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A79435 Yahweh Tsidkenu or The plain doctrin of the justification of a sinner in the sight of God; justified by the God of truth in his holy word, and the cloud of witnesses in all ages. Wherein are handled the causes of the sinners justification. Explained and applied in six and twenty sermons, in a plain, doctrinal and familiar way, for the capacity, and understanding of the weak and ignorant. By Charles Chauncy president of Harvard Colledge in Cambridge in New-England. Chauncy, Charles, 1592-1672. 1659 (1659) Wing C3739; Thomason E979_11; ESTC R222074 232,660 312

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Christ c. 2 Have I no reservation within my self where I would bee dispensed withall in any courses of life or any secret lusts or corruptions at lest known or allowed in judgement or practice Hath my faith such a commanding power that it will not let mee alone in commission of sin or Omission of duty then I may conclude that the faith of Christ is wrought in mee and thence undoubtedly conclude that I am a justified person Because that hee that beleeveth on Christ is already justified Now when this is soundly concluded the soul may upon daily occasions put forth and exercise his faith in Christ for his spiritual and everlasting comfort Direct 5. When thou wouldest exercise thy faith at any time thou must not go about it in thine own strength either of nature or grace received but look up for a fresh influence of the Spirit and his assistance For as it is sure that no creature can of himself look upon natural things nor act without a renewed and fresh concourse of Gods common providence So Grace though it bee above nature and stronger than it yet its motion is from the Holy Ghost And this assistance of the Spirit comes from Christ as the light from the Sun by an efflux Joh. 8.12 the power is in Christ though it work on us Therefore all things are said to be done through Christ strengthening of us Phil. 4.13 Every act of Faith requires a power of Christ in a fresh administration wher in he fulfils the good pleasure of his will and the work of faith with power 2 Thess 1.11 And this is the meaning of Pauls prayer for the Ephesians Chap. 3.16 17. that they might bee strengthened with might by the Spirit and that Christ might dwell in their hearts by faith And as the Holy Ghost must assist the grace of faith before it can act so hee must clear up the objects of faith before faith can work upon them as the light must shine upon the brasen Serpent before the Israelite can see it Wherefore the Apostle praies earnestly that God would give the spirit of wisdome and revelation to know the things they beleeved and hoped for Eph. 1.17 18. Wherefore as in all other graces so in faith God worketh in us the deed as well as the will Phil. 2.13 and Jud. 20. building us up in faith is by praying in the Holy Ghost and wee must look up to the Holy Ghost by earnest prayer to help us in the whole progress of our faith and every act of faith till wee receive the end of our faith the Salvation of our souls Christ Crucified the special Object of Justifying Faith THE SIXTEENTH SERMON ON Romans 3.25 Faith in his blood HItherto of Faith in General as the Instrument of our Justification and Christ the more special Object of it as justifying Now follows the third thing premised concerning the most special Object or the most special consideration of that object in those words Faith in his blood for the understanding whereof let mee put you in minde of the former Explication of the word blood which hath been expounded to bee meant Synecdochically a part being put for the whole So that it signifies all the sufferings of Christ in the whole state of his abasement but most especially his sufferings both in body and soul at his death even all the pains of the first and second death which our Saviour did undergo upon the Cross So that by faith in his blood wee are to understand Faith apprehending Christ crucified or undergoing the shameful and accursed death of the cross Therefore we observe Doct. It is the duty of sinners for their Justification distinctly to apprehend and rely upon Christ crucified Or thus That it is the Duty and should bee the care of sinners to place their confidence on Christ crucified for Justification For that is the meaning of the phrase Faith in his blood that is faith relying on Christ crucified This notes the subject matter of redemption whereon our Faith is principally grounded in the article of our Justification Our faith indeed in the point of Justification doth imbrace whole Christ but most properly and in a peculiar manner it is terminated in the Sacrifice and Propitiation or Death of Christ and this the Scriptures attest Joh. 6.53 54 55. Jesus said unto them Verily Verily I say unto you except you eat the body of the Son of God and drink his blood you have no life in you and this is by beleeving on Christ crucified for Christ doth not speak there immediately of the Lords Supper though Sacramental eating may bee comprehended under it and hee saith peremptorily that there is no life and therefore no justification or Salvation without the eating there mentioned but hee addes on the contrary vers 54. Who so eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood by faith hath eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day There is a direct promise of Life Justification and Salvation to them that do beleeve on Christ crucified and vers 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in mee and I in him i.e. hath union and communion with Christ Jesus in all his benefits and therefore must needs bee justified and this is the same which John preached Behold the Lamb of God c. Joh. 1.29 i.e. the Lamb of God for Sacrifice that wee should behold for justification with the eye of faith Yea so Joh. 3.14 16. As Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness c. that lifting up was especially when Christ was Crucified and lifted up upon the Cross and looking on the brazen Serpent signifyed beleeving on Christ crucified that such as did so should not perish but have everlasting life And this is the very condition of the Covenant of grace Reas 1. Taken from the Old Testament wherein the mystery of Christ and Justification was more veiled and dark yet even then this truth was received that their reconciliation was by faith in the Messiah to come and made a sacrifice for sin and hence the Covenant was confirmed with blood shed Heb. 9.20 neither was the Old Testament dedicated without it Exod. 24.8 For when Moses had spoken every precept hee took the blood of Calves and Goats and sprinkled both the book and all the people saying This is the blood of the Testament that God enjoyned unto you and vers 23. it was necessary that the heavenly things themselves should bee purified with better sacrifices than these and it is necessary still that there should bee the same way of cleansing of sin away by way of Sacrifice and Blood of the New Testament Matth. 26.28 For this is the meaning of the sacrifices they were oppointed for attonement yea almost all things by the Law were purged with blood Heb. 9.22 and without shedding of blood there is no remission and so it was then and thereby the people are taught to look for justification by Christ Hence
God to roar even the fierce wrath of the Almighty So that as the Greek Church prayed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It was unknown torment that our Saviour underwent Hee encountred both the fathers wrath kindled by the sins of all the Elect and entered the lists with Satan and all the powers of darkness Luke 22.23 This is your hour and the power of darkness All the Devils in Hell were up in Armes and issued out of their gates Principalities and Powers are all let loose against the Redeemer of the World This is some part of the second death of Christ but to clear it further wee will answer a few objections Object How could Christ suffer the pains of the second death without dis-union of the God-head from the man-hood for the God-head could not dye Sol. 1 Joh. 3.16 God laid down his life for us The person dying was God else his person could have done us no good The person suffering must bee God as well as man but the God-head suffered not As if you shoot off a Cannon in the bright Ayr the air suffers but the light of it suffers not Actions and Passions belong to Persons Nothing less than that Person who is God man could bear the brunt of the day and overcome for our justification Object How could Christ indure Hell fire without grievous sins as blasphemy and despair Sol. The perturbations of Christ were like the shakings of pure water in a clean glass the water remains pure still When Christ was shaken there was no mudd in the bottome which rises in us when wee suffer extremity And again as the body of Christ dyed without dividing the God-head from it So his soul dyed the second death without parting of the God-head from it Besides Blasphemy and Despair are no parts of the pains of the damned but the consequents and follow the sense of Gods wrath in a sinful creature that is overcome by it Rev. 16.9 But Christ had no sin of his own nor was overcome of wrath and therefore held fast his integrity Object But when did Christ suffer hell torments they are inflicted after death not before it usually but Christs soul went strait after death into Paradise how else could hee say This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Sol. 1 'T is not impossible that the pains of the second death should bee suffered in this life Time and place are but circumstances the main substance of the second death is the bearing Gods fierce wrath The favour of God in Hell to a man would make Hell a Heaven The place is not a part of the debt neither and therefore ought to bee no part of the payment The laying down of the Price makes the satisfaction This is all that is spoken and threatned to Adam Gen. 2.17 Thou shalt dye the death and this may bee suffered here Wicked go to Hell as their Prison because they can never pay their debts otherwise the debt may as well bee paid in the market as the Gaol This Christ did in the dayes of his flesh when hee offered up strong crys and tears Heb. 5.7 not after death Object But the pains due to mans sins are to bee everlasting how can Christs short sufferings countervail them Sol. If the measure of a mans punishment were Infinite the duration needs not be infinite Sinful mans measure of punishment is finite and therefore the duration of his punishment must bee infinite because the punishment must bee answerable to the infinite evil of sin committed against an infinite God But Christ God-man suffered punishment in measure infinite and therefore there is no ground why hee should indure it eternally Add moreover that the dignity of Christs persons did excuse him from punishment infinite for duration for Act. 2.24 It was impossible that hee should bee holden of death because hee was both the Father of Life and the Lords Holy One. Besides continual imprisonment in Hell arises from mans not being able to pay the price for could hee pay the debt in one year hee needs not lye two years in Prison Now the debt is the first and second death because therefore sinful man cannot pay it in any time he must endure it eternally But Christ is ready pay hee laies it down upon the nail to the full for all Christs Elect therefore it is not required of him that hee should suffer for ever Neither can it stand with Gods Justice to hold him under the second death having paid the debt Now that hee hath paid he witnesseth Joh. 19.30 saying when hee had received the Vinegar It is finished So vers 28. After this Jesus knowing that all things were accomplished Many Interpretations are given of the place but this alone will hold water That the heavy wrath of the Lord which did pursue Christ and the second death that filled him with grievous terrors is now over and past It cannot bee construed of the fulfilling all Types and figures for many Types and Prophecies did pre-figure his death as that Dan. 10. that the Messiah must bee cut off and all the Sacrifices must dye the Prophecy of his Resurrection Psal 16.10 the prophecy of his intercession and sitting at Gods right hand Psal 110.1 Isa ●3 ult Therefore the former sense only is true Use 1. Of Terror to Carnal Persons Conceits removed if any argument can shake the heart of a careless wretch that lives in sin this may to consider Christs sufferings for sin imputed to him This will likewise remove those vain conceits men have taken up to secure themselves in sinning 1 That sin hath no such great evil in it as is imagined and therefore they make a mock of sin blaspheming them 1 Pet. 4.3 4. that run not to the same excess of riot with them Let such know that besides the judgements recorded in Scripture against sin and the tumbling of Angels down from heaven reserving them in chains under darkness besides the casting Adam out of Paradise for sin and the drowning the old World the fire and brimstone of Sodom the destruction of Jerusalem the torments of the damned in Hell-fire where the worm dyeth not and the fire goeth not out Mark 9.44 46 48. That which is ten thousand times more terrible take thou notice of that Christ suffers an agony for mans sin behold God dying for the sins of the Elect. See his misery who is but a surety 1 Cor. 2.8 Sins of men crucify the Lord of Glory and put him to so painful so shameful a death as thou hast heard God over all blessed for ever is cursed in but bearing thy sins If God so punished the surety how will he deal with the principal Canst thou hope O impenitent Soul to speed better in thy own sins than Christ could that bare but the sins of others 1 Sam. 14.39 As the Lord liveth who saveth Israel though it bee in Jonathan my Son hee shall surely dye said Saul If the Son must dye what will become of
partaker of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 and that by the exceeding great and precious promises so that thy lusts are destroyed and thou art no longer an enemy or a stranger unto God but acquainted and reconciled Col. 1.21 Lastly see this by the peace that the bloud of Christ hath wrought in thy soul Heb. 9.14 Obj. But hath every one peace of Conscience that hath interest in the bloud of Christ Ans Every one hath peace with God Rom. 5.1 and though it doth not always quiet the conscience yet it stayes the heart with some waiting upon God and purges the conscience every day more and more See whether thou findest this in thee Vse 5. Exhortation to get this propitiation Exhortation to betake our selves to the Sacrifice and bloud-shed of Christ Heb. 9.26 He is the only Mercy-seat We shall speak 1 To those that apprehend or have cause to apprehend Gods Wrath kindled against them 2 To the members of Christ 1 To those that lye still in a state of enmity to seek for the appeasing Gods anger and to take the right course for this Consider 1 The excellency of this condition Peace and reconciliation with God is the main businesse in the Kingdom of God that is first to be sought Matth. 6.33 the prayer of the Saints Dan. 9.16 17. O Lord according to all thy righteousnesse let all thine anger and fury be turned away 2 Consider that the Lord deals with you as he commanded his people to doe Deut. 20.10 he sends forth his servants with inessages of peace and hangs forth his white flag of truce before hee sends forth his armies of Judgements to destroy it or as Matth. 10.11 13. Luk. 10.6 Enquire in the house or city who is worthy and if the son of peace bee there let your peace come upon it else shake off the dust c. Thus are the offers of peace in the word of reconciliation sent to you Is there any child of peace here that will hear it and give it entertainment And know that though you should not regard it yet the Kingdom of God is come nigh to you and Conscience will one day find it upon the file for a testimony against you And hereafter will wisdom say Because I have called c. Prov. 1.24 28. Luk. 19.42 Verily I perswade my self that there are many thousands in these days of the Gospel that are wounded deep and lye bleeding to destruction under that word of wisdoms mouth for refusing stiffely so fair an offer as we are making this day unto you Quest What course should a poor soul take to have the benefit of this propitiation Ans 1. It will be very needful for a Sinner advisedly toset down with himself what he hath in all the world to support his heart when the evil day shall come upon him Isa 10.3 What will you doe in the day of visitation Job 31.14 What shall I doe when he rises up when he visits what shall I answer Then your thoughts will be so snarled and perplexed that you will not know whether to goe nor how to bear nor avoyd nor remove the evil that is coming upon you As Luther speaks of the Papists That at the approaches of death they were so perplexed in spirit that they were like Birds taken in a Lime-bush which the more they flutter the more they are hampered so fearfully saith he that I have seen many Murtherers and Malefectors condemned to death goe to their execution more couragiously than they So it falls out with poor obdurate sinners in the evil day though you out brave it now outwardly yet what a black bosome and Scorpions stings of guilt hast thou within thy soul rankling and gathering against the evil day whither will yee then fly to the Creatures they are all Gods Armies and Subjects and will fight against you as the Stars against Sisera Judg. 5.20 will you goe to your wits and shifts but then you shall bee at your wits ends Psal 107.27 will yee goe to an angry God the Judge of all the World But he saith Hos 13.7 8. I will be to them as a Lion and as a Leopard by the way to observe them c. yea the Lord will be more terrible than all these Wilt thou goe to thy Conscience alas that 's that Hell-worm the tormentor and the rack Ah it is better to be a Dogge or a Toad or any thing than to bee without Christs propitiation yet at such a time doth a poor member of Christ know what to doe See Job 13.15 Hab. 3.17 Psal 94.19.49.5 Heb. 13.6 2 Strive to apprehend as much as possible thou mayest the infinite power of that God whose anger is kindled against thee 1 Cor. 10.21 Doe you provoke the Lord Are you stronger than he Isa 27.4 Who will set the bryars and thorns against him c Remember what the very Philistims said 1. Sam. 6.6 Wherefore doe you harden your hearts as the Aegyptians and Pharaoh hardned their hearts c. Ezek. 22.14 How can thy heart endure or thy hands bee strong c. Isa 45.9 Psal 76.7 3 Consider that it is possible to appease Gods anger See Jonah 3.9 though it bee not certain yet if it bee possible it is enough to set us a seeking after it 4 See the large extent of the blessed propitiation of Christ Jesus 1 Joh. 2.1 2. Hee is a propitiation not for our sins only c. that is the elect and beleevers he wrote to but to all others over all the world Not that all or the greater part shall bee saved by the death of Christ but that by this large extent of the efficacy of Christs death the elect themselves might be the better encouraged to embrace the sacrifice of Christs death by faith He gave his life a ransome for all 1 Tim. 2.6 that is some of all sorts of persons or people no kind excluded He keeps a free and open house unto all comers Isa 45.20 22. 5 God though he be the person injured yet he is content to lay down the quarrel and hath eminently shewed his willingnesse thereto in that he sent his Son to make reconciliation for sinners 1 Joh. 4.10 Dan. 9.24 and hath committed to his Ministers the word of reconciliation that as in Christs stead they might pray men to accept of this peace Quest How doth the Lord entreat us to bee reconciled unto him Doth not the Lord know that it is not in our power to bee reconciled to him our nature being enmity against God Ans Christs propitiation or expiatory sacrifice hath purchased all those things to bee wrought in sinners that may make them partakers of and comforted in this sacrifice of his As Faith Phil. 1.29 Repentance Acts 5.31 change of nature Isa 11.6 7. Heb. 13.21 22. so that all a poor sinner hath to doe is to fall down at the feet of Christ in the use of his Ordinances to wait upon him and to follow his directions both willingly
that imputeth If any man doth perfectly perform those things that the Law commandeth the reward of righteousness is imputed to him according to debt for this hath the foundation in himself and his perfect performance but if a man works not but having transgressed the Law beleeveth to him the reward of righteousness is accounted according to grace for it hath a foundation out of himself in anothers performance viz. in Christ Which the Apostle proves vers 5. To him that works not c. If the imputation should bee made according to the foundation that is in himself sin should bee imputed to condemnation for hee is ungodly but now faith is accounted to the ungodly for righteousness therefore this must bee founded on the grace of him that imputes The former kind of imputation is onely by way of supposition and no man was ever justified by it in the sight of God but the latter is the common way whereby Abraham and all beleevers are justified in Gods sight Object It seems to bee an unrighteous act and implies falsehood to impute righteousness to a sinner as it is to impute sin to a righeeous person Prov. 17.15 To justify the wicked and condemn the righteous are both an abomination to the Lord and the contrary is reputed an act of Gods justice 1 King 8.32 Exod. 34.7 Answ It is against Law and justice to justify the wicked without cause when there is no satisfaction made by the offender himself or by any other on his behalf suitable to the will of the persons offended and persons concerned do consent but now when God justifies and imputes righteousness to the ungodly having received a full and sufficient satisfaction by his sons obedience this is no unjustice at all but every way most just the Lord Jesus and the father being content and consenting to it 2 There is no falshood in this imputation of righteousness because God can call things that are not as though they were Rom. 4.17 and hee doth truely make those righteous whom hee justifies by his imputed righteousness Rom. 8.4 that the righteousness of God might be fulfilled in us which if it be meant of imputed righteousnesse as it is commonly taken the phrase shews it to bee as really ours as if wee had done it our selves if it bee taken of inherent righteousness as some of the learned take it it shews that where this imputed righteousnesse is there is also inherent as an effect thereof though it bee but imperfect begun and an effect of the former Object But this imputed righteousnesse is but a work of the thought and Cogitation only and is not a real matter therefore is not to bee rested in Answ This Righteousness that is imputed is really given to beleevers it is called the gift of Righteousness Rom. 5.17 that which is given is really our own to all such purposes wherein it may concern us Object But if Christs righteousness bee Imputed to us then it seems to follow that the beleever is as righteous as Christ and therefore every beleever is a redeemer and a Saviour of others for Christ was so Answ This will not follow because 1 The beleever is still a sinner in himself so was not Jesus Christ the righteous 2 Because the vertue that is in the head is communicated to all the members it doth not therefore follow that every member is thereby made a head to have such an influence into all the other members as the head hath 3 Redeemer Saviour Surety c. are denominations proper to him as he is a pay-master and satisfier of the Law in the behalf of others and not as any thing is due from himself and although his righteousnesse by a Legal Imputation to us and acceptation on our behalf is called ours and wee may bee properly said to bee righteous in his righteousness yet his surety-ship as such cannot bee imputed ours hence none of those denominations as of Saviour Redeemer c. So that though we be pay-masters and satisfiers of the Law under this imputation and by Gods account yet we are not therefore sureties or redeemers For it is proper to us onely to bee redeemed not to be redeemers So that the righteousness of Christ whereby hee satisfies the Law is applyed by imputation to the beleever not his Surety-ship Redeemer-ship because proper onely to the Redeemer and not communicable to the redeemed so much as by imputation for Redeemer and Redeemed are Relata ergo opposita neither doth the Law in demanding Satisfaction look at Surety-ship but paiment whether it bee in the person of the offender or of the surety Therefore this objection falls to the ground as vain and frivolous for though the Law calls a sinner perfectly righteous in his justification yet it calls him not a surety or a Redeemer for the Law calls not for a Surety c. but accounts the sinner as righteous touching the demands of the Law as one that never brake the Law yea as the Surety himself made under the Law for satisfaction to the Law by Active or Passive Obedience do equally dismiss or acquit the person that is under it from the Guilt Curse or Condemnation of it Reas 1. Taken from the union of the beleever with Christ for being once made one with Christ all his benefits become his so that the righteousnesse of the head is communicated to all his members The oyntment on the head of Aaron ran down on his skirts and members Thus Paul desired to bee found in Christ not having his own righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 hee desired the righteousnesse which is through faith i. e. imputed righteousnesse apprehended by faith and hee shews the reason why it is made the beleevers because we are found in him that is ingrafted into his Mystical body and are made one Mystical person with him and this will serve to answer Popish objections Obj. How can a man bee made righteous by another mans righteousnesse more than rich by another mans riches Ans Though the righteousnesse bee compared to a Garment in Scripture yet the Person of Christ is really united to the beleever which cannot be spoken of a garment Besides also Christ's imputed righteousnesse there is also imparted righteousnesse Reas 2. From the compar son between the first and second Adam for as Adams transgression of the Law of God is imputed to all his posterity and that in respect thereof they are reputed sinners and accursed and liable to eternal death so also Christs obedience whereby he fulfilled the Law is so imputed to the members of his Mystical body that in regard of God they stand as innocent justified and accepted to eternal life The Argument is Pauls Rom. 5.19 As by one mans disobedience many are made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Vers 17. As by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousnesse shall reign in life by
woful condition come upon you Take heed as it follows there vers 46. Seeing that you put away the Word from you and Judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life you that have a pardon offered to you being condemned male-factors and yet will bee prophane unclean and proud still you do as good as say wee care not for the pardon wee scorn the offer of remission of sins though we bee damned for them Let such desperate souls know they judge themselves unworthy c. Object You will say why whatsoever my sins are though I go on yet grace is sufficient to save mee at last Answ But doth not the Apostle say shall wee continue in sin c. far bee it that ever such a thought should enter into any heart Rom. 6.1 2. Sodomites themselves had they had this grace preached by any Messenger from God they would in all likelihood have beleeved and repented What is this but turning the Grace of God into wantonness that branded sin of Jud. 4. Ordained of old to Condemnation and the very characteristical Note of Reprobation to turn Gods grace into Lasciviousness T is true God doth not presently reject where grace proffered is neglected Rom. 10 ult All the day long c. yet it is oft a sad presage that grace will depart from those for ever that prophanely set it at nought The day of Grace is short Luke 19.41 2 Cor. 6.2 Col. 1.6 the Gospel brought forth fruit in the Colossians The first day they heard of it and knew the grace of God in truth Use 3. Comfort to beleevers that this grace is free It is an unspeakable ground of comfort to poor beleevers What better Cordial can you take than this what Doctrin should you rather learn you complain of sins before Calling of corruptions yet remaining of coldness in duty and you say how can such a wretch as I bee accepted or justified The Doctrin takes away the ground of your Lamentation in saying you are justified and pardoned freely not onely by Gods Grace and Mercy but altogether freely Rom. 5.16 the free gift is of many offences to justification So vers 18. the free gift came to justification Luth. in Epist ad Gala. Let Moses saith Luther bee dead and buried and his Sepulchre never bee found in point of justification This is your security and makes your justification such as a man may have peace in and boldness and confidence in the inward Combates of Conscience and in the panges of death for it makes the promises sure Rom. 4.16 unmortified corruption would make justification upon any other terms uncertain but Gods free grace is a sure Rock to build on a foundation that cannot bee undermined It puts you under the Kingdome of grace where grace must as surely reign unto life as sin did unto death Rom. 5.21 Further this Justification gives safety and perpetuity of happiness because this feee grace is unchangeable Rom. 5.2 Being justified by Faith wee stand in Grace wee never fall from it and vers 17. They which receive abundance of Grace and of the gift of Righteousness shall reign in Life by one Jesus Christ Consider seriously that this grace is given when wee are enemies to God lying in our blood besmeared in our filthiness Now it is not likely a poor beleever shall ever fall into a worse estate than this was So that the same grace must needs be still continued to him Use 4. Exhortation to all sorts 1 to unjust 1 Exhortation first to unjustified persons If justification bee of free grace then let carnal and prophane men see a little chink of light beaming into their dungeon of darkness Here is some possibility of obtaining mercy and pardon at the Lords hands Free Grace is the main motive to the Lord for to give Remission of sin Let it also bee a strong Motive to you to seek out after it If free why may not you have a share in it as well as others If the fault bee not in your selves it may bee yours as well as others T is not sins hainousness nor multitude can keep you out God keeps open house for Grace and Mercy and every poor beggar that will may come The Dole is not given because a man hath better Cloaths better Parts or abilities but to poor souls that come to fetch it Avoid discouragement and prophaneness when God is dispensing his grace to others as bad as thee Go then among the crowd of Prodigals thrust in among them Rom. 4.5 To him that works not that never did a good work but beleeves on him that justifieth the ungodly i. e. There are none justified but ungodly for all are ungodly before justification though afterward they are not ungodly in that they fall to working the work of God though not to trust in any work set their hearts on all the works of the Covenant though not on the Covenant of works Hear what the Spirit saies to thee Rev. 22.17 Whoever will let them take of the water of Life freely Here is a dram of Aqua vitae for a dead soul freely offered if thou wilt accept of it and wilt thou not accept of it say not I have no good work to commend mee for they that work not are not shut out Isa 55.2 but without money though not a penny in thy pocket not one good work at all To direct you in it 1 Know that Justification presupposes Damnation in a way of justice Directions to attain justification Thou therefore that desirest justification must bee convinced and certainly conclude thou art a condemned person in the rigour of Gods Justice according to that Ezek. 36.31 You shall remember your own evil waies and doings were not good and shall loathe your selves or judge your selves worthy to bee destroyed so Rom. 3.19 that all the World may become guilty Your soules must come to the bar of Gods justice and hold up your hands and cry guilty guilty yea and pass the sentence of condemnation on your own souls 2 Bee zealously diligent Direct 2 that you receive not the grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6.1 Paul in 2 Cor. 5.21 having spoken of free justification before hee addes wee then as workers together with him beseech you that you receive not the grace of God in vain You have heard of Gods grace now wee Apostles and Ministers of Christ beseech you that this grace bee not lost or in vain If our intreaties may prevail with you Oh! suffer not this water of life to bee spilt in vain 3 You must for ever resolve to live in the Kingdome of grace Rom. 5. ult Grace ought to reign Direct 3 you must not think to subject it to your lusts for grace must have the command of all Tit. 2.12 it denies ungodliness the throne 2 To justified Persons Are you justified freely by his grace 2 To such as are justified first learn to adore free grace lye low in the dust with Paul
and say with him 1 Tim. 1.13 I have been thus and thus vile but I obtained mercy and the grace of God was exceeding abundant c. Now to the King immortal c. v. 17. Secondly remember that Luk. 7.41 42. there was a certain Creditor that had two Debtors the one ought him five hundred pence the other fifty and when they had nothing to pay hee frankly forgave them all tell mee which of them will love him most So hath the Lord truely freely and frankly forgiven thee and that much more than many others Oh love the Lord so much the more count it a shame to bee sparing or nigardly in thy love or the expressions of it in thy duty and obedience towards him as vers 47. Her sins which are many are forgiven her for shee loved much Where for is taken not for a Cause of forgiveness but for a sign as thus surely such a Bankrupt hath a great debt forgiven him for see how loving and serviceable hee is to his Creditor 3 Freely you have received freely give Matth. 10.8 and freely forgive Redemption by Christ sufficient THE THIRD SERMON ON Rom. 3.24 25. Justified through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ HAving spoken before of the Efficient Cause of the justification of a Sinner as also of the inward impulsive Cause that is the free grace of God Come we now to the meritorious cause of Justification through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ which redemption hath the nature of the Meritorious or impetrating cause or Procatarctical Cause of a sinners justification 1 Because it was the means which Gods justice did require before grace could actually justify 2 It hath the nature of the formal cause so far forth as it is accepted for us that it being imputed and applyed to us God pronounces the sentence of our absolution Now to open the words first inquire Quest 1 What is meant by Redemption here Answ 1 Redemption is taken in Scripture two waies first improperly and generally and so it signifies any deliverance from evil or danger or enemies as it is used Exod. 15.13 Thou in thy mercy hast lead forth thy people whom thou hast redeemed The deliverance out of Egypt is called a Redemption There were of old three waies of redemption first by Manumission when a King doth let his vassal voluntarily go out free thus we could not be redeemed for the devil never meant to let us go free and especially it could not stand with Gods blessed nature Holiness Justice Truth Hatred of sin thus to set us at liberty Secondly by Permutation thus we could not be redeemed for recompence could not be made to God by exchange of any creature for that infinite wrong done to him by mans sin Matth. 16.26 Thirdly By violent oblation or conquest as Abraham redeemed Lot by rescuing him but mankind might not bee redeemed by this alone for though Christ might justly spoil Satan of his prey which hee by subtile wiles methods and falshoods had gotten yet mankind being guilty of high treason against God and therefore locked up under his wrath and curse no power was strong enough to redeem us out of his hands but these are all improper waies of redemption and too low to reach the thraldome mankind was faln into 2 Properly in a more speciall way of Redemption by giving a price or ransome for a poor Captive or Slave this is plainly signified by the word used in the Text which hints redemption by way of Ransome there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it 1 Tim. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2.6 Christ gave his life a Ransome for all The ordinary word used for redemption is the buying of any thing again by paying a Price Object Some Hereticks object Sin and Satan to whom sinners are Captive receive no price for Ransome Sol. Wee are primarily Gods Captives who is the Judge against whom wee have sinned to whose Wrath Curse judgement and vengeance wee are in bondage the ransome therefore is paid to God as the Judge Satan is but the Goaler sin the bonds and chains the World and Death as the Prison and Torments Wee are indeed when the ransome is paid to the justice of God set at liberty from those other in a way of power and lawful conquest So Christ is said to lead Captivity Captive Eph. 4.8 that is all those enemies that had lead us Captive but the price is paid to God himself to whom wee do therefore pray for the forgiveness of our sins and that in regard of the ransome paid by Jesus Christ Heb. 2.14 Luke 11.21 Christ may bee in some sort called the strong man armed that is stronger than Satan and spoils him of his goods c. Quest 2 What is meant by the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus Answ Christ is prefixt with three several Prepositions in the Scripture phrase 1 For Christ Phil. 1.29 To you it is given for Christ not only to beleeve but also to suffer 2 In Christ Eph. 1.3 Who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in Christ 3 Through Christ Rom. 7.24 Blessed bee God who hath given us victory through Christ The reason of them is 1 Wee have redemption in Christ because in Christ as a common store-house every blessing is first laid up and then imparted to his members As our death and condemnation was in the first Adam before it was applyed or actually received by us 2 Wee have redemption through Christ because Christ doth by his obedience purchase it which in due time is communited to us as from the first Adams desert came condemnation 3 For Christ seems to bee used in regard Christ is as well the Mediatour of application as impetration obtaining grace for us and working grace in us Hence Faith and Patience are said to bee wrought in the Elect. The words thus opened afford two points 1 That the justification of every sinner is through the redemption and satisfaction wrought by Christ 2 That there is a singular and plentiful redemption wrought by Christ sufficient to make satisfaction to God for the vilest sinners Of which in the first place Doct. 1 That there is a singular and plentiful redemption Redemption by Christ sufficient for the vilest sinners wrought by Christ sufficient to make satisfaction to God for the vilest Sinners The Text is emphatical it is That redemption that is in Jesus Christ such as was never heard of before nor matched in the worlds voluminous Histories or Records T is described Matth. 20.28 Christ came to give his life a Ransome for many that must needs bee a plentiful redemption that was wrought by the death of the Son of God So 1 Tim. 2.6 Hee gave his life a ransome for all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies a ransom paid for Captives and Christ himself must needs bee a great Price and for the sufficiency of it 1 It is spiritual of the soul as well as body Psal 49.15 God will redeem my
soul from the hand c. 2 It is an irresistible and mighty redemption Luke 1.67 Hee hath raised up a Horn of salvation that is a Kingdome power Dignity and strength of salvation every way sufficient to succour 3 Perfect not only in impretation of a possibility of deliverance but also in actual application to call the Elect to bring their soules to glory Rev. 5 9. Thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood so also from all our enemies Luk. 1.71 That wee should bee saved from our Enemies from all our iniquities Tit. 2.14 from death Hos 13.14 I will ransome thee from the power of the grave from the power of Satan Heb. 2.14 By death hee destroyed him that had the power of Death that is the Devil from the World Gal. 1.4 from the wrath of God Rom. 5.9 not onely present but to come 1 Thess 1.10 from the whole curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.15 from all that which the justice of God hath pronounced against transgressors yea both of soul and body to eternity Eph. 4.30 Heb. 9.12 Reas 1 Taken from the fitness of Christs Person being the word Incarnate to accomplish the work of our redemption for three things are required 1 Power to redeem us and to vanquish our Enemies Hell Death World Devil Christ is God over all Rom. 9.5 2 Right to redeem not only of propriety but of propinquity the next kinsman onely can redeem Deut. 25.5 the second Person in the Trinity that took mans nature was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 next of kin Eph. 5.30 flesh and blood 3 Dignity must bee given to the price paid Act. 20.28 these things suited none but Christ Reas 2 From things requisite to a sufficient redemption and satisfaction as 1 Price must bee such as will content the person to whom 't is due but the ransome paid by Christ was according to the Fathers will Heb. 10.9 and a sweet smelling savour to God Eph. 5.2 2 There must be an equality too of the debt or wrong in the Price paid for therefore satisfaction is required the sin of man made all things unequal between God and man now Justice requires equality 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Eth. Ezek. 18.29 Oh yee house of Israel are not my waies equal are not your waies unequall such is the satisfaction of Christ to all the sinnes and punishments temporal and eternal of all the Elect and is a just recompence for all the dishonour and wrong done to God by them which the glory of the World could not have reached to 1 Pet. 1.18 19. you were not redeemed with corruptible things as silver and gold c. It was such a Price as by one offering perfected for ever Heb. 10.14 those that are sanctified and what would we have more than perfection was the Law broken Christ is better than the Law hee is the essential word of God doth sin rob God of his Glory Christ is the brightness of his Fathers Glory Heb. 1.3 3 The Price paid must bee voluntary not forced for otherwise it would rather bee satispassion than satisfaction The damned in Hell do not satisfy for sin Christs payment was voluntary Joh 10.15 I lay down my Life and vers 18. I have power to lay it down He gave himself for us Eph. 5.2 4 Satisfaction must bee of that which is otherwise undue such was Christs the Father could in Justice exact no such matter at his hands being innocent He made him to be sin who knew none 2 Cor. 5.21 5 It must bee clear and evident to secure Captives or Debtors and to give their Souls and Consciences satisfaction but such was Christs redemption Heb. 9.9 14. The gifts and Sacrifices of the Law could not make him that did the services perfect as pertaining to the Conscience c. but Christ offered through the eternal Spirit that is the God-head of Christ purged the conscience from dead works Witness also the Resurrection the full price is paid seeing our surety is set at liberty from the grave Rom. 4.25 the Prison into which hee was cast for our sins Vse 1. To confute sundry errors and Heresies Confutation of Popish partial redemption and Socinian blasphemies that deny it as of Papists that make Christ a partial Redeemer and his satisfaction imperfect that bee satisfyes onely for the fault and leaves us to satisfy for the punishment or that he redeemed us from the eternal but would leave us to satisfy for the temporal punishment If Christs redemption bee perfect there is nothing left to bee done by us nor suffered in way of satisfaction Heb. 7.25 Christ saves to the utmost and needs not our botching For the Socinians they ascribe no more than Turks to Christs redemption Let us cease to rake in those Dung-hills their Nomination is a sufficient confutation Use 2. This singular redemption by Christ Bondage of unregenerate necessarily infers a singular bondage and slavery in which all unregenerate sinners lye Jer. 10.14 Egypt was never such an iron Furnace as the sinner is in Were wee not enthralled what need a ransome what need of redemption bodily bondage as in the Turkish slavery mony might redeem but nothing less than the blood of God could redeem us See the estate of the ungenerate 1 They are in hands of such Lords as do rule with rigour and severity over them 2 They have not freedome of will to do any thing they could do in their state of innocency for God 3 They are forced to indure most intollerable things to be born 1 The Lords over natural men are of two sorts 1 Principal 2 Ministerial The Principal is the most just and terrible God whose Justice they have wronged by sin therefore wee are said to bee redeemed from under the curse of the Law Gal. 4.4 7. that is from under the revenging Justice of the Law As Malefactors are called the Kings Prisoners properly not the Goalers that keep them So Sinners are Gods Prisoners and who can deliver them out of his hand but Christ Ministeriall Lords are the Devil and his Angels and the Conscience accusing condemning and tormenting for sin Hence Sinners are said before Conversion to bee under the Devils power Act. 26.18 under the power of darkness Col. 1.13 and taken as beasts alive of the Devil at his will 2 Tim. 2. ult Yea God makes a mans Conscience his keeper going up and down constantly with him haling him to condemnation Thus the Spirit often works through the Law in the affrighted Conscience and though some make this their Keeper Drunk that they may escape yet God awakens him to his former terror 2 A natural man hath no spiritual liberty to do nor enjoy good by any Promise Ordinance or Priviledge his heart is weary and burthened by all Mal. 1.13 hee is led by the nose as a slave serving divers lusts and pleasures Tit. 3.3 led along like bruite beasts with sensuality and hurried on by a violent appetite
as 2 Pet. 2.12 and chained fast to his lust by the bonds of iniquity Act. 8.23 his own iniquity shall take the wicked Prov. 5.22 3 Hee suffers innumerable miseries and intollerable Heb. 2.15 through fear of death c. When a man hath spent his wit youth strength state and worn out himself in the Devils drudgery when his body soul and Credit are all lost by the Devils service what reward for his true and trusty obedience Rom. 6. ult The wages of sin is death and Psal 11.6 7. Fire snares brimstone stormy tempests of Gods furious indignation this is the portion of his Cup. 1 Aggravation of this bondage of sinners O the misery of natural man far surpassing that of a Beast if a Dog bee chained hee howls if the Swine bee bound hee cries but sinful man laughs in the middest of his bondage hee counts it his liberty to live a slave to the Devil and thinks to gratify his fleshly lusts is liberty yea and promise others liberty in this course too whilest themselves are servants of corruption 2 Pet. 2.19 though they have no more liberty than the Oxe that is lead to the slaughter 2 They will not beleeve nor understand their bondage as when Christ offered liberty to the Jews Joh. 8.32 they said they were never in bondage to any Their thraldome entered not into their thoughts and they disliked that our Saviour should mind them of it As it fared with those men that Elisha lead to Samaria they were bands of the Syrians yet followed the Prophet being blind into the City of their enemies thinking they had gone to Damascus So it is with these while the Devil lead them to Hell where they must perish beyond all hope and take up a room amongst murthering Spirits they yet conceive they are walking towards Heaven and defie the Devil as having nothing to do with him who are at the very Pits mouth the very brink of Hell and by no means will bee stopped O beloved Let no man deceive himself imagining that if the Laws of men take not hold of him but hee goes where hee lists and doth what hee will then hee is the onely man that leadeth a free Life but rather know that every States Free-man is not Christs Free-man or redeemed one No no there bee many that fare daintily live in all Lieentiousness have their fill of Worldly Pleasures and run at randome like the Beasts in the Wildernesse that are more arrant Slaves than those that row in the Gallies of Turky Let them turn the inside outward and they will finde Legions of domineering Devils commanding over them If thou didst never feel this spiritual bondage 't is a certain sign thou art under it still Colos 1.13 Who hath delivered us c. See Luke 11.21 its aggravation 1 In that it is of the Soul Peter Epist 1. Chapter 3. speaks of Spirits in Prison a natural mans spirit is one of them and shuts up in Sin too which is the worst Prison 2 Here the means of escape are far more difficult another Slave may run away or his bolts bee removed or hee may buy his liberty but here is no possibility of it Rom. 7.24 3 Here bee more bad Masters they serve divers Lusts Tit. 3.3 So many Lusts so many Masters Jacob found it hard to please Laban one bad Master 4 Here men love their bondage so that if liberty bee offered they refuse it Joh. 8.36 Christ proclaimed liberty to the Jews but they refused it Yea Caution to children of godly Parents not to think they are born free by way of Caution know That the Children of godly Parents though they use to think themselves born free through their Parents Covenant are not free from this bondage It was the Jews great delusion Joh. 8.33 39. that they stood so much upon their parentage that they were Abrahams seed Christ tells them another story you are of your Father the Devil and so said the Baptist Matth. 3.9 Think not to say within your selves c. you are a Generation of Vipers To speak then a word in mercy to all Church-Children and to all the Children of Godly Parents 'T is true you have a great blessing and precious priviledges that are born of such Parents but know that this spiritual Freedome comes not by discent Joh. 1.13 Which are born not of the flesh c. Yea more godly parentage makes a Childes condemnation much worse whilest hee lies still in his natural estate Ezekiel 16.3 your Father was an Amorite c. They were in the sight of God but as the Nations devoted to destruction if they do evil though of the stock of Israel Manasses the Sonne of Godly Hezekiah did worse than the Amorites 2 King 21.11 So many Children of Godly Parents are worse than the Indian Salvages And it is to bee feared that when your Parents are gathered to their Fathers as it follows vers 12 13. The Lord will stretch over New-England the Line of Samaria and the Plummet of the house of Ahab and will wipe New-England as a man wipes a dish wiping and turning it upside down You have more to answer for than the Indians have you have publick priviledges and private instruction and examples Remember that the Lord will one day say to you if you continue in this estate as he did to the Jews Joh. 8.40 you do thus and thus so did not Abraham you are lofty and proud so was not your father you follow loose company so did not your Father you love the pot and revelling so did not your father you care not what mischief you do to others so did not your Father you live in unclean courses you talk cursedly c. as it is v. 39. if you were Abrahams children in Gods account you would do the works of Abraham that is you would be godly and humble and righteous and sober as your Parents were Therefore lay aside all such foolish conceits and look to the rock from whence you were hewen Isa 51.1 and tread in the steps of your godly Parents Redemption by Christ sufficient THE FOURTH SERMON ON Romans 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Doct. THat there is a singular and plenteous redemption wrought by Jesus Christ sufficient to make satisfaction to God for the vilest sinners Two uses have been handled Vse 3. Comfort to the redeemed Comfort to all those that have interest in Christ for to them belongs this plenteous redemption A mercy greater than ever was bestowed upon the Creature as appears 1 In that they are redeemed from the Justice and Wrath of God and the Curse of the Law that the blessing of Abraham may come upon them Gal. 3.13 14. that is all the blessings of the Covenant of grace And what can be more than this 2 In that they are redeemed from all iniquity Tit. 2.14 so that no sin can hurt them and though they complain of
the greatnesse and multitude of their sins yet have they a good and sure hope through grace still Psal 130.6 O Israel hope in the Lord for with the Lord there is mercy and with him is plenteous redemption From 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multum esse magnum esse plurimum esse The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying great and multiplied redemption that though sin abounds yet grace shall much more abound 3 In that they are redeemed from the perpetuity of all miseries felt or feared Thus did Job comfort his heart Job 19.25 Oh that my words were written oh that they were printed in a book that they were graven with an Iron Pen and in-laid in a Rock for ever What words were these that hee would thus eternize Why these I know that my redeemer lives and that he shall stand the latter day upon the earth and though after my skin worms destroy my body yet in my flesh shall I see God c. that is hee will redeeme me from all my troubles in life and death it self and saies at death Lord into thy hands I commend my spirit for thou hast redeemed mee O God of truth Psal 31.5 Quest How shall we know that we have a part in this Redemption Answ Trial of our redemption by Christ 1. If we be not in bondage to sin which appears in the commission and practise of sin according to that rule Joh. 8.34 Verily verily I say unto you that whosoever commits sin is a servant of sin This rule is universally true no man is set at liberty that commits sin and vehemently asserted Verily verily without all controversie and generally inclusive Whosoever doth it as 1 Joh. 3.8.10 He that commits sin is of the Devil yet note that committing sin is not intended of every particular individual act for so all men commit sin 1 Joh. 1.8.10 the free-men of Christ as well as the bondslaves of the Devil but of the common practice and work of wicked men so 't is 1 Ioh. 3.9 Hee that is born of God doth not work sin and 't is opposed to vers 7. where 't is said Hee that doth or worketh righteousnesse is righteous Now to doe righteousnesse is to exercise it customarily voluntarily deliberately to chuse a righteous course so to commit sin is voluntarily to live in the practice or allowance of any course of sin whatsoever So that he which gives common allowance to any one sin can have no comfort in this redemption but is in bondage still for saies Paul Rom. 6.16 Know you not that to whom you yeeld your selves servants to obey his servants you are c. You lose your own freedome yea you have sold your selves Isa 50.1 Behold for your iniquities you have sold your selves you take profit and pleasure and sell the Devil the eternal possession of your souls yea he holds them by conquest too 2 Pet. 2.19 Of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage Satan fights by tentations and subdues the soul so that it obeys him as a lawful Soveraign as often as it voluntarily chooses any sin ransack therefore an enlightned conscience and it will soon give an Account of liberty or bondage through the observation of thy course of life Obj. But may not a childe of God live and dye in such a state as David 2 Sam. 12.9 or as Paul Rom. 7.14 I am carnal and sold under sin Sol. It is impossible 1 Joh. 3.9 that hee that is born of God should so sin because the seed of grace abides in him and works these four things 1 A will and resolution in all things to live honestly Heb. 13.18 2 A resistance and reluctation against every known sin Gal. 5.17 3 Watchfulnesse about every concernment to prevent sin 1 Ioh. 5.18 4 Restlesnesse in case of relapse As in the Natural body all is restlesse till every joynt be in its place again so in a gracious heart 't is never satisfied till it come back into Gods way Where therefore this restlesnesse and reluctancy is wanting the soul is plunged into the depths of this hellish bondage The heart is hard to be perswaded of this estate and therefore Christ hath spoken so earnestly If thou seest not this misery or act unwillingly to try thy self or wouldest passe over the matter slightly thou mayest infallibly report thy self a slave to Satan and subject to this bondage 2 Consider how Redemption is applied of which Elihu gives an elegant description Job 33.19 to vers 25. Hee is such a one as is pinched with his bondage and chastened with strong pain his soul draws neer to the Grace and his life to the Buryers Then if there be a messenger one of a thousand to declare to man his righteousnesse God will be gracious unto him and say Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome 1 The Lord opens the Ears to Discipline How redemption is applied which were before quite stopped up 2 Then he is arrested with the Lords indignation clapt up in prison and laid by the heels 3 Then he looks for deliverance and bayl and some messenger of glad tidings How earnestly doth his soul long for a ransome 4 At last the Lord saith I will be gracious Thus the spirit of bondage precedes and the spirit of adoption follows None set at liberty but such as know their bondage Obj. But a man may see his bondage and never be redeemed out of it Sol. True but none miscarry that are painfully inquisitive after the means of redemption Acts 23.7 16.30 For Reprobates see their bondage and sink under it as Cain and Judas seeking either no means through sluggishnesse and deadnesse of heart or false means through folly and blindnesse 3 Consider what resistance hath been made against thee in thy deliverance out of thy captivity for none is set at liberty without much opposition Satan like Pharaoh Exod. 3.19 will not let you goe no not with an high hand Hee will never let goe as long as he can hold you Luke 11.21 The strong man armed keeps the Palace holds his Prisoners with all his might till a stronger than he comes and ejects him Seek after this resistance 4 See what assistance of God thou hast had against all this resistance by the Devil As he stretched out his arme to deliver out of Aegypt Exod. 6.6 so he puts forth mighty power to deliver from the powers of darknesse by the spirit of his grace Col. 1.12 13. Acts 26.28 Hast thou felt this mighty power Vse 4. Of instruction and exhortation to shew men whither to goe for Redemption And 1 To those that find themselves to bee in this bondage Haste you for there is redemption in Christ none such to be had or heard of all the world over beside And what then should you doe but seek after this Zech. 9.12 Instruction to men in Spiritual bondage Turn you to your strong hold
of Christs redemption who though by his redemption hee freed us from sin and Satans power yet never doth free us from their molestations till the Resurrection when Redemption shall bee fully accomplished For Canaanites are in the Land still Tentations Fears and Doubts molest the Conscience still Remainders of corruption make Paul cry out O miserable man that I am Rom. 7.24 and to still his conscience hee looks at Christ again vers 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. God will have us continually beholding to his Son and therefore hath made him Redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 to us 3 To be Servants of God Be Gods Servants that hath bought us at so dear a rate As the redeemed Gally-slave should look upon himself as his Servant that redeemed him Thus Paul argues 1 Cor. 6.19 20. Yee are not your own for you are bought with a price c. You owe your Life and Liberty to the Lord Jesus You are his by right of purchase be therefore wholly at his disposing Never was a dearer rate paid in the world Your utmost service though vessels fit for your Masters use will never recompence the charge laid out upon you You are his by Creation and his by Redemption Hee purchased your souls bodies and spirits and justly then may he challenge all This was the end of our deliverance Luke 1.74 75. delivered from our enemies to serve him 4 Stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made you free Stand fast in Christian liberty Gal. 5.1 All sorts of enemies of our salvation seek to pluck some of our liberty from us The Devil would have us abuse it as an occasion to the flesh Gal. 5.13 to turn our liberty into licentiousnesse as doe the Libertines Papists would bring us in bondage to the Law by looking for righteousnesse from thence Some would bring our Consciences in subjection to mens inventions but Paul adviseth us 1 Cor. 2.23 that being bought with a price we should not bee the servants of men nor subject our consciences to mens traditions 5 You that are at liberty remember them that are in bonds Heb. 13.3 as if you were bound with them Remember them that are in Spiritual bonds See how many in your Families Towns and Neighbour-hood goe clattering up and down in the bonds of iniquity in the fetters and chains of the Devil Pitty these poor prisoners Give them a lift to help them out Admonish the unruly pray for them that have not sinned unto death that they may bee set at liberty This is eminent charity 6 Bee thankful and seriously acknowledge the grace of God for the redemption that is in Christ Ezra 9.8 acknowledges a little reviving in their bondage Acts 12.5 how much more should wee eternal life It is an earnest prayer Psal 107.1 2. O give thanks unto the Lord for he is good for his mercy endureth for ever Let the redeemed of the Lord say so c. who ever is silent Let the redeemed say so So Psal 136.24 This is meant by the Song of Moses and the Lamb Revel 13.3 Moses and Israel praised God for deliverance from Aegypt the red Sea c. how much more should the Saints break forth into praises for deliverance from the nethermost Hell Spiritual bondage is the worst bondage And soul-redemption is the greatest redemption Isa 44.23 Senslesse creatures rejoyce only at the redemption of Gods people from Babylon But what is Babylon in comparison of our redemption by Christ Hear the Apostle Col. 1.12 13. Giving thanks unto God who hath delivered us from the powers of darknesse and translated us into the Kingdome of his dear Son in whom wee have redemption c. No love like that of Christ not no love of Christ like that manifested in our redemption Let thankfulnesse also exceed Vse last Of consolation unspeakable to all beleevers Comfort against Sin and Satan that Redemption is wrought in Christ Sin hath begun to fall and must utterly fall before him that is the chief Captain of our Salvation Satan hath been foyled oft yea vanquished and at last shall be cast bound in chains to eternal torments while the Saints shall triumph with their Redeemer for ever and ever The Satisfaction of Christ THE FIFTH SERMON ON Rom. 3.24 25. Being justified freely by his Grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ THe first Doctrine being unfolded and improved we now come to the second Doct. The justification of a Sinner is through the redemption of Christ 2. That the justification of a Sinner is through the redemption and satisfaction wrought by Christ. This truth the Holy Ghost bears witnesse to Ephes 2.7 In whom we have redemption through his bloud the forgivenesse of our sins Col. 1.14 hath the same words expresly Tit. 2.14 wee are said to bee redeemed from all iniquity That implies iniquity cannot be taken away as it is in the justification of a Sinner but in a way of redemption and satisfaction Quest 1. What is the nature of this satisfaction for the word is rarely found in Scripture Ans As it referres to men the word is found Mark 15.15 Pilate willing to satisfie the people released Barrabbas the Greek is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to satisfie is to doe as much as is surficient to him that expostulates or is wronged or to fulfill ones desires either by words or deeds But as satisfaction hath reference to a debt so it signifies full pay or to give a full price But as satisfaction hath reference to our debt unto God the word is not found expresly in Scripture but there are equipollent terms of the same signification as redemption here in the text paying a price and ransome c. which cannot be interpreted in any other good sense but as intending satisfaction Of which nature are these phrases Isa 53.5 Hee was wounded for our transgressions And again vers 8. For the transgressions of my people was hee smitten 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ dyed for our sins Heb. 10.12 Hee offered a Sacrifice for sins The word for there signifies the impulsive outward or meritorious cause respecting the punishment due to our sins Which is manifest 1 In that sin in Scripture is called a debt Matth. 6.12 Forgive us our debts Not that wee owe sin to God but that it makes us liable to Gods justice as Debts of mony make us liable to our Creditors and to any just course in Law for their recovery This debt of sin cannot possibly bee satisfied for by man for Matth. 18.24 it is a debt of ten thousand talents And the Spirits in prison 1 Pet. 3.21 can for ever suffer but not at all satisfie 2 Seeing all Mankind must otherwise eternally perish God the Father appointed of his rich grace and God the Son in infinite compassion condescends to bee our Surety and to take the debt upon himself Isa 53.10 It pleased the Lord to bruise him and vers 6. The Lord hath laid on him
without shedding of blood there is no remission So that the blood of Christ is the Antitype aimed at in the blood of those Sacrifices that were slain for sins Doct. That Christ by way of Satisfaction for sinners suffered the full and utmost punishment due to the sins of the Elect. Col. 1.20 To clear which 1 Consider that hee endured bodily infirmities and weaknesses as hunger Matth. 4.2 thirst weariness Joh. 4.6 poverty 2 Cor. 8.9 wanting the ordinary provisions and comforts of this life Mat. 8.20 The Son of man hath not where to lay his head Isa 53.3 Hee was an ab●ect among men a man of grief and acquainted with infirmity 2 Hee also underwent ignominy and extream disgrace by unjust accusations and vile reproaches hee is charged with blasphemy and of Leagues with Devils yea with Beelzebub the Prince of Devils Matth. 12.24 accused of sedition Rebellion Drunkenness Gluttony and that hee was a friend of Publicans and Sinners Matth. 11.19 3 Hee received many other injuries before his death as binding buffeting Luk. 22.63 scourging spitting blind-folding and evil intreating as if hee had been some fool or mad-man Isa 50.6 Hee gave his back to the smiters and his cheeks to them that plucked off the hair hee hid not his face from shame and spitting 4 Hee suffered Death it self Ne●at est vincire civem Romanam scelus verberare quid dicam in crucem tollere Cic. cloathed with all the circumstances of horror and terror both a shameful and a painful death which none but Slaves and bond-men could bee put to Roman free-men never felt it It was a lingring and tedious death his hands and feet stabbed with nailes his bones put out of joynt Psal 22.14 A death accursed of God Gal. 3.13 and therefore Paul speaks it out with an Emphasis Phil. 2.6 Christ suffered onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. Hee was obedient to the death even the death of the Cross T is true some kind of sufferings called by Divines dishonourable sufferings not suitable to his person nor consistent with the Prophecies of him as noysome diseases tearing of his body in pieces breaking his bones or the corruption or rotting of any one part Act. 2.27 could not bee suffered by him Thus much the body of Christ suffered Now for his soul-suffering Christ not only suffered bodily death but also the pains of the second death Isa 53.12 Hee poured out his soul unto death yea unto deaths for the Original word is in the plural number to shew that it stands in two things 1 In the absence and withdrawing of God from the soul and the hiding the light of Gods countenance from it leaving it to blackness of darkness It was Sauls sad complaint That God was departed from him 1 Sam. 28.15 So was it Christs misery when hee cryed out My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Matth. 27.46 which departure of God answers the pain of loss that the Elect should have suffered yet know that Christ was left but for a time and that in regard of sense and feeling of comfort only and no farther 2 The fierce Indignation and wrath of God seized upon him setting open the flood-gates of his anger to overwhelm him with an unsufferable torture of which when Heman had but a small drop to that full Cup which Christ drunk hee complains Psal 88.16 Thy fierce wrath goeth over mee and thy terrours have cut mee off At the taste of which Job Job 6.4 cries The Arrows of the Almighty are within me the poyson whereof drinketh up my spirits the terrors of God set themselves in array against mee And this suffering of Christ answereth to that punishment of sense the Elect should indure The second death is expressed Isa 30. ult By Tophet a●● a pile of fire and much wood The breath of the Lord like a river of brimstone doth kindle it The breath of Gods displeasure is the very bellows of Hell that blows up that infernal fire as truely easless as endless to these Reprobates that bear the punishment of their own sins alone but oh how heavy when upon Christ is laid the iniquity of Vs all Isa 53.6 so that hee is well said Rev. 19.15 To tread the wine-Press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God Christs suffering of the second death was either in the Garden or on the Cross 1 His Agony in the Garden is described Mark 14.33 Matth. 26.28 Luke 22.44 Mark saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee began to bee amazed and to bee very heavy or wee may more fully express it thus Hee begun to be gastred with wonderful astonishment and to bee satiated filled brimfull with heaviness A very sad condition Matth. 26.38 hee said my soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death It is beleagured or compassed round with sorrow for so sounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All the sins of the Elect like a huge Army meeting upon him made a dreadful on-set on his soul Luke 22.43 44. 'T is said Hee was in an Agony That 's a conflict in which a poor Creature wrastles with deadly pangs with all his might mustring up all his faculties and force to grapple with them and withstand them Thus did Christ struggle with the indignation of the Lord praying once and again with more intense fervency Oh that the Cup may pass away if it bee possible while yet an Angel strengthened his outward man from utter sinking in the conflict Now if this weight that Christ bare had been laid on the shoulders of all the Angels in heaven it would have sunk them down to the lowest hell It would have crackt the Axel-tree of Heaven and Earth It made his blood startle out of his body in congealed cloddered heaps The heat of Gods fiery indignation made his blood to boil up till it ran over yea affrightened it out of its wonted chanel The Creation cost him but a words speaking and it was done but it costs bloody sweats soul-distraction to go through the work of redemption 2 His Agony on the Cross where hee drinks down the very Gall and dregs of the Cup that hee but sipped of before You hear him groaning out Matth. 27.46 with a loud voice Eli Eli Lamasabachthani Which is not as Papists say a leaving of Christ in the hand of the Jews for the misery of death of the Saints of the meanest rank doth not argue that God hath forsaken them 2 Cor. 4.9 Wee are persecuted but not forsaken Nor may we think the God-head ever had left the man-hood or that our Saviour had forsook his Father for hee called him still My God my God but the forsaking was the Fathers with-drawing the light of his countenance and then what could follow but darkness and extream horror The words are taken from Psal 22.1 where the blessed God is spoken to as quite and clean gone out of the hearing of his crying and roaring Now that must needs bee much more than forsaking that made the Son of
the Servant what will become of the Slave Laugh on but know that Christ wept for sin rejoyce thou but withall remember that Christs soul was heavy to the death about it And it may bee thou wilt one day hear God laughing at thy misery as thou dost at thy sin Prov. 1.26 'T is said of Babylon Rev. 18.7 So much as shee hath glorified her self so much sorrow and torment give her Christ smarted for the sins of the Elect and thou must one day expect to feel as much torment for sin as thou hast taken pleasure in committing of it The sport and pleasure of sin is like that play 2 Sam. 2.14 where they destroyed each other Young men in merriment and jollity make a mirthful pastime of Drunkenness and riotting till their sports prove the bloody murtherers of each other Man nor Angel durst not call Christ accursed if the Holy Ghost had not said it Gal. 3.13 and surely then O vain man thy condition must needs bee exceeding cursed if Christ were accursed for sin imputed only Oh the gall of bitterness that sin will bring wretched men into Knowest thou not that it will bee bitterness in the latter end 2 Sam. 2.26 2 Conceivest thou 2 Conceit that God is merciful and therefore thou shalt do well enough though thou dost continue in sin Know that God spared not his only Son Rom. 8.32 and why should hee spare thee his very enemy would hee not spare a Son and an onely Son and will hee spare a stranger an enemy Shall a Son of Belial speed better than the Son of God Did Christs neerness of relation abate him nothing and shalt thou bee abated hopest thou to finde more mercy at Gods hands than Christ could Luke 23.31 If this bee done in the green tree what will hee do in the dry Christ was not such dry fuel for his Fathers wrath to burn up as thou art Rev. 14.10 They shall drink of the wine of Gods wrath poured out without mixture 3 But I will pray 3 Conceit and amend my life and turn over a new leaf and God will be gracious Canst thou pray better than Christ hee prayed earnestly Luke 22.44 with strong Cries and Tears Heb. 5.7 hee spent whole nights in prayer Luke 6.12 yet must he dye the death Canst thou reform and bee more holy than Christ hee fulfilled all righteousness Matth. 3.17 Hee did alwaies what pleased the Father Joh. 8.29 and yet all would not bee taken for current pay without his bearing the extremity of Gods fearful indignation What hope canst thou then maintain while thou lyest in sin 4 If I go to Hell I shall have company 4 Conceit and will speed as well as others and will bear it as well as I can wilt thou bear it O heap of dust Hast thou an Arm like God Job 40.9 knowest thou what thou sayest Christ is stronger than all Men and Angels that created the Heavens and bears up its Pillars that they stagger not yet blood leaps out of his veins when hee comes to encounter his Fathers wrath Hee cries with tears Father if it be possible Let this Cup pass from mee And again hee groans it out Psal 90.11 Who knows the power of his Anger that made his Son thus to cry out The earth trembled at it The Sun mourned under an Eclipse at the sight of it The graves opened to sigh at his sorrow The rocks cleft in sunder Was the mighty God put to all these perplexities to bear his Fathers wrath And shall such a worm as thou art bee able to wade through such a bottomless Sea of miseries All Christs sufferings were voluntary and chosen by himself and perfectly known before hee suffered them so that hee was prepared for them nor had hee any sin to weaken his strength or increase his burden and fully knew what infinite good his sufferings would do to save thousands to reconcile God and man to glorify God but not one of these chearing considerations can bee found in thy sufferings Thine will bee violent and suddain and unknown until thou feelest them and wilt have the burden of thine own sin as well as misery a pittiful gaulded back to bear so great a burden no good can come by all thy torments and canst thou hope to bear so great a burden as this to eternity Oh saies Spira That I might indure the wrath of God but twenty thousand years but it must bee eternally Thy soul must say after millions of years The pit is bottomeless The fire is unquenchable 5 But Christ hath suffered 5 Conceit therefore surely I never shall suffer these things Christs sufferings cannot prevent nor ease the torments of Christlesse souls Rev. 6.16 17. 1 Pet. 2.8 None can have the benefit of his death that have nor the benefit of his life His blood justifies none that continue strangers to the will of God Cavil But this is Legal Preaching in Gospel times speak to us of peace in Christ Reply Surely this is Gospel Preaching and a principal Doctrin of the Gospel too If justification by Christ be legal Doctrin what is Evangelical The Spirit saies in the Gospel though men love not to hear it Eph. 5.6 That the Unclean Malitious Covetous Drunkards shall never enter into the Kingdom of God And in truth all the threats of the Law and torments of the damned cannot set out sin in so ugly and dismal a face as this point doth The Law shews sin a sword to draw our blood but this shews it to be a Spear drawing the heart blood of the Son of God The Law makes man accursed the Gospel makes the Son of God accursed The sin of all the world on one man could not bring him so low as the least sin of the Elect can bring the Son of God Adams sin threw him out of Paradise from earth to earth and his Sons into hell that is but from earth to hell but Christ is by imputed sin fallen from the glory of heaven to the very sorrows of hell Whither then will the sinner fly for succour Do not think O impenitent man that thou canst better thy self by flying from the Law to the Gospel If Christ for sin suffered such things where shall the ungodly and sinner appear 1 Pet. 4.17 The Extremity and exactness of Christs Sufferings THE SEVENTH SERMON ON Romans 3.24 25. Through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Doct. WEE have already proved and in part applied this Doctrin That the Redemption of Sinners was wrought by Christs suffering the utmost and full punishment du● to sin Wee are now to proceed to the second use Vse 2. This informs that no punishment properly so called belongs to the Members of Christ nor are any of their Afflictions to bee deemed punishments for sin For if Christ hath suffered to the full All the punishment due to his Members then there is no punishment left to them to suffer but Christ hath suffered to
have destroyed Christ had not the sins of the elect met on him 2 The killing Christ is a farre fouler bloud-guiltinesse than ever David incurred than to kill an only Son or to murther a Josiah a King a godly King for this is the crucifying the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 and may therefore well be lamented 3 The love we owe and bear to Christ for his unparallel'd condescentions to make us heirs of glory should engage our hearts to weep for his death as he did for Lazarus's death Joh. 11.35 56. which the Jewes took notice of to be the probate of his love Behold how he loved him Thus Christ imputes the repenting tears of that sinful woman Luke 7.47 to love Christs great graciousnesse makes the most stony heart to lament its provocations 4 The sense of our dreadful and undone estate that needed the death of Christ to establish a Covenant of Grace with us should provoke us to bee in bitternesse as God expects Ezeck 16.62 63. And I will establish my Covenant with thee and thou shalt know that I am the Lord. That thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou hast done saith the Lord. 5 The Spirit of grace and supplication is now poured forth into the soul and that Spirit is a spirit of Lamentation and works and continues a broken and contrite spirit in all that receive it as it did in those Converts Acts 2.37 Pricking them to the heart for all their wrongs and injuries put upon Christ for embruing their hands in his precious bloud Look back therefore upon thy pleasure that thou hast taken in sin and with what greedinesse thou hast committed it and compare them with Christs sufferings and what hee deserved at thy hands that it may break thy heart as it did Davids 2 Sam. 12.7 8. when hee had long lain in a slumbering condition and God told him how much he had done for him wondring that after so much love he should despise his Commandements and make so wretched a requital How doth he cry out upon his sins vers 13. and loathes himself Obj. But a Christian should rejoyce in the Crosse of Christ how then comes it to be the object of sorrow Sure Paul thought otherwise Gal. 6.14 Sol. How the Crosse is a ground of rejoycing as well as of mourning It is true Christs Crosse is a ground of rejoycing as well as a ground of sorrow Of sorrow in respect of that hand we had in his death the wounds which our sins gave him the hard dealing and unkind requital he hath received for all his love Of joy in respect of the benefits and good we receive by his death Let us therefore maintain a spring of godly sorrow for our sins and streams of joy for the blessings we receive by him which is the true eating the Passeover with bitter Herbs Exod. 12.8 Also making confession of their sins Levit. 16.21 The Papists have a seeming practice of this duty keeping Good-friday in penance and lamentation setting up a Crucifix before them and zealously hating the Jewes for putting Christ to death but think not of their own sins that they had a hand in it To whom Christ might justly say as to the Women weeping at his Crosse Luk. 23 28. O yee daughters of Jerusalem weep not for me but weep for your selves for your sins whereby you have wounded me which is the duty of every Christian 2 Upon the consideration of Christs extream sufferings for Sin the Members of Christ are pressed hard Christs members should hate sin to hate every evil way and to shun all sin for ever 1 Because it was one end of Christs crucifying To hate sin is the end of Christs death that sin and the flesh should be crucified Gal. 5.24 that They that are Christs have crucified the flesh understanding by the flesh the corruption of Nature with the affections and lusts of it Christs members should pluck up the very roots of sin the very inward lusts that grow in the heart Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our Old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might bee destroyed that is the whole corruption of Nature may be killed by the death of Christ yet not so farre as to free us from all sin but that we might not serve sin or obey it in the lusts thereof For this cause did Christ bear our sin upon the Crosse That we being dead unto sin might live unto righteousnesse 1 Pet. 2.24 That is that we should behave our selves like dead men not to be moved nor inticed to sin For first this was the end which God propounded to himself in his Sons death to destroy sin Wee must be very careful how we frustrate the end of God in our giving way to sin Secondly Christ hath by his death merited the death of sin and so we are said to dye with Christ and so bee freed from sin Rom. 6.7 Thirdly adde to this the efficacy of Christs death which works the ruine of sin in all his members Hence Phil. 3.10 wee read of a power and force in the death of Christ to make us conformable to his death while his Spirit is killing sin in us So that Christs death hath no comfort for them that hate not sin 2 Our sin killed Christ We must hate sin because it killed Christ if then wee have any love to Christ wee must needs kill sin Psal 97.10 Yee that l ve the Lord hate evil The Love of Christ constraineth us to it 2 Cor. 5.14 The law of Nature makes a man that hee cannot indure the sight of one that hath killed his father or his dear Friend but his very heart will rise against him and hee cannot choose but follow the Law upon him to the utmost to hang him if all the law in the World will do it And can wee bee so unnatural that sin should destroy our dearest Saviour and we not be avenged upon it How should wee bee transported with Indignation at sin that brought on our Redeemer the pains both of the first and second death Then let us pursue our sins with all possible detestations if wee let them go wee are no Friends to Christ Let us stab them to the heart till they bleed their last that drew the blood of Christ Let them never come to any Sanctuary or City of refuge but as Avengers of that precious blood let us leave sin no shift no way to escape Let us say to them as David to the young man that told him hee had slain Saul 2 Sam. 1.14 How wast thou not afraid to stretch out thy hand to destroy the Lords annointed and David commanded him strait to bee slain do thou likewise Reason thus also against all temptations these sins were the death of my Saviour and why should they bee my delight They pierced his hands and feet
blessings that are given us in Christ Yea they are dead and deadly things without Christ for the letter killeth 'T is his Divine power that sets all a work 2 Pet. 1.3 Let us then fix our thoughts therefore on Christs sufferings not onely now and then giving them a slight glance or two as they come in our way Let us dwell on the Meditation of his infinite love till our hearts are warmed and inlarged by it till it kindles heavenly affections in us till his love constrains us to every good duty 2 Cor. 5.14 'T is that the greatest part of the World never knew God hath not shewed his love to all people Let Christs love therefore work love in thee out-biding all other loves Matth. 10.37 to hate the very best things in nature in comparison of Christ yea our love to Christ should make us bold to attempt anything commanded by him So it wrought in Paul Act. 21.13 I am ready to dye for the name of the Lord Jesus And if any man love him not saith Paul 1 Cor. 16.22 Let him bee accursed till the Lord come 4 Let this Argument inforce brotherly love 'T is the Holy Ghosts own inference We cannot bestow our love better than on them whom Christ loves 1 Joh. 4.11 If Christ so loved us wee ought to love one another For wee ought to love them best that Christ loved best Wee cannot bestow our affections better than where Christ hath bestowed his Now Christ hath bestowed his dearest bowels on the Saints so also ought we to bee tender of each other Far be it from any Christian to bee of the mind of Josephs brethren to hate him the more because their Father Jacob loved him or because the Saints have more grace or more infirmities than our selves They must bee loved for their Fathers sake though they should give us some cause to slight them Christs Propitiation THE TENTH SERMON ON Rom. 3.24 25. Whom God hath set forth a Propitiation I Have spoken of the Redemption and Satisfaction of Christ and the fulness of that satisfaction Now of the efficacy thereof which is expressed in the word propitiation together with the efficient cause thereof i.e. God the Father and his manner of working in the word set forth Propitiation signifies the Lords Reconciliation to sinners by way of Sacrifice Heb. 2.17 Propitiation what it means 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Christ is said to bee a merciful High-Priest in things pertaining unto God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Where the Verb of which the word in the Text comes is used It belonged to the Priest when the people had sinned to make reconciliation for them to God by way of sacrifice as often in Levit. 5. 6. for which end God appointed certain expiatory sacrifices in the time of the Law the beast must dye instead of the sinner And this doth singularly set forth and express both the Priestly Office of Christ that it belongs to him and him onely to make an attonement and that by way of Sacrifice and oblation to God So Levit. 23.27 28. Propitiation is also often used for the Mercy Seat Heb. 9.5 referring to Exod. 25.17 18 21 22. which Mercy Seat covered the Ark of the Testimony wherein were put the two tables of the Law and there saith God I will meet thee I will commune with thee from above the mercy seat from between the two Cherubims for all things that I will give thee in commandement unto the children af Israel Where wee may consider 1 That as the Mercy Seat covered the Tables of the Law from the face of God dwelling between the Cl●●ru●ims aboue the Ark So Christ doth cover the transgressions of both the Tables of the Law from the face of God that hee should not behold sin so as to impute it to the faithful Thus 1 Joh. 2.2 2 The Mercy Seat was the place where God used to meet his people and to shew himself reconciled to them 3 There they might consult with God in their straights 4 That over against the Mercy Seat the Priest went daily to offer sacrifice Heb. 9.6 So that in this word is contained both the means appointed for the attonement i.e. The Sacrifice of Christ and also the Lords reconcilement unto the persons of his people 5 The Mercy Seat contained the Law so doth Christ all our righteousnesse 6 It was interposed betwixt the Testimony and the Lord so is Christ betwixt God and our sins Doct. Through the sacrifice of Christs blood the Father is pacified That through the Sacrifice of Christ God is pacified and appeased with all those that have fellowship with Christ 1 Joh. 2.1 2. Christ is called our propitiation in the abstract Signifying that all which is requisite to pacify Gods anger against us is laid up in Christ and his Death there needeth nothing more but onely the pleading of his merit with the Father which also Christ himself doth as our Advocate 1 Joh. 4.10 God sent his Son to bee the propitation for our sins 1 Thess 1.10 Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood wee shall bee saved from wrath through him This was typified by all the Sacrifices from the beginning of the World All the vertue in them was by vertue of Christs death Heb. 10.4 The death of a beast could not suffice by way of Exchange for the death of a man If a subject should bee a Traytor to his Sovereign would the King take his Cattels life for his much less then can the wrath of God bee appeased with the blood of beasts It is onely by Christs death Rom. 5.1 Matth. 3.17 Eph. 1.6 Luk. 2.14 The Mercy Seat was called the Propitiatory as here Christ is called the Propitiation No propitiation was by the Mercy Seat without blood Heb. 9.7 thus sweetly prefiguring the satisfaction of Jesus Christ Quest Wherein stands this pacifying of Gods anger Answ There be three things implyed in it 1 The wrath of God before to bee kindled against sinners Rom. 3.5 2 That the effects of his anger in punishment and judgements are hanging over the sinners head 3 It doth mainly import the turning away of those judgements and the quenching of that wrath with the exemption and delivery of the sinner there-from All which wee finde Col. 1.21 And you that were sometimes alienated c. So Isa 59.2 compared with Eph. 2.13 Quest How God is pacified toward them whom he loved eternally How can God bee said to bee pacified towards them that have fellowship with Christ seeing that undoubtedly God loved them from all eternity Answ 1 Eph. 2.3 whatever wee are by grace yet by Nature wee are children of wrath Or as the Apostle Rom. 11.8 Concerning the Gospel they are enemies but as touching Election they are beloved for the Fathers-sake So indeed Gods chosen being yet in a natural estate they are enemies to God and God is an enemy to them in regard of
In former times by the sacrifice of the Law the Mercy Seat and other types thus was Christ then set forth Act. 10.36 All these interpretations are usefull and precious which I comprehend therefore in this Doct. Christ was purposed and proposed our Propitiation That God the Father purposed from eternity and proposed in fulness of time his Son Jesus Christ to bee the propitiation for sinners 1 It s much insisted on in Scripture that the eternal decree and purpose of God is mentioned as the ground mark of our redemption 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the fore-knowledge of God and the sanctification of the Spirit and obedience and the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Here wee have three works of the divine persons in the salvation of souls The Fathers election the Sons redemption and the Spirits application And these two latter are grounded in the former As also 1 Thess 5.9 1 Joh. 4.10 Act. 4.28 2 Christ was proposed formerly in the Old Testament I mean in the promises prophecies and types Act. 10.36 Luke 1.70 1 Pet. 1.10 11. The Prophets prophecyed of the grace of God in Christ and testified before hand of the sufferings of Christ c. Heb. 9.22 3 Most clearly in the Gospel-times 1 Pet. 1.20 The Lamb fore-ordained was manifested and offered in our times 2 Tim. 1.9 10. Gods purpose and grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the World began but is now made manifest by Christ c. when he came in flesh then was the fountain set open Zach. 13.1 Quest How was the decree of God the Father about the propitiation of Christ Answ There was from all eternity a gracious Covenant betwixt the persons of the Holy Trinity as it is expressed Isa 53.10 c. with Heb. 10.8 The Father saith If hee will make his soul an offering for sin c. And the Son saith Loe I cometo do thy will my God Quest Why did God the Father purpose from eternity Christ to be our propitiation Answ No reason can bee given but the good pleasure of the Lord Isa 53.10 It pleased the Lord to bruise him c. It s called the love of God and the free love of God 1 Joh. 4.10 that hee sent his Son to bee our propitiation Nothing without God whether faith or works or perseverance foreseen could move God to purpose any mans salvation For I may speak it with reverence God could not foresee any mans faith and good works except hee had decreed to give faith and obedience too himself Quest Why did God propose in the times of the Old Testament Christs propitiation Answ 1. It was necessary for the salvation of all the Elect before the comming of Christ there being no salvation to be had in any other but him Act. 4.12 and no salvation by Christ but by his sacrifice Heb. 9.22 but this is certain that God appointed their salvation and therefore appointed the means thereof that is the proposal of the Sacrifice and propitiation of Christ 1 Thess 5.19 2 It was necessary for after times for hence it is that Christ and his Apostles did Preach still out of the Old Testament Besides If they had one way of salvation and wee another then there would have been more waies to heaven than one and that would have endangered our salvation for wee should have been left in doubt and suspicion which way to take But the Scripture shews us that wee must bee saved as the fathers were Act. 15.11 Quest Why was Christs sacrifice proposed so openly since the comming of Christ Answ 1. In respect of the Elect both Jews and Gentiles that both might see their free admittance to him and acceptation in him Act. 2. cap. 3. 2 In respect of the reprobates that they might be left without excuse and Gods justice cleared in their destruction Eph. 2.13 Use 1. The hainousness of their sin who do neglect Christ This may serve to discover the hainousnesse of their sin that do either neglect or despise Christs Sacrifice or propitiation For 1 Consider that that revelation of Christ in the Old Testament though but dark and imperfect yet was sufficient and effectual unto the salvation of all the Elect then the Patriarks and Prophets c. John 1.29 Act. 10.43 Could the Ceremonies and the shadows save how much more Jesus Christ the body it self as hee is now revealed Could they see the Promises afar off and embrace them then And wee when they are near at hand put them away from us Had they but the predictions of Christs death and were saved by it and wee are not who have the full accomplished thereof God reserved for us these better things sad and very sinful is it if wee become never the better but the worse Act. 13.32 33. The Promise which God made unto the Fathers hee hath fulfilled unto us their children the neglect of these must needs be a more hainous sin for which the Patriarks and Prophets of old shall stand up in the judgement and condemn us 2 Because Christ is so generally and freely offered to all that will receive him Rev. 22.17 Whosoever will let him come and take of the waters of life freely What can men say but that their destruction is now of themselves wholly and that they are self-murtherers This will make the fire of Hell furnace seven times hotter than ordinary and worse than Sodomes Hell to think how ready and open the way to the Mercy Seat was and nothing hindered thee from it but thine own vile heart To see persons worse sinners than thy self saved in Heaven and thou thrust out Mat. 8.11 12. Many shall come from the East and West c. 3 It s aggravated by this that Jesus Christ was the onely propitiation determined of God for sinners from everlasting both his person and the manner of his redemption Psal 33.11 And hence unless wee could null the Counsel of God its impossible to finde any other propitiation No equivalent price for mans redemption besides this No Mercy Seat but meerly this By Gods decree the matter is eternally limitted that there is not any other way than by Christs death How shall wee escape if wee neglect so great Salvation Heb. 2.2 3. what recompence of vengeance can bee sufficient for this sin not onely if wee despise or scorn but if wee neglect or care not for this salvation Now hee that doth take care about this salvation will use all means rowl every stone take any pains about it will as Darius Dan. 6.14 18. Set his heart to the matter cared for it laboured about it passed the night without his accustomed meal his musick or his sleep and early and in haste arose and went unto Daniel whom he cared for thus 2 Cor. 7.11 Now if this bee the true care then those who have no fixed settled serious thoughts about their salvation That will not abate one jot of their sinful delights nor carnal contentments for it but
it may be cleared from the Spiritual businesse it ever puts the soul upon it is active like the vestuous woman which puts her hand to every ●●rk ●rov 31. ●4 17. 2 Thess 1.11 Hence it is that the 〈…〉 by his faith Heb ● ● believers doe all i. e saith 〈…〉 the faithful of old were inabled to do so great works old were inabled to do so great works Heb. 11.33 Subdued kingdoms wrought righteousnesse c. but it is most especially busie in the use of Ordinances as the Word Prayer Seals though it will not bee 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 callings it works by love and is our victory over the 〈◊〉 1 Jo● 5.4 So that a true faith is imploying it self on all hands for a beleevers good Now alas when 〈◊〉 faith is but a dead drugge in us or is but an underling in the heart and is at the command of every lust profit or pleasure truly it is not lively much lesse shall you live eternally by it 4 Clear up the way and fruits of forgivenesse of sins the way of bringing it home unto the soul is the Word Acts 26.18 the Word was preached to open mens eyes If ever wee come to the right knowledge of the pardon of our sins it must be by the Word preached working these particulars 1. Illumination discovering effectual your sin and misery to us with a through sense and feeling of it 2 The conversion of the soul and turning of it from darknesse to light Now when the league with Hell is disa●ulled then wee come to receive forgivenesse of sin Besides 〈◊〉 the fruit of forgivenesse there bee many 〈…〉 of this sappy root let mee name some First the 〈…〉 heart to love Christ with fervency Luke 7.47 〈…〉 were many were forgiven her for she loved much her love was the effect not the cause of her pardon So Psal 116.1 3 4 c. Quest What kind of love is this to God Ans Such a love as inlargeth the heart in duties to God as it did that poor woman and David and Peter Hence is in them a love to the Word and Ordinances and the Children of God it is not possible for a man to have great debts forgiven him and that out of pitty and bounty when hee hath nothing to pay but that his love should bee kindled and his heart in a light fire in zeal for God 2 A forgiving disposition in case of personal wrongs Ephes 4.32 Bee yee kind one to another tender-hearted forgiving one another even as God for Christs sake hath forgiven us and this note is given by our blessed Saviour with great earnestnesse and asseveration affirmatively and negatively If yee forgive men their trespasses then your heavenly Father will forgive you Matth. 6.12.14 15. and if yee from the heart forgive not every one his brother their trespasses neither will your heavenly Father forgive you Hee speaks indefinitely every one not excepting any it is a sad sentence for a malicious heart But a merciful heart that can forgive private wrongs and strive against motions of malice and revenge and be humbled for them and that from the heart how great soever the injuries are it is a sure fruit of Gods pardoning him and his freedom from guile and reigning Hypocrisie Psal 32.1 2. 1 Joh. 3.19 6 Maintain and improve the forgivenesse of sin cleared up unto thee and this will be by daily and diligent observation of our wayes by often reckonings with God and getting the Book still crossed by suing out a pardon of course and therefore Christ teacheth us to pray daily Forgive us our debts This was Davids practice as appears by Psal 119.58 59. and other places and this must bee joyned with a resolution and care to shun future sins and failings and hereby wee shall know we are of the truth i. e. sincere and shall assure our hearts before him 1 Joh. 3.19 Now this improvement is First by holy humble and thankful abasement of our selves before God continually Hos 3.5 Ezek. 16. ult so Ezek. 36.29 I will save you from all your uncleannesses then shall yee remember your own evil wayes c. Beware of pride covetousnesse carnal rejoycing shaking off sorrow for sin it is a bad symptom when a man doth so 2 Bee careful to improve your interest in the favour of God for others not only near relations but even for strangers especially for the publick as Noah Daniel Job Moses Samuel c. they were still standing in the gap 3 Bee ready to comfort other with the same comfort wherewith God hath comforted us 2 Cor. 1.4 4 Know and bear in mind your ingagement to the Lord. The Princes pardon is the condemned Malefactors life as Mephibosheth said 2 Sam. 19.28 All my fathers house were dead men before thee Pardon of sinne is the eternal life of the sinner and hee is passed from Death to Life by it Yea as the offending God by Sin is an infinite evil so the forgivenesse of the offence is an infinite good and wee may say What shall wee render to the Lord for all his benefits towards us Surely as Psalm 116.8 9. Hee hath delivered our souls from death our eyes from tears and our feet from falling that we should walk before the Lord in the land of the living Of the Righteousnesse of Christ THE NINETEENTH SERMON ON Romans 3.21 But now the righteousness of Christ c. IN the handling of the point of Justification I have spoken of the several causes thereof and the end thereof in regard of men viz. Remission of sins and thereupon immediately followes the accounting of the beleeving Sinner righteous unto Salvation that is by the imputation of the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ unto the Sinner and that being described in the context and same portion of Scripture I shall proceed unto it now where the handling of it may come in at the due place for our better understanding thereof In the two verses 19 20. the Apostle shewed before Negatively that Justification is not by the works of the Law now he shewes Affirmatively how we are justified and that is expressed 1 By the matter of it The righteousnesse of God amplified by way of opposition to the Law without the Law i. e. without the works of the Law any way Co-working or meriting our justification 2 This is set forth by the Adjunct of the approbation and testimony of the Law and the Prophets 3 By the instrument that is faith of Jesus Christ understand it not actively for the faith whereby Christ beleeved but passively the faith whereby Christ is beleeved on 4 The subject beleevers and those universally and emphatically set down unto all and upon all that beleeve Quest What is meant by the righteousnesse of God Ans It is not to be understood of that whereby God himself is righteous as Osiander said for that is essential to God and cannot be communicated to the Creature but this righteousnesse is elsewhere called the righteousnesse of Christ
God in such a way as to overthrow his truth his truth of his promises Tit. 1.4 Grace Mercy and Peace are from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ There is no Mercy to bee expected from God but through Jesus Christ Luk. 1.50 His mercy is on them that fear him they that do not fear God have no title to his mercy so there is the truth of his threatnings that hee will not bee merciful to any wicked transgressour Psal 59.5 to any one that loves his sin and lives in it and refuses to bee reformed Gods mercy is as it were the bridge over the pit to carry the soul to heaven but a man that hath his eies will bee careful that he tread not beside as upon the shadow of the bridge instead of the bridge Yea it is railed as it were with his truth beware of going without the rail lest you drop into the pit now those that we speak of go with out the rail and the promises and threatnings are against them so they do evidently trust in a lye saying They shall have Peace Mercy walking in the stubbornness of their own hearts Deut. 29.19 20. but the Lord saith hee will not bee merciful to such but besides the great delusion is that they do look for pardon of sin by meer mercy with the wrong or denial of the justice of God 3 There cannot possibly bee any remission of sin unlesse that God can pardon in Justice as well as Mercy There can bee no dispensation for this If God could have pardoned sin without the price of redemption then certainly Christ dyed altogether in vain For what did the father send forth Christ to bee the Propitiation for sin to shew his justice how can they beleeve that if Gods justice did not exact the price If the price might have been omitted without any prejudice to his justice could God bee eternally just if hee had not punished sin at all Prov. 17.15 To justify the wicked without satisfaction to justice is an abomination to the Lord and will the Lord do that which is abominable to him will any King put his own Son to death to save a traitours life when hee can freely pardon the traitour if hee will surely that were an unnatural and a cruel part and can wee think that God the Father will give up his onely begotten Son to death to save sinners when hee may out of meer grace and mercy pardon them without such a sacrifice certainly God would never do it Briefly the sinner must necessarily satisfy justice either by himself or by his surety or else it is utterly impossible that his sin should bee forgiven Heb. 10.26 27. Without a sacrifice for sin there remains nothing but a certain fearful looking for of judgement and fiery indignation that shall devour the adversaries Doth any soul expect pardon without Christ then hee expects peace without any sacrifice for him but the Text saith that without this there remains nothing but a fearful expectation c. Briefly such a hope of pardon is interpretatively no better than Atheism and denial of God For it denies the justice of God it denies his purity and holinesse it denies his Soveraignty yea it denies Christ if the Lord bee God hee is just and holy and Judge of all the World and if hee bee just hee cannot pardon sin but in a way of justice and that sealed by Christs blood I pray consider that Psal 89.13 14. Thou hast a mighty arm strong is thy hand and high is thy right hand consider what a God you have to deal withall hee is a mighty strong God no creature is able to withstand him if hee bee displeased Object I but he is merciful too Answ 1. Psalm 89.14 Justice and judgement are the habitation of his Throne mercy and truth shall go before his face justice and judgement are the basis and supporter of his Throne take away justice and you pull down his royal Throne you make him no longer King or Judge mercy and truth are his harbingers 2 They are offered first and when refused Justice doth execution So a like place Psal 36.5 6. Thy mercy O Lord is in the Heavens and thy faithfulnesse reacheth unto the Clouds that is there is a vastnesse and immensity in both they are very great but whence is his Justice so great his righteousnesse is like the strong mountains c. as if hee had said the righteousnesse of God is as unsupportable and unmoveable as the strong mountains and his judgements they do not swim aloft but they are an infinite and unsearchable depth You cannot bear them nor remove Gods righteousness nor measure or fathom his judgements and thou that art a sinner hast these mountains ready to fall upon thee and art sinking into this great deep What is it that makes the Devils eternally miserable but that they have no Christ to satisfy the justice of God and if a sinner on earth live and dye without Christ he is as uncapable of salvation as those in the 2 of the Ephes 12. Object 2. The Justice of God is answered in Christ for mee Answ True indeed there is no other Name under heaven given amongst men whereby wee shall be saved and happy is that soul that can groundedly plead this and most miserable is he or shee that is deceived herein it is an errour in the foundation 1 Cor. 3.11 Other foundation can no man lay Beloved let us take heed of an errour in this which is very common 1 Joh. 3.6 7. Consider whether there bee not Gods Writ sent out against you frequently signed in an open Court as Micaiah said to Ahab 2 Chron. 18 2● hath not the Lord pronounced against thee in the threatnings in his Word yea hath not the Arrest been served upon thee in the secret accusation of thy conscience when thou hast shifted it off as Felix did Pauls Sermon Act. 24.25 Consider how thy heart is affected with the doctrin of Gods justice and the judgements to come Is it not with thee as it was with that unhappy Felix doth not thy heart I say not onely tremble but swell against the truth of God doth it not secretly wish there were no Assizes yea art thou not still in the Jailours custody as a malefactor Beware of that which Elihu speaks Job 36.17 18. thou hast fulfilled the judgement of the wicked judgement and justice take hold on thee that is they are seizing upon thee Because there is wrath beware lest hee take thee away with his stroak then a great ransome cannot deliver thee will hee esteem thy riches no not gold nor all the forces of strength Gods Justice in a Sinners Justification THE FOUR AND TWENTIETH SERMON ON Rom. 3.25 26. That he might be just and the Justifier c. NOT onely the exact Truth of God Doct. 1 or the abundance of his Grace but also his strict justice do concur and act in the justification of a sinner in
the intensnesse and strength of it that it was stronger than death and all this to wash us from our sins 1 Joh. 3.16 Hereby perceive wee the love of God because he laid down his life c. sustaining the pains of death Of what death the First and Second Death He washed us in his bloud from all the filthinesse of Hell and Death All the dunghills in the world cannot defile us as sin doth and it was the filth of sin that Christ's bloud washed us from Sin defiles the soul yea the whole man Matth. 15.19 You then that are beloved ones and washed can yee content your selves with a slight consideration of this What manner of love is this Qualis Quantus 1 Joh. 3.1 Ephes 3.18 That yee may comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge c. Mark here is a thing that concerns all Saints and wee should labour for such might and strength as not only to apprehend in our minds but comprehend and lay hold upon all the measures of this love in our hearts and know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge i. e. either all other knowledge or else all the knowledge of carnal persons or all the knowledge of the Saints in the perfection of it that is it is the most desirable blessing in the world to understand the love of Christ aright Wee can never know too much of this love What should this love work upon our hearts truly wee should bee rooted and grounded in love not only have some leaves of profession but be rooted and grounded in it and it may lye deep in our hearts as roots and foundations use to doe yea this love of the Lord Jesus must bear up all the bulke and wait of our Christian trials yea as a root feed and nourish other graces and holy indeavours in us Oh it is much to be lamented that so many have left their first love They are but few sure that have ever had any rooted or grounded love to Christ at all that is suitable to Gospel measure or rule Luk. 7.47 What is the Gospel measure of love A. Matth. 10.37 Hee that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me i. e. our love to Christ should exceed all other loves and affections in our hearts yea in comparison of Christ we should hate father and mother c. Luk. 14.26.33 wee should hate all forsake all so farre as they stand in competition with Christ or the things of Christ else we cannot be the Disciples of Christ Instr 4. Redeemed ones have great boldnesse towards God This may work in all redeemed ones a marvellous boldnesse towards God that which the Scripture often expresses Ephes 3.12 In whom wee have boldnesse of accesse with confidence Heb. 10.19 Having boldnesse to enter into the Holiest by the bloud of Jesus It is sweet and precious that we have Heb. 4.16 Let us goe with boldnesse to the Throne of grace c. i. e. to Christ our High Priest hee hath set up a Mercy-seat for us And is that all Nay but saith the Apostle Heb. 12.23 Wee are come to God the Judge of all and we are come to the Seat of Justice and wee may in an humble boldnesse plead the justice of God and say Lord who art the Judge of all doe mee justice thou art just and therefore the Justifier of him that beleeveth in Jesus Oh ponder and take again upon thy heart the meaning of this it is not only that hee may bee merciful and gracious and the Justifier of beleevers though that bee a sweet and precious truth too to be beleeved and rejoyced in but it is that hee may bee just Oh beloved this is the very quintessence of faith when as the beleever by faith shall present unto God the Father the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ for satisfaction for sins and goe to him with a full price in his hand and current pay and to say as they doe in dealing here is one and there is t'other and this is not bare distributive but commutative justice between God and man where there is not only Geometrical but Arithmetical proportion that is weight for weight and measure for measure is observed Oh then tender all the pay together all the obedience of Christ active and passive tender we to the righteousnesse of God the righteousnesse of Christ it is such a jewel as exceeds our sins infinitely though they have been very many and great Gods justice shall be no loser by us at all and let poor beleevers incourage and embolden their hearts with this Luther was bold when he prayed thus not only Fiat voluntas tua but Fiat voluntas mea not only let thy will be done but let my will be done and it was but the confidence of faith upon this ground we are speaking of Oh beloved the world will account this malepertnesse to come thus before God that they are more bold than welcome but they are strangers to these things and to all that liberty we have in Christ Gal. 2.4 It would be sauciness indeed for those that are out of Christ to approach at any time on this manner to God but let the Children take this as the daily portion of the Childrens bread and it is no wrong to that text 1 Joh. 1.9 to take it in this sense If we confess our sins he is just for Christs sake to forgive us our sins nor to that 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth is laid up for me a crown of righteousnesse Inst Adore the righteousnesse of God in all his wayes 5. If God be thus just exactly just in the justification of a Sinner let us learn to acknowledge and adore the righteousness of God in all his wayes Psal 145.17 If his mercy doth not pardon one sin but in a course of justice through the death of Christ then doubtlesse the Justice of God will not be bafled or turned aside in the managing other matters in the world The light of Nature sees nothing but mercy in this case but the light of Grace sees Gods justice also So that though God deals otherwise many times in many things than we could have expected or can see a reason of yet he is always just and holy in his proceedings and it is not enough for us to acknowledge the righteousnesse and holinesse of God in some of his ways and works or in his ways towards others and not towards our selves and in his dealing with some persons and not with all but wee must justifie the Lord in our hearts and words always in all things toward all in all the ways of his providences in his afflicting the godly as well as punishing the wicked Ezra 9.13 yea in the prosperity of the wicked In his great Counsels of Election and Reprobation in the rejection of the Jews c. of which when Paul had spoken Rom. 11. he