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A43587 The sure mercies of David: or, a second part of Heart-treasure Wherein is contained the supream and substance of gospel-mercies purchased by Christ, and promised in the covenant of grace, together with the several ways how they are made and are to be improved for the saints fort and defence, settlement and incouragement in shaking and back-sliding times. Being the fruit of some meditations upon Isa. 55. 3. By O. Heywood an unprofitable minister of the gospel.; Heart-treasure. Part 2. Heywood, Oliver, 1629-1702. 1670 (1670) Wing H1775; ESTC R216795 143,081 284

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gift of God and none can come to Christ except the Father draw him Joh. 6.44 Alas it is as impossible to believe in Christ as to keep the Moral Law from principles of corrupted nature our state had been sad and forlorn still if God had not undertaken to work the faith which he requireth Duce D●o venitur ad deum 't is only the arm of omnipotency that can draw the soul to Christ Jesus is the only Author and finisher of our faith Heb. 12.2 Eph. 1.19 there is an exceeding greatness of his power to all them that believe put forth to create an act of saving faith all they that have felt it can testifie that this is a rich mercy and this is one of the mercies of the Covenant More particularly there are four choice dispositions promised in the Covenant of Grace which are Covenant-mercies 1. Saving illumination Jer. 31.34 they shall all know me saith the Lord by nature we are blind and blockish creatures but the new Covenant brings light and sight to the ignorant erring sinner and Oh what a mercy is it to know God and Christ and sin and misery and duty and felicity to know Scripture-truths and Gospel-mysteries our own hearts and the sweetness of Grace heaven and the way thither certainly such saving knowledge is worth a world truly such light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is for the eye of the soul to behold the Sun of Righteousness and the beauty of Heaven what blind Bartimeus would not own it as a rich mercy to have his eyes opened and is it not a blessed thing to be translated out of Aegyptian darkness into this marvelous light Oh happy are the eyes that are annointed with the new-covenant eye-salve and behold Coelestial objects through this Divine optick of faith and become faithful guides to the feet of an holy life 2. Sound humiliation this is another Covenant-mercy Ezek. 11.19 I will take the stony heart out of their flesh and will give them an heart of flesh a broken heart is instead of many Sacrifices an hard heart is the greatest judgement and a soft heart the greatest mercy repentance is Gods gift bound up in the Covenant of Grace our sweet and blessed Redeemer is exalted as well to be a Prince that he may give Repentance as to be a Saviour to give unto us remission of sins Oh what a mercy is the spirit of Repentance they that have this Godly sorrow shall never need to sorrow for it such a Repentance needs not to be repented of blessed are they that mourn for sin for they shall rejoyce happy such as sow in tears for they shall ●eap in joy certainly a Converted sinner looks upon a repenting heart as a rich mercy one penitent tear is an orient pearl of more worth than the whole Creation a bleeding soul is a blessed sight in the eyes of God and man it layes the Christian under the promise of the Covenant and qualifies it for remission and the sweetest consolation 3. Another Covenant-mercy with respect to the condition is heart-sanctification Ezek. 36.25 I will sprinkle clean water upon you and you shall be clean this is the mercy that David is so importunate for create in me a clean heart no less than creation will effect it a putting off the old man and putting on the new in a sound Regeneration is a miraculous mercy Oh what would a poor soul give for dominion over some special corruptions and power to resist temptations why here it is this mercy of mortification which is also a Christians duty is infolded in this blessed Gospel-Covenant so that sin shall not have Dominion over them that are under this Covenant of Grace a Christian can do more to mortifie sin and Crucifie the flesh than another man every word of God hath a cleansing vertue now you are clean saith Christ through the word that I have spoken to you but the promises of the Covenant have a direct and immediate tendency to cleansing 2 Cor. 7.1 having these promises i. e. the fore-mentioned Covenant let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness both of flesh and spirit it is only the Gospel Covenant that can make Evangelically holy and holiness is the image of God the beauty of a soul the duty of a Christian and the mercy of the Covenant 4. A spiritual conversation this is also included in the Covenant Ezek. 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my Commandments and do them Oh what a blessed thing is it to have a heart to love and fear and serve the Lord Oh what a mercy to be inabled to perform holy duties to walk with God in all wayes of well-pleasing Jer. 31.33 to have the Law of God written in the heart and transcribed in the life yea to keep Gods commands with ease alacrity and complacency not to have them grievous but pleasant to the soul and thus it is when the Christian acts from an innate principle of Grace and Holiness well this is the promised and purchased condition of the New Covenant God undertakes to put a new habit into the soul his fear which is the beginning of Wisdom and principle of obedience God gives the spirit of prayer the spirit of power love and of a sound mind 2 Tim. 1.9 he promiseth to give them one heart and one way that they may fear him for ever Jer. 32.39 Oh what rich mercies of the New Covenant are these 4. Yet the great mercies of the Covenant are behind under the next head for a Covenant contract conveyance contains the Habendum or grant reflecting advantage to the party Covenanting and that in these words I will be thy God this is repeated fifteen or sixteen times in the Scriptures this this is the mercy of the New Covenant the mercy of mercies the flower cream and quintescence of all mercies God gives himself to the soul by Covenant and what greater or better gift can he bestow if he should give us all the world and deny himself we are miserable beggars if he give himself and nothing of the world we are truly rich if we have God we have all things if we want God we want all things Deus m●us est omnia Ben scripsisti Thoma q●id pet Resp nil nisi ●ipsum Domine my God is my All saith one 't is recorded of Thomas Aquinas the great School-man that a voice from Heaven spake thus to him thou hast well written Thomas what desirest thou and that he answer thus nothing O Lord but thy self this certainly is the Language of a gracious soul Lord put me not off with any thing below or besides thy self what mortal Creature durst have presumed to beg of God such a boon if God had not graciously promised himself in the New Covenant what can the creature desire more what can it now want when it hath an infinite God all
the Author was known an● a seal is the mark whereby genuine things a● discerned from counterfeit all these are th● uses of the spirits sealing to confirm o●● hearts in the truth of God in his promise● against all the temptations of Satan th● blessed sealing is more prevalent for our co●firmation than all philosophical reasons o● demonstrations 5. Another way to beget assurance amo●● men is a solemn Oath and we know an Oa● for confirmation is to them an end of all stris● Heb. 6.16 and thus God willing more abu●dantly to shew unto the heirs of promise th● immutability of his Council confirmed it b● an Oath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inv●tat praemio salutem jurans etiam vivo dicens c●pit credi sibi O beatos nos que● causa deus jurat O mis●rrimos sinec juranti domino credimus Tert● de poen or interposed himself by an Oath● it is very observable to consider the form 〈◊〉 the Oath God swears by himself who 〈◊〉 the living and true God he could swear by ●o greater and it is observed that two things make a thing more credible 1. the quali●y of the person speaking 2. The manner of the speech Now the form of the Oath ●n Gen. 22.16 is exceeding emphatical to Abraham partly because of the asseveration surely Gen. 22.16 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Est particula ca●salis coaditionalis partly because of the duplication in blessing I will bless thee if I speak ●t it shall be done moreover the form of the expression in Genesis is strange for it is thus Quid tibi prodest si Deus se juram●nto o●st●ing●t si tu haec quasi commun●m audi●ns fabulam transeas Jurare di●it●r deus ut tu audiens paveas intre●iscas metu consternatus inquiras quid illud tantum est pro ●o deus jurare dicitur Or●g Homil. 9. super Gen. 22. if I bless thee thou shalt be blessed or because I bless thee or if I do not bless thee which is the form of an Oath Heb. ●4 3 as if he should say then let me not be true just yea let me not be God God pawns his faithfulness upon it and may he not then be believed but for what end is this it is to confirm his promises and assure the hearts of all the heirs of promise that he intends to do and will accomplish what he hath spoken that they might have strong consolation and that he might take away all doubts and haesitation and all this he doth for the heirs of promise he would not have done thus for others but he doth this and much more to satisfie his doubting Children 6. Yet further men use to give a pawn a pledge to assure others of their real purpose to make good the bargain and this is part of the payment this also doth our gracious God 2 Cor. 1.22 Cap 5.5 Ephes 1.14 his spirit is the earnest of our inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession an earnest is used in purchasing Land in hiring of Servants and in contracting Marriage and when ever the Lord puts his Holy Spirit into the heart it s as a pledge of all the mercies of the Covenant and of our eternal inheritance and though some men may be unfaithful so far as rather to lose their earnest than make good their bargain yet we may be assured God will not do so for it is as impossible that any saving grace of the Spirit should be cast into hell as it is for any sin to enter into Heaven God will not lose his pledge but fetch the soul to Heaven when he hath fetcht the heart to himself Grace is the Prologue and Praeludium to Glory the first Resurrection leads the van to the second a gracious change prepares for a glorious change Rom. 8.11 if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his spirit that dwelleth in you the spirit confirms the promises and we need not fear any danger of retractation not but that the promises are firm enough but he would establish our hearts in the faith thereof and acquiescence therein lest any question it 7. Another way whereby men testifie their cordial resolution to make good promises is by doing a great part of the work which gives real evidence they will do the rest he that promiseth to give another a thousand pounds Should a King promise to erect some Colledge and give liberal maintenance to Students in it we are certain by an humane faith that he will do such a thing th●ugh it be not begun but if the foundations be in laying we see its execution in part and are assured it will be finished Ba●us on E●h c. 1. v. 17. p. 144. and hath already given him nine hundred may he not rationally trust him for the rest or suppose there were but one pound or a penny behind there is great reason to conside in him for what is wanting why truly the Lord hath performed the greatest part of the promises of the Covenant the great promise of the Covenant was that the seed of the Woman should break the Serpents head that the Son of God should be incarnate be in mans stead in life and death to satisfie justice fulfil the Law and by his death bring in everlasting rightcousness and he hath already done it now saith the Apostle Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son See Rom. 4.8 9 10. Qui misit unigen●tum immisit spiritum p●omisit vultum quid tandem tibi negaturus ost Bern. but delivered him up for us all how shall be not with him also freely give us all things God is before-hand with us yea if we be indeed heirs of promise he hath made good good another grand branch of the New Covenant in giving the conditions of the Covenant faith repentance and new obedience so that the main business is already done the writings are made sealed signed and delivered there wants nothing but actual possession nay there is a Seisin and delivery of part of the inheritance and dare we not trust God for the remainder certainly we have good reason so to do the contrary is unreasonable 8. God hath gone another step which is to work many Miracles for the confirmation of these sure mercies this is a degree further than man can reach to make any thing sure hence saith our sweet Saviour Joh. 5.36 I have greater witness than that of John for the works which the Father hath given me to finish the same works that I do bear witness of me that the father hath sent me this Text shews the true and proper end and efficacy of Christs miracles Ig●tur non s●●● muta s●d vo●ahssira ideo non simpliciter intuenda sed intellig●nter audienda Marl. in loc they are not dumb shews but have a voice and cry aloud for
my face doth your heart readily eccho thy face Lord will I seek do your souls tremble under sence of threatnings and judgements do the apprehensions of Gods loving-kindness melt and attract your heart doth this strongly lead and draw you to repentance ask your own souls such questions as these whereby you may know whether you have this condition and disposition of the Gospel-Covenant 8. The last disposition that is promised in the New Covenant as a singular mercy is holy practice spiritual obedience so Ezek. Si ergo talis fucrit vita nostra ita omnibus membris qua●rata composita ut universi motus nostri secundum Dei Leges agantur vere testamentum Dei erit super carnem nostram Orig. Hom. 3. in cap. 17. gen 36.27 I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes and ye shall keep my judgements and do them this is an holy watchful chearful faithful fruitful obedience to Divine precepts and commands so then let me pose you thus do you run the ways of Gods commandments with enlarged hearts do you follow God fully and walk with God uprightly do you delight to do Gods will and in all things mind your rule doth the mind of God move you more than the customes and traditions of men though you cannot say you do exactly keep yet cannot you say you have respect to all Gods commandments are you like the Centurion's servants ready to go or come at Gods biding doth the Authority of a divine command more awe your conscience to obedience than the examples of most or best of men do you with Zechariah and Elizabeth walk in all the ways of Gods commandments blameless do you take heed to your ways that you offend not with tongue or hand or foot do you worship God in the beauty of holiness do you make it your business to ingage your hearts in your approaches to God do you lift up your hearts in Gods ways that God and you may meet do you worship God in the spirit rejoyce in Christ Jesus not having any confidence in the flesh in a word do you gladly follow Christs example study conformity to him and communion with him is faith working by love and doth that love ingage you to keep Gods commands and render them not grievous but pleasant do you account Christs yoke easie his burden light and his service perfect freedom and are you constant and permanent in holy walking all your days and though you may stumble and fall or turn aside or stand still or turn back yet you dare not quit and forsake Gods ways or chuse the ways of sin to go aside with the workers of iniquity but you lament your miscarriages are restless till you get into Gods ways again plead hard for pardon are more jealous over your hearts make more haste God-wards and so through grace keep faithful to death that you may receive a Crown of life Thus I have gleaned up the conditions or dispositions of Gods Children which are promised by God purchased by Christ and effectually wrought by the blessed spirit in the hearts of the elect and these are the mercies of the Covenant by which you may try whether you be interested in the Covenant for if you find these new-Covenant-mercies in you you may conclude you have an interest in new Covenant-priviledges Another way of tryal which I shall but briefly hint at is to discover the properties and effects of new Covenant-mercies upon the souls of such as partake of them i. e. those benefits and priviledges of the Covenant as Reconciliation Adoption Remission of sin imputation of Christs Righteousness and the rest before-mentioned leave gracious effects upon the hearts of such as partake thereof Take a taste 1. They are transforming conforming mercies they change heart and life as before yea and they make the soul argue from mercy to duty that soul that partakes of these mercies dare not sin that Grace may abound nor argue from mercy to sinful liberty much less make Christian liberty a cloak of lasciviousness oh no that 's the devils Logick a Child of God thinks and thus reasons did Christ dye for me and shall not I dye unto sin and live unto him that dyed for me shall my dear Saviour shed his blood for me and shall I think any thing too dear for him shall he forgive much to me and shall not I give all I have to him shall not I love him much pray much obey much O my soul how canst thou chuse but live in new obedience doth not the love of Christ constrain thee hath he reconciled thee to God and God to thee and wilt not thou be reconciled to thy offending brother hath he forgiven thee ten thousand Talents gratis and wilt not thou forgive such as offend thee a few farthings for Christs sake hath God given thee himself and dost thou withhold any part of thy poor silly sorry self from him nay here I am let him work in me and do with me as seems good in his eyes 2. They are chearing comforting and refreshing mercies these mercies of the Covenant will answer all objections clear all scores and put the soul out of doubt concerning its state Let the Devil and an unbelieving heart conspire together to torment the Conscience yet one word of the blessed Covenant will baffle all their arguings and stop their mouths and still the soul let God speak out and say I am thy God in Covenant who then can cause trouble this was all Davids Salvation Desire and Consolation One drop of this holy Oyle of the Covenant will sweeten a whole Fountain and Sea of the bitter Waters of the sharpest afflictions a taste of the Covenant will turn Water into Wine this is the Tree cast into the bitter Waters of Marah Isa 33.24 that makes them sweet sense of pardon takes away the sense of the pain if a particular promise can so comfort a soul as it may be called a cordial Oh what comfort will the Covenant afford which is a cluster and constellation of Evangelical promises the good things of the new Covenant keep head above Water and heart above terrour in all conditions these steel the soul with courage in difficulties comfort in Adversity and an Antidote in prosperity 3. These mercies of the Covenant are raising reviving elevating mercies they lift the heart above the World and advance it to Divine Coelestial objects and Conceptions Rev. 12.1 Col. 3.1 Phil. 3.8 9. a Christian thus cloathed with the Sun hath the Moon under his feet and all Sublunary enjoyments at his heels Christ and things above lye next his heart other things are dross and dung in comparison thereof a Covenanted Christians Treasure is in Heaven and his heart is there he preferrs a grain of Grace to all the comforts of the World common mercies will not content his heart or quiet his Conscience he opens his Heaven-born soul to Heavenly influences he
heal your backsliding will not cause his anger to fall upon you because he is marryed to you and he hates putting away the mercies of the Covenant depend not on your mutable wills but upon everlasting love your souls are carryed to Heaven in the Chariot of the Covenant which moves upon the solid Axle-tree of free-grace which as it was not procured so is it not continued by your merits or goodness 't is true if you had carryed the matter so towards men as you have done to God you might expect an heavy sentence but these are the sure mercies of an infinite God the Covenant is made in Christ and made good by Christ the Alpha and Omega the Amen the faithful and true witness is the Surety and Mediator of this blessed Covenant Oh Christians lay your stress here there 's help laid upon one that is mighty to save he can save to the uttermost pinch he is good at this soul-saving work do not fear he that begun this good work in your hearts will perfect it you may be confident of it 1 Pet. 1.5 Rom. 14 4. Jer. 32. you shall be kept by the power of God through faith to salvation though you be very weak yet he is able to make you stand you shall not depart from him omnipotency is engaged for you act faith therefore upon the numerous and gracious promises of perseverance though you have many fightings without and fears within though you feel averseness to good and a tendency to sin wants and weaknesses burdens and breaches snares and sadness yet lift up your hearts you stand upon better terms with God than Adam in innocency or the Angels in glory who were not confirmed in their integrity but are fallen by a dreadful apostacy it were sad for poor believers if their happiness did depend upon their mutable nature or strongest resolutions or if God should revoke his mercies as often as they provoke his justice but blessed be God for Jesus Christ and the rest of the sure mercies of David triumph in this O ye Children of the promise the Covenant wherein your souls are wrapped is ordered in all things and sure Heaven it self is engaged for you the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against you none can pluck you out of his hands who is the rock of Ages in whom is everlasting strength you may confidently make bold and blessed Paul's victorious challenge who shall separate us from the Love of God Rom. 8.35 ad finem though your internal motions be often like Ezekiel's wheel 〈◊〉 16 〈◊〉 intricate confused and perplexed as a wheel in a wheel grace sweying one way and flesh another yet if you be joyned to the living Creatures and united to Christ in the bond of the Covenant you shall go streight on with constancy and uniformity till your souls arrive at glory these mercies are not for a day or week or month or year but they run parallel with the life of God and line of eternity for with everlasting mercies he will have compassion on thee Isa 54.7 8. 6. In case of desertions and Gods withdrawings from him the soul may and must improve these sure mercies of David now desertions are ordinarily distinguisht into Gods withdrawing 1. His quickning 2. His comforting presence from the soul in both these cases the soul may improve them 1. In case God suspend the gracious influences of his spirit and the heart be shut up under deadness hardness unbelief distractions and the poor Christian cannot feel those lively springings of the graces of the Covenant in his heart then let him have recourse to the promise wherein God hath engaged himself to give a soft heart a new spirit faith love repentance the spirit of prayer c. all habits of grace the lively exercise of grace assisting grace quickning enlarging moving melting manifestations are bound up in this Gospel-covenant hence it is that when David ●inds his heart dull and out of frame he runs to God and cryes out my soul cleaveth to the dust ver 107. quicken me according to thy word Psal 119.25 and he goes often over with that phrase which imports that David lay under the sense of some promise that God had made for the quickning of his heart when it was out of frame and accordingly he recounts the gracious influences of Gods spirit and professeth that he will never forget his precepts because by them he had quickned him ver 93. thus let dead hearts lay themselves at Christs feet and plead in this manner Lord my heart is exceeding dull and distracted I feel not those enlarging melting influences which thy Saints have met with but are they not main material mercies of the Covenant dost thou not promise a spirit of illumination conviction humiliation is not holiness of heart and life a main branch of it dost thou not promise therein to write thy Law in my heart to give me oneness of heart to put thy fear within me to subdue my corruptions to help my infirmities in prayer now Lord these are the mercies my soul wants and waits for fill my soul with these warming influences revive thy work of grace in my soul draw out my heart towards thee inlarge my affections to thee repair thine image draw out grace into lively exercise doth not that sweet word intend such a mercy when thou saist Ezek. 36.26 thou wilt not only give a new heart but put a new spirit within me to make my soul lively active and spiritual in duties and motions dear Lord am not I a Covenanted soul and are not these Covenant-mercies why then my God dost thou thus harden my heart from thy fear why dost thou leave me in all this deadness and distraction remember thy word unto thy servant in which thou hast caused me to hope and in which thou hast helped me to plead oh quicken my dull heart according to thy word thus improve these mercies in case of deadness 2. In case of sadness and disconsolateness and the hidings of Gods face from a troubled drooping spirit Oh then make much use of these Covenant-mercies both as they are mercies and as they are sure mercies they are as free and as firm as ever if you see nothing but wickedness and wretchedness in your selves remember mercy prevents you if you see nothing but justice and frowns in Gods face remember his faithfulness ingageth him he is faithful he cannot deny himself would he love thee so as to make thee his and will he not now love thee as his Child consider the Covenant is certain though there be a present suspension thy union to Christ is secured though actual Communion be intercepted yea real unnecessary Communion is continued though sensible manifestations be obscured for observe it the soul holds Communion with Christ by that which desertions cannot hinder salvation may be there though the joy of that salvation be gone Covenant-relation may continue without comfortable satisfaction why bast
habendum or the thing that we must have and hold Now all these are either expresly or implicitly held forth in one Scripture which is Heb. 8.10.1 Heb. 8.10 There is the parties Covenanting I and the house of Israel this is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel 2. Here is the consideration evidently implyed in these words after those days i.e. after those dayes of Types Shadows and Prophecies in the fulness of time the Messiah shall come who is the substance and will satisfie divine justice and make an Attonement 3. Here is the condition of the Covenant plainly expressed in these words I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their hearts i. e. I will give that which I require I will put within them a principle of Grace that they may love me believe in me repent for sin and obey the Gospel that 's the third 4. Here 's the grant or good to be enjoyed which is the end and result of all the former viz. I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people i.e. whatsoever I am or have or can do who am omnipotent shall be imployed for their good or whatsoever they would choose a God for or desire to be in a God that will I be to them with whom I contract this Covenant and I will own them as my peculiar people Now the mercies of the Covenant consist in these four particulars especially in the last I shall a little open these that we may the better find out the mercies wrapt in the Covenant of Grace 1. The parties that enter this Covenant are God and man Oh the infinite distance and vast disproportion quantus quantillo Heaven makes a match with earth the great Creator with a mortal creature the glorious King with a silly beggar is not this a rich mercy shall the Cedar in Lebanon contract a League not only with the contemptible shrub but with the pricking offensive thistle shall the Sun of Righteousness convey beams of love to such worthless worms yea to such stinking dung-hills shall the beauty of holiness be confederate with sorry man who is but a lump of vanity or mass of impurity Yet thus it is and this is transcendent mercy there 's mercy in a Covenant God might have dealt with man in a way of absolute soveraignty and done with man even as he pleased without giving us account of his matters but he treats with man in a rational way above the capacity of other creatures God takes man up to parly and treat with him as though he were his equal Psal 8.4 what is man that thou art thus mindful of him or the Son of man that thou visitest him this mutual stipulation is infinite condescention on Gods part and advancement on mans man only man of all the Creatures is the subject of this Covenant Angels had no need of it Devils had no hope by it bruit Creatures were not capable of it only man and fallen man hath interest in it and benefit by it Oh the mercy there is in a Covenant of reconciliation even after man had turned bankrupt spent a fair estate broken Covenant and brought himself into a desperate case that yet God should forget what was past enter into a new and better Covenant betrust him with a new stock and yet lay help not upon foolish mans weak shoulders but upon one that 's mighty to save Oh rich O transcendent Love this leads us to the second thing in this Covenant 2. The consideration paid that 's Jesus Christ Joh. 4.10 and he is eminently the gift of God such a gift as never came out of the hands of God and was never received by the hands of mortal man a rich and inriching gift a gift proceeding from love so God loved the world that he gave his Son Joh. 3.16 Christ is several wayes a gift 1. Nobis to us 1 Cor. 1.30 who of God is made unto us wisdom 2. Pro nobis for us Gal. 2.20 Who loved me and gave himself for me 3. Prae nobis before us as an example copy and pattern as he suffered for us so he left us an example 1 Pet. 2.21.4 In nobis in us so Christ is said to dwell in our hearts by faith Eph. 3.17 thus Christ is given to believers by sanctification and inhabitation of his spirit Now 't is the second way principally whereby Christ is the consideration or price paid in this new Covenant viz. as he is given for us a valuable consideration to pacifie wrath and satisfie justice thus is Jesus Christ the Lutron or price of our Redemption we are bought with a price 1 Cor. 6.20 such a price as never was paid men pay money to purchase great possessions but we were not redeemed with corruptible things as Silver and Gold but with blood yea with the precious blood of Christ 1 Pet. 1.18 19. without shedding of blood there could be no remission yet the blood of Bulls or Goats could never take away sin Heb. 9.22 12. nay the blood of all the men upon earth could never wash away the guilt of the least sin no no it must be the blood of the immaculate Lamb the blood of God so called from the union of the two natures and communication of idioms or properties and this is the price paid the Father found out a ransome 1 Tim. 2.6 and our dear Saviour gave himself a ransome certainly this is a transcendent mercy of the New Covenant I dispute not those nice Controversies whether God could not have pardoned and saved man without the consideration of Christs undertakings or how God in justice can charge guilt and torment upon an innocent person this I am sure is Gods way of saving souls and we must not dispute but believe that Jesus Christ is the Mediatour of the Covenant and the price of our Redemption as God-man and this is the Marrow of the rich mercy and deep mysterie contained in the Gospel 3. In a Covenant is contained the couditions thereof what God requires of us without which we can have no benefit by the Covenant these also are to be reckoned as mercies of the Covenant on Gods part as well as duties on our part for they are secured and effected in us as well as commanded and required by God Luther makes this to be the main difference betwixt the two Covenants the Covenant of works requires obedience but gives no strength but the Covenant of Grace ingageth the Grace of God for the Elects performance of the conditions hence it is that what the Law commandeth Quod lex imperat gratia impetrat Evangelium dat quod lex exigit Aug. de spir littera the Gospel promiseth what God requireth Christ procureth what justice demandeth our dear saviour purchaseth and worketh by his spirit in the heart faith is the great Gospel-condition whereby Christ with all his benefits become ours but faith is the
●est The principle of Grace and these mer●ies themselves are of a durable nature Grace ●s an immortal seed a never-dying root ●rincipium continuativum Joh. 7.38 He that ●elieveth in me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water though Grace is loseable in its own nature yet not in event because God upholds it the house built on the rock shall stand immovable Prov. 10.25 1 J●h 2.17 the righteous is an everlasting foundation he that doth the will of God abides for ever yea he hath eternal life abiding in him But may not they depart from God no not totally and finally for God hath put his fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from him Jer. 32.40 they may sin and provoke God to withdraw the sense of his love they may lose their standing comforts and some degrees of Grace but never be stripped naked wholly of these sure mercies of David God hath secret hold of them and they have more hold of him than others have they are restless and dissatisfied till they enjoy God and these mercies be clear to them this Golden Chain stretcheth it self from everlasting it begins in free Election and ends in final salvation whom he predestinates them he calls justifies glorifies Rom. 8.29 30. it is horrid sacriledge to pluck one link from this golden Chain God is the finisher as well as the Author of faith it is not within the compass of any finite being to rob a gracious soul of the love of God or stop the channel of his Free-Grace to the Covenanted soul Paul can make a bold and brave challenge● Rom. 8.35 38 39. Who shall separate us from the love of God and he makes a sufficient enumeration of all things that were likely to conquer the believing soul and yet concludes that in all these things we are more than conquerours through Christ there are in the word sweet promises that may answer all Arminian Cavils and unbelieving fears concerning perseverance which many choice champions have produced and managed with dexterity and success See Mr. Prins Treat of Perseverance Dr. Prid. Lect. 7. De persevsanct Dr. Ames Coron Artic. 5. De perseverantiâ CHAP. IV. 3. THE third Head to be opened is more particularly to shew what is the way of making sure these Covenant-mercies how God doth it Now there are several steps of making a thing sure amongst men and God hath used the same means and some degrees more to make these mercies sure to the Children of men 1. Men are wont to pass their word When they promise any thing upon the word of an honest man they expect credit and among men this is current and the God of Heaven is worthy to be believed upon his bare word if I may so speak for he is a God that cannot lye nor deny himself yea let God be true and every man a lyar even a Balaam is convinced of it and must profess it Numb 23.19 God is not a man that he should ly hath he said and shall he not do it or hath he spoken and shall he not make it good the unchangeable God hath ingaged his Word in the New Covenant the Patriarchs of old gave credit to all that God spake by dreams visions and revelations as Abraham Isaac and Jacob. 2. Hence Ne● 9 38. We make a sure Covenant and write it Men use to give greater evidence by subscribing their hand and putting their mind and promise into Writing hence the expression and practice of giving Letters of credence and we use to say men are mortal give it me under your hand that will abide for litera scripta manet well our gracious God hath condescended to subscribe his promises under his own hand the hand of his blessed Spirit the word of God is upon record therefore whatsoever was written it is for our learning I may add satisfaction that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope Rom. 15.4 he hath given assurance to us of these things in the word of truth for this cause was the Gospel written that we may know the certainty of these things Luk. 1.4 and that we might believe Joh. 20.31 who dare now dispute or doubt of the truth and sureness of Gospel-promises since Heaven and Earth may pass away but one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the Law till all be fulfilled Mat. 5.18 3. Men use to call in Witnesses for further confirmation some important businesses require several witnesses Deut. 19.15 it s a standing rule at the mouth of two or three witnesses shall the matter be established well the God of Heaven hath confirmed his Gospel to us by three and three witnesses there 's three in Heaven the glorious persons of the Blessed Trinity the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one one in essence though three persons 1 Job 5.7 these bear Record of Christs God-head and there are three that bear witness in earth ver 8. these testifie of Christs manhood the Spirit i. e. say some his breathing out his soul and spirit in his giving up the Ghost and water and blood that came out of his side when it was pierced with a spear that shew he was real man and that he did really dye Hanc sequor sententiam hoc loco nec puto aliam posse adduci veriorem Aretius in loc See Mar'orate in loc Aretius interprets these three latter of the spirit in the Ministry of the Word the Water of Baptism and the Blood of the Lords Supper representing Christs meritorious Blood-shed and still this interpretation further confirms the Gospel-Covenant and consequently the mercies of it 4. Men use to give assurance to others by setting to their seal hence the practice amongst us of setting a seal to bills bonds leases purchases letters patents and this seal hath usually persons cognizance or Coat of Armes or some impression upon it and leaves the impression upon the Wax the God of Heaven adds his seal there is the broad seal of the new Covenant Baptism and the Lords Supper given and appointed purposely for the confirmation of our faith and as●uring of our hearts of the truth of the pro●mises as Circumcision is called a seal of the Righteousness of faith Rom. 4.11 for by ●ese seals both the Grace of God is confirmed to us and holy impressions wrought in th● hearts of the elect there are also privy seals the seal of this blessed spirit in our hearts Ephes Eph. 4.30.2 Cor. 1 22. 1.13 sealed with that holy spir● of promise hereby Gods Children are disti●guished from wicked men and confirmed i● the truth of the Gospel yea it beareth witness with their spirit that they are the Chi●dren of God Rom. 8.16 this is an elegant sim●litude for all civil Charters and Testamen● become authentick by the addition of a sea● and the seal in ●ormer times was the note i● Letters by which
Luk. 1.3 4.2 Tim. 3.14 and Paul his Timothy Oh sirs get well assured of these things let your faith and perswasion have its full dimensions let it be deeply rooted and high built take not things upon trust let every truth have its full emphasis and efficacy upon your hearts and Consciences especially the main momentous Gospel-truths that you must venture your souls upon and live and dye by you had need consider what ground you stand upon and be fully perswaded in your own minds But so much for the second Use CHAP. VIII III. THe third Vse is of Examination to try us whether we have a real interest in these sure mercies of the Covenant it is one of the greatest questions that we can be asked whether we have a right title to Covenant-mercies alas we have forfeited our title to God or to any good thing from him by our breach of the Old Covenant and now we have nothing to do with God except only to endure the severe strokes of his sin-revenging justice Oh what need have we to try our selves by an impartial scrutiny For our better assistance in this great and weighty business I shall a little open what it is to enter into Covenant in general and then enquire what conditions of the new Covenant we can find in our hearts and then shew a little of the nature and effects of these Covenant-mercies where they are For the first to enter into Covenant with God is to own God as our God and to give up our selves wholly to him as his expressed in these words in Scripture I will be thy God and thou shalt be my people this this is the Marrow of the Covenant for God to be our God it is a comprehensive word it is substantia faederis as Funius calls it anima faederis as Pareus calls it eaput foederis as Musail the substance-soul and head of the Covenant the life of Religion is in this as one saith sweetly the goodness of duties lyes in Adverbs and the sweetness of the Covenant lyes in possessives Well then the contracting of this Covenant betwixt God and a soul consists chiefly in a mutual reddition or giving up themselves each to other expressed in Scripture by a Matrimonial contract when God gives up himself to the soul and accepts of him and the soul accepts of God as his God and gives up himself to him now we are not to enquire after the act of God for 't is fully expressed in the Scriptures and it is certainly supposed God accepts the sinner when the sinner accepts of God for these are relatives nor is this any change in God the change is only in the sinner who is now put into a new state and relation it is certain by the free offers of the Gospel that God doth consent and the main thing to be enquired into is whether the soul do consent or no for if it cordially do the match is made God and the soul are marryed which is a thing of the greatest importance in the whole World I shall purposely wave controversies in this business wherein this consent lyes whether it be only an assent See Mr. Baxt. Saints Rest Part 1. p. 177 178. an act of the understanding or it be a choice an act of the Will c. I conceive 't is an act of the whole soul whereby a poor troubled sinner discovering its forlorn estate by its breach of the Old Covenant and sad consequences thereof and discerning a possibility of a recovery and the way of reconciliation by a new Covenant contrived and contracted betwixt God and fallen man sealed and confirmed by the blood of a Mediator God-man doth freely cordially and constantly accept of God as his chiefest good and ultimate end and give up himself to him resolvedly unreservedly and universally to be the Lords to be and do what the Lord pleaseth to obey divine commands be at God's dispose in life and death and thus to continue even to the end of his days This is for a soul to enter into Covenant with the Lord the tryal will lye in these two things 1. Whether we have accepted of God as our God 2. Whether we have given up our selves to him to be at his dispose yea or no a little of both these 1. Whether have you taken the Lord to be yours or no. We are all naturally Idolaters and have our hearts glued to the Creature or something else besides God we are of those many that cry out who will shew us any good and trace the whole Creation to find satisfaction till we are weary and sit down despairing of obtaining what we seek for all the creatures are forced to eccho this unanimous vote happiness is not in me thus like Hagar we wander in this howling wilderness Gen. 21.15 16 17 18 19. till the Water of hope be spent in the bottle and our souls like Ishmael be ready to perish under the shrubs of guilt and wrath and then we sit down in sorrow ready to pine away in our iniquities loth to see or think of our own damnation lifting up our voice with bitter weeping and despair God hears and asks the troubled soul what it ailes and under these confusions he creates a blessed spring of hope in this desert-state opens the eyes ravisheth the heart with the glory of Gospel-grace draws Water of life out of the well of salvation and satisfieth the hungry soul with good things makes the ransomed sinner own that God that thus owns him in a time of need and to cry out as repenting Israel once O Lord our God other Lords besides thee have had dominion over us but by thee only will we make mention of thy name Isa 26.13 or as David Psal 73.25 whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee my flesh and my heart faileth but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever ver 26. as if the poor soul should say I have been long seeking contentment here below but I see by sad experience all things fail there 's vanity and vexation writ upon the sweetest comforts under the Moon I have laid out much labour for that which profits not I am weary with my disappointments I will return to my first Husband return unto thy rest O my soul God alone is the most yea the only suitable and satisfying rest of my wandring and bewildred soul let others go a whoring from God to creature-props 't is good for me to draw nigh to God I am undone without him I am sick of love for him woe is me what shall I do if my soul get not an interest in God I faint I dye I am damned Lord put me not off without thy self let nothing take up my heart besides thee let all the pleasures profits honours of the World go whither they will so I may have my God I can set one God against them all if God
I am only thine and wholly thine take me as thine and make me less mine own and that will be my happiness and I shall be fitter for thy service I dare not part stakes betwixt thy self and any other for I see I cannot serve two contrary Masters I will not give my faculties or members any more as instruments of unrighteousness chain my soul to thee unite my heart to fear 〈◊〉 name This or such like is the language 〈◊〉 a Covenanting-soul and there can be no Covenant without this intireness and compleat resignation hence are those multitudes of expressions that call for a seeking God with the whole heart Deut. 4 29. c. 65. and a loving God with all the heart soul c. and serving God with all the heart yea this is the summ of all that God requires of us Deut. 10.12 O try then hath the spirit of God beat down every strong hold and vain imagination and brought over your hearts wholly to the Lord what say you is every nook and creek of your hearts delivered up to this great and mighty Conquerour is there no Creature-comfort or sensual pleasure that hath stollen away your hearts from your dearly beloved deal faithfully with your souls on this behalf there is no dallying with the searcher of your hearts 2 Have you given up your hearts and selves irrevocably irreversibly finally there 's no playing fast and loose with the great God you must not give and take again that 's fools play but you must be for ever the Lords all your days devote your selves to keep his commandments unto the end not like some servants that will keep to their Masters as long as they like or while they please them but this is a boaring through the ear to be the Lord's servants for ever it 's a marriage that lasts for term of life I will call upon him saith David as long as I live Psal 116.2 it is the hollow-hearted Hypocrite that ends his Religion before he have ended his days that puts his hand to the Plow and looks back that falls off when tribulation comes but a Covenanting spirit is a constant spirit whose house are we saith the Apostle if we hold fast the confidence and the rejoycing of the hope firmly unto the end Heb. 3.6 it is the end that crowns the action Solomon saith the end of a thing is better than the beginning Christ saith if ye continue in my word then are ye my disciples indeed Col. 1.23.1 Tim. 4.16 Jam. 1.25 Joh. 8.31 and many Scriptures make this a condition without which no salvation and though the end is not yet come yet is it the desire and design of your souls to pray and read and serve God all your days you do not you dare not set bounds limits to your obedience but say as David Psal 71.14 I will hope continually and will yet praise thee more and more q. d. I am so far from casting away my hope and faith that I will continue yea and increase in the exercises of Religion do you resolve with David to keep Gods Law continually yea for ever and ever Psal 119.44 and praying still for supporting Grace v. 117. using all the rest of God's appointed means for your perseverance to the end Thus I have dispatcht this part of the tryal which is general to try whether we be entred into Covenant with God by these reciprocal acts of giving and receiving whether you have taken God for your God and given up your selves to him as Covenanted souls are wont to do give me leave for a close of this head to summ up the most that I have said in the Divine Poem of that incomparable sweet Singer of our Israel Mr. George Herbert in the Clasping of hands pag. 151. Lord thou art mine and I am thine If mine I am and thine much more Then I or ought or can be mine Yet to be thine doth me restore So that again I now am mine And with advantage mine the more Since this being mine brings with it thine And thou with me dost thee restore If I without thee would be mine I neither should be mine nor thine Lord I am thine and thou art mine So mine thou art that something more I may presume thee mine then thine For thou didst suffer to restore Not thee but me and to be mine And with advantage mine the more Since thou in death wast none of thine Yet thee as mine didst me restore O be mine still still make me thine Or rather make no Thine and Mine More particularly I intreat you to enquire into the conditions of the new Covenant or the graces and dispositions promised therein and lay your hand on your heart and enquire whether they be really in you such as these 1. I told you saving illumination is one great Covenant-condition Jer. 31.33 hath the Lord discovered to you the great and good things of his Gospel opened to you his blessed treasury and annointed your eyes to behold all things in their lively colours have you got a clear discovery of the nature of sin duty misery mercy the creatures vanity Christ's beauty and excellency have you with an Eagle-eye pierced into deep Gospel-mysteries this is not a brain-knowledge consisting in notion but an experimental spiritual acquaintance with the things of God weighting the soul with the sense thereof and leading it into the life and soul of Scripture-truths so that a Christian now sees Divine things after another manner than ever before and is led into all truth by the blessed Spirit God promiseth that all the Churches Children shall be taught of God Isa 54.13 which Scripture our Saviour doth cite and interpret Joh. 6.45 of believing or coming to God every one therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me Ah Christians have you learned this choice Gospel-lesson of going out of your selves and closing with a naked Christ upon pure Gospel-terms this is the great lesson of the Gospel have you learned it you are dunces and deserve to be kickt out of Christ's school unless you have learned this great and sweet lesson Besides God teacheth many other lessons as to hate sin love God and holiness and to love God's Children Hence saith blessed Paul 1 Thes 4.9 as touching brotherly love ye need not that I write unto you for ye your selves are taught of God to love one another this divine nature prompteth souls to this they cannot do otherwise except they put off their very nature for a Christian may find his heart secretly and sensibly carryed out to all things and persons that have the stamp and image of God as the very name and the common nature of a Brother is potent and prevalent to attract the affections Cathedram habet in Coelis qui corda docet Quando deus est ma●ister q●àm cito do itur quod do●itur Aug. the truth is he hath his Chair in Heaven that thus teacheth hearts and if God
be the teacher he makes apt and able nimble and notable Scholars Oh Christians see and try your learning enquire who is your master 2. Another disposition like this or indeed a fruit of the former is God's writing his Law in our hearts Jer. 31.33 Heb. 8.10 10.16 he promiseth to put his Law into their inward parts and write it in their hearts so that as Talley answers to Talley Indenture to Indenture Face to Face so the heart shall eccho and answer to the Word of God and feel something within his own bosome that joynes issue with the word without so that a gracious soul can now say with Paul Rom. 7.12 16. I consent to the Law that it is good whatever I be the commandment is holy just and good a carnal heart riseth up in Rebellion against the word and secretly loaths a spiritual command and could wish it even razed out of the Bible that it might sin more freely but a gracious soul loves that word best that restrains corruption most and binds it closest in new obedience hence saith David thy word is very pure therefore thy servant loves it Psal 119.140 Praest●a ●i cor tuum molle tractabile custodi figuram quae te figuravit Artifex habens in semetipso humorem ne induratus amittas vestigia digitorum ejus Iraen advers Haer. lib. 4. prop. fin the stricter the Word is the better I love it I would have the Law of God restrain the exorbitancies of my heart and life it doth me good to be kept in for I have a wild and wayward heart Oh how glad am I of a word that searcheth curbeth and cutteth off my extravagant branches I willingly fall under it and bless God for it as one of the greatest mercies of my life can you say thus when there is a controversie betwixt a pinching word and a repining lust whether do you vote for which do you give your voice for and plead on the behalf of can you not take God's part and the words part against a naughty deceitful heart or do you pick quarrels with the statutes of Heaven when you should obey it Ah sirs try your selves in this and if you find that you have a counterpane of Gods Word within you a transcript of this blessed Copy in your hearts then are you within the Covenant 3. God promiseth to give his people in Covenant with him one heart and one way Jer. 32.39 this imports both an oneness of heart within it self and also an oneness of heart with other Saints before Conversion the heart was divided and distracted betwixt various objects God must have part Satan part sin part and the world another part of the heart but now the soul gives it self wholly to God as I have opened hence David prays unite my heart to fear thy name Psal 86.11 or make my heart one a real Saint is fully intirely universally given up to God but of this before likewise the Covenant of Grace makes Christians unanimous hence it is that as soon as souls have given up themselves to God they essay to joyn themselves to their fraternity Act. 9.26 and unite with the Society of sincere believers hence the primitive Saints were together with one accord Act. 2.46 cap. 4.32 yea they were of one heart and of one soul as the Curtains of the Tabernacle were coupled with loops so were Christians with love hence you hear so often mention made of fellowship in the Gospel Phil. 1.5 Eph. 2.21 and Gods Children are compared to a building fitly framed together by the cement of the Spirit yea to members of the body with relation to the head Col. 2.19 from whom i.e. Christ the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted Ephes 4.16 Well then sirs are you united and become one with the rest of the Saints though you cannot attain to a oneness in judgement in every lesser truth about Discipline c. yet are you one with them in heart and affection Yea of one judgement and way with them in main material points of doctrine and practice having one Lord Eph. 4.3 4 5. one faith one Baptism endeavouring to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace cannot you say to others come let us joyn our selves to the Lord in a perpetual Covenant Jer. 50.4 5. that shall not be forgotten are not your hearts glad when you see any come in and Worship the Lord how stand your ●earts affected towards such as fear God ●re you of one heart with them can you ●heerfully walk in one way with them as ●our sweetest companions is your chief ●ontent in these truly excellent ones then ●ou are in Covenant 4. The fear of God is a gracious disposition promised to new-covenant Converts Jer. 32.40 I will saith God Job 28 28. put my fear ●n their hearts that they shall not depart from ●e this fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom and 't is often put for all Religion it is a holy reverential awefulness wrought in a believers heart whereby through a serious sense of Gods glorious Majesty and tender mercy the soul is afraid ●o offend God and careful to please him as ● Child is his Father by a conscientious obedience to all Gods commands I cannot stand to open this fully but bring you to the ●est Christians doth the fear of God pos●ess and seize upon your spirits doth it make you men of truth hating covetousness Exod. 28.21 Heb. 12.28 doth it ingage your souls to serve him with reverence and godly fear doth it make you afraid of his threatnings Prov. 3 7. Psa● 5.7 fearful to offend him careful to please him do you worship him in his fear Prov. 14.26 Prov. 23.17 Mat. 10 28. Phil. 2.12 Isa 66.2 Isa 50.11 doth it make you run to him as your hope and confidence are your souls in the fear of the Lord all the day long doth the fear of God cast out the slavish fear of men doth it make you work out your salvation with fear and trembling doth it make you tremble at his word and willing to obey the voice of his servants doth it keep you humble self-denying from being proud high-minded Rom. 11.20 Rev. 14.7 Act 10.35 Prov. 14.16 do you fear God and give glory to him in seeing his works in a word do you fear God and work righteousness fear God and hate wickedness is it thus with your souls lay your hand upon your heart and seriously answer these questions I know you 'l all say you have the fear of God but whether hath it these Prophecies and one word more whence springs this fear of God doth it flow not only from the apprehension of God's Majesty and strict justice but from the sence of his free-grace and goodness so God saith in Hos 3.5 they shall fear the Lord and his goodness so saith David Psal 130.4 there is mercy with thee that thou
maist be feared Oh this is kindly when the sense of Gods love awes the soul to obedience and works upon it tenderness of Conscience that it can say I dare not grieve so good a God or offend so loving a Father who never did me hurt who is always doing me good shall I render evil for good God forbid this is Child-like and ingenuous and doth demonstrate a Covenant-relation 5. Sanctification is another Covenant-promise Ezek. 36.25 then will I sprinkle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean from all your filthiness and from all your Idol● will I cleanse you this is a sweet disposition what can you say to it not that the soul in this life can be free from the remainders of corruption for what is man that ●e should be clean but the power Job 15.14 strength and Dominion of sin is crushed in a Covenanted soul so that it may be truly said of the Regenerate that he hath a clean heart Psal 24.4 Joh. 13.10 and clean hands and Christ saith his Disciples were clean all except Judas Well then ●hath the good Word of God made you holy Joh. 15.3 and cleansed your hearts do you desire to make clean the inside of the Cup as well as out-side I mean do you cleanse your selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit resolving to perfect holiness in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 Job 17.9 are you growing stronger and stronger he that ●hath clean hands doth renew his strength are you washed from your idols i. e. the sin to which you are most addicted Psal 18.23 and keep your selves from your own iniquity can you say you hate every false way can you cut off a right-hand sin pluck out a right-eye sin though never so dear and useful pleasant and profitable do you resist and conquer in some measure your master-lusts so that you can say through grace Rom. 6.14 sin hath not Dominion over you though you feel to your cost it hath possession in you can you say you are prepared for duties and ordinances 2 Chron. 30.19 Act. 15.9 Psal 119.9 though you be not cleansed according to the purification of the sanctuary doth faith in God's promises purifie your hearts do you cleanse your ways by observing Scripture-precepts Psal 51.10 do you pray hard for a clean heart as well as clear state Oh sirs try your selves in these things unless you be sanctified you are not justified many are undone through self-deceit in this case Solomon saith there is a generation that are pure in their own eyes yet is not cleansed from their filthiness Prov. 30.12 take heed of this and labour to evidence your justification by your sanctification 6. Another gracious effect of the New Covenant is A new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36.26 this is an holy disposition an habit of grace the image of God the Divine nature strangely changing altering metamorphosing the soul casting it into a new mold and turning the stream and current of the souls motions and affections into another channel to a complyance with God's will and a tendency towards Heaven and the things of Heaven this is a wonderful act and fruit of God's free-grace and sanctifying spirit and oh what a change doth it produce in the heart and life not only a mental change to have the mind adorned with some general truths in a notional way so that whereas before a man was an ignorant Sot now he is grown a knowing person and learned discourser or disputant nor yet is it only a moral change whereby a man formerly a notorious offender is grown an exact Civilian nor yet a formal change by which a careless neglecter is become a constant performer of religious duties which is good so far yet no more than an hypocrite may do Simon Magus believes Herod doth many things Ahab fasts Judas can Pray and Preach But the new creature goes beyond them all for 't is a Cordial Spiritual Evangelical change of the whole man to what is good so that now the soul hath new motions actions conversation a new rule a new principle a new end new affections new loves and delights a new light and life new heat and strength new companions and acquiescence new griefs fears burdens back hopes hatred desires and expectations old things are past away and behold all things are become new so that it may well be called a new Creation 2 Cor. 5.17 Christians try your selves in this what work of God hath passed upon your souls have you a new heart are you made holy as God is holy doth this new heart hate and expel sin doth it close with real Saints as Saints doth it breathe after Grace in the souls of relations neighbours doth it make you sensible of the smilings and hidings of God's face doth it raise your hearts to heavenly objects and delights doth Grace in some measure g●●w thrive increase and come on in your souls do you Worship God in a spiritual manner and long for Communion with him here and in Heaven 7. A soft heart is promised in the new Covenant Ezek. 36.26 I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and give you an heart of flesh i. e. a soft broken and tender heart a flexible plyant and melting disposition not so much the eyes pouring floods of tears for that may proceed from a natural constitution but a soul grieved for sin as offence against God which lyes in the sinners account and estimation looking upon it as the greatest evil and worse than the worst affliction and if it were to do again he would rather be torn to pieces than willingly commit such a sin he would give all the World if in his power that it were undone again and therefore is it that the Scripture rather expresseth it by mourning than by weeping for weeping is rather a passionate act of the outward senses and irascible faculties though 't is desirable to give vent to inward sorrow by outward tears but mourning is an heart-contrition and hearty compunction for sin as dishonouring God grieving his Spirit Crucifying his Son and violating his holy and righteous Law well then have you soft and tender hearts i. e. can you lay to heart your sins as the greatest evils that ever befell you can you justifie God if he should condemn you can you condemn your selves as worthy to be damned in Hell for ever do you loath your selves for all your abominations can you wish you had been upon the rack when you committed such sins are you weary and heavy laden with the intolerable burden of the guilt of sin and what would you give or leave to have it taken off is your heart sensible of the absolute need you have of Jesus Christ are you soft and plyable to Gods holy will attentive to Divine motions retentive of Divine impressions doth the least hint of God's mind find in you an observant spirit when God saith seek
with them whatever they partake of a curse meets them in it whoever they are with a curse attends them Oh fearful state it was sad to be under the curse of a mortal man C ham found his Father Noah's curse heavy but oh how heavy is the curse of Almighty God who with a word can send the soul into Hell and follow his stroke into another World dear friends who would live in this cursed state another hour on the contrary whosoever hath these mercies of the Covenant hath all blessings blessed yea and also crosses and in a sort curses are turned into blessings who would not be covetous of such a state But to hasten 3. Without these Covenant-mercies the soul is not accepted in its choicest duties neither person nor performance is owned by God it is only upon a Covenant-account that any are accepted indeed in the Covenant of works the person was accepted for the works sake but in the Covenant of Grace God accepts the person first then the work if the man be in Christ then the offering is taken in good part though it be but a Turtle-dove or young Pigeon though but a sigh or groan God takes a Posie of Flowers of sweet-smelling Graces though mixed with stinking Weeds and pricking Bryars of vanity and corruption gathered by a Child and perfumed by Christs Mediation and is better pleased therewith than with the most odoriferous gifts of uncoverted souls where the heart is destitute of Covenant graces Prov. 15.8 alas the prayer of the wicked is abomination to God the great and jealous God challengeth the wicked man that hath not Covenant-mercies in his heart for taking Covenant-promises into his mouth Psal 50.16 17. What hast thou to do saith God q. d. thou poor graceless sinner thou profanest my holy name and provokest the eyes of my glory in the works and worship by which thou thinkest thou dost most honour and pleasest me in the state wherein thou art I cannot endure to look towards thee I abhorr thy person and performance thy costly incense is a smoak in my nose I can see through thy painted beauty at thy rotten inside thy guilded Eloquence and Rhetorical Flourishes are no more to me than the roaring of Bears or howling of Doggs get out of my sight thou sorry whining hypocrite all thy duties are as Cyphers and signifie nothing except the Mediatour as the principal and only figure be set before them and the spirit of God write and indite them which are two of the greatest mercies of the new Covenant Ah sirs God doth despise the most melodious Tunes of wicked men Psal 51.17 but a broken and contrite heart he despiseth not that 's sweet Musick in his blessed ●ears for a broaken heart is a Covenant-mercy these mercies are brave Ornaments ●o believing souls and render them lovely and amiable in the sight of God every penitent Tear is a rich Pearl every Prayer pierceth Heaven and fetcheth down abundant incomes from the Throne of Grace Oh what a difference do these mercies make ●n persons performances and acceptance with God 4. Without these mercies you have no solid ground of peace comfort or satisfaction for without these you are not only under the sentence of condemnation but ●ou have no real ground to hope that the sentence shall not be executed this very ●our 't is a wonder to think that graceless ●ouls should be so merry that are hanging over the pit of Hell but by the rotten ●read of a mortal life Oh how suddenly ●ay this brittle glass be broken and they ●e gone for ever for ought they know ●hen they go to bed God may say as ●ce he did to one as rich and secure as ●ese sensual sots this night shall thy soul 〈◊〉 required from thee 't is a wonder to me ●ow souls can rest quietly that are conscious to themselves or groundedly suspect they are not in Covenant with God and so know not that they shall be another moment out of Everlasting torments Red●e praevaricatores ad cor inhaerete ei qui sacit vos state cum to stab●tis requiescite in eo q●ie●i eritis Quo itis in aspectu q●o itis bonum quod amatis ab illo est sed quantum est illum bonom est ad suave Vid Aug. conf lib. 4. c. 12. but God leaves them to seared Consciences and Satan and the World joyn with their deceitful lusts to lull them asleep till God awake them by true repentance or eternal vengeance but God hath ● time to shake the foundations of this bastard-peace and set the soul upon the sure bottom of Covenant-relation and interest in Jesus Christ which only brings true content and comfort peace that passeth understanding joy in the Holy Ghost and a sweet Sabbath of refreshment to the tossed soul here the noble soul may as i● were terminate its desires and expatiate its largest faculties upon its only portion God in Covenant and thence will resul● continual ground of triumph and exaltation for these mercies are suitable and adaequate to the immortal soul and will support i● under greatest outward pressures and i● the hour of death therefore I may conclude this Exhortation with ver 2. of this Chapter Wherefore do you spend your money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not hearken diligently unto me and cat ye that which is good an● let your soul delight it self in fatness 5. These mercies of the Covenant will render your condition safe whatever befalls you we little know what may befall us betwixt this and the grave who knows what a day may bring forth man is born to trouble a Saint is born again to more bad news may come as Jobs Messengers treading in each others steps losses and crosses may put us on sad discouragements Oh but now to have a Covenanted God a Christ and all the fore-mentioned Covenant-mercies to solace the soul what mercy will this be when the true Christian can say I am my beloved's and my beloved is mine my flesh and heart fail but God is the strength of my heart and my portion for ever let the Sea roare Men rage Heavens look black and Earth tremble I lye at Anchor in a sure Port I trust in God Psal 112.7 Psal 46.1 2. and fear no evil tidings from below God is my refuge and help yea my present help in time of trouble evils shall either miss me or mend me all winds blow my soul nearer my Haven all dispensations hitch me a step nearer Heaven for all things work together for my good my Covenanted God will teach me to profit by Word Rod by Mercys Crosses Ordinances Providences God is my Sun and Shield to enlighten me in times of darkness to protect me in times of danger he will command a guard of Angels to attend me yea his wings shall cover me his comforts shall refresh my soul he will guide me here