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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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is Almighty and he must do it because he hath promised it This is Pauls Argument to King Agrippa Vers 6. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our Fathers c. And this is Christs Argument by which he proveth the Resurrection against the Sadduces Matht 22.32 I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob God is not the God of the dead but of the living Objection This Argument of Christ proves onely the Immortality of the Soul but not the Resurrection of the Body Answer It proves also the Resurr ction of the body because God is the God of Abraham Isaa and Jacob not onely the God of one part of Abraham but of whole Abraham not onely the God of his soul but of his body And therefore whole Abraham must live for ever for Gods Covenant with Abraham Isaac and Jacob is an everlasting Covenant 2. From the justice of God God cannot but raise the dead because he is a just God and must reward every man according to his works Now in this life men are not rewarded the Righteous in this life are oftentimes persecuted and the wicked are in prosperity And therefore there must come a rewarding time and if so then first there must be a Resurrection For dead men cannot be rewarded Objection Is it not enough that our Souls be rewarded Answer No For our bodies are partakers in good and evil actions with the soul and therefore it is just that they should be Partakers also in rewards and punishments Shall God require services of the body and shall he not reward those services Do not the Saints of God beat down their bodies and bring them into subjection Do they not fast often and mortifie their earthly members and suffer Martyrdome with their bodies And therefore God cannot but raise their bodies to the Resurrection of Life and raise the same bodies for it cannot stand with Gods justice that one body should serve him and another be rewarded or that one body should sin and another body be punished A just Judge will not suffer one man to fight and get the victory and another to be crowned The same body that sinneth must dye and the same body that conquers must be crowned What justice can there be for God to cast a body that never sined into Hell and that never was in Adam 3. From the end of Christs coming in the flesh which was to destroy all the Enemies of our Salvation Now the last Enemy which must be destroyed is death 1 Cor. 15.26 and death cannot be uttetly and totally destroyed unless there be a Resurrection of the dead 4. From the Resurrection of Christ This is Saint Pauls great Argument 1 Cor. 15.12 c. If Christ be risen how ●ay some that there shall be no resurrection of the dead For Christ rose as a Publique Person and as the Head of his Church And if the Head be risen all the members must also rise and therefore he is called the First-fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15.20 and the First-born of every creature And if the First-fruits be lifted up out of the grave the whole lump will certianly follow Hence also it is that Christ is called the Second Adam 1 Cor 15.21.22 and Paul argueth stro●gly That as by man came death so by man also came the resurrection of the dead and as in Adam all dye so in Christ shall all be made alive But now in the first Adam all dye not onely spiritually but cor●orally and therefore in the second Adam all must be corporally made to live And live again in the same bodies for Christ rose with the same body that he dyed with And therefore he rose with his scars and wounds and he convinced his Disciples that the body he rose with was a t●u● body and not a Spirit For a Spirit hath not flesh and bones saith Christ as ye see me have Luke 24.39 Objection Doth not the Apostle say in that very Chapter 1 Cor. 15 44. That the bodies of men shall be spiritual bodies at the Resurrection And therefore they cannot be the same bodies 1 Cor. 15.50 Doth not the same Apostle also say That flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God Hence the Socinians and divers others gather That the bodies of men shall not have flesh and blood and eyes and heads and feet at the Resurrection but shall be airy and spiritual bodies Answer There is a vast difference between mutation and perdition The same bodies shall be raised for substance but marvellously altered in regard of qualifications and endowments as you shall hear in the next particular Non aliud corpus sed aliter We read Exod. 4.6 7. That M ses put his hand into his bosom and when he took it out it was leprous as snow and again he put his hand in his bosom and pluckt it out and it was turned again as his other flesh Here was the same hand when belepred and when whole A Beggar when he puts off his rags and puts on the apparel of a King is the same man though outwardly altered or changed So shall it be at the Resurrection the bodies shall be the same for s●bstance though altered wonderfully as to their Qualifications and Endowments And as for that saying of the Apostle That flesh and blood shall not inherit the Kingdom of God the meaning is not That the substance of flesh an● blood shall never enter into Heaven for Christ in his Humane Nature is now in Heaven but that flesh as it is corrupted and sinful cloathed with infirmities and subject to mortality and death flesh and blood as it is in this transitory estate liable to corruption should not enter into Heaven and therefore it followeth in the Text Neither shall corruption inherit incorruption 1 Cor. 15.50 5. I might argue lastly from the Immortality of the S ul For the soul was made by God to dwell in the body and though it can subsist of it self without the body yet it still retains appetitum unionis a desire of re-union with the body and therefore is in an imperfect estate and not compleatly happy till it be re-united to the body And therefore that the souls of the godly may be compleatly happy and of the wicked compleatly miserable there must of necessity be a Resurrection of the body that so soul and body may be re-united and partake tog●ther either of compleat happiness or compleat unhappiness Adde to this what is said by Durand that great Schoolman That when a man dyeth not onely the soul of that man continueth alive but some substantial part of that mans body and God also the great Creator and first cause of all things And why should any man think it incredible for God to re-collect the parts of the matter of any mans body which are perished and to re-unite the same body to the same soul again
conceive what God hath prepared even for the bodies of those who love him and wait for his appearing Aug. de Civitate Dei lib. 22. cap. 21. Quae sit quam magna spiritualis corporis gloria quoniam nondum venit in experimentum vereor ne temerarium sit omne quod de illa profertur eloquium The Schoolmen reduce them to four heads Impassibility sibility Impassibilitas Subtilitas Agilitas Claritas Subtilty Agility Clarity The Apostle also comprizeth them under four particulars It is sown in weakness it is rai●ed in power It is sown in corruption and raised in incorruption It is sown in dishonour and raised in glory It is sown a natural body and raised a spiritual body Objection If it be a spiritual body how is it the same body Answer It is called a spiritual body not in regard of the substance of it but of the qualities of it and that in two respects 1. Because it shall have no need of meat or drink but shall be as the Angels of Heaven Mat. 20.30 not that we shall have Angelicam essentiam but Angelicas proprietates not the essence but the properties of Angels We shall neither eat nor drink but shall be as the Angels We shall have as Tertullian saith corpora reformata Angelificata Even as a Goldsmith saith Chrysostome puts his silver and gold into a pot and then melts it and forms of it a gold or silver b wl or cup fit to be set before Kings so the Lord melts the bodies of his Saints by death and out of the dead ashes and cinders of the bodies of his servants he frameth and will make goodly vessels of honour to stand before him and to praise him for ever in heaven 2. It is said to be a Spiritual body because it shall be absolutely subject to the soul In the state of glory the soul shall not depend upon the body but the body upon the soul In this life the soul is See this more fully handled in the Sermon preached at Dr. Bollons Funeral as it were carnal because serviceable to the flesh but at the Resurrection the body shall be as it were spiritual because perfectly serviceable to the Spirit But the time will not give me leave to insist largely upon this point So much in answer to the six particulars propounded for the explication of this Doctrine Now for the Application Use 1. LEt us believe this great truth and believe it firmly and undoubtedly That there shall be a Resurrection of the body and that the same numerical body shall rise again the same for substance though not the same for qualities The great God can do this for he is Almighty and to an Almighty power nothing is impossible God can do it because he is Omnipctent and he cannot but do it because he hath promised to do it He cannot be true of his word if the body do not rise again nor can he be a just God as I have shewed for it is just with God that as the body hath been partakers with the soul in good or evil actions so it should be partakers with the soul in everlasting rewards and everlasting punishments And it is just with God that the same body that serves him should be rewarded and the same body that sins against him should be punished And the truth is if the same body doth not rise it cannot be called a Resurrection but rather a new creation as I have shewed Let us I say firmly believe this truth for it is a fundamental truth and the foundation of many other fundamental truths For if the dead rise not then is not Christ risen and then is our faith vain and our preaching in vain Remember Job in the Old Testament believed this Use 2. IF there be a Resurrection of the dead Resurrectio mortuorum est consolatio fiducia Christianorum here is great consolation to all the real members of Jesus Christ For the Resurrection of the dead is the comfort and the hope and confidence of all good Christians This was Jobs comfort upon the dunghil Job 19.26 27. and Davids comfort Psal 16.7 and Christs comfort Mat. 20.19 But the third day he shall rise again It was Christs comfort and it is the comfort of every good Christian 1. Here is comfort against the fear of death As God said to Jacob Gen. 46.3 4. Fear not to go down to Egypt for I will go with thee and I will bring thee out again So give me leave to say to you Fear not to go down to the house of Rottenness to the Den of Death for God will raise you up gain Your Friends and Acquaintance leave you at the grave but God will not leave you The grave is but a dormitory a resting-place a storehouse to keep you safe till the Resurrection Christ hath perfumed the grave 1 Sam. 26. As David when he found Saul asleep took away his spear and cruse of water but when he awoke he restored them again So will death do with us Though it take away out strength and our beauty yet when we awake at the Resurrection they shall be restored again unto us God will keep our dead ashes and preserve them safe as a Druggist keeps every whit of the drug he hath beaten to powder A Saint while he is in the grave is united to Christ he sleeps in Jesus and Jesus will raise him up unto life everlasting John 11.24 2. Comfort against the death of our friends Though they be dead yet they shall rise gain as Martha told Christ I know that he shall rise again at the Resurrection 1 Thess 14. The Saints who dye in the faith of Christ are dead in Christ and such he will raise and bring with him to judgement If a man be to take a long journey his wife and children will not weep and mourn because they hope that ere long he will return again A man that dyes in Christ and sleeps in Christ doth but take a journey from Earth to Heaven but he will come again shortly and therefore let us not mourn as men without hope for our godly relations for we shall meet again and in all probability shall know one another when we meets though not after a carnal manner for we shall rise with the same bodies And if Lazarus was known when raised and the Widows Son known by his Mother if Adam in Innocency knew Eve when he awoke and Peter knew Moses and Elias in the Transfiguration which was but a dark representation of Heaven it is very probable that we also when we awake at the great Resurrection shall know one another which will be no little addition to our Happiness 3. Comfort to those who have maimed and deformed bodies At the great Resurrection all these deformities shall be taken away therefore it is called A Day of Restitution Acts 3.21 wherein God will set all things in joynt If there were
better Covenant established upon better promises But I must explain it before I admire it The Gospel Covenant is that whereby God upon the condition propounded of faith in Christ promiseth remission of sins in his blood and a heavenly life and that for this end that he might shew forth the riches of his mercy * Camero Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only still something more and more comfortably considerable in the consideration of the persons contracting namely God and man according to the proposed method 1. Consider Gods gracious condescention And now Beloved that I have named Gods gracious condescention were my heart but duly affected with it it would constrain me to stop and put in a large Parenthesis of admiration before I should speak a word more Will God after the loss of the natural communion wherein he created man will God when man d●eads his Majesty and trembles at his revenging justice will God then as a merciful Father enter into a Covenant of peace with poor undone sinners affrighted with the sense of sin and wrath O the incomprehensible ●ondescention of such unsearchable riches of grace that grace should abound according to sins abounding when sin over-flow d all its banks that God should make a way thorough the deep into the heavenly Canaan never can we enough admire such Extasying grace This is the first thing considerable 2. The second thing considerable is the duty which God requires in this Gospel Covenant and that is Faith faith whereby we embrace the remedy offered us We want a pardon and nothing but faith can receive it we want perfect Righteousnesse and nothing but faith can furnish us with it we want that which may make this Covenant effectual to us and make it a blessing to us and nothing can do any of these things but faith faith is the Antecedent Condition for which the Reward is given 3. The third thing considerable in the Gospel Covenant is the promise Now the promise of the Gospel Covenant is comprehended in the word Salvation therefore the Gospel is called the salvation of God Acts 28.28 And this is the great businesse of Christ to be a Saviour Isa 49.6 That thou mayst be my salvation to the end of the earth when the Angels preached the Gospel they thought they could not expresse their news in better language than to tell people of salvation that must needs be great joy to all people In short when Gospel Ministers come clad with garments of salvation as Heraulds do with the garments of their Office then Saints may well shout aloud for joy Psal 132.16 Now this promise of salvation contains all Gospel promises in it but they are reduced to these foure 1. Justification this is a priviledge which other Covenants were unacquainted with and without this what would become of poor sinful man And this may well be the first great Gospel promise I might name not some Verses but whole Chapters to prove it Rom. 4. and 5. Gal. 3. and 4. but in a word if you would know the preciousness of this promise Ask those that have but felt what sin is and they will tell you 2. The second promise contained in Gospel salvation is Sanctification Rom. 8.2 3 4. The Law of the Sp●rit of life in Christ hath made me free from the Law of sin and death for what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit q.d. The efficacy and power of the sanctifying Spirit which gives life to believers frees us from the tyranny of sin and death and whereas the Law by reason of the corruption of our nature could not make us pure and perfect but rather kindled than extinguished corruption God hath cloathed his Son with our flesh to take away the guilt and power of sin that his perfect righteousnesse might be imputed to us and fulfill●d by us that we might not live according to the motion of our sinful nature but according to the motion of his holy Spirit 3. The third promise is the resurrection of the body You know the penal●y of sin is the death of soul and body though the soul be immortal yet its being miserable for ever may sadly be called an Eternal death Now let the guilt of sin be abolished and you do therewith abolish the punishment of it for gu●lt is only an obligation to punishmen● let sin be pardoned and the sinner is freed from death and though believers dye yet it is as a corne of wheat falls into the ground they thereby ob●ain a multiplied life John 6.54 Whoso eateth my flesh and drinke●h my blood hath Eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day 4. The last promise is Eternal life a spiritual blessed and immortal life in heaven John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting life The Covenant of Grace is excellent fitted to bring us to the chiefest good Now the chiefest good consists in communion with God that was broken by sin and can never be perfectly recovered till sin be abolished therefore when the guilt of sin is taken away by Justification and the filthinesse of sin is taken away by Sanctification and the penalty of sin taken away by Resurrection then what can hinder our communion with God when we have once obtained perfect holinesse nothing can hinder us of perfect happinesse Thus you have the promise of the Gospel-Covenant which was the third considerable in it 4. The fourth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the Mediator of this better Covenant and that is Jesus Christ God-man blessed for ever through his dignity he hath purchased salvation Hebr. 9.12 14. By his own blood he entred in once into the holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God c. And he is not only the Author of Eternal salvation by his merit and efficacy but the most absolute example and pattern to us how we should walk that we may obtain his purchased salvation Rom. 8.29 God did predestinate us to be conformable to the Image of his Sonne that he might be the first born among many brethren 1 Cor. 15.49 And as we have born the Image of the Earthly we shall also bear the Image of the heavenly And this is the only Covenant whereof Christ is Mediator the first Covenant needed no Mediator the Old Covenant as Legal take it without its sprinkling of Gospel and so chiefly Moses but in all respects meer men were Mediators but of the New Covenant Christ was Mediator but this I shall leave
passion of God-man Man being every other way finite must have suffered infinitely in regard of duration even to eternity And none but Christ who was infinite in regard of the subject and dignity of his person as he was God could have so speedily and effectually delivered us from this punishment by suffering it himself whereby Gods justice was satisfied his hatred against the sinner removed and his mercy at liberty to act in the pardon of the sinner Sixthly This passion of Jesus Christ God was graciously pleased to accept for us and impute to us as if we had suffered in our persons and so he receives us into mercy And this is the substance of the Doctrine of the Gospel about mans salvation So much for the first thing the Explication of the point 2. I now come to the Assertion or Demonstration of it that you may receive this Doctrine as a Truth not built upon the traditions of men but revealed in the Word of God Now to prove this point viz. That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans Justification and Salvation I may use two sorts of Arguments First Some from the consideration of Christs death Secondly Some from the consideration of mans Justification and Salvation 1. From the consideration of Christs death I shall offer six Arguments 1. It s Possibility 2. Necessity 3. Nature 4. Cause 5. Vicegerency 6. Peculiarity First From the possibility Let me be bold to assert had it not been for this purpose it had not been possible for Christ to dye as it was not possible for Christ to be holden of death Acts 2.24 the price being paid and so the Prisoner of course to be released so it had not been possible because not just Id tantum possumus quod jure possumus to put him into a prison if it had not been to pay a debt And a debt of his own he had none he was a Lamb without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.19 Holy blameless undefiled separate from sinners Hebr. 7.26 He knew no sin 2 Cor. 5.21 which I the rather mention because S●cinus hath the impudence to lay down this blasphemous Assertion That Christ like the Jewish High Priest did offer for himself as well as for the people You have seen he had no debt no sin of his own he professeth of himself that he did alwayes those things which pleased his Father John 8.29 and therefore he must needs dye for our debts it is plain that Adam had he continued in integrity should not have dyed death is not the effect of nature then the Saints in glory must dye again for they have the same nature but the fruit of sin death entred into the world by sin Rom. 5.12 And the Apostle proves the sin of Infants expressed by that Periphrasis such as have not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression from the death of Infants and in Adam all dyed i. e. by his sin 1 Cor. 15.22 Therefore Jesus Christ being purified from the guilt of Adams sin by his holy birth and no lesse perfect than Adam should have been could never have dyed if not for our sakes Secondly From the necessity of Christs death it was necessary for our Salvation and Justification without which end it had been in vain The Socinians mention two other reasons and ends of Christs death the one to be an example of obedience but such we have many others upon far less charge the other to be a ground of hope for the remission of sin and the fulfilling of Gods promises but properly it is not the death but resurrection of Christ which is the ground of our hope 1 Cor. 15.14 If Christ be not risen your faith is vain so that those ends are improper and insufficient And to strike it dead I urge but one place Gal. 2.21 If righteousnesse come by the Law Christ is dead in vain What can be more plain if righteousnesse be not by Christ that the death of Christ be not the procuring cause of our Justification Christ is dead in vain to no end or as Grotius and others rather understand without any meritorious cause i. e. our sins however all comes to one Thirdly From the nature of Christs death it is a Sacrifice this consists of two Branches 1. Sacrifices did expiate sin 2. Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice 1. I say Sacrifices did expiate sin Levit. 1.4 He shall put his hands upon the head of the burnt-offering and it shall be accepted for him and many such places And this they did typically which strengthens the cause we have in hand as representing and fore-signifying Christ without which it was not possible for the blood of Buls and Goats to take away sins Hebr. 10.4 And the sins pardoned under the Old Testament were pardoned thorough Christ and not through any vertue of their Sacrifices Christ being a Mediatour for the Redemption of the Transgressions that were under the first Testament Hebrewes 9.15 2. And this brings in the second Head that Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice if either the names or nature of it may be regarded for the names and titles proper to Sacrifices they are attributed to it and God doth not give flattering titles nor false names but such as discover the nature of things it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Oblation or offering up of himself Ephes 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.25 to omit others and for the nature by vertue hereof sin is atoned he is our High Priest for this end to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being by an Enallage put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pacifie God reconcile God turn away his wrath You meet with all things in Christ which concurre to the making of a Sacrifice The Priest he is our High Priest the Sacrifice himself Christ was once offered the shedding of blood and destroying of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being the essential part of a Sacrifice Add to these 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passeover is Sacrificed for us where is a double Argument 1. That Christ is expresly said to be Sacrificed 2. That he is called a Passeover which at the best seems to have been both a Sacrifice and a Sacrament Now then Christs death being a Sacrifice it appeares that it appeased Gods wrath procured his favour Fourthly From the cause of Christs death I might urge a double cause 1. The inflicting cause it was Gods displeasure Nothing more plaine than that he had a very deep sense of and sharp conflict with Gods wrath from those dreadful horrours in the Garden where his soul was exceeding sorrowful unto death not certainly at the approach of an ordinary death which many Martyrs have undergone with undaunted courage but at the apprehension of his Fathers anger and upon the Cross where he roared out that direful complaint My
and unsainteth all others Isa 65.5 Which say Stand by thy self come not near me for I am holier than thou these are a smoak in my nose and a fire that burneth all the day saith the Lord. This is the worst spot in the beauty of holiness a spice of that pride that was in Lucifer and his fellow-aspiring Angels that made the first Schisme and separation in the purest Church even in heaven it self among the Angels that were wholly perfect Take heed of this as of the very pest of the Church and the bane of all Religion which is best preserved in unity and humility I shall shut up all with a wish and that an hearty Prayer alluding to what I said at first Oh that all our garments our Profession might be adorned with these Bells and Pomgranates peace and holinesse That as we call on God who is called holy holy holy Rev. 4.6 and on Christ who is called King of Saints Rev. 15.6 and as we profess the Gospel which is a Rule of holiness and are members of the Church which is called a Kingdom of Saints an holy Nation 1 Pet. 2.9 and as we look to be partakers of that Kingdom wherein dwells righteousness and holiness that according to that promise Thy people shall be all righteous Isa 60.21 that holiness to the Lord may be engraven upon all our hearts as with the engraving of a Signet the Spirit of God and holiness to the Lord upon all our fore-heads as to our conversation that as we have had a year which we call Annum Restitutae Libertatis we might have a year Restitutae Sanctitatis this we might safely call Annum Salutis or Annum Domini the year of our Lord. That our Officers might be all peace our Governors holiness Isa 60.17 that our Ministers might be cloathed with righteousness and our Church-Members with holiness that all of different perswasions might not contend but labour for peace and holiness Herein let us agree and all is agreed that the bells of our Horses and Bridles of our Horsemen Commanders and common Souldiers might be holiness to the Lord Zach. 14.20 21. that there might not be a Canaanite or hypocrite in the house of the Lord then might our Land Church Parliament Army City Min●stry be called Jehovah Shammah the Lord is there Ezek. 48.35 yea then would this holiness settle us in peace here and bring us to see the Lord where peace and holiness shall never be separated Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly Amen OF THE Resurrection ACTS 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing unreasonable with you that God should raise the dead THese words are part of St. Pauls Apologie for himself before King Agrippa against the unjust accusations of his implacable enemies wherein 1. He demonstrates the innocency of his life 2. The truth of his Doctrine and sheweth That there was nothing either in his life or doctrine for which he could justly be accused The Doctrine he taught did consist of divers particulars enumerated in this Chapter one of which and that not the least was That there should a day come in which there would be a Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Now that this Doctrine was not liable to any just exception he proves three manner of ways 1. Because it was no other Doctrine but such which God himself had taught It had a Divine stamp upon it as it is Verse 6. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers 2. Because it was that which all the godly Israelites instantly serving God day and night did hope for and wait and expect in due time to be fulfilled as it is Verse 7. Unto which promise our twelve tribes hope to come for which hope sake King Agrippa I am accused of the Jews and therefore it is called The hope of Israel Acts 28.20 for the hope of Israel I am bound with this chain 3. Because it was a Doctrine which God was able to bring to pass This is set down in the words of the Text Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead The emphasis lieth in the words with you Why should you O King Agrippa who art a Jew and believest in the God of Israel and that he made the world out of nothing think it incredible for this God to raise the dead indeed it may seem incredible and impossible to the Heathen Philosophers who are guided onely by Natures Light but as for you who believe all things which are written in the Law and Prophets why should you think it either impossible or incredible that God should raise the dead This interrogation is an Emphatical Negation and it is put down by way of Question Vt oratio sit penetrantior that so the Argument might take the deeper impression and the meaning is that it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a doctrine exceeding the bounds of faith or contrary to right reason that God should raise the dead The Observation which ariseth naturally out of the words is Doctrine That the Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust is neither incredible nor impossible neither against right reason nor true faith Though it be above reason yet it is not against reason nor against the Jewish or the Christian Faith For the explication of this Doctrine I will briefly speak to six particulars 1. What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead 2. Who are the dead that shall be raised 3. The absolute necessity of believing this Doctrine and believing it firmly and undoubtedly 4. The possibility and credibility of it 5. The certainty and infallibility of it 6. The manner how the dead shall rise What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead The first Particular Answ For answer to this you must first know what there is of man that dyes when any man dyeth Man consisteth of soul and body and when he dyeth his soul doth not dye it is the body onely that dyeth Death is not an utter extinction and annihilation of the man as some wickedly teach but onely a separation of the Soul from the Body It is called a departure Luk. 2.25 2 Tim. 4.6 And an uncloathing 2 Cor. 5.4 and a Departure of the Soul out of the body either to Heaven or Hell When Stephen was stoned his soul was not stoned for while he was stoning he prayed Lord Jesus receive my spirit When Christ was crucified his soul was not crucified for while he was crucifying he said Fa●her into thy hands I commend my Spirit The Wiseman saith expresly That when a man dyeth His body returns to the earth from whence it came Eccles 12.7 but his spirit returns to God who gave it And our Lord Christ commands us Not to fear them that kill the body 1 Luk. 2.4 and after
body which hath fasted and prayed and joyned sincerely with the soul in holy services shall one day behold the face of God with comfort Christ will say Are not these the eyes which have been lift●d up unto God in my service Are not these the ears which have hearkned to my word Remember this when your bodies are wearied and tired in the worship of God The more thou servest God with thy body the more glory it shall have at that day 4. Labour to get gracious souls here and you shall have glorified bodies hereafter 5. Labour to be united to Christ by a lively faith and he will be your resurrection and your life It is the great promise of Christ that he will raise up the body at the last day John 6.39.40 54 58. that is raise it up to life everlasting 6. Labour to have part in the first resurrection Revel 20.6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first resurrection I know this Text is differently interpreted but sure I am according to the judgement of all learned men there is a double resurrection the one spiritual the other corporal the one of the soul the other of the body Those Texts Ephes 2.1 Col. 2.13 John 5.25 do without all doubt speak of the spiritual resurrection By nature we have dead souls dead in sins and trespasses void of spiritual life as perfectly under the power of sin as a dead man is under the power of death and as unable to do any thing that is spiritually good as a dead man is to do any work Now a soul dead in sin shall be damned for sin but if thy soul be quickned and made alive if the Lord hath infused principles of grace into thee and given thee a new heart and a new spirit if regenerated and born again then thy bodily resurrection shall be happy It is very observable That the Resurrection is called Regeneration Mat. 19.28 In the regeneration that is as many interpret it in the resurrection If spiritually regenerated thy resurrection shall be most happy and glorious O pray unto God and labour for regeneration and a new creation and that thou mayest have a share in the first resurrection 7. Heaken to the voyce of Christ and of his Spirit and of his Ministers and of his Rod and then his voye at the resurrection when he shall call thee out of the grave shall be a happy voyce If thou stoppest thine ears and wilt not hearken to the voyce of the Rod nor to the voyce of his Word and the Ministers of it thou shalt hear the voyce of the Archangel calling thee out of the grave whether thou wilt or no and the voyce of Christ saying Go ye cursed ito Hell-fire c. 8. Count all things dung and dross that thou mayest gain Christ and be found in him at that day not having thine own righteousness but the righteousness which is of God by faith in Christ and be willing to do any thing if by any means you may attain to the resurrection of the dead Phil. 3.8 9 11. that is either to a happy resurrection or rather to such a degree of grace which the Saints shall have at the Resurrection 9. Remember and carry daily in your mind that saying of S. Jerom Whether you eat or drink or whatsoever you are doing think with y ur selves That you hear the Trumpet sounding and the voyce of the Archangel saying Arise ye dead and come to judgement Vse 5. A Divine Project how to make your bodies beautiful and glorious and beautiful in an ominent degree in a supersuperlative measure beautiful as the Sun in the Firmament as the beautiful Body of Christ which so dazzled Pauls eyes that it put them out To make your bodies Majestical Immortal and Impassible and that is by labouring to glorifie God with them and to get an interest in Christ and to get gracious and beautiful souls O that this word were mingled with faith Methinks if any Motive could prevail with you that are Gentlewomen and rich Ladies this should Behold a way how to make your bodies eternally beautiful What trouble and pains do many women that are crooked endure by wearing iron-bodies to make themselves stait What labour and cost are many women at to beautifie their rotten carcasses Hearken to me thou proud dust and ashes thou guilded mud that labourest to beautifie thy body by vain foolish and sinful deckings and trimmings and thinkest thy self deckt in the want of decking That pamperest thy body in all voluptuousness and makest thy self by thy strange fashions so unlike thy self as that if our civil forefathers were alive again they would wonder what strange monster thou wert Hearken unto me I say and consider thy madness and folly by labouring so much to adorn thy body with the neglect of thy soul thou undoest both body and soul The onely way to make thy body beautiful is as I hove said to gain Christ to have a part in the first resurrection and to get a gracious soul and then thou shalt be sure hereafter to have a glorious body Excellent is that saying of Bernard Christ hath a treble coming Once he came in the flesh for the good of our souls and bodies now he comes in the Spirit by the preaching of his Ministers for the good of our souls At the last day he shall come for the good of our bodies to beautifie and glorifie them Noli O homo praeripere tempora Do not O fond man mistake the time This present life is not the time for thy body it is appointed for the beautifying of thy soul and adorning it with grace and holiness The Resurrection is the time wherein Christ will come from Heaven to make thy body glorious How quite contrary to this do most people live Let it be our wisdom with the children of Issachar to have understanding of the times 1 Chro. 12.31 Let us labour to get our souls beautified by Christs second coming with Justification and Sanctification and Christ at his third coming will make our bodies glorious above expression The Day of Judgement asserted ACTS 17.31 Because he hath appointed a Day in which he will judge the world c. SAint Paul perceiving the Idolatry at Athens his spirit was stirred in him ver 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his spirit was sowred and imbittered in him Paul was a bitter man against sin That anger is without sinne which is against sinne Or the word may signifie he was in a Paroxysme or burning fit of zeal and zeal is such a passion as cannot be either dissembled or pent up with this fire he dischargeth against their Idolatry ver 22.23 Ye men of Athen● I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious for as I passed by and beheld your devotions I found an Altar with this Insc iption 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the unknown God Nor doth the Apostle only declaime againg the false god but
may not believe a doctrine thus holy a doctrine thus practised by him that published it and confirmed by miracles then a man is under an impossibility of ever being satisfied from any thing from God for what shall satisfie If God speak to us from heaven we should as much suspect that as if an Angel come from heaven we should suspect him but since we believe and know there 's a God and he is just and merciful it 's impossible the divine goodnesse should consent to such Impostors But you will say what are these miracles to us I say therefore thirdly they are a sufficient reason to engage us to believe the divinity of this holy doctrine though we never saw them You do not see Christ your selves nor did you see him dye nor work miracles but would you have had Christ live alwayes among you If you would he must then never dye and the great comfort of our life depended upon his death he dyed is risen and gone to heaven would you have him come down from heaven and dye that you might see it and would you have him dye quite thorow the world at the same time which must be if you would imagine we must see every thing our selves it 's a great piece of madnesse to believe nothing but what we see our selves Austin was troubled himself in this case Lib. 6. Con●es cap. 4. he had been cheated before and now he was resolved he would believe nothing but what should be plain to him at length says he O my God thou shewed'st me how many things I believed which I saw not I considered I believed I had a father and mother and such persons were my Parents how can I tell that a man may say it may be he was drop't from heaven and God made him in an extraordinary way so if I never were out of this Town it 's madnesse for a man to say there 's never another Town in England or to say there is no Sea because I saw it not Nay if a man come and tell me there 's this doctrine that teaches me all self-denial mortification weanednesse from the world and say this is of God and when he hath done ventures life children family have we not reason to believe it If you will not believe 't is either because the first persons were deceived themselves or else because you think they would deceive you now deceiv'd themselves they could not be when they saw so many miracles done and deceive you that they would not neither for would any good man to deceive an other undo himself they dyed for it and writ this book and sealed it with their blood and therefore there can be no reason to doubt of it they were witnesses and delivered what they saw Luke 1.2 7. Prop. As we have rational evidence the Scripture is the Word of God so we have evidence also from inward sensation born we are with principles of conscience and the truths in this book are so homogeneal to man that he shall finde something within himself to give testimony for it 2 Cor. 4.2 By manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God Joh. 5.44 Men believe not because they receive honour one of another and in Scripture they that would not believe are they that would not repent Mat. 21.28 to the 33. men that practice drunkennesse whoredome sensuality covetousnesse pride and know that these things are sinnes they are the great unbelievers because they are loth to leave their sins offer the greatest reason in the world for a thing if it be against a mans interest how hard and almost next to impossible is it to convince him A man would believe that the Romans were in England that reads the Roman History but if he shall finde the coyne of the Roman Emperour he will much more believe it Do a bad action O the secret terrours that a man finds within him as if he felt something of hell already Do a good action and the secret sweetnesse joy and peace that attends it that he cannot but say I believe it for I feel some degrees of it already 1 Cor. 14.24 25 c. he speaks to the inward principles of his conscience The reason men believe not the Scriptures is not because 't is unreasonable to believe them but because they have a desperate love to sinne and they are loth to entertain that that should check their interest There is in every life that certain sagacity by which a man apprehends what is natural to that life what nourishes that life a man that lives according to the Law written in his heart finds there 's that in this Revelation that feeds nourishes and encourages it so that this man finds experimental satisfaction in it Doth the Word of God tell me the wayes of God are pleasant I thought they were hard and difficult now I finde the yoke of Christ is easie and that no happinesse like this and no blessednesse like that I thought if I did not comply with such things I could never be blessed now I finde I need nothing to make me happy but my God he finds and feels these things are certan true and real Thus I have done with the demonstration You will easily observe I have neither taken notice of what the Papists tell us we must believe the Scripture because the Church saith it we cannot tell what the Church is till the Scripture had told us And though I have not mentioned the testimony of the Spirit yet I suppose I have spoke to the thing for I cannot understand what should be meant by the testimony of the Spirit except we either mean miracles wrought which in Scripture is called the testimony of the Spirit of Christ Acts 15.8 9. the giving of the Holy Ghost it 's the giving of those extraordinary miracles that fell down among them so Heb. 2.4 Acts 5.32 I say if by the testimony of the Spirit you mean this then you can mean nothing else but the Spirit assisting enabling helping our faculties to see the strength of that Argument God hath given us and by experience to feel what may be felt which comes under the head of sensation APPLICATION First then study the Scripture If a famous man do but write an excellent book O how do we long to see it or suppose I could tell you that there 's in France or Germany a book that God himself writ I am confident men may draw all the money out of your purses to get that book you have it by you O that you would study it Wnen the Eunuch was riding in his Chariot he was studying the Prophet Isaiah he was not angry when Philip came and as one would have thought asked him a bold question Vnderstandest thou what thou readest he was glad of it Acts 8 27 28. one great end of the year of release was that the Law might be read Deut 31.9 it 's the wisdome of
take off the veile from the Text in a short explication By one man and him we may consider 1. His name Adam and this comprehends his person sex and kind 2. His order he was the first man 1 Cor. 15.45 3. His person in the individual And so Original sin properly is not derived from the proximate Parents but the prime-parent 4. His nature Adam was one non tantum in individuo sed in specie one comprehending the whole root representing the whole stock the seed and generation of man-kind so Adam is taken for the species of man Sinne The Apostle here speaks of sin not sins as if he would precisely determine it of that one root of sin distinct from those many following fruits this sin hath been the Original the incentive the cause of all sinne this sinne stained the world Entered into the world viz. by propagation sin entered like death Now death is actually propagated as he said scio me genuisse mortalem I know I beget a dying child a child subject to death sinne entered not by example but generation The World By the world we must not understand terrenam corp●ralem vitam the pleasure and delights of the world for the Saints are crucified to the world in this sense Gal 6.14 and so Original sin should not seize on believers Nor 2. In locum mundi for as Pareus observes the Angels first sinned and sin first entred by them into the place of the world Nor 3. In Paradisum into Paradise for sin was first committed by Eve in Paradise But 4. We must understand the inhabitants of the world Vniversum genus humanum all man-kind Martyr Gorranus as Mart. Gor. And death by sinne The query among Divines is what this death is Some suppose the death of the body as Ambrose some the death of the soul as the Pelagians but as Haymo observes mors animae corporis in omnes pertranstit the death both of soul and body passed on all for as Origen saith Orig. Mors corporalis umbra est spiritualis the death of the body is only the shadow of the death of the soul so that by death in the Text we must necessarily understand the death of soul and body with all the antecedents and consequents of both Willet sicknesse weaknesse corruption guilt horrour despair Death passed upon all men Corporal death on all the most holy most flourishing most probable to live spiritual and eternal death on all men in the sentence not in the execution Rom. 3.19 the sentence is reversed the execution for ever forborn to believers For all have sinned For the opening of this I shall only give you the glance of Musculus In Adam omnes fuimus in lumbis ejus c. we were all in the loynes of offending Adam from that masse we sprung and therefore as Levi paid tythes in the loyns of Abraham Hebrews 7.9 10. so it is no wonder if we being in the loyns of Adam are found sinners in him Doct. Now the mournful truth that the Text presents us with is this viz. That our first Parent by his transgression hath left an unhappy portion of sinne and death to all his posterity thus much the Text expresseth thus much it confirms we have this unwelcome entail from our first Parent Concerning death I shall not dilate because the shade of death doth alwayes accompany the body of sin but I shall only insist on that part of our portion sin We are entituled to Adams sinne 'T is a derivation from the root to the branches as poyson is carried from the fountain to the Cistern as the children of Traytours have their blood tainted with their fathers Treason and the children of Bond-slaves are born in their Fathers condition Omnes in Adamo peccaverunt Aug. quia omnes unus ille fuerunt Aug. All were entangled in Adams sin because all were folded up in Adams person And the same Father in another place Traxit reatum homo quia unus erat cum illo à quo traxit Man drew down guilt upon himself because he was one with him from whom he drew it Greg. And it is an excellent observation of Gregory Genus humanum in parente primo velut in radice putruit Man-kind putrified in the first parent as in a root Adam is as the poysoned root and the clusters are envenomed because the root was poysoned had Adam stood and preserved his perfection his glory as a royalty had descended to his seed to man-kind but by his offence forfeiting his beauty and contracting on himself both guilt and an universal loathsomenesse both losse and loathsomnesse he transmits to his posterity and it is upon his breath that every child that comes into the world sucks in poyson with his first breach and is no sooner a living creature than a deformed sinner This truth we find early confirmed in the world so Adam begat Seth according to his own likeness Gen. 5.3 non ad similitudinem Dei sed ad similitudinem sui Brockman and it is very considerable the Original phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his image in his likeness the word is as it were redoubled to set the greater brand upon corrupt nature in his image nay in his likeness And to shew the necessity of our drawing corruptness from Adam holy Job expresses it by a quick and smart interrogation Job 14.4 Nay th s truth David seems to bedue with tears and deplore with sighs Psal 51.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sinne did my mother conceive me In the times of the Gospel this spot is more clearly discernable and from whence we received the contagion Rom. 5.19 By God we are creatures by Adam we are sinners so that Text By one mans disobedience many were made sinners And so most remarkably 1 Cor. 15.49 And as we have borne the image of the earthly c. Nor is that gloss of Cyprian upon the place to be over-passed Imaginem terreni portavimus Cypr. peccandi propens●●nem mortem imaginem caelestis portemus constantiam in sanctitate instaurationem ex morte corruptione ad vitam immortalitatem i. e. We have borne the image of the earthly Adam a propensity to sin and death let us bear the image of the heavenly a constancy in holiness and instauration from death and corruption to life and immortality I shall only adde one Scripture more Ephes 2.3 We were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Now there are three things which are considerable for the dispatch of the doctrinal part of the Text. 1. To demonstrate more particularly the transmission of Adams sin to us Now Adams sin is transmitted to posterity two wayes 1. By imputation 2. By inhaesion the guilt and the stain of his sin is propagated to all his posterity Particle 1 1. The sin of Adam is derived to us by way of imputation and that upon a double demonstration may be evidenced
and off-spring we expected that the beauty of his mind the harmony of his will the holinesse of his desires the absolutenesse of his Soveragnty should have fallen to us as a Princely inheritance and therefore Adam falling it is but just that the entaile of sin and death should be fixed upon us 3. Now the third thing to be opened in the finishing of which the doctrinal part will be dispatcht is to shew that Adams sin is not propagated to us by imitation but by generation against the heretical Pelagian And this shall be briefly coucht under the evidence of a five-fold Argument Arg. 1 Arg. 1. As our Divines seasonably observe Christs righteousnesse is not only proposed to us to be imitated we should then all fall sho t in writing after the copy but those that lay hold on his righteousnesse by faith they are changed and renewed in their minds there is a physical communication of this righteousness they feele the power of his death in the crucifying of their lusts and the vertue of his resurrection in their newnesse of minde and life Rom. 6.5 Phil. 3.10 as the Apostle most pathetically So Adams sin is not only our Copy but our corruption it doth not only seduce but defile our natures not only entice but condemne our persons Adam was not only a sinful pattern but a sinful Parent the plague of his sin hath infected the humane nature not only me but man-kind Arg. 2 Arg. 2. Baptisme that is administred to little ones to our infants it cannot be thought to blot out sins of imitation for they are guilty of none then Baptisme would in vaine be administred to our infants and this raises the feud of Anabaptists against this great truth of Original sin They deny the sin of Infants that they may deny the Baptisme Now we cannot conceive that tha blessed Ordinance of Infant Baptisme should be administred for no designs and purposes and why doth the Apostle call Baptisme the Laver of Regeneration Tit. 3.5 were there no stain in Infants what need of a Laver or of washing Arg. 3. And as Ambrose observes David ait ante usuram lucis Ambrose se accipere originis injuriam David complains that he lay under the stain of original sin before he was blest with the first light of the Sun he was dog'd with native corruption when the womb bore him it bore a living but a leprous childe he was wrap't in sin before he was wrapt in swadling cloaths Arg. 3 Arg. 4. And how many offend in the world who think nothing of Adam they transgresse and look not on his Copy And what is murder so often acted in the world to the earing of an Apple What proportion is there between those two Sins Adams eating of an Apple and Cains shedding of his brothers blood How many transgressours are there in the world that ne-ever heard of his offence or that ever there was such a man in the world whom did Philosophers imitate in their sin that opinionated the world to be eternal as Aristotle and his followers Arg. 4 Arg. 5. And that Argument of a learned man is most considerable Si peccatum originis sit tantùm ab imitatione Paulus non dixisset ex Adamo fluxisse peccatum sed à Diabolo quia ipse peccandi exemplum dedit i. e. If original sin were only propagated in a way of imitation Paul would never have said that sin entred the world by Adam but by Satan for he set the first pattern of sinning And now the doctrinal part is dispatch't I shall only annex some few things for the clearer evidence of this truth Arg. 5 1. If the guilt of Adams sin be not imputed to us why do our Infants of en labour under the wracking torments of some distempers and why often is the Cradle turn'd into a Coffin why come they crying and moaning into the world why doth palenesse of face plenteousnesse of tears and a multiplic●ty of diseases seize upon them as the prisoners of sin Surely God cannot forget the bowels of a Father this could not befall our Infants were not the hand of justice armed with sin and guilt let us not conceive God trying practice upon poor moaning innocents 2. If Adams sin be not inherent in us why have we not free will to good why do we not naturally burn in love to Jesus Christ and flourish with all vivacity in duty why flye we not to the Sanctuary as to our Paradise but on the contrary why do we draw the Chain of a body of death after us Duty is our burden sin our Element Rom. 7.24 the world our beloved the creature our Idol How are we dragg'd to service we flye to sin but are drawn to duty And in a word how come our understandings to be prisons of darknesse our wills stages of rebellion our affections heaps of dung or drosse for naturally we love sin or the creature what was then the inoffensivenesse of infancy thus to envenome our natures how came in the evil heart of unbelief Hebrews 3.12 3. This Truth of original sin was generally held in the Church till Pelagius who liv'd in the fifth Century confirmed by divers Councels in the Primitive times Quis ante Discipulum Pelagii prodigiosum Cael estium reatu praevaricationis Adaegenus humanum negavit esse astrictum Concilio Melevitano Concilio Toletano c. and the sixth Council of Carthage This truth hath been acknowledged by Heathens Plato complained Homines naturâ suâ esse pravos induci non posse ut justitiam colant i. e. That men were naturally very evil and could not be induced to the embracement of what was righteous And Cicero lamentatus est homines à naturâ novercâ in lucem edi Cicero complains that men were brought into the world by nature their step-mother the Heathens themselves universally enjoyned a strict Discipline to curb the ranknesse and untowardnesse of nature Actus ille Adami quo ipse peccavit omnibus imputandus est censendus omnium esse proprius c. A lap Nay this truth hath been confirmed by the most learned of the Papists A lapide in his Comment on the Romans acknowledgeth that that one act of Adams in eating the forbidden fruit wherein he offended is to be imputed to all men and is to be reputed the sin of all men and from hence it comes to passe that every childe of Adam hath contracted a necessity of sinning even with his first breath Nay the very Rabbies have attested this truth and we finde it clearly though sadly witnessed by our constant and much to be bemoaned experiences and here we might suppena and summon two witnesses for the further verification of it our own aversenesse to good and our natural propensity to evil 4. Nor was this truth ever opposed but upon some designe The Pelagians opposed it to maintain the perfection and power of nature which is mans proper Idol The Papists have opposed
watch over them till the morning of conversion appear in them 3. By their importunate prayers Adam destroyed his posterity by a wanton eye let us study to save ours by a weeping eye by prayer mingled with tears Hannah by prayer obtain'd a Samuel let us by prayer endeavour to make our children Samuels the God of grace can give grace to our issue upon the account of prayer Prayer may obtain that from the second Adam for thy children which they lost in the first 8. Let us consider this with our selves that though from Adam we receive sin and death yet that we charge not our sin and death upon him as if we dyed by his fall and not by our folly it is true our original guilt comes from him but from whom comes our actual he left us a stock of sin but who hath improved this stock Perditio nostra ex nobis our destruction is from our selves his sin is ours as we were in him but O those innumerable iniquities we our selves have adventured upon we had the Egge from Adam but the Serpent is from us that stings to death we cocker lust and warme corruption with our desire and delight that it engenders into killing transgressions Adam hath left us death by original but we apply this death by our actual sin And therefore as our perdition was hatched by Adam so it is fledged by us it is seminally from Adam but ripen'd by us we our own selves perfect our own misery we put the seal to our own destruction by our fostering of our own lusts and by our actual rebellions OF Original sinne INHERING Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin THe Apostles drift throughout the whole Chapter is clearly to beat down sin and to promote holinesse It was not known in his happy dayes how to ascend the Throne of glory but by the steps of grace Those Primitive and truly inspired Saints never thought of commencing any degree in happinesse per saltum knowing that without holinesse they should n●t see God Now to urge his already believing Romans to further sanctity the Apostle uses the consideration of their Baptisme as a special motive in the 3.4 5. verses and indeed those Ordinances in which we receive most from God are greatest obligations of the soul unto God There are these mercies with him that he may be feared When the direct beam of love from God to them is strongest the reflexion of love and duty from them towards their God is hottest then they are constrained and cannot as it were 2 Cor. 5.14 any longer choose but live to him that dyed for them This is that which the Apostle in this verse takes for granted Knowing this or we all know and grant this the participle by an Hebraisme being put for the verb which hath reference unto the foregoing part of the Chapter A Lapide in locum Of which the words following in my Text are the sum and conclusion viz. That our old man is crucified with him c. Which words contain 1. A duty or priviledge for in Religion the same thing is both it being our happinesse to serve so good a Master and to be employed in so good a service 2. The end of that duty or priviledge That the body of sinne might be destroyed c. But my task being only to speak to some of the terms we here meet withal I would not be curious in the division of the words I am only to unfold a word or two in each part Paraeus Chrys viz. Our old man the body of sinne and sinne all which signifie one and the same thing that is they all are put here to expresse our Original pravity and inbred corruption Concerning which I suppose you have in the former Sermon seen this fountain of death opened I am only to shew you the streames that are from it overflowing in every one of us Original pravity inhering in us spoken to in the general And in the handling of this subject give me leave to propound some things first more generally remembring that this discourse is intended partly in the nature of a common place and then I shall speak to it more particularly from the words now before us Considered first that there is such a pravity That which more generally I am to speak unto is First That there is a pravity naughtinesse and corruption in every one Secondly What this corruption and spiritual pravity is 1. That there is such a pravity will partly appear from the forced consent and common experience of all men Arguments to prove it To prove which I need not quote those passages which Austin hath formerly observed out of Plato and Cicero or adde any other for certainly the wickednesse man naturally tends unto is so grosse Contra Julian Pelag. that the dim sight of nature may easily discover it were this to be read of Pagans I would confirme my assertion as Paul did his Acts 17.28 Certain of your own Poets have said it But I remember I have to do with Christians and therefore to the Law and to the Testimony Alas these poor men like those that admired Nilus's streams but were ignorant of its spring-head they could not see so far as to the true cause of all this sinful misery they could complain that none were content with their condition but qui fit how or whence it came so to passe they could not tell Nay more the wisest Heathen with the plummet of reason could never fathom the depth of this corruption St. Paul Rom. 7.7 till a Convert and savingly instructed in the Law did not know this lust And this I the rather premise because I shall take my self tyed up to Scripture-evidence and proofs in the businesse in hand Scripture makes only a full discovery of this disease and of its cure too Here only invenitur venenum here only nascitur antidotus Hence then I shall chiefly fetch these Arguments instead of many The first Argument of our sinful condition by nature may be taken from Gen. 5.3 where 't is said that Adam who had been created in the likenesse of God ver 1. after his fall by sin Arg. 1. From mans begetting children in his own image begat a son in his own likeness who had now made himself like unto the beast that perish or far worse for an Oxe knows his Owner c. Now what is it for God to create man in his likenesse 't is sanctus sanctum A holy God creared man holy and by consequence for Adam to beget Seth in his likenesse is corruptus corruptum defiled Adam begat defiled polluted Seth and indeed who can bring a clean thing out of that which is unclean John 14.4 if the root be corrupt the fruit is not sound if the fountain be poyson'd the waters are not wholesome if the
this body of death Paul that could with rejoycing endure scourgings and stonings imprisonments and shipwracks yet cryes out mightily of this O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me Rom. 7.24 2. As a body being material is visible so original sin discovers its self to every one that without prejudice will look to finde it It is discernable in its effects daily Though we cannot see the soul yet from the motions and actions it causeth we know a man hath a soul so we may know every one hath original sin from that vanity and sin that is put forth by it 3. As the body hath divers members so this sinne it is not so much one sin as seminally and vertually all sin Peter Martyr there is a concatenation of vertues and vices Scripture speaks of both under that notion hence a single eye a pure heart c. And on the other side that sin is a body and is thus universally in us the Apostle shews Rom. 3.13 14. and the Prophet saith it hath over-spread us from the soles of the feet even unto the head there is no soundnesse Isa 1.6 As the waters in Noah covered the highest Mountains so these raging waves of iniquity over-flow the highest and choicest faculties of humane nature 4. I wish I could not adde as a body is beloved and provided for so is this sin We make provisio● for the flesh to fulfill its lusts Rom. 13. ult Who would willingly part with the least member of his body men do not willingly forgo any sin but if something of this body must be parted with 't is but haire and nayles c. such as are rather excrements than members and will soon grow again which we are content to cut and pare off And thus till that day in which God puts forth his Almighty power to make us willing we are loth to leave any sin unlesse such as for the present are troublesome to us or may ere long grow again and be with more ease or credit enjoyed by us 5. This sin as a body hath strength in it and Tyranny is exercised by it The body leads poor Captives whether it lists and says to this man G● and he goeth c. so does this sin we are held Captive by it Faius till the Son of God sets us free Man is not ingenuus but libertus he is not by nature born free but by grace made free untill he be established by the free Spirit he goes and comes as the winde and Tyde of corruption drives him And this is farre more sad than to be possessed or to have our members acted by the Divel himself for the incestuous person was given over to Satan which some interpret thus for the good of his soul 1 Cor. 5.5 that his soul might be saved but none are left under the power and command of their corruptions but to their certain and inevitable destruction 6. It is call'd here especially a body by the Apostle to answer to the other Metaphor of crucifying in the words before only bodies can be crucified Paraeus and this sin is crucified with Christ Which by the way shews the state of original sin in the people of God and how it should be in all others especially such as are baptiz'd it should by faith be nayl'd to the Crosse of Christ we should by believing fetch vertue from Christs death to crucifie it it must hang on Christs Crosse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Metaphor taken from those that are crucified who hanging on the Crosse upon nailes grow weaker and weaker till they expire and dye so must original sin be in us dead already as to its reigning power and dying daily as to its in-being moving power having every day lesse strength than other The third expression of original corruption in the Text 't is sin We have now but the last expression the Apostle uses for this original corruption he calls it here sin to shew that it is so it is sin 1. Properly and truly 2. Eminently and especially 1. Properly It is truly and properly sin it is not only a defect but a sin it is against the holy will of God and is chargeable upon us by the justice of God every soul disease is not only a punishment but a sin and therefore farre worse than the worst disease that is incident to the body and our sinful state should be more terrible to us than our dying condition To convince us of this know that this original corruption becomes our sin 1. By imput●tion 1. In that God imputes the guilt of Adams sin to us which I suppose you have had vindicated in the foregoing Sermon I shall only say this to it that God may as well by imputation make Adams sin become our sin for condemnation as he may by imputation make Christs righteousnesse become our righteousnesse unto salvation and yet Christ is made of God unto us wisdome righteousness c. and we have no other righteousness to appeare in for justification before him at that great day In Thesi de peccato Orig. Hence Rivet well observes that the Church hath ever found and still does that those very men who are enemies to the doctrine of Original sin are enemies also to the doctrine of the grace of God in Christ Thus the Socinians who deny that we have contracted any debt by Adams sin deny also that Christ satisfied and paid our debts to divine Justice and if they take away this let them take all 2. Though Original corruption be truly sin by imputation 2. By inhaesion yet 't is not sin by imputation only It is our sin by inhaesion inhering in us and making of us otherwise than God made us To blot a letter in a fairly writ Copy to draw a black line over a beautiful picture cann't but prove a fault what is it then to mar Gods curious workmanship which this sin does in man Consider that God is many moneths in the framing of the body for we are wonderfully made by him and when this body is fitted he unites it to a soul more worth than a world of bodies This great-little creature man Psal 139.13 14 hath many prerogatives too that advance him especially in that Gods delight is said to be with him Now when all this care and paines are taken this cost and charges expended by God to make man for himself this corruption comes and mars all and will God hold it guiltlesse No this sin is exceeding sinful for 2. 'T is sin eminently 1. Extensive 1. 'T is more extensive than other sins every actual sin hath some particular faculty in soul or body which it does defile and charge with guilt wherein it was conceiv'd or whereby it was acted but original sin stains all alike so farre as by their several natures they are receptive of its defilement it ruines the whole little world of man It does not only overspread
any receive not him this wrath tarries still and will cleave to and abide upon him for ever John 3.36 He speaks with authority Luke 19.27 Those mine enemies bring them and slay them before me and it shall be done 3. That the Psalmist makes it as it is a point of wisdome in the greatest to kisse the Son with a kisse of homage and subjection Psal 2 11 12. least he be angry what is the danger of that and ye perish in the war of your hopes and purposes and never compasse grace nor glory If his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all those which put their trust in him 4. That then ye may plead with the Lord with humble boldnesse Psal 74.1 Why doth thine anger smoak against the Sheep of thy Pasture remember thy Congregation which thou hast purchased of old the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed c. 5. And assure your hearts of welcome Prov. 21.14 A gift in secret pacifieth wrath and a reward in the bosome strong wrath Mark their policy Acts 12.10 and be assured the relations of Christ are beloved of the Father Job 33.24 Then he is gracious to him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome 2. To those which the Lord hath translated out of their natural condition 1. Bring the work often to the touchstone that you may not boast in a false gift gold will endure the test and be more fully manifested to be gold indeed and finding the work to be right live with an enlarged heart to the praise of that grace which hath made this change 2. Deal seriously in the mortification of sin which God only strikes at and in order thereto count sin the worst of evils if this were done and throughly and fixedly done in our spirits there is nothing of any other directions would be left undone To set up this judgement there needs 1. Ploughing carefully with the Lords heifer viz. search into the Oracles of God there and there only are lively portraitures of sin and the genuine products and traine of sin 2. The eye-salve of the Spirit We are blinder than Batts in this matter and are indisposed very much or rather wholly to let this truth sink down into our hearts 3. Applications to the Throne of grace None but those which deal in good earnest in heaven will see the hell and mystery of sin in themselves He gives the Holy Ghost to them which ask him 4. Excussions and communings with your selves Prov. 20.27 The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly and duly made use of will tell many stories correspondent to the Word of truth use conscience and use therewith another and bigger candle to rummage the dark room of thy heart with Superadde to conscience the succours of the Word and Spirit and thou shalt do something in the search and finde out convictively the swarms of evil in thine own heart 5. The work of grace There will be else a beam in the eye and plaine things will not be plaine to us Gods work holds intelligence and is of amicable affinity with his Word grace hath the only excellent faculty in looking through sin 6. Attendance to the Lords administrations against sin God writes in great letters in the world what he had first written in the Scriptures every breach by sin should lead down into more hatred brokennesse of spirit and shame before the Lord for sinne This is the engaging evil this engages God and the holy Angels and Devils and the very man against himself Nothing can be his friend to whom sin hath made God an enemy Wo to the man that is in this sense alone and hath heaven and earth and hell and all within the Continent of them against him it is impossible for that mans heart and hands to stand strong This is the mighty prevailing evil Never was man so stout as to stand before the face of sin but he shivered and was like a garment eaten up of moths This hath fretted the joynts of Kingdomes in pieces Psal 39.11 and made the goodliest houses in the world a heap of rubbish Zech. 5.4 will make Bab lon that sits as a Queen an habitation of Divels Rev. 18.2 and the hold of every foule spirit and a Cage of every unclean and hateful birds made the Angels Divels and heaven it self too hot for them Never were the like changes made as by sinne grace makes not changes of richer comfort than sin doth of dismal consequence it is made by the Holy Ghost an argument of the infinity of the power of God to pardon and subdue sinne Micah 7.18 3. Bear all afflictions incident to an holy course chearfully The Martyrs went joyfully into the fire because the flames of hell were quenched to them bore their Crosse easily because no curse and damnation to them in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.13 4. Reduce your anger to the similitude of Gods which is very slowly kindled and is an intense holy displicence only against sin Psal 103.8 and is cleans'd from all dregs of rashnesse injustice and discomposure such zeal should eat us up John 2.17 MANS IMPOTENCY TO Help himself out of that misery ROM 5.6 For when we were yet without strength in due time Christ dyed for the ungodly IN this Chapter there are two parts in the first the Apostle layes down the comfortable fruits and priviledges of a justified estate in the second he argues the firmnesse of these comforts because they are so rich that they are scarce credible and hardly received The firmnesse and soundnesse of these comforts the Apostle representeth by a double comparison 1. By comparing Chr st with Christ and 2. Christ with Adam Christ with Christ or one benefit that we have by him with another from the Text to ver 12. then Christ with Adam the second Adam with the first to the end of the Chapter In comparing Christ with Christ three considerations do occur 1. The efficacy of his love towards us before justification with the efficacy of his love towards us after justification the argument standeth thus if Christ had a love to us when sinners and his love prevailed with him to die for us much more may we expect his love when made friends if when we were in sin and misery shiftless and helpless Christ had the heart to die for us and to take us with all our faults will he cast us off after we are justified and accepted with God in him this love of Christ is asserted in the 6. verse amplified in the 7. and 8. verses and the conclusion is inferred verse 9. much more then being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him The second Comparison is of the efficacy of the death of Christ and the efficacy of the life of Christ 't is absurd to think that Christ rising from the dead
respect Christ abased himself to look like a sinner Humbled himself and became obedient to death the death of the Crosse In the further Amplification of this I shall endeavour to shew three things 1. What kinde of death Christ humbled himselfe unto 2. In what manner Christ underwent that death 3. Upon what grounds Christ thus humbled himself to death 1. What kinde of death Christ humbled himself unto and this I cannot omit the Apostle having added such a remarkable Emphasis by way of reduplication Death even the death of the Cross It was not only a violent death and there 's much in that that he dyed not a natural but a violent death Nor indeed could he both because there was no sin in him to be the in-let of a natural death nor would that have been satisfactory for the sin of others It was not only I say a violent death but such a violent death as had in it a more than ordinary violence a death by crucifying which hath these three imbittering Circumstances 1. Pain 2. Shame 3. Curse 1. Pain The easiest death is painful a death-bed though a down-bed is for the most part a little ease Oh my gowty feet saith Asa O my cold benum'd body saith David O my leprous skin saith Uzziah O my pained a king head cryes the son of the Shunamite but in the death of Christ there was the pain of many deaths put together in the very dawning of the Gospel the very first time we finde the death of Christ mentioned it is set out by bruising Gen. 3.15 It shall bruise the head and thou shalt bruise his heel Isa 53.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 26.39 viz. his humane nature that which could be bruised It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief bruised him as with a Pestel in a Mortar hence was it he prayed so earnestly that the Cup might passe it was so full of worme-wood and gall and the pain so violent which he was to encounter that he screwed up his request to the highest pin if it be possible wise and resolute men do not use to complain of a little they will not cry oh at a flea-bite or the burning of a finger and some of the Martyrs have born up with such Christian courage and gallantry in death that being on the Rack they would not be loosed they were tortured Heb. 11.35 not accepting deliverance saith the Apostle the incomes and supports of Divine Grace made an abatement of their pains oh but what shall we say of the bitternesse of that death where the Author of all their strength God and man bewrayes passions how much dregs was there in that Cup which Christ was so loth to drink of Three things made Christs death so exceeding painful Optime complexionatus Aquin. 1. The piercing his hands and feet those sinnews and sensitive parts Christs body was all over excellently well tempered and so his sense admirably acute but to be pierced and digg'd through hands and feet parts so full of nerves and sinnews must needs aggravate and augment the smart They have pierced my hands and my feet Psal 22.16 was the Prophetical complaint of the Psalmist fulfilled in Christ 2. Another thing that addeth much to the pain of Christs death was the extension and distortion of his body the Crosse was a rack to him and he was stretch't as upon the Tenters for when any persons were to be crucified the Crosse you must understand l●y all along upon the ground till the party was nailed to it and stretch't out at his full length and afterward erected and to this the Psalmist had respect in that sad complaint of his I may tell all my bones Psal 22 17. he was so rack't that his bones were almost ready to start out of the skin 3. The death of Christ was more painful by reason of its slownesse and gradual approach Christ was from the third Compare Mar. 15.25 with 34. to the ninth houre in dying from nine in the morning till three in the afternoon six compleat houres When bloody Tyrants would make any mans death more than ordinarily painful they have devised wayes to cause a lingring death and when news was once brought to one of them that such a one was dead suddenly he cryed out Evasit he hath made an escape When death comes the slower its pace the heavier its tread the longer the Seige the fiercer the storme but this is true of Christ more than others for when they are long in dying they usually faint and their spirits abate they are brought step by step to deaths doore and dead before death but with Christ it was otherwise he stood all that while in perfect strength the vigour and acutenesse of his senses was no whit blunted or made lesse sensible of paine That is a notable Scripture Mark 15.37 39. Jesus cryed with a loud voice and gave up the Ghost and when the Centurion which stood ov●r against him saw that he so cryed out and gave up the Ghost he said Truly this man was the Son of God a very strange inference this man dyes and gives up the Ghost and therefore he is the Son of God The Argument one would think were strong to the contrary but here lies the strength of his reason When he saw he so cryed out and died he said he was the Son of God He very well knew that in other men strength abated leisurely their speech grew low and they used to fumble and falter and rattle in the throat but as for this man he gave such a cry at the last gasp as he never heard and thereupon infers Truly he was the Son of God 2. Another bitter ingredient unto the death of Christ was shame and this was much more than the former There is nothing so sharp and cutting so intolerable to an ingenuous and noble spirit as shame The paine of an hundred deaths is more easily undergone by such than the reproach of one Now in this respect the thieves fared much better than he did we read of no irrision no inscription no taunts or sarcasms cast upon them they had only paine to encounter Christ both pain and scorne the souldiers the Jews the very thieves flouted him He endured the Crosse Heb. 12.2 saith the Apostle and despised the shame The Crosse was it self a● ignominious death the death of a slave Fecinus est vincire civem Romanum scelus verbera e quid dicam in crucem tollere Cic. Zach 11.13 no Free man or man of fashio● was ever put to it and to this day we say of one that is hang'd He dyes like a dog yea but Christ did not only dye such an ignominious and reproachful death as this but he was sold to it and a goodly price that he was prized at the death it self was shameful the death of a slave and this was an aggravating circumstance of ignominy that he
against it 2. Christ humbled himself to death obediently It was his will to dye and yet he dyed not of his own will but in obedience to his Fathers We have them both conjoyned Heb. 10.7 Lo I come to do thy Will O God And Joh. 10.18 I lay down my life of my self this Commandment have I received of my Father he became obedient unto death saith the Text In respect of God Christs death was justice and mercy in respect of man it was murther and cruelty in respect of himself it was obedience and humility To obey is be●●er than sacrifice Christs obedience was the best of his sacrifice when he prayed to his Father that the cup might passe it was with this Clause of exception Not as I w●ll but as thou wilt 3. Christ submitted himself to death humbly and meekly he was oppressed and afflicted y●t opened he not his mouth not that he spake nothing at all but he was silent as to murmurings and revilings that was the work of his persecutors not a word passed from him that might argue passion or impatience as from one of the Thieves that were crucified with him he was brought as a Lamb to the slaughter he was not enraged or exasperated with all the injustice cruelty and oppression of his enemies not one word in heat of blood to them whose errand was to shed his blood Friend saith he to Judas betrayest thou the Son of man with a kisse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys What meeknesse was here though I confesse there was a tart rebuke in that kinde compellation and Christ calling him friend smartly checkt him for his unfriendly carriage When one of his Disciples cut off Malchus his eare Put up thy sword saith he Wee 'le have none of that club law he touches his eare and heales it When he was reviled he reviled not again 1 Pet. 2.23 Psal 64.3 when he suffered he threatened not his enemies shot their arrows even bitter words but they recoyled not upon them Nay he returned not only no ill words but gave prayers in exchange for their taunts and revilings Father forgive them Luke 23.34 for they know not what they do It had been meeknesse to have gone through his sufferings without murmuring but it was an high and heroical act of meeknesse indeed to poure out prayers for them that were such busie instruments in pouring out his blood he was so far from biting the stone that he kissed it and the hand that threw it 3. Upon what grounds Christ thus humbled himself to death What cogent necessity was upon him for we may not conceive that Christ thus humbled himself to death upon trivial and impertinent considerations as David said once of Abner Died Christ as a fool dieth 2 Sam. 3.33 No sure it was upon these six weighty grounds 1. That Scripture prophesies and Predictions might be accomplished all which represent him as coming in died garments from Bozrah Gen. 3.15 The first Scripture that ever mentions Christ shews him a bleeding and crucified Saviour Now Christ was to make good to a tittle every thing that had been before written of him In Saint Matthews Gospel this is very remarkable who above all the rest hath most punctually observed the fulfilling of Prophesies with whom the burden and under-song of almost every event is ut impleretur that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the mouth of the Prophets Christ himself renders this account of his sufferings in that Discourse of his with his Disciples upon the Road Oh fools Luk. 24.25 26. and slow of heart to believe all that the Prophets have spoken Ought not Christ to have suffered these things The Prophets have all spoken this with one mounth and is it possible I should make them all liars 2. That Scripture types might be fulfilled many whereof were to decipher and prefigure the death of Christ as Isaac's being offered the slaying of the Sacrifices the lifting up of the Serpent Now had not Christs blood been shed and he lift up upon the Cross there had been no correspondency in the Antitype as Moses lift up the Serpent in the Wildernesse so must the Son of man be lifted up Joh. 3.14 Had not Christ been made a Sacrifice most of the Legal Ceremonies and precedent prefigurations had either spoken lies or at least nothing to the purpose 3. That his Will and Testament might be firme and effectua● in his life he had given many precious Legacies and they had been all voide and to no more purpose than a Deed without a Seal at it unlesse ratified and confirmed had not Christ given himself to death all his other gifts that he had bequeathed in his Will had been gif●lesse this is the Apostles Argument Where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator for a Testament is of force after men are dead Heb. 9.16 17. otherwise it is of no force at all while the Testator liveth A man that makes a Will doth not intend that any body should be the better by it but upon his death Suppose a man have a Legacy of a thousand pounds given him he is not one whit the richer so long as his friend liveth the Will holds not good in Law nor can he sue for one penny of it This Cup saith Christ is the New Testament in my blood Luke 22.20 that New Testament which is ratified by my blood Christs death gives life not only to his people but to his promises It is expedient for you that I go away John 16.17 saith he for If I go not away the Comforter will not come The sending of the Comforter was one principal clause of his last Testament but till the death of the Testator the Will could not be put in suit it signified nothing and was not pleadable The Holy Ghost was not yet given because that Jesus was not yet glorified what had they received nothing of the Spirit yes John 7.39 but not according to that plentiful proportion which he intended and promised in his Will The Legacy was paid but in part because the Testator was yet alive he was no sooner dead and got to heaven but he makes all good to a tittle as you may read Acts 2.2 3 4. 4. That justice may be satisfied the sentence upon sin was passed from the mouth of a righteous Judge now though justice might admit of a change of persons there was no room for a change of penalties death was threatned and death must be inflicted If Christ will save sinners from death justice will not let him save himself from death Heb. 9.22 without shedding of blood there is no remission Christ undertaking to crosse out and cover the black lines of sin must draw over them the red lines of blood What the chief Priests said concerning Christ is true in some sense though false in theirs He saved others Matth. 27.42 himself he cannot
the burden of it You have not y●t resisted unto blood Heb. 12.4 saith the Apostle striving against sin as if he had said you are not yet come to the hottest of the battel it may be you have gone through some light skirmishes a few ill words or outward losses but when Christ was challenged by this Goliah and none durst take up the Gantlet he resisted unto blood and verily the evil of sin is not so much seen in that thousands are damn'd for it as that Christ dyed for it If you should see a black vapour arise out of the earth and ascend by degrees till it covered the face of the heavens and obscure the Sun in brightest Noon-day lustre you would doubtlesse conclude there must needs be a strange and preternatural malignity in that vapour What shall we then think of sin that brought down the Son of God from heaven darkned his glory took away his life laid him in the dust After whom is the King of Israel come out saith David to Saul after whom dost thou pursue after a dead dog after a flea As if he had said 1 Sam. 24.14 methinks the King of Israel should never trouble himself about such a sorry and inconsiderable thing as I am a dead dog cannot bite when alive indeed he is a fierce creature he may flie in a mans face and tear out his throat but death tames him A dead dog needs no chain and a flea cannot bite very much the mark it makes is but a flea-bite you that have slight thoughts of sin do as good as say that the God of Israel entred into the lists and armed himself for the Battel against a dead dog nay that he lost the Field and was worsted by a flea the evil of sin is not so much seen that it is a knife that cuts our fingers as that its a knife redded over with the blood of our dear Redeemer 3. Hence note the exact and impartial justice of God and his most righteous severity against sin that rather than that shall passe unpunished his only begotten and everlastingly beloved Son shall shed his blood and become lyable and obnoxious to a curse In the blood of Christ as a mirrour is represented the most condescending mercy and inflexible severity that ever the world saw Son saith God if thou wilt undertake for sinners and undergo that penalty that is due to sin thy blood must go for it and nothing can be abated he prays the Cup may passe if possible but justice was inexorable he was upon such terms that it was not possible God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 to declare his righteousnesse that he may be just One would have thought he would have said to declare his love and mercy that he may shew himself gracious nay but though there be a truth in that the Apostle pitches upon another Attribute To declare his righteousnesse that he may be just If there were any respect of persons with God or if exact justice could have warp't and been drawn away with any accessory and circumstantial considerations doubtlesse Christ should have gone free and an indemnity from suffering should have been the Sons priviledge 4. This is sad and dreadful news to all impenitent and unbelieving sinners What will be their doom that have no share in this blood of Christ and not only so but trample it under foot as an unholy thing Let them look to it it will one day rise up against them as a witnesse for their certain damnation for such there 's a much sorer punishment Heb. 10.29 woe to those that have not the blood of Christ to plead for them but ten thousand woes to them that have the blood of Christ pleading against them And where it cries not for pardon it cries out for vengeance with a witnesse They are the enemies of the Crosse of Christ saith the Apostle whose end is destruction Phil. 3.18 19. And what better end could it rationally be hoped they should come to that have an enmity against the Crosse of Christ If that which is light in th e be darkness Matth. 6.23 how great is that darknesse If the healing saving blood of Christ be destruction how dreadful is that destruction the death of Christ is to a wicked man one of the saddest stories and most dreadful tragedies that he can read or hear of because having no interest in it he understands what must certainly be acted upon himself and if God would not hearken to the prayers of his Son how is it likely he should be moved with the cry of Rebels and Enemies When God sent the Prophet Jeremiah upon his Errand to the Nations with the Cup of his fury that they should drink and be drunken and spue and fall and rise no more upon case of their refusal to drink tell them saith he that loe I begin to bring evil on the City which is called by my Name Jer. 25.29 and sh uld ye be utterly unpunished ye shall not be unpunished As if God had said Carry a Cup and if they refuse tell them Jerusalem hath been before them and I am resolved it shall go round My own people shall not drink unpledged and they shall not be unpunished God hath prepared a Cup for all Christ-rejecting sinners warmed with fire and spiced with brimstone and if they wince and make a sowre face let them know Christ hath had it Gods only begotten and beloved Son hath drunk deep on 't and how or with what face can they expect to escape What! will God say to such a one Behold he whose judgment was not to drink of the Cup Jer. 49.12 hath assuredly drunken and art thou he that shalt altogether go unpunished thou shalt not go unpunished but thou shalt surely drink of it Use 2 2. For Exhortation and that in six particulars 1. Hath Christ shed his blood for sin let us then shed the blood of sin let sin never live one quiet quarter of an houre in our souls that would not let Christ live in the world Christ dyed unto sin for Satisfaction let us dye unto sin by Mortification He died unto sinne once likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin Rom. 6.10 11. Every Saint should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostles phrase is Rom. 6.5 planted together in the likenesse of his death And he further explaines his meaning Ver. 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin And verily unlesse by the death of sin in you you can have no comfortable evidence that the death of Christ was for you Christ was crucified and they that are Christs Gal. 6.24 Gal. 5.2 have crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing saith the Apostle I
Paul say unto you he affixeth his name and sets to his hand q. d. I say it and I will stand to it and so if your heart be uncircumcised by not putting off the body of the sins of the flesh if you live in any one known approved sin Christ and the death of Christ shall profit you nothing Ah! revenge the blood of your dearest Lord upon your dearest lusts and when Satan presents to you a sugred spiced cup tempting you to the commission of any sin say as David of the waters of Bethlehem Farre be it from me oh Lord 2 Sam. 23 1● that I should do this is not this the blood of my Saviour that not only hazarded but laid down his life for sin 2. Did Christ let out his blood for us let our lives then run out for Christ in a vigorous activity and unwearied exercise of grace It is the Apostles argument and it 's very forcible We judge that he dyed for all that they that live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him that dyed for them 2 Cor. 5.15 Christ did not shed two or three drops of his blood only or breath a veine and shall two or three duties a few shreds and odde parcels of holinesse serve to return back to Christ What can we think too much for him Tit. 2.14 that thought not much of his blood for us the blood of Christ is as well for the purity as the purchase of his people 3. Did Christ thus humble himself to death for us let us then prize him exceedingly and raise him in our esteem above riches honour pleasure father mother husband wife friend yea life it self Quanto pro me vilior tanto mihi charior Ber. or any other thing that we are apt to account precious how ought he to be prized and preferred above all things that prized such in considerable nothings as we are at so high rates as his own blood if you put Christ into one end of the scale be sure he out-ballances every thing that can be laid in the other To you that believe he is precious Other things may be rated according to that particular excellency that he hath put into them 1 Pet. 2.7 but you will be careful to keep the highest Room for the best friend and say Come down this and t' other vanity this friend must take place whatever other things may make twelve Christ shall be thirteen to a carnal heart nothing so low prized and undervalued as Christ but with believers that have an interest in him and know the worth of him he is in highest esteem Cant. 5.9 What is thy beloved more than another beloved say the daughters of Jerusalem they have sleight low thoughts of him and another be it who it will is to them as good as he but what answer makes the Spouse My Beloved is white and ruddy Ver. 10. the chifest among ten thousand If there were a general Muster and all the sons of men stood together Christ would be above and beyond them all and Paul is of the same mind who desired to know nothing but Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 as if he had said Let me but be acquainted with Christ and his Crosse such a superlative esteem he had of him that I care not this if I burn all my Books Whatever he had heretofore accounted excellent when his judgement was byassed with wrong apprehensions he now accounts drosse dung dogs meat Phil. 3.8 for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus his Lord all not worthy to be named the same day with Christ Nay Christ himself hath told us they are not worthy of him that do not think him most worthy Mat. 10.37 4. Christ humbling himself thus low should teach us highly to prize our souls by the price that was paid for them we may conceive at what a ra●e God values them If God should have said concerning any soul I so esteem it that rather than it shall perish I 'le dissolve and unpin the whole Fabrick of heaven and earth that you 'le say had evidently demonstrated an high valuation of souls but the course God hath taken shews a much higher esteem of them Now let this deare bought ware be precious ah let none of us adventure a soul for the satisfying of a base lust let not any sin steale that away upon easie termes which put the Lord of glory to such expences Christ that best knows the worth of souls for he paid for them so values them that he tells us the gaine of the world were no sufficient or satisfactory compensa●ion for he losse but of one of them Mark 8 36. and a man that should make that bargaine as too many do might put all his gaines in his eye Ingen●i hominis nulla si aestimatio and see never the worse after it What the Civilian saith of a Free-man is much more true of an immortal soul No●hing can be valued with it Tradesmen know that buying deare and selling cheap will undo them but it will much more undo you to sell ch●ap that which Christ hath bought so deare Do not pawn your soules to Satan that is do not adventure upon the commission of any sin with this reserve I will repent before I dye and then all is well that is as if thou shouldst say Here Satan I give thee my soule to pawn in lieu of the pleasure or profit of this or that sin and make it in my bargaine that if I repent I will have it again till then I deliver it into thy custody and if I never repent take it it is thine own for ever Nay but ask Satan when he comes thus higgling for thy soul and bids thee pleasure profit preferment or any such toyes and trifles but canst thou subtile Tempter give any thing aequivalent to the blood of God the price that hath been already paid for it our souls were not Redeemed with silve● and gold 1 Pet. 1.18 and let us never sell them for that with which Christ could not purchase them 5. Did Christ humble himself to the shedding of his blood let us then be willing if need be to shed our blood for Christ. We needed Christs death and possibly Christ may need ours though not for merit and satisfaction No that was our need for which his death was abundantly sufficient and needs not ours to make any additions or heapt overplus measure but Christ may need our death to seale his truth and credit his Gospel Act. 20.24 the Apostle Paul counted not his life deare that he might finish his course with joy to testifie the Gospel of the grace of God And the Holy Ghost gives an honourable character of some Heroical noble-spirited Christians that they loved not their lives unto the death Rev. 12.11 and the blood of the Lamb animated them to such valour that they overcame and conquered by the
Saint is able and apt to say Were it not for sin I would not much care for Satan I could defie and bid him do his worst it is the Devil within that makes the Devil without so formidable Now plead but this blood and the guilt of sin is done away Either as 1. Imprinted on the person to condemnation 2. Or reflected by the conscience in accusation 1. Sin is done away by this blood as it binds over to wrath and punishment it 's a spiritual aqua fortis that eates off the souls prison-shakkles Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Sin may remain but it shall not condemn and whence believers have their discharges the Apostle there shews Ver. 3. Suscipiendo poenam non suscipiendo culpam culpam delevit poenam Aug. God sent his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh If the channel of Christs blood runs through thy soul thou hast shot the gulfe as to condemnation this Scripture brings thee in not guilty and that 's the verdict of a thousand Juryes 2. The blood of Christ abolishes sin as reflected by the conscience in a way of accusation as it raises tumults and turmoyls in the soul and Armes a man against himself It 's a Malignant and mischievous property of sin that it doth not only put the soul into hell but puts hell into the soul Conscience is to sin what the burning-glasse is to the sun-beame twists all together till it scorches smoaks burns and flames but Christs blood hath that in it which is abundantly sufficient to silence and stop the mouth of an angry accusing conscience it 's a soveraign balsome to cure that cancer in the breast a mollifying oyntment and cooling fomentation for those invenomed sin-rankled ulcers that fester and bleed inwardly The blood of sprinkling speaks better things than that of Abel Heb. 12.24 Abels blood was very clamorous in Cains conscience he carryed an hue and cry within himself conscience as a blood-hound hunted him at every turne and its continual cry and eccho in his ears was Vengeance upon the murderer but the blood of Jesus hath in it a pleasant and peaceable voice and hushes all unquiet and tumultuary janglings Applyed by faith it saith to the soules rowling billows that cast up mire and dirt what Christ once said to the raging Sea Peace be still and there is a great calm 5. And the last enemy whose enmity the blood of Christ hath slain is death Not that death is so destroyed to believers that they shall not dye but unstinged that it shall not wound in the vital parts or at once kill bodies and souls The Apostles triumphant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is very remarkable O death 1 Cor. 15.55 57 where is thy sting O grave where is thy victory thanks be to God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ When a Bee hath fastned its sting in a mans flesh and thereby lost it it ever after they say turnes a drone death once fastned its sting in Christ and hath ever since to them that are in Christ been like a drone that can humme and affright but not sting and hurt them Death now drives a poor trade amongst them it may destroy the body and when it hath play'd that prank it hath done all its fears as a fierce Mastiffe whose teeth are broken out it can bark or rend and tear the tatter'd and thred-bare coate but it cannot bite to the bone How feeble an enemy is death since it travelled and took a walk to the top of Mount Calvary 2. A Believers enemies are not only foyled but through the blood of Christ his person is accepted Eph. 1.6 7. he hath made us accepted in the beloved he hath begraced us in Christ that is the proper importance of the phrase in whom we have Redemption through his blood 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If thou art sprinkled with the blood of Christ God will know his own mark upon thee thy person is accepted and services cannot be unacceptable 3. If a believer here is comfort in that thou mayst be assured that Christ is willing to do any thing for thee He is ready in heaven upon all occasions to plead this price and sollicite thy further affaires shew but Christs blood and I dare warrant the golden Scepter held out The Apostles reasoning is unanswerable He that spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things Rom. 8.32 Saints need never feare putting Christ to too much trouble in any thing they have for him to do for the shedding of his blood and that he hath already done hath been more troublesome and chargeable than any thing they can set him about for the time to come thou needest not fear his denying any thing to thee who hath thus far denyed himself for thee 4. Here is comfort to a believer in that his grace shall be preserved such a soul is too costly a purchase for Christ to lose he paid so dear that he may be trusted to demand and challenge the making good of his bargain if true grace could be totally and finally lost it might be said Christ payes the price and the devil gets the prize Phil. 1.6 He that hath begun a good work in you will performe it untill the day of Jesus Christ And it lies Christ in hand so to do otherwise he will come off a loser Christ is the good Shepherd John 10.11 28 that giveth his life for the Sheep and gives unto them eternal life and they shall never perish Ah how little do they consult Christs honour or the comfort of souls that tell us Believers may perish in sin like rotten sheep in a ditch if so how then shall Christ save his stake that hath been thus much out of purse upon them 5. Here 's yet further comfort to a believer in that by the blood of Christ heaven is opened Heb. 10 19. and we have boldnesse to enter into the holyest by the blood of Jesus Man had no sooner sinned but God sent an Angel to stand Centinel and keep him from Paradise with a flaming sword the blood of Christ hath opened that passage at once blunting the sword and quenching the flame Christ gave up the Ghost at the ninth hour at three in the Afternoon the time of the evening Sacrifice and at the very instant the Veile of the Temple that parted the holy place and holy of holyes was rent asunder so that the Priest who was then Ministring in the holy place had on the sudden a fair and free prospect into the holyest of all which excellently typifies that the death of Christ hath removed and rent away all obstacles and obstructions that might interpose betwixt believers and the blessednesse of glory The Rivers lead to the Sea the
stream of Christs blood if thou beest imbarqued by faith runs directly into the Ocean of endlesse boundlesse bottomlesse happinesse If thou hast open'd the door of thine heart to let Christ in the blood of Christ hath open'd and unlock'd the door of heaven and thou canst not be shut out A crucified Christ entertained will one day make glorified believers his Humiliation is the ready Roade both to his and his peoples exaltation CHRISTS EXALTATION Phil. 2. 9 10 11. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord to the glory of God the Father THE former Verses-speak of the deep humiliation of Jesus Christ these words contain the Doctrine of Christs most glorious Exaltation If you view Christ in the words before going you will behold the Sun of righteousness ecclipsed but in this Text you will see him shining forth in his strength and splendour The Doctrine of Christs Humiliation leads you to Mount Calvary but this Doctrine will lead you to Mount Tabor to Mount Olivet There you may see Christ standing at the Bar but here you see him sitting on a Throne of Majesty and glory The former Doctrine shews you the Son of man in the forme of a servant but this represents Christ to you the Son of God like himself in the glorious estate of Triumphant Majesty You have heard how Christ died for our sins Rom. 4.25 Rom. 5.10 and how we are Reconciled by his death and now you shall heare how he rose for our justification and how we are saved by his life In his Humiliation there was neither form nor beauty Isa 53.2 Heb. 1.2 nor comliness did appear but now you will see him in the excellency and brightness of his Fathers glory In Christs Humiliation you heare how he was reproached in his Person Name Doctrine Ministry and Miracles but he is now exalted and hath a name given him above every name And whereas in his Humiliation his enemies bowed the knee in scorne to him yet in his Exaltation they must bow the knee with fear and trembling Then they cried after Christ Crucifie him crucifie him but God hath exalted him so as every tongue must confess that Jesus is the Lord to the glory of God And thus Contraries are illustrated by their contraries the sufferings of Christ like a dark shadow to a curious picture Contraria ●juxta se posita magis elucescunt or a black vaile to a beautiful face do make the glory of his Exaltation the more glorious The height of Christs Exaltation is best known by considering the depth of his humiliation the Cross of Christ as one saith being the best Jacobs staff to take the height of this morning Star or rather Sunne of Righteousness breaking forth most gloriously from under a dark Cloud In these three verses we have these Particulars considerable 1. The Connexion between the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore also God hath exalted him 2. The Doctrine of Christs Exaltation laid down God hath highly exalted him 3. The end of Christs Exaltation it was for the glory of God the Father Before we come to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation we will a little consider the connexion of these three Verses with the three preceding Verses viz. 6 7 8. where it is said that Jesus Christ being in the forme of God and thought it not Robbery to be equal with God but made himself of no Reputation and took upon him the forme of a servant and was made in the likeness of men and being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross wherefo●e God also hath highly exalted him c. It is a Question amongst Divines whether the Humiliation of Christ be the Meritorious cause or only the Antecedent of his Exaltation and yet they that dispute this do all agree in this That Jesus did not by his Humiliation and sufferings merit such things as he was invested withal before he suffered for that which is meritorious must alwayes precede the reward and therefore it cannot be said that Christ did merit the personal union of his Divine and Humane Nature nor the happiness of his soul nor his Habitual Graces which He had from the first Moment of his Incarnation Christi humiliatio est exaltationis meritum ejus exaltatio est humiliationis praemium Aug. Hac enim particula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu propter quod meritum Christi denotat quibus sibi suam exaltationem nobis totam salutem promeruit Zanch. in loc First There are some Divines who interpret the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a causal and so hold that Christ by his Humiliation did merit his Exalta●ion and of this opinion was Augustine who calls Christs Humiliation the meritori●us cause of his Exaltation and his Exaltation the r●ward of his Humiliation The Popish wr●ters go generally this way I find also amongst Protestant Writers the Learned Zanchy of this Opinion who upon this Text hath this Note By this Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherefore The Apostle notes the merits of Christ whereby he hath merited his own Exaltation and our Salvation And that which favours this Explication is that saying of the Apostle concerning Christ Heb. 12.2 That for the joy that was set before him he endured the Cross and despised the shame as if having an eye to the Recompence of the Reward enabled Christ to persevere with more patience when he became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross Neither doth it derogate from the freeness of Christs sufferings that he was rewarded for them for even that glory that Christ hath in heaven is for our good and comfort Nor was it out of indigence and necessity that Christ accepts of glory in a way of Reward of his obedience but herein he commended his love the more to us that would so far condiscend and so far even in his Exaltation humble himself to receive glory in the way of obedience which he might have challenged by vertue of his personal union Even as a Prince who though he hath right to a Kingdom by Inheritance and Succession yet he will accept of it as a Reward of his Obedience and Conquest over its enemies 2. But others understand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text not as signifying the Humiliation ●f Christ to be the meritorious cause but only the Antecedent of his Exaltat●on and so they make this particle to be not causal but connective only and so I find some of the Ancient Translations as the Aethiopick Version doth only ioyn the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ together Humilavit seipsum magnificavit
eum Deus And for this may be rationally urged 1. That in the whole wo●k of our Redemption effected by Christ Jesus Christ had a respect no● unto himself but unto us It is for us that he humbled himself to the Death of the Crosse for us men and our Salvation 2. Jesus Christ had right to all the Honour Glory and Majesty which now he is possessed of in Heaven by vertue of his being the Sonne of God and the glory which he hath now in Heaven John 17.5 he had with God before the world was 3. The freeness of Gods love in giving Christ and of Christs in giving himself for us was such that the main intention of God was that not Christs but our estate might be bettered John 1. ●18 Rom. 9.5 if the Son of God had never left the bosome of the Father he had been for ever God bl ssed in himself But such was the love of the Father that he gave his only begotten Son that we might not perish Joh. 3.16 who believe but might have everlasting life 4. It is fit to be considered that the glory which Christ hath in Heaven in sitting at the right hand of God is such that it cannot be merited by the sufferings of the Humane nature of Christ And therefore it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath fr●ely given him a name above every name This last interpretation of the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is that to which most of our Protestant Divines do incline I will not here undertake to determine the Question I find it the judgement of some of our Learned Divines Dr. Featly Mr. Anthony Burgesse That there need be no Controversie about this thing for the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes order but whether the order of causality or antecedency or both may be consistent with the Analogy of Faith 1. For if we look upon Jesus Christ as rewarded for his sufferings for us we may thence be assured that our sufferings for him though of another nature shall be eternally rewarded Psal 58.11 2. Or if you note the order only that Jesus Christ was first humbled and then exalted we may thence learn that before honour is humility Prov. 18.12 1 Pet. 5.6 and that if we Humble our selves under the mighty hand of God in due time he will exalt us Leaving therefore this Question I proceed to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation as it is laid down in this Text. Doct. It pleased God the Father for his own glory that the Lord Jesus Christ after he had been deeply humbled should be highly exalted Thus it pleased God that he who had humbled himself to the death of the Cross Heb. 7.26 Phil. 2.7 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2 8. Acts 2.36 Heb. 2.16 1 Pet. 3.22 should be made higher than the Heavens and he who had taken on him the form of a Servant should now appear in Heaven like himself the Prince of life and he that made himself of no reputation should now be in Heaven the Lord of Glory and the same Jesus who was crucified God hath made both Lord and Christ and He who took not on him the nature of Angels but took on him the seed of Abraham is exalted above Angels being gone into Heaven and is on the Right Hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him There is a word in the Text that is very Emphatical which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted The Elegancy of the Greek tongue is singular The Apostle hath a notable word Ephes 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Minimorum minimus Beza Minor minimo Cor. a Lap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Emphaticus est hic notandus Pleonasmus q. d. Super omnem altitudinem exaltavit super-exaltavit Ambros Multiplicavit sublimitatem ejus Syr. Sublimitate sublimavit eum Arab. Insigniter extulit Justinianus lesse than the least of Saints and here we have a no less remarkable word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted him God hath exalted Jesus Christ above all Exaltation the Exaltation of Jesus Christ was super-superlative The Latine Version of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exaltavit eum he exalted him is too low to express the sublimity of the Greek word We have here an elegant and an emphatical Pleonasme which the Greek tongue borrows of the Hebrew as is frequently used in the New Testament as it is said of the Magi when they saw the Star they rejoyced with great joy Mat. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so when Christ came to Celebrate his last Passeover he saith to his Disciples Luke 22.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With desire have I desired to eat this Passeover So it is sa●d here the Lord Jesus Christ was very highly exalted he was exalted with all Exaltation Jesus Christ in his Resurrection was exalted in his Ascension he was highly exalted in his sitting at the right hand of God he was very highly exalted above all Exaltation Christ in his Resurrection was exalted above the Grave in his Ascension above the Earth and in his Session at Gods right hand he was exalted above the highest Heavens It is very Remarkable how the steps of Christs Exaltation did punctually answer to the steps of his Humiliation There were three steps by which Jesus Christ descended in his voluntary Humiliation Heb. 2.16 2 Cor. 5.21 Gal. 3.13 Gal. 4.4 Heb. 7.22 1 Cor. 5.7 First His Incarnation by which he was made of a woman and so became man he was made sinne and so became out Surety he was made a Curse and so became our Sacrifice This was the largest step of Christs Descension and Humiliation for it was more for the Son of God to become the Son of man than for the Son of man to die and being dead to be buried and being buried to continue in the state of the dead and under the power of death untill the Third Day Answerable to this degree of his Humiliation was his Resurrection for as by his Incarnation he was manifest in the flesh Rom. 1.3 4. the son of man made of the seed of David according to the flesh so by his Resurrection from the dead he was declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness The Resurrection of Christ was the first step of his Exaltation He was declared to be the Son of God Clarificatio Christi ab ejus resurrectione sumpsit exordium Aug. He was alwayes the Son of God even during the dayes of his flesh but then he was openly declared to be the Sonne of God that he could by his own Almighty Power raise up the Temple of his Body which the Jewes had Destroy'd The second step of Christs Humiliation was his poor painful and contemptible life and his painful shameful and cursed death of the Cross Heb. 5.7 He was found in
and hast Redeemed us unto God out of every kindred and tongue and people and Nation Rev. 5.9 10. and hast made us unto our God Kings and Priests c. This is the daily work of glorified Saints in Heaven to cast down their Crownes before that Throne where Christ sitteth The Saints departed Rev. 4.10 are discharged from those weights and clogs of corruption which did hinder them from this duty while they were in the body Heb. 12.1 Rom. 7.24 Rev. 4.6 and cumbred and pestred with the body of death They are never weary though they never rest day nor night saying Holy holy holy Lord God Almighty which was and is and is to come And thus I have shewed you how things in Heaven do bow the knee and are subject to the Name and Authority of the Lord Jesus II. Things on earth i. e. Good men and Bad men 1. Good men Psa 110.3 the Children of God who by the grace of Christ are made a willing people in the day of his Power for such is the heart-turning power of Gods Grace that of unwilling Isal 48.4 he makes us willing God by degrees removes out of our necks the Iron sinew that hinders us from stooping and bowing to Christ Grace by degrees doth take away that enmity in our mindes Col. 1.21 Rom. 8.7 and that carnal-mindedness which neither is nor can be subject to the Law of God By nature we are Children of disobedience as well as others Rom. 7.23 Eph. 2.3 and are willingly subject to no Law but the Law of our Members nor to no will but the wills of the flesh but the Grace of God removes that stoutness of heart contumacy and Rebellion which is in us naturally against Christ and so sweetly and powerfully inclines their wills Psal 119.6 1 Joh. 5.3 Veniat veniat verbum Dei si sexcenta nobis essent colla submittemus omnia that they follow the Lamb wherever he goes and have Respect unto all the Commandments of Christ and not one of them is grievous A Child of God willingly submits his Neck to the Yoke of Christ 2. Evil men they also must bow the knee to Jesus Christ and though their subjection be not voluntary and ingenuous yet bow they must and bow they do and partly through the awakening of a natural conscience partly by a spirit of bondage and fear of wrath they are as it were compelled to render many unwilling services and subjections unto Christ Non peccare metuit sed ardere Aug. Which compulsory subjection ariseth not from a fear of sinne but from a fear of Hell All these because they do not willingly bear the yoke of Christ they shall unwillingly become his foot-stool Mat. 11.29 Psal 110.1 And they do not so much honour Christ as Christ may be said to honour himself upon them The wicked do give honour to Christ as unwillingly as ever Haman cloathed Mordecai and proclaimed before him Hester 6.11 Thus shall it be done to the man whom the King will honour III. And Lastly The Devils in Hell are forced to yield subjection unto Jesus Christ and so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things under the earth infernalia things in hell do bow their knee unto him For if in the dayes of Christs Humiliation he hath exercised power over the damned spirits and they have acknowledged him and his Soveraign power over them much more are they subject to him now in the dayes of his Exaltation I shall not need to show you how often the Devils crouched to Christ whilst he was here on earth The Devils were not only subject to his Person but to those that commanded them in his Name for so the seventy Disciples returning gave Christ an account Luke 10.17 Lord say they even the Devils are subject unto us through thy Name In one story we finde that the Devils did three times prostrate themselves at the feet of Christ Saint Luke relates the Story of the man possessed with a Legion of Devils 1. First one of the Devils in the name of all the rest thus supplicates Christ Luke 8.28 What have I to do with thee Jesus thou Sonne of God Most High I beseech thee Torment me not 2. When Christ commanded the uncleane spirits to come out of the man Ver. 31. they besought him that he would not command them to go out into the deep that is into Hell Ver. 32. 3. The Devils a third time besought Christ that they might go into the Herd of Swine Thus those proud and rebellious spirits were forced to bow even in the dayes of Christs fl●sh James 2.19 And therefore much more now Chr●st is exalted do the devils tremble We read that Christ spoiled principalities and powers Col. 2.15 and made a shew of them openly Triumphing over them In which Scripture we may observe that Christ hath disarm'd and triumph't over Satan The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alludes to the manner of the Conquerour who disarm'd the Captives and afterwards they led their Captives in chaines when they made their Triumphant entrance so the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do signifie alluding to the Romane Conquests and Triumphs Thus the Lord Jesus Christ by his death overcame the Devil Heb. 2.14 Eph. 4.8 Duo in cruce affixi intelliguntùr Christus visibiliter sponte sua ad tempus Diabolus invisibiler invitus in perpetuum Orig Missilia Triumphalia and by his Ascension he led Captivity Captive and gave gifts alluding still to the manner of the Romane Triumphs when the Victor in a Chariot of State ascended up to the Capitol the Prisoners following his Chariot or else drawing it with their hands bound behind them and there were pieces of gold and silver thrown amongst the people and other gifts and largesses bestowed upon the friends of the Conquerour The Devil ever since the death Resurrection and Ascension of Christ hath been overcome and spoiled For by the death of Christ the Devil was unarmed and shackled but presently after he was gag'd and silenc'd and all his Oracles struck dumb and speechless and so the Devils divested of their long-enjoyed power and they forced to bow though unwillingly to Jesus Christ Hence it is said that the Devils tremble Jam. 2.19 because they know Christ as their Judge but not as their Saviour They must bow because they cannot help it But it may be objected Object If all the Devils in Hell and all the wicked men here on earth do bow the knee to Christ how comes it then to pass that the Devil and his instruments do continue their Rebellion and mischief against Christ and his Church 1. To this is answered that even the Devils of Hell are bound to bow the knee unto Jesus Christ though like wicked Rebels they have refused to do it And so much we gather from that Answer of Christ to the Devil who when he had the impudence and
blinde in their mindes stony in their hearts corrupt in their ways even as others 2. In regard of their outward condition both before and after this call they are for the most part poor and vile and contemptible in the eye of the world God puts not the greater value upon any man for a gold ring or goodly aparrel though the world doth He hath chosen the poore of this world rich in faith and Heires of the Kingdome Jam. 2.5 1 Cor. 1.29 Ye see your calling Brethren how that not many wise m●n after the flesh not many Mighty not many Noble are called Some it may be but not many God so orders his Call as that it may appeare there is no respect of persons with him 3. Whatever the outward condition of these men be there are but very few that are effectually called few I say in comparison of those that are left under the power and dominion of their lusts One of a City and two of a Tribe I tremble to speak it but a truth it is and must out Satan hath the Harvest God the gleanings of man-kinde which by the way may serve to convince them of their vanity and folly that make the multitude of actors an Argument to prove the rectitude of actions as if they could not do amisse that do as the most Whereas a very Heathen could say Argumentum pessimi turba The beaten Tract is most deceitful Sheep go the broad way to the Shambles Seneca lib. de vita beat when a more uncouth path might lead them to fresh Pastures Question 3 Who is he that Calleth Who but God that calleth things that are not as if they were all heart-work is Gods peculiar the restraining and ordering the heart he with-held Abimelech not suffering him to touch Sarah Abrahams Wife Gen. 20.6 and the heart of Pharaoh while it was least conformable unto the Rule of his Law was absolutely subject unto the Rule of his providence and well it is for us that it belongs to God to restrain and order hearts otherwise sad would be the condition of this Nation of the whole world but now if it be Gods peculiar to restraine and order hearts much more surely to turn change break melt Coluerunt Ethnici Venerem Verticordiam Val. Max. lib. 8. cap. 15. Lilius Girald Synt. 13 Jer. 31.33 and new-mould hearts It is his Soveraign grace which we adore as the only Verticordia as the real turn-heart therefore may we observe that 1. God doth especially challenge this unto himself You know whose expressions those are I will give a new heart and again I will take away the heart of stone are they not Gods who dare make any challenges against the Almighty hath not he a Scepter strong enough to secure his Crown those that will be plucking Jewels out of his Royal Diadem and ascribe that to themselves or any creature which is his Prerogative shall finde him jealous enough of his honour and that jealousie stirring up indignation enough to consume them But 2. As God may justly challenge this work to himself so it is altogether impossible it should be accomplished by any other For 1. This effectual vocation is a spiritual resurrection of the soul while we are in a state of Nature we are dead not sick or languishing not slumbring or sleeping but quite dead in trespasses and sinnes when we are call'd into a state of grace then are our soules raised to walk with God here as our bodies at the last day shall be raised to walk with the Sonne of God unto all eternity Now if it be not in the power of any creature to raise the body from the grave of death upon which account it is used as an Argument of the Divinity of Christ that he raised himself much less is it in the power of any creature to raise the soul from the grave of sinne And therefore do all true Believers experiment the power of God Eph. 1.19 20. even that exceeding greatness of power that Might of his Power as the Greek hath it whereby he raised up Christ from the dead 2. This effectual vocation is a new Creation of the soul whence we are said to be Created in Christ Jesus when we are called unto an experimental knowledge of him and unfeigned Faith in him upon which account it must needs be Gods workmanship for power of creating is not cannot be communicated to any creature Though the Angels excell in strength Psal 103.20 and wonderful things have been performed by them when they have as Ministers executed Gods pleasure in the punishment of the wicked and protection of the righteous yet the mightyest Angel cannot create the meanest worm that is the only product of infinite power And let me tell you if infinite power be manifested in the Creation of the world it is more gloriously manifested in the conversion of a sinner There is a worse Chaos a worse confusion upon the heart of man when God undertaketh his new Creation than there was upon the face of the earth in the Old Creation In the earth when it was without forme and void there was only indisposition Gen. 1.2 but in the heart of man there is both indisposition and opposition Well then I peremptorily conclude that the work is Gods Gods by the way of a principal efficiency and not only by way of motion or perswasion as some would have it wherein I fear a piece of cursed brokeage for their own glory For were it so they would be but very mean acknowledgements that do belong to God for the change of a most miserable and unhappy estate Suppose I should go to some wealthy Citizen and present him an object of charity using the most cogent Considerations which my Art and Wit could invent to inforce a liberal Contribution thereupon he freely parts with his mony for the relief of that indigent person tell me now to which of us is he mainly engaged to return thanks to me the mover or to him the bestower I make no question but your Judicious thoughts have made an award of the chief acknowledgement to the Latter The case would plainly be the same betwixt God and us if his only were the motion ours the act of Conversion his the perswasion ours the performance and if we go to Heaven we should have more cause to thank our selves than to thank God for all the happiness we meet with there Beloved I beseech you take heed of such an opinion as this it hath blasphemy written in the forehead of it if it be rooted in your mindes Scriptas habet in fronte blasphemias Ennodius lib. Epist 2. it will breed in your hearts a confidence of your own power and abilities and that is no better than a fine-spun Idolatry and shall finde little better resentment with God th●n if you worshipped stocks and stones Question 4. Vpon what account doth God Call What moves the Divine Majesty thus to
we are as really united unto Christ as the members of the body are to the head Hence are we said to be h Ephes 5.30 members of his body of his flesh and his bones As the head communicates real influences to the body so doth Christ to Believers communicates to us his Sp●rit graces fulnesse spiritual light life strength comfort Joh. 1.16 4. A close near dear intimate union Like that of the food with the body which it nourisheth Hence Believers are said to eat Christs flesh and to drink his blood John 6.54 Such an intimate union as that one possessive particle is not sufficient to expresse it not said my Vineyard is before me but my Vineyard which is mine is before me Cant. 8.12 5. An inseparable perpetual indissoluble union A marriage knot which neither men sins sorrows death nor Divels are able to dissolve Who or what can separate us from the love of God The Apostle clearly resolves his own question i Rom 8 38 39 I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. Believers are held in Christs hand he that would break this union must first be too hard of fist for Christ yea and for his Father too No man shall pluck them out of my hand my Father is greater than all and no man can pluck them out of my Fathers hand Joh. 10.28 29. And thus we have dispatch't the second Question 3. What are the efficient causes of this union Sol. 1. The efficient causes of this union are either principal or less principal 1. Principal and so this great work of union being opus ad extra 't is indivisum and so ascribed 1. In common to the whole k 1 Pet. 5.10 John 6.44 45. Ephes 2 6 7. Godhead Hence we are said to be call'd by God the Father into the fell●wship of his dear Son 1 Cor. 1.9 So likewise this union is ascribed to the Sonne The dead shall hear the voice of the Sonne of God and live Joh. 5.25 Joh. 10.16 2. But more especially the Spirit of God in a more peculiar sense is said to be the principal Author of this union He it is that knits this marriage knot betwixt Christ Jesus and true Believers Look as l Acts 4.24 Creation in some respect is appropriated to the Father m 1 Pet. 1.18 Redemption to the Son so the Application of that Redemption to the Holy Ghost 'T is by one Spirit that we are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 'T is by the Holy Spirit the Comforter That we are convinced of sin righteousnesse and judgment Joh. 16.7 8 9. 'T is by the Holy Ghost that we are renewed Tit. 3.5 2. Lesse principal or the means or instruments of union These are twofold outward inward 1. Outward Generally all the Ordinances of God by the Ordinances it is that we come to have n Job 22.21 acquaintance that is union and communion with Jesus Christ 'T is by these golden pipes that golden oyle is conveyed to us from that golden Olive Zech. 4.12 More especially 1. The Word read preach't meditated on believed improved 'T is by hearing and learning of the Father that we come to Christ Joh. 6.44 45. The Holy Scriptures were written for this end that through them we might have fellowship with the Father and his Sonne 1 Joh. 1.3 The way to have Christs company is to keep Christs words Joh. 14.23 2. The Sacraments those spiritual Seals and Labels which God hath fix't to his Covenant of Grace 1. Bapti me By one Spirit we are baptiz'd into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence we are said to be buried with Christ by Baptisme into death Rom. 6.3 4. Baptisme styled the Laver of regeneration Tit. 3.5 By Baptisme we put on Christ Gal. 3.7 2. The Lords Supper this is a great means of strengthning and evidencing our union and advancing our communion with Christ Jesus We are all made to drink into one Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence that 1 Cor. 10.16 The bread which we break is it not the communion of means arg●ments evidences of our communion with the body of Christ The wine which we drink is it not the communion of the blood of Christ Thus much for the external means of union 2. Inward internal intrinsecal means of union on mans part i. e. faith Not a bare historical miraculous temporal dead faith No but a living working justifying saving faith Christ comes to dwell in our hearts by faith Ephes 3.17 'T is by faith alone that we receive Christ Joh. 1.12 That we come unto him and feed upon him Joh. 6.56 'T is by faith that a Believer lives in and to Christ and Christ lives in and for a Believer Gal. 2.20 Thus much for the Explication of the termes of our Proposition for the fixing of it on a right Basis I now proceed to the second part of my discourse viz. Now That there is such a spiritual mystical real close inseparable union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers 2. Confirm appears three ways 1. From those many synonymical terms and equivalent expressions whereby the Scriptures hold forth this union Christ is said to be in Believers Col. 1.27 Rom. 8.10 To dwell in them Ephes 3.17 To walk in them 2 Cor. 6.16 So are Believers said to abide in Christ as he abides in them 1 Joh. 4.16 Joh. 15.17 To dwell in Christ as Christ in them Joh. 6.56 To put on Christ to be cloathed with him Gal. 3.27 Each of these expressions clearly import that near and intimate union that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers The King of Saints hath two Mansion houses one in heaven the Throne of his glory another on earth a Tabernacle of flesh the heart of a Believer which is the seat of his delight Prov. 8.31 his lesser Heaven Isa 57.15 66.1 2. 2. From those several similitudes by which the Scriptures shadow out this union Believers are said to be lively stones 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. Christ the living foundation the chief corner-stone on which they are built Ephes 2.20 21. Believers are styled living branches Christ the true Vine into whom they are engraffed and in whom they bring forth fruit Joh. 15.1.5 Christ the faithful loving discreet Bridegroom Believers his Loyal Affectionate obedient Spouse Ephes 5.31 32. Cant. 2.16 5.1 Believers are intitled Christs body Ephes 1.23 Bone of his bone flesh of his flesh Ephes 5.30 Christ the Believers head Ephes 1.22 In a word the head and mystical body are call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 In all these Resemblances he that runs may read the union betwixt Christ and Believers pourtrayed out to the life unto us 3. From that communion which there is betwixt Christ and true Believers Omnis communio fundatur in unione Communion where ever it is of necessity argues union as the effect necessarily implies the cause Believers they communicate with Christ in his fulness Joh. 1.16 In his o 2 Cor 5.21 Solus
Caesar By his passive Righteousnesse I mean all that he suffered in his life-time as the meannesse of his birth and education his persecution by Herod in his infancy after by the Scribes and Pharisees his hunger and temptation in the Wildernesse his poverty and straits he had not where to lay his head in a word he was all his life long in all things tempted as we are yet without sin Heb. 4.15 but especially what he suffered at his death First in his body he was scourg'd spit upon crown'd with Thornes and latength crucified which was 1. A cruel death the Latine cruciari to be tormented is derived à cruce from being crucified 2. A reproachful one Gal. 3.13 Heb. 13.13 it was the Roman death for slaves and Malefactors But secondly most of all he suffered in his soule witnesse those expressions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 26.37 Mark 14.33 adde his bemoaning himself to his Disciples in the following words and his passionate prayer thrice repeated Abba Father if it be p●ssible let this cup passe Adde further yet his sweating drops of blood in that bitter agony which so spent him in the Garden that an Angel was sent to comfort him but above all his desertion upon the Crosse witnesseth that he suffered unutterably in his soule when he cryed My God my God why hast thou forsaken me The Socinians are here puzzled to give any tolerable account how the infinitely good God could find in his heart to exercise his only begotten Son that never sinned with all these horrours in his soule for certainly it stood not with his goodnesse had not Christ as the second Adam been a publick person a Representative on whom the Lord laid the iniquities of us all Isa 53.6 But if we consider which they deny that Christ was then satisfying his Fathers Justice we need not wonder at those horrours and consternations of the manhood for he knew the vastnesse of his undertaking the numberlesse numbers and aggravations of sins the dreadful weight of his Fathers wrath the sharpnesse of that sword Zech. 13.7 which he was going now to feele not that God was angry with Christ upon the Crosse quoad affectum no he never more dearly loved him but quoad effectum adde Christs infinite abhorrence of the sins he bore and that infinite zeal wherewith he was inflam'd to vindicate the honour of Divine justice Now his infinite love to his Church struggling with all these produc't those agonies and overcame them all when he said It is finished Joh. 19.30 we meet him next triumphing in his Resurrection But here to resolve that great question whether Christs passive Righteousnesse alone or active and passive joyntly are the matter of Christs satisfaction which believers plead at Gods Bar for their Justification and which being accepted by God as a plea good in Law is said to be imputed viz. in a Law-sense for Righteousnesse Let these Reasons be weighed by such as do disjoyne them First each of them hath its proper interest in and its respective contribution towards the satisfying the injur'd honour of Gods Law For the honour of Gods Law is the equity of both its parts its command and its threatening Christs active Righteousnesse honours the equity of the first which man had dishonoured by his disobedience but the great God-man hath repaired the honour of Gods Commandments by yielding a most perfect obedience to every one of them and therein proclaimed the Law to be holy just and good Then Christs passive Righteousnesse in like manner honours the equity of the threatening for as by obeying he acknowledged Gods authority to make a Law and his unexceptionable righteousnesse in every single Branch of the Law made so by suffering he proclaimeth that man is bound to keep it or if he do not to beare the penalty He himself dyes to justifie that the sinner is worthy of death and offers himself upon the Crosse as a Sacrifice to the Divine Justice and hereby he hath proclaimed sin to be exceeding sinful and God to be so jealous a God as rather than sin should go unpunish'd and his justice want its glory the righteous eternal Son of God must be made an example what guilty man had deserved Thus God by two equal miracles of everlasting astonishment to be adored hath satisfied both his contending Attributes and rendred each of them Triumphant in making his righteous Son an example of his sin-avenging justice that guilty sinners repenting and believing might be made examples of his sin-pardoning-goodnesse In the second place as each hath its respective interest in satisfying the injur'd Law so neither of them can be anywhere severed from the other and those which God hath so indissolubly joyned let none part asunder for Christs active Righteousnesse was everywhere passive because all of it done in the forme of a servant for in our nature he obeyed the Law but in his very incarnation he was passive for therein he suffered an ecclipse of the glory of his Godhead And his passive Righteousnesse was everywhere active because what he suffered was not by constraint or against his Will no it was his own voluntary act and deed all along let me instance in the greatest of his sufferings his very dying was the product both of the freenesse of his love and the Majesty of his power John 10.17 18. Rev. 1.5 In the third place both Christs active and passive Righteousnesse what he did and what he suffered partake in common of the forme of ●atisfaction therefore they are both integral parts or joynt ingredients thereof for forma dat esse but this brings me to the second enquiry Query 2 What is the forme of Christs satisfaction or that which renders it satisfactory I answer the infinite merit of what he did and suffered which infinite merit stands 1. In the dignity of his person the fulnesse of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily Col. 2.9 John 1.14 Now for the work of a servant to be done by the Lord of all renders his active and for him to suffer as a Malefactor between Malefactors who was God blessed for evermore renders also his passive righteousnesse infinitely meritorious no wonder the blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin for it is the blood of God Acts 20.28 1 Joh. 1.7 And this is the Reason why the Righteousnesse of one redounds unto all for the justification of life Rom. 5.18 19. because his active and passive Righteousnesse is infinitely of more value than all that all the creatures in heaven and earth could have done or suffered to eternity the very man Christ Jesus is above all the Angels Heb. 1.6 for he is the man that is Gods fellow Zechary 13.7 And this infinite worthinesse of the Redeemers person you have excellently described as irradiating and infinitely exalting all he did and suffered Phil. 2.6 7 8 9. Heb. 7.24 25 28. 2. The active and passive Righteousnesse of Christ are of infinite merit because not at all due but
alteration of his will and affections that he shall not more disallow than detest the sinfulnesse of sin he no sooner seeth his iniquity but he loatheth himself because of his abominations sin was never so much the object of his affections as now it is the object of his passions what he before loved desired delighted in he now by Repentance hateth feareth envieth with David he hateth every false way and the very workers of iniquity if he be surprised by the difficulty of his estate or distemper of his minde with an act of sin he loatheth himself because of it and with Paul professeth I do the things that I would not do the very existency of sin in him is his intolerable burden Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of corruption is his out-cry death is desired because he would sin no more he would rather be redeemed from his vain conversation than from wrath to come penitent An●elme had rather bein hell without than in heaven with his iniquity and therefore he yet recedes Thirdly Into an abstinence from nay actual resistance of sin he puts away the evil of his doings forsakes his way abstains from the appearances of evil he is now ashamed of what he hath sometimes acted with eagernesse he now preacheth the Gospel he sometime destroyed and blesseth the name he blasphemed he is not only restrained himself but he labours to reclaime others from iniquity nay not only is his hand with-held from sin but his heart is set against it his study is to mortifie his earthly members and his resolution that sin shall not raigne in his mor●al body that he should obey it in the lust thereof he is careful to avoid all occasions and inducements unto evil he feareth to make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lust thereof his hearty prayer is that he may not fall into temptation but be delivered from evil he resisteth all sinful assaults striveth against sin unto very blood his righteous soul is grieved for the sins of others all his complaint under sorrows is against sin his care is to be rid of sin his fear of falling into sin So that the Gospel-penitent maketh a perfect recession from sin all sin sin in its kinde not in its species or degree not only this and that sin but sin which is contrary to Gods Law and Image be it sin small or great natural and near allied unto him it is his care to keep himself from his own iniquity the sin of his complexion calling constitution or condition he will not indulge his right eye or right hand in opposition to Gods holinesse No pleasure profit or honour shall willingly hi●e him to the least iniquity the penitent eye judgeth sin by its complexion not its composition by its colour not by its weight he determines of it not by comparison with it self but its non-conformity to Gods Law so that if you say of any thing there is sin in it you have said enough to set the Gospel penitent against it for he is turned from all evil yet take along with you this cautionary Note that you run not into sinful despaire and despondency in observing your penitent Recession from sinne viz. Sins existency and sometimes prevalency Caution is consistent with a penitent recession and turning from it Sin may remain though it doth not raigne in a gracious soul Who is there that lives and sins n●t If we say sin is not in us we are lyars and the truth is not in us The righteous themselves often fall Noah the Preacher of Repentance to the old World becomes the sad pattern of impiety to the new World Penitent Paul hath cause to complain when I would do good evil is present with me Sin abides in our souls whil'st our souls abide in our bodies so long as we live we must expect to bear the burden of corruption sin exists in the best of Saints by way of suggestion natural inclination and violent instigation and enforcement of evil and so taking advantage of the difficulty of our estate and distemper of our minds it drives us sometimes into most horrid actions even Davids Adultery or Peters denial of Christ which of the Saints have not had a sad experience hereof nor must it seem to us strange for Repentance doth not cut down sin at a blow no it is a constant militation and course of mortification an habit and principle of perpetual use not action of an houre o● little time as we have Noted before it is a recession from si● all our days though sin run after us if once we be perfectly freed from sins assaults we shake hands with Repentance for we need it no more so that let it not be the trouble of any that sin is in them but let it be their comfort that it is shunned by them that you fall into sin faile not in your spirits let this be your support that you flie from fall out with and fight against sin the true penitent doth evidence the truth and strength of his Repentance by not admiting sins dictates without resi●●ance not acting sins precepts without reluctance when he deviseth evil his minnde is to serve the Law of God and he approveth of that as good he doth what he would not the Law in his members rebels against the Law of his minde and leadeth him captive and therefore he abides not under sins guilt or power without remorse if he be drawn to deny his Master he goeth out and weepeth bitterly he is in his own eye a wretched man whil'st oppressed with a body of corruption nay he retireth not into sinful society without repining his soul soon thinks he hath dwelt too long in Meshech and in the Tents of Kedar the wicked are to him an abomination whil'st then any soul maintaineth this conflict and so visibly disalloweth what he sometime doth he may safely say it is no more I but sin that dwelleth in me for his servants you are to whom you yield your selves servants Rom. 6.16 and comfortably conclude that as a Gospel-penitent he turneth from all sin and that is the first part of the formality of Repentance the second naturally followeth and that is Second part of conversion Reversion to God a reception of God God and God only becomes the adequate object of Gospel Repentance man by sin hath his back on God by Repentance he faceth about all sin doth agree in this that it is an aversion from God and the cure of it by Repentance must be conversion to God when God calls for true Repentance it is with an if thou wilt return O Israel return unto me Jer. 4.1 and when Repentance is promised it is promised that the children of Israel shall return and seek the Lord their God and David their King and shall fear the Lord and his goodnesse Hosea 3.5 And when they provoke one another to Repentance it is with a come let us return
the soul in a shunning and avoiding sin and setting against all occasions and temptations thereunto and studying the will of God making it his meditation night and day and having in all things respect unto it as the rule of his life and conversation so that the very anxiety of his spirit is to shake off and avoid his sin to subdue and weaken his lusts Qui paenitet sollicitus est ne peccet Ambr. in Text. to stand against temptations unto evil for whoever repenteth saith Ambrose is careful not to sin again He is made whole he would sin no more but with all care caution circumspection and vigilancy strive against corruption and study to know and to do the will of God with the Church at Ephesus To remember from whence we are fallen and do our first works Revel 2.5.3.1 or the Church of Sardis to awake and watch not to be slothful in businesse and secure against sin untill surprised therewithall 2. Concomitant of godly sorrow Secondly Clearing of our selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Apology or answer by way of defence unto the calumnies of an Accuser which is not done by denial of guilt and excuse of sin but by confession Paenitentia non habet excusationem nisi confessionem Amb. in Text. for saith Saint Ambrose Repentance hath no excuse but confession This is an humble deprecation of Divine judgement and silencing of the Accuser of the Brethren by self-condemnation the true penitent doth judge himself with shame and sorrow that he may not be judged by the Lord he is ready to aggravate all not extenuate any his sins only findes an acquittance from them in the blood of Christ and concludes not against the charge of the Accuser and clamour of his own conscience I was an Extortione● a Drunkard an Adulterer a Blasphemer but I am washed I am sanctified I am justified Repentance rendreth guilt as if it had never been and so becomes the souls Apology 3. Concomitant of godly sorrow Thirdly Indignation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wrath unto grief the rising of the very stomack with rage and a being angry unto very sicknesse again it is only used in this one Text of Scripture as it hath sin for its object but in reference to other things it expresseth the very heighth of anger fretting unto fuming thus the rage of the Ruler of the Synagogue on a conceived breach of the Sabbath is expressed Luke 13.14 Religious wrath is the hottest it will make a meek Moses break the very Tables of the Lord Thus the discontent of envy is expressed in Mark 10.41 The Disciples stomack rose against Jam●s and John so that it here imports the turning of the unquiet passions of the soul wholly against sin a fretting and fuming at our selves for sin an hating and being ashamed of our selves for sin this wrath breaks out in a penitent David into disgraceful speeches against himself so foolish was I and ignorant when distrust prevailed on him Psal 73.22 And I have done very foolishly when he sinned in numbring the people 2 Sam. 24.10 Nay breaks into disgraceful demeanour towards sin as impenitent Israel to the defiling the graven images of silver and the ornaments of their golden Idols and casting them out with contempt as a menstruous garment and an angry rejection of them with a Get you hence Isa 30.22 So that sin is the object of hatred scorn rage reproach and contumelie and ground of grief and shame to the peni ent the soul cannot think of sin without stomachization heart-rising and redning of face he is indeed angry and sins not the whole of whole anger runs out against sinne Fourthly Fear a rare companion of wrath 4. Concomitant of godly sorrow but alwayes of care the truly penitent are of a trembling and timerous spirit and no marvel for the burnt childe dreads the fire they have paid dear for past guilt and may well beware to fall again the whole work of Repentance is expressed to be a fear of the Lord and his goodnesse Hos 3.5 The fear of the Lord is the only fence against temptations unto sin here note that this fear is a fear of sense affecting us with the evil sin procureth and dreadful judgments of God by it deserved trembling at the Word of threatning a fear of reverence awefully apprehending the holinesse and Majesty of God and that vast disproportion and disparity between God and us sorrowfully crying How shall dust and ashes polluted man come nigh to an holy and glorious Majesty and a fear of diligence and vigilancie watching and warring against sin that it may not surprise us by the difficulty of our state and distempers of our soul and thus the penitent worketh out his own salvation with fear and trembling but it is not a fear of diffidence and despondencie of distrust and despaire which deadning all hope of prevalency dulleth all diligence discourageth vigilancy and industry and at length driveth to self-destruction the fear of Repentance springs from sense of mercy and is spurred with the confidence of successe being assured it is God that worketh in the soul to will and to do Phil. 2.13.1.6 and will perfect what he hath begun 5. Concomitant of godly sorrow Fifthly Vehement desire 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a desire of fervency that can admit of no delay saith Dr. Slater Of dil●gence and activity say the Greek Criticks which puts on with industry and violence the soure sauce of godly sorrow doth ever sharpen the appetite of holy desire the hu●ted Hart thirsteth for the water the sin-wearied soul for Christ it is a desire to be wholly rid of sin and therefore breaks out into complaints against the remainders of sin in the soul as Paul Oh wretched man th●t I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death Rom. 7.24 the death of nature and day of judgement is desired and delightful because the destruction and discharge of sin it is also a desire of all sin-subduing and grace-strengthning administrations they that by Repentance have once tasted that the Lord is good do as new born babes desire the sincere milk of the Word 2 Pet. 2.2 This desire is vehement against all difficulties and discouragements running out with all fervent dil●gence for obtainment and bitter complaints for want finding no satiety without its very object 6. Concomitant of godly sorrow Sixthly Zeal an affection compounded of love and anger and is the edge of our desire enforcing all means and encountering all difficulties and opposition to our end this is that whereby the penitent persists in his godly sorrow under all checks and diversions and persevereth in his course of mortification against all opposition of the world or his corrupt self fighting against what hinders and flinging off all incumbrances and following heaven with force and violence that if it were possible it would draw all men with it but however it beareth down all before it
a Physician who could cure all bodily deformities what flocking would there be to him for help such a Physician is Death As Job had all things restored double when raised from the dunghil so shall a childe of God have all bodily deformities removed and his body shall be raised in glory and shine as the Sun in the firmament And why then should we be so afraid of death it is initium vivae spei the beginning of a living hope The Heathen mans Motto is Dum spiro spero while there is life there is hope but a Christians Motto is Dum expiro spero when I dye then my hope begins to live 4. Comfort to those who forgoe any members of their bodies for Christ If thou losest thy leg or arm or ear God will restore it again at the Resurrection The same leg c. as Christ healed the ear of Matchus he did not give him a new ear but the same again Famous is the story that Josephus tells of one of the seven children in the Maccabees who when he was to have his tongue cut out and his hand cut off said to his Mother These I have received from the Heavens and for the love of my God I despise them and trust that I shall receive them again 5. Comfort to the people of God when in the lowest condition When upon the dunghil and past help of man then let them remember That the God whom we serve can raise the dead and therefore can deliver them out of all their troubles though never so great and incurable This was Jobs comfort when in the saddest condition Job 19.25 26 27. It is proper to God to deliver from the lowest grave Psal 86.13 And for this very end and purpose God oftentimes brings his children into a very deplorable and desperate condition that they might learn to trust in that God who raiseth the dead 2 Cor. 1.12 6. Lastly Here is singular consolation in reference to the sad times in which we live It is with us now as it was with the Disciples when Christ was crucified their hopes dyed when Christ dyed their faith in Christ was dead and buried with Christ therefore they say Luke 24.21 We trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel and besides all this to day is the third day since these things were done As if they should have said Christ hath now been so long in the grave that we have no hope of salvation by him it is now the third day and we hear no tidings of him Even so the people of God are ready to say of these times We had thought that this had been the time wherein Christ would have made the Churches of England very glorious and have taken away all our tynne and drosse out of his Church and perfectly have purged his floor and made a most happy Reformation But we see that Christ is still in the grave and there are mountains upon mountains rowled over him to keep him still in it We are in as bad a condition as ever and our hopes as desperate and it is now not onely the third day but the thirteenth nay the sixteenth year and yet we are not delivered But now hearken to a Word of Consolation As Christ rose in spight of the Jews they rowled a stone upon the mouth of the grave and sealed it and set a watch to keep it and yet he rose in spight of them all So shall Religion and the Gospel and Church of Christ rise notwithstanding all the opposition made against it Though never so many Mountains ●e in the way God will in time rowl away all these Mountains Mat. 16. Isa 54. Zach. 12.3 for Christ haih said That the gates of H●ll shall not prevail against his Church and that no weapon formed against Jacob shall prosper and that he will make Jerusalem a burthensome stone for all people all that burthen themselves with it shall be cut in pieces though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it As the children of Israel the more they were oppressed the more they multiplied so the more the Church of Christ is trodden under foot the more it will prosper As Moses his bush burned and was not consumed because God was in it so the Church of Christ may be burning and full of troubles and afflictions which shall purge it Rev. 11.7 8 9 10 11. and refine it but it shall not be consum●d for Christ is risen and his Church shall rise The God whom we serve is a God who can raise the dead It is related of the two Witnesses that when they shall have flnished their estimony they should be slain and lie three days and an half unburied and that the people that dwell upon the earth should re●o●ce over them and make merry But yet notwithstanding the Spirit of God should after three days and an half enter into them and they should stand upon their feet and ascend up to Heaven in the sight of their Enemies By these two Witnesses are meant all the eminent Opposers of Antichrist whether Magistrates or Ministers who though they prophesie in sackcloath 1260 years and towards the end of them which is yet to come be in a more then ordinary manner massacred and killed yet they shall after a little while rise again in their successors stand ●pon their feet and ascend up to a more heavenly and glorious condition There will be a happy and blessed Resurrection of the Church Famous is the Parable of the Dry Bones Ezek. 37. God saith to the Prophet Son of man can these bones live The Prophet answered O Lord God thou knowest Then God tells him That he would cause breath to enter into the dry bones and make them to live c. Though the Church of Christ be in as sad a condition as the Israelites in Babylon and be as dry bones in a grave and though the Prophets know not how they can be raised 2 Pet. 2.9 yet God knoweth how to deliver his people He can and will in due time raise them up to a more pure and happy estate even in this life Let us comfort one another with these things Use 3. OF Terrour to all the wicked and ungodly that cannot say with Job I know my Redeemer liveth but I know my Revenger liveth There will a time come when they that now stop their ears and will not hear the voyce of Christ speaking by his Word and Ministers shall hear a voyce whether they will or no and shall come out of their graves to the Resurrection of condemnation just as Pharaohs Baker out of Prison or as Malefactors out of Newgate to be executed at Tiburn Happy were it for such that there were no Resurrection that their souls did dye as the souls of Brute Beasts But let such know That there shall be a Resurrection of the unjust as well as of the just and that there will a day come in which
then his * Cant. 2.14 v ice will be sweet when he shall call to them to come up to * Isa 25.6 this Mountain to a feast of fat things a feast of wine on the Lees of fat things full of ma●row of wines on the Lees well refined Laetissimè excipientis 3. 'T is the speech of one that bids us welcome to the feast too Come my friends I it is Come and welcome now Come poor heart thou hast been coming a long time I went my self to call thee I * 2 Chron. 36.15 sent my Messengers rising up early and sending them continually to invite thee to come in I sent my holy Spirit also like a Dove from heaven and it did light upon thee and gave thee an Olive branch of peace in the Wildernesse of thy fears when it allured thee and call'd thee from all thy wandrings then I sent my black rod for thee by that grim Serjeant death to strip thee of thy soul body of sin not to be touched but by the Angel of death then I sent my Angels to bring thy soul to the Courts of thy God and now by the sounding of the last Trumpet I have call'd for thy sleepy body to arise out of the * Psal 22.15 dust of death And now after all these Messengers thou art come I will not upbraid thee for thy delays but come come blessed soul with as many welcomes as there are Saints and Angels in glory I have * John 14.2 prepared a place for thee * Cant. 5.1 thou at come into my Garden Eat oh friends Drink yea drink abundantly oh beloved And so I have done with the explication of the several branches of the Text now let us see what fruit they bear that may be * Cant. 2.3 sweet to oru taste First 1. Infer Then if there be a Kingdome prepared before the foundation of the World for the blessed Saints and holy ones then what manner of persons are * 2 Pet. 3.11 we in all unholy Conversation and godlessnesse in this generation Men are as dead to Religion as if heaven was but a dream and as hot upon sin as if hell had no fire or was all vanished into smoak as atheistical and wretched as if neither heaven hell nor earth neither did feel a God or any memorandum's of his Providence Therefore a little to fortifie this notion which artificial wickednesse hath endeavoured to expel and expunge out of natural consciences I shall endeavour to confirme your faith by Scripture and reason The Socinians deny the revelation of eternal life and a state to come to have been propounded under the Old Testament and the reward being only earth their Law and obedience to be but carnal and low which is to level the Jews to the order of brutes that so the Gentiles under the Gospel might be advanced to the state of men and so by vertue of rhe new prize of immortal life proposed they should have a new command as their care to run which is all as true as that all the Tribes of Israel were converted into Isacar's * Gen. 49.4 strong asses couching down between two burdens but * Luke 7.35 wisdome is justified of her children and the Chaldee paraphrase renders those words * Gen. 4.7 Remittetur tibi in saeculo futuro if thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted by this glosse Amend thy works in this world and thou shalt be forgiven in the world to come and the ●argum says the very dispute betwixt Cain and Abel was concerning a world to come and those carnal Hereticks that * Jude ver 10.11 19. are sensual not having the spirit in what they know naturally as brute beasts corrupt themselves they are gone into the way of Cain But when God tells Abraham * Gen 15.1 I am thy exceeding great reward and Jacob cries out * Gen. 49.18 I have waited for thy salvation O Lord even when about to dye God stiling himse●f their God is not by our Saviours authority * Mat. 22.32 the God of the dead but of the living therefore God held out eternal life in the promises yea and in the very command too * Levit. 18.3 Gen. 3.12 do this and live the reward of that obeeience there enjoyned was no lesse than this everlasting life as appeareth by our Saviours interpretation when the Lawyer came to him * Luke 10.25.28 saying Master What shall I do to inherit eternal life and he said What is written in the Law how readest thou and he answered thou shalt love the Lord c. and Jesus said Thou hast answered right this do and thou shalt live that is thou shalt have that thou desiredst viz. inherit eternal life and the very reproach of the Sadduces and the distinction of their Sect from Pharisees and others argueth sufficiently the world to come was a very common notion among all the Jews and indeed the whole land of Canaan was but a comprehensive type and shadow of heaven and all their Religion but a * Hebr. 10.1 shadow of good things to come in the Kingdome of heaven as well as in the Kingdome of the Messiah * John 8.56 whose day they then saw and were glad and if the Gospel contain the promise of eternal life then they had it in Abrahams days * Gal. 3.8 for the Gospel was preached before to him yea and before to Adam * Gen 3.15 that the seed of the woman should break the S rpents head and the skins of the Sacrifices wherewith he was cloathed might suggest the putting on of that promised seed and his obedience who was * Isa 53.5 to be bruised for the iniquities of his people But now to awaken Atheistical souls that deny not only the revelation of this Kingdome of God under the old Testament but its reality and existence under old and new consider these foure things very briefly as the limits of this Exercise command 1. The whole Creation is a Book which always lyeth open wherein we may read that there is a God who made the goodly Structure and Fabrick of Heaven and Earth Who else could be able to * Job 26.7 hang the vast body of the Earth upon nothing or to * Ver. 10. girdle the Sea and all its mountainous Waves with a Rope of Sand * Psal 104.2 to spread the heavens as a Curtain and hang up those vast Vessels of light in the Skies there must be a being existent from and of himself and so being improduced is infinitely perfect and comprehendeth all those perfections dispersed through the whole Creation and infinitely more yet what he makes is like himself every creature bears his footsteps but * Psal 8 3. Gen. 1.27 the heavens are the works of his fingers and man bears the very image of God We see in the several stories and degrees of the Creation love and
19. The temper or rather distemper of the body enclining often sometimes to one sometimes to another sinne which the Divel who is best seen in our constitutions makes much use of in suiting his temptations hence he frequently tempts those that are melancholy to despair and the sanguine he tempts to presume with no small disadvantage to their souls from the several inclinations of their bodies To be sure whil'st a man is or should be providing for his soul the body too often interrupts him with What shall I eat what shall I drink wherewith shall I be cloathed And if there be any fear of suffering though for Christ and his Gospel the body cryes Spare thy self this may not come unto thee c. So that with Adam by reason of sinne we need a cloathing for and may be asham'd of our very bodies Even they also should be the Temples of the Holy Ghost but are now become Cages for these unclean Birds 1 Cor. 6.19 Put but these things together and 't is too sadly apparent that this original sinne is as extensive as any thing in meer man can be A short draft of Adams image in us Aug. de Ger. ad lit cap. 24. So that in every one methinks I see another Adam if you consider the parallel you shall finde Adams image and likenesse in each of his unhappy off-spring Take it with some enlargement out of Austin 1. Adam after his fall had his understanding darkned he thought to hide himself from that God from whom nothing can be hid Gen. 3.8 And are we not thus blinde does not man promise himself more security for a secret than for an open impiety The Adulterer the Oppressor the Proud and the Envious person saith None seeth me Isa 47.10 Durst men undertake that wickednesse under the sense of Gods seeing of them which they would be asham'd of if men look'd upon them were they not thus blind 2. We finde Adam flying from Gods presence his will and affections were defiled or he could not have been averse from communion with God Being now stain'd with sin he trembles to heare him whom before it was his chiefest delight to be with all And this also sin hath brought upon the posterity of Adam they do not delight in communion with God in their hearts and lives too they forsake God We do not read that Adam after the commission of his sin did so much as once think of God till he heard the voice of the Lord walking in the garden in the cool of the day in order to the calling of him to an account for his sin and then he is afraid and flies c. So his wretched children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seldome think of God at least seriously and as they ought till towards the end of their lives when God by the voice of some extraordinary sicknesse is a calling of them to judgement and then no wonder if they be afraid 3. I might observe a similitude we have in our bodies unto Adams sinful body but that our very cloathes as I hinted but now sufficiently evince it We have the same use and necessity of them which he by sin fell into The best apparel being but as playsters which this soare calls for howsoever too too often man makes himself proud of them Now whither these faculties of soul and body being so nearly conjoyned do corrupt and infect one another as Ivy while cleaving to the Oak draws away the sap from it and destroyes it I shall not here contend I confesse there are many difficulties concerning this subject of which we may say as of other depths in Religion with the Woman of Samaria John 4.25 When the Messias comes he will teach us all things I have been too long upon this first consideration in explaining why Original sin is called Man I must be the shorter in what follows why it is call'd Old man 1. Because it is derived from the eldest or first Adam 2. Why Original sin is called Old man for though Christ as God was from eternity yet as an Adam or common head he was the latest Man must be fallen in the one before he can be raised in the other Willet in locum 1 Cor. 15.46 2. Original sin is the Old man because corruption is first in every one Esau comes out first first that which is natural then that which is spiritual Heb. 8.13 2 Cor. 5.17 3. 'T is call'd Old because it is to be done away This old man all old things are to be done away Compare it to the new man or the work of grace and then you will say indeed There is no lovelinesse in it for which you should retain it were there not an eternity of happinesse or misery to put into the ballance vertue would out-weigh vice 4. It may be call'd Old because of its cunning and craft as old men by reason of their abundant experience are more wise and subtle than others This old man this corruption is cunning to deceive Oh what excuses does it bring for sin what pretences you have heard it hath much of Adam but know it hath somewhat of the wise and old Serpent too for it was begot betwixt them both I shall passe this first particular only with this note instead of further Application viz. Observe with Paraeus that when the Apostle calls Original sinne our old man he distinguishes it from our selves It is ours too nearly cleaving to us but it is not our selves Whence we must learn to put a difference betwixt the corruption of nature and nature it self Mans nature is from God but the corruption of mans nature is from himself And this original sinne is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7.20 21. any substantial part of man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle sayes of it Heb. 12.1 The sin that so easily besets us Thus at length we are come to the second particular which the Apostle uses to expresse original sinne by The second particular expressing Original sin the body of sin 't is the body of sinne And herein I have only to shew how this Original sin is a body for the other how it may be call'd sin or a body of sin will be consider'd in the third Appellation which is here bestowed upon it Now Original corruption is a body of sin Why called a body 1. In that a body though it seems never so beautiful and fair yet 't is in it self but a stinking carcasse made of base loathsome matter c. So sin and wickednesse though it may seem specious and alluring yet 't is but an abomination as Scripture in a hundred places calls it adultery covetousnesse excesse and all the parts of this body are not as they seem to be when varnished or painted over They say there is no stench comparable to that of a humane body when not salted or animated with the soul I am sure nothing so noysome as