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A46354 Several sermons preach'd on the whole eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans eighteen of which preach'd on the first, second, third, fourth verses are here published : wherein the saints exemption from condemnation, the mystical union, the spiritual life, the dominion of sin and the spirits agency in freeing from it, the law's inability to justifie and save, Christ's mission, eternal sonship, incarnation, his being an expiatory sacrifice, fulfilling the laws righteousness (which is imputed to believers) are opened, confirmed, vindicated, and applied / by Tho. Jacomb. Jacombe, Thomas, 1622-1687. 1672 (1672) Wing J119; ESTC R26816 712,556 668

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We read Mark 11.9 They that went before and they that followed cryed saying Hosanna blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord Believers who liv'd before Christ's incarnation and they who follow since both are equally obliged to magnifie God for him both receiving the same benefit by him 2. It may be enquired Why Christ was incarnate just when he was why at this very Epocha or period of time rather than at any other was Christ incarnate why not either before or after but just then Answ why because it was that very time which God had set therefore called the fulness of time Gal. 4.4 He that is pleas'd to set the time for other things as for the Churches deliverances Thou shalt arise and have mercy upon Zion for the time to favour her yea the set time is come Psal 102.13 and so in several Other cases surely he was pleas'd to set the time for so great a thing as the coming of his own Son in Flesh he in his eternal decree had determin'd the precise time for this which therefore when it was come then Christ came now I say all must be resolv'd into this True there were some more immediate Reasons why he came just when he did he was to come before the Scepter was wholly departed from Judah Gen. 49.10 whilst the Second Temple was standing Hag. 2.6 7 8 9. during the Fourth Monarchy Dan. 2.44 Daniel's 70 weeks were almost expired Dan. 9.24 there was a general expectation raised in the world of the coming of the Messias as might easily be made out Now with respect to these things the Lord Jesus came at that very period of time whereat he did but they all falling out but in compliance with and subordination to the Decree of God therefore the determination of the time of Christ's Coming and Incarnation must ultimately be resolv'd into that O he came just when he did neither sooner nor later because the Father had appointed that very time Prop. 'T was not the Divine Essence absolutely considered which assumed Flesh but that Essence considered as subsisting in the Second Person 4. 'T was not the Divine Nature or Essence simply and absolutely considered which assumed Flesh but it was that * Tota igitur Natura Divina fuit incarnata sed non quatenus absolutè in se consideratur ut omnibus Personis communis sed quatenus personalibus proprietatibus seu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Personâ Filii determinata co●sideratur Davenant in Col. 2.9 p. 240. Solus Filius suscepit humanitatem in singularitatem Personae non in unitatem Naturae Divinae Concil Tolet. Neque enim Divina Natura si propriè accuratè loqui velimus sed Persona Divina assumsit Naturam Humanam Divina quidem Natura unitur Humanae sed eam nòn assumsit assumere enim non est Naturae sed Suppositi Bisterf contra Crell p. 565. Vide Alting Theol. Problem p. 562. 577. Nature considered as subsisting in the Second Person If this restriction and stating of the Point be not admitted we cannot avoid our holding the Incarnation was common to all the Persons contrary to what the Church hath ever held and to what was asserted but even now therefore when 't is said † 1 Tim. 3.16 God manifested in the Flesh you are to understand God in the Personal not in the Essential notion Prop. The Nature assuming was the Divine Nature 5. The Nature assuming was the Divine Nature that being considered as was laid down in the forgoing Proposition The Manhood did not assume the Godhead but the Godhead it * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc de Orthod Fide lib. 3. cap. 2. p. 167. Man did not become God but God became Man 't is not said that † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athan. de Inc. Christi t. 1. p. 612. the Flesh was made the Word but the Word was made Flesh this is a thing so unquestionable that the very naming of it is enough Prop. That the Humane Nature was so assum'd as to subsist in the Divine that both Natures make but● one Person 6. The Lord Jesus the eternal Son of God God blessed for ever did so assume the Humane Nature as in a most mysterious and unconceivable manner to unite it upon the first framing or forming of it to his Divine Nature and to give that a subsistence in this so as that both do make but one Person the Essence Properties Operations of both Natures yet remaining the same without either conversion or confusion Here the Hypostatical Vnion is both asserted and and also described for wherein doth the nature of that Vnion consist but in that which is here laid down Of the Hypostatical Vnion Of it you read Col. 2.9 In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily i. e. Personally and Hypostatically Rom. 9.5 Whose are the Fathers and of whom as concerning the Flesh Christ came who is over all God blessed for ever here 's both the Natures of Christ and both in him making but one Person upon the personal conjunction of which he 's call'd Emmanuel God with us Matth. 1.23 But not to insist upon the Proof of this Vnion which all but INFIDELS and SOCINIANS do believe The mysteriousness thereof I will endeavour as well as I can rather to explain and open it an undertaking which I enter upon the Lord knows with great fear and dread because of the loftiness and mysteriousness of the thing to be opened O 't is a thing so sublime and mysterious as that it transcends the capacity of Angels and Men how then shall I be able to speak of it or to it Take whom you will single out a Person of the sharpest wit the profoundest judgment the most elevated reason let all the most raised abilities concur in him and then set the Hypostatical Vnion before this person alas poor man how will he be puzzl'd nonplus'd unable to fathom so great a depth as this is And well he may since 't is the mystery of mysteries one of the first magnitude than which by a narrow intellect none more hard to be conceiv'd of or understood 'T is indeed sure and certain to Faith which believes it because God reveals it which readily answers all Objections and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin Martyr solves all difficulties about it by resting on divine revelation but if Reason beyond its proper bounds will be prying into and judging of a thing so abstruse its blindness as well as its boldness will soon appear its bucket will not go to the bottom of a Well so deep its line is too short to measure such heights breadths lengths depths as are here to be found I do not in the least wonder that they who make Reason to be the supream Judge of matters of Faith do throw off the belief of this mystery for though it be not at all contrary to reason
some things as 't is plain he was for he knew not the * Vide Najanz Orat. 36. p. 588. precise time of the day of judgment Mark 13.32 as he was God he knew all things so his Vnderstanding was infinite he must therefore have some other Vnderstanding which was but finite in reference to which there might be something which he did not know He also had an humane Will distinct from his Divine Will for what could that Will be which he did submit and subordinate to the Will of his Father but this Luk. 22.42 Nevertheless not my Will but thine be don Then for those Affections which are proper to the Soul 't is clear Christ had them as namely Anger Mar. 3.5 Mar. 10.14 Love Mat. 10.21 Sorrow Mat. 26.38 Luk. 19.41 Fear Heb. 5.7 Joy Luk. 10 21. Joh. 11.15 Pity Mat. 9.36 Mat. 13.32 Now where these three things are most certainly there is a true and real Soul Yet here also our blessed Lord and Saviour is assaulted he hath two Natures which make up his Person his Deity and his Humanity but both of them by several persons are taken away as you heard but now and there are two Essential parts which make up one of his Natures his Manhood viz. Soul and Body but both of these too by several persons are taken away also Marcion divests him of a Body and * See Epiphan vol. 1. p. 743 771. Apollinaris of a Soul the Arrians also are charged with this Heresie these held that Christ had no Soul but that the ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodor. lib. 5 contra Haeres cap. 11. Deity was to him instead of a Soul and supply'd the office thereof that what the Soul is to us and doth in our bodies all that the Divine Nature was to Christ and did in his Body O what light can be clear enough for their Conviction and guidance in the way of truth whom God hath given up to † 2 Thes 2.11 strong delusions that they should believe lies Are not the Scriptures clear enough in this matter that Christ had a real Soul what was the subject of his inexpressible sorrow and agonies in the Garden but his Soul Matth. 26.38 My Soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death c. Joh. 12.27 Now is my Soul troubled and what shall I say what did he in special recommend to God when he was breathing out his last gasp but his Soul Luk. 23.46 When Jesus had cryed with a loud voice he said Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit and having said thus he gave up the Ghost what was the part affected in his sore desertion when he cry'd out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me surely his Body could not be the immediate subject of a punishment purely spiritual no that must terminate in his spiritual part the Soul By all this it appears then that Christ was as truly God so also truly Man he having a true Body and a true Soul Yet a little further that I may take in the whole truth Of Christ's submitting to the common Adjuncts c. of the Humane Nature and leave out nothing which may tend to the heightning of Christ's incomparable Love and condescension to Sinners he was not barely sent in Flesh so far as the verity of the Humane Nature is concern'd in his assuming the Essential parts thereof but he also submitted to the common accidents adjuncts infirmities miseries calamities which are incident to that Nature He lay so many Weeks and Months in the Virgins womb received nourishment and growth in the ordinary way was brought forth and bred up just as common Infants are ' bating some special respects shown to him to discover the greatness of his Person had his life sustain'd by common food as ours is was hungry thirsty weary poor reproached tempted deserted c. liv'd an afflicted life then dy'd a miserable death was a * Isal 53.3 man of sorrows and acquainted with grief † Phil. 2.7 made himself of no reputation took upon him the form of a Servant was made in the likeness of man not only in the taking of their Nature but also in submitting to those abasements and miseries which now that Nature is lyable unto his whole life was a life of sufferings wherein as there was enough in his Holiness * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Justin Martyr Expos Fidei Miracles to shew him to be God so there was also enough in his meanness poverty sufferings to shew him to be Man In a word he took all our infirmities upon him take it with a double restriction 1. To all our † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damascen de Orthod Fid. l. 3. c. 20. sinless infirmities such as are culpable and carry sin in them they must be excepted for though he was made like to us in all things yet without sin Heb. 4.15 2. To all our Natural infirmities as to personal infirmities such as are proper to this and that Person as blindness deafness lameness c. these Christ did not put himself under for he did not assume this or that Person but the Nature in common and therefore was not lyable to the particular infirmities of Individuums How the Humane Nature in Christ and in us differs but only to those which properly belonged to the common Nature I would carry this a little higher though I have said so much concerning the reality and sameness of Christ's Humane Nature with ours yet you are not in all respects to equalize that Nature as 't is in him and as 't is in us for Substance and Essence 't is one and the same in both yet in other considerations there 's a great disparity for 1. The Humane Nature is solely and singly in us in Christ 't is conjunctly with the Divine 2. We have it in the way of common and ordinary generation Christ had it in a special and extraordinary way 3. 'T is tainted and defil'd in us in Christ 't is perfectly pure and holy 4. In us it hath its proper subsistence in Christ it subsists only in his Godhead Thus I have shewn what this sending of Christ in the Flesh is and what it imports viz. the truth of his Incarnation of his Body and his assumption of the whole entire and perfect Nature of Man and also as the several Heads fell in my way I have out of the Word given you the proof of them I say out of the Word for these Mysteries are only to be known and believed upon the light and authority thereof if it asserts them that certainly must be sufficient to command the belief of Christians who profess in all things to make the Scriptures to be the Rule of their Faith And as to the credibility of Christ's incarnation from rational Considerations in subserviency to and grounded upon gospel-Gospel-revelation sundry * Tertull. de Carne Christi Deo nihil impossibile nisi quod non vult
50.20 In those days the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none 'T is an allusion to one that turns over all his Bonds searches into all his Debt-books to see if he can find any debt due to him from such or such a person but upon all his searching he cannot find so much as one debt to charge upon him So 't is with the pardoned justified sinner imagine that God should be inquisitive to find out some guilt as lying upon him he might indeed find out enough as he is in himself but as he is in Christ as he is pardoned and justified through Christ so there is nothing to be found against him and therefore not one Condemnation How doth this tend to the comfort and encouragement of Gods people this makes the Proposition to be very emphatical and highly consolatory there is not one Condemnation for them who are in Christ Oecumenius opens the words with this emphasis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. Sixthly The Apostle speaks indefinitely with respect to the subject there is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus He takes all such into the priviledge for the Indefinite here is equipollent to an Vniversal Paul doth not narrow or confine or impropriate this Non-condemnation to himself 't is not there is now no Condemnation to me but he extends it to all who have an interest in Christ And herein he discovers much of wisdom as * Mirabilis sanè est Apostoli prudentia qui cum de vi peccati scriberet eam expressit in personâ suâ ut intelligeremus c. Posteà verò cum agitur de auxilio spiritus Christi inducit personam aliorum ne cuiquam in mentem veniret non quoslibet Christianos frui hoc auxilio Dei sed tantum primarios quosdam eximios quales fuerunt Apostoli Pet. Martyr Peter Martyr observes for had he spoken in the Singular number to me many poor weak Christians would have been afraid to have applyed this blessedness to themselves they would have been ready to object Ah blessed Paul thou art high in Faith eminent in Grace therefore thou maist say there is no Condemnation to thee but 't is not so with us we are but poor shrubs meer dwarfs in Grace 't is not for us to lay hold upon so high a priviledge To obviate this discouragement saith the Apostle I tell you there is no Condemnation to any who are in Christ let them be who they will this belongs to all such to you as well as to my self True I am an Apostle you are not so but then I am a Believer and so are you true I may have more of grace than you but yet you are in Christ as well as I and the Vnion being common the Non-condemnation is common too for that is the ground of this 'T is the same righteousness to all and upon all that believe Rom. 3.22 't is the same faith for substance in the highest and in the lowest to them that have obtained like precious faith with us 2 Pet. 1.1 't is the same head and the same union with this head in all and therefore it must be the same exemption from Condemnation The difference in Pauls expressing himself according to the difference of the subject he was upon is very observable take him in the former Chapter where he is bewailing sin there he speaks altogether in the First person Singular and goes no further than himself read from the 7 verse to the end and you 'll find I and me in every verse But now in this Eighth Chapter where he 's treating of Priviledges there he speaks altogether in the Plural number as taking in the whole body of Believers Run over it all and except but one Verse in which 't is true he particularizes himself The Law of the spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death I say do but except this one Verse and in all the rest you will find the observation to be true but this will be further cleared up hereafter And elsewhere too you find him very careful not to engross or confine happiness to himself but to extend it to all who belonged to God as well as he himself did As take but that one instance 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day thus far he himself is concerned but doth he stop here and not take in others No 't is not enough to him to be sure of this happiness himself but he 'll let others know it shall be just so with them too therefore he adds and not to me onely but unto all them also that love his appearing In the great blessings of the Gospel Justification Adoption eternal Life all the Saints shall fare alike they are all Gods Children and therefore all shall have their portion and the same portion too Jude calls it common Salvation V. 3 and the same may be said of all other Blessings 't is common Justification common Adoption c. 7. Seventhly The Positive is included in the Negative There 's no Condemnation c. is this all that the Apostle drives at or hath in his eye viz. to hold forth that such who are in Christ shall not be condemned no! he aims at something more namely at this that such are fully justified and shall be most certainly saved they shall not only upon their being in Christ be looked upon as not guilty or barely kept out of Hell but they shall be judged compleatly righteous and they shall also be admitted into Heaven and eternally glorified There is a Meiosis in the words more is to be understood than what is expressed the Privative and the Positive part of the blessedness are to be linked together and blessed be God for both Had it been only freedom from Condemnation that would have been rich and glorious mercy but when it is not only that but Justification and Salvation too O here is mercy in the very height and Zenith of it Some enquire why the Apostle expresseth it in the Negative rather than in the Positive they answer because Men generally are more sensible of the Goodness of God in the freeing of them from evil than in the collating or bestowing of good No Condemnation more affects than positive Justification or Salvation It may be further added the Apostle thus expresses it because Negatives usually intend and highten the thing spoken of as in the Commandements such as are Negative carry an higher obligation in them than those which are Positive for they oblige both semper and ad semper too and as in the Promises when they are Negatively expressed this makes them to rise the higher in the matter contained in them as take that Promise which is made up of so many Negative Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor for sake thee this is more
the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe ch 3.22 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood c. v. 24 25 26 Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness ch 4.3 Now it was not written for his sake alone that it was imputed to him but for us also to whom it shall be imputed if we believe on him that raised up the Lord Jesus from the dead who was delivered for our offences and was raised again for our justification v. 23 24 25 Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God thorough our Lord Jesus Christ ch 5.1 Especially read what the Apostle writes in drawing up the Parallel betwixt the two Adams ch 5.15 to the end of the Ch. I say read and consider what is before asserted over and over concerning Justification and then tell me whether the Apostle might not well thus infer There is therefore c. and whether there be not strength enough in these premises to bear the weight of the Conclusion There is therefore now no Condemnation c. for unquestionably the Illative therefore upon which the Proposition is bottom'd like the Handle in the Dial points to all that the Apostle had been speaking of concerning justifying Grace 2. The Priviledge is farther sure upon Sanctification From their Sanctification Such as are in Christ are always sanctified wherever the Union is with the Son there is Sanctification by the Spirit now such as are sanctified shall never be condemned Rev. 20.6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection on such the second death or Condemnation hath no power Sanctification doth not carry in it such a direct and intrinsick opposition to Condemnation as Justification doth nor is it any meritorious ground of Non-condemnation Yet where there is Sanctification there shall be no Condemnation for upon this the power and dominion of sin is taken away * Dum non essent in Christo consentirent concupiscentiae erat illis damnatio Nunc autem cum sint in Christo repugnent concupiscentiae nihil damnationis est illis quamquam ex carne concupiscant quia non pugnatores sed victi damnantur nec est damnabile si existant desideria ●●rnalia sed si eis ad peccatum obediatur Anselm This must be understood of Condemnation in Event and that too as grounded upon the meer Grace of God vigorous resistance is made against it the bent of the heart is for God there 's the participation of the Divine Nature the Image of God is renewed in the Soul the Creature in part is restored to that original rectitude which was before the Fall with many such like considerations upon all which the sanctified person is secured from Condemnation God hath such a love to Grace it being the work of his own Spirit and to gracious persons they in sanctification being made after himself as 't is exprest Eph. 4.24 that he will never suffer such to perish eternally Grace merits nothing yet it secures from the greatest evils and entitles to the greatest good Nothing shall save where Grace is not nothing shall damn where Grace is The Sinner shall not live the Saint shall not dye O this Sanctification though it be imperfect yet how great good doth result from it Paul had sad remainders of sin in him but withall Grace was in him he had his double self as the Moralist expresses it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his renewed self and his unrenewed self the Law was spiritual but he was carnal sold under sin what he would not that he did what he would that he did not he was led captive by the Law of sin and death here was his unrenewed self Yet where he complains most of Sin even there he discovers much if not most of Grace he had a sinning Nature but he allow'd not himself in sin he consented to the Law that it was good it was not he that did so and so but sin that dwelt in him to will was present with him though how to perform he did not find he delighted in the Law of God in the inward man with his mind he served the Law of God c. here was his renewed self Do not these things evidence Grace was all this spoken in personâ irregeniti as some tell us No doubtless the Apostle here speaks as a * With my mind I serve the Law of God Ego qui in me significo quemlibet justum sub gratiâ constitutum Anselm Quod meo judicio tantam vim tantam emphasin habet ut illi planè humanae naturae corruptionem ignorare videantur si qui sint qui eam cum tali animi constitutione consistere posse putant nisi aliundè sit aliquatenus immutata Amyral Consid cap. sept Ep. ad Rom. p. 16. He might have gone higher ●ha●● aliquatenus immutata gracious man and in the person of gracious men And what doth he infer from all this There is therefore now no Condemnation c. Oh saith Paul I have sin enough to humble me but yet sin shall not damn me there 's too much of it in me but yet it hath not my heart with my mind I serve the Law of God the main bent of my heart is for holiness the corrupt Nature is very strong in me but yet it hath not its full strength its entire unbroken power and dominion over me that through Grace I am freed from I am though but imperfectly yet truly sanctified and hereupon though I may lie under much trouble here yet I am safe as to my eternal state there is therefore now no Condemnation to me I desire it may be observed that he doth not only infer Non-condemnation from the work of Grace in him spoken of in the closure of the former Chapter but as soon as he had laid down in common this great happiness of persons in Christ he presently confirms it as to himself from his sanctification and the dethroning of sin in him by the regenerating Spirit For the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death And with respect to others he much enlarges upon it Rom. 6.5 6 7 8 21 22 23. Well then persons in Christ they being justified and sanctified are above the danger of Condemnation and these are the two great Pillars upon which the Therefore in the words is built From their union with Christ The Text affords us another Argument or Ground of Non-condemnation and that lies in the Subject it self There is no Condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus why so because they are in Christ Jesus for these words are not only descriptive of the persons to whom the priviledge belongs but they are also argumentative and contain a
wickedness O let such take heed lest God hear them in a dreadful manner I hope I speak to none of these you I trust have a dread of God and of the things of eternity upon your spirits let exempt on from Condemnation be the matter of your prayer and do but joyn the right manner with the right matter and this will secure your Souls forever God never yet condemned a praying man he that fears and prays shall never feel what he fears and prays against Fifthly 5 Dir. Make sure of Faith I mean true saving justifying Faith where that is yea but the least dram of it there shall be no Condemnation It secures from this both as 't is the Grace which unites to Christ and also as 't is the great condition of the Gospel upon which it promises life and salvation Unbelief is the damning Sin and Faith is the saving Grace If thou be'st a sincere Believer 't is not only thou shalt not be condemned but thou shalt most certainly be saved both are sure from the frequent often repeated declarations attestations promises of the word the whole gospel-Gospel-revelation centers in this God is as gracious to acquit justifie save the Believer as he is righteous to charge punish condemn the Unbeliever He * Gratia Dei speranda est acceptanda ad normam propositum miserentis Dei reque enim convenit or qui●condemnationis reusest formulas Gratiae praescribat ei à quo justè potest condemnari sed requiritur ut praescriptum Gratiae ab allo accipiat grato animo amplectatur Muscul in praefat ad Ep. ad Rom. may set down what condition or conditions he pleases in order to the giving out of his grace which when they are performed he is engaged to make good what he promises upon them O therefore get faith for this is the grand Gospel-condition if you believe not the Gospel it self cannot save you if you believe the Law it self cannot condemn you I do not enlarge upon these things 6 Dir. because that Direction which is proper to the Text is this As you desire No-condemnation get into Christ so as to be in Christ Jesus For they and they only are the persons who are out of the danger of Condemnation The Priviledge and the Subject are of the same extent and latitude just so many as are in Christ are safe and no more If thou beest one of these do not fear if otherwise do not flatter thy self with false presumptuous and ungrounded hopes All that were not in the Ark perished in the common Deluge all out of Christ are lost When 't is a Christ 't is no Condemnation when 't is no Christ 't is nothing but Condemnation When the guilty pursued Malefactor had got into the City of Refuge then he was secure O thou poor awakened Sinner fly to Christ 't is for the life of thy precious Soul and get into Christ the alone City of Refuge for the poor guilty Creature then Guilt many pursue thee but it shall never hurt thee And here I would admonish all to take up with nothing short of Vnion with Christ You are members of the Church but are you members of Christ you are joyned to the Church upon Baptism but are you joyned to Christ by a true and lively faith here lies your security from Condemnation The first Adam hath brought Guilt upon us and consequently Death how we being united to him So the second Adam frees us from this and makes over righteousness to us how in the same way and upon the same ground viz we being united to him without this all that Christ is hath done or suffered will avail us nothing But I shall more fully insist upon this in that which will follow VSE 3. Believers are to admire God for exemption from Condemnation Thirdly I would speak to those who are in Christ to excite them to be very thankful and highly to admire the Grace of God What No condemnation not one condemnation O the riches the heighths bredths depths lengths of the love of God! How should such be even astonished because of this inexpressible mercy They who deserve millions of condemnations that yet there is not one condemnation belonging to them they that have in them matter enough to condemn them over and over that yet they shall never be condemned how should God be admired by those to whom this blessedness belongs Such as are not in this state how should they be filled with self-awakening thoughts such as are in this state how should they be filled with God-admiring thoughts O you that are in Christ what will you think of this happiness when you shall see it accomplished the truth is as Sinners will never know nor ever be suitably affected with their misery till they feel it in Hell so the Saints will never know or be suitably affected with their happiness till that day shall come wherein they shall be put into the possession of it in Heaven When God shall pick and single you out of the common crowd and shall say I here acquit you before all the world from all your guilt I here pronounce you to be righteous persons and I will by no means pass a condemnatory sentence upon you though I know what I might have done to you and what I will do to others I say when it shall come to this how will your Souls be drawn out and if you had a thousand more Souls how would they all be drawn out in the adoring and magnifying of the Grace of God! But something should be done now whilst you are here though but in the hopes and expectation of this felicity Where there is no condemnation there should be much thankfulness How doth the Traitor admire the grace and clemency of his Prince who sends him a pardon when he expected his tryal and sentence to dye And as you must be thankful to God the Father so in special to Jesus Christ 't is he * 1 Thes 1.10 who hath saved you from wrath to come 't is he who was willing to be condemned himself that he might free you from condemnation judgment passed upon him * Is 53.8 he was taken from prison and from judgment that it might not pass upon you he was * Gal. 3.13 made a curse that he might deliver you from the curse when Adam had entail'd guilt and wrath upon you Christ came and cut off this sad entail and procur'd justification for you * Rom. 5.18 As by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all to justification of life 'T is upon Vnion with him that there is no condemnation to you O let your whole Soul go out in thankfulness to Christ He as your Surety paid your debt else you had been arrested and thrown into prison forever in him there was nothing to deserve condemnation and yet he
justificari nisi ci inseramur uniamur unus spiritus cum eo fi●mus S●●eso the first Adam could do us no hurt were we not descended out of his loyns and in him as our common head and so the second Adam can do us no good unless we be made One with him and in him as our head also If we so be then there shall be gracious communications most blessed derivations from him but if not none of these can be looked for And who would not now desire to be in Christ who would not purchase this priviledge with a world nay who would not give ten thousand worlds for it O that you would all make sure of it Do not trouble your heads with curious enquiries into some difficulties about this union but let this be your business to make sure of the thing The poor low-gifted Christian may get it though the highest gifted man cannot grasp it VSE 3. Directions how to get into Christ But I must direct as well as perswade Methinks I hear some saying How may this blessed Vnion be attained what shall we do that we may be in the number of those who are in Christ Jesus For answer to this I must again refer you to its double bond and ligament the Spirit and Faith and advise you to get both of them Would you have Christ to be one with you then get the Spirit would you be one with Christ then get Faith 1. First get the Spirit which may be done by attendance upon the Word and by Prayer Gal. 3.2 Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the Hearing of Faith the Apostle means the Hearing of the Gospel or the Evangelical Doctrine The Gospel doth highly conduce to the obtaining of the Spirit for 't is the ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 Do any therefore want this Spirit let them wait upon the Gospel dispensation and publication and through the Grace of God attending that Dispensation they shall have it Let me also recommend Prayer as an excellent means for the procuring of the Spirit O Sirs what will bring you into Christ but the Spirit and what will bring the Spirit into you but Prayer you should be praying for the Spirit though you cannot as yet pray with the Spirit O that you would often go to God and plead with him for the giving of it to you Say Lord we read if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his now Lord we dread the thoughts of being none of Christs O to be out of Christ is a woful state and we perceive that is our state till we have thy Spirit we hear 't is the Spirit that knits the Soul to Christ till therefore we are partakers of it we cannot be knit to him wherefore we beseech thee to give it to us O whatever thou deniest to us do not deny us this good Spirit Thou hast promised * Luk. 11.13 to give thy Spirit to them that ask him Lord upon our bended knees we ask him of thee O now make good thy promise to us I say do you but thus pray and the thing shall be done a good God never denies his good Spirit to the good Seeker of it 2. Get Faith also This is a Grace highly precious and excellent the Apostle Peter speaks of several precious things and Faith is one of them 't is precious blood 1 Pet. 1.19 't is precious Christ 1 Pet. 2.7 't is precious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 and 't is also precious Faith 2 Pet. 1.1 Now amongst many other things which make it so precious this is one 't is the * Fidei Gratia incomparabilis haec est quod animam copulat cum Christo sicut sponsam cum sponso c. Luther tom 1.466 Grace which unites to Christ The woman consenting to take the man for her Husband upon that the matrimonial union follows so the Sinner consenting to the receiving and obeying of Christ which is one great act of Faith upon this he is united to him this I say makes Faith so precious O this is one of Faith's royal excellences nothing puts a greater worth and glory upon it than this great effect Well then see that you make sure of it are you yet without it in the sad state of unbelief You have no share in and can make no claim to this Mystical Union so long as 't is thus with you you must be put into another state and become true Believers then 't will be well These are the only persons who are in Christ we who believe are in him that is true 1 Joh. 5.20 For whom did Christ ask of his Father that they may be one even as we are one 't was for them that should believe on him Joh. 17.20 c. Therefore let it be your great endeavour to be Believers for let me tell you in the very first moment of believing you will actually be the members of Christ the Soul is in Christ as soon as ever Faith is in it I 'le say no more but only add this As you desire to get Faith first get the Spirit for if you once come to have that Spirit he will most infallibly work Faith in you Of all the several Graces he will not let that be wanting wherever he is The Vses hitherto have been General VSE 4. Several things press'd upon those who are in Christ To admire the Love of God I shall now more particularly direct my self to those who are in Christ Jesus And first is it thus with any of you that you are indeed taken into this near Vnion with Christ how should you admire the love of God! I here consider God personally and so I would excite you to admire the Love of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost for indeed all the Persons have a great hand in this Vnion and the love of each of them in it is very admirable The Father first lays the foundation of it and then he orders the accomplishment of it therefore 't is said 1 Cor. 1.30 Of him i.e. of God the Father are ye in Christ Jesus c. and he also is said to call unto the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.9 The Son is willing to be One with you what a condescension is that and he is the person in whom the Vnion is primarily terminated Then the Holy Ghost brings it about as one great Agent therein So that all the three Persons are concerned in the Mystical Union 't is to the Son by the Will of the Father through the agency and operation of the Spirit O let Father Son and Spirit all be adored by you Which that I may the more effectually perswade you to let the Thing it self be considered and how you stand in reference to it To be in Christ Jesus so nearly so indissolubly united to him what mercy is this There are in the Vnion many things of a
of Sin for though that puts forth a great efficacy in the manner of its working yet it doth not rise to such a pitch or degree of efficacy in what is evil as the Spirit of God doth in what is good Set corrupt Nature never so high yet 't is but a finite thing and so hath but a finite power but the Spirit is an infinite being and in his saving and special workings he puts forth an infinite power and therefore He must work more efficaciously than Sin can do the Law of the Spirit must carry it against and notwithstanding the Law of Sin for though both pass under the same appellation of Laws yet they are Laws of a different kind and nature with respect to their power and efficacy This Law or power of the Spirit is that which I will speak to and for the better opening of the Truth in hand which mainly points thereunto I 'le do two things Two things propounded for the opening of the Observation 1. I 'le speak to the necessity sufficiency efficacy of the power of the Spirit in order to the freeing of men from the power of Sin 2. I 'le shew in what Way or Method the Spirit doth work and exert his power in his rescuing of Souls from Sins power In the First of these Heads three things are put together which must be spoken unto apart The Necessity of the Spirits power to free from Sins power 1. First of the necessity of the power of the Spirit Concerning which I may confidently affirm that 't is indispensably absolutely necessary for the divesting Sin of its long possessed soveraignty no less a power than the mighty power of this Spirit can bring down Sins power ô it s no easie thing to rescue the poor enslaved captive-soul out of its bonds Omnipotency it self is requisite thereunto that 's the * Luk. 11.21 22. strong man which keeps the palace till Christ through the Spirit which is stronger than it comes upon it and overcomes it Israel had never got out of their bondage under Pharaoh if God himself had not brought them out of it through a mighty hand and by an out-stretched arm as you read Deut. 5.15 and so 't is here Let 's bring it to a particular case take a Sinner who is under the Law of Vnbelief as there are too many such God knows nothing shall ever free this Sinner from the power of his unbelief unless a divine and an almighty power from above be put forth upon him 'till this be done all the Calls Commands Invitations Promises of the Gospel are all weak and ineffectual therefore 't is said to be the faith of the operation of God Col. 2.12 and the Apostle pray'd that God would fulfil the work of faith with power 2 Thes 1.11 and says the Prophet who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed Isa 53.1 without the revealing of Gods mighty arm there 's no believing and you read that God in sanctification and the working of Faith doth put forth the exceeding greatness of his power according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Eph. 1.19 20. what can be spoken higher than this You see the Law of the Spirit is necessary to the freeing of a person from the Law of Vnbelief and is it not so in all other things wherein Sins power shows it self The power of Nature which some do so much magnifie can never conquer the power of Sin alas 't is impar congressus there 's no eaven match betwixt them and besides Natures greatest strength is on Sins side its relicks onely where 't is good are for God against Sin but its full and entire strength as 't is bad are for Sin against God God hath but its shattered sorces as it were but Sin hath its full Body what can enfeebled Nature what will depraved Nature do against Sin Let it be considered if the power of Grace in the Regenerate be so small that by that alone without the concurrence of divine and special assistance from above they can do nothing which Christ affirms Joh. 15.5 no not so much as think a good thought as the Apostle affirms 2 Cor. 3.5 what then can be expected from meer Nature in the Vnregenerate in whom Sin is in its full strength as to the weakning or subduing of it In things of a spiritual nature the Scripture doth not onely deny the act but the power too Joh. 6.44 No man can come to me except the Father draw him 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God c. neither can the know them because they are spiritually discerned Jer. 13.23 Can the Aethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil So in that which I am upon 't is not onely the Sinner doth not free himself from the Law of Sin but of himself without the mighty power of the divine Spirit he cannot so do he that is not strong enough to subdue some one particular Lust how shall he be able to subdue the whole body of Sin in all its united and combined force as he that cannot conquer one single Souldier can much less conquer the whole Army If God leave a man to grapple with Sin meerly by his own strength woe be to him The necessity of the Spirits power to free from Sins power made out in some Particulars That the power of the Spirit is absolutely necessary to free from the power of Sin will be very evident if you consider those several advantages which it hath for the securing and holding up of its power in the Sinner As 1. 't is in possession 2. It hath been so a long time may be twenty forty theescore years to be sure from the time of the Sinners coming into the world for its power and his birth are of the same date now Vsurpers in possession and who have long been so are not so easily conquer'd 3. It s dominion is entire it hath all on its side the whole Soul is for Sin insomuch that when the Spirit of God comes to grapple with it he finds nothing there to side with him or to take his part which argues the necessity of his infinite power When there is a party within a Kingdom ready to fall in with the foreign force that comes to depose the Tyrant he may with more facility be vanquished but if all the people unanimously stick to him then the conquest is the more difficult As Christ once said * Joh. 14.30 the prince of this world cometh and hath nothing in me so the poor Sinner may say the Sin-subduing Spirit comes but he finds nothing in me to close with him 4. The natural man likes the power of Sin it hath his heart which is worst of all for the securing of its empire he
and working ever since mans Fall alwayes was and yet is unable to justifie it may possibly attempt such a thing or rather the Sinner may look for such a thing from it but it cannot carry it on to any good issue This I conceive Pauls thoughts were in special upon when he says what the Law could not do For 't is the Sinners justification which he in this place is discoursing of and he first begins with the Law as being impotent and insufficient to accomplish this justification God by Christ condemned sin i. e. he abolish'd and cut off Sins Guilt and by him he brought about a righteousness for the Sinner but the doing of this by the Law was a thing altogether impossible that could not make the Creature to cease to be guilty or to become righteous The proving of this truth was elsewhere his main business as namely in the 3d 4th 5th Chapters of this Epistle where he doth professedly and largely insist upon it That one place is a sufficient proof of it Chapt. 3.20 Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of Sin He pursues the same Argument in his Epistle to the Galatians where he goes over it again and again Gal. 2.16 21. Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Jesus Christ even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the faith of Christ and not by the works of the Law for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified I do not frustrate the Grace of God for if righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain Gal. 3.11 21 22. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for The just shall live by faith Is the Law then against the promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily righteousness should have been by the Law But the Scripture hath concluded all under Sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe So also in his Sermon at Antioch Acts 13.39 By him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses How full and positive are the Scriptures in the denial of any power to the Law to justifie It can discover Sin accuse and judge for Sin but it cannot expiate Sin or make a man righteous before God There is indeed the righteousness of the Law and upon that righteousness by the Law but that now is altogether unattainable further than as 't is brought about and accomplished in the hands of Christ the Law in Christs hands can do great things but in ours it can do nothing So also the Law is weak in reference to Eternal life It could not do i. e. it could not save it never yet as separated from Christ carried one Sinner to Heaven 't is above the ability of the Law to save one Soul Consider it as the Covenant of works so its language is Do and Live Rom. 10.5 For Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law that the man which doth these things shall live by them Now man in his lapsed state cannot do according to the Laws demands therefore by it there 's no Life for him Had he continued in the state of innocency he had been able to have done all which the Law required and so would have attained Life by it in the way of doing but now the case is altered If Salvation depended upon the Creatures perfect and personal obedience not a man would be saved There must indeed be Obedience to the Law or no Salvation but should it be that very Obedience which the Law calls for and as the Law calls for it viz. as the condition of the first Covenant this would make salvation absolutely impossible You know Moses brought Israel to the borders of the Holy Land but Joshua must lead them into it so the Law as God uses it in subserviency to the Gospel may do something toward the saving of a poor creature but 't is the alone Merit and Obedience of the Lord Jesus applyed by Faith which must put the Sinner into the possession of the Heavenly Rest That which now saves is Christ not Moses the Gospel not the Law believing not doing I mean only in the old Covenant sense So much for the Matter of the Laws impotency The Grounds or Demonstrations of the Laws inability to justifie and save Secondly Let me give you the Grounds or if you will the Demonstrations of the Laws impotency and weakness to justifie and save He instance in Three 1. It requires that which the Creature cannot perform Before the Law do any great thing for a person it must first be exactly fulfill'd for that 's its way the terms and condition which it stands upon and 't is as high in these terms now as ever it was for though man hath lost his power the Law hath not lost its rigor it doth not sink or fall in its demands because of mans inability to answer them Though the Sinner be as the poor broken debtor utterly undone yet the Law will not compound with him or abate him any thing but 't will have full payment of the whole debt Now this in statu lapso as I shall shew when I come to the 4th verse is * Unde sequitur plus in lege praecipi quam praestando simus quia si pares essemus implendae Legi frustra aliunde effet quaesitum remedium Calvin Hic locus efficacissime convincit justificationem non esse ex opcribus c. P. Martyr Non implet Legem infirmitas mea sed landat Legem voluntas mea August impossible None but such an one as Christ could thus answer the Laws demands For nothing will serve it below perfection inherent righteousness actual obedience all must be perfect or else the Law despises them The Gospel accepts of Sincerity but the Law will ' bate nothing of perfection if there be but the least failure all is spoiled Gal. 3.10 For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Jam. 2 1● For who soever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point he is guilty of all And is it thus are these the terms and demands of the Law what then can it do or rather what can we do it must needs be weak to us Because in these rigors we are so weak to it it cannot do much for us because we can do but little to it it cannot do what we desire because we cannot do what it demands O how exceeding short do the best come of the high measures of the
Law (a) Prov. 20.9 Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin (b) Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all (c) Eccles 7.20 There is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not (d) Isa 64.6 Our very righteousness is as a polluted ragge (e) Job 9.2 3. How should man be just with God If he will contend with him he cannot answer him one of a thousand If I justifie my self mine own mouth shall condemn me if I say I am perfect it shall also prove me perverse See Job 15.14 15 16. Job 25.4 5 6. * Psal 130.3 If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand † Psal 143.2 Quis melior Prophetâ dequo dixit Deus Inveni virum secundum cor meum et tamen ipse necesse habuit dicere Deo Ne imres in judicium cum servo tuo Bernard in Annunt Mariae Sine peccato qui se vivere existimet non id agit ut peccatum non habeat sed ut veniam non accipiat August Enchirid. In pessimis aliquid boni et in optimis non nihil pessimi solus homo sine peccato Christus Tertul. Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified 2. The Law doth not give what the Creature * Lex Moysi quamvis spiritualis esset quia tamen non adjuvabat intus per gratiam lex ●rat infirma et imbecillis ob statum carnalem hominum in quo relinquebat illos Cajet Non quod ipsa infirma sit sed quod infirmos faciat minando poenam nec adjuvando per gratiam Anselm Lex Praeterquam quod peccati rationem aperiebat nihil praeterea auxilii praestabat spiritui adversus carnem et ideo neque sufficiebat ad justificandum neque ad perficienda Legis opera Soto needs it asks above his strength and gives below his want He must have Grace Sanctification Holiness c. but will the Law help him to these no! 't is high in the commanding of them but that 's all it doth not work them in the soul it asks very high but gives very low 'T is holy it self but it cannot make others holy it can discover sin but it cannot mortifie sin as the glass discovers the spots and blemishes in the face but doth not remove them The Law is a † 2 Cor. 3.6 killing thing but 't is of the Sinner not of the Sin it hath by accident by reason of the Flesh here spoken of a quite other effect for it doth rather * Non de legis praestatione hic agitur sed de ipsius vi in nostris immutandis animis ad illud Legis praescriptum efformandis utpote quae corruptionem illam in qua nascinsur non modo non sanet sed augeat potius Beza enliven increase and irritate sin as Water meeting with opposition grows the more fierce and violent and the Disease the more 't is check'd by the medicine the more it rages Paul found in himself this sad effect of the Law Rom. 7.8 But sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence for without the Law sin was dead Moreover the Law calls for duty but it gives no * Per-Legem non adjutorium sed nostri mali indicium monitorium habemus Lu●her strength for the performance of it Pharaoh-like who exacted brick but allowed no straw The Gospel helps where it commands the Law commands but helps not Lex jubet Evangelium juvat remember I still speak of the Law as it stands in opposition to the Gospel and as 't is the matter and transcript of the first Covenant It neither pardons what it forbids for doth it inable to do what it injoyns and much of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impotency of the Law lies in these * Necessarius fuit adventus Christi qui Legi suppetias ferret c. Nam illa quidem rectè docuerat c. Verùm adhuc duo erant necessaria quae Lex conferre non potuit 1. ut condonentur ea quae contra ejus precepta admissa fuerint 2. ut vires hominis corroborentur quibus possit Legis jussa perficere P. Martyr two things Take a particular instance great is the Sinners need of Faith for without this no justification no peace with God no heaven 't is the Gospel-condition on which all depends Now the Law knows nothing of this Faith nay 't is diametrically opposite to it 't is so far from working it that it hinders it to its utmost 'T is all for working for doing Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of Faith but the man that doth them shall live in them Believing belongs only to the Gospel therefore that is stiled the Law of Works and this the Law of Faith Rom. 3.27 If Faith come under the Law 't is only that Faith which is a General Faith or as 't is a part of Obedience not as the Condition of Gospel-grace The Law therefore not helping as to these things so indispensably necessary for Grace here and hereafter what can it do for the lost Sinner 3dly The Law could not do because it could not heal that breach which Sin had made betwixt God and the Sinner It still looks forwards and is alwayes calling for perfect Obedience but what if Sin hath been committed for the time past O there the Law is weak It can make no reparation for what is past as to that all it sayes to the guilty person is as they to Judas what is that to me see * Matth. 27.4 thou to that Suppose the Sinner could for the future come up to a full conformity to the Law and in every thing answer its highest commands Suppose him now to arrive at such a pitch of perfection that he should do nothing which this Law forbids and do every thing which this Law commands yet supposing the Fall from God and the Guilt thereby contracted or any one sin committed the Law would be weak and the creature could not thereby be justified the reason is because here is now reparation and satisfaction to be made for what is past which to make is impossible to the Law This perfect Obedience present and future might do the work was it not for what is past but guilt hath been contracted God hath been offended his first Covenant violated therefore there must be reparation made to him for this Now this the Law cannot do nor the Creature upon the terms of the Law for all that he can arrive at is but perfect obedience and that is his duty he 's under an obligation to it and therefore by it he can make no satisfaction for what is past this is but the paying of the present debt which can quit nothing of the former score This is very well if we look forward but what becomes of us when we look backward So
much too high as good as they are in reference to these great concerns they are no better than so many figg-leaves which will not cover a Sinners nakedness when God shall come to reckon with him whosoever bottoms his trust and confidence upon these he builds upon the sand and sooner or later there will be a sad downfal of all his Hopes * Sordet in districtione Judicis quod fulget in conspectu operantis Gregor these are things which glitter in our eye but they are but course and mean things without Christ in Gods eye Sirs I am upon a Point of as great importance as any that can be spoken to and therefore give me leave to stay upon it a little and to deal plainly and faithfully with you about it I would feign leave every one of you upon a good bottom built upon the Rock that * Isa 28.16 sure Foundation which will stand firm and steady in all winds and weather having that anchor-hold which will abide under all storms And therefore let me prevail with you to cast off all Legal Confidence and to rely trust rest upon nothing short of Christ and his Righteousness Duties Graces Holiness Obedience Good Works all in their proper places are excellent things but 't is the alone Merit Righteousness Satisfaction of Christ that must justifie and save you Would you have that righteousness which will bear the test at the great day that righteousness in which you may be able to stand before the disquisition of the righteous God O then fly to Christ to his imputed righteousness and there let all your trust and relyance be placed What is that One thing which the New-Testament-revelation mainly drives at 't is this to carry Sinners from Moses to Christ from the way of the Law to the way of the Gospel from doing as the Old-Covenant Condition and Ground of Life to believing The not understanding receiving embracing of this grand Truth was the sin and ruine of the Jewes all that Christ and the Apostles could say or do would not prevail with them to shake off their depending upon the Law but still they * Rom. 2.17 rested in the Law † Rom. 9.31 32. followed after the Law of Righteousness and sought righteousness not by Faith but as it were by the works of the Law ‖ Rom. 10.3 they being ignorant of Gods righteousness and going about to establish their own righteousness would not submit to the Righteousness of God O therefore how full how earnest was Paul in his dealings with them and with others too to undeceive and convince them about this He saith the whole matter of Righteousness was now taken out of the Laws hands and put into the hands of Christ * Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth * Rom. 3.21 22. Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight c. But now the Righteousness of God without the Law is manifested being witnessed by the Law and Prophets Even the Righteousness of God which is by Faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe He sets down the miserable state of those who would be resting upon the Law such as were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he describes them * Gal. 3.10 For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the Curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them He tells them by this they made the sending dying of Christ to be to no purpose * Gal. 2.21 I do not frustrate the Grace of God for if Righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain see too Gal. 5.3 4. He tells them further that God had such a respect for his own Law that if righteousness and Life had been possible by it he would have taken no other way * Gal. 3.21 If there had been a Law given which could have given Life verily righteousness should have been by the Law But why do I give you a few gleanings when you your selves may go into the full field Now was all this spoken only to the Jews and Gentiles who lived at that time doth it not concern us also have not these several Considerations their strength to us as well as to them To come neerer home the Text tells us the Law could not do will you not be convinced of the Laws inability to help you so as to betake your selves to that better and effectual way of Justification and Salvation which God hath so graciously provided for you The Law is weak as weak now as ever but Christ is strong as strong now as ever the Law can do nothing but Christ can do all 'Till it pleases God to convince you of the Laws impossibility to make you righteous and happy you 'll never seek out after help in Christ or close with him for as Christ had never come to you had it not been because it was impossible for the Law to save you so you will never come to him till you see that 't is impossible for the Law to save you this is that which moved God to send Christ and this is that which moves the Sinner to embrace Christ and his way of Salvation If this work of Conviction was but once pass'd upon you O you would soon quit the Law and all your Confidence would be bottom'd upon Christ Well! shall I bring it to an head here are two wayes set before you for Righteousness and Life the way of the Law and the way of the Gospel the way of Doing and the way of Believing now which of these two will you chuse if the former so as to venture your Souls upon what you can do your case is desperate by this you plainly put your selves under the Covenant of Works and there 's nothing but perishing as things now stand with us under that Covenant if the latter there is hope nay certainty supposing you close with the Gospel-way in a right Gospel-manner that it shall be well with you Who would not now say with David * Psal 71.16 I will make mention of thy righteousness even of thine only who would not with * Phil. 3.8 9. Paul count all but dross and dung that he may winne Christ and be found in him not having his own Righteousness which is of the Law but that which through the Faith of Christ the Righteousness which is of God by Faith 4. Fourthly Use 4. See here the admirable love of God and be greatly affected with it The Law was weak utterly unable to relieve us in our forlorn condition as to that conclamatum est the case is desperate and now the merciful God finds out another way pitches upon another course hee 'll see what that will do the former failing what 's that he sent
semel tantum missus est Dei Filius secundum alterum saepe missus est mittitur quotidie Nam secundum alterum missus est ut sit Homo semel tantum factum est secundum alterum verò mittitur ut sit cum Homine quomodo quotidiè mittitur ad Sanctos missus est etiam ante incarnationem ad omnes Sanctos qui ante fuerunt etiam ad Angelos Unde Aug. de Filio c. Lomb. L. 1. D. 13. twofold sending of him the one External and Visible the other Internal and Invisible the First was Christ's sending to be Man that 's past and over and was to be but once the Second is Christ's sending into Man that yet continues and is reiterated from time to time Now these two though they are of a different nature must not be parted he that would regularly hope for Salvation by Christ must have the latter as well as the former sending for 't is most certain that a Christ without if it be not also a Christ within will never save A Christ in our Flesh must be accompanied with a Christ in our Hearts there must be not only a Christ sent to us but also a Christ sent into us or else he will not profit us The whole business of Merit lies upon the Christ without as he took our Nature and therein fulfilled the Law but the fitting or qualifying of persons to have a share in the blessings merited that lies in the Christ within as he is received into the heart In a word the impetration is by Christ without but the application is by Christ within Now therfore I say you must nor rest in the One unless you find the Other too there are very dangerous mistakes abroad in the world about this Some are all for a Christ within making nothing of a Christ without a most pernicious Opinion and destructive of all Christianity Others again are all for a Christ without contenting themselves with this that he was sent into the world to save Sinners and this to them is enough for future happiness they look no farther But now whoever would be wise to Salvation must take in both so as to adore believe in rest upon a Christ as externally sent and yet so as to make sure of a Christ in * Col. 1.27 himself through the gracious operations of the Spirit Paul here in this Verse speaks of the External Sending in the 10 Verse he speaks of the Internal Sending And if Christ be in you all that live under the Gospel know the former but few know the latter O how is it with you Christ was sent to you but is he in you he was formed in the Virgins womh but is he formed in your hearts as the expression is Gal. 4.19 he came from heaven in a corporeal manner for you but did he ever in a spiritual manner come into you you have the external mission but have you also the mystical Vnion hath the Father who sent his own Son in your Flesh sent also his own Spirit into your hearts which is the great Promise of the New Testament as the former was the great Promise of the Old see Joh. 14.26 Joh. 15.26 Joh. 16.7 'Pray search diligently into these things for be assured that a Christ as only sent in the likeness of sinful flesh if He and his Spirit be not also received within I say a Christ so stated will never make you happy Men exhorted to believe in him whom God sent 6. Did God thus send Christ it calls aloud to you all to believe in him Hath the Father chosen him set him apart every way fitted him to be a Redeemer sent him into the world for that end and after all this will you not receive embrace fly to and venture your selves your All upon him O what an Argument is this to draw Sinners to an hearty closure with Christ what will engage Souls to believe on him if this will not Christ as sent is the Object the Ground and also the great Encouragement of Faith Sinners you may very safely believe on him for he 's no Impostor or Deceiver but that very person whom God sent to be the Saviour of the world And 't is not only so that you may safely believe on him but 't is your great duty to believe on him for he who sent him layes this as his grand Command upon you so to do 1 Joh. 3.23 And this is his Commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ Joh. 6.29 This is the work of God that great Work which he injoyns that ye believe on him whom he hath sent 'T is observable how high Christ speaks of the knowledge of himself under this notion as he was sent of God Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent As also how desirous he was that the World might know and believe that he was thus sent of God Joh. 17.21 23. That they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they all may be one in us that the world may believe that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me Now what was it that Christ propounded to himself in all this certainly he had more in his eye than the bare notional knowledge of or naked assent to this great Truth that he was the Person sent of God Yes his desire reach'd to a practical and fiducial knowledge of it to such a knowledge as might be attended with true and saving Faith So that 't is not enough for you to know and believe in a common and general way that Christ was indeed sent of God which will only make you differ from Jews and Heathens but you must so know and so believe it as to receive accept close with rest upon him in a saving manner which will make you differ from all outside and formal Christians Further let it be considered what was God's great design in the sending of Christ 't was this that Sinners believing in him might live So the Gospel tells you over and over * Joh. 3.16 17 God so loved the world that he gave or sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved is not here a strong engagement as well as an high encouragement to believe And it being God's act to send his Son he looks upon Himself as highly concerned according as men carry it towards him therefore saith Christ * Math. 10.40 He that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me * Luk. 10.16 He that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me And especially this holds true in
the matter of believing or not believing O do you close with Christ and receive him upon the Gospel-offer not only He himself but his Father also is highly pleased herewith and takes it very kindly at your hands I sayes God here are Souls that do not throw away or tread upon that costly remedy which I provided for them who give me the glory of my Wisdom and Mercy who would not have my great designs in the sending of my Son to be frustrated who duly entertain the Messenger whom I sent to transact the great affairs of my Glory and their Good who answer my expectations in my highest Love c. I say this pleases God exceedingly But on the other hand do you reject Christ make little of him stand it out against him refuse to believe how heinously doth God resent such carriage this he looks upon as an high despising and undervaluing of his Mercy a desperate striking at his Glory which is very dear to him a very unworthy requital of his Love a dangerous attempt to make all his Grace to be to no purpose and must not all this highly provoke him Suppose some Great Person hearing of the sad condition of some poor Captives should out of meer compassion to them send from a far Country his own and only Son to redeem them and this Son should in Person come to them and treat with them about their redemption he offering to pay down their ransom to free them from all their misery provided they will but trust on him and be subject to him If now these Captives should slight all this and choose still to continue in their chains rather than upon these terms to accept of deliverance would not this folly and obstinacy greatly incense both Father and Son Or suppose again some offended Prince against whom the Treason had been committed should send his Son to the Traytor with a Pardon in his hand and he should take no notice of this Son or Pardon brought by him but reject and slight both what could be expected to follow upon this but the greatest indignation Now is not this the very case of Vnbelievers nay is not theirs much worse in respect of the Person sending the Person sent the Benefits offered the Conditions required and therefore must not they incur an higher displeasure and make themselves obnoxious to a worser severity Sinners shall not these things be thought of will nothing prevail upon you to believe Was Christ sent and did he come to you and will not you come to him will you not yet understand that it is He only who must save you to allude to that Act. 7.25 He supposed his brethren would have understood how that God by his hand would deliver them but they understood not do you look for another Son or another Saviour to be sent indeed hath God such another Son to send or was not the once sending of this Son enough hath not God in Christ given you his last Way and Method for Salvation so that there is no Other to be expected after that And was he only sent did he not do all for which he was sent and so returned back again to his Father is there any thing further to be done but only that you will repent and believe Methinks these Considerations should work upon you yet I 'm sure they will not unless the Lord persuade your hearts to believe and he himself be pleased to work Faith in you We may speak much to convince you of your Duty but when we have said all 't is God who must both incline and inable you to believe who must over-powre against unwillingness and strengthen against weakness Faith is his Gift Eph. 2.8 he who gives the Christ to be believed on must give the Grace to believe with he who sent Christ to you must draw you to Christ * Joh. 6.44 No man can or will come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him So much for the Duties proper to be urged upon God's sending of Christ in which you have the First Vse Use 2. Comfort to Believers from God's sending Christ Secondly It affords abundant matter of Comfort to all sincere Christians The Truth which I have been upon Christ sent by God may be useful not only as a powerful incentive to Duty but also as a firm foundation of inward Comfort O believers set your Faith Hope Joy as high as ever you can this Sending of Christ will bear you out in it you cannot God having done this over-believe or over-rejoyce I 'le shew you what there is wrapped up in a Christ sent and for the better raising of your Comfort I 'le instance in Particulars for 't is with Gospel-Truths as 't is with your perfumed things which so long as they are wrapp'd up do but weakly affect the Sense but when they are taken out opened and parted then they do more strongly send forth their fragrant odours 1. Did God send Christ surely then great was his good Will towards you For had it not been so would he ever have done such a great thing for you as this therefore that heavenly Quire of Angels singing in consort upon the Birth of Christ made this a part of their Spiritual Song * Luke 2.14 Glory to God in the Highest and on Earth peace good will towards men I follow our reading of the latter Clause though I know it might be and is otherwise rendred why did they say good will towards men O because now in the Sending and Incarnation of Christ God had given out the highest demonstration that was possible of his good Will towards them Had there been any thing but that in his Heart and had there not been an abundance of that in his Heart he would never have sent and so sent his own Son 2. Did God send Christ surely then he is in good earnest real hearty in the matters of Salvation After such a thing as this Saints have not the least reason to be jealous of God or to question the reality of his Call offers invitations intentions promises declarations concerning their happiness What higher assurance could God give of his heartiness and reality in these than this if he once send his Son there 's no room left for suspicion or doubting This assures us that God is real in his Promises and will be faithful to his Promises for by it they are all at once ratified and confirmed If God make good the grand Promise of Sending his Son what other promise will he not make good a Christ sent is the Seal of all the Promises See Isa 7.14 3. Did God send Christ then you need not fear but that the work of Redemption is compleated When such a Person sends and such a Person is sent the Thing shall be done effectually and throughly be it never so high so hard if Christ undertake it hee 'l accomplish it Had a Creature indeed been sent there might
be adored by Faith not to be comprehended by Reason Isa 53.8 Who shall declare his Generation I may make use of this Text though possibly the Generation mention'd in it be not that which I am treating of for I much incline to think that it here notes that numerous issue and seed that Christ should have upon the Preaching of the Gospel rather than his being eternally begotten by the Father yet 't is very well known that several of the FATHERS take it in the latter sense they making this to be the meaning of the words Who can be able to understand in himself or to declare to others the hidden ineffable incomprehensible Generation of the Son of God surely none can Without controversie this as well as Christ's Incarnation is a * 1 Tim. 3.16 great mystery Nicodemus was a knowing man yet strangely puzzled at the Regeneration of Believers Joh. 3.4 How can a man be born when he is old can he enter the second time into his mothers womb and be born certainly the eternal Generation of God's own Son is a thing much more abstruse and unsearchable And there are riddles in Natural generation which we cannot resolve Eccles 11.5 As thou knowest not the way of the spirit nor how the bones do grow in the womb of her that is with child * Vide Najanz Orat. 35. t. 1. p. 566 567. now are we so much at a loss and non-plus there how much more shall we be at a loss when the far more unconceivable Generation of Christ is before us O therefore I advise you to be very humble and sober in all your disquisitions about that There are two things in Reason which you must alwayes oppose and beat down viz. the curiosity of it for it loves dearly to be prying into God's Ark into things which he sees good to lock up from the Creature and the pride of it for it also loves to sit upon the bench as Judge of the matters of Faith to be giving out its decrees and edicts as to believing or not believing now do not you give way to it in either of these respects in your most earnest desires after knowledge still keep within the compass of what the Word reveals and let the Word alone command and order your Faith and especially in such profound mysteries as that which I am upon see that these two things be done by you When I consider the several nice and curious Questions which * Non dubito asserere quando in Scholasticorum Quaestiones de his rebus incido quin in totidem salebras labyrinthos Syrtes Charybdes ipsaque adeo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 incidere mihi videar Quantò satius tutiusque est intra Scripturae limites se arcte continere sapere nolle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Episcop Inst Theol. lib. 4. cap. 33. sect 2. Some have rais'd and discuss'd about the Generation of the Son of God I cannot but stand and wonder at the pride and sauciness of the Wit of man and so far I do concur with that Learned person in his severe censure upon these men What is more than the thing it self the Father's communicating of his own Nature and Essence to Christ we must humbly submit to be ignorant of by soaring too high we shall but scortch and hurt our selves 2. In your eying of God the Father's active Generation of Christ take heed of all gross Conceptions about it so as not in the least to measure it by or to parallel it with any Physical or Carnal Generation Our apprehensions must be rightly informed about this otherwise what absurd and wretched notions shall we run our selves upon So far as there is that in common Generations which speaks goodness and perfection so far you make use of them to help you in your conceiving of the Divine Generation of the Son of God but there being much in them which speaks defect and imperfection all that you must praes●ind and cut off and lay aside when you are thinking of that Generation which is the ground of Christ's Sonship As for instance for like to beget like for one thing to conveigh its nature and substance to another this is good in Physical Generations and so far they may be improved to shadow out unto us the mystery of God's eternal generation But now there being sundry other respects which carry imperfection in them these you must be sure to keep out of your thoughts and by no means to conceive by them of that which I am upon As in our knowledge and conceptions of God by the Creatures we pick out of them what is good and perfect and lay aside what is evil and imperfect and so by them we ascend to know and conceive of God so we must do in Natural and Physical Generations with respect to God the Father's supernatural and hyperphysical Generation of Christ To shew the * Of this see Zanch. de tribus Elohim lib. 5. cap. 8. p. 254. Alting Theol. Elenct p. 170 171. Estwick against Biddle p. 443. Dr. Rearson on the Creed p. 275. c. difference betwixt these two let me particularize in a few things without much enlarging upon them Natural Generation upon the failing of individuals is necessary for the preservation of the species in God the Father's begetting of Christ it was quite otherwise In natural Generation there is multiplication there though the thing begetting and the thing begotten have the same nature and essence yet numerically they are not the same but in the Father's begetting of Christ these as the Learned prove are perfectly one and the same they have not only the same specifical but the same numerical Essence here as the divine Essence was not divided so neither was it multiplied for 't is as incapable of multiplication as of division Natural Generation in the Creature is a transient act that in God was an immanent act In Natural Generation the thing begetting precedes the thing begotten and begets that which is after it in time in God the Father's Generation of Christ it was not so both Father and Son being coeternal In Natural Generation there must be such a time before things arrive at their prolifick vertue far be it from us to entertain such a thought as to the Father's Generation of Christ So that you see there is a vast disparity betwixt these two and therefore you must in your apprehensions reverently distinguish betwixt them and not in common judge of the one by the other God forbid that you should so sadly mistake Though the Father's communicating of the Divine Essence to the Son was a true and proper Generation so far agreeing with Generations amongst us yet in other respects it was quite of another nature and so you are to conceive of it otherwise you will entertain very gross and unworthy thoughts of God 3. Joyn Study and Prayer together Would you know Christ as the eternal Son of God especially would you go beyond
a literal speculative notional knowledge of him as such so as to know both him and his Sonship practically and savingly O then be much in Prayer Read and pray hear and pray meditate and pray study and pray he studies this mystery and all others best who study's it most upon his knees This special and supernatural Sonship of Christ is not savingly to be known without special and supernatural illumination from Christ through the Spirit 'T is observable that in Matth. 16.17 when Peter had made that * Matth. 16.16 good Confession Thou art Christ the Son of the living God see what Christ resolved it into † 17. Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in Heaven You know that passage Matth. 11.27 All things are delivered unto me of my Father and no man knoweth the Son or makes others to know him but the Father neither knoweth any man the Father save the Son and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal him these two Persons do make known each the other the Father reveals the Son and the Son reveals the Father the Son is a fit Person to reveal the Father for he 's his only begotten Son and lies in his bosom therefore he saith * Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is the bosom of the Father he hath declared him and the Father is also a fit Person to reveal the Son for he having begotten him and having had him with himself from everlasting he knows him exactly O therefore go to him by Prayer beseech him to reveal his Son to you 'T is a great thing to know Christ in this relation so great that there must be an heavenly light a spiritual understanding given to a man before he can come up to it mark that of the Apostle 1 Joh. 5.20 And hath given us understanding that we may know him that is true he speaks of the knowing of Christ as the true Son of God 't is as if the Apostle had said if God had not illuminated our understandings and irradiated them with a divine light we had never known Christ savingly in this notion He who begat the Son of himself from all eternity to him it appertains by his Spirit in time savingly to reveal this Son to the Creature and therefore your work lyes with him in prayer to beg of him this revelation of the Son So much for the first thing 2. Branch of the Exhortation To believe Christ to be the Son of God and to believe on him as the Son of God 2. A second branch of the Exhortation shall be this Is Christ God's own Son then do you believe him to be such and believe on him as such The first we call dogmatical the second justifying and saving Faith the first is assent to the proposition that Christ is God's own Son the second is relyance upon the person who is and as he is God's own Son The first is more general and common for all who bear the name of Christians in some sense or other come up to it yet notwithstanding there is much worth and excellency in it though not so much as in the latter and that is absolutely necessary in order to the second for how can he believe on Christ as the Son of God who doth not first dogmatically believe him to be the Son and such a Son of God And this general Faith too as well as that which is more special admits of degrees for though all Christians believe it yet some are more confirmed rooted stablished in the belief of it than others are Now therefore this is that which I would press upon you to labour after a more steady unshaken fixed believing of this great Foundation-Truth I hope you do believe it but do you believe it in such a degree doth not your faith sometimes waver about it is not your assent weak and languid attended with doubtings and questionings are you rooted and * Col. 2.7 stablished in the faith as of other things so in special of this great Article of the Christian Religion are you come up unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgment of the mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ as the Apostle speaks Col. 2.2 I could most heartily wish that it was thus with you and with all who do profess that they believe Christ to be the Son of God but I fear it is not so Now my Brethren that I may the better excite you to labour after a full and firm assent hereunto consider that one special-reason or end why a great part of the New Testament was written was this that you might believe and be confirmed in your belief of this very thing Joh. 20.31 But these are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God and that believing ye might have life through his Name You may observe concerning this Evangelist St. John as of all the other Evangelists he was most inspir'd in the revealing of Christ's divine Sonship so he was also most inspir'd in the pressing of men to believe it and in the setting out of the weightiness of the belief of it 1 Joh. 2.23 Whosoever denieth the Son the same hath not the Father but he that acknowledgeth the Son hath the Father also 1 Joh. 4.15 Whosoever shall confess that Jesus is the Son of God God dwelleth in him and he in God 1 Joh. 5.5 Who is he that overcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God What a mighty stress did this great Apostle lay upon it O how doth it concern all upon the Considerations laid down by him to live under a steady belief of Christ's being the Son of God! Indeed this is the Foundation-Truth Christ himself is the personal foundation and this Truth not exclusively but eminently is the doctrinal foundation to both of which that famous and so much controverted Text is applicable Matth. 16.18 I say also unto thee that thou art Peter and upon this Rock I will build my Church and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it upon this rock what rock doth Christ mean was it Peter personally considered or was it Peter and his Successors as Some would have it they meaning by these Successors the POPES of ROME whom I trust I shall never close with in this interpretation so long as 't is this rock and not this sand undoubtedly let but persons be unbyass'd and not wedded to Party's and Opinions calculated for worldly designs and Interests nothing is more clear than that by this rock we are to understand either the Person of Christ or that Doctrinal proposition which Peter had laid down concerning him Vers 16. Thou art Christ the Son of the living God after which it immediately follows Vpon this rock I will build my Church or else we
may put them together and take in both upon this Person and this Faith the Church of God is built and therefore it shall stand fast for ever so that according to this Exposition which is with great strength defended by our PROTESTANT Divines this Sonship of Christ is the foundation-truth And therefore no wonder that in all Ages the Zeal of the Church hath been so much engag'd therein for 't is very well known that in its drawing up of Creeds and Summaries of Faith this one Article viz. Christ's being the Coessential Coeternal only begotten Son of God hath ever been put in witness the Nicene Constantinopolitan Athanasian Creeds because this was judged a thing most necessary to be believed And indeed there is not any one branch of the Christian Faith which the Church hath gain'd more out of the fire after much trouble and opposition than this one Nay this was that very Truth for the owning and asserting of which above any other our blessed Lord lost his life as you may plainly see by the * Joh. 19.7 Mark 14.61 c. Evangelical History And I desire that it may yet further be considered that as God himself began and ended with the witness and declaration of Christ's Sonship for as soon as he entred upon his publick Ministry the Father set him out with this witness * Matth. 3.17 This is my beloved Son c. and when he had well nigh finished his work and was going off the stage then the Father renew'd his witness again * Matth. 17.5 This is my beloved Son c So the Devil too he began and ended with the Sonship of Christ for presently after the Father's testimony thereof he took him aside to tempt him and when he had him alone and began the duel with him how did he assault him why * Matth. 4.3 if thou be the Son of God command that these stones be made bread he comes over it again † Vers 6. if thou be the Son of God cast thy self down c If thou be the Son of God why did Satan harp so much upon this what might his design be in laying his temptation thus I answer it must be for one or for all of these Reasons either that he might by the observing of Christ's behaviour in the contest more fully inform himself whether Christ was indeed the Son of God which was the thing he was deadly afraid of knowing that such a person would be the ruine of his kingdom or that he might see whether he could make Christ to doubt of his Sonship after and notwithstanding the plain testimony of his Father or that he might go as far as ever he could to draw him to the doing of what was evil and so if such a thing had been possible null this his neer relation to God surely there was some special cause why Satan pick'd out this and so much insisted upon it Well! here he began these were the very first words which this cursed Spirit uttered when he dared to assault our Saviour wherein he plainly struck at his Sonship it self though cunningly he made his temptations to point to some wicked inferences which he would have had drawn from Christ's relation rather than directly to the truth of the relation it self And as he began with this so he ended with this for 't was he which speaks a prodigious infatuation in him that he should be so forward in the promoting of that which certainly would end in his ruine who stirr'd up Pilate the High Priest the Body of the Jews against Christ and they through his instigation fell upon Christ and took away his life for what for this very cause because he made himself to be as indeed he was the Son of God By all this you see of what great moment and importance this Truth concerning Christ's Sonship is And to add yet one thing further pray look to that grand Seducer and Enemy of Christ and of the Christian Faith I mean Mahomet of whom we reade that he also set himself to his utmost to oppose and decry the Sonship of Christ He was willing to grant Christ to be a great Prophet but by no means to be the very Son of God this particularly and expresly he principled his Followers against in his ridiculous Alcoran and * Constantèr dic illis Deum unum esse necessarium omnibus incorporeum Qui nec genuit nec est generatus nec habet quenquam sibi similem Azoar 122. Alcor in Bibliandri Edit p. 188. Vide Cribrat Alcorani per Nicol. de Cusa lib. 1. c. 10 11 13 14 c. See Dr. Pearson on the Creed p. 272. he gave them in special this Command 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to worship one onely God and to honour Christ as the Word of God but not as the Son of God From all these premises I infer is this such a foundation-Truth and shall not we firmly assent to it hath the Church with such zeal contended for it and shall we yet doubt of it do Heathens Jews Turks so much oppose it and shall not we Christians who have and own Scripture-revelation steadily believe it hath Christ sealed it with his blood and yet shall we stagger about it have we such attestations from God and Man and yet shall there be questionings and reasonings in our Souls against it 1 Joh. 5.9 10. If we receive the witness of men the witness of God is greater for this is the witness of God which he hath testified of his Son He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself he that believeth not God hath made him a liar because he believeth not the record that God gave of his Son But Some will say to what purpose is all this who question 's whether Christ be God's own Son I answer O that there was not too much need of this advice many poor Souls think they do fully and firmly believe it and yet 't is to be feared they do not and the truth is that weakness which is in our Faith of adherence proceeds in part from that weakness that is in our Faith of assent much of that dejectedness which is upon our Spirits under trouble and of those inward sinkings under the sense of guilt comes from one of these two Causes either we do not revive upon our thoughts or else we do not fixedly believe in our hearts that Christ is God's Son and his own Son And as to loose and common Professors if ever Arrianism Old or New should get upon the throne which God forbid I fear the belief of Christ's Godhead and eternal Sonship would soon be laid aside O therefore I would be very earnest with you to get your faith yet more and more strengthned and confirmed about it But though this be very good yet 't is not enough besides the believing of Christ to be the Son of God there must be believing on Christ as the Son
of God You find in Scripture that saving Faith is described by its special reference to Christ as standing in this relation so Gal. 2.20 The life which I now live in the Flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me why doth the Apostle thus express it by the Faith of the Son of God I answer partly because Christ the Son of God is the efficient and * Heb. 12.2 author of faith partly because this Son is the great Object of faith and partly because Faith in its essential act doth very much eye Christ as thus related to the Father for 't is a believing or relying upon him as the Son of God 'T is very usual in the Gospel where it speaks of believing to mention Christ with it as standing in this relation 1 Joh. 3.23 This is his commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ 1 Joh. 5.13 These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God that ye may know that ye have eternal life and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God Joh. 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him as the only begotten Son should not perish but have everlasting life O what a person is Gods own Son for Sinners to believe on what an all-sufficient Saviour how able to * Heb. 7.25 save to the utmost must he needs be who is God and Man the Son of God and the Son of Man And indeed 't is not enough barely to believe on Christ but there must be such a believing on him as may in some measure be answerable to this his relation is he God's own Son at what a rate should we believe what a faith should we act upon him what great things should we expect for him and from him can any thing be too high for our faith when we have the proper natural Son of God in our eye as its basis and foundation Saints should have their faith raised not only upon the encouragement of the Promises but also upon the consideration of Christ's Person as he is so near and dear to God I have formerly observed how our Apostle in the Text rises higher and higher in the setting forth of the Love of God he sayes God sent there was Love he sent his own Son there was more Love this own Son he sent in the likeness of sinful flesh there was yet more Love and this he did for this end that he might for sin condemn sin in the Flesh c. there was the very top and zenith of Love Now as there is a rise in these things in the setting off the Love of God so there is also a rise in them in their several engagements and encouragements to us to believe in Christ and to believe in him yet more and more firmly and fiducially he was sent therefore we must believe he was and is God's own Son therefore we must the rather and the more strongly believe he took our flesh here 's an higher argument for an higher faith in that flesh he condemned sin performed all that the Law commanded suffered all that the Law threatned what a faith doth this call for Now if notwithstanding all this it shall yet be either no believing or but faint-believing both will be sad though in a great disparity for the faint-believing is unanswerable to what is reveal'd and uncomfortable to the Saint but the no-believing is damnable to the Sinner 3. Branch of the Exhortation To honour Christ 3. Thirdly is Christ God's own Son how then should all honour and adore him certainly upon this Sonship the highest yea even divine adoration it self is due to him Is he a Son such a Son the Son of such a Father the greatness of his Person arising from that high and near relation wherein he stands to God calls for the highest respect reverence veneration which Angels or Men can possibly give unto him Besides this 't is the absolute Will of the Father that all should * Joh. 5.23 honour his Son even as they honour himself for he having the same Nature and Essence with the Father the Father will have him have the same honour which he himself hath which whosoever deny's to him reflects dishonour upon the Father who will not bear any thing derogatory to the glory of his Son 'T is a known * Nicephor lib. 12. cap. 9. Sozom. l. 7. c. 6. story that of the carriage of Amphilochius to the Emperour Theodosius he had petitioned the Emperour to be severe against the Arrians to discountenance and suppress them because in their Opinions they did so much disparage the Son of God but could not prevail whereupon he made use of this device coming one day into the presence of the Emperour and of his Son Arcadius who now ruled joyntly with his Father he made his humble obeysance to the Emperour himself and shewed him all reverence but as for his Son he passed him by shewed him no respect at all rather dealt derisorily with him stroking him upon his head and saying to him in a way of contempt Salve tu Fili The Emperour upon this was much offended sharply reproves Amphilochius for his affront to his Son c. whereupon the good man vindicates his carriage plainly telling the Emperour he had given reverence enough to his Son And now the Emperour was more incens'd commands him with great indignation to be thrust out of his presence c. which whilst some was doing Amphilochius turn'd himself to the Emperour and said thus O Emperour thou being but a man canst not bear the contempt or disparagement of thy Son how dost thou think the great God can bear that contempt of his Son which the Arrians cast upon him the Emperour was much affected at this begg'd the Bishop's pardon commended his ingeny and did that now which he refus'd to do before The inference is undenyable if great Men stand so much upon the giving of all honour and due observance to their Sons much more will the Great God stand upon the giving of all due Honour and Reverence to his own and only Son O therefore let Christ be highly adored and honoured by you If you ask me how I answer every honouring of him is not sufficient but it must be such as may suit with his infinite Majesty and Greatness you must conceive of him as God as the Natural and eternal Son of God and according to that honour which is due to him as such so you must honour him The Apostle speaks of some * Rom. 1.21 who when they knew God they did not glorifie him as God so some pretend to give some glory to Christ but they do not glorifie him as God O this is that which you must come up to to adore and reverence Christ in such a manner
as may be suitable to his Nature and Relation as he is the infinite God and the eternal only begotten Son of God and what Honour can be high enough for such a Person But more particularly there 's a twofold Honour which you must all give to Christ 1. The Honour of Worship Heb. 1.6 When he bringeth in the first-born into the world he saith And let all the Angels of God worship him God will have his only begotten Son to be worshipped though he be very tender to whom that honour is given Divines do from hence strongly argue yet I know * Remonstr Apolog Cap. 2. 16. Episcop Inst Theolog. lib. 4. sect 2. cap. 34. 35. Some make but little of this Argument to prove the Godhead of Christ thus if religious Worship be God's peculiar if a God be the sole and adaequate object of Divine Worship if no Creature be to share with him therein it being that Glory which he will not give to another Isa 42.8 Matth. 4.10 Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shalt thou serve and yet the Father will have Christ to be the proper Object of divine Worship hence it follows that then he is and must be more than meer Man that he is true and very God And surely it would be no better than flat Idolatry in us Christians to give proper and formal religious worship to Christ was he not truly God as well as truly Man Therefore as to this Franciscus David and Christianus Franken both Socinians were in the right against Socinus if Christ was but meer Man the common Principle in which they all agreed then he could not be worshipped with religious Worship without Idolatry whereupon they would not give any such worship to him And as this Worship proves Christ's Godhead so his Godhead is the * Of this see Zanch. de tribus Elohim l. 3 c. 12. Junius Def. Trinit contra Samosat Profess Leid Cens cap. 16. Voetius de Adorat Christi Cheynel Trin-unity very largely p. 334. c. Dr. Stillingfleet of the Idolatry of the c. chap. 2. p. 112 113 114. ground of it for the adaequate immediate proper ground of Divine Worship as attributed to Christ is his divine Nature Essence and Sonship true he as Man is to be worshipped but not because he is Man the Humane Nature of Christ is the Object of Worship but 't is only as 't is taken into Personal Vnion with the Divine As he is Mediator and set in such an Office he is to be worshipped but this is not the proper and fundamental reason thereof for though he never had been Mediator yet Worship would have been due to him as the Father and Spirit are to be worshipped though the Office of Mediator belongs not to them Further the Lord Jesus as he in our Nature hath done such great and excellent things for us is to be worshipped yet this is only a forcible motive and inducement thereunto not the proper ground of it it remains then that the alone reason of Worship given or done to Christ is his being God and the co-equal co-essential Son of God And he being so what an obligation doth this lay upon you to worship him there 's inward worship consisting in the trust fear reverence adoration of the heart there 's outward worship consisting in attendance upon and due observance of Gospel-institutions as Prayer Hearing the Word c in both of these respects let Christ be worshipped by you both are due to him as he is God's own Son Well may you tender your homage to him in this way when Angels themselves bow before him and worship at his throne 2. Secondly there 's the Honour of Obedience which you must also give to Christ This is annexed to the declaration of his Sonship at the same time in which the Father attested that Christ was his Son he enjoyned obedience and subjection to him * Matth 17.5 This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased what follows hear ye him this hearing of Christ is the Creatures obeying of him in all his holy Laws Commands and Institutions and so 't is as if God had said here 's a Person whom I own for my Son in a special and peculiar way whom therefore I have set as * Psal 2.6 my King upon my holy Hill of Sion into whose hands I have put † Matth. 28.18 all power upon whose shoulders I have laid the ‖ Isa 9.7 Government therefore I charge you to hear him and to yield all Obedience and Subjection to him O Sirs 't is God himself and not such a poor worm as I who requires this of you it must be Reverence and it must be Obedience too this high relation of Christ calls for both and believe it without this Obedience he that is God's Son will never be your Saviour for Heb. 5.9 Being made perfect he became the author of eternal Salvation unto all them and to none but them that obey him I have spoken much to press believing on this Son upon you but let me add there must be obeying of him as well as believing on him Obedience is not so of the very essence of Faith but that Faith may very well be defin'd without it yet 't is an inseparable Adjunct or Consequent or fruit of Faith and these two do alwayes concur in the Subject though they be different in themselves and have a different influence upon justification and salvation But that which I aim at is this since Christ is the Son of God and this is clearly revealed to you since this Son hath made known to you in the holy Gospel what his Will and pleasure is how he would have you to live what to do what to shun I beseech you now hearken to him comply with him in all his excellent Commands give up your selves in an universal subjection to his blessed Laws let there be an obediential frame of heart to his whole Will this is indeed to honour him and to honour him in such a way as best answers his Sonship to God and his Lordship over you 4. Branch of the Exhortation To adore the Love of God 4. Fourthly is Christ no lower a Person than God's own Son what cause have we then to admire and wonder at the greatness of God's Love in his sending of him Here 's a glass indeed to transmit and represent unto us the Love of God O how shall we get our hearts affected with it what thankfulness in us can bear any proportion to the mercy before us For God to send to send a Son such a Son in such a manner as follows in the words here 's the Wonder of Wonders God never did the like before and hee 'l never do the like again and blessed be his name there is no need he should 'T would have been admirable mercy if God would have sent some other person upon this errand to redeem
and in the following words was to set forth the excellency of the Gospel which he calls Godliness because its main s●ope and tendency is to that and how doth he do it why by the glorious mysteries held forth therein of some of which he there gives a particular enumeration As to the height and verity of which mysteries he saith Without controversie c. confessedly beyond all dispute or denial these are mysteries indeed 't is as if he had said I know the poor Heathens pretend to great and high mysteries but indeed they are so far from being high mysteries that they are no mysteries at all they being but the fancies of deluded men but saith he I 'le tell you of mysteries that are both real and sublime which are so beyond all contradiction Without controversie great is the mystery of Godliness c. But how doth he make that appear he makes it out in some instances and his first instance is in the Incarnation of the Son of God Without controversie great is the mystery of Godliness God was manifested in the flesh c. O there 's a mystery indeed a transcendent mystery one which all the Gentiles cannot parallel A very Learned * Jac. Gothofredus in 1 Tim. 3.15 16. in Critic vol. 7. p. 3770. c. Author in a very learned Discourse upon this whole Verse proves that Paul therein throughout had his eye upon the Gentile-Rites Customs pretentions to mysteries c. especially upon those amongst the Greeks and amongst them especially upon those in their Eleusinia sacra which above all others were in highest repute at that time when the Apostle wrote this Epistle Now therefore against them he sets down the great mysteries of the Gospel and Christianity which certainly were infinitely to be preferred before the other The making out of this was our Apostles design according to the Opinion of the forenamed Author in every branch of the Words but I 'le go no farther than the first that only suiting with the thing I am upon And there are in it four things to prove the thing in hand 1 As to Gospel-mysteries the true God was the object of them and concern'd in them but the Gentiles in their mysteries had to do with those which by nature were no Gods which were but called Gods as they are described Gal. 4.8 1 Cor. 8.5 2. In Gospel mysteries one God only was the object of them and Christians had to do with this one and only true God but the Gentiles in their mysteries had to do with variety and multiplicity of Gods and so indeed with no God for many Gods are no God 1 Cor. 8.5 6. Though there be that are called Gods whether in heaven or in earth as there be Gods many and Lords many But to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him 't is God one God manifested c. 3. In Gospel mysteries there 's a God as incarnate commemorated and remembred in them in the Gentile-mysteries it was not so In them they had some notions and made some commemorations of their Gods but how only as common benefactors as giving them bread and wine and corn c but they went no higher but now Christians under the Gospel they commemorate God as taking flesh and suffering in that flesh for their good O there 's mercy indeed a mystery indeed 4. Whereas the Gentiles in their mysteries pretended such and such apparitions of their Gods in opposition to these the Apostle sets down the great and glorious appearance and manifestation of Christ He was indeed manifested in the flesh for he was so manifested in the flesh as to be made flesh his was not an appearance only but a real assumption there 's a mystery indeed In these respects the Apostle advances the mysteries of the Gospel and of the Christian Religion above those which the blind Gentiles were such admirers of in their idolatrous way Well! we who know and believe these things what high thoughts should we have of the Gospel and of the Christian Religion how should we adore and magnifie God for his infinite mercy to us in bringing of us under that revelation and that Faith wherein this unparallel'd mystery of a Christ incarnate is made known and embrac'd Of the excellency of the Flesh and Manhood of Christ 2. Secondly this further informs us of the excellency and glory of Christ's Flesh and Manhood from the premises it clearly appears that that is and needs must be superlatively great Was Christ himself sent in flesh did God's own Son assume and so assume flesh O what a lustre and glory must there be upon that flesh or body which such a person doth so assume 'T is call'd after its being glorified in him a glorious body Phil. 3.21 but 't was a glorious body long before even from the first moment of its formation and assumption 'T is true its glory whilst 't was here on earth did not shine forth in its full brightness there was a vail and covering upon it during the state of Christ's Humiliation but yet even then 't was full of glory though the fulness of its glory did not appear as the Sun is very glorious even when 't is hid under a cloud And indeed 't was requisite not only from the state of his abasement but also from the weakness of those with whom he was to converse that here he should very much keep in its glory for we see when at his transfiguration he let it break forth in a more than ordinary manner the beholders thereof could not well bear it it fill'd them with consternation read Matth. 17.1 c. But yet upon its miraculous framing its unstain'd and unspotted sanctity its neer union with the Godhead even here I say its glory was exceeding great O what a sight will it be in heaven to see this body of Christ in all its splendor and to see him in this Flesh sitting at the right hand of God! As he was at first sent in it 't was but mean in external appearance and to meer sense but now he is ascended and hath carried it up with him and 't is plac'd at the right hand of God so 't is an Object so glorious that 't is fit only for a glorify'd eye to behold And doth the Body of Christ engross all this glory hath his Soul no part or share therein yes surely it may rather be ask'd hath not that the greatest share it being the better and nobler part and capable of that of which the Body is not If God prepare so excellent a body hee 'l be sure answerably to prepare as excellent a soul to dwell in that body as they that build stately houses will put in inhabitants that shall be answerable to them Imagine a Soul untouch'd and unblemish'd with sin fully and perfectly sanctify'd fill'd with grace
see Heb. 5.7 Thus you are to understand the Apostle in these words and not as if he laid aside all knowledge of or respects unto the Lord Jesus as considered in his Humane Nature In believing we must eye a whole Christ Christ God and Christ Man too his whole Person with both his Natures is the proper object of Faith And certainly there 's something in 't that believing is so much set forth by its reference to his Flesh as Joh. 6.53 54 56. Verily verily I say unto you except ye eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood ye have no life in you Whoso eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him Take away this Flesh and Christ's fitness to be a Mediator to God and a Saviour to us ceases and consequently his fitness too to be the object of saving Faith 't is Christ God-Man whom in believing you have to do with and you are neither so to eye his Manhood as to overlook his Godhead nor so to eye his Godhead as to overlook his Manhood both together do your work Upon the whole therefore you are in the actings of Faith to look upon Christ as having assum'd your Nature and so to rest upon him 2d Branch of the Exhortation To be much in the study and contemplation of a Christ incarnate 2. Secondly be much in the study and contemplation of Christ as sent in flesh What an object is a Christ incarnate for these I have press'd you to study him as the Son of God I would also press you to study him as the Son of Man to know him as God's own Son and as having taken our own Flesh there 's the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the * Phil. 3.8 excellency of the knowledge of him What dry insipid jejune knowledge is all other in comparison of the knowledge of Christ as God-Man One dram of this especially if saving practical and fiducial is better than great heaps of meer natural and philosophical knowledge It cannot be enough lamented that Christ in his Person Natures Offices is so little known as to that which I am treating of his assuming Mans nature how little do the most understand of it all hope to be saved by a Christ incarnate but alas they know not what a Christ incarnate is in the general possibly they can tell you he was a Man but if you examine them about particulars what woful ignorance will you find in them is not this to be greatly bewail'd Nay go even to Saints themselves how scant and dimme is their light and knowledge about this none can know it fully some know nothing of it they who know something 't is God knows but very little in comparison of what they might they wade but ankle deep into this great depth is there not need therefore of this advice to stir you up to the studying of Christ as sent in the flesh O that you would study other things less and this more that you would every day with all due sobriety be prying searching diving into this mystery of a God manifested in the flesh so the Angels do this is one of those things which they desire to look into 1 Pet. 1.12 and we being more concern'd in it than they shall not we be looking into it David says Psal 111.2 The works of the Lord are great sought out of all them that have pleasure therein here 's a great work indeed the greatest that ever was done by God many great and glorious things he hath done but the sending of his own Son in our flesh exceeds them all now shall not this be sought out by us Things are to be studyed according to their excellency in themselves and their influence upon the good of others there are in a very eminent manner both of these inducements in the Incarnation of Christ to draw out our most serious endeavours after the knowledge of it for what so excellent in it self so beneficial to Man as that It stands very high in the place and reference which it bears in and to the Gospel 't is the Soul and Spirit the marrow and kernel of the whole Gospel one of the highest discoveries which the Gospel makes all the Articles of Faith saith * Dr. Sibbs o● 1 Tim. 3.16 p. 65. one stoop and vail to it and if so what a necessity doth this lay upon you to search as narrowly into it as ever you can Pray do not object the mysteriousness of the thing as if it was so much above you that you were not to meddle with it for 1. Though it be a great mystery yet 't is a mystery in a great measure revealed 2. The more mysterious it is the more need there is of the most diligent inquisition into it 3. 'T is a mystery to curb curiosity and Pride but not to stifle sober and modest enquiries Further be much in meditating upon and contemplating of Christ as sent in the flesh You are to study him that you may know more of him to meditate upon him that you may draw out and improve what you do know O Sirs he that is in your Nature in Heaven should he not be very much in your hearts here on earth A Christ incarnate how should our Souls be swallowed up in thinking of him as such What doth the whole world afford so deserving of our most fixed thoughts is there any flower in Natures garden out of which such sweetness may be suck'd what divine comfort what heavenly delights must needs flow from hence to the Soul that is much in the contemplation of it Is the foundation of our eternal happiness laid in it and shall we not mind it is it a thing so rare so unparallel'd and yet shall it be seldom in our thoughts What fools are we to suffer our selves to be so much taken up with trifles and shadows when we might live in the daily view of Christ God-Man why should an empty perishing world engross our thoughts when we have such an object as a Jesus incarnate to contemplate why do we dwell so much upon fleshly things of a deceiving and defiling nature when the flesh-assuming Christ the spotless and undefiled flesh of the holy Jesus is either not at all regarded or very hastily pass'd over 'T is said of Isaac Gen. 24.63 He went out to meditate in the field O Christians what a spacious and delicious field is Christ's Humane Nature for you to meditate in and upon O that you would go out frequently and so do You say sometimes you would imploy your thoughts in divine Meditation and Contemplation but you cannot call to mind a proper object for it or you are presently on ground and want matter for your thoughts to work upon 'pray when 't is so fix upon the Word as made Flesh there 's a fit and
subdued and conquered all the powers of Hell held it out till all was finished all this was done in our flesh by Christ-Man though not as meer Man I say in our flesh for had it not been so * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Chrysost Haec erat Dei virtus in substantià pari perficere salutem Non enim magnum si Spiritus Dei Carnem remediaret sed si Caro consimilis peccatrici dum Caro est sed non peccati Tertull. adv Marcion l. 5. the thing had not been so great but that Christ in our very Nature and Flesh should be able to do such things there 's the wonder doubtless he must be assisted and strengthened by an higher Nature otherwise it could not have been thus Nay that Christ-Man should continue yet to do such strange and mighty things O stand and wonder at his Power 'T was the stone cut without hands by which you are to understand Christ in the miraculous production of his Humane Nature which smote the image c. Dan. 2.34 You read of one sitting upon the cloud like unto the Son of man having on his head a golden crown and in his hand a sharp sickle for the cutting down of his enemies Rev. 14.14 and the Son of man is brought before the ancient of dayes and there was given him dominion and glory and a kingdom that all people nations and languages should serve him c. Dan. 7.13 14. Now that Christ in the Nature of Man should be thus exalted and also do such great and glorious things is not this wonderful Suppose you had seen * Exod. 2.3 Moses when a child in his Ark of bullrushes laid in the flags by the rivers brink and then afterwards had seen him when grown up in the head of the people of Israel as their ruler and deliverer as he is stiled Act. 7.35 subduing Pharaoh and all his Host would not this have struck you with admiration What then shall we say and think of Christ he that for some time was shut up in his Mothers womb lay as a weak infant on her lap suck'd at her breasts c. and when grown up suffer'd and dy'd upon the Cross this very Christ is the redeemer of the world the Saviour of man the King of all the earth the universal Conqueror over Devils and all Enemies whatsoever exalted far above principalities c. what shall we say to these things verily they command adoring silence and wonderment I have been very long yet not too long I hope upon this head when the Incarnation of the Son of God is before me than which there never was a greater thing to be wondred at could I say too much in order to the raising of your hearts to the highest adoration both of the thing and also of the persons concern'd in it what more proper and necessary to be urg'd upon such an Argument than such a frame of spirit Fourth Branch of the Exhortation To labour after the powerful influence of Christ's Incarnation upon Heart Life 4. Fourthly this great mystery of Christ's Incarnation must have some powerful influence upon your hearts and lives My Brethren 't is not enough to believe it to have an ineffective light in the head about it no nor sometimes to have the affections wrought upon in the admiration of it but this must be attended with deep impressions upon the heart and have a great efficacy upon the life The Apostle having spoke of the * 1 Tim. 3.16 mystery of Godliness presently he falls upon Christ's being manifested in the flesh as a great part of that mystery of Godliness and this in particular as well as the whole Gospel in General is set forth thereby because where 't is known and believ'd aright it doth very much conduce and operate to the promoting of Godliness St. John tells us 1 Joh. 4.2 Every Spirit that confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God is every Spirit that confesseth this of God yes so far as assent to the truth and a faithful profession of that truth will carry it But such as would be said to be of God in a more special and saving way they must not only assent and profess but they must live suitably to what they do so believe and profess this truth of Christ's being come in the flesh must have an efficacy upon them in what is practical and then they will be of God indeed A God incarnate is both the great incouragement to Faith and also the great incentive to Duty Should I here fall upon the several particulars which offer themselves and enlarge upon them I should too much trespass briefly therefore let me but touch upon six or seven things 1. Was Christ sent in flesh and do you know and believe it Christians upon this must be humble Oh how humble should you be What an argument is here from Christ's Incarnation for humility in his assuming flesh he hath set before you the highest the most glorious pattern of humility that ever was will you not follow it * Matth. 11.29 Learn of me for saith he I am meek and lowly he gave sufficient evidence of his lowliness in becoming Man now is it not better to learn of an humble God than of a proud man O Christian after such abasement of thy Lord and Saviour wilt thou be haughty and proud how unsuitable is a proud sinner to an humble Saviour What saith one more mysterious than God humbled more monstrous than man proud When ever pride self-conceitedness self-exalting begin to rise in the heart think of the humility of the Son of God how he emptied himself made himself of no reputation took upon him the form of a Servant c. and surely this will be an effectual Antidote against pride The Apostle when he would further lowliness of mind in the Philippians this is the consideration which he sets before them Phil. 2.3 6 7 c. * Diabolus superbus hominem superbientem perduxit ad mortem Christus humilis hominem obedientem reduxit ad vitam quia sicut ille clatus cecidit dejecit consentientem sic iste humiliatus surrexit erexit credentem August tem 3. p. 1051. We were undone by a proud Devil and a proud heart if ever we be sav'd it must be by an humble Saviour and an humble heart 2. Do not sin Partly Must not Sin that there may be in you as full a conformity to Christ as here you can come up to he took your Nature and sinn'd not therein you should be as like to him as ever you may Partly that Christ may have his end in his coming in the flesh for why did he so come but that he might destroy the works of the Devil 1 Joh. 3.8 that he might redeem you from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 that you being delivered out
fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ O if he had not condescended to take our flesh there had been * c. Alioqui nec satis propinqua vicinitas nec affinitas satis firma unde nobis spes fieret Deum nobiscum habitare tantum erat inter nostras sordes summam Dei munditiem dissidium Calvin Instit lib. 2. c. 12. no such thing as our Communion with God but now 't is sure And so 't is in the other things which were mentioned what is Christ's gracious presence in the Soul or the in-dwelling of the Spirit in a child of God both of which are often spoken of in Scripture to the personal presence and inhabitation of the Godhead in the Manhood of Christ In him dwelleth the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2.9 Communications of Grace from God 3. There are such and such communications of Grace from God to a gracious heart these are very secret yet very sure and credible Upon communion of Nature communications of Grace do certainly follow Christ having assumed flesh there 's now a way made through which God may convey his Mercy and Love to Creatures as he pleases The Godhead is the fountain from which all flows and there 's now a pipe to convey supply's from that fountain viz. the Manhood of Christ 1 Cor. 8.6 To us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him by Christ in our flesh all things come to us and we by him go to God he is the Way as he saith of himself Joh. 14.6 the Way by which our duties are handed to God and God's mercies to us O so long as Christ is Mediator betwixt God and Man as God-man there may and there shall be mutual intercourses and communications betwixt God and Man Sonship to God 4. The Scripture speaks much of the Sonship and Adoption of Believers A very great and glorious priviledge infinitely too great for such despicable worms as we are considered in our selves yet through the Grace of God in a Christ incarnate it is ours This neer relation to God upon the Manhood of his own Son is now made very * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in 1 Joh. Si Naturâ Dei filius propter filios hominum factus est Hominis filius quantò est credibilius Naturâ Filios Hominis Gratiae Dei filios fieri c. Aug. de Trinit lib. 13. c. 9. credible for if the Son of God was made the Son of Man why may not the Sons of Men be also made the Sons of God if the One was so abased why may not the Other be so advanced Especially if we consider that the bringing of Believers into this near relation was one great and special end why Christ was incarnate Gal. 4.4 5. When the fulness of the time was come God sent forth his Son made of a Woman made under the Law To redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the adoption of Sons When the Evangelist had laid down the exaltation of believers to a state of Sonship Joh. 1.12 and had shown how that is brought about Vers 13. immediately he falls upon Christ's being made flesh V. 14. whether the latter carries any reference to the former or is brought in upon this or that account with respect to the Saints Sonship spoken of I will not be positive in determining one way or another only this I say as to the thing 't is not incredible that such who believe should become the Sons of God when the Word was made Flesh The Resurrection of the Body 5. There 's the Resurrection of the Body And what more incredible to us than that though the S●riptures are very express and plain in the asserting of it though we know the Power of God and have many Considerations for the assuring us of its truth and certainty yet how apt are we to stagger and to be under doubtful thoughts about it But saith the Apostle Acts 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead blessed Paul is the Resurrection of the dead a thing not incredible what is there to take off the incredibility of it why enough and enough especially to us Christians Christ's Incarnation and that which followed upon it is sufficient to remove the incredibility of this mystery for he took our flesh then died in our flesh then rose again in our flesh I say in our flesh for he rose not only with a true Body but with the self-same Body that ours is with that very Body in which he died and was buried and if so why then should the Resurrection of our Flesh or Bodies be incredible This is nothing but what hath been done already to and in our flesh and 't is less to raise flesh than to take flesh 't was more strange for him who was God to die than 't is for him who is Man being dead to live again If it be said that Christ was an extraordinary Person and therefore that his Resurrection is not to be bottomed upon for the making of ours sure and certain I answer but it is because he did not rise as a single Person but as a common Head and therefore he rising we may be assur'd that we shall rise too 1 Cor. 15.20 21 22. But now is Christ risen from the dead become the first fruits of them that slept For since by man came death by man came also the resurrection of the dead For as in Adam all die even so in Christ shall all be made alive He that believes Christ's Incarnation will upon that believe the Resurrection As 't is well observ'd by some upon that passage betwixt Christ and Martha which we read of Joh. 11. where he asked her vers 25 26. I am the resurrection and the life he that believeth in me though he were dead yet shall he live and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die believest thou this mark her answer Vers 27. She said unto him yea Lord I believe that thou art the Christ the Son of God which should come into the world as if she had said yea Lord I do believe that thou canst raise the dead since thou art the Son of God which wast to be and now art incarnate he questions her about the Resurrection she professeth her faith in his Incarnation yet her Answer was very pertinent because she believing this could not but believe that also 6. The possessing of the heavenly glory is the highest of all The Heavenly Glory and therefore of all the most incredible for usually the higher the mercy is the harder it is to believe it What saith the poor Christian shall I in this flesh see God and live with him for ever O this is a thing very improbable much too big for my
that died yea rather that is risen again He is said to be delivered for our offences and to be raised again for our justification Rom. 4.25 the Sinners justification was merited by his death but it was manifested by his resurrection thence therefore Faith in its being assured of that priviledge must fetch its main encouragement so that this cannot be the only thing aimed at in his death since it more properly belongs to another Head 3. The old-Testament Saints were high in their assurance and yet they liv'd before the death of Christ 4. His death simply considered gives no such encouragement to faith or ground of assurance consider it indeed as we state it that is as he dy'd in our stead to satisfie God's Justice appease his Father's wrath expiate our sin c. and so 't is highly strengthning to Faith but if you take it in it-self and as our Adversaries state it so there 's but little in it for Faith's advantage What inducement or encouragement would this be to Sinners to believe to set before them the death of Christ unless those Ends and Considerations about it be taken in which our Antagonists oppose without which it would rather draw out mens fear than their faith rather drive them from God than to God for so more of his justice and severity would therein appear to deterre them than of his Mercy to allure and encourage them O did God deal so with his own Son who too was innocent and blameless what then will he do to such vile wretched guilty creatures as we are must Christ so die would not God spare him in the least what then will become of such as we Upon the whole matter the Soc. say Christ's death was not at all intended to be satisfactory to God I 'me sure according to their stating of it 't is not at all consolatory to Sinners 4. They say Christ dy'd for this end that he might have a right and power after his death when he should be in heaven to forgive sin Answ Whilst he was here on earth before his death he had that right or power therefore that could not be any end thereof Matth. 9.2 Son be of good cheer thy sins be forgiven thee and when some murmured at this see how he stood upon the asserting of it Vers 6. That ye may know that the Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins c. 5. 'T is said Christ dy'd for this end that he might procure for himself such and such power dignity and glory But to this we say it was so far from being the main end that it was indeed no end at all it being but the Co●●●●●ent not the End of his death see Phil. 2.8 9. These defective Causes and Ends being remov'd it remains that I set down those which were the chief and principal And they were such as these Christ dy'd to be a Sacrifice for Sin Heb. 9.26 10.12 a Ransom 1 Tim. 2.6 Matth. 20.28 a Propitiation 1 Joh. 2.2 to reconcile God to us and us to God Rom. 5.10 2 Cor. 5.19 Eph. 2.13 14. Col. 1.20 c. to deliver us from the curse of the Law by his being made a curse for us Gal. 3 13. to save from wrath to come 2 Thes 1.10 to justifie and make righteous 2 Cor. 5.21 Rom. 5.9 to procure remission of sin by his blood 1 Joh. 1.7 Eph. 1.7 Matth. 26.28 to overcome death by death Heb. 2.14 to purchase eternal life Joh. 6.51 Heb. 9.12 As he dy'd in our place and stead taking our guilt and bearing our punishment so he died for these ends that he might restore us to God's love and favour and expiate all our sins by his making satisfaction for them these were not only Ends but the supream and primary ends of his Death I do not exclude the former provided that 1. they be taken in conjunction with these nay 2. in subordination to them Christ in his dying might intend this and that as his bearing witness c. but his main and principal intendments were satisfaction reconciliation forgiveness of sin c. in the revealing of which the Holy Scriptures are so express and plain that to me 't is very strange that any opposition much more that so vehement opposition should be made against it Good Lord how are Opposers faine to strain their wit to summon in all their invention subtilty for the finding out of some forc'd and pitiful interpretations of the Texts alledged thereby to evade the true sense and meaning of them how do they set these Scriptures and themselves too upon the rack that they may seem to reconcile them with their hypotheses's but all in vain as is abundantly prov'd The vanity falshood of humane Satisfactions 3. Thirdly from hence I infer the vanity and falshood of all humane Satisfactions Was the Lord Jesus himself a Sacrifice for sin and did he thereby condemn abolish expiate all sin for his members then what needs to be done or can be done further by any Creatures in the way of Satisfactions * Eccles 2.12 What can the man do that cometh after the King I cannot but take notice how whoever will engage in these weighty Points he must tread upon thorns and bryars every step he takes no sooner shall he have got off from one Enemy but there will be some other at hand with whom he must encounter also I find it I 'me sure to be so for no sooner have I quit my self of the SOCINIANS but the PAPISTS in a full body make head against me The former would wholly take away Christ's Satisfaction the latter would add Mans to it the One denies the verity the Other the perfection of it For they tell us 't is very true that Christ did fully satisfie the Justice of God by his being a Sacrifice for sin and fully expiate the sins of Believers in respect of their guilt and of the eternal punishment due thereupon but not in respect of temporal punishments these they say they are yet lyable unto notwithstanding all that Christ hath done and suffered and that too not only in the present but for some time in the future state for the preventing or removing of which satisfaction must be made to God either by themselves or by others this is the ROMISH-Doctrine In which so far as I have gone we have falsities enough but should we go farther to their particular explication and stating of the latter branch mens satisfying by themselves or by others what a mass and heap of ungrounded unscriptural absur'd Opinions should we there meet with for there come in their penances fastings pilgrimages corporal punishments voluntary poverty masses and prayers for them who are in Purgatory Indulgences c. O what a big-bellied Error is this of humane Satisfactions what a numerous train of falsities is it attended with Contrary to this we hold that * See the 31 Article of our Church Christ by the once
* 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 2. p. 97. PORPHYRY's Objections against Sacrifices in general viz. they would encourage men to be wicked All to labour after an interest in Christ's Sacrifice and in the benefits thereby procured 3. Thirdly I would excite you to labour after and to make sure of a personal interest in this great Sacrifice and in the benefits resulting from it For 't is a thing to be resented with the greatest sadness imaginable that where ●ere is such a Sacrifice so at first offered up to God and now so revealed to men that yet so many millions of Souls should perish and as to their spiritual and eternal state be little the better for it because they regard not as to themselves either the thing or the good that flows from it My Brethren I beseech you if you have any love for your Souls let it not be so with you but let it be your greatest care to secure an interest in this Sacrifice and to partake of the blessings procured by it be often considering and questioning with your selves here 's a Sacrifice for expiation and atonement but what 's this to us here 's a dying Christ but did he die for us shall we be ever the better for his death if this propitiatory oblation be not ours what will become of us Under the Law the Gentile-strangers were to offer Sacrifices as well as the born-Jews see Numb 15.14 15. Lev. 17.8 and amongst the Jews the poor as well as the rich with respect to which difference in mens outward condition God accordingly appointed different Sacrifices Lev. 14.21 but yet something or other both were to Sacrifice and in their offerings for the ransome of their Souls all were to give alike Exod. 30.15 The rich shall not give more the poor shall not give less than half a Shekel Now all this was to shadow out two things about Christ's Sacrifice 1. its equal extent to all men notwithstanding all national or civil differences be they Jews or Gentiles rich or poor 't is the same Christ to all if they believe for there is no difference Rom. 3.22 2. the equal obligation lying upon all men to look after make sure of and rest in this one and the same all-sufficient Sacrifice none in order to remission justification atonement eternal life need to carry more to God by Faith and Prayers and none must carry less Sirs let us all put in for a share in Christ's offering and in the benefits purchased thereby for if we should come short of that we are lost eternally Are not reconciliation with God the expiation of sin eternal redemption c. things most necessary and most desireable if so where can we hope to have them but in a sacrific'd Redeemer but in the imputation of the merit of his death and Sacrifice And I add do not only make sure of the thing objectively considered but labour also after the subjective assurance of it Oh when a Christian can say Christ dy'd for me * Gal. 2.20 gave himself for me his body was broken and his blood shed for me he took my guilt and bare my punishment how is he filled with † 1 Pet. 1.8 joy unspeakable with | Phil. 4.7 peace that passes all understanding what a full-tyde of comfort is there in his Soul This is the receiving of the atonement as some open it and that is very sweet Rom. 5.11 And not only so but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have now received the atonement This is to be ey'd and only rely'd upon 4. In the actings of Faith eye Christ as a Sacrifice for sin and there let all your hope and confidence be bottom'd I say in the actings of Faith eye Christ as a Sacrifice for indeed this grace hath to do with him mainly and principally as dying and sacrific'd the Apostle speaks of Faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 't is a bleeding crucified Saviour that is the great and most proper object of Faith true it takes in a whole Christ all of Christ his Nativity holy Life Resurrection Ascension Intercession c. but that which it primarily and chiefly fixes upon is his death and passion When a Soul is brought into Christ to close with him in the way of believing what of him is first in its eye in that act is it a Christ as ascending as sitting at the right hand of God as interceding no thus it beholds him for the after-encouragement and support of Faith but that which it first considers is a Christ as dying upon the Cross and so it layes hold upon him And no wonder that 't is so since all the great blessings of the Gospel do mainly flow from Christ's death they are assur'd and apply'd by his Resurrection Ascension and Intercession but they were procur'd and purchas'd by his death as the Scriptures abundantly shew Rom. 5.9 10. Eph. 1.7 et passim now tnat which hath the most causal and most immediate influence upon these that deserves to be first and most eyed by Faith Here 's the difference 'twixt Faith and Love this chiefly looks to the excellencies of Christ's Person but that to the merit and efficacy of his Sacrifice When the Apostle Gal. 2.20 had spoken so high of his Faith in the Son of God he tells you in what notion he did therein consider him by adding who loved me and gave himself for me The stung Israelite was to look upon the brazen Serpent as lifted up and so he was healed do you desire to find healing redemption salvation by Christ O look upon him as lifted up upon the Cross so all good shall come to you Further I say let all your hope and confidence be bottom'd here this is that firm rock which you must only build upon for pardon peace with God salvation for all Oh take heed of relying upon any thing besides this Sacrifice Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ he that glory 's or trusts in any thing besides that his glorying is vain The forlorn undone Sinner should be alwayes clasping and clinging about this Cross resting upon the merit of Christ thereon and upon that only for all that hope will be but dying hope which is not solely bottom'd upon a dying Saviour The * Quum sis ipse nocens moritur cur victima pro te Stultitia est morte alterius sperare salutem Heathens could not believe that ever the death of Sacrifices should do the guilty person good they look'd upon it as folly to hope for life by anothers death but blessed be God we see that which they did not we firmly believe and steadily hope for expiation and Salvation by Christ's one offering of himself and lay the sole stress of our Faith and happiness upon that which they counted folly But let us be sure we do not mistake here I mean let us indeed
hope and faith but whoever thou art if thou beest a sincere Christian thou mayst believe it and be sure of it For Christ took thy flesh purchased heaven for thee in thy flesh ascended up to heaven in thy flesh and is there glorify'd in thy flesh and therefore may'st not thou assuredly hope that thou also thy self in thine own flesh shalt go to God and have it glorify'd in its measure as well as the Flesh of Christ is what encouragement is here for faith By Christ incarnate we do not only see that the Humane Nature is capable of the future blessedness but we have thereby ground of full assurance of it for what could he aim at in his being so short of Heaven In our Nature he both purchas'd it and also took possession of it and all for us Heb. 6.20 Whether the forerunner is for us entred even Jesus made an high Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec He being glorified * Est in ipso Jesu Christo unius cujusque nostrum portio Caro sanguis Ubi ergo portio mea regnat ibi me regnare credo ubi caro mea glorificatur ibi gloriosum me esse cognosco c. Aug. Medit. c. 15. in him we are glorify'd as he rose as a publick Head so he was glorified as a publick Head too He who hath so advanc'd our Nature will in time advance our persons his Incarnation which is past secures our Glorification which is to come 'T was more for Christ to come down to earth than 't is for him to carry us up to heaven if he will condescend to be like to us in his humiliation he will have us to be like to him in his exaltation * Quid futurus est Homo propter quem Deus factus est Homo Prosper What can be too high for man when for him God was made Man Well Believers Christ being sent in flesh what can now be too great for your faith you have great and glorious things in your eye but do not in the least question the accomplishment of them all is made easie credible nay certain upon Christ's Incarnation that being done all shall be done this is the third thing for the Comfort of God's people Vpon Christ's Incarnation God is knowable and accessible 4. Fourthly was Christ sent in Flesh there 's this in it for the strengthning of Faith and the heightning of Joy that God is now knowable accessible 'T is beyond all contradiction some may say a blessed thing to know God I but who can know him can any see God and live can a finite eye take a view of such an infinite Majesty the least ray of which out-shines the Sun in its greatest brightness what Man to know God alas poor creature his weak faculties will not bear the beholding of so glorious an Object To which I answer all this in such a sense is very true yet let not humble Souls be discouraged for this notwithstanding they may yet know God savingly and comfortably though not perfectly In and by a Jesus in flesh the great God is knowable partly as he by Christ so considered is most clearly manifested in Christ God-Man we have the brightest objective manifestation of God The whole Creation though thereby much may be known of God as you reade Rom. 1.20 makes no such discoveries of him as Christ doth therefore he 's said for this is one explication which the words will very well bear to be the brightness of his Father's Glory Heb. 1.3 and hence some stile him Speculum Patris the glass wherein the Father in the most cleer and lively manner is represented He that hath seen me hath seen the Father Joh. 14.9 and the Apostle speaks of the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face i.e. in and by the Manhood of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 Partly too as Christ in our flesh is a fit medium to transmit God as knowable to us Indeed God as consider'd absolutely and in himself is so infinitely above us that we cannot here immediately behold him so his Glory his immense and infinite perfections should they be let out upon us would soon reduce us to our first nothing But he being consider'd in Christ so mediately through Christ we can look upon him see him and live in this way the Majesty of God is as it were so refracted temper'd and qualified that the poor dimme eye of the creature may behold it As we cannot immediately look upon the body of the Sun so its splendor and intense light presently dazzles us yet we can look upon it in a pail of water so here we cannot immediately behold God in the brightness of his Glory a finite faculty must needs be dazzled by an infinite Majesty yet take him in the Flesh and Manhood of Christ there his Glory is so brought down to us that we can see him and know him to our comfort Christ Man interposes not only between us and God's Anger to skreen us from it that we be not thereby consum'd but also between us and God's Majesty that we may not be overwhelm'd by the infiniteness of it he lets it out as our capacity will bear and so by him God becomes knowable he both carry's us up to God and also brings down God to us O study God much but then be sure you study him in Christ incarnate in that way you may come to the knowledge of him * Per illam Unionem Hypostaticam assumptionem Humanae Naturae factum collyrium per quod oculis penè ipsis Divinitas cerneretur Aug. Tract 3. in Joh. Augustine saith by the Hypostatical Vnion of the Humane Nature with the Divine there is such a collyrium or eye-salve made for us that we may with these very eyes almost see the Deity how should we rejoyce in the Manhood of Christ By that flesh in which the Godhead was sometimes hid 't is now reveal'd that which was once a vail to cover it is now a glass to represent it do but know Christ and you will know God I add God is now accessible Christians Christ having taken your flesh carried it up with him to heaven sitting in it at the right hand of God and therein interceding for you through him you may now go to God and that too with all holy boldness and confidence You have not to do with a Deus absolutus which Luther so much dreaded but with God through a Mediator and which may be a great encouragement to your Faith that Mediator is the man Christ Jesus 1 Tim. 2.5 You go to God and you go by God as clothed with your Nature 't is Deus quà itur Deus quo itur the God to whom you go commands your reverence the God-man by whom you go incourages your confidence O that you would more explicitly in Duty revive upon your thoughts Christ's Mediation and Intercession in heaven in your Nature surely that