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A77515 Two treatises the one, handling the doctrine of Christ's mediatorship : wherein the great Gospel-mystery of reconciliation betwixt God and man is opened, vindicated, and applyed. The other, of mystical implantation : wherein the Christian's union and communion with, and conformity to Jesus Christ, both in his death and resurrection, is opened, and applyed. / As they were lately delivered to the church of God at Great Yarmouth, by John Brinsley, minister of the Gospel, and preacher to that incorporation. Brinsley, John, 1600-1665.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1652 (1652) Wing B4737; Thomason E1223_1; ESTC R22919 314,532 569

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naturall or violent death Christians you cannot be too jealous too suspicious of your selves in a matter of so great consequence as this Too credulous you may easily be too cautelous ye cannot And therefore if some sins be dead within you impannell a Jury call a Coroners enquest upon them in your own souls and make enquiry how they came by their death Whether they died a violent or a naturall death Search what wounds they have received and whether they were deadly wounds or no. Enquire what weapon it was that slew them whether the Sword of the Spirit that two edged Sword the Word of God What purposes what resolutions have been taken up and levelled against them What prayers and tears have been spent upon them If you find not these signes you may give in your verdict that they died a natural death which is no true Mortification in as much as it doth not carry the similitude of the death of Christ in this particular which was a violent death What to be done when some sins are dead alone Quest But here happily some may say In this case what shall wee do finding our sins to be dead alone in what way shall we now attain unto true Mortification Ans 1. To this I shall answer in a word 1. Bury them out of sight 1. If they be dead then bury them Bury them out of the sight of God and out of the sight of your consciences and that by suing forth the pardon of them in the Name of Christ never resting untill God hath been pleased to cast in a Quietus est into your bosomes assuring you that as they are dead to you so they are dead to him and shall never rise up in judgement against you If they be dead bestow your prayers upon them for the covering of them So doth David upon the sins of his youth which he desireth God not to remember Remember not the sins of my youth Psal 25.7 Bury them 2 2. Cast stones upon their graves And bury them as the use is to bury those whom we call Felones de se those who are their own executioners make away themselves Drive a stake through them and cast stones upon their graves Shew your detestation of them after they are dead If your sins be dead already so as you cannot take vengeance on them as you desire yet deal with them as the souldiers dealt with our Saviour John 19.32 33 34. who when they came and found that he was already dead and so had prevented their intentions in breaking of his legs according as the custome was they pierced his side and let out his heart blood to make him sure for reviving again Or as those enraged persecuters in the Marian dayes dealt with that man of God that renowned Confessour Martin Bucer who being long before dead and buried and so out of the reach of their malice they took up his bones and burnt them taking vengeance as they thought upon his Relicks After the like manner let aged sinners deal with their sins Are they dead by the course of nature and so have prevented your mortifying of them your breaking of their bones yet pierce the pericardium of your own souls pierce your own hearts by true and unfeigned repentance for them letting out the life blood of them working your hearts to an utter abhorrence and detestation of them making them sure for ever reviving again And take vengeance upon the relicks the remainders of them You are dead to such or such a sin as touching the outward act never rest till you be dead to it also as touching the inward affection till you have brought your hearts to this frame and temper that you cannot think of the sins of your youth without abhorrence and loathing of them and your selves for them Thus deal with those sins that are dead already 3. Fall upon those which are alive 3. As for those which are yet alive fall upon them speedily bringing them forth to execution There is no naturall man but hath some sin or other still ruling and reigning in him As in an aged sinner in whom many other sins are dead yet it may be covetousnesse liveth for that sin many times begins to live when many other sins begin to die or malice liveth and reigneth in him c. Now if you would be avenged of your sins execute the Survivour As in a treasonable conspiracy which is not detected till long after the plotting and acting of it the surviving traitour suffereth for all the rest So let it be here Your sins have conspired against you sought your ruine and destruction all your dayes This it may be hath been hid from you you have not been aware of it and so have walked upon the pits brink the brink of hell not fearing any thing and so let your sins alone But now arise for the Philistins are upon you Behold the traitours your lusts they are in your bosome Thereof happily some are dead but bring forth the Survivours let them suffer for the rest let not them also go in peace to their graves If covetousnesse or malice or any other sin be yet alive make sure it die a violent death This will onely minister comfort unto you that you are truely mortified persons truely dead unto sin when you are in this particular made conformable to Christ in his death when your sins die a voluntary but withall a violent death And what I say unto you The same counsell given to all let me speak it unto all All that hear me this day be they old or young let me speak unto you concerning your sins as Gideon once said to his son Jether concerning the two captivated Princes of Midian Zeba and Zalmunnah Judg. 8.20 Vp and slay them Or as Elijah to the men of Israel concerning the Idolatrous Priests and Prophets of Baal 1 King 18.40 Take them and let not one of them escape You can never have any true comfort or safety untill your sins have received their death's wound And therfore fall upon them and let them not die alone I remember what a true Christian Virago Acts and Monuments a good woman once wrote to that bloody Bonner Bishop of London concerning the Martyrs which he starved in prison that it would be more for his honour to bring them to the stake when they were fat and well liking then to starve them and let them die alone in the prison Let me apply this counsell of hers to my present purpose and tell every one that heareth me this day that it will be more for your honour and comfort to bring forth these true traitours your sins your lusts I mean to bring them to the stake to execution and put them to death then to let them pine and languish and be starved in the prisons of your bodies and so to die alone Herein is the honour and glory of a young man when he can subdue and mortifie
the sins of his youth and that whilest they are vigorous and strong not when they are pined and starved with age or sicknesse Be not therefore over pitifull or mercifull to your sins lest you be cruell and mercilesse to your own souls As long as they live you cannot be in safety And therefore forthwith bring them forth sacrificing them to the Lord now they are fat and flourishing The fat and young beasts under the Law were fittest for sacrifice The younger and more flourishing your sins are the more acceptable will the oblation be True mortification of sin is one of those sacrifices of righteousnesse which the Prophet David speaketh of Psal 51.19 which the Lord will accept Herein the sin is the sacrifice and every Christian must be a Priest to slay this sacrifice Sacrifices under the Law must not die alone No more must it be in this Evangelicall Sacrifice Sins must not die alone It was a Leviticall Prohibition Deut. 14.21 The people must not eat any thing that died alone Such a Mortification where sins die alone shall never find acceptance with God I beseech you think upon this a little To reprieve lusts dangerous you that willingly reprieve your lusts spare them suffer them to live and rule and reign in you now hoping and resolving to take a course with them hereafter you will repent in your age How can you expect that God should ever accept of such a dead sacrifice that ever he should smell a sweet savour from such a Mortification such a Carion a sacrifice that died alone And therefore that you may find acceptance with him sacrifice your sins now now before they be a day older let them not live till to morrow for fear they should die alone or your selves die before them Now bring them forth in the sight and presence of God Arraign condemne crucifie mortifie them whilest they might yet live This is true Mortification when the body of sin dieth as Christ died a violent death 4. Resemb A painfull Death Such was the death of Christ Painfull to his body Rabbini aiunt Non fuit mos in Israele ut clavos figerent in pedibus aut manibus hominum qui lapidati aut suspensi fuissent Martinius in Symbolum Dolorous to his soul In the fourth place it is also a painfull death Such was the death of Jesus Christ a dolorous and painfull death Painfull in his body The Jewes and Romanes had many kinds of death Amongst all none more painfull then crucifying specially after the Roman manner where the malefactour was fastned alive to the Crosse his hands and feet being nailed thereunto and so bearing the whole bulk of his body distended after that manner Such was the death of Jesus Christ being put to death under a Roman Power he was crucified after the Roman manner a painfull death And as painfull so dolorous It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief saith the Prophet Isaiah Isai 53.10 As painfull to his body so dolorous to his soul attended with Agonies both antecedent and concomitant before it and in it Before it What an agony do we find him in in the Garden In the Garden Luke 22.44 Being in an agony saith the Text his sweat was it were great drops of blood Whether a bloody sweat or no cannot from thence certainly be concluded as Grotius notes it out of Theophylact and Euthimius The Text saith onely It was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were drops of blood But however Sudor vix solet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grotius ad loc a strange and extraordinary kind of sweat it was arguing a vehement conflict of soul caused by a deep apprehension and sense of his Fathers wrath due unto sin and sinners whose Surety he then was And as before his death so in it Upon the Crosse As in the Garden so upon the Crosse There also Christ had his agonies his soul-conflicts These were those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those pains or pangs of death from which Saint Peter tels us Christ was loosed Acts 2.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word properly signifies the pains of a woman in travell Such were the pains of Jesus Christ in his death Gravissimi dolores quales esse solent mulierum in partu morientium Grotius ad Act. 2.44 which the Prophet calleth the travell of his soul Isai 53.11 like the pains of a woman dying in travell which the Psalmist calleth the pains of hell So he speaketh of himselfe being a Type of Christ Psal 116.3 The sorrowes of death compassed me and the pains of hell gat hold upon me Not onely the sorrows or cords of death Kebli Maveth the Cables of death as our English word answers the Hebrew both in sound and sense but the pains of hell took hold upon him The one upon his body as malefactours who are pinioned with cords when they are led to execution Vide Diodat in Psal 18.5 or as dead bodies that lie bound in the grave as the story tels us of Lazarus John 11.44 The other upon his soul And such were the pains which took hold upon our blessed Saviour in his Passion which extorted from him that passionate expostulation My God my God Mat. 27.46 why hast thou forsaken me complaining of that which was more grievous to him then a thousand deaths his Fathers present dereliction withdrawing his wonted presence from him Such was the death of Jesus Christ A pattern of Mortification which is a painful work And herein again behold it a true pattern of the Christian's Mortification his death unto sin which is also a painfull death Mortification is a painfull work The very word imports no lesse To kill a man or mortifie a member will not be without pain And so much is insinuated in those other expressions which the Spirit of God maketh use of to set forth the nature of this work as where it is called a Circumcision Be circumcised to the Lord and take away the foreskin of your hearts saith the Prophet Jeremiah Jer. 4.4 By that allusive Periphrasis setting forth the nature of true Mortification which is a spiritual Circumcision a cutting off of the superfluitie of sinfull and inordinate lusts Now Circumcision was a painfull work specially to aged persons so the Shechemites found it of whom the story tels us Gen. 34.25 that being circumcised they were so soar the third day after as that they were not able to stir to defend themselves Such is the spirituall Circumcision a painfull work specially in aged confirmed sinners causing a soarnesse in the soul Elsewhere it is called a Suffering in the flesh So Saint Peter phraseth it 1 Pet. 4.1 Hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin Meaning thereby the Christians Mortification which is a suffering in the flesh an irksom and painfull work to flesh and blood And as a suffering in the flesh so a Crucifying of the flesh Gal. 5.24
comparing the one with the other his former with his later thoughts his Book De Satisfactione with some of his Comments So doing I have found the one clear and candid free from subterfuge or evasion such as whatever hath been assayed by way of reply to it may give full satisfaction to any unprejudiced spirit The other so palpably guilty of both as that they deserve both Censure and Pity And this to me and I suppose it may be the like to others hath been and is no small confirmation of this Truth of God Surely if any one had been able to answer Grotius it should have been Grotius himselfe then whom I know none more able to have done it and as it seemeth none more willing But finding him so foiled by himselfe so unable by all his Artifice to build again what before he had destroyed I cannot but subscribe to that Apocryphall Text 1 Esdras 4.41 Magna est veritas praevalet Great is Truth and mighty above all things May these my poor labours contribute ought towards the clearing and vindicating of this sacred Truth upon which I do freely adventure my own soul not knowing in what other way to look for salvation whilest God hath the Glory and others the Benefit my selfe shall have what I aimed at In the desire whereof I rest Thine in the Service of this blessed Mediatour JOHN BRINSLEY An Alphabetical Table of the chief Points handled in this TREATISE A CHrist an Advocate for his people and how p. 168 Christ an Agent or Lidger Ambassadour in heaven 160 How Christ performeth the office of an Agent in heaven for us on earth 162 Angels whether they have any benefit by Christs Mediation 198 Christ the Head of good Angels 202 To the good Angels Christ is a Mediator of Confirmation 201 Primitive Angel-worship 268 Christ the Annointed how 38 The Greek particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explained 75 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expounded 77 Comfort against fear of totall and finall Apostasie 233 Christs appearing on earth in the end of the world 88 Christ appeareth once upon earth and once in heaven 90 Christ an Arbitrator betwixt God and Man 48 To receive the Attonement what 246 Christ an Atturney for his people and how 170 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explained 125 B HOw Christ is said to bear our sins 66 The difference betwixt Christs bearing our sins and our sicknesses 67 Sins expiated by Blood 102 Covenant old and new both made with Blood 148 149 C CHrist called to the office of a Mediatour and that by God his Father 34 36 How Christ was called to this Office 37 When Christ was called to this Office 42 Christ a Surety by way of caution 139 Conditions of the new Covenant Faith and Obedience 141 Christ an undertaker for the performance of these Conditions ibid. No cruelty in the Sufferings of Christ 129 Crueltie what and when 130 D DAvid annoynted a type of Christ 38 39 The death of Christ more then a preparatory to his oblation 93 Comfort against Death 239 The Law Deuter. 24.16 against commutations of Punishment explained and cleared 114 Christ the Disposer of his people 193 Christ a Dispenser to his people ib. E SAtan a Mediator of Enmity 28 Mediators of Enmity too many 29 Naturall enmity betwixt God and Man 221 Sense of enmitie preparatory to reconciliation 222 Enmity against God to be laid aside 247 Expiation how understood by the Socinian 98 Christs expiation properly of the guilt of sin ibid. Expiatory Sacrifices under the Law a type of Christs expiation 99 Sacrifices under the Law how they are said to expiate 101 Ezek. 18.20 explained and vindicated 106 F FAith and Repentance subordinate unto Christ and his satisfaction 110 Forgivenesse of sins how consistent with Christs satisfaction 125 126 The Parable of the Kings forgiving his servants Mat. 18.23 explained 127 G A double Garment wherwith Christ cloatheth his Elect 191 The Elect gathered by Christ into his Kingdom of Grace and Glory and how 181 Christs giving himself for us explained and vindicated 74 Christ truly God evinced by Scriptures 10 The God-head of Christ evinced by Argument 12 Christ not Mediator only as God 204 God taken Essentially and Personally 209 Christ as God-man differeth from God and man 210 Christ as God differeth from his Father a threefold difference 211 The God-head of Christ concurred with his man-hood in all the acts of his Mediatorship 213 The God-head concurring with the man-hood in suffering 4 ways 216 Christ a governour generally over the whole world specially over mankind 175 Christs government over the Reprobate world 176 Christs government over the Elect world 180 Christs outward government in his Church 184 Christs inward government in the Hearts of Beleevers 185 The Grace of God consistent with Christs Satisfaction 120 Grace gloriously manifested in Christ his satisfaction in five particulars 121 c. The Grace of God exalted by the Doctrine of Christs satisfaction more then by the Socinian Doctrin 123 The Grace of God in vaine to four sorts af Persons 242 The Grace of God in Christ to be received 246 Guilt under the Law twofold viz. Ceremonial External Morall Eternall 101 H HEarts of men not known by Saints or Angels 269 Hebr. 9.26 opened and glossed upon 88 The Holy Ghost how said to intercede 261 I CHrist took our infirmities how 69 Comfort against daily infirmities 231 Innocent persons may suffer for the nocent and how 115 Christ an Interpreter betwixt God and Man 50 Christ an Intercessor upon earth in heaven 154 156 Intercession made by Christ for his people but against his enemies 157 158 Christs Intercession a necessary Transaction putting life into his death 159 Saints upon earth how Intercessors 259 Neither Saints nor Angels properly Mediators of Intercession 266 Isai 53. a cleer Prophecie concerning Christs Satisfaction opened 63 Isa 53.4 compared with Mat. 8.16 and cleered 66 Comfort against the last Judgment 240 Christs Satisfaction how consistent with the Justice of God 113 Justice twofold Strict Moderated ibid. Justification an act of grace notwithstanding Christs Satisfaction 124 L JAcobs Ladder the mystery of it 46 Christ a Lidger-Ambassadour in heaven and great need he should be so 161 Whether one man may lay down his Life for another 117 Christ an absolute Lord over his own Life 118 Christ gave his Life a ransome for many for a world 119. 126 Gods eternall Love to his Elect what 26 The Love of God demonstrated in appointing and giving Christ to be a Mediator 35 This Love declared in three particulars 225 M MAgistrates though enemies to the truth must be prayed for and why 3 4 Christ true Man but not meet Man 119 Christ Mediatour not onely as Man 204 The Man Christ Jesus why so called 207 Christ a Mediator betwixt God and Men 6 A twofold Mediation of Christ Satistantiall Operative 7 Mediation of Christ how managed and carried on viz. by 5 stops 48 Christ
a compleat Mediator shewed in five particulars 249 Mediators of Redemption Intercession a Romish distinction 263 To a Mediator of Intercession two things requisite neither of which agreeth to Saints or Angels 266 To us but one Mediator 270 Christ Mediator as God-Man 212 Christ the only Mediator 254 Moses and others how called Mediators 258 Whether Saints or Angels be Mediators ibid. Mediation of Christ a spring of consolation 228 Mediation of Christ to be made use of 253 The Mercy of God how consistent with Christs Satisfaction 129 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word opened 6 7 Christ a Middle person betwixt God and Man 8 Millenaries refuted 90 161 N WHy Christ must partake of both Natures 19 According to what Nature Christ is Mediator 203 The concurrence of the two Natures in the work of Christ's Mediatorship explained 220 O WHether a party offended may be a Mediator 211 Christ offered up himself how 87 Christ a Mediator by Office 20 The Office of Mediator how conferred upon him 33 P WHether God could not have pardoned sin freely without any Satisfaction 131 Christians ought to be Peace-makers onely in God's way 31 32 Perseverance of Saints undertaken for by Christ 143 The death of Christ a true Price or Counterprice 80 Promises of Remission and Salvati-upon the Conditions of Repentance and new Obedience how to be understood 109 Promises assured by Christ viz by his Word Works Blood Spirit 145 c. Properties of God agreeing to Christ 13 c. Christ the Propitiation for our sins the word and thing explained 85 c. Christ a protector to his people 186 Christ a provider for his people 187 Christ purgeth our sins how 97 Christ purgeth not onely from power but guilt 98 How Christ is said to put away sin 91 R CHrist a Ransome for us word and thing explained 76 God forgiveth sin without any recompence 128 Reconciliation the great businesse of Christ 21 Reconciliation what it imports ibid. To be reconciled to one the phrase expounded 24 82 Reconciliation by Christ mutuall 23 Reconciliation on Gods part 25 83 Reconciliation on Mans part 27 Reconciliation a blessed work 28 Christ being a Mediator of reconciliation a pattern for our imitation 30 Reconciliation betwixt God and man how effected 46 The way and means of Reconciliation imparted in the Gospel 53 Christ the meritorious cause of reconciliation 81 The same way of reconciliation under the old Testament and under the new 111 Comfort to such as desire reconciliation with God 228 A threefold relation betwixt Christ and the Beleever viz. Naturall Mysticall Voluntary 115 Whether a man may remit what hee pleaseth of his own tight 133 God cannot part with his right though man may 134 Christ the rewarder of his people 195 S THe Sacrifice of Christ was offered upon Earth not in Heaven 92 By this Sacrifice Christ putteth away sin 93 Satisfaction of Christ the word not mentioned in Scripture 61 Satisfaction of Christ evinced by Scripture Testimonies in the Old Testament and New 63 72 The Death of Christ how satisfactory 81 Whether God could not have found out some other way of Satisfaction then by the death of his Son 134 Why God put the salvation of man upon this way of satisfaction 135 In the Satisfaction of Christ there is a joynt manifestation of God's Justice and Mercy 137 The Scape-goat a type of Christ 96 Sealing what signified by it and how Christ is said to be sealed 41 Christians may be confident but not secure 235 Socinian doctrine about the suffering of Christ explained and confuted 79 Socinian Objections against Christs Satisfaction answered 105 Christ a Solicitor for his people 172 Christ the Son of God how 12 Speculum Divinum a School fancie 268 Christ no stranger to those for whom he suffered and satisfied 115 116 Christ suffered for us not only for our Good but in our stead 72 In the sufferings of Christ no Cruelty 130 Christ a Surety betwixt God and Man 56 79 A Surety what 58 Christ a mutual Surety ibid. Christ a Surety on mans part by way of Satisfaction 59 Christ a Surety on mans part by way of Caution 139 Christ a Surety on Gods part to man 144 T CHrist taketh our sins upon him and taketh them away 95 Comfort against Tentations 236 Truth of God in his Threatnings Promises how consistent with Christs Satisfaction 106 109 W. COmfort against wants temporall and spirituall 237 Witnesse of the Spirit what 152 Divine works viz. Creation and Providence attributed to Christ 15 16 Divine Worship given to Christ 17 Z. ZAleucus a just Judge and a mercifull Father in the same act 137 ERRATA Page 7. line 3. r. Castellio p. 11. l. 4. r. Tzidkenou p. 18. l. 13. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 23. l. 4. r. grand work p. 52. marg r. Gennadius p. 55. r. as the Apostle saith of himself p 76. l. 6. r. and. p. 77. l. 7. dele of p. 92. marg r. Ostensionis p. 105. l. 22. r. oppugning p. 110 l. 30. r. Repentance without Faith p. 111. l. 23. r. new p. 115. l. 30. r. Joshua p. 123. l. 26. r. whence p. 154. l. 9. r. mysticall p. 192. l. 4. r. garment p. 201. l. 13. r. These p. 105. l. 20. r. here calleth p. 213. l. 23. r. retract p. 215. l. 22. r. secretioribus p. 240. l. 2. r. partaker p. 241. l. 1. r. unbelievers p. 256. l. 28. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 262. l. 32. r. other p. 269. l. 21. r. renounce ΜΕΣΙΤΗS OR The One and Onely Mediator betwixt God and Men the Man CHRIST JESUS 1 Tim. 2.5 For there is one God and one Mediator betwixt God and men the Man CHRIST JESUS AMongst Ministeriall offices and services there are two which are looked upon as chief and principall viz. Coherence to speak from God and to God To speake from God to his people to speake to God for his people The one of these is done in Preaching the other in Prayer Touching both these our Apostle Saint Paul indoctrinates his scholer Timothy in this Epistle The former he doth in the close of the chapter foregoing ver 18. where he giveth it in charge to him that he should War a good warfare And that not only as a private souldier a private christian fighting the good fight of faith as elsewhere he exhorts him 1 Tim. 6.12 but as a publick officer a Minister of the Gospel maintaining the truth of God against all false Teachers and Corrupters of it Holding faith and a good conscience So it followeth Faith the Doctrine of faith that sacred Depositum the doctrine of the Gospel which was committed to his trust This Timothy must hold 1 Tim. 6.20 holding it fast and holding it forth therein discharging his conscience in the sight of God and Man The later of these he doth in the former part of this chapter which beginneth as you may see with a serious exhortation and
as the same Apostle hath it cap. 1.2 the last Time or Times so St Peter cals them 1 Pet. 1.5 20. And St John the last Hour 1 John 2.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the last Time or Hour So did the Apostles then look upon the world as drawing towards a period a consummation And that not far from it in their times what then may we do in ours But I passe on Thus Christ appeared in the end of the world and that but Once Once and but once 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As for the Priests under the Law they appeared Often before God in the execution of their Ministeriall function The Priest went always say the 6th and 7th verses of this chapter i. e. daily every day into the first Tabernacle the holy place the second court of the Tabernacle or Temple accomplishing the service of God But into the second the Holy of Holies went the High Priest once every year Thus they appeared Often But Christ our High Priest appeareth but Once Once upon Earth and Once in Heaven Once upon Earth before Men Of this speakes the Apostle here in this 26. verse Once in Heaven before God Of this he speakes verse 12. By his own blood he entred in once into the Holy place i. e. Into Heaven Marke it Once he appeared upon Earth and once in Heaven Christ appeareth once upon Earth and once in Heaven As for any such second appearing upon Earth and returning to heaven before his coming to the last and generall Judgment Millenaries confuted as some imagine this our Apostle taketh no notice of it And therefore I dare not avouch it Nay hee tels mee expresly in the last verse of this chapter that Christ having been once offered to bear the sins of Many he shall appear the second time without sin unto Salvation unto them that looke for him Marke it Christ appeareth not twice upon Earth once to suffer and once to reign there personally and twice in Heaven once after his Resurrection and once after the settlement of his supposed Government as some have conceived but Once upon Earth and once in Heaven As for his second Appearing it shall be unto Salvation to the compleat and perfect salvation both of Soul and Body in heaven so Expositors I think universally expound that place of all those who love and look for that Appearing Heb. 5.9 2 Tim. 4.8 In the mean time let it be enough for us that he hath appeared once upon Earth So it may well be if we do but consider what followeth viz. the end of this Appearance which was To put away sin How Christ is said to have put away sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Abrogating abolishing taking away of sin Not taking it out of the world No the world still lyeth in wickednesse 1 John 5.19 Nor yet taking it out of the persons of his redeemed ones so as that it is should have no abiding no inbeing in them No this is a perfection reserved for heaven not to be looked for on Earth But so taking it away as that it shall not be imputed to them nor yet reign in them For both these ends Christ appeared upon Earth for the abolishing of sin in his people both in respect of Guilt and Power It is the former of these that is here properly and principally intended So much will appeare from the next clause which setteth forth the way and means whereby Jesus Christ effecteth this abrogation and abolition of sin viz. By the Sacrifice of himselfe The Sacrifice of Christ himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This was the Sacrifice which Christ our High-Priest offered Not the Bodies of other creatures as those Legall Priests did but his own body Offered upon Earth Vide D. L. in Heb. 1.3 9. ver 26. himself And this Sacrifice he offered up not in Heaven as the Socinian would have it in presenting himselfe before God his Father but upon Earth viz. in his Passion upon the Crosse There was this Sacrifice offered up Duplex est ut legalium quarundam victimarum ita Christi oblatio prior mactationis altera ostentationis Grot. de satisfact cap. 10. True indeed it was afterwards presented in heaven but it was first offered upon Earth So was it with some Sacrifices under the Law The blood of them was represented by the High Priest in the most Holy place as this our Apostle tels us ver 7. of this chapter but they were offered before viz. in the slaying and sacrificing of them by the Priest So was it in this Sacrifice of Christ How ever it be presented before God in heaven which is an other part of Christs Mediatorship as God willing I shall shew you hereafter belonging to the next branch his Intercession yet it was offered up upon earth viz. in his Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In mactatione Sacrificium Grot. de Satisf cap. 10. Thus were sacrifices said to be offered up when they were slain So profane Authors ever use the word and Scripture the like When God biddeth Abraham go offer his son Gen. 22.2 he addresseth himselfe to slay him ver 10. which because hee had intentionally done though not with his hand yet in his heart he is therefore said to have offered him up Heb. 11.17 Therein was Isaak a Type of Christ who was offered up after the same manner being actually slain There was he truely offered Hence it is that Saint John calleth him onely the Lamb slain Revel 5.6 and 13.8 which Saint Paul renders Sacrificed Offered Christ our Passeover is sacrificed or offered for us 1 Corinthians 5.7 Thus was Christ first offered up upon Earth Neither was this only a Preparation to that oblation which is made in Heaven as the Socinian would have it but a perfect Oblation The death of Christ more then a preparation to his oblation So was the offering made by the Priest in the Holy-place It was more then a Preparation to an offering a true Sacrifice As for the presenting of the blood of the Sacrifice in the Holy of Holies it was not properly a Sacrifice Grotius ibid. but rather the Commemoration of a Sacrifice already made So standeth it betwixt Christ's Oblation and his Intercession The former was done upon Earth There was the Sacrifice offered The later is only a Commemoration of that Sacrifice a presenting it unto God as it were continually to put him in minde of what was done that for the merit thereof hee may bee propitious unto his people And this is the Sacrifice whereby Christ is said to put away sin By this sacrifice Christ putteth away sin Not properly his Intercession in heaven but his Immolation his oblation upon earth in his death upon the cross So the Spirit of God clearly carries it every where ascribing the work of our Redemption the taking away of sin to the death and blood-shed of Christ He
saith the same Apostle Romans 5.18 or rather by one offence so the Originall hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. the first sin of the first Adam Judgment came upon all men unto condemnation Even so by the righteousnesse of one or one Righteousnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Justification meaning the righteousnesse of the second Adam the free gift came upon all men unto Justification of life Thus there is but one way of Reconciling Men to God As there was but one doore at which Enmity brake in so there is but one doore to let in Reconciliation The same way that is held forth under the Gospell was also held forth under the Law Onely with this difference That which was velatum vailed and hidden in the one hidden under Types and Figures is Revelatum unvailed in the other Otherwise there is the same Jesus Christ yesterday under the old Testament to day under the New and the same for ever The vertue of his satisfaction extending as well backwards as forwards as well to the sinns of the Law as the Gospell So much is expressly asserted by the Apostle Hebrews 9.15 where this our Mediatour the Lord Jesus is said to have suffered death for the Redemption of the trespasses that were under the old Testament not that the sins of the fathers were not pardoned before Christ died but that they WERE pardoned onely by vertue of Christ's death who in reference to the vertue and efficacy of his death as I shewed you before is said to be the Lamb slain from the beginning of the World Rev. 13.8 Thus you see the first of these Attributes vindicated and cleared from such impeachments as it might be conceived to suffer through this Doctrine of Christ's satisfaction This maketh nothing against the Truth of God whether in his Threatnings or Promises Passe we now to the second How can this stand with the Justice of God Object 2 that one should suffer How Christ's Satisfaction standeth with the Justice of God and make satisfaction for the sin of another The Rule of Justice is Noxa sequitur caput The same person that sinneth should suffer To this it is answered Justice is twofold either strict and rigorous or moderated Answ Justice twofold Strict or Moderated and tempered with Lenity Clemency Mercy So is it with men Amongst us there is a Kings-Bench as it was wont to be called and a Chancery the one a Court of strict Justice the other of Equity And thus is it in Gods proceedings with his creatures with some he dealeth in strict Justice so he doth with reprobate Angels and reprobate men such as despise that Redemption which is held forth unto them With others he proceeds in a way of moderated and tempered justice So dealeth he with believers relaxing and dispensing with his own Law as to them accepting the satisfaction of another on their behalfs Alleg. But still is not this injustice thus to charge their sins upon another and to require satisfaction from him Is it not directly contrary to God's own Law Deut. 24. The Law Deut. 24.16 cleared where he expresly prohibits any such Commutation or Exchange ver 16. The fathers shall not be put to death for the children neither shall the children be put to death for the fathers Every man shall be put to death for his own sin Ans To this it is answered This is a Law for man not for God Answer That Law bindeth man not God binding the one not the other God having an absolute power over the lives of his creatures he may dispose of them as it pleaseth him and who shall say unto him what dost thou If he punish the sin of the father upon the child though it be unto death who shall challenge him of injustice when as both Parents children are guilty before him Reply But it may be said Here the case is otherwise Here the Innocent suffers for the Nocent Reply How the Innocent may suffer for the Nocent the just for the unjust 1 Pet. 3.18 He that knew no sin viz. by experience was made sin that is a Sacrifice for sin bearing the punishment thereof for us 2 Cor. 5.21 And can this be justice Ans To this it is answered Even thus it was in some of the cases fore-named Saul's sons were innocent as to that fact of their fathers for which they suffered And so was David's child as to his Fathers Adultery and murder And so were the people as to Davids act in numbring them What have these sheep done Yet who dares challenge God of injustice herein Rep. Why but that the Innocent should suffer and the nocent go free The nocent going free this may seem to be harsh Ans And was it not so in those two last named instances The Innocent childe and the Innocent people suffer whilest guilty David goeth free True he suffered in their sufferings otherwise his person not touched Repl. But it may be said in those examples there was some Relation and Conjunction betwixt the person offending and suffering which drew the guilt of the one upon the other Ans And is it not so here Betwixt Christ and his Elect people all true beleevers there is a neare Relation and Conjunction A threefold Relation The first Naturall the second Mysticall the third Voluntary Answ A 3. fold Relation betwixt Christ and the Beleever naturall mystical voluntary Christus nobis conjunctissimus naturâ Regno vadimonio Grotius de satisf Cap. 4. A naturall Relation they are of the same flesh and Blood Heb. 2.14 Christ is their kinsman their Brother A mysticall Relation He is their Head they his members Ephes 5.23 and 30. He is their King they his Subjects A voluntary Relation he is their Surety undertaking for them Now upon this threefold Account we find one man suffering for or with another Sometimes upon the account of a naturall Relation Thus Achans sonnes and daughters suffered with him John 7. And Davids childe for him Thus the Disciples conceived when they saw the man that was born blind that it might be for his parents sin John 9.3 Sometimes upon the account of a mysticall Relation Thus in a Politick Body Even as it is in the naturall Body where one member sometimes suffers for another the Back or the Head suffers for what the hand hath acted the Subjects sometimes suffer for their Prince Delirant Reges plectuntur Achivi So it was betwixt David and the people And sometimes Princes suffer for their Subjects If ye shall still do wickedly ye shall be consumed both ye and your King 1 Sam. 12. last And thus in the Church God sometimes removes the Candlestick because the people play with the light Rev. 2.5 Ezekiel must be struck dumb because the house of Israel is a rebellious house Ezek. 3.26 and 27. And thus in the family As children somtimes suffer for their Parents as in the cases aforesaid so sometimes Parents suffer for their Children
be cruell towards another when he putteth him to torment or pain without a cause or putteth him to great torment for a small cause The Chyrurgian that puts his patient to great pain for the saving of life or limb when there is no other way of Cure he is not therein to be accounted cruell Thus standeth the case here It was not without cause and great cause that God thus delivered his Son to the death This he did not only for those ends assigned by the Socinian that he might seal his doctrine with his blood and shew himselfe a pattern of Obedience but for a greater end then these viz. for the Redemption of a world as I showed you that when there was no other Remedy Grotius de satisfact cap. 6. Now as Grotius well presseth it against them this End being added to those by them alledged it cannot make Christs sufferings greater then they were which they themselves acknowledg were inflicted by God his Father and that without any Cruelty Nay by how much the ends propounded were more and greater so much the further were those sufferings from all appearance of cruelty So as our doctrine in this regard freeth the Majesty of God from such an Imputation far more then theirs Christ able to undergo and overcome them 2. Besides what is also considerable Though the sufferings of Christ were great yet was there no such Cruelty in inflicting them upon him who was able both to undergoe and overcome them This was Jesus Christ able to do As he had power to lay down his life so also to take it up again John 10.18 That burden which would crush a child a strong man will go lightly away with as Samson being inclosed within the walls of Gaza did with the Gates thereof which he took upon his shoulders and carried up to the top of the mountain Judg. 16.3 Thus did the Lord Jesus being inclosed in the Grave he carried away the gates of death which would have crushed all the sons of Men into the pit of Hell So as those sufferings though great in themselves yet to him they were not so great His dying was but a Tasting of Death as the Apostle calleth it Hebrews 2.9 but I will follow the Adversary no further You now see these his supposed strong-holdes in a good sense slighted Those locks wherein he conceived his strength to ly cut off the Arguments and Allegations producible in this cause with the severall improvements of them clearly answered and satisfied Quest Onely a Query or two is yet behind Whether God could not have pardoned sin without any such satisfaction which I shall send away with their Resolutions briefly and so dismisse this point Q. 1. Could not God have pardoned sin freely without any such Satisfaction And might he not have done it Answer 1 A. 1. To this it is answered From Power to Will no good Consequence 1. A posse ad esse or velle c. From Power to Act or from Power to Will the Consequence wil not hold Because a man can do or may do such or such a thing it cannot thence be concluded that he hath done it or wil do it Suppose that God might have pardoned sin in such a way yet it will not thence follow that he hath done it Answer 2 A. 2. But 2ly without any derogation from the perfection and absolutenesse of his Power How it may be said that God could not do this it may be said with a reverence that this was a thing which God could not do Onely let it be rightly understood Not that it is so in it self absolutely considered but ex supposito upon the supposition of his Decree Gods decree was that sin should be punished with death that the one should be the wages of the other And that decree was gone forth the sentence was past upon man to that purpose The day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Genesis 2.17 Now this being presupposed it may with reverence be said that God could not pardon sin without some such satisfaction as the Law required Neither is this to be attributed to any defect of Power in him but to the perfection of his nature Upon this account it is that wee say that God cannot do this or that which man can do He cannot sin he cannot Lye Tit. 1.2 It is Impossible he should do so Heb. 6.18 And why so The Apostle renders a reason for it 2 Tim 2.13 He cannot deny himself Gods Truth and Justice they are himselfe And being so he cannot go against them And thus is it in this case To pardon sin without any satisfaction supposing the foresaid decree and sentence it cannot stand with the Truth and Justice of God and therefore he cannot do it This is Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle cals it Rom. 1. last The Judgement of God Jus Dei saith Beza Gods right Justitia Dei saith Erasmus and the Vulgar Gods Justice that they which do such things are worthy of death This is not only a Positive Law but Lex naturae the very Law of nature a Law Originally ingraven in the nature of God himself and by him as a Counterpane from that Originall imprinted upon the nature of man And being so God could not go against it so as to let sin go alogether unpunshed This he could not do without wrong and injury to himself Repl. No may some say May not men without any wrong or injurie remit what they please of their owne right Whether men may alwayes remit what they please of their own right Answer To this it is answered 1. This is not universally true Some cases there are wherein men may not part with their owne right Parents may not remit that honour and Obedience which of right is due to them from their children Husbands must not part with their Headship which they have over their Wives And why because this were against the Law of God and the Laws of nature It is a good limitation which is given by Casuists to that vulgar Maxime A man may part with as much of his own right as he will to another but it must be Salvo jure tertii saving the right of a third Saving the right of God of the Law of the Magistrate of a mans Neighbour Where any of these are wronged or injured by the Concession a man may not part with his owne right Now thus standeth it here should God passe by sin without any satisfaction it would bee a wrong to his Law as well as to his Truth and Justice And therefore it cannot bee 2. But 2ly Suppose man might do this yet God cannot This may seem a Paradox but we shall find it a Truth Though man may part with his owne right yet God cannot How so Because Gods right is himselfe Deus ipse est jus suum Marke it Gods right is himselfe and therefore he cannot part with it Upon this
such a way as is fit for him to act and his Father to accept Still he intercedes So much we may learn from the Apostle Rom. 8.34 where he addeth this to those other steps of that mysticall Ladder It is Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again who also is at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for us This Jesus Christ being in heaven doth on the behalfe of all beleevers He intercedeth for them Not against them Christ interceding for beleevers Such Intercessours men sometimes meet with such as intercede against them Such Intercessours Paul met with more then a good many So Festus tels Agrippa and those with him Act. 25.24 Yee see this man about whom all the multitude of the Jews have dealt with me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Vulgar renders Interpellavit me they have Interceded with me viz. against Paul crying out that he ought not to live any longer so it there followeth Accusing him for a Pestilent fellow and a mover of sedition as you have it in the chapter foregoing cap. 24. ver 5. Such Intercessours the Prophets of old and the Ministers of God in all ages have met with And such Intercessours they themselves sometimes though with grief and sorrow of heart are faine to be against an ungratefull and a rebellious people So saith the Apostle concerning Elias Rom. 11.2 Wot ye not what the scripture saith of Elias How hee made intercession unto God against Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. complaining against them accusing of them as it followeth in the next verse ver 3. Lord they have killed thy Prophets and digged down thine Altars And such an Intercessour is Satan against all the Saints of God Interpellans Interceding against them Accusing them before God night and day as you have it Rev. 12.10 But Jesus Christ Intercedeth for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 True inded as for his Enemies Against his Enemies he intercedeth against them Those who will not accept him as their Mediatour his Blood crieth against them Thus Abels blood interceded against Cain as the Lord tels him Gen. 4.10 The voice of thy brothers blood crieth unto me from the earth viz. for vengance against him that shed it Even thus doth the voice of Christs blood cry unto God against all obstinate and impenitent unbeleevers such as Crucifie to themselves the Son of God afresh as the Apostle speaks of those Apostates Heb. 6.6 If Christ were upon Earth again they would shew themselves as bitter enemies to him as ever the Jews were Being now in Heaven they rereject him they oppose him they will not have him to reign over them They will not receive and acknowledge him for their King their Priest their Prophet As for such Christ Intercedes and Negotiates against them But as for his own people who are given to him to beleeve on him he intercedeth for them negotiating with God on their behalfe This he doth for all those who come unto God by him He ever liveth to make intercession for them Heb. 7.25 A Transaction very requisite and necessary Christs Intercession a necessary transaction without which all those other parts of Christs mediatorship would have been to little purpose This it is which putteth life into the death of Christ that maketh it effectuall for the good and benefit of his Elect. Without this the blood of this our Mediator had been spilt in vaine The Sacrifices under the Law had not been of such force and efficacie had not the high Priest entred into the Holy place there to appear before the Lord and to present the Blood therof unto him so making Intercession in the behalf of the people for whom he had offered that Sacrifice Heb. 9.7 What ever Christ had done or suffered upon Earth it had been ineffectuall unto us had hee not after the like manner entred into Heaven which the Apostle to the Hebrews tels us he hath done there to Appear in the presence of God for us Heb. 9.24 To this end it was that Jesus Christ our High Priest is entred into the Holy of Holies the Heaven of Heavens that hee might there appeare in the presence of God in the behalf of his Elect making intercession for them Which he doth divers waies Christ appeareth in heaven for his people divers waies Marke it Christ appeareth in the presence of God for us for all those whom he hath by his death reconciled unto God And this he doth in divers respects according to divers severall relations I shall take notice only of four of them which I shall present unto you in such obvious terms as you may more easily remember and carry away Christ appeareth in the presence of God interceding for his Elect 1. As an Agent 2. As an Advocate 3. As an Atturney 4. As a Solicitour Every of these is a kind of Intercessour appearing for and negotiating on the behalfe of others for their good and benefit And every of these wayes may Christ be said to be an Intercessour appearing before God for us Passe them over severally briefly 1. As an Agent A Lidger Ambassadour 1. As an Agent or Lidger Ambassadour Pareus Com. in Heb. 9.24 So Pareus looketh upon that fore-named expression Heb. 9.24 where Christ is said to appear in the presence of God for us An Allusion saith he to the Custome among Princes or States who being confederated have their Lidgers or Agents which upon all occasions appear in the presence of the Prince in the name and behalfe of all those whom they represent and negotiate for Thus may Jesus Christ be said to appear in the presence of God for us viz. as an Agent an Ambassadour Legatus foederis as Malachy cals him Mal. 3.1 the Messenger or Ambassadour of the Covenant So he was upon Earth Then he was an Ambassadour an Agent on God's part to declare and confirm the Covenant unto us And so he is being in Heaven He is now an Agent as it were on our part An Ambassadour a Lidger Ambassadour So I may not unfitly not improperly call him in regard of his constant residence there That is the difference as you know betwixt a Lidger and an Extraordinary Ambassadour The one is sent upon some particular emergent occasion the other maketh his abode in a place And such an Agent is Jesus Christ in Heaven A Lidger Embassadour that maketh his constant residence there Whom the Heavens must receive or contain untill the time of the restitution of all things Acts 3.21 i. e. untill the perfection and full accomplishment of his Kingdom Till then he shall appear in the presence of God ever living to make intercession for those that come unto God by him as the Apostle hath it Heb. 7.25 And great need there is that he should do so that he should be a Lidger in Heaven Great need that Christ should be a Lidger in Heaven that he should continually appear in the presence of
terrible to nature much more the second But this grace of God in Christ in this Mediatour may support the soul against both This was Job's consolation Job 19.25 I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth or as some others read it shall stand the last upon the ground like a Triumphant Conquerour which having vanquished all his enemies put them either to the sword or to flight keeps the field standeth his ground Thus shall the Lord Jesus at the last day having vanquished all his enemies put them all under his feet even the last enemy amongst the rest Death as the Apostle hath it 1 Cor. 15.25 26. then shall he stand upon the earth And what followeth Then though after my skin worms destroy this Body yet in my flesh shall I see God Such was Job's hope and confidence in this his Mediatour his Redeemer that however death might for a time bring and keep him under the power of it not only consuming his skin but his flesh yet he should be raised again by his power and vertue at the last day and made partakers of a blessed and glorious Resurrection so that he should both in soul and body enjoy that beatificall vision the presence of his God for evermore This benefit shall all those have by this their Mediatour who are given to him He will be to them the Resurrection and the Life Joh. 11 25. Resurrection to their Bodies and Life eternall Life both to Souls and Bodies So it there followeth He that believeth on me though he were dead yet shall he live and whosoever liveth and believeth on me shall never die No living the life of grace here he shall live the life of glory hereafter Over such a one though the first death for a time may yet the second death shall never have any power This benefit shall all believers have by and through this their Mediatour to whom God the Father hath committed this dispensation that he should bestow eternall life upon them Thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him Joh. 17.2 6. Comfort against the last Judgement Sixthly and lastly Here is comfort against the terrors of that last and dreadful Judgment Such shall that day be when all men shall be brought before the Judgment Seat of Jesus Christ to give an account of what they have done in the flesh whether it be good or evil a dreadful Tribunall So the Apostle looked upon it 2 Cor. 5.10 where speaking of it he infers Knowing therefore the terrour of the Lord c meaning the terrour of that day the last and universall Judgment which shal be a day full of terrours to all wicked ungodly men all misbelievers such as have rejected the yoak Government of Jesus Christ would not stand to the Covenant which he had made would not have Christ to reign over them Then shall the Lord Jesus be revealed from heaven with his mighty Angels in flaming fire rendring vengeance to them that know not God and obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ Then shall they bee punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power as the Apostle thunders it out 2 Thessalonians 1.7 8 9. To them shall that day be a terrible day when they shall looke upon him whom they would not owne as their Mediatour and behold him sitting as a Judge to passe sentence upon them But so shall it not be to Beleevers those who have an interest in this blessed Mediatour let them know that his second appearing shall be to their salvation They being reconciled unto God by him here shall be saved by him there He will not undoe what he hath done Having satisfied for their sins and absolved them in the Court of their own consciences here he will then declare that satisfaction and publish that Absolution before the whole world Then shall they reape the full crop of those Benefits by this their Mediatour whereof they have here received only the first fruits Then shall the Lord Jesus perform the last Act of his Mediatorship on their behalf bringing them into the presence of God his Father presenting them faultlesse before the presence of his Glory with exceeding joy as the Apostle hath it Jude 24. These are some of those streames of Consolation which flow from this spiritual Rock this our blessed Mediatour The third and last head of Application is yet behind which is Vse 3 Exhortation Let not this grace of God be in vain A word of Exhortation Take it briefly Let not this Grace of God bee in vain to any of us This is Pauls obtestation to his Corinthians 2. Cor. 1.6 We then as workers together with Christ beseech you also that ye receive not this Grace of God in vain What Grace Why the grace of the Gospel The grace of God in Jesus Christ in giving him to be a Mediatour Of this grace he had spoken in the close of the chapter foregoing God was in Christ Reconciling the world to himselfe verse 19. This he there holdeth forth as the summe and substance of all his preaching He hath committed to us the word of reconciliation And concerning this grace he beseecheth them that they should not receive it in vain And let me in the name of God presse the same upon every soul that heareth me this day You have heard of the grace of God manifested unto Mankind in giving his Son to be a Mediatour betwixt him and them O let not this Grace of God be in vain to any of you So it is and so it shall be to many This grace of God is in vain to them So it is to 1 Ignorant persons 1. So it is in the first place to Ignorant persons Such as live under the sound of the Gospel where they hear the name of a Mediatour rung in their ears but yet they regard not to know him to have any acquaintance with him to know who he was what he was what he hath done how and in what way he hath discharged this office of his Mediatorship 2. And secondly all persons openly profane Such as cast off the yoke of Jesus Christ 1. Profane persons such as refuse to come into the Bond of the Covenant refuse to stand to the Covenant which Jesus Christ as Mediatour hath drawn up betwixt God and man which on man's part requireth faith and obedience Evangelicall Obedience for the conditions of it This they reject saying in their hearts with those rebellious ones in the Psalm Psal 2.3 Let us break their bonds asunder and cast away their cords from us As for such better they had never heard of the name of a Mediatour yea better for them there never had been a Mediatour This is and will be no small aggravation of their guilt that they should thus trample the Blood
entred those lists But there is a fatal yet Providential necessitie in it There must be Heresies 1 Cor. 11.16 such is Satan's malice and Man's corruption that in an ordinary way it cannot be expected that God's Field should be free from these tares And such is Gods just and wise dispensation to permit it to be so knowing how to extract good out of evill And seeing it must be so there is a like necessity incumbent upon the Ministers of God servants of that great Husbandman that they should have John 15.1 1 Cor. 3.9 an eye to them that they do not over-grow the good corn Upon this account it is that I have as occasion hath been offered underta-that work which our great Apostle the Dr. of the Gentiles reckons amongst those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those good works 2 Tim. 3.17 unto which the man of God should be throughly furnished Applying my self sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Reproof Engl. new Annot ver 16. viz. of Errors and false Doctrines which the Verse foregoing reckoneth as one of those four Cardinal uses for which the Scripture is profitable yet so as I have ever mainly intended those other Ministeriall services there mentioned of Doctrine Correction Instruction in Righteousnesse And to that end I have made choice of such portions of Scripture as I apprehended properly usefull for those purposes Among other I have singled out and now through a divine manuduction almost passed thorow this Chapter wherof the Text is a part with that fore-going Rom. 5. 6. The one of which professedly handles the Doctrine of Justification the other of Sanctification two main Pillars in the House of the Lord not unlike those in the Temple of Dagon Judg. 19.26 whereon the whole building stands The sum of the later of these you meet with in the Text held forth under a familiar but apt and elegant Metaphor serving as a vehiculum to convey this divine Mystery into the soul with greater both facility perspicuity In prosecuting of this Allegory I have endeavoured to follow it home to the head yet so as not willing to do what in like cases too often done viz. to overdo by extorting that from the Metaphor which it would not genuinely and naturally yeeld My service which I have herein desired to do to God and his Church as I wish it may so I hope it shall be accepted of the Saints and of You in speciall over whom God hath made me though most unworthy an Overseeer To his grace and blessing I cōmend it and you resting Yours in the service of Christ desirous to be found faithful JOHN BRINSLEY Yarmouth Sept. 8. 1651. An Alphabetical Table of the chiefe Points handled in this TREATISE A AArons Rod blossoming miraculous p. 26 Adoption a benefit flowing from mysticall Insition 37. Agonies in the Christians death to sin both before conversion and after 111 The least Agony in true conversion 116. Apostates to be suspected their condition dangerous 55. 240. Why men are called upon to Arise from the Dead 158. Augmentation a benefit flowing from union with Christ 51. Augmentation an evidence of Mysticall Implantation 54. B BArren Christians no true Mysticall Branches 74 The same body shall be raised again 181. 182 Bodies glorified spirituall Bodies 184. Mysticall Branches Beleevers 15. C CAll of God not to be put off 121 Cessation from sin evidencing true Mortification 137 Christ Mysticall 33. Communion Mysticall betwixt Christ and the Beleever 35 Conformity of Christians to Christ in his Death 90 Conformity of Christians to Christ in his Resurrection 146 In the first act of Conversion man a meer Patient 28 Conversion more then a morall swasion 158 D BEleevers Dead unto sin three wayes 125. 127 Death of Christ a violent death 99 Death of Christ a painfull death 108 Death of Christ a lingring death 118 Death unto sin a dying a continued act 121 Death unto sin what 126 Death of Christ the cause of the Christians death unto sin 130 Death unto sin how evidenced 135 E ETernall life a spirituall life 184 Eternal life a glorious life 186 F FAith without works dead 73 Christ a Foundation how 82 Fructification a benefit issuing from union with Christ 68. 72 Gospel Fruits good works 70 Fruitfulness an evidence of Mysticall Implantation 75 Fruitfulnesse in good works why requisite 76 Directions for Fruitfulnesse 78 Fulnesse of Christ the beleevers 40 G. GOspel preached the meanes of Mysticall Insition 24 Grafting naturall and mysticall unlike in three particulars 18 Grafting naturall and mysticall alike in ten particulars 22 Growth a property of all mysticall branches 52 Growth in grace to be endeavoured after 57 Growth in grace the honour of Christ and glory of Christianity 59 Growth in the Christian continuall ibid. Doubts about spirituall growth cleered 60 Hinderances of spirituall growth six 63 Means of growth 67 I. THe Christian an immortall creature 175 Insition mysticall what 13 Insition mysticrll how tryed 24 Joseph's brethren coming to him a pattern of the Christians coming to Christ 47 Judas never given to Christ as the other Apostles 85 Justification a benefit flowing from union with Christ 36 L. THe Law a Grafting knife 23 The beleever living and dying with Christ 12 No spiritual life out of Christ 25 The Christians life a new life in four particulars 165 Life of the Regenerate a spiritual life 171 An immortal life 173 Life of Saints in heaven spirituall glorious eternall 184 186 Beleevers live the life of Christ 209 Life of Christ after his Resurrection a pattern for Christians to live by 236 Lusts being dead alone what to do to them 102 Reprieving of lusts dangerous 107 M. MOrtification resembleth the death of Christ in five particulars 91 Mortification counterfeit discovered 93 Mortification a voluntary act 97 Mortification a violent death 100 Mortification a painful work 110 Mortification a lingring death 118 Mortification how the beleevers work 133 Mortification twofold Habituall Actuall 134 Mortification in what way to be sought and endeavoured 140 N Name of Christ put upon Christians 33. Nourishment beleevers receive from Christ 11. Christ perfect Nourishment to the beleever 44. Nourishment how conveyed to the soul from Christ 45. Nourishment to be drawn from Christ 47 Nutrition a benefit flowing from Vnion with Christ 43. O OLd age the unfittest time for the work of Regeneration 219. Old age renders conversion difficult and suspicious 220. Repentance in Olde age difficult to man not to God 224. P Pelagian doctrine confuted 29 Beleevers planted together in Christ 3 Beleevers planted together with Christ 5. Plantation mystycall by way of Adhesion and Insition 6. Mysticall Implantation how effected 16. ●●●ll Implantation the work of free grace 31. 〈◊〉 spiritvall Pride 7 Q 〈…〉 a Quickning spirit 200 〈…〉 discerned 202 R CHrist Raised to the glory of God his father how 176. Beleevers raised to the glory of God Actively and Passively 177 Resurrection Corporall and Spiritual 146
this his imbracing Christ in the armes of his faith 1. Sustentation and Support Resemb 3. 1. Sustentation This benefit hath the Ivie from the Oake Though weak in it self not able to stand alone yet being joyned to the Oake now it stands sure bids defiance to all stormes and tempests As long as the Oak standeth that cannot fall The like benefit hath the christian from his Christ Though weak in himself not able to stand by himself not able to resist the least blast of Tentation yet being united unto Christ he is now supported in all estates borne up in all Conditions made able both to do and to suffer I am able to do all things saith this Apostle but how Through Christ that strengthneth mee Phil. 4 13. Here was Pauls strength not in himselfe but in Christ So much some conceive that Enigmaticall expression of his to import 2 Corinthians 12.10 When I am weak then am I strong When weak in himselfe then strong in Christ He it was that strengthned him The Lord stood by me and strengthned me so he tels Timothy 2 Tim. 4.17 And the like will he do to every soul that cleaveth to him and rests upon him Applic. Applic. Which speaks abundant consolation to all selfe-despairing souls Consolation to self-despairing souls which are made apprehensive of their own impotency their own inability to stand of themselves Let them know that being made one with Jesus Christ he is able to support them to make them stand As the Apostle saith of the weak brother Rom. 14.4 He shall be holden up or established for God is able to make him stand So say I of and to the weak Christian who despairing of his own strength relyeth wholly upon Jesus Christ he shall be holden up for Christ is able to make him stand Of all plants none weaker then the Ivie yet being joyned to the Oak none stand surer The Christian is weak in himselfe of himselfe subject every day to fall from the grace of God but being once united unto Christ Rom. 5.2 he standeth sure An Arminian Cavill refuted Object True may the Arminian say so long as that union continues he doth so But what if that be dissolved So long as the Ivie holdeth close to the Oak it is sure but what if it be separated severed from it Ans To this let the Apostle himselfe return the answer Rom. 8.38 39. I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. shall be able to separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord. No separation of the Believer from Christ Death it selfe which maketh a separation betwixt the soule and the body yet cannot make a separation betwixt Christ and the believer If the Ivie may be plucked and parted from the Oake there I leave the Similitude Sure I am the believer cannot be separated from Christ and consequently not fall away finally or totally from the grace of God And therefore how weak so ever in our selves yet be we strong in the Lord. So the Apostle expresseth it Ephes 6.10 Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might The Ivie is weak but the Oak is strong We are weak but Christ is strong El Gibbor the Mighty God Isai 9.7 Be we strong in the power of his might so shall his might be our might 2 Cor. 12.9 His power shall be made perfect in our weaknesse supporting sustaining strengthening us 2. And as supporting so nourishing 4. Resemb 2. Nutrition There is the fourth Resemblance The Ivie clasping about the Oak it receiveth nourishment from it which it sucketh and draweth from it after a secret and hidden manner And the like benefit doth Christ afford unto the believer The believer being united unto Christ he now liveth upon him as the Ivie upon the Oak The life which I now live in the flesh saith the Apostle I live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 From him the believer by the power of his faith an attractive grace sucketh and draweth a spirituall vertue after an hidden manner Even as that poor woman in the Gospel by the touch of her finger or rather her faith drew from him a sanative vertue for the cure of her bodily infirmitie So doth the believer by the like touch of faith draw from him a nutritive vertue for the nourishing up of his soul unto eternall life Of which vertue all true believers are in their measure made partakers Being made one with Christ they live upon him His flesh is to them meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed John 6.55 He giveth unto them that water of life John 4.14 which whosoever drinketh shal never thirst any more viz. Siti totalis Indigentiae with a thrift of totall indigencie such a thirst as ariseth from a totall privation of God's grace thus is nourishment conveyed from Christ unto all true believers But of this I shall have occasion to insist more largely and fully when I come to handle the other similitude of Ingrafting where it will fall in more properly and naturally 5. Resemb 5. To this I might add in the fifth place that which followeth from the two former put together Living and dying with Christ viz. that which the Apostle himselfe here specifieth and instanceth in The Ivie being supported and nourished by the Oak now it liveth and dieth with it Thus the believer that is united unto Jesus Christ he partaketh with him both in his death and life In his death dying in him in regard of the merit of his death which redoundeth unto the believer no lesse then if he himselfe had died dying with him dying unto sin as he died for sin and that by a vertue issuing from his death In his life quickned and raised up by him and with him quickned from the death of sin raised from the grave of sin to a new spirituall and heavenly life the life of grace here and glory hereafter But both these I shall have occasion to deal with more fully in opening the Sequell of the Text to which place I shall refer them Thus you see the former of these Allegories in measure made out Come we to the later which my eye is principally upon as conceiving it here more properly intended by the Apostle Believers are planted together with Christ by way of Insition not only Complantati Similit 2. Believers planted with Christ by way of Insition but Implantati not only planted together with him but in him Even as the graft and the stock are planted together so is Christ and the believer they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Insititii as Erasmus renders it Grafted with him Grafted with him as the former Translation hath it A Metaphor which this Apostle seemeth to be much delighted in and taken with In that 11th Chap. to the Romans we may see him prosecuting it at large where speaking of the bringing in
rather asleep then dead But this construction Beza looketh upon not only as forced Beza Gr. Annot in Text. and making nothing to the Apostles purpose in the Text but also dangerous 2. Basil in the second place conceives the Apostle in this expression to point at the Instrumentall Cause of our spirituall Insition and engrafting into Christ which is Baptisme This saith he is here called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Similitude of the death of Christ in as much as it carrieth a representation and resemblance of his death And so by engrafting in the similitude of his death should be no more but to be incorporated into Christ by Baptisme which is a similitude of his death But this Interpretation though pious and safe yet here it cannot be admitted Beza's reason is convincing Beza ibid. Baptisme carrieth a representation not only of the Death of Christ but also of his Resurrection and so not only of the Christian's Mortification but also of his Vivification Which two the Apostle here plainly distinguisheth the one from the other 3. Chrysostome in the third place conceives that there is no Emphasis at all in the phrase The Similitude of Christ's death saith he is the same with the death of Christ And so indeed the phrase is to be understood in that 2d of Philip. 7. where it is said of Christ that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made in the likenesse of men that is Heb. 4.5 he was made a true man like unto others in all things sin onely excepted But here we shall finde the phrase importing somewhat more 4. Not to hold you any longer in suspence Conclude we it with Calvin Beza Martyr C. Lapide and others Believers are said to be engrafted with Christ in the likenesse of his death in a two-fold respect The phrase imports two things The phrase imports two things 1. A conformity of the one to the other 2. The ground and rise and cause of that conformity The Christian's conformity with Christ in his death He is engrafted in the similitude thereof made like unto Christ in his death dying though not the same kind of death yet a death like it The ground and cause of his conformity is Christ himself and his death from whence the believer receiveth that power that vertue to do what he doth as the Graft doth from the Stock He is grafted together with Christ in the likenesse of his death Put these together and they give us the full force and Emphasis of this elegant and comprehensive expression I shall handle them severally At this time of the former The believers conformity to Christ in his death 1. The Christian's conformity to Christ in his death He is engrafted in the likenesse of Christ's death that is he is made conformable to Christ in his death This is that which Paul wisheth for himselfe Phil. 3.10 That I may know him viz. Christ c being made conformable unto his death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this all true believers are in their measure made partakers of They are conformed unto Christ in his death carrying a representation and resemblance of his death Quod in Christo factum est per naturam P. Martyr ad loc id in nobis fit per Analogiam proportionem as Martyr borrows it from Chrysostome What was done in Christ in a naturall way is done and performed in the believer by way of Analogy proportion resemblance Christ died and so the believer dieth the one a naturall the other a spirituall death the one carrying a similitude of the other Christ's and the Christian's death a death unto sin Quest But what Death is this Ans Why in one word A death unto sin So the Apostle himself explaines his own meaning ver 2. How shall we that are dead to sin live any longer therein So again ver 10 11. where first speaking of Christ he saith In that he died he died unto sin and then speaking of Christians in the next verse he biddeth them Reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin Christ died and the believer dieth both unto sin the one by way of Expiation The one by way of Expiation the other of Mortification suffering and satisfying for the sins of others the other by way of Mortification killing and crucifying his own sins This is the death which carrieth with it a resemblance of the death of Christ. And of this death all true believers are made partakers in their measure Thus this main Proposition again subdivides and branches it selfe into two distinct Doctrinall Conclusions which I shall insist upon severally beginning with the former which informes us that The Christian's death unto sin Doct. 1. True Mortification carrieth a Resemblance of the death of Christ in five particulars carrieth a Representation of the death of Christ. It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is the similitude of his death carrying a lively resemblance of it That it doth so will clearly appear if we bring them together and compare the one with the other For the Death of Christ we know or may know what kind of death it was Divers particulars are observable and considerable about it To let passe others Take we notice of these five which are usefull to our present purpose The Death of Christ was 1. A true death 2. A voluntary death 3. A violent death 4. A painfull death 5. A lingring death Such was his naturall death and such is the Christian 's spirituall death His death for sin and the Christian's death to sin Touch upon the particulars 1. Resemb A true Death 1. A true Death Such was the death of Jesus Christ his naturall death not a putative seeming death as those old Hereticks the Marcionites and Manichees imagined but a true reall death A true separation of his soul from his body He powred out his soul unto death saith the Prophet Isai 53.12 He gave up the Ghost saith the Evangelist Mark 15.37 And such is this spirituall death in the believer his death unto sin A Separation of the soul from the body of sin a true death a true separation of the soul from the body of sin Such is the work of true conversion in the soul which is a turning of the soul from all sin unto God Repent and turn your selves from all your transgressions Ezek. 18.30 Not only from one sin but from all As in death the soule is separated not only from one member of the body as it is in a Paralysis a numbe Palsie where one part is dead being deprived of sense and motion but from all So is it in true conversion The soul is separated from the whole body of sin and every member of it So separated from it that it hates and abhors it Ye that love the Lord hate evill Psal 97.10 I hate every false way Psal 119.104 What I hate that I do saith Saint Paul Rom. 7.15 Such is the work of
true conversion in the heart of a regenerate person it causeth a reall separation of the soul from the body of sin Applic. False Mortification discovered Which discords to make some short Application as I go make many to be as yet strangers unto this blessed work It may be they have parted with some sins but they are not dead to sin No their souls are not separated from the body of sin Those sins which it may be they have left for fear or shame or some other sinister respects yet they have their hearts still Like a dear wife who carrieth her affectionate Husband's heart into the grave with her Illa habeat secum servétque sepulchro Thus do mens hearts oft-times cleave to their sins which in respect of actuall communion they are separated from They do not hate them nor yet any sin as sin For then they would hate all sinne A quatenùs ad omne c. He that hateth any sin as sin hateth all sin But so do not they No However it may be there is a kind of Antipathy in their natures by reason of their Constitution or Education against some sins yet there are others which are sweet and delightfull to them Now as for such they are not made conformable unto Christ in his death His death was a true death a separation of the soul from his body Secondly A Voluntary Death 2. Resemb A Voluntary Death Such was the Death of Jesus Christ He poured forth his soul unto death Isai 53.12 He gave himself for our sins Gal. 1.4 Laying down his life Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life John 10.17 No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my selfe verse 18. This he did in way of voluntary obedience unto his Father He was obedient unto the death c. Philip 2.8 What herein he did all the men and divels in the world could not have enforced him to His Death was a voluntary and spontaneous act And herein it was a pattern of true Mortification Such is true Mortification a voluntary act which is a voluntary and willing death Whatever Gods people do in way of duty to God they do it willingly Thy people shall come willingly in the day of thy power Psa 110.3 And as in all other actions and services so in this they are a willing people In Mortification a Christian dyeth unto sin is not put to death So much is imported in those phrases of Mortifying and Crucifying of sin If ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the flesh ye shall live Romans 8. They that are Christs hove crucified the flesh with the lusts and affections thereof Gal. 5.24 And so of putting off the old man That ye put off concerning the former Conversation the old man Ephes 4.22 All voluntary and spontaneous acts Such is true Mortification Not when sin dyeth of it selfe or is put to death accidentally by some other means but when the man himself puts it to death When a man putteth off the rags of the old Adam not when he is stripped of them In this resembling the death of Christ which was a voluntary death Applic. And if so Counterfeit Mortification discovered being inforced what a deal of Counterfeit Mortification will this one touchstone discover Many there are who seeme to have left their sinns but it is against their wills No thanks to them They are enforced to do what they do Enforced 1. It may be 1 By the sense of some temporal Inconvenience through the present sense of some temporall inconvenience they see attending upon them Thus the prodigall waster happily leaveth his riotous and luxurious courses of drinking and gaming How so Because he findeth them prejudiciall to his estate to his health 2. It may be they have a clamorous conscience 2. Through clamours of conscience which will not let them be quiet but continually dogs them And thereupon they are faine to let go their sins parting with them as a night-robber doth with his prey which he leaveth behind him because the dogs come with open mouth at him Upon this account it was that Judas was so willing to be rid of his thirty pieces of silver No thanks to him they were too hot for him to hold Thus do many men part with their sins as a sick man parts with his meat or Medicine which he would faine keepe but it maketh him sick and thereupon his stomack easeth it selfe of it 3. Happily they part with them not out of any dislike they have of them but for fear servile fear 3 Through fear of punishment Temporall from Man or God Fear of punishment Punishment Temporall or Eternall Temporall from Man or from God Of the former kind how many They abstaine from such and such evils but no thanks to them They dare do no otherwise The fear of man is upon them The penalty of the law deterrs them Of the latter not a few They see wrath is gone out against them from the Lord. Some temporall Judgment hangs over their heads like Dam ocles his sword threatning of them This maketh them to let go their sinns parting with them as the dog with his bone when the whip is over him This it was that made Ahab for a time act the part of a penitent Who that looketh upon him in that penitentiall garbe 1 King 21.17 cloathed with sack-cloth fasting and walking so demurely but would take him for a Mortified Convert But no thanks to him the Prophet had rung him such a peal as made both his ears to tingle He had denounced the judgements of God against him in such a terrible manner as made him for the time to put on that disguize Eternall Or haply the fear of eternal punishment is upon them Upon this account do men sometimes part with their sins Even as sea-men in a stress part with their goods which they cast over-board with their owne hands Not that they are out of love with them but because they love their lives better they see they must either part with them or perish with them Or like a Cut-purse who being apprehended by a Sergeant drops the purse which he hath cut or drawn not that he is weary of it but because he knoweth if that should be found about him it would hang him Even thus do many part with their sins when conscience being awakened they see hell gaping upon them It may be God's Serjeant Death in their apprehensions hath arrested them ready to carry them before the dreadfull Tribunall of a just and terrible God And they know that if such and such sins be found about them there is no way but eternall condemnation for them And hereupon they cast them away it may be seriously resolving never more to own them or to have any acquaintance with them Thus many seem to leave their sins All far from true Mortification to part with them who are yet
far from mortifying of them When men shall leave sin being enforced so to do through the sense of some present inconvenience or through the clamorousnesse of an accusing conscience or meerly through fear of punishment temporall or eternall this is but a counterfeit Mortification True Mortification must be a voluntary action not Involuntary nor yet Mixt. I call that a mixt action which is partly voluntary and partly involuntary As in that fore-named instance of the Seaman casting his goods over-board Mortification altogether voluntary which he doth partly with his will and partly against it This must be altogether voluntary Not but that there may be some reluctancy betwixt the flesh and spirit about this work Such a reluctancy we find in the humane nature of Christ about his naturall death When he saw that bitter cup coming towards him he passionately deprecates it in that thrice repeated Petition Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me Mat. 26.39 yet was his death a true voluntary death So in the Christian's death unto sin there may be a reluctancy betwixt the flesh and the spirit Notwithstanding some reluctancy in the flesh and yet the action a voluntary action An action is said to be voluntary or involuntary according to the superiour faculties of the soul not the inferiour If the reasonable part be consenting the action may be called voluntary though there be some reluctancy in the sensitive appetite Thus in the Christian in whom there is nature and grace flesh and spirit an unregenerate and a regenerate part if the superiour and better part be willing and that will not a velleitas but a volitio not a wishing but a willing an advised deliberate will with full consent of the inward man now though there be some reluctancy in the flesh in the unregenerate part yet may this be said a true voluntary act And is our Mortification such Can we say with the blessed Apostle Rom. 7. ult that However with our flesh we serve the law of sin yet with our mind we serve the Law of God Delighting in it after the inward man ver 22. So that we are dead to sin according to the inward man the regenerate part If so now though we find a Law in our members rebelling against the Law of our minds yet be not discouraged this in God's acceptation shall go for true Mortification a true death unto sin In as much as it carrieth with it this resemblance of the death of Christ which was a voluntary death Thirdly 3. Resemb A violent Death The Death of Christ was a violent death though voluntary yet violent Violent because not naturall He did not die alone but was put to death So saith Saint Peter 1 Pet. 3.18 He was put to death in the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In course of nature Christ might have lived many a year upon the earth when he was crucified being then but about the three and thirtieth year of his age His death was a violent death He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter Isai 53.7 The materiall Temple did not fall down alone it was pulled down And so was the mysticall Temple of Christ's Body Destroy this Body John 2.19 And herein again was his death a true pattern of the Christian's Mortification his dying unto sin which is both voluntary and violent Voluntary in respect of the Person but violent in respect of the Sin Not when sin dieth alone but when it is put to death and that whilest it might yet live longer It is nothing to die to sin when sin dieth to us in us Herein lieth as I may say the life of this death herein is the truth of Mortification when a man as it were layeth violent hands upon his sins cutteth them off being yet in their flower strength vigour not when they die for age When he pulleth up these weeds not when they wither of themselves So much is insinuated in these fore-named expressions of mortifying of crucifying the flesh the body of sin c each importing a violent death Such is the death of sin in the Christian a violent death Another touchstone for Mortification Applic. And is it so Here then we have another touch-stone whereby we may discover a great deal of false and counterfeit mortification in the world Many have left their sins who have not mortified them No if their sins be dead they died a naturall death they died alone As for them they were so far from offering violence to their lusts from putting them to death that they would willingly have saved their lives if it had lyen in their power And being dead they follow them to their graves as they do their dear friends mourning and lamenting over them that they must part Thus doth the aged Adulterer part with his inordinate lust Rom. 4.19 being now gray-headed and his body dead as it is said of Abraham's he leaveth the tricks of his youth as he counts and calls them But no thanks to him they have left him His sin dieth according to the course of nature dieth for age And thus a man that was intemperate in his youth which yet is not ordinary sometimes he becometh sober and abstemious in his age But what is the cause of it why the reason inducing him to it is no other then that which old Barzillai gave unto David why he was not willing to follow the Court 2 Sam. 19.34 He was now grown old so as he could not discern betwixt good and evill he had no taste in that he eat or in that he drunk Upon the like ground the aged sinner leaveth his intemperance Time having snowed upon his head and plowed upon his forehead he cannot now find that sweetnesse that delight in his sin which formerly he did And upon this account they two part Sin dying to him not he to his sin Now here give me leave Applied to aged sinners I beseech you to make bold with every hoary head every wrinckled face that heareth me that looketh upon me this day and put you upon the triall a little whether you be truely dead to sin or no. It may be your sins the sins of your youth and you are parted but let me ask you the question Vpon what terms did ye part Whether did you forsake them or they you Which is it that standeth chargeable with this desertion Which was it that gave the bill of divorce to the other you to your lusts or your lusts to you Your sins are dead but what death died they A naturall or a violent death If the former that is no true Mortification For all this you may yet be alive to your sins though they be dead to you Hence is it that late repentance in an aged sinner is alwayes looked upon as suspicious and seldome found to be true because that sins then die alone without any violence offered to them Enquire how our sins died whether a
an affliction of spirit causing frequent conflicts within him Now have you found do you find the like symptomes in your selves Surely where the soul never felt any of these pangs these agonies it may well suspect that sin may be asleep or it may be dead to the man but the man is not dead to it True indeed No death unto sin without some agonies as I said these pangs are not alike in all As in the death of the body some have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Physicians call it a more gentle and easie death then others so is it in this spirituall death this death unto sin to some it is more easie then to others God according to his various dispensations brings off the work of Regeneration and Mortification in a more easie way to one then to another Yet is there no death specially a violent death and such is this death unto sin but it hath some pangs some agonies The least Agonies in true conversion Quest But happily here some may say What are the least of these pangs these agonies that may be in this death What is the least measure of this compunction of spirit this soul-affliction that is requisite unto true Mortification Ans To this I answer and I shall do it with as much indulgence and tendernesse as may be There must be 1. A sense of sin and wrath 1. A sense of sin and of the wrath of God due unto it Such a sense we find in Jesus Christ He was very sensible of the weight and burden of those sins which lay upon him and of the wrath of God his Father due unto them This it was that put him into that preternaturall if not supernaturall sweat And such a sense in measure there must be in the soul of every Christian before he come to die unto sin He must first feel sin as a Burden Mat. 11.28 Come unto me ye that are weary and heavy laden viz. under the weight and burden of sin a burden ready to sink him into hell subjecting him to the wrath and displeasure of God 2. A sorrow for sin 2. From this sense of sin kindly working upon the soul there ariseth an inward sorrow for sin Such an affection we find also in our blessed Saviour before his passion My soul saith he speaking to his Apostles is exceeding heavy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 undiquaque tristis Mat. 26.38 beset and surrounded with sorrowes even unto death And such an affection in measure there is in every true convert every mortified sinner The apprehension of sin worketh in him an inward sorrow and griefe even that godly sorrow as the Apostle calleth it 2 Cor. 10.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sorrow according to God that is 1. Coming from God 2. Well pleasing to God 3. For offending of God 4. Bringing the sinner unto God Such a sorrow the Apostle there maketh a necessary ingredient to that Repentance which is not to be repented of 3. From this sorrow for sin 3. A desire of being freed from the guilt and power of it in the third place springeth a serious and unfeigned desire of being freed and delivered from it Such an affection also we find in our blessed Saviour Feeling the burden of the sins of the world lying upon him he was very desirous to be freed from it I have a baptisme to be baptized with saith he to his Apostles meaning his passion his death and how am I straitned untill it be accomplished Luke 12.50 And the like affection shall we find in a regenerate soul viz. a serious and earnest desire of being freed and delivered from that sin whereof it is made so sensible And that not onely from the guilt and punishment but also from the power and dominion tyranny and molestation of it O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this death 4. And fourthly 4. A striving against sin This desire being unfeigned it will expresse and put forth it selfe in answerable indeavours in effectuall strivings against sin Ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin Heb. 12.4 How did our blessed Saviour wrestle in the Garden offering up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears to him that was able to save him Heb. 5.7 Thus will a regenerate soul wrastle with God about the death of sin praying against it watching against it going out in the strength of God against it engaging in a continuall war a deadly feud against it Now these are the least of these soul-conflicts wherewith this spirituall death this death unto sin is attended And are we strangers unto these Do we not know what it is to be thus sensible of sin to be thus affected with sin to be thus desirous of deliverance from sin to be thus ingaged against sin Deceive not our selves we are as yet strangers unto this blessed work we do not yet know what this true death unto sin meaneth which also in this particular resembles the death of Jesus Christ It is a painfull death 5. Resemb A lingring death The last particular is yet behind wherein I shall be brief This death is a lingring death Such was the death of Jesus Christ Crucifying is a lingring death Christ hung divers hours upon the Crosse three at the least from the sixth hour to the ninth saith Saint Matthew cap. 27. ver 45. that is from our twelve to three before he gave up the Ghost And herein again doth the Christan's death unto sin carry a resemblance of that his death It is also a lingring death wherein sin is not put to death all at once but languisheth by little and little This is looked upon as one of the main differences betwixt Justification Justification perfected at once and Sanctification The former is a perfect work admitting of no degrees True indeed in respect of manifestation and in the sense of the person justified it is graduall but not in it selfe The person justified may apprehend his justification more clearly then he did but he cannot be more justified then he was Justification being a plenary absolution a full discharge of the sinner from the guilt and satisfactory punishment of all his sins past present and to come True there is a difference betwixt the one and the other Sins past Vide Ames Medul cap. 27. sec 23 24. and present are actually pardoned by a formall Application of the generall pardon unto them sins past onely virtually The former in them selves the later in the subject or person sinning from whom it is required only to shew forth that pardon which is granted and by faith to apply it to himself in respect of the renewed particular acts of sin In the mean time the Grant is perfect and full Numb 23.21 So as God beholdeth no iniquity in Jacob neither doth he see any perversnesse in Israel viz. so as to impute it unto condemnation Not so
truth of mortification Briefly It is an universall cessation arising from an inward Principle 1. An universal 1. Universall cessation not in respect of the Acts but the Kinds of sin He that is dead is feed from sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from Sin not this sin or that sin but all sin no more living to the lusts of men any lusts So much is insinuated where Mortification is called a putting off of the body of sins Col. 2.11 Not a member of this body but the whole body Death is a supersedeas to all natural operations it runneth thorow the whole man and every part of it closing the ey deafning the ear binding the tongue the hand the foot c. Such is true mortification a through work running through the whole man and through the whole body of sin Through the whole man not only the outward man but the inward causing a cessation from sin not only in the outward Action but in the inward Affection 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Heathen Poet The dead man longs not Anacreon citat per Bezam in Rom. 6.7 Even so doth this spirituall death it puts an end to all the inordinate longings of the soul so as sinful affections do not finde that allowance which sometimes they did They which are Christs have crucified the flesh with the lusts and affections therof Gal. 5.24 viz the inward affections of the soul whether irascible or concupiscible as Grot. explains that place A mortified person ceaseth not only from practical but contemplative wickednesse He doth not regard iniquity in his heart as David speaketh of himself Psal 66.18 And as it runs through the whole man so through the whole Body of sin Not killing one sin and sparing another 1 Sam. 15.15 like Saul who made a Cull amongst the cattell sparing the fattest So indeed do some deal by their lusts mortifying some not others their fat pleasurable profitable sins these they will spare as serviceable to them So doth not the true mortified person He dealeth impartially setting himself against all sin secret sins as well as open small sins as well as great He doth not willingly spare any Where this work is partial it evidenceth it not to be right Dying to sin imports an universall Cessation from sin 2. Springing from an inward Principle 2. It springeth from an inward principle from an inward change in the heart This is the difference betwixt a man that is bound and a man that is dead Each ceaseth from motion but the one the dead man doth it from an inward principle he hath neither power nor will to move The other from outward restraint He would move but cannot Thus do wicked men sometimes cease from sin abstain from the outward Acts of sin but no thanks to them there are some restraints upon them In the mean time their will is the same that ever it was As it is with a theefe in the Prison being manacled and shackled now he ceaseth from robbing and pilfering but yet it may be he is as very a theef as ever he was The outward act is restrained but the inward disposition not changed But in a regenerate person there is an inward change from whence this cessation proceedeth This Practicall Mortification springs from an Habituall Mortification His heart is turned from and against all sin dead to it He doth not finde that taste that sweetnesse in sin which sometimes he did Nay he loatheth abhorreth it he hath a secret Antipathy against it against sin as sin And thereupon it is that he endeavours the Mortification of it As a man that killeth a snake not out of any particular quarrell which he hath against it but out of that generall enmity that is betwixt his nature and the whole brood of Serpents Gen. 3.15 Now bring we our supposed Mortification to these Touch-stones Is it so Vniversall springing from such an inward Principle in the soul Reaching to all sins proceeding from an inward change in the heart If so now conclude it we are in the number of those who are planted together with Christ in the likeness of his Death Otherwise our Cessation from sin being only partiall or occasionall this evidenceth it to bee no true Mortification This Triall being made now two sorts of persons come to be dealt with Such in whom this work is begun Such in whom it is wanting A word or two to Each Vse 2. For the former let them be taught whither to give the praise and glory of this work Application to mortified persons Let them glory in Christ viz. to Jesus Christ He it was that merited this benefit for them and he it is that effecteth it in them by letting out and sending forth the vertue of his death making it efficacious in them for the killing of the Body of sin This could we never have done of our selves If it be done If the work of Mortification be begun If there be an Habituall Mortification wrought in the soul this is the work of Jesus Christ a fruit and effect of his Death That is the Stock from whence this Mortifying vertue issued And therefore not unto our selves but unto him be the glory of the work Paul will glory in nothing but in the Crosse of Christ by which he was crucified to the world Gal. 6.14 Application to unregenerate persons who are Vse 3. For those which want it Let them be first Exhorted then Directed 1. Exhorted to seek after this blessed work 1 Exhorted to seek after this work never to give rest unto their souls untill they finde such an habituall Mortification wrought in them Arguments or Motives I shall need no other then those which I have hinted already If we be not thus dead with Christ we shall never live with him If wee be not thus Crucified mortified with him we shall never be glorified with him If wee be not thus ingrafted in the likenesse of his death we never shall be in the likenesse of his resurrection 2 Directed to go to the crosse of Christ 2. Directed how to attain what they desire in what way and by what means this blessed work may be both begun and carried on Go to the Crosse of Jesus Christ That is the Stock from whence must issue this mortifying vertue for the crucifying killing of sin It is not all our own Purposes Resolutions Promises Vowes Covenants Indeavours Vndertakings in our own strength that will effect the mortifying of sin No this is the work of a supernatural power a fruit and effect of the death of Jesus Christ And therefore whoever of us would have this work wrought in us let us have recourse to his Crosse his Death and that in a three-fold way By way of Meditation Application Imitation 1. By way of Meditation Seriously 1 By way of Meditation upon sad and deliberate thoughts consider and contemplate the Death of Jesus Christ how shamefull how painfull how bitter it was
the likenesse of the one they shall be also in the likenesse of the other They shall be engrafted in the likenesse of his Resurrection that is they shall be made partakers of a Resurrection which carries with it a resemblance Instar ejus resurgent H. Grotius ad Text. a likenesse of his Resurrection Quest But what Resurrection is this Here is the first and main Question A twofold Resurrection Corporall Spirituall Ans For answer whereunto we may take notice of a two-fold Resurrection spoken of in Scripture a corporall a spirituall Resurrection the one of the Body the other of the Soul The later of these is the first Resurrection so called as it is commonly taken by Saint John Revel 20.6 where he pronounceth them blessed who have their part in the first Resurrection True indeed the Resurrection there spoken of is properly a generall Resurrection of whole Churches and Nations like that of the restoring of the people of the Jews which was represented unto the Prophet Ezekiel by the resurrection of those dry bones Ezek. 37. And is called by the Apostle Life from the dead Rom 11.15 Such a Resurrection shall there be of the Church after the thousand years a set time determined and appointed by God it shall be raised up from a low estate to a flourishing condition chiefly in regard of spirituall Priviledges This is the first Resurrection saith the verse fore-going But to have part in this first Resurrection is not barely to live in those times to be eye-witnesses of that Church-state but to share in it to feel the power and efficacy of those means those Ordinances which shall then be plentifully afforded and powerfully dispensed in the quickning of them spiritually in raising them up from the death of sin to the life of grace This is a Resurrection the first Resurrection the Resurrection of the soul The other the second Resurrection the Resurrection of the body of which the Apostle discourseth in that 1 Cor. 1● and frequently elsewhere Quest Now which of these shall we conceive the Apostle to aim at here in the Text And which of these is it that carries such a Resemblance of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ Ans To this it is variously answered The Text by some understood of the former Amongst expositours some are for the one others for the other Chrysostome Origen Tertullian with divers other after them understand it of the former the second Resurrection And they contend it must be so understood How else saith the Apostle here We shall be also of his Resurrection speaking not in the present but in the future tense not sumus but erimus not we are but we shall be Now say they as for that first Resurrection that is past already with believers In this sense Hymenaeus and Philetus and their followers were not mistaken when they held that the Resurrection was past already 2 Tim. 2.18 True it is so being understood onely of the first Resurrection the Resurrection of the soul that is past in a regenerate person in whom the work of Sanctification is begun he is already raised from death to life But there is a second Resurrection a Resurrection of the body which they heretically denyed and that is to come And of that say they speaketh the Apostle here in the Text If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also of his Resurrection By others of the later 2. Others and that the greatest part understand it rather of the former of these the first Resurrection the Resurrection of the soul when it is raised from the death of sin to the life of righteousnesse Of this speaks the Apostle in the verse fore-going That like as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newnesse of life And of this Resurrection it is say they that here he speaketh the first Resurrection Object But how then saith he We shall be Why the Apostle here useth the future tense speaking of believers We shall be planted in the likenesse of his Resurrection What are they not so already Upon their believing on Christ they are engrafted with him in the likenesse of both these both of his Death and Resurrection Being regenerated they have both the parts of Sanctification wrought in them not onely Mortification but also Vivification As they are dead to sin so they are quickned and raised to a new life The first Re●●rection im 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ans To this Beza returns answer True they are so but they are so but in part The work is but imperfect in them As they are but in part dead so they are but in part raised to newnesse of life Such a mutuall both Relation and Proportion there is betwixt these two this death and this life this death of sin this life of grace Where the one is the other is But as the one is imperfect so is the other And so as the one increaseth so doth the other And hereupon saith he the Apostle chooseth rather to speak in the future then in the present tense rather we shall be then we are or have been because as we are not yet quite dead unto sin there being still some remainders of corruption left in the soul so neither are we wholly raised from the dead to a new life Only the work is begun daily increasing more and more untill it shall come to full perfection in heaven And therefore saith the Apostle We shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection Quest Now which of these wayes shall we take Which of these Expositions shall we pitch upon Ans Truth is Both may here be understood though principally the later Each carries a fair aspect with it And for my own part I see no inconvenience in taking them in both Onely I must acknowledge the later of them I look upon as most properly and principally intended and aimed at by the Apostle yet so as not excluding the former In such a joynt sense that phrase of the Apostles is expounded Phil. 3.10 where he maketh it his wish that he might know the power of Christ's Resurrection that is that he might by experience find the same power put forth in him which raised Christ from the dead working in him a double Resurrection first raising him from the death of sin to the life of grace here and then from the death of nature to the life of glory hereafter And in a like joynt sense are we to understand the same Apostle in the 8th verse of this Rom. 6. If now we be dead with Christ we believe that we shall also live with him Live with him viz. in the life of grace on earth and glory in heaven Both which make up one and the same life onely differing in degree whence it is that they are both comprehended under that one word of Glorification Rom. 8.30 Whom he justified them also he
glorified Glorifieth here in this life in Sanctification begun in the life to come in Sanctification perfect Grace is Glory inchoated Glory is Grace consummated And thus not unfitly may we understand the language of the Text as intending this twofold Resurrection the first Resurrection whereof Christians in measure already are and shall be made partakers in this life the second Resurrection whereof they shall be made partakers in the life to come And of each of these we shall find it true which the Apostle here insinuates in the Text that they carry with them a Resemblance of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ Each carrying a Resemblance of Christ's Resurrection Each of them is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Representation of his Resurrection The truth hereof I shall shew you by comparing the one with the other And this I shall do severally beginning first with the first 1. The first Resurrection 1. The spiritual Resurrection carrieth a resemblance the raising up of the soul from the death of sin to the life of righteousnesse this is a work which carrieth with it a resemblance of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ A resemblance of a Resurrection and of his Resurrection Of a Resurrection in generall of his Resurrection in particular Touch upon each distinctly 1. In the generall 1. In generall of a corporall Resurrection This spirituall Resurrection carrieth with it a resemblance of a corporall Resurrection It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And hence it is that we find it so familiarly set forth under this expression If you be risen with Christ Col. 3 1. He hath raised us up together Ephes 2.6 Bring them together we shall find the one answering to the other See it in five or six particulars 1. They are alike in the Order of the work 1. Resemb In the Order of the work Resurrection presupposeth a Death going before it A man must first die before he can be capable of a Resurrection Herein lieth the difference betwixt Resurrection and Resuscitation the raising a man from his bed and from his grave In the one he is raised onely from sleep in the other from death This is peculiarly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 resurrection Which word however it may be sometimes used for any kind of raising again As Luke 2.34 it is opposed to falling Behold this Child meaning Jesus is set for the falling and rising again of many in Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 opposed to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yet most commonly in Scripture phrase it imports a raising from the dead And such is this spirituall Resurrection It is such a Resurrection as presupposeth a Death So much the Text giveth us clearly to understand If we have been engrafted in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his resurrection Such was the Resurrection of Christ He first died before he rose again And such is the Resurrection of the Christian a resurrection which in order followeeh a death The Christian must first die to sin before he can be raised up to this new life this life of Righteousnesse This is the order which the Spirit of God in Scripture every where prescribeth and layeth down Psal 34.14 Depart from evill and do good Isai 1.16 17. Cease to do evill learn to do well 1 Pet. 3.11 If any man will love life and see good dayes let him eschew evill and do good As in naturall works Privation goeth before Generation so in this spirituall work Privation must go before Regeneration A thing must put off its old form and cease to be what it was before it can put on another form and become what it was not Thus must a Christian first put off the old man before he can put on the new Ephes 4.22 24. He must cease to live the life of sin before he can live the life of grace True in time these two go together but in order the one goeth before the other as Death doth before Resurrection A man is not capable of a corporall Resurrection untill he be dead There must first be a separation of the soul from the body And so must it be here Before man can be made partaker of this spirituall Resurrection he must die to sin There must be a separation of his soul from the body of sin otherwise he can never live unto God Mortification in order goeth before Vivification Applic. Some convinced to be strangers to this Resurrection Which by the way may convince many to be as yet strangers unto this blessed life However happily they may perform many duties and services unto God yet they do not live unto God How should they they never yet knew what it was to die to die unto sin Their souls are not yet separated from the body of sin they are not turned from and against all sin Some sins there are which their soules do yet cleave unto are wedded to they like them love them and live in them Against such the evidence is too clear they are strangers unto this Resurrection which in order followeth after death Here is a first resemblance 2. 2. Resemb In the Nature of the work This spirituall resembles a corporall Resurrection as in the Order so in the Nature of the work What is the Resurrection of the body but a motion from death to life a raising of a dead body from the grave of the earth to a new life and that by the return of the soul unto it which was for a time separated from it inabling it to exercise the operations of a naturall life And such is the spirituall Resurrection a motion from death to life from the death of sin to the life of righteousnesse caused by the return of the Spirit of God unto the soul inabling it to exercise the operations of a spirituall life Mark it Such is this spirituall Resurrection Spirituall Resurrection what The quickning and raising up of a dead soul Such are all men by nature dead men The hour cometh and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God c. John 5.25 The dead men dead while they live living corporally but dead spiritually Dead in trespasses and sins as Paul hath it Ephes 2.1 having no more power to do any work of the spirituall life then a dead man of the naturall And as dead so buried Their souls daily as it were putrifying and rotting in the grave of sinfull corruption Such is the state of all men in their naturall condition before the grace of God meet with them Now this grace meeting with them it quickens and raiseth them Even when we were dead in sins he hath quickned us together with Christ and raised us up together Ephes 2.5 6. Thus in the work of Regeneration there is a new life put into the soul And that by the return of the Spirit of God into it At the first Creation of man man himself being made after the Image of
This it is which our Saviour meaneth in Joh. 4.14 Whosoever shall drink of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst So again Joh. 6.35 He that cometh unto me shall never hunger and he that believeth in me shal never thirst that is he shal find a full satisfaction in me as that he shal not hunger and thirst after other things as somtimes he did his soul shal not run out inordinately after creature-comforts to seek for happinesse and contentment in them Thus doth the life of this new-creature carry with it in measure a conformity to the life of Jesus Christ after his Resurrection being as his was a spirituall life 2. An immortall life 2. And secondly an immortall life Thus was Christ raised never to die again And so is the Christian raised So the Apostle himselfe maketh out this Resemblance ver 9 10 11 12. of this Chapter Christ being raised from the dead dyeth no more death hath no more dominion over him c Likewise reckon ye your selves also dead unto sin but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortall bodies c. Christ being raised from the grave he returns no more to his old lodging to his former state He never came under the power and dominion of death again Even so the Believer being once raised up from the grave of sin he dieth no more Expresse to this purpose is that of our Saviour John 11.25 26. He that believeth on me though he were dead yet shall he live And whosoever liveth and believeth on me shall never die This are we to understand not only of the second Resurrection as Arminians would have it who that they might decline the evidence of this Text make use of that subterfuge but also and most properly of the first Resurrection the raising up of the soul to a spirituall life Of such a life speaketh our Saviour in Joh. 5.25 The hour cometh and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they which hear it shall live Understand it not only of a corporall Resurrection as Grotius would have it in which sense yet it is true which is there said but of a spiritual Resurrection The Dead such as are spiritually dead dead in sin They shall hear the voice of the Son of God They shall hear Christ speaking to them in the Ministery of his word And they which hear this word hear it with faith They shall live live a spirituall life the life of grace here and glory hereafter And in a like sense are we to understand this passage in this 11th Chapter wherein our Saviour as Diodate observeth upon it according to his usuall custome taketh occasion from the corporall Resurrection before spoken of to instruct Martha in the doctrine of the spirituall Resurrection And speaking of this Resurrection he saith He that believeth on me though he were dead dead in trespasses and sins yet shall he live live a spirituall life And whosoever so liveth and believeth on me shall never die never die a spirituall death again never come under the power and dominion of sin again never totally fall from the grace which he hath received That incorruptible seed by which he is regenerated shal abide in him that Spirit of grace which he hath received shall maintain this spirituall life in him True indeed the body is still subject unto death but not so the soul If Christ be in you saith the Apostle the body is dead because of sin but the spirit is life because of righteousnesse Rom. 8.10 that is as Diodate and Beza and others expound it the body is yet subject to corporall death through the remainders of sin that are in all regenerate persons but The spirit is life even that little spark of the Spirit o grace that is still life unto the soul here and shall be both to soul and body hereafter through the most perfect righteousnesse of Christ imputed unto them Their bodies they are daily decaying daily dying as Paul saith of himselfe 1 Cor. 15.31 but not so their souls Though our outward man perish yet our inward man is renewed day by day 2 Cor. 4.16 And as for the second death that shall have no power over them Blessed and holy is he that hath his part in the first Resurrection on such the second death shal have no power Rev. 20.6 The second death is eternall death so expounded chap. 2. ver 8. And from this death are they freed who have their part in this first Resurrection The Believer an immortall creature O the blessed condition of a Believer The very day that he is raised up from the death of sin to the life of grace he is made an immortall creature That grace of God which bringeth this life bringeth immortality with it as the Apostle puts them together 2 Tim. 2.10 The believer dieth no more As for the death of nature it is not worth the name of death to him being only an entrance and passage into life and the poison and bitternesse of it being taken away As for those true and terrible deaths spirituall death the death of the soule eternall death the death both of soul and body these the believer is no more subject to Or though subject to them as in himself he is yet he shall be so kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation as he shall never actually come under the power of them He that will make a believer being once risen with Christ raised from the grave of sin subject to die again subject to fall away from the grace of God totally and finally and so to be brought under the power of the second death may as well make Christ subject to death after his Resurrection Christ being risen from the dead he dieth no more All the men and divels in the world could not drag him to the grave again being once risen from it The soul that is once risen with Christ quickned by his Spirit it is not all the power of hell that can bring it to the grave of sin again that can bring it under the power of a spirituall and eternall death Herein the Christian 's first Resurrection his soul-Resurrection answers the bodily Resurrection of Jesus Christ He is raised as Christ was in the generall to a new life in the particular to a spirituall to an immortall life Generall 2. The believer raised to the glory of God his Father And thus also is he raised as Christ was To the Glory of God the Fahter There is the second Generall Thus was Christ raised To the Glory of his Father and that both actively and passively Actively to the glorifying of him Thus was Christ raised 1. Actively to glorifie him Passively to be glorified with him 1. To glorifie him Father glorifie thy Son that thy Son also may glorifie thee So our Saviour begins his prayer John 17.1 This Jesus
of our Saviour Mat. 22.30 In the Resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage but are as the Angels of God in heaven Not standing in need of any natural much lesse carnal comforts or contentments such as the flesh was here delighted in In which respect also the body may be said then to be a spiritual body in as much as it shall then be freed from all carnal desires being wholly subject to and ruled by the Spirit Thus shall Believers be raised to a spirituall life 3. A glorious life 3. And that in the third place a glorious life Such was the life of Jesus Christ to which he was raised A Praeludium whereof he shewed unto some of his Disciples in that his Transfiguration upon the Mount Mat. 17.2 He was transfigured before them saith the Text and his face did shine as the sun and his raiment white was as the light A dark Representation of that transcendent light of glory whereinto he was to enter and whereof he was to be swallowed up after his Resurrection Ought not Christ to suffer these things and so to enter into his glory saith he to his Disciples Luke 24.26 This he did upon his Ascension into heaven From thenceforth he enjoyed a glorious life even his body being made a glorious body as the Apostle calls it Phil. 3.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a body of glory Such was his Resurrection And herein shall the Believer's Resurrection answer his It shall be a Resurrection unto Glory It is sown in dishonour it is raised in glory saith the Apostle of the body of a believer 1 Cor. 15.43 To which that of the same Apostle answers Phil. 3. last He shall change our vile bodie that it may be like unto his glorious body The bodies of God's Saints whilest they live are vile bodies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bodies of abasement vilenesse as the Originall there hath it subject to manifold infirmities diseases some of which are so loathsome as may well denominate them vile bodies much more when they are dead The soul being departed which was as salt to them whilest it dwelt in them now they become putrifying stinking carcasses fit for nothing but to be removed out of sight Thus are they sown in dishonour buried out of sight that they may not be noisome and offensive to the living But they shall be raised in glory glorious bodies made in their measure conformable to the glorious body of Jesus Christ partaking with him in the same glory the same for kind though not for degree A representation hereof we see in Moses who having been with God for a time in the Mount he came down with his face shining Exod. 34.30 Behold the skin of his face shone By the reflex of the divine Glory which he there beheld his face became glorious as the Greek there translates it and the Apostle alledgeth it 2 Cor. 3.7 Even so shall the bodies of God's Saints when they shall come to stand in the presence of their glorified Saviour beholding his glory which they shall do Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory which thou hast given me John 17.24 they shall be transformed into it We know that when he shall appear we shall be like him saith Saint John for we shall see him as he is 1 John 3.2 Like him in glory When Christ who is our life shal appear then shal we also appear with him in glory Col. 3.4 4. An Eternal life 4. Lastly This life being a glorious life it shall also be an eternall life Such was the life of Jesus Christ as I shewed you Christ being risen from the dead dieth no more And such shall the Resurrection of all that are Christs be This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality 1 Cor. 15.53 As the death of the wicked to which they shall be raised shall be eternall Their worm dieth not and their fire goeth not out Mar. 9.44 So shall the life of the righteous These shall go into everlasting punishment but the righteous into life eternall Mat. 25. last In this respect also they are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like unto or equall to the Angels Luke 20.35 36. They which shal be accounted worthy to obtain this world and the Resurrection from the dead viz. this Resurrection of life They neither marry nor are given in marriage there is no need of generation in heaven where there is no corruption neither can they die any more for they are equal unto the Angels and are the children of God being the children of the Resurrection viz. of this blessed Resurrection the Resurrection of the just which carrieth with it a resemblance of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ And thus I have dispatched the Doctrinal Part of this first Proposition here held forth unto us viz. That Believers are and shall be made conformable to Christ in his Resurrection They are so here in their first they shall be hereafter in the second Resurrection And this Conformity of theirs floweth from Christ and his resurrection Propos 2. This Conformity floweth from Christ and his Resurrection There is the secon Proposition which I shall dispatch with all possible brevity and so come to the Application of both together The Beleevers conformity to Christ in his resurrection floweth from Christ and his resurrection So much is insinuated in the phrase in the Text as I shewed you To be Ingrafted with Christ in the likenesse of his resurrection is to be made partaker of such a resurrection as resembles his and that by a vertue flowing from him and his resurrection Thus doth the Graft revive with the Stock in the Spring time and that by a vertue which it receiveth from the Stock And thus is the Christian raised by a vertue flowing from Christ into whom hee is ingraffed Christ himself being the principal Efficient cause of this resurrection That he is so wee shall need no other testimony then that of his own John 11.25 Christ the principal Efficient of this resurrection in the believer I am the Resurrection and the Life that is the author and worker of the resurrection so he is both of the first and second resurrection The Author both of spirituall and eternall life to the Beleever In him was life saith St John speaking of Christ Joh. 1.4 It was so and is so and that originally as water in the fountain Thus was natural life in the Father thus is spiritual and eternal life in the Son As the Father hath life in himself so he hath given to the Son to have life in himself John 5.26 God the Father being himself the originall and beginning of natural subsistencie and life in all the creatures be hath given to his Son Christ as Mediator that he should be the Author of spirituall and eternal life to all that are given to
part to make use of in the working of this first Resurrection Not that hee is tyed to an uniformity in his way of working alwaies to work after the same manner No his dispensations as in other of his works so in this are various But ordinarily so it is Before dead soules arise and come out of the grave of sin there is a shaking and an Earthquake and a rending of the Rocks God prepares the hearts of his people for this blessed work by some degree of a Legall contrition and compunction giving the soul to feel somewhat of the spirit of Bondage letting into it some sense and apprehension of sin and the wrath of God due unto sin After this cometh the still voice In the Gospel As it was in Eliahs vision at Mount Horeb 1 Kin. 19.11 12. After the whirlewind and the Earthquake and the fire came the still small voyce Thus fareth it ordinarily in the work of Conversion After the Whirlewind and the Earthquake and the fire of the Law cometh the still voyce of the Gospell quieting the soul with the offers of grace and mercy letting into it some comfortable apprehension of Reconciliation with God through Christ withall exciting it to lay hold upon that mercy and to indeavour to walk answerably to it in newnesse of life Now have we heard this voice of the Son of God Have we heard Christ thus speaking to our souls making his word effectuall unto us in this way If so here is an hopefull evidence that this blessed change is begun and that we have a part in this first Resurrection Whereas otherwise are we strangers to this voice never felt any such power in the word We may justly conclude our selves strangers to this blessed work surely we are as yet in our graves under the power of a spirituall death Enquiry 2. Have we received the spirit of Christ 2. Let a second enquiry be Have we received the spirit of Christ we know by what meanes it is that the dead body is raised by putting a spirit into it Thus we read of Jairus his daughter Luk. 8.55 After that Christ had called upon her saying Maid arise her spirit came again saith the Text and shee arose straightway By a like meanes doth Jeses Christ effect this Resurrection of the soule by putting his spirit into it By this meanes was his own Body raised Hee was put to death in the flesh but quickned by the spirit 1 Pet. 3.18 viz. that divine and eternall spirit which dwelt in his humane nature And by the same meanes are dead soules quickned By this means were those dry bones made to live again Ezek. 37.5 Behold saith the Lord I will cause breath to enter into you and you shall live Now what were those dry bones and what was this Breath you may see the Interpretation of both in the sequels These bones are the whole house of Israel ver 11. And yee shall know that I am the Lord when I have opened your graves O my people and brought you up out of your graves and shall put my spirit in you and yee shall live ver 13 14. This is the Breath put into these dry bones even the spirit of God put upon his people being then in Babylon causing them to live again restoring them to a flourishing condition By the same meanes doth Christ cause dead soules being Captives unto sin to live by putting his Spirit into them Hence is it that he is called a Quickning spirit 1 Corin. 15.45 Because by this meanes hee shal quicken the dead Bodies of his Saints at the last day Hee shall quicken your mortall Bodies by his spirit which dwelleth in you Rom. 8.11 And by the same meanes hee now quickneth dead soules by communicating his Spirit unto them Which in this respect the Apostle calleth The Spirit of life Rom. 8.2 Now then have we received this Spirit It was Pauls question to those new Converts Act. 19.2 Have ye received the Holy Ghost This he spake concerning the Extraordinary gifts of the Spirit which flourished in the Church at that time Let me propound the same question in a more ordinary sense Have we received the Holy Ghost Have we received the Spirit of Christ As it was Pauls question to his Galatians Gal. 3.2 Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of faith Taking it for granted that they had received the Spirit And so have all those who have any true union with Jesus Christ If any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Now have wee received this spirit by the hearing of faith Have we so heard the voice of Christ in the doctrine of faith the Gospell as that wee have received the spirit of Christ If so questionlesse this Spirit will have the same operation and effect in our soules that it had in the Body of Christ As it raised up the one so it will raise up the other Whereas otherwise being voyd and destitute of this Spirit of Christ we may like dreaming men fancy and imagine our selves to be risen but we are yet in the grave This Quickning spirit how discerned Question But the Question here will run on How shall we know whether we have received this Quickning Spirit or no. A Question that will be very usefull in the resolution of it The rather because there are so many who pretend to this spirit never more then at this day who yet are meere strangers to it By the fruits and effects of it Answer For your satisfaction know that this Quickning spirit where it is discovers it selfe by the fruits and effects of it Of these fruits and effects I might name many I shall only single out three of the Principall which will be properly usefull to our present purpose This Quickning Spirit where it dwelleth in the soul Which in working this Resurrection are three it is to it a Spirit of Illumination a Spirit of Faith a Spirit of sanctification A threefold work whereby the Spirit effecteth this first Resurrection in the soul being to it first a Spirit of Illumination secondly of Faith thirdly Of Holinesse 1. A Spirit of Illumination 1. It is a Spirit of Illumination Here is the beginning of this work it beginneth in Light Even as in the first Creation the first born of Gods works was Light God said Let there be Light Gen. 1.3 So is it in this new Creation the first work is Light The Light shineth in darknesse John 1.4 a new light shining into the soul of man which since the fall is become a dungeon of darkenesse As it was with Peter when God sent his Angell to fetch him out of Prison Acts 12.7 he caused a light to shine in the prison So is it with dead souls when God sendeth his Angells his Ministers to fetch them out of the prison the dungeon of the grave he causeth a light to shine forth unto them
in all unregenerate persons commanding evill actions as it were with authority putting the sinner upon them inclining and after a sort forcing him to the committing of sin Rom. 7.23 The law of sin which is in my members Now have we received a law contrary to this a law of holinesse having the clean contrary effects commanding with authority that which is holy and good putting us upon it carrying the soul with a strong impulsion towards it turning the bent of the heart that way so as that we can say with the Apostle that with or inward man we delight in the law of God Rom. 7.22 that with our mind we serve the law of God ver 25. If so surely this is no other but that law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus as the same Apostle calleth it Rom. 8.2 The law of this quickning spirit communicated from Christ as from the Head unto his members quickning and raising them up unto this spirituall life Whereas otherwise are we still under the law of sin certainly we are also under the power of death So much the Apostle insinuates in the next words where he puts these together the law of sin and death He that is freed from the one is freed from the other But he that is under the power of the one under the power of sin is also under the power of the other under the power of death Thus have you a second evidence whereby we may all of us judge of our selves whether we be engrafted with Christ in the likenesse of his Resurrection viz. Have we received the Spirit of Christ a Spirit of Illumination Faith Sanctification Take a third Do we live the life of Christ Enquiry 3. Do we live the life of Christ This do all that are raised with Christ they are in their measure made conformable to him in his life In their lives expressing his vertues Ye are a chosen generation c. saith Saint Peter speaking to believers that ye should shew forth the vertues of him who hath called you out of darknesse into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 This do those who are raised with Christ they shew forth the vertues of Christ Shewing forth his vertues by way of imitation that is as some expound it and that not improperly they do in their lives and conversations expresse those graces and vertues which were so eminent and exemplary in him They not onely have them but they hold them forth They do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word properly signifieth praedicare to preach So clearly do they expresse the vertues of Christ as that their lives are as so many Sermons upon the life of Christ each a counterpane to that Originall This do all who are risen with Christ they propound Christ as a pattern for their imitation practising his vertues to the life Quest What vertues Imitable vertues in Christ Ans The imitable vertues in Christ were many I shall instance in some of the chief and those I shall but touch His Inoffensivenesse Meeknesse Patience Humility Obedience Love Mercy Contempt of the world Heavenly-mindednesse All these were eminent in the life of Christ and all these doth the true believer that is risen with Christ shew forth in his life and conversation 1. Inoffensivenesse 1. Walking inoffensively So did our blessed Saviour In his whole course he was inoffensive harmlesse He did no sin neither was their guile found in his mouth 1 Pet. 2.22 He was holy harmlesse undefiled Heb. 7.26 In which respect he is so often called by the name of that most innocent of creatures The Lamb of God John 1.29 c. And this vertue they which are risen with Christ do expresse being also innocent harmlesse Harmlesse as Doves Mat. 10.16 Inoffensive Herein do I exercise my selfe to have always a conscience void of offence towards God and towards men saith Paul Acts 24.16 True it is the world takes offence at them and so it did at Jesus Christ but their desire and care is not to give any just offence 2. Meeknesse 2. They imitate Christ in his Meeknesse a vertue eminent in him He cometh unto thee meek It is spoken of Sion's King Mat. 21.5 I beseech you by the meeknesse and gentlenesse of Christ saith Paul 2 Cor. 10.2 In this respect also he is compared to the Lamb He was led as a lamb to the slaughter c. Isai 58. And this vertue the true Christian in his measure expresseth He is one of the meek of the earth Zeph. 2.3 One that sheweth out of a good conversation his works with meeknesse of wisdom Jam. 3.13 One that endeavoureth to restrain and bridle the passions of his heart not casting the reins upon their necks suffering them in a customary way to break forth in an inordinate manner One that in the purpose of his heart layeth aside wrath anger malice 1 Pet. 2.1 One that is gentle and easie to be intreated ready to forgive and forget injuries all which were eminent in Jesus Christ 3. In Patience 3. Patience In this respect also was Christ a lamb a sheep His patience in sufferings was most exemplary He was led as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep that is dumb before the shearer so opened he not his mouth Isai 53. When he was reviled he reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not c. 1 Pet. 2.23 And herein the true Christian carries some resemblance of him He is one that in patience possesseth his soul Luke 21.19 Exercising this grace in all changes of conditions Tribulation in him worketh patience Rom. 5.3 Here is the patience of Saints Rev. 13.10 14.12 They are companions in the patience of Jesus Christ Revel 1.9 4. Humility 4. Humility A vertue also most eminent in Christ Learn of me for I am meek and lowly Mat. 11.29 However being in the form of God he thought it no robbery to be equall with God without any usurpation he might have challenged an equality with God his Father being co-essentiall and co-equall with him in respect of his divine nature yet he made himselfe of no reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant He humbled himselfe c. Phil. 2.6 7. And herein doth the true Christian resemble him being one of a contrite and humble spirit Isai 57.15 One that humbleth himselfe in the sight of God Jam. 4.16 Not doing what he doth through vain glory but in lowlinesse of mind preferring others before himselfe Phil. 2.3 This did Jesus Christ and this those which are risen with Christ at least desire to do 5. Obedience 5. Obedience Hereof was Christ the great Exemplar and Pattern He humbled himself and became obedient even to the death c. Phil. 2.7 He sought not his own will but the will of him that sent him John 5.30 6.38 the will of his Father This he did and this he suffered both out of a principle of voluntary obedience And
vertue knowledge to knowledge temperance to temperance patience to patience godlinesse c as the same Apostle directs 2 Pet. 1.5 6. That so you may come behind in no grace no gift as Paul saith of his Corinthians 1 Cor. 1.7 Then adding one degree of grace to another faith to faith The righteousnesse of God saith the Apostle is revealed from faith to faith Rom. 1.17 that is from one degree and measure of faith to another According as faith is revealed more and more so is the Righteousnesse of Justification more assured unto the soul Labour to get your faith which is the radicall grace the very heart of this new-man confirmed and strengthened daily not neglecting such means as God hath appointed for that end amongst which the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper whereof some of you have this day been made partakers is a chief and principall one Then seek after the like growth and increase in love in humility in patience so in all other graces These are the members of this new man let it be your care that as it is in true Augmentatation which is secundùm omnes partes a proportionable growth in every part every of these may grow and increase with the increase of God Thus do you perfect holinesse in the feare of God as the Apostle exhorts 2 Cor 7.1 Being thus changed into the Image of Christ from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord as you have it v. last of the 3d. chap. of that Epistle 5. In respect of heavenli-mindedness 5. And lastly Rise more and more in respect of Heavenlimindednesse Your hearts are like ponderous bodies still tending downwards towards the Earth And therefore let it bee your daily worke to raise and scrue them upwards by frequent Meditation and Contemplation of Heaven and Heavenly things and in particular of that heavenly Glory to which Christ is raised Beholding as in a glasse the glory of the Lord saith the Apostle in the place last named 2 Corin. 3. last which Grotius expounds of the Glory of Christ in his Kingdome of Glory This Behold as in a glasse that is saith hee seriously and attentively cosider and contemplate it With all labouring to raise your Affections thither If yee bee risen with Christ c. Set your Affections on things which are above and not on things on the earth Col. 3.1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Minde things above and let them have your Hearts your Affections As for the things of this world labour daily to sit more loose to them that so you may bee willing to part with them when ever God shall be pleased to call you hence Thus being Risen yet rise daily more and more Which that you may do still seeke after a further and more intimate Vnion and Communion with the Lord Jesus Christ Still seeking after a more intimate union and full communion with Jesus Christ by whose spirit it is that you are and must be raised That you may more and more participate of that vertue which is in him Paul had no small share in this vertue yet hee desireth that he might still have further experience of it That I may know him and the vertue of his Resurrection Philip. 3.10 Let the same be your desire and indeavour that you may daily feele this divine vertue put forth in you more and more raising you up more and more from the death of sin to the Life of grace here Then rest assured the same vertue shall at the last day raise you up from the death of nature to the Life of Glory Being here made conformable unto Christ in your first Resurrection you shall be also in the second which shall be to you a Resurrection of life And thus I have at the length through the good hand of God leading and conducting me passed thorough this excellent portion of Scripture wherein you have held forth unto you that great Gospel Mystery of the Christians Vnion and Communion with and conformity to Jesus Christ both in his death and Resurrection The sweetnesse of the subject hath drawn forth my meditations beyond the staple which I first intended them May but my labours herein prove acceptable and profitable unto you I have what I aimed at Which that they may be let us Pray FINIS