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A50428 Sanctification by faith vindicated in a discourse on the seventh chapter of the epistle of St. Paul to the Romans : compared with the sixth and eighth chapters of the same epistle / written by Zachary Mayne ... to which is prefixt a preface by Mr. Rob. Burscough. Mayne, Zachary, 1631-1694.; Burscough, Robert, 1651-1709. 1693 (1693) Wing M1487; ESTC R11086 85,470 62

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necessarily dependant and consequent upon Faith and Grace as Justification it self is In the seventh Chapter after the Apostle had setled the matter of Sanctification in the sixth as indispensibly necessary and naturally flowing from the Doctrine of Grace and Justification by Faith he is pleased according to the Wisdom given to him to bring in an Instance of an Ineffectual Attempt towards Sanctification by a Man under Convictions from the Law as he had before shewn at large the folly of the Jews and Judaizing Christians in seeking Justification by the Law and indeed he words the matter in a way of personation in his own person whereupon several have mistaken the Apostle's design thinking that he spake all those things of himself after he was converted and in an estate of Regeneration whereas it is very clear to me and indeed I find to many learned and godly Men that the Apostle is only in his own Person personating a Man that is not truly converted but strugling with his Corruptions in his own strength being terrified by the Law which only convinceth of Sin and is a ministration of Condemnation and so no wonder that he is so overcome and brought into Bondage as he acknowledgeth himself to be in that Chapter But this I speak here but precariously till I shall afterwards have made it to appear In the eighth Chapter the Apostle after he had set forth the convinced Person in such a struggle with his Corruptions in his own Strength the Law affording him neither Strength nor Hope after he had set him forth as overcome and captivated and brought into desperation he gives him a glimpse of Christ gives him a Plank after his Shipwreck and in the very latter end of the seventh and beginning of the eighth Chapter brings him off clear from those Rocks and Shelves upon which he had been in utmost danger of perishing Which is all I shall say by way of Introduction and Analysis Sanctification by Faith VINDICATED IN A DISCOURSE ON THE Seventh Chapter of the Epistle OF St. PAVL to the ROMANS c. ROMANS Chap. VI. WHat shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound God forbid Verse 1 The Apostle had in the former Chapter made it his Design from the twelfth Verse to the end to shew that though the World had suffered much by the first Adam by whom Sin came into the World yet through the Grace of God the World that is especially those of it that receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness Verse 17. receive far more advantage by the second Adam than ever they had lost by the first Verse 18. Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free-gift came upon all men unto justification of life Verse 20. Moreover the law entred that the offence might abound but where sin abounded grace did much more abound Verse 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord And with these words in triumph concludes his Discourse of Justification by Faith and Grace Upon which the Apostle starts a thought that might enter into the heart of a foolish person What shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound This the Apostle answers with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.2 God forbid We have three such Questions together within the compass of six Verses in the third Chapter of this Epistle which the Apostle rejects with an abhorrency Rom. 3.3 What if some did not believe shall their unbelief make the faith or faithfulness of God without effect God forbid Verse 5. If our unrighteousness commend the righteousness of God what shall we say then Is God unrighteous who taketh vengeance God forbid Verse 7. If the truth of God hath more abounded through my lie unto his glory why yet am I also judged as a sinner A foolish way of freeing himself from judgment Nay it seems the People were so used in the Apostle's days to these Paralogisms and foolish Ratiocinations that they presumed to affix them even upon the Apostles themselves Verse 8. And not as we be slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say Let us do evil that good may come whose damnation is just To return therefore to our sixth Chapter Verse 1 Verse 1. What shall we say then shall we continue in sin that grace may abound Since God hath made Grace to abound much more than Sin where-ever Sin hath abounded shall we resolve to continue in Sin that so God may continue to make his G●●●e to abound towards us God forbid saith the Apostle God may for once having made Man a free Agent though holy as nothing else could come out of God's hand after his voluntary Defection and wicked Rebellion give him a Saviour and send us a second Adam the Lord from Heaven that should do us infinitely more good than ever the first earthly Adam d d us hurt but if we abuse his Grace and turn it into Wantonness the Grace will cease and only prove a greater aggravation of our Sin and Judgment But let us follow the Apostle's argumentation How shall we Verse 2 that are dead to sin live any longer therein This second Question strikes the first Question dead and is a full Answer to it How can Men that are dead to any thing live any longer in it or unto that to which they are dead It is a perfect contradiction to their being dead to it to live in it This is a Paraphrase and Comment enough for the second Verse Know ye not Verse 3 that so many as were or are baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death This is a full Argument again by way of Question for the proof of the Assertion uttered by way of Question in the second Verse viz. That all Saints as such are dead to sin for that when they were baptized into Christ they were baptized into his Death and so are by profession dead to Sin This is more fully exprest in the next Verse Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death Verse 4 that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newness of life Here i● a plain Allusion made to the ancient way of Baptizing which was by dipping under Water called here burying and rising or being raised up I shall give this Explication in the Words of Dr. Hammond upon the Text the third and fourth Verses 'T is a thing saith he that every Christian knows that the Innersion in Baptism refers to the Death of Christ the putting the Person baptized into the Water denotes and proclaims the Death and Burial of Christ and signifies our undertaking in Baptism that we will give over all the Sins of our former Lives which is our being
are to be conceived as two Queen-Regents to one of which every Man and Woman in the World is a Subject and all their Limbs Senses and Faculties of their Bodies and Souls are made Servants to do their Work Now the Work which Uncleanness or Iniquity enjoyns is Iniquity the Work which Righteousness enjoyns is Holiness Therefore says the Apostle with great accuracy as you have yielded your members servants to uncleanness and to iniquity the Queen or Tyrant rather unto iniquity the Work or rather Drudgery of Uncleanness and Iniquity even so now yield your members servants to righteousness the Queen-Regent in and of your Souls unto holiness the Work of Righteousness This is all I can observe in the difference of to and unto For when ye were the servants of sin Verse 20 ye were free from or free to righteousness That is Righteousness had no command over you What fruit had ye then of those things whereof ye are now ashamed Verse 21 The Apostle now having as it were done with the Description of their Relations of Servants and Mistresses Queen and Subject Services and Works he concludes the Chapter and the whole Discourse with an Account of the Wages paid by each Mistress each Queen to their several Servants What fruit had ye then of these things whereof ye are now ashamed for the end of these things is death That is of those things or services which ye performed or perpetrated to that tyrant sin But now being made free from sin Verse 22 and become the servants of righteousness ye have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life For the wages of sin is death Verse 23 but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. In this Verse the Apostle makes a manifest distinction betwixt the reward of Sin and the reward of Righteousness and Holiness The reward of Sin is in the nature of a due Debt as a Soldier 's Wages are a due Debt Death Temporal Spiritual and Eternal are the bitter Fruit and due Merit of Sin but Eternal Life though it be due to Saints by promise yet not by any desert of theirs it is the free gracious gift of God he gave us a Saviour to redeem us he gave us the Doctrine of the Gospel Faith and Repentance are the gifts of God and every Grace in us is not only gratum faciens but gratis data that which makes us acceptable but freely given us through Jesus Christ our Lord. And now having gone through the Chapter I think fit to re-capitulate a little and make a few Reflections upon what hath been said and so come to the main Chapter And now that we have seen the Doctrine of Universal Holiness so recommended unto us by our very Profession of being Christians that by our Baptism and necessary conformity to Christ in his Death and Burial and Resurection we are perfectly obliged to become dead to every Sin and alive to every Holy Action and Opportunity of bringing Glory to God when we are exhorted to reckon our selves dead unto Sin and alive unto God when we are charged that Sin must not reign in our mortal Body and assured that it shall not for this very reason because we are not under the Law but under Grace and at last told in plain terms that if it be eventually otherwise with us that if we do obey Sin we are the Servants of Sin and that unto Death besides all the rest that follows wherein we are particularly directed not only how to imploy our Minds and Affections but every Member of our Bodies in the Service of God being again and again said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made Freemen from Sin and entered intirely into the Service of Righteousness If I say after all this it may be truly said of the same persons that they are sold under Sin and carnal persons that they do in a general way things that they hate which Slaves indeed do and cannot do otherwise that they cannot find the way or obtain so much of themselves after all the change of state which they have past under as to perform that which is good I despair of understanding the meaning of any words that I shall ever hereafter meet with But yet I do not doubt to make it appear to any unprejudiced Reader in explaining the next Chapter that these Expressions are not spoken of the same Persons that are spoken to in this fixth Chapter which I here dismiss ROMANS Chap. VII KNow ye not Brethren for I speak to them that know the law how that the law hath dominion over a man so long as he liveth or so long as he liveth that is the Law liveth Verse 1 or as Dr. Hammond saith the Law of Man hath power or force as long as he liveth For the woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband Verse 2 so long as he liveth but if the husband be dead she is loosed from the law of her husband So then if while her husband liveth she be married to another man Verse 3 she shall be called an adulteress but if her husband be dead she is free from that law so that she is no adulteress though she be married to another man In these three Verses you have the common Case stated betwixt an Husband and Wife to which the Apostle by and by by way of similitude doth accommodate the State and and Case of every true converted Christian the Wife is to keep herself intirely for her husband so long as he liveth but if her Husband be dead she is free to marry whom she pleaseth Wherefore my brethren ye also are become dead to the law That is Verse 4 the Law is become dead to you by the Body of Christ So saith Dr. Hammond upon the place at the first Verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 You are put to death to the Law must be interpreted as a figurative Speech the Law is put to death to you The Soul of every Christian is the Wife the Law was her first Husband Christ is the second Husband While the Law was alive it had the power over the Soul as over a Wife but the Law being put to death that is in its Condemning Power by the Suffering of Christ and the Satisfaction that he made to it by enduring the Penalty of it for every Believer every Man is free from the Power of the Law that chuseth to betake himself to Christ as an Husband and to take him for his Lord and Saviour The Verse at large is thus Wherefore my brethren ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ Verse 4 that ye should be married to another even to him who is raised from the dead that we should bring forth fruit unto God The Apostle would not say the Law is dead to you for that had been an invidious Expression amongst the Jews at Rome to say that the Law was dead and therefore he
forth this Mystery How the Law through the corruption of our Nature is accidentally a great provoker to and stirrer up of Sin which I express thus When any Man goes on in his natural Course and lives the common Life of Men in his worldly Occasions and worldly Delights he may go on very smoothly and be all alive I was alive without the law once and well pleased with his Condition especially if the World smiles upon him before he begins to think of another Life and another World and a Day of Judgment when he shall be called to account for all the Irregularities and for all his Talents of Parts and Strength and Wealth and Opportunities of Glorifying God in the World But when he begins seriously to think and consider that he is a sinner that he is under a Law to God in every thing that he doth and speaks and thinks that he must give an Account for every thing that he enjoys or hath the use of and begins to be sensible that he is guilty of many Sins by way of omission and commission and that every Sin deserves Hell lays him under Wrath and an Eternal Curse then here comes the Law in its Convictions chargeth him with Guilt in one Action and another and above all with a Corrupt Nature that is the Scource and Fountain of every Irregularity and Transgression and bids him observe well and do all things that are written and recorded as his Duty and tells him he is damn'd if he do not and tells him he is under a Sentence of Condemnation for every Sin he hath committed for this is the proper Office of the Law to every sinner for it is not to be avoided but that it should be the Duty of every rational Creature Man or Angel to do his Creator's Will and to avoid the doing of every thing that is contrary thereunto and when he hath offended he falls under his Maker's displeasure But this Men do not think upon till Conscience begins to work And this I take to be the Law 's coming to a Man When the commandment came saith the Apostle Verse 9 Verse 9. sin revived and I died I was alive without the law once but when First a Man finds himself lost undone condemned and the Law strictly as a Law having no Pardon nor Mercy nor Hope in it for a poor sinner occasions all his Lusts for which it condemns him to rise up in rebellion against that Law which only forbids and condemns Sin but shews no way to get from under the guilt or power of it A Coward they say when made desperate grows many times very valiant And this is all the way I can conceive of how that the Law that is holy and just and good can work in a Man all manner of Concupiscence It first discovers these to be in the Soul condemns the Soul for them makes him desperate under the Conviction and by occasion enrageth Lust and indeed the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I say the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated occasion signifies impetus aggressio materia occasio opportunitas and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies proficiscor cum impeta quodam an impetuous violent Attempt which is here made by a sinner upon occasion of the Conviction which the Law as doing its proper Office works upon the Conscience So that you see how the Law as an Husband certainly produceth Sin in a sinful Man not directly but accidentally it works all manner of Concupiscence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it doth it effectually though accidentally and occasionally for without the Law saith the Apostle Sin is dead but the Law quickens it not only in its appearing Guilt but in its filthy Life-vigour and Predominancy I was alive without the Law once but as soon as ever the Law came Sin revived and I died I was not only dead in Law but alive in Sin Then it follows Verse 10. And the commandment which was ordained to life Verse 10 I found to be unto death The words are in the Greek thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And the Commandment unto Life the same was found to me or by me to death The Holy Law of God which was our Natural Husband in an Estate of Innocency and would have conducted us in all good ways to the pleasing of God and perhaps after some time of probation which the good Angels had would have fixed us in a state of Eternal Life and Blessedness as they are now fixed without any need of pardon This Commandment which in the Ordination of God was intended unto Life and could be intended by him to no other purpose and therefore our Translators add these words was ordained in a smaller Character this Commandment ordained unto Life I found to be unto Death that Law which would have saved innocent Adam killed me a sinful Son of Adam It killed me two several ways it discovered me to be under a Sentence of Death already and it enraged my Lusts and wrought in me all manner of Concupiscence and now every Lust enlivened was a new Death so that the Law killed me a thousand times over Verse 11. The Apostle repeating much the same words that he had spoken in Verse 8. as 't is his usual course in all his Argumentations to inculcate Verse 11 For sin taking occasion by t●● commandment deceived me and by it slew me What greater deceit could there possibly be put upon a Man than to bring Death upon him by that which was professedly by the great God of Heaven ordained to be put unto Life What greater deceit than to make a Man a thousand times more a sinner than ever he would have been else by that which is holy just and good and the very transcript of the Holiness of God And yet this cheat Sin puts upon every Man by the Law when a Man struggles with the Law alone being under conviction of ●in from it it must needs be a killing deceit that Sin puts upon a Man in such a case and the Law deservedly called a Killing Letter and a Ministration of Death and Condemnation 2 Cor. 3.6 7 9. Wherefore the Law is holy Ver. 12 13. and the commandment holy and just and good Was that then which is good made death to me God forbid See here the accuteness of the Apostle Paul and his great curiosity and niceness and subtilty in distinguishing If I may so express my self concerning an Author which I acknowledge with all sincerity to be divinely inspired But yet there is so much of the Man appears innocently in his Writings as it may be truly said his Writings do redolere or sapere genium scribentis And perhaps it may be said so of divers of the Penmen of Holy Writ Isaiah the Courtier Amos the Herdsman and Daniel the Statesman c. without any dishonour offered to the Divine Spirit that yet held the Pen of the Amanuenses I say observe here our Doctor subtilis in his distinguishing He
having as I have above declared setled the Doctrin of Justification by Faith and ended the Discourse in tryumph at the end of the fifth Chapter and proceeded in the sixth Chapter to shew at large how Holiness and Sanctification also necessarily and effectually follows upon the hearty embracing the Doctrine of the Gospel thereby they are baptized into the Death of Christ and profess themselves dead to Sin and are actually set free from Sin and become the Servants of Righteousness and yield themselves unto God and their Members Instruments of Righteousness unto God Ver. 13 14. and have their Fruit unto Holiness Verse 22. He as in a Parenthesis in the seventh Chapter gives you a Parable of a Man endeavouring to be holy by the Law but is utterly defeated of his design and instead of attaining Holiness thereby loseth all his comfort and hope and is plung'd into a far worse condition as to Holiness than he was in before and being brought into a state of desperation thereby betakes himself to Christ then in the very nick of time revealed to him and by betaking himself to Christ is set at liberty from Condemnation and Desperation and also from the Law of Sin and Death which he acknowledged himself before to be led into captivity unto after a fierce Battel betwixt the Law of the Members and the Law of the Mind and so finds by blessed experience that he is one of them in whom the Righteousness of the Law is now fulfilled which Righteousness by the Law could never have been effected accomplished and fulfilled The Righteousness of the Law can never be fulfilled in any mortal Man but by the Grace of the Gospel received that is a Man can never become holy but by Faith Acts 15.9 Purifying their Hearts by Faith Gal. 5.6.6.15 Faith working by Love to the keeping the Commandments of God is the new Creature Compare those two places in Gal. Such Men as have this Faith they walk not after the Flesh any longer but after the Spirit For they that are after the flesh Verse 5 do mind the things of the flesh but they that This Particle for is a causal Particle and shews the Reason of the Assertion going before The Assertion before in the fourth Verse is this The righteousness of the law is or that it might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Now this is proved to be so because they that are after the Flesh do ●ind the things of the Flesh and they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit Therefore they who are after the Spirit do truly attain unto the Holiness and Righteousness of the Law which is a Spiritual and an Holy Law because their whole Mind is set upon spiritual things or the things of the Spirit but for carnal Men or Men that are after the flesh their whole mind is upon fleshly or carnal things and accordingly as Mens minds are set if they have undertaken a feasible thing such will their attainments be They that are after the Flesh as all those are that are under the Law Rom. 7.5 When we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the law did work do mind the things of the Flesh * Cogitant desiderant curant sapiunt they savour and relish and give their mind to nothing but † Carnalia bona mundana honores opes c. Corpores Voluptates vel opera Carnis ad quae Concupiscencia Carnalis inclinat ut peccata omnia fleshly things they cannot freely lift up their Heart to God and heavenly or spiritual things but true Saints of God that have received the Spirit of Life which is in Christ Jesus have embraced Gospel-Principles with a Spirit of Faith and Love and so walk after the Spirit their mind is wholly or at least chiefly ser upon the things of the Spirit which I take in other words to signifie Matters of Religion And therefore since their minds are wholly set upon them no wonder they make great attainments in them so as to have the righteousness of the Law fulfilled in them For to be carnally minded is death Verse 6 but to be spiritually minded is life and peace For a Man to be carnally minded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the carnal mind or carnal mindedness or to be wholly set upon carnal things is a stare of Spiritual Death and will end if continued in in Eternal Death There can be no life in Religion where the mind is carnal and his tendency is altogether towards and his relish is only of carnal things But to be spiritually minded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the whole tendency of a Man indued with the Spirit and that hath heartily embraced Gospel-Principles is towards heavenly life and living unto God and as he hath a lively activity for God so his comforts accordingly grow upon him to be spiritually minded is not only full of life and activity for God but full of peace and comfort ordinarily Great peace have they that keep thy law and nothing shall offend them Psalm 119.165 Because the carnal mind is enmity against God for it is not subject to the law of God Verse 7 neither indeed can be It is no wonder that the carnal mind should have no activity for God and so consequently no peace whilest it is enmity against God yea neither is subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be Why what is this carnal mind Here I must make a grand Enquiry that we may find out if it so please God what this carnal mind is for if we know not the Subject spoken of we can never well understand what that is which is predicated or affirmed and asserted of it at least not the manner how it is affirmed of it For non entis nulla sunt attributa and non esse non apparere idem est What then is meant by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nay what is meant by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is but an accident or attrioute We may know what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is best by knowing what 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is Now in Verse 27 of this Chapter it is said God that searcheth the Hearts knoweth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what is the Mind of the Spirit when it maketh Intercessions for us within us and doubtless there the meaning is what the Spirit would have So here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is what the Flesh would have the relish savour or tendency of the Flesh What is this that is here called Flesh which hath in it such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such a tendency such a relish such a savour as neither is nor can be subject to the Law of God Till this Question be well answered till this Enquiry be prudently and satisfactorily made I despair of ever giving a right Paraphrase or Interpretation of this Verse or any of the like nature Caro saith Vorstius
Could ever things be made more sure and firm for the strong consolation of those that love God Who shall separate us from the love of Christ Who shall make Christ cease to love us Verse 35 that hath done and still is doing all this for us Shall tribulation or distress c. No Christ will rather love us the better for all these Or who shall make us cease to love Christ Shall tribulation or distress or persecution or famine or nakedness or peril or sword Yes a wicked Will may an evil Heart of Unbelief may make us to depart from the living God for these things Heb. 3.12 But there is no reason why they should Trust in God and they shall not thou may'st walk upon the Waves as upon a smooth Pavement of firm Ground if thou give not way to thy Diffidence if thou do every puff of Wind shall lay thee upon thy Back and thou shalt sink to the bottom unless thou cry out Lord help me or I perish A Sigh a Groan shall be heard Though any one of all those things may look dreadsully upon thee Famine Nakedness Sword For these things few follow Christ We must look for one or all sometime or other and be prepared in our Mind for them or we cannot be Christ's Disciples Verse 36. As it is written for thy sake are we killed all the day long Verse 36 we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter This is the fair account a Saint should take of his state and circumstances as a Christian and by the grace of God not shrink at the appearance But what follows upon the views of Faith in the face of all these appearances ghastly enough to the flesh Nay in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us Verse 37 We are so far from being appalled and conquered by the appearance of these things that we do more than conquer them and keep them from terrisying of us for we can rejoyce and glory in them Rom. 5.3 But then it is through him that hath loved us For I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers Verse 38 nor things present nor things to come Nor heighth nor depth nor anyother creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God Verse 39 which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. These two Verses are only a most admirable enumeration of all kinds of things that can have any efficacy upon us towards breaking the relation of a Saint to God and his interest in his favour which is foreign to my design of brevity to insist upon there being no matter of difficulty or obscurity in them And so here I make an end of my Explication of these three Chapters and after I have made some useful Reflections upon what I have said I shall take my leave of the Reader The first Use that I shall make of this foregoing Explication of these three Chapters is this That here we may see the Excellency of the Christian Religion Use I Of Information what an holy and comfortable Institution it is it is no way satisfied with any Professor of it till it brings him to sincere and universal Piety he must walk after the Spirit and be led by the Spirit or he is no sincere Professor of the Christian Religion he either doth not understand the Christian Religion or is very false and hypocritical that doth not by the Spirit dwelling in him make it his business to mortifie all the deeds of the Body Rom. 8.13 nor is he in the way to Life And then for the Comforts of Religion though I doubt not but many well inclined and I hope truly religious People have their doubts and fears of their good Estate to God-ward yet I think that ordinarily the sadness of truly religious People proceeds chiefly from their own neglect of their watch and for that they are to little acquainted with themselves and their state for a truly godly Man nath abundant matter of Joy lying fairly before him to take comfort and rejoyce in and therefore it is made a great Duty by the Apostle to rejoyce in the Lord always Phil. 4.4 And Christians live far below themselves when they live a drooping and a sad life indeed no other person in the World hath any true cause of joy which yet every Saint hath and in this Chapter is expressed the greatest Assurance and richest Joy that you can find in all the Writings in the World it far exceeds the Stoick's Apathy and the Epicure's Tranquillity and ariseth to a Joy unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 and that upon a good ground and bottom no less than that of being utterly divorced from all evil and united in affection and practice to all that is good upon the firm promise of acceptance with God at present through the Death and Intercessions of his only begotten Son and of Assistance from Heaven to do the whole Will of God acceptably and of Eternal Life after Death And this ground of Comfort and Establishment every good Man and Woman hath though they do not as they might and ought make the discovery of it to themselves My second Use of the foregoing Discourse Use II Exhortation shall be by way of humble Address to the Preachers and Ministers of the Word That in their Sermons and particular Dealings or Treating with Persons whose Consciences are somewhat awakened to a sence of Sin and Guilt and to take some care of their Souls they be very wary how they send Men to the Law by bidding and charging them only to reform their Lives and amend their Ways and leave their wicked Courses 'T is very true it is their duty so to do but you see in the seventh of the Romans throughout what an ill effect this Advice or this Undertaking alone without Christ had upon the sinner it only killed him so much the more and set all his Lusts a raging and in an uproar Fain he would do good but evil was present with him And wicked sin deceitful sin wrought death in him by that which was holy just and good which made sin appear to be malignant to an Hyperbole And while he was making his greatest Struggle and War against Sin only by vertue of the Law 's prohibition of Sin the Law of the Members made a more brisk resistance and conquered him and brought him into captivity to the Law of Sin The Holiness and Threatnings of the Law may be of excellent use to terrifie them but the Holiness of the Law alone will never teach them and perswade them to be holy I humbly advise all the faithful Ministers of Christ that design the salvation of Souls that they do not only charge Men that come to them for advice to leave their wickedness and to be good and religious though this be good and necessary advice much less as the foolish Papists do to impose such and such Penances which is the high way
I have kept the faith henceforth is laid up for me a crown of righteousness c. What he fight a good fight that could not lift up an hand Whenever he would do good evil was present with him The good that he would do he did not and the evil he would not do that he did A stout Soldier He fight a good fight that was taken prisoner and carried captive to the Law of Sin He finish his course that could not move a step nor stand upon his Legs How to perform that which is good I find not Is this he that did preach warn and teach every Man in all Wisdom and labour so hard at his Work striving according to the working that worketh in me mightily 1 Col. last And so Ephes 3.7 Whereof I was made a minister according to the gift of the grace given unto me according to the effectual working of his power or his powerful working the same with that in the Colossians and so in Ephes 1.19 That you may know what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places Sixthly This seventh to the Romans Reas VI if it should be allowed in the sence mentioned seems to take off all worthy Aspirings after degrees in Grace and all religious joyful Gratulations and Thanksgivings to God for Grace already received If we must be still Captives to and sold under Sin to what purpose is it to endeavour after any high Attainments in any much less in all the Graces of the Spirit to be adding one Grace unto another and one degree of Grace unto another They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts How shall we hope to be able to say with good Hezekiah upon a Death-bed Remember now O Lord I beseech thee how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight Isa 38.2 3. And Lastly The taking the seventh to the Romans that is to say Reas VII the latter part of it from the fourteenth Verse to the end to be spoken by St. Paul as concerning himself after conversion casts a disparagement upon the whole Gospel dispirits and enervates the Power and Efficacy of it which yet is stiled the Ministration of the Spirit We all know the Gospel to be the last of the Revelations of God to the World even by the Son himself and his Apostles endued with the Holy Ghost in a visible and admirable manner The Gospel is called the Kingdom of Heaven because in it Heaven is brought down upon Earth as well as we directed by it to get to Heaven We are come in the Gospel to mount Sion and to the city of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of angels to the general assembly and church of the first-born which are written in heaven and to God the judge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect and to Jesus the mediator of the new covenant and to the blood of sprinkling which speaketh better things than the blood of Abel Heb. 12.22 23 24. The Church of God in the Gospel is compared to an Heir at Age come to the Possession of his Estate The Church before to an Heir in his Non-age Gal. 4. Now in the Days of the Gospel it is promised that the feeble shall be as David and the house of David shall be as God as the Angel of the Lord before them Zach. 12.6 What shall St. Paul then the chiefest of the Apostles be as a Babe as Carnal sold under Sin shall St. Paul pray for his Colossians that they might be strengthened with all might according to the glorious power of God Col. 1.11 and for his Ephesians that God would grant according to the riches of his glory to be strengthened with mighty by his spirit in the inner man and have no strength himself Ephes 3.16 and not be able to find how to perform that which is good He can do all manner of evil which he would not but the good which he would fain do he cannot do and the reason is because the Spiritual Apostle is grown Carnal sold under Sin and led away into Captivity to the Law of Sin and Death Methinks 't is impossible that ever these words should be spoken of St. Paul as of himself for there was never as I conceive a more vigorous active successful Person or engaged in higher Work and Service Therefore I shall here break off my Epistle to the Reader and after having given him a short Analysis of the foregoing part of the Epistle with that of the sixth seventh and eighth Chapter shall betake my self to the Work which I have undertaken that is to shew by Paraphrasing the sixth seventh and eighth Chapters of the Epistle to the Romans That this cannot be the meaning of the seventh Chapter which is by many thought to be so the sixth and eighth rightly expounded will cast a great light upon the seventh inclosed betwixt them according to that Maxim Opposita Juxta se posita magis elucescunt The sixth and eighth Chapters seem to me like two Guardians or Watchers set to defend us from the dangerous misunderstanding of the seventh or to give thee another Comparison which hath fallen upon my fancy they seem to be like two hot Baths and the seventh like a cold Well fed from another Spring and the Source it self of it is in the same Chapter fully accounted for The ANALYSIS I Find then after the Apostle hath made a most stately Address consisting of fifteen Verses to that learned and faithful Church he spends the other seventeen Verses of the first Chapter in convincing the Gentiles of their sinfulness The whole second Chapter in convincing the Jews of theirs In the third he shews That the Jews though they had many Priviledges above the Gentiles yet were indeed no better than they 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cap. 3.9 Verse 20. He sheweth That neither of them can be justified by the Law and that they both must be justified by Faith Ver. 30. In the fourth Chapter he proves Justification by Faith by Abraham's Example and David's Description of the Blessedness of a Man any Man In the fifth Chapter he institutes a Comparison betwixt the hurt done to Mankind by the first Adam and the benefit to Mankind by the second Adam and heighthens the benefit unspeakably beyond the loss That as sin hath reigned unto death so grace reigns by righteousness unto eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord And so concludes the Discourse of Justification by Faith In the sixth Chapter the Apostle comes to a new Subject which takes up that and the seventh and a good part of the eighth Chapter viz. that of Sanctification and shews that that is as
buried together with Christ or baptized to his Death that so we may live that regenerate new Life answerable to Christ's Resurrection which consists in a Course of all Sanctity a constant Christian Walk all our days This is enough for Explication Now the Argumentation of the Apostle seems to lye here A Christian by his Profession is not only dead to Sin but he is buried too and risen to a new Life and therefore 't is absurd and monstrous to see him live in any Sin as terrible monstrous absurd and intolerable as it were for us that have buried our Friends with all proper Solemnities to see them again come to our Houses and haunt us from Room to Room and appear to us where-ever we go or abide this were enough to frighten us out of our Life Even so monstrous and horrible a thing would it seem to us if we had the sence of spiritual things as we have of natural to see any Man that professeth himself a Christian to live in any known Sin But what an Age do we live in and how absurd I had almost said is this Doctrine now How strangely sounding in our Ears Where the Professor that endeavoars to live as one dead and buried unto Sin looks rather like a Spectre or Ghost than a Man that proclaims his Sin as Sodom But let us leave the Age and return to the Apostle and to the Rule For if we have been planted together in the likeness of his death Verse 5 we shall be also in the likeness of his resurrection Excellent Reason still and well recommended to our very fincy where the Apostle drop another Nemplior in his Allegorical Argumentation We have not only been buried in and raised our of the Water of Baptism which is a transiend way of being conformed to the death of Christ but we have been planted together with him in the likeness of his death which insinuates a permanent way of estating us in this Mortification and Vivification wherein we are to simbolize with or be made like unto Christ in a death unto Sin and a life unto Righteousness and under these Figures the reason of the thing is still illustrated and con●inued that it is our Duty by our Christian Profession to become utter strangers to all sin and very conversant in all the parts and exercises of an holy Life for it would be a strange thing that we should be only dead and buried with Christ and not live with him for so our Christian Religion and Profession would bring us to nothing we should only become dead and not live and then Religion doth nothing for us Therefore if we have been planted together in the likeness of his Death we shall be also in the I keness of his Besurrection which he brings in with as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is more empha●ical than the word also and yet that is all that is put for it in the Translation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alone signifies also but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being a Discretive places more weight in that part of the sentence with which it is conjoined and is much of kin with the Expletive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Copulative 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that it is much as if it had been thus said For if we have been planted together with Christ in the likeness of his Death we shall then most certainly or much rather be in the likeness of his Resurrection But the Apostle hath not yet done with the Allegory but bestows new fresh and fragrant Flowers upon our crucified Lord Verse 6. Knowing this that our old man is or was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 crucified with him Verse 6 that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin This is a matter of knowledge if we know any thing of the mystery and meaning of the Gospel that when Christ was crucified and died for our sins he did not only die as a sacrifice for sin which was one principal end of his death but he did then seal the truth of the Gospel with his Blood the New Testament came to bear by the death of the Testator and there is this signification eminently in his death That whosoever should afterwards pretend to a benefit by his death which was chiefly for the expiation of sin should count himself indispensibly obliged never to indulge or allow himself in any sin which was the death of his Saviour as all sin was Let him that nameth the Name of Christ depart from iniquity 2 Cor. 5.14 1● For the love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one died for all then were all dead They must reckon themselves as dying with Christ to sin when he died for sin Verse 15. 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 again Which is a plain parallel Scripture to that before us In this Rom. 6.6 Knowing this that our old man was crucified with him I connot conceive how this our our old man that is out corrupt nature or humane nature as corrupt can be said properly to be crucified with Christ when he died any otherwise than by signification except it be by way of influence as his death confirmed the Gospel and the Gospel perswades and assists us to holiness as I have explained it Our old man that is those corrupt Affections and Inclinations which we had in us before conversion were crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed which is much the same with with our old Man's being crucified for our old Man was consistent of a Body with all its Limbs and Members that belong to a Body and this must now be destroyed to the intent that we should not henceforth serve sin For he that is dead is freed from sin Verse 7 The Apostle loves the figurative way of Argumentation which indeed is very acceptable and pleasant If a Man be dead he is justly freed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from whatsoever old Master he had Before we were converted to Christ we lived in sin and served sin as a Master but when we are joined to Christ by Repentance and Faith we are crucified dead and buried as to sin sin can claim no right to our service and we profess in Baptism to be baptized into this death and by our conformity to Christ to have been crucified dead and buried with him Now if we be dead with Christ Verse 8 we believe that we shall also live with him because we are also planted with him in the likeness of his Resurrection Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead Verse 9 dieth no more death hath no more dominion over him So if you be raised with Christ as you are representatively or significatively in Baptisin therefore as you have died unto sin so you must die no more for the next
death would be a death unto righteousness unto which you were raised and this death must never be So it follows For in that he died Verse 10 he died unto sin once The word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 semel duntaxat only once or once for all he dieth no more but in that he liveth or whatsoever he liveth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he liveth unto God his whole life is consecrated to God and so must yours be and you are no further Christians than you thus do So it follows Likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin Verse 11 but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. I know no difficulty in the words but that they may easily be understood by what hath been spoken before only I observe in the words Likewise reckon your selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that the great thing that we have to do is to keep the account clear to consider what is the consequence of our Christian Profession if we be wise and pertinent and serious therein we must count it our indispensible Duty to shew a true conformity to the Death Burial and Resurrection of Christ by our being as crucified dead and buried to all sin and alive unto God in all that we live I shall only give a parallel place both for matter and form unto the tenth Verse with this difference that one place speaks of our Saviour the other of St. Paul but each express a Crucifixion Death and Resurrection or living unto God and so pass to the twelfth Verse In the tenth Verse of this Chapter it is thus expressed in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The parallel place is Gal. 2.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I am crucified with Christ yet I live no longer I but Christ liveth in me and the life that I now live or what I live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God The other is Christ died to sin once but now what he liveth he liveth unto God Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body Verse 12 The Apostle having hitherto shewn doctrinally the absurdity of that Question in the first Verse Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound from our professed state of Death to Sin declared in Baptism and from our necessary conformity to Christ comes in this Verse as partly in the eleventh to make the Application by way of Exhortation Likewise reckon ye also yourselves And here let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body Here I take the word body not to be the same with the word body in the sixth Verse Our old man was crucified with Christ that the body of sin might be destroyed for there body is called the body of sin but in this Verse sin and body are distinguished one from the other as two different things and separable one from the other whereas in that phrase the body of sin sin cannot be separated from the body for take away sin from the body of sin and there will be no body left for the body of sin is made up of sin in all its variety but we may at least in conception separate sin from our mortal body for the same body in Adam that after he had sinned became mortal was actually without sin before he had sinned therefore it may at least be conceived without sin whereas the body of sin cannot be conceived without sin But this Criticism will more visibly appear if you observe the words of the Text in the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which is being exactly interpreted to be read thus Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body that you should obey sin it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the lusts of the body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An English Reader cannot make the distinction which is very apparent in the Greek For he is apt to take it thus Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body that you should obey it that is sin in the lusts thereof that is in the lusts of sin but it is not so but quite otherwise in the Greek in the lusts thereof that is of the body I shall endeavour to explain the matter thus for it is not a meer Nicety but the Observation or Criticism carries a great deal of useful sence in it We are all of us here in this World in a mortal body Whether in the body or out of the body I cannot tell God knoweth saith St. Poul 2 Cor. 12.2 I say we are all in a mortal body and this body of ours hath several appetites or designs as eating and drinking c. these designs are called lustings or lusts according to the old English Now the Apostle's advice is that sin reign not in our mortal bodies In the body of sin which is to be destroyed and crucified with Christ there is nothing else but sin reigning sin this therefore must be destroyed but it is no duty but a great sin for us to destroy and kill our mortal body we must nourish it and cherish it in a moderate way only we must have a care that sin reign not in these mortal bodies so as to obey sin in gratifying to excess the innocent lustings or desires of our body The thirteenth Verse illustrates and strengthens this sence that I have given of the twelfth Neither yield ye your members that is the limbs of your mortal body Verse 13 your hands and feet your eyes and ears and tongue Instruments Margin Arms or Weapons of unrighteousness unto sin In this Verse are two Captains Kings Generals or Masters God and Sin You must not yield your members or limbs as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin If by the members here were meant the members of the body of sin it were no good sence to say yield not your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin for how can it be that the members of the body should not yield to the use and service of the body which is only unrighteousness in the body of sin But by our members here is understood the limbs and members of our natural or mortal body Now I shall recite the whole Verse Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin Verse 13 do not obey sin in gratifying the desires of the body but yield your selves unto God as those that are alive from the dead that is from death in sin and your members as instruments of righteousness unto God Use your bodies and every limb and faculty of them to the glory of God whose you are and whom you ought to glorifie with your bodies and spirits which are his For sin shall not have dominion over you Above Verse twelve Verse 14 he had exhorted and cautioned them that sin might not have dominion over them Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body Here he either promises or at least foretells them that it shall not reign for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
seems to turn his Speech into a figurative Expression as I have noted above out of Doctor Hammond and chuseth rather to say Ye are become dead to the Law by the Body of Christ crucified for else there would have been no similitude in this Case for the Matter to which the Apostle doth assimulate the Case of every true Christian was to that of a Wife who was once bound to an Husband but by the death of her Husband became free to be married to another the word ye therefore answers to the Wife therefore when he says ye are dead to the Law the meaning is the Law is dead to you for else he would not speak of the death of the Husband but of the death of the Wife And accordingly the Apostle continues the Allegory in the next two Verses For when we were in the flesh Verse 5 the motions of sin which were by the law did work in our members to bring ferth fruit unto death But now we are delivered from the law Verse 6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are cancelled to the Law signifieth saith Dr. Hammond the Law is cancelled to us that being dead wherein we were held that is the Law which was our first Husband being dead wherein we were held or to which we were obliged as a Wife to a Husband during his life that we should serve in newness of spirit that is according to a free ingenious Gospel-Principle of Love and not in the oldness of the Letter that is according to the severity and rigour of the Law written in Tables of Stone which was our old and first Husband So that in this Antapodosis or Reddition which is here made by way of Similitude to the Case of an Husband and Wife I take it we have these several Propositions clearly expressed or strongly inferrible 1. The Law is a Man's first Husband 2. The Law is every Man's Husband that is his Soul's Husband till he betake himself to Christ by Faith for there is no middle State every Man is either under the Law or under Grace 3. The Law is a rigid and severe Husband 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Verse 6. Wherein we were held Gal. 3.23 24. Before Faith came we were kept under the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Law had set a guard upon us shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed shut up as it were in Prison in Salva Custodia Verse 24. Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ and a severe Schoolmaster 4. That whilst we are under the Law and before we betake ourselves to Christ by Faith we can do nothing but Sin Verse 5. For when we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Whilst we are under the Law we are in the Flesh wholly carnal and then the motions of Sin did work and nothing but they and did bring forth Fruit unto Death This is the Issue of our Wedlock whilst we sinners have no other Husband but only the Law 5. That the Law was in very good earnest since killed as to the condemning power of it for all Mankind by the Body of Christ crucified 6. That every Man in the World where the Gospel is preached is declared to be free from the condemnation of the Law upon condition that he betake himself to Christ as an Husband and a Lord. And this I take to be the greatest thing in the Gospel 7. That till a Man repent and believe this Gospel and be joyned to the Lord Christ as one Spirit with him he can never bring forth fruit unto God Verse 4. Wherefore my brethren ye also are become dead to the law or rather the Law is dead to you by the body of Christ that ye should be married to another even to him that is raised from the dead that we should bring forth fruit unto God This is the Fruit of the New Wedlock and without this change of State there can be no such Fruit. All these severally I take to be included in the Apostle's Similitude and so I come to the seventh Verse wherein the Apostle answers a terrible Objection which seems to arise rationally against what he had said What shall we say then Verse 7 is the law sin God forbid The Objection rises naturally thus You have said above That when we were in the Flesh the Motions of Sin which were by the Law did so work as to bring forth Fruit unto Death and that we need to be delivered from the Law even by the death of it as an Husband that so we may serve God with a new Spirit and bring forth Fruit to God Why what a strange kind of thing do you make the Law to be Quod efficit tale est magis tale That which is the cause of any thing and brings it forth into being is much more such a thing as that is which is produced and effected by it What shall we say then is the Law Sin or a sinful thing or the direct cause of Sin This Question or Objection the Apostle answers with an abhorrence Verse 7 God forbid and then gives a very substantial reason for it Nay I had not known sin but by the law for I had not known lust except the law had said Thou shalt not covet So that it is as much as if the Apostle had said 't is true if this bringing forth Fruit unto Death had been the natural and kindly Effect of the Law as a Cause it would be so it could no be freed from this aspersion of being a very sinful thing nay Sin itself in the abstract If innocent Man and the Law meeting together the natural product of the Law should be Sin the Law would indeed deserve the name of sinful and of sin but it is not the univocal natural kindly Product of the Law upon a Man but the accidental Effect of the Law upon a Sinner But sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence The Law is so far from deserving the name of sin or sinful saith the Apostle that I had not known sin but by the law for I had not known lust except the law had said Thou shalt not covet The natural Effect of the Law is first to forbid Sin and to command all that is holy just and good and in the next place to discover Sin to convince and condemn the sinner which is quite contrary to the promoting encouraging and producing Sin Well then having removed Sin far enough away from being the natural Effect of the Law he comes to shew how the Law did occasionally and accidentally produce Sin But sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence Verse 8 for without the law sin was dead or is dead there is neither of them no Verb substantive in the Original And here I think it a very fit occasion to set
had said Verse 10. The commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death Now here Verse 13. he utterly avoids with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that that which was good that is without all doubt the same Commandment which he says Verse 12. was holy and just and good was made death to him The words in the Greek are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Upon these two the Apostle distinguisheth with a God forbid that they should be the same Therefore we had need you see to be very curious in observing the words of Scripture But the meaning of the distinction or that which the Apostle designs to assert and what to avoid I take to be this The Law was by the perversness of our sinful Nature abusing an Holy Law an occasion of Death But the Apostle abhors to say that that good law is or was death 't was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 't was found to be so in event by accident but was not so in itself for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is a Verb Substantive and not a Verb Passive the Verb Substantive predicates in esse the Verb Passive in fieri ab extra So much for the niceness of the Distinction Let us now go on with the 13th Verse which will further confirm what I have written Was that then which is good made death to me or became it death to me Verse 13 Was it death to me God forbid But sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good became or was made death to me This ugly thing called Sin was made or became death The good Law was not made death to me But sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good That sin by the commandment might become out of measure sinful Verse 13 Here in this Verse the Apostle shews his great Subtilty and Acuteness again yea in my mind a Poetical strain of fancy carrying on a Prosopopaeia by which he gives Sin which we all know in the true Philosophical account of it is nothing but a disorderly Action or omission of a Duty or an irregular Affection yet I say he gives Sin a person as if it were a subtle mischievous contriving thing for so the words run It was not the good Law that was made death but Sin was made death or became death Sin I say that it might appear Sin that is that it might appear to be what it was that it might indeed look like it self a most mischievous thing indeed How doth that appear Why it works death in me by that which is good To bring good out of evil is the work of God but to bring evil and the greatest evil out of the greatest good is the work of the Devil or rather the work of Sin that mischievous thing that first made Devils and then made Hell Sin that it might appear Sin the Apostle hath no worse word or name to call Sin by or else it should have had some other dreadful Epithet Now that the Apostle was in such an holy rage against it then it follows with a new Invective in the end of the 13th Verse That sin by the commandment might become out of measure sinful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sin hyperbolically sinful 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so that you see all that the Apostle is angry with is only Sin but withal it is as apparent that Sin shews all this mischievousness and maliciousness and destructiveness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by occasion of the Law or Commandment which if it had not come to the Man's conscience that is here spoken of whosoever he be this Lyon Sin had lain couchant and as it were dormant that is fast asleep in comparison if the rage and superlative hyperbolical roaring Madness that the Laws put it into I come now to the 14th Verse For we know that the law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin Verse 14 For we know he appeals to the sentiments of all Christians and might do of all Men as he does in the second Chapter wherein he sets forth at large That the Gentiles that have not the law do by nature the things contained in the law that is by the dictates of Nature approve of the Law as a holy Rule which they are obliged to obey which shews the work of the law written in their hearts Ver. 14 15 of that Chapter For we know that the Law is spiritual 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is spiritual in its Original dictated by the Spirit of God spiritual in its Conduct it guides the Spirit of a Man to the prosecution of all worthy heavenly and spiritual things that suit the Spirit of a Man feeds it nourishes it strengthens it comforts it as much as sensible and fleshly things do the Body and Senses of a Man The law is spiritual but I am carnal sold under sin and that is the reason that the Law and I can no better agree but as sinful hyperbolically sinful sin is enraged at the presence and convictions and condemnations of the Law so I to be sure that am the sinner sold under sin that am a carnal person and in the flesh Ver. 6. When we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death must needs be mightily discomposed inflamed and desperate in sinning at the coming of the Law with its commands without giving strength to obey with its charges and threatnings without any hope of pardon For what the Apostle had figuratively and as it were poetically affixed to Sin giving it a Person doth properly fall upon the Sinner if Sin be said by the Apostle to become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 out of measure sinful by the Law How much more true is it of the Sinner and shall this Sinner be St. Paul and that after Conversion God forbid What carnal and sold under sin and out of measure sinful When the very Heathens are by the same Apostle affirmed by Nature to do the things contained in the Law no doubt by some special assistances of the Spirit keeping them from these mischievous though accidental effects of the Law whereby it is said in this Chapter to enrage Lust For that which I do Verse 15 I allow not for what I would that do I not but what I hate that I do A goodly description of the Apostle Paul who says Happy is that man which condemneth not himself in the thing which he alloweth and as it might be said in the thing which he alloweth not I know it is spoken in another case viz. in the matter of indifferent things making an ill use of his liberty Rom. 14.20 But how unhappy was St. Paul himself then in this seventh of Romans that did not only what he allowed not but what he hated and could not do what he did allow and
Law of God But to what purpose was this small delight in the Law of God which had no influence upon Practice or the mortification of his Flesh for he plainly acknowledges that he saw another Law in his Members warring against the Law of his Mind Verse 23 The Law of his Mind was a Rule in his Conscience that he ought to do all good and to avoid and eschew all evil But the Question is Which Law prevails Why he tells us plainly and why should we not believe him And bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members The two Laws indeed did both war but the Law of Sin was the conqueror And of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought under bondage 2 Pet. 2.19 And then being captivated no wonder he crys out in the 24th Verse Verse 24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death or this Body of Death Now when the Law hath perfectly left him for dead in a spiritual sence a condemned Wretch strugling for life by the help of the Holy Law which yet could afford him no comfort nor help here we must imagine as I conceive that God in wonderful Mercy made a discovery of Christ and Grace to him the Law was his School-master to bring him to Christ Now Christ is precious to him as the only Saviour that was before utterly lost and undone in himself and as to all hopes from the Law Now I suppose this Verse is that which hath misled all those Interpreters and good Christians that mistook this Chapter as if St. Paul had spoken it of himself after conversion The Expression indeed is admirable and truly Evangelical but I take it as I said before as a new discovery made to him under his Bondage and Captivity under Sin by which he might attain unto true deliverance from the guilt and power of Sin I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Verse 25 Not a word of Christ before in all this struggle and agony wherein the personation is made of one under Convictions and Condemnations and Irritations unto Sin accidentally from the Law till the Man is utterly undone and crys out for deliverance I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Verse 25 So then with my mind I my self serve the law of God but with my flesh the law of sin This I take to be added in the close of this Chapter as the summa totalis or the Epitome of all the foregoing Discourse But yet even in it though there is one little word added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I my self because the Mind is indeed more principally a Man's self than his Flesh or Body is yet it is to me very insignificant to prove what Men would have for as long as the Law of the Members prevails against the Law of the Mind and brings the Man into captivity to the Law of Sin What is that Service of God with his Mind worth 'T is the predominant Party in the Man that denominates him spiritual or carnal and indeed he allows the Denomination quae sumitur a Majori in the fourteenth Verse I am carnal and I am a person sold under sin And so I dismiss the seventh Chapter and hasten out of this cold shivering Water as I called it above into the other hot Bath of the eighth Chapter which will more evidently and demonstratively clear the sence and importance of the seventh and was given us as I said above as another surety for the seventh that the seeming ill sence of that might have no evil influence upon us nor give any disparagement to our noble Gospel-Religion But I shall take along with me as Ariadnes thread that Expression which was put into the dying and otherwise despairing Man's mouth in the 23th Verse of the seventh Chapter when he had said gaspingly O miserable man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord. And from that Expression I take my rise to begin to explain the first Verse of the eighth Chapter ROMANS Chap. VIII THere is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus Verse 1 Now I see by this last discovery made to me when I was even giving up all for lost that to avoid condemnation which the Law inflicted and could not otherwise chuse but thunder out against a sinner we must all betake ourselves to Christ so the Illative therefore may well convert this eighth Chapter with that Expression in Verse 25. of the foregoing Chapter Therefore if you will flee from condemnation you must flee to Christ for there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Why who are they that are in Christ Jesus It follows who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Ay they are the Men indeed and none but they free from condemnation The Man in the seventh Chapter was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 carnal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the flesh Verse 5. and therefore was followed with condemnation but they that are in Christ Jesus walk after the Spirit their state is altered and therefore no wonder they are freed from their Desperations But the second Verse makes all clear For the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus Verse 2 hath made me free from the law of sin and death There are several things very observable in this Verse 1. Here is the personation continued in the first person I and me hath set me free as much as to say I that before was a captive to Sin under the Law of Sin and Death am set free 2. Here is a quite different Law never before mentioned viz. The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus 3. The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus sets the person free that was captive under the Law of Sin and Death Now let it be allowed Disputandi Causa that the word or person I all along the seventh Chapter was St. Paul yet sure they will not deny that me which is but the Accusative Case of I is St. Paul also Let all then depend upon this word And then it will plainly appear that Ego non sum Ego The I in the seventh Chapter though spoken of the same person is not spoken of the same person in the same state here In the seventh Chapter he is led into Captivity to the Law of Sin and Death In this Chapter the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath set him free from the Law of Sin and Death Therefore the Man in the seventh Chapter that was led into captivity to the Law of Sin Verse 23. needed the Gospel which is here called the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus to set him at liberty from this Law of Sin Therefore he was before only a miserable Man under the convictions and condemnations of the Law and not converted which was the
the Law or the Promises of the Gospel What though they call themselves Churchmen and Sons of the Church What if they be of separate Assemblies if they walk not after the Spirit but after the Flesh they are the Devil's Slaves and Firebrands of Hell There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Isai 48.22 Without holiness no man shall see the Lord Holiness is the true end of all Religion we must attain unto Holiness or we can never please God in any Religion that we profess Cease to do evil learn to do well put away the evil of your doings Come now and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool Esai 1.16 17 18. There is no communion with God no Fellowship or Converse with or Approach unto God for all these I take to be understood by Reasoning together without washing and cleansing ourselves Before this in the 11 12 13 14 15 Verses God renounceth all Acceptance of any thing they did in Religion To what purpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me c. saith the Lord. Men may use some kind of honest Endeavours after Holiness and fail of attaining what they seek after Thus the Apostle witnesses of the Jews Rom. 9.31 But Israel which followed after the law of righteousness hath not attained to the law of righteousness Verse 32. Wherefore because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the law Now for these the Aposile had a great deal of Pitty and Commiseration as you may see Rom. 9.1 2 3. I say the truth in Christ I lye not my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Ghost that I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart For I could wish that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren my kinsmen according to the flesh who are Israelites c. And so Rom. 10.1 2 3. Brethren my hearts desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they might be saved For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God but not according to the knowledge For they being ignorant of God's righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God Now I have made these two last Quotations to prove That Men may in some sort and way have a great Zeal and Endeavour to please God and to be the Favorites of Heaven and yet lose their labour What shall become then of those that take no pains in Religion at all and indeed do not truly endeavour to become universally Holy but please themselves with some poor low ends in their Profession short of this only worthy design I shall conclude this Application with those words of the Apostle in Rom. 6.21 22. What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed What real Profit or what real Comfort had ye in those sinful Pleasures and wicked Courses wherein once in the State of Unregeneracy ye indulged yourselves Wicked Men of the World take a great deal of pains to get Profits and Pleasures and Honours and what doth it afford them What comfort have they of it at the very time upon a sober Review and Consideration The Answer is None at all and besides now ye are ashamed of what ye then did then it was no matter of Comfort and now 't is a matter of Shame But what follows Ver. 22. But now being made free from sin Who is free from sin Answer Every Saint of God is free from Sin in the Apostle's sence not in the sence of a quarrelsome Scholastick and become servants to God you have your fruit unto holiness That is a present rich Fruit indeed that by turning to God and exercising ourselves unto Righteousness we attain unto an Holy Frame and Temper and Readiness to every good Work And the end everlasting Life The Law teacheth Holiness and the Gospel effects it and though some may lose their labour that are at some pains in Religion for want of diligent Enquiry after the right way as the Jews did and all that seek to be justified and sanctified by the Law will do yet they that are at no pains at all in Religion are sure to tumble into Hell Strive to enter in at the strait gate sa it our Saviour for many I say unto you shall seek to enter in but shall not be able Luke 13.21 If seeking will not do but we must also strive to enter what will become of those that do not so much as seek And now I would end this Subject Use VII Of Consolation which is grown under my hand to double the largeness that I intended it with a Use of Consolation to all the true Saints of God Are there any as I hope there are many that have been duly convinced of Sin how great an Evil it is how it hath dishonoured God and defiled and debased their Nature and Noble Soul which is God's Off-spring and endangered their sinking under the Divine Displeasure to Eternity and especially of the great Sin of not believing in Christ but rather seeking to be justified by the Works of the Law have they at last found themselves killed by the Law with a Thousand Deaths and been driven to flee from the Wrath that is certainly to come unto the Hope that is set before them in the Gospel Have they been couvinced of Righteousness because Christ is gone to the Father and we are to see him no more till his second coming and from hence conclude that he hath brought about Everlasting Righteousness by his Death for else how could he upon whom his Father laid the Iniquities of us all and did while he was punishing him upon the Cross as it were forsake him be admitted again into his Father's presence as an Advocate for us Have they been convinced of Judgment as knowing that because Christ hath died and is again gone to the Father that therefore the Prince of this World the Devil is judged and condemned and shall be cast out of his Tyranny over Men all Men that betake themselves to Christ the Captain of their Salvation who by Death destroyed him that had the power of Death that is the Devil that he might deliver them who through fear of death are all their life-time subject to bondage Heb. 2.14 15. And so have they betaken themselves to Christ as their Head and Husband and only Saviour that he may be made of God unto them Wisdom Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption Why unto you is the Word of this Salvation sent You are the blessed of the Lord and ye shall be blessed and the Gates of Hell shall never prevail against you You are called to resist the Devil to fight against Principalities and Powers and the Rulers of the Darkness of this World and against Spiritual Wickedness in high places
2d Chapter must be meant the Moral Law and this was all they could ever be alive or become dead to 'T is true the Jews might be said to become dead to the Ceremonial Law too by the Body of Christ crucified But this was as nothing to the Romans or mecr Gentiles To leave then this Argument from the persons to whom he wrote being Gentiles and to speak only to the nature of the thing in Rom. 7.5 It is said For when we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the law did work c. What motions of sins can we suppose to be wrought by the Ceremonial or Judicial Law more than as they commanded Duties but gave no strength to perform which is the cause why the Moral Law wrought the same Effect Doth there appear any peculiar reason for this Effect from either of these Laws which is not found in the Moral Law Or if there do how doth this affect the Romans that were never under them Again Verse 7. What shall we say then is the law sin God forbid nay I had not known sin but by the law for I had not known lust except the law had said Thou shalt not covet What Law saith this Why it is the Tenth Commandment of the Moral Law Therefore it is the Moral Law that is the first Husband spoken of Again Verse 8. But sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence For without the law sin is dead Can all this be colourably said of the Ceremonial Law and not rather of the Moral Law As it forbids all Sin and commands all Duty and gives neither Strength nor Pardon Whereas the Ceremonial Law doth not command so much and yet gives some intimations of Pardon by the Sacrifices which it enjoys Verse 12. Wherefore the law is holy and the commandment holy and just and good I question whether this can be Scripturally and Theologically spoken of the Ceremonial Law which in a Sence is said not to be good Ezek. 20.25 Wherefore I gave them statutes that were not good and judgments whereby they should not live Dedi eis praecepta non bona id est Praecepta Ceremonialia saith Pole in Loc. Verse 14. For we know that the law is spiritual This is truly said of the Moral Law but it said of the Ceremonial Law that it was a carnal commandment Heb. 7.16 and Heb. 9 10. It is called carnal ordinances Rites or Ceremonies Again Verse 9. of Rom. 7. For I was alive without the law once Let us suppose for the present that the Apostle speaks properly in his own Name When was ever the Apostle alive without the Ceremonial or Moral Law who was bred up at the strictest rate under them both as a Pharisee The meaning therefore is he was alive without the Law that is before the Law came with its pressing Convictions and what shall we imagine that these Convictions were What That the Ceremonial Law came with its Convictions That he had neglected so many Washings and Sacrifices c. Who ever understood it so Is it not rather understood by all that the Moral Law came in upon his Conscience as a spiritual and Holy Law and the very Transcript of the Holiness of God and charged him with that as Sin which he never understood to be Sin before as he instanceth in Lust and Coveting and so made him appear guilty before the Holy God so as he could never hope to be accepted with God without Pardon and a Saviour And what other Law could this be which should be said to come thus but the Moral Law That which was ordained to be Life to Adam he found to be Death to him being once indeed and so often broken by his first Parents and by himself So by all these Texts out of the chief Chapter which I have in the foregoing Discourse been explaining I apprehend it is evident That the Apostle speaks chiefly if not only of the Moral Law Therefore the Moral Law was their Husband which 〈…〉 sake and to be married to another even Christ in order to Justification 〈…〉 we and all Men in the World for there is par ratio a like and 〈…〉 us If any shall doubt of the Evidence here given I que●●●●● 〈…〉 by those several other places where the Apostle mannages the 〈…〉 the Subject of Justification by Faith A Second APPENDIX ANother of my worthy Friends to whom I communicated my Manuscript for his judgment of it questioned whether it could be made to appear that the Law did so much as accidentally enrage Lust and occasion greater sinning in those that seek to be justified by the Law and was inclined to think that the Law did only aggravate the guilt of any Sin and so wound the Conscience and that this should be all the meaning of those words When the commandment came sin revived and I died and the commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death Rom. 7.9 10. But I am still of opinion that there is and must needs be a farther sence in the words and that when a Man seeks to be justified by the Law which is a Distemper very incident to Humane Nature under divers shapes and forms and the most subtile and unaccountable Disease of Mankind the Law instead of justifying which it can by no means effect doth not only aggravate Sin and kill a Man as a Ministration of Condemnation but doth though accidentally yet certainly work in us all manner of Concupiscence and doth bring forth new Fruit unto Death as well as discover the old for which I think there are several very considerable Proofs in this seventh Chapter to the Romans and I shall take them as they lye in order Verse 5. When we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death When we were in the flesh that is in a state of Unregeneracy and so under the Law had not betaken ourselves to Christ for an Husband the motions of sin did work This methinks cannot be understood of Past-sins that we were then convinced of them by the Law but they are Motions or Inclinations towards sinning so the Expression is continued they did work in ordine ad to bring forth fruit unto death That is towards new Commissions and these Motions of Sin are said to be by the Law How can this be interpreted of laying on guilt or charging us with guilt for Sins already committed So accordingly the Antithesis in the next Verse seems to carry it Verse 6. But now we are delivered from the law that did thus produce and not only discover Sin that being dead wherein we were held that is the Law that we should serve in newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter or as it is in Verse 4. That we should bring forth fruit unto God This part of the Antithesis speaks clearly of
doing good Actions therefore the other part of the Antithesis must speak of doing ill Actions by bringing forth Fruit unto Death for Contrariorum Contrariae sunt Rationes Again Verse 8. Sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence 't is one thing to work it and another to discover it so it follows for without the law sin is dead that is or seems to be dead as to energy not as to discovery or being made to appear or becoming alive in its guilt only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But let this 8th Verse and the 9th and 10th following be taken in this sence For making the guilt of sin to revive Yet what shall we say to the 11th Verse For sin taking occasion by the commandment deceived me First this Phrase taking occasion by the commandment Arrepta occasione inflammandi per legen vetantem concupiscentiam Vatablus in Pol. Versu 8vo Multi interpretes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exponunt occasionem putantque idem dici quod vulgari proverbio intimur in Vetitum Grotius in Pol. So that this taking occasion by the Commandment is by these Interpreters understood of taking an advantage towards new Commissions 2. Again Deceived me How can sin that is indwelling sin or sinful Inclinations be said to deceive but as it had a kind of malicious Design by a Prosopopaeia here to draw the sinning person farther into actual Commissions by which also it slew him not only by charging the Guilts that had past for that is the work of the Law to kill that way by way of charge and not the work of sin or sinful Inclination called Concupiscence sin doth not charge home sin upon the Conscience but Concupiscence here called sin promotes further Commisions seduxit me i. e. in suas partes me dolose traxit ab errare me fecit longius me abduxit a via justitiae ad peccandum me pellexit c. Menochius Estius Beza in Pol. But methinks the 13 Verse plainly makes it appear that sin takes a great advantage towards strengthening and promoting itself in the Sinner or sinful Person by the Law according to the Prosipopaea wherein the Apostle makes sin an Agent and as it were a Person Was that then which is good that is the Law made death to me God forbid But sin that it might appear sin and shew itself in its Colours working death in me by that which is good that sin itself by the commandment might become out of measure sinful I would fain know what tolerable sence can be made of these words but that they must afford a plain proof of what I have been contending for 'T is true 't is sence to say that sin by the Commandment appears to be sin because it is forbidden by the Commandment and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 3.4 Every sin is a transgression of the law And it is sence to say that sin brings us to death by that which is good that is the Law forbidding it but how will this plain honest sence bear all the heighth and heat and smartness of the Apostle's arguing in this Verse But sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good that sin by the commandment might become out of measure sinful Sin appears to be sin by the Commandment but how doth it appear out of measure sinful How doth this But come in But sin that it might appear sin namely for this Reason for that it works death in me by that which is good I say how doth this But come in 'T will not bear a Discretive to say only that the Law threatens with Death a Man that doth such and such things and he sinning or transgressing falls under this penalty this is no wonder at all How doth sin appear out of measure sinful by this How doth sin shew such extraordinary Venome in this That it lays a Man under the penalty of the plain Law But now if sin that is indwelling-sin or Concupiscence hath such a mischevious devilish nature in it that it doth not only lay us under the penalty of Death but will therefore sin because sin is forbidden and will therefore break the Law because it forbids sin and take its very rise and occasion to all manner of Wickedness and work in us all manner of Concupiscence from that which is holy just and good this shews sin and that by the Commandment to be a thing out of measure sinful this sets forth sin in its true Colours and shews it to be sin indeed a thing that cannot be decyphered by any worse Name than it hath already Sin that it might appear sin c. and out of measure sinful FINIS BOOKS Printed for John Salusbury at the Rising Sun in Cornhil THE Harmony of the Divine Attributes in the Contrivance and Accomplishment of Man's Redemption by the Lord Jesus Christ c. By William Bates D. D. The Changeableness of this World with respect to Nations Families and particular Persons With a practical Application thereof to the various Conditions of this Mortal Life By Timothy Rogers M. A. A Mirror for Atheists being some Passages of the Life and Death of the Right Honourable John Earl of Rochester written by his own Direction on his Death-bed By Gilbert Burnet Lord Bishop of Sarum An End of Doctrinal Controversies which have lately troubled the Churches By Richard Baxter The Certainty of the Worlds of Spirits fully evinced by unquestionable Histories of Apparitions and Witchcrafts Voices c. proving the Immortality of Souls By Richard Baxter The Protestant Religion truly stated and justified By the late Reverend Mr. Richard Baxter prepared some time before his Death Whereunto is added some Account of the learned Author By Mr. Daniel William and Mr. Matthew Sylvester The Christian's Converse with God or the Insufficiency of Humane Friendship and the Improvements of Solitude in Converse with God with some of the Author's Breathings after him By Richard Baxter Recommended to the Reader 's serious Thoughts when at the House of Mourning and in Retirement By Mr. Matthew Sylvester The Mourner's Memorial in two Sermons on the Death of the truly pious Mrs. Susanna Soame With some account of her Life and Death By Timothy Wright and Robert Fleming The whole Works of Isaac Ambrose Fol.