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

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the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe ch 3.22 Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood c. v. 24 25 26 Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness ch 4.3 Now it was not written for his sake alone that it was imputed to him but for us also to whom it shall be imputed if we believe on him that raised up the Lord Jesus from the dead who was delivered for our offences and was raised again for our justification v. 23 24 25 Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God thorough our Lord Jesus Christ ch 5.1 Especially read what the Apostle writes in drawing up the Parallel betwixt the two Adams ch 5.15 to the end of the Ch. I say read and consider what is before asserted over and over concerning Justification and then tell me whether the Apostle might not well thus infer There is therefore c. and whether there be not strength enough in these premises to bear the weight of the Conclusion There is therefore now no Condemnation c. for unquestionably the Illative therefore upon which the Proposition is bottom'd like the Handle in the Dial points to all that the Apostle had been speaking of concerning justifying Grace 2. The Priviledge is farther sure upon Sanctification From their Sanctification Such as are in Christ are always sanctified wherever the Union is with the Son there is Sanctification by the Spirit now such as are sanctified shall never be condemned Rev. 20.6 Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first Resurrection on such the second death or Condemnation hath no power Sanctification doth not carry in it such a direct and intrinsick opposition to Condemnation as Justification doth nor is it any meritorious ground of Non-condemnation Yet where there is Sanctification there shall be no Condemnation for upon this the power and dominion of sin is taken away * Dum non essent in Christo consentirent concupiscentiae erat illis damnatio Nunc autem cum sint in Christo repugnent concupiscentiae nihil damnationis est illis quamquam ex carne concupiscant quia non pugnatores sed victi damnantur nec est damnabile si existant desideria ●●rnalia sed si eis ad peccatum obediatur Anselm This must be understood of Condemnation in Event and that too as grounded upon the meer Grace of God vigorous resistance is made against it the bent of the heart is for God there 's the participation of the Divine Nature the Image of God is renewed in the Soul the Creature in part is restored to that original rectitude which was before the Fall with many such like considerations upon all which the sanctified person is secured from Condemnation God hath such a love to Grace it being the work of his own Spirit and to gracious persons they in sanctification being made after himself as 't is exprest Eph. 4.24 that he will never suffer such to perish eternally Grace merits nothing yet it secures from the greatest evils and entitles to the greatest good Nothing shall save where Grace is not nothing shall damn where Grace is The Sinner shall not live the Saint shall not dye O this Sanctification though it be imperfect yet how great good doth result from it Paul had sad remainders of sin in him but withall Grace was in him he had his double self as the Moralist expresses it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his renewed self and his unrenewed self the Law was spiritual but he was carnal sold under sin what he would not that he did what he would that he did not he was led captive by the Law of sin and death here was his unrenewed self Yet where he complains most of Sin even there he discovers much if not most of Grace he had a sinning Nature but he allow'd not himself in sin he consented to the Law that it was good it was not he that did so and so but sin that dwelt in him to will was present with him though how to perform he did not find he delighted in the Law of God in the inward man with his mind he served the Law of God c. here was his renewed self Do not these things evidence Grace was all this spoken in personâ irregeniti as some tell us No doubtless the Apostle here speaks as a * With my mind I serve the Law of God Ego qui in me significo quemlibet justum sub gratiâ constitutum Anselm Quod meo judicio tantam vim tantam emphasin habet ut illi planè humanae naturae corruptionem ignorare videantur si qui sint qui eam cum tali animi constitutione consistere posse putant nisi aliundè sit aliquatenus immutata Amyral Consid cap. sept Ep. ad Rom. p. 16. He might have gone higher ●ha●● aliquatenus immutata gracious man and in the person of gracious men And what doth he infer from all this There is therefore now no Condemnation c. Oh saith Paul I have sin enough to humble me but yet sin shall not damn me there 's too much of it in me but yet it hath not my heart with my mind I serve the Law of God the main bent of my heart is for holiness the corrupt Nature is very strong in me but yet it hath not its full strength its entire unbroken power and dominion over me that through Grace I am freed from I am though but imperfectly yet truly sanctified and hereupon though I may lie under much trouble here yet I am safe as to my eternal state there is therefore now no Condemnation to me I desire it may be observed that he doth not only infer Non-condemnation from the work of Grace in him spoken of in the closure of the former Chapter but as soon as he had laid down in common this great happiness of persons in Christ he presently confirms it as to himself from his sanctification and the dethroning of sin in him by the regenerating Spirit For the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death And with respect to others he much enlarges upon it Rom. 6.5 6 7 8 21 22 23. Well then persons in Christ they being justified and sanctified are above the danger of Condemnation and these are the two great Pillars upon which the Therefore in the words is built From their union with Christ The Text affords us another Argument or Ground of Non-condemnation and that lies in the Subject it self There is no Condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus why so because they are in Christ Jesus for these words are not only descriptive of the persons to whom the priviledge belongs but they are also argumentative and contain a
appears that this twofold walking is not to be limited to meer external and visible acts in the life but it lies very much in the inward secret acts of the heart there 's the Principle the Affections the Propensions the Ends and these are the things which do constitute the walking either fleshly or spiritual but more of this in the Vse I have done with the opening of the Description in both its parts not walking after the flesh but after the spirit which was my business in the Explicatory part The Doctrine proved by Scripture-Testimony I go on to the Second thing the Confirmation of the Point where it will be a very easie thing to prove That this is the property and deservedly the Character of such who are in Christ Jesus they walk not after the flesh but after the spirit All Christ's mystical Members are spiritual walkers this is that very life which such do live that very course which such do follow 1 Joh. 3.6 Whosoever abideth in him sinneth not that is he doth not live in a course of sin which is all one with not walking after the flesh Gal. 5.24 They that are Christ's have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts no sooner is a person brought into Christ but sin and the flesh are crucified and dead in that person so that there is no more walking after it 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption here the Apostle sets down what Christ is to Believers but first he sets down the ground of all namely the mystical union and then he adds to such who are in him he is not onely righteousness to free them from a guilty state but he is also sanctification to free them from a carnal and to bring them over to an holy course wherever then there is this union there is and must be also this spiritual heavenly and holy conversation as the inseparable fruit and consequent of Sanctification By a double Argument I shall not need to spend much time in the proof of it two Arguments I conceive may suffice for that 1. The being in Christ Jesus or the Union with him is brought about as hath been opened by the Spirit and by Faith now both of these necessarily infer this walking after the Spirit The Holy Spirit being in a person as the bond of his union with Christ wherever he is he will be a spring and principle of holiness he will not lie hid in the Soul but it shall be seen in the heavenliness and spiritualness of the conversation that he is there wherever he comes he comes as a commanding overpow'ring guide and principle working with great efficacy upon the Sinner as to his walking Ezek. 36.37 I will put my spirit within you what then and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my judgments and do them mark it saith God I 'le cause you c. the way of God in his working upon the Sinner is not meerly by moral suasion which leaves the Will undetermin'd and pendulous but 't is by effectual inclination and overpowering So that here 's a complication of several things in the Argument which make it very strong As 1. 'T is the Spirit which unites to Christ 2. This uniting Spirit is always an active working Spirit 3. The Matter of his working is Sanctification and universal Holiness 4. The manner of his working is effectual and irresistible Now put all these considerations together and it will most undeniably follow that such who are in Christ they shall walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit Moreover 't is the very Spirit of Christ himself by which Believers are united to him so that the same Spirit which was in him is in them also though in a different measure now hereupon where there is the same spirit there will be the same course or walking and therefore as Christ was holy so will they be holy too and as Christ walked not after the flesh but after the spirit so will they walk also If he indeed should take a person and immediately make him one with himself possibly the certainty of this spiritual walking would not be so evident but the Union being carried on mediately by the Holy Spirit that Spirit will have an infallible and powerful influence upon the Way and Walk of him who is united to Christ Besides this there is the Other Bond viz. Faith and that too doth naturally operate and tend to the furtherance of that conversation which I am proving For 't is of a purifying nature it first * Act. 15.9 purifies the heart and then consequently the several acts which issue and flow from the heart Faith is the justifying grace but 't is a * Act. 26.18 sanctifying grace too it justifies before God but it also sanctifies before men 'T is not only a bare instrument or condition of justification but 't is likewise an operative and influential grace upon sanctification 'T is the lively faith which knits to Christ and being so it will shew its liveliness by its vigorous promoting of the holiness and spiritualness of the Believers course insomuch that * Jam. 2.26 as the body without the spirit is dead so Faith without this spiritual walking is dead also It would be a very easie thing to descend to Particulars therein to show the special Methods in which the Spirit of God and Faith under it do work for the keeping down of the Walking after the flesh and the promoting of the Walking after the spirit in the distinct and several considerations proper to each of them but I fear I am already too prolix The second Argument is taken from Christ's tenderness of his Honour He will advance the creature but hee 'l do it in such a way as that he may secure and advance his own glory Now would this be for the Honour of Christ to take persons into so near a conjunction with himself and yet let them live the carnal and sensual life to walk just as others do who are * Eph. 2.13 afar off from him To be in Christ and yet to live in sin immers'd in flesh and sensuality O what dishonour would this reflect upon the Head if his Members should thus walk Christ will have his followers to differ from others yea and from themselves too therefore all that are in him shall be * 2 Cor. 5.17 new Creatures and from the change in the heart there shall be a change in the life and walking also He can joyn the greatest Sinners to himself but hee 'l first prepare and adapt them for such an Union by making them other persons and so causing them to live at another rate than they did before Where there is nearness nay oneness there as you have heard shall be likeness in an holy course he that will not have us take * 1 Cor. 6.15
wickedness O let such take heed lest God hear them in a dreadful manner I hope I speak to none of these you I trust have a dread of God and of the things of eternity upon your spirits let exempt on from Condemnation be the matter of your prayer and do but joyn the right manner with the right matter and this will secure your Souls forever God never yet condemned a praying man he that fears and prays shall never feel what he fears and prays against Fifthly 5 Dir. Make sure of Faith I mean true saving justifying Faith where that is yea but the least dram of it there shall be no Condemnation It secures from this both as 't is the Grace which unites to Christ and also as 't is the great condition of the Gospel upon which it promises life and salvation Unbelief is the damning Sin and Faith is the saving Grace If thou be'st a sincere Believer 't is not only thou shalt not be condemned but thou shalt most certainly be saved both are sure from the frequent often repeated declarations attestations promises of the word the whole Gospel-revelation centers in this God is as gracious to acquit justifie save the Believer as he is righteous to charge punish condemn the Unbeliever He * Gratia Dei speranda est acceptanda ad normam propositum miserentis Dei reque enim convenit or qui●condemnationis reusest formulas Gratiae praescribat ei à quo justè potest condemnari sed requiritur ut praescriptum Gratiae ab allo accipiat grato animo amplectatur Muscul in praefat ad Ep. ad Rom. may set down what condition or conditions he pleases in order to the giving out of his grace which when they are performed he is engaged to make good what he promises upon them O therefore get faith for this is the grand Gospel-condition if you believe not the Gospel it self cannot save you if you believe the Law it self cannot condemn you I do not enlarge upon these things 6 Dir. because that Direction which is proper to the Text is this As you desire No-condemnation get into Christ so as to be in Christ Jesus For they and they only are the persons who are out of the danger of Condemnation The Priviledge and the Subject are of the same extent and latitude just so many as are in Christ are safe and no more If thou beest one of these do not fear if otherwise do not flatter thy self with false presumptuous and ungrounded hopes All that were not in the Ark perished in the common Deluge all out of Christ are lost When 't is a Christ 't is no Condemnation when 't is no Christ 't is nothing but Condemnation When the guilty pursued Malefactor had got into the City of Refuge then he was secure O thou poor awakened Sinner fly to Christ 't is for the life of thy precious Soul and get into Christ the alone City of Refuge for the poor guilty Creature then Guilt many pursue thee but it shall never hurt thee And here I would admonish all to take up with nothing short of Vnion with Christ You are members of the Church but are you members of Christ you are joyned to the Church upon Baptism but are you joyned to Christ by a true and lively faith here lies your security from Condemnation The first Adam hath brought Guilt upon us and consequently Death how we being united to him So the second Adam frees us from this and makes over righteousness to us how in the same way and upon the same ground viz we being united to him without this all that Christ is hath done or suffered will avail us nothing But I shall more fully insist upon this in that which will follow VSE 3. Believers are to admire God for exemption from Condemnation Thirdly I would speak to those who are in Christ to excite them to be very thankful and highly to admire the Grace of God What No condemnation not one condemnation O the riches the heighths bredths depths lengths of the love of God! How should such be even astonished because of this inexpressible mercy They who deserve millions of condemnations that yet there is not one condemnation belonging to them they that have in them matter enough to condemn them over and over that yet they shall never be condemned how should God be admired by those to whom this blessedness belongs Such as are not in this state how should they be filled with self-awakening thoughts such as are in this state how should they be filled with God-admiring thoughts O you that are in Christ what will you think of this happiness when you shall see it accomplished the truth is as Sinners will never know nor ever be suitably affected with their misery till they feel it in Hell so the Saints will never know or be suitably affected with their happiness till that day shall come wherein they shall be put into the possession of it in Heaven When God shall pick and single you out of the common crowd and shall say I here acquit you before all the world from all your guilt I here pronounce you to be righteous persons and I will by no means pass a condemnatory sentence upon you though I know what I might have done to you and what I will do to others I say when it shall come to this how will your Souls be drawn out and if you had a thousand more Souls how would they all be drawn out in the adoring and magnifying of the Grace of God! But something should be done now whilst you are here though but in the hopes and expectation of this felicity Where there is no condemnation there should be much thankfulness How doth the Traitor admire the grace and clemency of his Prince who sends him a pardon when he expected his tryal and sentence to dye And as you must be thankful to God the Father so in special to Jesus Christ 't is he * 1 Thes 1.10 who hath saved you from wrath to come 't is he who was willing to be condemned himself that he might free you from condemnation judgment passed upon him * Is 53.8 he was taken from prison and from judgment that it might not pass upon you he was * Gal. 3.13 made a curse that he might deliver you from the curse when Adam had entail'd guilt and wrath upon you Christ came and cut off this sad entail and procur'd justification for you * Rom. 5.18 As by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all to justification of life 'T is upon Vnion with him that there is no condemnation to you O let your whole Soul go out in thankfulness to Christ He as your Surety paid your debt else you had been arrested and thrown into prison forever in him there was nothing to deserve condemnation and yet he
and working ever since mans Fall alwayes was and yet is unable to justifie it may possibly attempt such a thing or rather the Sinner may look for such a thing from it but it cannot carry it on to any good issue This I conceive Pauls thoughts were in special upon when he says what the Law could not do For 't is the Sinners justification which he in this place is discoursing of and he first begins with the Law as being impotent and insufficient to accomplish this justification God by Christ condemned sin i. e. he abolish'd and cut off Sins Guilt and by him he brought about a righteousness for the Sinner but the doing of this by the Law was a thing altogether impossible that could not make the Creature to cease to be guilty or to become righteous The proving of this truth was elsewhere his main business as namely in the 3d 4th 5th Chapters of this Epistle where he doth professedly and largely insist upon it That one place is a sufficient proof of it Chapt. 3.20 Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of Sin He pursues the same Argument in his Epistle to the Galatians where he goes over it again and again Gal. 2.16 21. Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Jesus Christ even we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified by the faith of Christ and not by the works of the Law for by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified I do not frustrate the Grace of God for if righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain Gal. 3.11 21 22. But that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for The just shall live by faith Is the Law then against the promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life verily righteousness should have been by the Law But the Scripture hath concluded all under Sin that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe So also in his Sermon at Antioch Acts 13.39 By him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses How full and positive are the Scriptures in the denial of any power to the Law to justifie It can discover Sin accuse and judge for Sin but it cannot expiate Sin or make a man righteous before God There is indeed the righteousness of the Law and upon that righteousness by the Law but that now is altogether unattainable further than as 't is brought about and accomplished in the hands of Christ the Law in Christs hands can do great things but in ours it can do nothing So also the Law is weak in reference to Eternal life It could not do i. e. it could not save it never yet as separated from Christ carried one Sinner to Heaven 't is above the ability of the Law to save one Soul Consider it as the Covenant of works so its language is Do and Live Rom. 10.5 For Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law that the man which doth these things shall live by them Now man in his lapsed state cannot do according to the Laws demands therefore by it there 's no Life for him Had he continued in the state of innocency he had been able to have done all which the Law required and so would have attained Life by it in the way of doing but now the case is altered If Salvation depended upon the Creatures perfect and personal obedience not a man would be saved There must indeed be Obedience to the Law or no Salvation but should it be that very Obedience which the Law calls for and as the Law calls for it viz. as the condition of the first Covenant this would make salvation absolutely impossible You know Moses brought Israel to the borders of the Holy Land but Joshua must lead them into it so the Law as God uses it in subserviency to the Gospel may do something toward the saving of a poor creature but 't is the alone Merit and Obedience of the Lord Jesus applyed by Faith which must put the Sinner into the possession of the Heavenly Rest That which now saves is Christ not Moses the Gospel not the Law believing not doing I mean only in the old Covenant sense So much for the Matter of the Laws impotency The Grounds or Demonstrations of the Laws inability to justifie and save Secondly Let me give you the Grounds or if you will the Demonstrations of the Laws impotency and weakness to justifie and save He instance in Three 1. It requires that which the Creature cannot perform Before the Law do any great thing for a person it must first be exactly fulfill'd for that 's its way the terms and condition which it stands upon and 't is as high in these terms now as ever it was for though man hath lost his power the Law hath not lost its rigor it doth not sink or fall in its demands because of mans inability to answer them Though the Sinner be as the poor broken debtor utterly undone yet the Law will not compound with him or abate him any thing but 't will have full payment of the whole debt Now this in statu lapso as I shall shew when I come to the 4th verse is * Unde sequitur plus in lege praecipi quam praestando simus quia si pares essemus implendae Legi frustra aliunde effet quaesitum remedium Calvin Hic locus efficacissime convincit justificationem non esse ex opcribus c. P. Martyr Non implet Legem infirmitas mea sed landat Legem voluntas mea August impossible None but such an one as Christ could thus answer the Laws demands For nothing will serve it below perfection inherent righteousness actual obedience all must be perfect or else the Law despises them The Gospel accepts of Sincerity but the Law will ' bate nothing of perfection if there be but the least failure all is spoiled Gal. 3.10 For as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them Jam. 2 1● For who soever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point he is guilty of all And is it thus are these the terms and demands of the Law what then can it do or rather what can we do it must needs be weak to us Because in these rigors we are so weak to it it cannot do much for us because we can do but little to it it cannot do what we desire because we cannot do what it demands O how exceeding short do the best come of the high measures of the
Law (a) Prov. 20.9 Who can say I have made my heart clean I am pure from my sin (b) Jam. 3.2 In many things we offend all (c) Eccles 7.20 There is not a just man upon earth that doth good and sinneth not (d) Isa 64.6 Our very righteousness is as a polluted ragge (e) Job 9.2 3. How should man be just with God If he will contend with him he cannot answer him one of a thousand If I justifie my self mine own mouth shall condemn me if I say I am perfect it shall also prove me perverse See Job 15.14 15 16. Job 25.4 5 6. * Psal 130.3 If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquities O Lord who shall stand † Psal 143.2 Quis melior Prophetâ dequo dixit Deus Inveni virum secundum cor meum et tamen ipse necesse habuit dicere Deo Ne imres in judicium cum servo tuo Bernard in Annunt Mariae Sine peccato qui se vivere existimet non id agit ut peccatum non habeat sed ut veniam non accipiat August Enchirid. In pessimis aliquid boni et in optimis non nihil pessimi solus homo sine peccato Christus Tertul. Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified 2. The Law doth not give what the Creature * Lex Moysi quamvis spiritualis esset quia tamen non adjuvabat intus per gratiam lex ●rat infirma et imbecillis ob statum carnalem hominum in quo relinquebat illos Cajet Non quod ipsa infirma sit sed quod infirmos faciat minando poenam nec adjuvando per gratiam Anselm Lex Praeterquam quod peccati rationem aperiebat nihil praeterea auxilii praestabat spiritui adversus carnem et ideo neque sufficiebat ad justificandum neque ad perficienda Legis opera Soto needs it asks above his strength and gives below his want He must have Grace Sanctification Holiness c. but will the Law help him to these no! 't is high in the commanding of them but that 's all it doth not work them in the soul it asks very high but gives very low 'T is holy it self but it cannot make others holy it can discover sin but it cannot mortifie sin as the glass discovers the spots and blemishes in the face but doth not remove them The Law is a † 2 Cor. 3.6 killing thing but 't is of the Sinner not of the Sin it hath by accident by reason of the Flesh here spoken of a quite other effect for it doth rather * Non de legis praestatione hic agitur sed de ipsius vi in nostris immutandis animis ad illud Legis praescriptum efformandis utpote quae corruptionem illam in qua nascinsur non modo non sanet sed augeat potius Beza enliven increase and irritate sin as Water meeting with opposition grows the more fierce and violent and the Disease the more 't is check'd by the medicine the more it rages Paul found in himself this sad effect of the Law Rom. 7.8 But sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence for without the Law sin was dead Moreover the Law calls for duty but it gives no * Per-Legem non adjutorium sed nostri mali indicium monitorium habemus Lu●her strength for the performance of it Pharaoh-like who exacted brick but allowed no straw The Gospel helps where it commands the Law commands but helps not Lex jubet Evangelium juvat remember I still speak of the Law as it stands in opposition to the Gospel and as 't is the matter and transcript of the first Covenant It neither pardons what it forbids for doth it inable to do what it injoyns and much of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 impotency of the Law lies in these * Necessarius fuit adventus Christi qui Legi suppetias ferret c. Nam illa quidem rectè docuerat c. Verùm adhuc duo erant necessaria quae Lex conferre non potuit 1. ut condonentur ea quae contra ejus precepta admissa fuerint 2. ut vires hominis corroborentur quibus possit Legis jussa perficere P. Martyr two things Take a particular instance great is the Sinners need of Faith for without this no justification no peace with God no heaven 't is the Gospel-condition on which all depends Now the Law knows nothing of this Faith nay 't is diametrically opposite to it 't is so far from working it that it hinders it to its utmost 'T is all for working for doing Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of Faith but the man that doth them shall live in them Believing belongs only to the Gospel therefore that is stiled the Law of Works and this the Law of Faith Rom. 3.27 If Faith come under the Law 't is only that Faith which is a General Faith or as 't is a part of Obedience not as the Condition of gospel-Gospel-grace The Law therefore not helping as to these things so indispensably necessary for Grace here and hereafter what can it do for the lost Sinner 3dly The Law could not do because it could not heal that breach which Sin had made betwixt God and the Sinner It still looks forwards and is alwayes calling for perfect Obedience but what if Sin hath been committed for the time past O there the Law is weak It can make no reparation for what is past as to that all it sayes to the guilty person is as they to Judas what is that to me see * Matth. 27.4 thou to that Suppose the Sinner could for the future come up to a full conformity to the Law and in every thing answer its highest commands Suppose him now to arrive at such a pitch of perfection that he should do nothing which this Law forbids and do every thing which this Law commands yet supposing the Fall from God and the Guilt thereby contracted or any one sin committed the Law would be weak and the creature could not thereby be justified the reason is because here is now reparation and satisfaction to be made for what is past which to make is impossible to the Law This perfect Obedience present and future might do the work was it not for what is past but guilt hath been contracted God hath been offended his first Covenant violated therefore there must be reparation made to him for this Now this the Law cannot do nor the Creature upon the terms of the Law for all that he can arrive at is but perfect obedience and that is his duty he 's under an obligation to it and therefore by it he can make no satisfaction for what is past this is but the paying of the present debt which can quit nothing of the former score This is very well if we look forward but what becomes of us when we look backward So
could not be thereby convinc'd However I thought I could not do less than what I have done possibly thereby weaker Christians may come to some clearer insight into these matters if there too I be disappointed yet I have laid down the grounds of my own pe●suasion which this Subject made necessary Whether the Answers I have given to the Objections will be satisfactory to others I know not but I. seriously profess as to the main they are so to me I must acknowledge in some of them there are those difficulties which 't is not an easie thing to get over yet upon the whole matter I must say that after the most serious thoughts I as to my self can with more ease and satisfaction answer the Arguments brought against the imputation of the active Obedience than I can those which are brought for it otherwise I had not embrac'd an Opinion which some knowing men oppose with scorn and derision I come to the Application wherein I must be very short From the Truth I am upon we learn 1. in what way or upon what terms a Believer is justified Vse 1 What are they why the fulfilling of the Laws righteousness which though it could not be done by the Believer himself yet by Christ it is done for him In the justifying of Sinners God proceeds upon the perfect righteousness and full demands of the Law and being justified they are righteous according to that * c. justi sumus coram Deo ex illâ etiam absolutissimâ legis formalâ Beza If with our justification from Sin there be joyn'd that active Obedience of Christ which is imputed to us we are just before God according to that perfect form which the Law requireth Engl. Annot. strict and exact righteousness which the Law itself holds forth You reade much of Legal and of Evangelical righteousness of justification by works and by faith there seems to be a contrariety between these two and so there is in some respects but if you consider them materially and fundamentally they are one and the same The righteousness by which we are justified 't is both legal or the righteousness of works and also Evangelical or the righteousness of faith in reference to Christ 't is legal as he exactly fulfilled the Law in reference to us 't is Evangelical that righteousness which was never performed in our own persons being graciously made over to us and accepted for us And so as to our selves we are justified by faith but as to our Head and Surety we are justified by works God deals with us in our own persons upon the terms of the Covenant of grace but he dealt with us in Christ upon the terms of the Covenant of works and indeed in the justification and salvation of a Sinner all these concur The Scripture 't is true sets them in opposition one to the other and makes them incompatible but that is only in reference to the same subject under the same personal consideration The same person as considered in himself and by himself cannot be justified by Works and by Faith too by the Covenant of works and by the Covenant of grace too but let Christ be taken in and so these things are reconcileable As Christ in his person did all which the Law or Covenant of Works required so in him our justification is by the Law of Works c. but as that his righteousness is imputed to us and apply'd by us so our justification is of grace by faith c. That very righteousness which is legal in the Head is Evangelical in the members in respect of the application of it Blessed be God for the sweet harmony and concurrence of both Covenants of Law and Gospel Works and Faith in the Sinners justification and salvation 't is admirably brought about by this great thing which the Text speaks of Christs fulfilling the righteousness of the Law for us 2. Secondly it shews us what great respect and value the great God had for his holy Law and what an high honour he put upon it Which appears from this the Apostle here setting down God's high and glorious ends in the sending of his Son into the world he makes them all to center in the satisfaction and accomplishment of his Law that it might be satisfied in its penalty Christ shall be a Sacrifice as you had it before that it might be satisfied in its commands Christ in his own person shall fulfil the righteousness of it as you have it here Here was by both plenary satisfaction made to the Law which was the very thing which God stood upon and would have done and rather than it should not be done his own Son must come from Heaven and put on flesh and be himself made under the Law he must live an holy life and die a cursed death and all to satisfie the Law And this was a thing so great in God's eye as that he look'd upon the fulfilling and answering of the Laws demands as a valuable compensation for all the abasement and humiliation of his dearest Son Oh let us think honorably of the Law for surely God did so The Apostle had seem'd to speak somewhat diminutively of it before what the Law could not do in that it was weak but here he puts a great deal of glory upon it in making this the end of the Incarnation of the Son of God that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us God never designed by the sending of Christ to have his Law * Nota per Christum non abolitam esse Legis justitiam non respectu quidem nostri verum impletam eam etiam respectu nostri in nobis Rolloc abolished or abrogated no but rather to have it accomplished and fully satisfied † Matth. 5.17 think not that I am come to destroy the Law or the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfil In Christ's obedience active and passive we have an high demonstration of that singular respect which God bare to his Law Sin was a base thing therefore that shall be condemned but the Law was good therefore that shall be satisfied Secondly Vse 2 from hence by way of Exhortation I would urge a few things upon you As 1. make sure of an interest in the priviledge here spoken of To have the righteousness of the Law fulfilled in us O what a priviledge is this is it yours are you in the number of the us in the Text is Christ's obeying the Law so made over to you as that in God's estimation the righteousness thereof is fulfilled in you Sirs this is a thing that must be done either by you or for you the former being impossible what relief have you from the latter If you cannot plead this fulfilling of the Laws righteousness either by your selves or by your Surety you are lost for ever you are under that * Gal. 5.3 debt to the Law which you will never be able to pay you are
50.20 In those days the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for and there shall be none 'T is an allusion to one that turns over all his Bonds searches into all his Debt-books to see if he can find any debt due to him from such or such a person but upon all his searching he cannot find so much as one debt to charge upon him So 't is with the pardoned justified sinner imagine that God should be inquisitive to find out some guilt as lying upon him he might indeed find out enough as he is in himself but as he is in Christ as he is pardoned and justified through Christ so there is nothing to be found against him and therefore not one Condemnation How doth this tend to the comfort and encouragement of Gods people this makes the Proposition to be very emphatical and highly consolatory there is not one Condemnation for them who are in Christ Oecumenius opens the words with this emphasis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. Sixthly The Apostle speaks indefinitely with respect to the subject there is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus He takes all such into the priviledge for the Indefinite here is equipollent to an Vniversal Paul doth not narrow or confine or impropriate this Non-condemnation to himself 't is not there is now no Condemnation to me but he extends it to all who have an interest in Christ And herein he discovers much of wisdom as * Mirabilis sanè est Apostoli prudentia qui cum de vi peccati scriberet eam expressit in personâ suâ ut intelligeremus c. Posteà verò cum agitur de auxilio spiritus Christi inducit personam aliorum ne cuiquam in mentem veniret non quoslibet Christianos frui hoc auxilio Dei sed tantum primarios quosdam eximios quales fuerunt Apostoli Pet. Martyr Peter Martyr observes for had he spoken in the Singular number to me many poor weak Christians would have been afraid to have applyed this blessedness to themselves they would have been ready to object Ah blessed Paul thou art high in Faith eminent in Grace therefore thou maist say there is no Condemnation to thee but 't is not so with us we are but poor shrubs meer dwarfs in Grace 't is not for us to lay hold upon so high a priviledge To obviate this discouragement saith the Apostle I tell you there is no Condemnation to any who are in Christ let them be who they will this belongs to all such to you as well as to my self True I am an Apostle you are not so but then I am a Believer and so are you true I may have more of grace than you but yet you are in Christ as well as I and the Vnion being common the Non-condemnation is common too for that is the ground of this 'T is the same righteousness to all and upon all that believe Rom. 3.22 't is the same faith for substance in the highest and in the lowest to them that have obtained like precious faith with us 2 Pet. 1.1 't is the same head and the same union with this head in all and therefore it must be the same exemption from Condemnation The difference in Pauls expressing himself according to the difference of the subject he was upon is very observable take him in the former Chapter where he is bewailing sin there he speaks altogether in the First person Singular and goes no further than himself read from the 7 verse to the end and you 'll find I and me in every verse But now in this Eighth Chapter where he 's treating of Priviledges there he speaks altogether in the Plural number as taking in the whole body of Believers Run over it all and except but one Verse in which 't is true he particularizes himself The Law of the spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of sin and death I say do but except this one Verse and in all the rest you will find the observation to be true but this will be further cleared up hereafter And elsewhere too you find him very careful not to engross or confine happiness to himself but to extend it to all who belonged to God as well as he himself did As take but that one instance 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a Crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give me at that day thus far he himself is concerned but doth he stop here and not take in others No 't is not enough to him to be sure of this happiness himself but he 'll let others know it shall be just so with them too therefore he adds and not to me onely but unto all them also that love his appearing In the great blessings of the Gospel Justification Adoption eternal Life all the Saints shall fare alike they are all Gods Children and therefore all shall have their portion and the same portion too Jude calls it common Salvation V. 3 and the same may be said of all other Blessings 't is common Justification common Adoption c. 7. Seventhly The Positive is included in the Negative There 's no Condemnation c. is this all that the Apostle drives at or hath in his eye viz. to hold forth that such who are in Christ shall not be condemned no! he aims at something more namely at this that such are fully justified and shall be most certainly saved they shall not only upon their being in Christ be looked upon as not guilty or barely kept out of Hell but they shall be judged compleatly righteous and they shall also be admitted into Heaven and eternally glorified There is a Meiosis in the words more is to be understood than what is expressed the Privative and the Positive part of the blessedness are to be linked together and blessed be God for both Had it been only freedom from Condemnation that would have been rich and glorious mercy but when it is not only that but Justification and Salvation too O here is mercy in the very height and Zenith of it Some enquire why the Apostle expresseth it in the Negative rather than in the Positive they answer because Men generally are more sensible of the Goodness of God in the freeing of them from evil than in the collating or bestowing of good No Condemnation more affects than positive Justification or Salvation It may be further added the Apostle thus expresses it because Negatives usually intend and highten the thing spoken of as in the Commandements such as are Negative carry an higher obligation in them than those which are Positive for they oblige both semper and ad semper too and as in the Promises when they are Negatively expressed this makes them to rise the higher in the matter contained in them as take that Promise which is made up of so many Negative Heb. 13.5 I will never leave thee nor for sake thee this is more
Hominem in Personam But now in the Mystical Vnion 't is otherwise there 't is the Vnion of Persons but not Personal Vnion this I 'le endeavour to clear as well as I can In the Mystical Vnion there is the Vnion of Persons the Person of Christ is united to the Person of the Believer and the Person of the Believer is united to the Person of Christ For Faith being the uniting grace and this faith receiving the Person of Christ * Joh. 1.12 Faith is a receiving of Christ himself we cannot receive the benefits that come by him without receiving of himself as in Marriage the Consent is I take thee not I take thine c. Vines on the Sacram. p. 120. To as many as received him c it must also unite to the Person of Christ In the Marriage-Vnion 't is person joyned to person and so 't is in the Mystical Vnion also How is a Believer said to be in Christ it cannot so properly be said that he is in the graces or in the comforts or in the gifts of Christ but the meaning is he is in the Person of Christ so that this is an Union of Persons For further this Vnion doth not lye only in some moral or spiritual acts qualities or gracious indowments as oneness of will or oneness of disposition c. but it lies in the Oneness of Persons And therefore * Nostra ipsius conjunctio non miscet Personas nec confundit substantias sed affectus consociat confaederat voluntates Cypr. Cyprian's explication of this Vnion with Christ is not full enough Our Vnion saith he with Christ does not mingle Persons nor confound Substances so far very true but it unites affections and wills if he meant that this was all then 't is conceived he came short there is more in it than so for there is besides this uniting of the Affections and Will the uniting though not the mingling of Persons The Father Son and Spirit are one not only in respect of Consent as some most falsely tell us but also in respect of Nature and Essence Now far be it from me to say that Christ and the Saints are one in this sense yet withall I say even between them there is an higher Vnion than barely that of oneness of affection and will I say no more than what * Vide Zanch. in Cap. 5. ad Eph. p. 245. Polan Synt. Theol. Lib. 6. cap. 35. p. 454. Hujus Unionis interventu fit ut tum Beneficiorum Christi tum Substantiae ipsius fiamus participes quia beneficia omnia vis illa vivifica quae animas nostras sustentat in vitam aeternam non possunt à Corpore Sanguine Christi cui inhaerent adeoque ab ipso Christo divelli Trelcat Inst Theol. Lib. 2. p. 189. Bucan L. C. 48. p. 818 819. 'T is not an Union of Christ with a Believer in Accidents only as in Opinion Affection in Consent of Mind and Heart or in likeness of Disposition and Conversation but it is an Union of Substances Essences Persons As Mr. Perkins saith the Person of him that believeth is united to the Person of Christ Reyn. Praec p 49. Others who write upon this Argument generally say But that you may not go too high I add this Vnion is not Personal 't is but Mystical not Personal For then Christ and the Believer would properly and physically make but one person and then it would be so many Believers so many Christs and then the Believer would have no subsistence but in Christ as the Humane Nature of Christ hath no subsistence but what it hath in the Godhead and then he would merit in what he did as Christ quà Man did by virtue of the Personal Vnion Therefore we must conclude that though here is an Vnion of Persons the Person of Christ in a mystical way being united to the person of Believers yet here is not any Personal Vnion they both notwithstanding this remaining several and distinct Persons These things may seem as indeed they are abstruse and dark to you I 'le come to that which will be somewhat more plain and easie For the further Explication of this Great Mystery there are Three Things which I 'le speak to 1. I 'le endeavour to open the several Kinds or Branches of that Vnion which is betwixt Christ and Believers 2. I 'le give you those Scriptural Resemblances by which 't is shadowed and set forth 3. I 'le give you the several Properties of it Vnion Mystical Legal Moral 1. First Let me open the several Kinds or Branches of this Vnion 'T is Threefold Mystical Legal and Moral A Believer is united to Christ three ways Mystically Legally Morally Take any of these singly and they will not be enough comprehensive but take them jointly so there 's all in them Of the Mystical Vnion 1. First there 's the Mystical Vnion so we usually call it Which may be thus * Vide Bodium in Ephes 5.28 p. 786. more fully describing of it describ'd 'T is that supernatural spiritual intimous Oneness and Conjunction which is betwixt the Person of Christ and the Persons of Believers through the Bond of the Spirit and Faith upon which there follows mutual and reciprocal Communion each with the other If this Description be taken in pieces it contains in it the most considerable things to be known about the Mystical Vnion For 1. Here is the proper General Nature of it viz. Oneness and Conjunction Christ and Saints are united how why in respect of that Oneness and Conjunction that is betwixt them This the Scripture-Expressions do mainly refer to and clearly hold forth They are said to be in Christ and Christ in them they are said to dwell in Christ and Christ in them to abide in Christ and Christ in them to be one with Christ as he is one with the Father the several Scriptures which speak to these things have been already cited They are further said to be (a) 1 Cor. 6.17 joyned to the Lord and to be one Spirit to be (b) Eph. 5.31 32. one flesh Christ (c) Gal. 2.20 lives in them he is the (d) Eph. 1.22 Head they the Members he the (e) Joh. 15.5 Root they the Branches he the (f) 1 Cor. 3.9 11. Foundation they the Building he the (g) Eph. 5.28 c. Husband they the Wife All these expressions I say point to that Oneness and Conjunction which is betwixt Christ and Believers in which the General Nature of the Mystical Vnion doth consist 2. Here 's the Qualities or Properties of this Vnion 't is a supernatural spiritual intimous Vnion to which I shall speak by and by 3. Here 's the Subjects of this Vnion Christ and Believers And that too is set down with this modification the Oneness and Conjunction is betwixt the Person of Christ and the Persons of Believers of which before 4. Here 's the Media or
Vincula Vnionis the Means or Bonds of this Union the Spirit and Faith 5. Here is also the Effect or Consequent upon this Union namely mutual and reciprocal Communion each with the other This will be opened in what will follow Only at present let me open the fourth Head the Means and Bonds of the Mystical Union In all Unions there is something which binds and knits Thing and Thing Person and Person together what is it then which binds knits conjoyns Christ to Believers and Believers to Christ I answer 't is the Spirit and Faith The Spirit unites Christ to us and Faith unites us to Christ First the Spirit is the bond of this Union on Christs part for by this he takes possession of Believers * Christ lives in us not by local presence but by the special supernatural operation of his Spirit Perkins upon Gal. 2.20 p. 216. dwells in them lays hold of them apprehends them as the word is Phil. 3.12 In * De Trinit de Poenit. Tertullians Dialect Spiritus nos Christo confibulat the Spirit doth joyn and button Believers to Christ And then Faith is the bond or ligament on our part Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts how by Faith Christ lays hold on us by the Spirit and we lay hold on him by Faith he comes to us by the Spirit and we go to him by Faith The Spirit of God does not only discover and make out the Union of the Soul with Christ Hereby we know that he abides in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.24 but he works promotes and brings it about As 't is in that Vnion which is amongst the Saints themselves * 1 Cor. 12.13 by one Spirit they are all baptized into one body So 't is in the Vnion which is betwixt Christ and them by this One Spirit they are all made one with Christ Therefore saith the Apostle * Rom. 8.9 If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his he means he hath neither interest in him nor union with him And then there is Faith which unites on our part for that is the uniting Grace the Sinew or Ligament which knits and binds the Soul to Christ that by which the Soul clasps and clings about Christ By faith we apply our selves to Christ and Christ to our selves and that application is the ground of union So also by Faith we * Joh. 1.12 receive Christ upon which receiving of him we are united to him and made one with him The spiritual ingrafting too is by this as you may see Rom 11.19 20 and this is our eating Christs flesh and drinking-Christs-blood upon which he dwells in us Joh. 6.56 Thus the Union is brought about both on Christs part and on the Believers part and this is the Mystical Vnion Of the Law-Vnion Secondly There is the Legal or Law-Vnion betwixt Christ and Believers The ground of this Union is Christs * Heb. 7.22 Suretyship he as the Saints 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Surety struck hands with God as the word imports put himself into their stead took their debt upon himself and bound himself upon their account to make satisfaction to God Now from this act of Christ there results that Law-Vnion which I am upon Saints as 't is said by some are united to Christ three ways Spiritu Carne Vadimonio as they are partakers of his Spirit as he hath assumed their Nature and as he hath engaged for them as there Sponsor or Surety You know in Law the Debtor and the Surety are but one Person the Law looks upon them as One and makes no difference betwixt them and therefore both are equally liable to the debt and if the One pay it 't is in the eye of the Law as much as if the Other had paid it So 't is with Christ and us he is our Surety for he took our debt upon himself engaged to pay whatever we owed as * Philem. 18.19 Paul once did to Philemon for his Onesimus entred into bond though not with us yet for us Upon this Christ and we are but One Person before God and accordingly he deals with us For he makes over our Sins to Christ and also Christs righteousness and satisfaction to us he now in a legal notion looking upon both but as One person And this Consideration is of great use and so accordingly 'tis improved by the Orthodox against Socinians to clear up and confirm those great Truths which concern Christs Sufferings and the Believers benefit thereby For if it be ask'd How could Christ he being a Person perfectly innocent suffer in a penal manner as he did he being altogether guiltless in himself how could the Father with justice fall upon him as though he had been guilty Or grant that he did thus suffer yet how can any good by his suffering redound to others I say if any shall raise such Questions the Answer is ready That Christ and Believers in Law are but one Person he having submitted to be their Surety in a voluntary substitution of himself in their stead and susception of their Guilt whereupon it came to pass that their Guilt was imputed to him upon which the Father might without the least impeachment of his justice severely fall upon him and his righteousness merit satisfaction was imputed to them for that being performed by their Surety 't is theirs to all intents and purposes as if they had perform'd it in their own persons Briefly upon this Law-Vnion resulting from Christs Suretiship our Sins were very well imputable to him and his merits to us This doth so exactly fall in with the common notion and case of Suretyship amongst Men that I need not any further insist upon the illustration of it The Adversaries therefore who deny that Christ either did or could suffer in the Sinners stead or that there is any imputation of his Merit to Believers are so pinched with this his being a Surety that they oppose it to their utmost wholly deny that too and are feign to make good one denial with another But here I digress Two things I shall add upon this Head and then dismiss it 1. That the Oneness of Person 'twixt Christ and the Saints which hath been affirmed of them more than once or twice in the opening of the matter in hand is not to be carried further than that particular Sense and respect in which 't is affirmed I mean this They are not one Person in respect of Nature Essence or any personal Vnion onely they are so in respect of that Mystical and Legal Oneness of Person that is betwixt them And this latter Oneness is very well consistent with the different Natures of the Subjects united though the former is not so 2. That this Law-Vnion is only proper to Christ the Second Person The mystical and the moral Union in some sense doth reach to the other Persons
for though the Saints proximately and immediately are united to Christ yet the Union is not so terminated in him but that through him they are united to the Father too Therefore 't is said Joh. 17.21 That they also may be one in us 't is not one in Me singly but one in Vs conjunctly And the Apostle saith 1 Thes 1.1 2. To the Church which is in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus Christ the same you have 2 Thes 1.1 So * Of the Saints Union with the Father as well as with the Son see Burg. upon Joh. 17. p. 586. Newton upon Joh. p. 450. of the Moral Vnion that Believers in some respects are in both and united both to Father and Son But as to the Law-union arising from Suretyship and Vadimony that is only proper to Christ he of all the Persons being the alone Surety for Believers Thirdly There is a Moral Vnion between Christ and Believers 'T is called Moral from the Bond or Ground of it which is Love and the word Moral is us'd not as it stands in contradistinction to Spiritual but to Natural and Physical I say the Bond of this Union is Love for Faith unites mystically and Love unites morally Love is an uniting grace as well as Faith though it doth not unite in the same way therefore 't is said He that dwelleth in Love dwelleth in God and God in him 1 Joh. 4.16 'T is all for union and it produces union take two persons who love each other their mutual affection makes them to be One there is a real Oneness between Friend and Friend The Philosopher very well defined Friendship by One Soul in two Bodies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A * Aristot Ethic. l. 9. c. 3.9 Friend is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alteridem another Self Thus 't is in that which is before us there is a mutual reciprocal hearty Love between Christ and Believers he loves them and they love him and by vertue of this mutual Love there is a real and close Vnion betwixt them The Husband and Wife are One not meerly upon the Marriage Covenant and external Relation but also and chiefly upon that Love and Affection that is betwixt them So it is 'twixt Christ and Saints * Qui scilicet dilect à Christo vicissim Christum amant Hocenim est in Christo esse non tantum Christo amari sed Christum amare Corn Mussus Qui Coristo incorporati sunt puro perfecto amore Idem Some therefore open this being in Christ Jesus or Oneness with him by Love in respect of this Love Believers are in Christ And so I have opened that threefold Vnion which is between Christ and Believers I have a little insisted upon the two latter branches of it but 't is the first the Mystical Vnion that I shall further mainly speak to for the truth is this is the Vnion which the Gospel principally sets before us Scripture-Resemblances by which the Mystical Vnion is set forth The Second Thing propounded was to instance in those several Scripture-resemblances by which the Mystical Vnion is set forth These are very many For this being a very high and mysterious thing it hath pleased God to make use of various Resemblances for the better describing of it that he might thereby make it to us more credible and more intelligible And 't is observable how the Spirit of God summons in all Vnions Natural Relative Artisicial that he might by all of them more clearly and distinctly shadow out the grand Vnion betwixt Christ and Saints Yet I must tell you though those are very useful as to the End designed and are very high the highest in genere Vnionis yet they all come short of the Mystical Union which they refer to they may illustrate it but they cannot reach or equalize it I will but briefly go over them both because they are fully handled by Others and also because that which is proper from them to the business in hand may be dispatched in few words The First is that of Husband and Wife A very fit and full Resemblance a * See Dr. Cudworths Union of Christ and the Church shadowed Type say some of the Mystical Vnion Upon the conjugal relation there is a very near and close conjunction If you please to look to its first institution you will find a deep foundation of Oneness laid therein Gen. 2.23 24. This is now bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and shall cleave unto his wife and they shall be one flesh Now Christ and Believers stand in this Conjugal relation each to the other he is their Husband they his Spouse they are espoused to Christ their Husband 2 Cor. 11.2 married to Christ Rom. 7.4 betrothed to God and Christ Hos 2.19 their name is Hephzibah and Beulah Isa 62.4 The Marriage-Vnion in the very height of it the Apostle brings down to Christ and Believers Eph. 5.28 29 c. So ought men to love their wives as their own bodies he that loveth his wife loveth himself For no man ever yet hated his own flesh but nourisheth it and cherisheth it even as the Lord the Church For we are members of his body of his flesh and of his bones For this cause shall a man leave his father and his mother and shall be joyned to his wife and they two shall be one flesh Well what of all this he adds This is a great Mystery but I speak concerning Christ and the Church As if the Apostle had said do not misapprehend me though I speak so much of the Vnion that is betwixt Husband and Wife according to the primitive Institution yet that is not the main thing which I drive at I aim at an higher Vnion than that namely at that Spiritual Vnion which is between Christ and the Church The Husband and the Wife are one Christ and Believers are so much more Another Resemblance is that of the Head and Members In the Body Natural there is a near and close Vnion between these two being fastened and joyned each to the other they make up one and the same body Thus 't is with Christ and Believers in the Body Mystical he is the Head they are the several Members belonging to that head Col. 1.18 He is the Head of the body the Church Eph. 1.22 God gave him to be the head over all things to the Church which is his body 1 Cor. 12.27 Now ye are the body of Christ and members in particular So Rom. 12.5 As truly and as nearly as the head and the members so truly and so nearly are Christ and Believers united also A third Resemblance is that of the Root and Branches There is also union betwixt these otherwise how should the One convey juice sap nourishment life growth to the Other So 't is with Christ and Believers he is the Root they the Branches Joh. 15.5 I am
but on the outside of the Ark which will not save from drowning 'T is the internal special Union which you must look after whether you be in Christ so as to receive life growth spiritual influences from him as the branch doth from the root Other Unions might be alluded to 'T is very true that Baptism is an ingrafting Ordinance into Christ therefore 't is set forth by being baptized into Jesus Christ Rom. 6.3 and Gal. 3.27 you read As many of you as have been baptized have put on Christ and again 1 Cor. 12.13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one body But then it must be limited to such and such subjects and as the spirit accompanies it working therein Faith and Regeneration So that the matter comes to this upon Baptism alone in the external reception of it you cannot be confident but if you can find that you are also true Believers and regenerate persons then you are right as to your Vnion and safe as to Non Condemnation This twofold Distinction being premised and opened in the General the main Question now lies thus before us How may a person know whether the Vnion in which he stands to Christ be internal special and saving or whether it be only external material and common 'T is a Question of very high import for answer to it I shall desire you 1. To fix your thoughts upon the double Bond of it 2. To look into some trying Scriptures which lay down marks and characters about it First make your search after and by the Bonds of the Mystical Vnion the Spirit and Faith As 1. Enquire whether you have the Spirit for it being the bond of the Vnion 't is evident that none can be a partaker thereof who is not first a partaker of the Spirit The Apostle lays it down very expresly * Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his that is he is none of those who are savingly united to him Whoever is in Christ the Spirit of Christ is first in him that being the agent by which this blessed In-being is brought about I told you the Spirit is the bond of the Union on Christs part which yet you are to understand not of the Spirit meerly as it resides in Christ himself but as 't is given and communicated to us he by his own Spirit as poured out upon Believers and dwelling in them takes hold of them and joyns them to himself Not that there is any priority of time betwixt the gift of the Spirit and the Vnion for they go together at the very same instant wherein the Spirit is received the Soul is united to Christ but in order of Nature the reception of the one is antecedent to the Vnion with the other 1 Joh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us and chap. 4.13 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us by the Spirit which he hath given us Observe it still the Apostle grounds the evidence of the Vnion upon the Spirit as given to the Saints not as it resides in Christ himself O therefore let the serious inquisitive Christian put such interrogatories as these to himself Have I the Spirit is he given to me doth he dwell in me for accordingly as he can answer these queries so will he be able to conclude whether he be in Christ or not And he that would know whether he hath the Spirit he must examine what he feels of its great acts in himself To have the Spirit 't is for a man to be brought under the great and special effects and operations thereof at present I say no more of it I hope hereafter I shall These are various there 's Illumination whence he 's called The Spirit of wisdom and revelation Eph. 1.17 Quickening whence he 's called the Spirit of Life Rom. 8.2 Conviction the promise is he shall convince the world of sin Joh. 16.8 he 's the Spirit of Grace and Supplication Zech. 12.10 the sanctifying Spirit 1 Pet. 1.2 the Spirit enabling to mortifie sin Rom. 8.13 working a person up to all holy obedience Ezek. 36.27 Now then what do you find in your selves of these high and precious operations of the Spirit here lies your participation or having of it and consequently the evidence of your Union with Christ This great Spirit is never idle where he is he is always an active operative working Spirit is he so in you doth he teach enlighten convince humble draw to Christ raise up the heart to heavenly things excite to duty assist in duty c. if so then he is in you and you are in Christ if it be not so then you have not the Spirit and thereupon are none of Christ's 2. Enquire about the other bond viz. * Soli verè Fideles sunt membra Christi idque non quatenus Homines sed quatenus Christiani nec secundum regenerationem ac proinde non secundum ipsam humanae Naturae substantiam per se sed quatenus illa in Christo ut altero Adamo renovatur singulis ejus partibus novâ ac spirituali qualitate Sanctificatis ut simus novi homines Polan Synt. Theol. p. 454. Faith Ask your selves in secret how the case stands as to Faith say O is this precious grace wrought in us are we sincere and sound Believers have we heartily clos'd with Christ according to the Gospel-offer have we received Christ and whole Christ is our trust relyance confidence for pardon life salvation grounded upon him and upon him only do we cast our selves upon his alone Merits renouncing every thing in our selves have we that Faith which is wrought by the (a) Eph. 1.19 Almighty power of God which (b) Acts 15.9 purifies the heart (c) 1 Joh. 5.4 overcomes the world (d) Gal. 5.6 works by love is attended with (e) Jam. 2.20 good works is it more than a meer dogmatical or historical Faith than such an easie common presumptuous false Faith as that which is in the generality of men O that you would herein deal faithfully with your own Souls let the search be deep and thorough go to the very bottom of your deceitful hearts bring things to an issue be sure that you be not mistaken if the Faith be right the Vnion is sure yea every thing else is sure but if that be unsound do not flatter your selves you are not in Christ Jesus but in the woful state of disunion and distance from him Thus the Examination must be made from the Bonds of the Vnion To clear up the thing yet further in order to your passing true judgement upon your selves I would direct you to a few trying Scriptures 1. Let the First be that 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature what a glass is this for every one of us to see our faces in The thing to be known is our being
also so to walk even as he walked Many will be saying they are in Christ pretending to Union with him I but do they walk as he walked do they live the Life of Jesus do they conform to his example He that doth not thus do he may say he abides in Christ but he doth but say so 't is not so in truth and reality 3. Take but one place more Joh. 15.2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away and every branch that beareth fruit he purgeth it that it may bring forth more fruit As this Text holds forth a twofold Vnion 'twixt Christ and men so it was spoke to but even now I am only now to consider it as it may be improv'd for tryal Some are in Christ but 't is not by real insition but only by external profession and Church-membership which will avail them but little for notwithstanding this they are cast forth as dead branches and gathered and cast into the fire and burnt as you see ver 6. and all this befalls them because they bear no fruit Others are in Christ in a saving and special way which is the thing to be enquired after For the finding out of which let me ask you what fruit doth grow upon you are you so in Christ as to be fruitful then you are in Christ indeed He will have no dead barren branches in him for that would reflect dishonour upon the Root All who are united to him shall bring forth fruit * Joh. 15.5.8 much fruit good fruit fruits meet for repentance Matth. 3.8 fruits of righteousness Phil. 1.11 fruitfulness in every good work Col. 1.10 And if so O how many empty barren professors are declared to be out of Christ by this Evidence Thus I have shown both from the double bond of the Vnion and also from some notable trying Scriptures how you may know whether you be really internally specially in Christ Jesus so as that you may with well-grounded confidence lay hold upon the Non-Condemnation here pronounced to such So much for the first Vse VSE 2. Exhortation to get this Vnion with Christ The Second shall be to exhort you all to endeavour to get into Christ O that you would with the greatest diligence make out after this blessed Union What can be so desirable as it what so worthy of your endeavours as to be one with Christ to have a Soul so nearly so inseperably knit to him what a great thing is this It was exceeding high in Paul's eye * Philip. 3.8 9. who counted all things but loss for Christ c. wherein why that he might be found in Christ i. e. be in him as his Head Root Surety City of Refuge c. for the expression admits of these several illustrations though I think the last is most proper Now did he thus highly esteem and value this being in Christ and shall we slight and make little of it Surely my Brethren 't is better not to be at all then to be and yet not to be in Christ better no Union 'twixt Soul and Body then to have that and yet no Union of the Soul with Christ Here 's No Condemnation but for whom only for them who are in Christ to such there 's no condemnation to others there 's nothing but condemnation as hath been often said doth it not highly concern all therefore to endeavour to be one of them who are in Christ To enforce the Exhortation I 'le give you but one Motive but that will be a very comprehensive and considerable one 'T is this Union with Christ is the foundation of all Good by and from Christ 'T is the fundamental blessing I mean with respect to application there can be no application of what Christ hath purchased without antecedent Vnion with his Person 't is the very basis upon which all is built the leading blessing the inlet to all the grace of the Gospel the ground of all communion and communication Ah Sinner thou canst hope for nothing from Christ unless thou beest in Christ without Christ and without hope go together Eph. 2.12 I say Vnion is the foundation of all Communion So 't is in Nature so 't is in Grace too * 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption mark it 't is first in Christ Jesus and then he is wisdom righteousness c. As it was with Christ in his Manhood first that did participate of the Gratia Vnionis in its being united to the Godhead and then after this all other grace was poured out upon it So 't is with the believing Soul 't is first taken into Union with Christ and then upon that all blessings priviledges benefits are conveyed to it You know the member receives nothing from the head unless it be united to it so 't is with the branches in reference to the root and so here without union with Christ there 's no justification no pardon no reconciliation no adoption no salvation by him for 't is a most certain truth omnis communio fundatur in unione If you be one with Christ and in him all is yours 1 Cor. 3.21 22 23. All things are yours whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or things present or things to come all are yours and ye are Christ's and Christ is God's Here 's a vast propriety and possession but 't is all founded upon Vnion we being Christ's so God is ours the promises are ours heaven is ours life death c. all is ours As the Wife upon the conjugal Vnion hath a right and title to all that her Husband hath so as that she may say Vbi tu Caius ibi ego Caia a proverbial speech used among the Romans at their Marriages so the Believer being joyned and married to Christ all that Christ is or hath becomes his but without this Union there 's nothing to be expected by him or from him It pleases God to deal altogether with men according to their union and according to the head which bears them now there are two publick Heads to one of which every man and woman in the world doth belong these are the two Adams of whom you read 1 Cor. 15.45 There 's the first Adam and all the unregenerate Seed are united to him as their head and upon their union with this head they derive nothing but guilt and wrath and condemnation Then there 's the second Adam Christ Jesus and all the regenerate Seed are united to him as their head and he by vertue of union also communicates pardon of sin peace with God justification eternal life c. Both of these Adams and publick Heads proceed by the Law and upon the terms of Vnion for * Sicut per peccatum Adami non potuissemus peccatores fieri nisi fuissemus in ejus lu ●bis ita per justitiam Christi non-poss●mus
justificari nisi ci inseramur uniamur unus spiritus cum eo fi●mus S●●eso the first Adam could do us no hurt were we not descended out of his loyns and in him as our common head and so the second Adam can do us no good unless we be made One with him and in him as our head also If we so be then there shall be gracious communications most blessed derivations from him but if not none of these can be looked for And who would not now desire to be in Christ who would not purchase this priviledge with a world nay who would not give ten thousand worlds for it O that you would all make sure of it Do not trouble your heads with curious enquiries into some difficulties about this union but let this be your business to make sure of the thing The poor low-gifted Christian may get it though the highest gifted man cannot grasp it VSE 3. Directions how to get into Christ But I must direct as well as perswade Methinks I hear some saying How may this blessed Vnion be attained what shall we do that we may be in the number of those who are in Christ Jesus For answer to this I must again refer you to its double bond and ligament the Spirit and Faith and advise you to get both of them Would you have Christ to be one with you then get the Spirit would you be one with Christ then get Faith 1. First get the Spirit which may be done by attendance upon the Word and by Prayer Gal. 3.2 Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the Hearing of Faith the Apostle means the Hearing of the Gospel or the Evangelical Doctrine The Gospel doth highly conduce to the obtaining of the Spirit for 't is the ministration of the Spirit 2 Cor. 3.8 Do any therefore want this Spirit let them wait upon the Gospel dispensation and publication and through the Grace of God attending that Dispensation they shall have it Let me also recommend Prayer as an excellent means for the procuring of the Spirit O Sirs what will bring you into Christ but the Spirit and what will bring the Spirit into you but Prayer you should be praying for the Spirit though you cannot as yet pray with the Spirit O that you would often go to God and plead with him for the giving of it to you Say Lord we read if any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his now Lord we dread the thoughts of being none of Christs O to be out of Christ is a woful state and we perceive that is our state till we have thy Spirit we hear 't is the Spirit that knits the Soul to Christ till therefore we are partakers of it we cannot be knit to him wherefore we beseech thee to give it to us O whatever thou deniest to us do not deny us this good Spirit Thou hast promised * Luk. 11.13 to give thy Spirit to them that ask him Lord upon our bended knees we ask him of thee O now make good thy promise to us I say do you but thus pray and the thing shall be done a good God never denies his good Spirit to the good Seeker of it 2. Get Faith also This is a Grace highly precious and excellent the Apostle Peter speaks of several precious things and Faith is one of them 't is precious blood 1 Pet. 1.19 't is precious Christ 1 Pet. 2.7 't is precious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 and 't is also precious Faith 2 Pet. 1.1 Now amongst many other things which make it so precious this is one 't is the * Fidei Gratia incomparabilis haec est quod animam copulat cum Christo sicut sponsam cum sponso c. Luther tom 1.466 Grace which unites to Christ The woman consenting to take the man for her Husband upon that the matrimonial union follows so the Sinner consenting to the receiving and obeying of Christ which is one great act of Faith upon this he is united to him this I say makes Faith so precious O this is one of Faith's royal excellences nothing puts a greater worth and glory upon it than this great effect Well then see that you make sure of it are you yet without it in the sad state of unbelief You have no share in and can make no claim to this Mystical Union so long as 't is thus with you you must be put into another state and become true Believers then 't will be well These are the only persons who are in Christ we who believe are in him that is true 1 Joh. 5.20 For whom did Christ ask of his Father that they may be one even as we are one 't was for them that should believe on him Joh. 17.20 c. Therefore let it be your great endeavour to be Believers for let me tell you in the very first moment of believing you will actually be the members of Christ the Soul is in Christ as soon as ever Faith is in it I 'le say no more but only add this As you desire to get Faith first get the Spirit for if you once come to have that Spirit he will most infallibly work Faith in you Of all the several Graces he will not let that be wanting wherever he is The Vses hitherto have been General VSE 4. Several things press'd upon those who are in Christ To admire the Love of God I shall now more particularly direct my self to those who are in Christ Jesus And first is it thus with any of you that you are indeed taken into this near Vnion with Christ how should you admire the love of God! I here consider God personally and so I would excite you to admire the Love of the Father of the Son and of the Holy Ghost for indeed all the Persons have a great hand in this Vnion and the love of each of them in it is very admirable The Father first lays the foundation of it and then he orders the accomplishment of it therefore 't is said 1 Cor. 1.30 Of him i.e. of God the Father are ye in Christ Jesus c. and he also is said to call unto the fellowship of his Son Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 1.9 The Son is willing to be One with you what a condescension is that and he is the person in whom the Vnion is primarily terminated Then the Holy Ghost brings it about as one great Agent therein So that all the three Persons are concerned in the Mystical Union 't is to the Son by the Will of the Father through the agency and operation of the Spirit O let Father Son and Spirit all be adored by you Which that I may the more effectually perswade you to let the Thing it self be considered and how you stand in reference to it To be in Christ Jesus so nearly so indissolubly united to him what mercy is this There are in the Vnion many things of a
his Members also this is his great request to his Father Joh. 17.24 Where 't is Vnion it shall be Vision in Christ here and with Christ hereafter are inseparable a Christ in you is a sufficient ground for the hope of glory Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory You therefore who are in Christ should highly comfort your selues with these things I would desire such not to put from them these Cordials as if they were not proper for them because of the weakness of their graces the imperfections of their duties the meaness of their persons or upon any other discouragement of this nature Art thou a Believer be thou never so weak yet thou art in Christ thou art low in grace in gifts in thy outward condition yet thou art in Christ The meanest member in the body is united to the head as well as that which is the highest and so 't is here Though the eye was weak which look'd upon the brazen Serpent yet it looking thereupon there was healing for all that The weakest faith is healing faith and 't is so not only because it takes a view of Christ but also because it knits to Christ O Christian Faiths uniting virtue doth not depend upon its strength but upon its sincerity the very minimum quod sic is enough to put thee into Christ therefore be not discouraged because thy faith is so weak and low And for thy outward condition that 's nothing at all to the state or priviledge the poor are in Christ as well as the rich the ignoble as well as the noble He doth not choose his members by any external considerations If Grace be in thy heart though thou art very mean in thy outward state hast scarce bread to put into thy belly or rags upon thy body Christ is not * Heb. 2.11 ashamed to own thee as one of his Members and Brethren Let this suffice for the opening of the Subjects of the Priviledge so far forth as they are described by their Vnion There is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8.1 There is therefore now no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit CHAP. III. Of the Holy and Spiritual Life in opposition to the Sinful and Carnal Life The Subjects of the Priviledge are further characteriz'd by their Course The words repeated Verse 4. with some little variation They are descriptive both with respest to the Non-condemnation and also to the Being in Christ Jesus Why the Apostle singles out this Character What Walking imports The Observation rais'd Eight things taken notice of from the Words 1. The Apostle doth not say There 's no Condemnation to them in whom there is no Flesh but to them who walk not after the Flesh 2. He doth not lay his Evidence upon particular acts but upon the general Course 3. Here is not redditio Causae but only descriptio Personae 4. The description is not laid down in the Negative only but also in the Affirmative 5. The two Walkings are supposed to be contrary 6. First 't is being in Christ Jesus and then 't is walking not after the Flesh c. 7. There always was and always will be different walkers 8. The Apostle lays it down in the general and the reason givenw by he so doth The Parts of the Description opened What is meant by Flesh and by walking or not walking after the Flesh Flesh considered 1. More Generally what it is to walk after it in that respect why the Corrupt Nature is set forth by Flesh a fivefold account given of that 2. More Particularly what it is to walk after it in that respect Of Lust or Lusting the most natural act of the Flesh What is here meant by the Spirit What it is to walk after the Spirit That opened in Five Particulars The Doctrine confirmed Applied 1. by way of Information in three things 1. That Scripture Marks or Signs grounded upon Sanctification and Holiness are not under the Gospel to be rejected by Believers 2. That the Popish Calumnies against Protestants and the Protestant Doctrine are causeless and groundless 3. That there are but few who are in Christ Jesus Use 2. To examine the walking whether it be after the Flesh or after the Spirit Use 3. 1. To dehort from walking after the Flesh Several Motives to enforce that Dehortation What is to be done for the avoiding of it 2. To exhort to walking after the Spirit Three Motives to that Use 4. Such as do walk after the Spirit are exhorted 1. To be very thankful 2. To walk yet less and less after the Flesh and yet more and more after the Spirit 3. To take the Comfort of this walking The great discouragement of troubled Christians about it removed THere is in the whole Verse as you have heard the Priviledge and the Description of the persons who have a share in that Priviledge They are described 1. By their Vnion with Christ There is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus this hath been spoken to 2. By their holy course they are such who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit this I proceed now to speak to In the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greek the Words run thus There is no condemnation to them in Christ Jesus not walking after the Flesh but after the Spirit Our Translators put in to them which are in Christ Jesus who walk not after c. And they part the being in Christ and the not walking c. and read them as distinct but Others put them together and make all but one sentence Thus the Syriack Version cited before thus (a) Nulia condemnatio iis qui per Jesum Christum sive per Evangelium eousque perducti sunt ut non eant quo carnis affectus rapiunt sine discrimine sed Spiritum Sanctu●● adepti ejus motibus constanter obsequuntur Grot. Grotius There is saith he no condemnation to them who by Jesus Christ or by the Gospel are brought to this not to go whether carnal affections do carry them but having obtained the Spirit they constantly obey his motions Some difference there is in this double reading but I 'le not enquire whether (b) Unica est in textu Pauli oratio sed Interpres distinxit in duas c. quam vis ad sensum non intersit Cajet material or not The Apostle recites these words v. 4. with a double variation 1. There he brings in the Relative and joyns it with the Participle which here he doth not for there 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereas the Relative here is joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Here 't is express'd in the Third person there in the First person that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit The Words are descriptive and characteristical of Persons both
and who is in Christ Jesus He doth not say There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus (b) Non dicit quia non secundum carnem ambulamus sed qui non secundum c. ne faciat in hâc justificationis causâ primum esse quod secundarium est c. Muscul in Rom. Cap. 8. V. 4. p. 124. because they walk not after the Flesh c. but to them who walk not after the Flesh c. so that this is meerly descriptive of the person The heavenly and spiritual life is not the (c) Non propter novam aliquam qualitatem quam in nobis operata est gratia Spiritus Sancti extra condemnationem sumus sed propter solam gratiam Dei quam fide Christi apprehendimus Muscul Non causa justificationis sed conditio nota justificatorum Pareus See more Dub. 2. p. 773. Cause of Justification only 't is the note or evidence of justified persons And as to the union with Christ the fruits of the Spirit and the effects of grace and sanctification begun in us these do not unite us unto Christ onely they (a) Fructus Spiritus sive sanctificationis in nobis inchoatae effecta nos non inserunt Christo sed nos ei insitos esse declarant Beza declare us to be so united they are Evidences not Causes Wherever there is justification and the mystical union there is sanctification and holiness yet the latter is not the ground of the former as wherever life is there is sense and motion yet these are not the cause but onely the sign evidence and consequent of life There 's a vast (b) Sunt cohaerentes quidem sed diversae questiones quâ re eximamur omni condemnationi c. quinam in Christo eximuntur condemnationi ii videlicet qui se in Christo esse ex regenerationis fructibus ostendunt Beza difference betwixt who is justified and why or upon what grounds he is justified The holy walker is the justified person but he is not justified because of the holiness of his walking No this causal influence upon justification is wholly founded upon the merits of Christ applied by Faith This is the Protestant-Doctrine to which I shall have occasion from these two first Verses to speak more than once 4. The description is laid down not in the Negative only but in the Affirmative also 't is not only who walk not after the Flesh but 't is also who walk after the Spirit In order to the participation and evidence of the grace of the Gospel 't is not enough (c) Non sat est non ambulare secundum Carnem abstineré á malis non peccare sed oportet secundum Spiritum ambulare benè ●agere Qui enim non benè agit hoc saltem malum committit quod bonum omittit Corn. Mussus Ut intelligamus non sufficere ad evitandam omnem damnationem abstinere á Carnalibus sed oportere proficere in Spiritualibus Cajet not to be evil or not to do evil but there must be being good and doing good Meer Negatives will never justifie or save for a man may go so far upon bare restraing grace and besides God requires a great deal more As when the repentance is right there is not only a ceasing to do evil but there is also a learning to do well Isa 1.16 Psal 34.14 Depart from evil and do good So when the walking is right and evidential of Gospel-mercy there is in it both the absence of Sin and also the presence of Vertue and Grace A Religion made up of Nots is but an half-religion To be magis extra vitia quam cum virtutibus as the (d) Tacit. Hist Lib. 1. p. 323. ex Edit Lips Historian describes Galba rather free from vice than vertuous in the positive fruits and effects of vertue this is not sufficient 't is to be as a cake that is bak'd but on one side as the Metaphor is Hos 7.8 The first is well but the last is (e) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Eth. l. 4. c. 1. better as the Philosopher tells us The Gospel doth not only teach us to deny ungodliness and worldly lusts but also to live soberly righteously godly in this present world T it 2.12 And it threatens not only those who bring forth evil fruit but also those who do not bring forth good fruit Matth. 3.10 'T is an expression of Theophylact upon the Words (f) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theop. Meer abstinence from Vice doth not crown but there must be also the participation of Virtue and of that which is Spiritual And (g) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in Vers 4. hujus Capitis Chrysostome upon the fourth Verse speaks to the same purpose You have in the description of the Text therefore the negative and the positive part of holiness and these two must go together for holiness is made up of both 1 Pet. 1.14 15. As obedient children not fashioning your selves according to the former lusts in your ignorance there 's the negative part But as he which hath called you is holy so be ye holy in all manner of conversation there 's the positive part As some read the Words this head cannot be grounded upon them for they onely put in the Negative not walking after the Flesh leaving out the Affirmative but after the Spirit So the Syriack so the Vulgar and the Expositors who follow it But generally the Greek Copies have it and the Syriack too brings it in v. 4 and why not here as well as there 'T is not put in onely as a (h) Non est dubium rectissimè tanquam interpretationem addi secundum Spiritum Qui enim non ambulat secundum Carnem necesse est ut ambulet secundum Spiritum medium enim in vitâ humanâ nullum est Contz in cap. 8. ad Rom. Qu●● true interpretation but 't is a part of the Text it self 5. The Apostle here brings in two Walkings and he supposes them to be contrary for he sets them in opposition one to the other who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit implying a contrariety betwixt these two walkings And so indeed there is the Flesh and Spirit are two contrary principles and therefore the Walkings which proceed from these contrary principles must needs be contrary too They are so contrary that they are incompatible and inconsistent in the same subject there may be Flesh and Spirit in the same person but there cannot be walking after both in the same person Therefore saith the Apostle Gal. 5.16 Walk in the spirit and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh as if he had said he that doth the one cannot do the other too He goes on v. 17. The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these two are contrary Contrary as to their Natures their Originals and which suits best with the scope of
large to be written out Ambrose expounds it The Law saith he of the Spirit of Life it is the very Law of Faith * Chrysostome distinguishes much to the same purpose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc The Law of Moses was a Spiritual Law because it forbad Sin but it was not the Law of the Spirit of Life because it could not remit Sin and so quicken the dead But this Law of Faith is the Law of the Spirit of Life because it doth not onely restrain Sin but it also restores from death c. This Law in Christ Jesus that is by Faith doth free the Believer from the Law of Sin and Death The Law of Sin is that which dwells in the members which persuades to that which is contrary to the Will of God the Law of Death is the Law of Moses because it kills Sinners And no wonder that this Law should be the Law of Death when the Gospel is to some the savour of death unto death and so he goes on in the further explication of it Amongst modern Interpreters Pareus follows this Exposition making the Law of the Spirit of life to be the Doctrine of the Gospel and the Law of sin and death to be the Law of Moses The Gospel saith he is the Law of the Spirit because 't is attended with the conveyance of the Spirit the Law of Moses was spiritual but not the Law of the Spirit because it did not convey the Spirit And that was the Law of Sin because it discovered sin irritated sin made sin to be sin and of Death too because it had a killing virtue in it 2 Cor. 3.6 The letter killeth but the spirit giveth life Thus Pareus who after he had laid down and opened his Opinion thus concludes With submission to other mens judgments I judge this to be the most plain and genuine meaning of this place This way very many * Lex Spiritu● c. est doctrina Evangehi fide apprehensa Osiand Fortasse legem Mose intelligit per legem peccati mortis à quâ etiam lege liberati sumus in vulgato Jesu Christi Evangelio Massus Utraque est Spiritus Sancti ut actoris utraqne est Spiritus nostri directiva● sed haec est Spiritus Sancti quatenus est vivificator noster in Jesu Christo c. Cajetan Legem peccati vocat literam Legis quae peccatum excitare solet damnationem revelare Vatabl. Opponitur haec Lex Spiritus Legi Mosaicae Crell Posset etiam per Legem peccati mortis intelligi Lex Mosis c. Perer. Vide Lud. de Dieu in loc Baldwin Dr. Hammond in Paraphr Others go either as to the whole or as to the most considerable part of it But neither shall I close with this Interpretation and that for two Reasons I. Because though the Gospel may very well be stiled the Law of the Spirit of life yet it sounds somewhat harsh to call the Mosaical Law God's own Law the Law of sin and death There is I grant something of truth in it and it may admit of a very fair and sound explication but then there must be a great deal of stating and limitation and cautioning before you can come at it And therefore many * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Chrysost Legem peccati mortis non ausim cum quibusdam accipere pro Lege Dei c. Quamvis enim peccatum augendo mortem generet Paulus tamen ab hâc invidiâ consultò supra deflexit Calvin His verbis non significatur Lex Mosaica c. Pet. Mart. Expositors do not approve of the application of this title to the Mosaical Law Nay our Apostle himself warns us against it whose way and custome it was whenever he had touch'd upon any thing which might seem to reflect any disparagement upon the Law presently to subjoin something for the vindication of its honour Rom. 7.7 What shall we say then is the law sin God forbid when the commandment came sin reviv'd and I dy'd and the commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death c. yet saith he the law is holy and the commandment holy and just and good was then that which was good made death to me God forbid but sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful No man did ever depress the Law more than Paul did in the matter of Justification yet in other respects none did ever more vindicate and exalt it Well! this is one Reason why I shall not fall in with this Sense A Second is this because the Apostle here is not treating of the Law-state or Gospel-state or of the Covenant-aàministration proper to either but he is more closely treating of the State of Nature and of Grace of freedome from Condemnation by the taking away of sins power and guilt in pursuance of which he pitches upon Sanctification by the Spirit and Satisfaction by the Son And therefore though the Former Notion may be taken in yet certainly that which directly falls in with the Latter as that Sense will which I shall presently give must be most agreeable to the Apostles Scope in this place 3. Thirdly by the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus Some understand nothing but the very Spirit of Christ Jesus They make the Law of the Spirit to be the very Spirit it self and nothing more thus * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Theophyl O●cumen Theodor. say the same Lex Spiritus i. e. Lex quae est Spiritus Aquin. Chrysostome and his Followers This is a very good foundation to build upon but yet without some further addition it will not so fully reach that special matter in the Words which hath a great weight and emphasis in it 4. Fourthly therefore Others do interpret them not onely as pointing to Gods Spirit but to make it the more express they consider the Spirit of God as renewing as regenerating as working the new and heavenly life in the Soul with great power and efficacy The Spirit is stiled the Spirit of life both as he is a living Spirit himself and also as he is a quickening Spirit to the Creature as he makes Sinners who were * Eph. 2.1 dead in trespasses and sins to live by working Grace and Regeneration in them and so life thereby But what is the Law of the Spirit of Life why 't is the mighty power of the regenerating Spirit put forth upon men in order to the freeing of them from the power and dominion of sin There are I know sundry other explications given of it (a) Lex-Spiritus vitae una eademque est quae Lex Dei sicut una eademque est Lex peccati mortis Nihil damnationis erit his qui Lege peccati quae est Lex mortis liberantur Legi Dei quae est Lex
Verse there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus That which might endanger as to Condemnation was Sin and there are two things in Sin to endanger about it its Power and Guilt therefore the Apostle shews how such who are in Christ are freed from both of these As to the taking away its Power that is spoken to in the second Verse The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin c. As to the taking away its Guilt that he speaks to in these two Verses What the Law could not do c. As if the Apostle had said If any thing could condemn God's people it would be Sin but that cannot for t is condemn'd it self Christ or God by him hath condemned Sin and so the Sinner himself shall not be condemned by it or for it The guilt of Sin being expiated and the Sinner made righteous upon the imputation of Christs Obedience and Satisfaction which are the two things here asserted surely there is there can be no condemnation to those who have an interest in this Grace And this I judge to be the chief scope and proper reference of the Words which I will endeavour to clear up a little further The Coherence further cleered The Believers Non-condemnation as you have heard is brought about partly by Sanctification in which the strength and dominion of Sin is broken and partly by Justification in which the guilt of Sin is done away and not imputed The First of these is done by the Spirit in the heart within in the putting forth of his mighty power in the work of Regeneration the Law of the Spirit of Life c. The Second is done by the Son for the person without in that Propitiatory Sacrifice which he offered up to God upon which God is atoned reconciled satisfied and so doth acquit the Sinner Now the Apostle having spoken to that act which is proper to the Spirit Vers 2. he here expresly speaks to that which was proper to and to be effected by the Son God sending his Son in the c. And he speaks of condemning sin for sin that is for Christ's being a Sacrifice for Sin and therefore this must properly and strictly refer to Justification rather than to Sanctification Yet I would not be too nice for as in a large sense the Law of sin in the foregoing Verse may point to the guilt as well as to the power of sin so here in a large sense too the condemning of sin may point to the abolishing of the power as well as to the expiating of the guilt of sin Expositors take in both and I would not straighten the Words more than needs though yet I conceive in their main and primary intendment they refer to what is done in Justification The Apostles Argument then stands thus To them for whom God sent his Son all other ways being impossible for sin to condemn sin and in their stead to fulfil the righteousness of the Law to them there is no Condemnation But for Believers and such who are in Christ God upon these terms sent his Son therefore to them there is no Condemnation I shall follow those * Nunc sequitur expolitio vel illustratio probationis qùod scilicet Dominus gratuitâ suâ misericordiâ nos in Christo justificavit id quod Legi erat impossibile Calvin Duobus argumentis consolationem de indemnitate piis confirmavit quorum prius fuit quod Lex Spiritus c. Alterum quod Deus misso filio suo c. Pareus Jam accedit ad probationem sententiae prioris quae fuit de justificatione nempe credentes in Christum esse justificatos seu nullam esse eis condemnationem Piscat in Paraphr Observandum sententiam hanc non cohaerere cum proximè praecedente sed cum priore membro versiculi primi Id. in Schol Vide Cajet in locum Quorum causâ Deus Pater misit Filium suum coaeternum in carne conspicuum fieri iis nulla est condemnatio at qui nostrâ causâ c. Gryn See Dutch Annot. Interpreters who make the main Scope and drift of the words to lie in this I know there are * Firmamentum est in hoc versu superioris conclusionis c. Beza Pertinent ista declarationis vice ad id quod dixit se per legem Spiritus c. et transfert totius hujus negotii causam meritum in gratiam Dei Muscul He proves the foresaid making free because that God being reconciled by Christs death he hath taken away from sin that power which he had granted it over man for a punishment of his first transgression Deod Hic affertur ratio quâ ostenditur istum Dei Spiritum liberatorem nobis donatum esse c. Pet Mart. Ratio superioris sententiae quâ explicat Apostolus quomodo Lex Spiritus c. Justin Hic Versus continet aetiologiam itemque exegesin eorum quae versu secundo dicta fuerunt Vorst So Staplet Streso R●lloc c. Several who go another way they making the Words to be rather the further explication or continuation of that Matter which is laid down in the Second Verse The Saints are made free from the law of sin and death how is that brought about why thus God sent his Son into the World by whom he is reconciled to them being reconcil'd upon this he hath taken away from Sin that commanding power that it had before abolished its strength devested it of its former dominion and regency and this they make to be the condemning of sin in the Text. Well! I will not now object any thing against this Interpetation hereafter I shall speak more to it when I come to the more particular opening of the Clause And for sin condemned sin only at present give me leave to prefer the former The words consider'd in themselves Their general sense and meaning Let us now consider the Words in themselves As to their general Sense and Meaning 't is plainly this though somewhat more darkly express'd * Quod impossibile erat logi Deus in Christo fecit Anselm Mens Apostoli hoc loco est etsi verbis obscurioribus expressa id nobis praestitum per gratiam quod Lex praestare non potuit Estius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophyl What the Law it standing in such circumstances could not do for the guilty undone Sinner that God through Christ hath fully done for him this is that plain Truth which they resolve themselves into The various Readings of them I find some considerable difference amongst Expositors in the Reading of them * Mihi locum hunc pro virili meâ perpendenti videtur aliquid verborum deesse ad explendam sententiam veluti si sic legamus Nam quod Lex Mosaica non potuit juxta partem carnalem secundum quam imbecillis erat inefficax hoc Deus praestitit misso Filio
the matter of believing or not believing O do you close with Christ and receive him upon the Gospel-offer not only He himself but his Father also is highly pleased herewith and takes it very kindly at your hands I sayes God here are Souls that do not throw away or tread upon that costly remedy which I provided for them who give me the glory of my Wisdom and Mercy who would not have my great designs in the sending of my Son to be frustrated who duly entertain the Messenger whom I sent to transact the great affairs of my Glory and their Good who answer my expectations in my highest Love c. I say this pleases God exceedingly But on the other hand do you reject Christ make little of him stand it out against him refuse to believe how heinously doth God resent such carriage this he looks upon as an high despising and undervaluing of his Mercy a desperate striking at his Glory which is very dear to him a very unworthy requital of his Love a dangerous attempt to make all his Grace to be to no purpose and must not all this highly provoke him Suppose some Great Person hearing of the sad condition of some poor Captives should out of meer compassion to them send from a far Country his own and only Son to redeem them and this Son should in Person come to them and treat with them about their redemption he offering to pay down their ransom to free them from all their misery provided they will but trust on him and be subject to him If now these Captives should slight all this and choose still to continue in their chains rather than upon these terms to accept of deliverance would not this folly and obstinacy greatly incense both Father and Son Or suppose again some offended Prince against whom the Treason had been committed should send his Son to the Traytor with a Pardon in his hand and he should take no notice of this Son or Pardon brought by him but reject and slight both what could be expected to follow upon this but the greatest indignation Now is not this the very case of Vnbelievers nay is not theirs much worse in respect of the Person sending the Person sent the Benefits offered the Conditions required and therefore must not they incur an higher displeasure and make themselves obnoxious to a worser severity Sinners shall not these things be thought of will nothing prevail upon you to believe Was Christ sent and did he come to you and will not you come to him will you not yet understand that it is He only who must save you to allude to that Act. 7.25 He supposed his brethren would have understood how that God by his hand would deliver them but they understood not do you look for another Son or another Saviour to be sent indeed hath God such another Son to send or was not the once sending of this Son enough hath not God in Christ given you his last Way and Method for Salvation so that there is no Other to be expected after that And was he only sent did he not do all for which he was sent and so returned back again to his Father is there any thing further to be done but only that you will repent and believe Methinks these Considerations should work upon you yet I 'm sure they will not unless the Lord persuade your hearts to believe and he himself be pleased to work Faith in you We may speak much to convince you of your Duty but when we have said all 't is God who must both incline and inable you to believe who must over-powre against unwillingness and strengthen against weakness Faith is his Gift Eph. 2.8 he who gives the Christ to be believed on must give the Grace to believe with he who sent Christ to you must draw you to Christ * Joh. 6.44 No man can or will come to me except the Father which hath sent me draw him So much for the Duties proper to be urged upon God's sending of Christ in which you have the First Vse Use 2. Comfort to Believers from God's sending Christ Secondly It affords abundant matter of Comfort to all sincere Christians The Truth which I have been upon Christ sent by God may be useful not only as a powerful incentive to Duty but also as a firm foundation of inward Comfort O believers set your Faith Hope Joy as high as ever you can this Sending of Christ will bear you out in it you cannot God having done this over-believe or over-rejoyce I 'le shew you what there is wrapped up in a Christ sent and for the better raising of your Comfort I 'le instance in Particulars for 't is with Gospel-Truths as 't is with your perfumed things which so long as they are wrapp'd up do but weakly affect the Sense but when they are taken out opened and parted then they do more strongly send forth their fragrant odours 1. Did God send Christ surely then great was his good Will towards you For had it not been so would he ever have done such a great thing for you as this therefore that heavenly Quire of Angels singing in consort upon the Birth of Christ made this a part of their Spiritual Song * Luke 2.14 Glory to God in the Highest and on Earth peace good will towards men I follow our reading of the latter Clause though I know it might be and is otherwise rendred why did they say good will towards men O because now in the Sending and Incarnation of Christ God had given out the highest demonstration that was possible of his good Will towards them Had there been any thing but that in his Heart and had there not been an abundance of that in his Heart he would never have sent and so sent his own Son 2. Did God send Christ surely then he is in good earnest real hearty in the matters of Salvation After such a thing as this Saints have not the least reason to be jealous of God or to question the reality of his Call offers invitations intentions promises declarations concerning their happiness What higher assurance could God give of his heartiness and reality in these than this if he once send his Son there 's no room left for suspicion or doubting This assures us that God is real in his Promises and will be faithful to his Promises for by it they are all at once ratified and confirmed If God make good the grand Promise of Sending his Son what other promise will he not make good a Christ sent is the Seal of all the Promises See Isa 7.14 3. Did God send Christ then you need not fear but that the work of Redemption is compleated When such a Person sends and such a Person is sent the Thing shall be done effectually and throughly be it never so high so hard if Christ undertake it hee 'l accomplish it Had a Creature indeed been sent there might
upon Heart and Life So as 1. To be humble 2. Not to give way to Sin 3. Especially not to those sins which do more directly disparage and debase the Humane Nature 4. To love God and Christ 5. To be willing to do to suffer to be abased for Christ 6. To labour after a participation of the Divine Nature 7. To be highly thankful both for the Thing it self and also for the revelation of it Use 3. Of Comfort As 1. Christ in Flesh must needs be un effectual way for promoting God's Glory and the Sinners Good 2. In this God hath given out a very high demonstration of his Love 3. By this all the Promises are seal'd and all the great things of Faith and Hope made sure and credible Particularly 1. The Mystical Union 2. Communion with God Christ's special presence the inhabitation of the Spirit 3. The Communications of Grace from God 4. Our Sonship to God 5. The Resurrection of our Bodies 6. The Future Glory 4. God is now knowable and accessible 5. The Humane Nature highly dignify'd and advanc'd 6. Christ upon this is the more compassionate 7. There are few troubles of Conscience wherein this may not afford matter of ease and relief The Fourth General in the Words THis branch of the Words contains a Fourth Head in it which comes next to be opened Our Apostle having spoken of God's sending his own Son he goes on to shew in what manner he sent him and as to that he saith God sent him in the likeness of sinful flesh Here 's nothing in the Text but Wonders but the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great things of God! the further we go the deeper the Waters are and still new matter offers it self to heighten our admiration 't was wonderful that God should send such a Son but that he should send such a Son in such a manner in Flesh yea in the likeness of sinful Flesh this is yet more wonderful O Christian stay alittle pause upon these Words get thy thoughts up thy heart elevated in the contemplation of what is here set before thee and then read one Why this Branch is added to what goes before In my entrance upon them it may be enquired why the Apostle is so particular and so express in this matter * Nonne satis erat dicere mittens Filium suum Hoc ipso verbo declaratum non fuisset istud magnum mysterium scituque dignissimum quomodo videlicet peccatum peccati damnavit Omnipotens similitudine ●arnis peccati peccatores à peccato liberans c. Corn. Mussus had it not been enough for him to have said God sent his own Son and so to have broke off but he must also add that God sent him in the likeness c To which I answer there was great reason for this amplification for the Apostle being here treating of such great mysteries of such high and glorious discoveries of the Wisdom Grace Love of God towards lost Sinners he thought in these he could not be too full or too express and he being to set down in a little room the whole model and platform of mans Salvation the good Spirit of God directed him to put in enough both for the setting forth of God's admirable Love Mercy c. and also for the encouragement of the Believers Faith with respect to the certainty compleatness and fulness of his Salvation Now Christ's incarnation and abasement in Man's Nature being so pertinent and proper and so necessary as to both of these ends therefore our Apostle will not pass that over without a particular mentioning of it And elsewhere you find him when he had spoken of Christ's mission presently to subjoyn Christ's incarnation also as Gal. 4.4 When the fulness of time was come God sent his Son made of a woman c. 'T was not only God's sending of Christ but his so sending of him viz. in Flesh yea in the likeness of sinful Flesh which puts such an emphasis and accent upon his own Grace and which doth give such full assurance to poor Creatures that they shall be effectually redeem'd and sav'd Upon these Considerations therefore besides the admirableness of the thing in it self Paul when he is upon such an Argument might very well superadde this to what preceded and he 's not satisfied with the once mentioning of it in the general but he repeats it and more particularly shows what use God made of Christ's Flesh or what good did by that redound to us for sin he condemned sin in the Flesh that is in the flesh of Christ The Explication of the Words For the clearing up the true meaning of the Words and the vindicating of them from those false interpretations which some of the old Hereticks put upon them I will lay down a Few Particulars 1. First that Flesh as here used concerning Christ carry's a quite other sense in it than what it did when it was spoken of before You had it Vers 1. Who walk not after the Flesh c. in this Verse what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the Flesh in which sense as 't is there used it occurs in many following Verses Now Flesh in these places is taken in a very different notion from Flesh in this for in them 't is taken morally and accidentally but here where Christ is concern'd in it 't is taken Physically and substantially in them it notes Man's nature as corrupted but here the very being and substance of the Humane nature or the verity of the Humane nature it self abstracted from any such adjunct and so 't is twice taken in this Verse 2. That Flesh in this application is not to be understood in its more narrow and limited sense but in its more general and comprehensive sense Here 's a double Synecdoche in the word as it signifies 1. the whole Body 2. the whole Man or the whole nature of man Flesh in its strict acceptation is but a part of the body and the body but a part of the Man but so you are not here to take it for Christ had a perfect entire compleat body and every thing as well as meer Flesh which is proper to a body for instance he had blood as well as Flesh therefore both are named Heb. 2.14 He also took part of the same i.e. of Flesh and blood and he had bones as well as flesh Luke 24.39 A Spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have Further Christ was not only clothed with Flesh as that is limited but to one part of Man but he assumed the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyrill Alexandr in Joh. p. 95. whole Nature of Man he had a Soul as well as a Body which two are the essential constitutive parts of Man What more common in Scripture than by Flesh to set forth Man in his whole entire humane Nature See Gen. 6.12 Psal 65.2 Isa 40.5 Joel 2.28 Luk. 3.6 Rom. 3.20 Joh. 17.2
would much embolden you in your addresses to God Eph. 3.12 In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the faith of him Heb. 4.14 16. Seeing we have a great high Priest that is passed into the heavens Jesus the Son of God let us hold fast our profession Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need Heb. 10.19 20 21 22. Having therefore boldness to enter into the Holiest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his flesh and having an High Priest over the house of God Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water Had Joseph's Brethren known that their own brother had been so near to Pharaoh with what confidence would they have addressed themselves to him Believers Christ your Brother who is flesh of your flesh is at God's right hand as the great Master of Requests the great Dispenser of Mercies why do you not more improve this for the emboldening of your Spirits when in Prayer you go to God 'T is a great thing for the Saints Comfort to consider how things were formerly under the Law and how they are now under the Gospel Then God carried it in a way of greater state and majesty then he kept a greater distance and was more hardly accessible see how the Apostle sets it forth Heb. 9.1 c. Then verily the first Covenant had also Ordinances of Divine Service and a worldly Sanctuary For there was a Tabernacle made the first wherein was the Candlestick c. and after the second vail the Tabernacle which is called the Holiest of all Which had the golden Censer c. Now when these things were thus ordained the Priests went alwayes into the first Tabernacle accomplishing the Service of God But into the second went the high Priest alone once every year not without blood which he offered for himself and for the errors of the people The Apostle here takes notice of the partition or division of the Tabernacle for the * Of this and of the whole Tabernacle see Joseph Antiq. Jud. l. 3. c. 5. Atrium or outer Court where the people used to be that he speaks not of only he meddles with the first and second Tabernacle where the ordinary Priests and the high Priest did officiate Now he saith the first of these were to go no further than the first Tabernacle the People might not go so far the high Priest might go into the second Tabernacle the Sanctum Sanctorum but how with great restrictions he must go alone but * Austine whom Sigonius follows differs in his interpretation of this Quod autem scriptum est Pontificem sèmel in Anno solum Sancta esse ingressum S. Augustinus interpretatur eum quotidie quidem ingressum esse propter incensum ac semel in Anno propter expiationem cum sanguine purificationis Verùm possumus etiam dicere eum quotidiè quidem Sanctuarium esse ingressum sed Sacerdotum comitatu stipatum semel autem in Anno solum i.e. sine Sacerdotibus in die expiationum Sigon de Rep. Hebrae l. 5. c. 2. For this Opinion he is severely taken up by P. Cunaeus de Rep. Heb. l. 1. c. 4. once a year and that too not without blood see Exod. 30.10 Levit. 16. and God was so strict about this that it was as much as his life was worth even for him at any other time to venture into the Holy of Holy's Levit. 16.2 The Lord said unto Moses speak unto Aaron thy brother that he come not at all times into the Holy place within the vail before the Mercy-seat which is upon the Ark that he die not for I will appear in the cloud upon the Mercy-seat Well! not to instance in the restraints laid upon the Priests Levites c. which the Word also mentions what might God's meaning be in this see Vers 8. The Holy Ghost this signifying that the way into the Holiest of all was not yet made manifest while that the way into the Holiest of all was not yet made manifest while as the first Tabernacle was yet standing as if the Apostle had said let not any wonder that God then would keep men at such a distance here was the reason of it or the mystery which was at the bottom of it Christ was not yet come the true Tabernacle was not as yet erected the first Tabernacle was only then standing Christ had not assum'd the Nature of Man thereby to make way for man freely to go to God therefore the way to the Holiest of all was not yet made manifest But now under the Gospel Christ being incarnate and gone to heaven in our flesh now all may go to God freely the way to him is open every believer in the world may now enter into the Holy of Holy's all former restraints and distances are now taken away Mark the Scripture cited already Heb. 10.19 20. Having therefore brethren boldness to enter into the Holiest by the blood of Jesus by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his flesh By this flesh Christ's Humane Nature or Christ in the Humane Nature is unquestionably meant which he calls the vail in allusion to that in the Tabernacle wherein there was a twofold vail one that covered the Ark Exod. 40.3 And cover the Ark with the vail the other which separated betwixt the Atrium and the first Tabernacle as also betwixt the first Tabernacle and the second Exod. 26.33 And the vail shall divide unto you between the Holy place and the most Holy so Heb. 9.3 And after the second vail the Tabernacle which is called the Holiest of all to which he also alludes Heb. 6.19 which entreth into that which is within the vail Now with respect to these vails Christ's Flesh or Manhood is set forth by the vail 1. as his Godhead for a time was hid and covered under it 2. as believers through this do go to God as it is the way into the Holiest And so 't is here brought in for he saith by a new and living way which he hath consecrated for us through the vail that is to say his flesh You see what these Texts drive at and what the Apostle draws from them viz. that Saints now upon the Manhood of Christ should with boldness enter into the Holiest and draw neer to God with full assurance of Faith this is their unspeakable priviledge under the Gospel which they should improve and rejoyce in This is the fourth thing for Comfort God is now knowable and accessible The Humane Nature is by Christ's Incarnation highly dignify'd and advanc'd 5. Fifthly This cannot but be exceedingly delightful to us to consider the advancement and dignity
* 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 2. p. 97. PORPHYRY's Objections against Sacrifices in general viz. they would encourage men to be wicked All to labour after an interest in Christ's Sacrifice and in the benefits thereby procured 3. Thirdly I would excite you to labour after and to make sure of a personal interest in this great Sacrifice and in the benefits resulting from it For 't is a thing to be resented with the greatest sadness imaginable that where ●ere is such a Sacrifice so at first offered up to God and now so revealed to men that yet so many millions of Souls should perish and as to their spiritual and eternal state be little the better for it because they regard not as to themselves either the thing or the good that flows from it My Brethren I beseech you if you have any love for your Souls let it not be so with you but let it be your greatest care to secure an interest in this Sacrifice and to partake of the blessings procured by it be often considering and questioning with your selves here 's a Sacrifice for expiation and atonement but what 's this to us here 's a dying Christ but did he die for us shall we be ever the better for his death if this propitiatory oblation be not ours what will become of us Under the Law the Gentile-strangers were to offer Sacrifices as well as the born-Jews see Numb 15.14 15. Lev. 17.8 and amongst the Jews the poor as well as the rich with respect to which difference in mens outward condition God accordingly appointed different Sacrifices Lev. 14.21 but yet something or other both were to Sacrifice and in their offerings for the ransome of their Souls all were to give alike Exod. 30.15 The rich shall not give more the poor shall not give less than half a Shekel Now all this was to shadow out two things about Christ's Sacrifice 1. its equal extent to all men notwithstanding all national or civil differences be they Jews or Gentiles rich or poor 't is the same Christ to all if they believe for there is no difference Rom. 3.22 2. the equal obligation lying upon all men to look after make sure of and rest in this one and the same all-sufficient Sacrifice none in order to remission justification atonement eternal life need to carry more to God by Faith and Prayers and none must carry less Sirs let us all put in for a share in Christ's offering and in the benefits purchased thereby for if we should come short of that we are lost eternally Are not reconciliation with God the expiation of sin eternal redemption c. things most necessary and most desireable if so where can we hope to have them but in a sacrific'd Redeemer but in the imputation of the merit of his death and Sacrifice And I add do not only make sure of the thing objectively considered but labour also after the subjective assurance of it Oh when a Christian can say Christ dy'd for me * Gal. 2.20 gave himself for me his body was broken and his blood shed for me he took my guilt and bare my punishment how is he filled with † 1 Pet. 1.8 joy unspeakable with | Phil. 4.7 peace that passes all understanding what a full-tyde of comfort is there in his Soul This is the receiving of the atonement as some open it and that is very sweet Rom. 5.11 And not only so but we also joy in God through our Lord Jesus Christ by whom we have now received the atonement This is to be ey'd and only rely'd upon 4. In the actings of Faith eye Christ as a Sacrifice for sin and there let all your hope and confidence be bottom'd I say in the actings of Faith eye Christ as a Sacrifice for indeed this grace hath to do with him mainly and principally as dying and sacrific'd the Apostle speaks of Faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 't is a bleeding crucified Saviour that is the great and most proper object of Faith true it takes in a whole Christ all of Christ his Nativity holy Life Resurrection Ascension Intercession c. but that which it primarily and chiefly fixes upon is his death and passion When a Soul is brought into Christ to close with him in the way of believing what of him is first in its eye in that act is it a Christ as ascending as sitting at the right hand of God as interceding no thus it beholds him for the after-encouragement and support of Faith but that which it first considers is a Christ as dying upon the Cross and so it layes hold upon him And no wonder that 't is so since all the great blessings of the Gospel do mainly flow from Christ's death they are assur'd and apply'd by his Resurrection Ascension and Intercession but they were procur'd and purchas'd by his death as the Scriptures abundantly shew Rom. 5.9 10. Eph. 1.7 et passim now tnat which hath the most causal and most immediate influence upon these that deserves to be first and most eyed by Faith Here 's the difference 'twixt Faith and Love this chiefly looks to the excellencies of Christ's Person but that to the merit and efficacy of his Sacrifice When the Apostle Gal. 2.20 had spoken so high of his Faith in the Son of God he tells you in what notion he did therein consider him by adding who loved me and gave himself for me The stung Israelite was to look upon the brazen Serpent as lifted up and so he was healed do you desire to find healing redemption salvation by Christ O look upon him as lifted up upon the Cross so all good shall come to you Further I say let all your hope and confidence be bottom'd here this is that firm rock which you must only build upon for pardon peace with God salvation for all Oh take heed of relying upon any thing besides this Sacrifice Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ he that glory 's or trusts in any thing besides that his glorying is vain The forlorn undone Sinner should be alwayes clasping and clinging about this Cross resting upon the merit of Christ thereon and upon that only for all that hope will be but dying hope which is not solely bottom'd upon a dying Saviour The * Quum sis ipse nocens moritur cur victima pro te Stultitia est morte alterius sperare salutem Heathens could not believe that ever the death of Sacrifices should do the guilty person good they look'd upon it as folly to hope for life by anothers death but blessed be God we see that which they did not we firmly believe and steadily hope for expiation and Salvation by Christ's one offering of himself and lay the sole stress of our Faith and happiness upon that which they counted folly But let us be sure we do not mistake here I mean let us indeed
place our whole confidence in Christ's meritorious death for if we rely partly upon that and partly upon something else we spoyl all Gospel-Conditions to be per formed on the Sinners part notwithstanding Christ's Sacrifice 5. Fifthly you must so confide and relie upon Christ's one most perfect and all-sufficient Sacrifice as yet withal to be careful that you on your part do perform those Gospel-conditions which God enjoyns and requires of you in order to remission justification glorification this word of advice is so necessary that 't is by no means to be passed over Christians 't is a thing of very high importance for you rightly to understand your selves in this matter therefore take it thus All your trust and relyance is solely to be bottomed upon the Death and Sacrifice of the Lord Jesus but yet you can●ot regularly and warrantably act this trust and relyance upon this ●nly ground or foundation unless in your own persons you perform those conditions which God prescribes in his Word The whole business of merit and satisfaction lies upon Christ that is wholly out of your hands and only in his but as to believing and repenting the two grand Gospel-conditions they lie upon your selves I speak with respect to the act not to the power and must be done by your selves yea and the doing of these is as necessary on your part under the notion of Conditions as suffering and dying was on Christ's part under the notion of merit And 't is most certain that the latter without the former will not profit you because Christ never design'd to impute or make over his merit to any further than as they should make good these Conditions of Faith and Repentance We have here two dangerous rocks before us and it must be our care and skill to shun both of them the one is the setting of inherent grace or duty too high as when we make it to share with Christ in merit and trust the other is the setting of inherent grace or duty too low as when upon the pretence of Christ's alone merit and full satisfaction we quite throw it off and are altogether careless about it as supposing it now to be a thing wholly unnecessary Now we are exceedingly prone to dash upon the one or the other of these rocks either we run our selves upon POPERY in the former or upon ANTINOMISM and LIBERTINISM in the latter O what need have all to beg the guidance of the unerring Spirit that thereby they may eavenly steere betwixt both and avoid each extreams which they shall most happily do if Christ and his Sacrifice be only eyed by them in the way of relyance and yet Holiness Obedience Faith Repentance have also that respect which is due to them as means and conditions Much hath been said concerning the perfection and sufficiency of Christ's Sacrifice that he hath thereby put away all sin fully expiated its guilt perfected for ever them that are sanctified c. shall any now from hence infer that all is done by Christ that the Creature hath nothing to do but only to receive the benefits prepared and purchased God forbid True Christ's Sacrifice was perfect in suo genere but not in omni genere 't was perfect as to what was meritorious and satisfactory so as to exclude all other Sacrifices and supplements whatsoever upon that account but not so as to exclude all Conditions which God will have the Creature to perform which though they can add nothing to the perfecting of the believers great Sacrifice yet they do prepare and fit Sinners for the participation of the benefits merited thereby To instance in all these Conditions or to enlarge upon any one of them would be a long work briefly therefore as ever you desire to be the better for a dying Saviour to share in the great and blessed effects of his Sacrifice look to it that you repent and believe O if you be found at last in the number of the impenitent and unbelieving all that Christ hath done or suffered will be a very nothing to you notwithstanding all that you will eternally perish Here is indeed an expiatory Sacrifice I but yet as to you no repentance no expiation here is Sin condemned by Christ's oblation of himself I but yet if the Sinner doth not penitentially condemn ●n in himself and himself for sin for all this hee 'l be judicially condemned at the great day The Scripture every where makes repentance the way to and condition of remission of sin Acts 2.38 Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins with very many other places to this purpose The Apostle having said 1 Joh. 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin presently subjoyns Vers 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness great is the efficacy of Christ's blood but 't is upon condition of the Sinners Repentance if we confess our sins c. At the JEWISH anniversary Expiation all the sins of the people were by the Sacrifices done away yet God would have them then to afflict their Souls Levit. 16.29 and the High Priest was in their stead to confess their iniquities and all their transgressions in all their sins Vers 21. we under the Gospel have our great expiation by the death of Christ but this also must be attended with penitential abasement and humilation So likewise as to Faith this too is a grace or condition indispensably necessary to the partaking of the benefits of Christ's propitiatory Sacrifice Therefore the Apostle speaking of propitiation brings in our Faith as well as Christ's blood it having an instrumental as well as that a meritorious influence thereupon Rom. 3.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood c. To the blessings of the new Covenant as the blood of Christ was necessary that thereby there might be * Grotius de Sat. p. 141. impetration so Faith also is necessary that thereby there may be application Our Lord's Sacrifice is every way sufficient for atonement yet he that believeth not the wrath of God abideth on him Joh. 3.36 so also 't is sufficient for expiation yet 't is only whosoever believeth on him shall receive remission of sins Acts 10.43 Under the Law the blood of the Sacrifice was to be so and so * Exod. 12.22 Heb. 9.19 sprinkled with a bunch of hyssope to which custom David alludes Psal 51.7 Purge me with hyssop and I shall be clean now answerably to this Paul speaks of the blood of sprinkling Heb. 12.24 't was not enough for Christ only to shed his blood but that must be sprinkled upon the Sinner how why by Faith which under
c. Justification and no Condemnation with respect to the Sentence are all one onely the one notes what is Positive the other what is Negative now the Apostle in the words inferring No Condemnation from Justification as you will see he doth by and by it appears that his eye was upon something distinct from and consequential upon Justification and that must be exemption from the state of Condemnation There is no Condemnation c. 't is as if he had said such shall not be condemned hereafter or lie under that damnation in Hell which will be the portion of Unbelievers to this therefore I shall chiefly speak Condemnation Virtual or Actual Further as some distinguish of Justification 't is either Virtual or Actual either in Title as to the Sentence of the Word here or full and compleat in the Sentence which shall solemnly be pronounced by God at the Great day So we may also distinguish of Condemnation 't is either Virtual that which is now in the Sentence of the Law or Gospel or Actual that which is to come when God by Christ will in a publick and solemn way pass a condemnatory Sentence upon men according to the Word and this shall be at the Last and Great Judment You read of the First Joh. 3.18 He that believeth on him is not condemned he that believeth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is condemned already so v. 26. of that Chapt. Of the Second Mark 16.16 and in divers other places In both of these senses also Gods people are exempted from Condemnation take it Virtually or Actually in Titlo here or in the Final Sentence of the Judge hereafter it belongs not to them And this I am now to make good which was the Second Head that I propounded to speak to The Observ proved The Negation in the Text is so express so absolute and peremptory that there cannot be the least doubt of the truth of it Indeed as to the application of this to a mans self in Hypothesi so there may be many doubts arising in the Soul concerning it but as to the Thing it self in Thesi nothing more sure and certain than it is You have it asserted not only in this single Scripture but in divers others also Joh. 3.18 He that believeth on him is not condemned neither is nor ever shall be Joh. 5.24 Verily verily I say unto you Christ would have Believers fully settled in the belief of this precious Truth and therefore he premises asseveration upon asseveration and gives you his own Authority for it he that heareth my word and believeth on him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life Read Joh. 3.16.36 Mark 16.16 1 Thess 1.10 If you look into the Text for I 'le go no further you will find a double Argument or Ground for the Non-condemnation of Believers The strength and import the Illative therefore opened 1. The First lies couch'd in the Illative Particle There is therefore now no Condemnation c. What doth this therefore point to when that is found out we must then enquire what there is of strength in it to prove and bottom Non condemnation upon For Answer to this Expositors do somewhat differ about it Some make it to refer to all that goes before from the 16 v. of the 1 Chapt. Est conclusio totius superioris disputationis à v. 16. primi Capitis Beza 'T is a Conclusion drawn from all that hath been taught hitherto Deodate Others limit it to some special part of the Apostles foregoing Discourse in this Epistle And so some apply it to what he had laid down in the 3 4 5 Chapt. where he insists upon Justification and proves at large that Believers are justified and that through the Righteousness of Christ which being so from this their blessed state and this gracious act of God upon them he here infers There is therefore now no Condemnation c. Others again make the Spring-head of the Inference to lie in the 7 Chapt. especially in the close of it Paul there thanks God who had delivered him from the body of sin through Christ he says with his mind his renewed and sanctified part he served the Law of God though with the flesh the carnal and unregenerate part he served the law of sin Now * Thus Bucer Insert ad illud in proximâ sectione Gratias ago c. Thus Pareus Illatio est valdè vehemens ex praecedenti querelâ Gratulatione Thus Musculus Nulla Condemnatio c. Quare referendum est istud exordium ad Gratiarum actionem capitis praecedentis quà dixit Gratias ago c. Thus Tolet Connexa est haec sententia ultimis praecedentis capitis verbis ex ipsis deducitur Pendet initium hoc tam saustum faelix ex hoc quod ultimò dictum est in fine praecedentis Corn. Mussus from this he draws the Conclusion There is therefore now no Condemnation c. I for my part will not limit the Inference to the One or to the Other but I 'le take in All yet I 'le consider the whole in its main Parts viz. Justification and Sanctification The Non-condemnation then of persons in Christ may be proved by or is grounded upon Non condemnation of Believers proved from their Justification 1. Their Justification He that is a justified man cannot be a condemned man for these two are contrary and incompatible If it be justifying it cannot be condemning if it be condemning it cannot be justifying There being in justification an acquitting absolving discharging from Guilt how can this consist with the condemning of one as guilty or because guilty this would be a plain contradiction oppositum in apposito 'T is with Law-contraries as 't is with Physicalcontraries upon the position of the one there needs must be the exclusion or negation of the other now Justification and Condemnation are Law-contraries ergo c. The Apostle argues upon this v. 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect and surely there must be charging before there can be condemning but there can be none of that why because it is God that justifieth The Believer being justified and justified by God too he must needs be exempted from Condemnation He that will not acquit the guilty will not condemn the righteous * Prov. 17.15 for both are equally an abomination to the Lord Now the justified person is a righteous person for else what doth his justification signifie and will the righteous Judge condemn a righteous person 'Pray that you may the better perceive how the deduction in the Text is grounded look back a little into the Epistle and see what the Apostle there lays down concerning Justification He says and this is the main Position upon which he doth but enlarge in all his following discourse Therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith ch 1.16 Even
Nature in the Soul that too may have its place here very properly for Spirit being set in opposition to the Flesh which is the depraved Nature it must have some reference to that other Nature which is opposite to this And * Spiritus sumitur pro animo regenerato per Spiritum Pareus Per spiritum intelligit novitatem Naturae effectam per regenerationem Spiritus vitiositate naturali emendatâ Piscat Vocat Carnem universam hominis naturam ut quae corrupta exciderit à priftinâ dignitate cui opponitur Spiritus eadem viz. instaurata per Spiritum Dei Beza Interpreters generally so open it 't is best therefore I say to take in both these notions of the word Spirit The natural and philosophical notion of Flesh and Spirit is Body and Soul though yet some Philosophers sometimes speak of them in a somewhat different and more restrained sense For Spirit they make to be as the whole Soul in general so sometimes only the highest part of the Soul viz. the intellectual and discursive Faculty in compliance with whom or rather with the * Vide Drussum in 1 Thes 5.23 Jewish Writers in their Nephesh Ruach and Nesama Paul seems so to use the word * 1 Thes 5.23 I pray God your whole Spirit and Soul and Body be preserved blameless c. And as to Flesh that they make to be not onely the Body it self but also the sensitive Soul that part which is void of and sets it self against Reason and refuses to be subject to the Laws and Dictates of the rational faculty Thus the * For this see Salmas in Epicl Simplic p. 116. c. Platonists and Stoicks do frequently make use of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Flesh onely they differ about the diversity of the Faculty where 't is seated from the reasonable faculty Now though Flesh and Spirit in the Text contain in them something higher than what this philosophical notion of them reaches yet 't is not altogether to be rejected and therefore in this discourse it will accordingly be made use of What it is to walk after the Spirit Now I come to answer the Question What is it to walk after the Spirit In general 't is to walk in the way of Spirit The Flesh hath its way and the Spirit hath its way the way of the Flesh is sin wickedness rebellion against God c. the way of the Spirit is holiness obedience righteousness c. He then that walks in the way of Sin he walks after the Flesh and he that walks in the way of Holiness he walks after the Spirit for the walking is according to the way that men go in So again To walk after the Spirit 't is to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit the Spirit hath its fruits such as Love Joy c. Gal. 5.22 and the Flesh hath its fruits several of which are recited Gal. 5.19 where the fruits of the Spirit fill up the life there 't is walking after the Spirit and so è contra as to the Flesh In short as to the general opening of it To walk after the Spirit 't is to live the holy and the spiritual life 't is to have Gods Spirit and to act in compliance with and obedience to it and 't is too to have the Divine Nature in the Soul to follow the motions and dictates of that Nature and to live in the exercise of the several Graces which grow upon that root I could very much enlarge upon this General Description but I shall chuse rather to explain the thing particularly under these Five Heads To walk after the Spirit 't is 1. To have the Spirit to be the principle of acting 2. To have the Spirit to be the guide of life and to follow its guidance 3. To have those affections which are proper to and suit with the Spirit 4. To live under and to close with holy inclinations and propensions to what is good 5. To act for spiritual Ends. Here I instance in more particulars than I did in the opening of the Walking after the flesh but they are as applicable to that as to this and they being contraries the One will illustrate the Other I. To walk after the Spirit 't is for a person to be acted by the Spirit or to act from the Spirit as his principle That is the principle as hath been said which acts a man or from which he acts when the Spirit is this to a person so that he lives and acts by its vital quickening agency and working in him then he may be said to walk after or according to the Spirit You heard before a man walks after the flesh when the flesh is his principle and so he walks after the spirit when the spirit is his principle This is applicable to the Spirit in both of the respects which have been mentioned As 1. take it personally the Holy Spirit is in Believers as the spring and principle of their obedience and holy actings In a sober sense all others I dread and detest that which acts and animates the Saints in their course it is Gods own Spirit he is not barely in them but he is in them as a lively and active principle to actuate their Graces to quicken and excite them to all holy and spiritual acts This is a part of that walking in the spirit which you read of Gal. 5.25 If we live in the spirit let us also walk in the spirit as if the Apostle had said if the Spirit hath been a quickening spirit to us and hath wrought a supernatural life in us then let us walk in the Spirit that is let us all along live and act by this Spirit as our great principle Such as are in Christ they pray mortifie sin are heavenly minded love God deny themselves c. now in all these acti agunt they act as they are acted from above the Spirit on his part stirs them up to what is good and gives out his influences to them in what is good and they on their part fall in with his exciting and assisting grace in opposition to all the interposures of the flesh and so they walk after the Spirit Then 2. take the Spirit habitually for Grace or the sanctified Nature in the heart this is a secondary or subordinate principle the principium Quod as the former is principium Quo from which spiritual acts do proceed You have the Apostle speaking to this double principle Gal. 2.20 I am crucified with Christ nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me there 's the supreme and first principle and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God there 's the subordinate and secondary principle Faith and Love those two great branches of that general root which I am upon make all the several wheels in a gracious heart to move that which is done in the life comes from
these in the heart the spiritual walker doth all from these two Graces as his abiding principles he lives by the Faith of the Son of God and * 2 Cor. 5.14 the Love of Christ constrains him Now he who is acted by this twofold principle he is the walker after the Spirit 'Pray observe as there are two publick Heads to which all men in the world do belong the first and the second Adam and as there are two Common States under which all are and shall be comprehended at present it is the state of Nature or the state of Grace and hereafter it is the state of blessedness or the state of mistery So there are also two Common Principles by which all men in the world are acted viz the Flesh and the Spirit They that have Flesh for their principle they walk after the Flesh they that have the Spirit for their principle they walk after the Spirit So far forth as our principle is divine and spiritual so far forth is our walking divine and spiritual for that is always answerable to its principle O are you acted in your course by an inward principle is that the Spirit of God and Grace in the heart is all done by and from this Spirit this is to walk after the Spirit II. To walk after the Spirit 't is to have the Spirit for the guide of life and to follow its guidance Where there is a fleshly guide there 't is fleshly walking where there is a spiritual guide there 't is spiritual walking for the Course is denominated as from the principle so from the guide or rule And indeed the latter is in part included in the former for whatever is the principle that carries in it too the nature and use of a guide inasmuch as the action is always steered and ordered by and according to the principle but yet I consider them here as distinct I say when the Spirit is the guide and followed as the guide this is to walk after the Spirit As I may be said to walk after one when he goes before me shews me my way and I follow him step by step where he goes I go as he bids me move so I move So 't is in reference to this walking after the Spirit Thus 't is very commonly opened Ambulare secundum spiritum quid est sequi in omnibus nostris actionibus ductum Spiritus Sancti What is it to walk after the Spirit 't is for a man in all his actions and motions to follow the Spirits conduct and guidance And here too 1. God's spirit is a guiding spirit He leads directs the Soul to and in the way of holiness I say in the way of holiness for this pure and holy spirit always leads to that which is pure and holy never to that which is sinful his excitations and guidance being evermore agreeable to his Nature Psa 143.10 Teach me to do thy will for thou art my God how doth God teach or guide a man to this it follows thy spirit is good good in it self and good as a guide to us lead me unto the land of uprightness Now when this Spirit is the dux viae a persons leader and guide and he follows its guidance in his conversation then his walking is right and good 'T is set forth Ver. 14. of this Chapt. by being led by the spirit As many as are led by the Spirit of God are the sons of God You read Ezek. 1.20 of the living Creatures whithersoever the Spirit was to go they went thither was their spirit to go And you read of the people of Israel Numb 9.16 As the cloud moved they moved as that stood they stood c. Thus 't is with the spiritual walker he is one who fetches his guidance from the unerring spirit and who regulates all his motions according to the spirits direction what the Spirit bids him do that he doth what the Spirit forbids him to do that he doth not he moves or stands still as this great guide directs him Let not any mistake me as though I did in this assert or advance any Enthusiasms immediate inspirations or directions from the spirit without or besides much less against the written word No God willing I shall shew the danger and vanity of such pretences when I come to the 14 v. I am for the Spirit and the * Ambulare secundum spiritum est omnes actiones qualescunque sunt dirigere instituere secundum dictamen Spiritus Sancti in Verbo in conscientiâ nostrâ secundum Verbum loquentis S●r●so Word conjunctly he guides but 't is by and in the Word and the guidance of the Word is the guidance of the Spirit He that squares his Life by the Counsels Commands Prohibitions of the Word he truly walks after the Spirit Again 2. there is the sanctified Nature which is a guide also though inferiour to the former Gal. 6.15 16. In Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new creature and as many as walk according to this rule peace be on them and mercy and upon the Israel of God The New Creature or Grace is a rule 't is not onely regula regulata but in some sense also regula regulans For in subordination to the Word it shows a man what is good and directs him to and in the doing of it what is evil and how he is to shun it it leads him to those things which are suitable to its self as to love God to hate sin c. He that lives in compliance with this guide he walks not after the flesh but after the spirit III. To walk after the spirit 't is to have spiritual and heavenly Affections such as are proper to and suit with the Divine Spirit The Spirit himself wherever he dwells and the spiritual life wherever it is wrought in the Soul are always attended with spiritual affections and indeed much of the influence and efficacy of both is exerted in the spiritualizing of the affections These are always suited to the Nature the fleshly nature hath fleshly affections and the Divine nature hath Divine and spiritual affections so that the walking after the spirit or after the flesh is very much to be judged of and measured by them Doth the poor Creature love God is his delight and joy in spiritual things have they his most strong and vehement desires this is to walk after the spirit Our Apostle himself here opens the twofold walking by this Ver. 5. They that are after the flesh or who walk after the flesh mind the things of the flesh but they that are after the spirit or who walk after the spirit mind the things of the spirit This minding the things of the flesh or of the spirit is not to be limited either to the inward acts of the Mind in the thoughts onely or to the outward endeavours but it includes and takes in the affections also Here then is the difference
the Gospel answers to the hyssop under the Law Well! after our Saviours being an offering for sin as we have nothing further to do but only through Grace enabling of us * Vid. Cameron Misc p. 529. to perform these Evangelical conditions so nothing less than that will serve our turn for a share and interest in the great effects and fruits thereof Frequent application to be made to this Sacrifice 6. Sixthly you are not to rest in some one single application of your selves or in the first application of your selves at your first believing to this great Sacrifice for expiation and remission but you are to repeat and renew it daily For though 't is true all the guilt of believers is removed thereby yet that is done in this method 't is removed as 't is contracted and as the benefit of it is accordingly drawn forth by the fresh applications of it O do not rest in what you did at your first Conversion but be you every day applying your selves to a sacrific'd Christ new guilt must have new pardons and daily sins call for daily expiations 'T is observable that Christ is set forth not only by the yearly expiatory Sacrifices or by those that were but seldom offered but also by the daily Sacrifices Joh. 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God c. We should not lie down in our beds at night before we have applyed our selves to a dying Christ for the cleansing of our persons from the guilt of the sins of the day past Yea we should never go to God in duty but we should revive upon our thoughts and make use of this Sacrifice Under the Law the blood was to be sprinkled even upon the Mercy-seat Levit. 16.14 God sits upon a Throne of Mercy but even that requires the blood of Christ no mercy from him no acceptance with him can be expected but upon the intervention of this Sacrifice God and Christ to be admired and adored upon this 7. Seventhly Upon this Sacrifice and what followed thereupon God and Christ are highly to be admired and adored by you This holy admiration hath been already again again press'd upon you under the foregoing gracious acts mention'd in the Text but surely that which is now before us doth as much deserve and call for it as they or any other whatsoever Is God to be admired because he sent his own Son because he sent this Son in flesh yea in the likeness of sinful flesh and is he not to be admired also for his making of him to be a Sacrifice for sin and for the condemning of sin in his flesh doubtless he is What Christ a Sacrifice a Sacrifice for such as we such great things brought about thereby O what matter is here to draw out admiration what so great so wonderful as this how much are the highest thoughts the most raised affections below the greatness of this mystery It hath my Brethren been largely set before you now I would ask How are your hearts affected with it 't is very sad if we can hear of such stupendious mercy and yet be but little wrought upon under the hearing of it Pray fancy to your selves what the Angels thought of this what frame they were in when they saw the Son of God hanging and dying upon the Cross as an expiatory Sacrifice Oh you may well suppose that it fill'd them with astonishment they were even amaz'd at this strange and wonderful spectacle never such wondring in Heaven as when the Lord Jesus was thus suffering on earth now shall that be little to you which was so great to them shall they thus admire and will you who were most concern'd in the thing and the greatest gainers by it be stupid and unaffected In Christ's being a Sacrifice God on his part hath display'd and advanc'd all his Attributes yea they by this have received their utmost advancement infinite Wisdom Justice Holiness Mercy could go no higher than a Christ crucifi'd and on your part by this your work is done your happiness being every way secur'd and your misery fully prevented by this you are reconcil'd to God and God to you condemning-sin is condemn'd it-self all its guilt expiated the righteousness of the Law fulfill'd c. by a strange and unthought-of method God hath fetch'd the greatest good out of the greatest evil by Christ's dying you live all which being considered is there not sufficient ground why you and all should admire and adore God And amongst other things pray in special admire his love his transcendent superlative matchless love what manner of love was this that God should give his Son to be a sacrifice for you 1 Joh. 4.10 Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins Rom. 5.8 But God commendeth his love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us Had not Christ been a person infinitely dear to God the thing had not been so much but that he should devote him to be sacrific'd whom he so dearly lov'd there 's the incomprehensibleness of his love 'T is reported of the PHOENICIANS that in their Sacrifices they did not use to Sacrifice an enemy or a stranger but * Porphyr do Abstin l. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some one that they had a special love for this I 'm sure was done by God in his giving of the Son of his love to be a Sacrifice for us therefore what admiration can be high enough for him When * Gen. 22.10 c. Abrahaham had the knife in his hand and was just going to offer his Son Isaac God stop'd his hand and provided a cheaper Sacrifice for him this was more than what he did for his own Son him he would have to be offered up and would admit of no other Sacrifice and when the hand of Justice was lifted up ready to destroy us then God to secure us interpos'd and found out a Sacrifice of propitiation not a Ram but his only begotten Son O the heights bredths lengths depths of his love And must not Christ be admired also surely yes was not his love too admirable as well as the Fathers Oh well might the Apostle say Gal. 2.20 Who loved me and gave himself for me Eph. 5.2 And walk in love as Christ also hath loved us and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Vers 25. as Christ also loved the Church and gave himself for it Rev. 1.5 Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood this was loving indeed When the * Joh. 11.36 JEWS saw Jesus weeping over LAZARVS they said Behold how he loved him but alas what was Christs weeping over him to his dying for us what was the shedding of a few tears to the shedding of his blood how may we come with a more emphatical Behold behold how he