying cause of eternal salvation to all them that obey him being to this purpose called of God an High-Priest after the order of Melchizedeck Now is not this the desirable act above all other acts Alas what am I better for a Mine of Gold in such or such or such a field in which I have no propriety at all I am throughly convinc'd that Christ's merits are most precious merits but oh that they were mine Oh that Christ's intercessions would bring the salve and lay it to my sore Oh that I could hear that voice from Heaven My son I was incarnate for thee and conceived for thee and born for thee and circumcised for thee and I did the Law and suffered the penalty for thee and now I am interceding that thy very soul may have the benefit of all my doings and of all my sufferings Why if Christ's intercessions be the applying cause if it bring home to my soul all the former transactions of Christ saying All these are thine even thine oh how desirable must this intercession be 3. In this application lies that communion and fellowship which we have with the Father and the Son John 17.21 I pray for these that as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they also may be one in us Understand this soberly we cannot think that there should be that oneness in equalitie betwixt God and us as betwixt God and Christ no no but there is oneness in similitude and reallity even in this life by vertue of Christ's intercession we have oneness with God and Christ not onely in comforts but also in graces I pray you mark this when I speak of communion with God in this life I mean especially the communication of grace between God and the soul on God's part there 's a special influence of grace and favour to man and on man's part there is a special return of grace and honour to God Some trembling souls are apt to think that all communion with God and Christ consists only in the comforts of the holy spirit whereas Christians may as really and advantagiously have communion with God in secret conveyances of grace inward supports in a concealed acceptation of service in the hidden drawings of the soul God-ward as in the more open and comfortable manifestations of God unto the soul communion with God is a familiar friendship I speak it in an holy humble sence now do we not as usually go to a friend for councel and advice as for comfort and cheering in a friends bosom we intrust our sorrows as well as our joys Suppose a soul even spiritually overwhelmed and ready to break be taking it self unto God and venting it self before the Lord now if afterwards the soul hath no more case than by the bare lanching of the sore if God pours in no balm at all but only gives support shall we say that this soul in this case hath no communion with God O yes in God's secret visits of the soul and in the souls restless groping after God though nothing but darkness be apprehended yet that soul lives in the light of God's countenance the Sun shines though a cloud interposeth God smiles though the soul do not perceive it or certainly thou hast his strengthening-supporting presence if not his shining John 17.23 now this is the fruit of Christ's blessed intercession and this is the subject-matter of Christ's intercessions O my Father that these may be one in us I in them and thou in me I in them by the influence and power of my Spirit and thou in me by the fulness and power of the Godhead And is not this a most desirable thing 4. In this communion lyes the vision and fruition of Jesus Christ in glory grace brings to glory If communion here we shall have communion hereafter and this also is a part of Christ's prayer and intercession Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me may be with me where I am John 17.24 that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me Jesus cannot be in Heaven long without his Saints indeed it is impossible that Christ should be in Heaven and that pieces and bits of Christ-mystical should be in Hell or yet long on Earth Christ will draw in his Legs and Members on earth up nearer to the Head certainly Christ and you that are believers must be under one roof ere long Is not he gone before to prepare a place yea many mansions for you John 14.2 we think them happy on earth that have their many stately Halls and Palaces their summer and their winter-houses O Christians how happy will you be when you come to be Lords and Heirs of many stately Mansions in the streets of Heaven but what speak I of Mansions now I am naming Christ Mansions are nothing many Mansions are but little yea many Mansions in Christ's Fathers house are but created chips of happiness in comparison of that communion which by vertue of Christ's intercession we shall have with Christ It is the saying of an eminently learned holy Divine Sam. Rutherford I should refuse heaven saith he if Christ were not there take Christ away from Heaven and it 's but a poor dark heartless dwelling Heaven without Christ would look as the direful land of death And therefore after Christ had spoke of many Mansions and of a place that he would prepare for his Saints he adds further to increase their joy John 14.3 I will come again saith he and receive you unto my self that where I am there ye may be also Mansions are but as places of bryers and thornes without Jesus Christ and therefore I would have Heaven for Christ and not have Christ for Heaven O this communion with Christ is above all desirable and this is the subject-matter of Christ's prayer Father I would have the Saints to be with me where I am that they may behold my glory Why this is the
love was manifested the seed then blossomed and the birth came out in an high expression of love the man-child the love of Christ was born Tit. 3.4 and saw the light After that saith the Apostle the kindness and love of God our Saviour towards man appeared I shall not need sure to instance in succeeding passages so far as we have gone we have clearly seen Christ's life was a perfect mirror of his love as there is no beam in the Sun in which there is no light so there was no act in the life of Christ but to a spiritual eye it shines with the light of love But above all O the love of Christ in his death ask a Malefactor if the Princes Son should go to his Father and say Father I confess this wretch hath deserved to dye but I see a willingness in thee that he should live only I perceive it sticks with thy justice why for that Father here I am and to satisfy thy justice I will dye my self only let this poor wretch live to the glory of thine and my free grace Ask I say the Malefactor what kind of love were this Surely Christ dyed for our sins and Christ rose again for our justification and he ascended and sate down at God's right hand and sent down his holy Spirit and all for us there was not one passage in all these transactions but held forth the breakings and breathings out of a strong fire of love 4. At this time there is a coal of burning love in the breast of Christ this fire was indeed from everlasting but the flames are as hot this day as ever now it is that Christ loves and lives And wherefore lives but only to love us and to intercede for us Christ makes our salvation his constant calling he is ever at his work Yesterday and to day and for ever there is not one hour in the day nor one day in a year nor one year in an age wherein Christ is not busie with his Father in this heavenly imployment of interceding for us He loved us before he died for us his love being the cause why he died for us and he loves us still in that now he intercedes for us it is as much as to say Christ hath loved us and he repents not of his love love made him dye for us and if it were to do again he would dye over again yea if our sins had so required that for every elect person Christ must have dyed a several death Love love would have put him willingly upon all these deaths O the loves of Christ towards our poor souls If I might but stay and take some turns in this large Field of love How many thousands of particulars might I draw out of Scripture expressing Christ's love to us in this respect though he be in Heaven yet by vertue of his intercession he bears us in his hands yea he leads us by the hand and arms too I taught Ephraim to go taking them by their arms but they knew not that I healed them he dandles us on his knees Isa 40 11. Hos 11.3 Deut. 32.11 12. he bears us on his wings As an Eagle stirreth up her nest fluttereth over her young spreadeth abroad her wings taketh them and beareth them on her wings so the Lord alone doth lead us he carries us on his shoulders as the man found his sheep and laid it on his shoulders rejoycing Nay I must yet come nearer Luke 15.5 for Christ by his intercession sets us nearer yet His left hand is under us Cant. 2.6 and his right hand doth imbrace us he wears us in Heaven as a bracelet about his arms which made the Spouse cry out O set me as a seal upon thine arm Cant. 8.6 he stamps and prints us on the palms of his hands Behold I have graven thee on the palms of my hands Isa 49.16 as if our names were written in letters of blood upon Christ's flesh he sets us as a seal upon his heart that is the expression of the Spouse too O set me as a seal upon thine heart Nay Cant. 8.6 so precious are the Saints to Jesus Christ that they lodge in Heaven in his bowels and in his heart for they dwell in Christ Hereby we know that we dwell in him 1 John 4.13 1 John 4.16 and they dwell in God and dwell in love For God is love and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God I know not what more to say you know the manner of the high Priests was to carry the names of the children of Israel into the Holy of Holies on their shoulders and on their breasts but was it ever heard that any high Priest besides the great high Priest of our profession should carry the names of thousands and millions on his shoulders and on his arms and on his hands and on his wings and on his bosom and on his heart nay in his heart and in his bowels as a memorial before the Lord O unmatchable love Methinks this love of Christ should now change my soul into a Globe or Mass of Divine love towards Christ as it were by the Spirit of the Lord. Methinks a sight of Christ in his presenting himself and his sacrifice to his Father for me should so enamour my soul as that I should delight in no other sight but this then is a Christian sweetly exercised when as the golden Ball of Divine Love is tossed to and again betwixt Christ's bosom and his and in this respect it is a wonder that before this I am not sickned and overcome with love and ready to cry out with the Spouse O stay me with flaggons Cant. 2.5 and comfort me with apples for I am sick of love O I am wounded with the arrows of love so as neither grave nor death nor hell neither Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come can ever lick these wounds or enbalm or bind them up O my Christ my Lord my Jesus What should I do but yield over my self as a Spouse under the power of her husband what should I do but lose my self in such a deep Ocean of loves stronger than wine hotter than coals of Juniper which hath a most vehement flame 2. Another motive of our love to Christ it is our propriety in Christ 1 Cor. 6.19 Ye are not your own said the Apostle of us and he is not his own may we say of Christ If any ask how may this be I answer That the soul in loving Christ is not her own and in regard of loving Christ is not his own every one makes over it self to another and propriety or interest to it self on both sides ceaseth My Beloved is mine and I am his Cant. 2.16 saith the Spouse not as if Christ should leave off to be his own or to be a free God when he becometh ours no no but he so demeans himself in respect
Tiberias First Christ appears and works a Miracle he discovers himself to be Lord of Sea as well as Land at his word multitudes of Fishes come to the Net and are caught by his Apostles nor is this Miracle without a Mystery Mat. 13.47 The Kingdom of Heaven is like a drawn net cast into the sea which when it is full men draw to land what is this divine trade of ours but a spiritual fishing the world is a sea souls like fishes swim at liberty in this deep and the nets of wholesome doctrine are they that draw up some to the shore of grace and glory 2. Upon this Miracle The Disciple whom Jesus loved said unto Peter it is the Lord. John is more quick-eyed than all the rest he considers the Miracle and him that wrought it and presently he concludes It is the Lord O my soul meditate on the mystery of this discovery if ever soul be converted and brought home to Christ it is the Lord but oh whither is Christ gone that we have lost so long his converting presence Oh for one Apparition of Jesus Christ till then we may preach our hearts out and never the nearer do what we can souls will to hell except the Lord break their career Ministers can do no more but tell thus and thus men may be saved and thus and thus men will be damned He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life John 3.36 and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life but when they have said all they can it is only God must give the blessing Oh what is preaching without Christ's presence One hearing what mighty feats Scanderbag's Sword had done he sent for it and when he saw it Is this the Sword said he that hath done such great exploits what 's this sword more than any other sword O sayes Scanderbag I sent thee my Sword but not my arm that did handle it so Ministers may use the sword of the Spirit the Word of God but if the Spirits arm be not with it they may brandish it every Sabbath to little purpose when all is done if ever any good be done it is the Lord. No sooner John observes the Miracle that a multitude of fishes were caught and taken but he tells Peter of a blessed discovery it is the Lord 3. Upon this discovery Peters throws himself into the Sea O the fervent love he carries towards Christ if he but hear of his Lord he will run through fire and water to come unto him so true is that of the Spouse Many waters cannot quench love neither can the floods drown it Cant. 8.7 if a man would give all the substance of his house for love it would utterly be contemned If I love Christ I cannot but long for communion and fellowship with Christ Vbicunque fueris O domine Jesu c. Aug. Wheresoever thou art O blessed Saviour give me no more happiness than to be with thee if on the earth I would travel day and night to come unto thee if on the Sea with Peter I would swim unto thee if riding in triumph I would sing Hosanna to thee but if in glory how happy should I be to look upon thee Christ's Apparitions are ravishing sights if he but stand on the shore Peter throws himself over-board to come to Christ why now he stands on the pinacles of heaven wasting and beckoning with his hand and calling on me in his Word Rise up my love my fair one and come away O my soul make haste Cant. 2.10 in every duty look out for another Apparition of Jesus Christ when thou comest to hear say Have over Lord by this Sermon and when thou comest to pray say Have over Lord by this Prayer to a Saviour neither fire nor water floods nor storms death nor life principalities nor powers height nor depth nor any other creature should hinder thy passage to Christ or separate thy soul from Christ Consider what I say 2 Tim. 2.7 8. saith Paul and the Lord give thee understanding in all things remember that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my Gospel that Christ was raised is a Gospel-truth ay but do thou remember it do thou consider it and the Lord give thee understanding in all things SECT III. Of desiring Jesus in that respect 3. LEt us desire after Jesus carrying on the great work of our salvation for us in his resurrection What desire is we have opened before some call it the wing of the soul whereby it moveth and is carried to the thing it expecteth to feed it self upon it and to be satisfied with it But what is there in Christ's resurrection that should move our souls to desire after it I answer 1. Something in it self 2. Something as in reference unto us 1. There is something in it self had we but a view of the glory dignity excellency of Christ as raised from the dead it would put us on this heavenly motion we should fly as the Eagle that hasteth to eat The object of desire is good Heb. 1.8 but the more excellent and glorious any good is the more earnest and eager should our desires be now Christ as raised from the dead is an excellent object the resurrection of Christ is the glorifying of Christ yea his glorifying took its beginning at his blessed resurrection now it was that God highly exalted him and gave him a name above every name Phil. 2.9 c. and in this respect how desirable is he 2. There is something in reference unto us As 1. Rom. 4.25 He r●se again for our justification I must needs grant that Christ's death and not his resurrection is the meritorious cause of our justification but on the other side Christ's resurrection and not his death is for the applying of our justification as the stamp adds no vertue nor matter of real value to a piece of gold but only it makes that value which before it had actually appliable and currant unto us so the resurrection of Christ was no part of the price or satisfaction which Christ made to God yet is it that which applies all his merits and makes them of force unto his Members Some I know would go further Lucius a learned Writer saith that Justification is therefore attributed to Christ's resurrection because it was the compleat and ultimate act of Christ's active obedience and from hence inferreth that remission of sin is attributed to his passive obedience and justification or imputation of righteousness to his active obedience Goodwin no way inferiour to him Rom. 8.34 faith that justification is put upon Christ's resurrection with a rather who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again not but that the matter of our justification is only the obedience and death of Christ but the form of our justification or the act of pronouncing us righteous by that his
obedience and death depends upon Christ's resurrection for then it was that Christ himself was justified and then he was justified as a common person representing us therein so that we were then justified with him and in him and we are said to be risen with him and to sit with him in heavenly places Burges one admirably judicious saith that justification is given to Christ's resurrection as a priviledge flowing from its efficient cause Indeed Christ's death is the meritorious cause of our justification but Christ's resurrection is in some sence saith he the efficient cause because by his rising again the Spirit of God doth make us capable of justification and th●n bestoweth it on us I know there is some difference amongst these Worthies but they all agree in this that the resurrection of Christ was for our justification and that by the resurrection of Christ all the merits of his death were made appliable unto us As there was a price and ransome to be paid by Christ for the redemption of man so it was necessary that the fruit effect and benefit of Christ's redemption should be applied and conferred now this work of application and actual collation of the fruit of Christ's death began to be in fieri upon the resurrection day but it was not then finished and perfected for to the consummation thereof the Ascension of Christ the Mission of the holy Ghost Apostolical preaching of the Gospel to Jews and Gentiles the Donation of Heavenly grace and Christ's Intercession at the right hand of God were very necessary 1 Cor. 15.17 O the benefit of Christ's resurrection as to our justification If Christ be not risen again ye are yet in your sins and your faith is in vain Remission of sin which is a part of our justification though purchased by Christ's death yet could not he applied to us or possibly be made ours without Christ's resurrection and and in this respect oh how desirable is it Eph. 2.5 6. 2. He rose again for our sanctification So the Apostle He hath quickened us together with Christ and hath raised up together with Christ Our first resurrection is from Christ's resurrection if you would know how you that were blind in heart uncircumcised in spirit utterly unacquainted with the life of God are now light in the Lord affecting heavenly things walking in righteousness it comes from this blessed resurrection of Jesus Christ we are quickened with Christ it is Christ's resurrection that raised our souls Rom. 6.11 being stark dead with such a resurrection as that they shall never die more Whence the Apostle Reckon your selves to be dead unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. We are dead to sin and alive unto God by the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ we may reckon thus for our selves that if we be in Christ there comes a vertue from Christ an effectual working of Christ by his Spirit into our hearts and it is such a work as will conform us to Christ dead and to Christ risen why reckon thus saith the Apostle go not by guess and say I hope it will be better with me than it hath been no no but reckon Rom. 6.4 conclude make account I must live to God I must live the life of grace for Christ is risen To the same purpose he speaks before Like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life Christ rose again to a new life and herein his resurrection differed from the resurrection of those others raised by him as of Lazarus Jairus Daughter the Widow of Naims Son for they were but raised to the same life which formerly they lived but Jesus Christ was raised up to a new life and according to this ex●mplar we should now walk in newness of life this is the end of Christ's resurrection that we should be new creatures of new lives new principles new conversations he rose again for our sanctification 3. He rose again for our resurrection to eternal life Christ is the patern and pledg and cause of the resurrection of our bodies for since by man came death by man came also the resurrection of the dead for as in Adam all dye 1 Cor. 15.21 22 even so in Christ shall all be made alive There is a vertue flowing from Christ to his Saints by which they shall be raised up at the latter day as there is a vertue flowing from the head to the members or from the root to the branches so those that are Christ's shall be raised up by Christ 1 John 5.28 29. Not but that all the wicked in the world shall be raised again by the power of Christ as he is a judg for all that are in their graves shall hear his voice and they shall come forth yet with this difference they that have done good unto the resurrection of life and they that have done evil unto the resurrection of damnation In this respect the Saints shall have a peculiar resurrection and therefore they are called the Children of the resurrection because they shall obtain a better resurrection Luke 20.36 Heb. 11.35 as the Apostle calls it And is not Christ's resurrection desirable in this very respect if we should think these bodyes of ours being dust must never return from their dusts it might discourage but here is our hope Christ is risen and therefore we must rise it is the Apostles own argument against those that held there was no resurrection of the dead why saith the Apostle if there be no resurrection of the dead 1 Cor. 15.12 13 16 20. then is not Christ risen If the dead rise not then is not Christ raised But now is Christ risen from the dead and become the first-fruits of them that sleep he argues plainly that Christs resurrection is the principal efficient cause of the resurrection of the just I am the resurrection and the life saith Christ i.e. I am the Author John 11.25 John 5.21 and worker of the resurrection to life As the Father raiseth up the dead and quickeneth them even so the Son quickeneth whom he will and hence it is that Christ is called a quickning Spirit Christ is the head and stock of all the Elect Christ is the Author procurer conveyor of life to all his off-spring by the communication of his Spirit Christ is a quickening Spirit quickening dead souls and quickening dead bodies 1 Cor. 15.45 the Author both of the first and second resurrection And is not this desireable He rose again for the assurance of our justification sanctification and salvation This is the reason why the Apostle useth these words to prove the resurrection of Christ I will give you the sure mercies of David Acts 13.34 none of Gods mercies had been sure to us if Christ had not risen again from the dead But now all is made sure his work of redemption being