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A51837 Christs eternal existence, and the dignity of his person asserted and proved in opposition to the doctrine of the Socinians : in several sermons on Col. I, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 verses / by the Reverend Tho. Manton. Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1685 (1685) Wing M520; ESTC R33496 105,834 258

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and Council of Saints Not one of the sinners shall remain in the company of the righteous nor appear in their Society 2. The wicked are raised ex officio Iudicis not beneficio Mediatoris they are raised by Christ as a Judge but not by him as a Redeemer The one sort are raised by the power of his vindicative Justice the other by the Holy Ghost by vertue of his Covenant Rom. 8.11 He shall quicken your mortal bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you The one by Christs power from without put forth by him as Judge of dead and living The other by an inward quickning influence that flows from him as their proper head When the Reaper gathers the Wheat into his Barn the Tares are bound in bundles and cast into unquenchable Fire Matth. 15.30 3. The wicked are forced to appear and cannot shift that dreadful Tribunal the other go joyfully forth to meet the Bridegroom and when the sentence of condemnation shall be executed upon the one the other by vertue of Christs Life and Resurrection shall enter into the possession of a blessed and Eternal Life wherein they shall injoy God and Christ and the company of Saints and Angels and sing Hallelujahs for ever and ever Thirdly How is this an evidence and assurance to all good Christians of their happy and glorious Resurrection 1. The Resurrection of Christ doth prove that there shall be a Resurrection 2. That to the faithful it shall be a blessed and glorious Resurrection 1. There shall be a Resurrection it is necessary to prove that partly because it is the foundation of all Godliness if there were not another Life after this there were some ground for that saying of the Atheists Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall dye 2 Cor. 15.32 If there be no future estate nor being after this Life let us enjoy the good things of the World whilst we can for with in a little while death cometh and then there is an end of all These Atheistical discourses and temptations to sensuality were more justifiable if men were annihilated by death no the soul is immortal and the body shall rise again and come into the judgment and unless we live Holily a terrible judgement it will be to us Partly because we cannot easily believe that the same body shall be placed in heaven which we see committed to the Grave to rot there Of all Articles of Religion this is most difficultly assented unto now there is relief for us in this business in hand Christ is the first-born from the dead There were many praeludia resurrectionis foretokens and pledges of the Resurrection given to the old World in the Translation of Enoch the Rapture of Elijah the reviving of these few dead ones which I spake of before but the great and publick evidence that is given for the assurance of the World is Christs rising from the Grave this makes our Resurrection 1. Possible 2. Easie. 3. Certain and Necessary 1. Possible the least that we can gather from it is this that it is not impossible for dead men to rise for that which hath been may be We have the proof and instance of it in Christ see how the Apostle reasoneth 1 Cor. 15.13 If there be no Resurrection from the dead then Christ is not risen and then our whole Faith falleth to the ground For all Religion is bottomed on the Resurrection of Christ if therefore Christ be risen why should it seem an incredible thing to us that others should be raised also 2. It is Easie for by rising from the dead he hath conquered death and gotten the victory of it 1 Cor. 15.57 A separation there will be of the soul from the body but it is not such as shall last for ever The victory over sin is the victory over death and the conquest of sin makes death an entrance into immortality The Scriptures often speak of Christs destroying the power of death Heb. 2.14 That through death he might destroy him that had the power of death The devils design was by tempting men to sin to keep them for ever under the power of death but Christ came to rescue men from that power by a Resurrection from Death to Life Again it is said he hath abolished death and brought Life and Immortality to light in the Gospel He hath voided the power of death by taking a course for the destruction of sin and made a clear Revelation of that Life and Immortality which was not so certainly known before We look to the natural impossibilities how what is turned to dust may be raised again because we do not consider the power of God but the moral impossibility is the greater for the sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law that which makes sin able to do us hurt is the guilt of sin otherwise it would be but as a calm sleep and this guilt is bound upon us by the Law of the righteous God which threatneth eternal Death to the sinner Now get free from sin and it is easie to believe the conquest of death I will prove two things that Christs R●surrection shews both his victory over sin and his victory over death 1 His victory over sin That he hath perfectly satisfyed for sin and appeased the wrath of God who is willing to be reconciled with all those that come to the Faith and Obedience of the Gospel which could not be if Christ had remained under the power of death for the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 15.17 If Christ had not risen ye are yet in your sins that is God is not pacifyed there is no sufficient means of atonement or foundation layed for our Reconciliation with him but his Resurrection declareth that he is fully satisfyed with the ransom paid for sinners by Jesus Christ for it was in effect the releasing of our Surety out of Prison so it is said Rom. 4.15 He was delivered for our offences and raised up for our Iustification he dyed to expiate and do away sin and his Resurrection sheweth it was a sufficient Ransom and therefore he can apply the vertue of it to us 2. His victory over death For he got out of it which not only shews there is a possibility for a man by the power of God to be raised from Death to Life but a facility as a second Adam he brought Resurrection into the World there were two Adams the one Man brought Death and another brought Resurrection into the World The sentence of death is gone out against all the children of Adam as such and the Regenerate Believers that are recovered by Christ shall be raised to immortal Life he hath gotten out of the power of death so shall we 3. Certain and necessary For several Reasons 1. Our relation to Christ he is the head of the body now the head will not live gloriously in Heaven and leave his members behind him under the power of death Believers are called the
the Law and the stinging sense of Gods Threatnings which are so absolute universal and every way true and evident unless we know a sufficient satisfaction hath been made for us If you think the promises of the Gospel are enough alass when the threatnings of the Law are so just and built upon such evident Reason the soul is exposed to doubtfulness And if the threatnings of the Law seem altogether in vain the promises of the Gospel will seem less ●irm and valid The Truth and Honour of Gods Government must one way or other be kept up and that will not be unless there be a fair passage from Covenant to Covenant and that the former be not repealed or relaxed but upon valuable consideration as it is when our Mediatour and surety beareth our sorrows and griefs and satisfieth for us But now if he were mere Man it would not have that esteem and value as to be sufficient for so many men and so many sins as are committed against an holy God Therefore he needeth to be God also 3. His Kingly Office How can that be exercised without an Infinite Power Because by our King and Judge all our Enemies are to be overcome the World Sin Death and the Devil And what is necessary to do this every man may soon understand And as an Infinite Power is necessary so an Infinite Knowledge that all things in Heaven and Earth may be naked and open to him and that he search the heart and try the Reins and then that he may subject all things to himself raise all the dead to life govern and protect the faithful in all the parts of the world that he may be present with them in every Age and Place to help and relieve them In short to do all things both in Heaven and in Earth that fall within the compass of his office Now what is a divine and infinite Power if this be not What can the Father do which the Son cannot do also yea what doth the Father do which the Son doth not likewise Ioh. 5.19 Is there any work which the one doth but the other cannot do Besides there needeth infinite Authority and Majesty therefore the King of the Church must be infinite But how is he infinite if he hath onely a finite Nature such as a mere Creature hath Or how could his finite Nature without change and conversion into another Nature be made infinite For without doubt that nature is infinite which hath an infinite power of Understanding Willing and Acting Well then Christ cannot be truly owned unless he be owned as Lord and God 5. Those that are rightly conversant about Christ and the Misteries of his Death and Resurrection should take Christ for their Lord and their God Every one of them should say my God on whom I depend my Lord to whose use I resign my self I shall 1. Explain in what sense these words may and ought to be used 2. Give you the Reasons why it becomes Christians to be able to say My Lord my God 1. In what sense these words may and ought to be used My Lord and my God There are two things considerable in those words 1. An Appropriation or a claim and challenge of Interest in him 2. A Resignation or Dedication of our selves to his Use and Service Both are implyed in these Titles My Lord my God Christ was his God or Benefactor and also his Lord and Master However that be in the mutual stipulation of the Covenant 't is evident Cant. 2.16 I am my beloved and my beloved is mine There is the appropriation of Faith and the resignation of Obedience Ezek. 36.28 Ye shall be my people and I will be your God Zech. 13.9 I will say 't is my people and they shall say the Lord is my God 1. The one is the fruit and effect of the other God saith I am thy God and the Soul answereth I am thy servant As when Christ said Mary she presently said Rabboni God awakeneth us by the offer of himself and all his Grace to do us good and then we devote our selves to his Service and profess subjection to him If he will be our God we may well allow him a dominion and Lordship over us to rule us at his pleasure We choose him because he chooseth us for all Gods works leave their impression upon our hearts He cometh with Terms of Peace and we with Profession of Duty God loveth first and most and purest and therefore his love is the cause of all 2. The one is the Evidence of the other If God be yours you are his He is yours by gift of himself to you and you are his by gift of your selves to him The Covenant bindeth mutually Many will be ready to apply and call God their God that do not dedicate and devote themselves to God If you be not the Lords the Lord is not yours He refuseth their claim that say Hosea 8.2 Israel shall cry unto me my God we know thee Israel hath cast off the thing that is good In their distress they pleaded their Interest in the Covenant but God would not allow the claim because they denied obedience 3. The one is more sensible and known to us than the other A believer cannot always say God 〈◊〉 mine but he will always say I am his Psal. 119.94 I am thine save me I am thine and will be thine onely thine wholly thine and always thine Appropriation hath more of a Priviledge in it Resignation is onely a Duty We have leave and allowance to say God is my God but we cannot alwayes say it without doubt and hesitancy because our Interest is not alwayes alike evident and clear When you cannot say my God yet be sure to say my Lord. We know God to be ours by giving up ou● selves to be his His choice and election of us is a secret till it be evidenced by our choice of him for our God and Portion our Act is more sensible to the Conscience Be more full and serious in the resignation of your selves to him and in time that will shew you your Interest in God 4. Gods Propriety in us by Contract and Resignation speaketh Comfort as well as our Propriety and Interest in God You are his own and therefoe he will provide for you and care for you 1 Tim. 5.8 If any provide not for his own he hath denied the faith and is worse than an Infidel Interest doth strangely endear things to us The world will love its own Iob. 5.19 and will not God love his own and Christ love his own Iob. 13.1 you may trust him and depend upon him and serve him chearfully for you are his own So that if we had no Interest in God established by the Covenant if God had not said to us I am yours yet our becoming his would make it comfortable For every one taketh himself to be bound to love his own provide for his own and to defend his own and do
inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession The inchoate or begun deliverance is that measure of deliverance which believers enjoy now by Faith which consists of two parts Iustification and Sanctification Sanctification 1. Pet. 1.18 Tit. 2.14 Who gave himself for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works When we are free from the power and weight of sin Iustification so it is in the Text and Eph. 1.7 When sin is freely pardoned and our debt cancelled and we are delivered from evil and wrath to come II. As it is a part so it is a principal part This will appear if you consider the evil we are freed from As 1. The power of the Devil is destroyed All the advantage which he hath against us is as we are sinners guilty sinners before God For we are put into his hands when we have forfeited the protection of our righteous Lord but forgiveness of sins gives us a release from him Acts 26.18 When Christ came to procure it he destroyed the devils Power when we are converted we are interessed in the priviledge 2. The reign of sin is broken for sanctifying Grace is inseparable from pardoning Grace yea I will venture to say that the gift of the sanctifying Spirit is a part of our pardon executed and applyed for a part of the punishment of sin was spiritual death or the loss of Gods Image Col. 2.13 He hath quickned you together with Christ having forgiven all your trespasses When God pardoneth he sanctifieth and createth us anew that we may be fit for his service so that we are renewed by the Spirit as well as recovered out of the s●ares of the devil 3. We are eased of tormenting fears in a great measure Man can have no firm peace and comfort in his own soul while sin remaineth upon him our case is dangerous whether we be sensible of it or no because our condition is not to be valued by our sense and feeling but by the sentence of the Law of God which we have broken and violated if there be any difference in the case the more insensible we are the more miserable The generality of men indeed are senseless and careless put far away the evil day from them and so make light work of reconciling themselves to God but are they the more safe for this No if they will dance about the brink of Hell and go merrily to their execution it argues not their safety but their stupidness The thoughts of danger is put off when the thing it self is not put away but if they be serious they cannot be without trouble Rom. 1.32 Knowing the judgement of God they conclude that they that do such things are worthy of death The very light of Nature will revive many unquiet thoughts within them The justice of the supream Governour of the World will still be dreadful to them whose law they have broken and whose wrath they have justly deserved They may lull the soul asleep by the stupifying potion of carnal Delights and while Conscience is asleep please themselves with stoln waters and bread eaten in secret which is soon disturbed by a few serious and sober thoughts of the world to come God is offended and what peace can they have 4. Death is unstinged That 's the usual time when Convictions grow to the height and the stings of an awakened Conscience begin to be felt 1 Cor. 15.28 Then the thoughts of Death and Judgement to come are very terrible to them and men begin to see what it is to bear their own sins and how happy they are who are sure of a pardon 5. The obligation to Eternal punishment ceases Pardon is dissolving and loosing that obligation Now the punishment is exceeding great Hell and damnation are no vain Scare-crows Eternity makes every thing truly great the poena damni an everlasting separation from the comfortable presence of the Lord Matth. 25.41 Go ye cursed Luk. 13.27 Depart ye workers of iniquity When God turned Adam out of Paradise his case was very sad but God took care of him in his Exile made him Coats of skin gave him a day of Patience afterwards promised the seed of the woman who should recover the lapsed estate of mankind intimated hopes of a better Paradise That estate therefore is nothing comparable to this for now man is stripped of all his comforts sent into an endless state of Misery whence there is no hopes of ever changing his condition So for the poena sensus the pain Mark 9.44 Where their worm never dieth and their fire is never quenched The worm is the worm of Conscience reflecting on past folly and disobedience See here a man may run away from the rebukes of Conscience by many shifts sleeping sporting distracting his Mind with a clutter of business but there not a thought free but is always thinking of slighted means abused mercies wasted time the offenses done to a merciful God and the curse wherein they have involved themselves the fire is the wrath of God or these unknown pains that shall be inflicted on body and soul which must needs be great when we fall into the hands of the living God! If a little mitigation a drop to cool your Tongue be thought a great matter oh what a blessedness is it to be freed from so great an evil Perhaps you coldly entertain the offer of a pardon now but then to be freed from wrath to come oh blessed Jesus 1 Thes. 1.10 2. The good depending on it Luk. 1.77 To give us the knowledge of salvation by the remission of sins Eternal life dependeth on it for you are not capable of enjoying God till his wrath be appeased As all evil was introduced by sin so all happiness by pardon This is an initial blessing which maketh way for the rest VSE Of Exhortation To perswade you to seek after this benefit All of us once needed it and the best of us till we are wholly freed from sin still need it 1. We all of us once needed it for we are not onely criminal persons liable to condemnation but actually condemned in the sentence of Gods law Ioh. 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already Now should not a condemned man make means to be pardoned and should not we accept of Gods terms especially when there is but the slender thred of a frail life between us and execution He that securely continues in his sins despiseth both the curse of the Law and the grace of the Gospel Oh consider nothing but a pardon will serve the turn not forbearance on Gods part not forgetfulness on yours 1. Not forbearance of the punishment on Gods part God may be angry with us while he doth not actually strike as the Psalmist saith Psal. 7.11 12 13. God is angry with the wicked every day if he turn not he will whet his sword He hath bent his bow and will make it ready
this Relation bindeth us unto As obedience and self-denial 1. Obedience to his Laws and the motions of his Spirit His Laws Luke 6.46 Why call you me Lord Lord and do not the things which I say The motions of his Spirit Rom. 8.14 As many as are led by the spirit of God they are the sons of God 2. Self-denial Christ spared not his natural body to promote the good of his mystical Body he exposed his life for our Salvation we should hazzard all for his Glory Nature teaches us to lift up the hands to save the head 4. There must be sutableness and imitation 1 Ioh. 2.6 He that abideth in him ought to walk as he walketh 5. If you be planted into his Mystical body you will make conscience of Love and Tenderness IV. Vse Let us Triumph in this Head depend on him There are two Arguments his Ability and his Sympathy 1. His Ability He can give us Life Strength Health Eph. 3.16 That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthned with might by his spirit in the inner man Col. 1.15 Strengthned with all might according to his glorious power unto all patience and long-suffering with joyfulness 2. His Sympathy He is touched with the feeling of our Infirmities Heb. 4.15 We have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points ●empted like as we are yet without sin The Head is concerned for the Members SERMON VI. COL 1.18 Who is the beginning the first born from the dead I Come now to consider the first particular Title which is given to Christ There are two other Titles given to Christ the one respects the state of Grace the other the state of Glory And First With respect to the state of Grace he is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning that is Origo mundi meli●ris the beginning of the new Creature as well as the Old for the same place and dignity which Christ hath in the order of Nature he hath in the order of Grace also Therefore he is called the beginning of the creation of God Rev. 3.14 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not taken there passively as if it were the first thing that was created but actively that he giveth a being and beginuing to all things that are created and by the Creation of God is meant the new Creation So that the Point is Doctrine That Iesus Christ is the Author and beginning of the new Creati●● I shall briefly explain this and pass to the next branch Christ is the beginning two wayes I. In a way of Order and Dignity II. In a way of Causality 1. In a way of Order As first and chief of the renewed state This is many ways set forth in Scripture Two things I shall take notice of 1. That he is the builder of the Church 2. The Lord and Governour of it 1. As Founder and Builder of the Church Matth. 16.18 Thou art Peter and upon this Rock will I build my Church Christ challenges it to himself as his own peculiar prerogative to build the Church More fully the Apostle Heb. 3.3 4 5. For this man was ●●unted worthy of more glory than Moses in as much as he that builded the house hath more honour than the house for every house is built by some man but he that buildeth all things is God And again Moses was faithful in all his house as a servant but Christ as a Son over his own house The scope of the Apostle is to prove that Christ must have the preheminence above all others that have been imployed in and about Gods House Moses was one of the chief of that sort that had greater familiarity with God than others and intrusted by him in very great and weighty matters yet Christ was not onely equal to Moses but far above him he proveth it by a comparison taken from a Builder and an House and from a Lord of the House and a Servant in the House but Christ is the builder of the House and Moses but a part of the House Christ is the Lord and Moses but the servant therefore Christ is more excellent and worthy of greater honour One of the Nobl●st works of God is the Church of the First-born none could build frame and constitute this but the Son of God coming down in our flesh and so recovering the lost world into an holy society which might be dedicated to God For the materials of this house are men sinful and guilty neither Men nor Angels could raise them up into an holy Temple to God none but the Eternal word or the Son of God Incarnate ●e that buildeth all things is God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all these things the things treated of he doth not speak of the first creation but the second the restoring of the lapsed World to God 2. The other Honour is that Christ is Lord of the new creation as well as the founder and builder of it for the World to come is put in subjection to him not to the Angels Heb. 2.7 By the World to come is not meant the state of Glory but the state of the Church under the times of the Gospel It is made subject to God the Redeemer it is solely and immediately in his Power and under his Authority and cast into a dependance upon him II. In a way of Causality So he is the beginning either as a Moral or efficient cause 1. As a moral Meritorious cause We are renewed by Gods creating power but through the intervening Mediation of Christ Or Gods creating power is put forth with respect to his Merit The life of Grace is purchased by his death 1 Ioh. 4.9 God sent his onely begotten son into the world that we might live by him Here spiritually hereafter eternally For life is opposite to death incurred by sin We were dead legally as sentenced to death by the Law and spiritually as disabled for the service of our Creator And how by him that he speaketh of verse 10. by his being a propitiation We were in the state of death when the doors of Mercy were first opened to us under the guilt and power of sin but we live when the guilt of sin is pardoned and the power of sin broken but this life we have not without Christs being a propitiation for our sins or doing that which was necessary whereby God without impeachment of honour might shew himself placable and propitious to Mankind 2. As an efficient cause by the efficacy of his Spirit who worketh in us as Members of Christs Mystical Body Wherefore it is said 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature And Eph. 2.10 We are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good works Whatever Grace we have cometh from God through Christ as Mediator and from him we have it by virtue of our union with him It is first applied by the converting
he came So is Christ as God without Mother as Man without Father As God without beginning as God Man without ending of Life 2. Another Type of him was Iacobs Ladder The top of which reached Heaven and the bottom reached Earth Gen. 28.12 And the Angels of God were ascending and descending upon it This Ladder represented Christ the Son of Man upon whom the Angels of God ascend and descend Iohn 1.51 The bottom which reached the earth represented Christs humane nature and conversing with Men The top which reached Heaven his heavenly and divine nature and in both his mediaation with God for Men Ascende per hominem per venies ad Deum Christ reaches to Heaven in his divine original to Earth in his Manhood and him the Angels serve By his dwelling in our nature this commerce between Earth and Heaven is brought about The third Type is the Fiery cloudy pillar Exod. 13.21 And the Lord went before them in the day in a pillar of a cloud and by night in a pillar of Fire to give them light to go by day and night this figured Christs guidance and protection of his Church travelling through this World to his heavenly rest The cloud signified his humanity the fire his divinity There were two different substances the fire and the cloud yet but one pillar So there are two different natures in Christ his divinity shining as fire his humanity darkning as a cloud yet but one Person That pillar departed not from them all the while they travelled in the Wilderness so while the Churches pilgrimage lasteth Christ will conduct us and comfort and shelter us by his presence His Mediatory conduct ceaseth not The fourth Type is the Tabernacle wherein God dwelt symbolically as in Christ bodily There God sat on the mercy seat which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 9.5 so Christ Rom. 3.25 A propitiation He there dwelt between the Cherubims and did exhibit himself graciously to his people as now he doth to us by Christ. The next shall be of the Scape Goat on the day of expiation Lev. 16.10 One Goat was to be slain the other kept alive The slain Goat signified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Flesh or humane nature suffering the Live Goat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Immortal Deity or as the Apostle expresseth it 2 Cor. 13.4 That Christ was to be crucified through weakness yet to live by the power of God or as we heard before 1 Pet. 3.18 Put to death in the Flesh and quickned by the Spirit Because these two things could not be shadowed by any one Beast which the Priest having killed could not make alive again and it was not fit that God should work mir●cles about Types therefore he appointed ●wo that in the slain Beast his death might be represented in the Live Beast his immortality The like mystery was represented also in the two birds for the cleansing of the Leper Lev. 14.6 7. Thirdly I prove it by Reasons taken from his office which may be considered in the general And so it is expressed by one Word Mediator or in particular according to the several functions of it expressed by the terms of King Priest and Prophet or with respect to the persons that are to be considered and concerned in Christs Mediation 1. His Office considered in the General so he is called Iesus the Mediator of the New Testament Heb. 12.24 It was agreeable that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Mediator should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a middle person of the same essence with both parties and that his operative Mediation should presuppose his substantial Mediation that being God Man in the same person he should make an atonement between God and Man Sin hath made such a breach and distance between us and God that it raiseth our fears and causeth backwardness to draw nigh unto him and so hindreth our love and confidence in him How can we depend upon one so far above us and out of the reach of our commerce therefore a Mediator is necessary one that will pity us and is more near and dear to God then we are One in whom God doth condescend to man and by whom Man may be encouraged to ascend to God now who is so fit for this as Jesus Christ God manifested in our flesh The two natures met together in his person and so God is nearer to Man then he was before 〈◊〉 the pure Deity for he is come down to us in our flesh and hath assumed it into the unity of his person and man is nearer to God for our nature dwelleth with him so closely united that we may have more familiar thoughts of God and a confidence that he will look after us and concern himself in our affairs and shew us his grace and savour for surely he will not hide himself from his own flesh Isa. 58.7 This wonderfully reconcileth the heart of Man to God and maketh our thoughts of him more comfortable and doth encourage us to free access to God 2. Come we now to the particular offices by which he performeth the work of a Mediator and they all shew the necessity of both natures these offices and functions are those of Prophet Priest and King 1. Our Mediator hath a Prophetical office belonging to his Administration that he may be made Wisdom to us and therefore he must be both God and Man God that he may not onely teach us outwardly as an ordinary Messenger or Minister but inwardly putting his Law into our minds and writing it upon our hearts Heb. 8.10 and 2 Cor. 3.3 Ye are manifestly declared to be the Epistle of Christ ministred by us written not with Ink but with the spirit of the living God not in Tables of stone but in the fleshly Tables of the heart Men may be the instruments but Christ is the Author of this Grace and therefore he must be God To convince mens understandings of their duty and to incline their hearts to perform it requireth no less then a divine power If such an infinite vertue be necessary to cure the blindness of the body how much more to cure the natural blindness and darkness of the mind And man he must also be for the great Prophet of the Church was to be raised up among his brethren like unto Moses Deut. 18.15 Till such an one came into the World they were to hear Moses but then they were to hearken to him he that was to come was to be a Lawgiver as Moses was but of a far more absolute and perfect Law a Lawgiver that must match and overmatch Moses every way He was to be a man as Moses was in respect of our infirmities such an one as Moses was whom the Lord had known face to face but of a far more divine nature and approved to the World by Miracles Signs and Wonders as Moses was Again 't was prophesied of him that as the great Prophet of the World he should be anointed that he might
come and Preach the Gospel to the poor Isa. 62.1 Which could not be if he had spoken from heaven in thunder and not as a man conversed with men Again he was to approve himself as one who had grace poured into his lips Psal. 45.2 That all might wonder at the gracious speeches that came from his mouth as they did at Christs In short that wisdom of the Father which was wont to assume some visible shape for a time when he would instruct the Patriarchs concerning his will that he might hide his Majesty and put a vail upon his glory was now to assume our nature into the unity of his Person not a temporary and vanishing appearance That God who at sundry times and in divers manners speak in time past unto the Fathers by the Prophets might in these last dayes spake to us by his son Heb. 1.1 2. Then God delivered his will by parcels now by him he would settle the whole frame of the Gospel 2. Jesus Christ as he is the Apostle of our profession so also he is the High Priest Heb. 3.1 and so must be both God and Man Man that he might be made sin for us God that we might be made the Righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 Man to undertake our Redemption God to perform it Man that he might suffer God that he might satisfie by suffering and make our attonement full We are purchased by the Blood of God Man that he might have a sacrifice to offer God that the offering might be of an infinite price and value Heb. 9.14 Man that he might have a Life to lay down for us God that the power of laying it down and taking it up again might be in his own hands Iohn 10.17 18. I lay down my Life that I may take it agai● no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again This was sit that his suffering should be a pure voluntary act required indeed by God but not enforced by Man he had a liberty at his own pleasure as to any thing men could do and thereby commendeth his love to sinners What shall I say he was man that he might dye he was God that by death he might destroy him that had the power of death He was Man that by his death he might ratifie the New Covenant God that he might convey to the heirs of Promise these precious Legacies of pardon and Life Man that he might be a merciful High Priest touched with the feeling of our infirmities God that we coming boldly to the Throne of Grace might find mercy and grace to help in every time of need Heb. 9.15 16. 3. His Kingly office he that was to be King of kings and Lord of lords needed to be both God and Man God that he might cast out the Prince of this World and having rescued his Church from the power of darkness might govern it by his Word and Spirit and finally present it to himself a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle or any such thing Man he needed to be for his own glory that he might be the First-born among many brethren And Head and Members might suit and be all of a piece and for our consolation that we might be heirs of God and joynt heirs with Christ Rom. 8.17 And for the greater terrour and ignominy of Satan that the seed of the Woman might break the Serpents Head In short God that he might govern and influence a people so scattered abroad upon the face of the Earth and raise them up at the last day Man that our nature the dignity of which was so envyed by Satan might be exalted at the right hand of Majesty and placed so near God far above the Angelical Thirdly With respect to the persons who are to be considered and concerned in Christs Mediation God to whom we are Redeemed Satan from whom we are Redeemed and we our selves who are the Redeemed of the Lord. And you shall see with respect to God with respect to Satan with respect to our selves our Mediator ought to be both God and Man 1. God he need to be with respect to God that he may be appeased by a valuable compensation given to his Justice no meer man could satisfie the Justice of God appease his wrath procure his favour therefore our surety needed to be God to do this And with respect to Satan that he might be overcome now none can bind the strong one and take away his goods but he that is stronger then he Luk. 11.21 Now no mere man is a match for Satan the Conqueror of the devil must be God that by strong hand he may deliver us from his Tyranny And with respect to Man that he may be saved Not onely because of the two former respects must he be God but also there is a special reason in the cause the two former respects evince it For unless God be appeased Man cannot be reconciled and unless the Devil be overcome Man cannot be delivered If a God be needful for that man cannot be saved unless our Redeemer be God but there is a special reason because of our own obstinacy and rebellion which is onely overcome by the divine power 'T is necessary Man should be converted and changed as well as God satisfyed and Satan overcome Now who can convert himself or chang● his own heart That work would cease for ever unless God did undertake it by his all conquering Spirit Therefore our Mediator must be God to renew and cleanse our hearts and by his divine power to give us a divine nature 2. Man also he ought to be with respect to these Three parties With respect to God that the satisfaction might be tendered in the nature which had sinned That as by Man came death by man also might come the Ressurection from the Dead 1 Cor. 15.21 22. That as in Adam all dye so by Christ shall all be made alive So with respect to the Devil that he might be overcome in the nature that was foiled by his Temptations And with respect to us That he that sanctifyeth and they that are sanctifyed might be of one Heb. 2.11 The Priest that wrought the expiation and the people for whom 't was wrought were of one stock the right of Redeeming belonged to the next Kinsman Christ is our Goel who Redeemed us not onely jure propreitatis as his creatures to God as God but Iure propinquitatis as his Kinsmen So as Man we are of Kin to Him as he came in our nature and as he sanctifieth doubly a kin not only by vertue of his incarnation but our Regeneration as he was made of a Woman and we born of God These are the Reasons VSE Let me press you to admire this Mystery of Godliness The Man Christ Jesus in whom the fulness of the Godhead dwelt bodily The life and strength of our Faith depends upon it