Selected quad for the lemma: faith_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
faith_n covenant_n seal_n seal_v 4,393 5 10.3434 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A35955 Therapeutica sacra shewing briefly the method of healing the diseases of the conscience, concerning regeneration / written first in Latine by David Dickson ; and thereafter translated by him. Dickson, David, 1583?-1663. 1664 (1664) Wing D1408; ESTC R24294 376,326 551

There are 38 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of the Israelits who were ignorant of the deceitfulness of their own heart and of their inability to perform what they promised he saith ver 28 29. They have well said all that they have spoken Therefore unto the tying a man in this bond of the covenant this morall honesty is sufficient albeit to salvation it is not sufficient but in order thereto a mean of God's appointment Now that there is such a thing as we call morall integrity or honesty which differeth from the true Christians spiritual honesty or sincerity it is plain from these places of Scripture which speak of this integrity of heart in such persons as were not renewed because they intended no other thing then they pretended Thus Abimelech excuseth himself to God when he took away Sarah Abrahams wife from him thinking Sarah had been his sister and not his wife Gen 20. 6. In the integrity of my heart and innocency of my ●●ads have I done this And this the Lord doth acknowledge to be true ver 17. So also the captains that came with their companies to David in Ziklag are said to have a perfect heart because they were morally honest and resolved as they professed uprightly to make David King and to help him in the war and not betray him 1 Chron. 12. 33. 38. Of the sundry wayes of mens framing of the covenant of Grace AS we told there was a covenant of works one truly so called of Gods institution and another false sort of covenant of works of mans framing So it is also in the mater of the covenant of Grace there is one truly so called and another sort false and counterfeit of mans framing That which is of Gods framing is the covenant that God makes with the Church for giving righteousness and life by faith in Jesus Christ that which we call a counterfeit covenant is the covenant which men frame unto themselves upon any other condition then faith Such was the counterfeit covenant of the false apostles who corrupted the Gospel-covenant among the Galatians whereof the Apostle Paul complaineth Gal. 1. 6 7. challenging them that they had forsaken God who called them to the grace of Christ and were turned over to another Gospel that is to another covenant of grace then the true one which is only one and not various but by the troublers of the Church was changed into another frame for the true covenant was perverted and corrupted by these who went about to joyn together Justification by works and Justification by grace through faith in Christ which two sorts of covenant are inconsistent and do mutually overthrow one another So also did the Pharisee Luke 18. 11 12. corrupt and pervert both the covenant of works and the covenant of grace he corrupted and perverted the covenant of works because he put up to God some external good works for the perfect obedience of the law and he perverted the covenant of grace because albeit he did acknowledge the grace of God and gave him thanks for giving him ability and power to do good works and for infusing habits of piety and justice in him yet he exalted himself and took the thanks and praise to himself who had made good use of these ver●uous habits God I thank thee saith he that I am not like other men c. 2. Like unto this fault is the errour of many of whom some makes the act of faith brought forth by the power of natural free-will to be the condition of the covenant contrary to the doctrine of the Gospel which makes saith infused to be the gift of God renouncing its own righteousness and the merit of all works also and resting on Christ to be the condition For the sentence of the Apostle standeth firm and unmovable Rom. 11. 16. If it be by grace it is no more of works c. Other some make this the condition of the covenant that Christ should pay for mortal sins by his own temporal sufferings and so take away everlasting punishment but will have the sinner himself to pay for veniall sins by temporal sufferings partly in this life and partly in purgatory Other some dream of framing the covenant of grace thus if a man do all the good he is able and hath a will to serve God better then before they conceive that God must take the will for the perfect dead and so for good payment Which counterfeit conditions and other such like inventions of self-pleasing conceits are all of them nothing else but the adulterating both of the covenant of works and of the covenant of grace appointed of God by which inventions men deceive themselves to their own perdition Now that such perverting of the covenant of works and of grace are rife frequent among men experience may prove For before Christs coming this was the way of carnal Israelits Rom. 10. 3. and Rom. 9. 30. For they being ignorant of the righteousness of God went about to establish their own inherent righteousness and would not subject themselves to the righteousness of God And of the Galatians it is said chap. 5. 4. Christ is become of none effect unto you whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from grace that is ye who seek righteousness or justification by worke have renounced so far as in you lyeth grace to be had by Christ and experience daily sheweth the same disposition in many professed Christians Quest. Are not then such corrupters of the covenant of grace loosed from their obligation wherein by their baptism they were tyed to seek righteousness by faith only Ans. No for albeit by so doing they prove themselves to be corrupters and falsifiers of their covenant to their own perdition if they repent not yet they stand obliged still before God to their covenant sealed in baptism For the covenant of God with man cannot be dissolved by mens treachery and without Gods consent not only because the covenant of God with men in regard of the perpetual equity thereof hath in it a perpetual obligation but also because the soveraign dominion of God hath the force of a law to oblige them whom God hath taken in among his people that being once his confederat subjects they should remain still his subjects For as circumcision was a seal of covenanted righteousness by faith So baptism is a seal of the same covenanted righteousness by faith whether the covenanters remain constant unto their covenant or not as we see in the Israelits who albeit they were polluted with idolatry in Egypt and albeit they proved rebellious in the wilderness and in the land of promise were found often guilty of breach of covenant yet still in the Scripture they are called God's people and the Lords interest and right in them stood fast and their right also unto the external priviledges of the citizens of God's kingdom remained fast also untill the time that for their open and obstinat rejecting of Christ the children of the kingdom were
creature presuppose innocent is called Grace because it is impossible that a meer creature can properly merit any good thing of God because the creature neither hath nor can have that which it hath not received Rom. 11. 35. who hath first given to Him and it shall be recompenced to him again Sometime Grace is taken for every gift or good bestowed by God upon the ill deserver in which sense gists common to elect and reprobat are called by the name of Grace Rom. 1. 5. Ephes. 4. 7. Sometime Grace is taken in opposition to the pactio●all merit of works or to the reward due by debt covenanted as Rom. 4. 4. To him that worketh the reward is not reckoned of grace but of debt In which sense that which is given for works is not given of grace Rom. 11. 16. and in this sense we take Grace as it is opposed to the covenant of works for the condition of the covenant of works is the giving perfect obedience to the law But the condition of the covenant of grace is the receiving of Christ by faith unto righteousnesse and life offered in the Gospel without the works of the law which covenant may thus be described The covenant of grace is a contract between God and men procured by Christ upon these tearms that whosoever in the sense of their own sinfulnesse shall receive Christ Jesus offered in the Gospel for righteousnesse and life shall have Him and all the benefits purchased by Him according to the covenant of Redemption and that God will be his God and the God of his children This covenant of grace is founded upon the covenant of Redemption past between God and Christ wherein it was agreed that all the elect given unto Christ shall be reconciled in due time to God and that to this end this grace should be preached to bring about the reconciliation and therefore Christ is called the Mediatour of the new covenant Heb. 12. 22. Of Infants interest in this Covenant Quest. WHat interest have infants in this covenant Ans. The same which they had since the first expresse and formall making thereof with Abraham to whom God promised to be his God and the God of his children whose children all are who are in Christ Gal. 3. 27 28 29. For of the redeemed some come to age whom God having called by the preaching of the Gospel doth induce and effectually move to embrace solemnly the offered fellowship with God and his saints in Christ and to consecrat themselves and their children unto the service of God There are other redeemed ones who die in their infancy before they come to the use of reason to whose salvation God hath expresse respect in making his covenant with their parents that he will not have them excluded from the blessing when he calls their parents to him but in the common offer of grace and reconciliation by Christ he makes the promise jointly to the parents and the children for in one sentence and as it were with one breath He saith I will be thy God and thy seeds after thee Gen. 15. 17. whereof the Apostle maketh good use Acts 2. 39. declaring the promise to be made to the Jews and their children and to the called Gentiles and their children And upon this ground Paul and Silas timeously did offer consolation to the Jailour trembling and anxious what way he should be saved Acts 16. 31. saying Believe in Christ Iesus and thou shall be saved thou and thy house As for the maner how the Lord dealeth with the souls of infants in converting them the Scripture doth not speak for this lieth among the secrets of God which doth not concern us to search after Deut. 29. 29. It should be sufficient to us that God in covenanting with the parents promiseth to be the God of their children And according to this covenant the Lord complains of their staying and offering their children unto idols calling them His own sons and daughters Ezek. 16. 20. and upon this ground in the second command the Lord promiseth to shew mercy to the thousand generation of believing parents and 1 Cor. 7. 14. the Apostle doth call the children of one of the parents believing holy children because of their consecration unto God by the believing confederat parent and in regard of Gods right and interest in them as the children of His own family by covenant And Christ our Lord upon this ground doth call the children of confederat parents burgesses of heaven of such is the kingdom of heaven Matth. 19. 13 14. and because infants are dedicat to Christ to be taught and governed by Him in His own way and order they are called disciples Acts 15. 10. as the disputers for the circumcision of Christians children as well as of their parents after the law of Moses do make it manifest and in the institution of baptism our Lord gives the priviledge of the covenant unto every nation no lesse then to the Iews that by covenant whole nations might be drawn in and given up as disciples to His doctrine Matth. 28. 29. make all nations disciples by your doctrine baptizing them c. that the children with the parents might be partakers by baptism of the seal of the covenant for the righteousnesse of faith no lesse then the children of Israelites were by circumcision Of the means to draw on the making of this covenant OF these means we have spoken in the fourth article of the covenant of Redemption and need not to insist more about them then to name them The first mean to draw men into this blessed covenant and to keep them in it is the externall revelation of the will of God for teaching men how great their sin and misery is and how they may be reconciled and delivered by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and how they may testifie their thankfulnesse being reconciled for such a mercy which grounds of saving knowledge are fully and faithfully set down in holy Scripture and committed to His servants in the ministry who should in preaching of the Gospel inform and perswade men to repent and imbrace the grace of Christ and put on His sweet yoke of obedience upon them The second mean is after application of the Lords word to the hearers for convincing them of sin in them and righteousnesse in Christ and judgement to follow to wit of absolution of the believer and of condemnation of such as believe not To receive into the bond of this covenant of grace all that appear seriously to consecrat themselves and their children to the faith and obedience of the doctrine of our Lord Jesus Christ without determining whether they be regenerat for the present or not The third mean is the solemn sealing of this covenant for righteousnesse of faith and salvation through Christ by baptizing both the parents that accept the covenant and their children also and by exhortations promises and comminations and all other arguments which may more and more
the uttering of the promise did not direct his speech unto Adam and Evah but to the devil by way of threatning and cursing him and his seed even all the reprobat in the audience of Adam and Evah that our first parents over-hearing the curse of the serpent and his seed and the promise of Christs incarnation in laying hold upon the promiser by faith might be justified and saved as privat persons after the same way as other believers after them should be justified and saved This their faith in Christ the Lord did foster and augment by his doctrine taught unto them and by the prescribing typicall sacrifices to be offered in faith to God for remission of sins And the Lord did admit their children into the externall fellowship of this covenant without putting difference between one and another outwardly as we see in Cain and Abel of which two the one to wit Cain was a covenanter in the fl●sh outwardly and in the letter only for he was destitute and void of saving faith the other to wit Abel was both outwardly and inwardly a covenanter not in the letter only but in the spirit also indued with lively justifying and saving faith in Christ to be incarnat and to die for his own people as the Apostle testifieth reckoning him up among believers justified by faith Heb. 11. 4. 3. After the flood God did not make the covenant with every man nor with any family by way of explicit and formall paction except Abraham and his family only of whom the Messiah God the Mediatour was to come according to the flesh and with him the Lord confirmed the covenant by adding unto it the Sacrament of circumcision as the seal of righteousnesse and justification by faith 4. In the wildernesse at mount Sinai that the Lord might make evident the necess●●y of justification by faith in Christ to come he did repeat the law to works and to them that did acknowledge their si●● he did set forth Christ their deliverer under the v●●l of sacrifices and leviticall types and the very same is the covenant now whereunto Christ and his ministers laying aside the vail of the ceremonies did openly invite their hearers that acknowledging their sins and renouncing confidence in their own power and worth they should cast themselves into the arms of Christ the Saviour that through him they might obtain justification and life eternall We see here indeed a diverse maner of dispensing and outward managing the making of the covenant with men but the covenant was still the same clothed and set forth in a diverse maner and did no other wayes differ then and now but as one and the self same man differeth from himself cloathed sutably one way in his minority and another way in his riper age 5. If the covenanters therefore be compared among themselves in respect of diverse dispensations the covenanters in spirit after Christs incarnation are in a better condition then the believers before Christs coming for the believers before Christ incarnat under the pedagogie of the law did lye under a servitude and bondage as to the outward man for then the sons and heirs not come to age did differ nothing from servants Gal. 4. 1. and in regard of the inward man they saw the mystery of salvation albeit savingly yet more obscurely for through the vail they saw the mystery of salvation to be had by Christ but after Christs coming the Lord dealt more liberally with believers because by their freedom from the leviticall ceremonies taking away the vail they may behold with open face the glory of the Lord as in a mirror and be transformed into the same image from glory to glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord 2 Cor. 3. 18. 6. But as for what concerns the covenanters in the letter and outwardly only they are in worse condition after the coming of Christ then the literall covenanters before his incarnation for the unregenerat under the Gospel are in danger of more heavy judgement then the uncircumcised in heart were before Christ came in regard it is a greater sin to neglect and despise Christ speaking from heaven in the more clear manifestation of himself in the Gospel then it was before Christ came to contemn the darker doctrine of Moses Heb. 2. 3. and 10. 20. Concerning the condition of the Covenant IN receiving or admission of persons who are come to the use of reason into the covenant these three things are to be observed and distinguished one from another first the condition of the person desireing to be in covenant with God for reconciliation and grace through Christ 2. The condition upon which he is entered in covenant 3. The condition required of him for evidencing of his sincere covenanting The first condition required of the man who desireth to enter in the covenant of reconciliation is the acknowledgement of his sins for except a man confesse himself a sinner and unable to help himself Christ rejecteth him and will have nothing to do with him for Christ hath said I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. As for the next the condition of the covenant upon which the man is received and whereby the man becometh a confederat it is his consent to receive the grace offered even Christ with his benefits as he is holden forth in the Gospel or the condition of the covenant is faith receiving Christ for righteousnesse and eternall life As for the third the condition required of the man now entered in the covenant for evidenceing the truth and sincerity of the faith which the covenanter professeth it is the taking on him the yoke of Christ which he layeth on his confederat people or this condition is the covenanters up-giving of himself to Christs government and obedience of his commands and all these three are expressed by Christ Matth. 11. 28. 29. First they that labour and are heavy laden are they whom Christ calleth unto a covenant and fellowship of his grace Secondly he propounds the condition of the covenant to wit that they believe in Christ or come unto Him that in him they may find full relief from sin and misery and in him full righteousnesse and felicity Thirdly he requires of them who do embrace him by faith and so have accepted the condition of the covenant that they give evidence of their faith in him by taking on of his yoke on them take my yoke upon you ●aith he All these three a covenanter in the letter externally will professe to have and to purpose to follow but the true covenanters in spirit have indeed all the three for true faith in Christ or the receiving of Christ offered in the Evangell for justification and salvation which is the condition of the covenant presupposeth the condition of the man who is called to imbrace Christ and draweth after it the condition required of the man covenanting for he that receiveth Christ for righteousnesse and eternall
17. and Lo a voice from heaven saying this is My beloved Son in whom I am well pleased and Ioh. 5. 39. He standeth to all things which were testified of Him in the Scriptures Search the Scriptures for in them ye think to have eternall life and they are they that testifie of Me. And vers 36. He professeth that all that He doth is with the Fathers consent and concurrence and that He came into the World that He might finish what the Father had sent Him to do and suffer which He calls His work that He was about And more specially He shews the agreement past between the Father and Him before He came into the world concerning his incarnation and the discharge of his Mediatory office and his power to give eternall life to those that believe in him for the Father sent him to be incarnat vers 37. and that he with the Father might give eternall life to whomsoever he will and might quicken the dead vers 21. and that he might exercise judgement authority was given to him as the Son of man vers 27. Yea he sheweth that it was agreed upon between the Father and him about all the doctrine which he should reach Iohn 8. 26. I speak to the World these things which I have heard of him and he sheweth that they were agreed about the price of redemption of the elect and about his resurrection from the dead and that his death did fully satisfie the Father Ioh. 10. 15. As the Father knoweth Me even so know I the Father and I lay down My life for the sheep and vers 17. therefore doth the Father love Me because I lay down My life that I might take it again and vers 18. this commandment have I received of the Father And Luke 24. 25. he propones in short the sum of the covenant past between the Father and himself speaking to the two disciples going to Emaus O fools and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken ought not Christ to have suffered these things and to enter in his own glory But most briefly he sheweth the whole mater so oft as he calleth the Father his God and that in respect of the covenant past between God and him to be incarnat and now incarnat indeed The sixth proof THe sixth evidence of the Covenant of Redemption past between the Father and the Son standeth in the heads and articles of the Covenant wherein they were agreed Now there are as many articles of the Covenant as there are injunctions commands and conditions required on the one hand and promises to fulfill all on the other hand as many predictions as there are of Christs sufferings and promises made to the Church through and for Him Of these many we shall touch only at four whereby the faith of believers in Him may be confirmed about their Redemption by Him and whereby the erroneous doctrine of them who evacuat the Covenant of redemption of the elect may be refuted wherein they teach that Christ by His obedience yielded unto the Father even to the death of the crosse did purchase no more but a possibility of salvation and no more grace for the elect then for the reprobat as if He had not purchased a certainty of salvation to be given to any but had suspended all the fruit of His suffering upon the frail mutable inconstant and corrupt free-will of men so that no man can by their doctrine have more certainty of their own salvation then they have of the certainty and stability of their own sickle mind and will and so no more certainty of their own salvation then of their own perdition The order we shall keep in speaking of the articles of the Covenant of Redemption shall be this The first article shall be of the persons redeemed The second article shall be of the price of Redemption to be payed by Christ in the fulnesse of time The third article shall be about the gifts and benefits purchased for and to be given unto the persons Redeemed The fourth article of this Covenant of redemption past between the Father and the Son shall be of the means and wayes whereby the gifts and benefits purchased may be wisely orderly and effectually applyed to the Redeemed In ranking of these articles we do not presuppose a priority of one of them before another in order of nature or time But we choose to speak of them in order of doctrine for our more easie understanding of the mater For the Covenant of Redemption past between the Father and the Son is by way of an eternall decree of the Trinity comprehending all and whatsoever belongeth to Redemption In the decerning of which decree there is not a first nor a last but a joint purpose of God to bring about and accomplish all the heads and articles of the Covenant each in their own due time order and way appointed The first article of the Covenant of Redemption concerneth the persons redeemed THe redeemed in Scripture are pointed forth under sundry expressions sometime they are called the predestinat sometime the elect sometime these whom God foreknew sometime they who are called according to His purpose sometime they that were given to Christ of the Father sometime Christs sheep sometime the children of God c. But whatsoever name they have the persons are the same according to that of the Apostle Rom. 8. 29. 30. whom He did foreknow them He did predestinat to be conform to the image of His Son Moreover whom He did predestinat them He also called and whom he called them he also justified and whom he justified them he also glorified The number and the names of the persons here spoken of are the same and they are called the predestinat in regard that God hath appointed them to a certain end to wit eternall life to be brought thereunto effectually by certain means for the glory of Gods grace They are called elect vers 33. in regard God in the purpose of his good pleasure hath severed them from among the rest of men lying with them in the state of perdition by their own procurement and hath designed them to be partakers of eternall salvation They are called foreknown and written in the book of life in regard God hath comprehended them in his speciall love no lesse distinctly and unchangeably then if he had their names written in a catalogue or book And they are called given unto Christ in regard the redeeming of them and bringing them to life is committed to Christ. But by whatsoever name they are designed the persons redeemed are still the same 2. But whereas the elect given to Christ are called the redeemed it presupposeth that they were considered and looked upon as now fallen by their own fault and lying by their own merit in sin and misery enemies to God and altogether unable to help themselves For this much doth the notion of Redemption or buying-back again import and that it is so
water in a glasse which howsoever it be troubled and tossed remaineth most pure and free of all muddinesse Obj. But at least was there not a conflict in our Lord between his faith and the temptation to doubting Ans. We grant not only a conflict of Christs humane naturall strength with the burden of affliction but also a conflict and wrestling of his faith against the temptation to doubting for wrestling doth not alwayes argue the infirmity of the wrestler for the Angel who is called God Hos. 12. wrestles with Iacob and in God was no infirmity Again wrestling doth not argue alwayes infirmity but doth only evidence the wrestlers power and the importunat obstinacy of an adversary who being repulsed and cast down doth not at first leave the field but riseth up again insists and presseth on so long as it pleaseth the most powerfull party to suffer the adversary to make opposition Obj. But you must grant that in the conflict of Christs humane naturall strength with the affliction and burden of the punishment laid upon him by the Father he was overcome and succumbed and died Ans. Yes indeed but we must put a difference between the conflict of naturall strength with the burden of affliction and the conflict between faith and a temptation unto sin in the conflict of holy humane nature in Christ with the punishment of our sins laid on Him it was not a sin to have his naturall strength overpowered and to lye down under the burden and to lay down his life and die but it was a main part of His obedience it was the performance of His promise and undertaking to yield himself to Justice and to die for us that we might be delivered from death eternall But in the wrestling of His faith with the temptation unto doubting it had been a sin to have yielded in the least degree and that which could not consist with the perfect holinesse of the Mediatour Surety for sinners Obj. But did not the perplexity of His thoughts and the anxiety of His mind diminish something of the vigour and constancy of his faith Ans. It did diminish nothing of the vigour and constancy of His faith for there is a great difference between the troubling of the thoughts and the hesitation or weakening of faith as there is also a great difference between the perturbations of the mind and the perturbation of the conscience For as the mind may be troubled when in the consideration of some difficulty it cannot at first perceive an outgate mean-time the conscience remaining sound and quiet so may the work of the mind 's discoursing be interrupted and at a stay for a time faith mean time remaining untouched wholly sound and quiet For example upon the sudden receiving of a wound or upon an unexpected report of some great losse such as befell Iob the wheels of the reasoning faculty may be at a stand for a time and the conscience in the mean time be quiet yea and faith in the mean time remain strong as we see in Iob● first exercise Now if this may be found in an holy imperfect man in any measure why shall we not consider rightly of the exercise of the holy one of Israel suffering in His humane nature the punishment of our sin Let us consider but one of the passages of our Lords exercise Ioh. 12. 27. 28. Now saith He My Soul is troubled wherein behold the perplexity of His mind smitten with the horrour of the curse due to us coming upon Him then cometh forth what shall I say wherein behold reason standing mute and altogether silent only He lets forth the confession of His perplexity presently after this He subjoyneth Father save Me from this hour wherein behold Holy nature trembling and shrinking to fall into the wrath of the Father and according to the principles of holy nature testifying the simple abhorrency of His soul from such an evill as is the wrath of God His Father which had it not been for love to save our souls He could not have yielded his humane nature to endure or bear it therefore He considering that we were but lost for ever if He should not suffer wrath for us He repeats the sum of the Covenant of Redemption agreed upon But for this cause came I unto this hour And last of all shuts up His speech and exercise in the triumphing voice of victorious and untainted faith Father glorifie thy Name and here He resteth wherewith the Father is so well pleased as that from heaven He speaketh to the hearing of the multitude standing by I have both glorified it and will glorifie it again 10. Among the deepest degrees of the suffering of Christ in His soul we reckon that desertion whereof Christ on the crosse giveth an account crying out My God My God why hast Thou forsaken Me By which speech He doth not mean that then the personall union of the natures was in him dissolved nor yet that God had withdrawn His sustaining strength and help from the humane nature nor that the love of the Father was taken off him nor that any point of the perfection of holinesse was taken from him but his true intent is to shew that God for a time had taken away sensible consolation and felt joy from His humane Soul that so justice might in His sufferings be the more fully satisfied And this is the forsakeing of Him here given to us to understand In which desertion Christ is not to be looked upon simply as He is in His own person the Son of the Father in whom He is alwayes well pleased but as He standeth in the room of sinners Surety and Cautioner paying their debt In which respect He behoved to be dealt with as standing in our name guilty and paying the debt of being forsaken of God which we were bound to suffer fully and for ever if He had not interposed for us 11. The last degree of Christs sufferings wherein He may be said to have descended into hell so far as Scripture in the old Testament or the hystory of Christs passion in the new will suffer us to expound that expression is that curse wherein the full wrath of God and the dregs of that horrible cup was poured forth upon His holy humane nature while heaven and earth and hell seemed to conspire to take vengeance on Him and fully to punish our sins in the person of Him our Surety by that cursed death of the crosse which was the evidence foretold of the malediction of God lying on Him in so far as was necessary to compleet the punishment of losse and feeling both in soul and body And therefore not without ground have Orthodox divines taken-in Christs suffering in His soul and the detaining of His body in the grave put in as the close and last part of Christs sufferings as the true meaning of that expression He descended into hell not only because these pains which Christ suffered both in body and soul were
they shall never perish neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand c. But that we insist not too long in this argument whereof the Orthodox divines have written abundantly in their disputations against the foresaid errour because the adversaries take their pretended arguments from the instability of mens will in the mater of perseverance and from the freedom and power of mans changeable will in the mater of conversion and saving faith and from the maner of Gods speaking to the mixed multitude of both called and not chosen and to them that are both called and chosen we shall content our selves for clearing this covenant betwixt the Father and the Son Mediatour and Redeemer to make the mater fast concerning the elect founding their conversion faith repentance perseverance and salvation upon the unchangeable covenant of Redemption fixed upon the setled agreement between God and God the Son Mediatour and Redeemer as shall be proven from five places of Scripture The first proof is from vers 13. of Isa. 52. to the end of Chap. 53. THe first place is Isa. 52. vers 13. and forward to the end of chapter 53. where we have first the two parties contracters God the Father and Christ for the Father brings forth his confederat Son to be incarnat by covenant his servant whom he imployes in the whole work of Redemption as the meritorious cause and accomplisher of it behold My servant saith God the Father by his Spirit speaking by the Prophet Chap. 52. 13. Next both parties are sure of the event of the paction and of the accomplishing of the whole work gloriously behold saith he My servant shall deal prudently and prosperously He shall be exalted and extolled and be very high vers 13. Thirdly he tells the proper price which Christ the Son shall pay for the Redemption of his people agreed upon by paction to wit the exinanition and humbling of the Son incarnat unto the ignominious death of the crosse that His visage shall be marred more then any man and His form more then the sons of men vers 14. and more particularly Chap. 53. 2. He hath no form nor comelinesse and when we shall see Him there is no beauty that we should desire Him He is despised and rejected of men a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief c. vers 2. 3. He was wounded for our transgressions vers 5. He shall make his Soul an offering for sin vers 10. Fourthly Christ the Son of God incarnat is assured and confirmed of the sweet fruit of his passion in the conversion of many nations whom he should sprinkle with the blood of the covenant and sanctifie by the water of His holy Spirit Chap. 52. 15. He shall sprinkle many nations c. Fifthly God and Christ are agreed and well pleased in the conversion of so many as are elected and given to Christ to have in Him the right of adoption Chap. 53. 10. He shall see his seed that is He shall regenerat the elect and make them His children and see them so to His satisfaction Sixthly no meritorious nor impulsive cause is found in the persons redeemed for which the punishment due to them should be transferred upon the Mediatour Christ our Redeemer for they should be found in themselves but despisers of Christ because of His sufferings Chap. 53. 4. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows yet we did esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted Seventhly no sin nor meritorious cause of punishment is found in Christ the Redeemer for which He should be smitten Chap. 53. 5. 9. He was wounded for our transgressions he had done no violence neither was any deceit in his mouth Eigthly peace and reconciliation and healing of our sinfull and miserable sicknesses and deliverance from wrath are purchased by the price of His blood Chap. 53. 5. the chastisment of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed Ninthly these sufferings Christ did not endure unwittingly or unwillingly but by consent by covenant deliberatly Chap. 53. 7. He was oppressed and he was afflicted yet he opened not his mouth he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter and as a sheep before his shearers is dumb so he opened not his mouth Tenthly the cause of this covenant whereby the price is called for an yielded unto and payed is the only free grace of God and His good pleasure Chap. 53. 10. It pleased the Lord to bruise him He hath put him to grief Eleventhly It is agreed between the Father and the Son that our sins should be imputed unto Him and His righteousnesse imputed unto us and that the redeemed should believe in him and so be justified Chap. 53. 11. he shall see of the travell of his Soul and shall be satisfied by his knowledge or faith in Him shall My righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities Twelfthly It is agreed between the parties that for whom Christ should lay down His life He should stand intercessour also for bringing unto them all the purchased graces and blessings Chap. 53. 11. he bare the sins of many and made intercession for the transgressours the rest of the world beside the elect He interceeded not for Ioh. 17. 9. 10. Hence it followeth that God and Christ did not bargain for the Redemption of all and every man no not for the Redemption conversion and salvation of all and every man to whom the Gospel was to be preached for many were to be called who were not chosen to whom the gift of saving faith was not to be given nor the power of God to salvation was never to be revealed and this is the observation which the Evangelist makes upon the 1. of Isa. 53. Ioh. 12. 37. c. But though he had done so many miracles before them yet they believed not on him that the saying of the prophet Isaiah might be fulfilled which he spake Lord who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed therefore they could not believe because Isaiah said again Isa. 6. 9. 10. he hath blinded their eyes and hardened their hearts c. Secondly it followeth hence that election and Redemption were not for the foreseen faith or works of the elect redeemed but of the meer grace and goodwill of God and all done for them and in them contrair to their deservings for it is said Isa. 53. 6. all we like sheep have gone astray and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all Thirdly it followeth hence that it was agreed upon that saving grace and conversion and sanctification should infallibly and invincibly come to passe and be given to the redeemed Isa. 52. 13. Behold My servant shall deal prudently and prosperously and vers 15. be shall sprinkle many nations and Isa. 53. 11. by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many Fourthly hence it followeth that the agreement is past for their finall perseverance
and full salvation for Isa. 53. 5. with his stripes we are healed now our healing is our full salvation from our sin and misery or our deadly sicknesses And Isa. 53. 10. the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand the pleasure of the Lord is partly our sanctification 1 Thes. 4. 3. partly our salvation and glorification Joh. 6. 39. this is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day And to this purpose powerfully doth his intercession serve from which the Apostle concludes that believers shall be perfectly saved Heb. 7. 25. wherefore he is able also to save to the uttermost them that come to God by him seing he ever liveth to make intercession for them The second proof is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. THe second place is from Isa. 59. 20. 21. where first we have the parties agreeing pointed at the Lord Jehovah saith and of the Redeemer He saith that He shall come to Zion as Redeemer Next we have the kind of agreement between the parties God on the one hand and the Redeemer with the redeemed for whom and in whose name he makes the agreement this is my Covenant with them but first with Christ as the words following do shew Thirdly we have the party redeemed Zion and Iacob that turn from transgression which is the mark of true believers in Christ and of the elect for whom this grace is appointed as Rom. 11. 7. Israel hath not obtained that which he seeketh for but the election have obtained it and the rest were blinded And Rom. 11. 26. all this Israel shall be saved as it is written Fourthly we have the sort of their delivery which shall be not only by price paying but also by powerfull and effectuall working as the originall imports Rom. 11 26 and Isa. 59. 20. Fifthly the benefits bestowed upon the elect are comprehended under the designation of the redeemed they are to be turned from their iniquity by effectuall conversion by granting them faith in Christ repentance and reconciliation Sixthly it is shewed how these graces shall be brought to passe to wit by application thereof by the word and Spirit of Christ from which sanctification salvation and the perpetuation of all graces unto salvation do flow and follow on them My Spirit that is in thee saith the Lord to the Redeemer incarnat and My word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed c. These articles of the covenant of Redemption make expresly first against universall Redemption of all and every man because Christ as is shewed before makes his bargain for the elect and leaves the rest in blindness and is a Redeemer of none but of these to whom He is a deliverer actually from whom He turneth away iniquity and ungodlinesse which benefits befall none but the elect and the redeemed Next they make against election for faith and foreseen works because when Christ cometh to call-in the Jews He findes nothing commendable in them but impiety and transgression and defection and whatsoever might provoke Him to reject them they are turned from transgression Thirdly they make against a meer possible and contingent conversion for invincible grace is promised here for the word and the Spirit of Christ shall take up a dwelling in them and not depart from them Fourthly they make against the doctrine of the Aposlasie of the saints and uncertainty of their perseverance because here it is promised to Christ that from the heart and mouth of His seed the word and Spirit of Christ shall never depart The third proof is from Joh. 6. 37. c. THe third place is Ioh. 6. from v. 37. to 45. where first is set down the party contracters in the Covenant of redemption for the Elect are given over into the hand of Christ by the Father All that the Father giveth to me cometh to me v. 37. Secondly upon the Fathers giving of the Elect unto Christ followeth in due time the conversion and saving faith of the redeemed All that the Father giveth me cometh to me saith Christ. Thirdly the redeemed are committed unto Christ as to their leading on preservation and perfecting of their salvation This is the Fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day Fourthly it is agreed by what means the faith of the redeemed shall be formed in them which are the revealed sight of Christ the Son of God in the Word the powerfull drawing of the illuminat soul unto Christ which powerfull draught overcometh all opposition and resistence because it is omnipotent and invincible for no man cometh to Christ but he whom the Father draweth v. 44. and that by making them savingly and in a lively maner see the Son and believe on him v. 40. Hence followeth 1. that it is false Doctrine to teach that there is an universal redemption unto life of all and every man because not all but only some are given and made to come to Christ the rest that are not given come not Secondly it followeth that Election is of meer free grace because men come not unto Christ that they may be given but they are given unto Christ that they may be brought and come unto him Thirdly by this agreement the powerfull conversion of the redeemed and their powerfull preservation unto eternal life is as certain as the power and constancy and obedience of Christ unto the Father is firm and certain This is the will of him that sent me that of what he hath given me I should lose nothing but raise it up at the last day ver 39. The fourth proof is Joh. 10. 14. THe fourth place is Ioh. 10. from v. 14. to v. 30. where we see that the Lord Jesus the true Pastor of Israel before he was incarnat Ps. 23. continueth in that same office now being incarnat and gives his people to understand this when he saith I am the good sheepherd Secondly the care and custody of all the redeemed both converted and unconverted was put upon Christ v. 14. 16. I know my sheep and am known of mine and other sheep I have which are not of this fold them also I must bring in and they shall hear my voice Thirdly the price of their redemption is clearly agreed upon v. 15. As the Father knows me even so know I the Father and I lay down my life for my sheep Fourthly the Father accepts the price and is satisfied and well pleased with it v. 17. 18. Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life that I may take it up again c. Fifthly all the redeemed are infallibly converted but they that are not redeemed are not converted v. 27 My sheep hear my voice and I know them and they follow me
a most wise course so to execute the decree of election and Redemption as he shall be sure to bring in his own to himself and not open up his counsell in particular to the discouraging of any as is told by the father Isa. 52. 13. My servant shall deal prudently and prosper The chief mean appointed is the preaching of the Gospel to all nations commanding all men where the Gospel is by Gods providence preached to repent and believe in the Name of Jesus Christ and to love one another as he hath commanded them Acts 17. 30. and 1 Ioh. 3. 23. and they who refuse to obey are without excuse Another mean is the bringing of so many as professe their acceptation of the offer of grace by Christ Jesus them and their children into the bond of an expresse solemn covenant that they shall submit themselves to the doctrine and government of Christ and teach their children so to do as Abraham the father of believers did Gen. 18. 19. Matth. 28. 19. 20. make disciples of all nations or make all nations disciples to Me. A third mean is the sealing of the covenant by the Sacrament of baptism Matth. 28. 19. 20. make all nations disciples to Me baptizing them in the Name of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost A fourth mean is the gathering them into all lawfull and possible communion with others his disciples that by their Church-fellowship one with another they may be edified under their officers appointed in Christs Testament to feed govern and lead them on in the obedience of all the commands which Christ hath commanded his people in his Testament by which means he goeth about his work and doth call effectually sanctifie and save his own redeemed ones leaving all others without excuse Concerning all these and other means and maner also of executing his decree it is agreed upon between the Father and His Son Christ as His holy Spirit hath revealed it to us in Scripture All which may be taken up in two heads the one is the agreement about the doctrine and directions given to His Church the other is about actions operations and all effects to be brought about for making his word good Concerning his doctrine Christ saith Ioh. 12. 49. 50. I have not spoken of my self but the Father who hath sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and what I should speak and I know that his commandment is life everlasting whatsoever I speak therefore eve●● as the Father said unto me so I speak Concerning actions and operations and the executiou of the decrees it is agreed also between the Father and the Son Ioh. 8. 16. If I judge my judgement is true for I am not alone but I and the Father that sent me and vers 29. He that sent me is with me the Father hath not left me alone for I do alwayes these things that please him and Joh. 6. 38. I came down from heaven not to do my own will without the consent of the Father but the will of him that sent me In a word the consent and agreement of the Father and the Son Jesus Christ our Lord is such that the Son ●oth nothing by his Spirit but that which the Father ●oth work by the same Spirit from the beginning of the world Ioh. 5. 17. My Father worketh hitherto and I work and Col. 1. 16. for by Christ were all things created that ●re in heaven and that are in earth visible and invisible ●hether they be throns or dominions or principalities or 〈◊〉 〈…〉 created by him and for him He is alpha and Omega the beginning and the ending the first efficient and the last end of all things Rev. 1. 8. because for the glory of Christ the creation the covenant of works and the covenant of grace were made and had and shall have their full execution all for the glory of God in Christ by whom all things were made and do subsist CHAP. V. Of the Covenant of works WE have spoken of the first divine covenant wherein God and God incarnat are the parties it followeth to speak of the next divine covenant to wit the covenant of works between God and man Adam and his posterity made in mans integrity In which covenant God is only the one party of the covenant and man created with all naturall perfections is the other party In this covenant mans continuing in a happy life is promised upon condition of perfect personall obedience to be done by him out of his own naturall strength bestowed upon him as the Apostle teacheth us Gal. 3. 12. the Law is not of faith but the man who shall do these things shall live by them And unto this law or covenant of works is added a threatning of death in case man should transgresse the sense whereof is ●old by the Apostle Gal. 3. 10. cursed is every one who doth not abide in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them The difference between the law and the Covenant of works THe word Law is sometime taken for the mater or substance of the law of nature written in the hearts of our first Parents by creation the work of which law is to be found in the hearts of their posterity unto this day And in this sense the word Law is taken by the Apostle Rom. 2. 15. the Gentiles saith he shew the wrok of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witnesse c. Sometime the word is taken for the formall covenant of works as Gal. 3. 10. as many as are of the works of the Law that is under the covenant of works are under the curse for it is written cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them 2. The law as it is taken for the covenant of works differeth from the law of nature written by creation in the hearts of our first Parents first because the law of nature written in the heart of man in order both of nature and time went before the covenant made for keeping that law because the covenant for keeping that law was not made till after mans creation and after his bringing into the garden to dresse it and to keep it Gen. 2. 16. 17. Secondly God by vertue of the law written in man● heart did not obliedge Himself to perpetuat mans happy life for albeit man had keeped that law most acuratly God was free to dispose of Him as he saw fit before he made the covenant with him But so soon as he made the covenant he oblieged himself to preserve him in a happy life so long as he should go on in obedience to his law and commands according to the tennor of the covenant do this and live Thirdly death was the naturall wages and merit of sin albeit there had no covenant been made at all for sin against God deserveth of its own nature
fellowship of God promised to him if he continued fast in obedience and what terror could be so great to afright and skar him from sin as the threatning of death bodily and spiritual if he transgressed Quest. But the profane curiosity of man dareth to ask a reason why God did not make man both good by nature and immutably good also Ans. It is indeed proud curiosity to enquire for reasons of God's holy will which hath its own most sufficient reason in its self and may satisfie all his subjects who will not devilishly prefer their own wisdom and counsel to his But we shall content our selves soberly to answer the question thus To be both originally or by nature good and unchangeably good also beseemeth God himself only as his property and prerogative which it became his Majesty to reserve to himself as the fountain of all goodness and not to communicat this glory either to Man or Angel in their creation that the due distance between God and the natural perfections of the creature should not only be provided for but made manifest to the creature also It 's true Christs humane nature was so sanctified in his conception that there was no possibility that sin should be in it but let us consider that Christs person which did assume the humane nature into personal union with his God-head is not a creature and to assume the humane nature into a personal union with his divine nature is the proper priviledge of God over all blessed for ever And what the humane nature of Christ hath of holiness it hath it not of it self but of grace from the second person of the God-head who did assume it And the Angels that stood when the mutability of angelical nature was manifested in the fall of many of them did stand by the grace of free confirmation of them in their station Fifthly God in covenanting with man made way for the demonstration of his most holy Justice in the execution of punishment which was not only the natural wages and deserved reward of sin but also by paction and covenant appointed by mutual consent of parties if man so much obliged to God should break so equitable and easie a command as was given to try him by being fore-warned of his danger Sixthly this way of covenanting with man was a most holy and fit mean to manifest the vanity and instability of the most perfect creature except in the exercise of all its abilities and habits it do acknowledge God and in every thing less and more constantly imploy him and depend upon him Last of all this was a most holy mean to bring forth to light the grace and mercy of God in Christ providing a remedy for fallen man before he fell and to open up the decree and covenant of Redemption in due time to be brought about by Christ to the glory of God in Christ by whom and for whom all things were made Col. 1. 16. Quest. Had this Covenant of works no Mediatour no Surety ingaged for Adam and all his posterity Ans. No Mediatour was in this Covenant for the party on the one hand was God and on the other hand was Adam and Eve our common parents standing upon the ground of their natural abilities representing and comprehending all their natural off-spring and according to the condition of the Covenant in their own name and name of their posterity promising obedience and receiving the condition of life if they continued and of death in case they failed Gen. 2. 17. In whose sin we all have sinned Rom. 5. 12. Now the necessity of a Mediatour did not appear in this Covenant so long as it stood that afterward in the making of another Covenant it might more timously appear First because man being created holy according to the image of God was the friend of God while he had not sinned and again his service while he stood in obedience was very pleasant and acceptable to God because so long freely and sincerely he served God according to the command and rule written in his heart Quest. After that his Covenant was broken was it not abolished altogether seing it could not now be any longer perfectly obeyed nor save us who are sinners Ans. Albeit this Covenant being broken on mans part did become weak and utterly unable to produce Justification by works or eternal life to us by our inherent righteousnesse yet on Gods part the bond of this Covenant doth stand firm and strong against all men by nature for their condemnation who are not reconciled to God Wherefore all that are not renewed and made friends with God by another Covenant of faith in God incarnat the seed of the woman who destroyeth the work of the devil do lye bound under the bond of this Covenant of works as Christ testifies Ioh. 3. 18. He that believeth on me is not condemned but he that believeth not is condemned already to wit by the force of the Covenant of works violated by them and are nor delivered from the curse by Christ the Son of God till they fly to him And this doth the Apostle confess speaking of himself and other elect Jews before their regeneration Ephes. 2. 3. We also were children of wrath even as others for whosoever is not reconciled to God by Christ against him doth the sentence of the Law and curse for violation of the Covenant stand in force for sinning against the Covenant doth not loose the man from the Covenant neither from the obligation to obey it nor from the punishment of breaking it Obj. But seing a man is utterly unable to obey the Law or to keep that Covenant doth not his utter inability excuse him and dissolve the bond Ans. No wayes Because that inability is the fruit of our sin and is drawn on by our selves nor doth God lose his right to crave the debt due to him because the Bankrupt is not able to pay what he oweth For even among men such as have mis-spent their patrimony are not absolved of their debt because they are not able to pay the debt yea even the children of the mis-spender of his goods do stand debtors so long as the debt is neither payed nor forgiven The Covenant of works therefore being broken the obligation standeth to make us give obedience so much the more in time to come and because of the curse pronounced for the breaking of the Covenant in time past the obligation to under-lye the punishment for by-gone sins doth stand and so both the obligation to underlye the punishment and the obligation to give obedience do stand together while a man is not absolved from the Covenant of works by entring in a new Covenant whereby the debt is payed and the sinner absolved Whosoever then conceive that they may be justified from by-gone sins by their own obedience in time to come either by way of doing or of suffering they but deceive themselves dreaming they can do impossibilities for the punishment to
be suffered for sin by the sinner is the curse-everlasting of soul and body seing a meer creature cannot for ever satisfie for his rebellion how long soever we presuppose his duration under suffering And for obedience by way of doing perfectly what the Law doth crave it is utterly impossible because we are carnal sold under sin and cannot satisfie the Law and because we cannot satisfie the Law the Law becometh weak and unable to justifie and save us Rom. 8. 3. How the Covenant of works may be called the Covenant of nature ALbeit the Law written by nature in mens heart differeth from the Covenant for performance of the Law as hath been shown before yet the Covenant of works made with Adam before he fell tying him to keep that Law may be called the Covenant of nature First because the Covenant of works is grounded upon the Law of nature and doth exact nothing of man save that which God might require of him according to the Law of nature Secondly because when the Covenant of works was made with Adam it was made with all his natural posterity which was to spring of him by natural generation and so the obligation thereof did pass upon all his natural posterity by the Law of nature which maketh the child begotten to bear the image of the begetters Thirdly that the Covenant of works may justly be called the Covenant of nature appeareth by the force of the conscience being wakened from its sleepy security for it challengeth for sin according to that Covenant and pronounceth the sentence of God's wrath against the sinner For the conscience doth acknowledge the Judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death Rom. 1. 32. Fourthly because the conscience naturally inclineth a man to seek justification by his own works if it can any way find pretence for it as we may see in the Pharisee who in his speech to God doth judge himself a holy man because he is not amongst the worst of men and hath many good works above others to reckon forth and lay before God Luk. 18. 11. Fifthly the inclination of mans heart to expect a reward of every good work he doth whether it be in some part reall or only apparently such testifieth so much Iudg. 17. 13. Micah so reasoneth Now know I the Lord will do me good seing I have a Levit to my Priest And how miserably the conscience may be deluded in this case when men do dote upon their own well-deserving appeareth in Leah for Gen. 30. 18. Leah saith God hath given me my hire because I have given my maiden to my husband Sixthly this point is also made manifest by the natural ignorance of righteousness by faith and affectation to be justified by works which the Apostle finds fault-with in the Israelits Rom. 9. 31. They sought righteousness not by faith but as it were by works And Rom. 10. 3. being ignorant of the righteousness of God and going about to establish their own righteousness to wit righteousness by works according to the tenour of the Covenant of works they did not submit themselves to the righteousness of God Seventhly the same course followed by Papists and other erroneous teachers testifieth the natural inclination of men to seek righteousness by works according to the tenour of the Covenant of works and not by faith in Christ Jesus that righteousness may come by grace only And so are some mens hearts glued to this error that they do transform justification by faith in justification by one work in stead of all as if the work of faith were the mans righteousness and not Christ him-himself laid hold on by faith Not considering that to the man that renounceth all confidence in any work of his own and flieth to Christ by faith Christ is made of God unto that man wisdom and righteousness 1 Cor. 1. 30. Last of all this natural inclination even of the regenerat to seek righteousness by works doth prove the Covenant of works to be naturally ingraft in all mens hearts as appeareth in the Galatians who being instructed in the doctrine of justification by faith in Christ without the works of the Law did easily upon a tentation offered look back with likeing to the way of Justification by works for which the Apostle reproveth them Gal. 4. 21. Tell me saith he ye that desire to be under the Law or Covenant of works and ver 9. But now after ye have known God or rather are known of God how turn ye again to weak and beggarly elements whereunto you desire again to be in bondage Obj. But the Galatians as it seemeth did not reject Justification by faith but did joyn with it Justification by the works of the Law thinking that the safest way was to joyn both together Ans. The inconsistency of these two wayes of Justification the Apostle sheweth Rom. 11. 6. For Justification by grace is no more by works otherwise grace is no more of grace and what Justification is by works is no more of grace otherwise work is no more works And therefore the Apostle makes the joyning of these two wayes of Justification to be nothing else but a plain seeking of Justification by the Covenant of works which cutteth a man off from any benefit by Christ Gal. 5. 2. and whosoever seeketh to be justified by the Law● or Covenant of works is fallen from grace ver 4. For further clearing this matter we may distinguish two sorts of the Covenant of works The one is true genuine and of God's institution which God made with all men in Adam for perfect obedience unto God's Law out of mans own natural abilities There is another counterfeit bastard covenant of works of mans own devising which a sinner lying in his sins unable to do what the Law commands or to suffer what the Law being broken binds upon him of his own head devileth upon other conditions then God hath set and will have God to take his devised covenant in stead of perfect obedience to the Law that so he may be justified Such was the covenant which the carnal Israelits made with God in the wilderness and which their posterity did follow turning the Covenant of grace whereunto God was calling them into a covenant of works of their own framing For the grace which was offered to them in Christ under the vail of levitical types figures and ceremonies they turned into an external service of performance only of bare and dead ceremonies and into a ministry of the letter and death for they did not take up Christ to be the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believes in him but did think that both the moral and ceremonial Law was given unto them of God to the intent that they should do the external works of the moral Law so far as they could and when they transgressed the moral Law they should fly to the ceremonial Law and make amends for their faults by
satisfying for their sin by the external sacrifice of some clean beast offered to God or by the washing of their body and their cloaths Such also is the covenant which now adayes many make with God cutting short with the old Pharisees the sense of the precepts of the Law by extending it no further then they may keep the same that so they may make their own inherent righteousness the longer conform unto their own clipped rule of righteousness and this they do by denying themselves to be guilty of original sin after baptism and by extenuating and diminishing many faults as but light and venial as they call them and by devising satisfactions for expiating the sins of the living by penances and pilgrimages and of the dead by their sufferings in their imaginary purgatory that so they may be justified by their works and sufferings Such also is their covenant who seek justification by deceased Saints merits hoping they may so have absolution from sin and obtain life eternal And all these sorts of covenants of mens framing we call bastard-covenants of works because God will not admit any other Covenant of works then that which requireth perfect personal obedience And therefore so many as seek to be justified by works do stand under the obligation of perfect personal obedience under pain of death and will be found not only utterly unable to do any good work but also to be without Christ and to be fallen from grace as the Apostle Gal. 5. 3 4. doth teach us Obj. Seing God doth abhor these bastard-bastard-covenants of works and doth well know that men are so far from performance of the due obedience of the Law that they are utterly unable before they be reconciled through faith in Christ to do so much as one acceptable work as the Psalmist teacheth Psal. 14. 1 2 3. Why doth the Lord exact perfect obedience unto the Law from sinners why doth he press so instantly the slaves of sin to perform the duties required in the true Covenant of works Ans. The Lord justly doth abhor and reject these bastard-bastard-covenants because they evacuat and make void both the Covenant of works and the Covenant of grace which is by faith in Christ and he doth press all men to perform perfect obedience to all the commands whereunto they are naturally obliged to the end that proud men conceity of their own natural abilities may find by experience that they are unable to perform the condition of the Covenant of works and may acknowledge the same and so dispair of righteousness by their works and be forced to flye to Christ and to the Covenant of grace through him that they may be fred from that covenant and being justified by faith in Christ may be enabl●d to begin new obedience to the Law in the strength of Christs furniture For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth Rom. 10. 4 And the Law entered that men might by the Law see and acknowledge that the offence did abound and then might perceive that the 〈…〉 ●●gr●ce by Christ did super-abound Rom. 〈…〉 and 1 Tim. 1. 5. The end of the command is 〈…〉 of a pur● heart and a good conscience and faith unfamed This was the end of the promulgation of the Law in mount Sinai that a stiff-necked people trusting in their own abilities might be made sensible of their imperfection by the repetition of the Law And to this also God super-added the external yoke of the ceremonial Law which neither they nor their posterity were able to bear Acts 15. 10. that the people perceiving their manifold pollutions and guiltiness wherein they were daily involved by breaking of God's Law might in the sense of the burden lying on them and of their damnable estate under it flye to Christ the lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world as he was represented and offered to their sight in the sacrifices and burnt offerings Of this end of pressing the Law upon proud men we have an example Math. 19. 16 17 18 19 20 21 22. In the conference of Christ with the young conceity rich man who in the opinion of his own inherent righteousness and of his abilities was hudgly swelled as if he had already for time by-gone satisfied the the whole Law and that he was able and ready to do any good work which could be prescribed unto him for obtaining of eternal life whose proud conceit that Christ might humble and bring down he craveth nothing but that he would keep the commands And when the young man denyed that he had broken the Law he proveth him guilty of gross and vile Idolatry from this that he put a higher estimation on his riches than on remission of sin and did love them more then heaven and fellowship with God in eternal life In all this let it be considered that albeit mens confidence in their works doth displease God yet good works do not displease him but they are so far pleasant unto him that there is no morall motive which may serve to stir up in his people an endeavour to follow after good works which the Lord doth not make use of partly by setting before them the reward if they obey partly by setting punishments before thei● eyes if they obey not yea and the very observation of externall morall duties and obedience such as may be discharged by the unregenerat man albeit God in relation to Justification do esteem it polluted and vile yet he doth sometimes reward their externall works by giving them externall and temporall benefits for their encouragement for even Ahabs temporary humiliation the Lord so far accepted that there-upon He took occasion to delay to take vengeance upon him 1 Kings 21. 27 28 29. Likewise the Lord useth to recompence the civil justice of Pagans with a temporal reward yea and to reward the outward diligence of every man in every lawfull occupation with some answerable outward reward The very Pharisees who for the raising to themselves a fame and higher estimation for holinesse did take a great deal of pains in prayers in the streets and Mercat-places and other exercises of Religion wanted not an answerable reward ve●ily saith Christ they have their reward Matth. 6. 2. And this course the Lord doth keep that he may encertain and foster the civil society of men among themselves and that His people looking on this bounty of God may be stirred up the more to bring forth the fruits of faith in hope of a mercifull promised better reward of grace in the life to come beside what they may have in this life CHAP. VI. Of the Covenant of Grace THe third and last covenant concerning mans eternall salvation is the covenant of Grace made between God and man through Christ the Mediatour Grace some●imes simply and absolutely taken is opposed to merit and in this sense every good thing which of Gods good pleasure is ordained or promised or actually bestowed on the
convince them of their need of Christ and duty of following Him to fix and strengthen their hearty purpose to cleave unto the Lord. Such as are the Lords command to believe in Christ and love one another 1 Ioh. 3. 23. and His threatening if they believe not Ioh. 3. 18. and 1 Ioh. 5. 10. 11. The fourth mean is the gathering of these that have imbraced this covenant into all lawfull and possible Church-communion with other His disciples and fixing them in their severall congregations that they may be edified under their Officers appointed by Christ in His Testament in their most holy faith and obedience of all His ordinances And for further clearing the way of Gods bringing the visible Church of Christ into this covenant with Himself let it be considered 1. Albeit of those that are come to the use of reason with whom God doth formally and solemnly make this covenant of grace and reconciliation many are externally only called and few in comparison chosen Matth. 20. 21. yet it is not the will of God otherwayes then by doctrine to separat the elect from the rest of them that are externally called or to make the elects name known to the world for the kirk knoweth not but God only knoweth who are His 2 Tim. 2. 19. And therefore He hath ordained means common to the elect and reprobat to bring both unto the externall embracing of His covenant and continuing externally therein and He doth bestow gifts both to the one sort and to the other and He worketh in both the one sort and the other according to His own will But as for inward and effectuall calling or speciall saving graces which do accompany salvation and the speciall operations of the holy Spirit He reserveth to the elect and redeemed only to whom in a time acceptable He revealeth Himself and sealeth them for His own service 2. By this wise and holy dealing with the hearers of the Gospel whereby the Lord so makes good the covenant of Redemption and bringeth His decrees to passe as none shall have just reason to stumble no wonder that many be compassed within the draught-net of the Gospel and be moved to enter into this holy and blessed covenant of whom there may be elect not as yet converted whereup on by Gods appointment followeth a solemn covenanting of all that consent to the condition of the covenant and professe their faith in Christ all whom with their children Christ translates from the Pagan world into His visible kingdom and fellowship of His Church militant and grants unto them right to the common priviledges of Citizens in the order appointed in His word that keeping all lawfull and possible communion with the Catholick visible Church of Christ they may be edified in their particular congrega●ions and governed with others by Ecclesiasticall disciplin 3. Together with these externall means serving for drawing on the covenant and going on in it the common operations of God do concur common to all the called both elect and reprobat and gifts common to both are bestowed such as illumination morall perswasion historycall dogmaticall and temporary faith morall change of affections and some sort of externall amendment of their outward conversation saving grace being the speciall gift of God to His own 4. Of this maner of covenanting and taking into Church-fellowship all the called that consent in a morall way to the condition of the covenant regenerat and unregenerat we have a patern in the Lords covenanting with all Israel Exod. 19. the covenant is offered to all the Israelites without exception all are invited to enter in covenant without exception arguments motives and morall inducements are made use of from their experience of the Lords goodnesse and gifts given to them before most ample promises of spirituall benefits are made unto them conditionally to be bestowed on them both in this life and in the life to come vers 4. 5. 6. the people embrace the condition of the covenant V. 7. 8. the people are sanctified and prepared to receive the holy commands and will of God in the rest of the chapter then in the 20. chapter and in the rest of the book the duties of the covenanters are propounded which concern the acknowledgement of sin and deserved death and these also which concern obtaining of justification and sanctification by Christ and which concern their shewing forth their thankfulnesse all the dayes of their life The same covenant after fourty years is repeated and renewed by Moses a little before his death in the land of Moab Deut. 29. the Lord commands Moses to renew the covenant with all the people vers 1. all the people of Israel are gathered together regenerat and unregenerat vers 2. the sum of arguments and motives to enter in covenant of new is shortly set down vers 3. the greatest part of the people to be joyned to God in covenant are openly declared by Moses to be unregenerat vers 4. After that arguments are used to move them in all time coming to trust in the Lord and to obey him to vers 9. the covenant is made with the heads of the tribes and elders of the people and their governours and with all the men of Israel with their little ones with the women and with the strangers that were in the midst of their camp vers 10. 11. the covenant is solemnized with adjuration of all to keep the conditions thereof vers 12. 13. the covenant is extended with adjuration to the posterity vers 14. 15. neither is there any exception made or exclusion of any that consented to the covenant whether unregenerat Israelites or strangers but all are admitted within this covenant The same way of covenanting did Iohn Baptist follow admitting to his baptism the seal of this covenant all those that came from Ierusalem and out of all Iudea and from the borders of Iordan without exception whosoever confessed their sins or that they were sinners and professed they did receive the offer of grace made in the Name of Christ Jesus the true lamb of God that takes away the sins of the world Matth. 3. 5 6. and so far was Iohn from waiting for evidences of saving grace and regeneration before he admitted them that came to his baptism into the fellowship of the externall covenant of grace and reconciliation that on the contrair he made publick profession that the fan whereby the chaff is separated from the wheat and the hypocrit discerned from the sincere Christian was not in his hand or in any other man or mens hands but in the hand of Christ Jesus Himself only And therefore which is worthy to be observed after he had publickly testified his suspicion of the hypocrisie and old poysonabled is position in the Pharisees and Saddu●es that came to his baptism and offered to receive the covenant of grace and the seal thereof vers 7. forthwith without inquiring into their regeneration and sincerity of heart he baptized them among the
rest v. 11. and left them to be examined thereafter by Christ Himself whether they were upright in heart or not The same way of gathering members of the visible Christian Churches out of the world did Christs own Apostles follow in His own company Christ himself being present bodily beholding and approving their baptizing of multitudes who after hearing of Christs sermons offered to receive baptism and went down to the water Arnon where Christs Apostles did make and baptize moe disciples then John Ioh. 4. 1. that is they admitted multitudes into the holy covenant and sealed the same with baptism taking no stricter course of examination of them then John did but admitting all that craved the benefit of the covenant and the seal of it though they had no certain evidence of their regeneration being satisfied that Christ did not forbid to baptize them when he saw them go down to the water to be baptized after hearing His sermon Now there is no question He knew their hearts all of them and that many of them would afterward shortly make defection from Him and depart from him and from his disciples fellowship as is plain Ioh. 6. 6 66 70. This way of receiving into externall covenant all these who receive the offer and the condition of the covenant without inquiring into their election or reprobation their regeneration or unregeneration for the time which may be called a covenanting outwardly and in the letter in the deep and wise counsell of God is appointed for the gathering and constitution of the visible kirk for by this mean first God so executeth and perfecteth the decree of election that in the mean time he hindereth none of all the hearers of the Gospel from receiving the grace of Christ offered therein He excludeth no man from embraceing the covenant but on the contrair he opens the door to all that are called to enter into as it were the outer court of his dwelling house that they may so draw more near to him and so he doth not particularly manifest any mans reprobation Secondly by this means also he hideth the election of the elect from others and from themselves till they repent their sins and flee to Christ and bring forth some evidences of their election in their obedience of faith and begun sanctification Thirdly the Lord makes use of this outward and common covenanting with all receivers of the offer as a mean to draw the confederat in the letter to be confederat in the spirit for the faith which he requires as the condition of the covenant he worketh in the elect if not before or with the externall covenanting yet undoubtedly after in a time acceptable and that by the ordinary means the use whereof is granted to all confederat externally and so as common illumination is a mean to that speciall spirituall and saving illumination and dogmaticall or historicall faith is a mean unto saving faith and externall calling is a mean of effectuall calling So externall covenanting in the letter is a mean most fit and accommodat to make a man a covenanter in the spirit Fourthly this externall covenanting wherein God promiseth to be the believers God and the God of their children is a mean not only to beget and foster faith in the covenanting parents for their own salvation but also a mean to comfort them about the salvation of their infants dying in their infancy whether before or after their baptism and a mean to give them good hope of those childrens blessed resurrection by vertue of the promise because in covenanting the Lord doth promise to be the believers God and the God of his children and doth not exact the condition of actuall faith from their dying infants From these grounds it followeth first that some are taken externally and conditionally into the covenant upon their ingagement unto the righteousnesse of faith and their baptism is a seal of their ingagement unto it who albeit they be not as yet regenerat yet they are to be esteemed members of the Church and Christians outwardly Christians by calling and in the letter whose praise is of men as they were also in the Church before Christs coming Jews outwardly and in the letter whose praise was of men commended indeed for so much but if they came not up to lay hold upon and follow after righteousnesse by faith were not Jews in Gods account and unto them circumcision was but in the letter and the sealing of the engagement only and not of the good things covenanted Rom. 2. 28 29. Secondly it followeth that there are some covenanters outwardly and inwardly also in the flesh and in the spirit also whose praise is not of men only but of God also to wit such as not only have engaged to fulfill the condition of living in the faith and following after the righteousnesse of faith but are performers really of their engagement and unto those their baptism is not only outward and in the flesh but inward also in the spirit also approven of God also Such as were in the visible Church of old Jews inwardly performers of their ingagement to live by ●aith Jews in the spirit and not in the letter only whose praise was of God and not of men only Rom. 2. 28 29. Thirdly it followeth that some are in the covenant absolutely or without condition required of them for their part whom God taketh in his own hand absolutly such as are elect infants dying in their infancy for whom that they might be delivered from originall sin and deserved wrath Christ hath ingaged and laid down his life and promised in the covenant to be their God whom therefore ere they die he doth immediatly quicken and sanctifie and translateth to heaven after death of such saith Christ is the Kingdom of heaven Mark 10. 14. How the externall dispensation of the Covenant of old differeth from that which now is under the Gospel ALbeit the covenant of grace in it self be one and the same from the first preaching of it in Paradise unto the end of the world because Christ the Saviour of his people is one and the same yesterday and to day and for ever and because the faith of the elect is of one kind and was and shall be to the worlds end yet the external outletting and dispensation of the covenant differeth as it was propounded before Christs incarnation and after it for in Paradise this covenant was set forth by way of promise according to the articles of the covenant of Redemption that Christ should assume the seed of the woman and should suffer in the flesh or humane nature and by his power destroy the works of the devil in favours of his own chosen people which should militat against the devil under his banner 2. And least any man should fancy that the covenant of grace founded upon this promise was made with all the posterity of Adam as the covenant of works was made with Adam and all his posterity the Lord in
life of necessity must acknowledge himself a man in himself unrighteous and a lost man and that he cometh to Christ to be justified and sanctified and saved by him and so to persevere in this course unto life eternall Of the tearms whereupon this Covenant is offered and pressed in Scripture THe terms of the covenant are diversly propounded in Scripture Exod. 19. 5. the Lord propounds it thus if ye will obey my voice indeed and keep my covenant then ye shall be a peculiar people unto me c. In these words the condition required of those that are already entered in covenant is most eminent for this people was in covenant from the time of Abrahams covenanting and was admitted to the Sacraments before their coming forth of Egypt and therefore the conditions previous to their entering in covenant and required for closing the bargain are not so much insisted on at this time This condition the people do accept and give answer to God by Moses vers 8. all that the Lord hath spoken we will do Another form and expression is used Acts 16. 31. Paul and Silas say to the Jailour now anxious how to be saved believe in the Lord and thou shalt be saved thou and all thy house The Jailour accepts of the condition and he is baptized and all his house vers 33. The condition of his person taking with guiltinesse and granting his lost condition is spoken of vers 37. the condition of the covenant therefore is propounded in the next room and is accepted where-upon baptism is administered unto him Psal. 27. 8. In other words the same condition is propounded the Lord craveth faith seeking communion on with God for the condition seek ye my face the Psalmist accepteth the condition and answereth Thy Face O Lord will I seek Isa. 45. 22. Christ requires faith in these he calleth and upon that condition promiseth salvation Look unto 〈◊〉 all ye ends of the earth and be ye saved the answer of the believer is set down vers 24. Surely shall one say in the Lord have I righteousnesse and strength Likewise the way of making this covenant is set forth by Christ offering himself a Saviour on the one part and the believers receiving Christ on the other part Ioh. 1. 11 12. as many as received him to them he gave power to become the sons of God even to them that believe on his Name And 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. upon this only condition of consenting to reconciliation offered he summeth up most shortly and clearly the covenant-making We are ambassadours for Christ as if God did beseech you by us we pray you in Christs stead be reconciled to God There remaineth no more for making of the covenant but that the hearer do honestly answer thus the offer and condition pleaseth me well I consent to be reconciled Now he who consenteth to be reconciled 1. Granteth his naturall enimity 2. Accepteth Christ the Mediatour Redeemer Reconciler offered to him by God whose fulnesse is in Christ And 3. obliedgeth himself to entertain this friendship all his life after Last of all the making of the covenant is sometime pressed to be received and followed under the form of a precept 1. Ioh. 3. 23. this is his command that ye believe in the Name of His Son Iesus Christ and love one another as he hath commanded us In which words the condition or estate of the person who is called to believe and enter in covenant is presupposed for it is imported that he must acknowledge nor only that he is a miserable sinner and unable to relieve himself but also that he is naturally averse from the way of seeking righteousnesse by faith in Christ and hath need that the soveraign power of God draw him to Christ. Secondly the condition of the making of covenant is propounded which is to believe in Jesu Christ. In the third room the con●ition require● of him that is entered in covenant by believing 〈◊〉 Christ is that we love one another as he hath commanded us This offered and commanded condition of the covenant of grace some by the grace of God do accept and engage to perform and do perform sincerely albeit weakly other some trusting in their own strength engage unto the obedience of faith and with their mouth professe they are sinners and do believe in Christ and that they will submit themselves to his Government drawing near to him with their lips when their hearts are far from him and such mens faith changeth not their old disposition and way of living but it suffereth them to serve their belly or mammon or vain glory and such other idols yet because the Church are not judges of the secrets of the heart they must receive into Church-fellowship all who confesse themselves to be sinners and professe they do accept the offer of Christs grace and promise subjection to his ordinances Obj. But how can the Church receive men in Church-fellowship who are destitute of lively faith Ans. The Church is not judge of the heart or of the secrets thereof because it cannot see faith in it self but must look to the profession of faith and to the fruits thereof in the own order and time the Church is witnesse to their engagement but not judges of their sincerity 2. The covenant of grace doth not exclude the most vile sinners if they acknowledge their sinfulnesse and do solemnly consent unto the condition of the covenant because according to this covenant nothing is bestowed on the covenanter of merit but of grace only which the Church knoweth God can give and sometimes doth give unto counterfit confederats making them sincere in his own time and that by the means of the ordinances made use of in the visible Church 3. It is one thing to be a confederat Christian in the letter externally in the sight of men another thing to be a covenanter in the spirit inwardly in respect of the heart and inward man Rom. 2. 28. and albeit the externall covenant doth not bring on righteousnesse and life except a man be also a covenanter inwardly in his heart in the sense of sin and imperfection making daily u●e of Christ yet it is certain that outward covenanting is an ordinary and blessed mean unto many to beget and foster faith and help forth the fruits thereof 4. It may and should suffice us that God in the first framing of a nationall Church did admit and commanded Moses to admit all the Israelites in covenant of whom very few were converted or reconciled to God in their spirit and this was not hid from Moses or from the truly godly in the camp of Israel as is plainly shewen to us Deut. 28. 29. where God bears witnesse against the people that their heart was not according to their profession and engagement and Moses speaketh out this truth in all the peoples audience while he is renewing the covenant with them notwithstanding they were unregenerat Deut. 29. Obj. But some will insist
and tell us that the visible Church is a society of Saints or regenerat persons and that they who live in the visible Church must be visible Saints whole li●e at least doth not contradict their profession and such as by the judgement of charity we must esteem regenerat Ans. Christs visible Church is the company of them that are called out of the world unto him the company of them that are consecrat to God and engaged by solemn covenant to follow the course of holinesse By ●●lling they are Saints albeit many of them may be ●ound polluted in their maners thus doth God Himself reach us to judge Psal. 50. 5. Gather unto me my saints saith He and who are these These who have made a co●●nant with me by sacrifice Now of these many did not worship God in spirit but placed all their religion in ceremonies and went about by their outward sacrifices to pacifie God and to expiat their sins as is plain vers 7. 8. others of these called saints consecrat unto God and joyned with him in a visible covenant were very wicked who no wayes behaved themselves as became covenanters with God and who therefore were to be excluded from the benefit of the covenant except they repented for they hated true holinesse and did cast the commands behind their back vers 16. were thieves and adulterers slanderers and calumniatours of their brethren vers 18 19. and yet for all this the Lord doth not exclude them out of the visible Church but doth in a fatherly maner reprove them that they might repent and not perish 2. There is no question whether all in the visible Church ought to be both in open conversation and in heart holy and that they shall certainly be damned and perish that are not such but the question is here about the duty of the Governours of the Church and of the godly in it whether they should exclude from Church-membership all who are not regenerat at least so to be esteemed in the judgement of charity or whether all are to be holden for Church-members and keeped within the Church who are in covenant with God and sealed with the seal thereof to the intent that by doctrine and censures of the Church so far as may be by means they may be regenerat and being regenerat be helped on in the way of holinesse 3. There is a difference to be put betwixt the precepts concerning the personall sanctification of every man in himself and the precepts given for the governing of others and keeping holy society with the called saints renewed or unrenewed in the visible Church so far as Gods word giveth light and order for it is commanded to me and thee that we pursue peace and holiness without which none shall see the face of God but it is not commanded to me or thee that we should keep no Church-fellowship in God's ordinances except with the regenerat It is not commanded to the Governours of the Church that they must examine every person concerning their regeneration neither are they forbidden to ad●●t any into the society of the Church save these whom they esteem regenerat But they are commanded to bring in to the Church all that oblige themselves to be Christs disciples with their children and by the means appointed of God in doctrine and censures of the Church to promove their sanctification and salvation for so many doth Christs commission to the Pastors of the Church import Math. 28. 19 20. 4. Regeneration is not the just measure whereby to square the dimensions and extent of the visible Church but confederation and obsignation of the Covenant by baptisme For the Church is Christs visible kingdom whose visible subjects are all they who solemnly are ingaged to subject themselves to his doctrine and government and therefore the Church visible is not to be defined the company of the regenerat but the company of the confederat with God and called unto holiness among whom Christ tells us there are few elect and so fewer regenerat and therefore the Church of Christ is compared to a barn-floor whereinto is gathered both the chaff and the wheat both they that have faith and they that profess faith out of whom Christ doth gather his own Elect and redeemed ones Obj. But at least in gathering of a Church out of the world respect must be had that the consenting of the covenanter be serious and how can the consent be serious where the heart is not sincere where the person is not regenerat Such a mans consent to the covenant as is without saving faith is but fained counterfeit hypocritical and such a consent as may hinder the mans regeneration and do nothing but provoke Gods wrath against the man and the receivers or admitters of him also Ans. Serious is sometime opposed to sport or play and so a mater may be serious which is in earnest gone about and is not openly histrionical And sometime serious is opposed to the intention of fraud and deceit and so that may be called serious which is done without a purpose to deceive or beguile the party But when the consenter to ingage in covenant speaketh as he thinketh albeit possibly his own heart deceive him his consent to the condition of the covenant may justly be called serious because he intends to deal in earnest as in a weighty business And such was the consent of the people of Israel unto the covenant made with God Exod. 19. Likewise counterfeit and hypocritical is sometime called so in opposition to that which is reall true and spiritual And so all consent to the covenant of Grace which doth not proceed from the spirit of Regeneration is but fained faith and indeed is not saving faith yet it may be serious and morally honest like Israels Exod. 14. 20. and so sufficient to make a covenant and to tye an obligation on the man to such duties as may lead to salvation Again fained connterfeit hypocritical is called that which a man purposely doth fain making shew of that which he knows not to be being conscious to his own wickedness and such a fained consent we grant doth provoke God against such a person but the Church is not judge of this so long as they know not of this gross hypocrisie We hold then that there may be and usually fall forth such a morall consent unto the covenant of Grace without saving faith which may be called a serious really honest consent as to the agreement of the mind and mouth of the covenanter such as is found in ordinary civil contracts between one man and another and must be acknowledged to be an external Church-covenanting with God and with the rest of the members of the Church and so the consent in respect to the making a covenant is not fained neither is it displeasing unto God in the own kind albeit it be not sufficient or acceptable to God unto the persons salvation For so much doth God himself testifie Deut. 5. speaking
seek of God the gift of faith or else be destitute of all excuse if they shall not do what they conceive and professe themselves able to do Thirdly it is equitable to crave faith from them who are able to promise morally the obedience of faith and are able to use the externall means leading unto true faith for the Lord Himself followed this way in his covenanting with the Israelites Exod. 19. where the Lord propounds the condition of the covenant and promiseth to be their God if they should hearken to His voice vers 5. 6. the people did accept the condition and undertook to perform it vers 7. 8. and upon these tearms the covenant was made with them morally in an externall way which did bind the obligation fast upon them Fourthly by preaching of the covenant of grace God doth ordinarly bestow grace and grace for grace on the redeemed in a time acceptable and in craving the condition the Lord giveth grace to accept the condition and to perform it and this course is very sutable to Gods soveraignty or supremacy sutable to His wisdom and his justice and sutable to the freedom of his grace for it becometh the absolute supremacy of God and the liberty of His most holy will to send the Gospel only to whom He will it becometh his wisdom where ever He doth send the Gospel to make offer of grace indifferently to all the hearers whether elect or reprobat that all may be tryed whether they please to receive the offer or not It becometh his justice to withhold grace from such as refuse the offer of it and it becometh his wisdom mercy grace truth and justice both to exact from the elect for whom Christ did satisfie the performance of the condition of the covenant and in the mean time by the offer of grace to make them sayingly to believe using the command of believing in Christ for a fit mean to beget faith hence it is that saving faith is given only to the elect which faith therefore is called the faith of the elect Tit. 1. 1. Hence it is that the elect are called heirs of the promises Gal. 3. 29. and children of the p●omise Heb. 6. 17. partly because they are the children promised to be broughin to Christ Isa. 53. 10. partly because by the promi●ses they are regenerat to a new life and by believing in Christ they obtain righteousnesse and eternall life for 1. Pet. 1. 23. they are called begotten again not of corruptible seed but of the incorruptible seed of the word of God Quest. If it be asked since faith is so necessary what is the object of faith Ans. We answer the truth of God revealed in Scripture or God speaking in Scripture and promising eternall life upon conditions holden forth in these promises among these promises some pertain to the covenant of works such as Gal. 3. 12. do this and live and Matth. 19. 17. If thou wilt enter into life keep the commandments and sundry other particular promises of blessings both spirituall and temporall annexed unto the promulgation of the Law which promises do serve to encourage them to make good their undertaking if they be able as they conceive they are and to humble them when they shall find by experience that neither threatning nor promises can make them to fulfill that law Beside the promises annexed to the covenant of works there are other promises which pertain to the covenant of reconciliation and tend to the making men embrace the covenant of grace and to continue therein such as these which are propounded in the Gospel for giving unto the believer all the sure mercies of David and the benefits purchased by Christ. And of this sort some are more generall some more speciall some of them belong to this life some of them to the life to come for true godlynesse comprehending faith and the fruits of it hath the promises both of this life and of the life to come of all these promises the foundation and fountain is the covenant of Redemption whereof we have spoken Chap. 4. wherein Christ promiseth to the Father to do his will and the Father promiseth to Christ as Mediatour and head of the Church in favours of the redeemed that he shall see his seed and be satisfied and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand upon this covenant of Redemption all the promises made to the Church do depend whether they be absolute promises whether conditional promises whether qualified promises which are like unto conditionall Absolute promises we call for example such as do promise absolutely the taking away the heart of stone and the conversion of the Elect and their perseverance and salvation Ier. 31. 31 32. c. and 32. ver 40. Such are the promises of gathering edifying propagating and perpetuating of the Christian Church to the worlds end as Math. 16. 18. Upon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it Which sort of promises do serve to move men to come and embrace Christ and after men have fled to Christ in whom all the promises are Yea and Amen the believer may make application and comfortable use of all the precious promises of righteousness and eternal life set forth in the Gospel Conditionall promises are such as make offer of Christ and reconciliation to the hearers of the Gospel upon this condition that in the sense of sin and fear of wrath they ●lye to Christ as the only and sufficient remedy of sin and misery Qualified promises like unto conditionall are these that have in them some qualification of the person who is already a believer and do seem to make that qualification or designation of the believer to be a condition of the blessing promised therein which promises if they be well considered do pre-suppone the qualified person to whom the promise is made to be both a believer and also to be evidently endued with the named quality as for example Math. 5. Blessed are the mercifull the peace-maker the meek the mourners the poor the sufferer of persecution for the Gospel or for Christ c. which vertues if the person be not a believer in Christ do as yet signifie nothing in him nor do not intitle the man to this Gospel-blessedness and being the designations of believers they give the persons endued therewith encouragment to go on and encrease in that grace and all other graces that they may thereby more and more give evidence of their being reall believers Such also are the promises which are made to the confident waiters on God rejoycers in God lovers and fearers of God c. In which promises grace for grace to be derived out of the fulness of Christ is promised to the believer Some promises design fit persons to enter in covenant and do invite them to come to Christ Such as are come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy loaden Math. 11. 28. And Ho!
every one that thirsts come to these waters c. Isa. 55. And besides these promises which contain the condition of the covenant made to them who embrace the condition and do already believe such as is they that believe in me shall not perish but shall inherit eternall life there are also promises conditional serving to make men who profess faith in Christ to be reall and stedfast in the covenant wherein they are at least outwardly and solemnly entered such as Ioh. 15. 7 10. If ye abide in me and my words abide in you ye shall ask what ye will and it shall be done unto you and if ye keep my commands ye shall abide in my love c. And Ioh. 12. 26. If any man serve me him will my father honour and Ioh. 14. 21. he that loveth me shall be loved of my father and I will love him and manifest my self unto him Obj. Seing it is certain that the condition of the covenant of grace is not the doing of one or moe works but faith receiving Christ offered without respect to our works as any part of the condition and seing the condition of the covenant is not the having or exercising of such and such vertues but the receiving of Christ through faith unto righteousness and eternal life by the man who hath renounced all confidence in his own works how cometh it to pass that such conditionall promises are made to them that are indued with and do exercise such vertues Ans. Albeit the endeavour to work good works or the exercise of such and such vertues prescribed by Christ cannot be the condition of the covenant for then no man could close covenant with Christ till first he shall find these vertues in himself and have given proof of his constant exercise thereof yet such conditional promises are made use of after a man hath closed covenant with Christ by faith as conditions required in a true believer to evidence the sincerity of his faith And that because many make pretense of their faith in Christ and yet do turn the grace of God into wantonness and do no wayes set themselves to new obedience unto God law and are no wayes careful to bring forth fruits suitable to professed repentance but are indulgent to their vitious and fleshly lusts and in effect do renounce all endeavour to exercise good works in stead of renouncing a carnall confidence in good works Therefore God doth put the endeavour to exercise Christian vertues on all professed believers as a condition distinguishing a sincere believer from an hypocrit least any man should please himself because he is externally in the covenant of Grace while it may be as yet his faith is but a dead faith not working by love Against which sort of pretended believers Iames chap. 2. disputeth Such conditional promises are directed toward them that are outwardly already in covenant and do serve for these severall uses First that such as both profess faith in Christ and are endeavouring the duties required in such conditionall promises may acknowledge that they have obtained of the Lord grace for grace grace to believe and grace to bring forth the fruits of faith Secondly that the honest hearted may be encouraged te set upon these duties and may hope to be furnished for them out of the rich fountain of Christs grace Iohn 1. 16. Thirdly they serve to make such as believe in Christ when they feel the in-lake of any such commanded duty or the bitter root of any vice in themselves to humble themselves in the sense thereof a●d to flye more earnestly to Christ the Redeemer that first they may be covered with his righteousness and then from him receive the power of the holy Ghost to bring forth good fruits as he hath promised Ioh. 15. 5. If ye abide in me ye shall bring forth much fruit Fourthly they serve to make believers in Christ subject themselves to the order of the operation of the holy Ghost who giveth grace for grace and worketh one grace before another in his own order as the foresaid promises do import Fifthly they serve to stir up believers in Christ to the love and exercise of such and such vertues in the hope of the promised reward Sixthly they serve to move believers to joyn one vertue to another for certifying themselves of their own calling and election by their growth therein 2 Pet. 1. 3 4. 12. Last of all they serve to make these who are destitute and void of such qualifications and are careless to have them manifest to themselves and others that they are blind and cannot see a far off and that they have forgotten that they were in baptism ecclesiastically purged form their old sins 2 Pet. 1. 9. Obj. How can this offer of grace to all the hearers of the Gospel and the solemn making of a covenant with all that profess they do accept of the offer stand with the doctrine of election of some and reprobation of others or with the doctrine of Christs redeeming of the El●ct only and not of all and every man Ans. The election of some and reprobation of others was made clear of old by Gods making offer of grace unto and covenanting with one nation only and not with any other Psa. 147. 19 20. He shewed his word unto Jacob his statutes and his judgments unto Israel he hath not dealt so with any nation an● as for his judgments they have not known them 2. And the offer of grace to all hearers of the Gospel and covenanting with all that profess to accept the offer do consist with the election of some only as well now as of old when God made a covenant externall and conditional with all Israel of whom the great part were not elected to life and of whom it is said albeit they were in number as the sand of the sea yet a remnant of them only were to be saved Isa. 10. 22. For by this course God was not frustrat of his purpose and fruit of his covenanting with the mixed multitude of Israelits for the Elect by faith obtained righteousness and life but the rest were blinded Rom. 11. 7. 3. This common offer of grace to all the hearers of the Gospel and the making of a morall covenant with all that do profess that they accept the offer may stand with the doctrine of Christs redeeming the Elect only no less now then of old when Christ did make offer of grace to them that were not his sheep Ioh. 10. 26. and did receive sundry in among his disciples in external covenant who did afterward forsake him Ioh. 6. 66. but yet he did save and doth save all his Elect sheep whom the father hath given unto him Joh. 10. 65. And however this doctrine soundeth harsh in the ears of many when they hear of any reprobat or not elected or when they hear that Christ did not lay down his life for all and every man but for the Elect only and proud men
comparing the words of Ieremiah and the commentary thereupon by the Apostle For Ieremiah saith that they did transgress the Covenant albeit God did shew himself a husband unto these un-believing Fathers that is they changed the covenant of Grace in a covenant of Works of their own framing and transgressed that Covenant also And the Apostle saith they did not continue in that covenant because they changed it to themselves in a covenant of Works according to which Covenant God did deal with them for in stead of being a husband to them he exacted of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and Lorded it over them and did not regard them Heb. 8. 6. For they sought after the righteousness of works and not to have righteousness by faith and therefore did he despise them and dealt with them after the tenor of the covenant of Works And it is observable that the words of Ieremiah do comprehend the Apostles meaning for the words may bear both that God was a husband unto them to wit in making a covenant of Grace with them and that he dealt with them as a Lord over them by exacting of them the penalty of the broken covenant of Works and of the rejected covenant of Grace As ●o the covenant of Grace the Apostle speaketh of it in express termes first by Gods promising that he would make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Iudah Secondly by his setting better promises before them then these were which were made to the Fathers in the wilderness Thirdly by his giving no other cause of bestowing so great blessings on them but his own good-will and pleasure Fourthly by his requiring no other condition of them but saith that they who feel in themselves the want and need of the promised blessings and are convinced of their own unworthiness might give credit unto God that maketh the promise and so embrace the promises and apply them to their own use As to the external dispensation of the Covenant it is certain first that it was common to all that were externally called to all the members of the visible Church for the covenant made in the wilderness with the elect Fathers and reprobat with the believers and un-believers with those that rejected the covenant of Grace and the offer of Righteousness by faith and with those who looked through the vail afar off to Christ coming and were saved was one and the same 2. It is certain that the external form of the covenant of Grace was more obscure and vailed over by the types and figures of the levitical ceremonies before Christ came but after his coming it was propounded in clearer and better promises 3. A day is set to wit the fulness of time when these shadows and typical figures should be abolished and the grace of God should be set before his people to be looked upon with open face 4. And yet the grace of God was not so hid and obscurely propounded to the Church before Christs coming as it could not be taken up by the children of God for in the midst of the shadows and dark typs the star-light of gracious promises did shine and the doctrine of the new Covenant was in substance holden forth by the Prophets and one instance thereof doth appear in this place of Ieremiah As to the internal covenant of Grace first these things which are promised in that Covenant do declare in what state God doth find men whom he doth convert and draw into covenant with himself for when the Lord taketh in hand that he will write his law in their heart that he will teach them himself to know him by the teaching of his Word and Spirit and that he will forgive their sins he pre-supposeth that lawless rebellion did reign in them with blindness of mind and hardness of heart and that the Elect by nature are without law without God without faith before he reform them according to the Articles or tenor of the covenant of Redemption 2. Albeit by nature the law be written in mens hearts as to the knowledge of sundry moral duties and so far as is sufficient to make them inexcusable for their contraveening these sparks of light Rom. 1. ●0 and 2 14. 15. Yet the writing of the law here promised is spiritual and super-natural inlightning their minds by the light of Gods Spirit and renewing their heart and in effect the thing promised is actual conversion of them 3. And seing conversion is here promised by Christ the Testator absolutely he hath taken in hand absolutely to effectuat it for it is not said I will put my law in their heart if they please to suffer me but determinatly I will put my law I will write my law in their heart and inward parts that is I will make them willing who were averse and obedient to my law who were rebellious 4. Christ the Testator doth in all this not satisfie himself by promising the illumination of the mind and the inclining of the heart for a time but promiseth also to make a solid and permanent work of it by making them persevere which is imported in the words I will put and I will write it for to write it is as much as to fix and ingrave it that it may remain 5. The chief head of the Covenant and which in substance doth contain all blessings is set down in these words I will be their God and they shall be my people for by this promise right is granted unto the true heartconvert and confederat first unto God himself then unto all his benefits whereof he hath need in order to righteousness and eternal life for they whose God the Lord is they do live and shall live for ever as Christ saith God is not the God of the dead but of the living Matth. 22. 32. And all particular promises what are they else but explications of this great and first promise and applications thereof to his childrens cases in particular Gifts of the Spirit are promised here and induements whereof disciples have need whereof pilgrims going home to that heavenly city have need yea the Spirit himself is promised to them who is to remain with them to the end of their life as a directer and leader They shall all know me saith the Lord that is as Christ doth interpret it They shall be all taught of God Joh. 6. 45. 7. The Lord sheweth here that he will deal with men in their regeneration and reconciliation as with reasonable creatures by preserving and not destroying them in their simple naturals by maintaining and not over-turning the liberty of their free-will I will make a Covenant saith he with the house of Judah Now a Covenant is a free and voluntar Contract 8. He sheweth that he is Lord and Over-ruler of mans will who can turn it about as he pleaseth and that he is not hindred nor impeded to execute and bring to passe whatsoever he hath purposed to do by the
might weaken their faith and to rejoyce in believing and to be zealous for the Lords glory and carefull to bring forth more and more fruits of faith and love and working such other gracious works of his Spirit in his children as may more and more mortifie sin in them and perfect the image of God in his new creature This divine magisteriall and effectuall application of reall blessings belongeth to God only and is the end of all ministeriall application which is of the externall means appointed of God to be made use of by men the blessing whereof must be left to God to bestow on whom how and in what measure and in what time it pleaseth him as the Apostle doth shew unto us 1 Cor. 3. 6. I have planted and Apollos hath watered but God giveth the increase 3. The externall means which do serve unto the foresaid divine operations are 1. The doctrine of life and salvation set down in the Scripture to be heard and read by all men and meditat upon with prayer for a blessing And 2. sent ministers to whom God hath committed the word of reconciliation by whose ministery disciples may be made unto Christ out of all nations And 3. the administration of the Sacrament whereby they with their children are baptized and gathered together in severall Churches and put under the government of such Church-officers as his Testament hath appointed And 4. these Churches joyned together in the most edifying way of mutuall communion and strengthening one another in true doctrine pure worship and discipline which Gods providence doth make way for that the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus may continue and grow in the world and all his ordinances may be exercised publickly and privatly to the best advantage of the Church for perfecting of the Saints for the work of the ministery and for the edifying of the body of Christ as the Apostle requireth Ephes. 4. 12 13 14. 4. In the use of these external means and specially in the application of these three covenants prudence is required both in P●stors and people to which intent and purpose these following considerations may serve 1. The remedy of every sic●ness of the conscience must be grounded on the doctrine of salvation set down in Scripture which doctrine 〈…〉 be known and believed by the porty 〈◊〉 before he can receive benefit thereby And 〈…〉 a prudent application of wholsom and saving doctrine may be made of necessity the party diseased must be acqu●●ared with the doctrine to be applyed unto him before he can make use thereof to his advantage for experience teacheth us how hardly gross ignorants can be convinced of sin add how hardly such can be comforted when their conscience is wakened with the terrours of God because they neither know from the Word of God the cause of the terrour and anxiety wherein they are nor can they be capable of the remedy of their evill except they first be catechised in the heads of saving doctrine h●ld forth in the Law and Gospel which instruction can hardly be given or received in a short time and howsoever a prudent Pastor must make use of time as it is offered yet when death is near to the party to be instructed how little is it that can be expected to be done 2. The order of applying saving doctrine doth not begin at the application either of the covenant of Redemption or at the covenant of Grace but he that will follow a right order must begin at the law and covenant of works under the yoke whereof we are all born by nature children of wrath And if a man apply that covenant and law to his heart and subscribe his own dittey and deserved condemnation then may he turn up his soul to Christ Jesus the Redeemer and flye to him for refuge and accept the offer which he makes in his Gospel of a new covenant of grace for pardoning of sin and reconciling unto God in himself the person who is fled unto him and for sanctifying and saving of him which covenant when a chased soul doth consent unto and layeth hold on Christ offered for relief from sin wrath death and hell then may he ascend by faith unto the covenant of Redemption and apply to himself with Gods allowance all the saving graces purchased by Christ by that covenant to all that flye unto him and believe in him 3. This order of making use of these three covenants many do not follow but they begin at the covenant of Redemption and will either be satisfied about this whether they be elected or not given to Christ to be redeemed or not which is a secret and not to be inquired into save in Gods order as we have shown or else they will not enter upon the use-making of these means which God hath appointed to bring a man to repentance and faith in Christ. This is a tentation of Sathan which if they yield unto it shall lead them either to resolute profanity with Cain or to anxious desperation with Iudas 4. There are some also who make leap-year of the covenant of works and do take no notice of their own naturall sinfulness or wrath due to them and lying on them by nature but neglecting this order do start a race and run to a presumptuous avouching of their faith in Christ and will thrust in themselves in the number of the elect given before the world was unto Christ to be redeemed and saved pretending their believing of the Gospel when they have not believed the doctrine of the law and so do turn the grace of God into lasciviousness and wantonness and go about the satisfying and fulfilling of their own lusts Wherefore it is necessary that every man who seeketh to be saved and hath resolved to follow Gods way to attain unto salvation do begin first at the covenant of works and examine himself according to the rule of the morall law how he hath behaved himself in obedience unto the first and second table and having sound a dittey great enough that he judge himself and passe sentence on himself as guilty and worthy of everlasting wrath for his sins Secondly when he is convinced of sin and deserved wrath and of his own utter impotency to deliver himself then let him flee to Christ and lay hold on the grace offered in the Gospel applying the same to his burthened conscience according to the tennor of the covenant of grace fully revealed in the Gospel And thirdly when he hath in earnest consented unto the covenant of grace and reconciliation and hath laid hold on Christ with unfaigned faith seeking in him remission of sin and renovation of life being resolved by the grace of Christ to use the means appointed of him for that end Now it is time and not till now to look up unto the covenant of Redemption and there to read his own name as it were written in the book of life and to acknowledge that the measure of repentance and
faith in Christ bestowed on himself now in experience hath flowed from that fountain of Gods love and free grace through Christ. Except this order be keeped a man cannot warrantably and with confidence and comfort make application of these covenants Hence it followeth that it is a preposterous and perilous course which some do follow and presse others to follow that presently upon the hearing of the Gospel every man should believe that Christ hath died for him for Christ calleth no man warrandeth no man to come to him except he first do acknowledge his sins and himself to be worthy of wrath condemnation and hell for his sins and to be utterly unable to save himself by any mean save by Christ for Luke 5. 32. Christ saith I came not to call the righteous but sinners unto repentance Neither doth Christ require of any man to believe himself to be of the number of Christs sheep for whom he laid down his life except he come by faith as a lost sinner to him and submit himself to his doctrine and discipline and pastorall care over him for Ioh. 17. 9. Christ saith I pray not for the world but for these thou hast given me out of the world and no man shall know that himself is given of the Father to Christ till first he come in the order foresaid unto Christ and when he is come to Christ resolveth to abide with him then may he say the Father hath given me to Christ and drawn me to Christ for this is the mark which Christ giveth Ioh. 6. 37. All that the Father hath given unto me shall come to me And again vers 44. No man cometh unto me except the Father draw him 3. There is an order al●o to be observed in the application of the graces offered in the Gospel for in the Evangel first Christ himself is offered as the only and sufficient remedy against sin and misery and next unto the person that receiveth Christ heartily all Christs benefits are promised to come to him by Christ and are to be found in and through Christ such as are Justification Adoption the indwelling of the holy Ghost love joy peace gentlenesse bounty fidelity meekness temperance and other Christian graces Gal 5. 22. for no man hath right unto Christs benefits before he be a believer in Christ. But so soon as a man in the foresaid order is fled unto Christ and hath laid hold on him by faith straight way a door and entresse is opened unto him unto the rich treasure of grace and right is given to him unto all the benefits of Christ for all the promises are yea and amen not before a man come to Christ not to a man without Christ but they are all yea and a men in Christ. 4. Therefore they wrong both God and their own selves who when they come unto the throne of grace do prescribe unto God another order of working then he hath set down in his word craving in the first place consolation and sensible peace in their conscience felt in their hearts and that God would work some such saving graces in their heart which the reprobat cannot counterfit which directions if God will take off their hand and bestow his graces on them sensibly as they prescribe unto him then they will stand oblieged to continue in the faith of Christ but if they find not their directions obeyed and their petitions in their order granted then with grief of heart they begin to complain and to pretend that they dare not approach unto God or Christ so long as these petitions are not first granted and felt to be granted This temptation doth invert and overturn the order of Go●s calling for Christ doth not call unto him well-doers or these that do found their faith upon their own good behaviour and lean to their own works which they desire to find in themselves before they fasten faith on Christ but Christ doth call sinners in their own sense and acknowledgment who renounce all confidence in their own works past present or to come He calleth such as are lost in their own sense and do feel themselves utterly unable so much as to think a good thought of themselves that they may be cloathed with the imputed righteousnesse of Christ and indued with the spirit of sanctification by him and Christs will is that they who believe in him abide in him and suck by faith out of him as the branches do suck sap out of the tree grace to bring forth fruits more and more abundantly for this is the order which Christ doth prescribe unto his disciples Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing Whosoever therefore will not believe in Christ or do think it is not lawfull to approach unto him till first they find in themselves amendment of life and evident fruits of saving faith they do in effect change the condition of the covenant of grace and do suspend their faith in Christ till they find works to build upon when it were their duty the more they feel their barrennesse so much the more straitly to lay hold on Christ and hold him fast and ply him with earnest supplications to make good his promise to them who do abide in him Ioh. 15. 5. 5. It is necessary to presse every man who doth believe his justification by faith that he be carefull to observe the morall law or ten commands as the perpetuall and unchangeable rule of good works prescribed of God for Christ came not to destroy the law but to fulfill it Matth. 5. 17. He hath indeed unto believers in him dissolved the covenant of the law not only by his doctrine teaching them that by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified in the sight of God because by the law is the knowledge of sin gotten but no absolution from sin Rom. 3. 20. But also by absolving every believer in him that walketh not after the flesh but after the spirit from all condemnation Rom. 8. 1● Mean while he hath not broken the yoke of obedience of the law from off the believer as he hath broken off the yoke of the covenant of works but by the contrair he prescribes to them who come unto him for remission of sin that they take on his yoke upon them and bring forth works of new obedience Matth. 11. 29. and this is the order which the Apostle doth prescribe Tit. 3. 8. This is a faithfull saying and these things I will thou affirm constantly that they which have believed in God might be carefull to maintain good works these things are good and profitable unto men 6. The moral precepts of the law are so to be pressed that the hearers whether un-converted or converted may by them whether in some measure obeyed or disobeyed be driven to Christ that the law may ever in some sort be a pedagogue unto Christ for before conversion
sort of men the Lord doth speak Deut. 29. 18 19. shewing that he makes his covenant with his people lest there should be among you saith he a root that beareth gall and wormwood And it come to pass when he heareth the words of this curse that he bless himself in his heart saying I shall have peace though I walk in the imagination of my own heart to add drunkenness to thirst It is possible few shall be found so impudent as that they dar in expresse termes professe this their mis-belief of Gods justice yet they are not a few who foster this error in their heart who having as it were made a Covenant with death and hell are far from fearing to perish in their sins In this sort are all they to be ranked who conceive that all the threatnings in the Scripture are given forth to the intent that men being bridled by terrors might compose themselves to a more humane and social life among others who lest they should seem Atheists in word do cry up Gods mercy bounty and love to man so as they make small reckoning of the Lords truth and justice even as if the justice of God in punishing rebels could not consist with his mercy to the penitent or as if the end of creating man could not be obtained if obstinat sinners be destroyed 2. The main cause of such error is an obstinat purpose to walk after the counsel and imagination of their own heart and because they cannot quiet their conscience in following their own wayes except in promising to themselves impunity in their sinning they presume confidently to go on in their own wayes against all threatenings and so do blow their consciences blind Such profane presumption although it deserveth to be beaten with a rod rather then to be reasoned with yet let the Pastor deal with the presumer as he ought to do with other desperat like sinners and in the first place let him propose for remedy of this evil what the Lord doth speak against such a person Deut. 29. 20. The Lord will not spare him but then the anger of the Lord and his jealousie shall smoak against that man and all the curses that are written in this book shall lye upon him and the Lord shall blot out his name from under heaven And as he findeth this work upon him So let him deal with him 2. Some are near of kindred to such persons who do not reject all threatenings yet do think in their heart that none are in danger except grosse flagitious and notorious sinners but as to themselves they conceive because they are not the worst of men they are without the reach of divine justice especially if their conversation be according to humane laws so regulated as they have the reputation of honest neighbours With such men Christ dealeth Luk. 13. 1 2 5. when word came concerning the Galileans whose blood Pila● mixed with their sacrifices Christ saith to them Suppose ye that these Galileans were sinners above all Galileans because they suffered these things I tell you nay but except ye repent you shall all likewise perish This is the remedy prescribed by Christ to such men 3. Some there are who hope to be absolved before God and do absolve themselves in their own conscience by their good works and obedience done to the law Of this sort was Paul before his conversion who till the time that the spiritual light of the law brake in upon his mind and killed the conceit of his own inherent righteousnesse was no mean man in his own eyes Rom. 7. 9. Such was the rich young man in the Gospel who said to Christ that he had keeped all the commands from his youth up till Christ did prove him a covetous Idolater who put a higher price on his riches then upon Christ and the kingdom of heaven Such were the Pharisees who by their obedience to the law such as it was doubted nothing to absolve themselves and that God should absolve them also But that the met-yaird should be no longer then their cloath or the law of further extent then their imagined possible practice they admitted no metonymie or figurative speech in the law whereby under one branch of a duty commanded all duties of that kind are comprehended and all faults contrary to the duty are forbidden As for example they counted not the sixth command to be violat except the man did take away his neighbours life nor the seventh command broken except by grosse adultery and violation of the marriage-bed nor the eighth command transgressed except another mans goods were openly or privately taken away whose mistake Christ doth correct Matth. chap. 5. and 6. 2. Such men as those are far from repentance far from humbling themselves before God and seeking remission of sin through Christ for they are ignorant of the righteousnesse of the Gospel by faith in Jesus Christ and of the way of coming to ability for doing any acceptable work by faith in Christ and therefore they go about to establish their own righteousnesse Rom. 10. 3. and 9. 31. 32. The false ground which they do lay for their own absolution is this they think to be justified by their works against which ground the Apostle hath pronounced condemnatory sentence Rom. 3. 20. By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in Gods sight for by the law is the knowledge of sin 3. With this sort we may joyn these who not only come short of the obedience due to the law but also are in conscience convicted of many transgressions of the Lords law yet they conceive that God will not exact of them or of any man who is about to obey his law more then the man can in the common infirmity of flesh overtake and do perswade themselves that God will be satisfied with all them in whom is a willingnesse to obey the law their false ground which they lay is this that God will accept a mans will for the deed And to this purpose they do abuse the Scriptures Isa. 1. 19 If you be willing and obedient you shall eat the good things of the land And 2 Cor. 8. 12. If there be first a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that he hath not 4. But here is their error whereupon they purchase from their conscience mis-informed an unwarrantable absolution first they lay down for a ground that they must be justified by works 2. Because they know they do come and shall come short in obedience they turn the condition of the covenant of works into other terms then God hath appointed and make the will of a man to obey the law so far as he is able to be the condition of the covenant which God disclaimeth 3. They deceive themselves in this that what is spoken to converted believers in Jesus Christ already justified by faith aiming at new obedience they do apply to themselves lying under the curse
and covenant of works for it is true indeed when God is dealing with those that are already justified by faith in Jesus and have renounced all confidence in their own works and fled unto Christ and have taken on his yoke the Lord doth take in good part the first fruits of the new creature and doth much esteem the tender fruits of the spirit as the places cited Isa. 1. and 2 Cor. 8. do shew But when the Lord hath to do with the proud natural man the unrenewed man the man that is not humbled for violation of the covenant of works he dealeth with him according to the rigour of the law according to the condition of the covenant of works pronouncing his curse against that man for every sin till the sinner be humbled and slye to Christ. 5. With the former we may joyn all these who believe they may wash away their sins partly by bearing such afflictions as are laid on them by God in this life partly by their tears prayers fastings pilgrimages penances and scourging of themselves and partly by their almes-deeds and other good works do believe they shall make amends for all their misdeeds and what they cannot perfect in this life for the mater of good works they will take assignation to the supererogation and superfluity of the merits of Saints made over unto them by the Pope And what for the mater of suffering is not endured in this life they will take upon them to endure in an imaginary purgatory and place of hell after this life and so poor souls they think they may absolve themselves at least from the sentence of everlasting condemnation by such poor shifts as those But the truth is so long as they rely upon their own sufferings and satisfactions they deny both the necessity and the worth of Christs sufferings and so long as they have confidence in their own works or works of other men they reject and disclaim the covenant of grace and yet behold how proud they prove themselves to be Isa. 58. 3. when they plead with God saying wherefore have we fasted and thou seest not wherefore have we afflicted our soul and thou takest no knowledge 6. Last of all unto the former sort we joyn these who please themselves in the composition of righteousness by works and righteousnesse by faith thinking to save themselves under the shelter of the one righteousnesse or of the other however God shall deal with them Such were the Seducers and seduced amongst the Galatians for refuting of whole errour the Apostle as it were travelled in birth till he brought them to take up the right frame of Christs way of salvation 7. The cause of all such mens deceiving of themselves in a false absolution of their conscience is their ignorance both of the righteousnesse of the law and of the righteousness by faith for such as think their sins are so few and light or their lives so innocent or their good works they have done so weighty and their purpose to do yet moe good works to be so holy or their pains taken in religion so considerable or their sufferings resolved upon so great and thereupon do absolve themselves consider not that the law or covenant of works doth require perfect personal obedience to all Gods law under the pain of Gods curse growing in Items as the law is oftener transgressed till they flye in to the perfect ransom of Christs obedience And as for the righteousnesse of faith in Jesus they consider not that his righteousnesse will not be bestowed upon any who do not renounce all confidence in their own or others works and betake themselves altogether to the only grace of Christ they consider not that if the worth of any work be relyed upon the bargain of free grace is spoiled and clear marred for if it he by works it is no more of grace and if it be of grace it is no more of works for these two are so opposit one to another in the mater of mans election and justification that they can no more consist together as causes p●ocuring or moving God then contradictory sentences can be both true as Paul teacheth Rom. 11. 6. 3 A third sort of self-deceivers and unwarranted self-●b●olvers we reckon all persons poysoned with deadly herefies who being drawn away from the doctrine of Christ set down in the holy Scriptures turn after some false christ and false religion of mens or their own devising giving unto their Idol what worship what service what employment what power they please and making their own conditions of peace with God as they think good some denying the eternity of the Godhead of the true Christ some the reality of his assumed humane nature some evacuating so far as they can his three offices and the fruit of his execution thereof all of them promising to themselves salvation in another then in the true Christ described to us in Scripture who is Creator up-holder and Governour of all things very coeternal God with the Father and holy Spirit in the fulness of time made man ever-living Prophet Priest and King to his Church both before his incarnation and constantly since the way the truth and the life made of God unto true believers in him wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption who walk among the golden candle-sticks and searches the wayes and hearts of every man as he holdeth forth himself in these Epistles unto the seven Churches of Asia Revel chap. 2. and 3. Of this danger of mistaking the true Christ and embracing a false in his room he himself doth carefully fore-warn his Disciples Math. 24. 4 5 24 25 26 Take heed that no man deceive you for many shall come in my name saying I am Christ and shall deceive many The proper remedy of this evil is this let every one that hath an ear hear what the spirit speaketh to the Churches not only in these seven Epistles but also in all the rest of the holy Scriptures which are the expressions of the holy Spirit but if any man receive not the truth in love set down by the Lords Spirit in the Scripture his punishment is set down by the Apostle 2 Thess 2. 11. and for this cause to wit because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved God shall send them strong delusion that they should believe a lye that they all might be damned who believed not the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousnesse 1. The fourth sort of absolvers of themselves without Gods warrand are these who pretend unto true religion and deny the power of it of whom some are couvinced of their duty to repent their sins and to forsake their lusts and to endeavour a reformation of their life and this they do promise to themselves and purpose seriously to do as they think only they cannot presently and at once break off the course they are upon but do hope by little and little to come forward
all maters do stand between God and us Secondly that we inform the conscience well from the Scripture not only concerning the law and covenant of works whereby we may know how guilty we are of manifold sins and how impossible it is for us to be justified by our works or to escape condemnation but also concerning the Gospel and covenant of gracious reconciliation by faith in Jesus Christ and concerning the covenant of redemption whereupon the covenant of grace offered in Christ is grounded Thirdly that we make due and orderly application of these covenants that the conscience may alwayes be furnished with mater of humiliation and held on in the exercise of repentance and not only keeped from desperation but also may be furnished with grounds of good hope to be saved through the grace of our Lord Jesus who hath purchased remission of sins and imputation of his righteousnesse to every humbled sinner flying to him for grace Fourthly that being ingrasted in Christ by faith we by way of thankfulnesse study in the furniture of his Spirit to live holily justly and soberly and that whatsoever measure of sanctification we attain unto we beware to fall back to that deadly error of seeking justification before God by our works whereunto we are naturally inclined for upon this rock the flour and most shining professors in Israel after the flesh made shipwrack of their salvation Rom 9. 32. Israel which followed after the law of righteousnesse hath not attained unto the law of righteousnesse wherefore because they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the law And Rom. 10. 3. for they being ignorant of Gods righteousnesse and going about to establish their own righteousnesse have not submitted themselves to the righteousnesse of God Unto this error of seeking righteousnesse by our works after entering in the way of justification by grace we are all naturally inclined for the covenant of works is so ingraven in all Adams children do this and live that hardly can we renounce this way of justification and howsoever it be impossible to attain righteousnesse this way yet hardly can we submit our selves to the righteousnesse by faith in Christ which not only the experience of Israel after the flesh maketh manifest but also the experience of the Galatians lets us see for they having once outwardly renounced justification by works and embraced the covenant of gracious reconciliation by faith in Jesus did turn about for a time to seek justification by the works of the law and were on the way of falling from grace and communion with Christ. And the experience of Papists doth shew the same for whatsoever they professe concerning faith in Christ yet they abhor justification by Christs imputed righteousnesse and do blaspheme that way as a meer conceit of men and a putatitious or only imaginary righteousnesse and do seek to establish their own righteousnesse and to be justified not only before men but also before God by the merits of their own and other mens works and sufferings the imputation whereof they can tell for money in the midst of their blaspheming the imputation of Christs righteousnesse What can be said for a thief condemned to die for his faults and redeemed by a potent man upon condition that he should be the domestick servant of the redeemer to work his work all his life-time and live upon his allowance and so never be necessitated to steal any more if the ransomed thief should after steal his Masters goods and make himself a stock-purse whereupon he thought he might live and loose himself from his redeemers grace and live upon his own finding were he not worthy upon the finding out of his thifts and other faults to be left in the hands of justice to die according to his deservings And what could be said for a tennent labouring a parcel of ground of his Lands-lord for a yearly farm-duty by his own miscarriage falling to beggary if he should be taken in to the free table of his Lands-lord and trusted with the same parcel of ground to be laboured for his Masters use if he should intervert the fruits of that ground and being weary of his Masters bounty and grace should seek to be fired of his Masters service and to labour the ground for himself for payment of rent if upon the finding out of his thift and not paiment of his rent he should be cast in prison did he not deserve to be dealt with according to justice who would not live by grace So may be said of the man who shall turn from justification by free grace to seek justification by his works The fifth and last use of this doctrine is that to the intent we may not absolve our selves without Gods allowance we study to make our calling and election sure by endeavouring to walk in the sense of our unworthinesse and ill-deserving and renouncing all confidence in any thing without Christ to rely on him for righteousnesse and life-eternal and by faith in him draw spirit and life from him for furnishing us unto new obedience for he is the justified man approven of God who hath no confidence in the flesh and rejoiceth in Iesus Christ and worshipeth God in the spirit Philip. 3. 3. THE SECOND BOOK CHAP. I. Of considerations to be pr●●sed HItherto the sicknesses of the Conscience of the un-regenerat man are spoken to and this was needfull to the end that we might shew how Regeneration is either altogether kept off or hindred from growing where it is begun And because many of these sicknesses which destroy many of the sons of Adam cleave to the regenerat man and though they do not reign nor altogether prevail over him yet do molest and vex him and hinder his comfortable walking toward his everlasting blessednesse Now we come to speak first in this Book of these cases of the conscience of the man regenerat which do brangle and bring in question his state in grace and make him doubt whether he be a man translated out of the state of nature out of the kingdom of Sathan or not And next of these cases that concern his condition in the state of grace in the following Book As to the first sort of cases which concern the regenerat mans state some considerations must be premised for making particulars afterwards more clear 1. In the question of this or that mans regeneration or his being in the state of grace it is all one to question whether he be born again or be effectually called or indued with saving faith or be a justified man or be reconciled to God or be an adopted child And in the answer of this question let it be proven that he is any of these and it is proven also that he is all these for albeit these denominations in their formal conceptions in the abstract may be distinguished yet upon the mater in the conceit they fall upon the same individual person altogether because it is impossible
faith and to follow hard after the growth of sanctification without which no man shall see the face of God and let us so extoll the covenant of Grace and freedom of the believer from the covenant of Works that we neglect not to keep up the authority of the moral Law and the commands thereof as the perpetual rule of new obedience the use whereof is very profitable in the whole course of a Christian life to hold forth the duty of believers in Christ and to shew unto them by their short-coming in duties the poyson and power of corruption remaining in the Saints and to make them sensible of the necessity of flying daily to that imputed righteousnesse by faith in Christ and of drawing strength from Christ to bring forth more aboundant fruits whereby Christ shall be more and more precious in our eyes and be acknowledged absolutely necessar for our justification sanctification and salvation 15. When question is made concerning Christian vertues and operations of the holy Spirit in us the order of Gods working held forth to us in Scripture is carefully to be marked by us which is that sense of sin should go before faith in Christ for the Law is a pedagogue to Christ for he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9. 13. And faith in Christ goeth before the fruits of faith and the fruits of faith before the sensible approbation of them and approbation of the fruits by Scripture goeth before the sensible fealing of the believer and the quieting of the conscience in its approbation of what the Scripture approveth for after we have believed we come to be sealed Ephes. 1. 13. Now for the not observing this order many real Christians do make unto themselves a very un-comfortable life for albeit they be convinced of sin and humbled in the sense of their own inability to help themselves and are fled to Christ for pardon and help and do lead a life blamelesse yet do they unhappily suspend the acknowledging of the work of faith bestowed upon them and do disquiet themselves so as they cannot rest on Christ but do quarrel the reality of their faith till they shall feel and perceive with approbation of their conscience such and such fruits of faith in themselves and that in such a measure as they have fore-imagined to be the necessar evidences of faith yea and they refuse to account themselves persons justified because they cannot perceive such mature fruits in themselves as they conceive must not only be but be acknowledged also to be in the justified person before he can lay hold on justification Such persons do in effect invert the order which they should observe for when it were their part to flye unto Christ the only Mediator because they come short of new obedience and because they are loaden with sin that in him they might have God reconciled to them and by his Spirit pouring in of his grace in their souls to make them more holy they take another and contrary course by suspending their faith upon their works and do exact of themselves works before faith and so do weaken their own faith and hinder it to bring forth such fruits as they do require It is reason indeed to prove our faith by our works and it is just that such a faith be accounted dead which is not accompanied with the purpose and endeavour to live holily justly and soberly But it is against all reason and equity to condemn weak faith accompanied with the purpose of a new life as if it were no faith because it hath not as yet brought forth so fair and fully ripe fruits as the weak believer would It were their wisdom when they perceive such impotency to do what is good and such strength of the body of death in them to flye unto the Redeemer so much the more and in him to seek remission of sin and strength to bring forth good fruits and to be sucking juice and sap out of him as the true Vine for if we come to him and abide in him we shall bring forth much fruit Iob. 15. 4 5. For faith in Christ in order of nature goeth before good works for only they who come to Christ and abide in him do bring forth aboundant fruit and not they who upon the apprehension of their want of fruits do loose or slacken their grip of faith and upon discouragment are ready to depart from the living God 16. The like wisdom is required in dealing with the consciences of men concerning the preparatory dispositions of such as may confidently come unto Christ to be justified sanctified and saved for albeit it be true that all that come to Christ ought to come in the sense of their sin and acknowledgment of wrath and death deserved for their sins ought to come with contrition of heart with godly sorrow for their sins and a humble renunciation of all confidence in themselves yet must not such persons as do not satisfie themselves in the measure or sincerity of such preparatory dispositions in themselves be keeped back or debarred from coming to Christ because they not only want as they conceive both the humiliation and sorrow of heart for sin and fear of wrath required in such as have accesse unto Christ but also do perceive in themselves such blindnesse of mind and vanity thereof such stupidity of conscience and stubbornesse of a proud heart as is not fit as they conceive to be received by Christ or fit to be comforted by him such persons I say are not to be forthwith debarred from coming to the throne of grace for oft-times sincerity of conviction compunction and humiliation is to be found in such as are displeased with their own short-coming in such preparatory dispositions more then in many others who make a fairer shew and profession of their godly sorrow and humiliation and are well pleased with themselves in that respect We must be wary also while we require sorrow and humiliation and other like preparatory dispositions in them who may come unto Christ least we secretly import and insinuat a sort of merit to be in such dispositions so as if he that doth not perceive himself thus qualified could expect no good at Christs hands except he have in his hand such preparatory dispositions as if it were a price of purchasing adresse to Christ. But let us hold this fast that the more poor and empty a man be in his own eyes he ought to draw the more near unto the riches of grace in Christ because in him only are to be found all the treasures of every saving grace and preparatory dispositions for receiving thereof he is that exalted Prince who giveth repentance unto Israel Act. 5. 31. he is the author and finisher of faith unto whom all they who in the sense of their want of repentance and faith do sigh in themselves ought and safely may come that they may have from him a more ample
aiming to walk as reconciled children and servants unto God uprightly laying forth their burdens and desires before him daily all these I say are believers in Christ and may assure themselves of reconciliation for there is no more in the Apostles and Ministers commission required for entering of the humbled sinner into a covenant of friendship save this we request you in Gods name and in the name of God incarnat Jesus Christ the Mediatour we beseech you be reconciled to God v. 20. Now we judge that humbled sinners fled to Christ and purposing to amend their lives by his grace will not be found unwilling to accept this offer of reconciliation but will declare their hearty consent to this offer and so may be convinced that a covenant is closed between God and them and that God hath given unto them saving faith how weak soever it seemeth unto them for the consenting unto and accepting of this offer is the condition required for entering in covenant and the proper act of saving faith Fifthly the Apostle holdeth forth the ground-right of this covenant and reason whereupon the sinner fled to Christ may be assured of justification because in the covenant of Redemption past between God in three persons on the one hand and the second person of the God-head as M●dia●o● and perfect Redeemer by price-paying on the other hand it is agreed finally ended and decreed that Christs satisfaction made for the imbracer of this offered reconciliation shall as certainly make the believer judicially righteous and justifie him as Christ was judicially made sin or a sacrifice for the sins of the redeemed for God saith he v. 21. hath made Christ to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him Therefore as Christ the only Mediator by accepting the covenant of Redemption had the sins of the redeemed imputed unto him albeit there was no sin at all nor could be in him and was punished for them unto the death of the crosse So the humbled sinner by flying unto Christ and accepting the offered covenant of reconciliation hath Christs satisfaction imputed unto him albeit he can see nothing in himself but a masse of inherent sin and shall not enter into condemnation but be brought to life-eternal through Jesus Christ our Lord. Both the covenant of Redemption made with Christ in the Redeemers name and the covenant of Reconciliation made with us through Christ are of Gods making and so must stand and cannot be dis-annulled for ever The other place 1 Cor. 1. 30. holdeth forth the right which God hath made to the believer unto the unsearchable riches of Christ whereunto the weakest believer fled from sin and wrath unto Christ as the refuge and perfect remedy from both may claim namely wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption by him and that by covenant and decree registrat in this and other places of Scripture as judicially declared and adjudged unto all and every believer in him So that they may and should make use of Christ as made unto them wisdom to direct them justification to justifie them sanctification to perfect them peece and peece in holinesse and redemption to support them under and deliver them from all bonds of misery For the better understanding of this rich passage we shall take it up in four sentences pronounced from the holy Spirit by the Apostle in every one whereof these three things are insinuat and imported first our need of Christ 2. his ingaged help and supply and 3. our duty to lay hold upon and make use of him according to the right and interest in him made unto every believer The first sentence is this Christ is made unto us wisdom which importeth first that not only we are by nature blind and ignorant of our sin and misery blind and ignorant of the way of salvation and right maner of serving God but also after that we are illuminat by grace and made in some measure to know our last condition and to flye unto Christ for delivery we are compassed about with much darknesse and foggy mists of doubts errors and mistakes and have need to be in every step of our way directed and powerfully taught by Christs Word and Spirit to know what is that good and acceptable will of God Secondly it importeth that as Christ is the treasure of all wisdom and knowledge who hath revealed in the Scriptures the whole counsell of God concerning our salvation So he is judicially made over unto us as anointed Prophet to his Church to make known unto us the way of life by his Word and Spirit Thirdly it imports our duty to receive him as the great gift of God and to give up our selves to his teaching to imploy him and depend upon him as Prophet appointed to us for direction by his Word what to believe and how to live before God Whereupon the weakest believer may trust in him for guiding them in the use of the Scripture and exercise of the means appointed by him unto salvation because he is made of God unto us wisdom and intimation thereof is made by his Apostle The second sentence is this Christ is made of God unto us righteousnesse which presupponeth first that we are by nature destitute of righteousnesse condem●ed as unrighteous by the law and unable to deliver our selves from condemnation and when we are fled to Christ and delivered from condemnation that we are not able to stand in that state but by our daily sins wherein we fall do deserve to be condemned as unrighteous Secondly it imports that Christ is not only righteous in himself and able to satisfie divine justice for our sins but also hath undertaken to pay and actually hath payed the price of our redemption by his obedience unto the Father even to the d●ath of the Crosse and hath taken on him the office of high Priest to apply unto us absolution from our sins make us accepted and to be dealt with as righteous and to keep us in that blessed estate by his intercession Thirdly it imports our duty to lay hold on Christ our Cautio●er by vertue of our right and interest in him granted and intimat unto us and so to rest on him that whatsoever Sathan Conscience or Law violat by us shal● say we who are f●ed from sin and wrath to him may oppose this sentence of our absolution registrat here Christ is made unto us righteousnesse judicially by the decree and decreet of God The third sentence is this Christ is made unto us of God sanctification which presupponeth that in the justified believer there are remaining still the reliques of sin inherent from which we are not able of our selves to deliver our selves but have need of divine power to mortifie sin in us and to repair the image of God by increasing holinesse in us Secondly it importeth that Christ the Mediator the holy one of Israel hath not only payed the price of our redemption
sense of sin begun in the afflicted by Gods mercy and that the afflicted cannot now be hindered from repentance nor be keeped in his former snare doth change himself as if he were an angel of light and setteth all at nought the measure of sorrow which the afflicted hath already and shews unto him how unanswerable the proportion of his sorrow is unto the multitude and hainousnesse of his sins and so spurreth him on to mourn more and more that if it be possible he may distemper and distract him or make him pine away and perish in his sorrow without faith or consolation in Christ this is one evil Another evil is this the affectation of such a degree of sorrow smelleth of seeking some sort of expiation of sin and compensation of the pleasure taken in sin by suitable sorrow for it unto which practical error we are by nature too too prone for as by nature we strive to be justified by works according to the covenant of works written in the children of Adam so when we see our selves come short of the righteousnesse of works we go about as is to be seen in Papists to supply the defect of works by some one sort or other of our sufferings and satisfactions for sin in special that by sorrow and tears in abundance we may wash away the guilt and pollution we have contracted by sin And in this course we run on naturally after wakening of the conscience to exact pennance and punishment on our selves till the deluded heart say it is enough And then as if all were well the deceived sinner resteth himself which deceit of the heart the oftener it hath place and prevaileth without being observed it is the more dangerous A third evil following on this practical error is by it the free grace of God and merits of Christ are greatly obscured and both the mans consolation and sanctification are marred the loss that the afflicted sustaineth on the one hand and the drawing on of new guiltinesse by such a course on the other hand is covered under the vizard of humiliation A fourth evil followeth this error which is this the afflicted person so long as he continueth in this mistake he giveth way to the tentation and doth of set purpose foster his own misbelief that he may thereby foster and augment his own sorrow and afright himself with dreadfull imaginations what shall become of him that he may augment his affected heavinesse of spirit and make the fountain of his tears run the more abundantly A fifth evil is the afflicted so long as he suspends his going to Christ because he hath not mourned sufficiently for sin he fosters another fault unawars to wit a purpose to lay down any more sorrowing for sin if once he had overtaken his imagined measure of sorrow and had his accesse so made unto Christ. This deceit of the heart is brought to light in the practice of some Antinomians who allow themselves once to mourn for sin that their mourning may make way for faith in Christ but after they apprehend they have once repented and casten their burthen on Christ and do number themselves among believers they scorn to mourn any more for sin they harden themselves against all remorse of conscience and do reject secret challenges as groundlesse and make themselves merry with their own fancy and reckon all penitents to be under the spirit of bondage which evils if the afflicted person would perceive to follow upon his error which as a net is spred before his feet to keep him from going to Christ and following the course and exercise of repentance all the dayes of his life he would take heed better to his steps 4. The afflicted must be informed or called to mind concerning sorrow for sin that it is not commended from the quantity or measure of it but from the quality or sincerity of it Now sincere sorrow for sin is best discerned by the hatred which the mourner hath against sin by the mourners humiliation of himself before God by his abhorring himself both for his sin and for the hardnesse of his heart under sin by his purpose to strive against all sin by his flying in unto Christ for relief from sin by his entertaining and renewing of godly sorrow after he hath believed in Christ according as he findeth the inherent roots of sin to be springing up in him This is indeed sincere and godly sorrow which causeth repentance never to be repented of 5. Fifthly and last of all the afflicted must be exhorted not to linger any more but flye to Christ and let him be humbled so much the more as he is not so humbled as he should and would be let him call to minde that Christ came not only to comfort mourners for sin but also to call sinners unto repentance for Christ hath not put such a measure of sorrow whereof we are speaking to be the condition of the covenant of Grace he doth not fell his precious wares nor his gifts of grace for the price of mens tears but let him remember that whosoever is so destitute in his own sense of all good as he finds neither the sense of sin nor repentance nor faith nor any other good thing in himself which may commend him to God but by the contrair much evil of all sorts and yet cometh to Christ is no doubt the poor in spirit whom Christ hath pronounced blessed Matth. 5. 3. and that the sense of his sin and misery in the measure which he hath of it is the evidence of eye-salve already bestowed upon him to encourage him to buy of Christ all the riches which he holdeth forth to the poor in spirit Revel 3. 18. CHAP. VII Wherein the Christians doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not his righteousness exceeding the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees is answered THere are some regenerat persons who in the sense of their sins and acknowledgment of their unworthinesse and inability to help themselves are fled unto Christ and have given over themselves to him by faith and are endeavouring to bring forth fruits suteable to repentance who for all this fall a doubting whether they be renewed whether their faith be true and saving faith and the reason which they give of their doubting is because the reformation of their life whereunto they have attained appeareth unto them not to exceed the righteousnesse which may be found in some Pagans or in Scribes and Pharisees of whom Christ hath said in the Evangel Matth. 5. 20. I say unto you that except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven This doubt is followed with grief anxiety of mind and fear least all vertues in them be found nothing but counterfeit and this case except it be speedily cured cannot chuse but draw after it heavy and hard consequences For curing whereof we must confesse that many Pagans and Infidels
this doubt let us remember that it is pre-supposed and found by experience that some that are afflicted with this doubt and suspicion do not cease to follow duties howbeit heartlesly do live blamelesse in an evil world and so are not idle nor unfruitfull only this doth trouble them that they find not the peace of conscience which they did expect they misse joy in God consolation in their prayers patience in affections chearfulness and alacrity in following their calling they do not find sensible approbation of their work from God as they did promise to themselves and did expect Hence flow their tears lamentations and complaints of themselves and suspicions of the reality and sincerity of their faith and all without just cause for as in bodily sicknesses sometime moe maladies then one are complicat and to each of them respect must be had for perfecting the cure So in this case moe practical errors do concur and each of them must be deciphered and removed We shall condescend upon four The first practicall error of the afflicted is the suspending of his faith upon a tacite condition that such and such effects be produced and that Gods sensible approbation of his diligence and works be felt as if there were no warrantable act of faith for laying hold on Christ except after a certain time and tryal taken whether it shall produce such or such fruits or not And here three deceits do concur The first is a faith with a secret reservation if such fruits follow is by suggestion of the tempter thrust in in the place of absolute believing without reservation and in effect is a trying of God in stead of trusting in him for through temptation the afflicted tacitly craveth a condition to be performed by God that when God performeth the prescribed condition then the mans faith after that may rest upon him other wayes not for when a sinner cometh to Christ he should speak to this sense O Lord my God seing it hath pleased thee to reveal thy self to me a blind impotent sinner running toward hell and hast offered thy self to me for a Saviour in whom I may have wisdom righteousnesse sanctification and redemption Behold O Lord I heartily receive the grace offered I imbrace thy Word and thy Self offered to me in thy Word and do give up my self wholly to thy government that thou may repair in me the lost Image of God and powerfully carry me on unto salvation Instead of saying thus and closing absolutely the bargain with God in Christ reconciling the world to himself the tempter would have the poor afflicted man to speak as it were to this sense O Lord the condition whereupon thou dost offer to be my God and Saviour doth please me well but because I fear I may deceive my self in performing that condition I require another condition of thee that thou wouldst first let me see the fruits of faith in me which if I shall find within sometime hence then will I count my self a believer and will rest on thee but if I find not such fruits as may evidence true faith in me I must pronounce my saith either no faith or a dead faith which hath a name of faith but neither power nor life in it For faith without works is dead as Iames saith ch 2. 26. Now what is this else in effect then to make a new condition in the covenant of Grace and to promise upon this condition to believe on Christ if God shall do as the sinner giveth him direction that is if God shall make him bring forth the fruits of faith first when it became him absolutely to imbrace Christ that he might both be forgiven of sin and enabled to bring forth fruits of faith Another fault is here also which is this the afflicted person doth require mature fruits from a weak faith from a faith that is not setled and fixed but suspended on a condition which is no lesse unreasonable then if a foolish Gardner should require fruits of a young tree lately planted yea before the roots of it were well setled in the ground yea and would not let it stand in his garden except it should first bring forth fruits whereby it might evidence it self worthy of pains taking on it A third fault is this that the afflicted in this case doth pre-suppose that true faith is posterior to the fruits of true faith both in nature and time for if he will not believe in Christ till after he perceive and feel in himself the fruits of faith upon this ground he can never believe till he first find the fruits of faith in himself which is nothing else in effect then to imagine that the effect must go before its cause Unto this threefold self-deceit we offer this one remedy in general that the afflicted person in the foresaid case humble himself before God in the sense of his barrennesse and so much the more as he findeth small or no fruits in himself let him flye to Christ and fasten himself the more on his imputed righteousnesse and cleave unto him by faith without delay that he may draw vertue and furniture from him to bring forth good fruits for this is the only way to make him bring forth fruits in abundance as Christ doth teach us Ioh. 15. 5. He that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing He and he only can make a good tree of an evil imp and cause it bring forth fruits answerable to the nature of the true vine wherein it is ingrafted And seing Christ in the Canticle ch 2. 13. doth make no small account of the green figs and tender grapes let not the afflicted despise the day of small things 4. The second practical error in the afflicteds foresaid case is this the afflicted person hath imagined in himself that such and such fruits would presently follow upon his receiving the offer of Christ as that he should forthwith be skillfull in the knowledge of the mysteries of salvation able to pray eloquently made chearfull in singing songs of praise unto God ready and expedit to every good work and that he should feel constantly an un-interrupted peace in his conscience and joy in the holy Ghost but after that by experience he hath found that he cannot so much as enter upon any good work without a fight with Sathan and with his own corrupt nature and other impediments and withall he doth feel the peace of his conscience and the joy of the holy Ghost with-drawn hereupon he begins to suspect the whole work of Gods grace in himself and that he remaineth in the state of nature unrenewed 5. For removing of this error let the afflicted know that the hopes which he hath conceived at the hearing of the Gospel shall not be disappointed albeit according to his childish fore-conception they come not to passe for in a time due and acceptable God shall perform all his promises
his yoke upon them are troubled with doubtings whether they be of the number of true believers whether they have rightly come unto Christ whether they have been well accepted of him and for their doubting they can give no other reason save this I cannot be quiet nor rest in assurance that I am in the state of grace if they be interrogat what they think of the evident signs of their regeneration which have been and are to be seen in their conversation since they began in earnest to seek the face of God in Christ They will possibly not altogether deny Gods work in them but yet dare not lean weight upon these signs because they do find these signs also brought in question whether they have been or are kindly and sincere mean time they are about to do that which is acceptable to God in the course of their calling albeit with more heavinesse and lesse alacrity then b●cometh persons reconciled to God in Christ. 2. This disease will be found complicat and made up of moe mistakes and errors then one and therefore is to be the more narrowly considered because it is no small hinderance of a comfortable christian conversation which God doth allow on his children for in the party troubled with unquietnesse we presuppone I● there is a serious sense of sin and purpose to do better 2. An unfained embracing of the covenant of grace and reconciliation in Christ J●sus And 3. an honest though weak endeavour to bring forth the fruits of new obedience and yet notwithstanding the person is not quiet but walketh heavily and is discouraged by reason of his uncertainty whether he be in the state of grace or not yea he is cast down and disquieted because he is disquieted and cannot get a reasonable answer from his conscience when he asketh of it why are thou cast down and disquieted within me 3. The mistakes and errors whence this dissatisfaction and unquietnesse doth flow are many but we shall condescend upon eight or nine only The first error and cause of unquietnesse is or may be this that the party afflicted albeit he have the habits of saving grace in him and doth by Gods grace put forth these habits in actual exercise yet he doth not reflect upon nor turn his eye to observe the operations of Gods holy Spirit in himself nor the acts of saving grace which the holy Spirit hath made him put forth of which if he take not notice they are to him for the time as if they were not and so no wonder he be disquiet while he perceiveth not in himself that which might make him quiet For example when the sense of sin is raised up in a mans spirit by the holy Ghost if he do not observe that this is one of the operations of the holy Spirit convincing the world of sin or if he do not turn back his eye on this operation and upon his own act stirred up thereby to subscribe the sentence of the law against himself no wonder that he doubt of his conversion till he see the foot-steps of God the converter of him from the love and approbation of sin unto the hatred of it and when he is ●l●d to Christ the only Redeemer from sin and misery and hath laid hold on him according to the covenant of grace offered in him if he do not look back on this operation of God drawing him to Christ and upon his own act of coming unto Christ by the draught of Gods Spirit what wonder he do not reckon himself among believers albeit he be in Gods account one of that number And when the holy Spirit hath kindled in him not only a purpose of new obedience but also a begun endeavour to live holily justly and soberly if he do not observe and acknowledge these operations of Gods Spirit making him to bring forth these acts what wonder that this mistake and inconsideration do open a door to disquietnesse and doubting whether he be in the state of grace or not 4. For removing this cause of disquietnesse the afflicted person must beware that he passe not sentence of Gods dispensation towards him according to the tentations and suggestions of Sathan nor yet according to the opinion which his Pastor or friend may have of him judging somewhat uncharitably of him upon sinister suspicions neither let him stand to the suspicions of his own incredulous heart but let him consider what the Word of the Lord hath said of the person in whom these three grace● do concur to wit 1. the sense of sin and inability to help our selves 2. flying unto Christ for relief from sin and misery and 3. some measure of upright purpose and endeavour to serve God in new obedience for of such saith the Apostle Phil. 3. 3 We are the Circumcision or true Israelits who have no confidence in the flesh but rejoyce in Iesus Christ and worship God in the spirit Let him therefore esteem the discovery of his sinfull and wretched estate in himself to be the very fruit of the eye-salve and work of the Spirit bestowed on him by Christ and let him esteem his hearty consent given to the covenant of grace and reconciliation to be the undoubted act of saving faith For hearty consent to the offer of grace in Jesus Christ presuppones first that the person sees no standing for him by the law or covenant of works but is beaten from all confidence in himself and made to believe and subscribe the righteous sentence of the law against himself to the praise of Gods truth and justice Secondly it imports the mans believing the testimony which God hath given of Christ Jesus to wit that God hath made a gift of life eternall to the soul that hungereth and thristeth for righteousnesse and that this life is in his Son yea it imports the mans receiving and embracing of Christ offered in the Gospel Thirdly it importeth that the consenter to the covenant of grace as he hath renounced confidence in his own works So he hath given up himself to God to live by the grace of Jesus Christ unto eternall life Now if the afflicted shall reflect upon these two operations of the holy Ghost making him humble in the sense of sin heartily to receive Christ Jesus for his relief and withall do observe an unfained purpose and begun endeavour to live more holily and fruitfully by the grace and furniture of Christ howsoever he labour under many infirmities not only is he undoubtedly a new creature but also by observing the foresaid evidence thereof may conclude that God hath begun a good work of grace in him and so shall this first cause of disquietnesse be removed 5. Another cause of disquietnesse is or may be this if the afflicted after examination of the work of grace in himself being convinced of his blessed estate and confirmed by present sense of Gods love shed abroad in his heart do not hold fast his estimation of Gods work in himself longer
dissimilitude of manners or discrepance of judgment or contention about any mater then partiality hindereth a right judgment one of another and affection marreth reason many times that it cannot discern what is right Therefore let the person afflicted with this tentation turn himself to God who searcheth the reines and let him humble himself in his sight renewing the exercise of repentance and faith in Christ and let him apply to himself what the Scripture doth pronounce of these who in the sense of their sin do flye to Christ Jesus that in him they may have remission of sin and amendment of their life for so did the Prophet in the whole Psal. 17. when he had to do with his uncharitable friends and kinsfolk and so let the afflicted do CHAP. XV. Wherein the converts doubting of his being in the state of grace so oft as he doth not feel the sense of his reconciliation with God is examined and answered SO●e true converts are who indeed are indued with the saving graces of faith hope and charity and give evident proof of the in-dwelling of the holy Spirit in them and do rejoyce now and then in God their Saviour when his love to them is shed abroad in their heart but when a cloud cometh over their eyes and they do not feel the warm beams of the Sun of righteousnesse shining in their soul as they before have felt they are assaulted with doubting if any saving grace be in them at all and do entertain these tentations oft-times so far as to suspect and expresse in words that there is no solid faith in themselves no lively hope no christian charity no mortification of sin no purity of heart and such like if when they are thus tempted and tossed they lay hold on Christ as in their first conversion and find the sensible comfort of the holy Spirit by the word of the Gospel applyed unto them then all is well their doubting is overcome for the time they rejoyce and praise God But if the Lord shall delay for his own wise ends to renew their sensible consolations and to renew the earnest-penny of their inheritance forthwith they begin to doubt again and to hearken to Sathans suggestions and to suspect that their former feelings were but temporary and not the special operations of the holy Spirit and at length break forth in many sad complaints And in a word they do not maintain the work of saving grace in themselves longer then the sun shine of spiritual felt consolations abideth with them And albeit their exercise be no wayes so hard as was the Prophets Psal. 77. yet they fall out in the same complaint which the Prophet expresseth ver 7 8 9. Will the Lord cast off for ever and will he be favourable no more is his mercy clean gone for ever doth his promise fail for evermore hath God forgotten to be gracious hath he in anger shut up his tender mercies 2. For clearing of this case two diseases may be perceived in the afflicted which is here described The one is this the afflicted setteth himself to live rather by sense then by faith and doth put his faith on work of set purpose that he may obtain or recover consolation shortly but if his desire be not shortly granted he maketh not use of the formerly felt consolations to strengthen his own ●aith when consolation is withdrawn The other sicknesse is this the afflicted doth not take up the nature of saving graces nor perceive the beauty thereof except in the sun-shine of sensible divine approbation thereof he doth not take up the right definition or description of saving graces for saith is to him nothing if it be not a full perswasion except he can pour forth tears alwayes he thinks he doth not repent except he find a joyfull expectation of Christs coming in glory he thinks his hope not lively and so of charity and patience temperance righteousnesse and holinesse if he do not find them in some eminent measur as they may near●by stand before the law the afflicted of whom we are now speaking thinketh he hath nothing of saving grace in him We grant that this sicknesse is very rare and few they are that are troubled with it yet where it appeareth it must be speedily cured but with great circumspection cured for the earnest desire he hath of feeling the sweet sense of the joy of the holy Ghost must not be disallowed but commended to him and he taught to cry as it is said Cant. 2. 5. Stay me with flaggons comfort me with aples for I am sick of love yet with holy submission unto Gods will for time maner and measure 2. He is also to be commended that in his trouble he goeth to God in Christ not altogether without faith which he putteth forth in active exercise thereof by confession of sin by supplication and otherwayes but here is he to be reproved that while he is actually exercising faith love hope c. he reckoneth all he doeth to be nothing no faith no hope c. because it is not in such a measure as he would 3. He is to be commended that he doth aime at the highest degrees of faith love hope patience mortification of sin and practice of holinesse and all commanded vertues but here he faileth that he counteth all as nought when consolation and sensible approbation of what he hath is not felt for here he despiseth the day of small things and unthankfully mis-regardeth the lower degrees of these saving graces which notwithstanding are bought to the redeemed by the same price wherewith the highest degrees are bought to wit with the precious blood of Jesus Christ. 3. Wherefore let the afflicted consider first that the will of God revealed requireth of us that we walk by faith and under the sense of our sinfulnesse and afflictions whatsoever hold fast the covenant of grace in Christ Jesus and by adhering unto him hold up our heart and entertain spiritual life in us Secondly let him consider that this way of living by faith and dependence on the word of Gods grace doth please the Lord well for without faith it is impossible to please him and thus living by faith in him doth give more glory of truth grace mercy and constancy unto God then when we suspend the glorifying of him till we find the sense of consolation from him for if we believe in God only because we find the consolations of his Spirit our faith in that case is weak and leaneth more upon the pledge and sensible evidence of his truth bestowed upon us then upon his promise without a pledge for no man will refuse to give credit to a man upon a pawn but God is worthy to be credited upon his word without a pawn yea when his dispensation seemeth contrary to his promise Thirdly let him consider that the Lord useth to give sensible consolations not only to help our faith in the time of consolation but also to help our
his lamentation for his short-coming in duties unto God by prayer for this is the way to make progresse in faith and repentance and humility and submission of his will unto God in the use of the means and let him thank the Lord that from day to day he is keeped from scandalous out-breaking CHAP. XVII Wherein is solved the converts doubt whether he be regenerat because he seemeth to himself to follow religion and righteousnesse from the common operation of Gods working by morall swasion and not from the special operation and impulsion of the holy Spirit THere are some true converts who have profited so far in the amendment of their life and conforming their conversation unto the rule of Gods Word that the yoke of Christ is become easie to them and their delight is to be frequently about the exercises of religion and works of righteousnesse and yet sometime they are troubled with suspicion whether the work of regeneration in them be solid because any thing they do may be done as they conceive by temporary believers in whom no sound renovation of corrupt nature will be found I find nothing in me saith one of the effectual motion of the holy Spirit but all by way of morall swasion by imitation of others by education as may be found in the unrenewed disciples of morall philosophy for as they by frequent actions do acquire habits wherewith being indued they discharge moral duties more easily and with delight So I by discharging acts of religion and acquainting my self with them daily do seem to my self to have acquired a facility and delectation in religious actions and works of righteousnesse toward my neighbours 2. This case we grant is very perilous and subtilely coloured by Sathan to deceive and weaken the true convert for it is true what power hath been seen in morall philosophy among Pagans to put a luster on mens civil conversation must be also granted to Theology among professed Christians because divine threatnings and promises for procuring outward reformation of a mans life are more apt to prevail with a man then all morall philosophy and it is true also that education by parents and imitation of good men is of great force morally to perswade a man to the following of the outward duties of religion and to a civil conversation Wherefore it is no wonder to see a true convert doubt of his own regeneration when he compareth external duties discharged by himself with the external duties discharged by others whose heart he cannot see but must judge charitably of them and yet can neither be clear determinatly to affirm all such to be true converts nor to affirm himself to be a true convert so long as he suspecteth that as some others reformation So also his own reformation may prove no better then from morall swasion which may be ●ound in a man unregenerat 3. For lousing of this doubt and strengthening of the faith of the true convert let him examine himself whether in the conscience of his natural sinfulnesse and sense of his own unworthinesse and inability to deliver himself from the power of sin wrath and misery he hath fled and from time to time doth flye to Christ according to the tenor of the covenant of grace to be justified sanctified and saved by him and doth follow the exercises of religion and righteousnesse in obedience to the commands of God If his conscience answer him that so he doth then first let him look upon his doubting of his state as the subtile tentation of Sathan and that he may be strong against this tentation let him renew the acknowledgment of his sins and sinfulnesse of his weaknesse and unworthinesse and renew also his consent to the covenant of grace in Jesus Christ and his purpose to obey the commandments of God in the strength of Christ for by this means he shall gain the entry into his refuge where-from Sathan was drawing him by furnishing doubts and weakening his faith Secondly having casten his anchor within the vail and setled his faith on Christ Jesus let him now maintain his former course so far as truth will suffer that his former course of life in following with delight the exercise of religion and righteousnesse did proceed from the holy Spirit and let him consider that it is not a sufficient reason to call in question the infused habits of saving grace because supernatural habits infused immediatly by the Spirit of Christ are entertained augmented and confirmed by frequent acts and daily exercise no lesse then natural or morall habits are which are acquired by exercise And this is clear from Scripture wherein are many exhortations to put faith love repentance patience c. in frequent exercise that these gracious habits may grow strong as the Apostle Peter doth speak 2 Epist. 1. chap. ver 5 6. c. Thirdly let him put a difference in judging of his own conversation and the conversation of others of whose principles and ends of outward godly carriage he cannot judge as he can do of his own for a man in nature unregenerat or a temporary believer may make profession of true religion and outwardly go on in a blamelesse conversation with this opinion that by his works he shall please God and procure salvation to himself But the true convert shall be found a renouncer of confidence in his own works a man sensible of his own sinfulnesse and imperfections who hath fled and resolveth still to adhere to Christ for righteousnesse and salvation through him the finding whereof in any measure after examination may solve the converts doubt for a man in nature cannot so hate sin and follow holinesse as to renounce confidence in his holinesse and slve unto Christ for righteousnesse Fourthly let the afflicted convert consider that the Lords dealing with his children both by morall motives and by effectual perswasion unto the obedience of faith may and doth very well concur and agree together neither is the special operation of the holy Spirit with any reason to be suspected because he sweetly leadeth on his child by way of counsell without the childs observation of any notable impulse making him to overcome strong tentations unto sin whereunto he is naturally inclined for the more victorious grace is over corruption the efficacie of the Lords grace is the more conspicuous and that obedience is most pleasant to God wherein corrupt nature maketh most opposition Therefore in this case here presupposed let him stand to the defence of his faith in Christ and go on cheerfully in the way of righteousnesse against Sathans tentation solliciting him to doubting and discouragement which counsell if he follow he shall find by experience that he hath made use of the shield of faith and gotten the victory not without the special operation and impulse of the holy Spirit CHAP. XVIII Wherein is solved the true converts doubt whether he be regenerat because he findeth not self-denyal in the measure which is requisite in converts
not please God Now it is an act of injustice not to give unto God the praise of every good thing in a man especially when the man is found to be cast down in himself and to be thirsting in his soul for a more intimat communion with Christ as is presupposed in this case 3. The second cause is or may be this that the afflicted albeit he hath had oft times sweet and sensible consolation and confirmation of the promises of the Gospel and hath thereby been put out of doubt of his adoption for the time yet when new temptations do arise according to what was expedient for the exercise of his faith because the same sweetnesse is not felt but heavinesse for the while 1 Pet. 1. 6 7. he forgetteth the consolations he hath had or suffereth them to be called in question For removing whereof whensoever the afflicted is cut short in the point of sense or sensible consolation let him then strive to abound in the work of the Lord and not slacken his hand in the exercise of religion and of his lawfull calling and his indeavour to please God in all things for seing the covenant of grace imbraced is a firm and solid ground for ●aith to fix upon albeit full perswasion and victorious consolation were neither at all or but very rarely ●elt in this life the afflicted whom we have to speak to here hath no cause to stumble but reason to blesse God who hath in any measure at any time comforted him by the Gospel for that condition which the afflicted wisheth for is reserved unto us in heaven and promises such as are made to the meek and mercifull Mat. 5. which qualified promises they look upon as conditional excluding them as they conceive who do not find in themselves such qualifications and partly because they are not clear about their right to receive the offer of the Gospel because they want as they conceive fitnesse in themselves to receive the same and thus are they oft-times vexed with doubts whether they be in the state of grace or not 2. For lousing of this doubt sundry things are already said by the way in answering other doubtfull cases But because many do meet with this difficulty we shall speak a little more particularly to the case and first it is needfull that the afflicted be confirmed about that which is right in him that the thing which remaineth and is ready to die may be strengthened To this intent we commend the afflicted that being sensible of sin and feared for-wrath he hath fled unto Christ for refuge next we commend him that he hath begun to give new obedience to Gods Law and doth purpose to follow on as he shall be enabled and thirdly we commend him that albeit he cannot attain that near conjunction with Christ which he would yet he neither will nor dare forsake Christ not put himself out of the number of weak believers in Christ for he hath said in his heart with Peter Joh. 6. 68. To whom shall I go for Christ hath the words of eternal life Hitherto all is right and the afflicted must resolve to cleave close to this foundation because Christ hath said Ioh. 6. 37. These that come unto me I will in no case cast out 3. For his doubt arising from the nature of the promises absolute conditional and qualified looked upon by him as if they were conditional we answer ● That these qualified promises having some mark in them of true believers are not exclusive of these believers who find in themselves a defect of the qualification but they are inductive unto all believers to study the attaining of that qualification and are corroborative of these belivers who find in any sensible measure these qualifications For example promises made to the mercifull to the peace-makers to the upright in heart do not exclude these who find themselves short in these graces and yet are hungry and thristy for righteousnesse yet are poor and indigent of all good in themselves and daily beggers at the throne of grace for what they want Mat. 5. for these qualifications found in a weak believer are signes and effects of sound faith in them And we must grant that of these graces specified in these qualified promises some of them are more eminent in some of the Saints and other some of them more eminently seen and felt in other some of the Saints And in the same person one of these qualifications may sometime shine more clearly and at another time by some tentation or mistake be over-clouded and not shine so clearly as before yet the qualifications are comfortable to all them who find the same in themselves and are inductive to make every believer to aime to excell in these graces and so to confirm their own faith more and more as 2 Pet. 1. 4 5 6 7. we are exhorted Again these qualifications are signs of a believer already entered in the covenant of grace by faith in Christ and begun to bring forth good fruits but they are not the conditions of entering into the covenant for then none could enter in covenant till first these qualifications in exercise were sound in them and that were to dis-annull the covenant of grace and to set up a sort of covenant of works for there is not another condition of entering in the covenant but faith in Christ only whereby the humbled sinner renouncing all confidence in any good in himself or from himself doth betake himself wholly to the grace offered in Jesus Christ in whom perfect righteousnesse is to be found Now unto the man who shall believe in Christ all the promises of the Gospel are made upon this condition that he do believe in Jesus Christ which condition of presuppose the afflicted should have what he wisheth consolations alwayes running like a river where were place for trying exercising and training of him in his faith but let him work and wrastle on and among hands he shall have as much peace as may suffice a pilgrim 4. The third cause is or may be this that the afflicted hath grieved the Spirit of God either by ascribing his gracious operations to some other cause then grace or counting his consolations to be but flashes and like unto delusions or that the afflicted by corrupt communication or grosse offences hath provoked God to anger as befell David Psal. 51. For removing of this cause whether the sin of the afflicted hath been more or lesse provoking let him with David Ps. 51. renew the exercise of repentance and faith in Gods mercy who only can renew a right spirit in him or rather restore him to the formerly-felt consolation and joy of his Spirit and let him walk more warily hereafter that he provoke not to wrath so mercifull a father 5. The fourth cause is or may be this that the afflicted albeit he hath consented to the covenant of grace and hath embraced Christ Jesus offered in the Evangel yet he doth not
set to his seal to the truth of God without an hink or fear and suspicion of his right to apply the grace offered in which case so long as he doubts and doth not rest his sinfull soul on the Word of God offering grace to every soul sensible of sin who shall flye to Jesus Christ what wonder the holy Spirit doth with-hold the sealing of the mans faith For this is Gods order holden forth Ephes. 1. 13. that a sinner should first six his faith on Christ offered in the Gospel and after he hath believed not before he do believe wait for the sealing of the holy Spirit For removing this cause 1. let the afflicted acknowledge that his hesitation doubting and suspicion is justly chastised of God because he hath not firmly adhered to the covenant embraced by him and because he hath not given unto God the glory of his truth without a pawn and yet doth in effect quarrel and complain that he doth not find these consolations which are given and but rarely it may be even to the sound and strong in the faith 2. Let him for the confirmation of his faith hereafter consider well how strong and solid a foundation faith hath to lean unto even Gods promise and oath given unto all that do flye to Christ for refuge and relief from sin and misery Heb. ● 17 18. that the afflicted may with the Psalmist Ps. 56. 10. sing in God I will praise his Word 3. Let the afflicted study to be so fast glewed unto Christ in every condition and case he findeth himself and go about the exercise of repentance and faith and new obedience in his calling submitting himself to the will of God in every dispensation which direction if he shall aime to follow he shall not want the fruit of his faith and honest endeavour to please God for Psal. 97. 11. Light is sown for the righteous and joy for the upright in heart CHAP. XXI Wherein is solved the doubt of the true convert whether he be indeed converted because he cannot confidently apply to himself the promises of the Gospel THere are some true converts who albeit for fear of the wrath of God for their sins are already fled unto Christ and have hid themselves under the wings of the propitiatory in the shadow of the Almighty Mediator and are already begun in earnest to give new obedience to the law of God yet from time to time they fall in fear and trembling suspicion that all be not a sound work of grace in them and that partly because they cannot confidently apply to themselves the promises of the Gospel whether absolut such as are made to the Elect Ier. 31 31. or conditional such as are made to believers in Christ offered in the Gospel or qualified promises such as are made to the meek and mercifull Mat. 5. which qualified promises they look upon as conditional excluding them as they conceive who do not find in themselves such qualifications and partly because they are not clear about their right to receive the offer of the Gospel because they want as they conceive fitnesse in themselves to receive the same and thus are they oft-times vexed with doubts whether they be in the state of grace or not 2. For lousing of this doubt sundry things are already said by the way in answering other doubtfull cases But because many do meet with this difficulty we shall speak a little more particularly to the case and first it is needfull that the afflicted be confirmed about that which is right in him that the thing which remaineth and is ready to die may be strengthened To this intent we commend the afflicted that being sensible of sin and feared for-wrath he hath fled unto Christ for refuge next we commend him that he hath begun to give new obedience to Gods Law and doth purpose to follow on as he shall be enabled and thirdly we commend him that albeit he cannot attain that near conjunction with Christ which he would yet he neither will nor dare forsake Christ nor put himself out of the number of weak believers in Christ for he hath said in his heart with Peter Joh. 6. 68. To whom shall I go for Christ hath the words of eternal life Hitherto all is right and the afflicted must resolve to cleave close to this foundation because Christ hath said Ioh. 6. 37. These that come unto me I will in no case cast out 3. For his doubt arising from the nature of the promises absolute conditional and qualified looked upon by him as if they were conditional we answer 1. That these qualified promises having some mark in them of true believers are not exclusive of these believers who find in themselves a defect of the qualification but they are inductive unto all believers to study the attaining of that qualification and are corroborative of these believers who find in any sensible measure these qualifications For example promises made to the mercifull to the peace-makers to the upright in heart do not exclude these who find themselves short in these graces and yet are hungry and thirsty for righteousnesse yet are poor and indigent of all good in themselves and daily beggers at the throne of grace for what they want Mat. 5. for these qualifications sound in a weak believer are signes and effects of sound saith in them And we must grant that of these graces specified in these qualified promises some of them are more eminent in some of the Saints and other some of them more eminently seen and felt in other some of the Saints And in the same person one of these qualifications may sometime shine more clearly and at another time by some tentation or mistake be over-clouded and not shine so clearly as before yet the qualifications are comfortable to all them who find the same in themselves and are inductive to make every believer to aime to excell in these graces and so to confirm their own faith more and more as 2 Pet. 1. 4 5 6 7. we are exhorted Again these qualifications are signs of a believer already entered in the covenant of grace by faith in Christ and begun to bring forth good fruits but they are not the conditions of entering into the covenant for then none could enter in covenant till first these qualifications in exercise were sound in them and that were to dis-annull the covenant of grace and to set up a sort of covenant of works for there is not another condition of entering in the covenant but saith in Christ only whereby the humbled sinner renouncing all confidence in any good in himself or from himself doth betake himself wholly to the grace offered in Jesus Christ in whom perfect righteousnesse is to be found Now unto the man who shall believe in Christ all the promises of the Gospel are made upon this condition that he do believe in Jesus Christ which condition of faith in Christ when it is now performed and by the
free of grosse out-breakings This last sort deceive themselves also because they esteem their natural sorrow for such sins as are grosse and scandalous to be true repentance albeit they be not humbled for the fountain of these out-breakings to wit their in-born corruption of nature and filthy concupiscence and the daily out-breakings thereof to the polluting of their spirits whereof they do take litle or no notice Many also there are who deceive themselves esteeming the outward exercises of religion and some works in themselves commendable to be sufficient fruits and evidences of their faith in Christ and of their regeneration albeit they have not as yet fled to Christ sincerely neither ever put a right estimation upon the imputed righteousnesse of Christ. Such men when they should renounce all confidence in their own works and in the sense of their sinfulnesse flye unto the covenant of grace offered in Christ that in him they might have remission of sin and from him by faith draw strength and ability to bring forth good works they run a contrary course for in the confidence of their own strength they go about sundry duties toward men and exercises of religion toward God trusting in those works as if by works they were to be justified Therefore justly shall Christ say unto them depart from me ye workers of iniquity I never knew you Such were many of the Israelits who being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God went about to establish their own righteousnesse These things when one weak in faith doth consider no wonder he be troubled and be afraid lest he deceive himself and perish as others have done 3. This is a dangerous disease and so long as it is not cured it hinders much the tender beginnings of the new creature that it cannot come up to manly strength First therefore let the afflicted wisely examine the course of his by-gone life lest he either absolve or condemn himself rashly and let him beware lest he esteem the worse of the evidences of a new creature and the fruits of faith because these that look to be justified by their works can produce the like works Secondly let the afflicted call to mind whether in the beginning of the re●ormation of his life the Law as a Pedagoge did lead him unto Christ and whether since that time the law did daily put him on and force him to ●lye to Christ and to embrace Christ and his righteousnesse and hath made him to study obedience to the law out of love to God so much the more carefully as he perceived himself obliged thankfully to acknowledge grace granted in Christ to him for if any measure of the daily exercise of repentance if any measure of love to Christ and any measure of endeavour of new obedience be found after examination in the person afflicted out of doubt the ground is laid solidly of his salvation out of doubt he hath an evidence of the work of grace by the operation of the holy Spirit in himself 4. If in this examination the afflicted be not clear but the doubt doth yet stick because of the suspicion he hath of the felt deceitfulnesse of his own heart we offer unto him this counsell that he quickly humble himself before God and do ingenuously acknowledge the native perversenesse and deceitfulnesse of his heart and for that very reason let him embrace Christ the Redeemer in the armes of faith offering himself to every condemned sinner and let him thank God who hath deciphered unto him this deceitfulnesse of his heart and offered Christ unto him for the true remedy of this and every other sinfull malady And in the mean time let him put a difference between himself and an hypocrit in whom the deceit of the heart is neither acknowledged nor seen but fostered and defended for a close hypocrite after hearing of the doctrine of the deceitfulnesse of the heart will stand to the defending of his own sincerity and will take it hardly if any man labour to convince him of any measure of hypocrisie but a true convert or regenerat person will not deny but much hypocrisie may be found in him and albeit he be sorrowfull that this deceitfulnesse of heart hath had lodging in him and lurked too long yet is he willing and glad to have this evil more and more discovered unto him and heartily doth he deliver up this traitor to Christ to be mortified and abolished by his Spirit 5. But if the afflicted cannot be quiet and satisfied still fearing and suspecting he be found a man unrenewed and that for the running issue of this filthy boyl opened up to him by the sword of the Spirit let him beware that he passe not permptor sentence against himself that he do not conclude himself to be a man altogether in the bond of iniquity but let him suspend for a time the disputation and do that which is allowed unto every self-condemned man in the beginning of his conversion that is quickly let him flye unto Christ for remission of sin let him lay hold on that righteousnesse purchased by him and the more he feareth to find God a severe judge let him the more firmly lay hold on Jesus Christ the Mediator who justifieth the ungodly by faith this is the only solid way to persevere in faith to overcome Sathan to solve doubts to resist temptations and to cure the wound made by Sathans firy darts for unto that man who in the sense of his sins and ill deserving and inability to help himself doth flye unto Christ it shall never be said by Christ depart from me I never knew thee 6. Now when the person afflicted hath of new laid hold on Christ and guarded the fortresse of faith and repulsed the tempter who by all means and specially by quarreling and questioning the by-past work of grace in him had laboured to weaken and overturn his faith for by-gones and for the present also lest it should convalesce and grow stronger for time to come now I say let the afflicted after victory return to the dispute and to the examination of his state in grace of his faith in Christ and of his regeneration and he shall see all the begun saving graces which were darkened by temptations clearly appear and shall perceive the several steps and degrees of Gods grace toward him in former times more evidently then he could discern them in the hour of darknesse and temptation And so he shall return from this battel strongerin faith then he was before and more perswaded of the work of the holy Spirit in him then he was before the temptation CHAP. XXV Wherein is solved the doubt of the true converts conversion arising from his breach of the covenant of Grace as he conceiveth THere are some sincere converts who albeit they do not doubt but penitents flying to Christ are received in favour with God are justified from their sins and do obtain right unto all the priviledges of the Saints yet they doubt
of grace because he findeth himself frequently in an evil condition EXperience teacheth that sundry true converts because they feeling themselves oft-times in an ill condition do call in question their being in the blessed state of grace not considering that the condition of a man whether in the state of nature unrenewed or in the state of grace may be comparatively in better or worse condition and yet his state remain the same The multitude of the misbelieving Hebrews were in an evil condition at the one side of the red Sea when they repented their coming out of Egypt but in a better condition when they did sing praises unto God on the other side of the Sea and yet for their state some were yea most part still in nature unrenewed Moses and Aaron were in an evil condition when their passion offended God at the smiteing of the rock but when they did interceed with God for the people when wrath was kindled against the host they were in a better condition and both in the one time and in the other they were in the state of grace true Saints in Gods estimation This mistake of the weak in faith not putting difference between their present disposition and their state maketh them judge of themselves to be in the state of grace when their condition is good and to be in the state of nature unrenewed when they feel themselves in an evil condition when they observe their heart inlarged to run the way of Gods commandments then they esteem themselves truly regenerat and when they feel themselves sluggish in the work of the Lord dull in hearing the Word flow to believe what the Scripture speaketh when they esteem their ordinary service to be after a form of godlinesse without affection and power and what service they do to proceed from fear of wrath rather then from the new and right principles of a regenerat man then they question all the works of grace in themselves What shall I think saith the afflicted concerning my state in grace when I find my condition so frequently not only short of what it should be but also polluted with divers sorts of sins 2. For answer we must grant that the externall duties of religion may be discharged from fleshly and corrupt principles for many do perform commanded external duties that they may eshew the reproach of impiety or that they may insinuat themselves in the good estimation and favour of the godly or for some base earthly ends for which gross hypocrits do whatsoever they do in religion Like unto these are all self-deceiving hypocrits who go about to establish their own righteousnesse miskening that righteousnesse which is of God by faith as if God could be obliged to take their performance for a full satisfaction for their former sins and would look upon their works as meritorious of eternal life and therefore because men may deceive themselves 1. the afflicted shall do well to examine himself whether he hath renounced all confidence in the flesh or his own works Phil. 3. 8 9. and fled unto Christ for righteousnesse with some measure of honest endeavouring to worship and serve God in his spirit which if his conscience can witnesse unto him to be his way wherein he is walking then may he be assured that he is a true convert 2. And albeit it be true that the imperfections of the regenerat man do many times obscure his state in grace yet can they not extinguish the sponk of regeneration begun in him or prove the work of grace in him not to be at all 3. We grant that the condition of a true convert at sometimes may be so bad by reason of sinfull distemper and fleshly carriage that many unrenewed mens conversation shall be found far more commendable then the present condition and carriage of the renewed man in his sinfull condition In which case neither God nor his own conscience nor any that feareth God can speak any thing but wrath to him till he repent and turn to God for mercy in Christ yet the afflicted penitent convert lamenting his bad condition is in better case then any unrenewed man can be into for the very grief and perplexity which he findeth because his condition is so oft ill and sinfull proveth his good affection toward God and his earnest desire to walk before God unto all well-pleasing in all things and at all times 3. But if the afflicted shall insist and object that the fear of Gods wrath and judgments ordinarily is a main motive which setteth him on to do the duties and service which God requireth of him and not the love of God the felt in-lake whereof doth make him go on halting and heavy in the wayes of God We answer that albeit the fear of Gods wrath and judgments looked upon alone doth not prove regeneration yet it may well consist with regeneration because God doth not for nought joyn with his precepts fearfull threatenings of judgments against those who shall transgresse his commands that they may be as a spur in his childrens sides to presse them to their duties and as a bridle to curb and check their vitious inclination unto sin which lodgeth in all men by nature And this motive is evident in the experience of the Prophet Ps 119. 120. My flesh trembleth for fear of thee and I am afraid of thy judgments 2. It may be that the afflicted lately converted unto God be not free as yet from the spirit of bondage but be keeped in some measure under the bonds of servile fear God so disposing for the humbleing exercising and training of his child lately entered in his holy warfare in which condition his fear is commendable when it ariseth from the conscience of his sinfull short-coming in Gods service and of the prevailing of his corruption against the begun work of renovation Wherefore let the afflicted go about the discharge of commanded duties in his christian calling and particular station wherein God hath placed him in what condition soever he shall find himself 2. Let him compare his present condition which he doth count an ill condition with the by-gone better conditions whereof he hath had possibly experience frequently and when he calleth to mind the comforts he hath had and the inlargement of heart to run in the way of Gods commandment in hope of a change of his present condition to the better in hope of finding renewed blinks of the Lords countenance let him humbly wait on God in the use of the means appointed till the day-star arise in his heart praying with the Psalmist that God would quicken him according to his loving kindnesse 3. Let him cleave the more closely to the covenant of grace and the righteousnesse which is by faith in Jesus Christ withall giving thanks unto God for the grace bestowed on him for the giving unto him eye-salve to see his blindnesse nakednesse and misery and for making sin odious and grievous unto him in any measure
Lord of the Conscience and no man may take upon him that power to prescrib unto and command another mans conscience let him know that God indeed is the only Lord of the conscience and because he is Lord therefore hath he appointed his Ministers to teach men the truth and to presse the disobedient members of the visible Church with censures and hath put the sword in the Magistrats hand to see his will done and to punish such as refuse to give obedience to his commands that so obedience may be procured to God the only Lord of the conscience In which case albeit the acts commanded by the will and conscience are curbed and restrained yet the will and conscience is not compelled but is brought to a better determination of its own elicit acts that having obtained a clearer light about its duty it may command the outward man to say do what is right If he pretend that religion is not to be propagat and press'd by force but by the word preached and heresies are to be rooted out not by the sword but by the power of truth holden forth to the heretick let him know that there is a difference between propagation of religion among Pagans or people not under the charge of the civil Magistrat or Church Judicatories and the preservation or purgation of religion among them that are within the visible Church and under the power of the civil Magistrat For albeit the only way to bring religion in request among heathen nations and strangers to the covenant of promises be that way which the Apostles did follow preaching the Gospel to all and receiving such as embraced the Gospel into Church-fellowship yet the Magistrat having civil dominion over heathen Idolaters may after information of them by the Preachers of the Gospel break their Idols and abolish them and restrain them from doing contempt unto the true Religion or abusing of the Sabbath as the fourth command of the moral law doth give warrant yea and may compell them to use the means whereby they may be instructed in the true Religion Again let him know there is a difference between dealing with Pagans and strangers from the commonwealth of Israel and dealing with these who have given up their names unto Christ have entered in covenant with God and by baptisme have consecrat themselves and their children unto the faith worship and obedience of God and do professe the christian Religion and yet go about by their errors and practices to corrupt and over-turn the true Religion and saith of others among whom they live for such may and should be not only instructed by Sermon con●●rence and dispute but also punished by the civil Magistrate for their deceiving of the people and troubling the flocks of Christ Deut. 13. and Rom. 13. If he pretend that Church-censures and civil punishments can serve for nothing but to make men dissemblers and hypocrits in the mater of religion which is most odious in the sight of God and wise men let him know that every hypocrit shall bear his own iniquity Ecclesiastick censures and civil punishments concern the words and deeds of the outward man that they may be ordered so as Religion and the peace of the Kingdom may not suffer detriment If any man say and do that which is right in hypocrisie and dissimulation the society wherein he liveth is safe but for his hypocrisie let the dissembler answer to God for it And yet it is not to be presumed that all who by censures and fear of civil punishments do forsake error and embrace truth are dissemblers and hypocrits in so doing because they are means appointed of God for curbing and reclaiming erroneous persons wherewith he giveth his blessing when it pleaseth him for by censures and civil punishments the allurements which have enduced them to error are cut off such as are applause of men vain glory worldly advantage sensual pleasure and such like wherein the erroneous have been taken as in an evil net which being broken the insnared captive may come freely off his error and embrace the truth and take in good part the censures and civil punishment which drew him out of the snare into the right way As we are assured by the prophesie of Zechariah chap. 13. 6. And one shall say to wit to the converted sectary what are these wounds in thine hands Then he shall answer those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends But whether by those means the erroneous be reclaimed heartily or in dissimulation respect must be had to Gods commands and his peoples good by curbing of vice and error according as God hath given power to the Church and to the civil Magistrat Rom. 13. 3 4. who is appointed the minster of God for the peoples good If he shall object that he who chargeth him for his error is no lesse subject to error then he whom he chargeth yea that Governours ecclesiastick and civil are no more exeemed from the danger of erring then privat persons yea that the determinations of Synods and Councils are not infallible yea that he is perswaded the error he is charged of is no error but not perswaded of the truth which the reformers of him pretend unto Let him know that the force of his objection doth assert that truth and righteousnesse is settled upon the mis-perswaded sectaries part and that the Church and Magistrat who ●indeth fault with him hath nothing to perswade them of the truth which they do presse upon the sectary and so cannot condemn or punish him but he must know that it is one thing to say one may erre in the latitude of a possiblity indefinit another to say one doth erre in such a particular wherein he hath the light of Scripture and reason clear for him The sectary will not deny he may erre but he will maintain that in such one or other article of his profession he doth not erre Shall he maintain his plea that he doth not erre in such a point of error and shall not the Magistrat and Church maintain their plea that they do not erre in punishing such an obstinat erroneous person Christ hath committed the keyes of doctrine and discipline to his Church that privat persons may know Christs will by the ministery of the Church except he will be holden for an heathen or publican Mat. 18. 17. He hath also committed the power of the sword unto the Magistrat who doth not bear the sword in vain Rom. 13. And therefore let the Church and Magistrat do their duty and let erroneous persons cease to stumble the Lords people by their error and practice and suffer themselves to be brought in order by such as have commission and power to move them by censures and civil punishment thereunto If still he will insist and alledge that by this means a Christian by censures and civil punishment is compelled to sin against his conscience let him know that a scandalous sectary or
convert being chased by the law to lay hold on Christ who is the end of the law for righteousnesse unto every one that believeth shall stand aback from laying hold on the highest priviledges of Saints and the greatest promises made to justified souls because of his own unworthinesse doth he not say in effect if I were more worthy and like in holinesse unto such and such Saints I could be more confident to lay hold on these high promises which ground if it be once holden it makes the reason of the mans confidence to be his own well-deserving and not the meer and only grace of God the free promiser thereof and so the way of salvation by grace should be undermined and over-turned which is absurd because the Apostle Ephes 2. 8. saith that by grace we are saved through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God Therefore let not the humbled convert think it presumption to lay hold on Christ and the fulnesse of all promised grace in him how large soever it be CHAP. XIII Of the condition of the convert fearing that the joy of the holy Ghost which he hath felt be found only to be either the joy of speculation common to temporal believers or a meer delusion OF this sort also is this case wherein the convert doth suspect that the joy of the Spirit which he hath felt at some times was either a joy of speculation or contemplation only such as Philosophers may find in their study of humane learning or else a delusion of Sathan also This case may fall upon the true convert in the time of affliction and felt desertion when not only the sense of consolation is withdrawn but also sorrow and heavinesse have seized on his spirit when the sharpnesse of affliction takes up the whole soul and sorrow doth fill the heart At such a time the memory of by-past joy is greatly darkned and the sense of present grief inflameth the whole man For as it falleth forth in a mans body that both sweet and sour liquor do affect the sense of tasting most when they are presently felt but when they are past the memory of them doth affect the imagination only and that but lightly in comparison with present sense As the sense of a fiery coal doth otherwayes affect us when it touches our flesh then the memory of the pain we have felt doth move us when the pain is past So it is in the passions of the soul for joyes spiritual shine for a while when they are lately raised up in the soul but after a time they are darkned and in some sort worn out especially when grief doth arise then they are swallowed up with sorrow or are well near forgotten or lightly esteemed and rejected My soul refused comfort saith the Psalmist Ps. 77. 2. Such was Davids condition Ps. 116. 11. when he said in his haste all men are lyars at which time whatsoever joy he had felt in believing the promises made to him by Samuel or other Prophets he counted all to be but deceiving of him and delusion This mistake is strengthened ordinarily by Sathans tentation and wicked suggestion watching upon all occasions to traduce and slander all Gods words and operations The complaint of Ieremie savours of this malicious suggestion which the Prophet layeth out before God to be rid of it Ier. 20. 7. Thou hast deceived me and I was deceived Yea oft-times it cometh to passe that our old man and corrupt inclination taketh part with Sathan and when occasion doth offer scorneth all the spiritual affections of the new man as Ishmael mocked Isaacs devotion 2. This evil except it be speedily and solidly cured not only casteth the convert in a miserable condition but also calleth in question his state whether at all he be regenerat reconciled and in the state of grace for if the joy of the holy Spirit granted to the supplicant praying to God in Christ for confirmation of his faith granted to the mourner for sin that he may be comforted shall be esteemed as the effect of speculation only then the comfort of the earnest-penny and first fruits of the spirit is lost the confirmation of faith by that consolation is enervat and weakened thanksgiving formerly offered for the comfort sometime felt is recalled and the testimony of Gods Spirit speaking according to the word in oft-repeated experience is laid aside And so the afflicted soul shall seem to himself in worse condition then when he was lying in his sins because he shall seem to himself to have lost his labour from the time that he renounced his sins Wherefore it is necessary that this sicknesse be speedily cured lest it prevail 3. For remedy of this evil let the afflicted lay aside the dispute for a time whether his joyes and spiritual experiences of the Lords working in him have been reall as they sometime seemed and let him turn his eyes upon his present miserable confused condition let him take a new view of his sins and unworthinesse let him observe Sathans malice power and wiles to weaken faith and what need now he standeth in of Christ Mediator Redeemer Surety and Physician by office after a new discovery of his sinfulnesse and let him look upon the riches of the grace of God offered in the Gospel to every hungry and thristy ●oul flying to Christ for refuge and let him say to God Lord there was never a time wherein I had more need of Christ for righteousnesse and salvation behold I flye unto thee I welcome and embrace Christ offered in the Gospel and heartily do consent unto the covenant of grace through him and do accept embrace and relye upon remission of sins through him and the imputation of his satisfactory righteousnesse made over to such as flye unto him or else I should perish utterly and do give up my self to thee that thou mayest write thy law more powerfully on my heart By this means the confidence of the afflicteds interest in the covenant of Grace shall be more fixed and made sure to him and Sathan disappointed of his design to cast the afflicted by his tentations in mis-belief and separation from Christ. 4. Thus when he hath renewed the grips of faith in Christ let him now enter the lists and dispute the solidity of his former felt experiences by discussing the objections which did weaken his estimation of the former felt joyes of the Spirit One objection against them was because they were of short endurance and therefore seemed not solid The answer may be this The short staying of the joy of the Spirit is no proof against it as not true joy for it is sufficient earnest of the promised salvation if when the Word of God in the Gospel speaketh peace to the man fled to Christ he findeth the Word believed to be confirmed to the believer by peace and joy albeit the sense of it remain but a short while After you believed saith the Apostle you were
walking shall be found in him scrupulosity SOmetime it cometh to passe that the convert being under hard exercise before his consolation doth put on the whole armour of God and studieth to walk circumspectly for a while but after a time he becometh somewhat weary of the yoke suspecting he hath given too much way unto scrupulosity whereupon he becometh more remisse and slack in his watchfulnesse and diligence laying aside the armour of God as David laid aside the armour of King Saul wherewith he was not accustomed For satisfying himself in this course I presuppone he maketh use of three pretended reasons The first is because it is impossible for any man to attain to such circumspection in his carriage as becometh him for it is no lesse then to aim at perfect obedience of the law which the Apostle hath declared to be impossible because of the weaknesse of the flesh Rom. 8. 3. The next pretended reason is because this bending of a mans spirit maketh the conscience unquiet that a man cannot injoy the peace of God granted in the Gospel The third pretended reason is because it doth restrain christian liberty in many things lawfull so as a man can neither make use of recreation of body or mind without scruple and here we must beware on the one hand lest we give way to any degree of mis-regarding the law which is the error of the Antinomians and on the other hand lest we insnare the conscience of converts and hinder them in the lawfull use of what God doth allow unto them 2. For remedy of this evil let the convert know that there is a necessity of aiming at circumspect walking This duty is indispensable for if a chink be opened here in the vessel for the least entry of water it may ere long fill and sink the whole ship for the command standeth unmoveable ●h●b 12. 14. Follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. And 1 Pet. 1. 15. As he that hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation And Mat. 5. 48. Christ hath said Be ye perfect as your father in heaven is perfect This ground being laid let us examine these three pretended reasons As to the first albeit the attaining unto the perfect obedience of the Law in this life be impossible because of the infirmity of corrupt nature yet the aiming at the perfect obedience of Gods Commands is both possible and profitable and he who aimeth at perfection of obedience in this life shall attain it fully in the life to come It is one thing to give perfect obedience unto the Law for in many things we do sin all of us another thing to endeavour according to the measure of grace given to obey the Law perfectly For God who hath loosed converts fled to Christ from the convenant of Works or the covenant of the Law he hath not loosed his subjects from obedience to the Law-giver he hath not abolished the ten Commands he hath not loosed the duties of the redeemed and converted souls but by receiving them in favour through faith in Christ he doth augment their obligation to serve the Lord their Redeemer so much more chearfully and carefully as the grace is large in forgiving them their sins and translating them from the slavery of sin and Sathan into the kingdom of Christ. Again albeit it be true that it is impossible to attain perfect obedience unto the Law yet there is great advantage to be had by circumspect walking and aiming at perfect obedience for this 1. doth glorifie our heavenly Father when we strive to be conform to his will and to have respect to all his commands 2. This endeavour adorneth the Gospel and profession of our most holy faith whereby we lay hold on the grace of free justification that we may become the servants of righteousnesse indeed 3. This endeavour beareth witnesse of our since● desire to serve God with all our heart albeit we attain not to the perfection of obedience in this life 4. This endeavour giveth unto us daily new mater of humiliation when in our aiming at our duty we come very short of our mark we shoot at 5. This endeavour and short-coming for all we can do maketh us despair of seeking justification by works before God and to esteem highly and make use by faith of Christs satisfaction for us imputed to us for righteousnesse which is a garment able to hide our imperfections and nakednesse 6. This endeavour to walk circumspectly puts us to the exercise of all christian graces and to strive with others and with our selves to perfect holinesse in the fear of God 3. As for the second pretended reason that this endeavour to walk circumspectly may make the conscience unquiet it puts a foul aspersion on the holy precept of the Apostle Ephes. 5. 15 16 17. who hath declared this to be a mans wisdom and so a good mean of making his conscience quiet and to establish in it the peace of God For by this endeavour to walk circumspectly believers in Christ are assured that they are without the reach of condemnation because they walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit Rom. 8. 1. Secondly this endeavour is the evidence of a good conscience which accompanyeth true faith and in a maner doth guard the conscience from just challenges which might trouble the same Thirdly by this endeavour the believer is by a holy necessity forced to cleave closse unto Christ to converse with him in heaven that the pollution of daily sin may be washen away by new application of Christs expiarory sacrifice to the believer and that Christ may let forth more strength to him to walk in the way of commanded duties and so the convert may stand in the grace of God Thus the peace of God offered and covenanted in the Gospel is preserved in him so long as this endeavour to walk circumspectly is entertained 4. As for the third pretended reason against circumspect walking as if by it Christian-liberty shall be crossed and cut short it is a false pretense for the contrair is true that Christian-liberty is not hurt but helped and preserved by circumspect walking for this is true Christian-liberty to have allowance of the use of the benefits which God doth bestow with his blessing so far as may serve our well-fare seing it is not a point of Christian-liberty licentiously by intemperance to abuse Gods benefits and turn them to our own hurt Wherefore let our heart be all day in the fear of God that we may in lawfull manner make use of lawfull things neither doth the study of holinesse make recreations of body and mind unlawfull but restraineth immoderat and untimeous use of things lawfull All that Christian liberty granteth unto us is that whether we eat or drink or what lawfull thing else we do we do all for the glory of God 1 Cor. 10. 31. that is so as we may be
wayes darkened and the application of promises is very weak 2. When Sathan by his tentations obscures the truth which should strengthen faith the convert finding himself in the mist may be at a stand till his sight be cleared up and he freed from the tentation 3. The sincere convert in the conscience of his own imperfection and consideration of the deceitfulnesse of the heart is wary and suspicious that he may be easily deceived and take historical or temporal faith for true saving faith and so doth readily lay hold on Sathans suggestions against the sincerity of his ●aith 4. In the conflict which his faith oft-times hath with mis-belief strengthened by Sathans tentations he finds himself now and then foiled by yielding unto the suggestion of Sathan as Davids experience teacheth may befall both the elder and younger souldiers Ps. ●●6 11. I said in my haste all men are lyars meaning Samuel and other Prophets who promised to David in Gods name he should be King 5. In the fight of faith some infirmity is alwayes manifested and the convert is forced to acknowledge that his faith is not so strong as he supposed it to be before the fight whereupon he is ready to suspect his fight in faith to be a fainting and decaying in faith 6. Sometime the convert by giving way to sin doth grieve the holy Spirit and provoke him to withdraw his comfortable testimony which he gave in former time to the convert which bringeth him into suspicion of the sincerity of his faith which seemed to himself sound and unfained before 2. This case is both troublesome to the convert and dangerous for till it be cured it groweth like a rageing feaver and sets upon the vital power of justifying faith and at least hindereth the exercise thereof not a little For remedy whereof let the afflicted convert put difference between an infirm faith and felt infirmity in faith fighting for albeit the convert in the conflict of faith against tentations to mis-belief do feel infirmity yet is not his faith to be accounted infirm simply because whatsoever infirmity he feels in his fight yet his fighting against tentations proveth his faith to be so much the stronger as he resisteth mis-belief and cleaveth closer to Christ. 2. Let him consider that the Lord suffereth his child to be exercised with tentations of set purpose to humble him and empty him of all confidence in his own wisdom righteousnesse and strength that he may gather strength in his fighting by Scripture holden up to God in prayer and so wax valiant in fight as believers have been helped before Heb. 11. 34. 3. Let the convert put difference between faith and a setled perswasion for setled and full perswasion excludes all dubitation for the time But saving faith may may be where doubting is and unbelief is felt as the father of the possessed child in his prayer to Christ maketh manifest Lord I believe saith he help my unbelief 4. Let him put difference between dubitation suggested and faith striving to overcome dubitation for dubitation bewrayeth infirmity of faith but striving against dubitation doth evidence life and vigour in faith to be present and is acceptable service to God 5. Let him put difference between the doubting of the truth of the promise and the weak griping of it for he that doubts of the truth of the promise is Iam. 1. 6 7. like a wave of the sea and can expect nothing But he that layes hold on the promise with a trembling hand and striveth to hold it fast against doubting may expect to obtain 6. Let him put difference between his suspicion of the failing of his faith and the right judging of it for in the mean time of his fighting and fear of failing he goeth on in exercise of faith fearing to succumb yet resolute not to depart from Christ In the love and estimation of whose grace he goeth on and groweth longing for the victory and for a nearer felt fellowship with him which if he did observe and consider his judgement should be rectified Last of all let him put difference between a hasty apprehension of the failing of his faith and a fixed opinion that his faith is but fancy for a strong souldier may be surprized on a suddain as David Ps. 31. 22. and Ps. 116. 11. and Ionah 2. 3 4. do furnish instances who shortly after did gather their courage and entered the lists afresh and became victorious against their tentations unto misbelief Therefore let the wrestler be of good courage for nothing can prove the sincerity of his faith more then his wrestling against distrust and his looking towards Christ through all the clouds which hinder his sight and his sorrowing for his unbelief for his weak holding grip of the covenant of grace and for his inability to glorifie the truth of the Gospel and rich grace of God offered in Christ Especially when he considereth that the Spirit of Christ commendeth the exercise of faith with variety of temptations for a mater of great joy Iam. 1. 2 3. CHAP. XIX Concerning the converts straitning his charity toward others more then he did at the first time of his conversion conceiving his former larger charity was unwarrantable folly ALl converts must agree to Christs saying Ioh. 13. 35. By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if ye have love one to another No man doubteth of this his duty in general but sundry make question about the exercise and expression of their charity for some conceive that their former charity in the mater of judging of others and in the mater of affection to others and in the mater of actual expression of their charity hath been ill bestowed toward unworthy and ill-deserving persons And this they reckon to have been folly and therefore do resolve to dispose of their judgement affection and good deeds more prudently then they have done that their charitable estimation affection and expression actual shall be drawn forth toward the worthy and well-deserving disciples of their acquaintance thus they condemn for folly what was right indeed The main pretenses of reason for their resolution are two The first is because they perceive many whom they judge wise and godly to exclude from the number of believers or disciples of Christ all in whom the evident signs of regeneration do not appear and so do think they may draw the circle of their charity in strait and narrow bounds and may shun to keep Church-fellowship in the pure Ordinances of Christ with any save approven visible Saints The other pretense is because they have found themselves oft-times deceived by those of whom sometime they have entertained good thoughts and no small estimation 1. As for the first pretense it belongs to the question of the constitution of visible Churches whether it be founded upon visible Sanctity or evidences of Regeneration or upon visible entering in the external covenant of Grace and profession of subjection to the