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A29414 A Brief account of the state of the differences now depending and agitated about justification, and some other points of religion declaring plainly wherein both sides agree and wherein they differ. 1692 (1692) Wing B4521; ESTC R31279 7,448 14

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hath shewn him 5. Again some say There are no habits of Grace but the influences of the Spirit are instead of them which is a mistake for this denies all Sanctifying of the faculties growth in Grace distinctions of Grace in Believers c. 6. Again some say That the sufferings Christ underwent were not the very same that were threatned in the Law and the damned suffer but only equivalent to them For they say Christ suffered not the loss of God's Image in his Soul as man did as a Punishment for sin To this it 's answer'd This is to say That Christ must become a Sinner that he may save Sinness when if so he could not save them at all Cannot a Surety pay a debt for the discharge of the Debtor unless he become as wicked as it may be the Debtor is Christ was never sick and yet sickness came upon mens bodies as a fruit and punishment of Sin Christ suffered the Idem of that Punishment that was due to man for Sin so far as might consist with the work he came upon which was to Redeem and Restore man And he redeemed man by his Blood and restores him by his Spirit Had he suffered the Loss of God's Image he could not have performed perfect Obedience to the Law he could not have offered up himself a pure Sacrifice for Sin he could not have been a pattern of perfect Holiness to his People But it behoved him in all things to be made like unto his brethren sin only excepted Heb. 2.17 Was man under the Curse of the Law So was he Was man by Sin deprived of the light of God's Countenance So was he for a time Was man to suffer the sence of God's wrath So did he Was man to die and to return to the Earth out of which he was taken So did he So that he suffered the same kind of Punishment that was due to man It 's true his sufferings were not Eternal because he paid the debt to the full which the damned in Hell cannot do and therefore also they despair which Christ never did because he knew he should and could deliver himself which they know they cannot do and therefore despair So that in this there is a Difference 7. Another Difference is about the Moral Law That it doth not remain as it did requiring perfect Obedience and threatning death to every Trangression still Which is judged an error For Christ tells us Mat. 6.18 That heaven and earth shall pass away but not one tittle of the law Luk. 16.17 And that he came not to destroy the law but fulfil it Only there is provision made in the Blood of Christ for the Pardon of sins against the Law to Penitent Believers So that some lower degrees of Obedience are not come in the room of that perfect Obedience which was at first required by the Law 8. That no Believer ought to have respect to any benefit to himself in any Duties he doth perform Which is judged a great mistake For may we not ask that we may have and seek that we may find as our Saviour speaks And look to the recompence of reward as Moses did for what we either do or suffer for God in this World And by the same reason we should not have respect to another's good neither 9. That not only the guilt but the filth of Sin was laid upon Christ That is the obliquity of the very act and the rebellion that is in it against God was charged upon Christ as guilty of it which is judged a very false and blasphemous Error Whereupon they say Christ became odious to his Father and abhorred by him when he Offered up himself a Sacrifice an offering to God of a sweet smelling savor Eph. 5.2 Christ indeed had our sin imputed to him and the sence of God's wrath against sin in his Soul whereby God testified his indignation against sin but not against his Son What was laid upon Christ was done away but the Act of sin was not done away though the guilt of it was 10. That Faith and Repentance are contained in the Moral Law and were written in man's Nature Which is judged a mistake For what was writ in man's heart did respect only the Moral Law or Covenant of Works where there is no mention of the Righteousness of Faith or any admittance of Repentance for sin 11. That the Gospel doth not promise life to Penitent sinners but the Impenitent because the Penitent have life already Which is judged an Opinion contrary to the whole Tenor of the Gospel It offers life to the Impenitent but doth not promise it 12. That the Gospel is nothing else but a Promise Which is judged a great mistake unless taken in a very strict sense For we find many Precepts and Threatnings in it according to which Christ 〈…〉 in executing his Kingly Office in his Church And there●●●● 〈…〉 ●●●tainly a mistake that for sins against the Gospel men 〈…〉 to the Law for Punishment and shall not be judged by the Gospel at all 13. That a Christian ought not to make 〈…〉 inward Grace or Qualifications to examine his State by Which is judged a grea● mistake Doth not the Apostle Paul judge of the Thessalonians Election by their Faith receiving the word with much assurance 1 Thess 1.5 And the Apostle John by love by love to the brethren 1 John 3.14 As a Man's bad state may be judged of by evil habits and qualifications so may not his good state be judged of by good habits and qualifications Especially when made evident in an holy Conversation Doth not our Saviour himself direct us to judge of the Tree by the Fruits Mat. 7.20 And the Apostle of the good state of the Philippians by partaking of his Grace Phil. 1.7 14. That Justifying Faith is a full persuasion of heart that we are Justified Which is another great mistake For the Scripture sets it forth by a coming to Christ receiving him and trusting in him that we may be Justified Gal. 2.16.3.24 15. To give Obedience on the ●●count of any Law-Sanction is legal Obedience whether new or old Law Which is a mistake and doth exclude all Obedience 16. That there is a work of Sanctification wrought in the Soul before Justification in a sinners first Calling the Apostle saying Rom. 8.30 Whom he called them he justified which is judged an error For calling taken in a strict sence is either the outward Call of the Gospel or the first answer of the Soul of a sinner to this Call in a willingness to leave his former sin and to come to Christ as King Priest and Prophet that he may be Justified and Sanctified by union with him Some other Differences I might mention but these are the Principal Thus for the sake of those that have not time to read long Discourses and cannot comprehend nice distinctions and controversies in Religion I have publish'd this plain Sheet Which I wish may be a Winding-sheet to our late Differences and an Instrument of Truth and Peace and of maintaining that Brotherly Union which hath been long desired and much endeavoured and at last happily effected and in the presence of God and Angels Attested and Solemnized Amen FINIS
righteousness And doth make our Justifying Righteousness to consist in a gracious Act of God upon the Sinner in covering and not imputing his sin And not in any Works of his own either of Nature or of Grace Rom. 4.7 8. 2. That Christ made a Compact with the Father for us in a distinct Covenant by himself and was not ever himself a Party in the Covenant and was not as a Surety bound in the same Bond with men but as a Surety giving a Bond of his own to obey the Law and suffer death for us and to pay our Debts owing to the Law or Justice of God Whereas others say this is a great mistake and say That Christ came under the same Law that man was under Gal. 4.4 and thereby became obliged to give obedience to the Law and not only so but to suffer the penalty of the Law For those that had broken the Law being in the same Bond with them as the Apostle saith Gal. 3.16 That the promises were made to Abraham and his seed which Seed he saith is Christ And the Covenant God made with David was made with him as a Type of Christ and with his Seed Psal 18.50 So that God saith of this seed Psal 89.33 If his children break my law I will visit their iniquities with stripes but my loving-kindness I will not take from him that is Christ nor break my Covenant with him as it follows in the new Verse And in the Covenant of Redemption it self made before the foundation of the World Christ stood not alone in that neither For then all the Elect were chosen in Christ Eph. 1.3 And Grace was given them in Christ then 2 Tim. 1.9 before the world began So that they judge it a great mistake to say that the Covenant of Redemption is only pleadable by Christ himself For tho part of that Covenant respect himself only that he should come into our Nature and suffer c. yet then he undertook for all that God gave him to bring them to glory 3. Further They say that God lookt upon Christ's Obedience as a valuable Consideration only why he should make a Covenant of Grace with men and that there was no necessity that Christ should come into the nature of man and be made under the Law and suffer death for our sins from the nature of the work of our Redemption but only from the designation and appointment of his Father thereunto And if he had appointed him to perform some Heroick Acts of Obedience in any other nature or of another kind it might have been as available for our Redemption and as meritorious for us as what he did perform But others look upon this as a great Error and say That the nature of the work of our Redemption did necessarily require that Christ should not only merit for us but make satisfaction which they don't consider and should satisfy Justice in the same Nature that sinned and perform obedience to that Law which man had broken and bear the Curse of that Law which man was under to redeem him from it For it seems necessary that God should secure the Honour of his Law and Justice of his Government 4. They will not allow Christ to do and suffer what he did as a Publick Person representing all the Elect comprehending a Spiritual Seed in himself as the first Adam did his Natural Seed so that the Elect may be said to obey suffer and satisfy Justice in him Though they yield that he did do all this for them For then they say the Elect may be said to merit in him as Christ merited and to be Redeemers of the World as Christ was and to perform sinless Obedience as Christ did But others judge this a great mistake For the Apostle in the fifth Chapter to the Romans doth parallel the two Adams and saith the first was the Figure of him that was to come And that all Mankind sinned in him and not only by him through the Corruption of Nature derived from him And as in Adam all died so in Christ are all made alive 1 Cor. 15. All died not only by him but in him Even Infants that have committed no actual Sin As an Insolvent Debtor may be said to pay the Debt in the Sureties paying it for him or in his stead Or if a Friend dies for a Malefactor the Malefactor may be said to satisfy the Law in him And the Objections against this they answer them thus That though Christ merited yet it doth not follow that those that are justified in his Merits did merit in him For Christ and they are not the same person naturally but only legally as the Client and the Advocate the Surety and the Debtor And Christ's Merits did arise from the Dignity of his Person and his voluntary Undertaking that for us which he was not antecedently obliged unto which is not the case of those whom he undertook for A Surety that pays another's Debt may merit from the Debtor but the Debtor is not at all concern'd in that Merit but only in the Discharge that he receives thereby So if a Believer is justified in the sinless Obedience of Christ doth it therefore follow that he must be accounted no Sinner Is it necessary that a Debtor who pays his Debt in a Surety be Partaker of all the Endowments and Qualifications of his Surety Or be judged so to do It may be yielded that hereby a Believer is justified in a more excellent Righteousness than his own tho it should be perfect or than Adam had in innocency but not that we should be accounted in all respects as righteous as Christ himself was tho it seems necessary that we should be justified in a Righteousness which should answer to the Infinite Justice of God offended by man's Sin And if any object Christ fulfill'd not the whole Moral Law not performing many Duties required of us as of an Husband a Father c. Answer He that performs all that the Law requires of him fulfils the Law Thus Christ did and so being under the Ceremonial Law he performed all requir'd of him by that Law And being also in the Gospel-Covenant he did all required of him there He did not indeed repent because not required of him not being a Sinner And if it be objected again That if our debt be paid in Christ and we justified thus in him What need any thing more to be done by a sinner for his discharge They Answer to this That though the Elect Believer is thus virtually and fundamentally discharged and justified in Christ's Obedience yet God hath appointed Faith to be the mean or way whereby he should be actually justified God having so provided that his Grace should be dispensed in a way that might conduce to his own Glory as well as man's Salvation May not a Surety who pays the Money to discharge the Debtor require something from him to do whereby he may be made sensible of the kindness he