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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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flagging helps them in their sinking and falling upholds them Therefore also Gods right hand is called the right hand of Majestie Heb. 1. 3. and the right hand of power Luk. 22. 69. To sit properly betokeneth a site of body opposite to standing or moving but figuratively it signifieth to rest stay dwell inhabite rule or governe as Psal 27. 4. One thing have I desired of the Lord that I will seeke after that I may sit or dwell in the house of the Lord all the dayes of my life 1 King 1. 30. He shall sit upon my See Luke 24. 49. Ruth 1. 4. Matt. 23. 2. throne in my stead Prov. 20 8. A King that sitteth in the throne of judgement scattereth away all evill with his eyes Isai 16. 5. And in m●rcy shall the throne be established and he shall sit upon it in truth To stand or sit at the right hand is an usuall phrase in Scripture By the former divers things are not●d First to resist oppose or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hinder the endeavours of any one Psal 109. 6. Let Sat●n stand at his right hand scil to stay or hinder that it might not move to infringe or weaken his endeavours Zech. 3. 1. And he shewed me Ioshua the high Priest standing before the Angel of the Lord and Satan standing at his right hand to resist him Secondly to assist defend protect against enemies and manifold Vid. 1 Chron. 6. 30. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 16. 10. dangers whereunto men are subject He shall stand at the right hand of the poore to save him from those that cond●mne his soule Psal 109. 31. I have set the Lord alwayes before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved Thirdly they are said to stand at the right hand that obtaine the next degree of honour with him at whose hand they are said to stand Psal 45. 9. Vpon thy right hand did stand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Queen in gold of O phyr For the second Great Kings and Princes doe set them at their right hands whom they specially love favour or honour and whom they mind to advance to the chiefe degrees of power and authority under them or to be as it were in their stead and in office to represent their person The King rose up to meet Bathsheba and bowed himselfe unto her and sate down on his Throne and caused a seat to be set for the Kings mother and she sate on his right hand Ad dextram Dei sedere est proximam post Deum potesta tem habere Verbum sedere Regni significat potestatem Hieron in Eph. cap. 1. 1 King 2. 19. To sit on my right hand and on my left is not mine to give but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of my Father Matth. 20. 21 23. By Christs sitting at the right hand of his Father is noted that great honour and glory plenitude of power and judiciarie office or dominion which God the Father hath given unto his Sonne after his manifestation in the flesh in his Nativity and justification by the Spirit in his Resurrection for then amongst other dignities he was received up into glory 1 Tim. 3. 10. It may be described the highest and supreme degree of Christs exaltation wherein he hath received of the Father excellent glory dignity power and dominion and is actually made the head of his Church and Lord and Ruler of all things both in heaven and earth Who is gone into heaven and is on the right hand of God Angels and authorities and powers being made subject unto him 1 Pet. 3. 22. He hath s●t him on his own right hand in the heavenly places farre above all principalities and power and ●ight and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come And hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be head over all things to the Church Eph. 1. 20 21 22. Th●u hast put all things in subjection under him he left nothing that is not yet put under him Heb. 2. 7 8 9. Vnto which of the Angels said he at any time Sit on my right hand Heb. 1. 13. which the Apostle expounds He must raigne till he hath put all enemies under his feet 1 Cor. 15. 25. By this sitting at the right hand of the Father not the propriety of his humane nature but the exceeding glorious state of his person is signified We have such an high Priest who is set on the right hand of the throne of the Majestie in the heavens Heb. 8. 1. Set downe at the right hand of the throne of God Heb. 12. 2. His divine nature could not possibly receive any intrinsecall improvement or glory all fulnesse of glory essentially belonging thereunto but so farre forth as it was humbled for the administration of his office so farre it was re-advanced He emptied and humbled himselfe not by emptying and putting off his divine glory but by suffering it to be over-shadowed with the similitude of sinfull flesh and to be humbled under the forme of a servant and he is magnified at Gods right hand as he doth manifest and shew forth his divine glory in his humane nature which before was covered and shadowed therewith as with a vaile And how-ever we cannot say the Deity or divine nature was exalted in any other sense then by evident manifestation of it selfe in that man who was before despised and accused as a blasphemer for that he made himselfe equall with God yet by reason of the communication of properties from one nature to another in the unity of one person it is true that as God saved the world by his bloud and the Prince of life was crucified and the Lord lay in the Grave so God was at the right hand of Majestie exalted again The humane nature of Christ is most highly exalted as he hath obtained a new eminencie and dignity over all creatures which in respect of his humane nature he never had before he hath an ample and immediate claime to all that glory which might in the humane nature be conferred upon him This glory dignity and dominion Christ received from his Father according to his eternall decree and Covenant He sits at the right hand of his Father and from his Father he received his power authority and rule Christ is a King both by the providence and by the good will and immediate consecration of his Father The Father loveth the Sonne and hath given all things into his hand Ioh. 3. 35. He judgeth Dan. 7. 14. Matth. 11. 27. Joh. 17 2. no man but hath committed all judgement to his Sonne Ioh. 5. 22. that is hath entrusted him with the actuall administration of that power in the Church which originally belonged unto himselfe He hath made him to be Lord and Christ Act. 2. 36. and raised him up to sit on his throne ver 30.
John the Baptist put over his hearers to Christ Joh. 1. 26 27. Luke 3. 16. Mark 1. 7 8. Matth. 3. 11 12. Christ invites men to the Kingdome of Heaven that is the Evangelicall Government of the Church as future at hand but not yet present Matth. 4. 17. Mark 1. 15. Nay after he was risen from the dead although he professe openly and plainly to his Disciples that all power was given unto him in Heaven and earth and he command them to preach the Gospell to every creature Matth. 28. 18 19. yet he gives them a charge to tarry at Jerusalem to waite for the accomplishment of the promise concerning the solemne sending of the holy Ghost and to be endued with power from above Luk 24. 49. as if they were designed before but then to be inaugurated and by extraordinary gifts many hearing and beholding openly to be approved The dayes immediately following the death and resurrection of Christ were the dayes of the Churches widowhood wherein she sate for a while destiture and comfortlesse and barren having neither power to beare nor to bring forth children But within ten dayes after Christ the Lord the Bridegroome of the Church had ascended from earth to Heaven in glory the holy Ghost came downe upon the Apostles in visible shape in token that Christs Church was now betrothed unto him and had received strength to conceive and bring forth and breasts replenished with plenty of Milk to nourish and feed her children This was as the Solemnization of the Marriage and then did the barren begin to rejoyce that she should be the mother of many children From this time properly the New Testament tooke its beginning The nature of this Testament stands principally in three things 1. In the kinde of Doctrine plaine full and meerly Evangelicall 2. In freedome from the curse of the Law and freedome from Legall Rites 3. In the amplitude and enlargement of the new Church throughout all Nations of the world It may be described the free Covenant which God of his rich grace in Jesus Christ incarnate crucified dead buried raised up to life and ascended into Heaven hath made and plainly revealed unto the world of Jew and Gentile promising to be their God and Father by right of Redemption and Christ to be their Saviour to pardon their sinne heale their nature adopt them to be his Sonnes protect them from all evill that may hurt furnish them with all needfull good things spirituall and temporall and crown them with everlasting glory in the world to come if they repent of their iniquities beleeve in Christ and through or by Christ in him and walk before him in sincere constant and conscionable obedience which he doth inwardly sease by the witnesse of the holy Spirit who is the earnest of their inheritance in the hearts of the faithfull and ratifie and confirme by outward seales universall plain easie and perpetuall The Author of this Covenant is God in Jesus Christ for none can make these promises but God none can make them good but his Highnesse Therefore the Lord doth evermore challenge this unto himself that he is the maker of the Covenant And as it is Jer. 31. 1 31 32 33. called our Covenant in respect of the conditions required Zech. 9. 11. So it is called the Lords Covenant because he hath made and will establish it If ye can break my Covenant of the day and my Covenant of the night c. Then may also my Covenant be broken Jer. 33. 20 21. with David my servant Christ also as Mediatour is both the foundation and Author of this Covenant as he is appointed of the Father Lord and King advanced at the right hand of God to give repentance and remission of sinnes unto Israel and as Testatour Heb. 9. 16. he hath confirmed the Covenant by his death But of this in the next Chapters God is both the Author of this Covenant and one partie confederate Fathers we know seldome frame Indentures thereby to bind themselves what they will doe for their children if they will be obedient but by right of Fatherhood they challenge of them their best service Lords and great personages seldome indent with their free servants what preferment they shall expect after some terme of service and attendance but if they look for reward they must stand at their courtesie But our Lord and Master to whom we owe our selves by right of Creation who might take advantage against us for former disobedience is content to undertake and indent with us and by Indenture to bind himself to bestow great things and incomprehensible upon us if we will accept his kindnesse and bind our selves unto him in willing and sincere obedience If you demand a reason of this dealing none can be given but the meere grace and rich mercy and love of God Thus saith the Ezek. 36. 22. Lord God I doe not this for your sakes O house of Israel but for mine holy Names sake I will cause you to passe under the rod and I will bring you into the bond of the Covenant c. And ye shall know Ezek. 20. 37. that I am the Lord when I shall bring you into the Land of Israel c. And there ye shall remember your wayes and all your doings wherein 42. 43. you have been defiled and ye shall lothe your selves in your own sight for all your evils that you have committed And ye shall know that I am the Lord when I have wrought with you for my Names sake not according to your wicked wayes nor according to your corrupt doings Man can doe nothing of himself to procure his spirituall good In spirituall things it fareth with him much what as with a child new borne into the world which being naked can neither provide cloathes nor being provided and laid by him can put them on for man destitute of all spirituall goodnesse can neither move to helpe himself untill it be freely bestowed nor manage and wield it well when it is of grace vouchsafed without direction and assistance from God And there is as little worth or dignity in man to move God to promise him help as there is ability in man to procure help There is nothing in man to move God to shew mercy but only misery which might be an occasion but can be no cause either why mercy is promised or salvation granted If man had not fallen from grace and state of Innocency God had never sent his Sonne to redeeme him nor shewed mercy reaching to the pardon and covering of his iniquity If he had not lost himself Christ had never come to find and restore him if he had not wounded himself he had not been healed and repaired of grace Man then is a subject on whom God bestowes grace and in whom he works it and his m●sery an occasion that the Lord took of manifesting his mercy in succouring and lifting him up out of that distresse but the free
Covenant how they differ viz. eight wayes p. 32. Christ more darkly revealed in the Covenant of promise and why ib. Covenant of promise when it began and how long it continued 36. The degrees of it ib. the parts of it 43. who contained under it 45. the Covenant of promise whether made in Adam with every infant that should be born into the world p 46. Covenant of grace as manifested to Abraham p. 47. what peculiarly to be observed therein ib. the grand promises of it 53. the temporall promises 54. Covenants personall family-Covenants and nationall p. 52. Covenant with Abraham how confirmed p. 90. All are not in Covenant in one manner p. 91. Covenant of grace under Moses till the return out of the Captivity p. 92. Covenant of works whether made with man fallen 93. Obscurity among Divines in differencing the old Covenant and new 95. Covenant made with Israel particularly explicated and what Moses brought to the further expressure of the Covenant of grace 122. Gods Covenant with David 143. c. In this Covenant Christ more cleerly manifested then before 144. The things promised in this Covenant 146 147. The condition of it 149. The execution of this Covenant 150 151. c. In this Covenant some things promised absolutely some conditionally 152 153. Two things to be considered in this Covenant 154. Covenant made with Israel after the Babylonish Captivity 156. c. The promises of this Covenant 158 159. c. In what sense this Covenant may be called new 161. Wherein this Covenant exceeded the former which God made when he brought them out of Egypt 161 162 163. Of the new Covenant or Testament and how God hath revealed himself therein 194. See New Testament D DOubting what the right course to take with him that doubts whether he should beleeve because of his former transgressions 226 Dead to what purpose invitations made to them that are dead in sins 244 Death inflicted on none but sinners or him that beareth the person of a sinner 276 Debt a two-fold paying of a debt 290 Decree of God to punish sin the reason of it 276 E ELect are in grace with God in respect of Ordination and appointment though after brought into grace by Christ by actuall collation and communication 292 Examination of our selves necessary p. 87. a meanes to attain and preserve uprightnesse 188 Exhortations to all import not a generall purchase of salvation for all 208 209. they are usefull both to them that have received the truth and to them that have not 209. to what purpose exhortations and invitations are to perswade men to believe that have no power 247 Externall blessings more esteemed of under the Covenant of promise and why p. 34 F FAith why not expressely required in the Covenant of nature p. 12. Faith which the righteousnesse of nature presupposeth how it differs from the faith required in the Covenant of grace p. 12. Faith the alone cause on our part required of justification and salvation 18. In what sense it is imputed for righteousnesse 63. Three divers opinions of orthodox Divines about the imputation of Faith 64. 65 66 Faith hath not the place of our righteousnesse but doth answer in our participation of Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers of Adams sinne 67 68. Though faith be commanded in the law it followeth not that being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the law 114. Faith whether that Christ as be died to impetrate remission of sin for me in particular be the object of justifying faith 227. Faith justifying is not without an apprehension of mercy in Christ to be obtained but implyeth not an apprehension of mercy in the pardon of sin already obtained 227 Faithfull all of the same faith with Abraham 91 Father though the same work be done by Father and Son yet a difference in the manner of working 268 Fathers before Christ and Christians in the time of the Gospell under the same Covenant for substance 26 Fellowes how the faithfull are called Christs fellowes 311 Fellowship with the Saints a signe means of uprightnesse 188 Fulnesse of grace of two sorts 311 G GIving doth not alwayes import an act of grace p. 61 Gospell why meet that the promise should goe before it 32. Grace bestowed more plentifully under the Gospell how to be understood 35. Gospell in what sense called everlasting 37. How faith is said to come by the Gospell seeing it was commanded in the law 113. The law as given to the Jewes not opposite to the Gospell ib. Gospell strictly taken or the new Testament when it took its beginning 197 198. Good that the intellectuall nature is capable of is double 313 Graces how given by the hand of the Apostles how by Christ 320 Guile of our spirits how to finde it out 187. c. how to take up our selves for it 192 H HAnd right hand what it signifieth in Scripture 303 Head how Christ is the head to his body 318 Heart a double heart what 185. signes of a good heart ibid. Heathens some remainders of Gods Image in them and many temporall blessings vouchsafed them whence it cōmeth to passe 13 Heaven The fathers that died before Christ had not that perfect state in heaven that now they have we are presently possessed of and in heaven they did expect their redeemer 35 36. The Kingdome of Heaven not expressely mentioned in the old Testament 132 Heavenly things wrapt up under earthly in the old Testament 33 Humane nature of Christ most highly exalted 305. Christ as man hath a prerogative above every creature 214. He is set above all principality and power and dominion and what signified hereby 214. He hath a power above every creature 215. The man Christ is King of heaven and earth 216. yet this power is not infinite simply ibid. Humanity of Christ whether to be adored 321 I IEhovah what it denoteth 123 Jewes why made a nationall Church 92. they had a double vail ●ver their eyes 120. An illustrious type of election in them 33 Incarnation of Christ whether necessary to goe before its effects and benefits 28. Incarnation of Christ the day of his coronation and espousals 294 Impute what it signifieth in Scripture 60 61. Imputation of a good thing three wayes 62. Imputation and reputation how differ ib. Certain corollaries about imputation See Faith 62 Infants holy by Covenant 52 Integrity see Vprightnesse the necessity of it 80 81 82 83. It sets a faire glosse upon the meanest actions 83. The effects and fruits of it 85. Meanes to attain it 86 87 88. How a Christian is to stir up himself to attain Integrity 88 89 c. Impotency of man such that he can neither move to any thing of himselfe that is good nor manage grace when vouchsafed 199. Impossible how that which is impossible may be an object of Gods desire and approbation 245. Innocent whether an Innocent person ought to suffer
fall by whom not only the Elect but the whole frame of nature received benefit In the Creation God raised up a great Family wherein he made Adam the head and all his posterity inhabitors the frame of Heaven and Earth his domicile the creatures his servants this Family upon the fall was broken up the present Master turned out of his imployments the children beggered the servants returning to God their Soveraigne and the whole frame of the creature under attainder God thus defeated if I may so speake sets up a second Family called the Family of Heaven and Earth wherein Jesus Christ the womans seed Gen. 3. 19. is the Head Matth. 28. 18. Ephes 1. 22. Col. 1. 19 20. stiled the second Adam Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth and that with more soveraignty and amplitude of injoyment then ever the first Adam had the whole creature being put under his feet The children of this Family are the faithfull who be the adopted Brethren Rom. 8. 15. sometimes called the seed The servants be the wicked and those of two sorts either such as attend in the Church neerer about Christs person or further off as in farme-houses for baser offices The creatures by a second ordinance from their former Master free are stated upon Christ though they beare some brands of evill from the sinne of their former Master the domicile though not so beautifull returnes to Christ So the Covenant of Grace entring upon the breaking up of the former Family investeth Christ with all as purchaser of the lost creature from revenging justice and as Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth who freely conferreth the heavenly inheritance upon the adopted sonnes and brethren and vouchsafeth earthly blessings and some spirituall common gifts to the wicked which may be called servants both those that more neerly attend his person and those that be further off But of this more hereafter CHAP. III. Of the Covenant of Grace in generall THe Covenant of Grace is that free and gracious Covenant which God of his meere mercy in Jesus Christ made with man a miserable and wretched sinner promising unto him pardon of sinne and eternall happinesse if he will return from his iniquity embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfained and walke before God in sincere faithfull and willing obedience as becomes such a creature lifted up unto such injoyment and partaker of such pretious promises This Covenant is opposite to the former in kind so that at one and the same time man cannot be under the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of grace For he cannot hope to be justified by his perfect and exact obedience that acknowledging himselfe to be a miserable and lost sinner doth expect pardon of the free mercy of God in Iesus Christ embraced by faith The condition of the Law as it was given to Adam excludes the necessity of mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne and the necessity of making a new Covenant argues the former could not give life Heb. 8. 7. He that is under grace cannot at the same time be under the law and he that waites for Salvation of meere and rich grace to be vouchsafed cannot expect it as the deserved wages of his good worke from justice and not of mercy What then may some say is the Law abolished or is it lawfull for Christians to live as they list because they be not under the Law Not so but the Law hath a double respect one as the unchangeable rule of life and manners according to which persons in Covenant ought to walke before and with the Lord and in this sense it belongs to the Covenant of grace The other as it is propounded in forme of a Covenant as if he must necessarily perish who doth neglect or breake it in the least jot or tittle and in this sense the Covenant of grace and workes are opposite The matter of Evangelicall precepts and of the Morall Law is the same but the forme of promulgation is not the same the rule is one but the Covenants differ Materialy the Law that is the matter and argument of the Law as a rule stands in force but if formally it did continue as a Covenant there could be no place for repentance nor for the promise of forgivenesse or mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne or the quickning of them that be dead in trespasses The Covenant of workes is of justice the Covenant of grace is of grace and mercy which cannot agree and take place in one and the same subject for he that try●th justice perceiveth not the force of mercy è contra This might be common to both Covenants that God doth freely give reward because he was not bound unto it by any Law and that is done of grace which we are not tied unto by Law but in the Covenant of Grace he gives the reward of meere and rich grace and that to the creature which hath deserved Hell This Covenant entered immediately upon the fall and so may be called a Covenant of Reconciliation not of friendship At the very instant when God holy and true was pronouncing judgements upon the severall delinquents in the fall setting downe his sentence against the Tempter both in his instrument the Serpent and the maine Author Sathan he brings in the party who should execute the same in which execution is unfolded the Covenant of grace for the Salvation of the creature that the Serpent had destroyed that God might be knowne in wrath to remember mercy At the very fall and before judgement was pronounced upon the delinquents that were tempted the Covenant of mercy was proclaimed that by vertue of this Covenant God might prevent further waste of his creature which Sathan might haue wrought upon his new advantage in following his good successe and that the tempted might have some comfort before their judgement least they might have been swallowed up of wrath The Authour of this Covenant is God considered as a mercifull and loving Father in Iesus Christ as a Creator he strooke Covenant with Adam in his integrity as a Saviour he looked upon the poore creature plunged into sinne and misery by reason of sin The cause that moved the Lord to make this Covenant was not any worth dignity or merit in man for man never had ought which he had not received and now by his disobedience had deserved to be cast off for ever neither was the present misery into which he had cast himselfe the cause that moved the Lord to receive man into favour for the Angels more excellent by creation as miserable by their fall he hath reserved in chaines of darknesse The sole moving cause why God made this Covenant Bonitatis Dei donumest quod liberare nos voluit quod verò aliter quam tali modo liberare nos noluit p●ccatorum nostrorum est meritum was the love favour and mercy of the Lord. Deut. 7. 7 8. Only the Lord had a delight in thy fathers
equall to us Christians in all substantiall graces of the Covenant Fourthly and from the same grounds we may conclude that the soules of the faithfull who departed this life before the comming of Christ in the flesh were immediately received into Heaven For they were taken to glory and saved as we Now such as are taken to glory are taken to Heaven For the Scripture knoweth Act. 15. 11. no place in which God doth ordinarily display his glory but Heaven And what should hinder their translation into the heavenly Jerusalem when they are removed out of this earthly tabernacle Not their sinnes for they which could not hinder them from Sanctification fitting them for Heaven could not hinder them from Heaven Not want of Faith who now have that faith which Abraham and many of them had No want of efficacie in Christ he was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world he was yesterday to day and for ever his death was effectuall to cause them to find pardon and the Spirit of Sanctification Not any priviledge of Christ for not simply to ascend into Heaven was Christs priviledge but to ascend soule and body as heire of all things and the Authour of Salvation to all that obey him David is said not to have ascended into Heaven but that is spoken Act. 2. 34. in respect only that he was not raised in body and gone into Heaven body and soule as the heire of all things and person who was to sit at Gods right hand It is also said The Fathers received Heb. 11. 39. not the Promise scil of Christs comming in the flesh to performe the worke of our Redemption but as they received the promise of forgivenesse and of the Spirit of Sanctification so after their death they were taken into Heaven They whose Pilgrimage and sojourning ceased with this life they could not but be in their Countrey at home after this life But Heaven is the Countrey of the Saints for where their Father is there is their Countrey Those who walked as strangers here on earth because they looked Heb. 11. 13 14 15 16. Heb. 11. 5. 2 King 2. 11. Luke 9. 31. for an heavenly Jerusalem a City whose Maker was God they leaving this earth were translated thither The translating of Enoch Moses and Elias seeme to figure out no other thing Christ was the fore-runner of Enoch not in act in respect of the assumption of his humanity into Heaven but in vertue and merit From the beginning of the world a place was prepared for all whom God had chosen in Jesus Christ Matth. 25. 31. and 20. 23. but a place was to be prepared of Christ for us in respect of the promised paiment by the force and efficacy whereof the effect was before obtained but with respect to future labours which were both certaine and present with God For a morall cause though it be not present in act if it be supposed as future may have its effect The faithfull before Christ when they removed out of these earthly tabernacles were received into everlasting habitations Luke 16. 9. Now if the godly at the instant departed were bestowed in any place but Heaven they then did goe to mansions which they were to leave in a short time even then when Christ did ascend Our Saviour promised to the penitent Theefe upon the Crosse This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise which if it was not Luke 23. 43. into Heaven but into Limbus it was but for a short time for that was to be broken up within a few houres space But to returne to the matter in hand The Covenant of Promise and the new Covenant are so one for substance that what is in the first for weight and essentiall is in all the degrees following and to be understood though not mentioned and whatsoever in any after degree appeares as substantiall to the Covenant that was included in the first propounding of it but in sundry accidents which nothing hinder their substantiall unity they are distinguished First on the part of the Object Christ exhibited in the New 1 Ioh. 1. 1 2. 4. 14. Mal. 3. 1. Isai 59. 15. Covenant is promised as to come in the Covenant of promise For it was meete the promise should goe before the Gospell and be fulfilled in the Gospell that so great a good might earnestly be des●red before it was bestowed and that the expectation of them that waited for the consolation of Israel might not be frustrated Secondly In the manner of administration and measure of faith For the knowledge of Christ and faith in him to come was more obscure and darke then the knowledge of him already come and faith which doth behold him present The manner of Christs Mediation was more sparingly and obscurely revealed his person the manner of execution of the office of Mediatour and the benefits that we receive in him more darkly unfolded sometimes propounded in generall words sometimes shadowed in types and figures seldome more specially described And the reason why these things at first were more darkely delivered may be first because things present or past are seene more clearely then things to Heb. 11. 17. come prophesies be obscure before the accomplishment 2. The Church was then in her Infancy and rude not come to her ripe age the Lord in his infinite wisdome so disposing the matter 3. It was meete the cleare and full revelation of this mystery should be reserved to Christ the chiefe Prophet The Authour of life was to lay open and make manifest the way to life Till the way into Heaven was really entred by the true high Priest after the order of Melchisedech it was not fully manifested Heb. 9. 8. Under the Old Testament the way into the Holiest was not absolutely shut but vailed not altogether untraced but not fully laid open because our true and reall high Priest had not made satisfaction by the offering up of himselfe a sacrifice once for all nor consecrated that new and living way through the vaile that is to say his flesh 4. The minds of men were to be held in a longing desire and expectation of Christ and the obscure revelation of Christ and his benefits did serve to raise their hearts to an earnest desire of his comming in respect of the cleare revelation and great and glorious blessings they might then expect But in this obscurity we may observe some degrees Before the Law given by Moses the promise was more obscure the Law being given even to the times of the Prophets lesse cleare in the times of the Prophets even to Iohn the Baptist more cleare Even from the first giving forth of the promise untill the comming of Christ in the flesh the revelation was more cleare distinct ample as the comming of the Messiah did approach neerer and neerer For the Church by how much it was neerer to her beginnings by so much it was the ruder and therfore to be instructed
with money of the stranger which is not of his seed Thus Ishmael Esau and others were circumcised counted Abrahams seed and under Covenant untill they fell away and discovenanted themselves but their posterity are not counted for the seed because they utterly fell away and departed from the faith The whole Nation of the Jewes descending from Jacob was accounted the seed of Abraham untill the time of Reformation though many amongst them were wicked and oft-times fell away I know saith our Saviour to the Pharisees ye are Abrahams seed but yee John 8. 37. seeke to kill me so did not Abraham In respect of the externall administration of the Covenant they were counted the seed but they walked not in the steps of the faith of Abraham and therefore indeed and truth they were not the seed And the Apostle speaking to the Jewes who had put Christ to death saith Ye are the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made with Act. 3. 25. our Fathers saying unto Abraham And in thy seed shall all the Kinreds of the earth be blessed Further it is to be observed that in all the seed the Covenant reacheth to Infants borne of the seed under the Covenant which was the reason why they must receive the seale of the Covenant at eight dayes old Neither must we put off this that Infants have only jus foederis for they be foederati Your children are holy saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 7. 14. Holy by Covenant though by nature sinfull Indeed it is true they be not capable of many actuall injoyments under the Covenant nor of actuall Faith but through the free grace and acceptation of God the Promise of forgivenesse and the Kingdome of Heaven belongeth unto them So that if any person come into Covenant and procreate children that man and his issue are foederati and may grow up into a further body from that beginning From this we may see the true ground of all Covenants as they receive difference Luk. 18. 9. from the parties injoying whether personall family-Covenants or nationall Personall is the cause of family-Covenants as Abrahams Covenant the ground of his Families entrance and so the Covenant made with the Family the ground of nationall as in the Families of Jacob cast together made all Israel under Covenant And herein appeares the truth of the former distinction that the Covenant is made according to internall force and efficacy or outward administration only The things on Gods part promised under this manifestation to Abraham and his subfederates are held forth in these and the like expressions I will make thee a great Nation and I will blesse thee Gen. 12. 2 3. and make thy name great and thou shalt be a blessing And I will blesse them that blesse thee and curse him that curseth thee and in thee shall all Families of the earth be blessed Vnto thy seed will I give this land ver 7. Lift up now thine eyes and look from the place where thou art Northward and Southward and Eastward and Westward For all the Land Gen. 18. 18. Gen. 13. 14 15 16. which thou seest to thee will I give it and to thy seed for ever And I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth so that if a man can number the dust of the earth then shall thy seed also be numbred Feare not Gen. 15. 1. ver 5. Abraham I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward Looke now towards Heaven and tell the starres if thou be able to number them And he said unto him So shall thy seed be I am the Almighty Gen. 17. 1. 2. 3. 6. 7. 8. ver 19. God and I will make my Covenant between me and thee and will multiply thee exceedingly and thou shalt be a Father of many Nations And I will make thee exceeding fruitfull and I will make Nations of thee and Kings shall come out of thee And I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting Covenant to be a God unto thee and to thy seed after thee And I will give unto thee and to thy seed after thee the Land wherein thou art a stranger all the Land of Canaan for an everlasting possession and I will be their God By my selfe have I sworne saith the Gen. 22. 16 17. and ●4 7. Lord for because thou hast done this thing and hast not with-held thy Sonne thy only Sonne That in blessing I will blesse thee and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the starres of heaven and as the sand which is upon the sea-shore and thy seed shall possesse the gates of his enemies And in thy seed shall all the Nations of the earth be blessed because thou hast obeyed my voice The grand Promises of this Covenant are that God would be the God of Abraham and of his seed whereby is signified that God would be to him what he had revealed himselfe to be his King Psal 33. 1● and 144 15. Psal 4● 14. Hieron in Ez. 1. Shad●ai Sy● Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 transtu●erunt quod nos fortem r●bustum possumus dicere Is●● 13. 6. and Father his Portion and Protectour that he would pardon his sinne write his Law in his heart leade him into all truth defend him from all evill and in due time receive him unto glory Happy are the people that be in such a case yea blessed are they that have God for their God This God is our God for ever and ever he shall be our guide untill death And this is implyed in that the Lord expressed himselfe unto Abraham to be Almighty or All-sufficient the nurse of all living things strong and potent to doe whatsoever he will who can bring all things to nothing as he made all things of nothing can give and take away give plentifully abundantly as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen 49. 25. Gen. 17. 1. and 28. 3. and 35. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pleaseth himselfe whose goodnesse doth copiously reach unto all his creatures The Sept. Interpreters sometimes expresse this title by the common name of God sometimes they omit it altogether and for I am God Almighty they translate I am thy God sometimes they put for it the God of heaven Psal 91. 1. sometimes they render it by a word that signifieth fit sufficient strong and potent Job 31. 2. but most commonly Almighty Omnipotent able to doe all things Job 15. 25. and 22. 25. and 23. 16. and 26. 16. and 27. 11. and paraphrastically who hath made all things Job 8. 3. Sometimes they turne it heavenly Psal 68 15. once they retaine the Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezek. 10. 5. and once they use an expression which comes nigh to selfe sufficiency and contentation Job 29. 5. qui materia copiosus est valde But 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when God manifested himselfe to Abraham to be God Almighty the meaning is not so much to expresse what God is in himselfe as what he would be to Abraham and his posterity as afterwards when he saith he would be knowne unto them by his name Jehovah Exod. 6. 3. therby is meant that he would give being to the promises formerly made unto them And in many passages when the Scripture speakes of the eternity of God the absolute eternity which respects God himselfe is not understood but that wherby he Psal 90 2. Psal 10● 12 13 28 29. Heb. 1. 12. Gen. 12. 2 3. Act. 3. 25. Gen. 12. 17. Heb. 6 1● Gal. 3. 8. will shew himself eternall in his love and favour and rich grace towards his people Art not thou from everlasting ô Lordour God we shall not die And when the promise was made to Abraham that in him or in his seed all nations of the earth should be blessed therein was preached the Gospell unto Abraham that the Gentiles should be turned from their sinnes justified by faith adopted to be the Sonnes of God made partakers of the promised Spirit and receive the Inheritance purchased for the Saints Unto these spirituall blessings it pleased God to add the promise Voss resp Rav rsp cap. 23. of many and great temporall good things which are fully branched out in the words before cited and may be reduced to these heads 1. Protection I am thy shield The Sept. hath it I Psal 3. 4. 7. 11. Psal 18. 3. will protect or stand betwixt the and all dangers that may threaten or seem to come nigh thee The like promise is often repeated in Scripture wherin not simple aid or vulgar manner of protection is signified but present certaine effectuall defence nigh N●mb 23. 10. Deut. 10. Gen. 3● 13. Jer. 15. 8. Hos 1. 10. Hab. 1. 9. Isa 10. 22. 4● 19. Jer. 33. 22. Theocrit Joyll 15. Horat. 1 Car. Od. 2● Sen. in Med. Ovid Trist Eleg. 4. at hand continually and that performed w●th great c●re and promptnes of mind 2. Riches and honour I will make thee great and thy name shall be great 3. Multiplicity of seed I will multiply thee exceedingly There be three things in Scripture and Heathen Authours which are used proverbially to signify an huge and exceeding great number the dust of the earth the sands of the sea and starres of Heaven And all these are brought to res●mble the exceeding number into which the seed of Abraham should breake forth Gen. 13. 16. 22. 17. Gen. 15. 5. 4. The Land of Canaan is promised as an everlasting possession and therein holy Government Church ordinances and other blessings attending theron all which are stated upon Abraham and his naturall seed by Jacob and we find verified in them Touching these blessings we must observe first that God gave more of the temporall lesse of the spirituall to the naturall seed in the first ages but in the latter ages more of the spirituall blessings lesse of the temporall and outward to the Christian seed of the Gentiles Secondly many of Abrahams carnall seed injoyed the outward blessings which reached not the spirituall as infinite numbers that dwelt in the Land of Canaan and being Iews outwardly did partake in outward priviledges beloging to the posterity of Jacob. Thirdly those that injoyed this outward part of Abrahams blessing and priviledges of the Covenant cannot be called strangers altogether from the Covenant of promise for the Apostle confesseth that the carnall Iew in his time was not wholly broken Rom. 9. 4. off from the Covenant and the Service of God with the promises which may be said of carnall Christians which live within the pale of the visible Church with correspondency in some measure unto the ordinances These injoying the outward blessings of Abraham are in the eye of the Scripture reputed to be within the Covenant of grace whereof we have an apparant proofe Deut. 29. 10. Where all are said to enter this Covenant to the very hewer of wood and drawer of water amongst whom was the carnall as well as spirituall seed Fourthly it is to be observed that the possession of the Land of Canaan as it was a part of their outward happinesse so it was a type of the eternall rest Heb. 4. 1. as shall be proved more at large hereafter It may be demanded how the Land of Canaan which the Israelites possessed for a time can be called an everlasting possession The answer is that the word translated everlasting doth not ever signifie that which shall have no end but an age terme or continuance It is spoken of the actions and vertues of God of the time past or future Of the time past and so we reade of the bounds of ages Pro. 22. 28. The paths of ages Ier. 18. 15. The dayes of ages Deut. 3● 7. The yeares of ages Psal 77. 5. The deserts of ages Isai 58. 12. Ioshua 24. 2. I held my peace of ●ld Isa 42. 14. that is long time Of the time to come with determination certaine or uncertaine as untill the yeare of Jubile as long as he liveth as long as the Law of Ceremonies is in force or as long as the earth endureth and such like as He shall serve thee for ever Deut. 15. 17. and is untill the yeare of Jubile Lev. 25. 40 41. he shall serve them for ever Lev. 25. 46. that is all the dayes of his life He shall appeare before the Lord for ever 1 Sam. 1. 2● that is as long as he liveth I will praise the Lord for ever and ever Psal 145. 1 2. that is as long as I shall have any being Psal Horat. Serviet aeternum qui pactones●iat uti 1 Sam. 1● 13. 146. 2. So the cares of this age Matth. 13. 22. is put for the cares of this life Luk. 8. 14. The Covenant of the Sabbath and Circumcision is called everlasting Exod. 32. 16 17. Gen. 17. 13. that is during the time of the Old Testament or untill the time of Reformation The earth standeth for ever Eccles 1. 4. Psal 104. 6. that is as long as the world shall endure as long as the fashion tenor or forme of the world shall continue 1 Cor. 7 31. The grave is called the house of ages or an everlasting house Eccles 12. 7. The desolations which shall end in the space of 70 yeares are called everlasting desolations Ier. 25. 9. And that which whiles it lasteth Ovid. Meta. l. 1. Ad ●ea perp●tuum deducite tempora carm●n is never interrupted is said to be everlasting Psal 25. 6. Thy mercies which are everlasting that is which thou alwayes usest being never interrupted So it is a perpetuall speech which is never interrupted or broken off though it may have an end So that we must wisely consider what doth agree to every place even to the appointed end and that rather hidden in the will of
The Apostle saith the Covenant from the Mount Sinai gendreth to bondage figured by Gal. 4. 24. the bond-woman and her sonne who were cast out of Abrahams Family The Apostle his argument may be drawne thus the same proportion which Hagar the hand-maid had to Sarah her Mistresse in Abrahams house the same proportion hath the old Testament to the new in the Church of God the same proportion which Hag●●s off ●pring had to Sarahs the same proportion had the children of the Law that is the Jerusalem which then was unto the Jerusalem which is above that is to the children of the Gospel or sons of promise Now Hagar was sometimes a visible and principall member of Abrahams family a kind of second wife to Abraham and Ishmael her sonne was for a while Abrahams presumed heire yet after Hagar did begin to despise and contest with her Mistresse Sarah and Ishmael to flout or persecute Isaac Abrahams heir apparent and son of promise both mother and son were cast out of Abrahams house and deprived of all hope of inheritance in the Land of promise Sarah bearing the type of the true visible Church then on earth did pronounce that sentence Gen. 21. 10. of Excommunication against them Cast out the bond-woman and her sonne and God ratifying in heaven what she had bound on earth injoyns Abraham to put her sentence in execution Gen. 21. 12. The Covenant likewise which God made with this people upon Hagar or Mount Si●●i was ●s the be trothing of Israel unto himselfe The Law of Moses whilst it was lawfully used was the only Catechisme or Introduction without which there was no entrance into the Church of God The children of this Covenant did by vertue of it become the presumed heires or children of God But when the deputed or nursing mother came once to contest with the true Spouse of Christ with the new Testament or Gospel and after her children the Jerusalem which then was began to persecute the children of the Jerusalem which is above the mother with her children that is the Law with such as sought to be under it were cast out of the true visible Church by the Apostles unto whom ou● Saviour had committed the keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven For it now stood in such opposition to the Gospel as Hagar did to her Mistresse Sarah at the time when ●he and her son committed those misdemeanours for which both of them were cast out of Abrahams house The Jerusalem which was on earth was sometimes or in some part rather a consort than an opposite or adversary to the Jerusalem which was above So was the old Testament or Law and all such as lawfully used it rather subordinate allies then foes or adversaries to the new Testament or heires of promise They that used the Law as a School-master to bring them unto Christ to them it was the Covenant of grace for substance Unto such as used the old Testament as they ought only as an Introduction to the new there was indeed but one Testament For as the Schools speak Vbi ●●um propter aliud ibi ●●um tantu● But such as rested in the Law and used it not as a pedagogie to Christ but sought justification by the observation of the Law Morall or Ceremoniall and opposed Christ the soul of the Law such were held under damnable b●●dage and cut from Christ And in this sence the Covenant made upon Mount Sinai did beget children unto such bondage for which they ought to be cast out of the Family of God And in this sence the two dispositions differ not only in circumstances but in substance they be not only two but opposite By the way let it be observed that by the former Covenant upon Mount Sinai is understood the Law given by Moses both Ceremoniall consisting in divers rites and commandements and Morall as the Jewes sought to be justified thereby who refused Christ The Old Testament then and the New are sometimes compared and considered by sacred writers as the thing including and included the Huske and the Graine The Gospell before Christs time was in the Law as the Corne new set in the ●are And the Law and the Gospell and the two Testaments thus considered are rather one than two at least there is an unity of subordination betwixt them The same Testaments may be considered sometimes as abstracted or severed each from other Thus the Gospell or New Testament since our Saviours death and resur●ection is become as pure Corne threshed and winnowed The Old Testament or Law thus severed from it remaines only as the chaffe or huske If we thus consider the Law or Old Testament as the Jewes embrace it that is altogether severed from the new to which alone we Christians adhere by faith they are not only two but two opposites or contraries This opposition or subordination between the Legall and Evangelicall Testament is opened by the Apostle saying If the first Covenant had been faultlesse then should no place have been sought for the second F●r finding fault with them he saith Behold the dayes c●me saith the Lord when I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and the Heb. 8. 7 8 ● 10. Jer. 31. 32 3. ● house of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their fathers in the day wh●● I tooke them by the hand to leade them out of the Land of Egypt because they continued not in my Covenant and I regarded them not saith the Lord. For this is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Lawes into their mind and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people But what Law was it which the Lord promiseth to write in the hearts of his people was it not the Law given before by Moses concerning which also Moses expresseth the same promise that Jeremy doth The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the Deut. 30. 6. heart of thy seed that thou mayest love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule that thou mayest live Now that Law God himselfe had delivered in writing and commanded Moses Exod. 34. 1 27. also to write the same Therfore the words of the Prophet as touching the writing of Gods Law in our hearts can import nothing but this that the Lawes which were before by the ministery Ezek. 36. 26 27. 2 Cor. 3. 1 2 3. of Moses delivered only in Inke and Paper should by the power of the holy Ghost through the faith of Christ be wrought and written in the affections of the heart that God in Christ would not only administer outwardly the letter of the Law whether in writing or preaching but would by the regeneration of the Spirit give grace inwardly to the obedience thereof And as the Law written in the tables of the heart and
Chaldee translate it he manifested not nor made knowne this Name They being sustained by faith in Gods Almighty power without receiving the thing promised Act 7. 5. Heb. 11. 9 10. But now their children should receive the promise and so have full knowledge and experience of Gods power and goodnesse and of the efficacie of that his Name Jehovah which therefore they sung to Isa 49. 23. 52. 6. 60. 16. Ezek. 28. 22 23 24 26. 30. 19 25 26. Exod. 19. 18 19 20. Deut. 5. 4 22. his praise upon their full deliverance from the Egyptians Exodus 15. 3. So upon performance of further promises or judgements he saith they shall know him to be Jehovah This Covenant was given with tokens of majestie and terrour for Mount Sinai was all of it on a smoake because the Lord descended upon it in fire and the smoake thereof ascended as the smoake of a fornace and all the Mountaine trembled exceedingly and the voice of the Trumpet was going and waxing strong exceedingly The Mountaines saw the Lord and trembled Hab. 3. 10. they leaped like Rammes Psal 114. 4. The earth quaked the heavens also dropped at the presence of God even Sinai it selfe at the presence of God the God of Israel Psal 68. 9. Judg. 5. 5. The mountaine burnt with fire unto the midst of heaven with darknesse clouds and thicke darknesse Deut. 4. 11. and from this it may be the Law is called fiery Deut. 33. 2. The Prophets Deut. 4. 35 36 use the like words to signifie the Majestie of God Psal 18. 9 10 12 14 97. 2 4. with clouds and smoake God often manifested his glorious presence to his people Exod. 40. 34 35. 2 Chron. 5. 24. 6. 1. 7. 1 2. Isa 6. 4. Revel 15. 8. And as Princes publish their decrees with the sound of the Trumpet So God to his ancient people revealed the pleasure of his will and gave answers unto them in thunderings and voices Joh. 12. 28. Rev. 4. 5. 6. 1. 10. 3. 8. 5. And hence it may be the two reverend Ambassadours of his voice and divine Maiestie are called the sons of thunder Mark 3. 17. This is noted as one difference betwixt the old and new Testament Ye are not come unto Heb. 12. 17 18 19 20 21 22. the Mount that might be touched and that burned with fire nor unto blacknesse and darknesse and tempest and the sound of a Trumpet and the voice of words which voice they that heard entreated that the word should not be spoken unto them any more For they could not endure that which was commanded And if so much as a beast touch the Mountaine it shall be stoned or thrust thorow with a dart And so terrible was the sight that Moses said I exceedingly feare and quake But ye are come unto Mount Sion and unto the City of the living God and the heavenly Jerusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels to the generall assembly and Church of the first-borne which are written in Heaven and to God the Judge of all and to the soules of just men made perfect It may be hereby God would testifie his anger and displeasure against sinne not as yet expiated by the bloud of the Messiah and warne the Israelites to deny themselves stand in awe of his Highnesse and cleave inseparably unto the word of his promise If any man shall thinke that Christ the second person in Trinity to be incarnate who is called the Angel of the Covenant or Messenger of the Covenant scil by whom it was sent unto Moses Mal. 3. 1. and the Angel of his presence Exod. 23. 20 21. and 33. 14. Isai 63. 9. did deliver the Law unto Moses I will not gain-say it because it is expressely said that Moses was in the Church in the wildernesse with the Angel who spake to him in the Mount Sinai Act. 7. 37. who is called Christ 1 Cor. 10. 9. And this Covenant of Grace was made in Christ the promised seed for God was not the God of Israel but in and through the promised Messiah whose person and offices are more fully described whose death and resurrection is more lively typified in this expressure of the Covenant then in either of the former Had ye beleeved Joh. 5. 46. Moses saith Christ himselfe the Author of truth you would have beleeved me For he wrote of me that is Christ was if not the sole subject yet the only scope of Moses his writings And as Moses so the Prophets that followed after him who wrote by the same Spirit and under that expression of the Covenant did speake of Christ more fully and plainly then he had done before In the first promise it was revealed that the Messiah should be the seed of the woman to Abraham it was made known that he should be of his seed but in the writings of Moses we learne that he was to be both God and man or that God was to be incarnate and to have his conversation amongst men after a more peculiar manner then in the ancient times of the world he had The promise runs thus And I will dwell amongst the children of Israel and will be their Exod. 29. 45 46. God and they shall know that I am the Lord their God that brought them forth out of the Land of Egypt that I may dwell amongst them I am the Lord their God The same promise is renewed or repeated And I will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre Lev. 26. 11 12 13. Ezek. 37. 26 27 28. you and I will walke among you and will be your God and ye shall be my people The Chaldee translateth the first place I will settle my habitation or divine presence amongst the sonnes of Israel And where in the Hebrew it is I will dwell in the midst of the sons of Israel Onkelos and Jonathan reade it I will place my Divinity But what Divinity whether the holy Spirit or rather the Word as we reade The Word was made flesh and dwelt Joh 1. 14. amongst us when Christ took our nature upon him and came and dwelt amongst his own then was this promise punctually fulfilled Or if it be referred to the habitation of God by his Spirit amongst the spirituall seed of Abraham as we find the word often used Rom. 8. 2. 2 Cor. 6. 19. 2 Tim. 1. 14. Ephes 3. 17. Jam. 4. 5. 2 Cor. 12. then it implieth the incarnation of Christ and his dwelling amongst the Jewes because that was to goe before the plentifull habitation of the Spirit in the hearts of the faithfull And if the Evangelists words have not reference to the forecited places they do allude to a passage in the Prophet Zachary whence Zech. 2. 10 11 12. they may be interpreted Sing and rejoyce O daughter of Sion for lo I come and I will dwell in the midst of thee saith the Lord And many nations
shall be joyned to the Lord in that day and shall be my people and I will dwell in the midst of them and thou shalt know that the Lord of Hosts hath sent me unto thee The Prophets describe the Psal 11. 1. Messiah to be the Sonne of David and Davids Lord The Lord said unto my Lord The Chaldee hath it The Lord said unto his Psal 110. 1. Word namely the Messiah or Christ who is the eternall Word of God by whom he made and doth conserve all things And in other places the Paraphrasts put the Word of God for God or Lord and that sometimes when the second person in Trinity is not necessarily to be understood and Isai 1. 14. my soul Targ. my word Jer. 1. 8. I am with thee Targ. my word Isai 45. 17. By the Lord. Targ. By the word of the Lord. Gen. 3. 8. The voice of the Lord. Targ The voice of the word of the Lord or the word the Lord Gen. 22 15 1● I have sworne by my selfe Targ By my word Psal 103. 13. The Lord. Targ. The word of the Lord. Psal 16. 1. In thee Chald. In thy word Psal 103. 18. The Lord hath Targ. The word of the Lord. Gen. 31. 24. God came to La●an Targ. The word came So Gen. 20. 3. Gen. 28. 15. I will be with thee Targ. my word shall be thy help Hos 1. 7. I will save them by the Lord their God Chald. I will redeeme them by the word of God their Lord. sometimes the word or promise they so render as Psal 119. 76. According to thy word unto thy servant where the Chaldee hath Memar And so Psal 130. 5. And in thy Word or promise I trust But if the second person be not ever meant by the word of God as the Paraphrast useth it yet certainly in many places it must be so understood and that this word was to be incarnate was most certainly fore-told Psalm 102. 11 26. Heb. 1. 10. For the very literall meaning of the Psalmist will enforce thus much that this place was to be meant of God not simply or absolutely but of God incarnate For the eternall duration of the God-head is not measurable by daies or yeares but the incarnation of the Sonne of God or his duration in the flesh may be accounted by number of yeares for the time past yet are his yeares as man to continue without end without any decay or diminution of that nature which he assumed And Psal 68. 19. Psal 103. 13 14 15 16 17. Tit. 3. 3 4 5 6 7. if out of any one place of the Psalmes where he doth intreat of the deliverance of the Church it doe appeare that the Messiah is true and very God by the same reason wheresoever he speaks of the deliverance of the Church God and the Messiah shall be the same But it is most certaine in sundry passages he that is God is also the Messiah And for that reason what is spoken of the mercy of God in the Psalme following may be understood not of the mercy of God absolutely or considered in the God-head only but the mercy of God to be incarnate to be made King and Judge of the earth which may be cleared by the very letter and circumstance of the text For the expected comfort whereupon this Psalmist pitcheth is this The Lord hath prepared his throne in the heavens vers 18. and his Kingdome ruleth over all And this is that Kingdom and that throne which Daniel fore-told that God long after his time would erect Da. 2. 44. To be born of God what is it but to Joh. 1. 12 13. be born of immortall seed what is that immortal seed wherof St Peter saith we are born again but the flesh and bloud of the Son of Isai 40. 6 7 ● man who is also the Son of God whose flesh is meat indeed whose bloud is drinke indeed which nou●isheth us not to a bodily but to 1 Pet. 1. 23 14. a spirituall and immortall life which presupposeth an immortall seed We are begotten and borne againe by the preaching of the Word as by the instrument or meanes and by the the eternall word that is by Christ himselfe as by the proper and efficient cause of our new-birth Thus much St Peters words in that place will enforce us to grant according to the letter For having before declared that the word of God by which we are borne againe doth live and endure for ever he thus concludes and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached unto you 1 Pet. 1. 25. Moses also and the Prophets did fore-tell that the Messiah or mercifull one or gracious Saint as he is called Psal 16. 10. should Psal 8. 6. H●b ● 7. Psal 16. 10 Deut. 18. 15 16 17 18 19. Psal 110. 1 2 3. be made for a little time lower then Angels and after crowned with glory and honour and set over the works of the Lords hands that he should suffer death and rise againe be laid in the grave but not see corruption That he should be the great Doctour of the Church a Priest after the order of Melchisedech the King of Kings and Lord of Lords whom God would set upon his holy hill of Sion His death and resurrection Kingdome and Priesthood was prefigured by the Sacrifices and Serpent the Priest hood of Aaron and Kingdom of Israel But of these things more fully in the new Covenant This Covenant was made in Christ the promised Messiah in and through whom the faithfull obtained the blessings promised but according to the administration of this Covenant Moses was the Mediatour and herewith in this expression is embellished above the former The Law was ordained by Angels in the hand L●v. 26 46. Deut. 5. 5. 27. 28. of a Mediatour Gal. 3. 19. that is by the labour and ministery of Moses which though some do●●t of is yet confirmed from this that Christ reserves himselfe to be a Mediatour of a better Testament Heb. 8. 6. There is but one Mediatour true and spirituall scil Christ but Moses was a Mediatour only typicall The Mediation whereby men are truly and effectually united unto Christ cannot fall upon any person who is not endued with infinite power and vertue who is not God as well as man but the Mediation of Moses was of this use to shew what was the true manner of worshipping God but did not inspire force and power to follow it nor reconcile men to God but propound those things whence it might easily appeare that there is need of another reconciliation Moses an Israelite and part of that people with whom God made the Covenant was comprehended under the one part confederate but as he undertook the function of Mediatour imposed upon him of God he was not now simply an Israelite but a Mediatour interceding betwixt God and the people Israel that he might be a more illustrious type of Christ Moses was
the increase of thy kine and the flocks of thy sheep in the Land which he sware unto thy fathers to give thee Thou shalt be blessed above all people and there shall not be male or female barren amongst you or among your cattell And the Lord will take away from thee all sicknesse and will put none of the evill diseases of Egypt which thou knowest upon thee but will lay them upon all them that hate thee The Lord thy God bringeth thee into a good Land a Land Deut. 8. 7 8 9. 11. 14 15. of brookes of water of fountaines and depths that spring out of the vallies and hils a Land of wheat and barley and Vines and Fig-trees and Pomegranates a Land of Oile Olive and Honey A Land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarcenesse thou shalt not lacke any thing in it a land whose stones are iron and out of whose hils thou maist digge brasse The Lord hath vouched thee this day to be his peculiar Deut. 26. 18 19. people as he hath promised thee and that thou shouldest keep all his Commandements And to make thee high above all nations which he hath made in praise and in name and in honour and that thou maiest be Deut. 28. 1 2 c. an holy people unto the Lord thy God as he hath spoken Secondly The Lord promised to chuse a place to cause his name to dwell there and set his Tabernacle amongst them and walke with them But when you goe over Jordane and dwell in the Land Lev. 26 4 5 6 7 8 9 11. Deut. 12. 10 11 12. 16. 6. which the Lord your God giveth you to inherit when he giveth you rest from all your enemies round about so that ye dwell in safety Then shall there be a place which the Lord your God shall choose to cause his name to dwell there thither shall ye bring all that I command you And I Lev. 26. 10 12. will set my Tabernacle amongst you and my soule shall not abhorre you And I will walke among you and will be your God and ye shall be my people For the Lord hath chosen Sion he hath desired it for his habitation Psal 132. 13. 14. This is my rest for ever here will I dwell for I have desired it Thirdly Free forgivenesse of sinnes is likewise promised in this Covenant This is implyed in that he promiseth to be their God for if he be theirs he will be favourable to their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more And so much is expressed when upon repentance and turning unto him he hath proclaimed himselfe ready to receive them into favour If from thence Deut. 4. 29 30. thou shalt seeke the Lord thy God thou shalt find him if thou seeke him with all thine heart and with all thy soule And it shall come to Deut. 30. 1 2 3. passe when all these things shall come upon thee the blessing and the curse which I have set before thee and thou shalt call them to mind among all the nations whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee And shalt returne unto the Lord thy God and shalt obey his voice according to all that I command thee this day thou and thy children That then the Lord thy God will turne thy Captivity and have compassion upon thee and will returne and gather thee from all nations When thy people Israel be smitten downe before the enemy because they have sinned 1 King 8. 33 34. Man as capable of Justification is ● sinner as be actually receiveth Justification a Believer against thee and shall turne againe unto thee and confesse thy Name and pray and make supplication unto thee in this house Then heare thou in heaven and forgive the sinne of thy people Israel and bring them againe unto the Land Moreover the Lord made himselfe knowne to be the God that pardoneth iniquity transgression and sinne when he gave this Covenant unto his people But of this before Fourthly Eternall life is promised in the Covenant for God is not the God of the dead but of the living and therefore the faithfull Jewes which have God for their God doe live still not Math. 22. 32. Math. 19. 17. Luk. 10. 25 28. in earth but in heaven The life which is promised to them that keepe the Law is eternall but in this Covenant life is promised to them that keepe the Commandements Not only long Psal 34. 12 13. life and good dayes in the Land of Canaan but eternall life is assured by the promise to them that keepe Covenant as eternall death and destruction is comprehended under the curse denounced against them that breake the Covenant Expresse mention of Gal. 3. 13. the King some of Heaven perhaps is not found in the Old Testament but eternall life is comprehended under the termes of life and blessing as eternall death under the tearmes of death and the Curse Eternall life in heaven eternall death in hell the Law noteth though it doe not expressely name them Which things unlesse they had been commonly knowne in the dayes of our Saviour the penitent Thiefe about to die had not thought of a Kingdome nor the Lord promised Paradice to him when he asked a place in the Kingdome of the M●ssiah But all these promises were made of fre● grace and of free love accomplished Speake not thou in thine heart after that the Lord Deut. 9. 4 5. thy God hath cast them out from before thee saying For my righteousnesse the Lord hath brought me in to possesse this Land but for the wickednesse of these nations the Lord doth drive them out from before thee Not for the righteousnesse or for the uprightnesse of thine heart doest thou goe to possesse their Land but for the wickednesse of these Nations the Lord thy God doth drive them out from before thee and that he may performe the word which the Lord sware unto thy Fathers Abraham Vers 6. Is●●k and Jacob. Vnderstand therefore that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good Land to possesse it for thy righteousnes for thou art a stiffe-necked people True it is the promises runne upon this condition If ye obey my voice and doe my Commandments But conditions are of two sorts antecedent or consequent Antecedent when the condition is the cause of the thing promised or given as in all civill contracts of Justice where one thing is given for another Consequent when the condition is annexed to the promise as a qualification in the Subject or an adjunct that must attend the thing promised And in this latter sence obedience to the Commandments was a condition of the promise not a cause why the thing promised was vouchsafed but a qualification in the subject capable or a consequence of such great mercy freely conferred Of them that slip aside and transgresse the Covenant God calleth for and commandeth repentance that is it is his will and command that they
the most holy doth break every commandment and is guilty of none so as it shall be imputed unto him But he that habitually willingly on set purpose shall dispence with himselfe in the transgression of any one commandment or any branch thereof he is a trespasser he shall be accounted guilty 2. To be upright is to stand as it were in Gods presence as one of the words doth signifie Isa 57. 2. as was shewed before I 2 Cor. 12. 19. 2 Cor. 2. 17. 4. 2. 7. 12. Psal 18. 22 23. Psal 119. 16● have set the Lord alwaies before me Psal 16. 8. So David protesteth his uprightnesse for all his judgements were before me and I did not put away his Statutes from me I was also upright before him and I kept my selfe from mine iniquity And I have kept thy precepts and thy testimonies for all my waies are before thee Thus Job proveth himself to be no hypocrite as his friends Job 13. 15 16. imagined Though he slay me yet will I trust in him but I will prove mine owne waie● before him He also shall be my salvation for an hypocrite shall not come before him And seeing he walketh as under the eye and in the sight of the Almighty therefore in some measure he is alike in all places and companies because he remembreth well that God is present in every place and doth behold and discerne all his actions yea his secret imaginations 3. The third effect of uprightnesse is hatred of all sinne of our bosome delightfull profitable sins of secret sins of the sins of our inclination custome education whatsoever but more in our selves then in others and love of good specially the best and chiefest good in others as in our selves Homebred sin is most hatefull because most hurtfull to the soule pernicious to our State dishonourable to God And it is a good token of a plaine and down-right heart when a man is willing to see ready to acknowledge and can with eagernesse of affection set against his owne sinne rather then against the sins of other men For the love of sin is abandoned the heart is framed to self-deniall which it hath not by nature but by grace and sinne will have no pleasure to lodge in that heart where it is thus pursued But true goodnesse is lovely in all men because it proceeds from God conformeth a man after the image of God and inableth to the obedience of his commandment and whose heart is right with God he cannot but rejoyce to see his name glorified by whomsoever 4. Delight in the most high at all times in all conditions prosperity and adversity evill report and good report making God the stay of our soules when oppressing trouble lieth heavie upon us and walking before him in humility meekenesse and feare when all things prosper according to our hearts desire and readily performing our vowes which we made in the day of our calamity Job 27. 10. Job 3. 23. and 2. 3 10. This is a notable effect of uprightnesse Thus Job confirmeth his uprightnesse in adversity he called upon God and waited upon his aide in prosperity he remembred his change eschewed evill stood in awe of God shewed mercy to the poore fatherlesse and widdow comforted them that were in distresse in both estates God was his delight and his portion It is a double and crooked heart that starts aside and varieth in obedience according to outward conditions that goeth forward or backward on this side and on that as occasion requireth that praiset● mercy in his need but commendeth sparing and nearenesse when he washeth his pathes in butter The upright is resolved of his way and doth breake through all lets and barrs whatsoever may be cast before Prov. 21. 29. him in his journey A wicked man hardeneth his face but as for the upright he directeth his way As the ungodly man is obstinate in evill so is the upright constant in piety and will not be removed from it I have enclined my heart to performe thy Statutes alway even unto the end Hold thou me up and I Ps 119. 112 117 shall be safe and I will have respect unto thy Statutes continually 5. Respect of Gods approbation more then the applause of men resting well contented that we are allowed of him though disesteemed in the world is a good signe of an even and polished heart A good heart regardeth not much what men thinke or 1 Cor. 4. 3. 1 Thess 2. 4. say so God be well pleased I passe little to be judged of mans judgement yea I judge not my selfe As we were allowed of God to be put in trust with the Gospel even so we speake not as pleasing men but God who tryeth our hearts Let the world fawne or frowne speake faire or revile be quiet or persecute all is one a faithfull man will goe forward in his good course neither starting aside nor turning backe For the heart that is well directed seeketh heaven and not earth the favour of God not the faire countenance of men rest in the world to come not peace in this vale of misery and thus minding his ●ome prepared in heaven he goeth on his race not regarding how little his service is esteemed by earthly men 6. An honest heart is no lesse carefull to returne praise for graces and good things received then to beg supply of what is wanting Isa 33. 1. This is the study of the upright and it becomes them well in which they diligently apply themselves to set forth the goodnesse power mercy and rich grace of God vouchsafed unto them 7. To the upright man the hardest things are easie because they are industrious and chearefull in the workes they take in hand according to the Lords appointment The way of the slothfull is an hedge of thornes but the way of the upright Pro. 15. 19. is made plain 8. The down-right Christian is carefull to shunne all appearances occasions and provocations unto sin willing to suffer admonition and rebuke and constant in the use of all means that he Job 31. 1. Psal 141 4 5. might grow in grace The means whereby truth and uprightnesse may be attained and strengthened are 1. Constant and conscionable dependance upon the preaching of the word effectuall receiving and sound feeding upon it Desire 1 Pet. 2. 1. the sincere milke of the word saith the Apostle He cals the word sincere milke a milke without deceit It is in it selfe truth having the God of truth for the Authour Christ Jesus the truth for Joh. 14. 6. the witnesse the Spirit of truth for the composer of it and it worketh truth in the hearts of them that heare and receive it kindly It is mighty to the purging out of that leaven of fraud which is within us and to the transforming of us into the image of God if it be kindly planted and soundly rooted in the heart and conscience Sanctifie them with thy
and receiving of the Sacraments oblige themselves to the condition required and thus all members of the visible Church be in Covenant With others God doth make his Covenant effectually writing his Law in their hearts by his holy Spirit and they freely and from the heart give up themselves unto the Lord in all things to be ruled and guided by him And thus God hath contracted Covenant with the faithfull only The first sort are the people of Rom. 2. 28. God outwardly or openly having all things externall and pertaining to the outward administration The second are the people of God inward or in secret whom certainly and distinctly the Lord only knoweth Experience hath confirmed it that in the dayes of the Gospell the Church of Christ hath sometimes been shut up within narrower bounds and limits sometimes it hath spread it selfe over the face of the earth more gloriously and so much was plentifully foretold in the Scriptures that such as lived in the times of that great apostasie and falling from the faith might not be offended at it What the state of Gods Church shall be in these latter dayes time will manifest more certainly then we can yet define but some Divines are of opinion that the bounds thereof shall extend further and the glory thereof be greater then ever heretofore And this is not improbable for when the Apoc. 11. 15. seventh Angel sounded there were great voices in heaven saying The Kingdomes of this world are become the Kingdomes of our Lord and of his Christ and he shall raigne for ever and ever which accordeth with that of Daniel Behold one like the Son of man came with the Dan. 7. 13 14. clouds of heaven and came to the Ancient of dayes and they brought him neere before him And there was given unto him dominion and glory and a Kingdome that all people nations and languages should serve him his dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not passe away and his kingdome that which shall not be destroyed CHAP. II. Christ the Mediatour of the New Testament for whom he died and rose againe CHrist Jesus incarnate is the Mediatour of the new Testament a reall Mediatour a fit middle person betwixt God and man a Mediatour and Testatour both who hath confirmed the Testament with his bloud But seeing the Covenant is made in Christ and Christ died in some sort for them that be under the Covenant it will not be out of place first to shew for whom Christ died and rose again and then how Christ is the Mediatour of the New Testament and what is the exaltation and Prerogative of the new above the old Covenant in that respect Touching the first there be two main opinions of Divines The first sort hold that he died for all and every man with a purpose to save But in the explication of their Tenent they adde Corvin in Mol. cap. 28. Sect. 1. 4. 20. 1. That Christ died for all men considered in the comman lapse or fall but not as obstinate impenitent or unbelievers Christ died not say they for Cain and Judas as such or as they should perish nor for Abell and Peter as faithfull in respect of the impetration of Salvation but without difference for them considered Resp ad Epist Minist Walak pag. 51. Armin. Worst part Secunda necess Resp Synod declar sent remonst circa Art Sect. de morte Christi Thomson diatr. cap. 4. Corvin in Mol. cap. 27. Sect. 4. cap. 12. Sect. 25 26 27. in the common state and condition of the fall and sin 2. That Christ died for all men in respect of the impetration of Salvation but the application thereof is proper to believers 3. That Christ died not to bring all or any man actually to Salvation and make them partakers of righteousnesse and life but to purchase salvabilitie and reconciliation so farre as that God might and would salvajustitia deale with them upon termes of a better Covenant which might well stand allthough it should be applied to no man no man should be reconciled or saved by Christ God should have no Church on earth or Saint be crowned with glory in heaven 4. That Christ hath purchased salvabilitie for all men but faith and regeneration he hath merited for none because God is bound to give that which Christ hath merited of him although it be not desired or craved Exam. Censur Cap. 8. pag. 95. Cap. 7. pag. 87 Respons ad specul 11. 107. Other po●itions they hold which ●ang not together nor agree Exam. Cens with that which hath been mentioned as that God neither would nor could by right condemne any man for the sinne of Adam and that Originall sinne so called is properly neither sinne nor punishment And then if Christ died for mankind in the common lapse he died for them that never had sinned nor deserved punishment Againe they teach that all Infants whether of believing Corvin in Mol. cap. ●8 Sect. 13 14. or Infidell parents dying without actuall sinnes committed in their owne person are restord into the favour of God regenerated and saved and that because God hath taken all mankind into the grace of reconciliation and entred into a Covenant of grace Arm. Resp ad ad Art 13 14. with Adam and all his posterity But then Christ died for all mankind in respect of impetration and application both and by his death hath actually reconciled all mankinde unto God merited actuall regeneration for them and purchased Salvation if after they be possessors of these spirituall blessings they doe not fall from them and shake them off by impenitency and infidelity For Adam and Eve excepted mankind cannot be considered in the Armin in Perk. pag. 4. common lapse but as infants only Further they affirme that Infants have refused grace in their parents grandfathers ancestors by which act they have deserved to be forsaken of God which how it can stand with their generall position or that last mentioned I cannot conceive Lastly they teach that Christ died for the impenitent and unbelievers for thus they reason If Christ died for all whom he came to save and came to save unbelievers as his words are I came not to judge but to save then he died for unbelievers How they accord these things I cannot finde but if we take things as they lay them downe it will plainely follow that Christ died for all mankind in respect of impetration only and that he died for them in respect of impetration and application both that he hath not actually reconciled them unto God and that he hath purchased actuall reconciliation that he died not for the impenitent or unbelievers in respect of impetration and that in respect of impetration only he died only for such And all this can hardly be reconciled with that they have in their Script Synod declar sent Rem circa Art 2 Gratia haec impetrata est peccat●ribus quatenus in communi
seeke attonement and to walke sutably He doth remove the guilt of sinfully from the conscience of the offending brethren Heb. 9 14 15. He is potent with God to satisfie revenging Gal. 3. 13 14. justice by presenting his bloud to remove the curse of the Law that those which are called might receive the inheritance He alone hath in his owne person performed obedience to the broken Law of God and fulfilled all righteousnesse and by his crosse hath cancelled the hand-writing that was against us and broken downe the partition and slayed hatred and enmity betwixt the brethren Ephes 2. 14 15. But of this more hereafter The Fathers received Heb. 11. 13 14. not the promises but saw them afarre off and were perswaded of them and saluted them with great sweetnesse but under the new Covenant we have recived the promise God hath sent his Son into the world borne of a woman and made under the Law and openly manifested him to be the Son of God And if Gal 4. 4 5. the appearing of Christ God and man did adde much to the joy and comfort of the Saints in glory the manifestation of Christ in the flesh must adde to the faith and comfort of them that waited for the salvation of Israel The Incarnation of Christ was the day of his Coronation and of his espousals wherein in speciall manner Cant. 3. 11. he contracted him unto his Church Goe forth O ye daughters of Zion and behold King Salomon with the crowne wherewith his mother crowned him in the day of his espousals and in the day of the gladnesse of heart The Fathers expected deliverance from the curse of the Law and to inherit the promises in and through the Messiah and the Sacrifices did prefigure and Prophets fore-tell the death of the Messiah but we may well thinke the faithfull did not distinctly understand how the Saviour promised was to satisfie justice and by death to overcome him that had the power of death But in the new Testament we learne expressely that Christ is made of God unto us wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption how he satisfied justice by one oblation of himselfe removed the curse of the Law destroyed him that had the power of death purchased the promised Spirit and ratified all the promises of the Covenant by his death and bloud-shed Heb. 9. 15. Thirdly He is entred into heaven appeareth before the Father and maketh request for his people unto which there is pre-required a power and prevalencie over all his enemies to breake through the guilt of sin the curse of the Law and the chaines of death with which it was impossible that he should be held And this power of Christ was shewed in his Resurrection wherein he was declared to be the Son of God with power Rom. 1. 4. and in his ascension wherein he led all his enemies captives Ephes 4. 8. and in his sitting at the right hand of God farre above all principalities and powers Ephes 1. 19 20. All which did make way to the presenting of his Sacrifice before the Mercy-seat which is the consummation of it and without which he had not been a Priest We have such an high Priest saith the Apostle as is set downe at the right hand of the Majestie in the heavens for if he were on earth he should not be a Priest seeing that there are Priests which offer gifts according to the Law Heb. 8. 1 4. Christ our high Priest having offered up himselfe an expiatory Sacrifice once for all by his divine power rose againe from the dead and is entered into the very heavens to appeare in the presence of God for us Heb. 9. 24. Levit. 16. 11 15. It was the same continued action whereby the Priest did offer without the holy place and did then bring the bloud into the holiest of all Heb. 13. 11. For the reason why it was shed was to present it to the mercy-seat and to shew it unto the Lord there Heb. 9. 8. Inchoari potest functio veri Sacerdotis stante typico Sacerdotio perfecta esse non potest illo stā●e Oblatio peracta in terra perfectissima f●it sed perfectione partis non perfectione totius Aliud est offerre in terra aliud peracta oblatione manere in terra Heb. 1. 3. 10 5 6 9. 1● 1 Cor. 5. 7. So Christs act or office was not ended nor fit to denominate him a compleate Priest till he did enter with bloud and present his offering in the holiest of all not made with hands Heb. 9. 24. And therefore he had not been a Priest if he should have continued on the earth for there was another Priest-hood there which was not to give place but upon the accomplishment of his for the whole figure was to passe away when the whole truth was come Now Christs oblation was the truth prefigured in the Priests sacrificing of the beast and his entrance into heaven was the truth prefigured in the Priests carrying of the bloud into the holiest of all And therefore both these were to be accomplished before the Leviticall Priest-hood did give place Some referre this to the oblation of Christ whereof they make two parts the one exp●atory when Christ suffered upon the crosse the other presentatory when he doth appeare in heaven before God for us the one of killing or suffering the other of ostension the one finished on earth when Christ suffered without the gate because as no sin so no punishment can come within the holy place the other performed in heaven satisfaction being Heb. 13. 11 12. first made on earth The first was not a preparation of a Sacrifice but a Sacrifice the latter was not so much a Sacrifice as the commemoration of the Sacrifice made for appearing in heaven is not properly a sacerdotall act unlesse it leane upon the vertue of the Sacrifice performed the first was an act of humiliation the latter Heb. 10 8 ●● of glory the first performed once for all the latter done continually that the explatory Sacrifice or obtaining of redemption this the application of redemption The Sacrifice consisted in the Videtur etiam spect are consuetudines Regum Iudicum inter homines Reges enim soederati in suis aulis matuo habent Legatos pacis obsides qui quamdiu apparent in Regis conspectu firma stat confoederatio death of Christ alone the application thereof is grounded upon Christs death as its merit but effected by the life of Christ as its immediate cause When the Apostle saith Christ appeareth before the Father for us the expression is borrowed from the custome of humane Courts for as in them when the Plaintiffe or Defendant is called their Atturney appeareth in their name and behalfe so when we are summoned by the justice of God to defend our selves against those exceptions and complaints which it preferreth against us we have an Advocate with the Father even Jesus Christ
faculties as it were to a finite nature The place where Christ fits at the right hand of his Father in respect of his Humanity is in heaven because where that is there it is also inwardly glorious in it selfe and hath in it self Luke 24. 51. Mark 16. 19. Hebr. 4. 14. Act. 1. 11. 1 ●e● 3. 22. as in a subject his power and worketh by that power within the spheare of it finitenesse not severally from the word but with it and in it He is at the right hand of God in the heavens Ephes 1. 20. in the highest places Heb. 1. 3 8. above Col. 3. 1. This his Soveraignty is a consequent following on his Ascension into Heaven Look as Kings are crowned in the chiefe Cities of their Kingdomes and keep their residence in their Palaces neere unto them so it was decent that our Saviour should be crowned in this heavenly Jerusalem and keep his residence as it were in his heavenly Mansion There Christ sitteth at the right hand of God where he appeareth for us where he maketh intercession for us But Christ appeareth for us in Heaven Heb. 9. 24. and 8. 4. and in Heaven he maketh request for us and from Heaven we 1 Thess 1. 10. Isai 66. ● expect the Lord Jesus Phil. 3. 21. God is infinite Heaven is his throne and the earth his footstoole but the humanity of Christ is finite and not every where present Christ is ascended above these visible heavens above them and without them but he sitteth at the right hand of the Father in the highest heavens above them not without them So the Cherubims were over the Arke Ephes 4. 9 10. Heb. 9. 5. of the Covenant and yet they stayed upon the Arke as the place Heaven is one thing heavenly glory another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exod. 25. 21 22. Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est id quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in coelo est Heb. 9. 23. Heb. 8. 4. Ita coelum dicitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Mac. 3. 39. Job 22. 12. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 16. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isai 33. 5. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 15. 20. corpora 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 2. 6. Ephes 6. 12. and 2. 2. Joh. 3. 11 12. Ignat. Epist 11. Psal 68. 34. When a finite nature is in heaven it is not in earth Christ is not so supra omnes coelos ut sit extra illos non in eis extraterras tamen quia mundum bunc reliquit Eidem carni duplex isque contrarius existendi modus tribui non potest sc localis illocalis seu physicus hyperphysicus as earth and earthly misery Heb. 11. 13. Joh. 14. 2. But whilest we say Christ is in heaven his presence in earth in the Church in the midst of his enemies is not excluded For the same Christ who is man is also God and every where Christ in his body is in the heavenly and triumphant Church absent from the earth by his infinite Deity he is present together in the earthly militant and heavenly But concerning his Body we may truly conclude because he is in heaven therfore it is not every where for Christ cannot be said to be made every where in the heavens without a contradiction no more then to be made infinite within limited bounds of being This being taken for granted that heaven can signifie nothing but a place limited for the extent of it Christ as God and man hath power of rule over all things by the essence of his Deity he is every where by the essence of his humanity now he is in heaven but he ruleth every where by the ministeries of his domination Where as man at the right hand of the Father there he is said to be as man in respect of place and if where he sits as ruling there also he be in all places in his body he is also in his body out of his body then which nothing is more absurd Christ is received into Heaven and sitteth at the right hand of God by a mediatory action which he executeth according to both natures the word working what pertaineth to the word and the flesh what appertaineth to the flesh Christ is Mediatour as God and man and glory hath redounded unto him as God and man and living in this glory he ruleth and governeth his Church as God and man He ascended into Heaven in his humanity he sitteth at the right hand of God as Mediatour in respect of both natures he worketh together with the Ministers of the word by his divine and every where present efficacy The first thing implied by Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father is the filling of his humane nature with supernaturall gifts of knowledge power c. and whatsoever doth any way pertain to the administration of his office God his God hath annointed Psal 45. 7. Heb. 1. 9. him with the oyle of gladnesse above his fellowes In respect of us these gifts may be called infinite but simply they are not because they are things created the effects and works of the holy Spirit Joh. 3. 34. Isa 11. 2. Men sura est divisio quaedam donorum at in Christo plenissima copia ubertas Ephes 4. 7. Rom. 12. 3. 1 Cor. 12. 8 11. So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Labor immensus Ov. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dolor immensas Senecae dicuntur Joh. 1. 16. Non deplendo aliquidex ipsius neque imme●sitate neque dimensione sed implendo nostrā indigentiam ab ipso absolutely they are finite comparatively infinite He received the Spirit above measure that is the whole Spirit all the gifts of the holy Spirit in higher degree then any creatures men or Angels in full abundance That is said to be done in measure which is done sparingly moderately in proportion for he that gives bountifully or largely doth not measure or number what he giveth but powreth out copiously as we say from the full heape or with both hands And that which is plentifull aboundant full is said to be above measure not that simply and absolutely it is infinite but in comparison By that which is given and not by measure not that which is infinite but that which is whole and entire is signified And of his fullnesse we all receive grace for grace we so receive of his fulnesse that his sufficiency is no whit diminished our want is filled by him but his fulnesse is not emptied by us The Sunne is not greater if it be beheld of many not the lesse if of fewer the same is true of the righteousnesse of Christ imputed The Sunne doth not decay by motion an Angell is not wearied with the service of God Christ man is not wearied with the care of the Church nor his store and plenty wasted with that which he doth
yet he had not the act and use of it That which some See Maldonat in Luk. 2 40. Quod voluntatem concernit omnes virtutes ta●e incrementum in ea accep●runt quale in creaturam cadere potest Jun. Th●ss Theolog. 29. answer that Christ by infused knowledge knew all things and after attained another kind of knowledge which they call acquisite is not so fit because knowledge acquired and infused of the same things is of the same nature and condition and two formes or qualities of one kind cannot be in the same subject The second thing implied in Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father is to be admitted into divine blessednesse setledly to enjoy it Christ as God ever had and could not but have that essentiall beatitude and that blessednesse which he receiveth as man is not to have end The good that is in an intellectuall nature is of two sorts the one of vertue the other of sweet joyfull and pleasing delight And though both these concurre sometimes as in the fruition of God in heaven wherein the perfection of vertue and fulnesse of joy and delight doe meet together yea and though every thing that is vertuous be delightfull yet it is not so much the height of vertue as of delight that is judged happinesse Now our Saviour Christ was joyned to God by the affection of vertue or justice and Vt mori corpus Christi potuit tamen cum unionem tum eff●ctus quosdam De●tatis participare Ita mori mortem suam derelinqui anima potuit tamen uni●ne sua hujus unionis effectis frui Can ●●● 〈◊〉 lib. 12. cap. 1● Ma●donat in Mat. 26. Isa 5● 4. Joh. 4 6. H●b 4. 15. Joh. 14. 23. Prov. ●5 ●5 Chamier tom 2. lib 5. cap 20. Nullus comprehensor est obnoxius ul●●s calamitatibus could not be devided or separated from him no not for a moment because he could not but love him feare him trust in him but by the affection that see●eth pleasing content in enjoying those ineffable delights and pleasures that are found in God our Saviour as man might and was for a time divided from God Moreover our Saviour Christ in his life time here on earth so restrained and kept within the closet of his secret Spirit the happinesse that he enjoyed in seeing God that it should not spread farther nor communicate it selfe to the inferiour faculties of his soule or impart the brightnesse of it to the body but it was subject to misery and passion The godly in this life doe tast not only some hope of heavenly life but the first fruits of this heavenly joy The Church and every Saint is heaven the soule of the righteous is heaven Our Saviour was both viator and comprehensor blessed in this life with that blessednesse which is not to be had but in heaven but now our Saviour advanced on the right hand of God is admitted into that incomprehensible glorious setled blessednesse never to suffer the least ecclipse for one moment which doth communicate it selfe to C ham panst tom 2. lib 4. cap 4 and 5. Ma● 17. 2. 1 P●t 1. 11. Heb. 12. 2 Phil. 3. 21. Verè contr●stari dolere pati non potest cui divina ●e●t●tud● impassibilitas verè reali●er communicata fuit Vrsin Tom. 2. co●f●ss de person Christ pag. 407. all powers of soule and body that it is and shall remaine for ever incorruptible impatible immortall encreased with strength and nimblenesse shining with brightnesse and glory celestiall and divine Thirdly our Saviour Christ as man is taken to have prerogative before every other creature For this phrase of setting at his right hand noteth the preheminence of him as next to God himselfe that looke as one made a King hath a dignity above all persons named in his Kingdome Dukes Earles Lords So our Saviour taken up as man to this kingly dignity must needs be in preheminence before them It is no wonder for this nature essentially appertaineth to that person which made all these things visible and invisible Againe every person the nearer he is in conjunction of bloud to an earthly King the more he hath prerogat●ve Col. 1. 16 Joh. 1. 3. Heb. 1. 2 3. Revel 4 ult above others more dis-joyned so this created nature seeing it is made one personally with God by how much it is more nearely united by so much it is fit that it should have prerogative before others Not to speake that being heire of all things it is meet that he should be before all who are but parts of his inheritance and having more excellent endowments I meane created gifts than any other it is meet he should have the first place before all other Christ is set farre above all principality and power and might and domination which words are commonly understood of the Angels but the two first words may fitly be interpreted as names of excellency found in this present world For principalities and powers when they are put for angelical natures they are not termed so simply but with an addition to the place but these words put for humane excellencies we reade them simply without any thing added And this distribution of power named in this world and in that to come Ephes 1. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 principatus dicuntur Rom. 8 38. Luk. 12 ●● Significat etiam turmas 1 Sam. 11. 11. Eph 3. 10 Sept. Job 1. 17. and 6. 1● Sept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aq. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3 ● Col. 1. 16. Dr●s praeter in Rom. 8. 38. Deod ibid. respecteth something in this enumeration fore-named the former these two first named the latter the couple following Fourthly Christ not only as God but as man hath power above Heb. 1. 2. every creature As Mediatour he hath received a power imperiall over every creature which is apparant in this that the Apostle saith Christ is so placed above all that all are subject under Ephes 1. 21. Heb. 2. 8 9. Matth. 28. 19. Duplex est Christi dominium 1. Essentiale quod ab aeterno habet commune cum Patre 2. Vicarium seu Mediatorium quod habet a Patre in cujus locum quasi succedit Camer in Heb. 1. 2. his feet To me is given all power in Heaven and earth that is power whereunto every creature is subject He speaketh of it as done because it was immediatly to be performed This person as God receiving by voluntary dispensation this honour from the Father that he should in an immediate and appropriate manner execute government over all creatures in heaven and earth the same person as man participating in this Kingly divine authority so farre that he should instrumentally concurre in executing all that judgement which Christ according to his divine nature did principally effect Though the Father and the Spirit have a right and soveraignty over the creature yet they doe not immediatly