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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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ingraven in tables of stone is one for substance so is the new and the old Testament The Law is not opposed to the Law but the writing to writing Writing in tables of stone pertained to Moses or to the Old Testament writing in the heart to Christ or the new Covenant The Law is the same but otherwise administred in the hand of Christ then in times past in the hand of Moses Moses gave the Law in tables of stone but could not give power or ability to doe what the Law required but Christ writeth the Law in the heart and inableth the faithfull in some measure to doe what he commandeth And in the same place the Lord by the Prophet sheweth that when he made this Covenant with Jer. 31. 32. the Fathers which they brake he declared himselfe to be an husband unto them or joyned himselfe in marriage unto them But God never joyned himselfe in marriage unto a people but by the Covenant of grace It may be said the Apostle sheweth the former Jer. 3. 14. Covenant to be faultie or that another Covenant was lacking But that is not mentioned to prove the Covenants to be two in substance opposite one to the other but because the first Testament did not containe the Image of the things themselves and therfore was not to be rested in as if we could be justified by Heb. 10. 1. the workes of the Law or ceremoniall observances annexed but must be used as an introduction to leade us unto Christ who is the very Image of the things themselves This first Covenant therfore could not be fulfilled or effectuall but by the bringing in of a second which was prefigured thereby For the blood of Bulls and Goats was not availeable to purge away sinne but did prefigure the blood of Christ which is effectuall to purge our consciences from dead workes The blood of Bulls and of Goats and Heb. 9. 13. 14. the ashes of an Heifer sprinkling the uncleane sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh sc from a trespasse meerely committed against the Law of Ceremonies but the bloody sacrifice of our Lord and Saviour Christ whereof the legall Sacrifices were tipes and shadowes was alone appointed of God and is effectuall to cleanse us from all sinnes committed against the Morall Law of God and to purifie us from such dead works as not expiated by his blood would bring forth everlasting death Of necessity therfore the first Covenant because it is of grace must bring forth a second Joh. 1. 17. Joh. 5. 46. in which is fulfilled that which in the first is prefigured The Law was given by Moses and the righteousnesse of faith was taught by Moses as our Saviour testifieth Why then doth the Apostle in the words following add by way of opposition but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ The sence of the place seemes to be this That the Law prefiguring Christ and redemption in him and teaching and commanding what oug●● to be done but neither giving grace to doe it not containing the substance of the thing prefigured was given by Moses but grace to doe what was commanded came from Christ in whom also the substance of what was prefigured by the Ceremonies is fulfilled But if the Law of Moses sent the Jewes to Christ and directed them how to walke believing in him but of it selfe did not give grace or truth of necessity it must make knowne Christ 2 Cor. 3. 6 7 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or as some bookes have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syr. verba viva Ar. Serm●nem vivum in some sort and command faith in him which is proper to the Covenant of grace The Law is a killing letter saith the Apostle and the ministration of death and condemnation But the same Law which is called a dead or killing letter is stiled a lively word or lively oracles that is such as give life The words of Paul therfore are not to be understood absolutely of the Law but as it was Act. 7 38. Lev. 18 5. Ezek. 20. 13. Neh. 9. 29. separated from Christ and the Gospell of men who did rest in the Law and sought to be justified by it whereas Christ was the end of the Law which the Jewes not perceiving they erred from the truth and perverted the true sence and scope of the Law For the ministery of Moses as it is referred to the mind and counsell of the Lord is bright and illustrious but the carnall people could not behold that brightnesse and therefore the Law is vailed to the carnall Jew that he cannot behold the light that shineth therein Even unto this day when Moses is read the vaile 2 Cor. 3. 15 16. is upon their heart Neverthelesse when it shall turne unto the Lord the vaile shall be taken away That is when Israel shall be turned unto the Lord the vaile shall be taken away that in the law it selfe they may see Christ whom now being blind by reason of their indurate mind they could not fee. For there was a double vaile drawne over their eyes the first of hatred against Christ the second of the Law it selfe in which Christ was revealed but not so clearely as in the Gospell which double vaile shall be taken Isa 25. 7. Rom. 4. 15. 3. 20. 7 9. away when they shall be converted unto Christ The Law worketh wrath and discovereth sinne yea reviveth it What the Apostle speaketh of the Law in these and other above rehearsed passages is to be understood of the whole Jewish pedagogie viz. the Law Morall and Ceremoniall as it was given by Moses And as here the Law is said to worke wrath and terrifie so Psal 19. 7 8 9. 119. 47. elsewhere it is said to cause the soule to returne to enlighten the eyes and rejoyce the heart Of necessity for the reconciliation of these sayings of the Prophet and Apostle in shew contrary it Beza in Rom. 2. 27. Calv. in 2 Cor. 3. 17. Col. 2. 13. The ceremonies are visible words preaching Christ and they preached our guile and wrath belonging unto us must be granted that the Law animated by Christ is pleasant and delightfull but as it is barely considered in opposition to Christ and to the Gospell as it exacteth perfect obedience but giveth no ability or power to performe what is required it woundeth terrifieth killeth and worketh wrath Of the Law there is a twofold use and consideration One as it is a rigid exactor of intire obedience and hand-writing against us for sinne and thus of it selfe barely considered it woundeth but healeth not it reviveth sinne but mortifieth it not The other as it pointeth to Christ in whom Salvation is to be found and directeth how to walke in all well-pleasing before the Lord and thus it is an easy yoke The Law considered without Christ woundeth killeth and reviveth sinne by reason of our Corruption But the Law considered in Christ and as it
the increase of thy kine and the flocks of thy sheep in the Land which he sware unto thy fathers to give thee Thou shalt be blessed above all people and there shall not be male or female barren amongst you or among your cattell And the Lord will take away from thee all sicknesse and will put none of the evill diseases of Egypt which thou knowest upon thee but will lay them upon all them that hate thee The Lord thy God bringeth thee into a good Land a Land Deut. 8. 7 8 9. 11. 14 15. of brookes of water of fountaines and depths that spring out of the vallies and hils a Land of wheat and barley and Vines and Fig-trees and Pomegranates a Land of Oile Olive and Honey A Land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarcenesse thou shalt not lacke any thing in it a land whose stones are iron and out of whose hils thou maist digge brasse The Lord hath vouched thee this day to be his peculiar Deut. 26. 18 19. people as he hath promised thee and that thou shouldest keep all his Commandements And to make thee high above all nations which he hath made in praise and in name and in honour and that thou maiest be Deut. 28. 1 2 c. an holy people unto the Lord thy God as he hath spoken Secondly The Lord promised to chuse a place to cause his name to dwell there and set his Tabernacle amongst them and walke with them But when you goe over Jordane and dwell in the Land Lev. 26 4 5 6 7 8 9 11. Deut. 12. 10 11 12. 16. 6. which the Lord your God giveth you to inherit when he giveth you rest from all your enemies round about so that ye dwell in safety Then shall there be a place which the Lord your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell there thither shall ye bring all that I command you And I Lev. 26. 10 12. will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre you And I will walke among you and will be your God and ye shall be my people For the Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation Psal 132. 13. 14. This is my rest for ever here will I dwell for I have desired it Thirdly Free forgivenesse of sinnes is likewise promised in this Covenant This is implyed in that he promiseth to be their God for if he be theirs he will be favourable to their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more And so much is expressed when upon repentance and turning unto him he hath proclaimed himselfe ready to receive them into favour If from thence Deut. 4. 29 30. thou shalt seeke the Lord thy God thou shalt find him if thou seeke him with all thine heart and with all thy soule And it shall come to Deut. 30. 1 2 3. passe when all these things shall come upon thee the blessing and the curse which I have set before thee and thou shalt call them to mind among all the nations whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee And shalt returne unto the Lord thy God and shalt obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day thou and thy children That then the Lord thy God will turne thy Captivity and have compassion upon thee and will returne and gather thee from all nations When thy people Israel be smitten downe before the enemy because they have sinned 1 King 8. 33 34. Man as capable of Justification is ● sinner as be actually receiveth Justification a Believer against thee and shall turne againe unto thee and confesse thy Name and pray and make supplication unto thee in this house Then heare thou in heaven and forgive the sinne of thy people Israel and bring them againe unto the Land Moreover the Lord made himselfe knowne to be the God that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sinne when he gave this Covenant unto his people But of this before Fourthly Eternall life is promised in the Covenant for God is not the God of the dead but of the living and therefore the faithfull Jewes which have God for their God doe live still not Math. 22. 32. Math. 19. 17. Luk. 10. 25 28. in earth but in heaven The life which is promised to them that keepe the Law is eternall but in this Covenant life is promised to them that keepe the Commandements Not only long Psal 34. 12 13. life and good dayes in the Land of Canaan but eternall life is assured by the promise to them that keepe Covenant as eternall death and destruction is comprehended under the curse denounced against them that breake the Covenant Expresse mention of Gal. 3. 13. the King some of Heaven perhaps is not found in the Old Testament but eternall life is comprehended under the termes of life and blessing as eternall death under the tearmes of death and the Curse Eternall life in heaven eternall death in hell the Law noteth though it doe not expressely name them Which things unlesse they had been commonly knowne in the dayes of our Saviour the penitent Thiefe about to die had not thought of a Kingdome nor the Lord promised Paradice to him when he asked a place in the Kingdome of the M●ssiah But all these promises were made of fre● grace and of free love accomplished Speake not thou in thine heart after that the Lord Deut. 9. 4 5. thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying For my righteousnesse the Lord hath brought me in to possesse this Land but for the wickednesse of these nations the Lord doth drive them out from before thee Not for the righteousnesse or for the uprightnesse of thine heart doest thou goe to possesse their Land but for the wickednesse of these Nations the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee and that he may performe the word which the Lord sware unto thy Fathers Abraham Vers 6. Is●●k and Jacob. Vnderstand therefore that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good Land to possesse it for thy righteousnes for thou art a stiffe-necked people True it is the promises runne upon this condition If ye obey my voice and doe my Commandments But conditions are of two sorts antecedent or consequent Antecedent when the condition is the cause of the thing promised or given as in all civill contracts of Justice where one thing is given for another Consequent when the condition is annexed to the promise as a qualification in the Subject or an adjunct that must attend the thing promised And in this latter sence obedience to the Commandments was a condition of the promise not a cause why the thing promised was vouchsafed but a qualification in the subject capable or a consequence of such great mercy freely conferred Of them that slip aside and transgresse the Covenant God calleth for and commandeth repentance that is it is his will and command that they
all men unto justification of life Rom. 5. 18. Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen againe Rom. 8. 34. I am come that they might have life and that th●y might have it more aboundantly Joh. 10. 10. In this was manifested the love of God towards us because that God sent his only begotten Sonne into the world that we might live through him 1 Joh. 4. 9. By the which will we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Heb. 10. 10. For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified vers 14. The passages of Scripture are plentifull which testifie application to be the end of Christs death for he died to establish and ratifie the everlasting Covenant of grace Heb. 9. 15 16 17. to abolish him that had the power of death that is the devill Heb. 2. 14 15. conquer death 2 Tim. 1. 10. destroy and kill sinne Rom. 6. 10. sanctifie his people through the truth Joh. 17. 19. give life unto the world Joh. 6. 33. redeeme us from the curse of the Law Gal. 3. 13. and from all iniquity Tit. 2. 14. obtaine eternall redemption Heb. 9. 12. that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. that he might deliver us from this present evill world Gal. 1. 4. that being dead unto sinne and alive unto God Rom. 6. 4 5 6. we might not live to our selves but unto him which died for us and rose againe 2 Cor. 5. 15. and that we might receive the adoption of sonnes Gal. 4. 5. And it is absurd to reason it selfe that Christ by the decree of God should purchase that for men which is not given unto them that he should acquire what they obtaine not that by divine imputation Christ should die for every man when the merits of Christ be not communicated unto them that the promised seed should be given to Abraham no blessing or multiplication following If Christ have purchased a new Covenant faith redemption reconciliation for every man without question they are or shall be delivered from the condemnation and dominion of sinne the Spirit is given or shall be given to abide with them they ar● or shall be renewed after the Image of God If Christ be a King he hath a Kingdome subjects and territories wherein he doth exercise his regall power He is a King not only in personall right or to punish enemies but a King to feed and rule a people God hath given his Sonne the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession and shall men with-hold it Shall God give men unto Christ and shall they detaine themselves from him If Christ came to destroy the workes of the devill that is sinne as the Apostle shewes 1 Joh. 3. 8. Joh. 8. 41 44. and to deliver men from the feare of death and the devill shall we not thinke that Satan is cast downe and death abolished Christ is a Saviour as in merit so in efficacy else should his purchase be in vaine the end of his comming into the world be uncertaine his purpose in laying downe his life be frustrate and Christ should merit by the appointment of God what God doth not give therfore the impetration of righteousnesse must not be plucked from the application nor doth the giving of benefits purchased by the death of Christ depend upon the pleasure of men any more then the acquisition doth Betwixt the purchase and application of Christs death faith comes between but that faith is merited by the death of Christ and for Christ vouchsafed to them for whom he died Tit. 3. 6. Ephes 1. 3. Phil. 1. 29. Ephes 6. 23. Some have answered that all men are the sheep of Christ as the dispersed torne and devoured of evill pastors and beasts of the field and the seduced and destroyed are acknowledged to be sheep Jer. 23. 1 2. Ezek. 34. 5 6. But the Prophets speake only of the people of the Jewes which at that time was distinct from the Gentiles as the flock and inheritance of the Lord so that hence nothing can be gathered but that they who live in Christs Church and fold are his people and sheep of his pasture Againe the Scripture speakes of the sheep of Christ two wayes according to vocation or according to election According to vocation they are sheep who externally pertaine to the number of Gods people and the Church according to election Jer. 23. 3. Rom. 9. 27. Ezek. 34. 5 6. many sheep are without many wolves within and many sheep within many wolves without Although there be a distinction betwixt the merit of Christ by his obedience even to death and his intercession yet one of them cannot be separated from the other for he maketh intercession for them to his Father for whom he hath merited reconciliation by his death and we cannot thinke he should lay downe his life for them for whom he would not pray If we looke unto the signification of the words Mediatour and Intercessor note the same thing and if Christ have put himselfe betwixt the wrath of God and man to obtaine reconciliation by making satisfaction to offended justice can it be thought he will not request that for the virtue of his sacrifice they for whom he hath satisfied might be accepted of the Father If we looke to these two functions of Mediation suffering death and making intercession they are conjoyned in Scripture It is Christ that Rom. 8. 34. died yea rather that is risen againe who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us If any man sinne we have 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. an Advocate with the Father Iesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our our sinnes Christ is our Advocate if he be our propitiation if we will receive the testimony of the Apostle and not separate things that God hath conjoyned Incredible it is that Christ out of his incredible love should vouchsafe to lay downe his life for them as well as others for whom the time of his passion being at hand he would not power out a prayer How these two be conjoyned in the intention of our Saviour sc to pray Joh. 17. 19. for men and to offer himselfe a Sacrifice for them may appeare by the words of our Saviour himselfe for these I sanctifie my selfe that is for these am I prepared to offer my selfe that they might be sanctified by the truth for these that is them for whom he prayed And if Christ had intended to offer up himselfe an holy and propitiatory sacrifice for the sinnes of all and every man he would rather have prayed his Father to accept his sacrifice for all men then professe that he prayed not for all men For whom Christ hath offered up himselfe a Sacrifice to put away sinne for them doth he appeare before God in heaven and if he doth appeare before Heb.
seeke attonement and to walke sutably He doth remove the guilt of sinfully from the conscience of the offending brethren Heb. 9 14 15. He is potent with God to satisfie revenging Gal. 3. 13 14. justice by presenting his bloud to remove the curse of the Law that those which are called might receive the inheritance He alone hath in his owne person performed obedience to the broken Law of God and fulfilled all righteousnesse and by his crosse hath cancelled the hand-writing that was against us and broken downe the partition and slayed hatred and enmity betwixt the brethren Ephes 2. 14 15. But of this more hereafter The Fathers received Heb. 11. 13 14. not the promises but saw them afarre off and were perswaded of them and saluted them with great sweetnesse but under the new Covenant we have recived the promise God hath sent his Son into the world borne of a woman and made under the Law and openly manifested him to be the Son of God And if Gal 4. 4 5. the appearing of Christ God and man did adde much to the joy and comfort of the Saints in glory the manifestation of Christ in the flesh must adde to the faith and comfort of them that waited for the salvation of Israel The Incarnation of Christ was the day of his Coronation and of his espousals wherein in speciall manner Cant. 3. 11. he contracted him unto his Church Goe forth O ye daughters of Zion and behold King Salomon with the crowne wherewith his mother crowned him in the day of his espousals and in the day of the gladnesse of heart The Fathers expected deliverance from the curse of the Law and to inherit the promises in and through the Messiah and the Sacrifices did prefigure and Prophets fore-tell the death of the Messiah but we may well thinke the faithfull did not distinctly understand how the Saviour promised was to satisfie justice and by death to overcome him that had the power of death But in the new Testament we learne expressely that Christ is made of God unto us wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption how he satisfied justice by one oblation of himselfe removed the curse of the Law destroyed him that had the power of death purchased the promised Spirit and ratified all the promises of the Covenant by his death and bloud-shed Heb. 9. 15. Thirdly He is entred into heaven appeareth before the Father and maketh request for his people unto which there is pre-required a power and prevalencie over all his enemies to breake through the guilt of sin the curse of the Law and the chaines of death with which it was impossible that he should be held And this power of Christ was shewed in his Resurrection wherein he was declared to be the Son of God with power Rom. 1. 4. and in his ascension wherein he led all his enemies captives Ephes 4. 8. and in his sitting at the right hand of God farre above all principalities and powers Ephes 1. 19 20. All which did make way to the presenting of his Sacrifice before the Mercy-seat which is the consummation of it and without which he had not been a Priest We have such an high Priest saith the Apostle as is set downe at the right hand of the Majestie in the heavens for if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law Heb. 8. 1 4. Christ our high Priest having offered up himselfe an expiatory Sacrifice once for all by his divine power rose againe from the dead and is entered into the very heavens to appeare in the presence of God for us Heb. 9. 24. Levit. 16. 11 15. It was the same continued action whereby the Priest did offer without the holy place and did then bring the bloud into the holiest of all Heb. 13. 11. For the reason why it was shed was to present it to the mercy-seat and to shew it unto the Lord there Heb. 9. 8. Inchoari potest functio veri Sacerdotis stante typico Sacerdotio perfecta esse non potest illo stā●e Oblatio peracta in terra perfectissima f●it sed perfectione partis non perfectione totius Aliud est offerre in terra aliud peracta oblatione manere in terra Heb. 1. 3. 10 5 6 9. 1● 1 Cor. 5. 7. So Christs act or office was not ended nor fit to denominate him a compleate Priest till he did enter with bloud and present his offering in the holiest of all not made with hands Heb. 9. 24. And therefore he had not been a Priest if he should have continued on the earth for there was another Priest-hood there which was not to give place but upon the accomplishment of his for the whole figure was to passe away when the whole truth was come Now Christs oblation was the truth prefigured in the Priests sacrificing of the beast and his entrance into heaven was the truth prefigured in the Priests carrying of the bloud into the holiest of all And therefore both these were to be accomplished before the Leviticall Priest-hood did give place Some referre this to the oblation of Christ whereof they make two parts the one exp●atory when Christ suffered upon the crosse the other presentatory when he doth appeare in heaven before God for us the one of killing or suffering the other of ostension the one finished on earth when Christ suffered without the gate because as no sin so no punishment can come within the holy place the other performed in heaven satisfaction being Heb. 13. 11 12. first made on earth The first was not a preparation of a Sacrifice but a Sacrifice the latter was not so much a Sacrifice as the commemoration of the Sacrifice made for appearing in heaven is not properly a sacerdotall act unlesse it leane upon the vertue of the Sacrifice performed the first was an act of humiliation the latter Heb. 10 8 ●● of glory the first performed once for all the latter done continually that the explatory Sacrifice or obtaining of redemption this the application of redemption The Sacrifice consisted in the Videtur etiam spect are consuetudines Regum Iudicum inter homines Reges enim soederati in suis aulis matuo habent Legatos pacis obsides qui quamdiu apparent in Regis conspectu firma stat confoederatio death of Christ alone the application thereof is grounded upon Christs death as its merit but effected by the life of Christ as its immediate cause When the Apostle saith Christ appeareth before the Father for us the expression is borrowed from the custome of humane Courts for as in them when the Plaintiffe or Defendant is called their Atturney appeareth in their name and behalfe so when we are summoned by the justice of God to defend our selves against those exceptions and complaints which it preferreth against us we have an Advocate with the Father even Jesus Christ
in a more rude forme As the time of the Sunne approacheth neerer or if further off so is the light that goeth before it greater or lesser and as the time of the arising of the Sonne of righteousnesse is more remote or nigh at hand so was the revelation that went before more dimme or cleare It was meete and expedient that when the comming of the glorious King of peace and righteousnesse did draw nigh the hearts of men should be raised up in desire and expectation of him But the better they were acquainted with his person and office the more distinctly they understood the time of his comming the more lively tast they had of the benefits they should receive by him and the greater tokens they saw of his glory approaching the more their hearts would be enlarged to desire and expect him Moreover it was the good pleasure of God to manifest the riches of his grace not all at once but by degrees as he saw it most expedient for the glory of his great Name and the good of his people in severall ages and states of the Church of which we shall have occasion to speake largely in the Chapters following But here two things must be noted to prevent some doubts that may arise First that clearenesse of Revelation is twofold One on the part of the revealer when the revealer dealeth so that unlesse he have a rude hearer or altogether malitious it may be understood of the hearer what he meaneth The other cleare even on the part of the hearer when it is so great that the rudenesse of the hearer cannot hinder that he should not perceive what is spoken but his malice only In the first sence the revelation of Christ in the Covenant of the promise was cleare but the testimony concerning the Kingdome of Christ could not be understood of a rude hearer before the accomplishment If it be objected how then could they be saved In the second place i● is to be observed that Christ doth not save as clearly knowne but as he is sincerely acknowledged But when the Revelation was sparing and darke no man can deny that Christ was truly and unfainedly acknowledged in the Church of the Iewes The word of God is the measure of faith and that is true and saving faith which believeth all things which are revealed and in that manner wherein they are revealed and therefore the faith of the Fathers was sound and effectuall because they believed what God was pleased to reveale and after that manner wherein it was revealed of God A Third difference ariseth from this for Christ with all his benefits was proposed to the Israelites under types and figures As Exod. 24. 7. 8. Heb. 10. 1 Gal. 3. 16. Heb. 8. 1 2 9. 7 8 9 10 11. Rom. 3 25. 1 Iohn 2. 2. Heb. 3. 18. 4. 1. the Prtiests Altars Sacrifices Propitiatory were all types of Christ his Priest-hood and Sacrifice and the Land of Canaan a type of Heaven the Lord leading the Iewes by the help of earthly things to heavenly and spirituall because they were but young and tender which was one cause why the Covenant was more obscure heavenly things being wrapt up under earthly But in the new Covenant Christ is offered to be seene with open face the truth substance and body of the things themselves is exhibited and all vaile of figures removed our minds are streight directed to heavenly blessednesse 4. The variety of administration doth offer a fourth difference Gal. 4. 12. 3. 13 25. for the Apostle compares the Nation of the Iewes to an heire as yet an Infant that is under Tutours and Governours The Christian Church to an heire come to ripe yeares And from this ariseth a fifth difference That as an heire not Gal. 5. 1. come to yeares not differing from a servant the Church was held under the Ceremoniall Law from which they that believe in Christ are delivered after the expiration of the time of nourture appointed of the Father Sixthly they differ in the number of them that are called to the participation of the Covenant The Covenant of promise was at Deut. 30. 8. Math. 10. 1 6. 15. 24. first concluded within the Families of the Patriarkes the rest having excommunicated themselves and then within the confines or limits of Iudea that in the Iewes there might be a most illustrious type of Election and of rejection in the Gentiles that is of the Church of God and Sathan But the partition wall betwixt Iew Gentile being broken downe the Covenant of grace was made with all Nations Seventhly the efficacy of Christ promised is lesser then of Christ Gen. 2● 18. Deut. 19. 8 9. exhibited In the Covenant of promise certaine promises concerning corporall blessings were made unto the Fathers and externall blessings were more esteemed as Symbols of spirituall and heavenly But under the New Covenant blessings spirituall and the gifts and graces of the Spirit are in more ample and plentifull manner powred upon the Church Remission of sinnes though it was certaine with God was lesse felt under the Covenant of Promise because the cloud of the Law put betwixt the mercy of God and the eye of the sould the grace of God was more obscurely revealed and the meanes of expiating sinne by the death of Christ as also because remission of sinnes was not really obtained by our surety for as yet he had not made the satisfaction promised The Spirit was powred in lesse plenty upon the faithfull because Ioh 3. 34. Ioh. 1. 16. 7. 38 39. Ioel ● 28. that benefit was to be reserved to the times of Christ who was first to receive the Spirit above measure in his humane nature and thence to derive grace unto all us The Iewes as heires were partakers of the Spirit of Adoption bu tempered with the sprit of Servitude because they were Infants under the yoke of the Law Rom 8. 15. Gal 46. the way to heaven not as yet clearely manifested But the heire come to ripe yeares is altogether led by the Spirit of Adoption The sense of future glory was also more obscure because there is more obscure mention of it and of the way thereunto in the Old Testament If we speake of some particular persons under the first Covenant they were endued with greater gifts of the Spirit then many under the New but more light of knowledge and greater plenty and abundance of Grace is bestowed upon the Church in the time of the Gospell if we respect the body of the Church and faithfull in Generall Eighthly the seales of the Covenant of promise were in number more in signification more obscure in use painfull and burdensome peculiar to some people as the Covenant was and to continue only untill the time of reformation But the seales of the New Testament are in number few in signification cleare in use easy common to all nations and to endure for ever And from
of Adam by the Law of nature written in his heart Confidence in God through Christ or the Messiah was required of the Israelites by the Law published upon the Mount Adam was to performe obedience to the Lord immediately without a Mediatour being himselfe pure and innocent But the Israelites being in themselves sinner● ●ould not in their own names performe service pleasing and acceptable unto the Lord. Adam knew he was beloved of the Lord so long as he continued in obedience but had no warrant to wait upon his mercy when he had broken the Covenant of works But to the Israelites God bound himselfe in Covenant upon Mount Sinai promising to be their God and take them for his people notwithstanding they were sinners in themselves which could not be without forgivenesse and this Covenant they might and did renew by repentance after transgression The Law is not to be confounded with the Gospell but the sacred and inviolable knot of the one with the other is to be maintained unlesse we shall make God contrary to himselfe The Law doth not so directly and expressely teach faith in When Paul saith Faith came by the Gospell it is to be understood of the manner of propounding vvithout the invvrappings of types that the Doctrine vvas ● taught plainly vvithout types and figures Rom. 8. 3. Christ but require obedience yet doth it leade us to Christ and more obscurely command faith in him The Gospell doth more fully reveale Christ and the grace of God in him commanding faith by name but it doth also urge presse and exact obedience Thus sweetly doe the Law and Gospell consent together But here it is to be noted that faith is commanded in the Law which exacteth every thing that is good but it is given to us not by the Law but of the holy Ghost The distinction of the Law and Gospell as they are opposed one to another is cleare and evident but as the Law was given to the Jewes it is not opposite but subordinate to the Gospell The Law in it selfe considered exacted perfection of works as the cause of life but when that was impossible to man by reason of the infirmity of his flesh it pleased the Lord to make knowne to his people by the ministery of Moses that the Law was given not to detaine men in confidence of their own works but to leade them unto Christ Whatsoever the Law teacheth whatsoever it promiseth whatsoever it commandeth alwayes it hath Christ for the scope thereof For though the Law of righteousnesse promise a reward to the keepers thereof yet after it hath shut up all men under sinne it doth substitute another righteousnesse in Christ which is received by faith not purchased by the merit of works And therefore the Apostle doth reprehend the Jewes as perverters of the true sense and meaning Rom. 10. 4 5 6 c. of the Law when they sought to be justified by their works and sheweth that Moses taught them to look for Salvation in the Messiah and seek for that righteousnesse which is by faith Whereby it is manifest that the Law was given 〈◊〉 be a manuduction unto Christ in whom we have Redemption from all things from which by the Law of Moses we could not be justified and a rule to the faithfull according to which they must frame their conversation For what word was that which Moses saith was neere even in their hearts but the Law which the Lord gave upon Mount Sinai and promised to write in the hearts of his people under the Covenant of Grace And from this ground it is not hard to answer what is further objected against this truth as If faith be commanded in the Law then being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the Law For faith is not a work of the Law nakedly and absolutely considered as it exacteth perfect obedience of man in his own person but of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to direct them unto Christ who is the soule and life of the Law And though it be commanded in the Law as it is in the Gospel or new Covenant yet it justifieth not as a part of Regeneration or an act of obedience and work of Grace by it worth or dignity but in respect of that office whereunto it is assigned of God and as it receiveth the promises of mercy It is a s●phisticall forme of reasoning to say Faith is commanded in the Gospell therefore if we be justified by faith we are justified by the works of grace The arguments are like and both faultie For justification by faith in Christ is opposed to justification by the works of the Law because he only is justified before God by the Law whose acts being examined by the Law are found just and righteous according to that which the Law requireth but he is justified by faith who being in himself ungodly believeth in Christ for salvation So that according to the Apostles meaning wheresoever faith be commanded he is justified by faith without the works of the Law who is acquitted from sin by the meer and rich grace of God in Jesus Christ received by faith And to seek justification by works is to rest upon our works for salvation as they that answer in all things to that righteousnesse personall which the Law requireth Justification by faith and justification by workes are opposite and so is faith and workes but faith is not opposed to one act commanded whereby the promise is received for then it should be contrary to it selfe but to works whereby the Law is fulfilled in our owne persons to workes I say not to one work because no one worke can justifie but all are necessary If it be said the Apostle doth every where oppose the Law and the Gospel or the old and new Testament The answer is from the same ground that in the Scriptures of the new Testament the Law as well Ceremoniall as Morall is opposed to faith or the Gospel and yet the Ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ as all men acknowledge Therefore the Apostle doth not perpetually and absolutely oppose the Law and the Covenant of grace for he teacheth expresly that faith establisheth Rom. 3. 31. the Law For he understood the force and sentence of the Law to consist in faith but because the Jews addicted to the latter of the Law did pretermit the force and life of it Paul proves the Law so taken and separated from faith to be the cause not of life but of death as that which did not only want Christ who is the soul of the Law but is opposite to him And therefore Paul doth this because the Jews faith being let passe did seek righteousnesse in the dead works of the Law and did oppose the Law to the Gospel and Christ who was the end and scope of the Law This will be more plain if we shall examin the particular passages of Scripture wherein this matter is handled
pointeth unto him killeth corruption and converteth the soule In the Epistle to Gal. 3. 10 17. Act. 7. 53. The law was givē ad ordinationes angelorū Syr Ar per mandatum as Rom. 13. 2. as a son is said to doe ad nutum patris as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is used Num. 16. 34 or secundum juxta o●dinationes as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth Gen. 1. 21 paralell to this are Gal. 3. 19. Heb. 2. 2. The reason truth of these sayings seem to be that the Angel which appeared to Moses in the bush v. ●5 and was with him in the wildernes v. 39. did out of the midst of the Angels which did on every side cōpasse him about give the Law upon Mount Sinai whereof the Sanctuary was a figure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same that decretum vigils the Galathians the Apostle opposeth the Covenant of Grace to the Law in many things as that the Law accurseth every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to doe them that it was foure hundred and thirty yeares after the Covenant which was confirmed before of God in Christ c. But it is to be remembred that in those passages the Apostle disputeth against the Jewes who trusted in the workes of the Law and thought by the blood of Bulls and Goats to be purged from their sinnes or of them that joyned the Law with Christ in the matter of Justification as if Justification had been in part at least by the workes of the Law which the Apostle every where condemnes as contrary to the intent and purpose of the Lord in giving the Law The contrariety then of the Law or Old Testament even of the Law as it beareth the figurative sprinkling of the bloud of Christ and so pointeth us to him unto the new Testament or Covenant of grace is not in themselves but in the ignorance pride and hardnesse of heart of them who understood not or did pervert the right end of the Law as if it was given for Justification The Law as it opposed to Christ doth accurse every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the booke of the Law to doe them because he that trusteth in the Law is convinced by the Law to be a transgressour but the Law as given to them that be in Covenant doth reprove every transgression and convince every man of sinne who continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them but doth not accurse the offendour in every jot or title because in Christ sin is pardoned and forgiven To the Jew who rested in the works of the Law and refused Christ the Law which was given foure hundred and thirty yeares after did make void the promise or Covenant confirmed before of God in Christ But according to the true meaning of the Law and to them that used it aright it did not make void the promise but establish it What the Apostle citeth of the Law out of Deuteronomy and noteth of the giving of the Law after the promise is for substance preached by the Prophet Jeremy at the Lords appointment when he speaketh of this Covenant of grace without all question Heare ye the words of this Covenant and speake unto the men of Judah Jer. 11. 2 3 4 5 6. and say unto them thus saith the Lord God of Israel Cursed be the man that obeyeth not the words of this Covenant which I commanded your Fathers in the day that I brought them forth out of the Land of Egypt from the iron fornace saying obey my voice and doe them according to all which I command you so shall ye be my people and I will be your God That I may performe the oath which I have sworne unto your Fathers to give them a Land flowing with milke and honey as it is this day Then answered I and said so be it O Lord. Then the Lord said unto me proclaime all these words in the Cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem saying Heare ye the words of this Covenant and doe them This Covenant then which God made with Israel was for substance one with that he had made before with the Patriarks that is it was a Covenant of grace and mercy though the Law to them that rested in the works thereof and perverted the right use and end of the Law was a killing letter and ministration of death CHAP. VIII A particular explication of the Covenant that God made with Israel and what Moses brought to the further expressure of the Covenant of Grace THis doubt being thus discussed we may proceed with more facility to lay open the particulars of this Covenant God of his free-grace and mercy made this Covenant with Israel upon Mount Sinai fifty daies after the Israelites were delivered out of Exod. 19. 28. Egypt as fifty daies after the deliverance of his people from the bondage of sin and Satan the same Lord proclaims his Gospel or new Covenant upon Mount Sion in Jerusalem the Metropolis or Isa 2. 2. Micha 4. 2. Gal. 4. 24. Heb. 12. 18. royall seat of Abraham or Davids seed God I say of his infinite love and undeserved mercy did make this Covenant for if he remember mercy when he performeth his Covenant then it was of meere grace that he entred into Covenant Also it is of mercy Ps 103. 17 18. Nehem. 9. 32. Hos 2. 19. that God doth troth-plight him unto any people for the promise runneth I will betroth thee unto me for ever yea I will betroth thee unto me in righteousnesse and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies But when the Lord made this Covenant he betrothed himself unto Israel And when he made this Covenant he did more fully proclaime his great name and make his mercy better knowne then formerly he had done for Exod. 14. 6 7. ought we find For he passed by before Moses and proclaimed The Lord the Lord God strong mercifull and gracious long-suffering abundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity and transgression and sinne and that will by no meanes cleare the guilty visiting the iniquity of the Fathers upon the children unto the third and the fourth generation Which glorious description of Almighty God is often Numb 14. 18. Psal 86. 15. Psal 103. 8. 145. 8. Nehem. 9. 17. Jon. 4. 2. Exod. 6. 3. mentioned by Moses and the Prophets as the ground and foundation of their faith hope and comfort And whereas he had appeared to Abraham Isaac and Jacob by the Name of God Allmighty Now he was knowne to the Israelites by his Name Jehovah which Name denoteth both Gods being in himselfe and his giving of being unto that is the performance of his word and promise in which latter respect he here saith he was not knowne to the Fathers by this Name or as the Greek and
lapsus peccati statu alijsque peccatis excepta sola impenitentia considerantur c. Sicut fidelibus quatalibus fructus impetratae gratiae proprié obtingit ita infidelibus rebellibus qua talibus gratia impetrata non est c. pag. 312. The second sort of Divines distinguish the sufficiency and efficiency of Christs death In respect of the worth and greatnesse of the price he died for all men because it was sufficient for the redemption of every man in the world if they did repent and believe and God might without impeachment of justice have offered Salvation to every man in the world upon that condition if it had been his pleasure In the efficiency as every man or any man hath fruit by the death of Christ so Christ died for him But this is not of one kind some fruit is common to every man for as Christ is Lord of all things in heaven and earth even the earthly blessings which infidels injoy may be tearmed fruits of Christs death Others proper to the members of the visible Church and common to them as to be called by the word injoy the Ordinances of grace live under the Covenant partake of some graces that come from Christ which through their fault be not saving and in this sence Christ died for all that be under the Covenant But other fruits of Christs death according to the will of God and intention of Christ as Mediatour be peculiar to the sheep of Christ his brethren them that be given unto him of the Father as faith unfained regeneration pardon of sinne adoption c. and so they hold Christ died efficiently for his people only in this sence namely so as to bring them effectually to faith grace and glory Now let us come to examine what the Scriptures teach in this particular The Apostle writeth expressely that by the grace of Heb. 2. 9. God Christ tasted of death for all men or distributively for every man Some referre this to the sufficiency of Christs death but all men cannot be referred to man-kinde considered in the common masse or lapse for the words must be understood of the death of Christ as it was suffered in time and not as it was decreed of God and of men considered as at that time But at what time Christ suffered mankind could not be considered as in the transgression of our first Parents The Jewes were of opinion that Christ the Messiah was promised a Saviour to them only How to impetrate Salvation No but to be applied as in Covenant Now to beate downe their pride the Apostle saith Christ tasted of death for all sc both Jew and Gentile who stood in relation by virtue of the Covenant as the Jewes did So that the Apostle speakes of the application of Christs death which is not absolutely common to all and every man in the world and by every man is meant every man who heareth receiveth and is partaker of the fruit and benefit of Christs death offered in the word of reconciliation every man who is under the new Covenant as it is propounded of God in the Gospell and accepted of them But every man under the new Covenant as he is under the Covenant is partaker of the fruit benefit of Christs death That the passage is to be understood of them that apply and possesse the fruit of his death is manifest by divers reasons from the verses precedent and subsequent The world to come verse 5. may well be that all or every man for whom Christ tasted death but that world to come is that happy age which the Prophets did foretell should begin at the comming of Christ whose accomplishment or fulfilling we expect as yet Beza an not in Heb. 2. 5. Corvin in Mal. cap. 29. § 1. Heb. 2. 10 11. 13 Isa 53. 10. Heb. 2. 16. They for whom Christ died are in the same Chapter described to be one that is of the same nature and spirituall condition with Christ to be his brethren such as trust in God the children of God given unto Jesus Christ the generation or posterity of Christ as the Prophet speaketh whom Christ tooke by the hand and lifted up from their fall the seed of Abraham But these things agree to them only that possesse the fruits and benefits of Christ for whom he died by way of application If the maintainers of universall redemption consider their owne grounds it will be hard to fit this Text to their purpose or rather from them the former exposition may be confirmed For either by all men they must understand mankind in the common lapse as fallen in Adam and then Christ by his death hath restored them into the favour of God they stand actually reconciled they be regenerated and if they die before by actuall sinne committed in their owne person they fall from that estate are undoubtedly saved or they must understand all men considered as obstinate impenitent rebellious unbelievers And then Christ died for all and every man as obstinate impenitent and unbelievers which I cannot find that any of them hath or dare affirme or by all men they must understand all beleevers who apply and possesse the benefits of Christs death which is that we affirme They say how truly I dispute not his dominion over all men that they are bound to obey him and live unto him is grounded upon his dying for every one But if that be granted is it not necessary that his death should be applied to every one in some sort at least made knowne unto them in the word of life For men are bound to obey and live unto Christ as they will grant not because he hath impetrated righteousnesse and salvabilitie but because he hath entred into Covenant with them made knowne unto them the way of life imparted unto them his blessings and they have accepted of the condition and received him to be their Saviour And these words By the grace of God I should thinke import more to them then that velleity or common mercy or generall affection of doing good which Armin. and Corvin make naturall and as they teach God beareth towards them that he hateth Corvin in Molin cap. 29. Sect. 2. which was the cause why he gave Christ to die for all men even that free grace and love whereby he quickens them that were dead in trespasses and saveth them that believe Ephes 2. 5. As for the particle All or every one examples are usuall in Scripture where it is used with fit limitation though neither all precisely nor the most part be signified and that confessed by all sides But what need paralell places to prove it may be when the circumstances of the text shew it must be limited and they that most presse universall redemption are enforced to acknowledge a limitation in this matter It is objected that the holy Ghost speaketh generally in the beginning of the Chapter What is man But how to frame any Heb.
of God the people of God Saints by calling and so Christ died for them efficiently and by way of application as they be within the Covenant made in Christ and doe partake of those fruits and benefits of his death which of themselves tend to salvation but are perverted of them to destruction through their owne default But others comprehended under the world be faithfull indeed living members of Jesus Christ sealed by the Spirit and for these Christ died efficiently in a peculiar manner scil to bring them to life and happinesse as already they are called savingly and effectually to faith and repentance The argument à pari is of no weight manifestly confuted both by Scripture and experience it selfe For to many that perish is the word of Salvation sent they receive it professe it rejoyce in it live under the Ordinances of grace be partakers of sundry graces of the Spirit all which be speciall fruits of Christs death speciall to some not common to all men and in which respects Christ is said to die for them But to affirme the same things of every particular man in the world is to offend against common sence If Christ had died for one wicked man that perished because he had been wicked or for that reason there had been some truth in the argument but some fruits of Christs death are imparted to some although they be wicked not because they are wicked or for that reason Besides it is one thing to say Christ died for some that perish as they partake the fruits of his death in themselves belonging to Salvation which is granted another to say Christ died for all men considered as fallen according to the will of God and intention of Christ as Mediatour with full purpose to purchase for them actuall reconciliation on Gods part which is that they contend for So that this objection will be of no force untill it can be proved that impretation is application they be in Covenant who be not nor never were in Covenant they have the Gospell who never heard of the Gospell they have received the promise of Salvation who are rejected and cast off of God as aliens from the Covenant Christ is amongst them who never had possible meanes imaginable to come to the knowledge of the truth and they are enlightned and have tasted of the good word of God and of the powers of the life to come who all their life long have lived in ignorance and infidelity and not heard that there is a Christ 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. We thus judge saith Paul that if one died for all then were all dead And that he died for all that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him which died for them and rose againe Here the Apostle saith expressely Christ died for all simply meant in respect of the impetration of a new Covenant and salvation according to that Covenant common misery is concluded from this that Christ died for all men sc that all were dead which is universally true of every man And upon this ground he exhorts men to live unto Christ scil that Christ died for all men Some learned Divines not partiall referre See Estium in 2 Cor. 5. 14. pag. 586. this to the greatnesse of the price and dignity of Christs death which was sufficient for the redemption of man-kind if they did repent and believe but the Apostle rather speaks of Christs death for all in respect of application event or effect for all not simply but for all to whom the fruit and benefit of Christs death is offered in the Gospel and received by faith Thus Vorstius Vorst in 2 Cor. 5. 14 loc com Illud quoque hic obiter notandum Christ died and was raised up for all men in generall if we consider the amplitude of divine grace offered in Christ but in respect of the event or effect both are done for all the elect and believers only And in this latter sence that phrase is used of the Apostle in this place And this the circumstances of the text will plainly enforce For he speaks of the death of Christ not as it was purposed and decreed of God but as it was actually suffered by Christ when the farre greatest part of the world was for present state drowned in Infidelity and Idolatry wherein they had continued a long time being rejected and cast off of God The end of Christs death and resurrection there named by the Apostle sheweth it is to be meant of the fruit and application that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but to him which died for them that is that by force of that communion which they have with him their head being dead unto sinne they should live unto righteousnesse But that can agree unto none who are not partakers of the fruits of Christ none are fitted by grace to live unto Christ but they that have put on Christ by faith That All for whom Christ died is that world which God in Christ hath reconciled unto himselfe not imputing their sins ver 19. whereby is meant the world of Jew and Gentile of which we have spoken before in the fore-cited places which must have the same meaning and cannot be affirmed of the world universally according to that present state wherein it stood when Christ suffered How then doth the Apostle conclude common misery from this If one died for all then were all dead It may well be understood of death unto the world and sinne and not of death in sinne as if he had said if Christ died for all then all that are his are dead to sinne and to the world The words and scope of the Apostle do both agree well to this interpretation It hath been alleadged that the words speake of a death passed not present as our translation sheweth and so could not be understood of death unto sin But Vorstius upon that very word noteth that he understandeth Vorst in 2 Cor. 5. 15. Schol. all Christians in which the efficacie of Christs death sheweth forth it self as they also by the example of Christ are dead to sin and the flesh Confer Rom. 6. 2 c. 1 Pet. 4. 1. Some foolishly understand this of the guilt of death that the sense should be because Christ is dead for all men hence it is truly gathered that all men are guilty of death which is refuted in the verse following This is Vorstius his censure of that interpretation As for the words seeing they speake of the death of Christ applyed in the time past it was requisite these that intreat of the death of sin in them that be Christs should be put in the time past also And so the words doe more confirme then weaken the interpretation It is further objected that it will not agree with the argument of the Apostle who by Christs death for all could not prove all to be dead to sin nor so much as all
for them both and being graciously invited he is without further dispute or delay to cast his soule upon the promises of mercy and come unto Christ that he might be refreshed But they are in vaine commanded to believe if Christ died not for them because they cannot believe Is it then in vaine that the obstinate and rebellious are commanded and invited to believe who as such cannot believe Was it in vaine that God commanded Pharoah to let Israel goe that our Saviour would have gathered Jerusalem when the things concerning her peace were hid from her eyes Might not men argue by the same reason that it was in vaine for God to intreate and perswade them to believe when he did fore-know that by such invitation they would not be allured to come unto him And if they cannot believe it is not through the unreasonablenesse or absurdity of the thing commanded which doth excuse nor impotency of weaknesse as if they would believe but cannot which is to be pitied but impotency of wilfulnesse and prave affection the more unable to believe the more wilfull to refuse which is inexcusable And though I cannot say God hath given to every man to believe if he will Yet sure God is not wanting to any man in that which either in justice or promise he is bound to give and did men deny themselves nourish the motions of Gods Spirit and earnestly desire to believe without question they should find the Lord gracious If men believe it is of grace not only that whereby they are inabled to believe but whereby they are discerned from other men if they believe not it is of themselves of their own pravity and they be not further from believing then from desire to believe It is objected further that Christ as he died to impetrate remission of sins for me in particular is the object of justifying faith The mercy of God reaching to the pardon of sin in and through Jesus Christ is the object of faith justifying as it is proffered unto us in the word of life but it is one thing to believe that mercy is to be had through the death of Christ and that it is offered unto us in the Gospell and we called to imbrace it another to believe that Christ according to the compleate and full will of God hath laid downe his life for us in particular to purchase for us both grace and glory Proportionable to the perswasion a man hath of Gods willingnesse to be mercifull is his perswasion of the sufficiency of Christs satisfaction and proportionable to his perswasion that God is mercifull to him in the pardon of his sin is his perswasion that Christ died for him in particular Justifying faith is not without an apprehension of mercy in Christ to be obtained but implieth not an apprehension of mercy reaching to the pardon of sin already obtained It is not without an application of recumbency reliance or imbracing which presupposeth the offer o● mercy in and through Jesus Christ to be received but the application of particular perswasion that Christ died for me in particular as well as for any other or hath purchased for me grace and glory is Corvin in Mol. cap. 29. Sect. 24. not required in justifying faith Some have affirmed that faith whereby I believe that Christ died for me is the foundation of faith whereby I believe in Christ but I should desire better proof than their bare word for it seeing the Scripture makes the mercifull offer of salvation in Christ to the burdened hungry and thirsty the ground of this affiance and that perswasion according to their positions may be in good and bad them that never shall be justified neither will nor can rest upon Christ for salvation To believe that Christ is an all-sufficient Saviour and that salvation is offered to me in his name is lesse then to believe in Christ for remission of sins and in order of nature goeth before it But to believe that according to the purpose of God Christ is my Redeemer who hath purchased for me in particular grace and remission of sins and eternall redemption and hath actually reconciled me unto God this is the consequent of resting upon Christ for salvation and cannot be believed according to the Scripture unlesse a man doe first believe in Christ and according as men rest upon Christ superficially or soundly with a soveraigne and well-rooted affiance so they believe the other For when we reade in Scripture that Christ tasted of death for every man Heb. 2. 9. died for all 2 Cor. 5. 15. is the reconciliation for the sins of the whole world 1 Joh. 2. 2. shed his bloud for many Mat. 26. 28. gave his life for the ransome of many Mat. 20. 28. Mar. 10. 45. purchased the Church by his blood Act. 20. 28. Ephes 5. 25. gave himselfe for us all Tit. 2. 14. Rom 8 32. for his people Mat. 1. 21. for his sheepe Joh. 10. 15. for them that were given unto him of the Father Joh. 17 9 19. In these and such like passages by All the World Many and Vs are meant men in Covenant partakers of the benefits of Christ redeemed from all iniquity and purified unto him as a peculiar people delivered from this present evill world Gal. 1. 4. that they might live unto God 2 Cor. 5. 15. Peter Act. 3. 26. saith to the Jewes that crucified Christ Vnto you first God having raised up his Sonne Jesus sent him to blesse you in turning away every one of you from your sinnes But he spake to them who were in Covenant the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant and as they were in Covenant so God raised up Christ for them which cannot be referred to the impetration of righteousnesse but the application of Christs death in some sort Otherwise if it be observed that the Apostle speaks of the Jews according to the present state when Christ was incarnate or actually raised from the dead I thinke the greatest Patrons of universall redemption will not affirme that Christ died for every man good and bad believer or Infidell obstinate and rebellious to purchase for them actuall reconciliation on Gods part according to that state wherein they stood when Christ came into the world or was raised from the dead Once againe it is objected that if this proposition Christ died for all men be not the ground of particular affiance it can have no ground at all neither promise of mercy absolute nor conditionall generall nor speciall But already it hath been shewed that bare assent or belief that Christ died for all men cannot be the ground much lesse the only ground of justifying faith and it may further be made evident by these reasons First That is the foundation of faith whereupon particular affiance leaneth or is immediately grounded But no mans particular affiance on Christ for salvation can be grounded on his generall belief that Christ died for all men because this
were all their life subject to bondage But when the Scripture nameth death generally it comprehends all that which God threatned in that sentence Thou shalt die the death that penall death which is the reward of sinne but not sinne it selfe which is penall only not sinfull Other mens debts are answered diverse wayes some answer them simply as redeemers some as sureties He that answers them as a suretie must pay the Heb. ● 6. same summe of money that the debtor oweth Now Christ is not only our Mediatour but our suretie Heb. 7. 22. and hence the mediation of Christ is called a propitiation Rom. 3. 25. 1 Joh. 2. 2. and the surety is of debt and justice to make full satisfaction because he hath voluntarily promised it and God the Father did in justice exact it Rom. 3. 24 25. and 8. 32. In the sufferings of Christ we must consider the circumstances and substance of his sufferings The circumstances as the person of the sufferer the cause of suffering and efficacy of the passion in which respect it was more then the Law required for the Law did not require that God should die nor that any one should die that had not finned nor such a death and of such efficacie as not only to abolish death but to bring in life and that by many degrees more excellent then that which Adam had lost but if we respect the substance of punishment it was that which the Law required which he paid of love free and voluntary and yet of justice Justice requireth the same summe of debt the dignity of Christs person nothing hindering and according to justice Christ made satisfaction As concerning the substance of punishment Christ suffered what was due to us but in the circumstances which pertained not to the substance of the debt some thing was pardoned to the dignity of the person In this stands the dignity of Christs person that he might be fit meritoriously to pay our debt so farre was it from freeing or acquitting him for any part of our debt He that knew no sinne was made sinne for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. Surely he hath born our griefes and carried our sorrowes Isai 53. 4. When the Scripture speakes so fully why should humane curiosity limit the sufferings of Christ as if they were not fully satisfactory but by divine acceptilation only Christ suffered not every particular punishment that every particular sinner meeteth withall but his passion was a common price payed at once for all his people satisfying justice for all their offences Rom. 5. 19. Heb. 10. 14. Rom. 8. 33. He bore our sinnes in his body upon the tree 1 Pet. 2. 24. We are redeemed by his bloud Eph. 1. 7. The bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sinne 1 Joh. 1. 6. Phil. 2. 8. Col. 1. 20. He hath made peace by the bloud Voss respons ad Iudic. Ravens cap. 6. Robert Loeus Examen Eccl. The saur effigiet veri Sabbath of the crosse Touching the punishments which Christ suffered they were not ordinary but beyond measure grievous bitter and unsupportable yea such as would have made any meere creature to sinke down under the burthen of them to the bottome of hell For he suffered grievous things from all the things in heaven earth and hell He suffered at the hands of God his Father and of men of Jewes of Gentiles of enemies insulting of friends forsaking of the Prince of darknesse and all his cruell and mercilesse instruments But whereas of the punishments of sinne some be sinnes and punishments both others punishments only and some common to the nature of man others personall growing out of some imperfection and defect in the vertue and faculty forming the body disorder in diet or some violence offered and some for sinne inherent others for sinne imputed Our Saviour Christ suffered the punishments that are only punishments and not sinne common to the whole nature of man not personall to this or that man the punishments of the sinnes of other men not his own and that of them that should breake off their sins by repentance not of them that would sin for ever if they might live for ever The whole life of our Saviour was a life of suffering but his speciall sufferings were those he endured in the Garden or upon the crosse In the Garden he was in an agony upon the crosse he was pressed with the weight of grievous and unsupportable evils His agony was that sorrow wherein his soule was beset round with heavinesse and feare even unto death Thus the Evangelists describe it He began to be sorrowfull and very heavy Matt. 26. 37 38. Then saith he to them scil Peter James and John My soul is exceeding sorrowfull even unto death He began to be sore amazed and to be very heavy And saith unto them My soule is exceeding sorrowfull Mar. 14. 33 34. Joh. 12. 27. unto death Now is my soul troubled His soul was smitten with horrour that all powers and faculties for a time left their proper functions and did concurre to relieve nature in that extremity as when a man hath received some gashly wound the bloud doth at first retire to comfort the heart But this stay came not from any internall defect which had been sinfull but from an externall cause to wit the horrour which fell upon him as the wheeles of a Watch may cease from motion without any fault in them when they are stayed by the hand of the Artificer He feared also the stroke of the justice of God his Father sitting on the Tribunall or Judgement seat to punish the sins of men for whom he stood forth to answer this he feared as a thing impossible to be escaped in respect of the resolution and purpose of God his Father that by his satisfactory death and no other way man should be delivered And he declined everlasting destruction as a thing he knew he should escape without all doubt or uncertaintie of event though not without conflicting with the temptations of Sathan and the enduring of many grievous and bitter things These passions in Christ were most pure because he himselfe was most free from all taint of sin as if you put cleare water into a cleare glasse though you shake and stirre it never so much it will raise no mud The effects of this agony were two Earnest prayer and bloudie sweat Being in an agony he prayed more fervently He Luk. 22 44. fell on his face and prayed He prayed thrice the same words O my Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me neverthelesse Matt. 26. 39. not as I will but as thou wilt As the sense of nature and inferiour reason presented death and the ignominy of the crosse unto him as they are in themselves evill without the consideration of any good to follow he desired to decline them But as superiour reason considered them with all circumstances knowing Gods resolution to be such that the
common cause doth not distinguish but if grace be common to them that believe and them that believe not it is only the common cause of conversion and doth not separate the believer from the unbeliever Men are said to sanctifie purge and free themselves as the instruments of God and free agents subordinate to grace predetermining but the Scripture never saith that man is the cause separating himselfe from the number of reprobates externally called in like manner with himselfe Conversion as it is an act supernaturall in us should be the effect of divine vocation but the cause of comparative vocation should be the meere will or pleasure of the creature Grace and liberty cannot be mixed together in the partiality of the cause because liberty as the Patrons of that opinion hold is a free indifferent elective cause but grace a cause determinate to produce one effect The use of grace is the application of actuall grace to act But if the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will neither grace preventing nor co-operating doth apply grace to it worke not preventing grace because no meere power as such doth actuate it self nor co-operating because in order of causality it goeth not before the efficiency of the will If God give to believe and not only power Phil. 1. 19. to believe to believe and not only to believe when we will to believe then by grace he determineth the will to believe suffer will and the efficacie of grace is reduced unto God willing and determining And if he worke in us both to will and to doe Phil. 2. 13. Mat. 11. 27. not according to the liberty of our will but his own good pleasure if to will and doe inclinably rightly and well and not so as we may resist then he determineth the will to will and doe by his grace To what end doe the promises and threatnings tend may some man say if God doe worke all things by his effectuall power in them that believe To what end but that men might be saved But God doth that which pertaineth to a King and Law-giver towards many when that which pertaineth to the secret and unutterable dispensation of his grace he doth not doe that is he invites many in the Ministery of his Word and externall administration of the Covenant whom he doth not inwardly instruct and draw taking away the blindnesse and hardnesse of the heart But then the invitation is a giftlesse gift Not so neither but rather he is a most unthankfull servant of a perverse minde that he Deus sic movet hominem ad bona opera ut homo cognoscat vetit Deo monenti moventi ultrò morem gerat Nec tantum Deus agit cum voluntatibus nostris sed etiam per voluntates Isa 53. 10. Isa 45. ● 12. Psal 8. 8. Ps 72. 8 ● 10 Ps 100. 1 2 3. Jer. 23. 5 6. cannot obey For this inability is no cause of disobedience proceedeth from no fault of the faculties subject to the minde and will from no naturall quality of the matter necessitating but the meer wilfulnesse and perversenesse of the soul The invitation of God is not so hard that man cannot fulfill it if he would nor wicked that we cannot will to doe it without sinne but lawfull just honest and such as if man would he could not but execute so farre as he truly judgeth it ought to be willed and executed If the efficacie of grace depend upon the liberty of mans will to things opposite then the promises of God the Father made to his Sonne might all be frustrate That he should see his seed that the people should come unto him from the North and the West and from the Isles that he should possesse the Gentiles as his inheritance that his dominion should be from Sea to Sea that a willing people should come unto him c. But the Covenant of God with his Sonne cannot be made void and of none effect If some may object conversion be so the Determinatio Dei est externa aequiv●ca no● vitalis principalis Humana verò interna univoca vitalis subordi●ata Deus ita utitur voluntate ut ipsa voluntas sese electivè vitaliter ex practico rationis judicio agat Deus pr●mò principaliter ab aeterno actum liberum ut futurum liberè ponendum determinat sed non ad alium sed ad ●undem numero actum ad quem voluntas in tempore determinavit ●ese Causa actus liberi est potentia determinata non simpliciter potentia Deus sic movet res necessarias ut non fiant contingentes sic movet res co●tingentes ut voluntarias ut non adimit eis contingentiam voluntatem Quando superior causa est physica a legesoluta inferier mora●is legi subdita esto quod superior physica influit in inseriorem tamen si in●erior est libera rea esse potest in●erior non superior Virg. Aeneid 8. fati● egere volentem worke of God then man doth not repent and believe but God But this followeth not for repentance is the gift of God but the act of man God is the cause of willing efficient but not formall the cause externall and effective but not vitally efficient The determination of God externall and vitall volition differ as cause and effect for he worketh in us to will but volition doth not worke to will the determination of God as efficient is externall and respecteth the will in the first act of its influx but vitall determination is internall and respecteth good to be chosen or to be desired In man not converted two things are to be considered native contumacy and the not curing of that native contumacy The native contumacy is of themselves as darknes from the earth the not curing of this cōtumacy is of God as a cause physicall because he can cure it but doth not but not as a Morall cause because he is not bound to heale or cure it The effect of God not curing this native contumacy is only a negative non-conversion physicall or not culpable as a morall effect The absence of the sunne is the cause why the darknesse of the night is not removed but the darkenesse it selfe is not from the sunne Fault is a morall defect and cannot arise but from a morall cause and deficient Culpable non-conversion is a consequent of Gods not curing our native contumacy but no effect thereof as of a morall cause because God is not bound to remove it either by Law debt justice promise or Covenant and betwixt the resistance of the Spirit and Gods not-conversion the free willing of the corrupt will and voluntary love of native contumacy doth intercede Not only ability to believe but beliefe it selfe is merited by the death of Christ and for Christ vouchsafed to them who are called according to his purpose In this vocation of a sinner God doth so administer both
of explaining the conditions of agreement The Greek Interpreters doe frequently and almost perpetually render by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a testament or disposition Psal 25. 10 14. Psal 44. 17. 50. 16. 55. 20. seldome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Covenant Isa 28. 15. which is used elsewhere Sap. 1. 16. 1 Mac. 10. 26. 2 Mac. 13. 25. 24. 26. But in the old Testament the word Berith is never read for a testamentary disposition which of the Rabbins as Drusius witnesseth is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the word that signifieth to command and so to set his house in order or to make his will Isa 38. 1. Which word is yet generall and must be restrained according to the circumstances of the place Where the LXX and Theodotio translate it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Symmaechus and Aquila turne it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 25. 14. Nor is it a thing unusuall with classicall Authors of the Greeke tongue to use the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the generall signification For Camerarius citeth out of Aristophan de Avibus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used for to make a Covenant The Papists carpe at our Interpreters because they render the word Covenant rather then Testament for they would have it to signifie a testamentary disposition But they are deceived for the signification of the word is more generall and the Apostle Heb. 9. 16. argueth not from the simple signification of the word but the circumstances of the Covenant In a Covenant and Testament both there is an ordination and disposition of things according to pleasure and the Greeke phrase in the New Testament doth follow the received Interpretation of the Septuagint although in this the Covenant of Grace is like to a Testament that it is not established but by the death of the Mediatour as of a Testator The Covenant in Scripture doth sometimes signifie an absolute Promise of God without any stipulation at all such as was the Covenant which God made with Noah presently after the Floud promising freely that he would never destroy man and beasts with an universall deluge of water any more Gen. 9. 11. And that Covenant of Peace and everlasting Covenant which Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God made with Phinehas that he and his seed after him should have the Covenant of an everlasting Priesthood Numb 25. 12 13. Of this kind is the Covenant wherein God promiseth that he will give his elect faith and perseverance to which promise no condition Jer. 33. 20. annexed can be conceived in mind which is not comprehended in the Promise it selfe Heb. 8. 10. But oftentimes in holy Writ the name Covenant is so used that in it is plainly signified a free Promise of God but with stipulation of duty from the reasonable creature which otherwise was due no promise comming betwixt and might have been Psal 50. 16. Syr. Quid tibi libris praeceptorum meorum quod assumpseris pactum meum exacted of God and ought to have been performed of the creature if God had so pleased Psal 50. 16. and 25. 10. Psal 44. 17. For a Covenant is quiddam complexum implying two things distinguished either re or ratione the one covenanting the other restipulating or accepting As also two parts covenanted First the giving of some future good Secondly the retribution of some performance The first without the second is no more then a Promise the second without the first is no lesse then a Law though the Apostle Gal. 3. 22. makes another opposition of Law and Promise nature and faith workes and Christ for that is from a divers acceptation of the Promise But when two persons upon these two parts concurre it is that we call a Covenant properly though tropically sometimes the Promise and sometimes the stipulation only is noted by the Covenant Psal 50. 5. Nehem. 1. 5. Gen. 17. 7 9. and sometimes the seale of the Covenant is called the Covenant Gen. 17. 10 11. This distinction of the Covenant depends upon a distinction of Gods love for there is a love of God towards the creature whence all the good that is in the creature doth flow and there is a love of God vouchsafed to the creature and that for those things which it hath received not of it selfe but of God as it was beloved with that first love That we may call primary or antecedent for distinction sake this secondary or consequent love From that flowes both the making and fulfilling of the Absolute Covenant on this depends the fulfilling of the Covenant whereunto a restipulation is annexed but not the making thereof For in the Absolute Covenant there is nothing in the creature that might move God either to promise or to performe what he hath promised but in the Covenant to which a stipulation is annexed God fulfils what he promised because the creature exhibits what was exacted although this that God hath entered into such a Covenant and promised so great things unto him that performed such and such obedience that wholly proceeds from the antecedent love and free pleasure of Almighty God The essance of the Covenant properly consisteth in the Promise and stipulation But the words of the Covenant containe obedience required of God and promised of them in Covenant and so by a Metonymie are called the Covenant Exod. 34. 27 28. Deut. 29. 1. Jer. 11. 2 3 4. and 34. 13 14. The Tables of the Law were the Tables of the Covenant The Covenant and Law differ as friendship and tables obligatory to friendship he that violates these is convinced to breake this Heb. 8. 1 2. and the tables of the Covenant of Law are called the Covenant or Testament and the Book of the Covenant Exod. 24. 4 7. 2 King 23. 2. A Covenant is made betwixt men of those things which either were not due before or were not thought to be due which are made firme stable and due by the very Covenant so that by the Covenant new right is acquired or caused either to one or both who Covenant betwixt themselves of any matter Therefore the Covenant of God doth contain new things great and in no wise due which of his meere pleasure God offers unto us Now where there is huge and infinite disparity there can be no assurance of this so great a gift but the certaine Word of God and the assured Promise of him who doth never lie nor change That therefore Man should enter into Covenant with God it was necessary that men should first give credit to the Word of God and then that they should hope for those things which exceed their capacity and so at last trusting in God and obeying they should obtaine the good things promised and Exod. 24. 6 7 8. therefore the words of the Covenant may well be put for the Covenant Neverthelesse in making Covenant with the creature God is not tied to verball expressions but often he contracts the Covenant in reall
to love them saith Moses and he chose their seed after them Deut. 10. 15. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine owne blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live Ezek. 16. 6. See Ezek. 36. 32. Luk. 1. 54 55 72 78. This Covenant was made in Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sinne no Covenant can passe betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected no pardon obtained but in and through a mediatour Sinnes were never remitted unto any man no man was ever adopted into the place and condition of a sonne by grace and adoption but in him alone who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Jesus Christ true God and true man Act. 4 12. Heb. 13. 8. The fall of our first parents was occasion of this Covenant for Actus nostrae liberationis divinam bonitatem causam habet Sed aliter actus exactio nimirum paenae per modum satisfactionis ca●sam eam habet quae ad paenam exegendam irritat id autemest peccatum God suffered him to slip that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery Mercy freeing man from misery possible might have taken place before transgression and have discovered it selfe in the preventing of sinne and so of misery but it seemed good unto Almighty God to suffer misery to enter upon man through sinne that he might make knowne the infinite riches of his mercy in succouring and lifting him up being fallen and plunged into a state remedilesse and desperate for ought he knew Besides we may conceive that Almighty God upon just grounds disdaining that such a base creature falne by pride should thus upon advantage of the mutability of his reasonable creature ruinate the whole frame of the Creation and trample the glory of his name under foot and withall looking upon the Chaos which sinne had brought and would further make if some speedy remedy was not provided did out of his infinite and boundlesse love to man though in the transgression and just and dreadfull indignation against Sathan give forth this gratious and free Covenant The forme of this Covenant stands in gratious and free promises of all good to be repaired restored augmented and a restipulation of such duties as will stand with free grace and mercy For the Covenant of Grace doth not exclude all conditions but such as will not stand with grace The Covenant which was made of free love when we lay wallowing in our blood and which calls for nothing at our hands but what comes from and shall be rewarded of meere grace is a Covenant of grace though it be conditionall So the pardon of sinne is given of grace and not for workes though pardon be granted only to the penitent and faith on our part a lively unfained and working faith be required to receive the promise The parties covenanting are two and so are the parts of the Covenant the one in respect of God the other in respect of man A Covenant there is betwixt God and man but no mutuall obligation of debt for such mutuall obligation is founded in some equality but there is no equality between the Creator and the creature much lesse betwixt the Lord most high and man a sinner If man had never offended God almighty who gave him his being and perfection could not have been indepted unto him but as he was pleased to recompence the good of obedience in the creature that never deserved punishment much lesse can God be indepted to the creature that hath offended who can neither endure his presence nor beare the weight of his wrath nor satisfie Justice nor deliver his soule from the thraldome of sinne The obligation of man to God is of double right and debt but it is of rich grace and abundant love that God doth bind himselfe unto man God doth promise in this Covenant to be God and Father by right of redemption and Christ to be Saviour of them that beleeve in God by him and in faith do yeild sincere uniforme willing upright and constant obedience unto his Commandements Jer. 31. 31 32 33 Deut. 31. 6. Ezek. 36. 25 26. Gen. 15. 1 4 5. Jer. 32. 40. 33. 9. Heb. 8. 10 11 12. Isa 54. 7. Hos 2. 19. The stipulation required is that we take God to be our God that is that we repent of our iniquities believe the promises of mercy and embrace them with the whole heart and yeeld love feare reverence worship and obedience unto him according to the prescript rule of his word Repentance is called for in this Covenant as it setteth forth the subject capable of Salvation by faith but is it selfe only an acknowledgement of sinne no healing of our wound or cause of our acquittance The feeling of Luke 13. 5. Act. 11. 18. 2 Cor. 7. 10. Ezek. 18. 27● paine and sicknesse causeth a man to desire and seeke remedy but it is no remedy it selfe Hunger and thirst make a man to desire and seeke for food but a man is not fed by being hungry By repentance we know our selves we feele our sicknesse we hunger and thirst after grace but the hand which we stretch forth to receive it is faith alone without which repentance is nothing but darknesse and despaire Repentance is the condition of faith and the qualification of a person capable of Salvation but faith alone is the cause of Justification and Salvation on our part required It is a penitent and petitioning faith wherby we receive the promises of mercy but we are not justified partly by prayer partly by repentance and partly by faith but by that faith which stirreth up godly sorrow for sinne and enforceth us to pray for pardon and Salvation Faith is a necessary and lively instrument of Justification which is amongst the number of true causes not being a cause without which the thing is not done but a cause wherby it is done The cause without which a thing is not done is only present in the action and doth nothing therein But as the eye is an active instrument for seeing and the care for hearing so is faith also for justifying If it be demanded whose instrument it is It is the instrument of the Soule wrought therin by the Holy Ghost and is the free gift of God In the Covenant of workes workes were required as the cause of life and happinesse but in the Covenant of grace though repentance be necessary and must accompanie faith yet not repentance but faith only is the cause of life The cause not efficient as workes should have been if man had stood in the former Covenant but instrumentall only for it is impossible that Christ the death and blood of Christ and our faith should be together the efficient or procuring causes of Justification or Salvation When the Apostle Rom. 3. ●● 22 28 30. Gal. 2. 16. 17. Rom. 4. 2 3. writeth that man
is not justified by workes or through workes by the Law or through the Law opposing faith and workes in the matter of Iustification but not in respect of their presence faith I say and works not faith and merits which could never be without doubt he excludes the efficiency and force of the Law and workes in justifying But the particles By and of doe not in the same sense take Iustification from the Law and workes in which they give it to faith For faith only doth behould and receive the promises of life and mercy but the Law and works respect the Commandements not the promises of meere grace When therfore Iustification and life is said to be by faith it is manifestly signified that faith receiving the promise doth receive righteousnesse and life freely promised Obedience to all Deut. 7. 1● 10. 12. Ier. 7. 23. Lev. 19. 17 18. Luk. 10. 27 Mar. 12 30. Gods Commandements is covenanted not as the cause of life but as the qualification and effect of faith and as the way to life Faith that embraceth life is obedientiall and fruitfull in all good workes but in one sort faith is the cause of obedience and good workes and in another of Iustification and life eternall These it seeketh in the promises of the Covenant those it worketh and produceth as the cause doth the effect Faith was the efficient cause of that pretious oblation in Abell of reverence and preparing Heb. 11 4 7 c. the Arke in Noah of obedience in Abraham but it was the instrument only of their justification For it doth not justifie as it produceth good workes but as it receiveth Christ though it cannot receive Christ unlesse it brings forth good workes A disposition to good workes is necessary to justification being the qualification of an active and lively faith Good works of all sorts are necessary to our continuance in the state of justification and so to our finall absolution if God give opportunity but they are not the cause of but only a precedent qualification or condition to finall forgivenesse and eternall blisse If then when we speake of the conditions of the Covenant of grace by Condition we understand whatsoever is required on our part as precedent concomitant or subsequent to justification repentance faith and obedience are all conditions but if by Condition we understand what is required on our part as the cause of the good promised though only instrumentall faith or beliefe in the promises of free mercy is the only Condition Faith and workes are opposed in the matter of Justification and Salvation in the Covenant not that they cannot stand together in the same subject for they be inseperably united but because they cannot concurre or meete together in one the same Court to the Iustification or Absolution of Man For in the Court of Iustice according to the first Covenant either being just he is acquitted or unjust he is condemned But in the Court of Mercy if thou receive the promise of pardon which is done by a lively faith thou art acquitted and set free and accepted as just and righteous but if thou believe not thou art sent over to the Court of Justice Obedience is two-fold perfect in measure and degree this is so farre required that if it be not performed we must acknowledge our sinne in comming short And this God is pleased to exact at our hands that we might walke in humility before him strive after perfection and freely acknowledge his rich grace and mercy in accepting and rewarding the best service we can tender unto his Highnesse when in the Court of Iustice it deserveth to be rejected 2. Sincere uniforme and constant though imperfect in measure and degree and this is so necessary that without it there is no Salvation to be expected The Covenant of Grace calleth for perfection accepteth sincerity God in mercy pardoning the imperfections of our best performances If perfection was rigidly exacted no flesh could be saved if not at all commanded imperfection should not be sin nor perfection to be laboured after The faith that is lively to imbrace mercy is ever conjoyned with an unfained purpose to walke in all well pleasing and the sincere performance of all holy obedience as opportunity is offered doth ever attend that faith whereby we continually lay hold upon the promises once embraced Actuall good workes of all sorts though not perfect in degree are necessary to the continuance of actuall justification because faith can no longer lay faithfull claime to the promises of life then it doth vertually or actually leade us forward in the way to Heaven For if we say we have fellowship with God and walke in darknesse we lie and doe not the truth But if we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another 1 Joh. 1. 6 7. This walking in the light as he is in the light is that qualification wherby we become immediatly capable of Christs righteousnes or actuall participants of his propitiation which is the sole immediate cause of our justification taken for remission of sinnes or actuall approbation with God The truth of which Doctrine St John likewise ratifies in tearmes equivalent in the words presently following And the blood of 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Christ cleanseth us walking in the light as God is in the light from all sinne But of these things more largely in the severall degrees how this Covenant hath been revealed In this Covenant man doth promise to repent of his sinnes and repenting to cleave unto the promise of mercy made in Iesus Christ and in saith to yeeld willing cheerefull and continuall obedience In contracts amongst men one may aske more and the other bid lesse and yet they may strike agreement But it is altogether bootlesse for men to thinke of entring into Covenant with God if they be no● resolved to obey in all things The practise of all Gods people who ever made Covenant with his Highnesse doth expressely speake thus much when they solemnly entred into or renewed their Covenant for thus they promise Whatsoever the Lord saith that will we doe Exod 24. 3 7. The people said unto Joshua The Lord our God will we serve and his voice will we obey Josh 24. 23. And they entred into Covenant to seeke the Lord God of their Fathers with all their he art and with all th●e●r sou●e That whosoever would not se●ke the Lord God of Israel should be put to death whether small or great whether man or woman 2 Chron. 15. 12 13. And the King stood by the pillar and made a Covenant before the Lord to walke after the Lord and to keepe his Commandements and his Testimonies and his statutes with all their heart and all their soule to performe the words of this Covenant that were written in this booke and all the people stood to the Covenant 2 Chron. 34. 31. 2 Kings 23. 3. They entred into a Curse and into
equall to us Christians in all substantiall graces of the Covenant Fourthly and from the same grounds we may conclude that the soules of the faithfull who departed this life before the comming of Christ in the flesh were immediately received into Heaven For they were taken to glory and saved as we Now such as are taken to glory are taken to Heaven For the Scripture knoweth Act. 15. 11. no place in which God doth ordinarily display his glory but Heaven And what should hinder their translation into the heavenly Jerusalem when they are removed out of this earthly tabernacle Not their sinnes for they which could not hinder them from Sanctification fitting them for Heaven could not hinder them from Heaven Not want of Faith who now have that faith which Abraham and many of them had No want of efficacie in Christ he was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world he was yesterday to day and for ever his death was effectuall to cause them to find pardon and the Spirit of Sanctification Not any priviledge of Christ for not simply to ascend into Heaven was Christs priviledge but to ascend soule and body as heire of all things and the Authour of Salvation to all that obey him David is said not to have ascended into Heaven but that is spoken Act. 2. 34. in respect only that he was not raised in body and gone into Heaven body and soule as the heire of all things and person who was to sit at Gods right hand It is also said The Fathers received Heb. 11. 39. not the Promise scil of Christs comming in the flesh to performe the worke of our Redemption but as they received the promise of forgivenesse and of the Spirit of Sanctification so after their death they were taken into Heaven They whose Pilgrimage and sojourning ceased with this life they could not but be in their Countrey at home after this life But Heaven is the Countrey of the Saints for where their Father is there is their Countrey Those who walked as strangers here on earth because they looked Heb. 11. 13 14 15 16. Heb. 11. 5. 2 King 2. 11. Luke 9. 31. for an heavenly Jerusalem a City whose Maker was God they leaving this earth were translated thither The translating of Enoch Moses and Elias seeme to figure out no other thing Christ was the fore-runner of Enoch not in act in respect of the assumption of his humanity into Heaven but in vertue and merit From the beginning of the world a place was prepared for all whom God had chosen in Jesus Christ Matth. 25. 31. and 20. 23. but a place was to be prepared of Christ for us in respect of the promised paiment by the force and efficacy whereof the effect was before obtained but with respect to future labours which were both certaine and present with God For a morall cause though it be not present in act if it be supposed as future may have its effect The faithfull before Christ when they removed out of these earthly tabernacles were received into everlasting habitations Luke 16. 9. Now if the godly at the instant departed were bestowed in any place but Heaven they then did goe to mansions which they were to leave in a short time even then when Christ did ascend Our Saviour promised to the penitent Theefe upon the Crosse This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise which if it was not Luke 23. 43. into Heaven but into Limbus it was but for a short time for that was to be broken up within a few houres space But to returne to the matter in hand The Covenant of Promise and the new Covenant are so one for substance that what is in the first for weight and essentiall is in all the degrees following and to be understood though not mentioned and whatsoever in any after degree appeares as substantiall to the Covenant that was included in the first propounding of it but in sundry accidents which nothing hinder their substantiall unity they are distinguished First on the part of the Object Christ exhibited in the New 1 Ioh. 1. 1 2. 4. 14. Mal. 3. 1. Isai 59. 15. Covenant is promised as to come in the Covenant of promise For it was meete the promise should goe before the Gospell and be fulfilled in the Gospell that so great a good might earnestly be des●red before it was bestowed and that the expectation of them that waited for the consolation of Israel might not be frustrated Secondly In the manner of administration and measure of faith For the knowledge of Christ and faith in him to come was more obscure and darke then the knowledge of him already come and faith which doth behold him present The manner of Christs Mediation was more sparingly and obscurely revealed his person the manner of execution of the office of Mediatour and the benefits that we receive in him more darkly unfolded sometimes propounded in generall words sometimes shadowed in types and figures seldome more specially described And the reason why these things at first were more darkely delivered may be first because things present or past are seene more clearely then things to Heb. 11. 17. come prophesies be obscure before the accomplishment 2. The Church was then in her Infancy and rude not come to her ripe age the Lord in his infinite wisdome so disposing the matter 3. It was meete the cleare and full revelation of this mystery should be reserved to Christ the chiefe Prophet The Authour of life was to lay open and make manifest the way to life Till the way into Heaven was really entred by the true high Priest after the order of Melchisedech it was not fully manifested Heb. 9. 8. Under the Old Testament the way into the Holiest was not absolutely shut but vailed not altogether untraced but not fully laid open because our true and reall high Priest had not made satisfaction by the offering up of himselfe a sacrifice once for all nor consecrated that new and living way through the vaile that is to say his flesh 4. The minds of men were to be held in a longing desire and expectation of Christ and the obscure revelation of Christ and his benefits did serve to raise their hearts to an earnest desire of his comming in respect of the cleare revelation and great and glorious blessings they might then expect But in this obscurity we may observe some degrees Before the Law given by Moses the promise was more obscure the Law being given even to the times of the Prophets lesse cleare in the times of the Prophets even to Iohn the Baptist more cleare Even from the first giving forth of the promise untill the comming of Christ in the flesh the revelation was more cleare distinct ample as the comming of the Messiah did approach neerer and neerer For the Church by how much it was neerer to her beginnings by so much it was the ruder and therfore to be instructed
from the quality of the blessings there promised which could not be accomplished in any other but in Christ alone And this is evidently holden out to be the literall sense in other places Acts 3. 24 25. But where shall we find mention of the passion of Christ in this expressure of the Covenant unto Abraham which in the first manifestation was clouded in the phrase of bruising his heele and is essentiall to the Covenant of Grace in any overture of it as containing the price and ransome by which all hinderances are removed as the Apostle saith Christ was made a curse for us that the blessing of Gal. 3. 13 ●4 Abraham might come on the Gentiles Some answer that this is thrice put on in the passage of this Covenant with Abraham first in the federall confirmation by the figments with the smoaking fornace and burning lamps which passed between those pieces Gen. 15. 8 9 17. which howsoever it typified the dividing of Abrahams seed in Egypt with their fiery labours and sorrowes yet primarily the type expresseth the torment and rending of Christ Abraham his prime seed and by the fornace and fiery lampe the wrath of God that runneth betwixt and yet did not consume the rent and torne nature Secondly they conceive this perpession of Christ was expressed in the bloud of the Circumcision Gen. 17. 10 11. For they be of opinion that where God commands shedding of bloud in any his ancient Ordinances it doth fully reach unto the bloud of Christ and his everlasting Testament The bloud which was shed in the signes ordained to seale the Covenant of Promise what did it signifie but the bloud of Christ whereby the Covenant was to be sealed Lastly we may find a full expression of his passion in the resolved sacrifice of Isaac which was typicall the death of Christ and the Ramme in his stead wherein is set forth an Embleme of Gods love unto the world in that he hath truly sacrificed his only Sonne Christ to take away sinne Joh. 3. 16. And if some of these be not lively expressions it may seeme to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in typo vertit Tremelius ex Syri interpretis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quae vox Hebra●●è 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est apud Evang. Matth. 13. 35. Propheta Psal 78. ● redditur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. in Epist ad Hebr. 11. Gen. 17. 4. be implyed in the very Promise for how should the blessing promised come upon the posterity of Abraham if the promised seed had not borne the curse of the Law and by suffering removed it that mercy might be glorious in conferring righteousnesse and life eternall In the former Covenant a secret honour was put upon Eve as she was made if we may so speake the first pipe whereby God conveyed the grace of his Covenant unto her posterity who did not degenerate into the seed of the Serpent But here the Covenant is made with Abraham who received it not as an example only nor as a type but as an Ordinance leading unto the conveyance of the same Covenant to all the confederates In which sense it is plainly spoken to in the Epistles to the Rom. and Gal. and he called the Father of the faithfull Rom. 4. 11 12 16. and they which are of the faith the children of Abraham Gal. 3. 7. the seed of Abraham Gal. 3. 29. Abraham is not the Father of the faithfull effectively as if he should be the worker of faith in all or that men should be borne faithfull of him For so God only by the holy Ghost is the Father of the faithfull But analogically for the grace of the Covenant given unto him on that condition and priviledge that as Fathers transferre and passe over their rights and inheritance to their children so he as a Father should propagate the righteousnesse of faith and free blessednesse to all the faithfull by Doctrine Example and Covenant So that all who receive this Covenant from God in Christ doe likewise by faith draw it through Abraham to whom the promise was made Gal. 3. 16. The Subfederates are described and by that differenced from all the world to be Abrahams seed I will establish my Covenant between Ge● 17. 7. me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting Covenant to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee Where these specialties are holden out That God will be as good a God to Abrahams seed as he is to Abraham himselfe and that whatsoever right by the Covenant was invested upon Abraham should descend as from a Parent under this Covenant to all his seed by vertue of this Covenant made with him But we must distinguish Abrahams seed For sometime by the seed of Abraham Gen. 18. 22. Gal. 3. ●6 is meant Christ who is the prime and principall seed who first entred the Cōvenant as Purchaser Maker Confirmer and upon whose person it was setled for us all by Abraham Againe by Abrahams seed are meant all that receive this Covenant from him whether by outward administration only or internall force and vertue also In the eye of God and Scripture all beleeving Gentiles are the seed of Abraham which may be called the Christian seed In thee shall all Nations of the earth be blessed which Gen. ●2 3. and 18. 18. and ●● 18. Rom 4. ●6 17. ver 11. must needs be understood of the Gentiles which should beleeve and is plainly so interpreted by the Apostle Therefore it is by faith that it might be by grace to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed not to that only which is of the Law but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham who is the Father of us all As it is written I have made thee a Father of many Nations That he might be the Father of them that beleeve though they be not circumcised that righteousnesse might be imputed to them also And if ye be Christs then are Gal. 3. 14 29. ye Abrahams seed and heires by Promise All beleeving Jewes and Proselytes are comprehended under the seed of Abraham and may be called the spirituall seed in opposition to the carnall or naturall seed only This distinction of Abrahams seed spirituall and naturall the Apostle plainly specifieth Neither because they are the Rom 9. 7 8. and 2. 28 29. seed of Abraham are they all children but in Isaac shall thy seed be called that is they which are the children of the flesh these are not the children of God but the children of the promise are counted for the seed Besides all that descend from the loynes of Abraham and all that were borne in his house and bought with his money are counted Gen. 17. 11 12 13. for the seed though indeed many of them were wicked and profane Therefore Abraham is commanded to circumcise every man-child both him that is borne in his house or bought
with money of the stranger which is not of his seed Thus Ishmael Esau and others were circumcised counted Abrahams seed and under Covenant untill they fell away and discovenanted themselves but their posterity are not counted for the seed because they utterly fell away and departed from the faith The whole Nation of the Jewes descending from Jacob was accounted the seed of Abraham untill the time of Reformation though many amongst them were wicked and oft-times fell away I know saith our Saviour to the Pharisees ye are Abrahams seed but yee John 8. 37. seeke to kill me so did not Abraham In respect of the externall administration of the Covenant they were counted the seed but they walked not in the steps of the faith of Abraham and therefore indeed and truth they were not the seed And the Apostle speaking to the Jewes who had put Christ to death saith Ye are the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made with Act. 3. 25. our Fathers saying unto Abraham And in thy seed shall all the Kinreds of the earth be blessed Further it is to be observed that in all the seed the Covenant reacheth to Infants borne of the seed under the Covenant which was the reason why they must receive the seale of the Covenant at eight dayes old Neither must we put off this that Infants have only jus foederis for they be foederati Your children are holy saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 14. Holy by Covenant though by nature sinfull Indeed it is true they be not capable of many actuall injoyments under the Covenant nor of actuall Faith but through the free grace and acceptation of God the Promise of forgivenesse and the Kingdome of Heaven belongeth unto them So that if any person come into Covenant and procreate children that man and his issue are foederati and may grow up into a further body from that beginning From this we may see the true ground of all Covenants as they receive difference Luk. 18. 9. from the parties injoying whether personall family-Covenants or nationall Personall is the cause of family-Covenants as Abrahams Covenant the ground of his Families entrance and so the Covenant made with the Family the ground of nationall as in the Families of Jacob cast together made all Israel under Covenant And herein appeares the truth of the former distinction that the Covenant is made according to internall force and efficacy or outward administration only The things on Gods part promised under this manifestation to Abraham and his subfederates are held forth in these and the like expressions I will make thee a great Nation and I will blesse thee Gen. 12. 2 3. and make thy name great and thou shalt be a blessing And I will blesse them that blesse thee and curse him that curseth thee and in thee shall all Families of the earth be blessed Vnto thy seed will I give this land ver 7. Lift up now thine eyes and look from the place where thou art Northward and Southward and Eastward and Westward For all the Land Gen. 18. 18. Gen. 13. 14 15 16. which thou seest to thee will I give it and to thy seed for ever And I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth so that if a man can number the dust of the earth then shall thy seed also be numbred Feare not Gen. 15. 1. ver 5. Abraham I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward Looke now towards Heaven and tell the starres if thou be able to number them And he said unto him So shall thy seed be I am the Almighty Gen. 17. 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. 8. ver 19. God and I will make my Covenant between me and thee and will multiply thee exceedingly and thou shalt be a Father of many Nations And I will make thee exceeding fruitfull and I will make Nations of thee and Kings shall come out of thee And I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting Covenant to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee And I will give unto thee and to thy seed after thee the Land wherein thou art a stranger all the Land of Canaan for an everlasting possession and I will be their God By my selfe have I sworne saith the Gen. 22. 16 17. and ●4 7. Lord for because thou hast done this thing and hast not with-held thy Sonne thy only Sonne That in blessing I will blesse thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of heaven and as the sand which is upon the sea-shore and thy seed shall possesse the gates of his enemies And in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed because thou hast obeyed my voice The grand Promises of this Covenant are that God would be the God of Abraham and of his seed whereby is signified that God would be to him what he had revealed himselfe to be his King Psal 33. 1● and 144 15. Psal 4● 14. Hieron in Ez. 1. Shad●ai Sy● Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transtu●erunt quod nos fortem r●bustum possumus dicere Is●● 13. 6. and Father his Portion and Protectour that he would pardon his sinne write his Law in his heart leade him into all truth defend him from all evill and in due time receive him unto glory Happy are the people that be in such a case yea blessed are they that have God for their God This God is our God for ever and ever he shall be our guide untill death And this is implyed in that the Lord expressed himselfe unto Abraham to be Almighty or All-sufficient the nurse of all living things strong and potent to doe whatsoever he will who can bring all things to nothing as he made all things of nothing can give and take away give plentifully abundantly as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen 49. 25. Gen. 17. 1. and 28. 3. and 35. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleaseth himselfe whose goodnesse doth copiously reach unto all his creatures The Sept. Interpreters sometimes expresse this title by the common name of God sometimes they omit it altogether and for I am God Almighty they translate I am thy God sometimes they put for it the God of heaven Psal 91. 1. sometimes they render it by a word that signifieth fit sufficient strong and potent Job 31. 2. but most commonly Almighty Omnipotent able to doe all things Job 15. 25. and 22. 25. and 23. 16. and 26. 16. and 27. 11. and paraphrastically who hath made all things Job 8. 3. Sometimes they turne it heavenly Psal 68 15. once they retaine the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezek. 10. 5. and once they use an expression which comes nigh to selfe sufficiency and contentation Job 29. 5. qui materia copiosus est valde But 〈◊〉
Chaldee translate it he manifested not nor made knowne this Name They being sustained by faith in Gods Almighty power without receiving the thing promised Act 7. 5. Heb. 11. 9 10. But now their children should receive the promise and so have full knowledge and experience of Gods power and goodnesse and of the efficacie of that his Name Jehovah which therefore they sung to Isa 49. 23. 52. 6. 60. 16. Ezek. 28. 22 23 24 26. 30. 19 25 26. Exod. 19. 18 19 20. Deut. 5. 4 22. his praise upon their full deliverance from the Egyptians Exodus 15. 3. So upon performance of further promises or judgements he saith they shall know him to be Jehovah This Covenant was given with tokens of majestie and terrour for Mount Sinai was all of it on a smoake because the Lord descended upon it in fire and the smoake thereof ascended as the smoake of a fornace and all the Mountaine trembled exceedingly and the voice of the Trumpet was going and waxing strong exceedingly The Mountaines saw the Lord and trembled Hab. 3. 10. they leaped like Rammes Psal 114. 4. The earth quaked the heavens also dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it selfe at the presence of God the God of Israel Psal 68. 9. Judg. 5. 5. The mountaine burnt with fire unto the midst of heaven with darknesse clouds and thicke darknesse Deut. 4. 11. and from this it may be the Law is called fiery Deut. 33. 2. The Prophets Deut. 4. 35 36 use the like words to signifie the Majestie of God Psal 18. 9 10 12 14 97. 2 4. with clouds and smoake God often manifested his glorious presence to his people Exod. 40. 34 35. 2 Chron. 5. 24. 6. 1. 7. 1 2. Isa 6. 4. Revel 15. 8. And as Princes publish their decrees with the sound of the Trumpet So God to his ancient people revealed the pleasure of his will and gave answers unto them in thunderings and voices Joh. 12. 28. Rev. 4. 5. 6. 1. 10. 3. 8. 5. And hence it may be the two reverend Ambassadours of his voice and divine Maiestie are called the sons of thunder Mark 3. 17. This is noted as one difference betwixt the old and new Testament Ye are not come unto Heb. 12. 17 18 19 20 21 22. the Mount that might be touched and that burned with fire nor unto blacknesse and darknesse and tempest and the sound of a Trumpet and the voice of words which voice they that heard entreated that the word should not be spoken unto them any more For they could not endure that which was commanded And if so much as a beast touch the Mountaine it shall be stoned or thrust thorow with a dart And so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly feare and quake But ye are come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the living God and the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels to the generall assembly and Church of the first-borne which are written in Heaven and to God the Judge of all and to the soules of just men made perfect It may be hereby God would testifie his anger and displeasure against sinne not as yet expiated by the bloud of the Messiah and warne the Israelites to deny themselves stand in awe of his Highnesse and cleave inseparably unto the word of his promise If any man shall thinke that Christ the second person in Trinity to be incarnate who is called the Angel of the Covenant or Messenger of the Covenant scil by whom it was sent unto Moses Mal. 3. 1. and the Angel of his presence Exod. 23. 20 21. and 33. 14. Isai 63. 9. did deliver the Law unto Moses I will not gain-say it because it is expressely said that Moses was in the Church in the wildernesse with the Angel who spake to him in the Mount Sinai Act. 7. 37. who is called Christ 1 Cor. 10. 9. And this Covenant of Grace was made in Christ the promised seed for God was not the God of Israel but in and through the promised Messiah whose person and offices are more fully described whose death and resurrection is more lively typified in this expressure of the Covenant then in either of the former Had ye beleeved Joh. 5. 46. Moses saith Christ himselfe the Author of truth you would have beleeved me For he wrote of me that is Christ was if not the sole subject yet the only scope of Moses his writings And as Moses so the Prophets that followed after him who wrote by the same Spirit and under that expression of the Covenant did speake of Christ more fully and plainly then he had done before In the first promise it was revealed that the Messiah should be the seed of the woman to Abraham it was made known that he should be of his seed but in the writings of Moses we learne that he was to be both God and man or that God was to be incarnate and to have his conversation amongst men after a more peculiar manner then in the ancient times of the world he had The promise runs thus And I will dwell amongst the children of Israel and will be their Exod. 29. 45 46. God and they shall know that I am the Lord their God that brought them forth out of the Land of Egypt that I may dwell amongst them I am the Lord their God The same promise is renewed or repeated And I will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre Lev. 26. 11 12 13. Ezek. 37. 26 27 28. you and I will walke among you and will be your God and ye shall be my people The Chaldee translateth the first place I will settle my habitation or divine presence amongst the sonnes of Israel And where in the Hebrew it is I will dwell in the midst of the sons of Israel Onkelos and Jonathan reade it I will place my Divinity But what Divinity whether the holy Spirit or rather the Word as we reade The Word was made flesh and dwelt Joh 1. 14. amongst us when Christ took our nature upon him and came and dwelt amongst his own then was this promise punctually fulfilled Or if it be referred to the habitation of God by his Spirit amongst the spirituall seed of Abraham as we find the word often used Rom. 8. 2. 2 Cor. 6. 19. 2 Tim. 1. 14. Ephes 3. 17. Jam. 4. 5. 2 Cor. 12. then it implieth the incarnation of Christ and his dwelling amongst the Jewes because that was to goe before the plentifull habitation of the Spirit in the hearts of the faithfull And if the Evangelists words have not reference to the forecited places they do allude to a passage in the Prophet Zachary whence Zech. 2. 10 11 12. they may be interpreted Sing and rejoyce O daughter of Sion for lo I come and I will dwell in the midst of thee saith the Lord And many nations
be thinke themselves of their evill doings confesse their iniquities and turne unto the Lord. The frequent and earnest exhortations of the Prophets made to backsliding and rebellious Israel that she should acknowledge her wickednesse and returne unto the Lord is a full Commentary of that which Jer. 3. 7 22. 4. 1 2. Ezek 18. 27 28 Ezek. 18 31 32. 33. 11 13. God required of them in this Covenant in case they should turne away from the holy Commandment The Lord protesteth by his Prophet Ezekiel that he hath no pleasure in the death of him that dieth but rather that he should repent and live and the same for substance he made knowne to Israel in the Covenant which he stroke with them sc that if they transgresse and goe astray he doth admit will accept and approve nay command their unfained repentance and comming home unto the Lord that they might live This question Why will ye die ye house of Israel is put forth to the people in Covenant and not indifferently to all and every man living It is manifestly spoken of the house of Israel whom God had spared notwithstanding their manifold and great provocations to whom he not only gave space of repentance but used meanes to bring them to repentance by sending Prophets unto them to admonish them of their sins to denounce the judgements of God against them for their impenitency and earnestly to exhort them to cast away their transgressions that they might live God then doth approve and command the returne of his people that have gone astray he waiteth for their amendment useth meanes to bring them to the knowledge of themselves is not wanting to them in any thing that in justice or promise he ought to doe for them but yet it is not his will effectually to bring every man to repentance whom he doth command to repent The Commandment of God shews what is our duty but not what God will worke in every man the commandment lieth upon them that be obstinate and rebellious but they have not grace to will their conversion or amendment Neverthelesse we must not thinke either that God doth dissemble or that he is the authour of mans impenitency for mans corruption pravity and wilfulnesse is the cause of his going on in evill and his impotency is not a meere infirmity which he doth bewaile but a stubbornesse which he doth foster and cherish by all means The condition of this Covenant in the sence afore-said is faith in the promised Messiah which is implied in the promise I will be thy God and commanded in the precept built upon it Thou shalt have me to be thy God For God is not the God of Israel but in and through the Mediatour neither can Israel take God to be their God but by faith in the Messiah In the Prophets we meet with no exhortations more common then these Trust in the Lord commit thy selfe unto the Lord rowle thy burden upon him leane upon the Lord but what the Prophets exhort-unto that is commanded in this expressure of the Covenant and trust in the Lord man a sinner cannot unlesse it be in and through a Mediatour Israel is commanded to seek the Lord and walk before him in all well-pleasing But without Heb 11. 6 7. Quod addit Apostolus nondum venisse fidem Gal. 3. 23. quamd●● Dei po pulus sub legis custodia detinebatur id aliò spectat scil fides Apostolo eo loco est eva●ge lica fontis misericordiae Dei Rom. 3. 29. in Christi filij Mediatoris sanguine declaratio quam fidem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocat quippe revelationis Christi gradum excellentissimum eadem prorsus ratione qua Johan aj●●at spiritum John 7. 39. Jer. 31. 33 34. 32. 33 34. quae comparatè tantum dicuntur non autem absolutè quasi haec nullo gradu jam tum contingerent faith it is impossible to please God For he that commeth to God must believe that God is and that he is the rewarder of them that diligently seeke him We cannot seeke God nor pray unto him without faith for to seek God is to trust in him But all men will confesse the Israelites were by Covenant bound to seeke God and pray unto him As Gideon Barak Sampson Jepthah David and Samuel through faith subdued Kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained promises c. So the faithfull and true Israelite by faith walked with God and became heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith As God is one who shall justifie the circumcision by faith and the uncircumcision through faith without question in the Covenant of Grace he taught the Circumcision to seek justification by faith and not by the works of the Law Neverthelesse herein God called for and his Israel was bound to yeeld obedience to all his Commandements Strict exact perfect obedience the Lord doth require so that the least failing must be acknowledged to be a sin uniforme and sincere obedience is so required that without it there can be no Salvation Perfect obedience is commanded that if a man will trust in his works to be justified thereby he must either bring that which is every way compleat or be cast in judgement Sincere obedience though imperfect is approved that the imperfection of their best works being covered and their transgressions graciously pardoned they might be accepted by faith in Christ who is the end of the Law as righteous unto eternall life This distinction was formerly propounded but now is more largely to be confirmed The Law requires perfect and exact obedience for secret faults even thoughts arising from corrupt nature before they attained Rom. 7. 7. full consent are therein condemned and he that trusteth in his works if he continue not in every thing that is written in the Gal. 3. 10. book of the Law to doe them he is accursed But to them that be in Covenant the Law was given with such moderation that sincere obedience was accepted of them though attended with Psal 19. 12 13. many imperfections as is cleare by that of the Psalmist who can understand his errours cleanse thou me from secret faults keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sinnes let them not have dominion over me then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from the great transgression The godly Governours and people of Israel were well acquainted with the meaning of the Law and what obedience should be accepted at their hands And when 2 Kin. 23. 3. 2 Chro. 15. 12 13 14. Neh. 10. 29 30 31. they promised and bound themselves by Oath to walk in all the Statutes Judgements and Ordinances of the Lord or of the Law of Moses they did neither pervert the sense of the Law nor promise punctually to fulfill the Law in every jot and title Therefore they understood the tenour of the Law as it was given unto them to admit of upright unfained and true obedience the imperfection
to confirme his promises by sundry arguments some whereof we will here repeat because the ample promises of their returne and the repaire of the City and Temple doth give some light what Covenant the Lord made with them after their returne First God promiseth to deliver them because they had been beloved of him of old time I am the Lord thy God the holy One of Isai 43. 3 4 5 6. Isai 46. 3 4. Israel thy Saviour I gave Egypt for thy ransome Ethiopia and Seba for thee Since thou wast precious in my sight thou hast been honourable and I have loved thee therefore will I give men for thee and people for thy life Feare not for I am with thee I will bring thy seed from the East and gather thee from the West I will say to the North Give up and to the South Keepe not back bring my sonnes from farre and my daughters from the ends of the earth Even every one that is called by my Name for I have created him for my glory I have formed him yea I have made him Secondly The Lord hath not sold them for price or gaine therefore he might redeeme them without money Awake awake Isai 52. 1 2 3. fortem posce animum put on thy strength O Zion put on thy beautifull garments O Ierusalem the holy City for henceforth there shall no more come into thee the uncircumcised and the uncleane Shake thy selfe from the dust arise and sit down O Jerusalem loose thy selfe from the bands of thy necke O captive daughter of Zion For thus saith the Lord Ye have sold your selves for nought and ye shall be redeemed without money Thirdly By former experience he doth assure them of their future Isai 52. 4 5. return into their own place For thus saith the Lord God My people went downe aforetime into Egypt to sojourne there and the Assyrian oppressed them without cause Now therefore what have I here saith the Lord that my people is taken away for nought they that rule over them make them to howle saith the Lord and my Name continually is blasphemed Therefore my people shall know my Name therefore they shall know in that day that I am he that doth speake Behold it is I. Fourthly This shall be to the Lord for a name and glory For Isai 48. 11. and 42. 8. mine own sake even for mine own sake will I doe it for how should my Name be polluted and I will not give my glory unto another I will cause the Captivity of Iudah and the Captivity of Israel to return and will build them as at the first And I will cleanse them from all Jer. 33. 7 8 9. Ezek. 36. 22 23. their iniquity whereby they have sinned and whereby they have transgressed against me And it shall be unto me a Name of joy a praise and an honour before all the nations of the earth that shall heare all the good that I doe unto them and they shall f●are and tremble for all the goodnesse and for all the prosperity that I procure unto it c. Fifthly That they might not faint through the long and great calamity which went before deliverance the Prophet in the Name of the Lord setteth before them the glory and dignity of the Messiah which followed his humiliation Behold my servant shall deale prudently he shall be exalted and extolled and be very Isai 52. 13 14. high As many were astonied at thee his visage was so marred more than any man and his forme more then the sonnes of men so shall he sprinkle many nations the Kings shall shut their mouths at him for that which had not been told them shall they see and that which they had not heard shall they consider Another Prophet directing the faithfull how to behave themselves in that long and grievous Captivity scil to wait patiently for the accomplishment of the Promise because the vision would speake in its appointed season and not lie he doth unfold the Doctrine of free Justification by faith in Christ more plainely then formerly it had been expressed in the Law of Moses adding Behold his soul which is lifted up is not upright Hab. 2. 4. in him but the just shall live by his faith Whence the Apostle inferreth that we are justified by free grace and not by the works of the Law in the fight of God In the Originall Gal. 3. 11. it is The just shall live in his faith but that particle is oft very well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred by a Deut. 6. 5 Mar. 12. 30. Luke 10. 27. Rom. 1. 17. Gal. 3. 11. Heb. 10. 38. Deut. 32. 21. Hos 12. 13. Psal 78. 2. Act. 17. 28. Psal 18. 30. Matth. 17. 21. Phil. 4. 13. Of or By and it is all one whether we reade it The just shall live by of or in faith the sense being The just shall live the life of grace here and of glory hereafter in or by faith That which the Prophet speaketh in generall of all the Promises of God that the godly might certainly and constantly hold in what thing they ought to rest in the midst of all stormes and tempests and whence they may live securely in the distresses of death that the Apostle doth specially interpret of Justification and life eternall which we obtaine by faith The Prophet and Apostle both speake of a lively faith which is effectuall to bring forth good works but we obtain life eternall by faith and not by works To live here is to obtaine life or glory not to leade our life according to the Law or rule of righteousnesse as the drift of the Prophet and Exposition of the Apostle opposing the life which is by faith to that which is by the works of the Law which could not be if to live by faith had been to direct our life according to the Law Though then the righteous man must exercise himselfe in righteousnesse yet he is justified and liveth that is obtaineth life eternall by faith and not by the works of faith Now the Lord the strong Redeemer of his people according Jer. 24. 6 7. and 50. 20 34. Ezek. 20. 34 35 37. to the word of his Prophets brought back their Captivity with joy in his time appointed planted them in their own Land brought them into the bond of his Covenant and set up his Tabernacle amongst them When the Lord saith the Psalmist brought back the Captivity of Zion we were like them that dreame Psal 126. 1 2. Then was our mouth filled with laughter and our tongue with singing then said they amongst the Heathen The Lord hath done great things for them And the Prophet Zachary As for thee also by the blood Zech. 9. 11. of thy Covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water By this great speciall late and new blessing the Lord did bind his Israel unto him more strongly then heretofore
no former age of the world but to these last times only as 2 Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ he is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are made new And so a new song is a song wherein the name of God is celebrated for some new and admirable benefit of deliverance by the comming of Christ as Isa 42. 10. Sing unto the Lord a new song and his praise from the end of the earth Psal 96. 1. O sing unto the Lord a new song sing unto the Lord all the earth Rev. 5. 9. And they sung a new song saying Thou art worthy to take the booke Rev. 14. 3. And they sung as it were a new song before the throne and before the foure beasts Though now and then that is called a new song wherein the name of God is celebrated for some new benefit of deliverance at what time soever vouchsafed as Psal 40. 3. And he hath put a new song in my mouth even praise to our God Againe that is new which is perpetuall shall never wax old or vanish away Heb. 8. 13. In that he saith A new Covenant he hath made the first old Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish away And in this sence may that of the Apostle 1 John 2. 8. well be understood Againe a new Commandement I write unto you which thing is true in him and in you In the Covenant of grace God promiseth to put a new spirit into his people Ezek. 11. 19. not new for the matter not for the inward forme or kind but the frame and fashion a new spirit Ezek. 18. 31. renewed in qualities not changed in substance And so the faithfull are said to put on the new man which after God is created in holinesse and righteousnesse Ephes 4. 24. Col. 3. 10. And in Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision Eph. 2. 15. but a new creature Gal 6. 15. that is a new man refined reformed and renewed by God in Christ Jesus And it may be the renewed soule is called the new man or new creature because it is noble beautifull fresh and vigorous never to wither or decay with age And whatsoever we must understand by the new heavens and the new earth promised Isai 65. 17. and 66. 22. Revel 21. 1. the title new seemeth to import the admirable excellencie and continuance thereof never to alter or decay but to remaine before the Lord. In all these respects the Covenant of Grace is fitly called the new Covenant or Testament Jer. 31. 31. Heb. 8. 8. 2 Cor. 3. 6. for it is divers from that which God made with the Fathers before Christ most necessary and excellent never to wax old or to decay By it a new light of the doctrine of the Gospell shined to the world it had new worship new adoration a new forme of the Church new witnesses new tables new Sacraments and Ordinances and these never to be abrogated or disanulled never to wax old Heb. 8. 13. and it was established after a new manner by the bloud of the Mediatour It is called a Covenant of peace an everlas●ing Covenant which shall not be removed the Covenant of my peace Ezek 36 27. and 34. 25. Isai 54. 10. and 55. 3. Heb. 13. 20. Isai 61. 8. It is called a Covenant and a Testament A Covenant in respect of the manner of agreement a Testament in respect of the manner of confirming A Covenant in respect of Heb. 9. 16. God a Testament in respect of Christ who being appointed of the Father Lord and Prince with full possession of all things necessary to Salvation died as Testatour and confirmed by his death the testamentary promise before made of obtaining the eternall inheritance by the remission of sinnes John the Baptist by the light of preaching was greater then the Prophets that had gone before him but properly he was not a Minister of the new Testament as it differed from the old wherefore a middle place is rightly assigned to him being the forerunner of Christ to prepare Matth. 11. 11. the way before him From the birth of Christ the things foretold in the old Testament pertaining to the constitution of the new began to be fulfilled and that first by his comming in the flesh afterwards by his administration and then by his death by whose death the old Testament was abolished and the new did succeed in the roome thereof The old Testament was abolished by the death of Christ in right but not in act For before the promulgation of that innovation by the sound of the Gospell they amongst the Jewes that did beleeve in Christ were true beleevers though they were zealous for the Law but after the doctrine Act. ●0 21. of grace was sufficiently published they that obstinately did cleave to the shadowes and Ceremonies of the Law did reject the promise and Covenant in Christ So that properly the Heb. 13. 10. beginning of the new Covenant is to be fetched from that time wherein Christ hath fulfilled all things which were shadowed of him in the Law or foretold in the Prophets that is after that Christ was corporally ascended into Heaven and had sent downe the holy Spirit in the visible shape of fiery tongues upon his Apostles Act. 2. 3 4. at the solemne feast of Pentecost For the summe of the Gospell or new Testament is this that the Ceremoniall Law is ceased and the use of the Law whereby we were kept in bondage untill faith was revealed abolished and that Christ being already crucified dead buried and received into Heaven remission of sinnes in his bloud is clearly plainly and openly propounded offered and given to all them that by true and lively faith doe beleeve that he is Christ the Lord and Saviour and that the Spirit of Adoption is sent into their hearts who by firme affiance and confidence doe rest in the Redeemer that being taught of God they stand not in need of the legall pedagogie Surely that doctrine concerning faith in Christ cannot strictly be called the Gospell which did take place the Mosaicall worship as yet in force and that by the approbation of Christ those things not being fullfilled as yet which were preached in the Gospell For the Gospell is a message of good tidings or things past which affect the heart with singular joy and chearefulnesse And as the old Covenant was not promulgated without great pompe upon Mount Sinai the people of Israel hearing and beholding and swearing unto it Exod. 19. 18. and 20. so it was meet that the New Testament should be published on a solemne set day in the assembly almost of all Nati●ns with great splendour and glory as it was on the feast day of Pentecost And before that time the doctrine concerning faith was of that sort that men were rather called to the future Kingdome of God then commanded to rest in the present state of things
John the Baptist put over his hearers to Christ Joh. 1. 26 27. Luke 3. 16. Mark 1. 7 8. Matth. 3. 11 12. Christ invites men to the Kingdome of Heaven that is the Evangelicall Government of the Church as future at hand but not yet present Matth. 4. 17. Mark 1. 15. Nay after he was risen from the dead although he professe openly and plainly to his Disciples that all power was given unto him in Heaven and earth and he command them to preach the Gospell to every creature Matth. 28. 18 19. yet he gives them a charge to tarry at Jerusalem to waite for the accomplishment of the promise concerning the solemne sending of the holy Ghost and to be endued with power from above Luk 24. 49. as if they were designed before but then to be inaugurated and by extraordinary gifts many hearing and beholding openly to be approved The dayes immediately following the death and resurrection of Christ were the dayes of the Churches widowhood wherein she sate for a while destiture and comfortlesse and barren having neither power to beare nor to bring forth children But within ten dayes after Christ the Lord the Bridegroome of the Church had ascended from earth to Heaven in glory the holy Ghost came downe upon the Apostles in visible shape in token that Christs Church was now betrothed unto him and had received strength to conceive and bring forth and breasts replenished with plenty of Milk to nourish and feed her children This was as the Solemnization of the Marriage and then did the barren begin to rejoyce that she should be the mother of many children From this time properly the New Testament tooke its beginning The nature of this Testament stands principally in three things 1. In the kinde of Doctrine plaine full and meerly Evangelicall 2. In freedome from the curse of the Law and freedome from Legall Rites 3. In the amplitude and enlargement of the new Church throughout all Nations of the world It may be described the free Covenant which God of his rich grace in Jesus Christ incarnate crucified dead buried raised up to life and ascended into Heaven hath made and plainly revealed unto the world of Jew and Gentile promising to be their God and Father by right of Redemption and Christ to be their Saviour to pardon their sinne heale their nature adopt them to be his Sonnes protect them from all evill that may hurt furnish them with all needfull good things spirituall and temporall and crown them with everlasting glory in the world to come if they repent of their iniquities beleeve in Christ and through or by Christ in him and walk before him in sincere constant and conscionable obedience which he doth inwardly sease by the witnesse of the holy Spirit who is the earnest of their inheritance in the hearts of the faithfull and ratifie and confirme by outward seales universall plain easie and perpetuall The Author of this Covenant is God in Jesus Christ for none can make these promises but God none can make them good but his Highnesse Therefore the Lord doth evermore challenge this unto himself that he is the maker of the Covenant And as it is Jer. 31. 1 31 32 33. called our Covenant in respect of the conditions required Zech. 9. 11. So it is called the Lords Covenant because he hath made and will establish it If ye can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night c. Then may also my Covenant be broken Jer. 33. 20 21. with David my servant Christ also as Mediatour is both the foundation and Author of this Covenant as he is appointed of the Father Lord and King advanced at the right hand of God to give repentance and remission of sinnes unto Israel and as Testatour Heb. 9. 16. he hath confirmed the Covenant by his death But of this in the next Chapters God is both the Author of this Covenant and one partie confederate Fathers we know seldome frame Indentures thereby to bind themselves what they will doe for their children if they will be obedient but by right of Fatherhood they challenge of them their best service Lords and great personages seldome indent with their free servants what preferment they shall expect after some terme of service and attendance but if they look for reward they must stand at their courtesie But our Lord and Master to whom we owe our selves by right of Creation who might take advantage against us for former disobedience is content to undertake and indent with us and by Indenture to bind himself to bestow great things and incomprehensible upon us if we will accept his kindnesse and bind our selves unto him in willing and sincere obedience If you demand a reason of this dealing none can be given but the meere grace and rich mercy and love of God Thus saith the Ezek. 36. 22. Lord God I doe not this for your sakes O house of Israel but for mine holy Names sake I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. And ye shall know Ezek. 20. 37. that I am the Lord when I shall bring you into the Land of Israel c. And there ye shall remember your wayes and all your doings wherein 42. 43. you have been defiled and ye shall lothe your selves in your own sight for all your evils that you have committed And ye shall know that I am the Lord when I have wrought with you for my Names sake not according to your wicked wayes nor according to your corrupt doings Man can doe nothing of himself to procure his spirituall good In spirituall things it fareth with him much what as with a child new borne into the world which being naked can neither provide cloathes nor being provided and laid by him can put them on for man destitute of all spirituall goodnesse can neither move to helpe himself untill it be freely bestowed nor manage and wield it well when it is of grace vouchsafed without direction and assistance from God And there is as little worth or dignity in man to move God to promise him help as there is ability in man to procure help There is nothing in man to move God to shew mercy but only misery which might be an occasion but can be no cause either why mercy is promised or salvation granted If man had not fallen from grace and state of Innocency God had never sent his Sonne to redeeme him nor shewed mercy reaching to the pardon and covering of his iniquity If he had not lost himself Christ had never come to find and restore him if he had not wounded himself he had not been healed and repaired of grace Man then is a subject on whom God bestowes grace and in whom he works it and his m●sery an occasion that the Lord took of manifesting his mercy in succouring and lifting him up out of that distresse but the free
and receiving of the Sacraments oblige themselves to the condition required and thus all members of the visible Church be in Covenant With others God doth make his Covenant effectually writing his Law in their hearts by his holy Spirit and they freely and from the heart give up themselves unto the Lord in all things to be ruled and guided by him And thus God hath contracted Covenant with the faithfull only The first sort are the people of Rom. 2. 28. God outwardly or openly having all things externall and pertaining to the outward administration The second are the people of God inward or in secret whom certainly and distinctly the Lord only knoweth Experience hath confirmed it that in the dayes of the Gospell the Church of Christ hath sometimes been shut up within narrower bounds and limits sometimes it hath spread it selfe over the face of the earth more gloriously and so much was plentifully foretold in the Scriptures that such as lived in the times of that great apostasie and falling from the faith might not be offended at it What the state of Gods Church shall be in these latter dayes time will manifest more certainly then we can yet define but some Divines are of opinion that the bounds thereof shall extend further and the glory thereof be greater then ever heretofore And this is not improbable for when the Apoc. 11. 15. seventh Angel sounded there were great voices in heaven saying The Kingdomes of this world are become the Kingdomes of our Lord and of his Christ and he shall raigne for ever and ever which accordeth with that of Daniel Behold one like the Son of man came with the Dan. 7. 13 14. clouds of heaven and came to the Ancient of dayes and they brought him neere before him And there was given unto him dominion and glory and a Kingdome that all people nations and languages should serve him his dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not passe away and his kingdome that which shall not be destroyed CHAP. II. Christ the Mediatour of the New Testament for whom he died and rose againe CHrist Jesus incarnate is the Mediatour of the new Testament a reall Mediatour a fit middle person betwixt God and man a Mediatour and Testatour both who hath confirmed the Testament with his bloud But seeing the Covenant is made in Christ and Christ died in some sort for them that be under the Covenant it will not be out of place first to shew for whom Christ died and rose again and then how Christ is the Mediatour of the New Testament and what is the exaltation and Prerogative of the new above the old Covenant in that respect Touching the first there be two main opinions of Divines The first sort hold that he died for all and every man with a purpose to save But in the explication of their Tenent they adde Corvin in Mol. cap. 28. Sect. 1. 4. 20. 1. That Christ died for all men considered in the comman lapse or fall but not as obstinate impenitent or unbelievers Christ died not say they for Cain and Judas as such or as they should perish nor for Abell and Peter as faithfull in respect of the impetration of Salvation but without difference for them considered Resp ad Epist Minist Walak pag. 51. Armin. Worst part Secunda necess Resp Synod declar sent remonst circa Art Sect. de morte Christi Thomson diatr. cap. 4. Corvin in Mol. cap. 27. Sect. 4. cap. 12. Sect. 25 26 27. in the common state and condition of the fall and sin 2. That Christ died for all men in respect of the impetration of Salvation but the application thereof is proper to believers 3. That Christ died not to bring all or any man actually to Salvation and make them partakers of righteousnesse and life but to purchase salvabilitie and reconciliation so farre as that God might and would salvajustitia deale with them upon termes of a better Covenant which might well stand allthough it should be applied to no man no man should be reconciled or saved by Christ God should have no Church on earth or Saint be crowned with glory in heaven 4. That Christ hath purchased salvabilitie for all men but faith and regeneration he hath merited for none because God is bound to give that which Christ hath merited of him although it be not desired or craved Exam. Censur Cap. 8. pag. 95. Cap. 7. pag. 87 Respons ad specul 11. 107. Other po●itions they hold which ●ang not together nor agree Exam. Cens with that which hath been mentioned as that God neither would nor could by right condemne any man for the sinne of Adam and that Originall sinne so called is properly neither sinne nor punishment And then if Christ died for mankind in the common lapse he died for them that never had sinned nor deserved punishment Againe they teach that all Infants whether of believing Corvin in Mol. cap. ●8 Sect. 13 14. or Infidell parents dying without actuall sinnes committed in their owne person are restord into the favour of God regenerated and saved and that because God hath taken all mankind into the grace of reconciliation and entred into a Covenant of grace Arm. Resp ad ad Art 13 14. with Adam and all his posterity But then Christ died for all mankind in respect of impetration and application both and by his death hath actually reconciled all mankinde unto God merited actuall regeneration for them and purchased Salvation if after they be possessors of these spirituall blessings they doe not fall from them and shake them off by impenitency and infidelity For Adam and Eve excepted mankind cannot be considered in the Armin in Perk. pag. 4. common lapse but as infants only Further they affirme that Infants have refused grace in their parents grandfathers ancestors by which act they have deserved to be forsaken of God which how it can stand with their generall position or that last mentioned I cannot conceive Lastly they teach that Christ died for the impenitent and unbelievers for thus they reason If Christ died for all whom he came to save and came to save unbelievers as his words are I came not to judge but to save then he died for unbelievers How they accord these things I cannot finde but if we take things as they lay them downe it will plainely follow that Christ died for all mankind in respect of impetration only and that he died for them in respect of impetration and application both that he hath not actually reconciled them unto God and that he hath purchased actuall reconciliation that he died not for the impenitent or unbelievers in respect of impetration and that in respect of impetration only he died only for such And all this can hardly be reconciled with that they have in their Script Synod declar sent Rem circa Art 2 Gratia haec impetrata est peccat●ribus quatenus in communi
into Covenant with them and vouchsafe unto them the meanes of grace but unto some he shewed more speciall love so as to call them effectually and make them heires of salvation In like manner in the last times or daies of the new Testament God manifested so much love to the world as it is opposed to the Jewish Nation as that in the ministery of the Gospell he entreated them to be reconciled and entered into a Covenant of peace with them but unto some he bare and manifested more peculiar love in that he called them effectually and made them heires of life Neverthelesse when these Texts be expounded of the daies of grace or times of the new Testament we must not conceive that all men now called Gentiles were in former ages of the Church utterly cast off and shut out of Covenant or that the gift of Christ to Jew and Gentile is so restrained to the daies of grace as that he was not given to the faithfull whether Jew or Gentile in all ages but that the transcendent love of God in giving his Sonne to die and in him receiving the world of Jew and Gentile into the new Covenant is peculiar specially after the distinction of Jew and Gentile to the times of the Gospel This might easily be confirmed both for the substance of matter and the sence of these passages out of their writings that be the stiffest maintainers of the point in hand See Vorst Parasc cap. 4. 7. Corv. in Mol. cap. 31. § 33. Exam. censur cap. 8. Vorst de Deo not ad disput 1. Now then let us compare their position and those texts together and see whether they consent or dissent one from another First The love wherewith God so loved man fallen as to give his Sonne to die I speake according to their opinion is common to all men an incompleate will and affection whereby God loved them as men or a volition and intention of being reconciled But the love mentioned in this text is a love speciall to some ages and some men not common to every man in all ages It was a speciall love whereby the Lord loved the Jewes as his peculiar treasure above all Nations of the earth in the time of the Law Deut. 7 6. 10. 14. 26. 6. 32. 8. 2 Sam. 7. 23. 1 King 8. 53. Psal 33. 12. 100. 3. 143. 5. And it is a speciall love not common to all ages much lesse to every man in every age whereby the Lord hath loved the world of the Gentiles in the daies of the Gospell to take them for his people And this love is true love though many pervert the grace of God to their owne destruction Secondly The world for which Christ died was man-kind considered as fallen in Adam for unbeliefe followeth the death of Christ cannot be precedent to it But here the world comprehends unbeleevers and impenitent in respect of their present state and not such only as may fall into unbelief and impenitencie even such impenitent and obstinate as the Scripture saith could not believe Joh. 12. 39. Thirdly The world for which Christ died as they teach doth comprehend every particular man of what estate or condition soever in what age of the world soever But the world in the text doth not comprehend all men of all ages nor every man of any age yet passed but the world as it is set against the Jewish Nation only not comprehending every particular man of the Jewes or Gentiles but so many and so considered as they give reason of that opposition Looke in what respects God is said to have chosen the Jewes to be his peculiar people in the time of the Law but now in times of the Gospell to love the world in opposition to that peculiar favour at that time manifested to them alone in that sence is the world of Jew and Gentile to be understood and so many comprehended under it Fourthly They say Christ died for the world in respect of impetration or acquisition of righteousnesse not of the application of his death But this world which God so loved was called by the Gospell and did enter into Covenant with God and God with them The world which Christ came to save was a world in Covenant and whereunto he preached peace and so the death of Christ was applied unto them by the word and Sacraments and received by them in respect of faith temporary and profession For when God enters into Covenant with a people and they accept the conditions and give up their names unto God they doe in a sort apply the death of Christ unto themselves and possesse some fruits and benefits thereof And therefore either these passages must be interpreted of Gods giving Christ to die for the world in a speciall manner or from them it may undeniably be concluded that he died not for all man-kind For that which in speciall love was given in peculiar manner to the world of Jew and Gentile in the times of the new Testament that is not the effect of common love given to all and every man in all ages but God of his speciall love to the world of Jew and Gentile in the daies of the new Testament gave Christ to die for them therefore of common love he did not give him to die for all man-kind of every age and condition And seeing God loved some and but some according to the true sence of these places so as to give Christ to die that whosoever believeth in him should not perish c. Yea some considered for the present in the state of impenitency unbelief and obstinacy and it may be given up unto a reprobate sence Deut. 9. 9. 32 28. whereas he cast off many Nations in former ages much more particular persons who never proceeded so farre continued so long Josh 24. 2. Psal 100 3. Isa 43. 8. 65. 1. Ezek. 16 3. in these sins as this world had done must we not of necessity acknowledge some free election or choice according to the good pleasure of God Certainly it cannot be concluded hence that Christ did equally lay down his life for all men without exception to purchase for them actuall reconciliation on Gods part It is here objected that this world doth comprehend many impenitent Synod de●ens sent Remonst circ Art 2 pag. 301. and unbelievers that shall not be saved and if Christ died for one that shall not be saved it followeth à pari that he died for all And it is true as many be externally in Covenant and have all out ward things common with the faithfull who be not true members of Jesus Christ so also this world opposed to the Jewish Nation called of God and admitted into Covenant doth comprehend many which in deed and truth be not lively members of Jesus Christ In like manner many indeed wicked men and ungodly living in the visible Church and under the externall Covenant are called the chosen
Gentiles in the place of the Jewes and is to be understood of the world opposed to the Jewish Nation That world concerning whom the Lord had spoken before to Abraham saying In thy seed shall all the Nations of Gen. 12. 3. and 18. 18. Psal 2. 8. and 22. 27 28. Isai 11. 9 10. Psal 72. 11. the earth be blessed That world which the Prophets foretold should be added to the Church and given to the Messiah This world I say which God hath promised to blesse and adde to the Kingdome of the Messiah he hath reconciled unto himselfe to wit as they are blessed in Abrahams seed actually and effectually This is the Priviledge of the New Testament that God was Synod ubi supra Illi hoc loco per vocem Mundi intelligantur ad quos sermo reconciliationis pertinet in Christ reconciling the world unto himselfe as is most apparent in the words next following and hath committed unto us the word of reconciliation and by the sentence it self God was in Christ But what is proper to the times of the New Testament cannot be attributed to every man in the world even those that sate in darknesse and the shadow of death before the light did shine upon them The reconciliation here mentioned is actuall effectuall particular reconciliation purchased by Christ published by the Apostles to the world of Jew and Gentiles and received Meritum Christi subordinatur gratiae dilectionis generali ex ea enim fluit ordinatio hujus medii c. non enim ut vellet nostri misereri fecit Christus sed ut salva justitia nostri misereri posset Stegma pag. 54. Rom. 5. 9 10. by them in the Covenant of grace For it is explained by the non-imputation or remission of sinnes at least as one part or branch of reconciliation which is a transient act conferred in time and inferreth a change of state and condition in the partie justified or reconciled and of other reconciliation betwixt God and man the Scripture speaketh not And it is to be observed that the Apostle saith not Christ hath purchased that God is reconcileable or actually reconciled on his part as if before he were irreconcileable but God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself where the world is the subject or matter of reconciliation which is changed in respect of state or condition now received into actuall favour whereas heretofore it lay under wrath In another place the Apostle puts reconciliation by the death of the Sonne of God and justification by Christs bloud for the same where justification cannot be taken for possibility of justification but for actuall justification by faith in the bloud of Christ wherewith Salvation is joyned whereby we are acquitted from the guilt and punishment of sinne and so the justified or reconciled are opposed to sinners ungodly and enemies In respect of vers 6 8. our antecedent state we were enemies when In Scriptura ut saepè res dicitur quod paulò antè fuit ut coeci vident surdi a●diunt claudi ambulant Matth. 11. 5. esurientes qui prius miserè victitabant in solo sterili ●sal 107. 36. Joh. 9. 17. leprosus qui jam mundus est Matth. 26 6. Virgo quae jam nupta Matth. 10. 35. baculus qui est serpens Exod. 7. 11. publicanus qui est Christi discipulus Matth. 10. 3. discipulum Christi qui eum reliquit Joh. 6. 66 Sic contra saepè in sacris literis res describitur qualis ●utura est non qualis nunc est Ephes 5. 20. Ita Christi oves dicuntur qui tunc adhuc erant lupi Joh. 10. 16. Dei filii qui tum a●huc erant filii diaboli Joh. 11. 52. Tarn exercit l. 2. Job 3. 2. 561. reconciled to God by the death of his Son but by reconciliation we are received into grace and of enemies made friends and sons In these passages we cannot find reconciliation put for reconcileablenesse nor predicated of all the world nor all the enemies of God nor in any other Scripture For though all were enemies before reconciliation yet all enemies are not reconciled but they that be converted to the faith Thus we are taught in the word of truth to distinguish the state of the Gentiles living in their infidelity without God from the state of the Gentiles reconciled But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were farre off are made nigh by the bloud of Christ c. And that he might reconcile both unto God in one body by the crosse having slaine the enmity thereby Eph. 2. 13 16. And you that were sometimes alienated and enemies in your minds by wicked works yet now are reconciled Col. 1. 21. Now scil the Messiah being exhibited they are reconciled and their sins pardoned the promise of mercy pertaining to them as well as to the Jewes when formerly abalienati à foedere promissionum they were not reconciled And when in the precedent verse he saith that it pleased the Father by him scil Christ to reconcile all things unto himselfe whether they be things in heaven or things in earth he speaks of actuall reconciliation not reconcileablenesse and all things must be limited as that signification of the word and scope of the place doth necessarily require The sentence is diversly interpreted some think it not absurd to extend it simply to all things without exception but especially to reasonable creatures Angels and men Others think it must necessarily be restrained to creatures of a certaine kind and interpret it of Angels and men reconciled one to another who were formerly separated by mans disobedience Others restraine it to the faithfull in heaven and earth and expound it of Vorst in Col. 1. 20. Sch Eph. 1. 10. the Church and men in Covenant who are received into favour and reconciled by the death of Christ laid hold on by faith But to interpret it simply of all men penitent impenitent believers infidels obstinate separated from God by their evill works is directly contrary to the Text and hath scarce a second Author No man is to be excluded from seeking the benefit of reconciliation but from the benefit it self the Apostle excludes them that be not in Covenant and in the state of grace to whom only this spirituall blessing doth pertaine And in the same manner this and the like words are to be limited in other places Eph. 1. 10. Rom. 11. 32. And this they must not deny if they would be at one with themselves for they say all men are under a new Covenant and received into favour and that pardon of sin is promised unto all that shall continue in that Covenant and not transgresse against it Arm. respon ad Art 13 14. so that to consummate happinesse there is need of continuance only in the state which evermore hath effectuall communication conjoyned And restitution into the state of grace and actuall reconciliation if they be not one thing they
be commanded to beleeve in him The Authours of the Synod cap de Election A Law not given or when it cannot be understood See Synod de fens sent pag. 33● Non repugnat c doth not bind Whosoever is bound to beleeve in Christ must have the rule of new life which is the Covenant which was purchased by the blood of the Mediatour as they dispute And then he which is not in Covenant nor ever had the rule of new life how should he be bound to beleeve in Christ The second caution is that he that goeth on in an evill way and maketh a pastime of sinne is not called immediately to beleeve in Christ nor hath received grace sufficient as such a man to rest upon him for Salvation Before they will or can come unto Christ it must be otherwise with them they must be prepared of God who draweth men to Christ but first as they say drawes them to mind their soules seriously A wicked man living within the pale of the Church is bound to beleeve as to repent and cease from his evill way for the neglect of one duty doth not exempt a man Synodal ubi Supr arg 30. Arm. priv disp de fide from another but so long as he goeth on in an evill course he cannot lay hould on the promises of mercy nor embrace Christ as his only Saviour The hungry thirsty and burdened not they which wallow in iniquity are invited to come unto Christ that they might be eased and refreshed They are called to beleeve in Christ for pardon not that they are already the children of God and restored into favour A thirsty and weary man as such can no more beleeve that he is the child of God then a wounded man as wounded can that he is cured or the man stung with the fiery Serpent that he was healed before he looked up to the brasen Serpent Thirst is opposed to water and weatinesse to refreshing A man must believe before he can be in the state of grace and know he doth beleeve before he can beleeve that he is the child of God neither of which can be affirmed of the weary as simply such Thus then I grant all men are bound to beleeve in Christ but thence it will not follow that Christ died for all men equally to purchase for them actuall reconciliation on Gods part and with full and compleate will and purpose quantum in se to save them but only that Christ died for them as an all-sufficient and efficient Saviour so that in the Covenant of grace salvation might be and is tendered unto them upon condition of true repentance and faith unfained For they to whom the Gospell is preached and by whom it is professed are bound to beleeve what is offered in the Gospell as it is offered there in viz. if they hunger and thirst deny themselves and be wearie of their sinnes But it is one thing to deny our workes and relie upon the free mercy of God in Christ another to beleeve that Christ died for our redemption in particular Whosoever is bound to beleeve hath Christ as an all-sufficient and efficient Saviour in and through whom Salvation might be obtained and undoubtedly shall be obtained by him if he renounce his owne works and flie to the sole mercy of God in Christ as the object of faith in order of nature before either the act of faith or proposall of the commandement to beleeve He hath also the rule of new life and is admitted into the Covenant according to the externall administration wherein Christ is offered as a sufficient and efficient Mediatour so that pardon of sin adoption and eternall happinesse shall redound to all and every one by his death if they doe believe and as a Mediatour by merit and saving efficacy to reconcile them actually unto God that be in Covenant effectually The word of truth is the foundation of faith in nature before it true as it is promised not made true by faith but that faith cannot be given to the promise unlesse the thing promised be truly existent and made good before faith is strange in Divinity One thing is true because it is promised another because it is fore-told another because it is simply declared Those things which are true as related those things have been whether we believe them or not and those things which are fore-told as true those in like manner shall come to passe whether we believe or believe not But those things which are true as promised it is not necessary that they be unlesse we believe For the narration and Arm. pri● disp thes 43. prediction is absolute but the promise conditionall requiring faith in the hearer There is this mutuall respect betwixt the promise and stipulation that the promise is as an argument which God useth that he might obtaine of man what he requireth and the performance of the thing required is a condition without which man cannot obtaine the promise of God But leaving further dispute of this matter faith in Christ and the commandment to believe in him hath a subject word true in it selfe not made true by faith whereupon it is builded as true firme and certaine as any ground of faith in Christ can be desired or conceived There is one act of faith whereby we believe that sins are pardonable this is builded upon this ground that Christ is an all-sufficient and efficient Saviour in whose name Salvation is freely offered by faith to be received There is another act of faith whereby we rest upon Christ for salvation this is grounded upon these and Mat. 11. 28. Isa 55. 1. such like promises Come unto me all y● that labour and be heavie laden and I will refresh you Hoe every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters Let him that is a thirst come unto me and drinke There is a third whereby we believe that our sins are already pardoned and this is grounded upon these and such like He that believeth shall be saved It is objected if Christ died not for all men then a man may doubt whether he should believe or no But that scruple is not removed by the contrary perswasion that Christ died for all mankind in the common lapse for so Christ died for many men that neither can nor ought as such to believe and he that questioneth whether he should believe doth it in respect of former transgressions abuse of grace neglect of the meanes and conscience of his owne unworthinesse in which case it affords small comfort and lesse resolution to informe him that Christ died for all men as sinners but not as impenitent or unbelievers But the direct way and course to comfort the distressed and doubting soule in that perplexity is to informe him that his sins are pardonable because in Christ forgivenesse is offered unto him that he is particularly called being hungry thirstie burdened finding himselfe destitute both of grace and comfort to come unto Christ
for then all must comprehend even those that sinne sins unto death amongst the rest unlesse we beleeve that there are no such sinners in the world and he had need be of a strong faith and have some extraordinary revelation that beleeveth that Then are we to pray for all and every Infidell obstinate rebellious person even the whole Kingdome of Antichrist that they might come to the knowledge of the truth but he must be a man of strong faith that can believe that God will give his Gospell to every of these in particular that they might come to the saving knowledge of the truth The distinction of antecedent and consequent will hath no place in this matter because such are to be understood as have most egregiously abused the common grace of God received Moreover we shall never find in Scripture that the faithfull ever made such prayers but as God hath signified his will and pleasure concerning the calling and gathering of his people Jews or Gentiles so they have prayed as we may pray for the fulnesse of the Gentiles and calling of the Jews wherein we doe not exclude any though Act. 5. 31. a●d 11. 18. we know God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and gives the grace of repentance and to repent also to whom he please the habituall grace serving for the one and the actuall and effectuall motion of Gods Spirit being requisite to the other Some pleade further The meanes to this end that men may have part in Christ are unlimited the word written Joh. 20. 31. and preached Act. 3. 24 25 26 27. yea a command to preach to every creature Mark 16. 15. which Paul understood and therefore warned every man and taught every man Col. 1. 18. to repent Act. 17. 30. and to beleeve Rom. 1. 5. But if all this be granted nothing will follow which is not freely granted For as on the one side no man will affirm that Christ died to this end namely to procure forgivenesse of sinne and Salvation to all and every one whether they beleeve or no so on the other side none will deny but that he died to this end that salvation and remission of sinnes should redound to all and every one in case they should beleeve and repent For this depends upon the sufficiencie of that price which Christ paid to God his Father for the redemption of the world No man denieth but God made a Covenant with Adam fallen and his posterity as now with the faithfull and their seed that all mankind had continued in this Covenant if they had not discovenanted themselves and their posterity that no man is deprived of the benefits of Christs death but through his own sinne and corruption that God is not the cause efficient or deficient of any mans infidelity but man himself That men are seriously invited to repent in the Ministery of the Word and that the promise of Salvation is faithfull and true so that he that beleeveth shall never perish These things be not questioned nor whether some effects or benefits of Christs death be common to all men but whether he died equally for all men to purchase actuall reconciliation for them on Gods part and set all Infants in the actuall state of salvation but to procure faith and beliefe for no man so that he had obtained the full immediate end of his death though no man had ever beleeved on him or been saved by him But that which is assumed in this argument is apparently false as it is applyed The Covenant of grace is revealed to some no man being shut forth by name but if he repent and beleeve he shall be saved but many thousands never heard of never had probable meanes to come to the knowledge of the Covenant The commandement to preach the Gospell to every creature was given to the Apostles in the dayes of grace upon the publication of which Covenant they which formerly served dumbe idols were bound to repent and beleeve but that commandement was peculiar to the Apostles not given till after the resurrection of Christ after such commandement the Apostles were injoyned to tarry for a time in Jerusalem nor could they possibly disperse themselves in a moment into every part of the world nor the world take notice of any such commandement given unto them or of the doctrine revealed by them Before that time the Lord suffered the Gentiles for a long time to walk in the vanity of their minds without the light of his truth and since that time divers nations have been cast off left to themselves as aliens from the Covenant and deprived of all meanes to come to the knowledge of God in Christ And if there were any force in this reason The meanes of grace be unlimited and command given to preach to every creature therefore Christ died for all men This must be of greater weight The meanes of grace be not vouchsafed unto all and every man therefore Christ died not for all and every man For if meanes necessary to Salvation be not propounded if they be not nor ever were called to the faith by the ordinary and only effectuall meanes ordained of God to bring men thereunto we speake of our selves and not according to Scripture if we affirme God gave Christ to die for their redemption Amongst many effects of Christs death reckoned up in this argument this is the most generall and all the rest depend upon it and if the meanes be not vouchsafed to all none of the rest can be common to every one It is a received principle amongst them that as God loved the world and Christ gave himselfe a ransome for all men or is the propitiation for the sins of the whole world so God willed that the Gospell concerning Christ should be published to all men in the world Corvin in Mol. cap. 31. sect 33. If then the Gospell be not published or God willed not that the Gospell should be published to all and every man in the world Christ died not for all and every man Adam and Noah having received the Covenant were bound to teach their children and so successively in all ages Psal 78. which had it been observed none had failed to have the same published unto him If this be applied to the present purpose they must teach only that Christ died for all and every man if they that be in Covenant shall carefully observe the charge and commandement of God And by the same reason they may conclude that God gave his Sonne to die and that with plenary purpose that no man should ever sinne by ignorance infirmity impenitency unbeliefe or any particular transgression that God purposed to give to every man the plentifull and effectuall meanes of grace and that every man should actually apply the death of Christ For if every man successively had obeyed the commandement given to Adam and fulfilled that charge the doctrine of salvation had been published to every man every man had been
borne and lived in Covenant every man had actually applyed the death of Christ unto himselfe every man had enjoyed all the Ordinances of God yea there had been no impenitent person I might adde properly no sinner but Adam and Eve Then they could not say Christ came to save the world under which infidels must be comprehended or that he prayed for his persecutours and unbeleevers nor that he came to save his people from their sinnes for if this charge had been obeyed there had been no Infidell nor persecutour nor sinner amongst his people but only our first Parents And by the same evasion they may hold that Christ died for all and every man when he died for no man living or that ever lived but Adam only But this is nothing to prove that since many Nations have neglected their charge and being fallen from God have received from him a Bill of divorce a commandement hath been given notwithstanding unto his servants in all ages to publish the doctrine of salvation unto every creature amongst all Nations Adam and Noah were in Covenant is there the same reason of them and their posterity continuing in the faith that there is of them that be strangers to the Covenant shut up in darknesse and never heard the sound of the Gospell for many generations together It seemeth sufficient to Princes say they to publish their Lawes in some places at some times though they concerne all are for their good and take hold of them if they be not observed leaving it to Parents to teach their children and every one to enquire for his own good In this comparison there be divers things unlike divers that cannot befitted to the purpose unlesse it be in a sense contrary For they say Lawes once sufficiently published bind and stand in force though unknowne or scarcely possible to be known by some particular men now living in some remote parts of the dominions And the plaine direct reddition is That God having made a Covenant of grace with Adam and his posterity all and every man is bound to beleeve in Christ and walke in obedience though he be ignorant of his duty never received ability to do it never had meanes possible to come to the knowledge of Christ yea though he be cast off and left to the hardnesse of his heart God hath commanded Parents to teach their children Who doubts of that But the question is whether God hath vouchsafed sufficient means of grace to every man which is not hereby proved because God when he gave his Covenant injoyned Parents to teach their children We grant the Lord is wanting in nothing which either he promised or in his eternall wisdome and justice saw meet to be done and that such as be deprived of the means of grace be justly deprived But we say as experience confirmeth that sufficient meanes of grace hath not been afforded to every man living since the fall of Adam In the comparison there be many things unlike For common-wealth are one body politick in which it is held sufficient to publish Lawes in some knowne places and at some times granting space and meanes that all may learne them if they will But we speake of such as never were so much as in the outward society of the Church nor adjoyning to them that never heard of the Covenant of grace they nor many of their Ancestours nor of a people or society professing the true Religion So that whereas the reason is of the meanes of supernaturall knowledge vouchsafed to them that never heard of the Covenant or lived nigh unto them that enjoyed the word of reconciliation the com●arison is of men in Covenant who cannot want possibl● meanes ●o know the main and fundamentall points of the Covenant Old Lawes they say not in use yet in force scarce possible to be knowne do bind But the question is of many doctrines in use which must necessarily be known or a man cannot be in the number of the faitfull so much as in externall society There is not a prohibition to preach or write to any say they unlesse it was to punish some speciall sinne as when Christ saith Cast not pearles before swine or some others were to be served first as Christ said to the woman of Canaan I am not sent but to the lost sheepe of the house of Israel and Paul Act. 13. It was needfull that the Gospell should be first preached unto you And it was thus when the Spirit forbade Paul to goe into one place and commanded him to goe into another We might aske unto which of the two cases they will referre that of our Saviour Into the way of the Samaritanes enter ye not Matth. 10. 5. and Tarry ye at Jerusalem untill ye be endued with power from on High Luke 24. 49. during which time and before the Apostles could disperse themselves many millions might depart this life who never enjoyed meanes sufficient to bring them to the knowledge of God in Christ And if God have charged his servants not to cast pearles before swine and prohibited them for a time to preach the Word of the Kingdome to some people and in some places because it is his pleasure to serve others first why should we not likewise think that God in justice hath deprived many nations and people of all possible meanes whereby they should come to the knowledge of the truth Let us see how well this fitteth the matter in hand The meanes of grace be unlimited but in two cases there was a prohibition to write and what is this but in plain termes to confesse that the meanes of grace in all ages and times in respect of all places and persons have not been unlimited Besides when no man must take this office of preaching upon him but he that is called thereunto of God and no man can shew that he hath beene called to preach the Gospell to every creature why may not this be called a prohibition The last refuge is That any man might have had the Word using that little well that God gave How should he have had it By ordinary meanes or extraordinary revelation Some are bold to affirme he should have had it after an extraordinary manner Others speake of I know not what possibility by traffique and the like both sorts utter strange things and it is reason we should require better proofes then bare affirmations To him that hath shall be given is a proverbiall speech whereby our Saviour signifieth that they who be enlightened by the Gospell and use well the supernaturall gifts they have received shall be enriched with an happy encrease And that the contemners of the Gospell and grace bestowed upon them shall have that taken from them which they seemed to have But that men unregenerate can of themselves use their naturall gifts in an acceptable manner or that God will bestow supernaturall upon them that use their naturall gifts minus male as Arminius speakes is neither found in the
Temporaries Math. 13. 21. And then concludes to take away the shew of repugnancy which seemes to be betwixt this and the former places We must hold that Christ in act and very deed is the redeemer of the faithfull as long as they be such although in power yea and in will he be the Saviour of the whole world To let passe other things which pertaine not to this question it is plaine the Apostle speakes of them for whom Christ died in act event or application in which sence they confesse he died not for all men but the faithfull only as such And as these false teachers were called into the Covenant accepted the condition beleeved in Christ for a time rejoyced in him and brought forth some fruite so we confesse they were bought by the blood of Christ because all these were fruits of Christs death whereof they were made partakers As in the Parable the Lord is said to remit to his servant a thousand Talents when he desired him sc inchoately or upon condition which Math. 18. 25. was not confirmed because he did not forgive his fellow servant so the false Prophets are bought by the blood of Christ sc in a sort as they beleeved in Christ but not sincerely and unfainedly We Heb. 6. 5 6 7. reade of some Apostates that they had been enlightened and tasted of the heavenly gift and been partakers of the holy Spirit who afterwards did revolt from the faith To these men their sinnes were remitted in a sort in this world and in a sort they were bought by the blood of Christ but inchoately only and as they tasted the word of life Had they eaten the word of life that is had they soundly and truly beleeved in Christ they had received perfect and consummate remission of sinnes both in this world 2 Pet. 2. 22. Vt generalis vox acquirere pro emere Act. 7. 16. cum Gen. 25. 10. sic specialis emere pro acquirere vicissim usurpatur Apo. 3. 18. 2 Sam. 7. 23. Psal 26. 11. and in the world to come they had been perfectly redeemed and reconciled unto God but because they did not eate tasted only they received not perfect remission they were not perfectly redeemed To this taste answereth the Sowe that is washed and returneth againe to the wallowing in the mire washed and so redeemed washed with remission of sinnes and so redeemed from sinne inchoately but because she returneth to the filth of sinne that remission is confirmed neither in the houre of death nor at the day of Judgement The false Prophets were bought as they beleeved Had they beleeved effectually with a soveraigne well-rooted Luk. 21. 28. Rom. 8. 23. Heb. 11. 35. Empti dincuntar h●e ut alibi l●quitur scriptura Exod. 15. 16. Deut. 32. 6. acqui siti uenepe quod illos Deu● in familiam suam adsci●erit See Kimedont de Redemp hū gen cap. 9. pag. 206. affiance they had been bought saving-effectually as they beleeved superficially so they were bought in act and event but not unto Salvation The purchase of redemption goeth before faith is not made by faith but applied only but it is most assured if men beleeve unfainedly they are redeemed effectually if they beleeve not they are not redeemed for them that be cast off as aliens we doe not reade that redemption was purchased This interpretation will not seeme new nor strained to them that shall weigh the circumstances of the Text not to them that urge it when they shall consider it is their owne It agreeth well with the scope of the Apostle which is to shew the fearefull condition of such false teachers because they in life denied the Lord that had called them into Covenant which they had accepted whom they had embraced by faith by whom they were delivered from the pollutions of the world in whom if they had beleeved unfainedly without question they should have been saved and whom wilfully not of frailty they had denied And is not this a good argumēt to prove that by their wilfull departure they had brought upon themselves swift damnation If they were never the neerer heaven by ought Christ had done the fault was their owne for life was truly promised unto them whereof they deprived themselves not because they could not doe otherwise but because they would not receive it or having received it in part they voluntarily fell off What though God never purposed to make them actuall partakers of the saving benefits of Christs death By his commandement he bound them to beleeve by promise he assured them of Salvation if they did beleeve he bestowed upon them many spirituall gifts the fruits of Christs death and if they fell away God was no cause efficient or deficient of their revolt And doth not all this conclude their sinne to be out of measure sinfull in denying the Lord that bought them The other places Rom. 14. and 1 Cor. 8. receive the same answer for they speake of weake bretheren for whom Christ died who were beleevers or as beleevers for whom Christ died in respect of application And then this argument doth not hang handsomly together Christ died for beleevers in respect of application therefore he died for all men to impetrate righteousnesse If they reason thus he died for some in respect of application that may perish therefore he died for all men in respect of impetration it hangs but loosely for they themselves will say Christ died for the faithfull only in respect of application and not for all men whatsoever we are to thinke of the condition of the faithfull whether they shall stand or may perish Amongst themselves some that maintaine generall redemption by the death of Christ doe yet hold that no lively member of Jesus Christ can perish or fall away And I can hardly see how their positions will hang together if they doe not grant that though some believers may fall and perish yet others cannot But as concerning the weake bretheren such as be true believers it is possible they should be grievously shaken by offences and temptations yea destroyed as farre as lies in the authours of scandall and temptation and their own frailty but in respect of the decree and unchangeable love of God and the intercession of Jesus Christ they shall not utterly perish but if they be tempted they shall be supported or if they fall God will raise them up againe The Apostles exhortation then is forcible that they should not offend their weake brother for this was as much as lies in them to destroy him for whom Christ died Perditio est ●orbi ac vul●u neris non mortis Vorst in Rom. 14. 15. Thus Vorstius paraphraseth the text offend not him with thy meat I pray thee and as much as in thee is destroy him for whom Christ died And in his loc com upon that Chapter although the elect cannot perish the unchangeable decree of God withstanding yet it is not said in vaine
that they perish by our fault who when they have entered into the way of salvation being offended with our actions begin to turne from the same And in loc com upon the other place although Christ will suffer none of his to perish yet indeed they are said to drive weake Christians into destruction who doe rashly offend them because to wit offences of themselves doe tend to their destruction to whom they are objected Lastly It is objected that the Covenant in Christ is generall Joh. 3 16. 6. 30. without respect of others As the Covenant is generall so is the fruit and application of Christs death in and through whom the Covenant is made that is proffered of God and accepted of man As all and every man is called into Covenant liveth under the Ordinances of grace is partaker of the fruits of the Spirit and applieth the death of Christ so Christ died and rose againe for him But this manner of Christs death pertaineth to the event act or application which they confesse is not common to all men and is manifest in this that God entred not into Covenant with every Nation at all times neither under the Law nor in times of the Gospell scil Act and with the Nations he passed by and which as the Scripture saith were without God God expressely declared himselfe in the time wherein the distinction of Jew and Gentile tooke place that he would accept of strangers as well as any if they should love and feare his name Isa 56. 7. But the Covenant at that time was not made with all Nations as it was with the Jews not made known unto all the Gentiles they did not enjoy means sufficient to come to the knowledge of the truth That the promises of mercy did at all times belong to them that fulfilled the condition is needlesse to be proved but that the Covenant was made with every man or that meanes sufficient or grace to receive the promises was granted to every man at all times in all ages if they would is that which no Scripture testifieth And that passage of the Prophet which promiseth the acceptance of the stranger if he repent and turne unto the Lord is manifestly spoken of the times of the new Testament when the partition wall was broken downe as the verses following doe convince In the daies of grace the Covenant was more generall then in former times it had been but God hath not erected his Tabernacle nor walked amongst all Nations in every age of these last times as experience teacheth How then is the Covenant generall respecting every man Peradventure they mean no more but this that every man that will be saved must be saved by it and whosoever doth believe be he bond or free Jew or Gentile male or female rich or poore he shall be saved though the Covenant was never made with most Nations of the world nor accepted by them nor they had means to come to the knowledge of it much lesse grace to performe the conditions and then to grant the Covenant is generall will availe them nothing There is no force in this argument the Covenant of grace is made with some none being exluded if they repent and believe therefore Christ died for every man rather we may strongly Rom. 1. 16. Col. 1. 23. Act. 17. 30. Tit. 2. 14. Luk. 24. 47. argue Christ died not for every man because God is not the God of all by Covenant But the invitation is generall scil in the daies of grace and to them that heare it and the promise universall to every believer we adde the invitation is serious shewing what God is well pleased with and doth approve in us scil that which he perswadeth with arguments in themselves forcible to move and incite and what he will performe if we make good the condition We adde that the party invited is passively capable of the invitation that no man of what state or condition soever is hindred or kept backe from comming to Christ by any cause efficient or deficient out of man himselfe which doth either constraine or necessitate his not comming and he that refuseth to come refuseth not through inability as unable though unwilling and desirous to imbrace it but willingly preferring some base inferiour good before it But this argueth only the sufficiency of Christs death that all men should be saved if they did believe and the efficiency thereof that the members of the visible Church should be invited seriously and those that be effectually called should inherit the promise It will be said to what purpose are they called and invited if they be as unable to come as a dead man is to arise and walke True it is every man is of himselfe unable by nature to come unto Christ and God doth enable whom he please but this inability is not from any impossibility that is without man himselfe either in respect of the thing commanded or any externall cause or bruite necessity and disposition but from his voluntary perversenesse which is most blame-worthy The comparison may be admitted if rightly interpreted otherwise it is captious for sinne is the death of the soule not physicall but morall Man by sin locseth not the faculty of understanding and willing but of understanding and willing aright as in duty he is bound the object being propounded and revealed with fit and convenient light It is not therefore all one to invite a sinner to forsake the errour of his way and call upon a dead man to arise out of the grave The Lord who doth whatsoever he will in heaven above and in earth beneath in his deepe and unsearchable counsell never absolutely intended to make every man actually and effectually partakers of the benefit promised for if he had so purposed it it should have taken effect neverthelesse the invitation is serious shewing what we ought to doe and God doth approve and desire on our parts and the purpose of God to give faith to whom he please and not to all men is no cause of any mans unbeliefe either efficient or deficient For that man believeth this he oweth unto God and that not simply alone but comparatively in respect of others who believe not but that man refuseth the promises of mercy this is of himselfe not of simple or naturall infirmity which might procure pity but of his owne perversenesse and love to some inferiour good different from the good proposed or contrary to it and aversenesse from the circumstances and conditions of the object proposed They aske what signe doth God shew of desire or approvall that men should believe when he gives them not power so to doe This that he commandeth intreateth perswadeth them to repent and believe waiteth with long-suffering and patience for their amendment promiseth mercy if they will returne convinceth them of their wilfulnesse and though he change not their hearts by the effectuall worke of his Spirit is wanting to them in nothing which in
the Nations of the earth be blessed though no exclusion be expressed the Apostle is Gal. 3. 16. bold to interpret it as if it had been said In thy seed alone Whom he foreknew them he predestinated this proposition is not Rom. 8. 29 30. expressely exclusive is it not then exclusive in sense When David saith The Lord is my God he excludes not the faithfull from the same preeminence but when the Lord saith to his people I am the Lord thy God he excludes them that be not in Covenant Abraham beleeved God and it was accounted to him for righteousnesse Gen. 15. 6. here is not restriction added but the proposition is exclusive Whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting Joh. 3. 16. life doth not this proposition exclude works from being a cause of Salvation because only is not added Some answer that these passages be exclusive because the Apostle expressely shuts forth works from the act of Justification Rom. 3. 28. whereas they rather teach that faith doth comprehend repentance conversion and new obedience and that works are not excluded from the act of Justification but only works done by the power of nature But leaving that the proposition is for the matter exclusive and that the Apostle shewes from the thing it self proving hereby that Abraham after he had followed the Lord a long time and yeelded obedience to his commandements was justified by faith without the works of the Law The words therefore may be exclusive though only be not added and that they be restrictive is plain by the thing signified for what is it for Christ to lay down his life for his sheep or to purchase his Church by his bloud but to bruise the serpents head to redeeme them from all iniquity and purifie them to be a peculiar people to himselfe ●o save his people from their sins to deliver them from the feare of hell and death and to blesse all Nations of the earth according to the promise made to Abraham This needs no further confirmation then the next answer which they make that the words be exclusive not in respect of the thing it selfe but of the modus which others expresse thus that Christ died for his sheep in respect of the application and event For if it be exclusive in the modus exclusive it is as well though only be not added as if it was And the question is not of the sufficiency of Christs death for all men in respect of the magnitude and excellency of the price nor of the efficiency of his death in some degrees for such as shall not inherit the crown of glory but of the modus whether he died sufficientèr efficientèr quantum in se for all and every man That this Modus is excluded will appeare in that we shall never reade that Christ died for any but for his sheep his Church his brethren his people or them that be considered as such in respect of present profession externall administration and application of his benefits Vnto you is borne this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Luke 2. 11. Luke 1. 68 69 70. Lord. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel because he hath visited and redeemed his people and hath raised up an borne of Salvation in the house of his servant David as he spake by the mouth of his holy Prophets which have been since the world began That we should be saved from our enemies and from the hands of all that hate us Mine eyes have seen thy salvation which thou hast prepared before the face of Luke 2. 30 31 32. all people A light to lighten the Gentiles and the glory of thy people Israel Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his Heb. 2. 17. brethren that he might be a mercifull and faithfull high Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the s●nnes of the people Thou art worthy to take the booke and to open the seales thereof for Rev. 5. 9. thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kinred and tongue and people and nation And generally in every place they for whom Christ is said to die are called his elect his sheep his people his brethren not barely called into Covenant but received upon their acceptance thereof The severall passages alleadged to prove the universality of Christs death have been examined already and found to speake directly to this purpose But amongst them that be called into and accept of the Covenant some be elected simply others in comparison some be the sheep and brethren of Christ in truth and sincerity others in profession and externall administration or in some respect only And as we must distinguish of the elect and sheepe of Christ so of his dying for them For he died for all his elect as they apply and be partakers of the benefits of his death he died saving-effectually scil to bring them to grace and glory according to the election of grace for his simply elect and people in truth that is for them upon whom Salvation should be conferred and to whom it should be soundly applied So the Prophet telleth us Christ died that indeed and most certainely Isa 53. 10. he might see his seed and bring many brethren unto God And if Christ died not for his sheepe for this particular end that by his speciall grace and that which is given to none others they Rom. 9. 18. Job 10. 15. might injoy the fruit of his death we must confesse that Christ in this saying doth give no particular comfort to his sheepe and in that whole Chapter which is absurd And though sheepe and beleevers materially be the same formally in this place they be not for when Christ saith to the Pharisees Yee beleeve not for yee are not of my sheepe Joh. 10. 16. If to be a beleever and the sheep of Christ doe signifie the same thing he should say ye beleeve not and that which followeth My sheepe heare my voice and follow me Joh. 10. 27. should be the same as if it had been said the beleevers beleeve So that sheepe and beleevers are reciprocall but formally they are not made sheepe by faith but by election Moreover the acquisition of righteousnesse by the death of Christ and the application thereof are things to be distinguished but so inseperably conjoyned that for whomsoever it is acquired to them it is applied By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall beare their iniquities Isa 5● 11. He bare the sinne of many and made intercession for the transgressours Isa 33. 12. By his stripes are we healed Isa 53. 5. Who was delivered for our offences and was raised againe for our justification Rom. 4 25. As by the offence of one judgement came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousnesse of one the free gift came upon
17. of John ver 21. That the world may beleeve that thou hast sent me Some by the world in that place understand the elect who then were dispersed abroad or them that were to be converted from infidelity to the faith But because the word world in the whole Chapter is taken in another sence it is most naturall in this place to understand it as before for men that be of the world not illightened or converted to the faith and the word Beleeve to be put improperly for to acknowledge or confesse The sense is that the world although unbeleeving although Maldonat in Joh. 17. 21. Iansen hac 136. an adversary to me yet seeing the great love and concord of my Disciples may be compelled to beleeve that is to acknowledge and confesse that I was sent of God that is that I am not as now it thinketh a seducer but that I am truly sent of the Father or that the Infidels may by experience be convinced to confesse my glory and be compelled to acknowledge and confesse that thou hast sent me a Saviour into the world This sense is so plain and easie that we need not seek any further for the meaning but if we grant it to be meant of true and sound faith it will not follow thence that Christ made intercession for every man in the world that he might beleeve For the world is usually taken for men in the world indefinitely and not simply for every man nor yet for the greater part of men in the world There went out a decree from Cesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed Luk 2. 1. but this cannot be extended to every nation much l●sse to every man The Vide Psal 118. 10. 1 Chro. 14. 17. Jer. 27. 7. Dan. 2. 38. Matth. 10. 22. Rom. 15. Rev. 18. 3 23. impure spirits goe forth unto the Kings of the earth and of the whole world Rev. 16. 14. All the world wondred after the beast Rev. 13. 3. The whole world lyeth in iniquity 1 Joh. 5. 19. He was in the world and the world knew him not Joh. 1. 10. Behold the world is gone after him Joh. 12. 19. The Syriacke Interpreter vulgar Interpreter and Mannus the Greeke Paraphrast adde the universall particle and reade it the whole world But if the world be taken for every man in the world we must conclude that every man in the world did follow Christ and that no man in the world did know him They aske again what is it the Intercession of Christ required Psal 2. 8. Aske of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine Inheritance Is it not for unbeleevers to bring them to the faith and doth not Christ intercede for the comming of Gods Kingdome as he taught his Disciples to doe There is therefore an Intercession of Christ for them that beleeve But here we cannot find that generall Intercession of Christ they speake of that every man might come to the faith by fitting meanes but for the most part ineffectuall The prayer required in the second Psalme Arminius Armin. Orat. de Sacerdot Chr. referreth to the prayer which Christ offered to the Father for himselfe according to the commandement and promise of the Father Aske of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine Inheritance to which Promise of the Father Christ having respect said Father glorifie thy Sonne that thy Sonne also may glorifie thee as thou Joh. 17. 2. hast given him power over all flesh that he might give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him And from this prayer are to be distinguished saith he those supplications which with strong cries and teares he offered to his Father in the dayes of his flesh by those he craved to be freed from his Agony by this he prayeth that he might see his seed and that the will of God might prosper in his hand But howsoever it be the prayer spoken of in that place is absolute certain and effectuall for what God there promised Christ prayed for in particular and he was heard therein and therefore it cannot be applyed to that generall Intercession of Christ which they would maintaine as every man may plainly see They further reply that this Intercession of Christ Joh. 17. pertaineth to the application of Christs death that Christ maketh Intercession for beleevers and by the world they are signified who did or would contemne and reject Christ offered to them in the word of his Gospell as the word world is used in many other places Joh. 1. 10. and 3. 19. and 14. 17. 16. 8 9. 14. 22. But if it pertain to the application of Christs death it followeth thence that the death of Christ shall be applyed to them who were given unto him of the Father that in speciall manner he might lay down his life for them seeing Christ offered up himselfe a sacrifice to the Father for them and them only for whom according to his office of Mediatorship he made speciall Intercession If by the world obstinate contemners of the Gospell be understood what shall we thinke of them to whom the word of reconciliation was never sent or Christ offered in the Ministery of the Gospell are they partakers of the benefits of Christs speciall Intercession or is the death of Christ applyed unto them If only contemners of the Gospell be meant by the world for which Christ would not pray why should it be interpreted of speciall Intercession seeing our Saviour as they confesse neither laid down his life nor made generall Intercession for such as such that they might be brought to the faith or be partakers of the merits of his death Our Saviour in that his prayer opposeth the world to them that are given unto him of the Father and as to be given unto him of the Father notes somewhat precedent to effectuall vocation and lively faith though every one that is given unto him doth or shall beleeve so the world notes a state antecedent to wilfull contempt though they that be of this world if they live under the Gospell will prove themselves contemners Joh. 6. 37. All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me and him that commeth unto me I will in no wise cast out saith Christ But to come unto Christ is to beleeve in him by effectuall vocation Joh. 1. 10. The world knew not Christ but they were the world before they shut their eyes against the light and refused Christ offering himselfe unto them Joh 3. 19. They are the world who are not given unto Christ are not his sheep his people his brethren believe not in him be disobedient cast out though they never stubbornly contemned the Gospell because the sound therof never came into their eares that light never shined amongst them And now for conclusion of this argument let this one thing be added that if we search the Scripture we shall find no mention of this two-fold Intercession of Christ properly
talis de persona peccatori● in per sonam aliam transire Neque etiam sapientia Dei quae in boc negotio max●mè elucet locum babitura videtur si per naturam nequisset Deu● aliter ●gere sapientia enim est electrix mediorum Luk. 24. 26 27. Joh. 10. 18. weighty For hereby God manifesteth his just indignation against sin and magnifieth the riches of his grace and tender compassion towards the sinner whom he is pleased to save from deserved wrath Seeing then God decreed not to deliver man from the sentence of death contracted by sin but upon satisfaction made to divine justice and the punishment of sin borne by his surety of necessity if Christ become a Mediatour to intercede for us he must undertake to pay our debts and in our roome and steed to suffer what we deserved And as he undertook so he hath borne the chastisement of our peace and by bearing the punishment hath taken away our sins That Christ did under-goe the punishment due to sinners as their surety is evident in this that he died for us For the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6. 23 5. 12. which God inflicteth upon none but either a sinner or him that beareth the person of a sinner 2 Cor. 15. 21 22. Col. 1. 14. Eph. 1. 7. Heb. 12. 2. Act 20. 28. Col. 1. 20. Rom. 3 25. Gal. 3. 13. Heb. 12. 24. wherefore seeing Christ in himselfe most innocent did suffer death it necessarily followeth that he suffered not in his owne but in our name and satisfied the Father for us Hitherto it makes that he suffered not any kind of death whatsoever but ignominious violent judiciall and accursed such as had the sence of Gods wrath adjoyned For no reason can be imagined why Christ should so much dread death which the Martyrs endured without feare but that for the time he was deprived of that refreshing of divine grace and favour wherewith they were sustained and confirmed 2 Cor. 4 8 9. in the midst of the fire Nor is there any thing whither we can referre those tremblings of Christ those groanes and teares in which he was heard that desire that the cup might passe from him but to the imposition of our sinnes and that conflict with the wrath of God which followed from it The death of our Saviour is referred to his unspeakeable love towards us Joh. 14. Rev. 1. 5. Gal. 2. 20. 13. Gal. 2. 20. Ephes 5. 2 23. But if he could not but I de because he was man he shewed his infirmity in dying rather then the fervour of his love For though Christ had loved us unto death Soc. lib. 3. de Serv. c. 5. yet had he not commended his love in dying if he dyed by condition of nature and had not being innocent laid downe his life for us mortall because sinners In like manner Christ is said to have Lev. 5. 1. 10. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 5. 10. Ezek. 18. 20. 2 King 7. 9. Syr. portavit et ascendere secit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sursum serre Luk. ●4 51. sursum ducere Matth. 17. 1. Mar. 9. 2. Heb. 7. 27. Jam. 2. 21. Heb. 13. 15. 1 Pet. 2. 24. carried our sinnes and that in his body upon the tree which in usuall phrase of Scripture is to be punished for our sinnes and pay the punishment of our sinnes Isa 53. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 24. Lev. 19 8. 20. 17. 24 15. Numb 14. 23. 30. 16. Lam. 5. 7. Ezek 18. 20. And such a carrying is described to which smiting is adjoyned and the chastisement of our peace from the translation of all our iniquities upon Christ Isa 53. 5. For as it followeth in the same place immediately He was afflicted that is with the punishment due to sinne which was laid upon him Isa 53. 6 7. Whereunto those passages of Scripture might be referred which say that Christ made his soule an offering for sinne Isa 53. 10. that he that knew no sinne was made sinne for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. that he hath redeemed us from the curs of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. in which he must of necessity be understood who bears the punishments of sinne And it is against reason that he should be said to beare the sinnes of others who suffers by occasion of sin only unlesse he beare the punishment of sinne and take it upon himselfe For who will say he that suffers losse or dammage from the fault of a thiefe doth beare his sinne when he doth not beare the punishment of theft nor is punished for it The Evangelist translates this saying of the Prophet to corporall diseases which Christ did not receive upon himselfe it is by way of similitude and Math. 8. 16 177 agreement in the thing it selfe although the manner of the thing be diverse as also by such miracles Christ declared himselfe to be that Messiah who was to beare and by bearing to take away our sinnes Moreover the Scripture saith Christ died for our sinnes 1 Cor. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 15. 3. Gal. 1. 4. Heb. 10. 12. 1 Pet. 3. 18. and was delivered to death for our offences Rom. 4. 23. and for sinners and wicked Isa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 53. 6. Rom. 5. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. to be made sinne for us 1 Pet. 3. 18. to suffer the just for the unjust which import that sinne was the efficient meritorious cause of the death of Christ for sinne cannot Psal 39. 12. Psal 73 18 19. 10● 17. Ephes 5. ● otherwise be the cause of punishment but by way of merit nor can any man be said to be punished for sinne but the meritorious cause of punishing is noted thereby And those particles applied to other things may note the finall cause applied to sufferings they point out the efficient or meritorious only and sinnes deserve affliction per modum paenae Lev. 26. 39. Deut. 18. 12. 1 King 14. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5. 38. Luk. 11. 11. Rom. 12. 17. 1 Cor. 11. 15. Heb. 12. 16. 1 Pet. 3. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the impulsive cause Rom. 15. 9. 2 Cor. 1. 11. Ephes 1. 16. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 7. 4. 9. 2. 12. 5. 2 Cor. 12. 10. 1 Cor. 1. 4. Jud. ver 15. Sic Latini pro beneficijs gratias agere ulcisci pro injurijs c. Christ is said to die not only for our sinnes but for us not for our good alone but in our roome and steed as the phrase importeth and the one particle used signifieth opposition or subrogation and commutation Mat. 20. 28. Mar. 10. 45. Joh. 11. 50. Rom. 5. 7 8. 2 Cor. 5. 15. Heb. 2 9. 1 Pet. 2. 2. and the latter though sometimes it admit a different sence in this matter must be expounded by the former Rom. 9. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 14. Christ
might be made for this promised Spirit by interceding Mediator-like for them and by willing the going of such graces from him as who is with God the Son but one worker though a distinct principle of working that is though distinct in nature yet the same person He therefore worketh them as his own workes from his owne power for Gods power is by unity of person made his the divine power not being without him as the power of another person then he is but being personally with him And those things which his humane nature worketh which are wrought after his humane nature the workes not of an humane but a divine person for though the nature according to which they are wrought be humane yet the person working is the person of the Sonne of God Hence it is that Christ-man doth give graces authoritativè effectivè yea according to humane action doth effect them in the highest degree that an instrumentall operation can effect any thing St Paul gives graces by laying on of hands with prayer ministerialiter not as his worke but as intreating it from God in Christ and signifying what God doth in Christ not from any power any way within his person but the power of another not as conjoyned with God as the body with the soule but as an instrument with God Christ the Head of his Church is over all to whom all things are subject He who must be a saving head to us there is great need he should be over all Could he not bind that strong one and cause him re-deliver his possession how should we ever be set at liberty Could he not dissolve the worke of Satan swallow up death create life and quickning in us our case were lamentable The sixt thing implied is That Christ God and man is the object of divine odoration Let all the Angels of heaven worship him All knees shall bow unto him All shall honour the Sonne as they honour the Father Yee believe in God believe also in me saith our Saviour In him shall the Gentiles trust So Steven called upon the Lord Jesus saying Lord Jesus receive my spirit And the Apostles in the entrance of their Epistles desire grace and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ not the Lord of Jesus Christ as some Heretikes would corrupt the text and so in the shutting up of their Epistles The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15. 23. Gal. 6. 18. 2 Cor. 13. 13. Phil. 4. 23. 1 Thess 5. 28. 2 Thess 3. 18. Philem. v. 25. 2 Tim. 4 22. But some object that if adoration be due to Christ God and man then it will follow that the humane nature is omniscient and almighty which followeth not because that which is spoken of the concrete or whole person is restrained to the one nature which should not be The person adored or called upon is man but the humanity it selfe only or solely or in it selfe properly taken is not the proper subject or object of that worship Albeit we may and should adore the man Christ with divine worship yet may we not adore his man-hood or his flesh and bloud Because though the man Christ be God yet his man-hood is not God and by consequence not to be worshipped with that worship which is properly and essentially divine Againe if adoration agree to the humanity of Christ then may his humanity helpe and save us But the humanity of Christ cannot helpe and save us because omnis actio est suppositi whereas the humane nature of Christ is not suppositum None of those who defend the adoring of the humanity of Christ with divine worship doe well and warrantably expresse their opinion First Some of the Schoole-men have found none other respect Aquin. 3. q. 25. Art 2. wherefore the man-hood of Christ can be said to be adored except this that the flesh of Christ is adored by him who adoreth the word incarnate even as the Kings cloathes are adored by him who adoreth the King And thus they make the flesh of Christ to be adored only by accident Ego vero saith the Arch-bishop of De Rep. Eccl. lib. 7. cap. 12. n. 43. Spalato non puto à quoquam Regis vestimenta quibus est indutus adorari And why doth he that worshippeth the King worship his cloathes more then any other thing that is about him or beside him perhaps a Hawke upon his hand c. There is no more but the Kings owne person set by the worshipper to have any state in the worship and therefore no more worshipped by him Others devise another respect wherefore the man-hood of Christ may be said to be worshipped namely that as the divine worship agrees only to the God-head and not personis praecisè sumptis i. Fr. S. Clara Expos art confess Angl. art 28. sub ratione formali constitutiva personarum quae est relatio but only as these relations identificantur with the essence of the Godhead so the man-hood of Christ is to be adored Non per se praecisè sed prout suppositatur à Deo But if by suppositatur they meane as they must meane that the man-hood is assumed into the unity of the person of the Sonne of God for otherwise if they meane that the man-hood is made a person they are Nestorians that which they say cannot warrant the worshipping of the manhood with divine worship because the man-hood even after this assumption and hypostaticall union is still for all that a creature and a distinct nature from the God-head so that it cannot yet be said to be worshipped with divine worship Dr Field layeth out a third way for whiles he admitteth the phrase of the Lutherans who say not only concretively that the Of the Church lib. 5. cap. 15. man Christ is omnipotent but the humanity also he thus distinguisheth when we speake saith he of the humanity of Christ sometimes we understand only that humane created essence of a man that was in him sometimes all that that is implied in the being of a man as well subsistence as essence But this distinction is as if a man should say sometimes by blacknesse I understand blacknesse and sometimes the subject wherein it is together with the blacknesse it selfe An abstract is no more an abstract if it have a subsistence It is the tenet of the Schoole that though in God Aqu. ●qu 13. art 1. the concrete and the abstract differ not because Deus Deitas are the same yet in creatures whereof the man-hood of Christ is one they are really different For the concrete signifieth something compleat subsisting but the abstract such as humanity signifieth something not as subsisting but as that whereby something is Wherefore when some say the flesh of Christ is to be adored the speech is not proper but figurative because properly Polan Syntag. lib. 6. cap 16. the flesh secundum se is not adored because it is a creature but
Isa 11. 9. 54. 13. 1 Cor. 1. 7. 2. 10. Joh. 6. 45. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 32. 28. 1 Sam. 8. 7. Eph. 6. 12. We wrestle not against flesh bloud i. only Act. 16. 14. 2 Cor. 3. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 22. God would pour upon his Church in the times of the new Testament leading the true children of the Church by his blessed Spirit into all truth necessary to Salvation The like phrases are often found in the Scriptures and the adversitive particle but is not put as exceptive But the anointing i. e. except as Internall Vocation is by the operation of the holy Spirit effectually inabling and drawing us unto Christ enlightening the minde and affecting the heart seriously to attend unto those things which are spoken and by faith to receive and embrace them The principall effectuall help which maketh us come to God by belief is the efficacy of Gods Almighty power put forth to such a purpose It is the effectuall working of Gods Almighty Col. 2. 12. 2 Cor. 4. 6. power which worketh faith in us to Salvation For the creating us anew in Christ is a greater work then giving us our naturall being in Adam and therefore may not be ascribed to any power Eph. 2. 1 ● Luk. 11. 20 21. 2 Tim. 2. 26. that is not almighty We are by nature dead in trespasses held in bondage by strong powers whom none but the strongest can over-master and by believing we are lifted up to an estate without comparison more excellent then that we formerly received Now to bring us from death under which so mightie ones held us captive to such a life so unutterably glorious must needs be the working of a power almighty Besides so farre as God doth intend to work so farre he putteth forth his omnipotent power to accomplish but God doth intend to make some before other some come unto him and therefore he doth stretch out the arme of his power to effect this A second helpe is the inward illumination and inspiration wrought in us by which as the internall Word God speaketh in the minde The conversion of sinners is called a conviction because it is ever wrought in us as we are reasonable and intelligent creatures the judgement going before is a directour what to chuse And if the minde of man were once throughly and in a spirituall manner as it becommeth such objects as are altogether spirituall Saepe fit intellectus haefitanter suadeat langu●de tractet habenas aut serò se ad judicandum applicet Ex adverso autem app●titus sensitivi saepe tam subitò tam ve●ementèr concitantur ut voluntas ab apperitu impulsa jubeat intellectum judicare ex appetitus imperio possessed of the adequate goodnesse and truth which is in grace and glory and did consider it deliberately both simply and in comparison with all circumstances and occurrences and did apply it selfe to the serious study and thought thereof the heart could not utterly reject them For humane liberty is not a brutish but a reasonable thing it consisteth not in contumacy and head-strongnesse but in such a manner of working as is apt to be regulated varied or suspended by the dictates of right reason and sound judgement if things be distinctly and certainly apprehended seriously weighed and pondered and the thought thereof preserved and kept in minde The only cause why men are not willing to submit unto Christ is because they are not throughly and in a manner sutable to the excellency of the things inlightened in their minde or they do not keep in minde and thought that which they are taught in the Word of God and cannot but know in some sort Sinners in Scripture are said to be blinde simple fooles brutish inconsiderate that remember not that God seeth them consider not their latter end Sinne is naturall not as nature is opposed to liberty but as nature is opposed to grace 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 8. 5 6. 2 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 14. And so without Christ and the holy Spirit miserable naturall or mortall men would sinne necessarily The first sinne of our first parents was an errour for whatsoever a man doth will that he doth will being led by certaine reason true or in appearance The act of willing hath in it power whatsoever is subject to it but it selfe is not in it own power but in the power of reason whose prescript it doth follow whether right or corrupt Necessarily good is preferred before evil and the greater good certainly and distinctly knowne before the lesser but not knowne it is not preferred with equall necessity The will is not enforced of it selfe either of it selfe resting or forcing it selfe for then it should be in act and not in act at one and the same time The will cannot bend into the direct contrary for then it might most willingly desire that condition which it certainly knew to be most miserable and refuse that condition which it most certainly and distinctly knew to be most blessed Nor suspend of it selfe without the intervention of the understanding because the will is not the mistresse of it selfe but of the act which depends upon the inferiour faculties They that know the gift of God they desire and aske it They that know God they will trust in him and keep his Commandements They that are taught of God they will come unto Christ and faith is lively and operative to draw men to the love of God and obedience to his precepts The act of judgement is two-fold 1. Naturall which ariseth from the sharpnesse or dulnesse of the wit 2. Morall according to which we are said to be good or evil There be two degrees of light 1. Directing and warning what is to be done 2. Perswading and effectually moving forward the will This perswasion is when with such force the holy Spirit doth accompany the Gospell that it doth not only move the will but move it effectually or throughly and beget faith lively and well rooted What the minde judgeth best the will followeth as best what lesse good the minde judgeth the will lesse followeth What the In singulis quidem actionibus vo●unt as regitur ab intellectu in genere tamen volu●tas ī aperat intellectui nec intellectus fe applicat ad intelligendum nisi jussut à voluntate 1 Cor. 8. 2. Joh. 17. 3. minde judgeth the greatest evil the will doth specially avoid what it judgeth a lesse evil it doth lesse flee from Unlesse the minde should either wax idle or loose the reines to the affections which must needs proceed from a most grievous and most perverse errour of the minde right reason would obtain not only by right but in deed and fact the command and rule Knowledge is either prescribing or perswading true and solid either of the thing simply considered or of the thing considered with all his circumstances certaine just
profitable and pleasant answerable in some sort to the nature excellency and use of the thing known And in this case the heart is not over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truth seriously thought upon unto a practicall judgement This is the learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge Christ is not known if he be not acknowledged as he is propounded what perfect Si ignorare accipitur pro non attendere dici potest voluntatem humanam vix unquam peccare sine aliqua ignoratione quia quando vo●untas peccat intellectus ut plurimum aliud agit nec attendit ad regimen voluntatis knowledge doth perfectly that imperfect knowledge doth imperfectly As the end acknowledged cannot be refused by like right neither can the meanes acknowledged the meanes I say necessary only necessary and without which there is no possibility or likelihood to obtaine the end For will is a reasonable appetite and therefore doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented unto it with evidence certainty profit and delight as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of an humane soule and that both simply and in comparison for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to be free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally in a manner sutable to its owne condition If it be objected the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good The answer is that it is true the will must not only be moved but renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ But withall God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner without a speciall work of grace upon the soule whereby the will is framed and fashioned to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed The third help is a formall cause a free gracious disposition or Scimus non impetrari remissionem ante prece ●ed dic● decretam esse ante preces eam peti precibus quamvis sit decreta P. Malin de e●ect ex fide pag. 316. habite of faith by which the will is inclined agreeable to the disposition of it to come unto God This habite is necessary because without it the will being in bondage stained and defiled it is altogether unable to will or desire that which is spiritually good If there could be a will without such habite man might performe the act of a man spiritually alive before he was made alive So that the full answer to this question viz. what is that effectuall help whereby I come to God is this It is a mixt thing standing partly of that almighty power of his put forth for my good partly of that inward Word and inspiration by and with which his power is put forth partly in that spirit of faith and supernaturall life which his almighty power through his Word bringeth forth in my soule What was that help whereby Christ made Lazarus able to come to him out of the grave of naturall death The principall was Christs power the instrumentall his voyce the formall cause immediately helping to it or working it was the spirit of naturall life which the power of Christ by his Word restored to this dead corps which now was fallen And thus we have the effectuall help or grace by which we come actually to convert which are all given from Gods free grace and favour towards us And when God doth infuse the habite of faith into the minde of one of ripe age he doth cause him actually to beleeve as the nature of the thing it selfe and condition doth manifest For if the Spirit by inlightening the minde and renewing the heart doe perswade and move the soule effectually to embrace adhere unto and love the Lord Jesus Christ then the condition of the thing will not beare that grace should be given effectually but the act and motion of the soule must necessarily follow But though the connection of these two be indivisible yet the flexion or turning it selfe is not indivisible or in a point or moment but it may be sooner or slower more speedy in one more remisse in another The will is necessarily bowed or bended but more vehemently in one more slackly in another freely or willingly in all that are turned and yet necessarily And this first thing is well to be noted for from hence we may gather in what standeth the efficacy of grace effectuall to Conversion viz. In Gods effectuall power put forth to execute his intention which he hath of converting some actually before other some It Quaestio non est de irresistibilitate sed de insuperabilitate finali Nam quomodo traberemur gratia irresistibili cum id ipsum quod nolumus Deo resistere ●it ipsa Deigratia Illud ipsum velle resistere nihil ali●d est quam resistere doth not stand in any congruity or temperature of grace correspondent to our nature For this doth argue there is inward an incorrupted connaturall disposition to receive grace This maketh the effect of Conversion as much if not more to depend on the active capacity of the will as on the grace of God For it maketh the grace of God worke it morally and externally by perswasion only and the will of man from a power within it selfe which doth more inwardly enter the effect of Conversion then the other It may be questioned in what order doth the Spirit make us come unto God whether immediately or by some preparation going before wherein it is further to be considered what that preparation is or wherein it consisteth To the first branch of the Question it is truly answered that God doth use so to worke our comming to him by beliefe that he doth first for the most part prepare us thereunto As before we engraffe a Sciens we cut it and set it for incision and if a Timberlogg lie sunke in mudd men set to their tacklings first to draw it out of the mire before they lay it on a Cart to carry it away Thus God doth by his power often worke some preparative change in a sinner before he doth by his power and word worke the spirit of faith in them and make them come unto him So God by afflictions is said to boare the eare and prepare to conversion 2 Chron. 33. 11 12. Act 2. 37. When Manasseh was humbled in great misery he sought the Lord. Thus by conviction of sin others were pricked in heart and said What shall we doe to be saved and then speedily they received the Gospel beleeving Sometimes by extraordinary terrours rising from externall accidents yea hidden naturall causes God is pleased to bring men nearer unto him Thus the Jaylor Act. 16.
26 27. was prepared to receive the Gospel by the shaking of the Castle and that feare he fell into supposing the prisoners had been fled And Paul himselfe by an extraordinary vision was brought to Act 9. 6. great astonishment Sometimes by restraining grace or common gifts which make men for degree nearer that is in their kinde and state not so much removed as others in the same kinde and state with them God doth prepare men thus Christ said to the young man who was nigh and unconverted Thou art not farre Mar. 12. 34. and 10. 21. from the Kingdome of God Nay God may by giving a man up to the height of some sin or sins prepare him to conversion as Paul and Manasseh the one left to persecuting the other to those horrible out-rages And God in wisdome knew it best for Peter to give him up to be tempted of Satan and left to himselfe to deny his Master for the curing of his self-confidence Physicians by ripening diseases make way to cure them for sick matter is never more easily brought away then when in ripenesse and quantity it exceedeth Concerning this matter let these conclusions be remembred First These preparations are not absolutely necessary for we see God doth give sanctifying grace to Infants in whom none of these preparatory operations can take place Secondly We doe not finde that they have been alwayes used though perhaps it be a thing most commonly falling forth How was Matthew called even at his custome and he followed presently Mat. 9. 9. Luk. 19. 6. not as Judas but as a true convert of Christ So Zacheus upon the very call came downe hastily and received Christ joyfully So it is said of Lydia God opened her heart that she attended Act. 16. 14. unto those things which Paul spake For life and death being such contraries as have no third thing between them which doth partake in them both the one may be changed into the other without any thing preparatory The entring of grace doth expell corruption and spirituall quicknesse in newnesse of life is the mortification of sin Terrours doe not drive men to Christ of themselves nor stirre men up to imbrace the promises and God is able to draw men unto Christ by the allurements of the Gospell By Evangelicall enticements men may be allured as well as driven Hos 2. 14. by the convictions and comminations of the Law Thirdly All things which God doth prepare to the receiving of grace and comming to him they make not of themselves any thing to the introducing of grace farther then God intendeth this effect by them Feare of hell conscience of sin never such afflictions morall parts and all gifts which may be without sanctifying grace and true beliefe many have all these who yet never turne unfainedly unto God When the sicknesse is growne greater in quantity this absolutely taken maketh the patient further off health The feeling of the disease is no part of the recovery though the Physitian may worke by it Phrensie in it selfe is no preparation to health but to the Physitian who can worke on the patient more fitly in this taking then in a deadly Palsey it may be a preparative to health Thus to be like an aguish man on his good dayes or like to some mad-men in the time of their intermissions is in it selfe as fa●re from state of health as otherwise but yet the Physitian may use such a state as a way to health choosing rather to deale wit● him in this taking then in the fit And so it is not the height of sin nor the feare of hell nor a morall course of life that of themselves can make nearer the state of grace but only in regard of God who doth intend to turne them hereunto Afflictions of themselves profit not if God open not the ear fear and horrour drive to despaire if God support not vertuous life according to the light of nature turneth a man further from God if he adde not thereunto the effectuall worke of his Spirit And all or any of these in regard of Gods intention may prepare man to receive the Gospell or the grace of effectuall vocation Fourthly A man that is sunke deeper into sin may be converted with lesse sorrow or legall terrour as the Thiefe upon the Crosse and he that hath not so grievously offended may be kept longer under for the ripenesse and aboundance of the humour may make way for the more speedy removall thereof when it is for the safety of others that have not gathered so much corruption to be kept under for a season Fifthly A Christian must not quarrell his conversion because he hath not been terrified or brought so low as others or kept under so long for it matters not how deeply thou hast been wounded but how soundly thou hast been cured It is not materiall what paine thou hast felt but whether thou be brought unto Christ Sixthly Ch●●stians in temptations or distresse must not desire or pray that God would terrifie them or humble them with deepe apprehensions of his indignation for they know not their owne strength whether they be able to beare it if God should deale severely they forget that it is God that must make all afflictions profitable and that of themselves these things tend to despaire and hardnesse of heart and it is no small unthankfulnesse to complain of the Physitians care because he is inclined to deale tenderly with you Godly sorrow is to be cherished and so is the desire of and prayer for more tendernesse of heart but when we pray for more horrour we relie too much upon our selves and yet consider not our own weaknesse Seventhly This preparation is neither saving grace nor a thing between nature and grace done by the externall aide of the Spirit It is not saving grace because it is that whereby God is pleased to bring us to Christ and not that whereby we are renewed to believe or engraffed into Christ Nor a thing between nature and grace as if the Spirit without any habit of grace did lift us up to the supernaturall acts of beliefe hope love for then we should be-lifted up to acts of life without the habit which is to make a blinde man see without sight and to make us bear good fruit without sap or before we be good trees Eighthly These things may dispose us to faith but not to justification immediately because the smart of the wound may provoke to seeke a plaister but serveth not to the curing of it Justification is of the free grace of God through the bloud of Jesus Christ and not through any habit of grace infused into us much lesse through feare of hell or initiall hope or desire or such like Ninthly Where the effectuall raising up of the heart to faith beginneth there Gods preparative workes take an end for as that which prepares the ground for seed now ceaseth when the seed is to be sowne So all these
Covenant how they differ viz. eight wayes p. 32. Christ more darkly revealed in the Covenant of promise and why ib. Covenant of promise when it began and how long it continued 36. The degrees of it ib. the parts of it 43. who contained under it 45. the Covenant of promise whether made in Adam with every infant that should be born into the world p 46. Covenant of grace as manifested to Abraham p. 47. what peculiarly to be observed therein ib. the grand promises of it 53. the temporall promises 54. Covenants personall family-Covenants and nationall p. 52. Covenant with Abraham how confirmed p. 90. All are not in Covenant in one manner p. 91. Covenant of grace under Moses till the return out of the Captivity p. 92. Covenant of works whether made with man fallen 93. Obscurity among Divines in differencing the old Covenant and new 95. Covenant made with Israel particularly explicated and what Moses brought to the further expressure of the Covenant of grace 122. Gods Covenant with David 143. c. In this Covenant Christ more cleerly manifested then before 144. The things promised in this Covenant 146 147. The condition of it 149. The execution of this Covenant 150 151. c. In this Covenant some things promised absolutely some conditionally 152 153. Two things to be considered in this Covenant 154. Covenant made with Israel after the Babylonish Captivity 156. c. The promises of this Covenant 158 159. c. In what sense this Covenant may be called new 161. Wherein this Covenant exceeded the former which God made when he brought them out of Egypt 161 162 163. Of the new Covenant or Testament and how God hath revealed himself therein 194. See New Testament D DOubting what the right course to take with him that doubts whether he should beleeve because of his former transgressions 226 Dead to what purpose invitations made to them that are dead in sins 244 Death inflicted on none but sinners or him that beareth the person of a sinner 276 Debt a two-fold paying of a debt 290 Decree of God to punish sin the reason of it 276 E ELect are in grace with God in respect of Ordination and appointment though after brought into grace by Christ by actuall collation and communication 292 Examination of our selves necessary p. 87. a meanes to attain and preserve uprightnesse 188 Exhortations to all import not a generall purchase of salvation for all 208 209. they are usefull both to them that have received the truth and to them that have not 209. to what purpose exhortations and invitations are to perswade men to believe that have no power 247 Externall blessings more esteemed of under the Covenant of promise and why p. 34 F FAith why not expressely required in the Covenant of nature p. 12. Faith which the righteousnesse of nature presupposeth how it differs from the faith required in the Covenant of grace p. 12. Faith the alone cause on our part required of justification and salvation 18. In what sense it is imputed for righteousnesse 63. Three divers opinions of orthodox Divines about the imputation of Faith 64. 65 66 Faith hath not the place of our righteousnesse but doth answer in our participation of Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers of Adams sinne 67 68. Though faith be commanded in the law it followeth not that being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the law 114. Faith whether that Christ as be died to impetrate remission of sin for me in particular be the object of justifying faith 227. Faith justifying is not without an apprehension of mercy in Christ to be obtained but implyeth not an apprehension of mercy in the pardon of sin already obtained 227 Faithfull all of the same faith with Abraham 91 Father though the same work be done by Father and Son yet a difference in the manner of working 268 Fathers before Christ and Christians in the time of the Gospell under the same Covenant for substance 26 Fellowes how the faithfull are called Christs fellowes 311 Fellowship with the Saints a signe means of uprightnesse 188 Fulnesse of grace of two sorts 311 G GIving doth not alwayes import an act of grace p. 61 Gospell why meet that the promise should goe before it 32. Grace bestowed more plentifully under the Gospell how to be understood 35. Gospell in what sense called everlasting 37. How faith is said to come by the Gospell seeing it was commanded in the law 113. The law as given to the Jewes not opposite to the Gospell ib. Gospell strictly taken or the new Testament when it took its beginning 197 198. Good that the intellectuall nature is capable of is double 313 Graces how given by the hand of the Apostles how by Christ 320 Guile of our spirits how to finde it out 187. c. how to take up our selves for it 192 H HAnd right hand what it signifieth in Scripture 303 Head how Christ is the head to his body 318 Heart a double heart what 185. signes of a good heart ibid. Heathens some remainders of Gods Image in them and many temporall blessings vouchsafed them whence it cōmeth to passe 13 Heaven The fathers that died before Christ had not that perfect state in heaven that now they have we are presently possessed of and in heaven they did expect their redeemer 35 36. The Kingdome of Heaven not expressely mentioned in the old Testament 132 Heavenly things wrapt up under earthly in the old Testament 33 Humane nature of Christ most highly exalted 305. Christ as man hath a prerogative above every creature 214. He is set above all principality and power and dominion and what signified hereby 214. He hath a power above every creature 215. The man Christ is King of heaven and earth 216. yet this power is not infinite simply ibid. Humanity of Christ whether to be adored 321 I IEhovah what it denoteth 123 Jewes why made a nationall Church 92. they had a double vail ●ver their eyes 120. An illustrious type of election in them 33 Incarnation of Christ whether necessary to goe before its effects and benefits 28. Incarnation of Christ the day of his coronation and espousals 294 Impute what it signifieth in Scripture 60 61. Imputation of a good thing three wayes 62. Imputation and reputation how differ ib. Certain corollaries about imputation See Faith 62 Infants holy by Covenant 52 Integrity see Vprightnesse the necessity of it 80 81 82 83. It sets a faire glosse upon the meanest actions 83. The effects and fruits of it 85. Meanes to attain it 86 87 88. How a Christian is to stir up himself to attain Integrity 88 89 c. Impotency of man such that he can neither move to any thing of himselfe that is good nor manage grace when vouchsafed 199. Impossible how that which is impossible may be an object of Gods desire and approbation 245. Innocent whether an Innocent person ought to suffer
for a nocent the question largely handled 284 285 c. It is not universally against equity for one to suffer the punishment of anothers sinne ib. That an innocent person may justly suffer for a nocent what is required 286. Intercession of Christ whether well distinguished into general and speciall 258. Intercession of Christ what it is 296. It is generall and particular heavenly and glorious 297. It is founded upon his satisfactory merits ibid. It implyeth three things 298. It is not reciprocall ibid. The benefits of it to the Church ibid. and 299. How the faithfull come to be subject to evil and misery Christ interceding for them ibid. Whether Christ prayeth for the absolute perseverance of beleevers or only upon condition 301. Invitations of God mans perversenesse only the cause why he answereth them not 343. Israel why called Iesurun 180. Judgement whether the will follow it 333 334. 335. the act of Judgement two-fold ibid. Justice of God cleered in requiring that of man fallen which he hath no power to doe 44. Justification cannot be by faith and workes as concauses ●o Justification is by faith alone not by that faith which is alone 73. K KIngs why specially to be prayed for 231. Kingdome of Christ he entreth alwayes on it by conquest 323. yet useth no compulsion 324. men are gathered into this Kingdome by vocation ibid. Knowledge of God begets in us a similitude of God 86. Christ saveth not as cleerely known but as sincerely acknowledged 33. L LAW called fiery why 101. and 124 The Law as given upon mount Sinai was a Covenant of grace proved at large 102 103 110. The Law never given without the Gospell nor the Gospell without the Law 102. The Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience 105. 106. c. The Law to be expounded according to the sense the prophets give of it 110. In the Law frequent mention of the Messiah 111. Faith in Christ commanded in the Law though more obscurely 113. Law and Gospell in what respects opposed 115 116 117 118 119 120 c. Law a double use of it 120. How it is said that the Law entred that sinne might abound 139. Whether the Law be abolished to them that are under the Covenant of grace p. 15. Learning of Christ what 334. Limbus patrum no such thing p. 30. yet the fathers before Christ had not that perfect state which now they have and we are presently possessed of p 35. Love of God toward the creature a double distinction of it 4. M MAny sometimes put for all 250. Mediatour the necessity of one 264. What an one the Mediatour must be ib. Why the second person was Mediatour rather then the first or third 266. According to which nature Christ was Mediatour ib. A Mediatour what 270. Whether Christ a Mediatour to himselfe ib. whether if Christ be a Mediatour according to his divine nature all the three persons be not Mediatours 271. Mediation of Christ three things to be considered in the acts of it p 28. How Christ hath performed the office of mediatiō 271. Meanes not vouchsafed to all and therefore neither the rest of the effects of Christs death 233. Measure what to doe a thing in Measure 310. Ministery of the Jewes and the end of it 138. Misery in man the occasion but no cause of Gods mercy towards him Messiah the times of the Messiah times of greater light 331. Moon a fit resemblance of the Church 147. Moses whether the Covenant of grace were manifested by him 93. The shining of his face what it signifyed 94. How and in what sense he was a mediatour 127 128 165. N NAtural gifts whether they may be so used that God will bestow supernaturall 237. Negations in Scripture imply not alwayes an absolute denyall p. 5 New what it signifieth in Scripture 194. A new song what ib. A new commandment what 195. New man what ib. New Testament abolisheth not the former but the former was fulfilled by the latter 29. Covenant of grace in what respect called a new Covenant or Testamēt 195. Why it is called a Covenant and why a Testament 196. New Covenant when properly it began 196. New Testament published on a solemn day in the Assembly almost of all nations 197. New Testament the nature of it stands in three things 198. A description of it ib. The authority of it reason why God made it 199. New Covenant preferred much before the old though both of the same nature and from the same fountain 200. The promises in it assured by Father Son and holy Ghost 201. was stricken with all nations in opposition to the Jewes ib. made with some externally others internally 202 203. The prerogative of the new Covenant above the old 293 294 c. O OAth when the Saints bound themselves by oath to walk in all the statutes of the law what they meant 135. why God confirmed his promise to Abraham by oath 58 Obedience under what notion required in the Covenant 19. It is two-fold perfect and sincere 20. Obedience perfect is commanded though not rigidly exacted and why 21. It is in vain to think of entring into Covenant if not resolved to obey in all things ib. Obscurity in the knowledge of Christ under the Covenant of promise and the degrees of it and reasons p. 32 Old Testament what 92. difference betwixt the old Testament and new Old Testament abolished by the death of Christ in right not in act 196 P PAsseover when and to what purpose instituted 142 Peculiar people who 103 The Pedagogy of the Jewes illustrated largely by comparison of a Schoolmasters dealing with his Scholars 138 139 140. Perfection what it imports in Scripture phrase 75. A thing is said to be perfect three wayes 76 77 78 79. Prayers not to be made for all men 231. Christs praying for those that crucified him was of private duty not out of his office of Mediatour 259. some prayers suppose a condition in him for whom we pray some none 301 Personall union the end of it 269 To prepare the heart to seek God what 179 Preparations whether the spirit makes us come to God immediately or by some preparations going before 336. Nine conclusions concerning such preparations 337. c. This preparation is neither saving grace nor a thing betwixt nature and grace 339 Priesthood the end and use of it 138 141 R REading God may work by it when that preaching is not slighted 327 Reconciliation imports no change in God 293 Redemption universall redemption the controversie concerning it largely discussed 204. thorow the chapter and objections answered The deliverance we obtain by Christ is called Redemption and was made by the paying of a price 279 Religion for substance ever one and unchangeable 27 Remission of sin though certain yet lesse felt in the old Testament 35. Remission what 290. It is not repugnant to antecedent satisfaction ibid. Repentance how called for in the Covenant of grace 18. Necessary and
doth give life and sence to the body and not the whole Trinity If the speciall Offices of Christ be considered severally much more if all of them be considered joyntly it will evidently appeare that both natures must necessarily concurre in the formall execution of them For he cannot worthily performe the office of the chiefe Doctor of the whole Church and heavenly Prophet nor execute the office of an eternall high Priest that is offer a Sacrifice truly propitiatory daily heare the prayers of all his people and present them before God nor exercise kingly power and authority in heaven and earth who worketh to the forme of meere humanitie or onely as he is man When in those offices there must be a divine excellencie and efficacie The end of personall union is the administration of his office Qualis substantia personae t●● li● operatie qualis operatio talis substantia and the personall union of two natures in Christ had not been necessary unlesse both had concurred as a formall beginning to that worke For every agent necessarily worketh according to and by its forme whence it followeth either that the person of the Mediatour doth not consist of two natures or both natures of Christ as proper formes doe necessarily concurre to the proper works of a Mediatour because the proper operations must be conjoyned in one worke of a Mediatour as both natures are joyned and united in one person There is one God saith the Apostle and one 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. Mediatour between God and man the man Christ Jesus adding the man Christ to shew that in him were both natures that is he was God and man in one person and so a fit middle person or Mediatour And man may be taken personally not naturally it being most usuall to name the whole person of Christ from either 1 Cor. 2 ● nature as he is called the Lord of glory when his person is understood And so in this place the man Christ that is that person Ia● animad in Bell. contr l. 5. 6. 3. not 11 12. who hath that nature by which he is truly called man and of that appellation there may be divers weighty reasons more amongst the rest this that the Apostle would encourage us to put our trust and confidence in him as being our elder brother By voluntary dispensation Christ is Mediatour as God incarnate and not by nature as God And according to that dispensation Christ Joh. 17. 3 and 14. 1. 1 Joh. 2 1 2. is Mediatour to the Father who is personally called God sometimes in this respect and distinguished from Christ as Mediatour and Christ is our Advocate to the Father but never represented in Scripture praying to the Son or holy Spirit but the Father only which dispensation is carefully to be observed from which we must not depart upon any vain speculation which humane curiosity might suggest A Mediatour must be a middle person equally distant and equally drawing nigh to both parties betwixt whom he doth mediate Bellarm. de Christ l. 5. c. 2. §. Praeter●a Ille solus est verè medius inter Deum hominem cum utriusq naturam habeat And thus Christ God incarnate is a fit middle person for he draws as neare to the Father as God as to us as man and is as farre distant from God as he is man as he is from us as God and he comes as neare to the Father as he departeth from us and comes as neare to us as he doth to the Father But Christ as a just man is not so a middle person for he comes not so nigh to the Father as just as he doth to us as man nor is so farre distant from us as just as he comes nigh to us as man Then as Mediatour he should be joyned to the Father in will only but in nature dis-joyned and be distant from man not in nature but in quality only then should he be Mediatour not as substantially one with the Father but only as he is united to him in will If it be alleadged that if Christ be Mediatour as God incarnate then he is Mediatour to himselfe because he is God and then also he should differ from himselfe because a Mediatour is a middle person We answer it is not necessary a thing should differ from the Iun. ibid. cap. 5. not 1 3 5 15. extreames according to all that in respect whereof it is of a middle condition but it is sufficient if it differ in some thing from one and in some thing from another as is before explained So the Son of God incarnate by voluntary dispensation differeth not only from the Father and the holy Ghost but from himselfe as God only scil as man he differeth from himselfe as God and as God from himselfe as man The whole Trinity being offended with us for sin was to be pacified but the Scripture teacheth Christ was our Mediatour to the Father and we must silence our conceits and learne of God what to believe And assuredly if the Father be reconciled the whole Trinity is reconciled And further it may be added that he who according to absolute essence or nature is the partie offended may according to voluntary dispensation sustaine the person and doe the office of a Mediatour and so Christ was primarily a Mediatour to the Father for us and by consequence and secundarily to the whole Trinity and so to himselfe as God It is further objected if Christ be Mediator according to his divine nature then all three persons in Trinity be Mediatours but this is a meere deceit for the divine nature is taken essentially for the divine nature common to Father Son and holy Ghost or personally for the divine essence considered distinctly in the Father Son and holy Ghost In the latter sence we say Christ according to his divine nature is our Mediator as he was incarnate and did assume our nature unto his divine person and not the Father or the holy Ghost But then it will be said he was inferiour to the Father In office it is true by voluntary dispensation he is inferiour but in nature Iun. ibid. not 13. he is equall to the Father and nothing hinders but one equall to another in nature may by voluntary and free choice under-take Phil 2. 6 7. an office of inferiority Being in the forme of God he humbled himselfe The Scripture teacheth expressely that God the Father Joh. 1. 18. 3. 16. 3. 13. Rom. 5. 8. Ephes 1. 7. Col. 1. 14. 1 Joh. 1. 7. ● 1. 4. 10. Act. 20. 28. gave his only begotten Son to death for us and the only begotten or proper Son of God according to both natures and in both states is said to administer his office the property of either nature observed as also the only begotten Son of God is said to descend from heaven to earth for our sakes and to suffer death for us
and to have done and suffered other such things and that by the bloud of his Son we are reconciled to God the Father This office of Mediation Christ hath performed First as the great Doctour of his Church by revealing unto us the way to life even 1 Cor. 2. 7 8 9. the last full and perfect will of God concerning mans salvation the wisdome of God in a mysterie even the hidden wisdom which God ordained before the world unto our glory which none of the Princes of this world knew Such things as eye hath not seen eare hath not heard or ever entred into the heart of man to conceive Such as the naturall inquirie of Angels could never Mat. 11. 27. Joh. 1. 1● have discovered No man knoweth the Father but the Sonne and he to whom the Sonne hath revealed him No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him He only it is that openeth the bosome of his Father that is who revealeth the secret and mysterious counsels and the tender and compassionate affections of his Father unto the world He is said to be a teacher sent from Joh. 3. 2. God and to be the Lord which speaketh from heaven and the doctrine which he taught an heavenly doctrine even great Salvation The woman of Samaria could say I know when the Messiah cometh he will tell us all things And our Saviour professeth Heb. 12. 25. Joh. 3. 12. Heb. 2. 3. Joh. 4. 25. Joh. 15. 15 to his disciples All things that I have heard of my Father I have made known unto you And in this the new Covenant is lifted up above former expressions of the same Covenant for substance For God who in sundry times and in divers manners spake in times past unto the Fathers Heb. 1. 1. ver 3. by the Prophets hath in these last daies spoken unto us by his Sonne who is the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse Image of his person that is he in whom the glory and Majesty of the Father Col. 1. 15. otherwise invisible and inconspicuous doth shew forth it selfe and that which is hid in the Father as in a ring is manifested as on the seale And as God is manifested in Christ so was he manifested and made knowne by Christ In Christ are hid Col. 1. 3. Ephes 3. 9 10. all the treasures of wisdome and he hath made knowne the manifold wisdome of God The discovery of misery and sin is that which sweetens mercy and gaines it esteem and therefore as the mercy of God was plentifully unfolded so was the Law laid open and sin discovered by our Saviour more fully then it had been in the old Testament that as sin abounded mercy might abound much more And where the maladie appeares hideous and desperate there is need that we be well acquainted with the soveraigne remedie and hence as the doore of the Law and curse is cast quite open that men might throughly know themselves so Christ in his person natures office and benefits is lively deciphered that when men feele themselves lost in themselves they might runne unto him for righteousnesse grace life and salvation Secondly Christ hath satisfied offended justice and answered whatsoever the Law had against us The word satisfaction the Scripture hath not but the thing signified thereby is plainly noted by the phrases of Redemption Expiation Reconciliation and many such like every where in Scripture Justice did release the debtour or the punishment of the person offending but would not simply release the punishment of the offence or pardon the fault without satisfaction If then the guilty be spared the surety must suffer punishment It is here questioned whether God could not pardon sin without satisfaction or satisfaction be absolutely necessary the decree and pleasure of God so to have it excepted Many sound orthodox and learned Divines hold the affirmative Martin de pers Christi lib. 1. Sect. ex mundi redemp● p. 154 155. because justice is essentiall to God and it is a righteous thing with God to render tribulation to them that afflict and that every transgression receive a just recompence 2 Thess 1. 6. Heb. 2. 2. Rom. 1. 32. Exod. 34. 7. And if recompence be just it is injustice to let sin goe unpunished The Lord testifieth that he that justifieth the wicked is an abhomination to his highnesse and he will not doe what he abhorreth in others Prov. 17. 15. Isa 5. 23. God cannot but love his Image and so he cannot but hate the corruption of it and severely punish that which is dissentanie from it This seemes to be engraven in the heart of man by nature that God is just and that sin cannot be done away without satisfaction and hence come those many fond devices amongst the Heathen Lex non est aliquid internum in Deo aut ipsa Dei voluntas sed voluntatis quidameffectus Lactant. de 〈◊〉 Dei cap. 19. Index peccatis veniam dare n● potest quia voluntati servit alienae Deus autem potest quia est legis suae ipse disceptator judex quam cum poneret non uti● ademit sibi omnem potestatem sed habet ignoscendi licentiam Senec. Occidere contra Legem nemo non potest servare nemo pr●ter te to pacifie offended justice they were ignorant of the true God and how his wrath and displeasure was to be appeased but assured of this that he was offended by sin and that without satisfaction the sin could not be expiated or done away For these and such like reasons many have thought that it is absolutely repugnant to divine justice to pardon sin without satisfaction Others and those learned and orthodox are of opinion that the necessity of satisfaction depends upon the will and pleasure of God and that God by his absolute power salva justitia might have pardoned sin without satisfaction For God might out of his absolute soveraignty not have punished Adams sin both because it was against himselfe not others to whom he is tied to doe justice and especially for that the demonstration of his revenging justice springeth not from the necessity of his nature but from his voluntary disposition as well as the giving life perpetuall to obedience for a certaine space performed For with-draw that voluntary Covenant who doubteth but that had the creature kept his innocency a thousand yeares God was free to have annihilated him Also God is able were he pleased to shew his power to turne it to his glory which mens impotency not attaining being also forbidden by the Law of their Superiour maketh them that they cannot alwaies with justice forgive even that wherein themselves are trespassed If God of his absolute power cannot pardon sin without satisfaction then not to punish sin is simply a thing impossible or God in so doing should be deficient or inconformable to the rule of his will but to let
died the Just for the unjust that is being just he was substituted for us unjust and suffered not only for our good as the Martyrs may be said to doe Isa 53 9 10. Rom. 5. 5 6 7 8. 1 Pet. 3. 18. 1 Cor. 1. 13. The same is demonstrated by this that Christ is said to be the Mediatour who gave himselfe a ransome for all men 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. that by redemption of transgressions which were under the former Covenant they that are called might receive the inheritance Heb. 9 15. and the mediation it selfe is joyned to the sprinkling of blood Heb 12. 24. so that none other mediation is to be understood then that whereby parties disagreeing are set at one Hitherto it is to be referred that we are said to be reconciled to God by the blood of Christ Rom 5. 10 11. 2 Cor. 5. 18. Ephes 2. 16. Col. 1. 20. whereby our conversion to God is not understood as if we who hated God before had now departed there from and did set our love upon him but that we which formerly were under wrath are restored into favour that which caused that seperation being taken away by the satisfaction of Christ and free condonation of grace Therefore Christ is called our Heb. 2. 17. sig ibi expiati●nem sedeam quae fit plac●nd● propitiatorie Rom. 3. 25. and propitiation 1 Joh. 2. 2. 4. 10. not a testimony of placation because God in Christ is made propitious unto us and not we propitious to God In Scripture God is said to reconcile the world unto himselfe according to the usuall manner of speaking wherein he that offendeth is therefore said to be reconciled because as he gave occasion to hatred so he hath need of reconciliation and the pacifying of him whom he hath Sophocles in Ajace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dijs conciliari i. ips●s reddere prop●tios Punitio omnis qua talis sive impersonaliter spectata causam habet justitiam Dei. Procata●ctica ver● causa sunt peccata itidem impersonaliter in genere spectata sine determinatione punitio verò quae pro alio est plane miseri●ordiae divinae opus est procatarctica vero caus● sunt peccara nostra satisf●ctionem exigentia Voss resp cap. 12. offended although the reconciliation of them that be offended be not excluded The deliverance which we obtaine by Christ is called redemption which was made by the paiment of a price Rom 3. 24. Gal. 3. 13. Ephes 1. 7. Heb. 9 12. 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Matth. 20. 28. Mar. 10. 45. 1 Cor. 6. 20. 7. 23. and redemption made by a price can be no other then by satisfaction or substitution as the Apostle saith Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. 1 Tim. 26. Faith and repentance and preaching of the Gospell come betwixt that we might obtaine spirituall deliverance from the captivity of sinne but no man will say that we are redeemed by them as by a price whereby we obtaine deliverance In the legall sacrifices sinnes were expiated no other way but by substitution how much more was Christ who is the bodie of those shadowes substituted for the sinnes of the faithfull Wherefore the Apostle saith Christ was appointed to make reconciliation for the sinnes of the people Heb. 2. 17. that is that by expiating the sinnes of the people he might pacifie God in the same sence wherein the blood of Christ is said to purge the conscience Heb. 9. 13 14. Therefore the Scripture useth those words in this businesse which note recompence and subrogation as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth both to pacifie and reconcile Gen 3. 20 Prov. 16 14. and to recompence or satisfie 2 Sam. 21. 3. Exod. 21 30. Psal 49. 8. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to recompence or pay Gen. 31. 39. In the legall sacrifices there was a typicall expiation but the conscience was not purged nor sinne taken away or heavenly Heb. 9. 9 10. 4. 9. 23● things sanctified by such sacrifices but the sacrifice of Christ was necessary by which things of so grea● moment were effected which was tipified by the legall sacrifices and was effectuall as a morall cause of Salvation before Christ was exhibited in the flesh And if the Fathers of the ●l● Testament were saved by Christ of necessity the satisfaction of Christ was true and reall for when it was not distinctly understood it could not profit them as an example or confirmation of doctrine but as a reall satisfaction only If Christ by his death had confirme● his doctrine only and not Heb. 5. ● made satisfaction be had not died as a Priest whose office it is to offer sacrifice and make attonement but the Scripture sheweth plainly that Christ is our high Priest according to the order of Melchizedech Psal 110. 4. Heb. 7. 14 15. who hath offered up himselfe a sweet smelling sacrifice Ephes 5. 2. and sanctified us by one offering up of himselfe once for all Heb. 10. 11 12. And because the sacrifice of Christ may be considered either as he offered Heb. 9. 13 23. up himselfe for all the faithfull in generall his sheep and Church or as every particular faithfull man is comprehended under that universality and the good things purchased for all tend to the salvation of every singular beleever God would have the first should be shadowed forth by the anniversary sacrifice and some others which were offered for all the people the latter by the private sacrifices of every sinner Lev. 5. Exod. 29. 30. Christ then as Mediatour by his death hath made satisfaction for us and that true full reall satisfaction and not by a certaine fiction of Law or divine acceptilation as they call it For why did God exact the bloody death of his Sonne if it had pleased him to rest in any light satisfaction The Apostle concludes the sacrifice of Christ to be necessary because it is impossible the blood of Bulls and Goats should doe away sinnes Heb. 10. 4. which argument concludes not if Christ hath satisfied only as it pleased the Father to accept of his imperfect satisfaction as if it had been perfect The satisfaction of Christ was free because he was freely given to satisfie but the decree of God presupposed to shew his mercy and justice full satisfaction was necessary because sinne must be punished as the Law requireth or God is not true as in his promises so in his threatnings None other wages is appointed for sinne but death Rom. 6. 23. hence he that is dead is justified from sinne Rom. 6 7. But Christ suffered death and by death made recompence to justice for our debt and in that he died for sinne he died once Rom. 6. 9 10. He tasted death that by death he might destroy him that had the Heb. 2. 9 14 15. power of death that is the devill and deliver them who through feare of death