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A29699 Paradice opened, or, The secreets, mysteries, and rarities of divine love, of infinite wisdom, and of wonderful counsel laid open to publick view also, the covenant of grace, and the high and glorious transactions of the Father and the Son in the covenant of redemption opened and improved at large, with the resolution of divers important questions and cases concerning both covenants ... : being the second and last part of The golden key / by Thomas Brooks ...; Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2 Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing B4953; ESTC R11759 249,733 284

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father and the son and all your days to admire at the love of the father and the son who have from eternity by compact and agreement secured your souls and your everlasting concernments But The Sixth Proposition is this That God the father had the first and chief hand in this great work of saving sinners by vertue of this Covenant of Redemption wherein Heb. 2. 10. he and his son had agreed to bring many sons to glory Weak Christians many times have their thoughts and apprehensions more busied and taken up with the love of the son than with the love of the father but they must remember that in the great and glorious work of Redemption God the father had a great hand an eminent hand yea the first and chief hand God the father first laid the foundation stone of all our happiness and blessedness his head and heart was first taken up about that heaven-born project the salvation of sinners Isa 28. 16. Therefore thus saith the Lord God behold I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone a tried stone a precious corner stone a sure foundation Heb. I am he that foundeth a stone in Zion It is God the father that hath long since laid Christ as a sure foundation for all his people to build their hopes of happiness upon it is he that first laid Christ the true corner-stone Rom. 9. 33. 1 Pet. 2. 6. Isa 53. 10. whereby Zion is for ever secured against death hell and wrath Hence 't is said the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand that is God's Eternal Decree about the work of our Redemption and salvation shall be powerfully faithfully and compleatly executed by Jesus Christ who by his word and spirit shall communicate unto all his Elect the fruit of his death to life and salvation Jeb 23. 24. This is a full place against all Socini●ans who boldly allert that God removes the curse of the Law by a free and absolute pardon without satisfaction Grotius's Exposition on the place is but flat and dull When God saith I have 〈◊〉 a ransom we are to understand it of a real Ransom of full pay or satisfaction and not of a Ransom by favour and acceptation Again Deliver me from going down into the pit for I have found a ransom The Hebrew word signifies a price paid to redeem a man's life or liberty I have found a ransom or an atonement a cover for man's sin Angels and men could never have found a ransom but by my deep infinite and unsearchable wisdom saith God the father I have found a Ransom I have found out a way a means for the redeeming of mankind from going down to the infernal pit viz. the death and passion of my dearest son But where O blessed God didst thou find a Ransom not in Angels not in men not in Legal Sacrifices not in Gold or Silver not in tears humblings and meltings of my people but in my own bosom That Jesus that son of my love who has layen in my bosom from all Eternity Joh. 1. 18. he is that Ransom that by my own matchless wisdom and singular goodness I have found I have not called a Council to enquire where to find a Ransom that fallen man might be preserved from falling into the fatal pit of destruction but I have found a ransom in my own heart my own breasts my own bosom without advising or consulting with others I have found out a way how to save sinners with a salvo to my honour justice holiness and truth Had all the Angels in heaven from the first day of their creation to this very day sat in serious Council to invent contrive or find out a way a means whereby lost man might be secured against the curse of the Law hell condemnation and wrath to come and whereby he might have been made happy and blessed for ever and all this without the least wrong or prejudice to the justice and righteousness of God they could never have found out any way or means to have effected those great things Our Redemption by a Ransom is God's own invention and God's only invention The blessed Ransom which the Lord has found out for poor sinners is the blood of his own dearest son a ransom which never entred into the thoughts or hearts of Angels and men till God had reveiled it which is called the blood of the Covenant because thereby the Covenant is confirmed and all Covenant-mercies assured to us Joh. 3. 16. Again God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son Here is a sic without a sicut that sic so signifies the firstness of the father's love the freeness of the father's love 1 Joh. 3. 19. Hos 14. 4. and the vehemency of the father's love and the admirableness of the father's love and the matchlesness of the father's love O! what manner of love is this for God to give his son not his servant his begotten son not his adopted son his only son and not one son of many his only son by eternal generation and communication of the same Essence to be a Ransom and Mediator for sinners God the father loving lost man sent his son to suffer and to do the office of a Mediator that through his mediation he might communicate the effects of his love in a way agreeable to his justice for God loved the world and that antecedently to his giving Christ and as a cause of it The design the project of saving sinners was first contrived and laid by God the father therefore Christ says The son can do nothing of himself but what he sees the father do God the father sent his son and God the father sealed his son a commission to give life to lost sinners Him hath God the father sealed that is made his Commission authentical as men do their Deeds by their seals It is a Metaphor taken from them who ratifie their authority whom they send that is approve of them as it were by setting to their seal Christ is to be acknowledged to be he whom the father hath authorized and furnished to be the Saviour and Redeemer of lost sinners and the store-house from whence they are to expect all spiritual supplies Look as Kings give sealed Warrants and Commissions to their ministers of State who are sent 1 King 21 8. Est● 3. 12. cap. 8. 8. out or employed in great affairs So Christ is the father's great Ambassadour authorized and sent out by him to bring about the Redemption and Salvation of lost man And look as a seal represents in wax that which is engraven on it so the father hath communicated to him his divine essence and properties and stamped upon him all divine perfection for carrying on the work of Redemption And look as a seal annexed to a Commission is a publick evidence of the person's authority so Christ's endowments are visible marks whereby to know him and clear evidences that
applicable to the person of Christ He that by his office is to be Emmanuel God with us he must in regard of his person be Emanuel also that is God-man in one person He that by office is to make peace between God and man he must be God-man he that by office is to stand and minister between God and men he must be God and Heb. 2. 17 18. cap. 4. 15 16. man that so he might not be only zealously faithful towards God's justice but also tenderly merciful towards men's errours Look as he must be more than man that he may be able so to suffer that his sufferings may be meritorious that he may go through-stitch with the work of Redemption and triumph over death Devils difficulties discouragements curse hell wrath c. All which Christ could never have done had he been but a mere man So it was requisite that he should be man that he might be in a capacity to suffer die and obey for these are not works for one who is only God A God only cannot suffer a man only cannot merit God cannot obey man is bound to obey wherefore Christ that he might obey and suffer he was man and that he might merit by his obedience and suffering he was God-man now such a person and only such a person did the work of Redemption call for That is a mighty Scripture Phil. 2. 6 7. Who being in the form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God here 's Christ's pre-existing in the nature of the Godhead and then after comes his manhood But made hi●self of no reputation Greek he emptied Isa 53. 6. 9. himself as it were of his divine dignity and majesty he did disrobe himself of his glory and became a sinner both by imputation and reputation for our sakes for our salvation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the likeness of men All this Christ did upon his father's prescription and in pursuit of the great work of Redemption The blessed spirit fitted the man Christ Jesus to be a meet Mediatour and Redeemer for poor sinners The spirit formed the nature of man Luk. 1. 35. Gal. 4. 4. of the substance of the Virgin after an extraordinary manner for the service of the Lord Christ he sanctined the humane nature which Christ assumed after such a perfect manner that it was free from all sin in the very Luk. 1. 35. moment of conception he united this pure humane nature with the divine in the same person the person of the Heb. 10. 5. son of God that he might be a fit head Mediatour and Redeemer for us But The Eighth Proposition is this viz. That there were commandments from the father to the son which he must obey and submit to God the father did put forth his paternal authority and lay his commands upon his son to engage in this great work of redeeming and saving poor sinners souls he had a command from the father what to teach his people as the Prophet of the Church For I have not spoken of my self saith Christ but the father which sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and Joh. 12. 49. what I should speak Christ declares that he had received a Commission from the father who sent him concerning his Doctrine and what to say and speak and that he was perswaded that this Doctrine delivered to him by the father points out the true way to eternal life and that he had exactly followed this Commission in preaching both for matter and mannor The two words of saying Between saying and speaking there is this difference saith à Lapide that to say is to teach and publish a thing gravely to speak is familiararly to utter a thing and speaking may be taken comprehensively pointing out all the ways of delivering his commission by set and solemn preaching or occasional conferences and the whole subject matter of his preaching in precepts promises and threatnings and so it will 〈…〉 port that his commission from the father was full both for matter and manner and his discharge thereof answerable Christ is a true Prophet who speaks neither more or less in the Doctrine of the Gospel than what was the father's will should be delivered to us For whatsoever I speak even as the father said unto me so I speak Christ keeps close to his Commission without adding or diminishing and herein Christ's practice should be every faithful minister's pattern● Again Christ had a command to lay down his life for those that were giu 〈…〉 No man taketh it from Jo● 1● 18. me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again this commundment have I received of my father The father is so well pleased with the reconciliation of lost sinners that he loveth Christ for the undertaking thereof and is fully satisfied with his suffering for attaining that end in both these respects it holds good Therefore doth my father love me because I lay down my life vers 17. The father is pleased with him that he undertook this service and is content with his death as a sufficient ransom Christ having laid down his life for the Redemption of lost man did take it again as a testimony that the father was satisfied with his sufferings Now the way of the accomplishment of our Redemption was agreed on betwixt the father and the son before the accomplishment thereof Therefore saith he this commandment have I received of my father which Psal 40. 6 7. with Heb. 10. 6 7 8. makes it clear that he came into the world fully instructed about carrying on the work of Redemption It pleased Christ to suffer death not only voluntarily but in a way of subjection to his father's command that so the merit thereof might every way be full and acceptable to the father for this commandment have I received he was content to be a servant by paction that so his sufferings might be accepted for his people And so when Christ was going to die he saith That the world may know that I love the Joh. 14. 31. father and as the father gave me commandment even so I do arise let us go hence As if he had said power is permitted to Satan and his accomplices to persecute me to death that dying for man's Redemption the world may see the obedience and love I bear to the father who hath thus determined All that Christ suffered for the Redemption of sinners was by the order and at the command of the father who did covenant with him concerning this work For as the father gave me a commandment even so do I In this Scripture as in a crystal-glass you may see that Christ did enter the lists in his sufferings with much willingness and alacrity with much courage and resolution that so he might commend his love to us and encourage
said he Bishop Ridley as the breath is in my body I will never deny my Lord Christ and his known Truth Another used such a speech to one that advised Father Latimer him to spare himself as Christ did to Peter on the like occasion Get thee behind me Satan There are a world of other Instances of the like nature but enough is as good as a Feast By all these Instances you may see that Blessed Word verified They loved not their lives unto the death They were willing to Rev. 12. 11. lay down their lives for the Glory of Christ and for the Truth of Christ So that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They loved not is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they neglected or contemned their life as Brightman hath well observed They slighted yea despised their lives and rather exposed them to hazard and loss than to deny Christ or their holy Profession It is a Paraphrase of the constancy of their Faith even unto Martyrdom for the name of Christ But Tenthly Consider That God puts a great deal of honour Phil. 1. 29. upon suffering Saints To suffer for Christ is honourable God will not put this honour upon every one he puts this honour only upon those that are Vessels of Honour by Grace God makes men 2 Tim. 2. 20 21. Vessels of Silver and Vessels of Gold and then casts them into the fire to melt and suffer for his name and a higher Glory he cannot put upon them on this side Glory The Crown of Martyrdom is a Crown that the Blessed Angels those Princes of Glory are not capable of winning or wearing And O who art thou and what art thou O man that God should set this Crown upon thy head Mark at what a rate Peter speaks If ye ●e reproached 1 Pet. 4. 1 〈…〉 for the name of Christ happy are ye for the spirit of ●lory and of God resteth upon you on their part he is evil spoken of but on your part he i● glorified The very suffering condition of the people of God is at the present a glorious condition For the spirit of Glory rests upon them and therefore they must needs be glorious yea very glorious upon whom the spirit of Glory falls Rom. 8. 9 11. Dan. 3. and in whom the Spirit of Glory dwells What a Glorious Mold and Mettal were the three Children made up of that were cast into the fiery Furnace and what a deal of honour and glory did God put upon them in the eyes of all the world The Apostles all along accounted their own sufferings and the sufferings of the Saints for Christ to be the highest honour and glory that God could put upon them in this world as will be evident by our comparing Heb. 11. 36 37 38 2 Cor. 11. 23 to 28 Heb. 10. 32 to 26. the Scriptures in the Margin together To suffer for Christ is the greatest honour and promotion that God gives in this world said old Father Latimer and therefore when sentence was pronounced against him he cryed out I thank God most heartily for this great honour So Saunders I am the unmeetest man for Act. and M●n 1361. Ibid. 1744. this high Office that ever was appointed to it So Careless the Martyr this is such an honour said he as the greatest Angel in Heaven is not permitted to have God forgive me mine unthankfulness c. John N●y●s took up a Faggot at the fire and kissed John N●y●s it Saying Blessed be the time that ever I was born to come to this preferment So when they had fastned Alice Driver with a Alice Driver chain to the stake to be burnt Never said she did Neck-kerchief become me so well as this Chain So Balilus the Martyr when Balilus he was to die requested this favour of his Persecutors 〈◊〉 That he might have his chains b 〈…〉 ed with him as the Ensigns of his honour What are we poor worms full of vanities and lies Calvin said Calvin that we should be called to be maintainers of the Truth for Su●●erings for Christ are the Ensigns of Heavenly Nobility To die for Christ is the greatest promotion that God Philpot. can bring any in this Vale of Misery unto said Mr. Philpot the Martyr A French Soldier for his zealous Profession of the reformed Thuan. Hist l. 11. Anno 1553. Religion was condemned to the fire with others only he should have the favour of going to the St●ke without a Wyth but he desired that he might wear such a Chain as his fellows did esteeming this rebuke of Christ more glorious than the Ensigns of St Michael's Order 'T was an excellent saying of Prudentius Prudentius Their names saith he that are written in red letters of Blood in the Churches Calendar are written in Golden Letters in Christ's Register the Book of Life The Passion-days of the Martyrs were anciently called the Natalitia salutis the Birth-days of Salvation the Day-break of Eternal Brightness We count it a great honour Isa 9 6 7. Dan. 3. 24 25. Isa 43. 2. cap. 63. 9. to have Princes to be our Companions Christ the Prince of Peace and the Angels those Princes of Glory are our Companions in all our Sufferings Such is the honour that God puts upon his Suffering Saints that nothing shall hinder him from being their Companion in all their Sufferings in all their afflictions in all their Temptations and this believe it is no small honour I have read how that in the Primitive times when some Euseb Eccles Hist l. 5. good people came to comfort some of the Martyrs that were in Prison and ready to suffer they called them blessed Martyrs O no said they we are not worthy of the name of Martyrs These holy humble hearts thought Martyrdom too high an honour for them And Luther writing to those which were condemned to death saith the Lord will not do me that honour after all that bustle I have made in the world In the Primitive times they were wont to call Martyrdom by the name of Corona Martyrii the Crown of Martyrdom We read of a Woman-martyr who having her Child in her hand gave it to another and offered her self to Martyrdom Crowns said she are to be dealt out this day and I mean to have one You see what high and honourable thoughts the Saints had of their Sufferings in those days and O that all suffering Saints would labour to write after that noble Copy that they have left upon Record But Eleventhly Consider that suffering Saints do put a great deal of Honour and Glory upon God Christ Religion and upon God's Truth Worship and Ways What a spreading Fame and Glory of God did the Sufferings of the three Worthies scatter all the world over God is acknowledged and adored by Nebuchadnezzar a Decree is made That Every People Nation and Language Dan. 3. 28 29. which speak amiss against the God of
that the many weaknesses that hang upon you and the decays of Nature that dayly do attend you seem to point out an approaching dissolution I shall at this time give you this one word of Counsel viz. That every day you would look upon Death in a Scripture-glass in a Scripture-dress or under a Scripture-notion That is First Look upon death as that which is best for a believer Phil. 1. 23. For I am in a strait betwixt two having 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 N●c Christus nec caelum patitur hyperbolen saith one here it is h●rd to hyperbolice a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better The Greek is very significant far far the better or far much better or much more better 't is a most transcendent expression Eccles 7. 1. Better is the day of death than the day of ones birth A Saint's dying day is the day-break of Eternal Righteousness In respect of pleasure peace safety company glory a Believer's dying day is his best day I have read of one Trophonius that when he had built and dedicated that stately Temple at Delphos he asked of Apollo for his recompence that thing which was best for man The Oracle wished him to go home and within three days he should have it and within that time he died It was an excellent saying of one of the Ancients That is not a death but life which joyns the dying man to Christ and that is not a life but death which separates a living man from Christ But Secondly Look upon Death as a remedy as a cure Death will perfectly cure you of all corporal and spiritual Vltimus morborum medicus mors diseases at once the crazy body and the defiled soul the aking head and the unbelieving heart Death will cure you of all your ails aches diseases and distempers At Stratford-bow in Queen Mary's days there was burnt Act. and Mon. Fol. 1733. a lame man and a blind man at one stake the lame man after he was chained casting away his crutch bad the blind man be of good comfort for death saith he will cure us both thee of thy blindness and me of my lameness And as Death will cure all your bodily diseases so it will cure all your soul distempers also Death is not Mors hominis but Mors peccati not the death of the man but the death of his sin Death will work such a cure as all your Duties Graces Experiences Ordinances Assurances could never do for it will at once free you fully perfectly and perpetually from all sin yea from all possibility of ever sinning more Sin was the Midwife that Pecc●tum erat obstetrix mortis c. mors sepu●chrum pec a●i Ambrose de bono mortis c. 4 brought death into the World and death shall be the grave to bury sin and why then should a Christian be afraid to die or unwilling to die seeing Death gives him a Writ of ease from infirmities and weaknesses from all aches and pains griefs and gripings distempers and diseases both of body and soul When Sampson died the Philistines also died together with him so when a Saint dies his sins die with him Death came in by sin and sin goeth out by death as the worm kills the worm that bred it so death kills sin that bred it But Thirdly Look upon death as a rest a full rest a believer's dying day is his resting day It is a resting day Rev. 14. 13. Job 3. 13 to 17. 2 Thes 1. 7. Micah 2. 10. Jer. 50. 6. from sin sorrow afflictions temptations desertions dissentions vexations oppositions and persecutions This world was never made to be the Saints rest Arise for this is not your resting place they are like Noah's Dove they can rest no where but in the Ark and in the Grave In the grave saith Job the weary are at rest Upon this very ground some of the most refined Heathens have accounted Mortality to be a mercy for they brought their friends into the World with mournful Obsequies but carried them out of the world with all joyful sports and pastimes because then they conceived they were at rest and out of Gun-shot Death brings the Saints to a full-rest to a pleasant rest to a matchless rest to an eternal rest But Fourthly Look upon your dying day as a reaping day Now you shall reap the fruit of all the prayers 2 Cor. 9. 2. Gal. 6. 7 8 9. Isa 38. 3. Mat. 25. 31 to 41. that ever you have made and of all the tears that ever you have shed and of all the sighs and groans that ever you have fetched and of all the good words that ever you have spoke and of all the good works that ever you have done and of all the great things that ever you have suffered When Mortality shall put on Immortality Eccles 11. 1. 6. you shall then reap a plentiful Crop a glorious Crop as the fruit of that good seed that for a time hath seemed to be buried and lost As Christ hath a tender heart and a soft hand so he hath an Iron memory he punctually Mat. 10. 24 25. remembers all the sorrows and all the services and all the sufferings of his people to reward them and crown them Rev. 22. 12. But Fifthly Look upon your dying day as a gainful day there is no gain to that which comes in by death Phil 1. Eccles 7. 1. Phil. 1. 23. 21. For me to live is Christ and to die is gain A Christian gets more by death than he doth by life to be in Christ is very good but to be with Christ is best of all 'T was a mighty blessing for Christ to be with Paul on earth but 't was the top of Blessings for Paul to be with Christ in heaven Seriously consider of a few things First That by death you shall gain incomparable Crowns 1. A Crown of Life Rev. 2. 10. Jam. 1. 12. 2. A Crown of Righteousness 2 Tim. 4. 8. 3. An Incorruptible Crown 1 Cor. 9. 24 25. 4. A Crown of Glory 1 Pet. 5. 4. Now there are no Crowns to these Crowns as I have fully discovered in my discourse on The Divine Presence to which I refer you But Secondly You shall gain a Glorious Kingdom Luk. 12. 32. It is your father's pleasure to give you a Kingdom But death is the young Prophet that anointeth them to it and giveth them actual possession of it They must put off their rags of Mortality that they may put on their robes of Glory Israel must first die in Egypt before he can be carried into Canaan There is no entring into Paradise but under the flaming sword of this Angel Death that standeth at the Gate Death is the dirty Lane through which the Saint passeth to a Kingdom to a great Kingdom to a glorious Kingdom Heb. 12. 28. Dan. 2 44. cap. ● 3. Rev. 19 7. to a quiet Kingdom to an
but two famous Covenants that we must abide by in one of them all men and women in the world must of necessity be found either in the Covenant of grace or in the Covenant of works The Covenant of works is a witness of God's holiness and perfection the Covenant of grace is a witness of God's goodness and commis●ration the Covenant of works is a standing evidence of man's guiltiness the Covenant of grace is the standing evidence of God's righteousness the Covenant of works is the lasting monument of man's impotency and changeableness the Covenant of grace is the everlasting monument of God's omnipotency and immutability Now no man can be under both these Covenants at once if he be under a Covenant of works he is not under a Covenant of grace and if he be under a Covenant of grace he cannot be under a Covenant of works Such as are under a Covenant of works they have the breach of that Covenant to count for they being the S●rpentine brood of a transgressing stock but such as are under a Covenant of grace shall never be tryed by the Law of works because Christ their surety hath fulfilled it for them Acts 13. 38 39. Rom. 8. 2 3 4. Gal. 4. 4 5 6. But let me open my self more fully thus That all unbelievers all Christless graceless persons are under a Covenant of works which they are never able safely to live under should they live and die under a Covenant of works they were surely lost and destroyed for ever for the Covenant of works condemns and curses the sinner Cursed is every one that continueth not in all Gal. 3. 10. things which are written in the book of the law to do them neither hath the sinner any way to escape that curse of the Law nor the wrath of God reveiled against all unrighteousness and ungodlyness but in the Covenant of grace Rom. 1. 18. this Covenant of works the Apostle calls The law of Rom. 3. 27. Gen. 2. 16 17. works This is the Covenant which God made with man in the state of innocency before the fall In this Covenant God promised to Adam for himself and his posterity life and happiness upon the condition of perfect personal and perpetual obedience and it is summed up by the Apostle Do this and live God having created man upright Gal. 3. 12. E●cl●● 7. 29. Gen. 1. 26. 27. after his own image and so having furnished him with all abilities sufficient for obedience thereupon he made a Covenant with him for life upon the condition of obedience I say he made such a Covenant with Adam as a publick person as the head of the Covenant and as he promised life to him and his posterity in case of obedience so he threatned death and a curse unto him and his posterity in case of disobedience In the day thou eatest Gen. 2. 1● Gal. 3. 10. Not only the Covenant of Grace but the Covenant of works also is an et 〈…〉 Co●●nant and therefore the curse of the Covenant remains upon me● unto Eternity There is an eternal obligation upon the creature he being bound to God by an eternal Law and the transgression of that ●aw carries with it an eternal guilt which eternal guilt brings sinners under an eternal curse thereof thou shalt surely die or dying thou shalt die God in this Covenant of works did deal with Adam and his posterity in a way of supremacy and righteousness and therefore there is mention made only of the threatnings In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death And it is further observable that in this Covenant that God made with Adam and his posterity he did promise unto them eternal life and happiness in heaven and not eternal life in this world only as some would have it for Hell was threatned in these words In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death and therefore heaven and happiness salvation and glory was promised on the contrary we must necessarily conclude that the promise was as ample large and full as the threatning was yet this must be remembred that when God did at first enter into Covenant with us and did promise us heaven and salvation it was upon condition of our personal perfect and perpetual obedience and therefore called a Covenant of works Do this and live was not only a Command but a Covenant with a promise of eternal happiness upon perfect and perpetual obedience All that are under a Covenant of works are under the curse of the Covevenant and they are all bound over unto eternal wrath But the Lord Christ has put an end to this Covenant and abolished it unto all that are in him being himself made under it and satisfying the precept and the curse of it and so he did cancel it As a hand-writing against us nailing Col. 2. 14. it unto his cross So that all they that are in Christ are freed from the Law as a Covenant but unto all other men it remains a Covenant still and they remain under the curse of it for ever and the wrath of God abides upon John 3. 36. them Though the Covenant of works as it is a Covenant for life ceaseth unto believers yet it stands in force against all unbelievers Now oh how sad is it for a man to be under a Covenant of works For First The Covenant of works in the nature of it requires perfect personal and perpetual obedience under pain of the curse and death according to that of the Apostle As many as are of the works of the Law are under the Gal. 3. 10. curse presupposing man's fall and consequently his inablility to keep it For it is written cursed is every one that Deut. 27. 26. continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them The Covenant of works therefore affords no mercy to the transgressors of it but inflicts death and curse for the least delinquency For whosoever James 2. 10. shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point he is guilty of all The whole Law is but one copulative He that breaketh one commandment habitually breaketh all A dispensatory conscience keeps not any commandment when the disposition of the heart is qualified to break every command then a man breaks every command in the account of God every one sin contains vertually all sin in it He that dares contemn the Law-giver in any one command he dares contemn the Law-giver in every command He that allows himself in any one known sin in any course way or trade of sin he s●●s himsel● under that curse which is threatned against the transgressors of the Law They that are under this Covenant of works must of necessity perish The case stands thus Adam did break this Covenant and so brought the curse of it both upon himself and all his seed to the end of the world in his sin all men sinned Now if
be deceived That Covenant that is built upon this rock of God's eternal purpose must needs be sure and therefore all that are in covenant with God need never fear falling away there is no man no power no devil no violent temptation that shall ever be able to overturn those that God has brought under the bond of the Covenant Joh. 10. 28 29 30 31. 1 Pet. 1. 5. But Secondly Consider that the Covenant of Grace is confirmed and made sure by the blood of Jesus Christ Heb. 13. 20. Heb. 9. 16 17. The main point which the Apostle intended by setting down the inviolableness of men's last Wills after their death is to prove that Christs death was very requisite for ratifying of the New Testament consult these scriptures Mat. 16. 21. Luk. 24. 26. Heb. 2. 10. cap. 2. 17. which is called the blood of the everlasting Covenant Christ by his irrevocable death hath made sure the Covenant to us The Covenant of Grace is to be considered under the notion of a Testament and Christ as the Testator of this will and testament Now look as a man's will and testament is irrevocably confirmed by the Testator's death For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all whilest the Testator liveth These two verses are added as a proof of the necessity of Christ's manner of confirming the new Testament as he did namely by his death The Argument is taken from the common use and equity of confirming Testaments which is by the death of the Testator A Testament is only and wholly at his pleasure that maketh it so that he may alter it or disanul it while he liveth as he seeth good but when he is dead he not remaining to alter it none else can do it In the seventeenth verse the Apostle declareth the inviolableness of a man's last will being ratified as before by the testator's death This he sheweth two ways 1. Affirmatively in these words A Testament is of force after men are dead 2. Negatively in these words otherwise it is of no strength Now from the affirmative and the negative it plainly appears that a Testament is made inviolable by the Testator's death so Jesus Christ hath unalterably confirmed this Will and Testament viz. The New Covenant by his blood and Heb. 9. 15. death That by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Christ died to purchase an eternal inheritance and on this ground eternal life is called an eternal inheritance for we come to it as heirs through the good will grace and favour of the purchaser thereof manifested by the last Will and Testament Hence you read This is my blood Ma● 26. 28. of the new testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Again This cup is the new testament in my ●uk 22. 20. 1 Cor. 11. 25. blood which is shed for you The Covenant is called both a Covenant and a Testament because his Covenant and Testament is founded established ratified and immutably sealed up in and by his blood Christ is the faithful and true witness yea truth it self his word shall not Rev. 3. 14. Joh. 14. 6. Mark 13. 31. pass away If the word of Christ be sure if his promise be sure if his Covenant be sure then surely his last Will and Testament which is ratified and confirmed by his death must needs be very sure Christ's blood is too precious a thing to be spilt in vain but in vain is it spilt if his Testament his Covenant ratified thereby be altered If the Covenant of Grace be not a sure Covenant then 1 Cor. 1● 14. Christ died in vain and our preaching is in vain and your hearing and receiving and believing is all in vain Christ's death is a declaration and evidence of the eternal counsel of his father which is most stable and immutable in it self but how much more is it so when it is ratified by the death of his dearest son In whom all the promises are yea 2 Cor. 1. 20. and Amen that is in Christ they are made performed and ratified By all this we may safely conclude that the Covenant of Grace is a most sure Covenant there can be no addition to it detraction from it or alteration of it unless the death of Jesus Christ whereby it 's confirmed be frustrated and overthrown Certainly the Covenant is as sure as Christ's death is sure The sureness and certainty of the Covenant is the ground and bottom of bottoms for our faith hope joy patience peace c. take this corner this foundation stone away and all will tumble were the Covenant uncertain a Christian could never have a good day all his days his whole life would be filled up with fears doubts disputes distractions c. and he would be still a crying out Oh! I can never be sure that God will be mine or that Christ will be mine or that mercy will be mine or that pardon of sin will be mine or that heaven will be mine Oh! I can never be sure that I shall escape the great damnation the worm 2 Thes 1. 9. that never dies the fire that never goes out or an eternal separation from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power The great glory of the Covenant is the certainty of the Covenant and this is the top of God's glory and of a Christian's comfort that all the mercies that are in the Covenant of Grace are the sure mercies of David and that all the Grace that is in the Covenant is sure Grace and that all the glory that is in the Covenant is sure glory and that all the external internal and eternal blessings of the Covenant are sure blessings I might further argue the sureness of the Covenant of Grace from all the attributes of God which are deeply engaged to make it good as his wisdom love power justice holiness faithfulness righteousness c. And I might further argue the certainty of the Covenant of Grace from the seals which God hath annexed to it You know what was sealed by the Kings Ring could not be altered God hath set his seals to this Covenant his Est 8. 8. broad seal in the Sacraments and his privy seal in the witness of his spirit and therefore the Covenant of Grace is sure and can never be reversed But upon several accounts I may not now insist on these things And therefore Eighthly and lastly the Covenant of Grace is stiled a well ordered Covenant 2 Sam. 23. 5. He hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure Oh the admirable counsel wisdom love care and tenderness Rom. 11. 33 34 35 3● 1 C●● 2. 7. Eph. 1. 8.
so sealed up to him mercy and peace love and reconciliation with the kisses of his lips And the son said unto him Father I have sinned against heaven and in thy sight Sincerely confess and the mends is made acknowledge but the debt and he will cross the book And am no more worthy to be called thy son Infernus sum domine said that blessed Martyr Lord I am hell but Mr. 〈◊〉 at ●● death 〈◊〉 and Men. 1374. thou art heaven I am soil and a sink of sin but thou art a gracious God c. But the father said to his servants bring forth the best robe and put it on him and put a ring on his hands and shooes on his feet And bring hither the Among the Romans the ring was an ensign of vertue honour especially nobility whereby they were distinguished from the common people fatted calf and kill it and let us eat and be merry Here you have 1. The best Robe 2. The precious ring 3. The comely shooes and 4. The fatted calf The returning Prodigal hath Garments and Ornaments and necessaries and comfortables Some understand by the Robe the Royalty which Adam lost and by the ring they understand the seal of God's holy spirit and by the shooes the preparation of the Gospel of peace and by the fatted Calf they understand Christ who was slain from the beginning Christ is that fatted Calf saith Mr. Tindal the Act. and Mon. Fol. 986. Martyr slain to make penitent sinners good chear withal and his righteousness is the goodly rayment to cover the naked deformities of their sins The great things intended in this Parable is to set forth the riches of grace and God's infinite goodness and the returning sinner's happiness When once the sinner returns in good earnest to God God will supply all his wants and bestow upon him more than ever he lost and set him in a safer and happier estate than that from which he did fall in Adam and will never hit him in the teeth with his former enormities nor never cast in his dish his old wickednesses You see plainly in this Parable that the father of the Prodigal does not so much as mention or object the former pleasures lusts or vanities wherein his Prodigal son had formerly lived all old scores are quit and the returning Prodigal embraced and welcomed as if he had never offended And now O Lord I must humbly take lieve to tell thee further that thou hast confirmed the New Covenant by thy word and by thy oath and by the seals that thou hast annexed to it and by the death of thy Son and therefore thou canst not but make good every tittle word branch and article of it Now this New Covenant is my Plea O holy God and by this Plea I shall stand hereupon God declares this Plea I accept as holy just and good I have nothing to say against thee enter thou into the joy of thy Lord. The Ninth Plea that a Believer may form up as to the Eccles 11. 9. cap. 12. 14. Mat. 12. 14. cap 18. 23. Luk. 16. 2. Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. Heb. 9. 27. ●ap 13. 17. 1 Pet. 4. 5. ten Scriptures that are in the margin that refer to the great day of account or to a man's particular account may be drawn up from the consideration of that Evangelical obedience that God requires and that the believer yields to God There is a legal and there is an evangelical account now the Saints in the great day shall not be put to give up a legal account the account they shall be put to give up is an Evangelical account In the Covenant of works God required perfect obedience in our own persons but in the Covenant of Grace God will be content if there be but uprightness in us if there be but sincere desires to obey if there be faithful endeavours to obey if there be a hearty willingness to obey well saith God though I stood upon perfect obedience in the Covenant 2 Cor. 8. 12. of works yet now I will be satisfied with the will for the deed if there be but uprightness of heart though that be attended with many weaknesses and infirmities yet I will be satisfied and contented with that God under the Covenant of Grace will for Christ's sake accept of less than he requires in the Covenant of works He requires perfection of degrees but he will accept of perfection of parts he requires us to live without sin but he will accept of our sincere endeavours to do it though a believer in his own person cannot perform all that God commands yet Jesus Christ as his surety and in his stead hath fulfilled the Law for him So that Christ's perfect righteousness is a compleat cover for a believer's imperfect righteousness Hence the believer flys from the Covenant of works to the Covenant of Grace from Luk. 1. 5 6. Ma● 28. 20. Act. 24. ●6 1 Pet. 1. 14. 15. Heb. 13. 18. Lex data est ut gratia qu●reretur gratia data est ●t lex implere●ur August his own unrighteousness to the righteousness of Christ If we consider the Law in a high and rigid notion so no believer can fulfil it but if we consider the Law in a soft and mild notion so every believer does fulfil it Act. 13. 22. I have found David the son of Jesse a man aften mine own heart which shall fulfil all my will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All my wills to note the universality and sincerity of his obedience David had many slips and falls he often transgressed the Royal Law but being sincere in the main bent and frame of his heart and in the course of his life God looked upon his sincere obedience as perfect obedience A sincere Christian obedience is an entire obedience to all the commands of God though not in respect Psal 119. 6. Heb. When my eye is to ill thy commandments of practice which is impossible but in disposition and affection A sincere obedience is an universal obedience It is universal in respect of the subject the whole man it is universal in respect of the object the whole law and it is universal in respect of durance the whole life he who obeys sincerely obeys universally There is no man that serves God truly that doth not endeavour Numb 14. 24. to serve God fully sincerity turns upon the hinges of universality he who obeys sincerely endeavours to obey throughly A sincere Christian does not only love the Law and like the law and approve of the Law and delight in the Law and consent to the Law that it is holy just and good but he obeys it in part which though Rom. 7. 12 16 22. it be but in part yet he being sincere therein pressing towards the mark and desiring and endeavouring to arrive Phil. 3. 13 14. at what is perfect God accepts of such a soul and is as well pleased with
Let us consider the promise which the father engageth to perform on his part the son must ask and the father will give He will give him the heathen for his Psal 2. 8. inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth for his possession An allusion to great Princes when they would shew great affection to their Favourites they bid them ask what they will as Ahasuerus did and as Herod did that Es●● 5. 3. Ma● 6. 23. Isa 49 6. M●t. 28. 18. ●al 2. 10 11. Psal 40. 6. 7 8. is he shall both be the Lord's salvation to the ends of the earth and have all power given him in heaven and earth so that all knees shall bow to him and every tongue shall confess him to be Lord. In the other Text before mentioned Psal 40. Christ declares his compliance to the agreement and his subscribing the Covenant on his part when he came into the world as the Apostle explains it Heb. 10. 5. c. Mine ears saith he hast thou digged or pierced Lo I come to do thy will as if he had said oh father thou dost engage me to be thy servant in this great work of saving sinners Loe I come to do the work I here covenant and agree to yield up my self to thy disposing and to serve thee for ever it seems to be an allusion to the master's boring through the servants ear Exod. 21. 6. Among the Jews only one ear was bored but in this Psal 40. 6. Here are ears in the plural number a token of that perfect and desirable subjection which Christ as Mediator was in to his father But for a more clear distinct and full opening of the Covenant of Redemption or that blessed compact between God the father and Jesus Christ which is a matter of grand importance to all our souls and considering that it is a point that I have never yet treated of in pulpit or press I shall therefore take the liberty at this time to open my self as clearly and as fully as I can And therefore thus If you ask me what this Covenant of Redemption Qu. is I answer in the general That a Covenant is a mutual Ans agreement between parties upon articles or propositions on both sides so that each party is tied and bound to perform his own conditions This description holds the general nature of a Covenant and is common to all Covenants publick and private divine or humane But Secondly and more particularly I answer The Covenant of Redemption is that federal transaction or mutual The Covenant of Redemption defined stipulation that was betwixt God and Christ from everlasting for the accomplishment of the work of our Redemption by the mediation of Jesus Christ to the eternal honour and unspeakable praise of the glorious grace of God Or if you please take it in another form of words thus It is a compact bargain and agreement between God the father and God the son designed Mediator concerning the conversion sanctification and salvation of the Elect through the death satisfaction and obedience of Jesus Christ which in due time was to be given to the father But for the making good the definition I have laid down I must take lieve to tell you That there are many choice Scriptures which give clear intimation of such a federal transaction between God the father and Jesus Christ in order to the recovery and everlasting happiness and salvation of his Elect. I shall instance in the most considerable of them The first is this Gen. 3. 15. And I will put enmity between The first Proof thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed it shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise its heel Here begins the book of the Lord's Wars God's battels The Scriptures are called the book of the Battels of the Lord. Numb 21. 〈◊〉 This is spoken of that holy enmity that is between Christ and the Devil and of Christ's destroying the Kingdom and power of Satan For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devil Heb. 2 14. God by way of threatning told Satan that the seed of the deceived woman should overmatch him at last and should break in pieces his power and crafty plots he gives Satan lieve to do his worst and proclaims an open and an utter enmity between Christ and him From this Scripture some conclude that Christ covenanted from Eternity to take upon him the seed of the woman and the sinless infirmities of our true humane nature and under those infirmities to enter the lists with Satan and to continue obedient through all his afflictions temptations and trials to the death even to the death of the cross And Phil. 2. 8 9. that God the father had covenanted with Christ that in case Christ did continue obedient through all his sufferings temptations and trials that then his obedience to the death should be accounted as full satisfaction to divine justice for all those wrongs and injuries that were done to God by the sins of man Christ must die or else he could not have been the Mediator of the new Covenant through death Heb. 9. 15 16. But The Second Sripture is that Isa 42. 6. The Lord hath The second Proo● called thee in righteousness and with hold thine hand and will keep thee and give thee for a Covenant of the people f●r a light of the gentiles Thus God speaks of Christ In this Chapter we have a glorious Prophecy of Christ our Redeemer here are four things proph●cied of him 1. The Divine call whereby he was appointed to the work of our Redemption vers 1. Behold my servant whom I uphold mine elect in whom my soul delighteth I have put my spirit upon him he shall bring forth judgment to the gentiles Jesus Christ would not yea he could not he durst not thrust himself upon this great work or engage in this great work 'till he had a clear call from heaven 2. Here you have the gracious carriage and deportment of Christ in the work to which he was called this is fully set down vers 2 3 4. He shall not cry nor lift up nor cause his voice to be heard in the street He shall come clothed with majesty and glory and yet full of meekness A bruised reed shall he not break and the smoaking flax shall he not quench he shall bring forth judgement unto truth In the words there is a Meiosis he will not break that is he will bind up the bruised reed he will comfort the bruised reed he will strengthen the bruised reed Christ will acknowledg and encourage the least degrees of grace he will turn a spark of grace into a flame a drop into a sea c. He shall not fail nor be discouraged These words shew his Kingly courage and magnanimity
Though he should meet with opposition from all hands yet nothing should daunt him nothing should dismay him no afflictions no temptations no sufferings should in the least abate his courage and valour 3. The Divine Assistance he should have from him that called him This is set down in two expressions vers 6. I will hold thy hand I will keep thee Divine Assistance doth usually concur with a divine call when God sets his servants on work he uses to defend and uphold them in the work 4. The work it self to which Christ was called This is expressed under divers phrases vers 6 7. To be a light to the gentiles to open the blind eys to bring out the prisoners from the prison and to be a covenant to the people In these last words you have two things observ●able The first is one special part of Christ's office He was given for a covenant 2. The persons in reference to whom this office was designed A Covenant of the people One end why God the father gave Christ out of his bosom was that he might be a Covenant to his people Christ is given for a Covenant both to the believing Jews and Gentiles As he is the glory of the people of Israel so he is a light to lighten the Gentiles In this Scripture last cited you have the father's designation and sealing of Christ to the Mediatorial imployment promising him much upon his undertaking it and his acceptation of this office and voluntary Heb. 5. 4 5. 〈◊〉 40. 7 8. Joh. 10. 17 18. submission to the will of the father in it Loe I come to do thy will And these together amount to the making up of a Covenant between God the father and his son for what more can be necessary to the making up of a Covenant than is here expressed But The Third proof This Prophe●y is applied to Christ 〈◊〉 2. 2● A● 13. 47. Gal. 3. 16. Heb. 3 4 5. And many of the Jews do conses●● that this pla●● i● to be un●erstood of Christ only 〈◊〉 1. ●1 22. 〈◊〉 2. 10 11. Heb. 1. ● The third Scripture is that Isa 49. 1. Listen Oh Isles unto me and hearken ye people from far the Lord God hath called me from the womb from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name These words are spoken in the person of Christ he tells us how he is called by his father to be a Mediator and Saviour of his people Jesus Christ would not take one step in the work of our Redemption till he was called and commissionated by his father to that work God the father who from Eternity had fore-assigned Christ to this office of a Mediator a Redeemer did both while he was in the womb and as soon as he was come out of it manifest and make known this his purpose concerning Christ both to men and Angels Christ did not thrust himself he did not intrude himself at random into the office of a Redeemer No man takes Heb. 5. 4 5. this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron So Christ took not upon himself the office of a Mediator a Saviour but upon a call and a commission from God The summ is that Christ took up the office of a R●deemer● by the ordinance of his father that he might fulfil the work of our Redemption unto which he was destmated vers 2. And he made my mouth like a sharp sword in the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and made me a polished shaft in his quiver hath he hid me Christ having avouched his fathers calling of him to the work of man's Redemption he gives you a relation in this verse of God's fitting and furnishing of him with abilities sufficient for so important a work together with his sustaining and supporting of him in the performance of the same Here are two similitudes or comparisons 1. That of a sharp sword That of a bright and sharp arrow to See Eph. 6. 17. Heb. 4. 12. Rev. 1. 16. cap 6. 2. shew the efficacy of Christ's Doctrine The word of Christ is a sword of great power and efficacy for the subduing of the souls of men to the obedience of it and for the cutting off of whomsoever or whatsoever shall oppose or withstand it Christ was not sent of the father to conquer by force of arms as earthly Princes do but he conquers all sorts of sinners even the proudest and A● 2. 37 41. Act. 4. 1 2 3 4. Act 16. 29 35. 2 Cor. 10. 4 6. stoutest of them by the sword of the spirit which is the word of God as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the margin together Having spoken of the efficacy of Christ's Doctrine he tells us that he will take Joh. 7. 30 44. Luk. 22. 53. 〈◊〉 27. 62 to 6● and cap. 27. 2 6. A●t 2 23 24. or as some render the words thou art my servant to Israel or for Israel that is for Israel's good for my peoples behoof Few saith Sasb●nt to this day doe consider Christ's labour in preaching prayer fasting and suffering a cruel death for us for if they did they would he more affected with love towards him that loved them so dearly Isa 6. 13. cap. 8 18 c. care of the security of his person In the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and in his quiver hath he hid me God the father undertakes to protect the Lord Jesus Christ against all sorts of adversaries that should band themselves against him and to maintain his doctrine against all enemies that should conspire to suppress it God so protected his dear son against all the might and malice of his most capital enemies that they neither could lay hold on him or do ought before the time by God fore-designed was come Christ was sheltered under the wing of God's protection till that voluntarily he went to his passion neither could they keep him under when that time was once over though they endeavoured with all their might to do it Now in the the third verse God the father tells Jesus Christ what a glorious reward he should have for undertaking the great work of Redemption And said unto me thou art my servant O Israel in whom I will be glorified God having called Christ set him apart sanctified him and sent him into the world for the execution of the office of a Redeemer He doth in this third verse encourage him to set upon it and to go on chearfully resolutely and constantly in it with assurance of good and comfortable success notwithstanding all the plots designs and oppositions that Satan and his Imps might make against him vers 4. Then I said I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought and in vain yet surely my judgment is with the Lord and my works with my God In these words Jesus Christ complains to his father of the incredulity wickedness and
Christ was manifested to be a true man he had a body like ours a body subject to manifold infirmities yea to death it self That body which Christ had is said to be prepared by God the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is translated prepared is a Metaphor from Mechanicks who do artificially fit one part of their work to another and so finish the whole God fitted his son's body to be joyned with the Deity and to be an expiatory sacrifice for sin The word prepared implies that God the father ordained formed and made fit and able Christ's humane nature to undergo suffer and fulfil that for which he was sent into the world God the father is here said to have prepared Christ a body because Christ having received of his father the humane nature out of the flesh and blood of the Virgin Mary by the power of the Mat. 1. 20. Luk 1. 31. 35. Holy Ghost here gives up the same unto the service of his father to do to suffer to die that he might be a sacrifice of expiation for our sins As for the words of the Psalmist Psal 40. 6. Mine ear hast thou opened Heb. digged open It is a proverbial manner of speech whereby there is implyed the qualifying or fitting a man unto obedience in service the ear or the opening of the ear Isa 50 5. Job 3. 16. being an emblem or symbol or a Metaphorical sign of obedience Now St. Paul following the translation of the Septuagint and being directed by the spirit of God expounds this of God's sanctifying and fitting a body unto Christ wherein hs was obedient even unto the shameful death of the Cross These words thou hast bored through mine ears do import that Christ now becoming man gives up himself to be a willing servant of his father to obey him unto the death of the cross And it is a similitude taken from the servants of the Hebrews who after that they had served their masters six years would not depart out of their master's service the seventh year but abide in it continually until death for a testimony whereof their ear was bored thorow on the posts of the door as may be seen Exod. 21. 6. It is therefore as much as if he should say thou hast given me a body that is willing and ready in thy service even unto death But to conclude this head the Apostle speaking of disanulling the sacrifice of the Law he uses this word body to set out a sacrifice which should come in stead of the legal sacrifices to effect that which the legal sacrifices could not effect But Fourthly Observe that Christ our Mediator freely and readily offers himself to be our pledg and surety Then said I lo I come to wit as surety to pay the ransome and to do thy will O God Every word carrieth a special emphasis as 1. The time Then even so soon as he perceived that his father had prepared his body for such an end then without delay this speed implyeth forwardness and readiness he would lose no opportunity 2. His profession in this word said I he did not closely secretly timorously as being ashamed thereof but he maketh profession before-hand 3. This note of observation Lo this is a kind of calling Angels and men to witness and a desire that all might know his inward intention and the disposition of his heart wherein was as great a willingness as any could have to any thing 4. An offering of himself without any enforcement or compulsion this he manifesteth in this word I come 5. That very instant set out in the present tense I come he puts it not off to a future and uncertain time but even in that moment he saith I come 6. The first person twice expressed thus I said I come he sendeth not another person nor substituteth any in his room but he even he himself in his own person cometh All which do abundantly evidence Christ's singular readiness and willingness as our surety to do his father's will though it were by suffering and by being made a sacrifice for our sins God's will was the rule of Christ's active and passive obedience Jesus Christ our only Mediatour and surety by free and ready obedience and death did make a proper real and full satisfaction to God's justice for the sins of all the Elect. Christ hath by his death and blood as an invaluable price of our redemption made sure the favour of God the pardon of our sins and the salvation of our souls Christ hath freed his chosen from all temporal spiritual and eternal punishments properly so called so that now the mercy of God may embrace the sinner without the least of wrong to his truth or justice But Fifthly Observe that Jesus Christ our surety does not only agree with his father about the price that he was to lay down for our redemption but also agrees with his father about the persons that were to be redeemed and their sanctification Heb. 10. 10. By the which will that is by the execution of which will by the obedience of Christ to his heavenly father we are sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Jesus Christ agrees with the father that all those shall be sanctified for whom he has suffered and satisfied The vertue efficacy and benefit of that which ariseth from the aforesaid will of the father and of the son is expressed under this word sanctified To pass by the notation and divers acceptations of this word sanctified let it suffice to tell you It is not here to be taken as distinguished from justification or glorification as it is else where taken but 1 Cor. 1. 30. cap. 6. 11. so as comprising under it all the benefits of Christ's sacrifice In this general and large extent it is sometimes Heb. 10. 14. cap. 2. 11. A● 26. 18. taken only this word sanctified here gives us to understand that perfection consisteth especially in holiness for he expresseth the perfection of Christ's sacrifice under the word sanctified which implyeth a making holy this Eccles 7. 31. was that special part of perfection wherein man was made at first and whereunto the Apostle alludeth where Eph. 4. 2● he exhorteth To put on that new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness for this end Christ gave himself even unto death for his Church that he might sanctifie it The principal thing under this Eph. 5. 25. word sanctified in this place is that Christ's sacrifice maketh perfect in this respect Christ's sacrifice is here opposed to the legal sacrifices which could not make perfect So that Christ's sacrifice was offered up to do that which they could not do for this end was Christ's sacrifice surrogated in the room of the legal sacrifices now this surrogation had been in vain if Christ's sacrifice had not made us perfect if the dignity of his person that was offered up and his
Justice be satisfied and divine wrath pacified yet the Devil will not let his captives go therefore Christ by a strong hand wrests us out of Satan's power and destroys him that had the power of death Heb. 2. 24 25. that is the devil The Ransom which Christ paid was the ground of man's full and eternal Redemption for by satisfaction of justice way was made to pacifie wrath both which being accomplished the Devil lost his right and power over such as he held in bondage This Redemption is a full freedom from all misery and compriseth under it reconciliation justification sanctification and salvation By this Redemption divine justice is satisfied wrath pacified grace procured and all spiritual enemies vanquished The perfection of this Redemption is hinted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in this word eternal the eternity here meant hath a special respect to the continual duration thereof without end yet also it respecteth the time past so as it looks backward and forward It implieth a vertue and efficacy from the beginning of the world for Christ was a lamb slain from the foundation of the world Christ himself Rev. 13. 8. Rev. 1. 8. is Alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending which is and which was and which is to come Now that which is spoken of the person of Christ may very well be applied to our Redemption by Christ This Epithete Eternal is here added to Redemption in opposition to the legal purifications which were momentary and temporary They had a day and endured no longer than the time of reformation On this ground by just and necessary consequence it followeth that the Redemption wrought by Christ is absolutely perfect and that there is no need of any other This being eternal all that have been all that shall be redeemed have been and shall be redeemed by it and they who are redeemed by it need no other means The liberty whereinto Christ Jesus brings the Elect is permanent and lasting it abides irremoveable and unchangeable to all Eternity The Jews which had sold themselves to be servants were to be set free at the Jubilee yet the Jubilee lasted but for one year Levit. 25. therefore the same persons might afterwards become bondmen again But this acceptable year of the Lord 's Isa 61. 2. cap. 63. 4. redeemed is an everlasting year it shall never end therefore they shall never be subject to bondage any more It is observable that when the Lord would comfort the Jews with hopes of a return from Babilon he usually annexed Evangelical promises respecting the deliverance of poor sinners from the slavery of Satan whereof that captivity was a Type some of which promises do plainly express the perpetuity of that spiritual freedom which they shall enjoy Take a taste Isa 35. 10. And the ransomed of the Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs See also Jer. 32. 39. Ezek. 37. 25 26 27 28. cap. 39. 29. and everlasting joy upon their heads they shall obtain joy and gladness and sorrow and sighing shall flee away Isa 51. 6. Lift up your eyes to the heavens and look upon the earth beneath for the heavens shall vanish away like smoak and the earth shall wax old like a garment and they that dwell therein shall die in like manner but my salvation shall be for ever and my righteousness shall not be abolished Isa 60. 19 20. The sun shall be no more thy light by day neither for brightness shall the moon give light unto thee but the Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light and thy God thy glory Thy sun shall no more go down neither shall thy moon withdraw it self for the Lord shall be thine everlasting light and the days of thy mourning shall be ended Jer. 31. 11 12. For the Lord hath redeemed Jacob and ransomed him from the hand of him that was stronger than he Therefore they shall come and sing in the height of Zion and their soul shall be as a watered garden and they shall not sorrow any more at all But The Fifth excellent Property of that Redemption that we have by Jesus Christ is this viz. It is an enriching Redemption it is a Redemption that makes men rich in spiritual blessings in heavenly places There are many choice Eph. 1. 3. and rare spiritual benefits that wait and attend on Redemption that go hand in hand with Redemption As Rom. 5. 1. cap. 3. 24 25. reconciliation remission of our sins justification of our persons adoption sanctification full glorification we have some fore-tastes of it in this life here we have the first fruits of the spirit but in the morning of the Resurrection Rom. 8. 23 30. we shall reap the whole harvest of glory It 's called by way of eminency the salvation of our souls 1 Pet. 1. 9. Redemption and the noble benefits attending on it are Salvation begun but in heaven this shall be salvation consummate Redemption is a rich Mine containing a Mass of Treasure that cannot be valued could we dig into it could we pry into it we might find variety of the choicest Jewels and Pearls in comparison whereof all the riches of the Indies all the Gold of Ophir and all the precious Jewels and most orient Pearls that are in the world are no better than dross I have read of Tiberius the Emperour that passing by a place where he saw a cross lying in the ground upon a Marble stone and causing the stone to be digged up he found a great treasure under the Cross But what was this treasure but a great nothing to that treasure that is wrap'd up in our Redemption by Christ What the Lord said once to his anointed Cyrus a temporal deliverer of his people the same he hath spoken and much more to his Anointed Jesus the greater Saviour and Redeemer of his Church I will give thee the treasures of darkness the hidden riches of secret Isa 43. 3. See my Treatise called The Vnsearchable Ru●es of Christ places There are unsearchable riches in Jesus Christ in him are riches of Grace of all Grace in him are riches of justification and riches of sanctification and riches of consolation and riches of glorification Would you share in the best of riches would you share in the most durable riches would you share in soul riches would you share in heavenly riches O! then secure your interest in the Redemption that is by Jesus Christ But The sixth and last excellent Property of that Redemption that we have by Jesus Christ is this viz. It is a Redemption sweetning Redemption it is such a Redemption as sweetens all other Redemptions 't is Redemption by Christ that sweetens our Redemption out of this trouble and that out of this affliction and that out of this danger and that out of this sickness and that out of this bondage and that Redemption by Christ is like that tree which Moses cast into the bitter Exed
he was the true Messiah and of the father's installing him into that office of a Redeemer So Joh. 6. 38. I came down from heaven not to do mine See Joh. 10. 17. c●p 16. 27. own will but the will of him that sent me In this verse Christ declares in the general that his errand into the world is to do his father's will who sent him and not his own which is not to be understood that as God he hath a different and contrary will to the fathers though as man he hath a distinct and subordinate will to his but the meaning is he came not to do his own will only as the Jews alledged against him but the father 's also and that in this work he was the father's Commissioner sent to do what he had entrusted him with and not as the Jews gave out that he was one who did that for which he had no warrant Christ in entertaining them that come to him as in vers 37. is not only led thereunto by his own mercy and bounty and love towards them as the reward of all his sufferings but doth also stand obliged thereunto by vertue of a Commission and trust laid upon him by the father and accepted and undertaken by him therefore he doth mention the will of him that sent him as a reason of his fidelity in this matter By what has been said it is most evident that God the father had th● first and chief hand in the great work of our Redemption It is good to look upon God the father as the first projector of our happiness and blessedness that we may honour the father as we honour the son and love the father as we love the son and value the father as we value the son admire the father as we admire the son and exalt the father as we exalt the son and cleave to the father as we cleave to the son c. I have a little the longer insisted on this propositon because commonly we are more apprehensive of the love of the son than we are of the love of the father that I may the more heighten your apprehensions of the father's love in the great work of Redemption Ah! what amazing love is this that the thoughts of the father that the eye of the father that the heart of the father should be first fixed upon us that he should begin the treaty with his son that he should make the first motion of love that he should first propose the Covenant of Redemption and thereby lay such a sure foundation for man's recovery out of his slavery and misery To speak after the manner of men the business from Eternity lay thus here is man saith God the father to his son fallen from his primitive purity glory and excellency into a most woful gulf of sin and misery he that was once a son is now become a slave he that was once a friend is E●h 2. 12 13. now become an enemy he that was once near us is now afar off he that was once in favour is now cast off he Gen. 1. 26 27. that was once made in our image has now the image of Satan stamp'd upon him he who had once sweet communion with us has now fellowship with the Devil and his Angels Now out of this forlorn estate he can never deliver himself neither can all the Angels in heaven deliver him now this being his present case and state I make this offer to thee O my son If in the fulness of Phil. 2. 7 8. Isa 63. 3. Gal. 3. 13. time thou wilt assume the nature of man tread the wine-press of my wrath alone bear the curse shed thy blood die suffer satisfie my justice fulfil my Royal Law then I can upon the most honourable terms imaginable save fallen man and put him into a safer and happier condition than ever that was from whence Adam fell and give thee a noble reward for all thy sufferings Upon this Jesus Christ replies O my father I am very ready and willing to do to suffer to die to satisfie thy justice to comply with thee in all thy noble motions and in all thy gracious and favourable inclinations that poor sinners may be sanctified and saved made gracious and glorious 1 Thes 1. ult Heb. 10. 10. 14. Psal 40. 6 7. holy and happy that poor sinners may never perish that poor sinners may be secured from wrath to come and be brought into a state of light life and love I am willing to make my self an offering and Loe I am come to do thy will O God Thus you see how firstly and greatly and graciously the thoughts of God have been set at work that poor sinners may be for ever secured and saved But The Seventh Proposition is this It was agreed between Gen. 3. 15. 1 Joh. 3. 8. A●t 2. 30. cap. 3. 22. Isa 7. 14. cap. 9. 6. D●ut 18. 15 18. Gal. 4. 4. ●em 8. 3. the father the son that Jesus Christ should be incarnate that he should take on him the nature of those whom he was to save and for whom he was to satisfie and to bring to glory Christs incarnation was very necessary in respect of that work of Redemption that he by agreement with the father had undertaken he had engaged himself to his father that the would redeem lost sinners and as their surety make full satisfaction By the fall of Adam God and man was fallen out they were at variance at enmity at open R●m 8. 7. hostility so that by this means all intercourse between heaven and earth was stopped and all trading between God and us ceased Now to redress all this and to make an atonement a Mediatour was necessary now this office belonged unto Jesus Christ both by his father's Heb. 10 5 6 7. ordination and his own voluntary susception and for discharge of it a humane nature was very requisite there was an absolute necessity that Christ should suffer partly because he was pleased to substitute himself in the sinner's stead and partly because his sufferings only could be satisfactory But now unless Christ be incarnate how can he suffer the whole lies thus without satisfaction no Redemption without suffering no satisfaction without flesh no suffering Ergo Christ must be incarnate The Joh. 1. 14. word must be made flesh And so Heb. 2. 14 16. For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself likewise took part of the same that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devil For verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham 1 Tim. 3. 16. Without controversie great is the mystery of godliness God was manifested in the flesh justified in the spirit seen of Angels preached unto the Gentiles believed on in the world received up into glory This is only
art my Lord that Isa 50. 5 6 7. Psal 16. 2. is thou art he to whom I have engaged my self that I will satisfie all thy demands I will fulfil thy Royal Law I will bear the Curse I will satisfie thy Justice I will humble my self to the death of the Cross I will tread the Psal ● 8. Isa 6● ● Wine press of my Father's Wrath I will fully discharge all the Bonds Bills and Obligations that lie in open Court against any of those whom by compact thou hast given Colos 2. 13 14 15 me let their debts be never so many or never so great or of never so long continuance I will pay them all there is no work so high nor no work so hard nor no work so hot nor no work so bloody nor no work so low in which I am not ready to engage upon the account of my chosen Loe I come I delight to do thy will yea thy law is in my heart● Christ freely submits not only to the duty of the Law but also to the penalty of the Law not only to do what the Law enjoyns but also to suffer what the Law threatens the former he Gal. 4. 4. 5. makes good by his active obedience and the l●ter by his passive obedience This was the way wherein the Father by an eternal agreement with his Son would 〈◊〉 1. 2. have the salvation of lost sinners brought about and accordingly Jesus Christ very readily complies with his Father's will and way Christ as Mediator had a command Joh. 10. 18. from his Father to die which Command ●he readily closes with Joh. 10. 11. I am the good shepherd the good shepherd layeth down his life for the sheep vers 15. I lay down my life for the sheep vers 17. I lay down my life that I might take it again vers 18. No man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self this commandment have I received of my father Christ was content to be a servant by paction that so his sufferings might be accepted for his people and certainly whatever God the ●●ther put Jesus Christ upon in his whole Mediatory work that Jesus Christ did freely fully and heartily comply with Loe I come And I have finished the work that thou gavest J●● 17. 4. me to do And had not Christ been free and voluntary in his active and passive obedience his active and passive obedience would never have been acceptable satisfactory or meritorious To go further to prove it would be to light a candle to see the sun at noon But Thirdly Jesus Christ promises and engages himself that he will conside depend rely and trust upon his Father for help and for assistance to go through his work with a notwithstanding all the wrath and rage all the malice and oppositions that he should meet with from men and Devils Heb. 2. 13. And again I will put my trust in him Christ's confidence in his Father was one great encouragement to him to hold out in the execution of his office and his confidence in God speaks him out to be a true man in that as other men he stood in need of God's aid and assistance and thereupon as others of the sons men his brethren he puts his trust in God The Greek Phrase used by the Apostle carryeth Emphasis it implieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 18. 2. Isa 8. 18. trust on a good perswasion that he shall not be disappointed it is translated Confidence Phil. 1. 6. word for word it may here be thus translated I will be confident in him The Relative Him hath apparent reference to God so as Christ himself being man rested on God to be supported in his works and to to be carried thorough all his undertakings till the Top-stone was laid and the work of Redemption accomplished Christ had many great and potent enemies and was brought to very great straits Psal 18. 3 4 5. Isa 8. 18. Mat. 27. 43. yea he and his were for s●gns and wonders in Israel yet he fainted not but put his trust in the Lord yea his greatest enemies gave him this Testimony that he trusted in God and though they spoke it in scorn and derision yet it was a real truth Christ's confidence in his Father was further manifested by the many Prayers which Heb. 5. 7. time after time he made to his Father Another proof of Christ's confidence in God's assistance even in his greatest plunges and his sharpest sufferings the Prophet Isaiah will furnish us with The Lord God hath opened mine Isa 5● 5 6 7 8 9. ear saith the Prophet and I was not rebellious neither turned away back I gave my back to the smiters and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair I hid not my face from shame and spitting For the Lord God will help me therefore shall I not he confounded therefore have I set my face like a flint and I know that I shall not be ashamed He is near that justifieth me who will contend with me let us stand together Who is mine adversary let him come near to me Behold the Lord God will help me who is he that shall condemn me loe they all shall wax old as a garment The moth shall eat them up Christ as Mediator trusted God the Father to carry him through all difficulties and oppositions till he had compleated the great work of his Mediation Christ strengthens and encourages himself in the execution of his Office against all hardships and oppositions from his confidence and assurance of God's aid and assistance and by the same eye of Faith he looks upon all his opposites as worn out and weathered by him Christ's Faith Patience and Constancy gave him victory over all wrongs and injuries So Isa 49. 5. My God shall be my strength Christ is very confident of his Father's assistance to carry him thorough that work that he had assigned him to Christ in the want of comfort never wanted faith to hang upon God and to call him his God My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27. 46. As man he ●r●e● out My God my God c. when a● God he promiseth Paradise to the penitent thief Hilary Christ was never forsaken in regard of the Hypostatical Vnion the Union was not dissolved but the Beams the Influence was restrained Nor in regard of his Faith for though now he was sweltering under the wrath of God as our Surety and left in the hands of his enemies and deserted by his Disciples and dearest friends and under the loss of the comforting and solacing presence of his Father yet in the midst of all such was the strength and power of his faith that he could say My God my God Christ before the world began having promised and engaged to the Tit. 1. 2. Gal. 4. 4. Isa 63. 3. Gal. 3. 13. Rom. 8. 3 4. Father that in the fulness of time he would