Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n conscience_n law_n sin_n 4,881 5 5.2089 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55302 Christus in corde, or, The mystical union between Christ and believers considered in its resemblances, bonds, seals, priviledges and marks by Edward Polhil ..., Esq. Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694? 1680 (1680) Wing P2751; ESTC R3312 145,980 330

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

strengthens unto all duties He is united to Believers He is food by way of eminency Several conclusions drawn from the resemblances viz. That the Vnion between Christ and Believers is not meerly a political one That it is not meerly a moral one Several reasons to prove the same That this Vnion affords support to Believers That it gives a vital influence to them That it is a very intimate Vnion That it hath a great mystery in it That it is very lasting and durable AFter all these resemblances the Holy Ghost yet proceeds on to set forth the mystical union by that which is between the food and the body This resemblance we have notably opened in the Sixth chapter of St. John where our Saviour who used to spiritualize every thing raises up his discourse above earthly food to heavenly above the typical to the real Manna which is himself who came down from Heaven to give life to the world In this Discourse several things offer themselves to us 1st Christ is the true food of the Soul The Jews dream'd that at the coming of the Messiah they should have a wonderful feast of outward varieties but he tells them that he himself was the feast My flesh is meat indeed my blood is drink indeed vers 55 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is though Metaphorically yet truly such it doth what meat and drink are to do nourish and strengthen the receiver nay it hath not only an analogy to but an eminency above all corporeal food it nourishes and strengthens us in the Soul the noblest part of man and that not for a day but to all eternity Hence our Saviour tells them That they should not labour for the meat which perisheth but for that meat which endureth unto everlasting life which the Son of man should give unto them vers 27. He is the food of the Soul upon a double account The one is this His flesh and blood as crucified and satisfactory to Divine justice do strengthen us against the curse and condemnation of the Law The moral Law is immortalized by its own intrinsecal rectitude the very frame of mans soul puts him under it his Reason cannot but be bound to know the supreme Truth his Will cannot but be bound to love the supreme Goodness the respects in his rational powers towards the Creator are a Law not to be altered as long as God is God and man man this Law cannot but be obligatory one jot or tittle of it cannot fall to the ground To make it the more sacred and venerable Divine Justice fenced it in with a Threatning and added a Curse against the transgressor Cursed is he that continueth not in all the points of it The wages of sin is death All men being transgressors Conscience as soon as it is awakened tells a man his own these and these things are sins thus and thus thou hast done the offended Law condemns thee the wrath threatned hangs over thy head the consequent of this is That the heart is full of inward wounds and terrors it knows not which way to look or turn it self Take a sinful man in these circumstances where doth his strength lye what plea or answer hath he to the broken Law How or which way may the Curse be avoided or the Conscience eased The only thing can be said is this Christ was made a Curse for us he is the end of the Law for righteousness he hath made a perfect atonement and satisfaction this is the Believers hope and confidence this is his great plea and answer to the charge of the Law Ostendo sidejussorem meum saith Bishop Davenant when the Law makes its demands against me I shew my Sponsor Christ who satisfied it This is lively expressed in Anselms direction for the visitation of the sick Si Dominus te voluerit judicare dic Domine mortem Domini nostri Jesu Christi objicio inter me tuum judicium alitèr tecum non contendo si tibi dixerit quia peccator es dic mortem Domini nostri Jesu Christi pono inter me peccata mea si dixerii tibi quod meruisti damnationem dic Domine mortem Domini nostri Jesu Christi obtendo inter me mala merita mea ipsiusque merita offero pro merito quod ego debuissem habere nec habeo That is if the Lord would judge thee say Lord I place the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between me and thy judgement otherwise I will not contend with thee if he say to thee that thou art a sinner say I place the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between me and my sins if he say to thee that thou hast deserved damnation say Lord I put the death of our Lord Jesus Christ between me and my evil merits and I offer his merits for my own which I should have and have not It is not in our inherent graces to justifie us against the Law these are not our Christ these do not satisfie the Law these do not make a compensation for sin no it is Christ only that doth this his death which satisfied Gods heart must satisfie ours his precious body and blood are the food which when fed on by Faith cheer the Conscience and fill it with peace Hence the Noble Luther tells the menacing Law O Lex immergo conscientiam meam in vulnera sanguinem mortem resurrectionem victoriam Christi praeter hunc nihil planè videre audire volo O Law I drown my Conscience in the wounds blood death resurrection and victory of Christ besides him will I see and hear nothing This is the true way of peace and holy rest the oriency of this Divine Truth is such that it hath extorted a confession from its enemies The Schoolmen themselves as Bishop Andrews hath observed whatever they are in their Quodlibets and comments on the Sentences yet in their Soliloquies and devotional meditations acknowledg Jehovah justitia nostra Cardinal Contarenus saith that we must viti tanquàm re stabili justitiâ Christi nobis donatâ lean on Christs righteousness communicated to us as on a stable thing This is it which stablishes and strengthens the heart against the accusations and terrors of the Law The other is this The flesh and blood of Christ as it is procurative of the Holy Spirit doth strengthen Believers unto all the duties incumbent on them the Spirit is from Christ as an Head and it is from him as aliment his Members have it and so have the feeders on him Hence in that sixth Chapter of John after a very Divine Discourse touching eating his flesh and drinking his blood he adds It is the spirit that quickeneth vers 63. The feeders on him have of his Spirit which strengthens them in the inner man this strength notably discovers it self in them their corruptions how strong soever are subdued The Spirit of life which is in Christ makes them free from the Law of sin Satan that evil one is
to Jesus Christ We find them drowning in sensual pleasures or earthing themselves in worldly profits or breathing after popular air and vain-glory but they will not come to Christ to wash in his Blood or subject to his Scepter or tread in his holy steps that they may live for ever so they perish as if there were no Sayiour or Gospel Two or three things will make this evident There are Two Covenants the one of Works which runs thus Do this and live the other of Grace which runs thus Believe and live the first in congruity to man in his primitive integrity calls for perfect sinless obedience the other in condescension to man in his fallen estate asks only faith All men as sinners being short of the first Covenant none can be saved but by the second nor by that neither unless they be united to Christ the Charter of salvation gives nothing to those who are in a separate estate from the fountain the unbeliever who is so is condemned already condemned by the first Covenant and not saved by the second There are two Heads Adam and Christ both communicate to those who are theirs Adam communicates sin and death to his posterity Christ communicates righteousness and life to his believing seed There being nothing but sin and death from the first Adam none can be saved but by the second nor by him neither unless they be in conjunction with him He is the Saviour of the body there is no condemnation to those who are in him nor nothing else to those who are out of him There are two ways and two periods of mankind those who are in Christ walk after the spirit in the pure way of holiness and so pass on to that Heaven which is the center of sanctity those who stay in the first Adam in a state of corruption walk after the flesh in a way of disobedience and so pass on to that Hell which is the center of iniquity Hence it appears That Union with Christ is the critical point upon which eternal life and death depend upon this account the Apostle exhorts us to examine our selves in this great concern Know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates 2 Cor. 13.5 Which is as much as to say if Christ took our flesh and we have not his spirit if he were a propitiatory Sacrifice and we are not sprinkled with his blood if he rose again from the dead and we are dead in sins and trespasses he profits us not at all To us as an * Sunt quibus nondum natus est Christus nondum est passus non surrexit usque adhuc Bern. de Resurr Dom. Ser. 4 Ancient speaks he is not yet born he hath not yet suffered he is not yet risen That is he is of no effect to us we are no better than reprobates rejectaneous persons such as God will put away as the dross of the earth Memorable are the words of the Learned Zanchy * De Verâ Dispensat 4. Tota verae justitiae salutis vitae participatio ex hâc pernecessariâ cum Christo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pendet The whole participation of true righteousness salvation life depends on that very necessary Union with Christ Union is a very extensive term the Philosophers reckon up many kinds of it some learned men distinguish Unity Unition and Union Unity is of one individual thing Union is of more than one met in conjunction Unition is the act of the efficient which joins things together Union is the state of the united which is produced by the unitive act There may be Union without Unition between the persons in the sacred Trinity there is an Union but it being an eternal one Unition which imports a temporal act can have no place therein but in all temporal Unions an Unition cannot be wanting that being it which tacks things together and of two makes them in a sort to become one In Union both the extremes are united but both are not always changed Thus in the Union of the Divine nature in Christ with the humane the change is not in the Divine nature but only in the Humane which is taken into one person with the Divine * In 3. Part. Aq. Art 7. In Quest 2. Medina taking Union so largely as to comprehend Unition in it observes in Union three things first the action by which things are united then the Union of the things united lastly the relation which arises between the extremes from the two former the conjunction of the extremes depends upon the unitive act the relation between them results from both the unitive act and the conjunction Union with Christ is union with him who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and man in one person were he only God the union of a faln creature to him being immediate and without a Mediator would be impossible were he only man the union of a faln creature to him being but a creature and so uncapable to be a Mediator would be unprofitable and to no purpose God-man is the Sponsor Mediator Head God-man obeyed suffered satisfied for us with him it is that the union is A double union with Christ may be noted the one is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in appearance only Thus the meer professor is united to him living in the Church and coming to the Ordinances he looks like a member of Christ and is as our Saviour speaks Joh. 15.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quasi branch in him he seems to be such but in truth is not so he hath not the Spirit of Christ and so is none of his he is in union with sin and in that state cannot be in union with Christ What fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness what communion hath light with darkness Bellarmine who holds hypocrites to be members of Christ confesses that they are but membra mortua dead members which is as much as to say they are but equivocal members or rather none at all Membrum mortuum est membrum pictum saith Aristotle a dead member is but a painted one Upon this account other learned Papists as Melchior Canus will not have them to be members at all but only parts members say they cannot be without life but parts may St. Austin best of all saith * Tract 3. in Epist Joh. That they are but as evil humours in the body Aut in membris sumus aut in humoribus malis either we are among the members or among the humours hypocrites are but as corrupt humours in the Church they do not fill up the Body of Christ but corrupt and deturpate it putatively they belong to Christ but really to Satan The other is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in truth and reality thus belivers are united to him as subjects they are under him as living stones they are built on him as a dear Spouse they are joined to him as fruitful branches they are implanted into him as mystical members they
overcome by them the Spirit which is in them is greater than he that is in the world they do duties as becomes them who live at so high a rate in a very lively vigorous manner the free Spirit stablishes and enlarges their hearts to run in the pure ways of holiness and obedience under crosses they do not murmur at the hand of God but in an holy silence subject to it the Spirit strengthens them unto all patience St. Paul glories in afflictions that the Power of Christ may rest upon him 2 Cor. 12.9 The Noble Potamenia being by the Persecutors threatned to be cast into a Vessel of burning Pitch begged of them That she might not be cast in all at once Spondan Annal. Anno. 310. but piece-meal that they might see how much patience the unknown Christ had given unto her The Reason of such acts of power and strength in Believers is because they live upon the Body and Blood of Christ and from thence have a Divine virtue and power to perform the same 2dly Christ as food is united unto believers there is a very close and intimate union between the food and the body and so there is between Christ and believers He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him saith our Saviour vers 56. Eating here must not be taken properly an oral manducation is capernastical and indeed a very horrible thing to be imagined Hence St. Austin saith That the command of eating his flesh and drinking his blood seems to require an horrible wickedness and then concludes De Doctr. Christ lib. 3. c. 16. Figura ergo est a thing to be done in a spiritual way Hence Averroes the Philosopher said That if Christians devoured their God he would not have his soul to be with them It is a wonder to me that those who are called Christians should hold such an eating Nay that men on earth should orally eat the body of Christ in Heaven or that his glorified body should come into our earthly mouths and stomacks is to me a thing utterly impossible he is and must for ever remain in glory The eating therefore is a spiritual one done by faith though Christ be in Heaven faith flies up and apprehends him In 1 Cor. 10. Hom. 24. St. Chrysostom would have us be as Eagles and so fly to Heaven and then adds Where the carcass is there will the eagles be Christ our aliment is gone to Heaven and faith follows after him to draw life and virtue from him Faith doth spiritually participate of his body and blood and from thence doth derive a Divine power and strength into the soul As faith ascends up so the holy Spirit comes down upon believers which compleats the union between him and them They dwell in him and he in them as our Saviour speaks they dwell in him by faith and he in them by his Spirit There is a mutual indwelling a most near and intimate union between them The learned Grotius takes this mutual indwelling to be only amore mutuo by a mutual love Amans est ubi amat quod hic tribuitur manducationi id alibi tribuitur dilectioni 1 Joh. 4.16 The lover is where his love is What here is attriouted to eating that in another place is attributed to love He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God and God in him But I take it there is a difference our union to Christ is first and more immediate and then in and through him we are united unto God It 's true God dwells in the sincere lovers but he dwells in them as in parts of Christ partakers of the atonement were they not such the spots of guilt and imperfection upon them would make the holy one wave dwelling in them Christ is united to us as aliment inlivening and strengthening us but God is not as such united to us though the fountain of life and virtue be in him yet are these derived down unto us in and through Christ of whose body and blood we do by faith participate We are saith Bishop Vsher by a mystical and supernatural union as truly conjoined with Christ as the meat and drink is with us when by the ordinary work of nature it is converted into our own substance 3ly Christ is food by way of eminency Food above all food other bread is comparatively but a shadow or meer figure but he is the true bread 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 living bread which makes men live for ever other bread comes but out of the earth but he is that bread which came down from Heaven The Son very God came down into our flesh and in it was broken upon a Cross that his body and blood might become bread for us He hath saith Bishop Vsher by his death made his flesh broken Incarnat fol. 52. and his blood poured out for us upon the Cross to be fit food for the spiritual nourishment of our souls and the very well-spring from whence by the power of his Godhead all life and grace is derived unto us Thus that excellent man Other food being inferior to the body is changed into our substance but Christ the spiritual food being infinitely more excellent than our souls turns believers who feed upon him into his own likeness Christs blood may be read in their serene consciences his death may be seen in their continual mortifications his Spirit shews it self in their holy graces as they live at an higher rate so they live in a more divine manner than other men Their humility meekness love zeal obedience patience tell us that they live upon him who turns the eater into himself the eater so participates of him as to be assimilated to him Thus much touching the resemblances of the Mystical union I shall now draw out fome Conclusions from them because as is before noted the Analogy between the Mystical union and the earthly patterns serves if genuinely taken not only for illustration but for very good proof 1. The union between Christ and believers is not meerly a Political one such as is between a King and his Subjects It 's true Christ is a King believers are his subjects there are Laws of constitution which make him a King over them and Laws of administration according to which he governs them yet the union between him and them is not meerly Political To make this appear I offer these things The manner of his Kingdom is considerable were his Kingdom such only as earthly ones are there might be some colour to say That the union is only Political But his Kingdom is not of this world Joh. 18.36 It is not mundanae indolis of an earthly but of an heavenly nature Eusebius Hist 13. When the kindred of our Saviour were asked touching his Kingdom they answered Domitian That it was not Earthly but Coelestial It cometh not in outward pomp and glory but in inward efficacy It stands not meerly without in Laws and Ordinances but
power of his resurrection in a Divine life the one is notably adumbrated in the baptismal immersion into the Water the other in the eduction out of it Thus Baptism is a seal to confirm Christ with his benefits to us But this is not all it is also a seal to convey him with his benefits to us Hence in Scripture it is for the remission of sins Acts 2.38 It is the Laver of regeneration Tit. 3.5 Hence in the Fathers it is called the investiture of Christianity the genital Water the spiritual Nativity the divine Generation with the like which import that it is a sacred Medium by which divine Grace is communicated to us only it is to be remembred that Baptism doth not this ex opere operato out of the work done it is not the Physical cause of Grace but the Moral it is Idolatry to imagine that a meer creature should physically by its own intrinsecal virtue cause such a thing as Regeneration which is only proper for God to do we are all apt to be led by Sense rather than by Faith we had much rather have Grace inclosed in a visible element than be in a dependance upon God for it but Grace is not in Baptism as Wine is in a Vessel it is not insistent in the Water but assistent it lodges not by the way in the element but comes immediately from the eternal fountain In the right use of Baptism it never is wanting but In Esay cap. 4. as St. Jerom hath it Homo tantùm aquam tribuit Deus autem Spiritum Sanctum Man only gives the Water God gives the Holy Ghost Baptism is a seal of union with Christ only the Quaere is to whom it is so In answer to this I shall speak a little first touching the Baptism of adult persons then touching the Baptism of Infants As touching the Adult Baptism is a seal of union not to all but to Believers only Bonaventure saith that faith is necessary in all Sacraments In sent lib. 4. d. 3. qu. 3. especially in Baptism Quoniam Baptismus est janua Sacramentorum sicut fides est janua virtutum because Baptism is the gate of Sacraments as Faith is the gate of virtues Baptism is the seal of the Covenant therefore it appertains to those who by Faith are within it It is clear in Scripture that Faith is pre-required to Baptism They that gladly received the word were baptized Acts 2.41 When they believed Philip they were baptized Acts 8.12 If thou believest with all thine heart thou maist saith Philip to the Eunuch Act. 8.37 Anciently before Baptism Interrogatories were put unto the person to be baptized and answers made by him in this manner Renuncias Satanae Renuncio Credis in Christum Credo Dost thou renounce Satan I renounce him Dost thou believe in Christ I believe Hence Tertullian saith De Resur Anima non lavatione sed responsione sancitur the Soul is established not by washing but by answering In the due use of Sacraments there must be an hand on both sides manus Dei offerentis the hand of God offering and manus fidei accipientis the hand of faith receiving though a Sacrament hath its essential integrity though there be a real offer on Gods part yet without a receiving-Faith there is Sacramentum sine re a sign without Grace Were Faith always present the Grace as well as the Sign would ever be communicated but Faith being absent nothing but the meer Sign passes to the receiver Hence the Scripture distinguisheth touching Circumcision between that in the flesh and that in the heart Rom. 2.28 29. and touching Baptism between the putting away the filth of the flesh and the answer of a good conscience towards God 1 Pet. 3.21 The House of Israel was not as other Nations uncircumcised in flesh yet were they uncircumcised in heart Jer. 9.26 Simon Magus was baptized with Water but not with the Holy Ghost for he was in the gall of bitterness Acts 8.13 23. Believers are the men to whom Baptism is a seal of union they are in truth baptized into Christ and into one body while others are so in shew and appearance only they do indeed put on Christ while others as St. Austin speaks Contr. Don. lib. 5. c. 24. put him on only usque ad Sacramenti perceptionem non usque ad vitae Sanctificationem unto a perception of the Sacrament not unto sanctification of life They are buried with Christ and risen with him feeling his death in their mortification his resurrection in their Divine Life Baptism is for the remission of sins but it is to those who by Faith are capable of it it is a Laver of regeneration as the Gospel is the Power of God to Salvation not to all but to Believers As touching Infants the Learned Professors of Leyden require Faith not only in the Adult Synops Theo. de Baptismo but in Infants too in order to Baptism Infants may be put into three ranks Some Infants are in their infancy in union with Christ they have Faith in the seed though not in the fruit Grace in the gift though not in the use they have the Spirit dwelling in them Aust Epist 57. and are a part of his Temple though they know him not Neither needs this seem strange it is very reasonable to believe that a supernatural power may do as much as a natural one the Image of God which if Adam had stood would have passed to Infants by natural generation may well be derived to them by spiritual regeneration It 's granted on all hands that some Infants at least enter into life eternal But what do they do so unjustified unsanctified Surely no in Heaven there is not so much as the guilt of one unremitted sin those Infants who go thither must be justified if they be justified they must have Faith and Sanctification Faith because justification is by it The Scripture knows not two ways of justification one by Faith another without it Sanctification because Justification is never separate from it But you are sanctified but you are justified saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 6.11 These twins of Grace can never be parted where the justifying blood is sprinkled there the sanctifying spirit is communicated where the binding guilt of sin is dissolved there the polluting spot is done away both are to be found in those Infants that are saved Hence the Fathers in the Milenitan Council Can. 2. do say That Infants are baptized in peccatorum remissionem ut in eis regeneratione mundetur quod generatione traxerunt for the remission of sin that that in them may be cleansed in regeneration which they drew in generation Here they mention both remission and regeneration in them Again In Heaven there is not there cannot be the least spot of pollution Infants which go thither must be sanctified without the new birth there is no entry Joh. 3.5 Without holiness no seeing of God Heb. 12.14 Hence it
shall therefore instance in several things The first Priviledg is this Those that are in union with Christ have his satisfactory righteousness imputatively derived upon them Christ obeyed unto death the death of the Cross not as a private person but as a Sponsor or Surety for us he stood in our room he suffered in our stead he was a second Adam an head no less communicating to his seed than the first Adam was to his posterity as Adams sin comes upon each one of us as soon as he is proles Adae so Christs Righteousness comes upon each one of us as soon as he is proles Christi Thus the Apostle As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Rom. 5.19 Hence those many phrases in Scripture Christ is our Righteousness we are the Righteousness of God in him he is the end of the Law for Righteousness to us his stripes heal us his blood cleanseth us from all sin All which shew that his Righteousness is communicated to us this is an exceeding great priviledg Two things will evidence this The one is this The Righteousness of Christ delivers us from the curse and wrath of God There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Their being in him is a security it is with them as it was with those Servants of Pharaoh which were within when the storm came they are under the cover of Christs satisfaction when the fire and brimstone and horrible tempests comes down upon a Christless world they are in a Sanctuary in the wounds of Christ Vindictive Justice once satisfied there cannot come there again for a second satisfaction their sin was condemned in the flesh of Christ Rom. 8.3 It was fully punished there it is not to be condemned again or punished a second time in his members no the Apostle doth in that place immediately add The righteousness of the law is fulfilled in us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ar. Eth. lib. 5. c. 7. vers 4. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the satisfaction that Christ made to the violated Law becomes imputatively ours the Law cannot demand another satisfaction Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us Gal. 3.13 It was never meant that the curse should fall upon the head and members too it was upon the head that the members might escape This is such a priviledg that those who have it are happy in every condition their troubles are single and without a curse in them their cup is pure and without any dregs of wrath in it Death to them is but a dark entry into life-eternal it unties their bodies and souls but it separates neither from their Head they sleep in Jesus in a state of conjunction with him the great day of judgment need not alarum their fears the trumpet of God doth not sound death to them but life the world may be wrapt up in a winding-sheet of flames the Christless inhabitants may cry to the Rocks and Mountains to fall upon them and cover them but Believers are safe with Christ as members with the head his Righteousness is as a rich Robe to cover them Christ will come in glorious Majesty a train of Angels will attend him but Believers need not be afraid being head he will not condemn his members being Author of his own Righteousness he will not deny the plea of it they shall be for ever discharged from the wrath to come The other is this The Righteousness of Christ intitles us unto favour and life-eternal It intitles us to the favour of God Our Saviour prays to his Father for Believers That the love wherewith thou hast loved me may be in them and I in them John 17.26 That is that the Fathers love might be not only towards him but might in a measure be derived upon his members in whom he is by a mystical conjunction the words I in them point out that conjunction as the reason of extending love to them God favours us as mystical parts of Christ he is with us through Immanuel he shines on us in the face of Christ he tells us in Scripture that he taketh pleasure in them that fear him looks to a contrite Spirit compasses the righteous with favour but all this respect is unto them as being in Christ it is only for persons in innocency and graces in perfection to be accepted in themselves fallen persons and defective graces must be accepted in and through a Mediator Here 's the priviledg of those in Christ notwithstanding all their defects they are favourites of Heaven Gods eye is upon them his pleasure is in them his favour irradiates them the light of his countenance is a kind of Heaven unto them It also entitles us to life-eternal Justification of life is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by one righteousness Rom. 5.18 not by many righteousnesses but by one which is that of Christ by the same blood by which he entred into the holy place Hebr. 9.12 do his members enter also his blood removes obstacles it purges away guilt which would have barred them out of Heaven it satisfies Justice which would have been like a flaming sword to keep them out of Paradise neither is this all it is a full price for Heaven it merits all the glory above St. Bernard therefore observes that Christ hath a double right to Heaven haereditate patris merito passionis De Vitâ S. Vern lib. 1. cap. 12. by the inheritance of his Father and by the merit of his Passion the one is enough for him the other for us those that are in Christ shall enter Heaven and see the blessed One there in whose presence is fulness of joy and at whose right hand are pleasures for evermore This is a priviledg not fully to be known till it be enjoyed a thing too excellent to be seen in this dark and fluctuating world when we are in the region of light and in the eternal center then we shall understand what an heavenly purchase Christ hath made for us and what a priviledg it is to be in union with him Another priviledg is this Christ who suffered on earth for those that are in him doth intercede for them in Heaven he is an Agent for them above to maintain their peace and intercourse with Heaven he bears their Names upon his Humeral and upon his Pectoral spiritually sustaining and intimately loving them he appears in the presence of God for them he is their Advocate with the Father and pleads though not orally yet really by his Blood and Righteousness that all the good and excellent blessings thereby purchased may come down upon them he is the Lamb that stands as if it were slain Rev. 5.6 His wounds and blood cry in the ears of God to be returned unto his members in pardons and graces he who satisfied justice now pleads for grace he who dying laid the foundation of Salvation
now lives to perfect the work to save 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. 7.25 not by halves but altogether to give our Salvation its last act and complement he is a Priest for ever his Sacrifice but once offered up is in his Intercession virtually continued to perfect for ever them that are sanctified Here believers have a tree of life bearing as many excellent fruits as Christ paid for in his Death To instance in some of them Here 's a pardon for them He that on earth made satisfaction for sin in Heaven pleads for the pardon of it his Blood crys That the sin which is satisfied for in the head may not be charged upon the members If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 John 2.1 He pleads that righteousness which being put into the opposite ballance outweighs all the sins of his people Here 's the supply of the Holy Spirit given to them he that here below dyed to merit the communication of the Spirit lives and intercedes above to have it done I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever John 14.16 Our Saviour prays in the force of an infinite price therefore the Spirit is given to them he lives for ever and continues praying therefore the Spirit abides with them that which he by Prayer obtains for us by Power he confers upon us therefore as Dr. Reynolds observes in the Psalm he is said to receive gifts for men noting the fruit of his Intercession On the 110 Psalm fol. 438. Psal 68.18 And in the Apostle to give gifts to men noting the power and fulness of his Person Ephes 4.8 Having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost he hath shed forth this which you now see and hear Acts 2.33 The Intercession of Christ never fails to communicate the Spirit to his members Here 's an access to God a free ingress for them unto the Mercy-seat whilest he is at Gods right hand none can bar them out from the divine Presence The Apostle tells us That we have a great High Priest passed into the Heavens one no less than the very Son of God and withal one as man touched with the feeling of our infirmities no less willing and compassionate than able to help us And from thence he concludes Let us therefore come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with boldness with a liberty to speak all our mind unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Hebr. 4.14 15 16. Believers need not fear to approach unto the great God his Glory will not swallow them up his Justice will not be a devouring fire to them they may freely open their wants before him their regular prayers shall surely speed in Heaven Christ intercedes there for them and which is the Eccho of that Intercession the Spirit makes intercession in their hearts the success therefore cannot fail though their prayers as they are in their bosoms have much weakness and imperfections yet as soon as they are put into the hand of Christ and perfumed with the sweet incense of his Merits they are glorified prayers and have power with God to procure the thing desired Another priviledg is Adoption All men in a sense are the off-spring of God the immortal Spirit in them had in the very make of it the natural Image of God which was a nobler print of the Deity than that which was upon all the material world besides Adam in Innocency was in an higher way the Son of God the holy Graces in him which made up the Moral Image had more of the divine Beauty shining in them than that which was to be found in the Essence of the Soul but Believers are the Sons of God in a more excellent manner To as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God John 1.12 By conjunction with Christ the natural Son they become adopted ones Adam was a Son only by Creation his Soul had in the Essence of it a natural Image of God and in the holy Graces of it a Moral one but Believers are sons by mystical union with Christ the natural Son neither is this a meer empty title but they are born of God they are of the seed-royal of Heaven the Blood of God runs in their consciences the divine Spirit which formed Christ in the womb doth by a supernatural overshadowing form him in their heart in their adoptive Sonship there is a shadow of the eternal one the splendor of grace in them resembling God in a measure is a little picture of Christ who is the brightness of his Fathers glory This priviledg as it is from God is a piece of admirable love Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sons of God 1 John 3.1 The Apostle stands and wonders at it as an object of glorious and amazing Eminence Also as it is upon Believers it is a piece of incomparable Dignity such as doth far outshine all that lustre which is upon the Potentates of this world all the glory of earthly Princes is but fumus seculi the smoak of this lower Region their titles glitter only in carnal eyes but adoption is radius coeli a ray of heavenly glory making believers though but worms in themselves shine to the eyes of Angels who look upon them as mystical parts of Christ Touching this priviledg I shall only touch on two or three things Believers as Sons have an heavenly freedom in the ways of God They are not drag'd to holy things by the cords of Hell and Death they do not bring forth their duties meerly under the pressure of the Law-letter or in the power of fallen nature in a dead carnal servile manner no they are spirited for holy things the Law is in their hearts the rectitude of the commands attracts them the Love of Christ constrains them the great rewards in Heaven ravish them the Holy Spirit inspires obedience into them Holiness becomes natural to them Duties are brought forth in the easiness of the new creature they can walk run fly on in the pure ways towards eternal happiness this is a very choice priviledg indeed they are no longer in the straits of sin and earth but in a divine amplitude and liberty their hearts rest not in * Liber ab infinito ad infinitum super infinitum movetur finite things but go out to the infinite One their thoughts are upon the first Good their aims at the last End their liberty is joyned to its great fountain their motion is to the true center this is a right noble royal posture of Soul towards God in whom all our happiness is Believers as Sons live under the continual Indulgences of God in temptations he bears them up upon the wings of grace in a world of snares he plucks their
are made conformable to his death Phil. 3.10 There are two things in this conformity There is a conformity to his sufferings in the mortification of sin Our old man is crucified with him Rom. 6.6 We suffer in the flesh ceasing from sin 1 Pet. 4.1 What Christ suffered in his pure flesh by way of expiation that those that are in him suffer in their corrupt flesh by way of mortification Was he arraigned and condemned to die they serve sin so He was charged with blasphemy they charge it upon sin which in its rebellion blasphemes Gods Soveraignty in its turpitude his Holiness in its secrecy his Omniscience in its ingratitude his Goodness in its folly his Wisdom and in all his glory He was charged to say That he could destroy the Temple they charge it upon sin which hath laid those souls which were made to be Temples of the Holy Ghost in spiritual ruins The mind of fallen man lies in darkness the will in the chains of concupiscence the affections in the grave of earthly things They adjudg sin unto death as being the greatest of evils Was he stript they deal so with sin They unvail and undress it pluck off its false colours disrobe it of all its pomps and shadows of seeminggoodness and make it appear in its ugly hue and nakedness so that it looks as it is sinful sin and an evil of evils a thing most worthy to be crucified Was he nailed to the Cross they nail sin there they restrain the inward corruption that it cannot go at large and riot in open scandals no nor steal out in an evil thought but it will be arrested in its passage to the will they set guards within and without that it may not creep in by the ports of sense nor rise up out of the deep of the heart Within there is a watch over the thoughts and without over the sensible objects There are such nails of restraint that it cannot move or stir it self but it dies away by little and little Was he pierced they pierce sin and let out the vital blood I mean the love and joy and delight of it It is a prodigious thing in their eyes to love that which crucified their dear Saviour and makes war upon their good God to joy in that which hath been their sorrow and set the whole Creation a groaning about their ears or to delight in that which in it self is a meer ataxy and confusion and in the soul is an hellish blot and turpitude It is their daily work to cast it out of their hearts as an accursed thing and in an holy hatred to pursue it to the death The violence done to Christ they put upon it till it do like one upon a Cross give up the Ghost This is a sure mark of union with him They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts Gal. 5.24 They have done it and because sin is long a dying they are still a doing of it more and more If a man indulge his lusts it is a meer vanity for him to imagine that he is in Christ he cannot at the same time be a subject of Christ and a drudg to sin he cannot be joined to a crucified Saviour and to the Crucifier too his heart cannot at once be a Temple of the Holy Ghost and a stable of unclean lusts these things are utterly inconsistent All that are in Christ die to sin having in his death the great pattern of Mortification and from it a spirit for the work Also there is a conformity to his sufferings in bearing the Cross they that are in him in their first Espousals did receive him intirely Cross and all and so virtually and in purpose did swallow down all the persecutions that were to go along with the Gospel And if God call them out to it they are ready to take up the Cross and fill up that which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in their flesh the satisfactory sufferings of Christ in his natural body were full and perfect but the sufferings of Christ in his Mystical body are daily to be filled up and all that are in him are content to bear their part in them Christ hath sanctified the way of affliction by going himself in it to glory and they are willing to follow him in thither He drunk up the cup of wrath to the bottom and they are content to take such drops of it as are allotted to them In the midst of afflictions and bloody sufferings they carry themselves as parts of the holy Lamb some of his meekness and patience rests upon them to tell the world that they are his they do not murmur at instruments but submit to the will of their Father who sits in Heaven and orders all they do not wave the Cross but accept it as a piece of conformity to their Head who died on a Cross to sweeten it to his members To them reproaches for Christ are as marks of honour Sufferings for the Gospel as pledges of future glory Some of the Martyrs have stiled their Prisons a Paradice their Chains an ornament This is an high proof of union with Christ They that suffer with him shall be sure to reign with him If a man be not willing to suffer for him he hath not any part in him he doth not accept of him upon the terms of the Gospel Such an one would have a Christ of his own fancy not a crucified one a Gospel and no Cross in it and an Heaven and no sufferings in the way to it which can never be In suffering times the leaves of his profession will fall off he will appear as a meer man of this world one who loves the world above Christ and fears temporal sufferings more than eternal A true Christian he cannot be omnis Christianus est crucianus all that are in Christ learn the lesson of the Cross This is the second Conformity The third is this There is a conformity to the Resurrection of Christ what was done in the flesh of Christ in his corporeal Resurrection that is done in the spirits of true Christians in a spiritual One there the stone was rolled away from the Sepulchre here from the heart there the flesh of Christ was raised up by an Almighty Power here the Spirits of Christians are raised up by it In this conformity two things may be noted There is a conformity to his Resurrection in heavenliness of mind Thus the Apostle If ye then be risen with Christ seek those things which are above where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God Col. 3.1 As long as men are in the old Adam their center is here below their affections are buried in earthly things but as soon as they are in union with Christ they are not here any longer but they are risen their affections do not creep upon the earth but are lifted up to heaven their Faith puts back the things of time and looks