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B10086 The safety of appearing at the day of judgement, in the righteousness of Christ: opened and applied. By Solomon Stoddard ... Stoddard, Solomon, 1643-1729. 1687 (1687) Wing S5709; ESTC W22065 210,940 366

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place against the sins of ungodly men being executed to the full upon them Mat. 5.18 it has taken place against the sins of the Elect upon Jesus Christ the curse having been executed upon him Gal 3.13 He ba●k redeemed us from the curse being made a curse for us and God does bestow eternal life upon none but those who have fulfilled the righteousness of the Law in their Surety eternal life is given as a recompence of Christs Righteousness Rom. 5.21 PROPOSITION III. This covenant of Works could not be known by our first Parents any other way than by divine revelation because both the promises and threatnings of this covenant depended on the free will of God so that whatever a bilities of understanding Adam had in his first estate they were insufficient to make a discovery of them the precepts of the Law were written In the heart of man when he was first made and so they are still though not so legibly Rom. 2.15 They show the works of the Law written in their hearts and this I dont understand to be any distinct work of God from that of creating the soul for the precepts of the Law excepting that one of the Sabbath have a self-evidencing power so that supposing man to have an understanding he can't but have some knowledg of them and supposing them to have an understanding not corrupted he can't but have a clear knowledge of them but the promises and threatnings of the Law are not understood by any thing written in mens heart Conscience indeed by its own natural light does give evidence that sin is offensive to God and so affright men with expectation of wrath but it can't witness the certainty of Judgments much less of eternal condemnation except it have received some further light either from the Works or Word of God. PROPOSITION IV. The Covenant of Works does require Obedience only as the condition of life there are several other Obligations upon us unto Obedience some antecedent to the covenant of works as the infinite excellency of God the work of Creation some of them consequent as the dying love of Christ Gods giving converting Grace and many the like but the covenant of works requires it only as a condition of life and hence tho the covenant of works be fulfilled for us by Jesus Christ so that there is no engagement on us to perfect obedience as it is a condition of life yet those antecedent obligations do remain upon and we ow obedience still as a natural due Psal 95.6 that primitive obligation as we are creatures will ly upon us for ever besides those other obligations that God has laid upon us since PROPOSITION V. The covenant of works requires perfect but not personal obedience the obedience required in the covenant of works is perfect for one transgression layes man open to the curse but it does not stand upon personal obedience every one is obliged to personal obedience but this is upon another account and not by vertue of the covenant of works the covenant of works never tied us up to personal obedience as the condition of life God has been so far from binding us up to personal obedience as the condition of life that he never did propose that way unto us but from the beginning of the world constituted a publick person to act in our behalf and upon his failing immediately revealed Jesus Christ to be another publick person to act for us Rom. 5.19 PROPOSITION VI The life promised in the Covenant of works is a life of glory in heaven the promise is life Gal. 3.12 The man that doth them shall live in them some have thought that Adam should have had only the continuance of that blessedness which he was created in if he had kept the Covenant it is very true that there is no mention in the Covenant of his going to heaven but we have clear ground to conclude from Scripture that if man had stood he should have gone to heaven according to this promise 1. Because hell where the devils are is the reward of disobedience by the covenant of works therefore heaven where the holy angels are is the reward of Obedience it is meet the rewards should be proportionable I know it is answered that sin deserves evil at Gods hands but holiness which is due unto God does not deserve any rewards but this does not take off the force of the argument for it is by the Law that sin merits as well as holiness and hence wicked men are punished only for such sins as they commit in this life 2 Cor. 5.10 and there is as much goodness in holiness as evil in sin and it is a meet thing that God should bestow as much good in a way of obedience as he inflicts evil in a way of disobedience besides the Law expresses the punishment of sin by death Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death and the reward of obedience by life Gal. 3.12 the man that doth them shall live by them therefore it is a life directly opposite to that death a life that contains as much good in it as that death doth evil those terms do mutually explain one the other 2. Because Christ in fulfilling of the law for us has purchased life for us in heaven Christ has purchased heaven for us Epb. 1.14 it is called a purchased possession and he did it by performing the righteousness of the Law for us it is by making of us righteous that we come to have a title unto eternal life Rom 5.21 Grace reigns by righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. Because Christ tells the young man in the Gospel that enquired of him what good thing he should do that he might have eternal life that if he would enter into life be should keep the Commandments Mat. 19.16 17. where we may mind that the life enquired after by the young man was a life in Heaven and that Christ in this answer is leading of him to the covenant of works upon a design to convince him of his inability to keep it 4. Because the Apostle Paul gives that as the reason that men cannot be justified by the Law because they are sinners Rom. 8.3 3.20 the Legallists that Paul disputes against expected eternal life in heaven by their works yet in all his disputes with them he never telis them that the covenant of works does not promise any such thing if he could have told them so that would clearly have cut off all their hopes but he still shows that they can't have Salvation by the Law upon this account because they can't fulfil it yea he plainly implies that the reward by the Law and Gospel are the same but the way of obtaining it is different Rom. 4.4 He that worketh has the reward by debt be that worketh not hath it by grace The second thing that falls under Consideration here is What is the difference between the Covenant of works and the
sins upon him Christ was legally guilty of our sin and God punished him 1 Pet 2.24 He bare our sins in his own body upon the tree sai 53.4 Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows Rom 4.25 He was delivered for our offences And here we may take notice of a great difference between the first and second Adam The first Adam brought the guilt of one sin upon us but Jesus Christ takes away the guilt not only of that but of our innumerable personal Transgressions and this the Apostle minds Rom 5.16 And not as it was by one that sinned so is the gift for the judgment was by one to condemnation but the free gift is of many offences to justification the first sin that Man is guilty of layes him open unto death and his after sins do multiply his Obligations unto death but do not expose him unto so many several deaths yet they do expose him unto a sorer and greater degree of eternal death where there are several sins meeting in the same person they are to be punished with an aggravated death one death must be endured equivalent to so many several deaths for every sin must be accounted for in the day of judgment Eccles 12.14 and therefore Christ that he might procure a remission of all our sins bore a punishment proportionable to them all he was punished for them all Isai 53.5 He was wounded for our transgressions what he redeemed us from that he endured himself Gal. 3.13 only it must be remembred that by reason of the dignity of his person that sorrow which he endured was a greater measure of punishment that it would have been in us The Eighth thing to be considered is That the Righteousness of Jesus Christ is sufficient for the Elect of God in all ages he has an everlasting Priesthood and the vertue of his Sacrifice dos cotinue from the beginning to the end of the World therefore he is said to bring in everlasting Righteousnes Dan. 9.24 His Righteousness was efficacious for the ages before his coming though it was not then actually wrought out in former Generations this righteousness was available for justification as a man may be discharged of a Debt because of the Bond of his Surety before the money is paid so Christ was preached as the way of Salvation from the very fall of Adam Gen. 3.15 The seed of the Woman shall bruise the Serpents head the way that the Patriaks were justified was by Faith in Christ Rom. 4.3 hence they are said to be saved by Grace Act 15 11 the Covenant which was made with Abraham was made in consideration of the righteousness of Christ Gal 3 17 The covenant that was confirmed before by God in Christ Christ was actually slain after the World had stood about four thousand years but he was reckoned as slain from the foundation of the World Rev 13 8 the vertue of his blood reached unto the first ages of the world that is implied Heb. 9.25 26. Nor yet that he should offer himself often as the High Priest entereth every year into the holy place with the blood of others for then must be often have suffered since the foundation of the World but now once in the end of the World hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Hence there was through him remission of the sins that were past Rom 3 25. he died for the redemption of transgressions that were under the first Testament Heb 9 15 the means of the salvation of the Fathers was accomplished in the dayes of the Gospel they were saved before but the price of this Salvation was payed when Christ died that is intended by that expression Heb. 11 40 God having provided some better thing for us that they without us should not be made perfect His Righteousness is also efficacious for all ages after his coming Christ payed for the salvation of those Generations that were not born then he satisfied for sins that were not then committed for God has appointed the Gospel to be Preached to the end of the World Mat. 28 19 20 yea Christ appointed that his death should be shewed forth in the Lords Supper unto the day of Judgment 1 Cor. 11 26 in the Redemption of Christ God shewed grace to the ages to come Eph 2 7 there will be some saved by Christ in all Ages to the end of the world Eph 3 31 the Saints under Antichrist are said to be redeemed by Christ Revel 14 6. The reason of this everlasting efficacy of Christs Righteousness is from Gods acceptance God might accept it as well before it was wrought out as after and it was as easie for Christ to redeem millions of men as one Christ being a Surety the same righteousness that will serve for one will serve for all as it is with the sin of Adam it is as sufficient to condemn millions as one and if Christ had been to redeem many more he needed not to have done or suffered any thing more what is done by the representative is reckoned to all them whom he represents The last Proposition for the cleaning of the Argument is That Christ has so purchased Salvation that the Elect cannot fail of it and herein lies one great difference between the first Adam and the second though the first Adam made us Heirs of death yet there is a possibility of our escaping destruction but the second Adam has so made us Heirs of life as that it is impossible that we should miss thereof that is intended Rom. 5 17. If by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they that receive abundance of Grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in lise by one Jesus Christ Christs purchase gives us such a title to Salvation as that there can be no failure of it 2 Thes 2.16 God has given us everlasting consolation and good hope through Grace the reason of the difference is because there was an exception in the Law that we must dye except our Surety died for us but the promise of eternal life which Christ has purchased does admit of no exception the promise made unto Christ does admit of no exception Psal 72 17. Men shall be blessed in him according to that promise to Jacob all the Families of the earth should be blessed in his seed and the promise made unto Believers does admit of no exception there are many promises that have a limited interpretation some are indefinite and some are conditional but this promise is absolute and universal Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth on him might not perish but might have everlasting life Before I leave this Argument it is needful to answer one Objection which is this If Christs Righteousness be that which the Law requires of us then God would deal with those that have an interest in that as he would have done if they had performed
that righteousness themselves as he would have done if Adam had kept the covenant of works but he don't do thus the promise in the covenant of works is life which includes all manner of felicity but Believers are far short of felicity they have much sin remaining in them are left to fall into many sins they are liable to very sore and dreadful afflictions and to death the promise of the Law is not fulfilled to them therefore it seems they have not the righteousness of the Law. Ans 1. These sorrows do not come upon the People of God for want of a perfect righteousness or for want of compleat satisfaction and this is an evdence of it because those sorrows do not come in a way of vindictive justice or vengeance though they are for the matter of them the same with the curses of the Law yet not for the manner they do not come to satisfie God for sin those Saints that have the most sin have not always the most sorrow to be left unto sin is not a curse to the people of God Hezekiah was left to sin in mercy 2 Chron 32.31 It was that be might know what is in his heart and so their afflictions Rev. 3.19 Whom I love I rebuke and chasten Jer 24 5 I have sent them into the land of the Chaldeans for their good Sin opens a door to afflictions but God brings them in mercy All the wayes of the Lord are merccy and truth to such as keep his covenant and his testimonies Psal 25.10 2. Though Christ has fulfilled the righteousness of the Law for us yet God is not absolutely bound to reward the righteousness of Christ just in the same manner as he would have done the righteousness of Adam though the righteousness be the same yet there may be circumstantial differences in the reward blessedness is the reward of righteousness but there may be so the circumstantial parts of the reward that may differ as it was with the sufferings of Christ he suffered not in all things the same that the Elect should have done but yet he suffered as much so it is here Christ has purchased perfect blessedness for us yet he has not so purchased it that God is bound to bring us presently and at once into the possession of it Christ has purchased the good of the covenant of works viz. blessedness to be dispensed to us according to the tenor of the covenant of grace viz. to have it begun here and perfected hereafter therefore he is called The Mediator of the new covenant Heb. 12.24 and his seed is called the blood of the everlasting covenant Heb. 13.20 3. There is special reason also why God should not wholly deliver his people from sin and sorrow in this world the special reason why he leaves them to sin is to take occasion thereby for the magnifying of his pardoning grace there are also weighty reasons why he exercises his people here with many sorrows in particular that he may vindicate his own holiness and that he may carry on the work of Sanctification in them in a way suitable unto the nature of Man. CHAP. IV. The second Argument from the Prophecies and T●pes of the Old Testament the third Argument from God's love in giving his Son to dye for us the fourth Argument from the Exaltation of Christ Argument 2. GOd has foretold in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament that Christ should bring us to Salvation by his righteousness therefore it is safe appearing before God therein God has foretold this both in the plain Prophecies that he gave to the ancient Church and in those Types that he gave them wherein this Truth was represented 1. It was foretold in the Prophecies of the Old Testament God by degrees did reveal much of the way of Salvation unto the Church of Israel though it fell abundantly short of those manifestations which he has given in Gospel times yet what was then made known serves as a great confirmation of the truth of the Gospel and I shall not insist on such Prophecies as do only hold forth Salvation by Christ without revealing the particular way of it as where it is said the seed of the woman should bruise the serpents head that in him all the Families of the earth should be blessed that he should be a light to the Gentiles and salvation to the ends of the earth though I might make good the Argument from hence for our condition was such that Christ could not save us without working out righteousness for us but I shall only urge such Prophecies as do hold forth Christs saving of us by his righteousness of which there are these four sorts 1. It was foretold that the Church should have their righteousness from Christ that they should derive their Justification from him Isai 45.24 Surely shabl one say in the Lord Jehovah have I rightousness and strength righteousness is not here taken for holiness or the righteousness of sanctification but the righteousness of justification the Church has its sanctification from Christ by infusion and assistance and their justification from him by the imputation of his righteousness and henco that Name The Lord our Righteousness is given to Christ Jer. 23 6 and the same name is given to the Church Jer. 33.16 both of them in remembrance that the Church does derive her Righteousness from Christ accordingly Christ is said to bring in everlasting Righteousness Dan. 9.24 2. It was foretold that Christ should dye for our sins the death of Christ was not onely foretold but also upon what account it should be 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ dyed for our sins according to the Scriptures this we have at large set down in Isa 53 where we may mind 1. What he suffered namely death besides many other calamities he was brought as a Lamb to the slaughter ver 7 he was cut off out of the land of the living ver 8. God made his soul an offering verse 10. 2. Vpon what account he suffered the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all ver 6. 3. What benefit redounds to us by his sufferings by his knowledge that must not be understood subjectively but objectively by the knowledg of him shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities 3. It was foretold that Christ should effect our salvation by doing that for us that sacrifice and burnt offering could not do Psal 40 6 7 8. sacrifice and offering thou didst not desice but mine ears hast thou opened c. concerning which Scripture you may observe these things 1. That the thing that sacrifices could not effect for us was our reconciliation there was some imagination in men that sacrifices should make their peace but God did not accept them upon that account 2. When he says mine ears hast thou opened he speaks concerning Christ this we have the authority of the Apostle for Heb. 10.5 3. By this phrase is imported the Obedience and
our selves with an idle dream which would deceive us ●●men are blamed in the Word of God for such confidences Isa 29.18 it is not lawful or warrantable for us to believe in that which we have not sufficient encouragement to believe in but we have not sufficient encouragement to believe in the righteousness of Christ if it be not safe to appear before God in it what can encourage us to depend upon and be satisfied in that which it is not safe to depend upon 2. If it be commanded that we believe on the righteousness of Christ then it is duty so to doe then we are bound in conscience to come unto Christ we cannot without sin stay away from Christ and therefore surely it is safe to trust in the righteousness of Christ the holy God would never make it our duty to trust in that which is not a sufficient ground of faith it were an hard lesson to be bound in conscience to do that which we could not satisfie our consciences in doing it were wildness for any man to imagine that God should command us to love that which is not lovely or to mourn for that which is not matter of sorrow or to rejoyce in that which is not matter of joy so it is to think that God should require us to trust in that which is not a ground of confidence that would be very hard for God to bind us to put our confidence in that which we could not put our confidence in except we were out of our wits if it were not safe to trust in Christs righteousness what could induce us to do it except we were under a delusion it is against nature for man to put confidence in any thing but under this notion that there is ground of confidence in it what perswasions can prevail to make men rest on that which they could not safely rest upon the Lord is a righteous God and gives no such unequal command all his commands are righteous he requires but what is equal Psal 119 138. 3. If God commands us to believe on the righteousness of Jesus Christ then we must do it upon pain of damnation if we fail thereof every sin does by Law deserve death and the continuance in the neglect of any known command does unavoidably bring death and ruine and so the neglect of this command John 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already because be hath not believed in the Name of the only begotton Son of God certainly then it must be a safe thing to believe on Jesus Christ if there be no safety in believing there is no reason that we should be punished for not believing if there be no safety in believing in Christ then it is madness to believe in Christ and will God punish us for not acting the part of mad men it were an unreasonable thing for a man to believe in Christ if it were not safe so to do and therefore unreasonable that he should be punished for not doing of it will God damn man for not building their hopes for Heauen upon the sand will God cast a man into Hell because be will not embrace a delusion and put his confidence in a broken Reed the Lord is a righteous God and would never punish men for not believing if they had not abundant encouragement to believe the command of this holy God gives us great security in believing John 12.50 I know that his command is life everlasting OBJECTION Here it may be objected against this Argument That we are commanded by God to believe for many things and to believe in the righteousness of Christ for them which we have no certain security that we shall enjoy in a way of believing whatever we pray for we must do it believing and we must do it in the Name of Christ thus we are to believe for health for the conversion of all our Children for rain and other publick mercies so that it is no bard or unreasonable thing to be commanded to believe for that which is not sure in a way of believing neither do we want sufficient encouragement to believe though the thing we believe for be not sure to us in that way ANSWER That Act of Faith which is the condition of the Covenant of Grace is far differing from other acts of Faith that are required of us we do believe for a mercy when by a spirit of Faith we take hold of any of those encouragements which God gives us with respect to that mercy that when we are encouraged by the power of God the mercy of God the love of God to us indennite promises the redemption of Christ to rely upon God with quietness for a mercy with submission to his holy will. We do believe in God for that mercy and this we have sufficient encouragement to do though there be no certainty that we shall enjoy the mercy in that way and this God may fairly command us though he don't absolutely promise the mercy but that Faith which is the condition of the covenant of Grace does much differ from this that is an accepting of Christ and Salvation by him as offered to us and a relying on him for it according to the promise of the Gospel that this is the Faith that is required as the condition of the covenant of grace is evident because it is called a receiving of Christ justifying Faith is the receiving of the promise of the Gospel 't is a relying upon God in Christ according to the invitations of the Gospel and God would never require us to accept of an offer and rely upon him for it if it were not safe so to do how is it possible for any man to rely upon God for the making good of his offer if it were not safe so to do CHAP. VI. The seventh Argument from the Spirits assuring Men of the truth of the Gospel The eighth Argument from Gods bestowing the beginnings of Salvation on Believers here in this World. Argument 7. THat Righteousness which the Spirit of God convinces and assures men that they may safely appear before God in that they may safely appear in but the Spirit of God does convince and assure men that they may safely appear before God in the righteousness of Christ that must needs be true which the spiril convinces men to be true Satan labours to shake mens belief of this and raises doubts and questions in the heart about it and from thence we may argue probably that it is true but the spirit of God does perswade and convince men of the truth of it and establishes the heart in it and from thence may infallibly argue the truth of it In opening and declaring this Argument we may Consider 1. That many men are convinced and assured that it is fafe appearing before God in the righteousness of Christ there are some kind of perswasions about it in the hearts of many others that are bestowed partly upon the testimony of men partly
no influence unto justification 2. To the second part of the Objection that promises of Salvation are made to Obedience I Answer 1. That the promises of eternal life are not made unto obedience as that which does merit eternal life and therefore the best of Gods servants do acknowledg themselves unworthy of any good Gen. 32.10 They shall walk with me in white for they are worthy Luk. 21.36 Watch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass and to stand before the Son of man but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred worthy often signifies no more than conveniency and suitableness so Eph. 4.1 walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called but the obedience of the people of God cannot merit eternal life there are two wayes of meriting neither of which can belong to the obedience of the Saints one is when men do merit a reward from absolute justice from the meer dignity of the work in this sence one man can merit from another but no man from God for whatever man does for God is but a due Debt and because no man can do any good but by the grace of God the work it self is the gift of God there is another way of meriting and that is according to the tenour of the Law when man keeps the Law he does deserve a recompence according to the tenor of it thus Jesus Christ has merited life for us Eph. 1.14 he has purchased the heavenly possession so the Angels merited blessedness for themselves but the Obedience of the Saints is not meritorious in this sense because it fails of legal exactness there be many sins mixed with their obedience and their best obedience is very imperfect and polluted and indeed it is upon the account of Christ that the obedience of the Saints is accepted 1 Pet. 2.5 We offer Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ 2. The promises of eternal life are not made to obedience as the proper condition of it because God is absolutely engaged to bestow eternal life upon Believers every Believer has already performed the condition of the Covenant and is under an absolute promise of life John 1 2. This is the promise that he hath promised us even eternal life and obedience is promised to them therefore cannot be properly a condition 3. The promises of eternal life are made unto obedience as the sign of it obedience is an evidence that a man is an heir of eternal life good works do declare that a man is one that shall be saved obedience is an evidence of the love of God it is from love that a man is enabled to live a life of obedience and they are an evidence that a man is a believer where there is obedience there is Faith also men are sanctified by Faith in Christ Acts 26.18 4. The promises of eternal life are made to obedience as wherein God has appointed to lead men to it God has purposed to lead men in a way of holiness unto happiness and wherever he begins to deliver men from sin here to deliver them perfectly hereafter this is the order wherein God has appointed to bestow salvation first to sanctifie and then to glorifie God has appointed to prepare all those for glory here that he does intend to bestow it upon hereafter he prepares them here for that holy place for that holy company for that holy work that is there though they shall be more fully prepared at the time of their dissolution this is the method that God has designed to save men in that they shall have their fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Rom. 6.27 3. To the third part of the Objection that Glory is called the reward of Obedience I Answer 1. That when Heaven is called a recompence the word is not taken for that which is deserved there is a plain difference in the way wherein God inflicts death and bestows life Rom. 6 23. the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. Heaven is not properly bestowed upon the Saints upon the account of their obedience as the condition of it it is upon the account of the obedidience of Christ as the meritorious cause and upon the account of their Faith as the condition of it their obedience is indeed the way wherein they do receive it and so it is a recompence of it they have heaven in a way of obedience and heaven will make an abundant recompence for all their labour and travail the people of God take pains undergo hardships undergo many temptations and conflicts in a way of obedience but heaven will make amends for all and abundantly recompence all their trouble in the way of serving God at the end of their journey they shall receive heaven and that will make amends for all their trouble 3. Saints when they go to heaven shall receive a recompence on the account of their good works their good works are the condition of an additional glory the essential glory of heaven is given on the account of Christs purchase and that God has promised to bestow in a way of obedience but besides those promises there are others wherein God has engaged further degrees of glory upon condition of obedience there will be a gracious reward by the covenant of grace given to every act of obedience performed by the Saints Mat. 10. ult God will take an account of all the good works of his Saints and recompence every one so that the more any Saint does for God the more glory shall be bestowed upon him Phil. 4.17 and hence it is as one Saint does more for God than another so the glory of one shall exceed the glory of another God will not overlook any thing that is done by his people though the obedience of the Saints be imperfect yet it is capable of being rewarded by the covenant of grace it is not properly the condition of enjoying heaven but it is the condition of enjoying further degrees of glory in heaven CHAP. VIII USE I. Reproof to those that seek salvation by their own righteousness VSE I. THe improvement we shall make of this truth is first to reprove those that are seeking acceptance with God and salvation by their own righteousness that neglecting the righteousness of Christ are seeking the favour of God by their own works this was the very spirit of the Jewish Nation in those declining times wherein Christ Jesus was upon the earth and this is one great part of the apostacy of the Antichristian Church that they teach Justification by works but besides these it is the ordinary practice of such whose consciences are awakened and terrified first to seek their peace and work out their reconciliation by their own righteousness when once the sinner is stung with the guilt of sin and under the awful apprehensions of Gods wrath the first way
the account of their own righteousness meeting with such commendations of the practice of holiness they are much confirmed in their carnal confidence in such ways as these 1. Hence they think their own righteousness does draw the heart of God unto them they think that their holiness does attract the affection and good will of God unto them they imagine that their holiness does work them into Gods love that the beauty of their holiness does captivate the affections of God and their cries and carriages do work upon divine compassions and make God willing to bestow salvation upon them and indeed a self-righteous man doth attribute more to his own righteousness than a Saint does to the righteousness of Christ a godly man neither does nor ought to make the righteousness of Christ the foundation of Gods sove Christ has purchased the favour of God and reconciliation with him but he did not purchase the good will and love of God there was no need of purchasing that God could love sinners freely there was no possibility of purchasing that that was too great a thing to be 〈…〉 Christ procured the effects of Gods love but not the love it self Gods love was the cause of Christs coming not the effect thereof but the self-righteous man imagines a vertue in his own righteousness to draw the heart of God to him and engage the love of God. 2 Hence they think their own righteousness does make amends for their miscarriages that they have made are atonement for themselves for their former sins they think their repentance makes up that breach that sin had made and that out of a respect unto that God forgets what they have done amiss they imagine that there is a reconciling vertue in their reformations and good services that they satisfie God for what has been past And herein they attribute more to their own obedience than we ought to do to the active obedience of Christ Christs active obedience was not sufficient to satisfie for sin it purchased the blessings of the covenant but it did not deliver us from the curse active obedience to the Law has merit in it if it be perfect but it has not any satisfying vertue it is something of another kind that God requires for satisfaction the Law threatens death for sin Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death so that Christs active obedience could not satisfie for sins if he undertake to satisfie for sins he must bear the punishment of death 3. Hence they think that out of a respect to their own righteousness and upon the account therof God will bestow salvation upon them they think that this is that which interests them in all the good of the covenant their own prayers and reformations and affections and zeal in the cause of God is that which makes them heirs of glory and gives them a title to the eternal inheritance They look upon their own righteousness as the price of heaven and think they have done something to the earning of glory they are at work for God and look upon heaven to be their wages And herein they attribute that to their own righteousness that ought to be attributed unto the righteousness of Christ This was the very design of the active obedience of Christ to give us a claim to glory because we were very unworthy and could not fulfil the condition of the Law Jesus Christ undertook for us and has performed the righteousness of the Law and merited eternal life Rom. 6.23 The gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. Another temptation to make men depend upon their own righteousness and seek salvation in that way is the seeming excellency of their own righteousness there is a real excellency in true holiness it is the perfection of mans nature sin is a vile thing but holiness does advance and perfect mans nature holiness is the glory of man The Righteous is more excellent than his Neighbour the Righteous are called excellent ones Psal 16.3 and though all the righteousness of self-righteous men is but hppocrisie and therefore an abomination in Gods sight yet they themselves do imagine that there is an excellency in it and from hence they make it a ground of confidence imagining an excellency in it they think God is taken with it and that it is meritorious they do from the excellency of their carriage promise salvation to themselves And there is a four fold excellency which they are wont to take special notice of 1. The moral excellency of their carriage they count their carriage excellent because they live according to principles of honesty and sobriety and piety they are no Drunkards nor Oppressors not Railers nor Sabbath-breakers nor Swearers c. but they have a good conversation they do not live a prophane nor sensual life are not blemishing themselves by vicious courses they have an amiable lovely and justifiable carriage their outward carriages are according to principles of reason and religion their behaviour is equal and honourable they walk without blame the Pharisee was lifted up with that he was no Extortioner unjust person nor Adulterer the young man was taken with that that he had been moral from his youth Mat. 19 20. Paul speaks of that as a thing which men build much upon that as touching the righteousness of the Law they are blameless Phil. 3 6. 2. The religious affections that they feel working in their hearts Sometimes such men have great affections they have melting affections under the considerations of their sins and Gods mercies outward salvation the sufferings of Christ for sinners and the like they have a delight in Ordinances strong desires after Christ and holiness they have a zeal against the sins of the times and for the better party the Scripture is plentiful in instances of such affections in unconverted men as Saul the stony-ground hearers and others and they count these sincere and are highly taken with them they look upon these to be the very spirits of religion things which do greatly ingratiate them with God. They look upon these affections as blessed frame of heart these they think are the things that God does especially delight in they count these heavenly frames of heart they are much affected with their affections now they reckon they have a suitable frame of heart to spiritual things 3. The difficulties that they go through in serving of God which raises the price of their services and makes them more available they mind that they take a great deal of pains in serving God in reading and praying and taking spiritual opportunities they dont gratifie a slothful spirit but are laborious in religion and they hope God takes notice of that so they are at considerable expense they spend of their Estates in works of piety and charity and on that account value their duties highly so they are much in fasting and in that way afflict their bodies so they upon the account of Religion have displeased
us when we had grievously offended him he will now he is reconciled do what remains in order to our salvation when provocations lay in the way yet he drove on this design of our salvation therefore he will do it much more now those provocations are removed when he looked upon us as offenders he did much in order to our blessedness therefore now he looks upon us as friends he will not think much to effect what remains if he was not willing that we should dye when we were guilty sinners he will not be willing that we should dye now our guilt is removed when he was angry he spared no cost for our salvation we may be sure then he will not now he is pacified now there is no obstruction in the way of Gods love to hinder the course thereof Justice is now satisfied Gods anger is done away by Christ the sacrifice of Christ has pleased God Eph. 5.2 Christ Jesus has wrought out full reconciliation for us Col. 1.20 Gods anger is turned away through the mediation of Christ God has satisfied himself to his own content for the wrongs that they have done him so that there is no offence to lye as a Bar in the way of their Salvation 3. If God had so much love as to give his Son to dye for our salvation when he might justly have damned us surely he will save us when he cant justly damn us but is bound in justice to save us when he might righteously have destroyed us he pnt himself to great cost for our salvation then he will not break rules of righteousness to destroy us God that would not take the opportunity to destroy us when we were in his hands and he might fairly have done it will not now destroy us when he himself has brought us into such a condition that he cannot righteously do it God now stands bound unto Jesus Christ Jesus Christ has suffered the Law and therefore God is bound to save all those that Christ died for upon what account should they sear that God will damn them not upon account of their sins they have been fully punished already as it was an act of justice in God to punish Christ upon the account of imputed sin so it is an act of Justice to save those that have an interest in Christ on the account of imputed righteousness Justice requires that they that are righteous whether by personal obedience or imputed righteousness should have life Christ has paid a ransome for us Mat 20.28 and therefore we must in justice be set free 4. If God had such love as to send Christ to dye for us which mercy he was never satisfied for surely he will do what else is requisite for our salvation being fully satisfied for that it would be strange if God that has done such a thing as to give us his Son to dye out of meer grace without any recompence should deny other things to us needful to compleat our salvation which he has taken satisfaction and recompence for he that had such a dear love for us to do that which could not be payed for without any price will do the rest seeing he has received the price of it God has taken a price for our justification sanctification and salvation Tit. 2.14 Eph 1.14 all covenant blessings are purchased 5. God that had such love as to send his Son to dye for our Salvation when he would have been no loser if we had not been saved he will compleat our salvation seeing if he do it not now he would be a loser he would lose this cost that he has been at for our salvation if he should suffer those to perish that Christ died for then the death of Christ would be in vain time was he might have let sinners have perished and have lost nothing by it but now if he should let them perish that Christ died for he would lose the glory of that undertaking he would dishonour himself he has laid a foundation with great cost if he should not finish his work his expenses would be lost and Christs death would be in vain but without doubt God that has gone so far in this work and has expended treasure of mercy in order to it will yet lay out what ever shall be further requisite for the compleating of it Argument 4. From the Exaltation of Christ because Christ who was our surety is exalted by God it is safe for us to appear before God in his righteousness Jesus Christ was a surety for us Heb. 7.22 Jesus was a surety of a better Testament Jesus Christ was our undertaker stood bound to satisfie our debt and to satisfie the justice of God for the wrongs that we had done unto him and therefore he was made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 our guilt was translated unto him God laid on him the iniquities of us all Isai 53.6 and the punishment that was inflicted on him was properly our punishment Surely he hath bore our grief and carried our sorrow Isai 53.4 it was that punishment that firstly did belong unto us he suffered upon the account of his publick Office and undertaking as Mediator he gave himself a ransom for us And Jesus Christ who was our Surety after he had suffered for sinners was gloriously exalted by God God has advanced him unto an estate of glory this exaltation of Christ does consist in three degrees First His resurrection from the dead this has been confirmed from the testimony of Angels those holy creatures which would not deceive us Mar. 16.6 Luk. 24.4 5 6. from the testimony of his friends who were well acquainted with him and could not easily be deceived Acts 2.32 Acts 10.40 41 from the testimony of adversaries men who would have been glad if it had been otherwise men that were under no temptation to lye for Christ Mat. 28.11 and this was according to the predictions of the Old Testament 1 Cor. 15.4 God put his soul into him again and brought him out of the Sepulchre this was accomplished on the third day after his death this time of his Resurrection was foretold of old and that in sundry places Luke 24.34 5 6. it was foretold in the books of Moses Gen. 22.24 compared with Heb. 11.19 in the Prophets namely in Jonah 12. Mat. 40. in the Psalms Psal 16.10 compared with Acts 2.31 Secondly His ascending into heaven his soul had been in heaven at the time of his death but forty days after his refurrection when he had confirmed his disciples in the truth of his resurrection and instructed them in other things pertaining to the kingdom of God his whole humane nature was taken into heaven he is said to ascead above all beavens Eph. 4.10 that is into that heaven that is above the airy and starry heavens Thirdly his sitting down at the right-hand of God Heb. 3. this phrase denotes glory it is a metaphor taken from Monarchs to sit at the right-hand of the Prince is to
set in the second place of dignity the throne being the highest the Lord Jesus is advanced unto greater glory in heaven as he is man then any angel in heaven in special besides other particulars in having the administration and government of all things in his hands This Exaltation of Christ is a clear evidence of Gods accepting that sacrifice that he offered up for us 〈◊〉 and being fully satisfied for our sins by the sufferings of Jesus Christ And there are three things therein that serve to convince us hereof 1. By Christs Exaltation he is delivered from that suffering estate which our sins brought him into he is hereby set free from that state of humiliation which he was in for our sins vengeance had taken hold of Christ as our surety the justice of God seized him he was apprehended as one liable to the Law and God took vengeance on him and soured out wrath on him but now by his Exaltation he is set at liberty justice has dismissed him God has done exacting any more punishment on him which is a clear evidence that he is wholly discharged of that guilt that was upon him Christ subjected himself to the wrath of God and God punished him as much as he pleased Christ bore the curse till God laid it was enough In his resurrection God opened the prison door and let him out God sent an Officer to deliver him from his grave Mat. 28. 2. The angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone from the door Gods delivering of Christ evidenceth the satisfaction that he has received by his sufferings if Christ were not risen it would be an argument that sins were not satisfied for 1 Cor. 15.17 If Christ be not risen your faith is vain ye are yet in your sins but his resurrection shews that Gods demands are answered and therefore when Christ was raised from the dead he is said to be justified God gave him a legal acquittance and discharge from that guilt which he had taken upon him 1 Tim. 3.16 God was manifest in the flesh justified in the spirit the Apostle Peter expresses it thus he was quickned in the spirit 1 Pet 3.18 so that when he was quickned he was justified Christ could never have been delivered out of the hands of Justice if he had not paid the uttermost farthing Hence we are said to have a lively hope by the resurrection of Christ 1 Pet. 1.3 God has begotten us again to a lively hope by the resurrection of Christ from the dead this consideration is a means by Gods blessing to beget a lively hope in us the ground of our hope is the resurrection of Christ it might better be rendred a living hope the same word is rendred living 1 Pet. 2.4 this is such an hope as will abide and continue the hope that is built upon the foundation will never fail other hopes may dye away but this is a living hope a parallel Scripture to this is 1 Pet. 3.18 we have the answer of a good conscience towards God by the resurrection of Jesus Christ a well-informed conscience is satisfied with this when a mans conscience accuses him of sins they are manifest and he can't deny them heinous and he can't excuse them yet this silences those accusations that Christ is risen Conscience sees in the resurrection of Christ the satisfactoriness of his sufferings and has peace on that account that the debt is paid and upon the same account it is that Paul attributes power to the refurrection of Christ Phil. 3.10 that I may know him and the power of his resurrection when God sets this consideration home upon the heart it has a mighty comforting power this will raise up a drooping spirit when a man is distressed indeed with the guilt of sia the world has no power to comfort him his priviledge cannot his duties cannot but this thing set home has power to ease his heart resiesh his soul silence his conscience the sence of this brings great comfort to a christian and the Apostle mentions this consideration as the security of christians against condemnation and as that which adds further encouragement to that which rises from his death Rom. 8.34 Who is he that condemneth it is Christ thao dyed yea rather is risen again 2. By Christs Exaltation he is rewarded for his sufferings God presently upon his sufferings took him up into heaven and bountifully rewarded him for his undertaking some seem loth to grant that Christ did merit for himself but there is no danger in affirming that according to compact God did gloriously recompence Christ for his Obedience and sufferings for us the primary design of Christs undertaking was to merit for us but it was every way suitable that this service of his should be rewarded 2 Phil. 8.9 he humbled himself and became obedient to death the death of the cross wherefore also God hath highly exalted him God took wonderful contentment in it that Christ would lay down his life for us that is the intendment of that expression therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life John 10.17 God did highly approve of it and took a complacency in it and in Christ by reason of it and manifested his approbation by rewarding it Christ has a glorious reward in heaven and this is an evidence that he has gone thorow his undertaking that he has not failed in the work that God committed to him If Christ had failed of righteousness not only we but he also would have failed of glory Christs own had a dependance upon his working out of perfect righteousness as well as ours his happiness and ours were imbarked together if he had not run the race he had not been crowned if he had not been a conquerer he had not received the prize if he had sunk under the work and not compleated our redemption God would not have bestowed this reward upon him but since he has received a glorious reward we may conclude he has done his work and performed the Office of a surety this argument the spirit of God makes use of John 16.8 9 10. the comforter will convince of righteousness because I go to my Father and ye see me no more the way whereby Christ came to sit down on the right-hand of the majesty on high was the purging of our sins with his blood Heb. 1.3 the thing whereby Christ came to be admitted into the holy place Was the obtaining of eternal redemption for us Heb. 9.12 The way that he came to partake of that priviledge of sitting down with his Father on his throne was the overcoming the difficulties of the work which he undertook Rev. 3.20 3. By his Exaltation he has the administration of things put into his hands that he may bestow upon sinners that salvation in order to which he suffered that he may put him into the possession of that glory which was the end of his undertaking it is