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A26345 The main principles of Christian religion in a 107 short articles or aphorisms, generally receiv'd as being prov'd from scripture : now further cleared and confirm'd by the consonant doctrine recorded in the articles and homilies of the Church of England ... / by Tho. Adams ... Adams, Thomas, fl. 1612-1653. 1675 (1675) Wing A493; ESTC R32695 131,046 217

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having broken became liable unto death or to the curse of the Law This Covenant which God entered into with the first Adam was in Paradise a Covenant or Law of Works Do this and live But that Covenant which God hath establisht in Christ the second Adam with all Believers since the Fall whether in the Old or New Testament 't is a Covenant of Grace and the grand Condition of this Covenant on mans part or the qualification whereby he is fitted and capacitated to receive the benefit of this Covenant 't is the righteousness of Faith for it runs thus Believe and live not that the Covenant of Grace whether in the Old or New Testament does not require new obedience but that it does not require this in order to justification for this new obedience or this obedience of Faith it is rather the fruit or effect than the instrumental cause means or condition of justification But more distinctly amongst those many differences which are wont to be assigned by Divines betwixt the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace we may take notice of these 1. The Covenant of Works was made with man before the Fall before he had sinned against God the Covenant of Grace afterward 2. The Covenant of Works did not promise pardon upon repentance the Covenant of Grace does because Christ the Mediator of this Covenant has purchased pardon for all penitent sinners who have but a hand of Faith to receive it 3. The Covenant of Works was without a Mediator for till man had sinned he needed none to mediate peace betwixt God and him but the Covenant of Grace is established in the hands of a Mediator sc. Christ Jesus perfect God and perfect man that he might make a reconciliation betwixt God and Man 4. In the Covenant of Nature or Works Adam was only the Son of God by Creation but in the Covenant of Grace those who were children of wrath do through Faith become the Children of God by Grace and Adoption 5. The Covenant of Works had for its Seals of confirmation or for the Sacraments of it the Tree of life so called because it did sacramentally confirm the promise of life upon condition of perfect obedience and the Tree of knowledg of good and evil which was so called from the event because man having sinned in eating the forbidden fruit he presently came to know by a sad experiment what an infinite good he had lost in losing Gods favour and what misery and mischief he had brought upon himself But now the Seals or Sacraments of the Covenant of Grace were under the Old Testament Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb and now under the New Testament Baptism and the Lords Supper 6. In the Covenant of Works there was no place at all for Gods further exercising of his patience grace and mercy but in the Covenant of Grace his mercy most is signally display'd yea and that which is a mystery as well as a miracle of Divine Wisdom here we may see mercy and justice kiss each other in the satisfaction that Christ has made And as the Covenant of Grace and the Covenant of Works do differ in the foregoing particulars so doth the Covenant of Grace under the Old Testament differ from the Covenant of Grace under the New Testament though these are not two but one Covenant in substance in clearness for till the Law or from Adam to Moses the Promise of Grace was more obscure under Moses more clear from Moses to the Prophets yet more clear from them to Iohn the Baptist yet more clear and from him to Christ yet more clear and under the preaching of Christ whilst he was fulfilling the Promises yet abundantly more clear than under Iohn but most clear of all when Christ had finished the work of Redemption by price and was ascended into Heaven and had sent down his Spirit upon his Apostles in that plentiful effusion of the Spirit at the time of Pentecost Act. 2. A. 13. Our first Parents being left to the freedom of their own will fell from the state wherein they were created by sinning against God To. 2. Hom. xiij Par. 2. When our great Grandfather Adam had broken Gods Commandment in eating the Apple forbidden him in Paradise at the motion and suggestion of his wife he purchased thereby not only to himself but also to his posterity for ever the just wrath and indignation of God who according to his former Sentence pronounced at the giving of the Commandment condemned both him and all his to everlasting death both of body and soul. Expl. 13. Here for explanation sake we may observe 1. That our first Parents were created with freedom of will i. e. if they would have continued in their obedience they might for they had a power to obey God perfectly and if they would sin they might God left them and that very justly to themselves he being not bound to hinder them though he could from sinning against him 2. That by their sinning against God they lost this freedom and with it all that happiness which did belong to a state of innocence and integrity for by their fall they were so bruised in all their powers and faculties that they became unable to serve God and so bemired with the guilt and pollution of sin that they were altogether unfit to enjoy God A. 14. Sin is any want of conformity unto or transgression of the Law of God Expl. 14. This description of sin doth agree to sins of all sorts original or actual and these whether in thought word or deed whether of omission or commission of ignorance or of knowledg of infirmity or presumption and to sins of all degrees and sizes whether great or small for in all sin whatsoever whether it be of men or Devils there is a want of conformity to the Law of God and a violation of his just will as well as a repugnancy to the holiness of his nature Neither is it improper to place the nature of sin in a privation or want of conformity for it is that which doth deprive and rob the rational creature of the rectitude or moral perfection of his own nature which doth consist in his being like to God and in being conformable to his will A. 15. The sin whereby our first Parents fell from the estate wherein they were created was their eating the forbidden fruit Homil. xij This first man Adam who having but one Commandment at Gods hand namely that he should not eat of the fruit of knowledg of good and evil did notwithstanding most unmindfully or rather most wilfully break it in forgetting the strait charge of his Maker and giving ear to the crafty suggestion of that wicked Serpent the Devil Expl. 15. In this A. there are two things remarkable 1. That our Parents by sinning lost that state of perfection which they had in Paradise and Christ only excepted whatever some Quakers dream there was never any
e. they became mortal and subject unto death having in themselves nothing but everlasting damnation both of body and soul. O what a miserable and woful state was this that the sin of one man should destroy and condemn all men that nothing in all the world might be lookt for but only pangs of death and pains of Hell Expl. 19. Concerning this A. 't is observable in the general That mans losses by the sall do reach as far as the guilt of that first disobedience whereby he fell namely to all mankind yet more particularly 1 st Adam lost and we in him and with him communion with God and the loss of this is a treble loss 1. Of Gods sweet and gracious presence and company and that in a most immediate manner as one friend is personally present with another 2. Of converse with God for whilst God and man were together in Paradise and man continued innocent their society was not like that of the Quakers in their Silent-Meetings but there would have continued such familiarity betwixt them as is betwixt two loving friends they would have walked together and talked together for if God did use that familiarity with Moses Exod. 33.11 since the fall much more would he have continued it with Adam and his posterity if they had never fal'n 3. From this sweet company and converse would have sprung up in the heart a continual satisfaction and delight to the soul of man for man yet continuing like God he could not but love him and delight himself in this sweet intercourse 2 dly The sinful posterity of Adam till interested in Christ are actually under the wrath of God for God is angry with the wicked every day and actually under the curse because under the Law not under Grace 3 dly Man in this state is continually liable to have the curse executed upon him every moment and has no protection at all either against the miseries of this life or the pains of hell A. 20. God having out of his meer good pleasure from all eternity elected some to everlasting life did enter into a Covenant of Grace to deliver them out of the estate of sin and misery and to bring them into an estate of salvation by a Redeemer Artic. xvij Predestination to life is the everlasting purpose of God whereby before the foundations of the world were laid he hath constantly decreed by his counsel secret to us to deliver from curse and damnation those whom he hath chosen in Christ out of mankind and to bring them to everlasting salvation as vessels made unto honour Homil. xij Behold the goodness and tender mercy of God he ordained a new Covenant and made a sure promise thereof namely that he would send a Messias or a Mediator into the world which should make intercession and put himself as a stay between both Parties to pacifie the wrath and indignation conceiv'd against sin and to deliver man out of the miserable curse and cursed misery whereinto he was fal'n head-long by disobeying the will and commandment of the only Lord and Maker Expl. 20. In which A. we have 1 st Gods eternal purpose and absolute decree whereby he hath singled out or chosen some of mankind upon whom he is resolved to bestow eternal life and that out of his meer free grace without any foresight of faith obedience perseverance or any other condition as a cause or motive inducing him to make this choice nay the decree it self is not founded in the merits of Christ but purely in the love of God though as for all the blessed effects of this decree as reconciliation pardon justification adoption sanctification salvation c. are actually received and enjoyed by the elect only upon the consideration of the merits righteousness and satisfaction of Christ. Yet more distinctly and for order sake we may conceive of these two things in Gods decree of Election 1. Gods most wise design to advance the glory of his free-grace in bringing many sons to glory 2. That God of his free grace had singled and culled out a certain distinct number of persons for the enjoyment of this glory Now this very act of Gods picking and culling out those particular persons whom he designed to save is that we call very properly Election Neither did this grace of God only appear in making this choice and then in leaving his chosen ones to get eternal life and heaven as they could but 2 dly He did also pitch upon an effectual means or contrive a way whereby his chosen people should effectually and infallibly obtain eternal life and this was by entring into a Covenant of Grace with Christ the second Adam and the Mediator of the new Covenant and in Christ with all believers that whosoever should believe on the Son of God he would give unto them eternal life and that they should never enter into condemnation Hence I infer 1. That it is the free grace of God and not the free will of man that maketh one man to differ from another Paul from Iudas 2. That the praise and glory of this difference is to be ascribed not unto man but unto God Not unto us O Lord c. A. 21. The only Redeemer of Gods Elect is the Lord Jesus Christ who being the eternal Son of God became man and so was and continueth to be God and man in two distinct natures and one person for ever Artic. xviij They also are to be had accursed who presume to say that every man shall be saved by the Law or Sect which he professeth so that he be diligent to frame his life according to that Law and the light of Nature For the holy Scripture doth set out unto us only the name of Jesus Christ whereby men must be saved Hom. x. p. 2. Reprobates perish through their own default Christ Jesus as he is a rising up to none other than those who are Gods Children by Adoption so is his word yea the holy Scripture the power of God to salvation to them only that do believe it Expl. 21. There are three things to be noted in this A. 1. That the Redeemer of Gods Elect is God as well as Man 2. Man as well as God 3. Both God and Man in one person 1. He is God for he is the Son of God not by Creation as Adam was nor by natural generation as we are all the Children of Adam but by eternal generation so as that God the Father who begat him was not before him in time And he was God that his Godhead might keep his humane nature from sinking under infinite wrath when he suffered for our sins that he might have power to raise himself from the grave and rescue himself out of the jaws of death that the dignity of his person might render his sufferings obedience intercession and satisfaction of infinite value and efficacy for the procuring of eternal life for his people and that
man perfectly innocent or free from sin since the fall Now that state of perfection which our first Parents lost and we in them did consist 1. In their conformity to God or in having his image stampt upon them in knowledg righteousness and holiness 2. In their perfect capacity and fitness to enjoy God their Creator 2 dly That the sin whereby they fell was direct disobedience in eating the forbidden fruit whether an Apple or whatever else and that against a particular positive express Precept thou shalt not eat of it which sin of theirs was a big-belly'd sin and carried in it 1. Pride and Ambition to be as Gods in the Devils sense i. e. in knowledg or know as much as God himself 2. Ingratitude for their priviledg and liberty to eat of all other trees of the Garden 3. Infidelity not giving that credit and belief to God which he did to Satan 4. This forbidden tree was the Seal of the Covenant of life and therefore to eat of it was to tear off the Seal A. 16. The Covenant being made with Adam not only for himself but for his Posterity all mankind descending from him by ordinary generation sinned in him and fell with him in his first transgression Homil. xij The judgment of everlasting death fell not only on him but also on his posterity and children for ever so that the whole brood of Adams flesh should sustain the self-same fall and punishment which their fore-father by his offence most fully had deserved Exp. 16. We have here two things to be considered 1 That Adam was not only the root of all mankind descending from him by ordinary generation he being the first that God created of that species but also the representative of mankind and did as a publick person stand for all his posterity in that Covenant of life which God made personally with him hence that common phrase that we were all in his loyns i. e. naturally as descending from him and legally as represented by him Not but that we were also in the loyns of Eve but that man being first created and of the more noble Sex is principally taken notice of both in the Covenant and in the Transgression For 2 dly we are here to observe that all mankind Christ the Son of God only excepted did sin in Adam By one sin entred into the world upon all for as much as all have sinned Some explain this by the example of Levi who is said to pay tythes in Abraham though Levi was not born some hundred years after Abraham did thus pay tythes So all Adams posterity which proceed from him in the ordinary course of nature may be said as well to sin in Adam though some of them might not be born some hundreds or thousands of years after him We know that the bonds and compacts of Parents may reach the Children else they could not be liable nor capable of enjoying their estates to pay their debts and the treason of the Parent doth legally taint the Son till it please the Prince to take it off And then further as the righteousness of Christ the second Adam and his obedience is imputed to all that believe so the disobedience of the first Adam is reckoned to the score of all his posterity because they were legally in him and one with him when he sinned A. 17. The fall brought mankind into an estate of sin and misery Homil. ii p. 1. Iob having in himself great experience of the miserable and sinful estate of man doth open the same to the world Chap. 14. Expl. 17. In this A. 't is observable that the fall did not only put our first Parents actually under misery but it did instate all his posterity in misery and did entail sin upon them as Ancestors do entail their Lands upon their posterity and if the second Adam had not by an act of infinite grace and wisdom cut off this entail in the behalf of believers all mankind must for ever have continued not only heirs and children of wrath as we are all by nature but also actually under the wrath of God for ever For this was all the estate that our first Parents left to their posterity sc. sin and misery A. 18. The sinfulness of that estate whereunto man fell consists in the guilt of Adams first sin the want of original righteousness and the corruption of his whole nature which is commonly called original sin together with all actual transgressions which proceed from it Artic. IX Original or birth-sin is the fault and corruption of the nature of every man that naturally is ingendred of the off-spring of Adam whereby man is very far gone from original Righteousness and is of his own nature inclin'd to evil Expl. 18. There are four Particulars in this A. which do all suppose that Adam sin'd as a common Representative of all Mankind As 1. That the guilt of that single act of disobedience which Adam was guilty of is very justly imputed to all the degenerate and sinful race of Adam for that Covenant which was made with him being made with us also in him when he transgressed by eating the forbidden fruit we his posterity are to be looked upon as Accessaries and consenting to the fact and when he thus sinned it was as much as if all his posterity had sinned in their own persons 2 The want of original righteousness or the want of power and ability to do the will of God which man had by Creation for God made man upright that is in a capacity and with ability to do the whole will of God which ability was not taken away from man till he had foolishly and wilfully thrown it away 3. The corruption of the whole nature of man and that in every mothers child of us the Child Iesus only excepted For every one of us may truly say with David one by one Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me It being impossible that a clean thing should come out of an unclean Now because this corruption of nature is the fountain of all manner of sin both in thought word and deed therefore it is called original sin And then 4. All those corrupt streams which do proceed from this corrupt fountain are called actual sins by which I understand any action of a man whether it be an internal action of the mind and soul or external of the body which is not conformable to the Law of God as also the neglect and omission of any action whether internal or external which the Law requires A. 19. All mankind by their fall lost communion with God are under his wrath and curse and so made liable to all miseries in this life to death it self and to the pains of hell for ever Homil. xij As in Adam all men universally sinned so in Adam all men universally received the reward of their sin i.
applying of the Redemption purchased by Christ to all those whom he has redeemed by his blood Not that the Spirit may be said to believe in the elect but that he doth work that faith in them whereby they as Members are united to Christ their Head and so do mystically and spiritually but really become one with him for they that are thus joined to the Lord are one spirit and so being one with Christ what was done for them by Christ as their Mediator Head and Husband is accounted as done by themselves he having pay'd their debt as their Surety they receive their discharge and shall never come into condemnation or be cast into Prison after they are once thus one with Christ and effectually called by the Spirit A. 31. Effectual Calling is the work of Gods Spirit whereby convincing us of our sin and misery enlightning our minds in the knowledg of Christ and renewing our wills he doth perswade and enable us to embrace Jesus Christ freely offered to us in the Gospel Artic. X. The condition of man after the fall of Adam is such that he cannot turn and prepare himself by his own natural strength and good works to faith and calling upon God Wherefore we have no power to do good works pleasant and acceptable to God without the grace of God by Christ preventing us that we may have a good will and working with us when we have that good will Hom. II. Of Alms p. 2. The good deeds of man are not the cause of making him good but he is first made good by the Spirit and grace of God that effectually worketh in him and afterward he bringeth forth good fruit God of his mercy and special favour towards them whom he hath appointed to everlasting salvation hath so offer'd his grace especially and they have so received it fruitfully that though by reason of their sinful living outwardly they seemed before to have been the children of wrath and perdition yet now the Spirit of God mightily working in them unto obedience to Gods will and commandments they declare by their outward deeds and life in the shewing of mercy and charity which cannot come but of the Spirit of God and his especial grace that they are the undoubted children of God appointed to everlasting life Expl. 31. That we may the better know what effectual Calling is we are to consider of a double Call which doth many times prove ineffectual as 1. Outward in the preaching of the Word and the voice of the Rod or any Providence whatsoever which doth call men to repentance faith and holiness but notwithstanding all these outward Calls there are Millions in the world who turn the deaf ear to God and will not return to him by repentance nor come to Christ by faith 2 dly There is an inward Call which is no less ineffectual than the former and it is the Spirits Call as when he proceeds no further than that which Divines call a common work as 1. Common illumination or some kind of floating knowledg in the head concerning the word of God and spiritual matters and no doubt but many men who have wicked hearts and lead bad lives may be well stored with gifts of this kind as Iudas for one 2. Some kind of flashy affections excited and stir'd up in the Soul towards good things called foretasts of the powers of the world to come and such was in Herod and Balaam 3. Some kind of faint languishing inclinations in the will to obedience such as Herod had when he did many things 4. Some kind of sense of sin both in its guilt and horrour such as Iudas had and yet notwithstanding all this inward work of the Spirit his Call may be ineffectual And if all this may be without success then no wonder if the Arminians Call that of moral suasion or of arguments do prove no better But then 2 dly There is another inward Call of the Spirit which is effectual to the Elect sc. that whereby the Spirit doth not only call but enable them to come at his call as when he doth renew the mind and change the will sanctifie the heart purifie the conscience and affections and doth work a lively faith in such persons and repentance from dead works A. 32. They that are Effectually called do in this life partake of Justistification Adoption Sanctification and the several benefits which in this life do either accompany or flow from them Artic. xvij They through grace obey the Calling they be justified freely they be made Sons of God by Adoption they be made like the image of his only begotten Son Jesus Christ they walk religiously in good works and at length by Gods mercy they attain to everlasting felicity Expl. 32. Into the nature of these particular Benefits of Effectual Calling there will be occasion to enquire hereafter but as to the certainty of the thing that all that are effectually called shall partake of these is evident from these grounds 1. In that Christ did purchase these benefits not for himself but for them nay he had never laid down such a price in his Fathers hands but for the sake of Believers 2. The tenour of the Covenant of Grace doth ascertain this for when God the Father and Son did treat together concerning the redemption of the Elect it was upon these terms sc. That upon the Sons undertaking to satisfie both the Law and Justice of God and upon the full performance of this undertaking all those that do believe in Christ though by nature they had been children of wrath as well as others should upon their believing be justified adopted sanctified and saved 3. Upon their believing they do receive Christ and he gives himself freely to them and how shall they not with him have all things else they stand in need of A. 33. Justification is an Act of Gods free-grace wherein he pardoneth all our sins and accepteth us as righteous in his fight only for the righteousness of Christ imputed to us and received by faith alone Artic. II. We are accounted righteous before God only for the merit of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ by faith and not for our own works or deservings To. I. Hom. III. Because all men be sinners and offen-ders and breakers of his Law and Commandments therefore can no man by his own acts works and deeds seem they never so good be justified and made righteous before God but every one is constrained to see for another righteousness and this which we so receive of Gods mercy and Christs merits embraced by faith is taken accepted and allow'd of God for our perfect and full justification Part 3. Our works do not merit or deserve remission of our sins and make us of unjust just before God but God of his own mercy through the only merits and deservings of his Son Jesus Christ doth justifie us Nevertheless because Faith
deserve grace of congruity yea rather for that they are not done as God hath willed and commanded them to be done we doubt not but they have the nature of sin Hom. III. p. 2. We have neither faith charity hope patience chastity nor any thing else that good is but of God and therefore those virtues be called the fruits of the Holy Ghost and not the fruits of man Truly there be imperfections in our best works Let us therefore not be asham'd to confess plainly our state of imperfection yea let us not be ashamed to confess imperfection even in all our best works To. 2. Hom. XVII The holy company of Saints in heaven confesseth constantly that all the goods and graces wherewith they were endued in soul came of the goodness of God only It is meet therefore to think that all spiritual goodness cometh from God only Expl. 82. When 't is said no meer man since the fall c. 'T is clearly imply'd that before the fall man had power to keep the Law of God perfectly but now since the fall he has not this power in this life neither 1 in his corrupt estate before conversion nor 2 in his regenerate after conversion 1 st Not in his corrupt estate for though men unconverted either to Christianity as the Gentiles or to Christ as all prophane Christians may by the power of nature and freewill or by the help of common grace be able to do some things contained in the Law which in themselves considered are good for the matter yet not in a right manner because not from a right principle true grace and not to a right end Gods Glory nor by a right rule the Law of God in the spiritual meaning of it Nor 2 dly in his regenerate state here in this life for 1 his knowledg of his duty is but in part And how can he do it perfectly when he does not know perfectly 2 His grace imperfect Ex. gr faith love c. because mingled with more or less of the opposite corruption A. 83. Some sins in themselves and by reason of several aggravations are more hainous in the sight of God than others Hom. V. p. 3. Christ saith Wo be unto you for you devour widows houses under colour of long prayers therefore your damnation shall be greater You make them children of hell worse than your selves be Hom. VIII p. 2. Children of unbelief of two sorts who despair and presume and both these sorts of men be in a damnable state as the one should believe the promises so the other the threatnings not over-boldly presume of Gods mercy and live dissolutely Expl. 83. If we consider sin only with reference to the Infiniteness of Gods majesty who is thereby provoked in this respect all sins are equally hainous because all against an Infinite Majesty but if we consider them either in their own nature as transgressions or in their several circumstances then some sins are greater or more hainous than others for though every sin be a transgression of the Law of God yet every Law of God doth not equally and so directly and immediately concern the Glory of God and the salvation of man neither is every Law so clearly promulgated or made known Besides there are some aggravations in the sin it self as when it is not only in the heart but in word and deed so the greater the scandal the greater the means to prevent it the greater the person by whom and against whom the greater the sin as also it may receive its aggravations from many circumstances as time when a man is drunk upon the Lords day place as to cut a purse in the Church or at the Bar before the Judg Company as to be debauch'd in Civil or prophane in Religious company A. 84. Every sin deserveth Gods wrath and curse both in this life and that which is to come Hom. XX. p. 1. We do daily and hourly by our wickedness and stubborn disobedience horribly fall away from God thereby purchasing unto our selves if he should deal with us according to his justice eternal damnation Expl. 84. Every sin being a breach of the Law deserves the curse of the Law or the penalty which is due to the sinner upon every the least sin and that penalty is death not only temporal but spiritual and eternal or the wrath of God to be inflicted upon the sinner both here and hereafter Obj. But if every sin deserve hell then this would seem to take away the difference in punishments Answ. No for this doth not ly in the duration of the punishment for that will be eternal to all who come into that state where the worm never dyes and the fire never goeth out but it will be in the degrees of the punishment some belike shall lose more good and endure more evil or torment than others CHAP. III. Of things to be practis'd according to the Gospel Or the Ordinances of the Gospel particularly of the two Sacraments in 13 Articles with their Explanation From A. 85. to 98. A. 85. TO escape the wrath and curse of God due to us for sin God requireth of us Faith in Jesus Christ repentance unto life with the diligent use of all outward means whereby Christ communicateth to us the benefits of Redemption Hom. XX. p. 1. We have here a perpetual Rule appointed unto us which ought to be kept at all times and that there is no other way whereby the wrath of God may be pacified and his anger asswaged which no man is able to abide but is mov'd by repentance to obtain mercy And with a full purpose of amendment of life fleeing to the mercy of God taking sure hold thereupon through faith in his Son Jesus Christ there is an assured and infallible hope of pardon and remission and that we shall be received into the favour of our heavenly Father To. 1. Hom. VIII p. 2. If we turn to him with an humble and a very penitent heart he will receive us to his favour and grace for his name sake for his promise sake for his truth and mercies sake promised to all faithful believers in Jesus Christ his only natural Son Expl. 85. There were never any more than these two ways prescribed by God unto man for his keeping or obtaining of that happiness which doth consist in the favour of God 1 Perfect and sinless obedience to the whole will of his Creator and this was prescribed in innocency for his keeping in favour with God 2 Faith in Iesus Christ which was prescribed immediately after the Fall for the recovery of the favour of God which he had lost for we are to look upon God not only as the party offended by transgression but also as the supreme Lawgiver and great Governour of the world and therefore God as the supreme Governour was bound by vertue of the perfection of his own Government and for the preservation of the honour of his Law