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A76812 The covenant sealed. Or, A treatise of the sacraments of both covenants, polemicall and practicall. Especially of the sacraments of the covenant of grace. In which, the nature of them is laid open, the adæquate subject is largely inquired into, respective to right and proper interest. to fitnesse for admission to actual participation. Their necessity is made known. Their whole use and efficacy is set forth. Their number in Old and New Testament-times is determined. With several necessary and useful corollaries. Together with a brief answer to Reverend Mr. Baxter's apology, in defence of the treatise of the covenant. / By Thomas Blake, M.A. pastor of Tamworth, in the counties of Stafford and Warwick. Blake, Thomas, 1597?-1657.; Cartwright, Christopher, 1602-1658. 1655 (1655) Wing B3144; Thomason E846_1; ESTC R4425 638,828 706

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to do the duty that we owe. What the name of Christian or servant or people of God speaks the same these signs call for As the Altar set up Josh 22.24 did witness that those two Tribes and a half did belong with the other Tribes to the God of Israel so these Sacramental signes witness the same thing likewise 8. Remembrancing Eighthly They ace remonstrative and remembrancing signes sometimes of mercy conferred The Passeover was a sign of Israels freedom out of the land of Egypt Exod. 12.26 27. The Lords Supper shewes forth the Lords death untill he come 1 Cor. 11.26 being appointed to be done in remembrance of Christ Matth. 26.26 Mar. 14 20. Luk. 22.29 1 Cor. 11.24 of Christ dying giving his body and blood for us As those twelve stones taken out of Jordan by twelve men out of every Tribe a man were for a sign in ages following a memorial unto the children of Israel for ever that the waters of Jordan were cut off before the Arke of the Covenant of the Lord when it passed over Jordan Josh 4.6 7. So these Sacramental signs are memorials of the mercy mentioned They are alwayes memorials of the Covenant that we have entred the duty in which we stand engaged The Apostle having shewed that Baptisme doth signifie a death to sin and a life in righteousness Rom. 6.4 presently thence gives warning he that is dead is free from sin vers 6. Ninethly I might shew that they are ratifying and confirming signes but this is distinctly mentioned 9 Ratifying They are seals as well as signes which remaines to be handled SECT III. Corollaries from the former Doctrine SEveral consectaries follow from this observation which containes one part of the definition of a Sacrament First The sign and thing signified are analogically one That the sign and the thing signified in every Sacrament are one not properly and really one but in that manner one as all those things that remain distinct in nature one from other yet bear proportion and resemblance one with other are one One as Christ and a door Christ and a vine are one They are so one that one may be said to be the other when yet one distinct thing from other cannot be said to be the other in a sense that is proper my hand is not my writing my writing is not my hand but my hand is that which writes and writing is written with my hand and so my writing is usually called my hand and these speeches are in all mouthes vulgar common and are so far from being hard to understand that indeed they help the understanding A woman shewes a written peece of parchment and sayes Here is my Dower or Joynture when Dower or Joynture is in Lands not in Papers Every one knows that this speech means that it is that which vests her in it we shew a paper and say This is my will not meaning that faculty of the soul it self but a manifestation of what our desire is should be done with our estate after our decease such a man lives on my trencher that is on the meat which is laid on the trencher at my table so that men should blesse God for that he condescends to speak in such perspicuity and not complain in such speeches of difficulty Upon account of this oneness between the sign and the thing signified sometimes the sign is said to be the thing signified as that Bread is the body of Christ and the Cup the blood of Christ Matth. 26.26 27 So that that of Austin is famous that Christ said This is my body when he gave the sign of his body Circumcision is called the Covenant Gen. 17.9 10 11. Ast. 7.8 The Lambe is called the Passeover Exod. 12.11 21. Matth. 26.28 And the trees before spoken to are called the tree of life and the tree of knowledge of good and evil see Ezek. 5.5 1 Cor. 10.4 In all of these places the signe hath the name of the thing signified by reason of Analogy and representation and all by institution sometimes on the other hand the thing signified is called by the name of and is said to be the sign as 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passeover is sacrificed for us so Joh. 6.55 My flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed fitly resembled by meat and drink Joh. 15.1 I am the true vine fitly resembled by a vine see Joh. 10.10 11. Sometimes the effect which the thing signified doth produce is called by the name of the sign so in that speech of Ananias related by Paul Act. 22.16 Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins calling on the Name of the Lord when it was not the water that he was then to use but the blood of Christ that could take away sin 1 Joh. 1.7 so Baptisme saves 1 Pet. 3.21 when as the Apostle there as may be further shewen explains his own meaning so the putting off the sins of the flesh is called by the name of Circumcision and of Baptisme Colos 2.11 12. Sometimes that which is the proper work of the sign is attributed to the thing signified Deut. 10.16 Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart and be not stiffe necked These and such like speeches as these would be familiar with us and we should be able to give an account of them in case we understood Sacramental relations and other resemblances frequent in Scriptures Secondly Then it further followes There is no such things as transubstantiation that there can be no such thing as transubstantiation The sign and the thing signified remain distinct and cannot properly be the same in any Sacraments Of all Scripture-Sacraments and all those additional forged Sacraments of the Church of Rome one onely is by them thus honoured The Paschal Lambe was not turned into the body of Christ nor is water turned into the blood of Christ in Baptisme Nor do any other of their supposed signes lose their nature onely in the Lords Supper bread is not bread though it be still called bread but flesh wine is not wine though called the fruit of the vine but blood we see bread we taste bread we handle bread and yet we must not give credit either to our eyes ears taste or touch but we must believe it is no bread It hath the natural properties of bread and wine it gives natural nourishment as bread and wine the bread if eaten in excesse and the wine drunken will cause surfeit and intoxicate as bread and wine As the natural force so the natural defects of bread and wine still remain after consecration The bread breeds wormes and the wine turnes to vineger yet we must believe that God by miracle hath taken away bread and wine given blood and flesh turned bread into flesh wine into blood and yet still by miracles keeps up the natural shape properties and defects of these outward Elements When God in Scripture wrought miracles the miracles were seen and
confederate with him in Covenant and was upon that account to be circumcised which engaged to actual faith and upon actual believing it sealed this righteousness of faith to him This precedency of faith is a separable adjunct and comes not into the definition To make the definition full and clear the whole text of the Apostle is to be taken into consideration with the context and all that in the History Gen. 17. to which it relates hath relation to it all which is vertually in the words comprized where we may observe 1. The Person receiving or by right interessed 2. The thing received 3. The end or use 4. The thing signified or sealed The Person receiving or by right interessed is Abraham and giving and receiving being relatives as Pareus on the words observes if Abraham received it it is necessarily implyed that there is some one that gave it Christ sayes Joh. 7.22 Moses gave Circumcision to the Jewes because he delivered unto them a Law concerning it Levit. 12.3 but God gave it in charge to Moses as we may see there vers 1. as Gen. 17.9 10. he had before given it in charge to Abraham And therefore Christ saith that Circumcision was of the Fathers God is then the author as Abraham the receiver of Circumcision Abraham that thus received Circumcision from the hand of God may be considered 1. As a man so he stood in no other relation to God then barely as his creature and with others in the world was without God and not within the verge of his Covenant and for seventy and five years he thus continued 2. As a professor of the faith and worshipper of the true God renouncing the gods that he had worshipped in Charran and professedly serving the Lord Jehovah onely 3. As a man upright and sincere in the Covenant comming up to the termes proposed of God and walking perfect before him In all of these capacities Abraham may be considered as any other of the sons of Abraham that are sincere and faithful In the first capacity he had no right to Circumcision all that are in that condition are called by the Apostle Circumcision yet it was not of necessity to his interest in the Covenant or Circumcision the signe and seale of it to be sincere in Covenant though it be necessary to the attainment of the grace of the Covenant and mercy sealed in the Sacrament As others came into Covenant and were intitled to the initiating sign and seale so might Abraham but others came in upon a bare profession as those multitudes of Proselytes that joyned themselves to Israel One of which was Doeg an Edomite 1 Sam. 21.9 had he not been of Israel by profession he had not been detained in the Sanctuary before the Lord upon any religious account as we find he was ver 7. And had he been right in the Covenant he had not had so many things in charge against him neither had the Psalmist spoken in that language that we read of him The Eunuch as we have cause to think had an heart right with God but it was not so with Simon Magus as Peter expresly tells him Act. 8.21 Abraham then is considered as a man professedly in Covenant when he received this sign of Circumcision The thing received is here Circumcision which I shall speak to onely as of a Sacramental kind and not consider it in the individual nature of it as the initiating Sacrament of the Old Covenant held out under that external rite of cutting off the foreskin of the flesh The use of it is to be a sign and seal for signification and ratification to those that received it The thing signified and sealed is the righteousnesse of faith so it is also called Heb. 11. Elsewhere it is called the righteousnesse of God Rom. 10.3 being freely given to us of God and onely able to justifie us in his sight but chiefly because it is wrought by Christ who was not meer man nor barely a creature but the true God as St. John stiles him 1 Joh. 5.20 This righteousness of God is applyed to us and made ours by faith Phil. 3.9 and therefore as it is called the righteousnesse of God so also here and elsewhere the righteousnesse of faith This text being thus cleared a full and compleat definition of a Sacrament may be found The definition of a Sacrament A Sacrament is a sign appointed of God to be received of his Covenant-people to seal the righteousnesse of faith unto them I know there is somewhat put into the definition of a Sacrament by some that treat of this subject which is not here in words exprest and therefore upon that account this definition may be challenged as defective as 1. The Minister by whom it is to be dispensed from God to man But whether this be essential in a Sacrament or otherwise as afterwards is to be enquired into it is sufficiently implyed In case it must be received from God by his people in that way and from that hand that he himself in his Word hath appointed 2. The Sacraments contain as well a profession of our duty towards God as Gods tender and seal to man of which here is nothing said But this we shall find both in the sign and seal which are both mentioned necessarily included and as it appears that it is comprized so to make it more clear and explicite it may by the Reader be added CHAP. V. Sect. I. Of Sacramental signes I shall here purposely wave several Schoole-niceties as in what predicament a Sacrament is to be placed Taking it in the whole nature of it as consisting of a twofold matter the one outward and earthly which is the visible signe the other inward and heavenly which is the thing signified and of a twofold forme one outward which is the due participation of it according to the way prescribed of God the other inward consisting in the analogy between the signe and the thing signified it must needs be an Ens aggregatum and so not capable of any place in that series of being And signe and seale being clearly relatives I shall leave the Reader to informe himself from learned Keckerman in the third Book and eighth Chapter of his Systeme of Philosophy what is the Relatum the Correlatum the relation it self the foundation and the terminus in this Sacramental consideration and shall go on to lay open the several parts of this definition The whole of it being comprized in this text of the Apostle every part affords some doctrinal Observation In the first place I shall observe that Sacraments are signes The truth of this observation is so clear of it self that it needs no proof Taking the word Sacrament in the largest sense that we can speak of it in which it falls short of these Gospel-Ordinances known by that name it is yet Sacrae rei Signum the sign of an holy thing And might be made good by a particular induction not only in those
in ignorance being so far knowing Christians SECT IX The seventh Proposition enlarged AS for those that are of years Admission of men of years examined though we are not much concerned scarce one unbaptized Person in an age being tendred to us yet it is not meet wholly to omit it when any in the Primitive times upon the Preaching of the Apostles was ready to professe and willing to engage in a way of Christianity he was streight according to the order of Christ to be admitted by Baptisme the Commission it self speaks thus much Disciple all Nations baptizing them is the charge being discipled there needs no further enquiry and accordingly was the practice the Eunuch upon profession of faith and water at hand was presently baptized by Philip Act. 8. and the Jaylour the self same hour that he was converted was baptized by Paul and Silas Act. 16. Those that limit Baptisme to years of discretion appear to be wholly of this mind Mr. Tombes Examen Pag. 159. is clear that profession of faith and holinesse is sufficient warrant to baptize And for their practice let their Proselytes wheresoever they prevail speak when such as we see are admitted we may well conclude that in their judgement none are to be refused There are others that set up a new Church-door having discipled any in their way they do not as Christ enjoyned concerning unbaptized Heathens or as others concerning baptized Christians baptize them but they tender a Covenant of Church-fellowship unto them and that is their way of Church entrance when yet their infants keep the old rode of Baptisme These at least some of them are exceeding strict and will have none admitted but those that the quickest sighthed Admission unto a Church-Covenant and membership looked into Eagle-eyed Christians judge so farre as they are able to apprehend to have both name and thing of Christianity And to add honour to this way the world must be born in hand and that with attestation of no mean ones that the conversion of the Gentiles and Jewes in that infinite number as we read in the Acts of the Apostles was all in reality and that the whole Church of Hierusalem consisting at least of eight thousand members was an homogeneal body under the same light conscience and tendernesse Of a more noble homogeneity and more pure constitution sure then ever came into Christs thoughts to see his Kingdom attain unto upon earth He compares it to a field made up of a mixture of Tares and Wheat Matth. 13.24 to a Draw-net cast into the Sea which taketh fishes of all kinds both good and bad Matth. 13.47 And in the close o● two other Parables inferres that many are called but few are chosen Matth. 20.16 Matth. 22.14 This he spake in the ears of his Disciples and we may wonder if they should live to see it contradicted He tells his hearers Luk. 9.27 Matth. 16.18 There be some standing here which shall not taste of death till they see the Kingdom of God And can we think that he understood a Kingdom in that resplendent glory which he had ever denyed when he made it his business to decipher and hold it forth unto them When they heare of it they hear of a field with tares and wheat of a draw-net with fish of all sorts They live to see flourishing fields of pure wheat full nets of fishes that are onely good being told that many are called but few chosen they yet see myriads of thousands called and all chosen Yea Paul after he had seen the contrary and gained fellowship according to these men in such an homogeneal pure body still symbolizes in like Parables of a great house that had vessels some to honour and some to dishonour 2 Tim. 2.20 applying it to the Elect and Reprobate in the Church of God We are told that the complexion of a visible Church under the Gospel is conversion the constituted matter converted ones and that this soul-complexion is the same in the whole body members having received the same Spirit of Adoption owning and experiencing the same grace of God But it is plain that Christ did neither see nor foresee any such purity of complexion nor can they that look upon Primitive Churches in the glasse of Scriptures see any more then Christ did discover Those words of Luke Act. 15.3 And being brought on their way by the Church they passed through Phenice and Samaria declaring the conversion of the Gentiles and they caused great joy unto all the brethren is made a fundamental ground-work of this building of such glory as though all conversion by the Word were attended by the changing work of the Spirit which happy glosse in case it would hold would turne all the grounds in the parable into good ground and a cōnvert or proselyte in an historical narrative would ever be the same with elect or regenerate But the words going before and following these if they may be but taken in will serve to spoil all this supposed glory and purity A sect riseth up and teacheth the Brethren that except they be circumcised after the manner of Moses they cannot be saved and what manner of men they were and how their Doctrine took we may read in Pauls Epistles to the Philippians Colossians and especially in that to the Churches of Galatia it almost wrought to the apostatizing of those Churches from the faith of Christ to another Gospel If ever these were one homogeneal body respective to soul complexion an abundant proof is given in against the Saints perseverance and for their falling from grace Paul was not so enamoured with their beauty when he tells them that he is afraid of them and travells again in birth of them And whether he had such high thoughts of the Corinthians let sundry passages in his Epistles to them witnesse Great complexion spots may be seen 1 Cor. Chap. 3.3 Chap. 6.8 Chap. 11.18 19 21. Chap. 15.12 34. 2 Cor. 12.20 21. So that it is plain that in primitive times Jewes and Pagans being wrought upon by the Word heard and miracles seen to make profession of and engage to a Christian faith and life were upon that account received of which as some had hearts sincere towards Christ so many were otherwise Through the whole Scripture there is no demurre put to the Baptisme of any who made profession of the Name of Christ save Saul concerning whom Ananias being warned of God to go to him and conferre sight upon him being struck blind objects the evil that he had done to the Saints at Hierusalem and that he had at present authority from the Chief Priests to bind all that called on the Name of Christ Acts 9.13 14. And when he afterwards assayed to joyn himself to the disciples that were at Hierusalem they were all upon that account afraid of him Neither Ananias at Damascus nor the Church at Hierusalem did put his sincerity in grace to the question upon that account they might
Cyrenius in Syria to Pilate in Judea Luke 2.2 Luke 3.1 is given by the Apostle to these here mentioned A military or politicall word saith one which is spoken of a publick person who is possest of power either in Common Wealth or Army And if those other texts of the Apostle be consulted Hebr. 13.17 1 Tim. 5.17 1 Tim. 5.19 2 Cor. 2.6 and 5.12 13. 1 Thes 5.12 to mention no more so much will easily be found in them that speaks a government within the Church it self not going out of its own limits Whether some texts ordinarily produced hold out so large an enumeration as is by some bottom'd upon them may happily be disputed but that there should not so much as any government at all be spoken to cannot be imagined which thing in reason is also plain 1. The Church is a society a visible Kingdom an incorporation a body and when all of these have their lawes governours censures punishments it cannot be thought that this society should herein so farre differ and be so farre inferiour to all other societies as to be wholly destitute when all others enjoy government governours for their strength defence and more compleat being the Church alone shall be like that City which the Wise man speaks of broken down and without walls Prov. 25.28 2. The Church consists of men as do other societies subject to failings yea to enormities and exorbitances in judgement and practice There hath no age past in which the Church hath not had her schisms errors and scandals No society or body politick is so like to run upon miscarriages seeing the lawes to which Christ ties are so averse to our natures when we can bear others we are apt to say we will break these bonds and cast them away from us Satan envies no other society or bond of men as he doth the society or bond of Christians His kingdome will consist together with all other states and kingdomes they may rule and he rule likewise onely this of Christs Kingdome is wholly averse to Satans and militates against it for the ruine of it 3. The Church from the beginning hath exercised this power within it self when all other powers were adverse and contrary to it How long was it before the Church had a Christian Magistrate and lay under the persecution of heathen states in all which time a discipline vvas yet kept up If the Church had no such povver hovv could it then exercise it 4. The Churches that have been remisse in their improvement of this povver have had their check from Christ himself in glory He manifests his displeasure from heaven against the Church of Pergamos that they had those that held the doctrine of Balaam and the doctrine of the Nicolaitans and against the Church of Thyatira because they suffered Jesabel to teach and seduce his servants Rev. 2.14 15 20. The censure that lyes upon the Kings of Judah upon neglect of reformation in their time argues that they vvere in povver for it So the censure of these Churches upon like account argues their povver in like manner Even those that plead most for freedome of conscience and liberty in religion vvith all impunity from the civil povver yet confesse from these and like texts a povver vvithin the Church it self for censure of delinquencies To all this some are ready to subscribe as being not able to gainsay the clear Scripture evidence of a povver Ecclesiastical and confesse that it vvas so in those times but novv they contend that the case is othervvise Providence hath ordered a change of things and all is swallowed up in the hand of him that is chief in power since the time that the Church hath enjoyed Kings for her nursing fathers and Queens for her nursing mothers not barely accusing them of error that dissent in opinion but charging them to resemble those sons of Belial that upon the Israelites institution of Kingship were ungratefully asking this question How shall this man save us 1 Sam. 10.27 Making good their assertion of a change of this nature by this similitude As in the first Church among the Jewes whilest they were in a wandring condition as their need was greater so Gods personal providence and guidance of them was more expresse and apparent and therefore whilest they were in this Theocraty their government was not to be managed by any setled universal authority besides that of God himself or any one who took not in all weighty things immediate direction from him until such time as being throughly settled in peace and security from their enemies he might make his recesse and permit and appoint to them a King of their own Nation So in the first founding of the Christian Church during the time of their persecution as their weaknesse required were in a Theocraty too guided by the expresse direction of our Saviour himself given to the Apostles during the time of those fourty daies that he was conversant with them upon earth but now after the time that God hath perfected the time of the Churches deliverance and free establishment in peace and rest from all about her and the Prophecy is fulfilled by appointing Kings her nursing fathers and Queens her nursing mothers and having sons to be set as Princes in all Lands so that now under Constantine the uproomes and wandring Tabernacles as formerly under Solomon are converted into stately temples for men now to think of their running into their Wildernesse and persecuted condition by entertaining those temporary forms which unto that condition were most fit doth import both ingratitude and murmur against God and imprudence towards themselves Thus farre this similitude But those of this opinion I doubt would take ill that free dealing toward themselves which they use toward others and that upon their casting off all Ecclesiastical government under the notion of temporary forms we should apply that speech of the Lord himself to Samuel concerning the people of Israel upon their resolution to make a change in government 1 Sam. 8.7 They have not rejected thee but they have rejected me that I should not reign over them And to make the dissimilitude in this simile further apparent it should I suppose be taken into consideration that when God was pleased first to permit and then appoint a King over Israel that the former fabrick of Government written in the Law was not taken down but the whole Levitical order still stood as to all purposes prescribed of God the change was no more nor further but in him that rul'd in chief Instead of one raised by an immediate hand of God as their exigence required they now had one after the manner of other Nations of constant standing And God forbid that we should murmur that the Church hath her sons for Princes and that those that rule over us serve the Lord Jesus with us But we think that these servants of Christ thus raised in honour should see that what Christ hath set up should
Bishops and Deacons without mention of ruling Elders as also from the distinct qualifications required in Bishops and Deacons with their wives and families when as to these Elders there is all silence may be more easily answered in case it appear that these had not any constant standing in this work I onely here say that on what bottome soever they stand this which I have said can nothing prejudice them 3. Neither must this exempt admission to or exclusion from Cauti 3 the Sacrament from all cognizance of Church power nor quite take it out of the verge of their censures Not to be wholly exempted from all cogn●zance of Church-power though those in juridick place be not aforehand consulted or taken into association in it For though it be left solely to Pastors to discern those to whom they may distribute these Elements as it is to divide the Word and give every one his portion yet upon mal-administration they may be called to question If pro imperio they shall keep back those that are duly qualified or admit such that evidently according to Church-determination should be denyed they are liable to censure as they are for corruption or imprudence in doctrine And therefore it was well provided Canon 27. That he that shall repel any from the Sacrament upon complaint or being required by the Ordinary shall signifie the cause to him and therein obey his direction Presupposing Church power to be vested in him who for the most part was a meer lay person which might cause ruling Elders to stand more right in the eyes of some persons this was well determin'd Should Pastors be set up for this work without any appeal or controul it migbt then indeed be spoken to as a grievance Cauti 4 4. It is a Ministers wisdome if it may be to see with more eyes then his own A Ministers prudence to take in assistants and to take in to himself if they may be had assistants in this work especially to judge of men as to their conversations and to be witnesses of their promises and engagements in case admonition be needful for amendment and reformation More eyes see more then one and reason it self suggests the convenience of all helps to be taken in to lighten the burden Paul tells Timothy of the profession that he had made before many witnesses 1 Tim. 6.12 as a Motive to be constant An engagement made before witnesses carries authority with it and possesses with shame upon violation of it Thus the Pastor also shall in a great part avoid that charge of partiality that notwithstanding all circumspection he is like to suffer If any object that this is to set up officers pro arbitrio which will make way for the introduction of any upon like grounds of supposed prudence I answer this were somewhat if he should make over his power from himself by delegation being himself in office But discharging his duty in his own person he may doubtlesse take in all usefull helps Paul may make use of Tertius to write Epistles to Churches and yet not make him an Apostle Aaron and Hur may stay up Moses his hands and yet not usurp Cauti 5 Moses his place Where an Eldership is erected to imbrace them as helpers 5. Where an Eldership is erected then gladly to imbrace them as helpers in the work Happily they may think their power weakened and their right denyed in case they joyn not in it If the Pastor be of another judgement it is not yet his prudence to raise stirs about it If others come in as assistant to carry on what he might otherwise do alone he hath small cause of grievance it favours too much of arrogance and of the spirit of such as love preheminence to affect to be alone though it is ordinarily most seen in resolving and attempting to overrule all where a man confesses himself to be no more then in association with others And for those that refuse to come where an Eldership sits it argues too sullen an humour Were I an inhabitant in London or like place I should take my self to be bound to passe through all the Elderships there rather then hold out of Communion 6. In making scrutiny into the knowledge of them that offer Cauti 6 themselves to deal with all gentlenesse To proceed with all gentlenesse in tryall of mens knowledge especially towards such as have been of a more mean education many times such know that which they can scarce expresse and strength of affection is often seen in plain hearts without any great light Let these be holpen in their words and let speech be to them in words fitted to their capacity Let not a question be put of any thing save that which is needful to be known when it appears that the creation is known and particularly mans estate by creation in the image of God and his fall by sin and redemption through Christ so that the party can distinguish the Persons in the Trinity to give an account which of them is the Saviour of the world that each person is God the second God and man in assuming our nature and withall able to give an account of the death of Christ in satisfaction for sin our way of interest by believing the necessity of repentance and a new life as qualifications of those that shall be saved knowing the outward signs in the Sacrament and in some competent measure their signification and use Such may be exhorted with tendernesse to grow in knowledge but not to be kept back as ignorant ones 7. Neither is a Minister upon whisper of any scandal Not to refuse but upon known crimes Nos a Communione quemquam prohibere non possumus nisi aut sponte confessum aut in aliquo judicio Ecclesiatico vel seculari nominatum atque convictum to set Cauti 7 upon proof by witnesses much lesse to undertake the giving of oathes to that purpose as hath been observed out of Suarez But upon evidence of knowledge of a way in flagitious practices known to him and scarce doubted by any That of Austin is famous We can forbid none Communion unlesse he voluntarily make confession and be called and convicted in some Court either Ecclesiastical or Civil I know this is produced by some to prove that a single Minister may not in any case withhold the Sacrament from any person But this is a great mistake it onely proves that upon any particular charge it cannot be done without due proof and proof cannot be made without power of judicature either Civil or Ecclesiastical Aquinas quotes this of Austin Sum. 13. quaest 80. art 6. and yet he never doubted of the sole power of the Pastor in it It plainly thence appears that there were both Ecclesiastical and Civil Courts then appointed to take cognizance of crimes which some would make to be inconsistent And that Ministers did take occasion upon convictions there to deny Communion It doth no
never speak of the terms or means to attain it are no other then deceivers To speak largely of the Fathers bowels to receive and not a word of the Prodigals duty to come in or the multitude of sins that were forgiven that sinner in the City supposed to be Mary Magdalen and conceal her tears of repentance to be large in one and silent in the other is the way to heal with slight words Whereas as Mr. Baxter sayes The ungodly that I deal with are so confident that their sin is forgiven and God will not damn them for it that all that I can say is too little to shake their confidence which is the nurse of their sin When he makes this his businesse he does the work of the Prophets of John Baptist and of Christ Jesus and I wish that all the labourers in the Lords work may joyn with him in that way and that the Lord may give successe Yet I still believe that all this is to be done in order to a well setled and firmly grounded confidence when he tells those that come to Christ and hear his words and do them not clayming salvation by him and not obeying him that they build their hopes on a sandy foundation and foolishly deceive themselves I believe that he tells those that hear and accordingly yeeld obedience that their hopes of salvation have a firm bottom as a house built upon a rock But I know not why all of this should here in this place be brought in in the close of all that hath past as he sayes concerning himself unlesse it be to bear men in hand that my doctrine of conditional sealing in the Sacraments which he yet confesses differs little from his own may be charged with this danger when I suppose it is the alone way of prevention of it If I should make the words of the institution an absolute tender and the seal wholly unconditional I know not how to avoid it and I may very well fear that he cannot be without some such meaning First In that he puts into his Index as we have heard The danger of teaching men that they are bound to believe that they are justified and shall be saved amidst those things in which none but I are concerned and Secondly Where he first begins with me he utters like language pag. 3. I doubt not sayes he but the difference between you and me is onely about the methodizing of our notions and not de substantia rei and yet presently adds but I doubt lest your doctrine being received by common heads according to the true importancy of the expression may do more against their salvation then is well thgouht on and that not by accidence but from its own nature supposing the impression of the soul to be but answerable to the objective doctrinal seal How unhappy am I in methodizing of wholesome truths which are the same in substance with a mans of such eminence If that alone should have such a sad influence upon mens understanding though age growes upon me and many other weaknesses yet were I sensible of the truth of this charge I would travel on foot to the remotest ground in England to learn from any hand a more happy way and I have therefore been more large that the Reader may see the whole of my thoughts in this where I may seem to be under so heavy a censure that he may help me in prayer that in all that I do I may edifie and not destroy SECT II. Corollaries from the former doctrine LEt us here see the goodnesse of God the singular tender care of Christ thus to condescend to our weaknesse Christs tender care evidenced in his condescension to our weaknesse as to vouchsafe these visible sensible pledges and confirmations of our faith in the promises All that can be thought upon to ratifie and make good whatsoever from any hand we have in expectation Christ hath been pleased in his condescension to vouchsafe unto us In such a case we desire 1. A promise that he from whom we expect it would engage himself by his word for it This Christ hath done in the Gospel-promises we have his promise frequently repeated still inculcated Gen. 32.12 And thou saidst I will surely do thee good and make thy seed as the sand of the Sea which cannot be numbred for multitude 1 Tim. 4.8 Godlinesse is profitable unto all things having the promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come Joh. 11.25 I am the resurrection and the life he that believeth in me though he were dead yet he shall live 2. When we have a word we yet desire an oath that the person by that sacred tye may be obliged not to recede or go back from that which he hath spoke This God hath vouchsafed when God made promise to Abraham because he could swear by no greater he sware by himself that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lye we might have a strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us 3. When we have both word and oath yet we desire his hand that it may be subscribed that we may have somewhat to produce and shew for that which we expect This God hath vouchsafed Joh. 20.31 These are written that ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ the Sonne of God and that believing ye might have life through his Name Rom. 15.4 Whatsoever things were written afore-time were written for our learning that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope 4. Yet we desire earnest a pledge in hand to make good what is in Covenant and promise past and by oath under hand confirmed This God is pleased to vouchsafe Ephes 1.13 In whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession 2 Cor. 1.21 22. Now he which establisheth us with you in Christ and hath anointed us is God who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts 5. We yet desire a seal As Jeremy had the evidences of his purchase Jer. 32.10 This God hath also vouchsafed and this is of two sorts 1. Inward by his own immediate hand the stamp of his Spirit the impresse of his grace This is the character or mark that we are his these God sets apart for himself Ephes 1.13 Ephes 4.30 1 Cor. 2.21 22. 2. Outward put into the hands of his Ministers and these are Sacraments these outward visible assurances The former needs no conditions but it self all sanctified are saved and sanctification is the seal there are all Gospel-conditions The latter requires all the gracious qualifications of a people in Covenants All that are thus qualified according to the Gospel have here full confirmation and assurance of interest in all promises so willing is God every way to
onely one dark on the one part and bright on the other which seems more probable The first being fitly understood of the various appearances of one and the same Cloud The Cloud not ordinary but supernatural and not a variety of Clouds 2. For the nature of it or matter whereof it did consist which doubtlesse was Supernatural and extraordinary Had it been of the common nature of Clouds which is a thick moist exhalation drawn up by the heat of the Sun it could not have been of so many years durance neither could it have subsisted at all elsewhere then in the middle region of the air The reflex from the earth would soon have dissolved it 3. For the Motion of it It is plain that it followed not the motion of the heavens The motion of it guided by an Angel so it could not at any time have stood still neither was it carried at all uncertainty with the blasts of winds as ordinary Clouds are but the motion was ordered according to the good pleasure of God by the Ministery of an Angell The form of it was in appearance as a pillar Exod. 14.9 4. For the Forme of it it was in appearance as a pillar The smoke which in a calm season ascends out of Chimneys sets out the shape of it being called pillars of smoke Cant. 3.6 of no greater breadth then the tabernacle as appears Numb 9.15 Had it been of any greater breadth it had hindred the Israelites prospect and had it not been of eminent height it could not have been visible for the guidance of Israel in that distance in which many of them were often from it The Vse is that which is most considerable and that was two-fold The use of it 1. As Israels guide 1. As Israels guide as Numb 9. is fully held forth When the Cloud stood still they were to keep in their quarters and when that moved they were to march and to march that way that it led This was the constant use of it as the Psalmist Psal 98.14 observes and also the Levites on their day of Israels humiliation Neh. 9.19.2 As Israels guard 2. As Israels guard Exod. 14.19 20. It used to be in the van now it was placed in the reare It had formerly gone before them as a guide but now it stood behind them as a guard so that Egypt eagerly set upon the pursuit of them could not come near them Of this the Psalmist takes notice Psal 150.39 He spread a Cloud for a covering and a fire to give them light by night so that here God was a Sun and shield The second observable providence is Israels passage through the Sea which we find Exod. 14.21 22. Exod. 14.21 22. opened And Moses stretched out his hand over the sea and the Lord caused the sea to go back by a strong East-wind all that night and made the sea dry land and the waters were divided And the children of Israel went into the midest of the sea upon the dry ground Several things observable in Israels passage through the Sea and the waters were a wall unto them on their right hand and on their left With frequent Scripture-observations upon it Josh 4.23 Psal 78.13 Psal 114.3 Heb. 11.29 In Moses words we see First The Author of this great work and this is twofold 1. Principal the Lord. 2. Secondary Moses stretching out his hand upon the sign given Secondly The instrument a strong East wind imployed of God to force the waters against their natural current In which we see 1. The continuance a whole night 2. The effect that it wrought to divide the waters and to make the land dry God will keep up his agents untill his work be done 3. Israels passage They went into the midst of the sea upon the dry ground 4. Their security The waters were a wall unto them on the right hand and on the left Some have thought that there were several divisions of the sea into parts according to the several tribes of Israel but this is without ground all that we can collect is that the whole of Israel and of those that joyned themselves to them had a safe passage made them they all went out both old and young sons and daughters Exod. 10.9 and all these had a passage cut to their hand The third remarkable providence is Manna The narrative of it we may see Exod. 16.14 15. Exod. 16.14 15. opened And when the dew that lay was gone up behold upon the face of the wildernesse there lay a small round thing as small as the hoar-frost on the ground And when the children of Israel saw it they said one to another It is Manna for they wist not what it was And Moses said unto them This is the bread that the Lord hath given you to eat and mentioned in several other Scriptures Num. 11 7. Psal 78.24 Deut. 8.3 Nehem. 9.20 Joh. 6.31 49 58. Several remarkable occurrences might be observed about it which is not needful to stand upon From whence Manna hath its name It had the name from the Israelites question upon the sight of it not knowing it they said Manhu which is what is this It was given to Israel upon their complaint against Moses and Aaron that they had brought them forth out of the land of Egypt to kill them with hunger Exod. 16.3 4. And it continued with them till they came into the Land of Caanan The time that it did continue with Israel and had eaten of the old Corn of the Land Josh 5.12 Whether it were of the same kind with that which at this day in several Countries is found is much disputed but whether it were the same or in nature differing from it it was certainly miraculously provided to their hands It was miraculously provided otherwise it would have been found in that wildernesse both before and after those fourty years of Israels travels through it It was called by the name of Angels food Psal 78.23 Not that the Angles feed upon it but by reason of the excellency of it as the tongue of him that excells is called the tongue of Angels 1 Cor. 13.1 Though that which some talke of the rarity of it A fable concerning it rejected and would gather out of the Wisdom of Solomon Chap. 16.20 21. that it was fitted to every mans taste and as any did fancy so it was If any did desire to eat of an Egg that was turned into an Egg or to eat of an Hen or Lamb that was forthwith turned into such a dish and so was a figure of transubstantiation may well be reckoned amongst the Legend-tales Then the Israelites would never have complained that their soul loathed that light bread Num. 21.5 Nor had they had cause to have said as they did Num. 11.4 5 6. Who shall give us flesh to eat We remember the fish which we did eat in Egypt freely the Cucumbers and the Melons and
He is set out a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3.24 not through faith in his command It is the blood of Christ that cleanseth all sin and not the Soverainty of Christ These confusions of the distinct parts of Christs Mediatorship and the speciall offices of faith may not be suffered Scripture assignes each it's particular place and work Soveraignty doth not cleanse us nor doth blood command us Faith in his blood not faith yielding to his soveraignty doth justifie us Mr. Brs. reply analized In your reply to this passage of mine you 1. Acquit me of any further error then what is found in my method affirming that I agree with you in substantiâ rei 2. You lay down six several distinctions 3. You lay down nine propositions All of which both distinctions and propositions I believe you intended for illustration of the point in debate but your Readers and those neither of the younger nor duller sort complaine of your obscuring of it 4. You fall upon your charge of me and here you charge 1. My expressions with confounding that which was my business as well as I could to distinguish 2. You charge my implications or implyed sense which it seems you far better know then I with triple injustice 1. Against the truth and word of God 2. Against the souls of men 1. In such nice mincing cutting the conditions of their salvation to their great perplexity if they receive my doctrine That which all complain of in your expressions you are pleased to blame me withall in my implications Upon the comming out of your Apologie I was wrote unto by an eminently-learned hand in these words I wish that it may not divert you from better employment and namely your Treatise about the Sacraments to which if you adjoyn as an appendix something by way of reply to Mr. Br. not so as to trouble your self and others as Mr. Br. doth too much with Logicall niceties but to clear and confirm the main matter I think it will be most convenient 2. I am charged as not affording one word of Scripture or reason when yet in those few words recited I think the reader may see as many as in all your distinctions and propositions Lastly and leastly as you term it my charge is of evident injustice to my friend For it is as is said no hard matter to know who I mean in charging him with confounding the distinct parts of Christs mediatorship I am expresly spoke to and charged without injustice for confounding Christs actions with mans faith How truly let the Reader judge And am yet guilty of injustice in charging my implyed friend in my implyed sense with such a crime 5. You excuse your self for your not much troubling me with arguments Giving your reason that you have done it over and over to others Where I would have the Reader to observe that you have other Adversaries besides me in this point and those of the most learned who as else where you say have vouchsafed that condescension as to give in animadversions 2. That we hear none of these learned mens reasons A few words of mine let fall by the bie are fallen upon and elaborate learned Treatises of others lie dormant industriously written on this subject 6. You come in with your ten arguments which it seemes you take to be a number below trouble It would trouble you If I should say your implyed sense is That they are such to which I may without trouble give in an answer 7. You amplifie your tenth argument with a large discourse and all of this before you can reach my words I should trouble the Reader in his purse and patience if I should follow you in all these particulars and indeed I was scarce ever brought so near to a non-plus To speak to all Time will not suffer and to take to some and leave others will expose me to censure Your distinctions should be look'd into and if they had been either proved or explained you had done your Reader a Favour Your first distinction is between Constitutive Justification His distinctions considered or remission by the Gospel-grant or Covenant and Justification by the sentence of the Judge I hope you do not make these two distinct Justifications that so it should be a distribution of a Genus into its species So I think few Readers will own it But if you mean by the former a Justification wrought and in it self perfect and compleat as your word constitutive would seem to imply And by Justification by the sentence of the Judge Justification manifested and declared then I freely yeeld That is Justification in it self perfect and full that renders a man blessed And this your constitutive Justification which you call remission by the Gospel-grant doth Psal 32.1 Commented upon by the Apostle Rom. 4.7 8. Whether the Elect shall have any other justification or this manifested and more fully held out let Christ himself determine At the day when God by him shall judge the world he will pronounce this sentence Come yee blessed of my Father Matth. 25.34 This Justification then by the sentence of the Judge is a manifestation of this blessedness which is in remission and non-imputation of sin Your next distinction is between Constitutive Justification as begun and as continued or consummate And here I doubt not but you may distinguish provided that you donot divide and make one condition to be required for the first as you use to do viz. Faith only and another which is works the condition of the second When David through faith was put into a justified state and after fell into sin there was a necessity of his return in the order established of God You may say if you please that works must now acquit him from this second guilt but this I shall hardly imbrace He sought in his faln condition to have sin by free grace remitted and to be purged with that which Hysopin Ceremoniall purifications did typifie Psal 51.7 A justified state is carried on in a way of obedientiall affiance But faith in Christs blood first and last doth only justifie The Apostle speaks of the falls of the Children of God when he sayes If any man sin 1 John 2.1 and tels us the way to be acquited not any new but the old and first way We have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and he is the propitiation for our sin And I know no other way of propitiation then through faiths in his blood I know what you say Pref. to your Confes pag. 8. if I number right They are very different questions How we are constituted just or put into a justified state at our conversion How we are sentenced just or justified at Gods Judgment seat You may if you please make them two questions but were I to be Catechized by you I should give you the same answer And I believe Paul was of the same mind when he