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A96661 Mount Ebal levell'd or Redemption from the curse. Wherein are discovered, 1. The wofull condition of sinners under the curse of the law. 2. The nature of the curse, what it is, with the symptomes of it, in its properties, and effects. 3. That wonderful dispensation of Christs becoming a curse for us. 4. The grace of redemption, wherein it stands, in opposition to some gross errors of the times, which darken the truth of it. 5. The excellent benefits, priviledges, comforts, and engagements to duty, which flow from it. By Elkanah Wales, M.A. preacher of the Gospel at Pudsey in York-shire. Wales, Elkanah, 1588-1669. 1658 (1658) Wing W294; Thomason E1923_1; ESTC R209971 189,248 382

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Sect. 1. The third Conclusion What Redemption is THe third Conclusion or Doctrine is the marrow and summe of the Text. Christ by being made a Curse for us hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law This is the result the issue the fruit of the Lord Christs becoming a curse for us that hereby we are redeemed from the curse of the Law under which we were held This Truth may receive proof from the consent of other Scriptures Let us hear but two or three of the fullest testimonies that thereby it may be established Gal 4 5. God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem us c. Tit. 2.14 He gave himself for us that he might redeem us c. Heb. 9.11 12. Christ by a greater and more perfect Tabernacle than that under the Law and by his own blood hath obtained eternal Redemption for us Observe here that this Redemption followeth upon and floweth from Christs becoming a Curse for us two wayes 1 In the intention and purpose of God and Christ God the Father in his eternal counsel did propound unto himself this end of giving Christ and Christ in the fulness of time did set before his eyes the same and in giving himself to become a curse that poor inthralled sinners might be redeemed thereby from the curse of the Law 2 In the effect and event of the thing Look what the Lord did intend to work and to bring about by Christs undergoing the curse for us the same was and is throughly wrought and brought about to the full The thing is done as to the making of a plenary satisfaction to Divine justice and so obtaining the benefit of Redemption on the behalf of all those for whom the Lord hath appointed it in his eternal purpose But for a more particular clearing and beating out of this Doctrine I shall endeavour 1 To shew what this Redemption is and wherein it stands 2 To give some arguments or grounds of Scripture-reason for the confirmation of it For the former the Scriptures of the New Testament afford us several words to express the nature of this benefit The most general word is rendred Deliverance and notes out a setting one free by any means whatsoever as in the Lords Prayer Deliver us from evil Mat. 6.13 2 Pet. 2.9 T●e Lord knoweth how to deliver c. This word is used to express the work of Redemption 1 Thess 1.10 Who delivereth us from the wrath to come There is another general word of the same signification 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 12.58 properly it imports a changing from or an alienation It is used once and but once that I know in this argument to wit Heb. 2.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There be some other words of a more restrained signification one which is sometimes rendred Delivering as Act. 26.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but properly notes a taking away by force or by an act of justice as 1 Cor. 5.13 Act. 12.11 The Apostle Paul in mentioning this benefit maketh use of this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 1.4 That he might deliver us c. There be other two words more frequent in Scripture which signifie a setting free by paying of a price The former is in reference to Captives or Prisoners who being in bondage to others are set at liberty by the payment of a Ransome This is called Redeeming or redeeming from Luke 1.68 and Rom. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We are all in slavery under sin the Law Satan c. Christ comes and by laying down his life for us payes our ransome and so delivereth us out of their hands The latter word is borrowed from the Condition of such persons 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as having been abridged of their former liberty or of such things as having been alienated from their first owners and so being under the power of others are now brought out from that condition and brought into a state of freedome We read in the Law of sundry persons and things who being under the power of others might yet be redeemed as servants which had sold themselves lands and dwelling-houses which were sold by their ownners Levit. 25.23 c. And this Redemption was made by paying a valuable consideration according to the number of years to the Jubilee more or lesse and so buying them out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This is the import of the word here used and seems to be an Allusion to that Levitical Ordinance We had sold our selves to the drudgery of sin and were become Satans servants and so liable to all that curse and wo that attends upon that slavery Now the Lord Jesus comes and because our case is desperate no revolution of years could ever have brought us a Jubilee but we must be bond-men for ever therefore he hath paid an infinite sum that he might buy us out clearly from this accursed servitude and bring us into true liberty we are said to be ransomed not with corruptible things but with the precious blood of Christ 1 Pet. 1.18 19. and to be bought with a price 1 Cor. 6.20 and Christ is said to be slain and to buy us with his blood Rev. 5.9 The Scripture is exact and copious in discovering this great work in the particulars of it shewing us th● different termes 1 From which 2 Unto which Christ hath redeemed us 1 From what hath he redeemed us From sin Mat. 1.21 From all iniquity Psal 130.78 Tit. 2.14 From death Hos 13.14 From the power of the grave Psal 49.15 from the Law Rom. 7.6 Gal. 4.5 and here from the curse of the Law From this present evil world Gal. 1.4 From the earth and from among men Rev. 14.3 4. From the wrath to come 1 Thess 1.10 Out of the hands of our enemies Luke 1.71 74. 2 Unto what hath he redeemed us To himself Deut. 4.34 2 Sam. 7.23 To God Rev. 5.9 to be the first fruits unto God and to the Lamb Rev. 14.4 to be a peculiar people to himself Tit. 2.14 to serve him without fear all our dayes Luke 1.74 75. Yet further the Redemption of Mankinde is considerable in a double respect 1 As it is an act and work of Christ the Mediator and so the immediate product of his sufferings thus it exists in Christ himself as Rom. 3.24 the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ therefore he is called the Redeemer Isa 59.20 Rom. 11.26 and he is said to send redemption to his people Psal 111.9 he hath laid down the price and so effected the business Heb. 9.12 he hath obtained redemption He professeth that he came to give his soul to be a ransome for many Matth. 20.28 and the Apostle tells us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That he gave himself a counter-ransome for all a ransome every way equivalent and full 1 Tim. 2.6 2 As it is a benefit actually brought home applied to elect sinners by
a sufficient and satisfactory price unto God for the party Redeemed 1 Cor. 6.20 Therefore we are said to be bought with a price And this Price is called a ransome price Matt. 20.28 A price to ransome us out of our spirituall captivity Matt. 20.28 and it is said to be laied down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now the preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as learned men know signifieth a substitution and Surrogation of one in the roome of another As Matt. 2.22 Archelaus is said for to raign 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the roome of Herod Adde further That this Price which Christ laid down for our Redemption is called not onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A Counter-prise or a price correspondent and answerable 1 Tim. 2.6 to the debt it is paid for It was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If any shall ask what this price was Saint Peter tells us 1 Pet. 1.19 Act. 20.28 It was the most pretious bloud of Christ and Saint Paul tells us It was the Bloud of God It is called the Bloud of God because shed in his humane nature by him whose Person was God blessed for evermore Rom. 9.5 and hereby it came to have an infinite virtue and efficacy in it Ex infinita Personae dignitate infinitum erat pretium sanguinis et carnis quam pro nobis obtulit Hence it was that the Bloud of one man became sufficient to Redeem all beleevers and the Bloud shed in a little space able to satisfy for sins which deserved eternall punishment because the Person that suffred was God as well as man All this and much more which might be added doth clearly prove That Jesus Christ hath made Satisfaction to God for the Sins of all who beleeve in him This great and fundamentall truth is very pithily soundly Orthodoxly practically and profitably handled in this ensuing Treatise It is written by a grave ancient and religious Minister of very good repute amongst the Godly in Yorkshire A Master-builder in Gods House If any shall not relish and taste the sweetness of it he will thereby make it appear that his Palate is much out of tune For to a real Christian it must needs be very welcom Let not our ignorance of the Author hinder us from buying and reading of it but let us consider that it is recommended to us by one who well knowes him Mr. Edw. Bowles Mininster at York and who is well-known to the world and in whose judgment we may safely confide The subject matter of this discourse is to shew how Jesus Christ who is the fountain of all blessedness volutarily submitted himself to be made a curse not onely accursed but a curse to Redeem us from the curse of the Law due to our sins And that this may not seem a riddle or a Paradox you must know that Christ Jesus may be considered 2 wayes 1. As he was the Sonne of God 1 Pet. 2.24 2. As our surety bearing our sins in his body upon the Cross In the first respect he was alwaies the well-beloved Sonne of God in whome he is well-pleased But as he was our Representative in this respect he underwent the wrath of God and the curse of the law due to us not due to him simply M●tt 3.17 but due to us and born by him as our surety The hatred was against us and our sins God never hated his Sonne But yet as he stood in our stead and was made sin for us who knew no sin he suffered the effects of Gods hatred even the puishment due to our sins 2 Cor. 5.21 And whereas the Socinians and those who are against Christs Soule-sufferings say That Christ is therefore onely said to be made a curse because he suffred the bodily death of the Cross which by the law was a cursed way of dying and this they say is evident by what the Apostle addes in the latter end of the curse for it is written Gal 3.13 Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree This is notoriously false as appears 1. Because that curse which Christ redeemed us from that curse Christ was made or else the Apostle had not reasoned soundly in saying Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us That curse which Christ redeemed us from that curse he was made But Christ redeemed us from the corporal spiritual and eternal curse And therefore such a curse he was made secundum aequipollentiam though not secundum omnimodam Identitatem Jesus Christ for our sins suffered so much of the curse of the law as was possible D. Willet and necessary for him to suffer And as a learned man saith he suffred all such pains of hell which were neither dishonourable to his person nor defiling to his nature nor obstructive to the works of Redemption 2. The bodily death of Christ upon the Cross is brought in by the Apostle as one very well saith not as the formal reason of the Curse Calov●us in his Socinismus profligatus but onely as a signe and declaration of it The Curse did not precisely consist in the death of the cross neither were they that were hung upon a Tree therefore accursed because hung upon a Tree but the hanging on the Tree was a signe they were accursed as Hierome excellently Hier. upon Galat. 3.13 Non quicunque pependerit in ligno maledictus coram Deo sed qui propter scoelus suspensus Not every one that hangeth on a Tree is cursed of God but he that hangeth there for his sinne If Haman had prevailed for the hanging of innocent Mordecah upon the gallowes he should not have stood accursed Wherefore it was not the death of the Cross but our sinnes hanging upon the Cross that derived this curse upon Christ. This is evident by the very words of Moses quoted by the Apostle Deut. 21.22 23. If a man hath committed a sinne worthy of death and he be to be put to death and thou hang him on a Tree his body shall not remain c. By which words it appeares That it was not so much the kinde of death as the desert of death which made it ignominious It was our sinnes hanging with Christ upon the Cross which made the same an accursed death Adde what Moses saith Deut. 21.23 He that is hanged is accursed of God But now no death is in it self more ignominious then another before God 3. The shame thereof is external and concerneth men Ergo the Curse was not onely nor especially in the shamefulness of the death The ordinary gloss thus noteth upon the words Non est hoc in contumelia Domini quid mirum si maledictus dicitur a Deo qui habet in se quod Deus odit id est peccatum This redoundeth not to the reproach of God for what marveil if he be said to be accursed of God in 3 Gal. that
hath in himself that which God hateth namely sinne not his own but ours And therefore I conclude That Christ was made a Curse for us not onely by the ignominious manner of his death but by suffering in our stead the Curse due to our sinnes The Lord give us grace so to study Christ's being made a curse for us that by faith in him and love to him we may be freed from it and the blessings of Abraham may be our portion Thy servant in Christ Jesus Edm. Calamy TO THE READER ALthough this Treatise in regard of its worth and weight might without any Testimonial have adventured it self even upon this censorious and froward generation yet seeing something by way of recommendation is desired I look upon it not onely as a duty but an honour that I may be serviceable in leading forth so usefull a book into the world as I apprehend this to be and certainly I can make no better use of my Name than to prefix it to this discourse if it may be an inducement unto any one to read it The Authour concerning whom my affectionate esteem will not suffer me to be wholly silent is a person of long standing in the faith and much experience in the things of Christ now passing the seventieth year of his age and about the forty fifth year of his Ministery And having well-nigh fulfilled the dayes of our yeares which are said to be Threescore and ten Psal 90.10 being within sight of Eternitie he hath set before his eye the infinite obligations of eternal Redemption and not thought it sufficient to serve his own generation by preaching the Gospel but hath been perswaded to leave this labour of Love as a Legacy to the generation to come that the people yet to be borne may know and praise their Redeemer The work thou hast in thine hand is the fruit of a well-grown tree that brings forth fruit in its old age and though the leaves and branches thereof may not be so seemingly fair and luxuriant as some younger plants do afford yet taste of the fruit and thou shalt finde it of good relish sound and nourishing It grew indeed in a cold Northern Climate which men think brings little to perfection but it had the advantage of a warme heart which is the best soil and the beames of the sonne of righteousness for the ripening of it If any say It is a common Subject let him remember Titus 1.4 that it is Common Faith and Common Salvation Iude 3. and must be known by more then a common knowledge It 's plain indeed as being reached not to Curiosity but to Conscience but plain work clean wrought is very commendable and many times where is most of Art there is least of Use Yet it is not so plain but the lines and engravings of the Holy Ghost may be discerned in it by an eye well enlightened and although the Treatise was entended mainly for Practise yet our reverend Authour like a wise and vigilant builder hath as the exigents of these times require carried on his work with a weapon on the one hand Neh. 4.17 and a working Instrument in the other defending the Truth against its adversaries as well as recommending its followers Let it not therefore be grievous to thee for it is safe for thee Christian Reader to retire a little from the Curiosities and Contentions of this pretending Age to a serious Consideration of this most necessary and weighty subject For though thou understood all Mysteries and all knowledge and hadst Faith to remove mountains it will profit thee nothing unless thou canst finde this Mount EBAL levell'd zechar 4.7 this great Mountain of CURSES made to thee a plain before the Lord JESUS who buildeth up his Church as an Holy Temple unto God But I will not detain thee from the work it self whith set's before thee DEATH and LIFE a CURSE and a CHRIST The Lord by his special grace incline thine heart unto and establish it in a sincere choise of the Lord Jesus that thy soul may live So prayes Thy servant in the Gospel Edw. Bowles YORK April 19. 1658. To the Inhabitants of PUDSEY LEEDS and BRADFORD Beloved Brethren I Need not say much to you concerning the Reverend Authour of the ensuing Treatise You fully know his doctrine manner of life purpose 2 Tim. 3.10 Faith Long-suffering Charitie Patience That he hath laboured long in his masters Vineyard as with great diligence so not without some success It is the high commendation of blessed Paul that from Jerusalem and round about even to Illyricum Rom. 15.19 he fully preached the Gospel of Christ So our Reverend brother not onely in the populous places near unto us but in lesser Villages hath frequently sounded the Gospel of Salvation not confining his labours to that obscure Congregation wherein he hath officiated as a painful overseer for many yeares but communicating the sweet savour of Christ to many others and let us adde this He hath been so farre from heeding the preferments of this world though tendered him at several times as he hath contented himself with a mean allowance not worthy to be named considering his worth and industry but I shall say no more of him though I might say exceeding much as knowing his modestie to be such as he would rather blame than thank me for it Give me leave to say a little unto you who have so often been partakers of his Ministerial labours and 1. To you of Pudsey whose Pastor he hath been and still is much precious seed he hath sown among you and therefore from you is expected much precious fruit If you after so much Preaching Catechising and expounding be found either ignorant or secure prophane or dissolute as you are left without excuse so the many yeares pains of so faithfull a Teacher will rise up in Judgement against you Luke 12.45 To whom much is given of him much is required God hath given in to you much instruction He exspects from you much knowledge of the best things endeared affections thereunto and abundance of those fruits Matth. 3.8 which John the Baptist calls Fruits meet for Repentance worthy of amendment of life Which I desire may be considered that so you may not be found barren and unfruitfull in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming 2 Pet. 1.18 The goodness of the soil should be seen in the plentifulness of the Crop and the pains of the Pastor in the peoples knowledge of God and Christ in their Faith hope love meekness humilitie patience holiness and obedience 2. For you of Leeds and Bradford as you have all and often participated of his godly labours so I heartily wish and desire it may appear you have not done so in vain and therefore exhort you to remember how you have heard Revel 3.3 and received and hold fast and repent Yea to hold fast these good and ancient truths you have
so often heard from his mouth And forasmuch as to the weak endeavours of your own Teacher the Lord as it were by the way of largess hath superadded the pains of this Reverend brother I am sure yee ought to be gracious yea to grow in grace and to abound in every good word and work But alack it is to be feared that according to the old Proverb We are better Fed then Taught much preaching little reforming of mens hearts and wayes It should be otherwise else it will one day be known and little to the comfort of many that there have been painful and faithful Teachers among them Call to minde the dayes of old when the harvest was great the labourers few many converts though scarcity of able and faithfull Teachers Now the Labourers are many shall the Harvest be small Shall few or none be found who look Zion-ward and with their faces to that Jerusalem which is above My brethren I speak a little to awake the drowsie Who can tell what a little may do It will do much if he who doth all afford his blessing Awake thou that sleepest and stand up from the dead and you that are awake take heed of slumbering in these declining times There is much in the following Treatise to awaken the secure because they may finde therein a plain and full discoverie what their condition is by nature as they spring out from the loynes of fallen Adam and there is much also both to direct and instruct and comfort such as flie for help to the Refuge set before them But I shall spare to mention what every one may read Pray that the life of the aged Authour may yet be prolonged and his Labours blessed and pray for him also who desires you may profit by this work of his and other the holy Labours of his servants which are according to godliness I rest Yours to serve you in the Gospel of Salvation Rob. Todd From my Studie in Leeds April 26. 1658. A TABLE OF THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. THe Introduction shewing the Coherence scope and summe of the Text. Page 1 Chap. II. The first Conclusion All men are under the Curse of the Law Page 6 Opened in four Propositions I. All men are under the Law Page 6 II. All men have broken the Law Page 7 for 1. Our first Parents broke it Page 8 2. We all broke it in them Page 9 3. We do all break it in our own persons Page 16 III. All men are found guilty of sinne by the light and verdict of the Law Page 12 IIII. Being thus found guilty they stand accursed by the doom of the same Law Page 13 The Curse of the Law wherein it stands Page 15 The Curse on the body Page 16 The Curse on the soul Page 18 The Curse on the whole man Page 21 Use 1. Mankinde is not in that Condition wherein it was set at first Page 26 2. Our Condition by the fall is wofull Page 27 Evidenced by six sad effects of the Curse Page 28 1. Subjection of the Creature to vanitie ib. 2. Spiritual bondage to Sathan ib. 3. Vnfruitfulness towards God Page 29 4. Liableness to all plagues Page 30 5. Punishing sinne with sinne Page 31 6. Hellish terrors fear of death and judgement Page 31 32 And by 5 strong Properties of it Page 32 It 's 1. Grievous and bitter Page 33 2. Grounded and authoritative ib. 3. Impartiall and thorough-dealing Page 34 4. Subtill and spiritual Page 35 5. Standing and abiding Page 36 3. Admire the Lord's goodness in mitigating the Curse Page 38 4. No possibility of Justification by the works of the Law Page 40 Four sorts which vainly seek Blessednes by the Law Page 42 Professed Papists ib. Ignorant Protestants Page 44 Civil Livers Page 45 Some religious Professors Page 46 5. No marvel if Law-preaching be so unwelcome and displeasing Page 48 6. Yet the Law must be preached Page 50 7. Exhortation to two streams Page 53 1. All should be convinced of this and make haste out of this estate Page 55 2. Parents and others should use all fit means for the recovery of children c. Page 55 8. A disswasive from the wicked practise of cursing our selves or others Page 56 CHAP. III. The second Conclusion Christ was made a Curse for us which are under the curse of the Law Page 60 Cleared by enquiring Page 61 1. Wherein his becoming a Curse for us stands ib. And that is in Three things 1. Taking our Nature upon him Page 62 2 Imputation of our sinne unto him Page 63 3. Vndergoing the wrath of God and the sad effects thereof Page 64 Considered in 1. The preparation to it by lighter skirmishes Page 66 2. The main brunt it self Death of body Page 66 and of soul Page 67 1. In the withdrawing of the sence of his Fathers love Page 68 2. In the full seizing of the Lords wrath on him both in the garden and on the Cross Page 69 Some additional Observations especially of the mitigation of his soul-sufferings Page 72 1. In the place Page 73 2. In the time of continuance Page 74 3. In the companion Desperation ib. 2. By whom or by what power he was thus made Answered Page 78 1. Negatively not by any Authority which the Law had over him nor by any contrivement of the Creature c. ib. 2. Positively by a divine power exerted in 3 Acts Page 80 1. The Fathers fore-appointment ib. 2. The Sonn's condescention Page 81 3. A compact betwixt them arising from both these Page 82 Use 1. Information in 4 particulars Page 86 1. The mischievousness of sinne Page 87 2. The greatness of misery by sinne Page 88 3. The Impartialness of Gods Justice against sinners Page 89 4. Christs unspeakable love to sinners Page 91 2. Exhortation in 2 branches Page 93 Learn 1. a point of wisdome for our selves give free way to Christ to bear the curse for us ib. 2. Our duty to him answerably be willing to be made a curss for him Page 96 3. Lamentation the sinners put him to bear the curss still Page 99 Obj. Are there any that do so Page 100 Ans Yes many especially 5 sorts ib. 1. Hereticks which acknowledge not Christ in his Natures Offices c. ib. 2. Those which contemne or slight the Doctrine or Ministery of the Gospel Page 101 3. Those which make an Apostacy from the truth and profession of Christ Page 102 4. Those which accustome their tongues to outragious swearing tossing his name by blaspemous oaths Page 103 5. Those who exspect salvation by him and yet continue in sin taking encouragement to be more licentious or remiss in their course Page 105 The Conclusion of this Use Page 107 CHAP IV. THe Third Conclusion Christ by being made a Curse for us hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law Page 108 Redemption flowes from Christ's becoming a curse ib. 1. In Gods intention and purpose ib. 2. In the effect and event
cast filth upon it therefore I doe remand it from thee it shall no longer abide in that base unworthie soule of thine henceforth let that ugly image of sinne and hell which it seemes pleaseth thee better seize upon thee take it to thee and fils thy self with it Thus we are all alienated from the life of God Eph. 4.18 This part of the curse lyes heavie on the whole soule 1. On the Mind and understanding part which is impotent and unable to conceive the things of God and to discerne of things that differ our understandings are darkened Eph. 4.18 see 1. Cor. 2.14 2. On the Conscience which is defiled Tit. 1.15 being either sensles and so excusing when it should accuse Eph. 4.19 or when awaked wanting just matter of excusing and so unpeaceable Isa 57.21 3. On the will which is rebellious against the truth and wayes of God revealed to the mind depraved in its power of chusing can will onely that which is evil cannot will that which is good see Pro. 17.11 Jer. 5.23 Math. 23.37 4. On the affections which being the Wills Waiting-Maids are of the same temper disordered affecting evil disaffecting good running into extremitie of excesse or defect and so spoyling the conversation Thus man once made upright yet by seeking out many inventions Eccl. 7.29 is become without God in the world Eph. 2.12 ergo accursed 3. When the soule and body are parted then the wretched soule is sent down to hell to take possession of those everlasting flames As soone as ever the first death hath done its office forthwith the doome of the second death passeth upon the immortall soule and then the great Jaylour of hell layeth hold upon it and drags it into the presence of the Almighty on whom it shall look with horror and amazment Thy now sleeping conscience shall then be awakened and all thy sinnes shall be set in order before thee thou wilt not see them now but they shall then stare in thy face yea thy secret sinnes shall be set in the light of Gods countenance and thy most pleasing iniquities shall appeare before thee in their proper black hiew to gaster thy soule into finall desperation No place left for repentance the doore of mercie and the gate of heaven shall be thenceforth shut up against thee for ever thy wretched soul must take up its lodging in the lothsome prison of hell with the Divell and his Angels Luk. 16.22 23. 1 Pet. 3.19 where it shall lie filled with the wrath of God for the present astonished and swallowed up with the apprehension of the eternitie of that to come and tremblingly waiting for the great day of reckoning and the dreadfull houre when it shall be poured downe in full vials upon the whole man III. The curse which comes upon body and soule together or the whole man may be summed up in these 3 particulars also 1. The losse of his right unto and soveraignty over the creatures The Lord invested Adam in the day of his creation into a title and power * Jus 〈◊〉 pot●sta●e v● over the work of his hands especially the creatures here below he had free libertie to use them and they were given to be serviceable to him even the Sun Moone and starres to give him light the garden and all the trees of it except that one for his necessarie and comfortable sustenance and refreshing God hath given the earth to the children of men Psal 115.16 yea the Patent extended to dominion over the creatures Gen. 1.28 in which respect the Psalmist greatly admires the Lords high honouring of mankind Psal 8.4 6. c. But now by the fall Adam hath forfeited all this interest so that the creatures might justly deny us their service the Sun Moon and starres might withhold their light heat and influences from us the fire aire water c. might refuse to act or work for our good yea contrarily the creature setts it self against us in the quarrell of its Creatour as if it owed us a mischeif the Lion Bear Woolf would devoure us the beasts of the feild make head against us yea every worme will turne againe All the hosts of heaven and earth are readie even like to rebell against us This is a curse which all the sonnes and daughters of Adam feele in some measure and sometimes reacheth to the taking away of life limbe and all comforts And although the sinner enjoy the benefit of the creatures both for necessitie and delight yet that is onely by the indulgence of the most High who makes his Sun to shine and his raine to fall upon all and the choicest enjoyments are but as the Accommodations afforded to a Traitour in the Tower there 's a deadly curse lying hid in the bowels of them which will make sad work in the latter end 2. The general Judgement after death which is called the Judgement of the great day Jude 6. The Lord Jesus shall come in the clouds and shall be revealed from heaven with his mightie Angells in flameing fire 2. Thes 1.7 8. He shall descend from heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the trump of God 1. Thes 4.16 When the trumpet sounded at the giving of the law Exod. 20 18 Heb. 12.19.20 21. it was doubtles to set forth the terribleness of the curse which attends the Law but at this great day it shall sound farr lowder to fill the eares and hearts of sinners which have broken it with the dreadfull report of it to their conviction and confusion Jude 14.15 Their bodies shall be raised out of the dust and united to their soules and their persons shall be presented before this glorious Judge and arraigned at the barr of his great Tribunall The books shall be opened and all their foule businesses although now cast behind their backs and laid to sleep in the darkest vaults of forgetfulness shall be unmasked before the whole world Eccl. 12.14 The processe and result of the transactions of that day will be no small part of this curse when the Goats which shall stand at Christs left hand shall heare him solemnly sounding out that most dolefull sentence Depart ye cursed c. Math. 25.41 3. The full and finall Execution after Judgement As soone as ever this great work of judging the world is over and the last doome awarded then shall follow the execution thereof accordingly then shall the great black curse be poured downe upon sinners all the curses of the Law and Gospell too shall meet together as in one Sea and fall upon the soules and bodies of all impenitent ones in their perfect strength and furie and abide on them for ever this is called everlasting punishment Math. 25.46 and it stands in 2 things 1. Some that 's privative called the punishment of losse * Paenae damni an utter expulsion or banished from the blessed face and presence of God and the glorie of heaven Depart from me Math. 7.23
lighter skirmishes for having emptied himself of his glory so that he did not appear to be that which indeed he was and subjected himself to the state of a servant and so a meet object of suffering he became a man of sorrows all his life long Isa 53.3 compassed about with infirmity Heb. 5.2 as soon as he was born he was laid in a manger because there was no room for him in the Inne while he was very young he was persecuted and forced to flie into Aegypt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was tempted of Sathan Quod illud dictum civium satis arguit Usser Annal. per poster p. 552. he wrought for his living at the trade of his reputed father as it is more than probable by that speech of the Mazarenes Mar. 6.3 Is not this the carpenter c He was the object of mans reproach he was called a wine-bibber a friend of publicans and sinners an enemy to Caesar one that hath a devil he was subject to the infirmities which are incident to mankind as hunger thirst poverty he was betrayed by Judas forsaken by his disciples abused by the Jews mocked buffetted spit upon crowned with thorns accused arraigned condemned as the vilest malefactor In one word he was a worm and no man Psal 22.6 2. The main brunt it self was that he was struck with death The Sacrifice in the Law was to be slain the goat which was to be offered for a sin-offering for the people must be killed and the blood of it must be brought within the veil Lev. 16.15 The same courses as to killing was to be taken with the burnt-offering peace-offering and trespass-offering as we may see in the 1 3 5 6 7. chapters of Leviticus So it was prophesied Isa 53.12 he poured out his soul unto the death and elsewhere often Now this death which Christ did undergo was both of the body and soul 1. He suffered the death of the body called the first death this Gabriel the Angel revealed to the Prophet Daniel some 1006 years before Dan. 9.26 the Messiah shall be cut off the accomplishment whereof the stories of the Evangelists relate very largely Isa 53.8 Acts 8.33 his life is taken from the earth We by sin had deserved the first death the taking down of this earthly frame by the separation of the soul and body therefore Christ our surety must die that death for us the particular end of death which he should and did suffer was the death of the cross which was so designed and ordered by the all-wise counsel and providence of God both because it was very painfull and grievous and also because it was a most shamefull and ignominious death but especially because it was even by divine appointment stigmatized with this brand of infamy that whosoever was hanged on a tree was to be accounted ceremonially accursed as it is avouched in the close of the verse It was not necessary that he should suffer all the several sorts of death as stoning burning sawing beheading c. it was sufficient that he suffered that one kind of death which the wisdom of God saw to be most fit and suitable neither yet was it necessary that his death should be attended with such cruelties as some men have been enforced to suffer as pulling the flesh from the bone pinching it with hot pincers and the like These are rather personal than natural and meerly accidental not essential to the first death Therefore the legs of Christ were not broken and although his body was laid in the grave yet he saw no corruption because these infirmities did not consist with the dignity of his person and the latter would have made void the fruit and effect of his sufferings Therefore the Scripture declares both these to be contrary to Gods will See Jo. 19 33-36 Acts 2.31 2. He suffered the death of the soul or that which is called the second death Sin brought death into the world not onely that death which pulls down this earthly frame but also that which makes a wofull separation of the whole man from God Therefore the Lord Jesus must undergo this death too Isa 53.10 he made his soul an offering for sin And this death stood in these two things 1. There was a stoppage or withdrawing of the sense of his fathers love and favour from his soul This he complains of as a forsaking Psal 22.1 and it answers to that poena damni punishment of loss which we should suffer But we must understand this to be done in such manner and measure as becomes the person suffering 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was not a pulling the Godhead from the manhood this union continued entire all the time of his sufferings and shall do to all eternity Neither was it a deprival of the spirit wherewith his humane nature was filled even from the womb that did still abide in him and shall never be taken away from him according to that precious promise Isa 59.21 which I conceive must be fulfilled first in him and then in his seed with him Neither was it a total or perpetual withdrawing but onely in part and for a time the Lord turned away his face from him for a little season he hid himself out of his sight and would not be found he took off the sweet influence of the joy and comfort of the spirit suspending them for a time and keeping off from him at a great distance Psal 22.1 yet all this while God was present with him by his supporting grace so that he had some intermissions and an Angel came to comfort him Luke 22.43 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he was heard in that he feared H●b 5.7 or he was heard from his feare that is he was heard and delivered 2. There was a letting out and seizing of the Lords wrath and indignation upon his soul God did put into his hand a cup of the red wine of his wrath full of the mixture of the bitterest ingredients and he drank it off This answers to that p●na sensus punishment of pain which we should suffer All the waves of Gods displeasure went over his head See Psalm 18.4 5. 88.6 7 16 17. This supernatural death he suffered in both the kinds before mentioned first in the garden and after that on the cross In the garden Mat. 26.36 John 18.1 there the wrath of God did encounter him and he was put to grapple with it hand to hand he bare three several storms one after another and so took a deep draught of this bitter cup. The manner of it is described by sundry expressions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 14.33 he began to be sore amazed which notes a dreadfull astonishment arising from a sudden commotion of all the powers of his soul together and to be very heavie that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be surprized and possessed with a very great and pressing anguish of spirit through the unspeakable horrour of divine
condemned sinners by their knowledge of him or by faith in his Name for he shall take upon him their iniquities and acquit them from blame And this Covenant of God with Christ is the very basis or bottome of the Covenant of Grace God made a Covenant with Christ the spiritual David Psal 89.3 4. that he might make a Covenant with all his Elect in him Rom. 11.26 27. He made this Agreement with Christ as the Head and on this is reared up the whole frame of precious promises comprised in the Covenant of Grace as a goodly building upon a sure foundation And herein the Levitical Priesthood was a type of the Priesthood of Christ That was settled on Aaron and his successors and continued unto them by Covenant their anointing was to be an everlasting Priesthood Exod. 40.15 and more fully Numb 25.12 13. he gave to Phineas and to his seed the Covenant of an everlasting Priesthood and by vertue thereof they were inabled to manage the Covenant of life and peace which was with them Mal. 2.5 as to the Legal and Ceremonial administration of it even so the true Priesthood is settled on Christ and continued to him by Covenant and by vertue of this he manageth the Covenant of Grace in its Evangelical and Spiritual administration And as they must bear the iniquity of the Congregation and so be made typically a Curse for them Lev. 10.17 So Christ must be made a Curse truly by imputation by bearing the iniquity of the Congregation of the first-born which are written in heaven Only the Apostle gives us this difference betwixt these two Covenants that those in the Law were made Priests without an oath but Christ was made with an oath Heb. 7.20 21. For the proof of which he brings Psal 110.4 noting out a special preheminence of his Priesthood above theirs that theirs was changeable and so had an end but his is unchangeable and perpetual the Lord having confirmed the Covenant by his Oath and so infeoffed him in it by a grant never to be revoked Therefore Covenant and Oath are sometimes put together as Psal 89.3 But I am sensible that I have expatiated too far The issue of all is this in short Christ being made a Curse for us proceeds from the purpose and good pleasure of God appointing him and calling him out thereunto and it is the execution of a wonderfull and glorious design or contrivement agreed upon by God and Christ for working out the salvation of the Elect. I hasten to the Application Sect. 4. Use 1. Information in four particulars ANd first This Truth will afford us matter of very useful Information to establish our judgements in some particulars of special concernment 1 It holds forth unto us the strange mischievousness of sin in the nature and workings of it Oh the excessive sinfulness the unspeakable poysonfulness of sin that could reach as high as heaven and bring the Son of the Eternal God under the Curse Oh that the sons and daughters of Adam would look about them begin at length seriously to consider what an hideous Monster they nourish what a venemous Serpent they keep yea hug in their bosomes Look upon it in this glass and see how black and ugly it appears If you have not seen it by the Ministry of the Law so as to humble you and to lay you low before the Lord I beseech you turn your eyes unto Jesus Christ and see what foul work it hath made what mischief it hath brought on him Behold here a strange sight a sad spectacle the blessed Son of God made acursed The justice of the Law hath found him amongst sinners and singled him out from all the company and set him as a mark to shoot at yea hath spent all the arrows of its quiver upon him and thereby hath mangled and rent and torn and wounded him grievously yea hath brought him down to the gates of death even as low as hell When thou hast presented him to thy minde in this pittiful pickle then reflect upon thy self and say What evill beast hath done this Was it any offence that he hath done against the Law in his own person that hath provoked it to pour out such a flood of curses upon him Oh no he was holy harmless undefiled there was no spot of unrighteousness in him It was for my rebellion treason apostacy from my Maker Me me adsum qui feci I have sinned and Christ hath suffered the curse for my sin Take now a survey of the several branches of this curse and see how it dogged him all along from his birth to his burial especially the griefes and the groans the sorrows and the sweats the tears the terrors and the torments of his soul under the power of the second death and then say in thy heart Oh fool that I was I did not beleeve that sin had been so exceeding bad as it is I see now it is no tame beast but an unreasonable ravenous devouring Serpent full of deadly poyson Canst thou see all this heavy load lying on the back of Christ and yet judge any sin to be small or go on with a proud heart and a high look maintaining thine old league with sin and continuing in the hell of thine accursed natural condition as if it were thy heaven 2 It re-mindes us further of the greatness of that misery whereinto man is implunged by sin For if Christ be made a curse who had no sin of his own but onely ours laid upon him What a grievous curse then must needs lye upon them who have the guilt of their personal sins sticking close to their consciences and still lye weltring in their own gore-blood especially on those wretched souls which must bear the wrath due to sin in their own persons for ever The men of the world put the evil day far from them they feel no harme they fear no danger and therefore they blesse themselves in their present state and say No curse shall take hold upon them But oh how much better were it to reason thus Christ was made a curse for sinners therefore surely sinners in themselves and without Christ are in a desperate condition If we should see a man grievously tormented and put to death with extraordinary tortures and should withall understand that he suffered all these things for another mans crimes and not for his own we would conclude thus Surely that man was a notorious Malefactor and if the stroke of Justice had fallen upon his own head what a terrible death must he have indured If this curse was so bitter his wrath so heavy on Christ our Surety how unspeakably bitter and heavy would it be on us the principals Yea bring it home to thy self and say Alas What have I done I have surely spun a fair thred I have brought my self into a lamentable condition that either the Son of God must come down from heaven and be made a curse for me or else I
effectual calling Jesus Christ was made a curse and so became a sacrifice for sinners not that they might immediately without any more ado be made partakers of the redemption purchased thereby or be actually redeemed upon the very offering made but that having first made this benefit feasible so that now there is such a thing to be had which without him neither is nor could be he might afterwards communicate it to the Elect and give them the personal possession of it that they might enjoy it for themselves And this he doth by a powerful drawing them to himself and so by union to him they have a real interest in this benefit Therefore the Apostle sometimes speaks of it as appropriated to beleevers Eph. 1.7 Col. 1.14 and Jehovah stiles himself the Churches Redeemer Isa 49.26 as often elsewhere and Job calls him his Redeemer Job 19.25 Both these considerations are here implied as depending necessarily the one upon the other in respect of those that shall be saved and that they are not to be confounded but distinguished appears by Heb. 9.15 where we may observe a clear difference betwixt the death of the Mediator for the redemption of transgressions and receiving the promise of the inheritance This latter being laid down as a consequent or fruit of the former and limited to them that are called To conclude Take the whole in this short summe Redemption is the buying out and delivering of sinners from the curse of the Law and so from the guilt of sin and the wrath of God and the condemation of hell due thereunto by the death and satifaction of Christ the Mediator Sect. 2. Proof from Scripture-reason FOr the latter this main truth concerning the redemption of sinners by Christ now made a curse for them may receive further confirmation from grounds of Scripture-reason whether we consider the fitness of the person to undertake such an enterprise or the efficaciousness of his sufferings 1 The person was every way fit to redeem us being both God and man 1 He is true God 1 Joh. 5.20 blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 the only begotten of the Father Joh. 1.14 the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father vers 18. and therefore very gracious with him which the Father himself did solemnly testifie by a voice from heaven Matth. 3.17 He is the mighty God Isa 9.6 therefore the Father hath laid help on him Ps 89.20 the Horn of David Psal 132.17 and the Horn of salvation Luke 1.69 mighty to save Isa 63.1 he was infinite lyable to break through all difficulties and with an holy scorn to sleight an whole host of the most terrible enemies to march through them without danger and in despite of them all to fetch waters of life for us out of the Well of Bethlehem He is the Lord 1 Chro. 11.18 Is there any thing too hard for him Jer. 32.27 2 He is true man also in one and the same person flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone next a kin to us therefore he is not ashamed to call us brethren Heb. 2.11 It was a Levitical Ordinance that if an Israelite were fallen into decay and had sold himself to a stranger any of his brethren or nigh of kin unto him might redeem him Lev. 25.47 48 49 and the same might be done if he had sold any part of his possession vers 25. therefore these two phrases are used indifferently to note the same thing a near kinsman and one that hath right to redeem Ruth 2.20 3.9 Of this we have an instance in Hanameel Cosen-german to the Prophet Jeremy Chap. 32.7 8. c. This doubtless had some reference to Christ We had sold our selves to a stranger even to Satan to serve him Christ is a near kinsman one of the same stock and blood with us therefore the right of redemption is his It was also a statute and a custome in Israel That if a man dyed having no childe to inherit after him then his brother or next kinsman should take his wife and raise up seed to his deceased brother Deut. 25.5 c. and withall if the inheritance were alienated or set to sale he was to buy it out or redeem it for the use of the first-born that so it might continue settled upon the Family of the dead man Wee have a clear instantial Gospel-truth lys hid as I conceive Old Adam dyed and left no seed behinde him that might inherit heaven and moreover the inheritance was quite extinct and lost as to him and all his and therefore the Lord thrust him out of Paradise Gen. 3.24 Onely Jesus Christ is found the next kinsman who begetting sons and daughters by the word of Truth doth therby raise up a seed of God redeem the forfeited inheritance and so settle it upon the first-born of Adams family for ever yet with this difference that this seed shall not be called after the name nor inherit in the right of the first Adam but they shall be called by a new name which the mouth of the Lord shall name Isa 62.2 And they shall inherit in the right of the second Adam onely Act. 26.18 Eph. 1.11 2 The sufferings of Christ were fully efficacious to redeem us for thereby 1 He hath given abundant satisfaction to the justice of God and so hath weakned yea nullified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and taken away sin in the guilt and condemning power of it God sent his Son in the similitude of sinful flesh and for sin that is upon the sad and woful occasion of sins being in the world or that he might abolish and destroy it And what is the fruit of this glorious designe Why he hath condemned sin in the flesh that is by laying the curse which the Law threatned against sinners upon that very flesh or nature which had sinned he hath cast sin in its own plea. A mans work may be said to plead for his pay the crime of a Malefactor cryes for the execution of the Law upon him so sin pleads against the sinner and calls for death its wages to be inflicted upon him Sin although as an act it be transient yet in the guilt of it lyes in the Lords high Court of Justice filed upon record against the sinner and calling aloud for deserved punishment saying Man hath sinned and man must suffer for his sin But now Christ having suffered for sin that plea is taken off Lo here saith the Lord the same nature that sinned suffereth mine own Son being made flesh hath suffered death for sin in the flesh the thing is done the Law is satisfied and so he non-suits the action and casts it out of the Court as unjust Thus whereas sin would have condemned us he hath condemned sin and there is now no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 3. The blood of the Mediator out-cryes the clamor of sin We read Lev. 16.7 c. of two Goats which were
to be presented before the Lord the one to be offered for a sin-offering the other to be kept alive for a Scape-goat that Aaron having laid his hands on his head and confessed over him all the iniquities of the children of Israel might afterwards send him away bearing their iniquities into a Land not inhabited All this is fulfilled in Christ he hath both given himself to be a sin-offering for us and thereby removed guilt so far that when it is sought it cannot be found Jer. 50.20 So much is implied in that expression Heb. 9.26 He hath put away sin by the sacrifice of himself therefore redemption and propitiation are put together as the effect and cause First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 P●acamentum he is a propitiation pacifying Gods wrath and rendring him propitious to sinners and thence follows Redemption Rom. 3.24 25. When the debt is discharged then the Law with the arrests and executions of it are void and of no force So Christ having paid our debt hath thereby both removed sin and guilt and voyded the curse of the Law so that now it hath nothing against us 2 He hath broken the Serpents head according to the ancient Prophesie given out in Paradise Gen. 3.15 by taking part of flesh and blood with us he hath through death destroyed him that had the power of death that is the devil and so wrought our deliverance Heb. 2.14 15. The Son of God was manifested that he might loose or dissolve the works of the Devil 1 Joh. 3.8 he hath as it were shattered them all to peeces Isa 30.14 and will still be shattering them hee will not spare so that there shall not be left so much as a shred Now this was one of his works to hold poor sinners fast bound and shut up under the brazen bolts of the curse of the Law unto condemnation but he hath broken the gates of brass and cut the bars of iron in sunder Psal 107.16 He hath met those terrible enemies the Philistims of hell and grappled with them hand to hand he hath discomfited them and brought them under and he will not cease till he hath beaten them small as the dust before the wind nor turn again till they be consumed That which David spoke of himself as the Type See Isa 63.3 4 c. is eminently fufilled in Jesus Christ onely Psal 18.37 38-42 He is that little David that prevailed over the great Champion Goliah of Gath with a sling and with a stone and smote him and slew him 1 Sam. 17.50 51. He is that strong invincible Sampson that rent in peeces that infernal roaring Lion as easily as if he had been a Kid Judg. 14.5 6. that slew the Philistims hip and thigh with a great slaughter Chap. 15.8 and when they had him fast bound with new cords they became as flax upon his armes and with the jaw-bone of an Ass laid heaps upon heaps vers 14 15 16. that carried away the door of the gates of Hell to set the prisoners at liberty Chap. 16.3 and made the noblest conquest when he seemed to be wholly conquered and no hope was left that ever he could look up again slaying at his death far more than hee had slain in his life vers 21-30 He hath spoyled Principalities and powers and triumphed over them on the Cross Col. 2.15 When the High commission Court and Star-chamber were cast down then all fell with them that appertained to them as there are no more informations pleadings censures punishments So there are no Serjeants Bayliffs Apparitors Pursevants even so this Lord Jesus having thrown down the Court of sin by his death and thereby disabled the Law he hath also judged the great Catch-pole of hell and put him out of office so that he cannot now execute the curse and wrath of God upon poor sinners as gladly hee would and although for the present he can reach to bruise their heel and doth often work them wo yet the Redeemer will tread him under their feet shortly Romans 16. ver 20. Sect. 3. An Objection If by Ransome then not by Rescue Answered THus much for the clearing and prooving of the Conclusion but here lieth a Doubt in the way for answering whereof wee may borrow a little light from the premises If our Redemption was by Christ's becoming a Curse for us and so by buying us out with the price of his blood How could it then be by strength of hand and a forcible rescue These two seem to destroy one another Ransome and Rescue V●de Musculum loc com de redempt●one To be delivered by the paying of a price and to be delivered by conquest are inconsistent as to the same persons The nature of the things is so different that they cannot concurre in the same deliverance Ans Although these two do usually stand at a distance yet in this great business of the Redemption of mankinde they close well together To clear this take these three Considerations 1. Mankinde by the breach of the Law being become a debtor to justice and under the curse even in the extremity of it and Almighty God who is the party wronged being the onely soveraign Lord and Lawgiver Therefore the principal and most proper way to effect man's deliverance was to give satisfaction to justice so that either sinners must die the death in their own persons or Christ their surety must give his life a ransome for them being at an utter loss in themselves Against this it may be objected Then we must say that Christ redeemed us from God and himself being God he redeemed us out of his own hands by paying a price to himself which is absurd Ans This seeming absurdity will vanish if we keep to Scripture phrase and take along with us these Two things 1. The person of the Redeemer was not onely God but also man and although as to the sufficiency for the work and the valour and efficacie of it he must necessarily be God yet both the right and act of Redemption belonged to him properly as man so that we may say It was the man Christ that bought us out of the hands of the curse and wrath of God 2. God the Father himself had a special hand in this business the whole dispensation and managing of it was by his supream and soveraign appointment as we heard before and thus it is no more absurd to say that God took a course to satisfie his own just●ce and to redeem us from himself than to say that a King doth so when he gives his own son to lay down his life Or a Creditor when he requires the debt of his own Son for which the son was surety by the Fathers consent for the saving of Traitors from the stroak of his Law 2. Man being thus obnoxious to the justice of God and therefore delivered up by him into the hands of Sathan as his jaylour or executioner to keep him as his
may not I will not suffer this high affront of Adam and his posterity against my holy Law whereby the honour both of my justice and truth are in danger to be trampled under foot And yet if I should let out all my wrath upon them the spirit would fail before me and the souls which I have made Isa 57.16 I will therefore let it out upon their Surety and he shall bear it for them that they may be delivered and thus the Lord in wrath remembers mercie Hab. 3.2 I have done with the doctrinal part of this Conclusion I proceed to the Application CHAP. V. Use 1. Confutation of Papists and Socinians 1. THis main Gospel-truth may afford us some help towards the Confutation of the damnable Doctrine of two grand Enemies of the cross of Christ and of this great and glorious work of Redemption by his becoming a curse for us 1. Papists who not being content with this way of Christ have devised other means and put into the hands of sinners something else to make up the price of their Redemption They present us with several parcels to this purpose as Bellar. De poenitentia lib. 4. cap. 2 3 6 7. 1. That a man may redeem himself from the temporal punishment of his sins by some notable and extraordinary good works while he lives as by fasting pilgrimages almes-deeds building and endowing of Churches hospitalls and the like They grant that Christ by his sufferings hath made satisfaction immediately for the guilt of eternal death but then when the sin is remitted there remains still on the sinners an obligation to temporal punishment for which we must make satisfaction our selves one way or other and so in part redeem our selves But oh where shall we find that man except Jesus Christ that can shew us such a good work Verily the best choicest the eminentest works of any meer man that ever the Sun saw or shall see are poor weak blemished things like a menstruous cloth infinitely short of the puritie of God's Law and therefore no way equivalent to the injurie done to him by sin 2. That there is a Purgatory-fire wherein all those must be purged Bellar. de purgatorio which die in the guilt of Venial sin who yet may redeem themselves at length by their own sufferings there or they may be ransomed before by the prayers and offerings of the living But the Scripture holds forth nothing to us concerning this nay it affords us many strong arguments against it if it were worth the while to produce them They say this fire is every whit as hot as hell-fire but I am confident it never burnt any body nor do I know to what use it serves but onely to warme the kitchin of that Man of sin 3. That there is a certain Treasury in the Church Idem De Indulgent●●s Vide Ames wherein are laid up the remainder of the superabundant satisfaction of Christ and those sufferings of the virgin Mary and other Saints which were more and greater than they needed for themselves and the keyes of this chest are committed to the Pope of Rome that he may upon just and reasonable cause dispence Indulgencies either by himself or by his Delegates unto them that need and desire them to make satisfaction for the temporal punishment oftheir sins But this is no better than the former For besides that Christ's satisfaction although in it self infinite hath nothing more in it than needs as to the application of it to those for whom God did intend it where shall we finde the man that hath done or suffered more then he ought to have done or deserved to suffer In truth these are but as Babies for children to play with or as when a mother promises her child an apple to till it on to some good action Bell. E●● de Indulg cap 6. which yet she doth not give it as some Papists do confess O rely because they come off at good round rates they serve to fill the coffers of the great merchant of Rome In a word all these are meer fancies yea lying vanities which cannot stand with this Truth For if Christ was made a curse for us and thereby hath wrought our Redemption then either there is no other way to effect it in whole or in part or else it will follow that Christ's work is imperfect which who dares once imagine As for us we may ascribe to the Psalmists Resolve Psa 49.7 8 9. No man can redeem his brother If not from temporal death how much less from eternal we shall leave these offals to the dogs of Rome for we have enough in Christ 2. Socinus and his followers who teach that Christs becoming a Curse for us and the whole course of his humiliation in doing and suffering was not at all for satisfaction but onely to set forth himself to us an example for our imitation and in his own person both by doing and suffering to shew us the way to heaven This Heresie was first hatched by Pelagius about the time of S. Augustine and about 700 years after revived by Abailardus in the time of holy Bernard as it seems by his writing against him Vide Gr●tii d●f●ns cap. 1. V●scii respons cap. 3. ex Socino aliis and now of late started again by Socinus with an advantage of more liveliness as it is usual with heresies when they come to a second and third resurrection For thus they deliver themselves more particularly Jesus Christ came into the world on this errand both to declare unto sinners the way to eternal life and to bestow it on them in case they will follow his counsel And for this purpose he was content to suffer death that thereby he might 1. Seal confirm and put out of question the truth and certaintie of his doctrine 2. Purchase to himself the right of bestowing eternal life upon them 3. Perswade them to that which is necessary for the obtaining of it to wit faith to believe his word and promise and sure hope to wait for the accomplishment of it 4. Hold forth himself before them a remarkeable matchless example of patience and obedience And whereas the Scripture doth frequently ascribe remission and salvation to the death of Christ that say they is a figurative speech They are the proper effects of his resurrection and the glorie which followed and are attributed to his death onely because he must necessarily die before he could rise again But now that Christ was so made a curse for us as to suffer the punishment due to our sins in way of a satisfaction to divine justice and thereby to redeem us from the curse this they will flatly denie and condemn it Se●tentia va●d p●●n 〈◊〉 D●●na●● 〈◊〉 ●la●phemis as an opinion that is deceitfull erroneous and very pernicious yea false absurd and horribly blasphemous and it is observable that when they make use of any Scripture either for the strengthening
our redemption at all Lastly We finde that Christ is called our Ransome which is never spoken of Moses and that is enough to shew that there is an huge distance betwixt them even in this business of Redemption Apud eundem ubi supra 2 That this Redemption is ascribed to Christs suffering an accursed death not in respect of God but of us that is not that God was moved hereby as by a valuable consideration to set sinners at liberty but onely that they might thereby be brought effectually to the enjoyment of it by faith and obedience To this we answer that the bringing of sinners to enjoyment of this benefit is not the next and immediate effect of Christs death that belongs to the application which supposeth Redemption in being for the thing must be before it can be applied Now the Scripture doth every where make Christs accursed death the next and immediate cause of the benefit of Redemption but to the application and personal possession of this benefit its onely a remote cause There be sundry others nearer even in respect of the Redeemer himself as his Resurrection Ascension Intercession the publication of it by the Ministry of the Gospel the sending of the Spirit to make it effectual So that our redemption is ascribed to Christs accursed death primarily in reference to God the Lord and Law-giver that his justice might be satisfied and but secondarily and at a further distance in reference to us that we might reach to the enjoyment of it Much more might be added but I shall refer you to those godly learned men which have purposely confuted them I have no delight to rake in this dunghill nor would I have insisted thus much upon it but for these two reasons because 1 I conceive it to be a fundamental falsehood undermining the very being of the Gospel and pulling down the chiefest pillar of our salvation by Christ 2 Yet this soul-killing plague having broken out is dangerously spread abroad in this wanton licentious age and too many of all ranks are infected with it Yea there is a strange generation of hereticks called Quakers lately sprung up which have borrowed their abominable opinions and wilde practises from other sects and patched them up unhandsomely like a beggars coat Among other errors they broach us this down right Socinianisme See the perfect Pharisee Pos 5. That Christ in the flesh with all that he did and suffered therein was but a figure and nothing but an example whereby both Masters and Scholars do with one blow destroy the satisfaction and merit of Christ and consequently the whole work of our Redemption Let us abhor this damnable doctrine and cleave to the truth of Scripture which is delivered in such plain and familiar expressions as cannot without too much impudence and palpable wresting be eluded Truly besides many pregnant Texts in the New Testament almost the whole fifty third Chapter of Isaiah may serve for a sufficient confutation of it They might with a little dishonour to Jesus Christ speak out and say flatly that he died not at all as say that he dyed to a small purpose But it is no marvel if they that have robbed him of the truth of his God-head do dispoile him also of the principal office of Priesthood and the efficacy of his satisfaction with the choisest benefits purchased thereby for the salvation of lost sinners CHAP. VI. Use 2. Sect. 1. 1 Information in six particulars 2 HEnce we may infer matter of Information in sundry particulars 1 See and seeing admire the unspeakable love of God and of Christ to wretched mankinde not onely that Christ is made a curse in our stead but much more that this strange dispensation should work so noble and glorious an effect as Redemption is Assuredly both God the Father in giving Christ to be a curse and Christ the Mediator in submitting thereunto had this great end all along in their eye and upon their hearts next to the greatest end of all the glory of free grace even the rescuing of poor lost sinners from that hellish slavery wherein the curse of the Law had intangled them Oh the rich love of the Lord our God It was the fruitful womb which did first conceive and then warm and at length in the fulness of time bring forth this heavenly birth Joh. 3.16 1 Joh. 3.16 4.9 10. Should an earthly Prince disburse a great summe of money of his own accord undesired for the ransoming of a company of slaves which were not only strangers but also enemies to him and his Fathers house being convicted Traitors and so continuing this would be accounted an act of such singular clemency as could hardly bee paralleld by any report of story What wonderful loving kindness then is this that the Prince of the Kings of the earth Rev. 1.5 hath laid out the price of his dearest blood for the redemption of the backsliding traiterous brood of Adam and is found of them that sought him not that never looked after him Isa 65.1 Rom. 10.20 2 The work of Redemption is a very costly peece a business of infinite charge The Redeemer must be no meaner person than the Christ of God the price to be paid no lower a price than the accursed death of the Cross Might not the incomparable dignity of the person have dispensed with the means of the price or the extraordinary costliness of the price have over-weighed the means of the person so that either a lower price from a person of such eminent worth or a meaner person paying such an extraordinary dear price might have served the turn Oh no neither of these If the whole world yea ten thousand worlds with all the riches and treasures of their several Indies had been laid down upon the naile for this ransome by the greatest Potentate that ever the earth knew they would have been contemned as falling infinitly short It was a most costly Redemption and so we should account of it We reckon of our earthly priviledges Can. 8.7 libertie immunities freedomes according to the rate which they cost if wee know they cost a great price we value them the more He that said he had bought his Roman freedome with a great summe Act. 22.28 did prize it accordingly even so and much more should we set an high rate upon this choice spiritual benefit which cost so vast a summe 3 The grace of the Gospel is a very precious thing Out of the eater came meat c. Iudg. 14.14 for it is the purchase of Christs satisfaction and the summe and kernel of the work of Redemption The curse of the Law did even break his bones and this hath opened a spring of spiritual marrow and fatness wherewith the soules of dry empty sinners might be both filled and satisfied Were it not for this there could be no grace nor mercy we should never have heard of any such thing as the Gospel to bring the glad tidings
have a very foule nasty heart my soule is a very stie of all uncleanness I am carnal fold under sin Rom. 7.14.23.34 I can do no good thing Oh miserable man who shall deliver mee why Christ thy Redeemer hath made thee a new creature he hath put into thee a principle of holiness and he is still at work in thee weakning sin by degrees so that though it will dwell in thee yet it shall not over-master thee nor bring thee under its feet Corruption shall go down and grace shall get up more and more The Lord Jesus will not spare either pains or cost in prosecuting this business he will wear of that filthy slough of the old nature and the image of hell and make thee partaker of the divine nature that thou mayest be conformed to his own image Sigh and breath after it 6. Final Redemption Which stands in the total removal and absence of all miserie and imperfection begun at death to be perfected at the resurrection The Apostle calls it the Redemption of our bodies Rom. 8.23 as I conceive for these reasons 1. To distinguish it from the first and great act wrought by Christ on the Cross to wit Redemption by way of merit whereon the main stress of the business lay which was not intended so much for the body as the soul to deliver it from guilt and curse 2. To intimate that part of Redemption which we shall be partakers of by death whereby we shall be set free from manifold evils and annoyances which compass us about and molest us while we are in the bodie 3. Because the accomplishment of this benefit at the last day shall be more visible in the bodie The soules of righteous men even before the resurrection are fully delivered from all bondage wanting onely that perfection which stands in their union to their bodies These lying in their graves as in prison under misery shall then be united again to their souls and so both shall be equally sharers according to their several capacities in this final Redemption So then this is a certain effect or consequent of the great work wrought by Jesus Christ the price is paid for the whole and full deliverance shall come in the day of Resurrection which is therefore called the day of Redemption Eph. 4.30 and Christ is made of God to us Redemption 1 Cor. 1.30 At that day oh most desirable day there shall be a clear riddance from all those unwelcome guests which sin hath brought into the world As 1. from the evils of the bodie or outward man all crosses incident to our imperfect condition here whether attendants on mortality or corrections for our wandrings and miscarriages or sufferings for righteousness 2. from the evils of the soul or inward man from sin with all the rags and tatters of it which being fast on us here from the temptations of Sathan and the inticements of an evil world wherewith we are encompassed and also from the second death the wrath to come in the damnation of hell Glad●us mort●s retusus vulnerat adhu●● sed c●●●a p●●●cu●um Calv. in 〈◊〉 The first death indeed will hold us under a long time but at length it shall be destroyed 1 Cor. 15.26 and in the mean time it is but as a sword without edg which may wound a little yet without danger it shall do us no hurt but be as a wicked door to let our souls into immortalitie and the grave with the corruption of it shall be as a bed of spices to perfume our bodies and to prepare them for the resurrection Briefly whatsoever there is in all the world that can be called evil we shall be set free from it all forever all imperfection both of parts and degrees shall be done away Matt. 22.30 1 Cor. 13.10 yea Gods own ordinances as marriage preaching and sacraments which are given as remedies of weakness here shall take their leave as things whereof we shall have no further need or use Let the Lords redeemed lift up their heads and see this part of their happiness afarr off Your soules and bodies both lie under a thousand wearisome vanities in this pilgrimage but your redemption draweth nigh when there shall be no more sorrow nor crying but all tears shall be wiped away from your eyes Rev. 21.7 never to know or taste of misery any more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. Full Glorification We have some foretasts of it in this life therfore the Apostle speaketh of it as a thing done in those that are justified Rom. 8.30 when God gives poor believing souls assurance of his love sence of his favour and fills the heart with joy and peace then he begins to glorifie them Therefore this joy is called unspeakable and full of glory 1 Pet. 1.8 these are a choice portion of the first fruits of the spirit Rom. 8.23 we shall reap the whole harvest of glory in heaven It s called by way of Eminency the salvation of our souls 1 Pet. 1.9 Redemption and the former benefits flowing from it are salvation begun and continued for we are saved here Eph. 2.8 2 Timoth 1.9 but this shall bee salvation consummate The Scripture sets forth this benefit by variety of appellations as Eternal life Matth. 25.46 Everlasting habitations Luke 16.9 Paradise Luke 23.43 The recompence of reward Heb. 11.26 A Crown of Righteousness 2 Tim. 4.8 A Crown of glory that fades not away 1 Pet. 5.4 The glory which is to be revealed in us or into us Rom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●to us N●n n●m ast●b●mus q as●inanes vacui Spectateres nec g●oria quasi extriae s●cus revelab●tur n●b● sed in nobis Bernard 8.18 For we shall not stand as idle spectators looking upon it as a thing without us but we shall be possessours of it within us the everlasting Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ 2. Pet. 1.11 The inheritance of the Saints in light Col. 1.12 and the riches of the glory of it Eph. 1.18 Yea an inheritance incorruptible undefiled and which withereth not away 1 Pet. 1.4 And on this account the Apostle calls it the Adoption Rom. 8.23 because that shall be the time of our entring into the full possession of the Kingdome which is prepared for us and unto which we are intituled by adoption It was a main end of Christs giving himself for the Church that at length he might present it to himself a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle Eph. 5.25 27. And the Apostle reasoning from reconciliation by Christs death to salvation by his life Rom. 5.10 intimates that this is a necessary consequent of that This estate shall be the perfection of all created contentments Here shall be riches which cannot be plundered treasures which corrupt not pleasures which vanish not whatsoever is truly desirable which men enjoy severally some this some that in this world heaven hath all these and infinitly much more in a far more