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A39663 The fountain of life opened, or, A display of Christ in his essential and mediatorial glory wherein the impetration of our redemption by Jesus Christ is orderly unfolded as it was begun, carryed on, and finished by his covenant-transaction, mysterious incarnation, solemn call and dedication ... / by John Flavell ... Flavel, John, 1630?-1691. 1673 (1673) Wing F1162; ESTC R20462 564,655 688

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the like proportion also is betwixt the blood that consecrates them Earthly things with common Heavenly things with the most excellent blood So then there are two things to be especially observed here First The nature of Christs death and sufferings it had the nature use and end of a Sacrifice and of all Sacrifices the most excellent Secondly The necessity of his offering up it was necessary to correspond with all the Types and prefigurations of it under the Law but especially it was necessary for the expiating of sin the propitiating of a justly incensed God and the opening a way for reconciled ones to come to God in The point I shall give you from it is DOCT. That the sacrifice of Christ our high Priest is most excellent in it self and most necessary for us Sacrifices are of two sorts Eucharistical or thank-offerings in testification of homage duty and service and in token of gratitude for mercies freely received and Ilastical or expiatotory for satisfaction to Justice and thereby the attoning and reconciling of God Of this last kind was the sacrifice offered by Jesus Christ for us To this Office he was called by God Heb. 5.5 in it he was confirmed by the unchangeable oath of God Psal. 110.4 for it he was singularly qualified by his incarnation Heb. 5.6 7. and all the ends of it he hath fully answered Heb. 9.11 12. My present design is from this Scripture to open the general nature and absolute necessity of the Priesthood of Christ. Shewing what his Priesthood implys in it and how all this was indispensably necessary in order to our recovery from the deplorable state of sin and misery First then we will consider what it supposes and implies And then wherein it consists And there are six things which it either presupposeth or necessary includeth in it First At first sight it supposes mans revolt and fall from God and a dreadful breach made thereby betwixt God and him else no need of an attoning sacrifice If one dyed for all then were all death 2 Cor. 5.14 dead in Law under sentence to dye and that eternally In all the sacrifices from Adam to Christ this was still preached to the world that there was a fearful breach betwixt God and man and that even so justice required our blood should be shed And the fire flaming on the Altar which wholy burnt up the sacrifice was a lively Emblem of that fiery indignation that should devour the Adversaries But above all when Christ that true and great sacrifice was offered-up to God then was the fairest glass that ever was in the world set before us to see our sin and misery by the fall in Secondly His Priesthood supposes the unalterable purpose of God to take vengeance for sin He will not let it pass I will not determine what God could do in this case by his absolute power but I think it is generally yielded that by his ordinate power he could do no less than punish it in the person of the sinner or of his surety Those that contend for such a forgiveness as is an Act of Charity like that whereby private persons forgive one another must at once suppose God to part with his right cedendo de jure suo and also render the satisfaction of Christ altogether useless as to the procurement of forgiveness Yea rather an obstacle than a means to it Surely the nature and truth of God oblige him to punish sin He is of purer eyes than to look upon iniquity 1 Heb. 13. And beside the word is gone out of his mouth that the sinner shall dye Thirdly The Priesthood of Christ presupposeth the utter impotency of man to appease God and recover his favour by any thing he could do or suffer Surely God would not come down to assume a body to dye and be offered up for us if at any cheaper rate it could have been accomplished There was no other way to recover man and satisfie God Those that deny the satisfaction of Christ and talk of his dying to confirm the truth and give us an example of meekness patience and self-denyal affirming these to be the sole ends of his death do not only therein root up the foundation of their own comfort peace and pardon but most boldly impeach and tax the infinite Wisdom God could have done all this at a cheaper rate The sufferings of a meer creature are able to attain these ends The death of the Martyrs did it But who by dying can satisfie and reconcile God What creature can bring him an adequate and proportionable value for sin Yea for all the sin that ever was or shall be transmitted to the natures or committed by the persons of all Gods Elect from Adam to the last that shall be found alive at the Lords coming Surely none but Christ can do this Fourthly Christs Priesthood implys the necessity of his being God-man It was necessary he should be a man in order to his passion compassion and derivation of his righteousness and holiness to men Had he not been man he had had no sacrifice to offer no soul or body to suffer in The Godhead is impatible immortal and above all those sufferings and miseries Christ felt for us Besides his being man fills him with bowels of compassion and tender sense of our miseries This makes him a merciful and faithful High-Priest Heb. 4.15 And not only fits him to pity but to sanctifie us also for he that sanctifieth and they that are sanctified are both of one Heb. 2.11 14 17. And as necessary it was our High-Priest should be God since the value and efficacy of of his sacrifice results from thence Fifthly The Priesthood of Christ implies the extremity of his sufferings In sacrifices you know there was a destruction a kind of Annihilation of the Creature to the glory of God The sheding of the creatures blood and burning its flesh with fire was but an umbrage or faint resemblance of what Christ endured when he made his soul an offering for sin Sixthly and Lastly It implies the gratious design of God to reconcile us at a dear rate to himself in that he called and confirmed Christ in his Priesthood by an oath and thereby laid out a sacrifice of infinite value for the world Sins for which no sacrifice is allowed are desperate sins And the case of such sinners is helpless But if God allow yea and provide a sacrifice himself how plainly doth it speak his intentions of peace and mercy These things are manifestly presupposed or implyed in Christs Priesthood This Priesthood of Christ is that function wherein he comes before God in our name and place to fulfil the Law and offer up himself to him a sacrifice of reconciliation for our sins and by his intercession to continue and apply the purchase of his blood to them for whom he shed it All this is contained in that famous Scripture Heb. 10.7 8 9 10 11 12
Historie to great indignation against Pilate the Jews and the rude and bloody Souldiers and could not contain himself but cried out as the Bishop was reading O that I had been there with my French-men I would have cut all their throats who so barbarously used my Saviour To allude to this When the Believer considers and remembers that sin put Christ to all that shame and ignominy that he was wounded for our transgressions he is filled with hatred of sin and cries out O sin I will revenge the blood of Christ upon thee thou shalt never live a quiet hour in my heart And Secondly It produces an humble adoration of the goodness and mercy of God to exact satisfaction for our sins by such bloody stripes from our surety Lord what if this wrath had seised on me as it did on Christ what had been my condition then If these things were done in the green tree what had been the cafe of the dry tree Sometimes representations and not common ones are made of the Love of Christ who assumed a body and soul on purpose to bear the wrath of God for our sins And when that surpassing Love breaks out in its glory upon the soul how is the soul transported and ravished with it crying out what manner of Love is this Here 's a Love large enough to go round the heavens and the Heaven of heavens Who ever loved after this rate to lay down his life for enemies O Love unutterable and unconceivable How glorious is my Love in his red garments Sometimes the fruits of his death are there gloriously displaied Even his satisfaction for sin and the purchase his blood made of the eternal inheritance And this begets thankfulness and confidence in the soul. Christ is dead and his death hath satisfied for my sin Christ is dead therefore my soul shall never die Who shall separate me from the Love of God These are the fruits and this is the nature of that remembrance of Christ here spoken of Secondly What aptitude or conducency is there in this Ordinance to bring Christ so to remembrance Much every way For it is a sign by him appointed to that end and hath as Divines well observe a threefold use and consideration viz. as it is memorative as it is significative and as it is instructive First As it is memorative and so it hath the nature and use of a pledge or token of Love left by a dying to a dear surviving friend And so the Sacrament as was said before is like a Ring pluckt off from Christs Finger or a Bracelet from his Arm or rather his Picture from his Breast delivered to us with such words as these as oft as you look on this rememember me Let this help to keep me alive in your remembrance when I am gone and out of your sight It conduces to it also Secondly As it is a significative sign most aptly signifying both his bitter sufferings for us and our strict and intimate union with him Both which have an excellent usefulness to move the heart and its deepest affections at the remembrance of it The breaking of the Bread and shedding forth the Wine signifies the former our eating drinking and incorporating them is a lively signification of the other Thirdly Moreover this Ordinance hath an excellent use and advantage for this affectionate remembrance of Christ as it is an instructive sign And it many waies instructs us and enlightens our mind particularly in these truths which are very affecting things First That Christ is the Bread on which our souls live proper meat and drink for Believers the most excellent New-Testament food It 's said Psal. 78.25 man did eat Angels food He means the manna that fell from Heaven Which was so excellent that if Angels who are the noblest creatures did live-upon material food they would choose this above all to feed on And yet this was but a Type and weak shadow of Christ on whom Believers feed Christ makes a royal feast of his own flesh and blood Isai. 25.6 all our delicates are in him Secondly It instructs us that the New-Testament is now in its full force and no sustantial alteration can be made in it since the the Testator is dead and by his death hath ratified it So that all the excellent promises and blessings of it are now fully confirmed to the believing soul. Heb. 9.16 17. All these and many more choice truths are we instructed in by this sign And all these waies it remembers us of Christ and helps powerfully to raise warm and affect our hearts with that remembrance of him Thirdly The last enquiry is how Christ hath hereby left such a special mark of his care for and love to his people And that will evidently appear if you consider these five particulars First This is a special mark of the care and Love of Christ in as much as hereby he hath made abundant provision for the confirmation and establishment of his peoples faith to the end of the world For this being an evident proof that the New-Testament is in its full force Matth. 26.28 this is the Cup of the New-Testament in my blood it tends as much to our satisfaction as the legal execution of a deed by which we hold and enjoy our estate So that when he saith take eat it is as much as if God should stand before you at the Table with Christ and all the promises in his hand and say I deliver this to thee as my deed What think you doth this promote and confirm the faith of a Believer if it do not what doth Secondly This is a special mark of Christs care and Love in as much as by this he hath made like abundant provision for the enlargement of his peoples joy and comfort Believers are at this Ordinance as Mary was at the Sepulcher with fear and great joy Matth. 28.8 Come Reader speak thy heart if thou be one that heartily lovest Jesus Christ and hast gone many daies possibly years mourning and lamenting because of the inevidence and cloudiness of thine interest in him that hast sought him sorrowing in this Ordinance and in that in one duty and another if at last Christ should take off that mask that cruel covering as one calls it from his face and be known of thee in breaking bread Suppose he should by his Spirit whisper thus in thine ear as thou sittest at his Table dost thou indeed so prize esteem and value me will nothing but Christ and his Love content and satisfie thee then as sweet lovely and desireable as I am know that I am thine Take thine own Christ into the arms of thy faith this day Would not this breed in thy soul a joy transcendent to all the joys and pleasures in this world what thinkest thou of it Thirdly Here is a signal mark of Christs care and Love in as much as this is one of the highest and best helps for the mortification of the
pleasures and enjoyments of the wicked which feed them for the day of slaughter How little stomach can a man have to those dainties that understands the end and meaning of them Give not sleep therefore to thine eyes Reader till thou have got good evidence that thou art of that number whom Iesus hath delivered from wrath to come Till thou canst say he is a Jesus to thee This may be made out to thy satisfaction three waies First If Iesus have delivered thee from sin the cause of wrath thou maist conclude he hath delivered thee from wrath the effect and fruit of sin Upon this account the sweet name of Iesus was imposed upon him Matth. 1.21 Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall save his people from their sins Whilst a man lies under the dominion and guilt of sin he lies exposed to wrath to come and when he is delivered from the guilt and power of sin he is certainly delivered from the danger of this coming wrath Where sin is not imputed wrath is not threatened Secondly If thy soul do set an inestimable value on Iesus Christ and be endeared to him upon the account of that inexpressible grace manifested in this deliverance it 's a good sign thy soul hath a share in it Mark what an Epithite the Saints give Christ upon this account Col. 1.12 13. Giving thanks to the Father who hath delivered us from the power of darkness and translated us into the Kingdom of his Dear Son Christ is therefore Dear and dear beyond all compare to his saved ones I remember it 's storied of the poor enthralled Grecians that when Titus Flamminius had restored their ancient liberties and proclamation was to be made in the Market place by an Herald They so prest to hear it that the Herald was in great danger of being stifled and prest to death among the people but when the Proclamation was ended there were heard such shouts and joyful acclamations that the very birds of the air fell down astonished with the noise while they continued to cry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Saviour a Saviour and all the following night they continued dancing and singing about his Pavilion If such a deliverance so indeared them to Titus How should the great deliverance from wrath to come endear all the Redeemed to love their dear Iesus This is the native effect of mercy on the soul that hath felt it Thirdly To conclude a disposition and readiness of mind to do or endure any thing for Christs sake upon the account of this deliverance from the wrath to come is a good evidence you are so delivered Col. 1.10 11. That we may walk worthy of the Lord to all pleasing being fruitful in every good work There 's readiness to do for Christ. Strengthened with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long suffering with Ioyfulness There 's a chearful readiness to endure any thing for Christ. And how both these flow from the sence of this great deliverance from wrath the 12. vers will inform you which was but now cited Oh then be serious and assiduous in the resolution of this grand case Till this be resolved nothing can be pleasant to thy Soul End 2. As the Typical blood was shed and sprinkled to deliver from danger so it was shed to make attonement Levit. 4.20 He shall expiate We translate attone the sin The word imports both And the true meaning is that by the blood of the Bullock all whose efficacy stood in its relation to the blood of Christ signified and shadowed by it the people for whom it was shed should be reconciled to God by the expiation and remission of their sins And what was shadowed in this Typical blood was really designed and accomplisht by Jesus Christ in the shedding of his blood Reconciliation of the Elect to God is therefore another of those beautiful births which Christ travailed for So you find it expresly Rom. 5.10 If when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the Death of his Son This if is not a word of doubting but argumentation The Apostle supposes it as a known truth or principle yielded by all Christians that the death of Christ was to reconcile the Elect to God And again he affirms it with like clearness Col. 1.20 And having made peace by the blood of his Cross by him to reconcile all things And that this was a main and principal end designed both by the Father and Son in the humiliation of Christ is plain from 2 Cor. 5.18 19. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself God filled the humanity with grace and authority The Spirit of God was in him to qualifie him The authority of God was in him by Commission to make all he did valid The grace and love of God to mankind was in him and one of the principal effects in which it was manifested was this design upon which he came viz. to reconcile the world to God Upon which ground Christ is called the propitiation for our sins 1 Joh. 2.2 Now Reconciliation or attonement is nothing else but the making up of the ancient friendship betwixt God and men which sin had dissolved and so to reduce these enemies into a state of concord and sweet agreement And the means by which this blessed design was effectually compassed was by the death of Christ which made compleat satisfact●on to God for the wrong we had done him There was a breach made by sin betwixt God and Angels but that breach is never to be repaired or made up Since as Christ took not on him their nature so he never intended to be a mediator of reconciliation betwixt God and them That will be an Eternal breach But that which Christ designed as the end of his dea●h was to reconcile God and man Not the whole species but a certain number whose names were given to Christ. Here I must briefly open First how Christs death Reconciles Secondly why this Reconciliation is brought about by his death rather than any other way Thirdly what are the Articles according to which it 's made And Fourthly what manner of Reconciliation this is First How Christ Reconciles God and men by his death And it must needs be by the satisfaction his Death made to the Justice of God for our sins And so reparation being made the enmity ceases Hence it 's said Isa. 53.5 The chastisement of our peace was upon him and by his stripes are we healed That is as our English Annotators well sense it He was chastized to procure our peace by removal of our sins that set God and us assunder the guilt thereof being discharged with the price of his blood Now this Reconciliation is made and continued betwixt God and us three waies namely by the oblation of Christ which was the price that procured it and so we were virtually or meritoriously reconciled By the application of Christ and his benefits to
overcome especially by a poor Creature as I am that am able to do nothing no not to raise one penny towards the discharge of that great debt I owe to God for here thou wilt find upon thy Union with Christ that there is merit enough in his blood and mercy enough in his bowels to justifie and save such an one as thou art Yea and I will add for thine incouragement that it is a righteous thing with God to justifie and save thee that canst not pay him one penny of all the vast sums thou owest him when by the same rule of justice he condemns the most strict self-righteous Pharisee that thinks thereby to quit scores with him It is righteous for a judge to cast him that hath paid 99 l. of the 100. which he owed because the payment was not full and to acquit him whose surety hath paid all though himself did not and freely confess that he cannot pay one farthing of the whole debt 2. If thou be a self-deceiving soul that easily takest up thy satisfaction about thine interest in Christ look to it as thou valuest thy soul Reader that a fond and groundless conceit of thine interest in Christ do not effectually and finally obstruct a true and saving interest in him This is the common and fatal errour in which multitudes of souls are insnared and ruined for look as a conceit of great wisdom hinders many from the attaining of it so a groundless conceit that Christ is already thine may prove the greatest obstacle betwixt Christ and thee but here thou wilt meet with many Rules that will not deceive thee tryals that will open thy true condition to thee Thou sometimes reflectest upon the state of thy soul and enquirest is Christ mine may I depend upon it that my condition is safe thy heart returns thee an answer of peace it speaks as thou wouldst have it but remember friend and mark this line Thy final sentence is not yet come from the mouth of thy judge and what if after all thy self flattering hopes and groundless confidences a sentence should come from him quite cross to that of thine own heart where art thou then what a confounded person wilt thou be Christless speechless and hopeless all at once O therefore build sure for Eternity take heed lest the loss of thine eternal happiness be at last imputed by thee to the deceitfulness and laziness of thine own heart lest thy heart say to thee in Hell as the heart of Apollodorus seemed in his sufferings to say to him I am the cause of all this misery to thee 3. If thou be one whose heart is eagerly set upon this vain world I beseech thee take heed lest it interpoe it self betwixt Christ and thy soul and so cut thee off from him for ever O beware lest the dust of the earth getting into thine eyes so blind thee that thou never see the beauty or necessity of Christ. The God of this world so blinds the eyes of them that believe not And what are the sparkling pleasures that dazle the eyes of some and the distracting cares that wholly divert the minds of others but as a Napkin drawn by Satan over the eyes of them that are to be turned off into Hell 1 Cor. 4.3 4. Some general aims and faint wishes after Christ thou mayest have but alas the world hath centered thy heart intangled thy affections and will daily find new diversions for thee from the great business of life So that if the Lord break not this snare thou wilt never be able to deliver thy soul. 4. If thou be a loose and careless professor of Christ I beseech thee let the things thou shalt read in this Treatise of Christ convince shame and reclaim thee from thy vain conversation Here thou wilt find how contrary thy conversation is to the grand designes of the death and resurrection of Christ. O methinks as thou art reading the deep humiliation and unspeakable sorrows Christ underwent for the expiating of sin thou shouldst thenceforth look upon sin as a tender Child would upon that knife that stab'd his Father to the heart Thou shouldst never whet and sharpen it again to wound the Son of God afresh To such loose and careless professors I particularly recommend the last general use of this discourse containing many great motives to reformation and strict Godliness in all that call upon the name of the Lord Jesus 5. If thou hast been a prophane and vain person but now art pardoned and dost experience the super-abounding riches of grace my request to thee is that thou love Jesus Christ with a more fervent love than ever yet thou hadst for him Here thou wilt find many great incentives many mighty arguments to such a love of Christ poor soul consider what thou hast been what the morning of thy life was What treasures of guilt thou laidst up in those dayes and then think can such a one as I receive mercy and that mercy not break my heart can I read my pardon and mine eyes not drop What mercy for such a wretch as I a pardon for such a Rebel O what an ingenuous thaw should this cause upon thy heart if it do not what a strange heart is thine Did the love of Christ break through so many impediments to come to thee Did it make its way through the Law through the wrath of God through the grave through thine own unbelief and great unworthiness to come to thee O what a love was the love of Christ to thy soul And is not thy love strong enough to break through the vanities and trifles of this world which intangle it to go to Christ how poor how low and weak is thy love to Christ then 6. Lastly Art thou one that hast through mercy at last attained assurance or good hope through grace of thy interest in Christ Rejoice then in thy present mercy and long ardently to be with thine own Christ in his glory There be many things dispersed through this Treatise of Christ to animate such joy and excite such longings It was truly observed by a worthy Author whose words I have mentioned more freely than his name in this discourse that it is in a manner as natural for us to leap when we see the New Ierusalem as it is to laugh when we are tickled Ioy is not under the souls command when Christ kisseth it And for your desires to be with Christ what considerations can you find in this world strong enough to reine them in O when you shall consider what he hath done suffered and purchased for you where he is now and how much he longs for your coming your very hearts should groan out those words Phil. 1.23 I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ. The Lord direct your hearts into the love of God and into the patient waiting for of Christ. Having delivered my message to the Reader in general I have somewhat more particularly to
loved him even so believers hath he loved you Ioh. 17.22 what manner of love is this whoever loved as Christ loves whoever denyed himself for Christ as Christ denyed himself for us Hence we are informed that interest in Iesus Christ is the true way to all spiritual preferment in Heaven do you covet to be in the heart in the favour and delight of God get interest in Jesus Christ and you shall presently be there what old Israel said of the Children of his beloved Ioseph thy Children are my Children the same God saith of all the dear Children of Christ Gen. 48.5 9. you see among men all things are carryed by interest persons rise in this world as they are befriended preferment goes by favour 't is so in Heaven persons are preferred according to their interest in the beloved Eph. 1.6 Christ is the great favourite in Heaven his image upon your souls and his name in your prayers makes both accepted with God How worthy is Jesus Christ of all our love and delight you see how infinitely the Father delighteth in him how he ravishes the heart of God and shall he not ravish our hearts I present you a Christ this day able to ravish any soul that will but view and consider him O that you did but see this lovely Lord Jesus Christ then would you go home sick of love surely he is a drawing Saviour Ioh. 12 32. why do we lavish away our pretious affections upon vanity none but Christ is worthy of them when you spend your pretious affections upon other objects what is it but to dig for dross with golden M●ttocks the Lord direct our hearts into the love of Christ. O that our hearts loves and delights might meet and concenter with the heart of God in this most blessed object O let him that left Gods bosom for you be embosomed by you though yours be nothing to Gods he that left Gods bosom for you deserves yours If Christ be the beloved darling of the Father's soul think what a grievous and unsufferable thing it is to the heart of God to see his dear Son despised slighted and rejected by sinners verily there is no such cut to the heart of God in the whole world unbelievers trample upon Gods darling tread under foot him that eternally lay in his bosom Heb. 10.29 smite the apple of his eye and how God will bear this that parable Matth 21.37 to the 40. will inform you surely he will miserably destroy such wretched sinners if you would ●tudy to do God the greatest despight there is none like this what a dismal word is that 1 Cor. 16.22 if any man love not our Lord Iesus Christ let him be Anathema Maranatha i. e. let the great curse of God lye upon that man till the Lord come O sinners you shall one day know the price of this sin you shall feel what it is to despise a Jesus that is able to compel love from the hardest heart O that you would slight him no more O that this day your hearts might fall in love with him I tell you if you would set your love to sale none bids so fair for it as Christ. 2. Vse of Exhortation To Saints if Christ lay eternally in this bosom of love and yet was content to forsake and leave it for your sakes then 1. Be you ready to forsake and leave all the comforts you have on earth for Christ famous Galleacius left all for his enjoyment Moses left all the glory of Aegypt Peter and the other Apostles left all Luk. 18.28 but what have we to leave for Christ in comparison of what he left for us Surely Christ is the highest pattern of self-denyal in the world 2. Let this confirm your faith in prayer if he that hath such an interest in the heart of God intercede with the Father for you then never doubt of audience and acceptance with him surely you shall be accepted through the beloved Eph. 1.6 Christ was never denyed any thing that he asked Ioh. 11.42 the Father hears him always though you are not worthy Christ is and he ever lives to make intercession for you Heb. 7.25 3. Let this incourage thy heart O Saint in a dying hour and not only make thee patient in death but in a holy manner impatient till thou be gone for whither is thy soul now going but to that bosom of love whence Christ came Joh. 17.24 Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am and where is he but in that bosom of glory and love where he lay before the world was ver 5. O then let every believer incourage his soul comfort ye one another with these words I am leaving the bosom of a creature I am going to the bosom of God To sinners exhorting them to embrace the bosom-Son of God poor wretches whatever you are or have been whatever guilt or discouragement at present you lye under embrace Christ who is freely offered you and you shall be as dear to God as the holiest and most eminent believer in the world but if you still continue to despise and neglect such a Saviour sorer wrath is treasured up for you than for other sinners even something worse than dying without mercy Heb. 10.28 O that these discoveries and overtures of Christ may never come to such a fatal issue with any of your souls in whose eyes his glory hath been this day opened The THIRD SERMON ISAI LIII XII Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his soul unto death and he was numbred with the transgressors and he bare the sin of many and made intercession for the transgressors IN this Chapter the Gospel seems to be epitomized the subject matter of it is the death of Christ and the glorious Issue thereof by reading of it the Eunuch of old and many Jews since have been converted to Christ. Christ is here considered absolutely and relatively absolutely and so his innocency is industriously vindicated ver 9. though he suffered grievous things yet not for his own sins for he had done no violence neither was any deceit in his mouth but relatively considered in the capacity of a surety for us So the Justice of God is as fully vindicated in his sufferings vers 6. the Lord hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all how he came to sustain this capacity and relation of a surety for us is in these verses plainly asserted to be by his compact and agreement with his Father before the worlds were made ver 10 11 12. In this verse we have 1. His Work 2. His Reward 3. The Respect or Relation of each to the other 1. His Work which was indeed a hard work to pour out his soul unto death aggravated by the companions with whom being numbred with transgressors the capacity in which bearing all the
be Is it indeed worth no more than this in your eyes Surely you will not be long of that opinion Will you be of that mind think you when death and Judgement shall have throughly awakned you O no then a thousand worlds for a Christ. As its storied of our Crook-back'd Richard when he lost the field and was in great danger by his enemies that pressed upon him O now said he a Kingdom for an Horse Or think ye that any beside you in the world are of your mind You are deceived if you think so To them that believe he is precious through all the world 1 Pet. 2.7 And in the other world they are of a quite contrary mind Could you but hear what is said of him in heaven in what a dialect the Saved of the Lord do extoll their Saviour or could you but imagine the self revenges the self torments which the damned suffer for this their folly and what a value they would set upon one tender of Christ if it might but again be hoped for you would see that such as you are the only despisers of Christ. Beside methinks its astonishing that you should despise a mercy in which your own souls are so dearly so deeply so everlastingly concerned in as they are in this gift of God If it were but the soul of another nay less if but the body of another and yet less than that if but anothers beast whose life you could preserve you are obliged to do it but when it is thy self yea the best part of thy self thine own invaluable soul that thou ruinest and destroyest hereby Oh what a monster art thou to cast it away thus What! will you slight your own souls Care you not whether they be saved or whether they be damned Is it indeed an indifferent thing with you which way they fall at death Have you imagined a tollerable Hell Is it easie to perish Are you not only turned Gods enemies but your own too O see what monsters can sin turn men and women into O the stupifying besotting intoxicating power of Sin But perhaps you think that all these are but uncertain sounds with which we alarm you It may be thine own heart will Preach such Doctrine as this to thee Who can assure thee of the reallity of these things What shouldst thou trouble thy self about an invisible world or be so much concerned for what thine eyes never saw nor didst ever receive the report from any that have seen them Well though we cannot now shew you these things yet shortly they shall be shewn you and your own eyes shall behold them You are convinced and satisfied that many other things are real which you never saw But be assured that if the word spoken by Angels was stedfast and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompence of reward How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Which at first began to be spoken to us by the Lord and was confirmed to us by them that heard him God also bearing them witness Heb. 2.2 3 4. But if they be certain yet they are not near It will be a long time before they come poor soul how dost thou cheat thy self It may be not by twenty parts so long a time as thine own phancy draws it forth for thee Thou art not certain of the next moment And suppose what thou imaginest what is Twenty or Forty years when it is past yea what is a thousand years to the vast eternity Go trifle away a few days more sleep out a few nights more and then lie down in the dust it will not be long ere the Trump of God shall awaken thee and thine eyes shall behold Jesus coming in the clouds of heaven and then you will know the price of this sin O therefore if there be any sence of eternity upon you any pity or love for your selves in you if you have any concernments more than the beasts that perish despise not your own offered mercies slight not the richest gift that ever was yet opened to the world and a sweeter cannot be opened to all Eternity The FIFTH SERMON JOH I.XIV. And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us c. YOU have heard the Covenant of Redemption opened The work therein propounded by the Father and consented to by the Son is such as infinitly exceeds the power of any meer Ceature to perform He that undertakes to satisfie God by obedience for the sin of man must himself be God And he that performeth such a perfect obedience by doing and suffering all that the Law required in our rooms must be man These two natures must be united in one person else there could not be a concourse or co-operation of either nature in his mediatory works How these natures are united in the wonderful person of our Immanuel is the first part of the great mysterie of of godliness A Subject studied and adored by Angels And the mysterie thereof is wrap'd up in this Text. Wherein we have First the incarnation of the Son of God plainly asserted Secondly that assertion strongly confirmed In the assertion we have three parts The person assuming 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word i. e. the second person or subsistent in the most glorious Godhead call'd the Word either because he is the scope and principal matter both of the prophetical and promisory word Or because he expounds and reveals the mind and will of God to men as vers 18. The only begotten Son which is in the bosom of the Father he hath declared or expounded him The Nature assumed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fl●sh i. e. the intire humane Nature consisting of a true humane soul and body For so this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Rom. 3.20 And the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which answers to it by a usual Metonymie of a part for the whole is used Gen. 6.12 And the word flesh is rather used here than man on purpose to aggravate the admirable condescention and abasement of Christ there being more of vileness weakness and opposition to spirit in this word than in that as is pertinently noted by some Hence the whole nature is denominated by that part and called flesh The Assumption it self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was made not fuit he was as Socinus would render in design to overthrow the existence of Christs glorify'd body now in heaven But factus est it was made i. e. he took or assumed the true humane nature called flesh for the reason before rendred into the unity of his divine person with all its integral parts and essential properties and so was made or became a true and real man by that assumption The Apostle speaking of the same act Heb. 2.16 Uses another word He took on him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fitly rendred he took on him or he assumed Which assuming though inchoative it was the work of the whole Trinity God
Sacrifice he must be such as the Law required pure and spotless Fifthly His sanctifying himself for our sakes speaks the strength of his Love and largeness of his heart to poor sinners thus to set himself wholly and entirely apart for us So that what he did and suffered must all of it have a respect and relation to us He did not when consecrated for us live a moment do an act or speak a word but it had some tendency to promote the great design of our Salvation He was only and wholly and always doing your work when consecrated for your sakes His Incarnation respects you Esa. 9.6 For us a Child is born to us a Son is given And he would never have been the Son of man but to make you the Sons and Daughters of God God would not have come down in the likeness of sinful flesh in the habit of a man but to raise up sinful man into the likeness of God All the miracles he wrought were for you to confirm your Faith When he raised up Lazarus Joh. 11.42 Because of the people which stand by I said it that they might believe that thou hast sent me While he lived on earth he lived as one wholly set apart for us And when he dyed he dyed for us Gal. 3.13 He was made a curse for us When he hanged on that cursed tree he hang'd there in our room and did but fill our place When he was buried he was buried for us For the end of it was to perfume our Graves against we come to lie down in them And when he rose again it was as the Apostle saith for our Iustification Rom. 4.25 When he ascended into glory he protested it was about our business That he went to prepare places for us And if it had not been so he would have told us Ioh. 14.2 And now he is there it is for us that he there lives For he ever lives to make intercession for us Heb. 7.25 And when he shall return again to Judge the world he will come for us too He comes when ever it be to be glorified in his Saints and admired in them that believe 2 Thes. 1.10 He comes to gather his Saints home to himself that where he is there they all may be in Soul and Body with him for ever Thus you see how as his Consecration for us doth speak him set a part for our use so he did wholly bestow himself time life death and all upon us Living and Dying for no other end but to accomplish this great work of Salvation for us Sixthly His sanctifying himself for us plainly speaks the Vicegerency of his death that it was in our room or stead When the Priest Consecrated the Sacrifice it was set apart for the people So it 's said of the scape Goat And Aaron shall lay both his hands upon the head of the live Goat and confess over him all the iniquities of the Children of Israel and all their transgressions in all their sins puting them upon the head of the Goat And shall send him away by the hand of a fit man into the Wilderness Levit. 16.21 Thus Isa. 53.6.7 He stood in our room to bear our burden And as Aaron laid the iniquities of the people upon the Goat so were ours laid on Christ. It was said to him in that day on thee be their Pride their Unbelief their hardness of heart their vain thoughts their earthly mindedness c. Thou art Consecrated for them to be the Sacrifice in their room His death was in our stead as well as for our good And so much his sanctifying himself for us imports Seventhly His sanctifying himself imports the extraordinariness of his Person For it speaks him to be both Priest Sacrifice and Altar all in one A thing unheard of in the world before So that his name might well be called wonderful I sanctifie my self I sanctifie according to both natures My self that is my humane nature which was the Sacrifice upon the Altar of my Divine nature For 't is the Altar that sanctifies the gift As the three offices never met in one Person before so these three things never met in one Priest before The Priests indeed Consecrated the bodies of Beasts for Sacrifice but never offered up their own Souls and Bodies as a whole burnt offering as Christ did And thus you have the import of this phrase I sanctifie my self for their sake Secondly I shall shew you briefly the habitude and respect that all this hath to us For unto us the Scriptures every where refer it So in 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passover is Sacrificed for us Eph. 5.2 He loved the Church and gave himself for it See Tit. 2.14 This will be made out by a three fold consideration of Christs Death And First Let it he considered that he was not offered up to God for his own Sins For he was most holy Isa 53.9 No iniquity was found in him Indeed the Priests under the Law offered for themselves as well as the people But Christ did not do so Heb. 7.27 He need not daily as those High-Priests to offer up Sacrifice first for his own Sins and then for the peoples And indeed had he been a sinner what value or efficacy could have been in his Sacrifice He could not have been the Sacrifice but would have needed one Now if Christ were most holy and yet put to death and cruel sufferings either his Death and sufferings must be an act of injustice and cruelty or it must respect others whose persons and cause he sustained in that suffering capacity He could never have suffered or dyed by the Fathers hand had he not been a sinner by imputation And in that respect as Luther speaks he was the greatest of sinners Or as the Prophet Isaiah speaketh all our sins were made to meet upon him Not that he was so intrinsecally but was made so sc. by imputation As is clear from 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us that had no sin So that hence it 's evident that Christs Death or Sacrifice is wholly a respective or relative thing Secondly It is not to be forgotten here that the Scriptures frequently call the death of Christ a price 1 Cor. 6.20 And a ransom Matth. 20.28 Or counterprice To whom then doth it relate but to them that were and are in bondage and captivity If it were to redeem any it must be captives but Christ himself was never in Captivity He was always in his Fathers bosom as you have heard but we were in cruel bondage and thraldom under the Tyranny of sin and Satan And it 's we only that have the benefit of this ransom Thirdly Either the death of Christ must relate to believers or else he must die in vain As for the Angels those that stood in their integrity needed no Sacrifice and those that fell are totally excluded from any benefit by it He is not a Mediator for them And among men
So that no man can be his own Priest to reconcile himself to God by what he can do or suffer And therefore one that is able by doing and suffering to reconcile him must undertake it or we perish Thus you see plainly and briefly the general nature and necessity of Christs Priesthood From both these several useful Corollarys or practical deductions offer themselves Corollary 1. This shews in the first place the incomparable excellency of the reformed Christian Religion above all other Religions known to or professed in the world What other Religions seek the Christian Religion only finds even a solid foundation for true peace and settlement of conscience While the Iews seek it in vain in the Law the Mahumetan in his external and ridiculous observances the Papist in his own merits the Believer only finds it in the blood of this great sacrifice this and nothing less than this can pacifie a dis●●●●sed conscience labouring under the weight of its own guilt Conscience demands no less to satisfie it than God demands to satisfie him The grand inquest of conscience is Is God satisfied If he be satisfied I am satisfied Woful is the state of that man that feels the worm of conscience nibling on the most tender part of the soul and hath no relief against it That feels the intollerable scalding wrath of God burning within and hath nothing to cool it Hear me you that slight troubles of conscience that call them fancies and melancholly whimsies if you ever had had but one sick night for sin if you had ever felt that shame fear horror and despair which are the dismal effects of an accusing and condemning conscience you would account it an unspeakable mercy to hear of a way for the discharge of a poor sinner from that guilt You would kiss the feet of that messenger that could bring you tydings of peace You would call him blessed that should direct you to an effectual remedy Now whoever thou art that pinest away in thine iniquities that droopest from day to day under the present wounds and dismal presages of conscience know that thy soul and peace can never meet till thou art perswaded to come to this blood of sprinkling The blood of this sacrifice speaks better things than the blood of Abel The blood of this sacrifice is the blood of God Act. 20.28 invaluably pretious blood 1 Pet. 1.18 one drop of it infinitely excels the blood of all other creatures Heb. 10.4 5 6. Such is the blood that must do thee good Lord I must have such blood saith conscience as is capable of giving thee full satisfaction or it can give me no peace The blood of all the Cattle upon a thousand Hills cannot do this What is the blood of beasts to God The blood of all the men in the world can do nothing in this case What is our polluted blood worth No no it 's the blood of God that must satisfie both thee and me Yea Christs blood is not only the blood of God but it 's blood shed in thy stead and in thy place and room Gal. 3.13 He was made a curse for us And so it becomes sin pardoning blood Heb. 9.22 Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 Rom. 3.26 And consequently conscience pacifying and soul quieting blood Col. 1.20 Eph. 2.13 14. Rom. 3.26 O bless God that ever the news of this blood came to thine ears With hands and eyes lifted up to Heaven admire that grace that cast thy lot in a place where this joyful sound rings in the ears of poor sinners What had thy case been if thy mother had brought thee forth in the desarts of Arabia or in the wastes of America or what if thou hadst been nursed up by a Popish father who could have told thee no other remedy when in distress for sin but to go such a pilgrimage to whip and lash thy self to satisfie an angry God! Surely the pure light of the Gospel shining upon this generation is a mercy never to be duly valued never to be enough prized Corollary 2. Hence also be informed of the necessity of faith in order to a state and sense of peace with God For to what purpose is the blood of Christ our sacrifice shed unless it be actually and personally applyed and appropriated by faith You know when the sacrifices under the Law were brought to be slain he that brought it was to put his hand upon the head of his sacrifice and so it was accepted from him to make an attonement Lev. 1.4 Not only to signifie that now it was no more his but Gods the propriety being transferred by a kind of manumission nor yet that he voluntarily gave it to the Lord as his own free act but principally it noted the putting off his sins and the penalty due to him for them upon the head of the sacrifice and so it implyed in it an execration as if he had said upon thy head be the evil So the Learned observe the Ancient Aegyptians were wont expresly to imprecate when they sacrificed If any evil be coming upon us or upon Aegypt let it turn and rest upon this head laying their hand at these words on the sacrifices head And upon that ground saith the Historian none of them would eat of the head of any living creature You must also lay the hand of faith upon Christ your sacrifice not to imprecate but apply and appropriate him to your own souls he having been made a curse for you To this the whole Gospel tends even to perswade sinners to apply Christ and his blood to their own souls To this he invited us Matth. 11.28 Come unto me ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest For this end our sacrifice was lifted up upon the Altar Joh. 3.14 15. As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the wilderness so must the son of man be lifted up that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life The Effects of the Law not only upon the conscience filling it with torments but upon the whole person bringing death upon it are here shadowed out by the stingings of fiery Serpents and Christ by the brazen Serpent which Moses exalted for the Israelites that were stun● to look unto And as by looking to it they were healed so by believing or looking to Christ in faith our souls are healed Those that looked not to the Brazen Serpent died infallibly so must all that look not to Jesus our sacrifice by faith It 's true the death of Christ is the meritorious cause of remission but faith is the instrumental applying cause and as Christs blood is necessary in its place so is our faith in its place also For to the actual remission of sin and peace of conscience there must be a co-operation of all the causes of remission and peace As there is the grace and love of God for an efficient and impulsive cause and the death of Christ our
sacrifice the meritorious cause so of necessity there must be faith the instrumental cause And these concauses do all sweetly meet in their influences and activities in our remission and tranquility of conscience and are all suo genere in their kind and place absolutely necessary to the procuring and applying of it What the near that the blood of Christ is shed if I have no interest in it no saving influences from it O be convinvinced this is the end the business of life Faith is the Phoenix grace as Christ is the Phoenix mercy He is the gift Joh. 4.10 And this is the work of God Ioh. 6.29 the death of Christ the offers and tenders of Christ never saved one soul in themselves without believing application But wo is me how do I see sinners either not at all toucht with the sense of sin and so being whole need not the Physitian or if any be s●●●g and wounded with guilt how do they lick themselves whole with their own duties and reformations as Physitians say of wounds let them but be kept clean and nature will find balsom of its own to heal them If it be so in spiritual wounds what need Christ to have left the Fathers bosom and come down to dye in the quality and nature of a Sacrifice for us O if men can but have health pleasure riches honours and any way make a shift to still a brawling conscience that it may not check or interrupt them in these enjoyments Christ may go where he will for them And I am assured till God shew you the face of sin in the glass of the Law Make the Scorpions and fiery Serpents that lurk in the Law and in your own consciences to come hissing about you and smiting you with their deadly stings till you have had some sick nights and sorrowful days for sin you will never go up and down seeking an interest in the blood of this sacrifice with tears But Reader if ever this be thy condition then wilt thou know the worth of a Christ. Then thou wilt have a value for the blood of sprinkling As I remember it 's storied of our Crook-back Richard when he was put to a rout in a field battel and flying on foot from his pursuing enemies he cried out O now said he a Kingdom for a Horse So wilt thou cry a Kingdom for a Christ. Ten thousand Worlds now if I had th●m for the blood of sprinkling Corollary 3. Is Christ your High-Priest and is his Priestood so indispensably necessary to your salvation then freely acknowledge your utter impotency to reconcile your selves to God by any thing you can do or suffer And let Christ have the whole glory of your recovery ascribed to him It 's highly reasonable that he that laid down the whole price should have the whole praise If any man think or say he could have made an attonement for himself he doth therein cast no light reproach upon that profound wisdom which laid the design of our redemption in the death of Christ. But of this I have spoken elsewhere And therefore Corollary 4. In the last place I rather choose to perswade you to see your necessity of this Priest and his most excellent sacrifice and accordingly to make use of it The best of you have polluted natures poisoned in the womb with sin those natures have need of this sacrifice They must have the benefit of this blood to pardon and cleanse them or be eternally damned Hear me ye that never spent a tear for the sin of nature if the blood of Christ be not springled upon your natures it had been better for you that you had been the generation of beasts the off-spring of Dragons or Toads They have a contemptible but not a vitiated sinful nature as you have Your Actual sins have need of this Priest and his sacrifice to procure remission for them If he take them not away by the blood of his cross they can never be taken away They will lie down with you in the dust They will rise with you and follow you to the Judgement seat crying we are thy works and we will follow thee All thy repentance and tears shouldst thou weep as many tears as there be drops in the Ocean can never take away sin Thy duties even the best of them need this sacrifice It is in the verture thereof that they are accepted of God And were it not God had respect to Christs offering he would not regard or look towards thee or any of thy duties Thou couldst no more come near God than thou couldst approach a devouring fire or dwell with everlasting burnings Well then say I need such a Priest every way Love him in all his offices See the goodness of God in providing such a sacrifice for thee Meat drink and air not more necessary to maintain thy natural life than the death of Christ is to give and maintain thy spiritual life O then let thy soul grow big whilst meditating of the usefulness and excellency of Christ which is thus displaied and unfolded in every branch of the Gospel And with a deep sence upon thy heart let thy lips say blessed be God for Iesus Christ. The TWELFTH SERMON HEB. X.XIV. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified AFter this more general view and consideration of the Priesthood of Christ method requires that we come to a nearer and more particular consideration of the parts thereof which are his Oblation and Intercession answerable to the double office of the High-Priest offering the blood of the Sacrifices without the holy place which Typed out Christs oblation and then once a year bringing the blood before the Lord into the most holy place presenting it before the Lord and with it sprinkling the mercy-seat wherein the intercession of Christ the other part or Act of his Priesthood was in a lively manner Typified to us My present business is to open and apply the Oblation of Christ. The efficacy and excellency whereof is excellently illustrated by a comparison with all other oblations in the precedent context and with a singular Encomium commended to us in these words from the singularity of it It is but one offering one not only specifically but one numerically considered But once offered and never more to be repeated For Christ dieth no more Rom. 6.9 He also commends it from the efficacy of it By it he hath perfected i. e. not only purchased a possibility of salvation but all that we need to our full perfection It brings in a most intire compleat and perfect righteousness All that remains to make us perfectly happy is but the full application of the benefits procured by this Oblation for us Moreover it 's here commended from the extensiveness of it Not being restrained to a few but applicable to all the Saints in all the ages and places of the world For this indefinite them that are sanctified is
equivalent to a universal and is as much as if he had said to all and every Saint from the beginning to the end of the world Lastly He commends it from its perpetuity It perfects for ever That is it is of everlasting efficacy It shall abide as fresh vigorous and powerful to the end of the world as it was the first moment it was offered up All runs into this sweet truth DOCT. That the Oblation made unto God by Iesus Christ is of unspeakable value and everlasting efficacy to perfect all them that are or shall be Sanctified to the end of the world Out of this fountain flow all the excellent blessings that believers either have or hope for Had it not been for this there had been no such things in rerum natura as Justification Adoption Salvation c. peace with God and hopes of glory pardon of sin and divine acceptation These and all other our best mercies had been but so many entia rationis meer conceits A man as one saith might have haply imagined such things as these as he may golden Mountains and Rivers of liquid gold and rocks of Diamonds but these things could never have had any real existance extramentem had not Christ offered up himself a Sacrifice to God for us It is the blood of Christ who through the eternal spirit offered up himself without spot to God that purges the Conscience from dead works Heb. 9.14 That is from the sentence of condemnation and death as it is reflected by Conscience for our works sake His appearing before God as our Priest with such an offering for us is that which removes our guilt and fear together He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Heb. 9.26 Now for as much as the point before us is of so great weight in it self and so fundamental to our safety and comfort I shall endeavour to give you as distinct and clear an accompt of it as can consist with that brevity which I must necessarily use And therefore Reader apply thy mind attently to the consideration of this excellent Priest that appears before God and the Sacrifice he offers with the properties and adjuncts thereof The Person before whom he brings and to whom he offers it The Persons for whom he offers and the end for which this Oblation is made First The Priest that appears before God with an Oblation for us is Jesus Christ God-man The dignity of whose person dignified and derived an inestimable worth to the offering he made There were many Priests before him but none like unto him either for the purity of his person or the perpetuity of his Priesthood They were sinful men and offered for their own sins as well as the sins of the people Heb. 5.3 But he was holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners Heb. 7.2 He could stand before God even in the eye of his Justice as a Lamb without spot Though he made his soul an offering for sin yet he had done no iniquity nor was any guile found in his mouth Isa. 53.9 And indeed his offering had done us no good if the least taint of sin had been found on him They were mortal men that continued not by reason of death Heb. 7.23 But Christ is a Priest for ever Psal. 110.4 Secondly The Oblation or offering he made was not the blood of beasts but his own blood Heb. 9.12 And herein he transcended all other Priests that he had something of his own to offer He had a body given him to be at his own dispose to this use and purpose Heb. 10.10 He offered his body Yea not only his body but his soul was made an offering for sin Isa. 53.10 We had made a forfeiture of our souls and bodies by sin and it was necessary the Sacrifice of Christ should be answerable to the debt we owed And when Christ came to offer his Sacrifice he stood not only in the capacity of a Priest but also in the capacity of a surety and so his soul stood in the stead of ours and his body in the stead of our bodies Now the excellency of this Oblation will appear in the following adjuncts and properties of it This Oblation being for the matter of it the soul and body of Jesus Christ is therefore First Invaluably pretious So the Apostle stiles it 1 Pet. 1.19 Ye were redeemed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the pretious blood of the Son of God And such it behoved him to offer For it being offered as an expiatory Sacrifice it ought to be aequivalent in its own intrinsick value to all the souls and bodies that were to be redeemed by it And so it was and more also for there was a redundancy of value an overplus of merit which went to make a purchase for the redeemed as will be opened in its place So that as one rich-Diamond is more worth than a thousand Pebbles one piece of Gold than a many Counters so the soul and body of one Christ is much more excellent than all the souls and bodies in the world And yet I dare not affirm as some do that by reason of the infinite pretiousness of Christs blood one drop thereof had been sufficient to have redeemed the whole world for if one drop had been enough why was all the rest even to the last drop shed Was God cruel to exact more from him than was needful and sufficient Besides we must remember that the passions of Christ which were inflicted on him as the curse of the Law these only are the passions which are sufficient for our redemption from the curse of the Law now it was not a drop of blood but death which was contained in the curse This therefore was necessary to be inflicted But surely as none but God can estimate the weight and evil of sin so none but he can comprehend the worth and pretiousness of the blood of Christ shed to expiate it And being so infinitely pretious a thing which was offered up to God it must Secondly Needs be a most compleat and alsufficient Oblation fully to expiate the sins of all for whom it was offered in all ages of the world The vertue of this Sacrifice reacheth backward as far as Adam and reacheth forward to the last person of of the Elect springing from him That the efficacy of it thus reached back to Adam is plain for on the account thereof he is stiled the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world Rev. 13.8 And to the same sence a Judicious Expositor understands those words of Christ. Joh. 8.58 before Abraham was I am And look as the Sun at mid-day extends his light and influence not only forward towards the West but also backward towards the East where he arose so did this most efficacious Sacrifice reach all the Elect in the vertue of it who died before Christ came in the flesh It is therefore but a vain cavil that some make against the
tree full of all delectable fruits of holiness yet if the fire of his indignation thus seize upon me what will be your condition that are both barren and guilty void of all good fruit and full of all unrighteousness and so like dry seary wood are fitted as fewel to the fire Consider with thy self man how canst thou imagine thou canst support that infinite wrath that Christ grapled with in the room of Gods Elect He had the strength of a Deity to support him Esa. 42.1 behold my servant whom I uphold He had the fulness of the Spirit to prepare him Isa. 61.11 He had the ministry of an Angel who came post from Heaven to relieve him in his agony Luk. 22.43 He had the ear of his Father to hear him for he cryed and was heard in that he feared Heb. 5.7 He was assured of the victory before the combat he knew he should be Justified Isa. 50.8 And yet for all this was sore amazed and sorrowful even to death and his heart was melted like wax in the midst of his bowels If the case stood thus with Christ notwithstanding all these advantages he had to bear the wrath of God for a little time How dost thou think a poor worm as thou art to dwell with everlasting burnings or contend with devouring fire Luther saw ground enough for what he said when he cryed out I will have nothing to do with an absolute God i. e. with a God out of Christ. For it is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God Wo and alas for evermore to that man that meets a just and righteous God without a Mediator Whoever thou art that readest these lines I beseech thee by the mercies of God by all the regard and love thou hast to thy own soul neglect not time but make quick and sure work of it Get an interest in this Sacrifice quickly what else will be thy state when vaste ternity opens to swallow thee up What wilt thou do man when thine eye-strings and heart-strings are breaking O what a fearful scriech will thy Conscience give when thou art presented before the dreadful God and no Christ to screen thee from his indignation Happy is that man who can say in a dying hour as one did who being desired a little before his dissolution to give his friends a little tast of his present hopes and the grounds of them cheerfully answered I will let you know how it is with me then stretching forth his hand said Here is the grave the wrath of God and devouring flames the just punishment of sin on the one side and here am I a poor sinful soul on the other side but this is my comfort the Covenant of grace which is established upon so many sure promises hath salved all There is an act of oblivion passed in Heaven I will forgive their iniquities and their sins will I remember no more This is the blessed priviledge of all within the Covenant among whom I am one O 't is sweet at all times especially at such a time to see the reconciled face of God through Jesus Christ and hear the voice of peace through the blood of the Cross. Inference 3. Hath Christ offered up himself a Sacrifice to God for us then let us improve in every condition this Sacrifice and labour to get hearts duly affected with such a sight as faith can give us of it Whatever the condition or complaint of any Christian is the beholding the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world may give him strong support and sweet relief Do you complain of the hardness of your hearts and want of love to Christ behold him as offered up to God for you and such a sight if any in the world will do it will melt your hard hearts Zech. 12.10 They shall look upon me whom they have pierced and shall mourn It is reported of Iohannes Milius that he was never observed to speak of Christ and his sufferings but his eyes would drop Art thou too little touched and unaffected with the evil of sin is it thy complaint Christian that thou canst not make sin bear so heard upon thy heart as thou would consider but what thou hast now read realize this Sacrifice by faith and try what efficacy there is in it to make sin for ever bitter as death to thy soul. Suppose thy own Father had been stab'd to the heart with such a knife and his blood were upon it wouldst thou delight to see or endure to use that knife any more Sin is the knife that stab'd Christ to the heart this shed his blood Surely you can never make light of that which lay so heavy upon the soul and body of Jesus Christ. Or is your heart prest down even to despondency under guilt of sin So that you cry how can such a sinner as I be pardoned My sin is greater than can be forgiven Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world Remember that no sin can stand before the Efficacy of his blood 1 Joh. 1.7 the blood of Iesus cleanseth from all sin This Sacrifice makes unto God full satisfaction Are you at any time staggering through unbelief Filled with unbelieving suspicions of the promises Look hither and you shall see them all ratified and established in the blood of the cross So that hills and mountains shall sooner start from their own bases and centers than one tittle of the promise fail Heb. 9.17 18 19. Do you at any time find your hearts fretting disquieted and impatient under every petty cross and trial See how quietly Christ your Sacrifice came to the Altar How meekly and patiently he stood under all the wrath of God and men together This will silence convince and shame you In a word Here you will see so much of the grace of God and love of Christ in providing and becoming a Sacrifice for you you will see God taking vengeance upon sin but sparing the sinner You will see Christ standing as the body of sin alone for he was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him That whatever corruption burdens this in the believing application will support Whatever grace be defective this will revive it Blessed be God for Iesus Christ. The THIRTEENTH SERMON HEB. VII XXV Wherefore he is able also to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make intercession for them HAving dispatcht the first part or Act of Christs Priesthood consisting in his Oblation we come to the other branch of it consisting in his Intercession which is nothing else but the vertual continuation of his offering once made on earth That being medium reconciliationis the means of reconciling this medium applicationis the way and means of his applying to us the benefits purchased by it This second part or branch of his Priesthood was Typified by
the High-Priests appearing in the Holy of Holies which was the figure of Heaven presenting to the Lord the names of the twelve Tribes of Israel which were on his breast and shoulders Exod. 28.9 12 28 29. to which the Church is supposed to allude in that request Cant. 8.6 set me as a seal upon thine heart as a seal upon thine arm Now the very sight of Christ our High-Priest in Heaven prevails exceedingly with God and ●urns away his displeasure from us As when God looks upon the Rainbow which is the sign of the Covenant he remembers the earth in mercy So when he looks on Christ his heart must needs be towards us upon his account and therefore in Rev. 4.3 Christ is compared to a Rainbow encompassing the Throne Secondly Christ performs his intercession-work in Heaven not by a naked appearing in the presence of God only but also by presenting his blood and all his sufferings to God as a moving plea on our account Whether he make any proper oral intercession there as he did on earth is not so clear some incline to it and think it 's countenanced by Zech. 1.12 13. where Christ our intercessor presents a proper vocal request to the Father in the behalf of his people Saying O Lord of Hosts how long wilt thou not have mercy on Ierusalem and on the Cities of Iudah against whom thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten years and the Lord answered him with good and comfortable words And so Act. 2.23 As soon as he came to Heaven he is said and that as the first fruits of his Intercession to obtain the promise of the Holy-Ghost But sure I am an Interceding voice is by an usual prosopopeia attributed to his blood which in Heb. 12.24 is said to speak better things than the blood of Abel Now Abels blood and so Christs do cry unto God as the hire of the Labourers unjustly detained or the whole creation which is in bondage through our sins are said to cry and groan in the ears of the Lord. Iam. 5.4 Rom. 8.22 not vocally but efficatiously A rare illustration of this Efficatious Intercession of Christ in Heaven we have in that famous story of Amintas who appeared as an Advocate for his brother Aechylus who was strongly accused and very likely to be condemned to die Now Amintas having performed great services and merited highly of the Common-Wealth in whose service one of his hands was cut off in the Field he comes into the Court on his brothers behalf and said nothing but only lifted up his arm and shewed them cubitum sine manu an arm without an hand which so moved them without a word speaking that they freed his brother immediately And thus if you look into Revel 5.6 you shall see in what posture Christ is represented visionally there as standing between God and us And I beheld and loe in the midst of the Throne and four beasts and in the midst of the Elders stood a Lamb as it had been slain i. ● bearing in his glorified body the marks of his death and sacrifice Those wounds he received for our sins on earth are as it were still fresh bleeding in Heaven A moving and prevailing argument it is with the Father to give out the mercies he pleads for Thirdly and Lastly He presents the prayers of his Saints to God with his merits and desires that they may for his sake be granted He causes a cloud of incense to ascend before God with them Revel 8.3 All these were excellently Typed out by the going in of the High-Priest before the Lord with the names of the Children of Israel on his breast with the blood of the Sacrifice and his hands full of incense as the Apostle explains them in Heb. 7. and Heb. 9. Thirdly And that this Intercession of Christ is most potent successful and prevalant with God will be evinced both from the qualifications of this our Advocate from his great interest in the Father from the nature of the pleas he useth with God and from the relation and interest believers have both in the Father to whom and the Son by whom this intercession is made First our Intercessor in the Heavens is every way able and fit for the work he is ingaged in there What ever is desirable in an Advocate is in him eminently It is necessary that he who undertakes to plead the cause of another especially if it be weighty and intricate should be wise faithful tender-hearted and one that concerns himself in the success of his business Our Advocate Christ wants no wisdom to manage his work He is the wisdom of God yea only wise Jude 25. There 's much folly in the best of our duties we know not how to press an argument home with God but Christ hath the art of it Our business is in a wise hand He is no less faithful than wise therefore he is called a faithful High-Priest in things pertaining to God Heb. 2.17 He assures us we may safely trust our concerns with him Joh. 14.2 In my Fathers house are many mansions if it were not so I would have told you Q. D. do you think I will deceive you Men may cheat you but I will not your own hearts may and daily do deceive you but so will not I. And for tender heartedness and sensible resentments of our conditions there is none like him Heb. 4.15 For we have not an High-Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin We have not one that cannot sympathize so it is in the Greek and on purpose that he might be the better able to sympathize with us he came as near to our conditions as the holiness of his nature could permit He suffered himself to be in all points tempted like as we are sin only excepted And then for his concernment and interest in the success of his suit he not only reckons but hath really made it his own interest Yea more his own than it is ours For now by reason of the mystical union all our wants and troubles are his Eph. 1.23 Yea his own glory and compleatness as mediator is deeply interessed in it And therefore we need not doubt but he will use all care and diligence in that work If you say so he may and yet not speed for all that for it depends on the fathers grant True but then Secondly Consider the great interest he hath in the Father with whom he so intercedes Christ is his dear Son Col. 1.13 the beloved of his soul Eph. 1.6 betwixt him and the Father with whom he intercedes there is an unity not only of nature but will and so he always hears him Ioh. 11.42 Yea and he said to this his dear Son when he came first to Heaven Ask of me and I will give thee Psal. 2.8 moreover Thirdly He must needs speed in his suit if you
SERMON GAL. III. XIII Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us YOU have seen the general nature necessity and parts of Christs Priesthood viz. his Oblation and Intercession Before you part from this office it 's necessary you should further take into consideration the principal fruits and effects of his Priesthood Which are compleat Satisfaction and the Aquisition or purchase of an eternal inheritance The former viz. the satisfaction made by his blood is manifestly contained in this excellent Scripture before us wherein the Apostle having shewn before at the tenth verse that whosoever continues not in all things written in the Law to do them is cursed declares how notwithstanding the threats of the Law a Believer comes to be freed from the curse of it Namely by Christs bearing that curse for him and so satisfying Gods justice and discharging the Believer from all obligations to punishment More particularly in these words you have the Believers discharge from the curse of the Law and the way and manner thereof opened First The Believers discharge Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law The Law of God hath three parts Commands Promises and Threatnings or Curses The Curse of the Law is its condemning sentence whereby a sinner is bound over to dea●h even the death of soul and body The chains by which it binds him is the guilt of sin and from this none can loose the soul but Christ. This curse of the Law is the most dreadful thing imaginable It strikes at the life of the sinner Yea his best life the eternal life of the soul. And when it hath condemned it is inexorable No cries nor tears no reformations or repentance can loose the guilty sinner for it requir●s for its reparation that which no meer creature can give even an infinite satisfaction Now from this curse Christ frees the Believer That is he dissolves the obligation to punishment Cancels the hand-writing Looses all the bonds and chains of guilt So that the curse of the Law hath nothing to do with him for ever Secondly We have here the way and manner in an by which this is done And that is by a full price paid down and that price paid in the room of the sinner both making up a compleat and full satisfaction He pays a full price every way adequate and proportionable to the wrong So much this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we translate redeemed imports He hath bought us out or fully bought us That is by a full price This price with which he so fully bought or purchased our freedom from the curse is not only called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 20.28 a ransom But more emphatically 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in 1 Tim. 2.5.6 which might be translated an adequate or fully answerable ransom And so his freeing us by this price is not only expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou hast bought us to God by thy blood Rev. 5.9 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath fully perfectly bought us out And as the price or ransom paid was full perfect and sufficient in it self so it was paid in our room and upon our account So saith the Text by his being made a curse for us The meaning is not that Christ was made the very curse it self Changed into a curse no more than when the word is said to be made flesh the divine nature was converted into flesh but it assumed or took flesh and so Christ he took the curse upon himself Therefore it 's said 2 Cor. 5.21 He was made sin for us who knew no sin That is our ●in was imputed to our surety and laid upon him for satisfaction And so this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for implies a substitution of one in the place and stead of another Now the price being full and paid in lieu of our sins and thereupon we fully redeemed or delivered from the curse It follows as a fair and just deduction that DOCT. The death of Christ hath made a full satisfaction to God for all the sins of his Elect. He to wit our surety Christ was oppressed and he was afflicted saith the Prophet Isai. 53.7 it may be as fitly rendred and the words will bear it without the least force it was exacted and he answered But how being either way translated it establisheth the satisfaction of Christ may be seen in our learned Annotations on that place So Col. 1.14 in whom we have 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 redemption through his blood even the forgiveness of sin Here we have the benefit viz. redemption interpreted by way of Apposition even the remission of sins and the matchless price that was laid down to purchase it the blood of Christ. So again Heb. 9.12 by his own blood he entred once into the holy place having obtained 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 eternal redemption for us Here 's eternal redemption the mercy purchased His own blood the price that procur'd it Now for as much as this Doctrine of Christs satisfaction is so necessary weighty and comfortable in it self and yet so much opposed and intricated by several enemies to it the method I shall take for the clearing establishing and preparing it for use shall be First To open the nature of Christs satisfaction and shew what it is Secondly To establish the truth of it and prove that he made full satisfaction to God for all the sins of the Elect. Thirdly To answer the most considerable Objections made against it And Lastly to Apply it First What is the satisfaction of Christ and what doth it imply I answer Satisfaction is the Act of Christ God-man presenting himself as our surety in obedience to God and love to us to do and suffer all that the Law required of us and thereby freeing us from the wrath and curse due to us for our sins First It is the Act of God-man no other was capable of giving satisfaction for an infinite wrong done to God But by reason of the union of the two natures in his wonderful person he could do it and hath done it for us The humane nature did what was necessary in its kind it gave the matter of the Sacrifice the divine nature stampt the dignity and value upon it which made it an adequate compensation So that it was opus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the act of God-man Yet so that each nature retained its own properties notwithstanding their joynt influence into the effect If the Angels in Heaven had laid down their lives or if the blood of all the men in the world had beeen poured out by Justice this could never have satisfied because that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worth and value which this Sacrifice hath would have still been wanting It was God that redeemed the Church with his own blood Act. 20.28 If God redeem with his own blood he redeems as God-man without any dispute Secondly If he
poenal evil and part of the curse so God inflicts it not upon believers but they must dye for other ends viz. to be made perfectly happy in a more full and immediate enjoyment of God than they can have in the body and so death is theirs by way of priviledge 1 Cor. 3.22 They are not deaths by way of punishment The same may be said of all the afflictions with which God for gratious ends now exercises his reconciled ones Thus much may suffice to establish this great truth Inference 1. If the death of Christ was that which satisfied God for all the sins of the Elect then certainly there is an infinite evil in sin since it cannot be expiated but by an infinite satisfaction Fools make a mock of sin and there are but few souls in the world that are duly sensible and affected with its evil but certainly if God should damn thee to all eternity thy eternal sufferings could not satisfie for the evil that is in one vain thought It may be you may think this is harsh and severe that God should hold his creatures under everlasting sufferings for sin and never be satisfied with them any more But when you have well considered that the object against whom you sin is the infinite blessed God which derives an infinite evil to the sin committed against him and when you consider how God dealt with the Angels that fell for one sin and that but of the mind for having no bodily organs they could commit nothing externally against God you will alter your minds about it O the depth of the evil of sin If ever you will see how great and horrid an evil sin is measure it in your thoughts either by the infinite holiness and excellency of God who is wrong'd by it or by the infinite sufferings of Christ who dyed to satisfie for it and then you will have deeper apprehensions of the evil of sin Inference 2. If the death of Christ satisfied God and thereby redeemed the Elect from the curse then the redemption of souls is costly souls are dear things and of great value with God Ye know saith the Apostle that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold from your vain conversation received by tradition but with the pretious blood of the Son of God as of a Lamb without spot 1 Pet. 1.18 19. Only the blood of God is found an equivalant price for the redemption of souls Gold and silver may redeem from Turkish but not from Hellish bondage The whole creation sold to the utmost worth of it is not a value for the redemption of one soul. Souls are dear ware he that paid for them found them so Yet how cheaply do sinners sell their souls as if they were but low priz'd Commodities But you that sell your souls cheap will buy repentance dear Inference 3. If Christs death satisfied God for our sins how unparallel'd is the love of Christ to poor sinners It 's much to pay a pecuniary debt to free another but who will pay his own blood for another We have a famous instance of Zaleucus that famous Locrensian Lawgiver who decreed and Enacted that whoever was convicted of Adultery should have both his eyes put out It so fell out that his own Son was brought before him for that crime hereupon the people interposing made suit for his pardon At length the Father partly overcome by their importunities and not unwilling to shew what lawful favour he might to his Son he first put out one of his own eyes and then one of his Sons and so shewed himself both a merciful Father and a just Law-giver So tempering mercy with justice that both the Law was satisfied and his Son spared This is written by the Historian as an instance of singular love in this Father to pay one half of the penalty for his Son But Christ did not divide and share in the penalty with us but bare it all Zaleucus did it for his Son who was dear to him Christ did it for enemies that were fighting and rebelling against him Rom. 5.8 while we were yet sinners Christ died for us O would to God said an holy one I could cause Paper and Ink to speak the worth and excellency the high and loud praises of our brother-ransomer Oh the ransomer needs not my report but oh if he would take it and make use of it I should be happy if I had an Errand to this world but for some few years to spread proclamations and out-crys and love-letters of the highness the highness for evermore of the ransomer whose cloaths were wet and dyed in blood how be it that after that my soul and body should go back to their mother nothing Inference 4. If Christ by dying hath made full satisfaction then God is no loser in pardoning the greatest of sinners that believe in Iesus and consequently his Iustice can be no bar to their Iustification and Salvation He is just to forgive us our sins 1 Joh. 1.9 What an Argument is here for a poor Believer to plead with God! Lord if thou save me by Jesus Christ thy Justice will be fully satisfied at one round payment but if thou damn me and require satisfaction at my hands thou canst never receive it I shall make but a dribling payment though I lye in Hell to eternity and shall still be infinitely behind with thee Is it not more for thy glory to receive it from Christs hand than to require it at mine One drop of his blood is more worth than all my polluted blood O how satisfying a thing is this to the Conscience of a poor sinner that is objecting the multitude agravations and amazing circumstances of sin against the possibility of their being pardoned Can such a sinner as I be forgiven Yes if thou believest in Jesus thou maist for so God will lose nothing in pardoning the greatest transgressors Let Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption Psal. 130.7 i. e. a large stock of merit lying by him in the blood of Christ to pay him for all that you have done against him Inference 5. Lastly If Christ hath made such a full satisfaction as you have heard how much is it the concernment of every soul to abandon all thoughts of satisfying God for his own sins and betake himself to the blood of Christ the ransomer by faith that in that blood they may be pardoned It would grieve ones heart to see how many poor creatures are drudging and tugging at a task of repentance and revenge upon themselves and reformation and obedience to satisfie God for what they have done against him and alas it cannot be they do but lose their labour could they swelter their very hearts out weep till they can weep no more cry till their throats be parched alas they can never recompence God for one vain thought For such is
the severity of the Law that when it is once offended it will never be made amends again by all that we can do It will not discharge the sinner for all the sorrow in the world Indeed if a man be in Christ sorrow for sin is something and renewed obedience is something God looks upon them favourably and accepts them gratiously in Christ but out of him they signifie no more than the intreaties and cries of a condemned malefactor to reverse the legal sentence of the Judge You may toyl all the day of your life and at night go to bed without a candle To that sense that Scripture sounds Isa. 50. ult Behold all ye that kindle a fire that compass your selves about with sparks walk in the light of your fire and in the sparks that you have kindled this shall ye have of mine hand ye shall lie down in sorrow By fire and the light of it some understand the sparkling pleasures of this life and the sensitive joys of the creatures but generally it 's taken for our own natural righteousness and all acts of duties in order to our own justification by them before God And so it stands opposed to that faith of recumbency spoken of in the verse before By their compassing themselves about with these sparks understand their dependence on these their duties and glorying in them But see the fatal issue ye shall lie down in sorrow That shall be your recompence from the hand of the Lord. That 's all the thanks and reward you must expect from him for slighting Christs and prefering your own righteousness before his Reader be convinced that one act of faith in the Lord Jesus pleases God more than all the obedience repentance and strivings to obey the Law through thy whole life can do And thus you have the first special fruit of Christs Priesthood in the full satisfaction of God for all the sins of Believers The FIFTEENTH SERMON GAL. IV. IV V. But when the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the Adoption of Sons THis Scripture gives us an account of a double fruit of Christs death viz. the payment of our debt and the purchase of our inheritance First The payment of our debt expressed by our redemption or buying us out from the obligation and curse of the Law which hath been discoursed in the last exercise Secondly the purchase of an inheritance for those redeemed ones expressed here by their receiving the Adoption of Sons Which is to be our present subject Adoption is either civil or divine Of the first the Civil Law gives this difinition that it is A Lawful Act in imitation of nature invented for the comfort of them that have no children of their own Divine Adoption is that special benefit whereby God for Christs sake accepteth us as Sons and makes us heirs of eternal life with him Betwixt this Civil and Sacred Adoption there is a twofold agreement and disagreement They agree in this that both flow from the pleasure and good will of the Adoptant And in this that both confer aright to priviledges which we have not by nature but in this they differ One is an Act imitating nature the other transcends nature The one was found out for the comfort of them that had no children the other for the comfort of them that had no Father This Divine Adoption is in Scripture either taken properly for that act or sentence of God by which we are made Sons or for the priviledges with which the Adopted are invested And so it 's taken Rom. 8.23 and in this Scripture now before us We lost our inheritance by the fall of Adam we receive it as the Text speaks by the death of Christ which restores it again to us by a new and better title The Doctrine hence is DOCT. That the death of Iesus Christ hath not only satisfied for our debts but over and above purchased a rich inheritance for the children of God For this end or cause he is the Mediator of the New-Testament that by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Heb. 9.15 We will here first see what Christ paid Secondly what he purchased Thirdly for whom First What Christ paid Our Divines comprize the vertue and fruits of the Priesthood of Christ in these two things viz. solutio debiti acquisitio haereditatis payment and purchase answerably the obedience of Christ hath a double relation ratio legalis justiciae the relation of a legal righteousness an adequate and exactly proportionated price And it hath also in it ratio super legalis meriti the relation of a merit over and beyond the Law To object as some do the satisfaction of Christ was more than sufficient according to our Doctrine and therefore could not be intended for the payment of our debt is a senseless cavil For surely if Christ paid more than was owing he must needs pay all that was owing to divine Justice And truly it is but a bad requital of the Love of Jesus Christ who beside the payment of what we owed would manifest his bounty by the redundancy of his merit which he paid to God to purchase a blessed inheritance for us This overplus of satisfaction which was the price of that inheritance I am now to open is not obscurely hinted but plainly expressed twice in Rom. 5.15 But not as the offence so also is the free gift for if through the offence of one many be dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more the grace of God and the gift by grace which is by one man Iesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath abounded or flowed abundantly unto many So vers 17. For if by one mans offence death raigned by one 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much more they which receive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the overflowings or abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall raign in life by one Iesus Christ. In both which places Christ and Adam are compared as the two roots or common heads of mankind both agreeing in this property of communicating their conditions to those that are theirs yet there is a great deal of difference betwixt them for in Christ the power is all divine and therefore infinitely more active and effectual He communicates abundantly more to his than they lost in Adam So that this blood is not only sufficient to redeem all those that are actually redeemed by it but even the whole world also And were there so many worlds of men as there are men in the world it would be sufficient for them also and yet still there would be an overplus of value For all those worlds of men would rise but to a finite bulk but this blood is infinite
a debased state but was really and indeed humbled and that not only before men but God As man he was humbled really as God in respect of his manifestive glory And as it was real so also voluntary It is not said he was humbled but he humbled himself He was willing to stoop to this low and abject state for us And indeed the voluntariness of his humiliation made it most acceptable to God and singularly commends the love of Christ to us That he would choose to stoop to all this ignominy sufferings and abasement for us Secondly The degrees of his humiliation it was not only so low as to become a man a man under law but he humbled himself to become obedient to death even the death of the Cross. Here you see the depth of Christs humiliation both specified it was unto death and aggravated even the death of the Cross. Not only to become a man but a dead corpse and that too hanging on the tree Dying the death of a malefactor Thirdly The duration or continuance of this his humiliation It continued from the first moment of his incarnation to the very moment of his vivification and quickning in the grave So the terms of it are fixed here by the Apostle From the time he was found in fashion as a man that is from his incarnation unto his death on the Cross which also comprehends the time of his abode in the grave So long his humiliation lasted Hence the observation is DOCT. That the state of Christ from his Conception to his Resurrection was a state of deep abasement and humiliation We are now entring upon Christs humbled state which I shall cast under three general heads viz. his Humiliation in his incarnation in his life and in his death My present work is to open Christs Humiliation in his incarnation imported in these words he was found in fashion as a man By which you are not to conceive that he only assumed a body as an assisting form to appear transiently to us in it and so lay it down again It is not such an apparition of Christ in the shape of a man that is here intended but his true and real assumption of our nature which was a special part of his Humiliation as will appear by the following particulars First The Incarnation of Christ was a most wonderful humiliation of him in as much as thereby he is brought into the ranck and order of creatures who is over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 This is the astonishing mysterie 1 Tim. 3.16 that God should be manifest in the flesh That the eternal God should truly and properly be called the man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2.5 It was a wonder to Solomon that God would dwell in that stately and magnificent Temple at Ierusalem 2 Chron. 6.18 But will God in very deed dwell with men on the earth behold the Heaven and Heaven of Heavens cannot contain thee how much less this house which I have built But it 's a far greater wonder that God should dwell in a body of flesh and pitch his Tabernacle with us Ioh. 1.14 It would have seemed a rude blasphemy had not the Scriptures plainly revealed it to have thought or spoken of the eternal God as born in time The worlds Creator as a Creature The Ancient of daies as an Infant of daies The Heathen Chaldeans told the King of Babel that the dwelling of the Gods is not with flesh Dan. 2.11 But now God not only dwells with flesh but dwells in flesh Yea was made flesh and dwelt among us For the Sun to fall from its Sphear and be degraded into a wandring Attom For an Angel to be turned out of Heaven and be converted into a silly fly or worm had been no such great abasement for they were but Creatures before and so they should abide still though in an inferiour order or species of creatures The distance betwixt the highest and lowest species of creatures is but a finite distance The Angel and the worm dwell not so far assunder But for the infinite glorious Creator of all things to become a creature is a mystery exceeding all humane understanding The distance betwixt God and the highest order of creatures is an infinite distance He is said to humble himself to behold the things that are done in Heaven What a humiliation then is it to behold the things in the lower world But to be born into it and become a man Great indeed is the mysterie of Godliness Behold saith the Prophet Isai. 40.15 18. The nations are as the drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the ballance he taketh up the Isles as a very little thing All nations before him are as nothing and they are accounted to him less than nothing and vanity If indeed this great and incomprehensible Majesty will himself stoop to the state and condition of a creature we may easily believe that being once a creature he would expose himself to hunger thirst shame spetting death or any thing but sin For that once being man he should endure any of these things is not so wonderful as that he should become a man This was the low stoop a deep abasement indeed Secondly It was a marvelous humiliation to the Son of God not only to become a creature but an inferiour creature a man and not an Angel Had he took the Angelical nature though it had been a wonderful abasement to him yet he had staid if I may so speak nearer his own home and been somewhat liker to a God than now he appeared when he dwelt with us For Angels are the highest and most excellent of all created Beings For their nature they are pure spirits for their wisdom Intelligencies For their dignity they are called principalities and powers For their habitations they are stiled the Heavenly Host and for their imployment it is to behold the face of God in Heaven The highest pitch both of our holiness and happiness in the coming world is expressed by this we shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 equal to the Angels Luk. 20.36 As man is nothing to God so he is much inferiour to the Angels So much below them that he is not able to bear the sight of an Angel though in an humane shape rendring himself as familiarly as may be to him Iudg. 13.22 When the Psalmist had contemplated the Heavens and viewed the Coelestial bodies the glorious Luminaries the Moon and Stars which God had made he cries out Psal. 8.5 what is man that thou art mindful of him or the son of man that thou visitest him Take man at his best when he came a perfect and pure piece out of his Makers hand in the state of innocency yet he was inferiour to Angels They alwaies bare the image of God in a more eminent degree than man as being wholly spiritual substances and so more lively representing God than man could do whose noble soul is immerst
Christ so earnest in prayer that he prayed himself into a very agony Let the people of God blush to think how unlike their Spirits are to Christ as to their prayer frames O what lively sensible quick deep and tender apprehensions and sense of those things about which he prayed had Christ Though he saw his very blood starting out from his hands and his cloaths died in it yet being in an agony he prayed the more earnestly I do not say Christ is imitable in this No but his fervour in prayer is a pattern for us and serves severely to rebuke the laziness dulness torpor formality and stupidity that is in our prayers How often do we bring the Sacrifice of the dead before the Lord How often do our lips move and our hearts stand still Oh how unlike Christ are we his prayers were pleading prayers full of mighty arguments and ferverous affectations O that his people were in this more like him Inference 5. Was Christ in such an agony before any hand of man was upon him meerly from the apprehensions of the wrath of God with which he now contested then surely it 's a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God for our God is a consuming fire Ah what is divine wrath that Christ so staggered when the cup came to him Could not he bear and dost thou think to bear it Did Christ sweat clots of blood at it and dost thou make light of it Poor wretch if it staggered him it will confound thee If it made him groan it will make the howl and that eternally Come sinner come dost thou make light of the threatnings of the wrath of God against sin Dost thou think there 's no such great matter in it as these zealous Preachers make of it Come look here upon my text which shews thee the face of the Son of God standing as full of purple drops under the sense and apprehension of it as the drops of dew that hung upon the grass Hark how he cries Father if it be possible let this cup pass O any thing of punishment rather than this Here what he tells the Disciples My soul saith he is sorrowful even to death amazed very heavy Fools make a mock of sin and the threatnings that lie against it Inference 6. Did Christ meet death with such a heavy heart let the hearts of Christians be the lighter for this when they come to die The bitterness of death was all squeez'd into Christs cup. He was made to drink up the very dregs of it that so our death might be the sweeter to us Alas there 's nothing now left in death that 's frightful or troublesom beside the pain of disolution that natural evil of it I remember it 's storied of one of the Martyrs that being observed to be exceeding jocund and merry when he came to the stake one asked him what was the reason his heart was so light when death and that in such a terrible form too was before him O said he my heart is so light at my death because Christs heart was so heavy at his death Inference 7. To conclude what cause have all the Saints to love their dear Lord Jesus with an abounding love Christian open the eyes of thy faith and fix them upon Christ in the posture he lay in the garden drencht in his own blood and see whether he be not lovely in these his dyed garments He that suffered for us more than any creature could or did may well challenge more love than all the creatures in the world O what hath he suffered and suffered upon thy account it was thy pride earthliness sensuality unbelief hardness of heart that laid on more weight in that day that he sweat blood The TWENTY THIRD SERMON MAT. XXVI XL VII XL VIII XLIX And while he yet spake lo Judas one of the twelve came and with him a great multitude with swords and staves from the chief Priests and Elders of the people Now he that betrayed him gave them a sign saying whomsoever I shall kiss the same is he hold him fast And forthwith he came to Iesus and said hail Master and kissed him THE former Sermons give you an account how Christ improved every moment of his time with busie diligence to make himself ready for his death He hath commended his charge to the Father Instituted the blessed memorial of his death Poured out his soul to God in the Garden with respect to the grievous sufferings he should undergo And now he is ready and waits for the coming of the enemies being first in the field And think you that they were idle on their parts No no their malice made them restless They had agreed with Iudas to betray him Under his conduct a band of Souldiers are sent to apprehend him The hour so long expected is come For while he yet spake saith the text loe Judas one of the twelve came and with him a great multitude with swords and staves These words contain the first preparative act on their part for the death of Christ even to betray him and that by one of his own Disciples Now they execute what they had plotted vers 14 15. and in this paragraph you have an account First Of the Traytor who he was Secondly Of the Treason what he did Thirdly Of the Manner of its execution how it was contrived and affected Lastly Of the Time when they put this Hellish plot in execution First We have here a description of the Traytor and it is remarkable how carefully the several Evangelists have described him both by his name sirname and office Iudas Iudas Iscariot Iudas Iscariot one of the twelve that he might not be mistaken for Iude or Iudas the Apostle God is tender of the names and reputations of his upright hearted Servants His office one of the twelve is added to aggravate the fact and to shew how that prophesie was accomplished in him Psal. 41.9 Yea mine own familiar friend in whom I trusted which did eat of my bread hath lift up his heel against me Lo this was the Traytor and this was his name and office Secondly You have a description of the Treason or an account what this man did He led an armed multitude to the place where Christ was Gave them a signal to discover him and encouraged them to lay hands on him and hold him fast This was that Hellish design which the Devil put into his heart working upon that principle or lust of covetousness which was predominant there What will not a carnal heart attempt if the Devil suit a temptation to the predominant lust and God withhold restraining grace Thirdly You have here the way and manner in which this Hellish plot was executed It was managed both with force and with fraud He comes with a multitude armed with swords and staves in case he should meet with any resistance And he comes to him with a kiss which was
Iudas his Tomb-stone 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. let every one that beholds me learn to be godly indeed to be sincere in his profession and love Christ more unfeignedly than I did O Professors look to your foundation and build not upon the sand as this poor creature did That 's sound advice indeed which the Apostle gives 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinks he he standeth take heed lest he fall O beware of a loose foundation If you begin your profession as Iudas did no wonder if it shall end as his did 1. Beware therefore you hold not the truth in unrighteousness Iudas did so he knew much but lived not up to what he knew for he was still of a worldly spirit in the height of his profession His knowledge never had any saving influence upon his heart He Preacht to others but he himself was a cast-away He had much light but still walked in darkness He had no knowledge to do himself good Secondly Beware you live not in a course of secret sin Iudas did so and that was his ruine He made a profession indeed and carried it smoothly but he was a thief Ioh. 12.6 He made no conscience of committing the sin so he could but cover and hide it from men This helped on his ruine and so it will thine Reader if thou be guilty herein A secret way of sinning under a covert of profession will either break out at last to the observation of men or else slide thee down insensibly to Hell and leave thee only this comfort that no body shall know thou art there Thirdly Beware of hypocritical pretences of Religion to accommodate self ends Iudas was a man that had notable skill this way He had a mind to fill his own purse by the sale of this costly ointment which Mary bestowed upon her Saviours feet And what a neat cover had he fitted for it to do his business clearly Why saith he this might have been sold for three hundred pence and given to the poor Here was Charity to the poor or rather poor Charity for they were only a blind to his base self ends O Christian be plain hearted take heed of craft and cunning in matters of Religion This spoil'd Iudas Fourthly Beware of self confidence Iudas was a very confident man of himself Last of all Iudas said Master is it I Matth. 26.25 But he that was last in the suspicion was first in the transgression He that trusteth his own heart is a fool saith Solomon Prov. 28.26 such a fool was this great Professor It will be your wisdom to keep a jealous eye upon your own hearts and still suspect its fairest pretences Fifthly If you will not do as Iudas did nor come to such an end as he did take heed you live not unprofitably under the means of grace Iudas had the best means of grace that ever man enjoyed He heard Christ himself Preach he joyned often with him in prayer but he was never the better for it all it was but as the watering of a dead-stick which will never make it grow but rot it the sooner Never was there a rotten branch so richly watered as he was O 't is a sad sin and a sad sign too when men and women live under the Gospel from year to year and never the better I warn you to beware of these evils all ye that profess Religion Let these footsteps by which Iudas went down to his own place terrifie you from following him in them Corollary 2. Learn hence also that eminent knowledge and profession puts a special and eminent aggravation upon sin Judas Iscariot one of the twelve Poor wretch better had it been for him if he had never been numbred with them nor enlightned with so much knowledge as he was endued with for this rent his Conscience to pieces when he reflected on what he had done and presently run himself into the gulf of despair To sin against clear light is to ●in with an high hand It 's that which makes a sad waste of the Conscience That without doubt which now torments this poor soul in Hell is that he should go against his light against his profession to gratifie a base lust to his eternal ruine Had he known no better it had been more excusable Those that had a hand in the death of Christ through mistake and ignorance were capable to receive the pardon of their sin by that blood they so shed Act. 3.17 19. compared Take heed therefore of abusing knowledge and putting a force upon Conscience Corollary 3. Learn hence in the third place That unprincipled Professors will sooner or later become shameful Apostates ●udas was an unprincipled Professor and see what he came to Ambition invited Simon Magus to the profession of Christ he would be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some great one And how quickly did the rottenness of his principles discover themselves in the ruine of his profession that which wants a root must needs wither as Christ speaks Matth. 13.20 21. that which is the predominant interest will prevail and sway with us in the day of our trial Hear me all you that profess Religion and have given your names to Christ if that profession be not built upon a sollid and real work of grace upon your hearts you shall never honour Religion nor save your souls by it O 't is your union with Christ that like a spring maintains your profession So much as you are united to Christ so much constancy steadiness and eavenness you will manifest in the duties of Religion and no more O Brethren when he that professes Christ for company shall be left alone as Paul was When he that made Religion a stirrup to help him into the sadle of preferment and honour shall see that he is so advanced to be drawn forth into Christs camp and endure the heat of the day and not to take his pleasure in a word when he shall see all things about him discouraging and threatning his dearest interest on earth exposed for Religion sake and he hath no faith to ballance his present losses with his future hopes I say when it comes to this you shall then see the rottenness of many hearts discovered And Iudas may have many fellows who will part with Christ for the world as he did O therefore look well to your foundation Corollary 4. Moreover in this example of Iudas you may read this truth That men and women are never in more eminent danger than when they meet with temptations exactly suited to their master-lusts to their own iniquity O pray pray that ye may be kept from a violent suitable temptation Satan knows that when a man is tried here he falls by the root The love of this world was all along Iudas his master-sin and some conjecture he was a married man and had a great charge but that is conjectural it was his predominant Lust. The Devil found out this and
Christs death was Justice and Mercy In respect of man it was murder and cruelty In respect of himself it was obedience and humility Hence our note is DOCT. That our Lord Iesus Christ was not only put to death but to the worst of deaths even the death of the Cross. To this the Apostle gives a plain testimony Phil. 2.8 He became obedient to death even the death of the Cross where his humiliation is both specified he was humbled to death and aggravated by a most emphatical reduplication even the death of the Cross. So Act. 5.30 Iesus whom ye slew and hanged upon a tree q. d. it did not suffice you to put him to a violent but you also put him to the most base vile and ignominious death you hanged him on a tree In this point we will discuss these three particulars viz. the nature or kind the manner and reasons of Christs death upon the tree First I shall open the kind or nature of this death by shewing you that it was a violent painful shameful cursed slow and succourless death First It was a violent death that Christ died Violent in it self though voluntary on his part He was cut off out of the land of the living Isai. 53.8 And yet he laid down his life of himself no man took it from him Joh. 10.17 I call his death violent because he died not a natural death i. e. he lived not till nature was consumed with age as it is in many who live till their balsamum radicale radical moisture like the oyl in the Lamp be quite consumed and then go out like an expiring Lamp It was not so with Christ. For he was but in the very flower and prime of his time when he died And indeed he must either die a violent death or not die at all partly because there was no sin in him to open a door to natural death as it doth in all others Partly because else his death had not been a sacrifice acceptable and satisfactory to God for us That which died of it self was never offered up to God but that which was slain when it was in its full strength and health The Temple was a Type of the body of Christ. Now when the Temple was destroyed it did not drop down as an antient structure decayed by time but was pulled down by violence when it was standing in its full strength Therefore he is said to suffer death and to be put to death for us in the flesh 1 Pet. 3.18 That 's the first thing It was a violent though a voluntary death For violent is not opposed to voluntary but to natural Secondly The death of the Cross was a most painful death Indeed in this death were many deaths contrived in one The Cross was a Rack as well as a Gibber The pains Christ suffered upon the Cross are by the Apostle emphatically stiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 2.24 the pains of death but properly they signifie the pangs of travail yea the birth pangs the most acute sorrows of a travailing woman His soul was in travail Isai. 53. His body in bitter pangs and being as Aquinas speaks optime complectionatus of the most excellent Crisis exact and just temperament his sences were more acute and delicate than ordinary and all the time of his suffering so they continued not in the least blunted dulled or rebated by the pains he suffered The death of Christ doubtless contained the greatest and acutest pains imaginable Because these pains of Christ alone were intended to equalize all that misery which the sin of man deserved all that pain which the damned shall and the Elect deserved to feel Now to have pains meeting at once upon one person equivalent to all the pains of the damned Judge you what a plight Christ was in Thirdly The death of the Cross was a shameful death Not only because the crucified were stripped quite naked and so exposed as spectacles of shame but mainly because it was that kind of death which was appointed for the basest and vilest of men Their Free-men when they committed capital crimes were not condemned to the Cross. No that was looked upon as the death appointed for slaves Tacitus calls it servile supplicium the punishment of a slave and to the same sense Iuvenal speaks pone crucem servo put the Cross upon the back of a slave As they had a great esteem of a Free-man so they manifested it even when they had forfeited their lives in cutting them off by more honourable kinds of death This by hanging on the tree was alwaies accounted most ignominious To this day we say of him that 's hanged he dies the death of a dog And yet it 's said of our Lord Jesus Heb. 12.2 he not only endured the Cross but also despised the shame Obedience to his Fathers will and zeal for your Salvation made him digest the shame of it and despise the baseness that was in it Fourthly The death of the Cross was a cursed death Upon that account he is said to be made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a Tree Gal. 3.13 This refers to Deut. 21.23 His body shall not remain all night upon the Tree but thou shalt in any wise bury him that day for he that is hanged is accursed of God The very Symbol of lifting them up betwixt heaven and earth carryed much shame in it For it implied this in it that the person so used was so execrable base and vile that he deserved not to tread upon the earth or touch the surface of the ground any more And the command for burying them that day doth not at all mitigate but rather aggravates this curse speaking the person to be so abominable that as he is lifted up into the air and hanging between heaven and earth as unworthy ever to set foot more upon the earth so when dead they were to hasten to bury him that such an abominable sight might be removed assoon as might be from before the eyes of men And that the earth might not be defiled by his lying on the surface of it when taken down However as the Learned Iunius hath Judiciously observed that this curse is only a Ceremonial curse For otherwise it 's neither in it self nor by the Law of nature or by civil Law more execrable than any other death And the main reason why the Ceremonial Law affixed the curse to this rather than any other death was principally with respect to the death Christ was to die And therefore Reader see and admire the providence of God that Christ should die by a Roman and not by a Iudaick Law For Crucifying or Hanging on the Tree was a Roman punishment and not in use among the Jews But the Scriptures cannot be broken Fifthly The death of the Cross was a very slow and lingering death They died leisurably
for he hath made it beneficial and very serviceable to the saints When Christ was nailed to the tree then he said as it were to death which came to grapple with him there O death I will be thy plagues O grave I will be thy destruction And so he was for he swallowed up death in victory Spoiled it of its power So that it drives but a poor trade now among believers frighting some weak ones among them though it cannot hurt them at all Inference 3. If Christ died the cursed death of the Cross for us how cheerfully should we submit to and bear any cross for Iesus Christ He had his cross and we have ours but what feathers are ours compared with his His cross was a heavy cross indeed yet how patiently and meekly did he support it He endured his cross we cannot endure or bear ours though they be not to be named with his Three things would marvellously strengthen us to bear the cross of Christ and bring up a good report upon it in the world First That we shall carry it but a little way Secondly Christ bears the heaviest end of it Thirdly innumerable blessings and mercies grow upon the Cross of Christ. First We shall bear it but a little way It should be enough to me saith a holy one that Christ will have joy and sorrow halfers of the life of the saints And that each of them should have a share of our daies as the night and day are kindly partners of time and take it up betwixt them But if sorrow be the greediest halfer of our days here I know joys day shall dawn and do more than recompence all our sad hours Let my Lord Jesus since he will do so weave my bit and span length of time wi●h white and black well and wo. Let the rose be neighbour with the thorn When we are over the water Christ shall cry Down Crosses and up Heaven for evermore Down Hell and down Death and down Sin and down Sorrow and up Glory up Life up Joy for evermore 'T is true Christ and his Cross are not separable in this life how be it Christ and his Cross part at Heavens door For there is no house-room for crosses in Heaven One tear one sigh one sad heart one fear one loss one thought of trouble cannot find lodging there Sorrow and the saints are not married together or suppose it were so Heaven shall make a divorce Life is but short and therefore crosses cannot be long Our sufferings are but for a while 1 Pet. 5.10 They are but the sufferings of the present time Rom. 8.18 Secondly As we shall carry the Cross of Christ but a little way so Christ himself bears the heaviest end of it There is a fellowship in sufferings betwixt Christ and his saints And as one happily expresses he saith of their crosses half mine He divideth sufferings with them and takes the largest share to himself O how sweet a sight saith one sweetly is it to see a cross betwixt Christ and us To hear our Redeemer say at every sigh at every blow and every loss of a Believer half mine For they are called the sufferings of Christ and the reproach of Christ. Col. 2.24 Heb. 11.26 As when two are partners and owners of a Ship half of the gain and half of the loss belongeth to either of the two So Christ in our sufferings is half gainer and half loser with us yea the heaviest end of the black tree lyeth on your Lord. It falleth first upon him and but rebounds from him upon you the reproaches of them that reproached thee are fallen upon me Psal. 69.9 Nay to speak as the thing is Christ doth not only bear half or the better part but the whole of our cross and burden Yea he bears all and more than all for he bears us and our burden too or else we should quickly sink and faint under it Thirdly As we have not far to carry it and Christ carries the haviest part yea all the burden for us yea us and our burden too So in the last place it's reviving to think what an innumerable multitude of blessings and mercies are the fruit and off-spring of a sanctified cross Since that tree was so richly watered with the blood of Christ what store of choice and rich fruits doth it bear to believers Our sufferings saith one are washed in the blood of Christ as well as our souls For Christs merits bought a blessing to the crosses of the sons of God Our troubles owe us a free passage through him Devils and men and crosses are our debtors and death and all storms are our debtors to blow our poor tossed bark over the water fraught-free and to set the Travellers in their own known ground Therefore we shall die and yet live I know no man hath a velvet cross but the cross is made of what God will have it but verily how be it it be no warrantable market to buy a cross yet I dare not say O that I had liberty to sell Christs cross lest therewith also I should sell joy comfort sence of love patience and the kind visits of a Bridegroom I have but small experience of sufferings for Christ but let my Judge and witness in Heaven lay my soul in the ballance of Justice If I find not a young Heaven and a little Paradise of glorious comforts and soul delighting love kisses of Christ in suffering for him and his truth My prison is my palace my sorrow is with child of Joy My losses are rich losses my pain easie pain my heavy days are holy days and happy days I may tell a new tale of Christ to my friends Oh what owe I to the file and to the hammer and to the furnace of my Lord Jesus who hath now let me see how good the wheat of Christ is that goes through his mill and his oven to be made bread for his own Table Grace tried is better than grace and more than grace It 's glory in the Infancy Who knows the truth of grace without a trial O how little getteth Christ of us but what he winneth to speak so with much toil and pains And how soon would faith freeze without a Cross bear your Cross therefore with joy Inference 4. Did Christ die the death yea the worst of deaths for us Then it follows that our mercies are brought forth with great difficulties and that which is sweet to us in the fruition was costly and hard to Christ in the acquisition Surely upon every mercy we have this motto is written The price of blood Col. 1.14 In whom we have redemption through his blood upon which a late neat Writer delivers himself thus The way of grace is here considerable life comes through death God comes in Christ and Christ comes in blood the choicest mercies come through the greatest miseries prime favours come swiming in blood to us Through a red sea Israel came to
Canaan Many a man lost his life and much blood shed the very land flowing with milk and honey was first made to flow with blood e're Israel could inherit the promise Seven nations were destroyed e're the Land of Canaan was divided to the Israelites Act. 13.19 Sin makes mercy so deadly hard to bring forth To Christen every pretious child every Ben●amin Benoni every son of Gods right hand a son of sorrow and death to her that brings him forth Adams sweets had no bitter till he transgressed Gods will One mercy did not die to bring forth another till he died But oh how should this raise the value of ●ur mercies What the price of blood the price of pretious blood the blood of the Cross O what an esteem should this raise Things as the same ingenious Author adds are prized rather as they come than as they are Far fetcht and dear bought makes all the price and gives all the worth with us weak creatures Upon this ground the Scripture when it speaks of our great fortune tells the great price it cost as eying our weakness who look more at what things cost than at what they are And as knowing if any thing will take with us this will To him that loved us and washed us from our sin in his own blood Rev. 1.5 Man is a Legal creature and looks much at what is given for a thing What did this cost Why it cost Christs own blood Colour is more than the cloth with us and scarlet colour is a general taking colour and therefore is Christs garments dipt in blood and he admired in this habit Who is this that comes from Edom with garments dyed red from Bozra Beware then you abuse not not any of the mercies that Christ brought forth with so many bitter pangs and throws And let all this endear Christ more than ever to you and make you in a deep sense of his grace and love to say Thanks be to God for Iesus Christ. The TWENTY SEVENTH SERMON LUK. XXIII XXXVIII And a superscription also was written over him in letters of Greek and Latine and Hebrew This is the King of the Iews BEfore I pass on to the manner of Christs death I shall consider the Title affixed to the Cross in which very much of the wisdom of providence was discovered It was the manner of the Romans that the equity of their proceedings might the more clearly appear to the people when they crucified any man to publish the cause of his death in a Table written in Capital Letters and placed over the head of the crucified And that there might be at least a shew and face of Justice in Christs death he also shall have his title or superscription The worst and most unrighteous actions labour to cover and shroud themselves under pretensions of equity Sin is so shameful a thing that it cares not to own its name Christ shall have a Table written for him also This writing one Evangelist calls the Accusation Matth. 27.37 Another calls it the Title Joh. 19.19 Another the Inscription or Superscription so the Text. And another the Superscription of his Accusation Mark 15.26 In short it was a fair legible writing intended to express the fact or crime for which the person died This was their usual manner though sometime we find it was published by the voice of the common Cryer As in the case of Attalus the martyr who was led about the Amphitheater one proclaiming before him This is Attalus the Christian. But it was customary and usual to express the crime in a written Table as the Text expresses it Wherein these three things offer themselves to your consideration First The Character or Description of Christ contained in that writing And he is described by his Kingly dignity This is the King of the Iews That very office which but a little before they had reproached and derided bowing the knee to him in mockery saying Hail King of the Iews the providence of God so orders it that therein he shall be vindicated and honoured This is the King of the Iews Or as the other Evangelists compleat it This is Iesus of Nazareth the King of the Iews Secondly The person that drew his Character or Title It was Pilate he that but now condemned him he that was his Iudge shall be his Herald to proclaim his glory For the Title is honourable Surely this was not from himself for he was Christs enemy but rather than Christ should want a tongue to clear him the tongue of an enemy shall do it Thirdly The time when this honour was done him it was when he was at the lowest ebb of his glory when shame and reproach were heaped on him by all hands When all the Disciples had forsaken him and were fled Not one left to proclaim his innocency or speak a word in his vindication Then doth the providence of God as strangely as powerfully overrule the heart and pen of Pilate to draw this Title for him and affix it to his Cross. Surely we must look higher than Pilate in this thing and see how providence serves it self by the hands of Christs adversaries Pilate writes in honour of Christ and stiftly defends it too Hence our observation is DOCT. 1. That the dignity of Christ was openly proclaimed and defended by an enemy and that in the time of his greatest reproaches and Sufferings To open this mystery of providence to you that you may not stand idly gazing upon Christs Title as many then did we must first consider the nature and quality of this Title Secondly what hand the providence of God had in this matter Thirdly and then draw forth the proper Uses and improvements of it First To open the nature and quality of Christs Title or Inscription let it be throughly considered and we shall find First That it was an extraordinary Title varying from all examples of that kind and directly crossing the main design and end of their own custom For as I hinted before the end of it was to clear the equity of their proceedings and shew the people how justly they suffered those punishments inflicted on them for such crimes But Lo here is a Title expressing no crime at all and so vindicating Christs innocency This some of them perceived and moved Pilate to change it not this is but this is he that said I am the King of the Jews In that as they conceived lay his Crime O how strange and wonderful a thing was this But what shall we say It was a day of wonders and extraordinary things As there was never such a person Crucified before so there never was such a Title affixed to the Cross before Secondly As it was an extraordinary so it was a publick Title both written and published with the greatest advantages of spreading it self far and near among all people that could be For it was written in three Languages and those most known
the Parent wrapt up in another Skin O the care the cost the pity the tenderness the pains the fears they have exprest for you It 's worse than Heathenish ingratitude not to return Love for Love This filial Love is not only in it self a duty but to be the root or spring of all your other dutys to them Thirdly Obedience to their commands is due to them by the Lords strict and special command Eph. 6.1 Children obey your Parents in the Lord for this is right Honour thy Father and thy Mother which is the first Commandment with promise Filial obedience is not only founded upon the positive Law of God but also upon the Law of nature For though the subjection of Servants to Masters came in by sin yet the subjection of Children to Parents is due to them by natural right therefore saith the Apostle this is right i. e. right both according to natural and positive Law However this subjection and obedience is not absolute and universal God hath not devested himself of his own authority to cloath a Parent with it Your obedience to them must be in the Lord i. e. in such things as they require you to do in the Lords authority In things consonant to that divine and holy will to which they as well as you must be subject and therein you must obey them Yea even the wickedness of a Parent exempts not from obedience where his command is not so Nor on the other side must the holiness of a Parent sway you where his Commands and Gods are opposite In the former case the Canonists have determined that the command must be distinguisht from the person In the latter it 's a good rule My Parents must be loved but my God must be preferred Yield your selves therefore chearfully to obey all that which they lawfully enjoin and take heed that black character fixed on the Heathens who know not God be not found upon you disobedient to Parents Rom. 1.30 Remember your disobedience to their just commands rises higher much higher than an affront to their persons and authority it 's disobedience to God himself whose commands second and strengthen theirs upon you Fourthly Submission to their Discipline and rebukes is also your duty Heb. 12.9 We had Fathers of our flesh that corrected us and we gave them reverence Parents ought not to abuse their authority Cruelty in them is a great sin but wrath and rebellion in a Child against his Parents is monstrous It 's storied of Aelian that having been abroad at his return his Father asked him what he had Learned since he went from him he answered you will know shortly I have learned to bear your anger quietly and submit to what you please to inflict Two considerations should especially mould others into the like frame especially to their godly Parents The end for which and the manner in which they manifest their anger to their Children Their end is to save your souls from Hell They judge it better for you to hear the voice of their anger than the terrible voice of the wrath of God To feel their hand than his They know if you fall into the hands of the living God you will be handled in another manner And for the manner in which they rebuke and chasten it is with grief in their hearts and tears in their eyes Alas it 's no delight to them to cross vex or afflict you Were it not meer conscience of their duty to God and tender love to your souls they would neither chide nor smite And when they do how do they afflict themselves in afflicting you When their faces are full of anger their bowels are full of compassion for you and you have no more reason to blame them for what they do than if they cry out and violently snatch at you when they see you ready to fall from the top of a Rock Fifthly Faithfulness to all their interests is due to them by the natural and positive Law of God What in you lies you are bound to promote not waste and scatter their substance To assist not to defraud them Who so robbeth his Father or Mother and saith it is no transgression the same is the companion of a destroyer Prov. 28.24 This saith one as far excells your wronging another as parricide is a greater crime than man-slaughter or as Reubens incest was beyond common fornication God never meant you should grow up about your Parents as suckers about a Tree to impoverish the root But for a Child out of a covetousness after what his Parents have secretly to wish their death is a sin so monstrous as should not be once named much less found among persons professing Christianity To desire their death from whom you had your life is unnatural wickedness to dispose of their Goods much more of your selves without their consent is ordinarily the greatest injustice to them Children are obliged to defend the Estates and persons of their Parents with the hazard of their own As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man so are Children of the youth Happy is the man that hath his quiver full of them They shall not be ashamed but they shall speak with the enemy in the gates Psal. 127.5 Sixthly And more especially requital of all that love care and pains they have been at for you is your duty so far as God enables you and those things are requitable 1 Tim. 5.4 Let them learn to shew piety at home and to requite their Parents The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifies to play the Stork to imitate that creature of whom it 's said that the young do tenderly feed the old ones when they are no longer able to fly abroad and provide for themselves Hence those that want bowels of natural affection to their Relations are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1.30 worse than Storks O 't is a shame that Birds and Beasts should shew more tenderness to their Dams than Children to their Parents It 's a saying frequent among the Jews a Child should rather labour at the Mill than suffer his Parents to want And to the same sence is that other saying your Parents must be supplyed by you if you have it if not you ought to beg for them rather than see them perish It was both the comfort and honour of Ioseph that God made him an instrument of so much succour and comfort to his aged Father and distressed family Gen. 47.13 And you are also to know that what you do for them is not in the way of an alms or common Charity For the Apostle saith it is but your requiting them and that 's Justice not Charity And it can never be a full requital Indeed the Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 12.14 That Parents lay up for their Children and not Children for the Parents and so they ought but sure if providence blast them and bless you an honourable
maintenance is their due Even Christ himself took care for his Mother Secondly You have had a brief account of the duties of this Relation next let us consider how Christs Example who was so subject to them in his life Luk. 2.51 and so careful to provide at his death enforces all those duties upon Children especially upon gratious Children And this it doth two ways both as it hath the obliging power of a Law and as he himself will one day sit in Judgement to take an account how we have imitated him in these things First Christs example in this hath the force and power of a Law yea a Law of Love or a Law lovingly constraining you to an imitation of him If Christ himself will be your pattern If God will be pleased to take Relations like yours and go before you in the discharge of relative Duties Oh how much are you obliged to imitate him and tread in all his footsteps This was by him intended as a president or pattern to facilitate and direct your Duties Secondly He will come to take an account how you have answered the pattern of obedience and tender care he set before you in the days of his flesh What will the disobedient plead in that day He that heard the groans of an afflicted Father or Mother will now come to reckon with the disobedient Child for them And the glorious example of Christs own obedience and tenderness for his Relations will in that day condemn and aggravate silence and shame such wretched Children as shall stand guilty before his Bar. Inference 1. Hath Jesus Christ given such a famous pattern of obedience and tenderness to Parents Then there can be nothing of Christ in stubborn rebellious and careless Children that regard not the good or comfort of their Parents The Children of disobedience cannot be the Children of God If providence direct this to the hand of any that are so my hearts desire and Prayer for them is that the Lord would search their souls by it and discover their evils to them whilst they shall read the following Queries First Query Have you not been guilty of slighting your Parents by irreverent words or carriages the old man or woman To such I commend the consideration of that Scripture Prov. 30.17 Which methinks should be to them as the hand writing that appear'd upon the plaister of the Wall to Belteshazar The eye that mocketh at his Father and despiseth to obey his Mother The Ravens of the Valley shall pick it out and the young Eagles shall eat it That is they shall be brought to an untimely end and the Birds of the air shall eat that eye that had never seen but for that Parent that was despised by it It may be you are vigorous and young they decayed and wrinkled with Age. But saith the Holy Ghost despise not thy Mother when she is old Prov. 23.22 Or when she is wrinkled as the Hebrew signifies It may be you are rich they poor owne and honour them in their poverty and despise them not God will requite it with his hand if you do Second Query Have you not been disobedient to the commands of Parents A Son of Belial is a Son of wrath if God give not Repentance to life Is not this the black brand set upon the Heathens Rom. 1.30 Have not many repented this upon a Ladder with an halter about their necks Woe to him that makes a Father or Mother complain as the Tree in the Fable that they are cloven assunder with the wedges that are cut out of their own bodies Third Query Have you not risen up rebelliously against and hated your Parents for chastening your bodies to save your souls from Hell Some Children saith one will not take that from a Parent which Beasts yea and salvage Beasts too Bears and Lions will take from their keepers What is this but to resist an Ordinance of God for your good And in rebelling against them to rebell against the Lord Well if they do not God will take the Rod into his own hand and him you shall not resist Fourth Query Have you not been unjust to your Parents and defrauded them First help to make them poor and then dispise them because they are poor O horrid wickedness What a complicated evil is this Thou art in the Language of Scripture a companion with destroyers Prov. 28.24 This is the worst of theft in Gods account You think you may make bold with them but how bold do you make with conscience and the command of God Fifth Query Are you not or have you not been ungrateful to Parents Leaving them to shift for themselves in those straights that you have helpt to bring them into Oh consider it Children this is an evil which God will surely avenge except ye repent What to be hardned against thine own flesh To be cruel to thine own Parents that with so much tenderness fed thee when else thou hadst perished I remember Luther gives us a story of one and oh that it might be a warning to all that hear it who having made over all he had to his Son reserving only a maintenance for himself at last his Son depised him and grudged him the very meat he eat and one day the Father coming in when the Son and his Wife were at dinner upon a Goose they shuffled the meat under the Table but see the remarkable vengeance of God upon this ungracious unnatural Son the Goose was turned into a monstrous Toad which seiz'd upon this vile wretch and kill'd him If any of you be guilty of these evils to humble you for them and reclaim you from them I desire these six Considerations may be lay'd to heart First That the effects of your obedience or disobedience will stick upon you and yours to many generations If you be obedient Children in the Lord both you and yours may reap the fruits of that your obedience in multitudes of sweet mercies for many generations So runs the Promise Eph. 6.23 Honour thy Father and Mother which is the first commandment with promise that it may be well with thee and thou maist live long on the earth You know what an eye of favour God cast upon the Recabites for this Ier. 35.8 from the 14. to the 20. verse and as his blessings are by promise entailed on the obedient so his curse upon the disobedient Prov. 20.20 Whoso curseth his Father or his Mother his Lamp shall be put out in obscure darkness i. e. the Lamp of his life quencht by death yea say others and his soul also by the blackness of darkness in Hell Secondly Though other sins do this sin seldom escapes exemplary punishment even in this world Our English History tells us of a Yeoman of Leicestershire who had made over all he had to his Son to prefer him in marriage reserving only a bare maintenance at his Sons Table Afterward upon some discontent the Son bid his Father get out of his
been long preparing for it but the suddenness and greatness of the change is amazing to our thoughts For a soul to be now here in the body conversing with men living among sensible objects and within a few moments to be with the Lord. This hour on earth the next in the third heavens Now viewing this world and anon standing among an innumerable company of Angels and the Spirits of the Just made perfect O what a change is this What! but wink and see God! Commend thy soul to Christ and be transferred in the arms of Angels into the invisible world the world of Spirits To live as the Angels of God! To live without eating drinking sleeping To be lifted up from a bed of sickness to a Throne of Glory To leave a sinful troublesom world a sick and pained body and be in a moment perfectly cured and feel thy self perfectly well and free from all troubles and distempers You cannot think what this will be Who can tell what sights what apprehensions what thoughts what frames believing souls have before the bodies they left are removed from the eyes of their dear surviving friends Inference 2. Are believers immediatly with God after their dissolution Where then shall unbelievers be and in what state will they find themselves immediatly after death hath closed their eyes Ah what will the case of them be that go the other way To be pluckt out of house and body from among friends and comforts and thrust into endless miseries into the dark vault of Hell never to see the light of this world any more Never to see a comfortable sight Never to hear a joyful sound Never to know the meaning of rest peace or delight any more O what a change is here To exchange the smiles and honours of men for the frowns and fury of God To be cloathed with flames and drink the pure unmixed wrath of God who was but a few days since cloathed in silks and fill'd with the sweet of the creature how is the state of things altered with thee It was the lamentable cry of poor Adrian when he felt death approaching Oh my poor wandring soul alas whither art thou now going Where must thou lodge this night Thou shalt never jest more never be merry more Your term in your houses and bodies is out and there is another habitation provided for you but 't is a dismal one When a Saint dyes heaven above is as it were moved to receive and entertain him at his coming he is received into everlasting habitations Into the inheritance of the Saints in light When an unbeliever dies we may say of him alluding to Isa. 14.9 Hell from beneath is moved for him to meet him at his coming it stirreth up the dead for him No more sports nor plays no cups of wine nor beds of pleasure The more of these you enjoyed here the more intolerable will this change be to you If Saints are immediately with God others must be immediatly with Satan Inference 3. How little cause have they to fear death who shall be with God so soon after their death Some there are that tremble at the thoughts of death That cannot endure to hear its name mentioned That would rather stoop to any misery here yea to any sin than die because they are afraid of the exchange but you that are interessed in Christ need not do so You can lose nothing by the exchange The words Death Grave and Eternity should have another kind of sound in your ears And make contrary impressions upon your hearts If your earthly Tabernacles cast you out you shall not be found naked You have a building of God an house not made with hands eternal in the heavens And it is but a step out of this into that O what fair sweet and lovely thoughts should you have of that great and last change But what speak I of your fearlesness of death Your Duty lies much higher than that far Inference 4. If Believers are immediatly with God after their dissolution then it 's their Duty to long for their dissolution And cast many a longing look towards their Graves So did Paul I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ which is far better The advantages of this exchange are unspeakable You have Gold for Brass Wine for Water Substance for shadows solid Glory for very Vanity O if the dust of this earth were but once blown out of your eyes that you might see the divine glory how weary would you be to live How willing to die But then be sure your title to heaven be sound and good Leave not so great a concernment to the last For though it is confessed God may do that in an hour that never was done all your days yet it is not common Which brings us to our Third and Last observation DOCT. 3. That God may though he seldom doth prepare men for glory immediately before their dissolution by death There is one parable and no more that speaks of some that were called at the last hour Matth. 20.9 10. And there is this one instance in the text and no more that gives us an account of a person so called We acknowledge God may do it his grace is his own He may dispense it how and where he pleaseth We must always salve divine prerogative Who shall fix bonds or put limits to free grace but God himself whose it is If he do not ordinarily shew such mercies to dying sinners as indeed it doth not yet it is not because he cannot but because he will not Not because their hearts are so hardned by long custom in sin that his grace cannot break them but because he most justly withholds that grace from them When blessed Mr. Bilney the martyr heard a Minister preaching thus O thou old sinner that hast lain these fifty years rotting in thy sin dost thou think now to be saved That the blood of Christ shall save thee O said Mr. Bilney what preaching of Christ is this If I had heard no other preaching than this what had become of me No no old sinners or young sinners great or small sinners are not to be beaten off from Christ but encouraged to repentance and faith For who knows but the bowels of mercy may yearn at last upon one that hath all along rejected it This thief was as unlikely ever to have received mercy but a few hours before he died as any person in the world could be But surely this is no encouragement to neglect the present seasons of mercy because God may shew mercy hereafter To neglect the ordinary because God sometimes manifests his grace in ways extraordinary Many I know have hardened themselves in ways of sin by this example of mercy But what God did at this time for this man cannot be expected to be done ordinarily for us And the reasons thereof are Reason 1. First Because God hath vouchsafed us the ordinary and standing means of
us through faith and so we are actually reconciled And by the virtual continuation of the sacrifice of Christ in heaven by his potent and eternal intercession and so our state of reconciliation is confirmed and all future breaches prevented But all depends as you see upon the death of Christ. For had not Christ died his death could never be applied to us nor pleaded in heaven for us How the death of Christ meritoriously procures our reconciliation is evident from that forecited Scripture Rom. 5.10 When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son i. e. Christs death did meritoriously or virtually reconcile us to God who as to our state were enemies long after that reconciliation was made That the application of Chri●t to us by faith makes that virtual reconciliation to become actual is plain enough from Eph. 2.16.17 And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the Cross having slain the enmity thereby And came and Preached peace to you that were afar off and to them that were nigh Now therefore as it is added vers 19. Ye are no more strangers and foraigners but fellow Citizens with the Saints c. And that this state of friendship is still continued by Christs intercession within the vail so that there can be no breaches made upon the state of our peace notwithstanding all the daily provocations we give God by our sins is the comfortable truth which the Apostle plainly asserts after he had given a necessary caution to prevent the abuse of it in 1 Ioh. 2.1 2. My little children these things write I unto you that ye sin not and if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation c. Thus Christ reconciles us to God by his death Secondly And if you enquire why this reconciliation was made by the death of Christ rather than any other way Satisfaction is at hand in these two answers First That we can imagine no other way by which it could be compassed And Secondly If God could have Reconciled us as much by another way yet he could not have Obliged us so much by doing it in another way as he hath by doing it this way Surely none but he that was God manifest in our flesh could offer a sacrifice of sufficient value to make God amends for the wrong done him by one sin much less for all the sins of the Elect. And how God should especially after a peremptory threatening of death for sin re-admit us into favour without full satisfaction cannot be imagined He is indeed inclin'd to acts of mercy but none must suppose him to exercise one attribute in prejudice to another That his Iustice must be Eclipsed whilst his mercy shines But allow the infinite wisdom could have found out another means of reconciling us as much can you imagine that in any other way he could oblige us as much as he hath done by reconciling us to himself by the death of his own Son It cannot be thought possible This therefore was the most effectual just honourable and obliging way to make up the peace betwixt him and us Thirdly This reconciliation purchased by the blood of Christ is offered unto men by the Gospel upon certain Articles and conditions upon the performance whereof it actually becomes theirs and without which notwithstanding all that Christ hath done and suffered the breach still continues betwixt them and God And let no man think this a derogation from the freeness and riches of Grace for these things serve singularly to illustrate and commend the grace of God to sinners As he consulted his own glory in the terms on which he offers us our peace with him so 't is his grace which brings up souls to those terms of reconciliation And surely he hath not suspended the mercy of our reconciliation upon unreasonable or impossible conditions He hath not said if you will do as much for me as you have done against me I will be at peace with you But the two grand Articles of peace with God are Repentance and faith In the first we lay down arms against God and it 's meet it should be so before he re-admit us into a state of peace and favour in the other we accept Christ and pardon through him with a thankful heart yielding up our selves to his government Which is equally reasonable These are the terms on which we are actually reconciled to God Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him turn to the Lord and he will have mercy on him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon So Rom. 5.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God And surely it would not become the holy God to own as his friend and favorite a man that goes on perversely and impenitently in the way of sin not so much as acknowledging or once bewailing the wrong he hath done him purposeing to do so no more or to receive into amity one that slights and rejects the Lord Jesus whose pretious blood was shed to procure and purchase peace and pardon for sinners But if there be any poor soul that saith in his heart it repents me for sinning against God and is sincerely willing to come to Christ upon Gospel terms he shall have peace And that peace Fourthly Is no common peace The reconciliation which the Lord Jesus died to procure for broken hearted believers it is First A firm well bottom'd reconciliation putting the reconciled soul beyond all possibility of coming under Gods wrath any more Isai. 54.10 Mountains may depart and hills be removed but the Covenant of this peace cannot be removed Christ is a surety by way of caution to prevent new breaches 2 Iohn 1.2 Secondly This reconciliation with God is the fountain out of which all our other comforts flow to us this is plainly carried in those words of Eliphaz to Iob. Chap. 22.21 Acquaint now thy self with him and be at peace thereby good shall come unto thee As trade flowrishes and riches come in when peace is made betwixt States and Kingdoms so all spiritual and temporal mercies flow into our bosoms when once we are reconciled to God What the comfort of such a peace will be in a day of straights and dangers and what it will be valued at in a dying day who but he that feels it can declare And yet such a one cannot fully declare it for it passes all understanding Phil. 4.7 We shall now make some improvement of this and pass on to the third end of the death of Christ. Inference 1. If Christ died to reconcile God and man How horrid an evil then is sin And how terrible was that breach made betwixt God and the creature by it which could no other way be made up but by the death of the Son of God! I remember I have read that when a great chasm or breach was made
in the earth by an earthquake and the Oracle was consulted how it might be closed this answer was returned that breach can never be closed except something of great worth be thrown into it Such a breach was that which sin made it could never be reconciled but by the death of Jesus Christ the most excellent thing in all the Creation Inference 2. How sad is the state of all such as are not comprized in the Articles of peace with God! The impenitent unbeliever is excepted God is not reconciled to him and if God be his enemy how little avails it who is his friend For if God be a mans enemy he hath an Almighty enemy in him whose very frown is destruction Deut. 32.40 41 42. I lift up my hand to Heaven and say I live for ever If I whet my glittering sword and my hand take hold on judgement I will render vengeance to my enemies and I will reward them that hate me I will make mine arrows drunk with blood and my sword shall devour flesh and that with the blood of the slain and the Captives from the beginning of revenge upon the enemy Yea he is an unavoidable enemy Fly to the utmost parts of the earth there shall his hand reach thee as it is Psal. 139.10 The wings of the morning cannot carry thee out of his reach If God be your enemy you have an immortal enemy who lives for ever to avenge himself upon his adversaries And what wilt thou do when thou art in Sauls case 1 Sam. 28.15 16. Alas whither wilt thou turn To whom wilt thou complain But what wilt thou do when thou shalt stand at the Bar and see that God who is thine enemy upon the throne Sad is their case indeed who are not comprehended in the Articles of peace with God Inference 3. If Christ died to reconcile us to God give diligence to clear up to your own souls your interest in this reconciliation If Christ thought it worth his blood to purchase it it 's worth your care and pains to clear it And what can better evidence it than your conscientious tenderness of sin lest you make new breaches Ah if reconciled you will say as Ezra 9.14 And now our God seeing thou hast given us such a deliverance as this should we again break thy Commandments If reconciled to God his friends will be your friends and his enemies your enemies If God be your friend you will be diligent to please him Iohn 15.10 14. He that makes not peace with God is an enemy to his own soul. And he that is at peace but takes no pains to clear it is an enemy to his own comfort But I must pass from this to the third End of Christs death End 3. You have seen two of those beautiful births of Christs travail and lo a third cometh namely the sanctification of his people Typical blood was shed as you heard to purifie them that were unclean and so was the blood of Christ shed to purge away the sins of his people so speaks the Apostle expresly Ephes. 5.25 26. Christ gave himself for the Church that he might sanctifie and cleanse it And so he tells us himself Joh. 17.19 And for their sakes I sanctifie my self i. e. consecrate or devote my self to death that they also might be sanctified through the truth Upon the account of this benefit received by the blood of Christ is that Doxology which in a lower strain is now sounded in the Churches but will be matter of the Lambs song in Heaven Rev. 1.5 6. To him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood be glory and honour for ever Now there is a twofold evil in sin the guilt of it and the polution of it Justification properly cures the former Sanctification the latter but both Justification and Sanctification flow unto sinners out of the death of Christ. And though it 's proper to say the spirit sanctifies yet it is certain it was the blood of Christ that procured for us the spirit of sanctification Had not Christ died the spirit had never come down from Heaven upon any such design The pouring forth of Christs blood for us obtained the pouring forth of the spirit of holiness upon us Therefore the spirit is said to come in his name and to take of his and shew it unto us Hence it 's said 1 Joh. 5.6 he came both by blood and by water by blood washing away the guilt by water purifying from the filth of sin Now this fruit of Christs death even our sanctification is a most incomparable mercy For do but consider a few particular excellencies of holiness First Holiness is the Image and glory of God His image Coll. 3.10 and his glory Exod. 15.11 who is like unto thee O Lord glorious in holiness Now when the guilt and filth of sin is washt off and the beauty of God put upon the soul in sanctification O what a beautiful Creature is the soul now So lovely in the eyes of Christ even in its imperfect holiness that he saith Cant. 6.5 Turn away thine eyes from me for they have overcome me So we render it but the Hebrew word signifies they have made me proud or puffed me up It 's a beam of divine glory upon the Creature enamouring the very heart of Christ. Secondly As it 's the souls highest beauty so it 's the souls best evidence for heaven Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God Matth. 5.8 And without holiness no man shall see God Heb. 12.14 No gifts no duties no natural endowments will evidence a righ● in heaven but the least measure of true holiness will secure heaven to the soul. Thirdly As holiness is the souls best evidence for heaven so it 's a continual spring of comfort to it in the way thither The purest and sweetest pleasures in this world are th● results of holiness Till we come to live holily we never live comfortably Heaven is Epitomized in holiness Fourthly And to say no more It is the peculiar mark by which God hath visibly distinguished his own from other men Psal. 4.3 The Lord hath set apart him that is Godly for himself Q. D. this is the Man and that the Woman to whom I intend to be good for ever This is a man for me O holiness how surpassin●ly glorious art thou Inference 1. Did Christ die to sanctifie his people how deep then is the polution of sin that nothing but the blood of Christ can cleanse it All the tears of a penitent sinner should he shed as many as there have fallen drops of rain since the Creation to this day cannot wash away one sin The everlasting burnings in Hell cannot purifie the flaming conscience from the least sin O guess at the wound by the largeness and length of this Tent that follows the mortal weapon sin Inference 2. Did Christ die to sanctifie his people Behold then the love
not so then would the holy and divinely inspired Apostles be found false witnesses 1 Cor. 15.15 For they all with one mouth constantly and to the death affirmed it If Christ be not risen then are believers yet in their sins 1 Cor. 15.17 For our Justification is truly ascribed to the Resurrection of Christ Rom. 4.25 While Christ was dying and continued in the state of the dead the price of our Redemption was all that while but in paying the payment was compleated when he revived and rose again Therefore for Christ to have continued alwaies in the state of the dead had been never to have compleatly satisfi●d hence the whole force and weight of our Justification depends upon his Resurrection Nay had not Christ risen the dead had perished 1 Cor. 15.17 Even the dead who dyed in the Faith of Christ and of whose salvation there now remains no ground to doubt Moreover Had he not revived and risen from the dead how could all the Types that prefigured it have been satisfied Surely they must have stood as insignificant things in the Scriptures and so must all the predictions of his Resurrection by which it was so plainly foretold See Matth. 12.40 Luk. 24.46 Psal. 16.10 1 Cor. 15.4 To conclude had he not risen from the dead how could he have been install'd in that glory whereof he is now possessed in heaven and which was promised him before the world was upon the account of his death and sufferings For to this end Christ both dyed and rose and revived that he might be Lord both of the dead and living Rom. 14.9 And that in this state of dominion and glorious advancement he might powerfully apply the vertues and benefits of his blood to us which else had been as a pretious Cordial spilt upon the ground So then there remains no doubt at all of the certainty of Christs Resurrection it was so and upon all accounts it must needs be so for you see how great a weight the Scriptures hang upon this nail And blessed be God it 's a nail fastned in a sure place I need spend no more words to confirm it but rather choose to explain and open the nature and manner of his Resurrection which I shall do by shewing you four or five properties of it And the first is this First Christ rose from the dead with awful Majesty So you find it in Matth. 28.2 3 4. And behold there was a great Earthquake for the Angel ef the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone from the door and sate upon it his countenance was like lightning and his rayment white as Snow and for fear of him the Keepers did shake and became as dead men Humane infirmity was not able to bear such heavenly Majesty as attended the business of that morning Nature ●ank under it This Earthquake was as one calls it Triumphale Signum A sign of Triumph or token of Victory given by Christ not only to the Keepers and the neighbouring City but to the whole world that he had overcome Death in its own dominions and like a conqueror lifted up his head above all his enemies So when the Lord fought from heaven for his people and gave them a glorious though but Temporal deliverance see how the Prophe●ess drives on the triumph in that Rhetorical Song Iudg. 5.4 5. Alluding to the most awful appearance of God at the giving of the Law Lord when thou wentest out of Seir when thou marchedst out of the field of Edome the Earth trembled and the heavens droped the clouds also droped water The mountains melted before the Lord even that Sinai from before the lord God of Israel Our Lord Jesus went out of the Grave in like manner and marched out of that bloody field with a pomp and Majesty becoming so great a conqueror Secondly And to increase the splendor of that day and drive on the Triumph his Resurrection was attended with the Resurrection of many of the Saints who had slept in their Graves till then and then were awakned and raised to attend the Lord at his rising So you read Matth. 27 52 53. And the Graves were opened and many bodies of the Saints which slept arose and came out of the Graves after his Resurrection and went into the holy City and appeared unto many This wonder was designed both to adorn the Resurrection of Christ and to give a specimen or handsel of our Resurrection which also is to be in the vertue of his This indeed was the Resurrection of Saints and none but Saints the Resurrection of many Saints yet it was but a special Resurrection intended only to shew what God will one day do for all his Saints And for present to give Testimony of Christs Resurrection from the dead They were seen and known of many in the City who doubtless never thought to have seen them any more in this world To enquire curiously as some do who they were what discourse they had with those to whom they appeared and what became of them afterwards is a vain thing God hath cast a vail of silence and secresie upon these things that we might content our selves with the written Word and he that will not believe Moses and the Prophets neither will he believe though one arise from the dead as these Saints did Thirdly As Christ rose from the dead with those Sa●ellites or attendants who accompanied him at his Resurrection so it was by the power of his own God-head that he quickned and raised himself and by the vertue of his Resurrection were they raised also who accompanied him It was not the Angel who rolled back the stone that revived him in the Sepulchre but he r●sumed his own life so he tells us Ioh. 10.18 I lay down my life that I might take it again Hence in 1 Pet. 3.18 He is said to be put to death in the flesh but quickned by the Spirit i. e. by the power of his God-head o● divine nature which is opposed there to flesh or his humane nature By the eternal Spirit he offered himself up to God when he dyed Heb. 9.14 i. e. by his own God-head not the third person in the Trinity for then it could not have been ascribed to him as his own act that he offer'd up himself And by the same spirit he was quickned again And therefore the Apostle well observes Rom. 1.4 That he was declared to be the Son of God with power by his Resurrection from the dead Now if he had been raised by the power of the Father or Spirit only and not by his own how could he be declared by his Resurrection to be the Son of God What more had appeared in him than in others For others are raised by the power of God if that were all So that in this respect also it was a marvellous Resurrection Never any did or shall rise as Christ rose by a self-quickning principle For though many dead Saints
rose at that time also Yet it was by the vertue of Christs Resurrection that their Graves were opened and their bodies quickned In which respect he saith Ioh. 11.25 when he raised dead Lazarus I am the Resurrection and the life i. e. the principle of life and quickning by which the dead Saints are raised Fourthly And therefore it may be truly affirmed that though some dead Saints were raised to life before the Resurrection of Christ yet that Christ is the first-born from the dead as he is call'd Col. 1.18 For though Lazarus and others were raised yet not by themselves but by Christ. It was by his vertue and power not their own And though they were raised to life yet they died again Death recovered them again but Christ dieth no more Death hath no dominion over him He was the first that opened the womb of the Earth the first-born from the dead that in all things he might have the preheminence Fifthly But lastly Christ rose as a publick or common person As the first fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15.20 I desire this may be well understood ●or upon this account it is that our Resurrection is secured to us by the Resurrection of Christ and not a Resurrection only but a blessed and happy one for the first fruits both assured and sanctified the whole crop or harvest Now that Christ did rise as a publick person representing and comprehending all the Elect who are called the children of the Resurrection is plain from Eph. 2.6 Where we are said to be risen with or in him So that as we are said to die in Adam who also was a common person as the branches die in the death of the root so we are said to be raised from death in Christ who is the head root and representative of all his Elect seed And why is he called the first-born and first begotten from the dead but with respect to the whole number of the Elect that are to be born from the dead in their time and order also and as sure as the whole harvest follows the first fruits so shall the general Resurrection of the Saints to life eternal follow this birth of the first-born from the dead It shall surely follow it I say and that not only as a consequent follows an antecedent but as an effect follows its proper cause Now there is a three fold causality or influence that Christs Resurrection hath upon the Saints Resurrection of which it is both the meritorious efficient and exemplary cause First The Resurrection of Christ is the meritorious cause of the Saints Resurrection as it compleated his satisfaction and finished his payment and so our Justification is properly assigned to it as before was noted from Rom. 4.25 This his Resurrection was the receiving of the acquittance the cancelling of the bond And had not this been done we had still been in our sins as he speaks 1 Cor. 15.17 And so our guilt had been still a bar to our happy Resurrection But now the price being paid in his Death which payment was finished when he revived and the discharge then received for us now there is nothing lies in bar against our Resurrection to eternal life Secondly As it is the meritorious cause of our Resurrection so so it is the efficient cause of it also For when the time shall come that the Saints shall rise out of the dust they shall be raised by Christ as their head in whom the effective principle of their life is Your life is hid with Christ in God as it is Col. 3.3 As when a man awakes out of sleep the animal spirits seated in the brain being set at liberty by the digestion of those vapours that bound them up do play freely through every part and member of the body so Christ the believers mystical head being quickned the spirit of life which is in him shall be diffused through all his members to quicken them also in the morning of the Resurrection Hence the warm animating dew of Christs Resurrection is said to be to our bodies as the dew of the morning is to the withered languishing plants which revive by it Isa. 26.19 Thy dew is as the dew of Herbs and then it follows the earth shall cast forth her dead So that by the same Faith we put Christs Resurrection into the Premises we may put the believers Resurrection into the Conclusion And therefore the Apostle makes them convertibles reasoning forward from Christs to ours and back again from ours to his 1 Cor. 15.12 13. Which is also the sence of that Scripture Rom. 8.10 11. And if Christ be in you the body indeed is dead because of sin but the spirit is life because of righteousness i. e. though you are really united to Christ by the Spirit yet your bodies must die as well as other mens but your souls shall be presently upon your dissolution swallowed up in life And then it follows vers 11. But if the spirit of him that raised up Iesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you i. e. though your bodies must die yet they shall live again in the Resurrection and that by vertue of the spirit of Christ which dwelleth in you and is the bond of your mystical union with him your head You shall not be raised as others are by a meer word of power but by the spirit of life dwelling in Christ your head which is a choice prerogative indeed Thirdly Christs Resurrection is not only the meritorious and efficient cause but it is also the exemplary cause or pattern of our Resurrection He being the first and best is therefore the pattern and measure of all the rest So you read Phil. 3.21 Who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body Now the Conformity of our Resurrection to Christs stands in the following particulars Christs body was raised substantially the same so will ours His body was raised first so will ours be raised before the rest of the dead His body was wonderfully improved by the Resurrection so will ours His body was raised to be glorified and so will ours First Christs body was raised substantially the same that it was before and so will ours Not another but the same body Upon this very reason the Apostle us●s that idential expression 1 Cor. 15.53 This corruptible must put on incorruption and th● mortal immortality Pointing as it were to his own body when he spake it the same body I say and that not only Specifically the same for indeed no other Species of flesh is so priviledged but the same numerically that very body not a new or another body in its steed So that it shall be both the what it was and the who it was And indeed to deny this is to deny the Resurrection it self For should God prepare
When thou makest a feast call the poor the maimed the lame the blind and thou shalt be blessed for they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt be recompensed at the Resurrection of the Iust. It was the opinion of an eminent modern Divine that no man living fully understands and believes that Scripture Matth. 25.40 In as much as ye have done it to one of the least of these my brethren ye have done it unto me How few Saints would be exposed to daily wants and necessities if that Scripture were but fully understood and believed Inference 3. Is Christ risen from the dead and that as a publick person and representative of believers How are we all concerned then to secure to our selves an interest in Christ and consequently to this blessed Resurrection What consolation would be left in this world if the hope of the Resurrection were taken away 'T is this blesed hope that must support you under all the Troubles of life and in the Agonies of Death The securing of a blessed Resurrection to your selves is therefore the most deep concernment you have in this world And it may be secured to your selves if upon serious heart examination you can discover the following Evidences Evidence 1. First If you are regenerated Creatures brought forth in a new nature to God for we are begotten again to a lively hope by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ from the dead Christs Resurrection is the ground-work of our hope And the new birth is our title or evidence of our interest in it So that until our souls are partakers of the spiritual Resurrection from the death of sin we can have no assurance our bodies shall be partakers of that blessed Resurrection to life Blessed and holy saith the Spirit is he that hath part in the first Resurrection on such the second death hath no power Rev. 20.6 Never let unregenerated souls expect a comfortable meeting with their bodies again Rise they shall by Gods terrible Citation at the sound of the last trump but not to the same end that the Saints arise nor by the same principle They to whom the spirit is now a principle of Sanctification to them he will be the principle of a joyful Resurrection See then that you get gratious souls now or never expect glorious bodies then Evid 2. If you be dead with Christ you shall live again by the life of Christ. If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death we shall be also in the likeness of his Resurrection Rom. 6.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Planted together some refer it to believers themselves Jews and Gentiles are planted together in Christ. So Erasmus believers grow together like branches upon the same root which should powerfully inforce the great Gospel duty of unity among themselves But I would rather understand it with reference to Christ and believers with whom believers are in other Scriptures said to suffer together and be glorified together to die together and live together to be Crucified together and buried together all noting the communion they have with Christ both in his death and in his life Now if the power of Christs death i. e. the mortifying influence of it have been upon our hearts killing their Lusts deading their affections and flatting their appetites to the Creature then the power of his life or Resurrection shall come like the animating dew upon our dead withered bodies to revive and raise them up to live with him in glory Evid 3. If your hearts and affections be now with Christ in Heaven your bodies in due time shall be there also and conformed to his glorious body So you find it Phil. 3.20 21. For our conversation is in heaven from whence we look for the Saviour the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his own glorious body The body is here called vile or the body of our vileness Not as God made it but as sin hath marred it Not absolutely and in it self but relatively and in comparison of what it will be in its second edition at the Resurrection Then those scattered bones and dispersed dust like pieces of old broken battered Silver will be new cast and wrought in the best and newest fashion even like to Christs glorious body Whereof we have this evidence that our conversation is already heavenly The temper frame and disposition of our souls is already so therefore the frame and temper of our bodies in due time shall be so Evid 4. If you strive now by any means to attain the Resurrection of the dead no doubt but you shall then attain what you now strive for This was Pauls great ambition that by any means he might attain the Resurrection of the dead Phil. 3.11 He means not simply a Resurrection from the dead for that all men shall attain whether they strive for it or no. But by a metonymy of the Subject for the Ajunct he intends that compleat holiness and perfection which shall attend the state of the Resurrection so it is expounded vers 12. So then if God have raised in your hearts a vehement desire and assiduous endeavour aft●r a perfect freedom from sin and full Conformity to God in the beauties of holiness that very love of holiness your present pantings and tendencies after perfection speaks you to be persons designed for it Evid 5. If you are such as do good in your Generation If you be fruitful and useful men and women in the world you shall have part in this blessed Resurrection Ioh. 5.29 All that are in the Graves shall hear his voice and shall come forth they that have done good unto the Resurrection of Life Now it is not every act materially good that entitles a man to this priviledge but the same requisites that the School-men assign to make a good prayer are also necessary to every good work The person matter manner and end must be good Nor is it any single good act but a series and course of holy actions that is here meant What a spur should this be to us all as indeed the Apostle makes it closing up the Doctrine of the Resurrection with this solemn exhortation 1 Cor. 15. Last with which I also close mine Therefore my beloved brethren be ye stedfast unmoveable alwaies abounding in the work of the Lord for as much as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord. Thanks be to God for his unspeakable Gift The FORTIETH SERMON JOH XX. XVII Iesus saith unto her touch me not for I am not yet ascended to my Father but go to my Brethren and say unto them I ascend unto my Father and your Father and to my God and your God IN all the former Sermons we have been following Christ through his Humiliation from the time that he left the blessed bosom of his Father and now having finished the whole course of his obedience on
Rock they refuse to return Will not your very Relations be your accusers To whom you have failed in all your relational duties Yea and every one whom you have tempted to sin abused defrauded over-reacht all these will be your accusers So that it is without dispute you will have accusers enough to appear against you Thirdly Being accused before Jesus Christ what will you plead for your selves Will you confess or will you deny the charge If you confess what need more Out of thine own mouth will I Iudge thee saith Christ Luk. 19.22 If you deny and plead not guilty thy Judge is the searcher of hearts and knows all things So that it will not at all help thee to make a lye thy last refuge This will add to the guilt but not cover it Fourthly If no defence or plea be left thee then what canst thou imagine should retard the Sentence Why should not Christ go on to that dreadful work Must not the Iudge of all the Earth do right Gen. 18.25 Must he not render to every man according to his deeds 2 Cor. 5.10 Yes no question but he will proceed to that Sentence how terrible so ever it be to you to think on it now or hear it then Fifthly To conclude if Sentence be once given by Christ against thy Soul what in all the world canst thou imagine should hinder the Execution Will he alter the thing that is gone out of his mouth No Psal. 89.34 Dost thou hope he is more merciful and pitiful than so Thou mistakest if thou expectest mercy out of that way in which he dispenses it There will be thousands and ten thousands that will rejoyce in and magnifie his mercy then but they are such as obeyed his call repented believed and obtained union with his person here but for unbelievers it 's against the settled Law of Christ and constitution of the Gospel to shew mercy to the despisers of it But it may be you think your tears your cryes your pleadings with him may move him these indeed might have done somewhat in time but they come out of season now Alas too late What the success of such pleas and cries will be you may see if you will but consult two Scriptures Iob 27.8 9. What is the hope of the Hypocrite though he hath gained when God taketh away his Soul Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him No no and Matth. 7.22 Many will say unto me in that day Lord Lord have we not Prophesied in thy name and in thy name have cast out Devils and in thy name done many wonderful works And then will I profess unto them I never knew you depart from me ye that work iniquity And must it come to this Dismal Issue with you indeed God forbid it should Oh then Inference 3. If Christ be appointed of God to be the Judge of all How are all concerned to secure their interest in him and therein an eternity of happiness to their own souls by the work of regeneration Of all the business that men and women have in this world there is none so solemn so necessary and important as this O my Brethren this is a work able to drink up your Spirits whi●● 〈◊〉 do but think of the consequences of it Summon in then thy self-reflecting and considering powers get alone Reader and forgetting all other things ponder with thy self this deep dear and eternal concernment of thine Examine the state of thine own soul. Look into the Scriptures then into thine own heart and then to Heaven saying Lord let me not be deceived in so great a concernment to me as this O let not the trifles of time wipe off the impressions of Death Judgement and Eternity from thy heart O that long word Eternity that it might be night and day with thee That the awe of it may be still upon thy Spirit A Gentlewoman of this Nation having spent the whole Afternoon and a great part of the Evening at Cards in much mirth and jollity came home late at night and finding her waiting Gentlewoman reading she lookt over her shoulder upon the Book and said poor melancholy soul why dost thou sit here poring so long upon thy Book That night she could not sleep but lay sighing and weeping her servant asked her once and again what ailed her at last she burst out into tears and said O it was one word that I cast my eye upon in thy Book that troubles me there I saw that word Eternity How happy were I if I were provided for Eternity Sure it concerns us seeing we look for such things to be diligent that we may be found of him in Peace O let not that day come by surprizal upon you Remember that as Death leaves so Judgement will find you Inference 4. Is Jesus Christ appointed Judge of quick and dead then look to it all you that hope to be found of him in peace that you avoid those sins and live in the daily practice of those duties which the consideration of that day powerfully perswades you to avoid or practise For it not only presses us to holiness in actu primo in the being of it but in actu secundo in the daily exercise and practice of it Do you indeed expect such a day O then First See you be meek and patient under all injuries and abuses for Christs sake Avenge not your selves but leave it to the Lord who will do it Don't anticipate the work of God Be patient my Brethren to the coming of the Lord Jam 5.7 8 9. Secondly Be Communicative publick hearted Christians studying and devising liberal things for Christs distressed members And you shall have both an honourable remembrance of it and a full reward of it in that day Matth. 25.34 35. Thirdly Be watchful and sober keep the Golden bridle of moderation upon all your affections And see that ye be not over charged with the cares and love of this present life Luk. 21.34 35. Will you that your Lord come and find you in such a posture O let your moderation be known to all the Lord is at hand Phil. 4.5 Fourthly Improve all your Masters Talents diligently and faithfully Take heed of the Napkin Matth. 25.14 18. Then must you make up your account for them all Fifthly But above all be sincere in your profession Let your hearts be found in Gods Statutes that you may never be ashamed for this day will be the day of manifestation of all hidden things And nothing is so secret but that day will reveal it Luk. 12.1 2 3. Beware of Hypocrisie for there is nothing covered which shall not be revealed neither hid that shall not be made known Thus I have finished through Divine aids the whole Doctrine of the Impetration of Redemption by Jesus Christ we shall winde up the whole in a General Exhortation and I have done The General USE AND now to close up all let me perswade all those for whom
212 361 362. Purchase Christs blood purchased a rich inheritance for the Saints p. 180 181. Q. SIX Questions opening the difference betwixt suffering for Christ in this world and for sin in that to come p. 526. R. REconciliation with God its nature medium continuation properties and terms opened p. 530 531. Why effected by Christs death ibid. Redemption of souls costly p. 175. Rejecting knowledge how dangerous p. 11. Rejecting Christ most fatal p. 91 92. Relation of Christs sufferings to us p. 168. Religion Christian Religion incomparably sweet and satisfying to the Conscience p. 134 135. What cause men have to bless God for it ibid. Remembrance of Christ what it is opened at large p. 269 270. Two sorts of it ibid. What it includes p. 270 271. The usefulness of remembring Christ. p. 277 278. Rest no expectation of resting till we have done working and sinning p. 586. Four things break a Saints rest on earth p. 587. Resurrection of Christ the certainty of it p. 546. The absurdities following the denyal of it p. 546. The manner of his Resurrection opened in many particulars p. 547 548 c. Christs Resurrection was the Resurrection of the Saints head and representative p. 549. Resurrection of Saints the effect of Christs Resurrection three wayes p. 550 551. The agreement of our Resurrection with Christs opened in five particulars p. 551 552 553. Retracting what we have professed or done for Christ condemned by Pilates example p. 363. Revelations of Gods will by Iesus Christ various p. 101. Gradual p. 102. Plain p. 103. Powerful p. 103. Affectionate p. 104. Pure p. 104. Perfect p. 104. Righteousness how dangerous to joyn any thing of our own with Christs Righteousness in point of Iustification p. 177. S. SAcrament a special pledge of Christs care and love p. 273. Sacrament seasons heart melting seasons p. 276. Sacramental Bread and Wine whence their excellency p. 267. Saints their security for salvation from whence it is p. 262 263. Sanctification of Christ respects us p. 74 75. Our Sanctification the best evidence of our interest in a sanctified Iesus p. 80 81. Satisfaction to God necessary to our reconciliation p. 131. God stood upon full satisfaction p. 131. No meer man can satisfie God p. 132. Christs death made full satisfaction for sin p. 167. What divine satisfaction is p. 168. Five things imported in the satisfaction of Christ p. 168 169 170. Errors about the satisfaction of Christ refuted p. 171 172. Divers objections 173 c. of the Socinians answered about it p. 172 173 174. All thoughts of satisfying God by our selves to be abandoned p. 177. Sealing of Christ what it imports p. 69 70. How God the father sealed him p. 70 71. Why Christ must be sealed before he would act as Mediator p. 62 63. How many wayes the Spirit seals us p. 67. His sealing us an evidence of Christs being sealed for us p. 67. Security of believers argued from Christs Mediation p. 93. Self-denyal of Christ for us p. 20. Self-denyal for Christ how reasonable p. 22. Sentence given against Christ what it was Opened in six particulars p. 319 320. In what manner Christ received his Sentence p. 321. Services accidentally done for Christ unacceptable p. 362. Signes in the Sacrament of the Supper are of three sorts p. 272. Sin an infinite evil in it and how that appears p. 174. The horrid nature of sin opened p. 470. The deep pollution of sin p. 174. Sitting at Gods right hand what it imports opened in seven particulars p. 578 579 580. The Saints sitting with Christ what an advancement to them p. 582. Christ to be eyed in prayer as sitting at Gods right hand p. 584. Christ did not sit till he had finished his work Nor must we p. 586. Society we may have with such here whom we shall have no Society with in Heaven p. 309. Sorrow what it is p. 329. Sorrow distinguished into habitual actual natural supernatural p. 330. Souls how precious they are p. 440. Their sympathy with their bodies and their body with them p. 470. Spirit weighty considerations to keep Saints from grieving the Spirit p. 572. Stoop how low a stoop Christ made to recover us p. 224 225 226. Substance of Christs Mediatory Kingdom and the manner of administration distinguished p. 159 160. Substitution of Christ in our room as our Sacrifice necessary p. 159 160. The excellency and eternal efficacy of this Sacrifice opened p. 140 141 142 143 c. Success of Christs interest in the world unquestionable p. 366. Surety Christ is so and what his being so imports p. 85 86. Sufferings of Christ how great p. 466. They may affect natural hearts for three Reasons p. 330 331. Sufferings for Christ how glorious p. 526 527 58● Sympathy of Christ with all that were burdened with sin or sorrow p. 241 242. T. TEars what they are p. 329. A double fountain of tears opened p. 330. Temptations of Christ fierce various and tedious p. 240 241. The great relief in temptation p. 246. Suitable temptations greatly hazard our ruine p. 305 306. Thief on the Cross his wonderful conversion p. 442 443. his example incourages none to delay conversion p. 443. Thirst proper and figurative p. 464. Thirst a great affliction p. 464. Christs thirst attributed to a double cause p. 466. Thirst in Hell what it is p. 472. Saints shall never thirst in Heaven p. 473 474. Throne how the Saints are confessors with Christ upon his throne p. 628. Time the preciousness of it and whence it results p. 435 436. Title affixed to the Cross of Christ what it was opened in six properties of it p. 358. The providence of God in the draught of Christs title remarkable in five things p. 360 361. Tryal of Christ for his life how managed p. 313. The inhumanity thereof p. 313 314. No man knows his own spiritual strength till it be put to the tryal p. 380. 381. Trust The Father and Son mutually trust each other p. 33. All our concerns to be trusted in the hands of Christ. p. 219 220. Trust in man how vain and foolish p. 309. V. THE Vicegerency of Christs sufferings p. 168. Understanding what it is and how opened p. 112 113. The proper office of Christ p. 114. Four things implyed in opening the understanding p. 114 115 116. Opening the understanding effected instrumentally by the word and spirit p. 117. The Union personal is extraordinary p. 54 55. How conserved when Christ was in the grave p. 57. How needful it is that Christ have union with our persons as well as natures p. 61. Unprincipled professors will become Apostates p. 305. Unbelievers where death will land them p. 440. Upbraid how those that perish under the Gospel will be upbraided by Iews Pagans and Devils p. 231 232. Uses that God will make of the Saints example in the day of judgement p. 628. Four uses he makes of it in this world p. 624 625 626. W. WEak
sins of the Elect he bare the sins of many and by the manner of his bearing it viz. meekly and forgivingly he made intercession for the transgressors this was his work 2. The Reward or fruit which is promised him for this work therefore will I divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoil with the strong wherein is a plain allusion to Conquerours in War for whom are reserved the richest garments and most honourable captives to follow the Conquerour as an addition to his magnificence and triumph these were wont to come after them in chains Isa. 45.14 see Iudg. 5.3 3. The Respect or Relation betwixt that work and this Triumph some will have this work to have no other relation to that glory then a meer antecedent to a consequent others give it the respect and relation of a meritorious cause to a reward 't is well observed by Dr. Featly that the Hebrew particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render therefore noting order it is not worth so much contention about it whether it be the order of causality or meer antecedency neither do I foresee any absurdity in calling Christs exaltation the reward and fruit of his humiliation however 't is plain whether one or other 't is that the Father here agrees and promises to give him if he will undertake the redemption of the elect by pouring out his soul unto death of all which this is the plain result DOCT. That the business of mans salvation was transacted upon Covenant-terms betwixt the Father and the Son from all Eternity I would not here be mistaken as though I were now to treat of the Covenant of Grace made in Christ betwixt God and us it is not the Covenant of Grace but of Redemption I am now to speak to which differs from the Covenant of grace both in regard of the foederates in this 't is God the Father and Jesus Christ that mutually Covenant in that it 's God and man they differ also in the preceptive part in this it is required of Christ that he should shed his blood in that it is required of us that we believe they also differ in their promises in this God promises to Christ a name above every name ample Dominion from Sea to Sea in that to us grace and glory so that these are two distinct Covenants The substance of this Covenant of Redemption is Dialogue-wise exprest to us in Esa. 49. where as Divines have well observed Christ begins at the first and second verse and shews his Commission telling his Father how he had both called and prepared him for the work of Redemption the Lord hath called me from the womb he hath made my mouth like a sharp sword and made me a polished shaft c. q. d. by reason of that super-abundant measure of the spirit of wisdom and power wherewith I am anointed and filled my Doctrine shall as a sword pierce the hearts of sinners yea like an arrow drawn to the head strike point blank into souls standing at a great distance from God and Godliness Having told God how ready and fit he was for his service will know of him what reward he shall have for his work for he resolves his blood shall not be sold at low and cheap rates hereupon vers 3. the Father offers him the elect of Israel for his reward biding Low at first as they that make bargains use to do and only offers him that small remnant still intending to bid higher but Christ will not be satisfied with these he values his blood higher than so therefore in vers 4. he is brought in complaining I have laboured in vain and spent my strength for nought q. d. this is but a small reward for so great sufferings as I must undergo my blood is much more worth than this comes to and will be sufficient to redeem all the elect dispersed among the Isles of the Gentiles as well as the lost sheep of the house of Israel hereupon the Father comes up higher and tells him he intends to reward him better than so and therefore vers 6. tells him it 's a light thing that thou shouldst be my servant to raise up the Tribes of Jacob and to rest over the preserved of Israel I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou maist be my Salvation to the ends of the earth Thus is the Treaty carryed on betwixt them transacting it after the manner of men Now to open this great point we will here consider 1. The persons transacting one with another 2. The business transacted 3. The quality and manner of the transaction which is foederal 4. The articles to which they agree 5. How each person performs his engagement to the other And lastly the antiquity or eternity of this Covenant transaction First The persons transacting and dealing with each other in this Covenant and indeed they are great person● God the Father and God the Son the former as a Creditor the latter as a surety the Father stands upon satisfaction the Son engages to give it if it be demanded why the Father and the Spirit might not as well have treated about our redemption as the Father and Son It is answered Christ is the natural Son of God and therefore fittest to make us the adopted Sons of God Christ also is the middle person in the Trinity and therefore fittest to be the Mediator or middle person betwixt us and God the Spirit hath another office assigned him even to apply as Christ's Vicegerent the redemption designed by the Father and purchased by the Son for us The business transacted betwixt them And that was the redemption and recovery of all Gods elect our eternal happiness lay now before them our dearest and everlasting concerns were now in their hands the elect though not yet in being are here considered as existent yea and as fallen miserable forlorn creatures how these may again be restored to happiness salvâ justitia dei without prejudice to the honour justice and truth of God this this is the business that lay before them For the manner or quality of the transaction it was foederal or of the nature of a Covenant it was by mutual engagements and stipulations each person undertaking to perform his part in order to our recovery We find each person undertaking for himself by solemn promise The Father promiseth that he will hold his hand and keep him Isa. 42.6 The Son promiseth he will obey his Fathers call to suffering and not be rebellious Isa. 50.5 and having promised each holds the other to his engagement The Father stands upon the satisfaction promised him and when the payment was making he will not abate him one farthing Rom. 8.32 God spared not his own Son i. e. he abated nothing of the full price he was to have at his hands for us And as the Father stood strictly upon the terms of the Covenant so did Christ also