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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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between the parts Thus Abraham entred into Covenant with God and he took a Heifer Shee Goat Gen. 15. Ver. 9.10 and a Ramme and divided them in the midst and laid one piece against another Ver. 9.10 And behold a burning Lamp passed between those pieces Ver. 17.18 in that same day the Lord made a Covenant with Abraham This cutting of the sacrifice into pieces and passing thorow was a lively and dreadful signe that the party who should break Covenant should be cut asunder and into pieces as he well d●se ved and as he at least implicitely imprecated upon himself notable to this purpose is that in the Prophet Jeremy I will give the men that have transgressed my Covenant Jer. 34.18 19 20. which have not performed the words of the Covenant which they made before me when they cut the Calfe in twaine and passed between the parts thereof the Princes of Judah the Princes of Jerusalem the Eunuchs and the Priests and all the People of the Land which passed between the parts of the Calf I will even give them into the hand of their enemy into the hand of them that se k their life c. that is to be slain and cut in pieces by the Sword And herein I take the Emphasis of the expression to lie Lev. 26.25 I will bring a Sword upon you which shall avenge the quarrel of my Covenant i. e. by cutting them asunder And this custome was conveyed to the Gentiles they went between the fire and carried a Sword in their hands and so took an oath Lib. 10. contra Jul. as Cyril proves out of Sophocles Thus Virgil speaking of Romulus and Tatius Aeneid 8. Hinc foedus à foedo animali foedè mactato Caesae jungebant foedera porcae They cut a Swine in sunder and made a League and to name no more Titus Livius speaking of the League between the Romans and Albans the Foecialis Herald or Minister of those Ceremonies cryed If the Romans shall falsifie by publick and wicked fraud in that day O Jupiter do thou so smite the Romans as I smite this Swine and so knock't the Swine on the head with a stone By all which it appears that Covenants have been ever held solemn and sacred things and that men by breaking of them deserved dreadful punishments In like manner there was the shedding dividing and sprinkling of blood at the making of Covenants and hence it was called the blood of the Covenant Exod. 24.6 7 8. Moses took half the blood and put it in Basons and half of the blood he sprinkled on the Altar and he took the book of the Covenant and read in the audien●e of the people and they said All that the Lord hath said will we do and be obedient and Moses took the blood and sprinkled it on the people and said Behold the blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning all these words Note He sprinkled the Altar instead of God who being incorporeal and a Spirit could not be sprinkled yet being a Covenant party would have the Altar sprinkled for him So much shall serve for the first Question setting forth in our Answer to it the name and nature of a Covenant in general the second Question follows Quest 2. What ground we have to speak of Gods Covenant with Adam and to call it a Covenant there being no mention of it here in the Text nor elsewhere in Scripture do we read of Gods Covenant with Adam Answ However the name be not here yet the thing is here and elsewhere comparing Scripture with Scripture it is a nice cavil in Socinians to call fot the word Satisfaction others for the word Sacrament others for the word Trinity others for the words Faith alone justifying others for the word Sabbath for Lords day c. and thence to conclude against Satisfaction Sacraments Trinity Justification by faith alone and Sabbath for want of expresse words when the things themselves are lively set down in other words so in this case of Gods Covenant with Adam we have 1. Gods Command which lays man under an obligation 2. We have Gods promise upon condition of obedience 3. We have Gods threatning upon his disobedience 4. We have their understanding it so as appears in Eves words to the Serpent 5. Chap. 3.3 We have the two Trees as signs and symbols of the Covenant 6. We have a second Covenant and a New Covenant therefore there was a first and Old Covenant a Covenant of Grace supposeth one of Works Object If any shall say by first and old Covenant was meant Gods Covenant with Israel and not with Adam and so by Covenant of Works the same is meant namely that which the Lord made at Mount Sinai Answ Hereunto I answer There is a repetition of the Covenant of Works with Adam in the Law of Moses Hebr. 8.7 8 9. Gal. 3.12 Rom. 10.5 as in that of the Apostle to the Galatians The Law is not of faith b●t the man that doth these things shall live in them so likewise to the Romans Moses dsscribes the righteousness which is of the Law that the man who doth these things shall live in them Thus it was with Adam principally and properly therefore he was under a Covenant of Works when God gave him that command in my Text. Quest. 3. Wherein then doth this Covenant of Works consist what is the nature tenour and end of it as such Answ 1. This Covenant required working on our part as the condition of it for justification and happinesse therefore called a Covenant of Works Gal. 3.12 thus before the man that doth these things shall live Working indeed is also required under grace now but 1. Not to Justification 2. Not from our own Power Ephes 2.8 Jam. 2.20 3. Not previous to faith which worketh by love and lives by working but man lives by faith 2. A second Characteristical signe of the Covenant of Works is this that in and under it man is left to stand upon his own legs and bottome to live upon his own stock and by his own industry he had a power to stand and not to have fallen this is meant when it is said God created man in his own Image Gen. 1.27 Eccles 7.29 And again This only have I found that God made man upright 3. In the first Covenant namely that of Works man had no need of a Mediatour God did then stipulate with Adam immediately for seeing as yet he had not made God his enemy by sin he needed no days-man to make friends hy intercession for him Gen. 1. ult After mans Creation God said He saw every thing which he had mude and behold it was very good and after the Covenant made in chap. 2. it s said They were naked and they were not ashamed i. e. they had not contracted guilt by committing of sinne from whence onely ariseth shame therefore under the Covenant
any other grace as love that then would have been currant and have justified us as faith doth now Fifthly God justifieth in a proper sense two ways first 5. How God As a Legislator secondly as a Judge 1. As a Legislator enacting by his Soveraign Authority that sweet and gracious Law of the New Covenant by vertue of whose tenor every sinner that believes is justified from the guilt of sin from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses Acts 13.38 9. This Law of justification by faith is Gods own act and deed the great Instrumentum pacis between God and man he hath proclaimed his Letters Patents the King of heaven and earth hath in the Gospel our Magna Charta given his Warrant under his own broad Seal that he that believeth shall not be condemned 2. As a Judge the God of heaven may in three respects be said to justifie a Believer First Forthwith upon his believing God owneth him secretly within himself as a person justified God esteems and approves of him as in that state unto which he hath by believing a title good in Law an indefeasible right a justified estate emergeth actually as soon as faith the Law-title thereunto emergeth as a necessary resultance by vertue of the tenor of the Gospel-Law which only justified vertually potentially and conditionally before every Believer in general but now actually absolutely and in particular it justifieth him as a Believer when he is so Secondly At the moment of dissolution God justifieth as the Judge of all the earth passing a private sentence and award unto everlasting life upon every believing soul Thirdly But eminently at the last day when the Ancient of days shall take the Throne and in open Court before the whole Creation by publick sentence for ever acquit and discharge Believers at that great and last Assizes 6. How Works Sixthly Shall I need to adde that Works are said to justifie us Jam. 2.4 because they justifie our faith or demonstrate before God and man and to our own consciences that our faith is not a dead and barren but a true and living one by its fruitfulness in well-doing 7. How the Spirit Seventhly But I must not forget lastly that the Spirit of God is said to justifie us 1 Cor. 6.11 and that two ways first directly by working faith in the heart which is one of the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Now Causa causae est etiam causa causati the Spirit justifieth as it is the Author of the justifying grace Secondly reflexively The Divine Spirit clears up justification to a Believers conscience by discovering the truth of faith by working assurance and by sealing a Believer to the day of Redemption The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God and if children then heirs c. Rom. 8.16 17. Thus I have at length done with my first Task the opening of the Point which finds it self summed up in this definition Justification is a judicial act of God as Law-giver and Judge of the world gracioussly discharging a Believer for the sake of Christs satisfaction from the condemnation of the Law of Works by the tenor of the Gospel-Law or New Covenant which requireth of accepte h from imputeth unto sinners faith in Christ Jesus as their righteousnesse see Rom. 3.25 6 7 8. Rom. 4.5 Phil. 3.9 To improve it now which was my other task by way of refutation I infer against the Antimonians first Vse Refut That justification is not from eternity 1. Because a person must be charged with guilt before he is justified or discharged but nothing can be before eternity if discharg'd from eternity when was he charged what from eternity too then he will be at once eternally charged with and discharged from guilt which if any excuse from a contradiction they are much wiser than I am 2. My Text convinceth them actual faith is not from eternity therefore not justification before God for if faith justifie us not before God but only at the bar of conscience then there will be no justification at Gods bar at all once mention'd in Scripture for works do it at mans bar what is it I wonder that justifieth from eternity Not Gods decree to justifie for then his decree to glorifie would make glorification from eternity too but Decreta Dei nihil ponunt actu in subjecto Gods decrees are immanent acts and passe nothing actually upon the creature 3. A justified person was actually under condemnation whil'st he was an unbeliever Rom. 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already but he could not be at all condemned if justified from eternity 4. Saint Paul expressely affirms that the believing Corinthians were not once but now were justified 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus c. Secondly I infer against them that they are dangerously mistaken in thinking that a Believer is righteous in the sight of God with the self-same active and passive righteousnesse wherewith Christ was righteous as though Believers suffered in Christ and obeyed in Christ and were as righteous in Gods esteem as Christ himself having his personal righteousnesse made personally theirs by imputa●ion This is their fundamental mistake and from hence tanquam ex equo Trojano issue out a throng of such false and corrupt deductions and consequences as these That God sees no sin in his children that affliction and death are not proper punishments of sin to Believers that all future sins are already actually forgiven as well as past and present that a Believer must not pray for the pardon of sinne but only for the manifestation of it that God loved Noah when drunk Lot when so and besides incestuous David when acting Adultery and Murther Peter when he was cursing and swearing and denying Christ with as high a love of complacency and delight as when co●versant in the most spiritual exercises of grace that all which God requires as a sinners duty in the Gospel is to believe that Christ dyed absolutely for him in particular that this is alone true Gospel faith and the doubting or questioning this the unbelief which the Gospel so much condemneth that to argue our justification from our sanctification and gather assurance of Gods love from our love and fear of him is a Legal principle that obedience to Gods Commandments is not properly a Believers debt but that all the obligation which lies upon him to holinesse is only the voluntary expression of his love and gratitude to God not as what is due but what is comely And lastly for I should be tyred to name all that Christ hath kept the Gospel-Covenant for us as well as satisfied the Law So that not only our Legal righteousnesse is without us in Christ our Surety but our Evangelical righteousnesse it self also Now to pluck up all these desperate consequences by
there needeth no Mediatour And hence Moses Law was not properly a Covenant of Works Gal. 3.19 because that Law was given in the hand of a Mediatour 4. The Covenant of Works once broken God abates nothing of his justice no not upon repentance but the soul that sinned dyed Mark our Text Thou shalt dye the death by which doubling of the words in the Hebrew Idiom of speech is meant Vehemency and Certainty Vatablus which was effected and so had continued inevitably without the help of another Covenant hinted in that first promise Gen. 3.15 For the first Covenant gives no relief to a poor sinner when he hath broken it but leaves him hopelesse and helplesse under a fearful expectation of wrath and fury indignation 5. The Lord in the Covenant of Works accepts the person for the Works sake that is he mainly looks at the work how adequate it is to the command and rule which he so exactly heeds that upon the least failer his justice breaks out in wrath neither can any personal excellency in the world salve the matter Deut. 27. ult Cursed is he that continueth not in all the words of the Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen a doleful Amen Jam. 2.10 and whosoever keeps the whole Law and offends in one point is guilty of all Note that whosoever God respects no mans person in that case 6. The Covenant of Works in performance of the condition leaves a man matter of boasting and glorying in himself and makes God a debtour to him Where is boasting it is excluded by what Law of works Rom. 3.27 Nay as if he had said the Covenant of Works affords matter of boasting to him that worketh to justification by his own personal power and righteousnesse Now to him that worketh is the reward reckoned not of grace Rom. 4.4 but of debt i. e. it obligeth God to pay it him as a due which is the language of Pharisees and Papists which were justly challenged and claimed 1. Were we indeed under a Covenant of Works and not of Grace 2. Were our works perfect 3. Did we not lye at Gods mercy for our guilt All which declare man impotent and grace necessary and withal Jews and Papists to be enemies to the Crosse of Christ and Covenant of Grace and under a Covenant of Works of which more anon 7. The Covenant of Works leaves a man still in doubt while resting in it in that state because it is a mutable state at best he had all in his own hands and then Satan cunningly rooked him of all God puts him into a good bottome and leaves him to be his own Pilot at Sea the Divel assaults him and sinks him and therefore the second Covenant takes all into Gods hands that it may continue safe under his Father by care and custoddy 1 Pet. 1.4 5. John 10.28 29. and so gives the soul good security against death and danger which Adam had not while he stood much lesse can any rich or honourable man in his fools Paradise here in this world say his Mountain is unmoveable his glory unchangeable seeing it passeth away as a Pageant 1 Cor. 7.31 if Adams Paradise was so mutable much more theirs if he stood not in his integrity how shall they stand in their iniquity 8. The Covenant of Works was made with all men in Adam who was made and stood as a publick person head and root in a common and comprehensive capacity I say it was made with him as such and with all in him Quo mansit remanente quo pereunte peribat he and all stood and fell together for even the Elect may say We are all by nature the children of wrath as well as others Rom. 3.19 and that of St. Paul We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God But the Covenant of Grace is a discriminating thing it takes in some and leaves out others Christ is not a head in Covenant with all as Adam was but of his Elect only for we finde many in the world under the headship of Satan and Antichrist and old Adam who are out of Christ not only because unconverted as Saints themselves are before regeneration but out of Christ in the account of Gods Election Donation and Covenant who have none of his special love nor ever shall have Thus I have briefly opened the distinguishing Characters of the Covenant of Works which might have been more enlarged by those of the Covenant of Grace which is easily done by way of opposition and comparison one with the other and therefore and for brevities sake I omit it and come to the next question Quest 4. Whether this Covenant of Works made with Adam was revived and repeated to Israel in Moses time and if so in what sense and why Answ I answer affirmatively that in some sort the Covenant of Works was revived and repeated to them which appears from these grounds 1. They were tyed to Commandments under a curse Gal. 3.10 Deut. 28 1 2. ver 15.16 2. Blessing is promised to obedience they are both set down by Moses at large in Deuteronomy chap. 28. and elsewhere 3. It is expresly called a Covenant I mean the giving of the Law for obedience The Lord God made a Covenant with us in Horeb. Deut. 5.2 4. It is opposed to the Covenant of Grace as another Covenant upon this very distinguishing account of obedience and faith works and grace as you may see at large among other places in that of the Hebrews Hebr. 8.6 7 8 9 10 c. Now there are foure principal ends which the Lord had in so doing 1. That he might hereby make men know what sin is how prone we are to it and how averse and head-strong against all good this is done by a Law of Works Rom. 7.7 to the 13. ver This indeed is Gods clear glasse by which he discovers to us the moral and penal evil of sin so Rom. 3.20 2. That hereby the Lord might hold men in to obedience by a strong curb because we are so apt to break fence he hedgeth up our way with thornes Hos 2.5 6. 3. That God might stop every mouth and make all guilty before him Rom. 3.19 4. That men may hereby be lash't and driven to Christ as with a School-masters rod to see an absolute need of him and to make out hard after him Gal. 3.22 23 24. For men care not to run to a City of Refuge unlesse the avenger of blood follow behinde at their heels neither do the whole need or regard the Physician but the sick and wounded Yet notwithstanding all this they were not properly under a Covenant of Works neither was the law given to them as such a Covenant meerly 1. Because as the Law was to convince of sin so it
shewed the expiation of sin and therefore their Sacrifices were killed and the blood shed and sprinkled Heb. 9.22 23. 2. The Covenant at Mount Sinai was not made with all without exception as Adams was but only with a select people even with Israel 3. Because the Lord still puts them in minde of his promise to Abraham which included Christ and faith in him Gal. 3.16 17. and was not null by the Law Quest 5. The last question is how long this Covenant lasted and whither any be under a Covenant of Works Answ Most strictly it was but to the giving of the first promise for then the Covenant of Grace began but was more largely and clearly revealed till the coming of Christ by the Law and the Prophets but was most perspicuously and fully by Christ himself in his doctrine and death and by the abundant pouring out of his Spirit Howbeit all along and to this day every natural man is under a Covenant of Works because out of Christ therefore under the Law and the curse of it for which cause the Covenant of Works is by some called the Covenant of nature Faedus naturae Again all they which look for righteousnesse and salvation by the power of their wills by the strength of nature and by performance of duties as Jews Turks Philosophers Papists Socinians Gal. 4.24 25. Pelagians these are all under a Covenant of Works they are not under grace they are of Hagar the Bond-woman of Mount Sinai which answers to Jerusalem which now is which is in bondage with her children as the Apostle speaks in his elegant Allegory I come now to draw some Corollaries from this doctrine of the Covenant of Works thus propounded in a practical way of application and that briefly Corol. 1. It serves for admiration to wonder with a holy astonishment at the Lords infinite condescending love in making a Covenant with poor man 1. Because it was a free act in him to do it he lay under no compulsion to it Rom. 9.15 16. nothing of merit or profit in a despicable worme appears as a motive to it it was a royal act of glorious grace from the King of heaven to vile creatures O wonderful 2. Because as it was free for him to do it so he bound his hands by it and as it were lost his freedome by it for his truth holds him fast to it Hebr. 6.18 by which its impossible for him to change O wonderful 3. He made the first offer he prevented us by his grace he loved us first 1 John 4.10 19. all this appeared in the first Covenant with us Bullinger de f●●dere Dei unios aeterno in vouchsafing us to make any at all with him Ineffabilis misericordiae Divinae Argumentum quod ipsum numen ipse inquam Deus Aeternus faedus ipsum primus offert nullis ad hoc hominum meritis adactus sed merâ nativâ bonitate impulsus nec scio an humanum ingenium hoc mysterium vel plenè toncipere vel dignis laudibus evehere possit Unspeakable mercy that the eternal God should first offer to league with us moved to it by no merit in us but by his own native goodnesse only a mystery which the minde of man cannot conceive nor his tongue praise to the worth of it thus a grave Authour which will the more inhance the love of God if we 4. Consider that he makes Covenant upon Covenant after breaches and forfeitures renews them again and ratifies them stronger than ever as he did the new Covenant after the old was broken by our high and hainous provocation in the fall and which he doth to every elect soul in the Sacraments and after grosse and grievous Apostasies See Jerem. 3.1 Ezek. 16.60 61 62 63. Hos 2. O admire and adore this love Corol. 2. Seeing there are two Covenants on foot one of Works another of grace and very many yea the farre greatest part of the world are under a Covenant of Works which is a most sad and doleful estate because a state of wrath and death a most wretched and accursed condition O try under what Covenant thou art for if thou art in the state of sinful nature a sprowt of old Adam never yet cut off from his root of bitternesse nor graffed into Christ thou art undone to be under such a Covenant is to be an enemy to God and to be lyable to all his plagues O make haste then and flee as a Post and as the young Roe into Christs Armes For consider how thou canst stand before the Bar of God in thy sins in thy nakednesse Adam fled away from the presence of God afraid and ashamed hiding himself in the Thicket because he was naked but where wilt thou hide thy nakednesse in that dreadful day of the Lord there will be no shelter in that day for a sinner Corol. 3. Labour to understand and discern aright the nature tenour and termes of both Covenants 1. Because they are easiiy mistaken and many do mistake them Rom. 10.2 3. 2. Because the mistake is dangerous like a man in the dark as he travels findes two wayes one way is wrong Prov. 14.12 yet it seems as good and safe as the other he goes on in the wrong which leads him to a Rock where he falls down headlong and breaks his neck so many a poor soul imagines he is under a Covenant of Grace and in a safe way to heaven when alas he is yet under a Covenant of Works and in the high-way to hell Labour then to discern the difference search Scriptures and thy own heart go to the Lord by prayer Job 33.23 and to his M nisters that they may shew thee thy way lest thou go on to thy destruction And therefore Corol. 4. Improve the Covenant of works for the conviction of sin righteousness and judgement for till the Lord lets thee see what it is to be under such a state thou wilt never see the evil of it nor ever desire to change it Corol. 5. Renounce thy Covenants with sin Satan and creatures or else thou wilt never be admitted into Covenant with God if thou break not with them God will never close with thee if thou be a Covenant-servant to them thou art no Covenant-servant of the Lords for how canst thou serve those two Masters Matth. 6.24 1 Joh. 2.15 16. God and Mammon both which crave thy whole man and thy whole work and which are utterly inconsistent with each other Corol. 6. Labour to relieve thy self under thy greatest straits and sears by Covenant promises I mean the promises of the new Covenant which are called better promises Hebr. 8.6 10 11 12. Joh. 15. because absolute pr●mises because they work that in us and for us which God requires of us when of our selves we can do nothing As the new Covenant is the best Covenant and the promises of it the best promises Isa 55.3 Acts
13 34. so the mercies of it are the best mercies for they are the sure mercies of David 2 Sam. 23.5 Corol. 7. Blesse the Lord that ye are under the best dispensation and clearest discovery of the Covenant of grace better than Adams after the promise was made to him upon his fall better than Noahs after the flood better than Israels in the Wildernesse yea better than the Patriarchs and Prophets who had much legality and obscurity in their administrations in comparison of us who behold with open face the glory of God 2 Cor. 3.18 That it is the lot of us Gentiles to be brought into the knowledge and participation of the Gospel in the last and best time I mean after Christs appearance in the flesh The Apostle compares the Church to a Tree Rom. 11.16 17. which hath the same root Christ but several branches now that the natural branches should be cut off to make way for the ingrafting of us wildings Pet. Mart. is matter of praise to the High God for his rich grace to us Gentiles Ephes 3.8 Corol. 8. Labour for a spirit of self-denial and debasement for as the Old Covenant spirit is a spirit of pride and boasting to advance natural abilities Rom. 3.27 Rom. 10.3 to glory in our own personal endowments and performances so a New Covenant spirit is contrary to that and is a spirit of faith self-denial and debasement Corol. 9. Watch against Satan as soon as ever God and man were in Covenant he set himself to break that Covenant and prevailed for he beguiled their simplicity by his subtilty 2 Cor. 11.3 Gen. 3. Now albeit the New Covenant stands on a surer foundation yet he will very much weaken our comforts and increase our sorrows by drawing us under Gods displeasure by sin forfeiting Covenant mercies by Covenant breaches which mercies though they are not lost finally to Gods Elect yet are they often to be recovered renewed and secured to our souls by a clear evidence Besides Satan will perswade men to slight and renounce their Baptisme as when he makes Witches and turns Christians to be Mahumetans because thereby he knows they renounce their Covenant with God to make one with himself there are that upon fairer pretences neglect or deny the Seals of the Covenant Satan had a fair pretence also to draw away our first Parents and make them break with God which they little thought would have cost so dear but the sad event shewed the sinfulnesse of that sinne wherefore Wa ch and pray that ye enter not into temptation Be not ignorant of Satans Devices in these back-sliding and fedifragous times Remember from whence ye are fallen and walk stedfast in Gods Covenant you that stand 1 Cor. 10.12 learn by others falls to take heed THE FALL OF MAN Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man sinne entered into the world and death by sinne and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned THis doctrine of Original sin is not more difficult to understand than necessary to be known more full of knots than uses if we consider 1. The several batteries that are planted against this truth by Rabbins Pelagians Socinians Flaccians Arminians Anabaptists batteries raised by Pelagius his pride Philosophers ignorance Papists policy and Hereticks idolized reason Or 2. if we consider the dependances of other doctrines upon this truth Augustine writing against Pelagius thought the summe of Religion consisted in the right knowledge of Original sin As we know the pleasantnesse of a garden by the noysomnesse of a dunghill the gratefulnesse of a day from the darknesse of a night so we cannot know the benefits of Christ so well as from the knowledge of our Original guilt and sin By a strict survey of Original sin we may better understand the honour of justification the power of grace and sanctification the sweetnesse of a Christ the necessity of a Gospel the preciousnesse of a Ministry and therefore it was a futilous and malicious assertion of Celestius of old to call the doctrine of Original sin rem questionis non fidei a matter of debate not faith and the Hereticks of late to reproach it with the stile of Austins figment 3. If we consider the influence of this truth upon our practice The knowledge of Original sin it is the curb of pride the foyl to set off grace the glass of man the spurre of industry it is that which makes the best of Saints to weep in the best of duties and the worst of sinners to look pale in their greatest prosperities so that you see the doctrine is most useful let it therefore be most grateful Now this Original sin Divines usually distinguish in peccatum Originali Originans in peccatum Originali Originatum into Original sin Originating and into Original sin Originated into the Cause and into the Subject of this sin the fountains and its streames one man infecting and all men infected the first is my task the second is referred to a more worthy hand In the latter part of this chapter where the Text is the Apostle carries on a double design 1. To shew the excellency of Christ and grace by Christ 2. The necessity of faith in Christ and both these he demonstrates by a full and large comparison between the first and the second Adam the losse by the first the gain by the second the sin of the first the grace of the second the condemnation we are obliged in by the first and the pardon we are enriched with by the second the first is a poysonous spring the second is a cleansing fountain The Text if you look at the design of it it points at the postern where sin and death first entered the world and that was by Adams eating the forbidden fruit the prohibited Apple was the first Apple of contention between God and man-kind If we look at the parts of the Text they are three 1. We have an unhappy Parent viz. Adam not only by his offence undoing himself but making a bankrupt world By him sin entered the world 2. In the Text we have an unhappy posterity not only to be linkt to the loynes but the sins of the first Parent The whole world had sin entered into it and all have sinned saith the Text viz. in him 3. We have an unhappy portion sin and death the inseparable twins of misery so saith the Text sin enters and death by sin sin came by Adam and death came by sin the one fell in pell mell into the world with the other and both are the unhappy inheritance of every child of Adam indeed the Saints are exempted from the second but not the first death sin and death were married in Adam and they shall not be divorced in any of the sons of Adam believers dye temporally though not eternally they feel the stroak though not the sting of death Now for the further clearing of my way it will not be a digression to
of Redemption it was from all eternity it was not made when Christ was just coming into the world but from everlasting Two Scriptures seem to hold out this 2 Tim. 1.9 Who hath saved us and called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began Here is the purpose of God here is grace given in Jesus Christ how in the Covenant betwixt the Father and him when was this given before the world began h. e. from all eternity So Tit. 1.2 In hope of eternal life which God that cannot l●e promised before the world began How was this life promised before the world begun but in this everlasting Covenant wherein the Father promised unto Christ eternal life for all his seed I have been speaking to you of a very great mystery of which the Scripture speaks but little signanter we have not the termes but we have the sense and substance of this Covenant of Redemption there laid down If in any assertion I have seemed too bold I am very ready to take shame for i● I am sorry my work did lie in such an untrodden path wherein I have but very few to give me any direction I will shut up all with a little Application And first Application I would from hence stir you up to an high admiration of the great and infinite love of God of God the Father of God the Son what manner of love hath the God of Grace revealed in this Covenant Love that for the freenesse of it and greatnesse of it we should admire in this life as we shall admire it in the life to come Both persons have discovered unconceivable love in this transaction Oh let both of them be admired with the highest admiration 1. Admire the love of the Father we are more apprehensive of the love of the Son than we are of the love of the Father I would not speak any thing to diminish the love of the Son God forbid Oh 't was wonderful superlative love only I would heighten your apprehensions of the Fathers love in the great work of our Redemption Redemption was not only brought about by Christ but the Father had a great hand in it therefore 't is said The pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand And I have found a ransome God so loved the world Isa 53.10 Job 33.24 John 3.16 that he gave his only begotten Son c. I might instance in several particulars to set out the Fathers love in our Redemption but take only that which I have been upon That the thoughts of God should be upon poor lost man so as to finde out a way for his recovery that he should call his Son and say Come let us consult together I speak after the manner of men Is there no way to be found that man may yet live he is now obnoxious to me and I might throw him into hell but may not I be satisfied and he saved too I am not willing he should utterly perish I say that God should thus set his thoughts on work for wretched man and treat with his Son and strike up a Covenant with his Son and therein lay such a foundation for mans recovery let Angels and men and all creatures adore this love and oh that you would return love for love return your drop for Gods Ocean We must honour the Son as we honour the Father John 5.23 and we must love the Father as we love the Son 2. And then admire the love of the Son too he is willing to engage in this Covenant he knew the termes of it what the Redemption of man would cost him even his life and precious blood yet for all this he willingly and freely binds himself to redeem poor sinners whatever it cost him O the heights depths breadths of this love Ephes 3.18 Blessed Jesus that ever thou shouldst consent to lay down thy life for me to wash away my sins in thine own blood 1 John 3.16 Rev. 1.5 to give thy soul as an offering for sin upon this encouragement and motive that thou mightest s●e such a poor worme as I brought in to God that thou shouldst set thy self as a Skreen betwixt Gods wrath and my poor soul and do and suffer ten thousand times more than what tongue can expresse or heart conceive What shall I what can I say to all this but fall down and wonder at that Love which can never be Fathomed So much for the first thing Vse 2 Secondly This Covenant of Redemption may be improved for the encouraging and strengthning of faith Faith sometimes is ready to question the blessings of the Covenant of Grace and the Continuance or Perpetuity of the Covenant of Grace that 's the great Foundation of Faith and when it staggers about that 't is very sad with the soul Now I 'le lay down two things for the help of Faith 1. The blessings of the Covenant are sure 2. The Covenant of Grace it self is sure First The blessings of the Covenant are sure They are called the sure mercies of David Isa 55.3 Isaiah 55.3 They are sure for Continuance and they are sure for Performance 1. For Continuance common mercies are dying perishing uncertain things but Covenant mercies are stable durable lasting things A great estate may come to nothing Prov. 23.5 Riches are uncertain things Imaginaria in saeculo nihil veri Tertul. 1 Tim. 6.17 And so in all worldly comforts they are but a fashion matters of fancy rather than of reality and they passe away 1 Cor. 7.31 But now grace pardon of sin adoption c. these are blessings that abide for ever Rom. 11.29 2. They are sure also for performance I mean whatever blessing God hath put into this Covenant as 't is full of blessings all shall certainly be made good to believers otherwise God would not be faithful to his Covenant which certainly he will be Men may be false in their Covenants to God but God will certainly be true in his Covenant to men Heaven and Earth shall passe away rather than there shall be the least entrenchment upon Gods truth in the not performing of his Covenant Secondly The Covenant of Grace is sure in it self a Cov●nant firme unalterable never to be broken 't is called an everlasting Covenant Gen. 17.7 Hebr. 13.20 a Covenant that shall stand fast Psal 89.28 a Covenant ordered in all things and sure 2 Sam. 23.5 The Covenant of Grace is so firmly ratified that there can be no nulling of it 1. God hath ratified it by his Oath Gen. 22.16 Hebr. 6.13 Si non credimus Deo promittenti at credamus Deo juranti Hierom Amant Scripturae pro pacto ponere Testamentum Aug. 14 15 16 17 18. His promise is enough but surely h●s oath must put all out of question there 's no room for unbelief now God hath sworn
to it 2. God hath ratified it by the death of his Son A mans last Will as soon as he is dead is in force and cannot then be disanulled The Covenant of Grace is a Testamentary Covenant which by the death of the Testator is so setled that there 's no altering of it Gal. 3.15 c. Hebr. 9.15 16. Again the Covenant of Grace is ratified by the seals which God hath annexed to it What was sealed by the Kings ring could not be altered Esther 8.8 God hath set his seal to this Covenant his broad seal in the Sacraments his privy seal in the witnesse of his Spirit and therefore 't is sure and cannot be reverst And further than all this 't is ratified in and by that Covenant which hath been now opened The Covenant of Redemption betwixt God and Christ secures the Covenant of Grace betwixt God and believers What God promises us he did before promise unto Christ and the F●ther would not make good his promise unto Christ if he should not make good his promises to the Saints And therefore as in other respects so in this also the Covenant may be said to be confirmed of God in Christ Gal. 3.17 with respect to that paction and stipulation that was betwixt them I lay all this before you for the strengthning of your Faith as to the stability of the Covenant of Grace so long as that Covenant stands you are safe and you see there 's no question but that Covenant will stand which God hath set upon such firme pillars This promise in the Text He shall see his seed will assuredly bring every believer into heaven O that faith might triumph in the consideration of this the Covenant of grace is sure Davids Faith did so when death was in his eye and affliction in his eye Yet he hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure for this is all my salvation and all my desire 2 Sam. 23.5 When Faith begins to faint look up to this Covenant and reason thus God will not alter his promise to me but to be sure he will not alter his promise to his Son I may fail in such and such conditions but Christ hath been faithful in all every childe of God may take much comfort from this Vse 3 In the third and last place I would have you to enquire what this Covenant of Redemption is to you Here 's a blessed Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son how far are you and I interested in it or like to receive benefit by it Was it universal that all men should have an equal share in it Some very learned men I know tell us of Pactum universale betwixt the Father and the Son Daven de morte Christi c. but I crave leave to differ from them 1. Because that which they make their Pactum universale is rather a Proposition or a Promise than a Covenant as he that believeth shall be saved 2. I know not how to believe that there should be a solemn Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son upon which never any man should be the better Did ever any sinner get any thing by this universal Covenant 3. We may preach the Gospel to all upon an indefinite Proposition He that believeth shall be saved and we need not to assert an universal Covenant for the universal preaching of the Gospel This was the great reason that prevailed with these worthy men to assert such a Covenant I know no Covenant but that special Covenant into which the seed of Christ were only taken I am loth to fall into the dusty roade of Controversies all along in this Discourse where I could not avoide them I have but just cross'd them over and so presently falne in again into some more quiet and private way Passing by therefore this universal Covenant of men more moderate and the universal Redemption of others who go higher I shall only lay down that which I judge to be a great truth viz. That 't is the Elect only who are concerned in this Covenant Such and such persons there were individually considered whom God the Father in his Electing love doth freely give to Christ for these and only for these doth the Lord Jesus engage to lay down his life Redemption on the Sons part shall be no larger than Election on the Fathers part that there may be a perfect Harmony and Agreement betwixt them in their love So then Beloved if you would draw down comfort to your selves from this Covenant you must finde out this that you are the Elect of God chosen of him to be Vessels of his mercy before the world was Christ undertook to give his life only for those whom the Father had first given to him these he only pray'd for and therefore surely these he only dy'd for You 'le say I put you upon a very difficult search 't is true 't is very hard for a man to know his Election but yet it may be known otherwise the Apostle would never have urged this as a duty upon Christians To make their Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Paul knew that the Thessalonians were elected of God 1 Thess 1.4 And he did not know it by Revelation only No he gives another account of it he knew it by way of inference from what he saw of God in them Ver. 5. For our Gospel came not to you in Word only but also in Power and in the Holy Ghost c. If Election may be known by others why not by our selves I grant à parte ante so it cannot be known so the book is cl●sped and sealed and none can open it Rev. 5.3 5. but the Lyon of the Tribe of Judah but à parte post by such and such effects and operations upon the heart so it may be known Several of these might be set before you out of the Word but I 'le only instance in the grace of Faith He that believes is certainly in the number of Gods Elect he 's a chosen Vessel of mercy All the Elect shall believe sooner or later they shall close with Christ upon the termes of the Gospel John 6.37 All that the Father giveth me there 's Election shall come to me there 's Faith Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternal life believed None but the Elect can savingly believe The sum of all then for the clearing up of your interest in this Covenant of Redemption is this Have you the precious Faith of Gods Elect Are your hearts wrought up to a blessed accepting of Christ Tit. 1.1 Have you ever had such a sense of sin and guilt and misery as to go out of your selves and only to rest upon the Lord Christ Do you venture your souls upon his all-sufficient merits And is this Faith a working Faith an heart purifying Faith a sin mortifying Faith James 2.14 a world overcoming Faith a Faith that closes with Christ as a Lord Acts 15.9
1 John 5.4 as well as a Saviour a Faith that is for obedience as well as priviledge Oh you that have this Faith go away in peace be of good comfort This everlasting Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son is yours your good was promoted and secured in this Treaty and foederal Engagement How much doth this Covenant speak for the benefit of believers if you be such 't is all yours By it you are already brought into a state of Grace by it you shall hereafter be brought into a state of glory Upon this Covenant Christ now sees you as his seed upon this Covenant you shall hereafter see him as your Saviour face to face unto Eternity To this Father to this Son with the Holy Spirit be glory for evermore THE COVENANT OF GRACE Heb. 8.6 But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministry by how much also he is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better promises THE general design of this Epistle is my special design in this Text viz. to demonstrate to you that you live under the best of gracious dispensations that Jesus Christ our deservedly adored Mediator of the New Covenant hath obtained a more excellent Ministry and by the faithful discharge of that Ministry more excellent benefits than either Moses the Messenger-Mediator or the Levitical Priests the Stationary-Mediators of the Old Covenant But now now is not here a note of time but of opposition as in Rom. 7.17 now then i. e. after the Law received so Grotius or if you will have it to note the time 't is the time of the Gospel this last time Hath he obtained not by usurpation but by election he hath of divine grace freely received * Anselm A more excellent ministry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Minister is he that doth something at the command of another Heb. 1.7 and so 't is said of Magistrates Rom. 13.6 they are Gods Ministers but 't is chiefly spoken of the Priests Nehemiah 10.39 The Priests that minister because they offer those things that God requires they are said to minister Exodus 28.35 43. Christs ministry is more excellent thatn the Levitical he executes it partly on earth and partly in heaven but he amplifies the excellency chiefly from the excellency of the Covenant * Paraeus and therefore it follows By how much also he is the Mediator of a better Covenant If you take the old Covenant for the whole dispensation under the old Testament as well Gospel-promises as those things which are more strictly legal then we may truly say he old and new Covenant are for substance the same and therefore the Comparison relates rather to the form than to the matter of the Covenant * Calvin The Covenant of grace is dispensed with more latitude clearnesse and power of the Holy Ghost * D●odate and therefore it may be called a better Covenant Which was established upon better promises 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys He names that which may most affect them with joy in saying it is established upon better promises All Cove●ants consist in promises The Covenants of Kings and Princes amongst themselves consist in promises of either not hurting or helping one another the Covenants of Princes and people consist in promises the Prince promises justice clemency and defence the people promise love obedience and gratitude so in the Covenant of grace the first and chief part whereof is I will be thy God and of thy seed and we promise faith obedience and worship the promises of the Old Covenant run more upon temporal good things the promises of the New Covenant are chiefly remission of sins sanctification by the Spirit c. and the Covenant is said to be established the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. d. Legislatum Law and Covenant are joyned together in Scripture They kept not the Covenant of God and refused to walk in his Law Psal 78.10 The New Covenant containeth certain precepts which every one must obey that will obtaine the promise Thus you have the meaning of the words The Observation I shall commend to you is this The Gospel Covenant or the new Covenant is the best Covenant that ever God made with man I will not stay you long in the general notion of a Covenant the word sometimes signifies an absolute promise of God without any restipulation as Gods engagement to Noah Gen. 9.11 And I will establish my Covenant with you neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood neither shall there any more be a flood to destroy the earth Whatever mans carriage shall be God promises that he will no more drown the world So the promise of perseverance Heb. 8.10 This is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their minds and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people Our perseverance doth not leane upon imperfect grace but upon divine favour but I wave this and shall speak of Covenants as they note the free promise of God with restipulation of our duty * Camero A Covenant is amicus status interfaederatos so Martin a friendly state between Allies 'pray ' consider the several Covenants the Scripture mentions and they are three namely the Natural Legal and Gospel Covenant the Natural commonly called the Covenant of Works that flourished till the first sin the Legal Covenant that flourished till the Ascention of Christ and the pouring out of the holy Ghost upon the Apostles though it began to languish from Johns preaching and began to grow old throuhout the course of Christs Mini●try the Gosp l Covenant that flourisheth from Christ till the end of the world I shall speak but little of the first something more of the second but dwell upon the last 1. The Natural Covenant is that whereby God by the right of Creation doth require a perfect obedience of all man-kind and promiseth a most blessed life in Paradise to those that obey him and threateneth eternal death to those that disobey him that it may appeare to all how he loves righteousnesse and holinesse how he hates impiety and wickednesse In this Covenant I shall consider but these three things 1. Gods condiscention that he would enter into Covenant with man God was at liberty whether he would create man or not and when God had made this glorious Fabrick there could be no engagement upon him besides his own goodnesse to keep it from ruine Matth. 20.15 Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own but man having an understanding and will to comprehend and observe the Laws given him had a natural obligation to duty which can no way be dissolved there is no power in heaven or earth can disoblige man from loving and obeying God Now that God will deale with man not summo
jure not imperiously and threateningly but magna comitate that God will deale with man as with his friend and though he may give what Laws he will yet he will give none but what are easie and yet make them more easie by bountifully rewarding an easie obedience this speaks wonderful condiscention 2. The second thing considerable in the Natural Covenant is mans duty which consisted in the knowledge and love of God whence would have proceeded piety to God justice and love to man this was mans natural duty for we must distinguish the duty from the Symbole of duty Natural duty consisteth in those things that are good in their own nature and not in those things that are only good because God commands them the Law about the forbidden fruit was only for the tryal of mans obedience for had not the divine command intervened it would have been as lawful for man to have eaten of that Tree as any other Tree in Paradise but 3. The last thing I shall mention concerning this Natural Covenant is the Promise of Reward now that consisted in a perpetual life flowing with all manner of good things agreeable to the soule and body of man in that perfect estate 2. The second Covenant was the Legal now the Legal Covenant is that whereby God did r●quire of the people of Israel obedience to the Moral Ceremonial and Judicial Law and to that obedience he promised all sorts of blessings in the Land of Canaan and to the dis bedient he denounced most severe curses and death and all to this end that he might bring them to the future Messiah Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only something more Therefore consider 1. Gods condiscention is singularly observable that ever he would enter into another Covenant with man when the first was broken this Moses useth as a mighty Argument to perswade Israel to observe the Covenant Deut. 4. from the 32. to the 40. verse Ask now of the dayes that are past which were before thee since the day that God created man upon earth and ask from the one side of heaven unto thie other whether there hath been any such thing as this great thing is or hath been heard like it Did ever people hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire as thou hast heard and live Or hath God assayed to go and take him a Nation from the midst of another Nation by temptations by signes and by wonders and by warre and by a mighty hand and by a stretched-out arme and by great terrours according to all that the Lord your God did for you in Egypt before your eyes c. thou shalt therefore keep his Statutes and his Commandments which I command thee this day that it may go well with thee and thy children after thee c. 2. Consider mans duty in the Legal Covenant and that is obedience to the moral Law to which was added the Ceremonial Law for a Rule and Direction in the worship of God and the Judicial Law which was their divine policy for the government of the State All these are comprehended in the ten Commandments but the more-particular their directions were the more plain was their duty and the truth is it was but need that they should have particular direction when their Legal Covenant neither admitted of faith in the Redeemer nor repentance of sin for pardon of sin and curse for sin are inconsistent Gal. 3.10 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 As many as depend upon the works of the Law for Justification are under the curse and the Law discovered no other way of Justification but by Works 3. The third thing considerable in the Legal Covenant is the promise that God made to those that obeyed it and that was perpetual happiness in the Land of Canaan By the way to prevent mistakes I do not say neither will the Scripture at all warrant any such assertion as that the Fathers under the Old Testament had only temporal promises they had salvation promised them and pardon of sin promised them but thanks to the Gospel for those promises the Apostle tells us Gal. 3.17 The Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was foure hundred and thirty years after cannot disannull that it should make the promise of none effect the Morning Star of the Gospel Covenant that shone upon Abraham foure hundred and thirty years before the Legal Covenant was given did shine thorough that dark dispensation But to speak of the Legal promises as L●gal so they are of temporal good things and they were made to works not to faith Rom. 4.4 To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt 4. The fourth thing considerable in this Covenant which had no place at all in the former is a Mediator Now the Mediator of the Covenant strictly legal was Moses for That needed only a meer man it not admitting of satisfaction nor reconciliation of mercy nor pardon Moses might serve as a Messenger to make known the minde of God unto the people Deut. 5.5 I stood b●tween the Lord and you at that time to shew you the Word of the Lord in the Natural Covenant communion with God was natural unto man and so there needed no Mediator In the Legal Covenant man was rather considered as what he should be than what he was and so a meer man was able in the name of the people to promise obedience and in the name of God to promise a reward and this Moses did you have both very plain in Deut. 5. The people do as it were say Go to God from us upon this Errand Ver. 27. Go thou n●ar and hear all that the Lord our God shall say and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee and we will hear it and do it and God doth as it were say Go dismiss them with this blessing if they will be obedient Ver. 28.29 30. And the Lord heard the voice of your words when ye spake unto me I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken O that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandments alwayes that it might be well with them and with their children for ever Go say to them Get you into your Tents again q. d. If they will keep their promise assure them I will keep mine and thus much concerning the Covenant strictly Legal 3. The third Covenant is the G●spel-Covenant and here Beloved here is 2 Sam. 23.5 the Everlasting Coven●nt ordered in all things and sure This is all our salvation and all our desire Here is the
better Covenant established upon better promises But I must explain it before I admire it The Gospel Covenant is that whereby God upon the condition propounded of faith in Christ promiseth remission of sins in his blood and a heavenly life and that for this end that he might shew forth the riches of his mercy * Camero Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only still something more and more comfortably considerable in the consideration of the persons contracting namely God and man according to the proposed method 1. Consider Gods gracious condescention And now Beloved that I have named Gods gracious condescention were my heart but duly affected with it it would constrain me to stop and put in a large Parenthesis of admiration before I should speak a word more Will God after the loss of the natural communion wherein he created man will God when man d●eads his Majesty and trembles at his revenging justice will God then as a merciful Father enter into a Covenant of peace with poor undone sinners affrighted with the sense of sin and wrath O the incomprehensible ●ondescention of such unsearchable riches of grace that grace should abound according to sins abounding when sin over-flow d all its banks that God should make a way thorough the deep into the heavenly Canaan never can we enough admire such Extasying grace This is the first thing considerable 2. The second thing considerable is the duty which God requires in this Gospel Covenant and that is Faith faith whereby we embrace the remedy offered us We want a pardon and nothing but faith can receive it we want perfect Righteousnesse and nothing but faith can furnish us with it we want that which may make this Covenant effectual to us and make it a blessing to us and nothing can do any of these things but faith faith is the Antecedent Condition for which the Reward is given 3. The third thing considerable in the Gospel Covenant is the promise Now the promise of the Gospel Covenant is comprehended in the word Salvation therefore the Gospel is called the salvation of God Acts 28.28 And this is the great businesse of Christ to be a Saviour Isa 49.6 That thou mayst be my salvation to the end of the earth when the Angels preached the Gospel they thought they could not expresse their news in better language than to tell people of salvation that must needs be great joy to all people In short when Gospel Ministers come clad with garments of salvation as Heraulds do with the garments of their Office then Saints may well shout aloud for joy Psal 132.16 Now this promise of salvation contains all Gospel promises in it but they are reduced to these foure 1. Justification this is a priviledge which other Covenants were unacquainted with and without this what would become of poor sinful man And this may well be the first great Gospel promise I might name not some Verses but whole Chapters to prove it Rom. 4. and 5. Gal. 3. and 4. but in a word if you would know the preciousness of this promise Ask those that have but felt what sin is and they will tell you 2. The second promise contained in Gospel salvation is Sanctification Rom. 8.2 3 4. The Law of the Sp●rit of life in Christ hath made me free from the Law of sin and death for what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit q.d. The efficacy and power of the sanctifying Spirit which gives life to believers frees us from the tyranny of sin and death and whereas the Law by reason of the corruption of our nature could not make us pure and perfect but rather kindled than extinguished corruption God hath cloathed his Son with our flesh to take away the guilt and power of sin that his perfect righteousnesse might be imputed to us and fulfill●d by us that we might not live according to the motion of our sinful nature but according to the motion of his holy Spirit 3. The third promise is the resurrection of the body You know the penal●y of sin is the death of soul and body though the soul be immortal yet its being miserable for ever may sadly be called an Eternal death Now let the guilt of sin be abolished and you do therewith abolish the punishment of it for gu●lt is only an obligation to punishmen● let sin be pardoned and the sinner is freed from death and though believers dye yet it is as a corne of wheat falls into the ground they thereby ob●ain a multiplied life John 6.54 Whoso eateth my flesh and drinke●h my blood hath Eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day 4. The last promise is Eternal life a spiritual blessed and immortal life in heaven John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting life The Covenant of Grace is excellent fitted to bring us to the chiefest good Now the chiefest good consists in communion with God that was broken by sin and can never be perfectly recovered till sin be abolished therefore when the guilt of sin is taken away by Justification and the filthinesse of sin is taken away by Sanctification and the penalty of sin taken away by Resurrection then what can hinder our communion with God when we have once obtained perfect holinesse nothing can hinder us of perfect happinesse Thus you have the promise of the Gospel-Covenant which was the third considerable in it 4. The fourth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the Mediator of this better Covenant and that is Jesus Christ God-man blessed for ever through his dignity he hath purchased salvation Hebr. 9.12 14. By his own blood he entred in once into the holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God c. And he is not only the Author of Eternal salvation by his merit and efficacy but the most absolute example and pattern to us how we should walk that we may obtain his purchased salvation Rom. 8.29 God did predestinate us to be conformable to the Image of his Sonne that he might be the first born among many brethren 1 Cor. 15.49 And as we have born the Image of the Earthly we shall also bear the Image of the heavenly And this is the only Covenant whereof Christ is Mediator the first Covenant needed no Mediator the Old Covenant as Legal take it without its sprinkling of Gospel and so chiefly Moses but in all respects meer men were Mediators but of the New Covenant Christ was Mediator but this I shall leave
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The gospel-Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
We have three notable advantages in our temporal promises beyond what they had in theirs 1. The Old Covenant had special promises of temporal good things in the Land of Canaan for the preserving of their Mosaical policy untill the time of the Messiah to be born of that people promises of long life c. The New Covenant hath promises of all good things necessary without any such clog All good works shall be rewarded and he promiseth to give a present temporal reward in part of payment Eph. 6.8 Whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free and which is more 1 Tim. 4.8 Godlinesse is profitable unto all having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 2. The temporal good things promised in the Old Testament were symbolical they prefigured spiritual benefits by Christ we have them without any such adjoyned significations Col. 2.17 They had a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ They had a more sparing taste of heavenly good things in earthly benefits we have a more streight and direct way unto eternal life 3. Promises of temporal good things were in the Old Covenant more frequent in the New Covenant more rare and this I name as their excellency because they are thrown in as meer additions to spiritual promises * Alting Ma. 16.33 Seek ye first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be added unto you this for temporal promises And for spiritual promises which are the best of the Gospel-Covenant not only the conditions of those promises are more easie for whereas it was Do this and live Gal. 3.15 now it is Believe and thou shalt not come into condemnation * Camero Joh. 3.18 but the condition is also promised Jer. 31.34 I will make a New Covenant with the House of Israel and with the House of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my C●venant they brake although I was an Husband unto them saith the Lord but this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my law into their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people and they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for they shall know me from the least of th●m unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sinnes no more Gods hearty good will is herein manifested Jer. 32.41 I will rejoyce over them to do them good and I will plant them in this land assuredl● with my whole heart and with my whole soul If you say these are Old-Testament promises and belonged to them to whom they were spoken and were not only Prophetical so as to concern another people * Calv. Instit I grant it Rom. 3.19 We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law But they had not that efficacy of the Spirit to make these promises so effectual as was Prophesied and promised for the times of the Gospel * Synop. pu th Joel 2.28 And it shall come to passe afterwards mark that afterwards I will poure out my Spirit upon all flesh c. The measure of the Spirit which they did receive tended mostly to bondage Gal. 4.24 25. but the Spirit is to us a Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8.15 And therefore the Gospel is specially called the Word of Gods grace Acts 20.32 as if all the grace that God had formerly expressed had been nothing in comparison of this Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under grace Law and grace are opposed as condemnation and mercy thus the Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the promises of it 5. The Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the effects of it the Old Covenant shews us sin doth accuse us and declares us guilty before the judgement of God Rom. 3.19 20. That every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sinne It subjects us under the curse and condemneth sinners for the transgressing of Gods commands Deut. 27.26 Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen So Gal. 3.10 it is the ministry of death 2 Cor. 3.6 7. but now the Gospel that proclaims pardon of sin and lifts up with quickening consolation Isa 61.1 2. in the Law God is considered as reproving sin and approving righteousnesse in the Gospel as remitting sin and repairing righteousnesse and therefore the Word of the Gospel is called good seed Mat. 13.3 The seed of Regeneration 1 Pet. 1.23 The Word of Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.18 19. The Ministration of the Spirit Gal. 3.2 The Word of faith Rom. 10.8 The Word of life Phil. 2.16 The power of God Rom. 1.16 That whereby the righteousnesse of God is manifest Rom. 3.21 The destruction of unbelievers is not the end of the Gospel but that is through their own fault Polan Syntag. eventus adventitius an accidental event God abundantly declares in the Gospel that he delights not in the death of sinners but in the saving translation of them by faith and repentance from the power of darknesse into the Kingdome of his dear Son The best effect of the Legal Covenant is the bringing man into the Gospel-Covenant and 'pray ' observe how when it is most effectual it turns over the sinner to the Better Covenant 1. It discovers sin to us Rom. 7.7 I had not known sin but by the Law but wherefore is it that we know sin at all that we might be compelled to seek reparation in the gospel-Gospel-Covenant Gal. 3.21 22. The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise of faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe 2. The Old Covenant restrains sin there is a natural stupidnesse in mens consciences but then when the dreadful threatnings of the Law still sound in their ears man is somewhat affrighted and hath some reluctancy though afterwards the Law of the minde is led captive by the Law of the members and man forbears sin as having a bridle put upon him Ringente interim intus tumultuante appetitu corrupto though he be restrained from sin yet it is but a kinde of coactior it ends best when it ends in a spontaneous and voluntary inclination of the minde to forsake sin and hate it and that is the work of the Gosp●l-Covenant 3. The Old Covenant works fear
must be plain with you I beseech you consider how Jews and Pagans and Divels will rise up in judgment against you 1. The Jew may say I had a Legal yoke upon me which neither I nor my Fathers were able to bear Christ invited me only into his Garden of Nuts where I might sooner break my teeth with the hard Shell of Ceremonies than get to the little more than bitter Kenel of Gospel promises you have those promises in abundance with more ease Cant. 6.11 q. d. Their Nuts were ripe but their Pomegranates full of sweet Kernels of Gospel-grace were not then budded The Jew may complain that in the best of their Sacrifices the smoak fill'd their Temple smoak only to provoke them to weep for a clearer manifestation 2 Cor. 3.14 Those of the Jews that were most enraged against Christ yet had they known him they would not have crucified the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 The Jew may say Though we could but groap after Christ your eyes are dazled with his glory We had but the Old Edition of the Covenant of Grace in a Character very darkly intelligible you have the Last Edition with a Commentary of our Re●ection and the Worlds Recep ion and the Spirits Effusion you have all that heart can wish Oh had we but one of your days of the Son of man we would not have sinned against so great salvation Sirs what do you think your consciences will be forced to reply O true true must the Gospel-sinner say I have known own'd and professed Christ and have been angry with Ministers and Friends when they did but question my being in Covenant but I have not in any measure walked worthy of the Gospel But I passe by the Jew let 's hear what the Pagan hath to say against you 2. I perish Eternally may the poor Pagan say without all possibility of Reconciliation and have only sinned against the Covenant of Works having never heard of a Gospel-Covenant nor of Reconciliation by a Mediatour Alas should I have improved my Naturals to the highest Reconciliation by Christ could never have entred into my head Oh had I heard but one Sermon had Christ but once broke in upon my soul to convince me of my undone condition and to have shewen a righteousnesse unto me but woe is me I never had so much as one offer of Grace But so have I must you say that refuse the Gospel I have or might have heard thousands of Sermons I could scarce escape hearing one or other shewing me the danger of my sin and my necessity of Christ but notwithstanding all I heard I wilfully resolved I would have nothing to do with him I could not indure to hear strictnesse prest upon me it was all the hell I had upon earth that I could not sin in quiet 3. Nay may the Divel himself say 't is true I was ever since my fall maliciously set against God But alas so soon as ever I first sinned God kick't me out of heaven and told me he would never have mercy on me And ' though I liv'd in the time of all manner of gracious Dispensations I saw Sacrifices offered and Christ in the flesh and the Gospel preached yet how could this choose but enrage me the more to have God as it were say Look here Satan I have provided a remedy for sin but none for thine this set me upon revenge against God so far as I could reach him But alas alas had God ever entred into any Covenant with me at all had God put me upon any terms though never so hard for the obtaining of mercy had Christ been but once offered to me what do you think would I have done would I have hearkened to any thing you could say to Refuse Christ and Salvation Could you or all the Angels in heaven have kept me from minding Christ But Woe to me may the Gospel-sinner say I have as good a Remnant of the Covenant of Works in my nature as the Pagans have I have all the discoveries of God in the Legal Covenant that the Jews ever had I am under a Better Dispensation than the Divels were under before their Fall The Gospel of Grace is urged upon me And therefore O poor Jew whatever may be said against thy breach of Covenant there 's a thousand fold more to be said against mine O poor Pagan whatever is to be said against thy breach of Covenant there 's ten thousand fold more against mine O wretched Divels whatever may be said against your sinnes there 's infinitely more to be said against mine I am the most Foolish Mad Wilful Rebel that ever waged war with the grace of God Sirs Is all this nothing to you Can you hear these things quietly I know you dare not think them over again and sin at the same rate as before if you think your souls any thing worth or heaven and glory any thing worth now offer up your selves to Christ in the gospel-Gospel-Covenant Thus much for the first Inference That their estate is dreadful that are not in the gospel-Gospel-Covenant The second Inference is this That their estate is comfortable that are in the gospel-Gospel-Covenant I will only instance in two things 1. The weakest and poorest faith and service is accepted through Christ in the Gospel-Covenant The Covenant of Grace is made to poor weak sinful fraile man through a Mediator God doth not expect that we should be perfect here Poor Christians have more ado to pardon themselves than to have God to pardon them They quarrel more with themselves for want of holinesse than God quarrels with them for it Beloved here are some comfortable Riddles of Grace for you to resolve The Covenant is meerly of Grace Grace runs through all the veins and arteries of it all the life blood and spirit of the Covenant are Grace Grace through Jesus Christ. And yet Beloved though it be wholly of Grace it is of Debt by being a Covenant God is pleased to enter into Bond to make good his Deed of Gift What God doth for the heires of promise it is no more than what is debt to Christ and what through him he is graciously engaged for us O the comfort of being in Covenant with God! you will say so indeed if you adde 2. This Gospel-Covenant is so made that it can never be disanul'd Alas we do not know where nor how to make a Covenant sure in the world he that is my friend to day may be my enemy to morrow his Bond may be good to day and may be to morrow insoluble There are ways more than we know of to evade the strictest Covenant to disanull the strongest Oath but now God hath sworn by himself Hebr. 6.13 that he will certainly blesse those whom he takes into Covenant with him God hath sworn by his holinesse Psal 89.34 35. As if he should say Let me not be accounted a holy God if I break Covenant with any of my people Nay he
that He that believeth shall never dye but have eternal life John 11.26 I answer We must look upon threatnings as a part of the Law declaring the duenesse of the punishment what the offender hath deserved to suffer not as predictions of the event any more than Thou shalt and Thou shalt not in the command are predictions but only are expressive of the duenesse of obedience Nor will it hence follow that we have the least cause once to suspect that God may if he please revoke his promises as well as his threatnings and then what would become of us for there is a wide difference in their essential natures and properties In a promise the obligation lies upon the party promising he hath past away his own liberty and the thing is now no longer his but the others who may if he please release and quit-claim to his pretensions he may dispense with and surrender his own right but if he claime his right to and interest in the benefit by vertue of the promise it cannot be detained without notorious wrong and injury which God forbid we should charge him with for he were not God if he were not infinitely true and faithful How should he ●lse judge the world But now the Obligation unto punishment lies contrarily upon the sinner threatned he hath past away his own indemnity and given God the right of punishing him I say the right not the necessity if God will claime this right he may but if he please he may dispence with it It is no injury if he punisheth yet no Obligation lies upon him but his own honour And that indeed obligeth him not never to dispence with his Law but never to dispense with it upon a light cause or upon termes misbecoming his Glorious Attributes And the dispensation we now speak of is an honourable one for 1. There are weighty inducements moving God hereunto If he had not dispenc't with the rigor of it First He had lost the opportunity of the highest possible way of glorifying his own goodnesse which now so infinitely endears him to the world and lays such Obligations on us to admire and adore him Secondly As all Israel lamented over Benjamin Judg. 21.6 that a Tribe was lost so the Creation would have mist a Tribe which is the reason some Divines have given why Christ took not on him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham because only some of the Angelical Tribe lost their birth-right only some kept not their first estate but man being in honour continued not but became like the Beast that perisheth Thirdly All Religion had been extinguish't and frozen by despair unavoidably if there had been no hope the fear of God his worship and service had for ever utterly perish't from off the earth But now his Name is excellent in all the earth even that Name Proclaimed to Moses Exod. 34.6 The Lord is known in Judah and his Name is great in Israel Psal 79.1 2. As the causes inducing are weighty so the terms on which he dispenseth with his Law are as honourable which was our third Query propounded in the opening the point For since Christ Redeemed us not by way of Solution strictly as a Surety paying the Debtors proper debt to the Creditor but by way of Satisfaction as a Mediator and Intercessor offering a valuable consideration to the offended Judge of the world in lieu of the Laws executing the penalty threatned upon the sin er It necessarily follows that no right at all in the benefits of this satisfaction can accrue to the Delinquent but upon such terms precisely as the offended party and the Mediator that satisfieth him shall agree unto and upon mutual treaty and compromise joyntly ratifie so that justification by way of satisfaction provides no● only for the sinners indemnity but in such a manner as also to consult the interests and honour both of the party sa●isfying and satisfied and this latter is the rule and measure of exhibiting the former and of making over the satisfaction for discharge of the offender Query 3 What are the terms therefore upon which both God and Christ have agreed to justifie sinners I answer first faith which is a hearty receiving Christ as he is tendred by the Gospel and here the soul quits all pretensions of being justified by any righteousnesse of its own and rolls it self upon the Lord its righteousnesse and therefore hath faith the honour to be the justifying grace because it so highly honoureth Christ it is the nuptial knot whereby the soul joyns it self to its Lord-Redeemer in an everlasting Marriage-Covenant it denies its self and forsakes all its other Lovers and clasps about its Lord and Husband as its all in all Look what a wife doth in a marriage-Marriage-Covenant to her husband that doth a soul in believing unto Christ it saith unto him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou art my husband Hos 2.16 And he saith unto his Spouse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you are my people But then this justifying faith hath two daughters that inseparably attend her 1. Repentance Here sinful man retracts and undoes his faults cryes peccavi weeps wrings his hands smites upon his breast and cryes What have I done Laments after the Lord and abhors himself in dust and ashes He calls himself fool mad man beast traytor to his God and to his soul In a word executes the Law upon himself and since God excuseth him from the punishment he accuseth himself of the guilt and condemns himself to the shame of his sin and hereby the sinner honours the equity of the threatning by his tears acknowledging that his blood was due 2. Newnesse of life here the sinner acknowledgeth perfect obedience to be still his duty this honours the equity of Gods Commandments And the Redeemer by making this one of the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant hath given his Father his Law back again he doth not repeal it no it s still the rule of life and every Commandment still obligeth a Believer Christ hath only released us from the condemning power of it not the commanding power of it We must still presse after perfection but though we fall short of it we shall not dye for it Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us but hath left us under the government and command of the Law The whole matter is excellently expressed 1 John 2.1 My little children these things I write unto you that you sin not and if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 3. Having thus discoursed to the three general points first propounded and shewed that the person justified is charg'd with guilt And secondly that he pleads to the charge where I have largely opened the nature of that plea I come now to the third general point to shew how upon his plea he is discharged or justified A sinner is then actually justified when he is constituted or
made righteous in Law Righteousnesse is a conformity to the Law he that fulfills the Law is righteous in the eye of that Law he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within the protection of it as he that transgresseth the Law is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guilty in the eye of the Law and without the protection of it Now the Law of the New Covenant runs thus He that believeth shall not perish so that a Believer keeps and fulfills this Law and therefore faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.22 23 24. because faith is the keeping of the New Covenant which therefore is called the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 in opposition to the Old Covenant called there by the Apostle the Law of Works As therefore innocency or perfect obedience would have justified Adam had he stood by vertue of the Law of Works or Old Covenant whose tenor is Obey and live for then he had fulfilled that Law and as his Disobedience actually condemned him by vertue of the same Law Disobey and dye for it Gen. 2.17 So now believing in Christ justifyeth by vertue of the Law of faith for it is the keeping and fulfilling of the Gospel-Covenant whose tenor is Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And again unbelief actually condemneth by vertue of the same Law He that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the Name of the only begotten Son of God Joh. 3.18 That is because the unbeliever is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the protection of the Gospel or Law of faith he cometh not up to its righteousnesse he is condemned already as a sinner by the Law of Works and yet once more with a witnesse condemned as an unbeliever as a monster that hath twice been accessory to his own murder first in wounding himself and secondly in refusing to be healed The Law of works includes us all under sin we are all dead our case was desperate but God who is rich in mercy through his great love wherewith he hath loved us Ephes 2.4 John 3.16 his immense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when we were dead in sins and trespasses hath sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And this is that Law according to which he will judge the world according to my Gospel saith Paul Rom. 2.27 Every Believer therefore though he wants the righteousnesse of the Law of Works viz. innocency yet he shall not be condemned because he hath the righteousnesse of the Gospel viz. faith which is the New Law in force according to which God now dealeth with us and shall judge the world at the last day And here it will be richly worth our very heedful Observation that although a Believer hath not the righteousnesse of the Law of Works i●herent in himself for if he had he were not a sinner but should be justified by that Law yet by faith he lays hold upon Christs satisfaction which in the very eye of the Law of Works is an unexceptionably perfect an infinitely glorious righteousnesse So that faith justifieth us even at the Bar of the Law of Works Ratione objecti as it lays hold on Christs satisfaction which is our Legal righteousnesse it justifieth us at the Bar of the Gospel or Law of faith formaliter ratione sui as it is Covenant-keeping or a fulfilling of the Gospel Law For he that keeps a Law is righteous where that Law is Judge the Law-Maker by his very making of the Law makes him righteous and the Judge that pronounceth according to the Law for a Judge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will infal●ibly pronounce him so But that with all requisite distinctnesse we may apprehend this great affair let us take a view of some of the most considerable and important causes which concur to the producing this excellent effect the discharge and justification of a sinner and state their several interests and concernments in their respective influences upon and contributions towards it 1. How free grace justifieth And first The free grace of God is the first wheel that sets all the rest in motion It s contribution is that of a proegumenal cause or internal motive disposing God to send his Son John 3.16 That sinners believing might be justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus Rom. 3.24 For Christ dyed not to render God good he was so eternally but that with the honour of his justice he might exert and display his goodnesse which contriv'd and made it self this way to break forth into the world 2. How Christs satisfaction Secondly Christs satisfaction is doubly concern'd in our Justification 1. In respect of God as a procatartick cause of infinite merit and impetrative power for the sake of which God is reconciling himself unto the world in Christ not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Cor. 5.19 2. In respect of the Law of Works Christs satisfaction justifieth us formally as our proper Legal righteousnesse I call it our righteousness because it becomes imputed to us upon our believing faith being our Gospel title by pleading which we lay claim to all the benefits accruing from the merit of Christs performance to a●l effects uses and purposes as if it had been personally our own I call it our Legal righteousnesse because thereby the Law of God owns it self fully apaid and acquiesceth in it as in full reparations and amends made unto it for the injury and dishonour received by the sin of man We must plead this against all the challenges and accusations of the Law Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 And thus our Legal righteousnesse required in the first Covenant that of Works is wholly without us in our Redeemer yet imputed upon our account Thirdly The Gospel justifieth quâ Lex lata 3. How the Gospel as it is the Law of faith for the very tenor of the gospel-Gospel-Covenant is Believe and thou shalt be saved Fourthly Faith justifieth vi Legis latae 4. How faith as it is our Evangelical righteousnesse or our keeping the Gospel-Law for that Law suspends justification upon believing Faith pretends to no merit or vertue of its own but professedly avows its dependance upon the merit of Christs satisfaction as our Legal righteousnesse on which it layeth hold nor can it shew any other title to be it self our Evangelical righteousnesse but only Gods sanction who chose this act of believing to the honour of being the justifying act because it so highly honoureth Christ So that as a most judicious pen expresseth it the act of believing is as the silver but Gods Authority in the Gospel-sanction is the Kings Coyne or Image stamp't upon it which gives it all its value as to justification Without this stamp it could never have been currant and if God had set this stamp on
the root there needs no more than a right understanding of the true and proper notion and manner of Christs redeeming us it is not by way of Solution but of Satisfaction Clearly thus our case to God is not properly that of debtors but that of criminal Subjects Gods aspect to usward not properly that of a Creditor but that of a Rector and Judge The person Christ sustained and the part he acted not in a strict sense that of a Surety paying the very debt in kind and so discharging a bond but that of a Mediator expiating our guilt and making reparations to Divine Justice another way than by the execution of the Law And indeed the very nature of a Law is such as it is quite impossible that the obligation either of its threatning or command should in a proper sense be fulfilled by any other than the very person threatned and commanded alius here makes aliud If another suffer the penalty the threatning is not fulfilled Nor if another performs the duty the command for the obligation as to punishment lies on the person threatned noxa caput sequitur and that to duty on the person commanded it cannot be fulfilled in kind by another but it ceases to be the same thing and becomes another th●ng from that in the Obligation yet it may be such another thing and Christs Righteousnesse both active and passive really is such as the Rector or Judge may accept of with honour and be satisfied with as if the very same thing had been suffered and done just in the same manner as the Law threatned and commanded it That Christ hath paid not the idem but tantundem i. e. not fulfilled the Law as for us in kind but satisfied it for us is most evident For 1. The Law obliged the sinners person to suffer Christ was no sinner 2. All men to suffer forasmuch as all had sinned Christ was but one man 3. The punishment due by Law was eternal Christ suffered but for a season and is entered into his glory thus Christ paid not the same thing that was in the Obligation but something equivalent thereunto This being obtain'd that the Lord Christ hath Redeemed us not by way of solution or discharging a Bond by payment in kind but by way of satisfaction or making amends to the injur'd justice of the Law It follows from the reason nature of the thing 1. That God pardons freely we are not only beholding to Christ for satisfying but to God too infinitely for accepting of any satisfaction at all he might have refused it he had done sinners no wrong if he had executed the rigour of the Law without hearkening to termes of Reconciliation Quite contrary a Creditor doth not pardon the debtor when the surety hath discharged the Bond by full payment in kinde the Debtor is beholding indeed to his friend the Surety but not at all to the Creditor who cannot refuse to cancel the Bond nay it were wrong and injustice in him if he did 2. That none hath or can have actual interest in or benefit by this Redemption but upon such termes as God and Christ have mutually compromised in and agreed to viz. the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant above mentioned See the answer to the third quere 1. The Reason hereof is partly from God the injur'd Law-giver of the world who seeing it was at his liberty to accept of satisfaction or no hath of necessity the right to make his own termes when and how far forth and in what manner and method he will condescend to admit the sinner to the actual benefit of Christs satisfaction 2. And partly too from Christ for as he is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Mediator between God and man a friend to both parties nay a person consisting of both natures the offended and offending he is engaged necessarily by vertue both of Office and person to espouse with equal tendernesse of regard he interests of both parties for he is really concerned in them both they are his concernments as well as theirs True indeed a Surety that dischargeth a Bond by full payment in kinde he sustaines and beares only the person of the Debtor minds only his indemnity doth what he doth upon his account and for his sake But our great Mediator must consult not only our impunity but his Fathers yea and his own honour and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 get you hence all you that either yet never did or that do not now repent believe and conscientiously endeavour to obey here 's not the least jot of benefit for you in the case you are in from this Redemption for how infinite soever the merit of Christs satisfaction is it conferreth nothing actually upon any person that hath not actually a Gospel-claime and title to plead it before God The immediate effect actually resulting from Christs performance is the procuring the Gospel-Covenant to be ratified by his Father as a Law whereby sinners upon the termes propounded become reconcilable unto God actually it is of force to all that have but to none that want the conditions of it Now the keeping this Gospel-Covenant God expects from us in person though by the assistance of his Spirit which he hath promised to give to them that humbly and earnestly ask it of him Luke 11.1 To affirme that Christ hath kept the Gospel for us too is to utter the most self-contradicting blasphemy and absurdity imaginable as if he could repent or believe in himself free except or cancel our Obligation to obey the Moral Law by his own obeying it as if Christ had so done all that nothing remaines to be done on our part Such strange extreames do some men run into that to avoid Justification by works by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are as extravagant on the other hand thinking the grace of God cannot be free except the sinner become either a senselesse statue meerly passive or which is yet worse have a Writ of ease to be quite idle or wich is worst of all a Licence to sin by Prerogative Let the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chastise this insolence Rom. 6.15 Shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under grace God forbid If Christ had obeyed the Law for us in the sense of paying a debt or discharging a Bond the Apostles answer could not stand Rom. 3.31 Do we then make void the Law through faith yea we establish the Law When a believer breaks the Law he sins for sinne is the transgression of the Law nay he cannot break it wilfully but he breaks the very gospel-Gospel-Covenant one condition whereof is sincere obedience and the guilt of that sin lieth upon him unpardoned untill by hearty repentance and fresh applications by faith to the blood of sprinkling which are the only Titles good in Law the only Gospel-claimes to pardon he hath sued out a new pardon for actual Remission is only of past sins Rom. 3.25 according to the tenor of
of a reason God sends his Gospel proclaiming Acts 3.19 Repent ye and be converted that your sinnes may be blotted out His Ministers proclaiming We then are Embassadors of Christ 2 Cor. 5. as though God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be ye reconciled unto God Why dost thou hate thy soul and say I will not why wilt thou not Is it because it doth not concern thee or because eternal life and death are trifles small little things not worth thy considering or doth any body hinder thee No no our Saviour gives the true account Ye will not come unto me that ye might have life Let me entreat this small request of thee for Gods sake for thine own take the next opportunity and spend half an houre alone let thy spirit accomplish a diligent search pursue this inquiry to some issue am I justified or no if not what will become of me if it should happen sometimes such things fall out that I should dye now presently I cannot promise my self that I shall see to morrow morning Thus go on and bring it to something before thou leavest give not over till thou art not only clearly convinced of but heartily affected with thy guilt not only to see but feel thy self to be the man who art undone without an interest in this justification Be in good earnest thou canst not mock thy God and is there any wisdome in mocking and cheating thy own soul What thou dost do it heartily as unto the Lord as for thy life as one that would not rue thy self-deceiving folly when it cannot be recalled and if thou art hearty and serious in these reflexions 1. Thou wilt deeply humble thy self before the Majesty of the Judge of all the earth with that self-abhorrence and confusion that becomes one who feels himself even himself being Judge most righteously condemned 2. Thou wilt sollicite and assail the Throne of Grace with all redoubled favours and holy passionate importunities of prayer and supplication giving God no rest till he hath given thee his Spirit according to his own promise Luke 11.13 Ezek. 36.26 27. To help thee to performe the conditions of the gospel-Gospel-Covenant plead his own promise with him Wrestle with him for a broken and clean heart for faith for repentance unto life for these are not of thy self they are the gift of God let him not go till he hath blessed thee with these blessings in Christ Jesus This will confound every sinner at the day of Judgment that when he might have had grace yea the Spirit of grace for asking he either asked not or if he did it was so coldly as if he were contented enough to go without Now if thou art in good earnest God is I assure thee in full as good earnest as thou he is ready to meet thee Try but once whether it be in vain to seek him all that ever tryed found it good to draw near to God and found him easie to be entreated he useth not to send the hungry empty away He that commands us to work out our salvation with fear and trembling he it is that worketh in us both to will and to do of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.12 13. Secondly To them that are the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus Let me beseech them 1. To walk worthy of God who hath called them to his Kingdome and Glory to adorn their holy profession take the Exhortation in Pauls words Col. 2.6 As ye have received Christ Jesus the Lord so walk ye in him Receive not this grace of God in vain the interest of your comfort obligeth you hereunto hereby you will know that you know him that you are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 that there is no cond mnation to you if you walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit and herein will your Father be glorified John 15.6 if ye bring forth much fruit 2. To live up to the comfort of their state 1 John 3.1 Ye are already the sons of God it doth not yet appear what you shall be Who shall lay any thing to your charge it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 Go eat thy bread with joy and put on thy white rayment God now hath accepted thy works Eccles 9.7 8. I conclude this particular and the whole discourse with the happy effects and fruits of Justification which every Believer hath as good a right and title to as the Gospel it self the Word of the God of truth can give him as I finde those sweet effects and consequences set down in my Text and the words next following it 1. Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ 2. By whom also we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand and rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 3. And not only so but we glory in tribulation knowing that tribulation worketh patience 4. And patience experience and experience hope 5. And hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given unto us Wherefore the righteous shall be glad in the Lord and all the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64.10 THE BELIEVERS DIGNITY and DVTY LAID OPEN In the High-Birth wherewith he is PRIVILEDGED And the honourable Employment to which He is called John 1.12 13. But as many as received him to them he gave power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God IN this Chapter Christ the principal Subject of the Gospel is admirably and Seraphically described 1. By his Divintiy as co-eternal and co-essential with the Father verse 1. 2. 2. By his discovery or manifestation 1. In the work of Creation ver 3. 10. 2. In the work of common providence ver 4.5 9. 3. In the work of gracious providence he being in the world and coming to his Church as our Immanuel God incarnate ver 11. 14. 3. By his entertainment which was 1. Passive his entertainment was poor the world knew him not ver 10. He was as a Prince disguised in a strange Country the Church sleighted and rejected him as Rebels do their natural Prince ver 11. And such entertainment Christ meets with at this day in his Truths Ordinances Graces Ministers and his poor members c. Object Was not Christ entertained by them what else means their harbouring him at Capèrnaum their flocking after him admiring of him seeking to make him a King c. Answ True they entertain'd him for a while civilly and formally upon self-interest but not spiritually by saving Faith Love and Obedience John 6.26 Matthew 11.21 23. Quest 1. Did Christ find no entertainment at all Answ This rejecting of Christ was not universal some did
called one of the f Gal 5.22 2 Cor 4.13 fruits thereof and he called the g Spirit of Faith for indeed the word and letter is dead the Spirit quickneth and this powerfully and certainly yet sweetly making willing to beleive in the day of his power Psal 110.3 2 Cor 6.7 10.4 for it is not the Word of truth only but the power of God that made the Apostles warfare so victorious in subduing souls to the obedience of the Faith It is so great a thing to bring blind proud self-destroying man to own Gods way of Salvation by the righteousness of another to accept all from another and him a crucified Saviour that it is a great part of the great mystery of godliness 1 Tim 3.16 that Christ should be believed on in the world so that it needs an exceeding greatness of Divine Power Ephes 1.19 the working of a mighty power in them that beleive even such as raised Christ from the dead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est facultas ipsa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsius sese exerentis virtus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsisius effectus sive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bez in loc though other sence is put upon that place yet by many judicious Expositors is this sence followed which we find in the Gr. Schol. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. None can come to the Son except the Father draw them Joh. 6.44 in which the Author and powerful manner of operation in causing Faith are contained And all this in effectual calling and regeneration before which is no part and degree no act and demonstration of spiritual life Ephes 2.1 Joh. 1.12 13. Act. 14.27 for we are dead which is not of him that willeth not of flesh and blood and the will of man but of God and this is spoken of the Believer to whom God opens the door of Faith 2. The actings and operations of Faith are from God as in him we live Joh. 15.5 so we move and without him can do nothing he worketh to will and to do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Velle bonum aeque ac voluntatem bonam he worketh habit and principle and by supervening Grace exciteth to and assisteth in acting it 3. The continuance and perseverance of Faith are from above Christ causeth our Faith not to fail Luk. 22.32 1 Pet. 1.5 and we are kept by Gods mighty power through Faith unto Salvation and Faith is by the same preserved The a 1 Thess 5.23 24. faithful God that effectually calls will safely keep in b Jude 8. Jesus Christ c 1 Cor. 1.8 and confirm to the end for this is the d Joh. 17.11 12 24. desire of the Son unto the Father and e Joh. 6.39 Mar. 9.24 Luk. 17.5 will of the Father concerning the Son 4. The growth and increase of Faith are from God who giveth all increase and therefore it was well prayed for unto the Lord to help unbelief and to increase Faith 5. The perfection of Faith is from God and Christ Jesus is as the author Heb. 12.2 so the finisher of our Faith and this either by bringing it to its 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and highest degree it can reach or is necessary for the Saints it should reach to in the world fulfilling all the good pleasure of his goodness and the work of Faith with power Phil. 1.6 and because he hath begun perfecting it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or by perfecting it in vision 1 Pet. 1.9 for it's God that gives the end of our Faith Salvation Less Principal The Less Principal Efficient Causes are either Impulsive or Instrumental Impulsive The Impulsive or Moving Cause is either External or Internal The Inwardly moving Cause Proegumena is 1. On Gods part his free grace and love self-moving goodness in which sence it is called the a Ephes 2.8 gift of God and the b Rom. 11.7 election obtain it even those that are ordained to life believe Act. 13.48 Not improvement of Reason not use of means appointed for the attainment of Faith that merit this gift but God worketh all of his own good pleasure Phil. 2.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which appears in that not many noble and wise but poor receive the Gospel 2. On the sinners part who doth believe and being quickned moveth acted acteth and that freely the moving Cause is sence of misery and undonness without Christ and interest in the promise through Faith there being no other name Act. 4.12 Joh. 3.18 and he that believeth not being condemned So that here is the necessary condition and causa sine qua non of Faith sense of misery and inability in self and all creatures to recover a man out of his lost estate whence ariseth renouncing and throwing away all our own righteousnesses those filthy rags Isa 64.6 Phil. 3.9 not having or not depending upon our own righteousness or any thing short of Christ The outwardly Moving Cause Procatarctica 1. On Gods part to give Faith is Christ and his merit for every good gift is through Christ Omne donum gratiae Dei in Christo est Ambr. in Ephes 1. As from the father of lights so through the the Sun of righteousness none come to the Father nothing cometh from the Father but by him whom by this means the Father will make to be honored as himself Joh. 5.23 As salvation was purchased by Christ upon terms of believing so Faith also whereby we lay hold upon Christ for Salvation and therefore that Spirit which is called the Spirit of Faith is by Christ promised upon his purchase making and ascending to be sent to convince the world of that great sin of unbelief Joh. 16.9 2. The externally moving Cause to believe on the sinners part which may be called the Formal Object is twofold 1. As to God and his Word Gods Veracity and infallible truth Heb. 4.13 6.18 Titus 1.2 1 Thess 2.13 Joh. 3.33 Heb. 10.23 he can neither be deceived nor deceive God which cannot lye hath promised is joyned to Hope and therefore Faith He that believeth receiveth the Word of God as the word of God and seteth to his seal that God is true accounting him faithful that hath promised the ground of Faith being Gods faithfulness and the object the Promise God's having spoken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was enough to Abraham Rom. 4.17 18. in a difficult case Here is the Resolutio fidei into its stable foundadation Gods unquestionable Truth who is Prima veritas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Joh 5.10 so that the believer hath the witness in himself and his evidence is better and assent stronger as to his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 than any ones as to things apprehended by sence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or by reason 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore sometimes divine testimony is added to rational discovery
as in this point that there is another life c. because of the certainty and distinctness of knowledge by revelation above all other ways 2. As to Christ offered in and by the Promise for more full explanations sake I sever the consideration of God promising and Christ offered which otherwise I would always unite the moving Cause of Faith in the sinner Heb 7.25 is his power as an All-sufficient Saviour able to save to the uttermost being anointed with authority and abilities commission and qualifications for that work and his love to sinners having laid down his life for them Joh 6.37 he will in no wise cast them out that come to him by Faith These are the solid props of a true Christians Faith which make the former believing God and the Word not to be a wavering opinion and the latter believing in Christ not an adventurous hazard Instrumental Cause The Instrumental Cause of Faith is either the begetting or preserving Cause 1. The Instrument by which the Spirit of God produceth Faith is the Word of God in whatever way coming to us to be a Joh 5.38 Luke 2.19 51. considered and meditated on by us The Word b 1 Joh 3.15 read by us or to us the Word expounded and enforced by the Publick Ordinance preaching Ex Officio the private Ordinance conference ex fraternâ charitate By believing the soul answereth to Gods call which supposeth a Word Ro. 10.8 14 17 therefore it is called the Word and Doctrine of Faith and Faith cometh by hearing men cannot believe in him of whom they have not heard Christ must be preached 1 Tim 3.16 Rom 1.16 before believed on for by the Gospel preached God puts forth his power in making men believe to salvation the efficacy whereof it being accompanied with that spiritual and powerful demonstration 1 Cor 1.18 21 c. mentioned 1 Cor. 2.4 the Apostle to the Corinthians explaineth and extolleth God having in due time manifested his Word through preaching Tit. 1.3 Act 24.14 Now this Instrument is All the word of God not excluding the Law from being the means as well as the object of Faith Gal 3.21 22. for the Law is a useful Schoolmaster to prepare us for Christ driving us out of our selves and following us with the lashes of the Curse that we may run to the Grace of the Gospel and make mention of Christs righteousness only Psal 71.16 So that knowledge must alway go before Faith we must know whom what and wherefore we believe 2. Tim 1.12 Ephes 1.18 19 and give a reason of our faith and hope the eyes of the mind enlightning goes before the working of Gods power in our believing so Pauls sending was to turn from darkness to light before Faith in Christ is mentioned Act 26.18 Joh 6.40 every one that seeth the Son and believeth on him c. a seeing in Scripture light makes way In so much that the knowledge of the Word and Christ as the means to get Faith Joh 17.3 Isa 53.11 is highly advanced and called life eternal yea put for believing to which it leads by his knowledge Objectivè Or the knowledge of him shall my servant justifie many Secondly The Instrumental Causes of Faiths maintenance and encrease are 1. The Word of God Causa procreans conservans Ab iisdem nutrimur ex quibus constamus It is seed to beget 1 Pet 2.2 and milk for growth in babes yea strong meat for strong ones in Christ 2. Sacraments as Seals of the righteousness of Faith Tesserae and pledges of Gods love superadded to his promise They signifie and help to clear the understanding and so consequently promote Faith they seal and confirm seals are for this end to confirm the Faith of him to whom the Deed is delivered and 't is usually said by learned Divines they actually exhibit for our growth by feeding 3. Prayer as in that man Lord help mine unbelief Mark 9.24 2 Thes 1.10 11 and the Disciples Lord encrease our faith and St. Paul for the Thessalonians Quoties de Fidei constantia incremento agitur ad preces confugiendum est Calv. in Jud. 20. v. I might add another Ternary of means for the encrease of faith inferior to the former 1. The Cross Afflictions Temptations 1 Pet 1.7 Therefore the trial of Faith is called pr cious because it burnisheth and encreaseth precious Faith the trial of Faith worketh patience Jam 1.3 patience experience and that is a good ground for more Hope and Faith Rom 5.4 they are conjoyned 2 Thess 1.3 4. 2. By frequent actings and exercise Faith is encreased though Graces beginning is different yet their improvement is in great measure after the way of other habits 3. By seeing and considering the Example of others the cloud of Witnesses Heb. 12.1 2. Heb. 13.7 whose Faith the Apostolical command is that we follow Thus many were of weak made strong beholding the faith of the Martyrs and the eminent effects of it Material Cause For the Material Cause of Faith Genus habet rationem materiae that which is its general and common nature wherein it agrees with others is the matter of it Now as Saving Grace in the Description was the Genus wherein it agrees with other Graces so comparing true Saving Faith with other Faiths that may tolerably pretend to the name Assent is the common nature and matter of it even the nearest and immediate Genus Faith historical of miracles temporary all have Assent but not all Assent belongeth to true Faith There must not only be knowledge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 acknowledgement as necessary and essential to Faith Col. 2.2 2 Tim. 3.14 and that arising from the full assurance of understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There must be a Faith Doctrinal and Assertive as the foundation of Faith applicative and fiducial if I assent not to the promise of another as true I cannot rely upon the person for the good mentioned There is a double acknowledgement I mean not verbal profession 1. That the things revealed in Scripture and by us known are of God 2. That they are true which naturally floweth from the former and shall all be fulfilled Rom. 4.21 Abraham was perswaded before he trusted Now to this end that this full assent and acknowledgement of the mind which is a necessary ingredient of true Faith may be had The Divine Authority of the Scriptures confirmed by miracles and other characters is to be studied that we may build our Assent and thereby our Faith upon a stable foundation Formal Cause The Formal Cause which doth straiten the general nature of Faith and distinguish true Saving Faith from all other Faiths forma vel aliquid formae analogum ponitur differentiae loco in which may be Notitia Assensus is Fiducial receiving of Christ offered by God in the
otherwise disturbed and perplexed Thus Faith in its own nature and direct tendency But still understand Faith as acting Faith as exercised produceth this effect the Christian so far forth as he lives by Faith and in the Improvement of Faith enjoys this quiet sedate minde even when he wants the full-blown joy of a life of Spiritual sence And not only from the nature of Faith doth this arise but also as Faiths hand casts out the Anchor of Hope which keeps the soul steddy and also as it represents and foretastes the recompence and joy to come This leads to the next Effect of Faith 10. Assurance and further joy thereby I make not this Constitutive of Faith nor inseparable from Faith lest I condemn and sadden causelesly the Generation of the just but whereever it is it proceeds from Faith Vnbelief is shut out from the Promise and can have no true Hope much less Assurance Heb. 10.22 Therefore it is called The full assurance of Faith and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 boldness and access with confidence and assurance is by faith in Christ Ephes 3.12 And thus believing doth through assurance the soul by a reflex act preceiving its own Faith and thence interest in the O ject of Faith brings the joy unspeakable and full of glory This though not absolutely necessary 1 Pet. 1.8 all believers should labor after that the comfort of it may confort according to the notation of the word and strengthen them Nehem. 8.10 2 Pet. 1.10 2 Joh. 5.13 for the joy of the Lord is our strength The Apostle P●ter bids give diligence to make our calling and election sure even to our selves rather than in it self And St. John wrote to those that believed that they might know they had eternal life 11. And lastly Salvation is the effect and inseparable consequent of true Faith according to the Text. Now this being that great and last effect which the others made way for the object of our desires the reward of our endeavours the only and perfect happiness of man I shall speak more distinctly to the connexion between Faith and Salvation under these three heads That How Why. First That Faith and Salvation are conjoyned and this is peculiarly one of those things which are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 6.9 having accompanying laying hold of salvation It is the Testimony of Truth it self John 3.16 that this is Gods great end in sending his Son into the world that whosoever believeth might have eternal life The Purchaser of salvation John 6.40 declares this to be the Will of him that sent him that every one that seeth the Son and believes on him might have eternal life Accordingly he that hath all power committed to him giveth commission and command to his Disciples to preach that whosoever believeth shall be saved Mark 16.16 And ascertaines their salvation by his prayer for all that should believe through his Disciples word John 17.20 Saint Paul testifies Rom. 10.9 10. Rom. 5.17 he that believeth in his heart shall be saved declares that they that have the gift of righteousness which he defends to be by Faith shall reign in life Rom. 8.30 and accordingly conjoynes justified viz. by Faith and glorified and asserteth this to be according to Gods design in Election and terms in Vocation 2 Thes 2.13 14. 1 Tim. 1.14 15 16. sets forth himself as an encouraging example of the exceeding abundant grace of our Lord through Faith to all though great sinners like himself that should believe on Christ to life everlasting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril This Saint John accounts so clear and unquestionable that he writes to them that believe 1 John 5.13 that they may know that they have eternal life So unlimitedly true is that of Habakkuk The Just shall live by his Faith Hab. 2.4 Deus oleum misericordiae gloriae ponit in vase fiduciae Bern. Secondly How Salvation is the effect of Faith Here consider these three things 1. The natural aptitude and fitnesse of this grace of Faith to be made use of in the way of saving man that had broken the first Covenant and could not be saved thereby yea so fit is faith as to be necessary upon supposition of Gods saving sinners by a New Covenant in the hands of a Mediatour and Surety and his Righteousnesse There must be an appropriation of that to the sinner and making all his own and this must be by voluntary acceptance self-confidence and boasting must be prevented now faith alone could do this as before hath been shown 2. The institution of God making this fitnesse of Faith useful and effectual to this end Salvation for be it never so fit yea necessary so that Salvation could not be brought about without it and suppose per hypothesin impossibilem which yet could not be that man had believed upon the Redeemer and God had not said Believe and thou shalt be saved Faith had not reached Salvation Phil. 3.9 therefore it is called the righteousness of God which is by Faith in the Son of God even of his finding out and appointing Even as Sacramental signes are and must be fit to represent what they are appointed for as Aug. Epist 23. ad Bonif. Oportet similitudinem habeant earum rerum quarum sunt Sacramenta quam si non haberent non essent Sacramenta yet they work not naturally but by Divine institution as a means of Faiths maintaining and increase so Faith to Salvation 3. The Dignity and Merit of the object of Faith is to be considered for though it be said 1 Pet. 1.9 Receiving 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mercedem as Beza rendreth it the end the reward of your Faith yet is it not of merit for the way of Salvation by Faith is altogether of Grace as Saint Paul industriously and abundantly proveth Faith therefore may be considered either qualitativè or relativè in it self or with respect to its object Now not as an habit in us or act exerted by us though acting not dead faith saveth not as a work of the Law required in the first Commandment doth faith save but through the righteousness of Christ which it apprehends and appropriates in it self it is the most indigent and soul-emptying grace that is and cannot by its own merit do this for it is due being by God commanded Luke 17.10 imperfect in it self for who attaines the highest degrees of faith and if perfect in its kind yet but an imperfect Righteousnesse being the fulfilling but of one Gospel-command Thirdly Why there is this undivided connexion between Faith and Salvation The Prime reason and that which it must be ultimately resolved into is the good pleasure of God according to which he worketh all things There is nothing in faith bearing proportion to this effect and attainment so that we may admiringly say Even so Father because it pleaseth thee Secondary and Subordinate reasons First On
but our day of nature may out-date our day of grace yet of this we have no assurance but if so it do it were better the day of our being had never been for the opportunity lost we are lost for ever whilst we enjoy the Word and motions of the Spirit we have hope but if ever these cease we are undone Let us startle our souls with these sad thoughts This may be the last day or hour of my life but if not the last day and houre of grace would we hear every Sermon as the last it would rouze our souls to repentance Sixthly Seriously exp●ct approaching judgement it is an Argument to repentance 6. Help to repentance and very perswasive thereunto as you have before heard the thoughts of the last judgement will cool the courage of the prophanest sinner when he seeth the day approach in which his secr●t sins must be laid open a severe sentence cannot be respited or suspended for the least moment but must be executed with speed certainty and severity the Judge is just and will then be inexorable All the shel●ers of his power might policies riches honours by which he staved off repro●f will now b● scattered a d fame vain and bootlesse the Judge is no respector of person a day stored with indignation which will not be mitigated but be poured out in full vials can the heart but tremble that is the subject of these thoughts They that sin with boldnesse set the day of judgement at a distance from their soul but if we will provoke repentance think with Jerom you alwayes hear the Trumpet of the last day sounding in your ears Arise ye dead and come to judgement Excellent was the stratagem to stir up repentance wh●ch is storied of a Christian King of Hungary who being on a time sad and pensive his brother a jolly Courtier would needs know the cause of his sadnesse O Brother said the King I have been a great sinner against God and know not how to die or to appear before God in judgement his Brother making a jest of it said These are but melancholy thoughts the King replyed nothing at present But the custome of the Country was that if the Executioner came and sounded a Trumpet before any mans door he was presently led to execution the King in the dead time of the night sends the Executioner to sound the Trumpet before his brothers door who hearing it and seeing the Messenger of death sprang into the Kings presence beseeching to know in what he had ●ffended Alas Brother said the King you have never offended me And is the sight of my Executioner so dreadful and shall not I who have greatly offended fear to be brought before the judgement seat of Christ a singular cure for jovial contempt of repentance the sense of judgement is a strong summons to repentance Seventhly Seriously apprehend the possibility nay probability nay the positive certainty of pardon I have before told you 7. Help to repentance Repentance is the result of faith despair deters duty hope in Israel is the great help to repentance the Law leads to conviction but the Gospel to conversion despair is the devils lock to impenitency look up therefore see there is mercy with the Lord that he may be feared and plenteous Redemption that he may be sought unto apprehend then the price of mans sin paid the justice of God satisfied the pardon sealed in and by the blood of Christ and proclaimed in the Gospel so that it is thine with certainty if received with a prostrate soul and sued out by serious repentance nothing needs to deter God is reconciled therefore return unto him 8. Help to repentance Eighthly Soak the heart in the blood of Jesus take every day a turn of meditation in Mount Calvary cast thy eyes on a crucified Christ read the nature of thy sin the provoked wrath of God and passionate loves of a Saviour it is suppling to the Adamantine heart and swasive to the most obdurate soul I have before noted its force and efficacy to repentance be perswaded daily to contemplate the Crosse of Christ 9. Help to repentance Ninthly Speed will much facilitate repentance sin may be removed before it be settled by custome but then it is difficult youth is pliable to precepts strong under burdens dexterous and active in businesse when old age is infirm and impotent the piety of youth is the horrour of the devil the honour of Religion the case and joy of the soul let not sin become customary if you will ever cast it off for it will become a second nature linger not in what you will be rid of for the longer you linger you will be more loth to part like Austins modo sine modo and paululum quod ibat in longum your anon will never come and our little longer in sin will last for ever by the good will of nature singularly good is the counsel of Basil If the thing be honest keep it to the end if filthy and hurtfull why dost thou continue in it doth any that desires to ease the stomach of choler increase it by a continued bad and intemperate dyet if ever you will repent repent betimes late repentance is rarely true but ever difficult 10. Help to repentance Tenthly Sue for it at the hands of God Repentance is Gods gift and therefore must be begged it is Christs purchase the Covenants promise and may be begged with confidence Jesus Christ is exalted to give Repentance therefore go to him in Faith all meanes is ineffectual without Gods Blessing Let therefore Prayer enforce all meanes to this end whilst you sit under the Word study the nature of God examine your selves sit loose to the world see life its brevity and the limitation of the day of Grace seriously expect the day of judgement sensibly apprehend a pardon soake the heart in the blood of Christ and speed Repentance second all with earnest Supplication say with Ephraim O Lord turn thou me and so shall I be turned so shall your stony heart be taken from you and you shall possesse this necessary grace of Repentance in the truth of it which God of his mercy grant us OF Holiness HEB. 13.14 Follow peace with all men and holinesse without which no man shall see the Lord. HEre are two duties enjoyned together in one and the same precept though not enjoyned w●th the same penalty peace and holinesse the latter hath a sad threat added if we misse it without which no man shall see the Lord. It is somewhat like that charge Exod 28.34 35. that the Vest of Aaron should be on the skirt with a Pomegranate and a Bell both of gold yet the use of the Bell was far above that of the Pomegranate that the sound thereof may be heard when he goeth in before the Lord that he dye not So are peace and holiness two golden graces or blessings peace is like the Pomegranate
but his choice and option if he be plagued with Eternal death 't is no other than that which he prefer'd before Eternal life The Lord sets life and death before us as by Moses the typical so by Christ the true Messiah if we will choose Christ and accept of him we may have Eternal life if not we must be sure of Eternal death he that refuseth the Eternal weight of glory in one end of the scale chooseth Eternal punishment in the other end as our first Parents did choose the curse by their voluntary refusing of the blessing which bad choice of theirs laid obnoxious unto Eternal pain both themselves and their posterity who cannot complain of God for inflicting the death they are by corrupt nature liable to sith besides their choice in their first parents and in their own persons they who live under the Gospel have as great a mercy tendred by the second Adam as Eternal death is a grievous punishment yea the Atheist who as 't was said of Antiochus Epiphanes takes more pains to go to Hell Buntings Itinerarie than some others to go to Heaven must confesse that he deserves his wages of Eternal death as his Pay sith he hath toyled and drudged all his life long in the Devils Service only to fit himself for misery 3. The Schoolmen have observed from the Philosopher Aquia Supl. Q. 99. Art 1. that the punishment ought to be levied according to the dignity of him against whom the offence is committed He is more severely punish't who gives his Soveraign a box on the ear than he that does so to his equal Now wicked men and that without Repentance sin against the Eternal God by the violation of his Honourable Law which he resolves to magnisie Isa 42.21 And as they ought not in their own case so they are unqualified to be competent Judges of their Own offences sit'h they cannot see the thousandth part of that evil there is in the least sin and therefore unfit to apportion the punishment which ought to be levied by the Judge of all the World who knows what is meet Gen. 18.25 and will do nothing but what is right proportionable to the offence committed against the supreme Majesty Peccatum in Deum crimen laesae Majestatis Adsit Regula peccatis quae paenas irroget aequas Horatius for where there is satisfaction required there must be proportion which would not at all be here in this case without some kind of infiniteness and because that cannot be found in any meer creature in value it must necessarily be in duration for if after millions of years it could ever be said the damned had fully satisfied Gods justice it might be said they shall be set free as the prisoner from the Goal having paid the debt Luk. 12 58 59 a thing impossible but because the sufferings of the damned which are all the satisfaction they can give infinite justice in regard of the subject being finite Ex parte subjecti and consequently not of nifinite value they must be so in duration at least à parte post as to the future for the defect of satisfaction in the temporal finite punishment of any meer creature Excep If it be excepted Excep neither by the Eternal punishment of men is Gods justice satisfied for then this punishment would not be Eternal Contradictio in Adjecto which is a contradiction in the very thing it self if ever it could be said of Gods justice now 't is satisfied Repl. I Reply 1. Let it be very well considered Repl. whether Gods iustice being infinite and consequently an essential Attribute in God doth not require from man upon his delinquency that satisfaction which is of infinite value Infiniti valoris he the party offended being essentially of infinite dignity Now such a satisfaction i. e. of infinite value could only be made by Christ who being the Surety of the Covenant and suffered in our stead is God-man in one person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 20.28 and gave plenary satisfaction unto God John 1.14 1 Tim. 3.16 Rom. 3.25 2. Though Eternal punishment may not be called a satisfaction made or given to the party offended yet 't is that which the party offending must ever be in making or giving Parti laesae by the order of the Supreme Judge who is to hear the cause and apportion the punishment to the fault because he the delinquent wanting that infinitenesse in dignity of person which doth bear a proportion to the dignity of the party offended must make this up by an infinite duration of punishment which may perhaps in some sort be termed satisfaction performed to the Law it being the payment of the whole in the obligation Satisfactio legi praestita Peysolutio totius quod est in obligatione for upon defailance of paying the debt of duty and obedience what more is required of the debt of penalty and suffering to be paid Debitum officii Debitumsupp li cii than death in its full latitude temporal spiritual and Eternal so that in this respect 't is no error to call it satisfaction but if we speak of a compleat satisfaction made to the party offended Parti offensae it must be granted that none but the only Son of God did or could give it thus for the first great impediment pretended in regard of the Subject Or 2. It is because there is a possibility of freedom from the Prison of Hell and then this must be either by Covenant and Compact which whoever affirms proferat tabulas for 't is fan y not faith which believeth any such thing without the written Word Or by commutation and what place for such a fancy Is any so absurd as to think there are any in Hell who belong to God and in Heaven who belong to the Divel that there should be matter for such a Chimaera such a strange fiction Or by force and what were this but to over-power Omnipotency Or by fraud and what were this but to out-wit Divine Wisdome and to put a trick upon him whose understanding is infinite Or by a price paid and what is it that offending man can lay down as a sufficient compensation or satisfaction to an offended God who is infinite for the injury done unto him which God should accept of 1 Sam. 2.25 Godw. Rom. Antiq. l. 1. Sect. 2. ●● Ephes 5.6 is hard to fancy and woful experience if nothing else will may convince vain man that 't is impossible to procure Or by manumission now this doth belong only to obedient servants not to ch●ldren of disobedience Or 3. The impediment is because there is an impossibility in regard of the subject as is pretended of undergoing torments of an eternal duration by a finite creature Ex parte subjecti and therefore all the Hell Socinians c. grant Socinus Racov. Cat. Crellius Bidle Richardson c.
steps 312 313 314. F Faith commended p. 455 456. Faith distinguished into its kinds 456 457. Faith defined 449. By its genus and subject 460. causes 461 462 463 464 465 466 467. Effects 468 469 470 471 472 473 474. properties 475 476 477 478. and opposites 479. 480 481. Faith if saving receiveth whole Christ on judgement and choice 475. Faith groweth and persevereth and purifieth 477 478 479. Faith and salvation how connexed 473 474. Faith strengthned by the Covenant of Redemption 228. Faith how it justifieth 421. Faith greatly opposed 480. Faith goeth before Repentance in order of nature as its cause 490. Faith in its essential acts without its reflexions is the cause of Repentance 491. Faith of Scriptures authorities to be strengthened 103 104. False Repentance seven kinds viz. Popish 515. Pagan 516. Profane ibid. Legal 517. Slaves ibid. Sullen p. 518. Quakers Repentance ibid. 519. Fall of man was from his own mutable self-determining will 111. Federal transaction did pass between God the Father and Son and that from all eternity 219 226. Fear of God the duty of such who believe God is 58 59. Fear accompanieth true Repentance 542. Filiation to God is by Adoption and Regeneration 447. Filial priviledges Believers comforts 451 452 453. Flesh an enemy to Faith 480. Flesh crucified by union with Christ 391 392. Forme of sound words to be held fast 670. By Magistrates how 674 675 676 677. By Ministers how 678 679. By the People how 680 681. Freedome of God Father and Son in transacting the Covenant for mans Redemption 224. Free-grace the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 477. Fruitfulnesse a note of union with Christ 392 393. G God is p. 30 31. Gods being is evident in nature 31. 48. and Scripture 48 49. Gods being consistent with the adversity of the just and prosperity of the wicked and evidenced by them 45 50 51. God is the only efficient of Faith 461 462. God could not be the original of sin 111. Gods glory the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. God as Judge justifieth how and when 122. God the object of beatifical vision 654 655. Gospel a good cause 3. Gospel-means to work Faith 465. and call loudly to Repentance 525. Gospel how it justifieth 421. Gospel-Covenant better than the Legal 245 246 247 248. Gosepl-Manner of propounding Repentance is by way of duty and priviledge 426 Gospel-Arguments perswading Repentance most pregnant and moving 527 528. Gospel-Helps to Repentance most powerful and operative p. 533. Grace of God magnified by mans fall 213 214. First cause impulsive of justification 420. Graces are the fruits of the Spirit 390. Grudge not the prosperity of the wicked 645. H Of Hell 621. the wicked turned into it 623. its name explained ibid. nature described 624. its pain ibid. The Properties of its punishment Extremity 628 629. Eternity 628 629. Hell discerned by the Heathen 635. Hell proved by Equity 636 637 638 639 640 641. Merit 636 637 638 639 640 641. No Bar or hinderance 636 637 638 639 640 641. Heresie an hindrance to Faith 480. Heresies and Errors disbanded when we come to heaven 649. Hearing must be fixt and constant 22. So it will help Repentance p. 545. Heart the subject of Faith 459. and seat of Holinesse 558. Heaven 647. it is a Kidgdome how 649. Hindrances to the understanding Scripture what they are and how removed 100 101. Holding fast what it meaneth 5. Holinesse 554. a state trade habit and disposition 555. Holinesse defined 556. Holinesse the designe of God in all his acts 559 560. Holinesse constitutes a Christian or Saint 561 562. Holinesse spreads over the whole man 558. Holinesse changeth a man 557. Holinesse necessary unto communion with God 563. Holinesse its properties 567. Companions peace righteousnesse unblameablenesse 268. its opposites filthinesse of flesh of spirit over-reaching and hypocrisie 569 570. Holinesse of the Publisher proveth the Scripture to be the Word of God 94. And so doth the holy matter pressed in it 91 92. and its holy Arguments 93. Humility the effect of sensible impotency p. 214. Humiliation of Christ 278. three steps of it 280 281. the manner of it 287. Humanity of Christ a miracle of humiliation 280. Humility must go before honour 333. I Ignorance inconsistent to Faith 479. dangerous 483. Impotency of man since the fall very great 202 203. Impossible to recover of himself 204. Impotent in respect of the Law 205. Of the Gospel 206. 207. Impotency determined in Scripture ibid. Impotency no bar to the demand of duty direction of means or infliction of punishment 210 211 212 213. Impotency is to be seen and known 214. Infants distempers and death an effect and evidence of original sin 143. So is their aptitude to evil and backwardness to good 144. Inheritance of Saints hath no corruption succession or division p. 441. Inheritance why heaven so called 661. Inherited by Adoption 662 663. Donation 662 663. Redemption 662 663. Inspiration what it imports 87. Inventions and many inventions what they signifie 106. Indignation accompanieth Repentance 442. Judgements of God prevented 521 522. and removed by Repentance 523 524. Last Judgement provokes holiness 563. and perswades to Repentance 531 532 533 Judge whom 608. Manner of his coming 610. Last Judgement its day 605. It is particular and general 606. why it must be and when 607. its method and order 609. Justice of God satisfied by the death of Christ 301. Justification its nature opened 402 c. Differeth from Sanctification ib. Justified implies guilt plea and acquittance p. 403. Justified persons are acquitted on their plea. 419. Justification its causes Gods free grace 421 422. Christs satisfaction 421 422. The Gospel 421 422. Faith 421 422. God Law-giver 421 422. God Judge 421 422. Works 421 422. Spirit 421 422. Justification by what plea procured 406. Justification not from Eternity 423. Justification procured by Christs death 341. is evident by the Possibility 342 343 344. Necessity 342 343 344. Nature 342 343 344. Cause 342 343 344. Vicegerency 342 343 344. Peculiarity to this end 342 343 344. Justification doth manifest the wisdome holinesse and mercy of God 428. Justification the priviledge of the Gospel-Covenant 140. Justification the ground of comfort p. 429. to be sought by sinners 430. prized by Saints 432. K Kingly Office of Christ what it is and how executed 255 256. Kingly Office the Saints priviledge by Adoption 441. L Law Regulans 110. Law Regulata 110. Law of God the rule of rectitude ib. Law given Adam in Creation was partly natural partly positive 108. Law requireth duty exacts penalty terrifieth and stupifieth 204 205. Law general and special obeyed by Jesus Christ 223 224. Law fulfilled in Christ his death 301. Law given in Paradise was not executed or abrogated but released and dispensed with p. 413 414 415. Light burning and shining 1. Likenesse of sinful flesh what it means and how Christ was found in it 281 282. Likenesse to God
in dignity offices and dominion the priviledge of Adoption 441. Love of God Father and Son manifest in the Covenant of Redemption 227. Love of Christ in his death 293. and union with Sinners 386. Love to God the evidence of Faith concerning his being 55 56 59. Losse of all good the paine of Hell Natural 625 626. Spiritual 625 626. Eternal 625 626. M Mans composure of body and powers of soul prove that there is a God 41. Man comprehends the whole species of such a creature 106. Man made mutable though holy and why 113. Man is depraved 〈◊〉 sinful 111. Mans misery by sin 173 174 175 p. 176. Man not Angels subjects of Faith 455. Mediator needful 263 264 265. Mediator of the Covenant of Grace who 241 261. Mediator one named man and why named Christ Jesus and why ib. Mediator is Christ and none but Christ 265 266 c. Mediator comfortable in all conditions giving man confidence of accesse to God 254 255. Misery inevitable to such as despise the Mediator ib. Merit of Christ the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. Method in Sermons necessary and profitable 22. Means of Repentance 546. Ministry needful unto Faith 483. Ministers must be burning and shining lights 1 2. Ministers must suffer affliction ib. Mixture of grace and sin is in the best men 167. Mutability the meer cause of mans sin 112. Mutability of mans created estate was just and necessary 113. Mutability attended mans Happinesse as well as Holinesse p. 114. Mutability and its sequel must lead us to God for confirmation 119. N Name of Christ part of his Exaltation 315 what it is 316. how it is above every Name 317 318 319 320. how Christs Name was given by God 320 321. Nature by three Arguments proveth that there is a God 30 31. Natural Agents by their operation proveth a God 42. Natural conscience proveth a God 43. Nature stained with Adams sin 151. Nature without Divine revelation discovereth not a Trinity nor yet opposeth it when revealed 77 78 79 80 81. Nature of God well studied a special help to repentance 547. New Covenant better than the old 243. Nobility no cause of boasting 145. Notes of repentance 539 540. O Object External could not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Object of New better than of the Old Covenant 251. Obedience in Subjection to Commands Submission to Providence The duty of such who believe God is 63 64. Offence at preaching Gods anger against sin is groundless 192 193. Offices of Christ fit him to be the only Mediator 271 272. Offices of Christ communicated to the Saints 441. Old Covenant abrogated 252. Opposition of Christ consistent with subjection to Christ how 327 328. Sin Originale originans discussed 135 c. Originale originatum discussed 150 151 c. Original sin is a defection 112. Original how said of mans pravity 155 156. Original sin is hard to be understood 134. Original sin confirmed by counsel 144. Acknowledged by Heathens ib. Original sin is called man and old man in what sense p. 157 158 159 160 161 162. a body and a body of sin 162 163 164. Original sin hath polluted mans nature 151 152 153. Original sin is to be subdued 170. Original sin to be conf ssed and bewailed 165. Original sin imbitters all worldly comforts 171. Ordinances argue original sin in mans nature 153. Ordinances means of union with Christ 383. P Pain in Christ his death 285 286. Pardon of sin freely given how 425 426. Parents beget their children in their own image 151. Parents good yet children by nature evil 152. Parents care for posterity quickned by the miscarriage of the first Parent of us all 147. Parents childrens looking glasses by which they dresse their lives ib. Penitent must be humbled and why 498 499 450. Peace a duty and blessing to be pursued 556. Peace an effect of Faith 47. Pelagius the first opposer of original sin p. 144. Person in the Godhead what it is 69. Persons in the Godhead three 70. Plurality of persons in the Godhead proved 71 72 73. Persons in the Godhead distinguished not divided 75. their order declared 76. Person promises properties and providences of Christ all belong to believers 393 394. Persecution of Saints a crimson sin 386. Perseverance of Saints certain 387. Pleading at Gods bar necessary to justification 404. Plea of not guilty can never procure justification at Gods bar 405. Popish Repentance false 515. Pravity and inbred corruption what it is 155. the parts of it 156. Pravity and a naughty nature is in every man 150. Pravity of the nature of man evidenced by Scripture 151 152 153. Salvation of Christ 151 152 153. Sacraments 151 152 153. Sad effects 151 152 153. Prayer an help to repentance 552. Prayer answered an effect of Faith 469. Prayer its extent and encouragement p. 262. Preparations of heaven how from the foundation of the world 660 661. Preparation to last Judgement characterised 617 618. Priestly office of Christ and its parts 272 273. Price of the soul of Christ his death 298. Price paid for man was not idem but tantundem 425. Principle and cause two distinct things 69. Principles good and bad two distinct blasphemous to assert 112. Promises were made to Christ on the account of his satisfaction for mans sin 209 300. Promises of Justification Sanctification Resurrection Eternal life The Promises of the better Covenant 240 241. Promises of temporal mercy better under the New than under the Old Covenant 248. Protestant doctrine of the imputation of Christs righteousness defended 387. Profane repentance what it is p. 516. Prosperity of profane no plea against Deity 50 51. Q Quakers repentance vile false and wicked 518 519. R Reason and sensation evince the Divine authority of the Scriptures 90. Revelation from God admitted by all and reason it should 88 89. Revelation not to be received untill cleared to be of God ibid. Rectitude is conformity to a Rule 107. Rectitude of Adam by Creation was of the whole man understanding will and sensitive appetite 109. Rectitude natural and not natural to man how 111. Regeneration explained 442. it s Synonimas 443. it is defined ib. Regeneration compared with natural generation 443 444. they agree in cause subject and manner of production ib. 445. disagree in properties 446. Religion making known Christs satisfaction most excellent 350. Relations of men subject to Gods wrath p. 187. Relation to God reason of comfort and duty 436. Repentance not to be repented explained 485. In its Nature 487. Necessity 520. Notes 539. Next way to it 546. Repentance defined 487. Repentance is a recession from sin and return to God 502 503 504 505. Return to God the second part of Conversion 506 507 508. Repentance seven false kinds 515 516 517 518. Repentance contemned when 334 335 336. Repentance neglected when and with what issue 537 538. Resurrection possible and credible 579 582 583 584 585. what it means ib. who to be
raised 480. to be believed 581. reasons of it 586 587 588 589. Resurrection the effect of the New Covenant and union with Christ 388. Resurrection after what manner and with what difference 591. how effected p. 593. it is to be believed 595. a ground of comfort ib. 596 597 598 599. a ground of terror 560. how made happy to our selves 603 604. Revenge accompanieth repentance 545. S Sacraments in the Old Testament were various and many 122. Tree of life a Sacrament in Paradise ibid. Sacraments prove corruption of nature 153. Saints are good company 3. Salvation by Christ an Argument of original pravity 153. Salvation the end of Faith 473. Salvation difficult 482. Sanctification Covenant priviledge 14. Satisfaction of Christ explained 337 339 340 341. its Matter 408 Form 412. Terms 417. Satisfaction not made by man himself 407. but by Christ 408 409 410. and how done 402. Satisfaction of Christ the only plea to procure justification at Gods bar ib. Scripture the Word explained 86. Scripture proves a God 48. Scripture similitudes shew the union between Christ and Believers 384. Scripture only discovers mans natural pravity 151. Sea its course and confinement proved a God 35 36. Secret sins discovered by natural conscience 44. Sense of Scriptures power on the soul prove them Divine 98. Sense of sin and sorrow for it are precursive parts of true Repentance 492. Sense of a short life helps to Repentance 349. Self sinful to be studied 168. Self examination an help to Repentance 548. Severity of Gods justice 295. Sense its pain in hell 626. Constituted by Real presence of all evil Impression of justice Personal Feeling 627 628. Sentence of last day 614. Sight of things invisible an effect of Faith 471. Sin to be feared and fled from 643 644. Sin a defect nothing positive 112 113. it is most unreasonable p. 114. subjects man to an impotency of saving himself 115. justifieth God in punishing man 116 117. should rather be gotten out than inquired how it came into the world 113. Sins evil seen in Christ his death 294. Sin better discovered by the New than Old Covenant 250. Sin abolished by Christ his death 302 303. Sin is imputed inherent extensive diffusive 165. Sin may exist and prevaile in a true Saint 505. Sin mortified by the Spirit 389. Sinner elect and called the subjects of Faith 460. Shame was in Christs death 206. Sensible sinner subject of true repentance 489. Society in heaven what 658 659. Sons of God partakers of the whole essence of the Father is the same numerical nature 66. 67. Sonship to God is by Creation 435. Generation 435. Marriage 435. Adoption 435. Sonship by Adoption Honourable 437 440. Free 437 440. Permanent 437 440. Sonship to God marks of it p. 453 454. Sorrow and humility usher faith 476. Soul of Christ suffered 410. Souls in heaven subject to Jesus Christ 324 325. Spirit of God in man a signe of union with Christ 389. Spirit of God justifieth how 422. Spirits evil shall be chained when Saints go to heaven 652. Speed facilitates repentance 452. Sting of conscience a note of Deity 45. Sting in Christ his death 286 287. Study of Scriptures a duty 99 100. Suns scituation and motion proveth a God 33 34. Sullen repentance what 518. Systems of Religion profitable for Ministers and people 5. they instruct in the faith antidote error 7 12. Adorn the truth 16. help the understanding 17. the memory 18. affections 19. such are found in Scripture 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. to be studied by young Divines 21. T Temptation of Satan did not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Things in heaven subject to Christ what 323 324. Things on earth subject to Christ what they are 325. Things under the earth 326. Every Tongue what it means 329. Terms of Covenant between God the Father and his Son 225. Torments of Hell Exquisite Intolerable Easelesse Remediless Universal and various 629 630 631. Tryal of last day shall be 1. Universal 2. Formal 3. Impartial 4. Exact 5. Perspicuous 6. Supreme 610 611 612. its consequence 613. Trinity proved by Old Testament text 72. New Testament 74 75. Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance 50. U Union of two natures in Christ without confusion or transmutation 270. Union of believers and Christ necessary p. 377. what kind it is not 379. what kind it is 381 382. its causes 383. grounds 385. its marks 389 390 391 392. it is to be sought by sinners and improved by Saints 396 397 398 399 400. Unbelievers miserable 48. not Gods sons 447. Vocation its twofold estate 437. Vocation a Resurrection a new Creation 361. W Will of God signified in a rule of rectitude 107. Witness from heaven differs in six particulars from witnesse on earth 67 68. we have both to prove Christ the Son of God 66. Word of God declareth his wrath 181 182 183. World visible its being and parts 31 32. World an enemy to faith 481. to be slighted by ●aints 549. Works their use in point of Covenant 126 127. how they justifie 422. Wrath of God what and how aggravated 177 178 179 180. falleth on man here 184. fully at the day of judgement ibid. sheweth his justice and wisdome p. 193 194 195 196. it is to be avoided 197 198. Y Yoak of the Law borne by Jesus Christ 280 281. Z Zeal Negative p. 2. Affirmative p. 2. Zeal accompanieth true Repentance 544. FINIS