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A85428 Christ set forth in his [brace] death, resurrection, ascension, sitting at Gods right hand, intercession, [brace] as the [brace] cause of justification. Object of justifying faith. Upon Rom. 8. ver. 34. Together with a treatise discovering the affectionate tendernesse of Christs heart now in heaven, unto sinners on earth. / By Tho: Goodwin, B.D. Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1642 (1642) Wing G1232; Thomason E58_2; Thomason E58_3; ESTC R8966 205,646 392

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Christs blood cries us up into Heaven like to that voice Revel 11. 12. Come up hither So Iohn 17. 24. Where I am let them be for whom this blood was shed But though this speaking An explication in what sense Christs blood is said to cry this voice and intercession be attributed to his blood yet it is but in a Metaphoricall and improper though reall sense as also that this blood is in Heaven is spoken though in a reall yet not a proper sense Some Divines of all sides both Popish and Protestant would make the whole work of Intercession to be onely Metaphoricall It is true indeede the voice and intercession of his blood apart considered is but Metaphoricall I grant and yet reall such a voice as those groanes are that are attributed to the whole creation Rom. 8. 22. But Intercession as an act of Christ himselfe joyned with this voice of his blood is most properly and truly such Therefore in the second place 2. Consideration Christ himselfe living joyning with the cry of his bloud how prevalent it must needs be adde to this Christs own intercession also which was the second thing propounded That Christ by his own Prayers seconds this cry of his blood that not only the blood of Christ doth cry but that Christ himselfe being alive doth joyne with it how forcible and prevalent must all this be supposed to be The blood of a man slain doth cry though the man remain dead even as of Abel it is said though to another purpose that being dead he yet speaketh Heb. 11. but Christ liveth and appeareth Vivit in coelum coelorum venit He follows the suit pursues the Hue and cry of his blood himselfe His being alive puts a life into his death It is not in this as it was in that other the first Adams sinne and disobedience Adam although he himselfe had beene annihilated when he dyed yet he having set the stock of our nature a going in propagation of Children his sin would have defiled and condemned them to the end of the world and the force of it to condemne is neither furthered nor lessened by his subsisting being or his not being it receives no assistance from his personall life one way or other And the reason is because his sinne condemnes us in a na turall and necessary way But the death of Christ and his blood shed these saving us in a way of grace and favour unto Christ himselfe and for his sake that very being alive of Christ that shed this blood adds an infinite acceptation to it with God and moves him the more to hear the cry of it and to regard it In a matter of favour to be done for the sake of another man or in a suit or matter of justice that concerns another who is interested in it that mans being in vivis his being alive puts a life into the cause If David would have respect to Ionathan when dead in his children he would much more if himselfe had been alive God made a Covenant with Abraham Isaac and Iacob to remember their Seed after them And why They are alive and were to live for ever and though dead shall rise againe So Christ reasoneth from it Mat. 22. 32. I am the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob God is the God of the living sayes he and not of the dead and so though Abraham be ignorant of his children as the prophet speakes and should not intercede for them yet because Abrahams soul lives and is not extinct as the Sadduces thought but shall live again at the Resurrection therefore God remembers and respects his covenant with them for he is a God of the living and so his Covenant holds with them whilst they live The old covenant of the first Testament ran in the names of Abraham Isaac and Iacob The God of Abraham Isaac and Iacob but this new covenant runs in the name of Christ The God and Father of our Lord Iesus Christ so Eph. 1. 3. and so he becomes our God and our Father in him And God being thus our Father because Christs Father and Christ in whose name the Covenant runs being alive and God by Covenant the God of a living not of a dead Christ This therefore works effectually with him to respect his blood and hear the cry of it and this though Christ were absent much more then when he is present also and on purpose appeareth in the presence of God for us as it is Heb. 9. 24. He is alive and so able to follow his owne suit and will be sure to see to it and to second the cry of his blood if it should not be heard To illustrate this by the helpe of the former comparison begun If as Abels blood cries so also it proves that Abels soul lives to cry that both his cause cries and himselfe lives to follow it So that the cry of Abels blood is seconded with the cry of Abels soule that lives how doubly forcible must this needs be And thus indeede you have it Revel 6. 9. where it is said that the soules of them which were slain for the testimony which they held cryed with a loud voyce saying How long O Lord holy and true dost thou not avenge our blood Yea see that not onely their bloud cryes but their soules live and live to cry And it is not spoken Metaphorically of their soules but what is truly done by them now in Heaven it being mentioned to shew how and by what God was moved to bring vengeance on the Heathenish Empire of Rome that had shed their blood Now not only Christs soule as theirs lives to cry but his whole person for he is risen againe and lives to intercede for ever In the Revel 1. ver 18. Christ appearing to Iohn when he would speake but one speech that should move all in him he sayes but this I am he that liveth and was dead and dyed for thee And whose heart doth it not move to reade it with faith and doth it not move his Father think you who was the chiefe cause and motioner of his death to think My Sonne that was dead and dyed at my request for sinners is now alive again and liveth to intercede and liveth to see the travaile of his soule fulfilled and satisfied God pronounceth this upon it in that 53. of Esay ver 10. By his knowledge or faith in him shall he justify many even as many as he dyed for Who then shall condemne Christ that was dead is alive and liveth to intercede CHAP. VIII Thirdly The prevalencie of Christs intercession and of his grace with his Father demonstrated from the greatnesse and absolutenesse of his power to doe what ever he asks A Third demonstration both of Christs greatnes with God 3. From the great power over all things that God the Father hath put into his hands and therefore will deny him nothing his power to prevail for us is
you know and ver 12. All are said to have sinned namely in his sinne Yea and according to those words in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which are added there you may render that sentence and the Originall bears it and it is also varied in the Margent thus In whom all have sinned namely in Adam as in a publique person Their act was included in his because their persons were included in his And 2. 2. Adam a Common person in what beell him for what he did as in death and his condemnation threatned for what befell him for sin that befell them also by the same Law of his being a person representing them Hence ver 12. Death is said to passe upon all men namely for this that Adams sin was considered as theirs as it there follows It is said to passe even as a sentence of death passeth upon a condemned Malefactor And ver 18. Iudgment is said to come by that one mans offence upon all men to condemnation Now in Gen. 2. 17. the threatning was spoken only to Adam as but one man In the day that thou eatest therof thou shalt surely die And Gen. 3. 19. that sentence seems onely to passe upon him alone Vnto dust thou shalt return Yet in threatning Adam God threatned us all and in sentencing Adam to death he sentenced us also The curse reacheth us too Death passed upon all men then and therefore by a just Law Death raigns over all as ver 14. and 17. because Adam was in all this Rom. 5. a Common person representing us and so in our stead and so all this concerns us as truely and as neerly as it did him I say by a just Law for indeed the Scripture upon the equity of this Rule pronounceth a Statute out against all men that they should die Heb. 9. 27. Statutum st It is appointed by a Statute Law that all should die Now if you search for this Statute when and where enacted you will find that the Originall Record and Roll is that in Gen. 3. 9. spoken onely of Adam but holding true of us To dust thou shalt returne Just thus the matter stands in the point of our §. 2. justification and salvation Answerably Christ ordained a Common person both in what he did or was done to him betweene Christ and Elect Beleevers for Adam was herein his Type Christ was considered and appointed of God as a Common person both in what he did and in what was done to him So as by the same Law what he did for us is reckoned or imputed to us as if we our selves had done it and what was done to him tending to our justification and salvation is reckoned as done to us Thus when Christ dyed he dyed as a Common person and God reckoneth that we dyed also When Christ arose he rose as our Head and as a Common person and so then God accounts that we rose also with him And by vertue of that communion which we had with him in all those actions of his it is that now when we are born againe we do all rise both from the guilt of sin and from the power of it even as by vertue of the like communion we had with or being one in Adam we come to be made sinfull when we begin first to exist as men and to be first borne Thus in his death he was considered as a Common person Exemplified by one instance in his dying and God reckoned us dying then and would have us reckon so also So Rom. 6. 10. the Apostle speaking of Christ saith In that he dyed he dyed unto sinne once but in that he liveth he liveth unto God Then ver 11. speaking of us he sayes Likewise reckon you your selves to be dead unto sinne but alive unto God through Iesus Christ our Lord. The meaning whereof is plainly this that whereas regenerate men are for the present in the reality but imperfectly mortified and dead to sinne as considered in themselves and in respect of the work of it as wrought in them yet that being considered in Christ as their Head and a Common person representing them they may 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they may truly by a way of faith reason or reckon themselves wholly dead in and through Jesus Christ our Lord in that he once dyed perfectly unto sin as a Common person representing them So as what yet is wanting in the work of Mortification in their sense and experience of it they may supply by faith from the consideration of Christ their Head even themselves to have dyed when he dyed The Apostle I say would have them by reason conclude or inferre for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies as Chap. 3. 28. therefore we conclude c. it is the same word from Christs death that they are dead which Conclusion cannot be made unlesse this be one of the Propositions in this Argument That we dyed in Christ when hee dyed and so though in our selves we are not yet wholly dead to sin nor perfectly alive to God yet through Iesus Christ your Lord and Head sayes he reckon your selves so in that as ver 10. he dyed and now lives and you were included in him And indeed this Consideration the Apostle suggests unto our faith both as the greatest encouragement against imperfect mortification begun that yet we may comfort our selves by faith as reckoning our selves wholly dead in Christs death and so may assure our selves we shall one day be perfectly dead in our selves by vertue of it and withall as the strongest argument also motive unto Mortification to endeavour to attain to the highest degree of it which therefore he carryes along in his Discourse throughout that whole Chapter He would have them by faith or spirituall reasoning take in and apprehend themselves long since dead to sin in Christ when he dyed and so should think it the greatest absurdity in the world to sin even the least sinne we being dead long since and that wholly when Christ our Head dyed And how shall we that are dead to sinne live any longer therein And ver 7. He that is dead is free from sinne and how then shall we doe the least service to it Now all this he puts upon Christs dying and our dying then with him ver 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him even when he was crucified that it might be destroyed one day in us fully and perfectly Christs Body representing therein as a publique person the Elect and their body of sin conjunct with them So as thus by faith they are to reason themselves wholly dead to sin in Christ and to use it as a reason and motive to stir up themselves not to yeeld to the least sin I use this expression of being wholly dead because if he had spoken meerly of that imperfect mortification begun in us the argument would not have been a perfect motive against the least sinnes
We who are dead how shall we live in sinne or yeeld unto the least sinne For it might be said Alas we are but imperfectly dead and from an imperfect death could but an imperfect argument have been drawn But the Scripture elsewhere tels us that Christ by his death hath perfected for ever all that are sanctified so Heb. 10. So as in his death they may reckon themselves perfectly dead by faith and perfectly sanctified though yet the work be not actually and fully perfected And all this communion with Christ as a Common person representing them in his death he there instructs them to be represented and sealed up to them by their Baptisme so ver 3 4. How I shall shew afterwards Now as this place holds forth Christ as a Common person in his Death representing us §. 2. so other places hold forth the like of his Resurrection More particularly how Christ was a Common person in his Resurrection and therein representing us In the 1 Cor. 15. 20. the Apostle argues that Elect Beleevers must and shall rise because Now Christ is risen from the dead and is become the first-fruits of them that sleep See the force of this Argument founded upon this notion and consideration that Christ was a Common person representing all the rest and this strongly presented in that expression of his being the first-fruits in allusion to the Rite in the Leviticall Law All the sheaves in a field being unholy of themselves there was some one sheafe in the name and room of all the rest which was called the first-fruit which was lift up and waved before the Lord and so all the sheaves abroad in the field by that act done to this one sheafe were consecrated unto God Levi. 23. 10. c. by vertue of that law The meaning of which Rite the Apostle expounding alledgeth Rom. 11. 16. If the first-fruits be holy all the lump is holy also Thus when we were all dead Christ as the First-fruits riseth and this in our name and stead and so we all rise with him and in him And although the Saints departed are not it their owne persons as yet risen as wee all who are now alive are not in our own persons yet dead yet in the meane time because thus they are risen in Christ as their First-fruits hence in the very words following hee faith they are but asleep He is become the first-fruits of them that sleep because they remaine alive in Christ their Head and shall rise one day because in him they virtually are already risen and this in Gods account in as true and just a sense as we though personally alive are yet all reckoned dead in Adam because in as a Common person had the sentence of death pronounced on him by vertue of which we must dye and this by the force of the same Law even of that which wee have inclucated of being a Common person representing us And indeed so it followes which argues this to be the Apostles meaning ver 21. For as in Adam all die even so in Christ shall all be made alive His argument lies thus Adam was the first-fruits of them that dyed Christ of them that rise Hence therefore we are elsewhere said though in respect to another life to be rise with Christ Ephes 2. 5 6. which is yet more to sit together with him in heaven because he as a Common person representing us sits there in our name and stead as you shall heare when I come to in the Text in the next Section CHAP. V. The second branch How Christs representing us as a Common Person in his Resurrection hath an Influence into our Justification made forth by two things 1. How Christ at his Resurrection was justified from our sin 2. That we were all then justified in him as a Common person NOw then to come to the other branch of the Demonstration namely how this relation to us as a Common Person representing us in his Resurrection hath a reall influence into our Justification And this is the point I drive at and for the clearing of which that large and general discourse by way of digression in the former Chapter was but to make way for I shall absolve and dispatch this Branch by shewing two things 1. That Christ himselfe was justified and that at his Resurrection 2. That he was justified then as a Common person representing us therein as well as that he rose as a Common person and so that we were then justified in him and with him and by this meanes it is that by that Act then done to him our Justification is made irrepealable for ever For the explicating of the first §. 1. As Christ was in his death made sinne for us 1. That Christ himselfe was justified at his Resurrection and so sustained our persons in his satisfying for sin by his death which is the matter of our righteousnesse so in and upon his Resurrection he was justified and acquited from our sins by God Made forth by three things laid together as having now fully in his Death satisfied for them which I make forthby these three things put together First in reason 1. There must have been some Act passe from God when Christ was acquited and justified from our sins by God if that Christ were made sinne for us and satisfied for it there must then some Act passe whereby Christ should be pronounced acquit of our sinnes and fully cleare of them and so be himselfe formally justified in respect of those sins for which he undertook to satisfie For according to the course of all Proceedings if a charge of guilt be formally laid there must be as formall an Act of acquiting and of giving a Quietus est There is no man but for his owne discharge and security would desire it Nor is there any wise man that payes a debt for which he is legally sued that wil not have upon the payment of it as legall an Acquitance Paul when he was cast into prison by a publique Act of Authority he stood upon it to have a publique Act of Release from the same Magistrates and would not goe forth of prison privily though themselves sent to him so to goe out Acts 36. 37. Now God himselfe did lay the iniquities of us all upon Christ Esay 53. 6. and had him to prison and to Iudgement for them ver 8. There must therefore some Act passe from God legally to take them off from him and declaring him discharged to deliver him from Prison and Judgement And De facto it is evident That there was such an Act passed that there was some such Act passed from God for as we read that Christ vvhile he lived and also in his Death was made sin and did beare the sin of many as the phrase is Heb. 9. 28. So we read in the very next words that he shall appeare the second time without sinne which must needs be spoken in a
all I know thy workes thy labour and thy patience c. Rev. 22. He therewithall hath an act of memory and recalls how himself was once affected and how distressed whilst on earth under the same or the like miseries For the memory of things here below remaines still with him as with all spirits in either of those two other worlds heaven or hell Son remember thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things and Lazarus evill c. sayes Abraham to the soule of Dives in hell Luke 16. 25. Remember me when thou commest into thy Kingdome said the good theefe to Christ And Revel 1. I am hee sayes Christ that was dead and am alive Hee remembers his death still and the sufferings of it and as he remembers it to put his Father in mind thereof so he remembers it also to affect his owne heart with what we feele And his memory presenting the impression of the like now afresh unto him how it was once with him hence he comes feelingly and experimentally to know how it is now with us and so affects himselfe therewith as Dido in Virgil Haud ignara mali miseris succurrere disco Having experience of the like miseries though a Queene now I know how to succour those that are therein As God said to the Israelites when they should be possessed of Canaan their own land Exo. 23. 9. Ye know the hearts of strangers seeing ye were strangers c. and therefore doth command them to pitty strangers and to use them well upon that motive So may it be said of CHRIST that he doth know the hearts of his children in misery seeing himselfe was once under the like Or as the Apostle exhorts the Hebrews Heb. 13. 3. Remember them that are in bonds as bound with them and them that suffer adversity as being your selves in the body and so ere you die may come to suffer the like So Christ the Head of the body which is the fountaine of all sense and feeling in the body doth remember them that are bound and in adversity having himselfe beene once in the body and so he experimentally compassionates them And this is a further thing then the former We have gained this further That Christ hath not onely such affections as are reall and proper to an humane nature but such affections as are stirred up in him from experience of the like by himselfe once tasted in a fraile nature like unto ours And thus much for the way of letting in all our miseries into Christs heart now so as to strike and affect it with them §. II. A more particular disquisition What manner of affection this is The Seat thereof whether in his spirit or soule onely or the whole humane nature Some Cautions added BUt concerning this Affection it selfe of pity and compassion fellow-feeling and sympathie or suffering with as the Text calls it which is the product result or thing produced in his heart by these there still remaines another thing more particularly to be inquired into namely What manner of affection this is For that such an affection is stirred up in him besides and beyond a bare act of knowledge or remembrance how once it was with himselfe is evident by what we find in the Text. The Apostle sayes not onely that he remembers how himselfe was tempted with the like infirmities that we are though that be necessarily supposed but that he is struck and toucht with the feeling of our infirmities to the producing of which this act of remembrance doth but subserve And he tels us Christ is able and his heart is capable of thus being toucht And the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a deep word signifying to suffer with us untill we are relieved And this affection thus stirred up is it which moveth him so cordially to helpe us Now concerning this affection as here thus expressed how far it extends and how deep it may reach I think no man in this life can fathome If Cor Regis the heart of a King be inscrutable as Solomon speaks the heart of the King of Kings now in glory is much more I will not take upon me to intrude into things which I have not seen but shall endeavour to speak safely and therefore warily so far as the light of Scripture and right reason shall warrant my way I shall set it forth three wayes 1. Negatively 2. Positively 3. Privatively 1. Negatively It is certaine that this affection of sympathie or fellow-feeling in Christ is not in all things such a kind of affection as was in him in the dayes of his flesh Which is cleare by what the Apostle speaks of him and of his affections then Heb. 5. 7. Who in the dayes of his flesh when he had offered up prayers and supplications with strong cryings and teares was heard in that which he feared Where we see his converse and state of life here below to be called by way of difference and distinction from what it is now in heaven The dayes of his flesh By flesh meaning not the substance of the humane nature for he retaines that still but the fraile quality of subjection to mortality or passibility So Flesh is usually taken as when all flesh is said to be grasse It is spoken of mans nature in respect to its being subject to a fading wearing and decay by outward casualties or inward passions So in this Epistle Chap. 2. 14. For as much as the children we his brethren did partake of flesh and bloud that is the frailties of mans nature he himselfe also took part of the same And accordingly the Apostle instanceth in the following words of that 14. verse as in death which in the dayes of his flesh Christ was subject to so also in such fraile passions and affections as did work a suffering in him and a wearing and wasting of his spirits such as passionate sorrow joyned with strong cryes and teares both which he mentioneth and also feare in those words He was heard in that which he feared Now these dayes of his flesh being over and past for this was onely as sayes the Apostle in the dayes of his flesh hence therefore all such concomitant passionate overflowings of sorrow feare c. are ceased therewith and he is now no way capable of them or subjected to them Yet 2. Positively why may it not be affirmed that for substance the same kinde of affection of pittie and compassion that wrought in his whole man both body and soule when he was here workes still in him now he is in heaven If this Position be allayed with those due cautions and considerations which presently I shall annexe For if for substance the same flesh and blood and animall spirits remaine and have their use for though Christ in Luke 24. 29. mentioned only his having flesh and bones after his resurrection unto Thomas and the other Disciples because these two alone were to be the object of his Touch and Feeling yet Blood
stories use to stir up a principle of humanity in men unto a compassionate love which Christ himselfe at his suffering found fault with as being not spirituall nor raised enough in those women who went weeping to see the Messiah so handled Weep not for me sayes he that is weep not so much for this thus to see me unworthily handled by those for whom I dye And therefore accordingly as these stirrings are but fruits of the flesh so humane inventions as Crucifixes and lively representations of the story of Christs Passion unto the sight of fancy doe exceedingly provoke men to such devotionall meditations and affections but they work a bare historicall faith only a historicall remembrance and an historicall love as I may so call them And no other then such doth the reading of the story of it in the Word work in many who yet are against such Crucifixes But saving justifying faith chiefly minds and is most taken up with the maine scope and drift of all Christs sufferings for it is that in them which answers to its owne aime and purpose which is to obtaine forgivenesse of sins in Christ crucified As God looks principally at the meaning of the Spirit in prayer Rom. 8. so doth faith look principally to the meaning of Christ in his sufferings As in all other Truths a Beleever is said to have the mind of Christ 1 Cor. 2. ult so especially he minds what was the mind and heart of Christ in all his sufferings And therefore you may observe that the drift of all the Apostles Epistles is to shew the intent of Christs sufferings how he was therein set forth to be a prepitiation for sinne to beare our sinnes upon the tree to make our peace c. He was made sinne that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him As in like manner the scope of the Euangelists is to set forth the story of them for that is necessary to be known also And thus did that Euangelicall Prophet Isaiah chiefly set forth the intent of Christs sufferings for justification Esay 53. throughout the Chap. as David before had done the story of his Passion Psal 22. And thus to shew the use and purpose of his sufferings was the scope of all the Apostles Sermons holding forth the intent of Christs passion to be the justification and salvation of sinners This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ came into the world to save sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. and they still set forth what the plot was at which God by an ancient designment aimed at in the sufferings of Christ which was an end higher then men or Angels thought on when hee was put to death And thus faith takes it up and looks at it And upon this doth Peter in his Sermon Acts 2. pitch their faith where having first set forth the hainousnesse of their sin in murdering the Lord of life then to raise up their hearts againe that so seeing Gods end in it they might be drawne to beleeve he tellls them that All this was done by the determinate counsell of God ver 23. and that for a farther end then they imagined even for the remission of sins through his Name as in the closure of that Sermon he shews It was not the malice of the Jews the falsenesse of Iudas the fearfulnesse of Pilate or the iniquity of the times he fell into that wrought his death so much as God his Father complotting with Christ himselfe and aiming at a higher end then they did there was a farther matter in it it was the execution of an ancient contrivement and agreement whereby God made Christ Sinne and laid our sins upon him God was in Christ not imputing our sinnes to us but making him sinne 2 Cor. 5. 20. Which Covenant Christ came at his time into the world to fulfill Sacrifice and burnt offering thou wouldst not have Heb. 10. 5. Loe I come to doe thy will and that will was to take away sinnes ver 4 10 12 14 15 16. These words Christ spake when he took our nature and when he came into the world clothed with infirmities like unto us sinners Rom. 8. 3. God sent his Son in the likenes of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh Mark that phrase for sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is there put for propter as Iohn 10. 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not for a good work That is not because of a good work or for a good works sake So here For sinne that is because of sin sin was the occasion of his taking the likenesse of sinfull flesh what to encrease it no but to condemne it as it follows that is to cast and overthrow it in its power and plea against us that instead of sins condemning us he might condemne sin and that we might have the righteousnesse of the Law ver 5. This phrase for sinne is like unto that in Rom. 6. 10. He dyed unto sinne that is for sins cause for so the opposition that follows evinceth In that he liveth he liveth unto God that is for God and his glory So he dyed meerly for sin that sin might have its course in Justice and for its sake suffered death so putting to silence the clamour of it The death of Christ was the greatest and strangest design that ever God undertook and acted and therefore surely had an end proportionable unto it God that willeth not the death of a sinner would not for any inferiour end will the death of his Sonne whom he loved more then all creatures besides It must needs be some great matter for which God should contrive the death of his Sonne so holy so innocent and separate from sinners neither could it be any other matter then to destroy that which he most hated and that was Sin and to set forth that which he most delighted in and that was Mercy So Rom. 3. 25 26. And accordingly Christ demeaned himselfe in it not at all looking at the Jews or their malice but at his Fathers command and intent in it And therefore when he was to arise to goe unto that place where he should be taken As the Father gave me commandement sayes he so doe I Arise let us goe hence Iohn 14. 31. And when Iudas went out at Christs owne provocation of him What thou doest doe quickly sayes he the Sonne of man goeth as it was determined he lookt to his Fathers purpose in it When he went out to be taken it is said Iohn 18. 4. Iesus knowing all things that should befall him went forth And when he was in his Agony in the Garden whom doth he deale with but his Father Father sayes he if it be possible let this cup passe and God made his Passion of so great necessity that it was even impossible that that cup should passe Indeed had Christ stood in his owne stead it had been an easie request and justice to grant it yea so he tells
lewdnesse in thy wickednesse as the Prophet speaks Consider what guilt of how hainous crimes God suffered to be laid to Christs charge by profane men when he was made an offering for sinne He dyed as a Traitor to his Prince and a blasphemer of God in the highest kind of blasphemy as making himself equall with God an Impostor a Seducer yea a Devill yea a Prince of Devils then whom a murderer was esteemed more worthy to live Which imputations though by men unjustly charged on him yet by God were so ordered as just in respect of his bearing our sins For him who was holines it self to be made the greatest of sinners yea to be made sin and the worst of sins and accordingly to suffer frō God men what greater satisfaction for the taking of sins away can be desired or imagined Or secondly 2. Against the badnesse of the heart in sinning dost thou aggravate thy sins by the naughtinesse of thy heart in sinning and sayst that the inward carriage thereof hath been much worse then the outward Look thou into the heart of Jesus Christ dying and behold him struggling with his Fathers wrath thou wilt find the sufferings of his soule more then those of his body and in them to lie the soul of his sufferings Thirdly 3. Against the delight and greedinesse in sinning may thy sin be aggravated in that thou didst commit it with so great delight and greedinesse and pouredst out thy heart unto it Consider that Christ offered himselfe more willingly then ever thou didst sin Loe I come sayes he Psal 40. I delight to do thy will and how am I straintned till it be accomplisht Luk. 12. 56. And though to shew how great an evill and misery it was in it selfe he shewed an aversenesse to it yet as it was his Fathers will for our salvation hee heartily embraced and drank off that cup unto the bottome Fourthly 4. Against deliberatenesse in sinning didst thou sin with much deliberation when thou mightst have avoided it There was this circumstance in Christs sufferings to answer that that he knew all he was to suffer and yet yeelded up himselfe as Iohn 18. 4. Fiftly 5. Against presumption in sinning Hast thou sinned presumptuously and made a covenant with death and hell Christ in like manner offered up himselfe by a covenant and complot with his Father so to doe Sixtly 6. Against aggravating circumstances of person time place c. Are there any especiall circumstances of time and place c. that aggravate thy sins As first that so great a person in the Church should scandalize the Name of God in sinning Why how great a Person was Christ even equall with God the Father and yet how greatly humbled even to the death his offices of King Priest and Prophet being debased with him how great a name had he as Heb. 1. 4. which notwithstanding was dishonoured more then ever any mans Or 2. that thou sinnedst at such a time or in such a company which sometimes serve to make a sin the more hainous Consider how God contrived to have the shame and affliction of his Sons death aggravated by all these circumstances It was of deaths the most accursed At a time most solemne In a place most infamous With company most wretched Thus might we find out that in Christs sufferings and satisfaction made that would fitly answer to any thing in our sins and so thereby we should be the more relieved And though the whole body of his sufferings doe stand and answer for the whole bulk of our sinnings yet the consideration of such particulars will much conduce to the satisfying of an humbled and dejected soule about the particulars of its sinnings Therefore to conclude get your hearts and consciences distinctly and particularly satisfied in the all-sufficiencie of worth and merit which is in the satisfaction that Christ hath made As it is a fault and defect in humiliation that men content themselves with a generall apprehension and notion that they are sinners and so never become throughly humbled so is it a defect in their faith that they content themselves with a superficiall and generall conceit that Christ dyed for sinners their hearts not being particularly satisfied about the transcendent all-sufficiencie of his death And thence it is that in time of tentation when their abounding sinfulnesse comes distinctly to be discovered to them and charged upon them they are then amazed and their faith non-plust as not seeing that in Christ which might answer to all that sinfulnesse But as God saw that in Christs death which satisfied him so you should endeavour by faith to see that worth in it which may satisfie God and then your faith will sit down as satisfied also If a man were to dispute for his life some hard and difficult controversie wherein are many great and strong objections to be taken away he would be sure to view and study and ponder all that might be said on that other part which he were to hold in way of answer to them and to get such a clear and convincing light as might make the truth of his Position apparent and manifest through those clouds of objections that hang in the way Now you will all be thus called one day to dispute for your soules sooner or later and therefore such skill you should endeavour to get in Christs righteousnesse how in its fulnesse and perfection it answereth to all your sinfulnesse that your hearts may be able to oppose it against all that may be said of any particular in or about your sins that in all the conflicts of your spirits you may see that in it which could cleare your whole score and that if God would but be pleased to impute it to you you might say I durst presently come to an account with him and cut scores with his Law and Justice Thus much of the first thing made the object of faith namely Christ as dying SECT III. FAITH supported by Christs RESURRECTION ROM 8. 34. Yea rather that is risen againe CHAP. I. Christs Resurrection supporteth faith two wayes 1. By being an evidence of 2. By having an influence into our Iustification The necessity of Christs Resurrection for the procuring our Iustification THe next thing to be lookt at in Christ as he is the object of justifying faith and from whence our faith may seek and fetch support and comfort in the matter of Justification is Christs Resurrection upon which we see here the Apostle putteth a rather Yea rather that is risen againe Some speciall thing in Christs Resurrection for our Justification There must therefore be some speciall thing in the Resurrection of Christ which it contributes to our faith and justification for which it should have a rather put upon it and that comparatively to his death Now to shew wherein this should lie consider how the Resurrection of Christ serveth to a double use and end in the matter of
direct opposition to his having born our sins and appearing then with all our sins laid to his charge He appeared charged with them then but now he shall appeare as apparently and as manifestly to be without those sins for of our sins it must needs be meant and so to be discharged of them as fully as ever he appeared charged with them For it is said He shall appeare without sin and therefore to the judgements of all it shall be made manifest that that God that once charged him with them hath now fully discharged him of them The Apostle speaks of it as of a great alteration made in this respect betweene Christ as he was whilst on earth and Christ as he is to appeare the second time and is now in heaven And this alteration or discharge must necessarily be made by God for he is the Creditour vvho followed the Suit and therefore he alone can give the Acquitance Now secondly 2. There must be some season of time when this discharge from our sins was first made unto Christ from hence it will follow that there must be some time when this alteration was first made and discharge given when Christ from being sin as he was made should become without sinne through Gods acquiting of him and this say I was at his Resurrection It is not deferred as then to be first done when he is to appeare the second time though then it appeares indeed but it is really done before for hee comes then to judge others for sinne Now in reason when should this Acquitance or Justification from our sins be first given to Christ and legally pronounced on him but when he had paid the last farthing of the debt and made his satisfaction compleat which was then done when he began to rise for his lying in the grave was a part of his Humiliation and so of his Satisfaction as generally Orthodoxe Divines hold Now therefore when he began to rise then ended his Humiliation and that was the first moment of his Exaltation His Acquitance therefore bears Date from thence even from that very houre Hence thirdly 3. That this must needs be and was first made to him at his Resurrection we read as that Christ was condemned so that he was justified Thus 1 Tim. 3. 16. God is said to be manifest in the flesh and then that this God-man was justified in the spirit That is whereas God was manifest or appeared in flesh to condemne sinne in the flesh as Rom. 8. that same God-man was also justified in the spirit from all those sins and so received up to glory as it follows there And not to goe far the very words of this my Text It is God that justifies are taken out of Esay 50. 8 9. and as there they are first spoken by Christ of himselfe then when he gave his back to the smiters in his death as in the verses before and vvas put to death as a condemned man he comforts himselfe vvith this He is neere that justifies me who shall condemne And when was that done or to be done but at his Resurrection So the phrase in Timothy imports if you compare it with another in Peter 1 Pet. 3. 18. Being put to death in the flesh and quickned in or by the spirit Paul he sayes Iustified in the spirit Peter he sayes Quickned in the spirit both meane one and the same thing By Spirit is meant the power of his God-head and Divine nature whereby he was at once both raised from the grave and from under the guilt of sin together He was at once both quickned or raised and justified also And that by Spirit they mean his Divine nature the opposition in both places evidently implyes for it is opposed to his Flesh or humane nature Now because he was quickned or raised by the power of the God-head and at that raising him he was justifyed also by God and declared justifyed by that Resurrection as he had been declared condemned by his death Hence to be justified is put for his Resurrection for that was his justification or declaration to all the world that he was justified from all the sins laid to his charge And that other place I cited out of Isaiah hath the same meaning also for Christ there comforts himselfe against the Jews condemning him and putting him to death with the hopes of Gods justifying of him when he should have gone through that work And Christs meaning there is this God will raise me up and acquit me though you condemne and kill me In the other Prophets you shall find Christ still comforting himself against his condemnation at his death with the thoughts of his Resurrection which he fore-saw as shortly to follow after it as here in Esay he comforts himselfe with these hopes of his being justified after their condemnation of him For instance Psa 16. 9. My flesh shall rest in hope thou wilt not leave my soule in hell nor suffer thy holy One to see corruption Which words you know Peter in the Acts doth twice interpret of Christs Resurrection In like manner here in Esay against his death and condemnation he comforts himself with the hopes of Gods justification of him at his Resurrection He is neere who justifies me and he shall help me who shall condemne And further His Resurrection therefore called his first begetting to confirm strengthen this notion because his Resurrection was the first moment of this his justification from our sins therefore it is that God cals it his first begetting of Christ This day have I begotten thee speaking manifestly of his Resurrection Acts 13. 35. And the reason of his so calling it is because all the while before he was covered with sin and the likenesse of sinfull flesh But now having flung it off he appears like Gods Son indeed as if newly begotten And thus also there commeth to be the fuller conformity betweene Christ justification ours For as our justification is at our first being born again And therein a conformity between our Regeneration and his Resurrection so was Christ also at this his first glorious begetting He was under an Attainder before here was the Act of Restitution first passed And as at our Conversion which is to us a Resurrection wee passe from death to life that is from an estate of death and condemnation unto justification of life so did Christ also at his Resurrection which to him was are begetting passe from an estate of death and guilt laid on him to an estate of Life Glory and justification from guilt and so shall appear as the word is Heb. 9. ult as he doth now in heaven without sin for he became to be without sin frō that very moment Thus I have shewn how Christ was justified at his Resurrection Now then in the 2. §. 2. place 2. That Beleevers were all justified in Christ his justification as a Common person representing them I am to
the present but imperfectly mortified in our selves yet when corruptions arise the Apostle bids us help our selves against them by faith reasoning our selves to stand wholly dead to sin when Christ dyed and so to conclude from thence that we shall one day be fully dead to sin because we then did perfectly dye in Christ unto it which kinde of reasoning also God would have us use as a motive and of all motives that are in the Gospell it is the strongest against any corruption when as it ariseth Shall I that am dead to sin in Christ and so am freed from it shall I live any longer therein Ver. 2. Now as God would have our faith make this use of our Communion with Christ in his death in point of sanctification just so when guilt of sin ariseth in thy conscience to accuse or threaten condemnation reason thou thy selfe as the Apostles word is in that other case or reckon thy selfe as our translation hath it justified in Christ in his Justification which was done at his Resurrection Yea and seeing God would have thee use thy Communion with Christ in his Death as an argument to move thee to mortifie sin bidding thee to reckon thy self dead to sin in Christ doe thou desire him in like manner to reckon thee as justified at Christs Resurrection for the ground of both is the same and return that as an argument to him to move him to justifie thee And this is that answer of a good conscience which Peter speaks of this is the meaning of Pauls challenge Who shall condemne Christ is risen And should thy heart object and say But I know not whether I was one of those that God reckoned justified with Christ when he arose Then go thou to God and aske him boldly whether he did not doe this for thee and whether thou wert not one of them intended by him put God to it and God will by vertue of Christs Resurrection for thee even himselfe Answer thy faith this question ere thou art aware He will not deny it And to secure thee the more know that however Christ will bee sure to look to that for thee so as that thou having been then intended as if thy heart be drawne to give it self up to Christ thou wert shalt never be condmned SECT IV. FAITH supported by Christs ASCENSION AND Sitting at Gods right hand ROM 8. 34. Who is he that condemneth It is Christ who is even at the right hand of God CHAP. I. A Connexion of this third Head with the two former Shewing how it affords a farther degree of Triumph Two things involved in it 1. Christs Ascension 2. Christs power and authority in heaven I Come next to this third great Pillar and support of Faith Christs Being at Gods right hand and to shew how the view and consideration hereof may strengthen faith seeking justification and pardon of sinne Who is he that condemneth Christ is even at Gods right hand In the opening of which I shall keep to the begun method both by shewing how Iustification it selfe depends upon this and the evidence thereof to us both which the Apostle had here in his eye and from both which our faith may derive comfort and assurance And I meane to keep punctually to the matter of Iustification onely as in the former These two latter that remain here in the Text Christs sitting at Gods right hand and his interceding for us are brought in here by the Apostle as those which have a redundant force and prevalencie in them for the non-condemnation of the Elect that although the two former abundantly served to secure it yet these two added to the former do make the triumph of faith more compleat and full and us more then Conquerours as it after follows Nor doth this place alone make mention of Christs sitting at Gods right hand which I now am first to handle in this its relation and influence into our Iustification the assurance of faith about it but you have it to the same end use and purpose alleadged by that other great Apostle 1. Pet. 3. from the 18. to the 22. And if the scopes of these two Apostles in both places be compared they are the same Here the Resurrection of Christ and his sitting at Gods right hand are brought in as the ground of this bold challenge triumph of faith and there is Peter is mentioned the Answer or Plea of a good conscience in a beleever justified which it puts into the Court and opposeth against all condemning guilts so it is called ver 21. The Apostle alleadging the Resurrection of Iesus Christ as one ground of it the answer of a good conscience by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ And then further to back and strengthen this Plea or Answer of a good conscience the Apostle puts his Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand into the Bill as further grounds confirming it so it follows who is gone into Heaven and is at the right hand of God Angells and Authorities and Powers being made subject to him All which the Apostle here expresseth in one word as enough to carrie it that Christ is even at Gods right hand The soule hath a sufficient answer against condemnation in Christs death and Resurrection full enough though it should stop there yea therein can faith triumph though it went no further for it can shew a full satisfaction given in his death and that accepted by God for us and Christ acquited and we in him Therefore faith you see comes to a rather there But then let it go on to consider Jesus sitting at Gods right hand and making intercession for us and then faith will triumph and insult over all accusers be more then a Conqueror then it comes not to a rather onely as here but to a much more shall we be saved by his life thus Rom. 5. 10. And the meaning thereof is that if his death had power to pay all our debts and justifie us at first then much more hath his life this power So that his death is but the ground and foundation of our faith herein and the lowest step of this ladder but these other are the top full triumph of faith therein And our spirits should rise as the Apostle herein riseth Faith upon these wings may not onely fly above the Gun-shot of all accusations and condemners but even cleane out of their sight and so far above all such thoughts fears as it may reach to a security that sins are forgotten and shall be remembred no more What joy was there in the Disciples when they saw Christ risen Ioh. 20. Therefore in the Primitive times it was used as a voice of joy and to this day the Grecian Christians s entertain each other at that time of the year with these words The Lord is risen your Surety is out of Prison fear not But as Christ said in another case so say I what will you say if you see your Surety ascended
besides all this there is a personall or an actuall Iustification to be bestowed upon us that is an accounting and bestowing it upon us in our own persons which is done whē we beleeve and it is called Rom. 5. 1. a being justifyed by faith and ver 10. receiving the atonement now this depends upon Christs Intercession and it was typified out by Moses his sprinkling the people with blood mentioned Heb. 9. 19. which thing Jesus Christ as a Mediator and Priest doth now from Heaven For Heb. 12. 24. it is said You are come to Heaven and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and as it is next subjoyned to the blood of sprinkling he shed his blood on the Crosse on earth but he sprinkleth it now as a Priest from Heaven For it is upon Mount Sion to which he had said first in the former verse ye are come and so to Christ as a Mediator standing on that mount and sprinkling from thence his blood and so therein there is an allusion unto Moses Christs Type who sprinkled the people with the blood of that ceremoniall covenant the type of the covenant of grace Now in the 1 Pet. 1. 2. The sprinkling of Christ his blood as it is there made the more proper work of Christ himselfe in distinction from the other persons and therefore was done by Moses who was his type so is it also put for our first justification And this sprinkling as it is there mentioned is from the vertue of his intercession And therefore in that place of the Heb. forecited he attributes an intercession unto it as the phrase that follows which speaks better things c. doth imply of which more hereafter Yet concerning this first Head let me adde this by way of caution which I shall presently have occasion to observe that though this our first justification is to be ascribed to his Intercession yet more eminently Intercession is ordained for the accōplishing our salvation this other more rarely in the Scripture attributed thereunto Secondly 2. The continuance of our justification depends upon it The continuation of our Iustification depends upon it And as his Intercession is the virtuall continuation of his Sacrifice so is it the continuing cause of our justification which though it be an act done once as fully as ever yet is it done over every moment for it is continued by acts of free Grace so renewed actually every moment There is a standing in Grace by Christ spoken of Rom. 5. 2. as well as a first accesse by Christ and that standing in grace and continuing in it is afterwards ver 11. attributed to his life that is as it is interpreted Heb. 7. 25. his living ever to intercede We owe our standing in grace every moment to his sitting in Heaven and interceding every moment There is no fresh act of justification goes forth but there is a fresh act of intercession And as though God created the World once for all yet every moment he is said to create every new act of providence beeing a new creation so likewise to justifie continually through his continuing out free grace to justifie as at first and this Christ doth by continuing his Intercession he continues a Priest for ever and so we continue to be justifyed for ever 3. A full security of our justification given thereby forever There is hereby a full security given us of justification to be continued for ever The danger either must lie in old sins comming into remembrance or else from sins newly to be committed Now first God hereby takes order 1. Against the remembrance of sins past that no old sins shall come up into remembrance to trouble his thoughts as in the old Law after the Priests going into the Holy of holies their sins are said yet to have done Heb. 10. 3. and to that end it was that he placed Christ as his Remembrancer for us so neere him to take up his thoughts so with his obedience that our sinnes might not come into mind not that God needed this help to put himself in mind but onely for a formality sake that things being thus really carryed between God and Christ for us according to a way suiting with our apprehensions our faith might be strengthened against all suppositions and feares of after reviving our guilts Look therefore as God ordained the Rain-bow in the heavens that when he lookt on it he might remember his Covenant never to destroy the world againe by water so he hath set Christ as the Rain-bow about his Throne And look as the Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper are appointed on earth to shew forth Christs death as a Remembrancer to us so is Christ himselfe appointed in heaven to shew forth his death really as a Remembrancer thereof to his Father and indeed the one is correspondent to the other Onely the Papists have perverted the use of the Lords Supper by making it on earth a commemorative sacrifice to God when as it is but a Remembrancer thereof to men and besides their Priests therein do take upon themselves this very office of presenting this sacrifice to God which is proper onely to Christ in Heaven But God when he would make sure not to be tempted to remember our sins any more nor trouble himselfe with them hath set his Christ by him to put him in minde of his so pleasing an offering So the High-Priests going into the Holy of holies was for a memoriall and therein the Type of Christ And this is plainly expresly made the use of this execution of his Priestly office in Heaven Heb. 8. where the Apostle having discoursed of that part of his office as the chiefe thing he aimed at in this Epistle ver 1. and of the necessity of it ver 3 4 and 5. and excellencie of it in this respect ver 6. he then shews how from thence the new Covenant of pardon came to be sure and stedfast that God will remember our sins no more ver 12. which he there brings in as the proper use of this Doctrine and of this part of his Priesthood 2. 2. To prevent the accusing condemning us by new sinne for times to come As by reason of intercession God remembers not old sins so likewise he is not provoked by new For though God when he justifies us should forgive all old sins past for ever so as never to remember them more yet new ones would break forth and he could not but take notice of them and so so long as sinne continues there is need of a continuing intercession Therefore for the securing us in this it is said Rom. 5. 10. That if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Where we see that his Death is in some more speciall manner said to procure reconciliation at first for sinnes of unregeneracie and to bring us to
Christ but then his life and Intercession or living to intercede is said to keep God and us friends that we may never fall out more What Christ did on earth doth more especially procure reconciliation for sinnes which we doe in the state of nature so as notwithstanding them God resolves to turne us from that state Intercession principally intended for sins after conversion and draw us to Christ But sins which we commit after conversion though pardoned also by his death yet the pardon of them is more especially attributed to his life and intercession as a daily preservative a continuall plaister as some call it to heale such sinnes So that it would seeme that God out of his eternall love doth bring us to Christ and draws us to him through the beholding the reconciliation wrought by his death and so gives us at first conversion unto Christ and we being brought to him he sprinkles us with his bloud and then God sayes to him Now doe you look to them that they and I fall out no more And to that end Christ takes our cause in hand by that eternall Priesthood of his and from that time begins more especially to intercede for us And thus sinnes after the state of grace may be said more eminently to be taken away by that part of his Priesthood which he now in heaven performes That place also 1 Ioh. 2. 1 2. seems to make this the great end of Intercession If any man sinne that is if any of the company of Beleevers to whom alone he wrote we have an Advocate wich the Father so as Intercession principally serves for sins to come or committed after grace received Thus also in his prayer Ioh. 17. which was left as a patterne of his Intercession in heaven he prayes for his Elect as Beleevers I pray for them that shall beleeve through their word Not but that sinnes after conversion are taken away by his death In what sense his Death doth more eminently prevaile for the pardon of sins afore conversion and his Intercession for sins after and sinnes before it by his Intercession also for Christ interceded for those who crucified him and by vertue of that Intercession those three thousand were converted as was observed But the meaning only is that yet more eminently the work of reconciliation for sins before conversion is attributed to his death for sins after conversion to his Intercession Even as the Persons of the Trinity though they have all a like hand in all the works of our salvation yet we see that one part is attributed more to one Person and another to another A third sort of reasons why God ordained this work of Intercession to accomplish our salvation by 3. Sort of Reasons from Christ doe respect Christ himselfe whose honour and glory and the perpetuation of it in our hearts God had as well in his eye in the ordering all the workings of our salvation as much as his owne That all might honour the Sonne as well as the Father as Christ himselfe speaks Now therefore for the maintaining and upholding his glory and the commings in thereof did God ordaine after all that he had done for us here below this work of Intercession in heaven to be added to all the rest for the perfecting of our salvation As First 1. That none of Christs offices should lye vacant it became him and was for his honour that none of his offices should be vacant or lye idle and he want employment in them All offices have work to accompanie them and all work hath honour as its reward to arise out of it And therefore when he had done all that was to be done on earth as appertaining unto the merit of our salvation he appoints this full and perpetuall work in heaven for the applying and possessing us of salvation and that as a Priest by praying and interceding in the merit of that one oblation of himselfe God would have Christ never to be out of office nor out of work And this very reason is more then intimated Heb. 7. 24 25. This man because he continueth ever hath an unchangeable Priest-hood or as ver 21. expounds it for ever And the work of his Priesthood is interpreted ver 25. to be ever to make intercession The meaning is that God would not have him continue to be a Priest in title onely or in respect onely of a service past and so to have onely the honour of Priesthood perpetuated to him out of the remembrance of what he once had done as great Generals have even in time of peace the glory of some great battail fought continued to them in their titles or rewards for ever But God would have him have as the renowne of the old so a perpetuall spring of honour by new work and employment in that office which he is continually a doing so to preserve the verdure of his glory ever fresh and greene and therefore ordained a continuall work for him And the summe of the Apostles reasoning is this That seeing himselfe was to be for ever so should his work and Priesthood be that so his honour might be for ever So ver 28. concludes it Consecrated or perfected for evermore Secondly 2. That Christ might have a continual hand in each and every work of our salvation to the last for the same reason also it became him that the whole worke of our salvation first and last and every part of it every step and degree of accomplishment of it should be so ordered as he should continue still to have as great and continuall a hand in every part even to the laying of the top stone thereof as he had in laying the first foundation and corner stone thereof And this you have expressed Heb. 12. 2. Looking to Iesus the beginner and perfecter of our faith Two things had been said of him as two causes of two effects and we must looke to him in both 1. He is to be looked at as Dying enduring the Crosse as there he is set forth 2. As sitting at Gods right hand and interceding as that whole Epistle had represented him We are to look at these two as causes of a double effect to looke at his dying as that which is the beginning of our faith so according to the Greeke and the margent of our translation and at his sitting at Gods right hand as an intercessor for the finishing of our faith thereby and so of our finall salvation For as Christs worke began in his life and death which is put for all his obedience here below so our first believing as was said begins by vertue of his death at first and as his worke ends in his intercession and sitting at God his right hand so answerably is our faith and salvation perfected by it that thus he might be left out in nothing but be the Alpha and Omega the Beginning and the Ending to whom be glory for ever So that wee
are to looke upon our Mediator CHRIST as doing as much worke for us in Heaven at this instant as ever hee did on Earth here suffering but there praying and presenting his sufferings All his worke was not done when he had done here that worke here was indeede the harder piece of the two yet soone dispatched but his work in heaven though sweeter far yet lyes on his hands for ever therefore let us leave out none of these in our believing on him CHAP. IV. The second Head The great security the consideration of Christs Intercession affords to faith for our Justification shewed 1. By way of evidence By two things ANd so I come as in the former I have done to shew what strong grounds of security and triumph our faith may raise frō this last act namely Christs Intercession for us in the point of justification Who shall condemne it is Christ that intercedes And this was the second generall propounded and therein to proceed also according to the Method taken up in the former 1. What assurance by way of evidence this doth afford unto faith of non-condemnation 2. What powerfull efficacy and influence this must be of that Christ intercedes First §. 1. to handle it by way of evidence That Christ intercedes To evidence these two demonstrations is a strong evidence to our faith by two demonstrations 1. From the very intent and scope of the worke of intercession it selfe and what it is ordained by God to effect 2. From the end of Jesus Christ himself who lives in Heaven on purpose to intercede for us Our salvation it is both Finis operis the end of the work and finis ipsius operantis in some respect the end of Christ himselfe the interceder and both these doe lay the greatest engagement that can be upon Christ to accomplish our salvation through his intercession 1. For the work it self Intercession you have seen is a part of the office of Christs Priesthood as well as his dying and offering himselfe now all the works of Christ are must be perfect in their kind even as Gods are of which sayes Moses Deut. 32. 4. His work is perfect for otherwise he should not be a perfect Priest Now the perfection of every work lies in order to its end for which it is ordained so as that work is perfect that attains to such an end as it is ordained for and that imperfect which doth not Now the immediate direct end of Christs Intercession is the actuall salvation of Beleevers Elect and persons whom he dyed for The end of his death is Adoptio juris purchasing a right unto salvation but of Intercession procuratio ipsius salutis the very saving us actually and putting us in possession of Heaven To this purpose observe how the Scripture speaks concerning Christs death Heb. 9. 12. He entred into heaven having obtained Redemption or found redemption that is by way of right by procuring full title to it But of his Intercession it sayes Heb. 7. 25. that by it Christ is able to save to the utmost them that come unto God by him that is actually to save and put them in possession of happinesse that is made the end and scope of Intercession there and that phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the utmost notes out a saving indeed a doing it not by halves but wholly and throughly and compleatly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to save altogether to give our salvation its last act and complement that is the true force of the phrase even to effect it to the last of it all that is to be done about it Thus also Rom. 5. 9 and 10. We are justified by his death but saved namely compleatly by his life that is his living to intercede So that the very salvation of Beleevers is it that is the work the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Christs Intercession Now what security doth this afford What security this affords for to be saved is more then to be justified for it is the actual possessing us of heaven So then do but grant that Christs Intercession is as perfect a work in its kind as Christs death is in its kind and you must needs be saved The perfection of Christs death and the work thereof wherein lay it as on Christs part to be performed but in this that he should lay downe a Ransome sufficient to purchase salvation for such and such persons as God would save and so the perfection of it lies in the worth and sufficiencie of it to that end it was ordained for it being a perfect sacrifice in it self able to purchase eternall redemption for us and to make us salvable against all sins and the demerits of them and to give us right to Heaven and had it wanted a graine of this it had then been imperfect Now then answerably for intercession the comfort of our souls is that the proper work that lies upon Christ therein is the compleat saving those very persons and the possessing them of Heaven this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the proper worke thereof To out-vie the demerits of our sins was the perfection of his death but to save our soules is the end and perfection of his Intercession Our sins are the object of the one and our soules of the other To that end was intercession added to his death that we might not have a right to Heaven in vaine of which we might be dispossessed Now therefore upon this ground if Christ should faile of our souls salvation yea but of any one degree of glory purchased by his death to any soule which that soule should want this work of his would then want and fal short so much of its perfection That place in Heb. 7. sayes not only that Christ will doe his utmost to save but save to the utmost You may say Object My infidelitie and obstinacy may hinder it though Christ doth what in him lies Well Resp but intercession undertakes the worke absolutely For Christ prays not conditionally in Heaven If men shall believe c. as we doe here on earth nor for propositions only but for persons and therefore he prays to cure that very infidelity Now as if a Physitian undertakes to cure a mad man if he knowes what he doth he considers the madnesse of his Patient and how he will teare off what is applyed and refuse all Physick hee therefore resolves to deal with him accordingly and so to order him as he shall not hinder that help which he is about to afford him and so upon those tearms he undertakes the cure even so doth Christ when by intercession hee undertakes to save us sinners he considers us what we are and how it is with us For Christ otherwise should not be as perfect a Priest in interceding as he was in dying what unbeliefe is in us yet undertakes the matter and so to save us is the scope and end of this his work which if he
their love encreased and the party for whom they suffered is thereby rendred the more deere unto them And as it is thus in these naturall relations so also in spirituall we may see it in holy men as in Moses who was a mediator for the Jewes as Christ is for us Moses therein being but Christs Type and shadow and therefore I the rather instance in him He under God had beene the deliverer of the people of Israel out of Egypt with the hazard of his own life had led them in the wildernesse and given them that good Law that was their wisdome in the sight of all the Nations and by his prayers kept off Gods wrath from them And who ever of all those Heroes we read of did so much for any Nation who yet were continually murmuring at him and had like once to have stoned him and yet what he had done for them did so mightily engage his heart and so immoveably point and fixe it unto their good that although God in his wrath against them offered to make of him alone a greater and mightier Nation then they were yet Moses refused that offer the greatest that ever any Sonne of Adam was tempted with and still went on to intercede for them and among other used this very argument to God even the consideration of what he had already done for them as with what great might and power he had brought them out of AEgypt c. thereby to move God to continue his goodnesse unto them so Exod. 32. 11. and elsewhere And this overcame God as you may read in the 14. ver of the fore-named Chap. Yea so set was Moses his heart upon them that he not only refused that former offer which God made him but he made an offer unto God of himselfe to sacrifice his portion in life for their good Rather sayes he blot me out of the book of life So ver 32. And we may observe the like zealous love in holy Paul towards all those converts of his whom in his Epistles he wrote unto towards whom that which so much endeared his affections was the paines the cost the travail the care and the sufferings that hee had had in bringing them unto Christ Thus towards the Galatians how solicitous was he how afraid to lose his labour on them I am afraid of you lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain so hee expresseth himselfe Galat. 4. 11. and ver 19. he utters himselfe yet more deepely My little children sayes he of whom I again travaile in birth untill Christ be formed in you He professeth himselfe content to be in travail again for them rather then lose that about which he had beene in travail for them once before Now from both these examples whereof the one was Christs Type and the other the very copy and patern of Christs heart we may raise up our hearts to the perswasion of that love and affection which must needs be in the heart of Christ from that which he hath done and suffered for us First For Moses did Moses ever doe that for that people which Christ hath done and suffered for you He acknowledged that he had not borne that people in his wombe but Christ bare us all and we were the travaile of his soule and for us he endured the birth-throws of death as Peter calls them Acts 2. 24. And then for Paul was Paul crucified for you sayes Paul likewise of himselfe but Christ was and he speakes it the more to enhaunce the love of Christ Or if Paul had beene crucified would or could it have profited us no If therefore Paul was contented to have been in travail again for the Galatians when he feared their falling away then how doth Christs heart worke much more towards sinners he having put in so infinite a stock of sufferings for us already which he is loath to lose and hath so much love to us besides that if we could suppose that otherwise we could not be saved he could be content to be in travail again and to suffer for us afresh But he needed to doe this but once as the Apostle to the Hebrews speaks so perfect was his Priesthood Be assured then that his love was not spent or worne out at his death but encreased by it His love it was that caused him to die and to lay downe his life for his sheep and greater love then this hath no man said himselfe before he did it But now having dyed this must needs cause him from his soul to cleave the more unto them A cause or a person that a man hath suffered much for according to the proportion of his sufferings is ones love and zeale thereunto for these doe lay a strong engagement upon a man because otherwise he loseth the thanks and the honour of all that is already done and past by him Have you suffered so many things in vaine sayes the Apostle to the Galathians Chap. 3. 4. where he makes a motive and an incitement of it that seeing they had endured so much for Christ and the profession of him they would not now lose all for want of doing a little more And doth not the same disposition remaine in Christ especially seeing the hard work is over and dispatcht which he was to doe on earth and that which now remaines for him to doe in heaven is farre more sweet and full of glory and as the reaping in joy of what he had here sowne in teares If his love was so great as to hold out the enduring so much then now when that brunt is over and his love is become a tryed love will it not continue If when tryed in adversity and that is the surest and strongest love and in the greatest adversity that ever was if it then held will it not still doe so in his prosperity much more Did his heart stick to us and by us in the greatest temptation that ever was and will his glorious and prosperous estate take it off or abate his love unto us Certainly no Iesus the same to day yesterday and for ever Heb. 13. 8. When he was in the midst of his paines one for whom he was then a suffering said unto him Lord remember me when thou commest into thy Kingdome and could Christ mind him then as you know he did telling him This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise then surely when Christ came to Paradise he would doe it much more and remember him too by the surest token that ever was and which he can never forget namely the paines which he was then enduring for him He remembers both them and us still as the Prophet speaks of God And if he would have us remember his death till hee comes so to cause our hearts to love him then certainly himselfe doth it in heaven much more No question but he remembers us as he promised to doe that good thiefe now he is in his Kingdome And so much for this second