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A66604 A discourse of the Resurrection shewing the import and certainty of it / by William Wilson. Wilson, William, Rector of Morley. 1694 (1694) Wing W2954; ESTC R24575 126,012 256

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that we shall assuredly rise again to Life because our Redeemer who has over-come Death has the Power of raising us to Life again and of justifying us to Eternal life in his Hands It is not a believing that there is a God For though such a Faith does much contribute to the comfort of our Lives when we know that he is reconciled to us yet it serves only to fill us with terrour and astonishment if his Wrath does still lie upon us Nor is it a believing only that he employ'd a great Prophet to make our Duty more plain and to give us the best Rules and the most excellent Example of a Holy Life For such a Revelation can be of no advantage to us if our former Offences for which we are condemned are not pardon'd Neither is it a believing that though Sin be strong and prevalent in us yet we are not one jot the less Just because we commit Sin as some speak but by being united to Christ who has fulfill'd all Righteousness we have all Righteousness that is needfull to possess us of Everlasting life i.e. That God has put all into the Hands of his Son and that we have nothing more to do for the gaining Eternal life but to believe that Christ has done all for us For all that we can do will not make us one jot the more Just and Righteous in the sight of God i.e. Nothing more qualified for Eternal life than we are without it Now that this is not the Faith that the Gospel requires of us is evident from hence That the Gospel does all along suppose us to be in a state of Probation for Eternal life which this Faith does not For it supposes we are as safe as we can be by believing the things that Christ has done and suffer'd for us and that by means of this Faith his Righteousness is ours and that this Righteousness which is ours by believing is the only Righteousness we have to trust to for Eternal life Now if this be so we must deprive Christ of two of his Offices viz. his Prophetick and Regal Offices For having fulfill'd all Righteousness for us there was no need of his discharging the Office of a Prophet by interpreting the Mind of God and prescribing Rules of Life to us nor of executing the Office of a Prince in governing us by Rules of Righteousness who have all Righteousness in him And besides To what purpose are all the Motives and Exhortations to do Righteousness which we meet with in the Gospel Why is a Day of Judgment appointed to take an account of our Doings if believing that he has done all for us be all the Duty that our Eternal Happiness depends upon St. Paul tells us That we must all appear before the Judgment-seat of Christ that every one may receive the things done in his Body according to what he hath done whether it be good or bad 2 Cor. 5.10 And if we must be Judg'd for all that we our selves do in this Life it is certain that we have somewhat more to do than to believe that Christ has done all for us The true account then of this Matter is this That Christ by suffering Death having born the Punishment that in Adam we were doom'd to has procured us a full discharge from that Punishment i.e. God has justified us so that there is no need of our doing Righteousness that we may rise again from the Dead because that which Christ has done and suffer'd has procured us this Mercy and we may depend upon him for it Of this Mercy God has given us an Assurance by raising him from the Dead For his Resurrection is for our Justification or a certain Evidence that God has justified us as his Death was for our Offences or the Punishment that the Justice of God has doom'd us to But then though this Justification be only owing to the Merits of Christ yet we must do Righteousness that we may for ever enjoy the Benefits of it and if we do not this our Mediatour himself will condemn us again So that being discharged from the Obligation to die as Malefactours we are to take care of our Lives lest we die again by the Sentence of our Redeemer i.e. We must add to our Faith all Christian Vertues which are necessary to qualifie us for Everlasting life lest the Gospel condemn us again This is that Mercy that the Gospel declares to us And accordingly the Faith that it requires of us is the believing that God sent his Son into the World upon this Errand and that being justified by his Death we shall not only assuredly rise again but by obeying the Gospel we shall assure to our selves Everlasting life So that the Faith that the Gospel requires of us does suppose we are in a Justified state i.e. discharged from the Sentence of Death that passed upon us in Adam and is required of us not as the only Righteousness whereby we are to make our selves Immortal but as an Encouragement to perfect Holiness that we may be justified to Everlasting life when we are Judged by our Gracious Redeemer And it is by this Faith that God makes a Trial of the Sincerity of our Hearts whether we dare depend upon the Power he has given his Son to raise us again and to give us Eternal life For he expects that we should leave this World as Abraham did his native Country and his Father's House though we know not the World we go to when we leave this with a firm belief in his Promise of being raised to a better life And for the better confirming our Faith the performing it is committed to the care of him that is risen and has received Power to destroy Death For his Resurrection is an Instance that Death is not an Enemy too powerfull for him to vanquish And since he is invested with that Power by which his own Body was raised what greater assurance can we have that Death shall be abolished than this That he who has undertaken to abolish it has that Power which can destroy Death But especially our great Certainty in this case does arise from hence That the doing of this is committed to his care the business of whose Life and Death was to deliver us from Death And is there any Reason to fear lest he who has loved us and laid down his Life for us should at last fail us of the Blessings that he came to mediate for us and which he has dearly purchased If he will suffer his Blood to be vilely cast away and the Price of our Redemption to be lost we may question whether he will finish the Salvation that he came to procure us But if he has any value for his own Blood any sense of his own Sufferings any regard to his own Merits we cannot but believe that he who has gone through the Tragical part of his Undertaking will undoubtedly Triumph at the last in the total destruction of
who would not have Life rendered unpleasant by any thing ought above all things to startle and tremble at the thoughts of Death as the greatest Enemy to Life All that are persuaded there is another Life after this are taught by this belief to have a very indifferent regard to this life because they know that the loss of this life is not the loss of all the life they hope for But now the Atheist is so much wedded to this life that he places all his Happiness in the delights of it and cares not to think of any other And therefore the thoughts of dying must certainly be very troublesome to him because he is persuaded he shall for ever lose that which he would not have embitter'd and that all his joys and pleasures all that he accounts good for him are thereby for ever gone And now what a wofull condition is this Man in who lives under such a persuasion as this He shows he is no Enemy to Life when he tells the World That all that he aims at is the making Life as pleasant and easie as 't is possible to be And yet that which he so much loves he rallies upon and pleases himself with the thoughts of losing it for ever Now if it be so gratefull to him to think he shall die never to live more why is he so tender at all of Life why does he seek out ways to make it pleasant why does he not live in a continual neglect and contempt of it if it be so ridiculous a thing to live as he would persuade the World it is when he derides the Religious Man's hopes of living again though he dies But if Life be worth all the care and pampering that he bestows upon it he of all Men ought not to make it his scorn He pretends to be a very great friend to Life while he undertakes to teach the World the best way of living And yet at the same time that he professes so much kindness and friendship for Life his Principles make him a perfect Enemy to it He believes that there is no more Life after this but that when once Death has closed his Eyes he shall never wake more and this Thought he so much pleases himself with that he laughs at all that do not believe as he does And yet he tells the World that he is an Atheist purely for the good of Life He is an Atheist because he would not have his Life sour'd with ill-natur'd Restraints as he believes them And yet because he is an Atheist he cannot endure to hear of a life that is Everlasting or of recovering his life again when he has lost it And is it now a wise thing to be an Atheist when every one that is so is taught by his Principles to thwart his own desires and to make it a part of his Wisdom to deride the belief of enjoying that for ever which he pretends to have a greater value for and to consult the good of more than any body else If he be wise in being such a friend to life as he would have the World believe he is when he would have nothing to interrupt or lessen the joys and pleasantries of it why is he such an Enemy to is as to be unwilling the Faith of those that believe an Eternal life should be true But if he be wise in ridiculing and opposing this Faith why does he profess himself a friend to Life Either he must be a fool in being contented that this belief should be false or in loving Life so much as he does Especially when we consider it is for the sake of Life that he chuses to believe as he does Why is Life so precious a thing to him that he cannot endure to think of any thing that is troublesome to it when with a great deal of satisfaction he can think of loving it for ever Atheism then is a very foolish thing not only because it makes a Man an Enemy to his own Life but an Enemy to the Immortality of it only that he may be thought the greatest friend to it by providing extravagantly for it now as a foolish Heir sells the Reversion of an Estate for the present Enjoyment of a small pittance of it The Atheist will perhaps plead for himself that he is no Enemy to a suture Life but to the belief of it without Reason And it is true he is no Enemy to the Life that he now lives nor is there any reason that he should because it is all he hopes for But if he loves Life at all why is he a friend to those Principles that will not suffer him to rejoyce in the hopes of a Resurrection to Life again He saith he sees no reason to believe this Suppose he had well consider'd the matter yet methinks he should not deride those who are persuaded there is good reason to believe it but rather lament it as his misfortune that he cannot discern the reason upon which others ground their belief For he that so loves his Life as to be unwilling to lose it should at least be very favourable towards a Doctrine that promises the Restauration of Life again and wish that he could see good reason to believe the Truth of it But to laugh and make a mock at it as if it was not worth wishing it was true does not savour of that Wisdom which a love of Life should prompt him to 5. We may hence inferr the Reasonableness of a Holy Life Our Religion does wisely command us to set our Affections on things above and not on things on the Earth and to have our Conversation in Heaven because our Life in this World will shortly have an End and it is in Heaven that we must live an Everlasting life Upon which account it is very fit that we should acquaint our selves with the Nature of the place we are going to and how we must live when we come thither And as he who is about to settle in another Country to send those Vertues before-hand thither which may be a maintenance to us when we come thither We to be sure ought not so to live now as if we were to live no more for what will become of us when we do live again if we have made no provision at all for that life The main solicitude that ought to fill our thoughts is not how we may thrive and improve our Fortunes in this World i.e. To put our selves into such a condition that while we live here we need not fear either poverty or the disgrace that accompanies it but what we must do that when we are returned from the Dead we may not be despised for our want of such Vertues as are to support that Life This ought to be the End of our Living now because we must live again For a loose inconsiderate way of living can be reasonable upon no account but either because we shall never be taken away from a World of
Body as does abundantly answer the Expression of God's being their God For if God be their God he will certainly satisfie so Natural a desire as that of a separate Soul towards its Body is i.e. He will bring the Soul out of its separate state and raise the Man that is dead Thus then of old from the time that Man became Mortal has this Doctrine been Revealed And although there are no such express Texts in the Old as there are in the New Testament for it yet all that consider the import and design of these Promises made to Adam and Abraham must grant that nothing less than the Resurrection from the Dead was intended in them They are the Promises upon which God founded his Church in the two first periods of it as now the Christian Church is upon that clear discovery we have of a Resurrection And because the Church is the same it was in all Ages the foundation likewise must be the same And as in the time of Adam's Innocency it was the Hopes of an Immortal Life that was the Encouragement he had to maintain his Innocency so since we became Mortal it is the same Hope wherewith God encourages us to return to and persevere in our Duty only with this difference That now we are to be made Immortal by conquering Death Thus the Seed of the Woman will break the Serpent's Head and God will show himself to be Abraham's God CHAP. II. The Resurrection as Exemplified to us in the Resurrection of Christ II. I Come now to consider what Ground of Certainty we have for this Doctrine as it is Exemplified to us in the Resurrection of Christ And this is such a sensible Demonstration of the certain Truth of it that none can reasonably make the least doubt of it who does not call in question the Truth of Christ's Resurrection For if it be certainly true that Christ is risen from the Dead this is a sufficient Answer to all those Objections wherewith wanton Wits endeavour to puzzle this Doctrine For no Argument can be good against which there lies plain matter of fact Let them pretend never so much Impossibility in the case yet since we can tell them of a Man that was dead and is alive again all the Impossibilities that they talk of come to this That it is impossible a Man should know all that God can do There are Two things then that I shall do 1. Consider the Certainty of Christ's Resurrection 2. What Ground of Certainty we have from thence that we shall rise again SECT I. Of Christ's Resurrection I. In speaking of Christ's Resurrection I shall 1. Consider the Certainty of it That he did rise 2. By what Power he rose 1. That he did rise again i.e. That the Body in which he suffer'd which was dead and buried and which lay three days in the Grave was raised again out of the Grave and is ascended into Heaven That the same Jesus who was Born of the Virgin Mary and lived a true and proper Life as we do among the Jews for above Thirty years and whom they took and put to Death as truly as they did the two Malefactors that were Crucified with him That Jesus I say who under-went as real a dissolution of Soul and Body as any other Man that is born into the World does did rise again the same Man both in Body and Soul as before he was Crucified This is the Doctrine that the Apostles were appointed to publish to the World that by being convinced that a Man who died as we do was raised again we might believe that there is forgiveness with God i.e. That the Punishment that is inflicted on us for Sin will not be Eternal Ye Men of Israel hear these words Jesus of Nazareth a Man approved of God among you by miracles and wonders and signs which God did by him in the midst of you as ye your selves also know Him being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God ye have taken and by wicked hands have crucified and slain whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains of Death Act. 2.22 23 24. The sum of which is this That as it was the same Jesus who was approved of God among them by Miracles and Wonders and Signs that the Jews crucified so it was the same Jesus that they had crucified and slain that God raised up This is an Article in which upon the account of the Curse we are fall'n under we are so nearly concern'd that the Apostles did mainly inculcate it as if the Preaching the Resurrection of Christ was to preach the whole of Christianity And God took care we should have as full an Evidence of the Truth of it as any Matter of Fact can possibly be proved by The Apostles I say were mainly concern'd in persuading the World to the belief of this Doctrine not that this is all that Christianity requires us to believe but because the other Articles of our Faith do either terminate in this and by consequence must be believed when we believe this or else are not of that moment to us as this is This is an Article that sets before us the Mercy we stood in need of the Mercy of being deliver'd out of the Hands of our Enemies and of having Life and Immortality the Blessings we lost in Adam brought to light And therefore the Resurrection of our Lord was accounted of that moment in our Religion that the Office they consider'd themselves Ordain'd to was this of being Witnesses of his Resurrection Act. 1.22 And accordingly this Doctrine St. Paul did in a peculiar manner recommend to the thoughts and care of Timothy Remember this that Jesus Christ of the seed of David was raised from the dead according to my Gospel 2. Tim. 2.8 This then being so considerable an Article of our Faith I am to consider what Evidence we have of the Truth of it For as the Apostle speaks if Christ be not risen then is our Preaching vain and our Faith is also vain 1 Cor. 15.14 i.e. The Christian Religion is of no use to the World The Evidence then that we have to prove this though it be not such as does carry an infallible Certainty in it yet is such as is sufficient to satisfie any unprejudiced person Because it is all the proof that a Matter of Fact as this is is capable of For we have the Testimony of several Hundreds that saw and convers'd with him after he was risen and that for forty days had both opportunity and liberty to examine the Truth of it throughly and to satisfie all the Doubts that rose in their Minds concerning it And besides we have good reason to believe that his greatest Enemies were convinced of the Truth of it And they who will not admit of this as a sufficient proof may as well question the Truth of every thing we see whether those be Men or no that we live among nay whether we our selves be not
Punishment for Grace to save him from But the case is not thus with us For the Scripture saith he has concluded all under sin Gal. 3.22 i.e. He has already given Judgment upon us and therefore his Justifying us cannot be by declaring us Righteous according to the Law of Integrity but by acquitting us of the sin he has concluded us under And what other Judgment is it that the Apostle has a respect to in this Expression but that which he gave upon Adam when for his Disobedience he condemn'd him to die God 't is true does in a secret and invisible way govern and judge the World in all Ages of it He hurls contempt upon Princes he humbles the proud and makes a Land barren for the wickedness of those that dwell therein And when he does any thing of this nature he concludes that sinfull People under their own Sins whom he punishes for their Wickedness But yet these and such-like Calamities though they are the Judgments of God and argue him to have pass'd a doom upon such a People Yet it is secret and does not determine of Men's state and condition any further than as to the Temporal comforts of this life But the sin that the Scripture tells us we are concluded under does respect all Men and the Judgment it speaks of had finally determin'd of our state had not Mercy interposed And of this nature was the Sentence that God pass'd upon Adam For his Judging him was of the same nature as the great Judgment at the End of the World will be It was open and by way of Process and Accusation Adam was cited charged admitted to plead for himself and at last convicted and condemned And this Sentence did determine of the final condition of Mankind appointing him and his Posterity irrevocably to Death So that he had died immediately and this Wrath of God would have lain upon us for ever had not the Divine Mercy contrived a means to justifie and save us And since it is by vertue of that Sentence we all die we are concluded under the guilt of Adam's sin i.e. We know our Doom and what we are to expect upon the account of that corrupt and mortal Nature that we receive from him If then Justification be from some punishment that we are already condemned to suffer it must be from this of Dying because no other Sentence is as yet pass'd upon us And unless we be discharged from this it is in vain that we have a new Law given unto us For we are not capable of Immortality till we are pardon'd the fault for which we are condemned and no Man can qualifie himself for a Blessing that he is not capable of This is the account of Justification that St. Paul gives us when he opposes it to Condemnation and makes it to consist in the Abolishing of Death Forasmuch as the Children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself took part of the same that through Death he might destroy him that had the power of Death that is the Devil and deliver them that through fear of Death were all their life-time suject unto bondage Heb. 2.14 15. i.e. The reason of Christ's Incarnation and Death was that he might bear our Punishment and set our Minds at rest which upon the account of that Sentence that doom'd us to die are full of Anxiety and Trouble at the thoughts of losing a Life that we are so fond of He under-went all that we account an Evil in Death His Body was turn'd to a Carcase and his Soul went to Hell or the place whither Death transports our Souls that state where the Devil designed when he robb'd us of our Immortality to erect a Tyranny over the Souls of Men where having vanquish'd that wicked Spirit he return'd triumphant with the spoils of our Enemy to his Body again And therefore as St. Paul saith there is no condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 In which words he has not a respect to the last Judgment in which all Flesh shall be Eternally sentenced either to an Immortal Life or an Eternal Death as if no Christian need to fear being condemn'd at that day For there are no doubt many vicious and leud Chrisitians that will be judg'd unworthy of the Name they bear and of the Hopes that belong to it But his meaning is that they are absolved and acquitted from the Sentence of Death that Adam and his Posterity long since received that their Souls being rescued out of his hands who has the Power of Death shall at the Resurrection return in a Triumphant manner to their Bodies again which is the great Privilege we have by Jesus Christ For these words are an Inference from what he discoursed in the foregoing Chapter where he consider'd and complain'd of the Misery of Man's Natural state as we are obnoxious both to Sin and Death Oh wretched Man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this Death Rom. 7.24 And sets before us the Goodness of our Christian state which assures us of pure and glorious Bodies Bodies perfectly deliver'd from Mortality and those corrupt Affections and Appetites which Adam's Sin has let loose upon us I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord v. 25. So that they who are in this state and take care to approve the things that are Excellent that they may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ are in as good a condition as if Sin and Death had never enter'd into the World For there is no Condemnation to those that are in Christ Jesus i.e. By Christ we are deliver'd from the Body of this Death or this Mortal sinfull Body And shall for ever enjoy the benefit of this Deliverance if we walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit And in this respect Jesus Christ is styled the second Adam in opposition to the first from whom Sin Mortality and Death are derived to us That as by the Apostasie of the first we are condemned to die by the Obedience of the second we are discharged from so dreadfull a Punishment and restored to the Hopes of living again And this he discourses more fully in the fifth Chapter where having observed the Calamity of that Mortal condition we are doom'd to by reason of Adam's Transgression he magnifies the Grace of God in this respect That through the Redemption we have by Jesus Christ we are deliver'd from this Effect of Adam's Offence As by the offence of one Judgment came upon all Men to condemnation i.e. As all Men were condemned to die for Adam's sin even so by the Righteousness of one the free gift came upon all Men to justification of life v. 18. i.e. All Men were discharged from the severity of this Sentence and allowed the liberty of providing for a Life that is Eternal as if they had never sinn'd nor ever been condemn'd to die It is true the Apostle discourses as if it was
the last we must undergo a publick Trial when the Justice of our Mediatour will declare those to be Just and Righteous who live according to this Rule So that the Justification that is by Faith does properly relate to the Sentence of our Mediatour whereby at the Day of Judgment he will declare the sincere Observers of his Will to be Righteous And therefore the Apostle saith We are justified freely by his Grace i.e. Have our Lives which we had forfeited in Adam restored us in Christ that he might be Just and the Justifier of him that believes i.e. That his justifying the sincere Christian at the last might be an Act of his Justice Or that when we come to be Judged at the last day Justice may declare the Righteousness of the sincere Christian So that the Justification that is by Faith denotes a freedom from the Danger of that second Death that the Gospel threatens those that disobey it with It is a second discharge from another kind of Punishment than that we are condemn'd to as the Sons of Adam and does suppose us to be in a Justified state from the Judgment that by one Man's offence is come upon all Men Or rather it is God's owning our Righteousness to be according to the Gospel Rule that Righteousness I mean which has the promise of Eternal life Obj. If it be said that according to this account no Man is justified by Faith at all in this life but that all the privilege we can be said to have by believing is that we shall be justified at the Day of Judgment whereas the Scripture speaks of it as a privilege that belongs to our Faith in this life Ans I answer That it no otherwise belongs to it than as it gives a Right to and assures us of it when our Gracious Mediatour shall come to Judge us Faith I mean the believing the Gospel to be the Rule of our Righteousness and living according to it is the fulfilling of that Law of Grace that our Saviour has instituted and accordingly this Law does justifie those that thus fulfill it in this life i.e. It denounces no Judgment against them But who have this Faith that the Law of Christ approves of and promises Eternal life to and who want it will be the work of the future Judgment to discover So long as we live by the Rules of the Gospel this Law of Christian Righteousness does assure us that the Reward it promises does belong to us i.e. that we have a Right to it But whether we shall receive it does not depend upon the present Sentence it gives of our case but upon that which will be pass'd when the time of our Trial is over For the Faith which is said to justifie us may be renounced and the Gospel disobey'd and in this case we cannot be said to be in a Justified state by vertue of the Faith we once had or the Obedience we once paid to the Gospel It justifies the goodness of our Lives for the time past if they have been according to this word of Faith but whether it will justifie us to Eternal life is not to be said till we have finish'd our Course and stood our Trial. So that this is not the Justification which we have by vertue of Christ's Mediation For that is a State we are already put into and is a Blessing that belongs to us in this life whereas this is a State we shall be put into when we are judged again 4. Then Justification is a state of Trial how we will use so great Mercy as God vouchsafes us therein For had there not been a Reversal of the Sentence that doom'd us to die we must have died without Mercy and without Hopes of ever living again Then all our Prayers and Tears and Repentance would have been of no advantage to us for the bettering our Condition and preserving us from Death But Justice would require that we should suffer the Punishment we were condemn'd to Judgment being given upon us there remained nothing but a fearfull looking for of the Execution of it which all the most earnest Sollicitations and Entreaties we could make would not have saved us from For to be in a Condemn'd state is to be Dead in Law And he that is in such a condition has lost his opportunity of preserving himself by obeying the Law that has already condemned him Such was our case when God had given Sentence upon us for then it was too late to think of preventing our dying Eternally and falling under God's Wrath when we were already under it But by acquitting us from this Sentence he had set Life and Immortality before us again and puts us to a new Trial whether we will grow wise by so great a danger as we have escaped and take warning by the Judgment that came upon us in Adam to save our selves for the future from the Wrath to come It is a very great mistake if we believe our being in a Justified state does certainly assure to us an Immortal life and is a Reason why we may be confident that we shall not be condemned in the Judgment to come There would be no reason of another day of Judgment if Justification did import thus much Neither is St. Paul to be understood in this sense when he saith Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God's Elect It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth Rom. 8.33 34. For his design was to encourage the Christians of his time to a stedfastness in the Faith notwithstanding the Rage and Violence of their Persecutours For though they were condemned and put to Death for the sake of Christ yet the Sentence of their Enemies signified nothing to and could do them no great hurt because it took away a life that God would restore them with advantage It is God that justifies and since he has so far remitted his own Sentence that you shall rise again who is he that condemneth or presumes to take away your life He delivers you over to a Death that will not hold you long because God has justified you Justification then assures us that we shall rise again though Divine Justice has condemn'd us to die But it does not assure us that we shall certainly live for ever when we are risen because that depends upon the Improvement we make of the Mercy God has shown us For unless we be so qualified as the Gospel requires we should we must be condemned and die another Death The state that Adam was created in was a state of Trial. For though he was Innocent and consequently free from all the vexation and perplexity that Guilt occasions yet he was neither so perfect nor so happy as God designed he should make himself The Innocence in which he was created does not imply that he was made as perfect and as excellent a Creature as if was possible for him to be I mean that his Soul was so stored
again So that Christ's rising for our Justification does imply these things 1. That God discharged him from the Punishment that he bore for our Offences 2. That he has received Power to justifie us 1. His rising for our Justification means his being discharged from the Punishment he suffer'd for our Offences If we consider his Resurrection with a respect to himself and his Sufferings as personal none can deny but God did in a very glorious manner bear witness to his Innocency thereby and acquit him of those Crimes wherewith his Accusers charged him and that unjust Sentence that his Enemies gave upon him When he was taken by wicked hands and haled before a Judge when he was accused condemned and executed upon a Cross between two Thieves he appear'd as a vile Criminal in the Eye of the World according to what the Prophet Isaiah spoke of him long before We esteem'd him stricken and smitten of God and afflicted i.e. That a just Providence had deliver'd him up to suffer a deserved Punishment But when he rose to Life again he was justified in the sight of Angels and Men to be that Holy and Innocent Person that had done nothing worthy of Death This his Enemies were so sensible of that when his Apostles publish'd to the World how that he was risen again they exclaim'd against them and by Threats and severe Usages endeavour'd to silence them because they brought his Blood upon them This was a visible Justification of his Innocence For no other way was more effectual to take away his Reproach and to procure him Honour among Men than by giving him the Life that was taken from him This indeed was his own Personal Justification But it teaches us That it is not agreeable to the Nature of Justice that Death should hold those that are Innocent And although we cannot plead our Innocence to excuse our selves from Dying yet when the Offences for which we die are pardoned Justice can no longer consider us as under an Offence For since Death is a Punishment for our Offences the same Mercy that pardons the Offence does likewise remit the Punishment i.e. it gives us a Right to our Lives And it is but just that we should have our Lives restored i.e. that we should rise again when Justice can no longer treat us as Offenders by keeping us under the Power of Death And in this sense God by justifying his Son has likewise justified us For though he was Innocent yet for the accomplishing the Redemption of Mankind he was content to charge himself with the Sins of the whole World And as it was by Sin that Death enter'd into the World he who would bear our Transgressions was according to the just Judgment of God that doom'd sinfull Man to die appointed to bear our Punishment likewise So that his Resurrection is not only an Argument that God looked upon him as a Righteous Person that had been unjustly condemned to die but as a Person that having sufficiently satisfied for the Offences for which he died Justice had no right to keep under the Power of Death As it was an Attestation of his Innocence and the spightfull Accusations that his Enemies loaded him with it was an Act of Justice i.e. it was Justice that acquitted him from the unjust Sentence of Pontius Pilate But as it was a freeing him from the Punishment of the Offences for which he was deliver'd it was a mercifull Discharge from an Obligation to Punishment So that since he was deliver'd for our Offences and died because a Sentence of Death was pass'd against Offenders his Rising again is a visible Declaration of that Mercy that pardons Offences For he who dies upon the account of Sin must rise from under a Sentence of Condemnation when he returns to Life again And thus it was that Christ rose He rose from under a Curse and was deliver'd from Death not as a Calamity but as a Punishment And since his Resurrection was of this nature let us consider in what respect it is for our Justification Now as to this matter we may observe these things 1. That by rising from the Dead he has given us an instance that it is possible that a Creature that is condemn'd to die because of an Offence may rise again 2. That that Justice which has condemn'd us to die is fully satisfied and therefore we shall rise again 3. That his Resurrection was not a Personal Privilege but the Triumph of our Representative and Mediatour over Death and consequently a publick Discharge of Mankind from the Sentence of Condemnation 1. That by rising from the Dead he has given us an instance that it is possible that a Creature that is condemn'd to die because of an Offence may rise again One of the greatest Difficulties that lies against this Doctrine is this That we are condemn'd to die by the just Judgment of God and undergo it as a Punishment of our Sin For is it possible that a Punishment when it is inflicted a Sentence after it is executed should be reversed A condemn'd Person before the Sentence is executed upon him may be reprieved and pardon'd And if we were not deliver'd over to Death at all i.e. if we did not see Men die it might easily be believed that we could live an Immortal life But when we are condemn'd and die because we are condemn'd it appears too late to hope for a Pardon after the Punishment is inflicted But this will be no such difficulty if we consider that the Divine Mercy provided that the Death we are adjudged to should not be Eternal by promising before Sentence was given upon us That the seed of the Woman should bruise the Serpent's head So that although Justice did require that we should lose our Lives for ever as Malefactours do and does 't is true inflict such a Death upon us as for ever separates us from this present World what Difficulty can there be in a Resurrection which restores us no more than what Divine Mercy reserved for us when his Justice condemn'd us and is the fulfilling of that Original Promise made to Adam Had we been condemn'd never to live again neither in this life nor in another Mercy could not have saved us when once the Sentence had been executed up us because a Pardon would then have come too late to save us But when it is only a Death that deprives us of the Hopes of living again in this life that we are condemned to our being condemned to such a Death cannot render it impossible that we should live again in another This is the difference between the Death that we are all condemned to already and that which wicked Men will be condemned to in the Day of Judgment This deprives us only of the Hopes of living again in this life but not in another and therefore a Resurrection from the Death we are now condemned to is not impossible upon the account of the Sentence we are fall'n under
is risen for our Justification is made Head over all things to his Church i.e. Has a Soveraign Authority given him to dispense the Grace and Mercy that he has purchased with his Blood He has Erected a Kingdom distinct from that which as the Creatures of God we are Members of and in that place too where the wicked Spirit designed to Erect an Everlasting Empire over the Souls of Men. For as he tells us Rev. 1.18 He has the Keys of Death and Hell A Kingdom of Grace which permits us to work out our own Salvation in this life and assure us of an Everlasting deliverance from the hands of our Enemies in the other World and thereby eases our Minds of those Apprehensions which our being under the Dominion of his Father's Justice fills our Minds with For his Rule and Authority is that of a Gracious Lord who has power to forgive Sins and to bestow Life upon those who have deserved to die and who must infallibly have perish'd for ever if we had continued under the strict Government of Justice So that our Condition is of the same nature with that of a condemn'd person who has his Life restored him by Favour and Grace and has the liberty of making his Fortune under the protection of that Authority that he had offended The Kingdom we belong to is not that of Justice that condemns the least Transgression but the Mercy of a Redeemer who calls us to Repentance and assures us he will protect us from the severity of Wrath if we submit to his Authority And then 2. How much reason have we to rejoyce in the Religion that Christ has instituted For it is not only his Institution who rose for our Justification but brings us the Glad-tidings of that Mercy and Grace which alone can compose the Minds of persons that are condemn'd to die It is enough to satisfie us that it must be very favourable to us that it is the Institution of a Saviour For we may be sure that nothing severe can come from him who came into the World to work deliverance for us Who can believe that he who had no other Aim but the propitiating Divine Justice and the interceding for Mercy toward a sinfull condemn'd Race would lay us under any hard Circumstances or publish to the World any other thing than the Mercy he came to procure for us Since his design was Gracious his Religion must be so too for as the design of Natural Religion is to set before us the Nature and to give us the Character of God the Author of it so the design of Christianity is to give us the Character of our Redeemer And therefore it can contain nothing less than the mighty Arguments of Love wherewith he courts our Obedience and the highest Instances of that Mercy that was the End of his assuming our Nature and dying for us It is a Religion indeed that has highly improved our Duty and rescued Holiness from that Corruption wherewith the depraved Minds of sinfull Men had soil'd it But that which does in a peculiar manner recommend it to us is the Tidings it gives us of Gods being reconciled unto us and the Hopes of an Immortal life it presents us with by being deliver'd from that Judgment to Condemnation that Divine Justice has pass'd upon us Had its design been only to rectifie our mistakes concerning our Duty and to give us a fair view of the true Lustre of Holiness it would not have contain'd Mercy enough to save us because the only Mercy that can save a condemn'd Malefactour is that which pardons his fault It is indeed a great Instance of the Excellency of this Religion that it gives us the best and most noble Character of the Divine Nature and furnishes us with the best Rules of Life But the great Grace of it consists in the Hopes it gives us of a Resurrection by acquainting us how our Redeemer was deliver'd for our Offences and raised again for our Justification And if then we believe that we are under an Obligation to any Religion methinks the Christian Religion should meet with an easie Entertainment among Men. For it is the only Religion in the World that can speak satisfaction to the Minds of condemned Wretches as we are Because it does not only ground our Hopes of Mercy upon the Gracious Nature of God but the compassionate Undertaking of a mercifull Mediatour It does not only acquaint us in the general that God is Mercifull but sets before us the Nature of that Mercy that we are to trust in The only Aim of Natural Religion is to acquaint us with our Duty and the Desert of our Actions But what can this signifie to a Creature that is already condemn'd because he is in an Offence to know the Duty he has transgress'd when withall he knows he must die because he has done so And to have the Excellency of that Law revealed unto him by which he might have improved himself to an Immortal condition when he knows he has disabled himself and lost his opportunity for such an improvement Such a Knowledge can only serve to heighten his Affliction and the more lively the Representation of his Duty is the more stinging must his Torment be Before we can be benefited by the plainest Representation of our Duty and the best Rules of Life the Wrath of God that we are fall'n under must be averted and no other Religion but that which assures us it is so can be of any Advantage to us For a Religion that assures us we are in a Justified state as the Christian Religion does gives us encouragement to perfect Holiness by assuring us our Labour shall not be in vain because we are in a state of Improvement It is too late to call upon us to work out our Salvation if we lie under a Sentence of Condemnation for not doing it We must first be saved from this Wrath before we can be in a possibility of securing to our selves an Immortal life And that is the only Religion that suits our present state that importunes us to a Holy life by acquainting us with such Mercy as we stand in need of And there is no Man surely can quarrel with or be an Enemy to such a Religion but who is an Enemy to his own Soul and carries a Mind in him that is disposed for no Religion at all 3. This may persuade us of the Reasonableness of the great Duty of believing which the Gospel so frequently and so earnestly inculcates upon us The believing I mean not only those Principles of Natural Religion the Being of a God and Providence the Immortality of the Soul and a future state of Retributions but those Doctrines of Revealed Religion which acquaint us with the Methods of Divine Wisdom and Goodness for the delivering us from Death As to the Principles of Natural Religion there is none that owns any thing of Religion but does own likewise that the believing them
is derived from him For if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal Bodies by the Spirit that dwelleth in you Rom. 8.11 i.e. The Spirit whereby Christ does now raise us to a New life will likewise quicken our mortal Bodies and give New lise to us after Death But this is not all that is meant by his Power to justifie us For 2. He has Power and Authority given him as the Supreme Judge of the World to acquit us Eternally from Death or when we are risen to give us Eternal life And this is a distinct thing from God's justifying us from the Sentence pass'd upon Adam His raising us to life again after we are dead is owing to our Justification from that Sentence For had not he by dying satisfied the Justice that takes away our Lives we should not rise again to Life But whether we shall live for ever after we are risen or die again does depend upon that Sentence that as our Judge he will pass upon us God has appointed a day in which he will judge the World in Righteousness by that Man whom he hath ordained saith St. Paul Act. 17.31 i.e. God has given him Power to take an account how Mankind has used the Mercy that he has favour'd us with and to declare who according to the Gospel are worthy of Eternal life and who are not and accordingly to determine of our Eternal condition either by justifying us to Eternal life or condemning us to a second Death And this he intimates to us in the fore-mentioned Text I am come that they might have life and that they might have it more abundantly That they might have life i.e. That I might by raising them from the Dead restore them the Life that Death deprives them of And that they might have it more abundantly i.e. That I might justifie them to a Life that is Eternal when at the Resurrection they are Judged a second time His Resurrection 't is true does assure us that we are now in a Justified state i.e. That we are acquitted from the Sentence that has pass'd upon Adam and that in respect of this Justification we shall certainly rise to Life again But though we be absolved from that Sentence we must expect another to be pass'd upon us which will finally and eternally save us from Death if when we appear before that great Tribunal he that is to Judge us does find we have not neglected so great Salvation and sinn'd away the favour that has been granted us And this Power to absolve us for ever from Everlasting Death is given to him who came into the World to suffer for our Offences and rose again for our Justification And therefore the Apostle to the Hebrews tells us That as it is appointed unto Men once to die and after Death the Judgment So Christ was once offer'd to bear the sins of many and unto them that look for him shall he appear the second time without sin unto salvation Heb. 9.27 28. i.e. Though we die by vertue of that Sentence that God gave upon us in Adam yet Christ having undergone the Punishment for us we shall not die Eternally by vertue of that Sentence For Christ who bore our Sins will come again to Judge us and then shall all his faithfull Servants be Eternally acquitted from that more dreadfull Curse that he will denounce against all that have lost their opportunity to save their Souls 2. This Power to justifie us i.e. to deliver us from Death by raising us to Lise again and acquitting us as our Judge at the last day he received when he rose from the Dead For then it was that he enter'd upon the publick Administration of the Affairs of his Kingdom and was made of God both Lord and Christ Then it was he received a Name that is above every Name and was dignified with the Honour of being Head over all things Thus he himself told his Disciples after his Resurrection That all Power was given unto him both in Heaven and Earth Matt. 28.18 By which he means the Power of that Kingdom that by vanquishing him that has the Power of Death he has obtained The Power of pardoning Sin and raising the Dead and giving Eternal life to all that faithfully and sincerely serve him The God of our Fathers saith St. Peter raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a Tree Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance unto Israel and remission of sins Act. 5.30 31. In which words the Apostle informs us that the Power God has given him is the Power of dispensing that Grace and Mercy that he has obtain'd for us The Power of delivering us from Death and of justifying us as our Judge to Eternal life And that this Power God advanced him to when he raised him from the Dead 'T is true while he was in this World he styles himself the Resurrection and the Life and tells us That God had given him Authority to execute Judgment because he is the Son of Man But yet in these Expressions he means no more than that he was the Person who was designed by his Father to this Eminent Dignity and Power of abolishing Death and Judging the World and giving Life and Immortality to mortal Men. And of this he gave a convincing proof by raising Lazarus from the Dead But yet the Life he restored Lazarus to was not that Immortal life which he will give his sincere Followers when he utterly destroys Death but the same Mortal life that he was possess'd of before But the Power of raising us to an Immortal life which he gave a proof that he was designed to be instated in by raising Lazarus from the Dead was not conferr'd upon him till he was risen from the Dead Then it was that he enter'd upon his Regal Office and was invested with that Power and Authority by which he has put all Enemies under his feet He is sat down on the right hand of God saith the Apostle expecting till his Enemies be made his foot-stool Heb. 10.12 13. Designing at the End of all things to subdue Death which is the last Enemy he is to destory and in a most solemn and glorious manner to deliver his faithfull Servants from their Captivity and all Power of Death for the suture and to put them into an actual possession of that immortal life that they live in an expectation of srom him And now if Christ be thus risen for our Justification or that he might receive Power to justifie us Let us consider 1. What Reason we have to depend upon him for Everlasting life This is that Faith that he expects from us and which in the Gospel we are so frequently exhorted to A believing that Death is vanquish'd by the Power of our Mediatour when he rose from the Dead and
Death For what better and safer hands can this Power to deliver and save us be lodged in than the hands of our Saviour For he to be sure will suffer nothing to be lost that he came to save and which he has Power to save This I have insisted on because some who believe that Christ rose again cannot see any Reason from thence to believe that we shall rise again too Now there are but Two things that I can think of that can be an occasion of distrust in the case 1. That this Power was not given him to this purpose 2. If it was we are not certain that he will make use of it Now we are sufficiently secured against any fears of this nature For 1. If he has any Power at all given him it must be to this purpose For none can be said to have a Power to do a thing given him which he is not to do by the use of that Power A Power which is not to be made use of is no Power at all and it could not be said that Christ has Power given him to raise us if this Power that is given him be sufficient to do this and yet he is not permitted to use this Power to this purpose Now that he has such a Power his own Resurrection is a sufficient proof For upon the same Reason that we believe he rose from the Dead we must believe that he has Power to raise the Dead because the Scriptures that teach us the one do teach us the other also So that if he has the Power of raising us committed to him it must be to this purpose that he may raise us And 2. We have great Reason to believe that he will make use of this Power to this purpose For will not he accomplish his own undertaking Will he not finish the thing that he has been sollicitous for Has a Malefactour any reason to doubt whether his Life shall be saved when his friend that has with Cost and Charge been long suing for his Pardon has it at last in his own hands No we are secured by the Love of our Redeemer that the Power he has received will be made use of for our deliverance For where can such a Power be better lodged than with him whose great concern it is to have us saved Thus the Apostle does argue upon this matter If when we were Enemies we were reconciled to God by the Death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his Life Rom. 5.10 i.e. If he loved us so much when we were Enemies as by dying to reconcile us to God can we believe that he loves us the less now for having loved us so much before Or that after he has procured such a Power of delivering us from Death he will not do what he was so desirous should be done He who died that we might live will undoubtedly give us Life now that he has the Power of giving Life conserr'd upon him This is the Faith that the Gospel requires of us and it is so well grounded that nothing can be more reasonable But 2. Since Christ has received Power to justifie us by raising us from the Dead and giving us Eternal life This may insorm us wherein the Mercy of the Gospel does consist This is a Matter worthy our Consideration because there are so many that mistake it There are few or none so little acquainted with the Circumstances of our Nature but are sensible that we stand in need of a great deal of Mercy to save us And this Universal acknowledgment that it must be Mercy that saves us is an acknowledgment likewise that no other Religion but such a one as is sounded upon Mercy is suited to the Natural condition of Mankind A Religion that only teaches us our Duty and what improvement is necessary to qualifie us for Immortality is not now so adapted to our Nature as when Man was Innocent For because there are strong Aversions in us to that which is good Sensual inclinations that render man Sins very gratefull to Flesh and Blood and by that means give Sin such a power over us that the Conquest of one Sin is many times the labour of a Man's life we are not in a Condition to improve our selves for Immortality as Innocent Man might But though this is the Acknowledgment of all Men and the Gospel upon that account does contain the best Religion we can be under the Government of yet the Mercy of the Gospel which is the Mercy we want is not so well consider'd but that many who believe it is Mercy must save them do rest upon such Mercy as will not save them For that which many found their Hopes upon is the simple Consideration of the mercifull Nature of God without any regard to any particular Instance wherein he has Exemplified to us the Mercy he would have us depend upon For because Mercy is an Attribute that belongs to the Divine Nature they persuade themselves that nothing severe can be dreaded from a God of Mercy Thus bad Men bear up their Spirits under the pressure of their guilt and put by those Terrours wherewith the Consideration of God's Justice would affright them into an amendment of Life and at last make a shift to go out of the World without any great sense of their Danger For if they must appear before a Just and Holy God yet the God that will Judge them has the Bowels and Compassions of a Father And this Thought lays all frightfull Apprehensions of his Justice They consider not that Death is the Wages or the just desert of Sin and that by carrying their Sins along with them into the other World they carry that along with them that the Justice of God has already condemn'd and does punish them for when they die They think not that while they do wickedly they despise the Mercy that God has shown us and even throw away their own Lives which the Divine Mercy by justifying them from a Sentence of Condemnation has put into their own power to save It is evident indeed that their own Consciences being witnesses they do that which deserves Death I mean the Eternal loss of their Souls when they have a recourse to Mercy for their hopes of recovering them again when they are lost i.e. When they are separated from their Bodies and sent into the other World to live among Cursed Spirits For why else should they expect to receive their Souls again from the Hands of Mercy rather than of Justice if they were not conscious to themselves that they justly lose them And since they are conscious of this in their own Minds what reason have they to think that God will not do that which their own Consciences tell them they have deserved And there is this further to prove the Folly of such a Hope that they see the Mercy they trust to does not save them from the Punishment of Sin But Death
has received this Power we may observe upon what Reason it will go worse with wicked Christians at the last than with ignorant Heathens That it will do so our Saviour has assured us in those dreadfull Denunciations against Chorazin Bethsaida and Capernaum the Cities where he frequently taught and wrought his Miracles Wo unto thee Chorazin wo unto thee Bethsaida for if the mighty Works that have been done in you had been done in Tyre and Sidon they would have repented long ago in Sackcloth and Ashes But I say unto you It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon at the Day of Judgment than for you And thou Capernaum which art exalted to Heaven shalt be brought down unto Hell For if the mighty Works which have been done in thee had been done in Sodom it would have remained untill this day But I say unto you It shall be more tolerable for the Land of Sodom in the Day of Judgment than for thee Matt. 11.21 22 23 24. And that there is a great deal of Reason it should be so is evident from hence That wicked Christians sin against that Mercy and despise that Salvation that the Heathen part of the World know nothing of For all the Mercy that Heathens have by the Death and Resurrection of Christ is that they shall assuredly rise again from Death because Christ who died for our Offences has discharged all Mankind from Death as it is a Punishment of Sin But how the great Judge will deal with them when they are risen we know not because the Mercy that shall be shown them is not revealed Christ by the Power he has received will raise them to Life again though they know not of it But when they are risen they will not be Judged for not improving this Mercy because they know nothing of it neither Neither have they that Revelation that ascertains to Christians both their Duty and Reward and therefore shall not be condemn'd for not improving themselves to that height of Vertue that the Christian Religion teaches But now the case of wicked Christians is quite otherwise For they must rise to answer for all the abuse of that Mercy that the Gospel acquaints them with And they must die again because they have despised that Life that they must then lose when it was in their Power to have secured it Though they have the means of knowing that they shall not for ever lose their Souls upon the account of the Judgment that came upon all Men to Condemnation in Adam and that they are favour'd with a new Trial whether they will chuse Life or Death they lose the time of their Trial and must die because they chuse Death And this will aggravate their Condemnation that when they were favour'd with the care of their own Souls they foolishly lost the time in which God put them to their choice whether they would live or die So that when they are condemn'd again it will be a startling Consideration to them that they must die for their own neglect of themselves and that they have taken no warning by their former Condemnation but have to no purpose been pardon'd the fault for which they lose this present life And besides it will beget terrible Reflections in them when they come to consider that the Judge before whom they stand is he that came into this World to deliver them from Death by vanquishing that subtil Enemy that betray'd us into Mortality That it is he that will condemn them that when he appears the second time comes with Power to save i.e. to conferr upon us the fruits of his bloody Victory And that he will condemn them because they have taken their Souls out of his hand when he had deliver'd them and have deliver'd them up again to the slavery of those Evil Spirits out of whose power he had rescued them So that their Condemnation will be with the greatest Indignation for disappointing the Hopes and thwarting the Design of him that has procured a Power from his Father to save It will be with bitter Wrath and Vengeance for deserting the protection of a Saviour after all the Sweat and Blood that he was at the expence of to deliver them Those mine Enemies that would not that I should reign over them bring hither and slay them before me Luk. 19.27 And oh with what Consternation and Agonies in their Souls will they then be tortured when they see the direfull Executioners of that terrible Sentence coming upon them to seize them and that they must lose their Lives again which they have but just received and which is worse to lose them within the sight of Immortality He will condemn all that do Unrighteousness but a wicked Heathen will not fall under so much Wrath as a wicked Christian because he sins only against the Light of his own Mind and loses the Benefit of that Salvation that he never heard of But that which will heighten the wicked Christian's Condemnation is this That he has received the Grace of God in vain and must be condemn'd by him whose Kindness they have been frequently told of and whose Mercy they have been courted to accept of and to improve Oh! with what weight will the Wrath of a Redeemer fall upon the Heads of wicked Christians How scorching will that Justice be which the Love and Mercy of a Saviour will be forced to give way unto Because you would none of my Counsel but have despised all my Reproof and trampled on my Blood and turned my Grace into Wantonness Therefore shall ye eat the fruit of your own Ways and be filled with your own Devices Go ye cursed into everlasting burnings Such a Sentence out of the Mouth of a Saviour will come with such Astonishment and Horrour as no Heathen has any reason to dread Neither is this the worst of their case For every one that calls himself a Christian does profess to have put himself under the protection of their Redeemer's Mercy And therefore every Christian that does wickedly must expect to die without pity because he renounces his Trust in that Mercy without which when he embraced the Christian Religion he declared he could not be saved and repenting of his subjection to his Saviour revolts from him who alone has the Power to justifie The case of the Heathens is pitiable because of their Ignorance And therefore the Apostle tells us God winked at the time of the Heathen Ignorance He seem'd to over-look their Follies and out of mere pity to take no notice of their Mistakes But what Mercy can they expect who make light of that Mercy that calls them to Repentance and puts it into their Power to provide better for themselves than their first Parents did 5. We may hence likewise observe how little reason we have to dread a future Judgment There are a great many Considerations that are sufficient to remove those Fears that the thoughts of that Great Day are apt to terrifie us
with For he who is appointed to Judge us is the Man Christ Jesus He is a Man that is sensible of all the Infirmities that we labour under and does carry in his Bowels the Affections and tender Compassions of a Man toward us In that he has suffer'd being tempted he is able or very inclinable to succour them that are tempted Heb. 2.18 For what severe or terrible thing can we fear from a Man like our selves What unkind or hard Sentence have we reason to dread from him who is our Brother Will not he who took part of Flesh and Blood be very tender to the Infirmities of his own Nature Though it be a terrible thing to appear before a Just and Righteous God because the Justice of a God is very frightfull yet it can be no very frightfull thing to appear before a God made Man because we are well acquainted with the Tendernesses that are in the Nature of a Man Or if this Consideration be not enough to reconcile our Thoughts to a Judgment to come because we too often see that the Passions of Men make them violent and injurious cruel and oppressive toward each other Yet he is a Man not subject to the like Passions as we are nor tainted with those Vices as corrupt our Nature and render it a difficult thing oftentimes to converse with those of our own kind But he is a Man famed for Meekness and Humility for Love and Charity for Mercy and Compassion So that he is qualified with all those soft and tender Vertues that we our selves would desire should be in him that is to Judge us And since we must be Judged we would wish for such a Judge as he is But this is not all for the most comfortable Consideration of all is this That the Power to Judge us that is committed to him is a Power to justifie and acquit us from Death He has merited a Power to give Life to the World and therefore when he appears the second time it will be to the Salvation of all that wait for him by raising them from the Dead and giving them Eternal life So that his Judging the World will be an executing of that Power of giving Life that he has received It will be with the Pardon that he has mediated in his hand and for the delivering us who now are appointed to die from any more fear of Death for the future He will 't is true when he appears be cloathed with that Majesty that will be terrible to his Enemies and as a Righteous Judge give a very dreadfull Sentence upon all the workers of Iniquity But yet though he will condemn to a second Death those that he finds not worthy of Life and as well concern himself for the Interests and Reputation of his Father's Justice as our Everlasting Welfare Yet it is plain that the giving so severe a Sentence is besides his purpose and as well contrary to the Office as the Inclinations of a Redeemer because he will raise even those to Life again whom he thus condemns His raising them to Life again will demonstrate even to those that must die again that it is for the dispensing of Mercy and the acting like a Saviour that he does then appear That the primary End of his appearing is for the restoring Lise to Mortal Creatures For why else will he raise them to Life whom he will afterwards condemn to another Death but to let the World see that he designs Life for all if Mercy it self can but save them The true and proper find then of his sitting in Judgment will be the displaying the Mercy of a Redeemer the distributing the price of his Blood and the communicating the Everlasting Grace of the Gospel He came to save that which was lost and to be sure he will not cast away any that he came to save nor easily condemn when his business was to destroy Death He will Judge us who will raise us to Life again And to be sure he who then gives us our Lives will not easily and without very great Reason take them away again And now how terrible soever it is to us to think of undergoing a Trial of our Actions before a just Judge Yet is it not enough to ease our Thoughts to think that this Judgment will be terrible to none but such as have no Reason to hope in his Mercy but that all whom Mercy can save the Bowels of a Mediatour will deliver from Condemnation What more favourable Judge can we expect than such a one as has purchased us and has purchased Eternal life for us Such a one as comes with Power to justifie and save all whom Mercy can deliver and who lets us see his Inclination to give us Life by freeing us from a Sentence of Condemnation when he raises us out of our Graves The Conclusion HAving consider'd the Nature and Certainty of the Resurrection all that I shall observe from the whole is the Necessity that is upon us to live like those that do believe we shall rise again I mean that we do nothing now that will lose us our Lives again when they are restored to us at the Resurrection To live in this World as if we should never live more after Death has taken us out of it is very excusable in those who know not that they shall rise again because they take care of all the Life they know of But for a Christian who believes he must live again to do this is an extremity of Folly and Madness for it is to be thoughtfull only for an inconsiderable part of our Lives And surely it is not to act wisely for our selves not to take care of all the Life we are to live It is in the Opinion of all Men a very great imprudence not to take care of our Lives And therefore that Labour and Toil those vexatious Cares and Solicitudes wherewith Men wear out their Bodies and vex their Minds are justified upon this account that they are for the maintaining of Life And they are lookt upon as Men of little understanding who live without any kind of fore-cast or thoughtfulness for Life Now what Men do and make a great Mark of their Prudence in doing for the support and preservation of this life is much more needfull to be done for the preserving the Life we shall rise to because that is the Life that it principally concerns us to look after When Men neglect the Duties of Religion the general Answer wherewith they satisfie themselves and wherewith they expect that all Men should be satisfied is that they have not leisure The business of this World takes up their time and if they have hardly time sometimes to Eat and Sleep they cannot think but the Cumber and the Urgency of their Affairs will as well excuse them from their Religious Services as it obliges them to a neglect of their Bodies But when Men talk at this rate one would think they were