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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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there needeth no Mediatour And hence Moses Law was not properly a Covenant of Works Gal. 3.19 because that Law was given in the hand of a Mediatour 4. The Covenant of Works once broken God abates nothing of his justice no not upon repentance but the soul that sinned dyed Mark our Text Thou shalt dye the death by which doubling of the words in the Hebrew Idiom of speech is meant Vehemency and Certainty Vatablus which was effected and so had continued inevitably without the help of another Covenant hinted in that first promise Gen. 3.15 For the first Covenant gives no relief to a poor sinner when he hath broken it but leaves him hopelesse and helplesse under a fearful expectation of wrath and fury indignation 5. The Lord in the Covenant of Works accepts the person for the Works sake that is he mainly looks at the work how adequate it is to the command and rule which he so exactly heeds that upon the least failer his justice breaks out in wrath neither can any personal excellency in the world salve the matter Deut. 27. ult Cursed is he that continueth not in all the words of the Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen a doleful Amen Jam. 2.10 and whosoever keeps the whole Law and offends in one point is guilty of all Note that whosoever God respects no mans person in that case 6. The Covenant of Works in performance of the condition leaves a man matter of boasting and glorying in himself and makes God a debtour to him Where is boasting it is excluded by what Law of works Rom. 3.27 Nay as if he had said the Covenant of Works affords matter of boasting to him that worketh to justification by his own personal power and righteousnesse Now to him that worketh is the reward reckoned not of grace Rom. 4.4 but of debt i. e. it obligeth God to pay it him as a due which is the language of Pharisees and Papists which were justly challenged and claimed 1. Were we indeed under a Covenant of Works and not of Grace 2. Were our works perfect 3. Did we not lye at Gods mercy for our guilt All which declare man impotent and grace necessary and withal Jews and Papists to be enemies to the Crosse of Christ and Covenant of Grace and under a Covenant of Works of which more anon 7. The Covenant of Works leaves a man still in doubt while resting in it in that state because it is a mutable state at best he had all in his own hands and then Satan cunningly rooked him of all God puts him into a good bottome and leaves him to be his own Pilot at Sea the Divel assaults him and sinks him and therefore the second Covenant takes all into Gods hands that it may continue safe under his Father by care and custoddy 1 Pet. 1.4 5. John 10.28 29. and so gives the soul good security against death and danger which Adam had not while he stood much lesse can any rich or honourable man in his fools Paradise here in this world say his Mountain is unmoveable his glory unchangeable seeing it passeth away as a Pageant 1 Cor. 7.31 if Adams Paradise was so mutable much more theirs if he stood not in his integrity how shall they stand in their iniquity 8. The Covenant of Works was made with all men in Adam who was made and stood as a publick person head and root in a common and comprehensive capacity I say it was made with him as such and with all in him Quo mansit remanente quo pereunte peribat he and all stood and fell together for even the Elect may say We are all by nature the children of wrath as well as others Rom. 3.19 and that of St. Paul We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God But the Covenant of Grace is a discriminating thing it takes in some and leaves out others Christ is not a head in Covenant with all as Adam was but of his Elect only for we finde many in the world under the headship of Satan and Antichrist and old Adam who are out of Christ not only because unconverted as Saints themselves are before regeneration but out of Christ in the account of Gods Election Donation and Covenant who have none of his special love nor ever shall have Thus I have briefly opened the distinguishing Characters of the Covenant of Works which might have been more enlarged by those of the Covenant of Grace which is easily done by way of opposition and comparison one with the other and therefore and for brevities sake I omit it and come to the next question Quest 4. Whether this Covenant of Works made with Adam was revived and repeated to Israel in Moses time and if so in what sense and why Answ I answer affirmatively that in some sort the Covenant of Works was revived and repeated to them which appears from these grounds 1. They were tyed to Commandments under a curse Gal. 3.10 Deut. 28 1 2. ver 15.16 2. Blessing is promised to obedience they are both set down by Moses at large in Deuteronomy chap. 28. and elsewhere 3. It is expresly called a Covenant I mean the giving of the Law for obedience The Lord God made a Covenant with us in Horeb. Deut. 5.2 4. It is opposed to the Covenant of Grace as another Covenant upon this very distinguishing account of obedience and faith works and grace as you may see at large among other places in that of the Hebrews Hebr. 8.6 7 8 9 10 c. Now there are foure principal ends which the Lord had in so doing 1. That he might hereby make men know what sin is how prone we are to it and how averse and head-strong against all good this is done by a Law of Works Rom. 7.7 to the 13. ver This indeed is Gods clear glasse by which he discovers to us the moral and penal evil of sin so Rom. 3.20 2. That hereby the Lord might hold men in to obedience by a strong curb because we are so apt to break fence he hedgeth up our way with thornes Hos 2.5 6. 3. That God might stop every mouth and make all guilty before him Rom. 3.19 4. That men may hereby be lash't and driven to Christ as with a School-masters rod to see an absolute need of him and to make out hard after him Gal. 3.22 23 24. For men care not to run to a City of Refuge unlesse the avenger of blood follow behinde at their heels neither do the whole need or regard the Physician but the sick and wounded Yet notwithstanding all this they were not properly under a Covenant of Works neither was the law given to them as such a Covenant meerly 1. Because as the Law was to convince of sin so it
Magistrates themselves under terrors for their vitious actions and those who are not subject to any humane Tribunal why do they with such fury reflect upon themselves for their crimes certainly it proceeds from hence that natural conscience dreads the supreme Judge seeing nothing is able to shelter them from his Tribunal nor restrain his power when he will take vengeance on them In vain doth the Atheist reply that these fears are the product of a common false opinion which is conveyed by education to wit that there is a God who is provoked by sin and that ignorance increases these terrors as little children fear bug-bears in the dark for 't is certain First That no Art or endeavour can totally free a sinner from these terrors whereas groundlesse fears are presently scattered by reason and this argues there is an inviolable principle in nature which respects a God We know there is nothing more disturbs the spirit than fear and every person is an enemy to what torments him hence the sinner labours to conquer conscience that he may freely indulge himself in sin but this is impossible for conscience is so essential that a soul cannot be a soul without it and so inseparable that death it self cannot divorce a man from it perire nec sine te nec tecum potest it can neither dye with the sinner nor without him 't is true the workings of it are unequal as the pulse doth not always beat alike but sometimes more violent and sometimes more remisse so this spiritual pulse is not always in equal motion sometimes it beats sometimes it intermits but returns again those scorners who run a course of sin without controule and seem to despise hell as a meer notion yet they are not free from inward gripes conscience arrests them in the Name of that God whom they deny although they are without faith they are not without fear desperate sinners ruffle it for a time and drench themselves in sensual pleasures to quench that scintilla animae that vital spark which shines and scorches at once but all in vain for it happens to them as to Malefactors who for a time drown the apprehension of their danger in a Sea of drink but when the fumes are evaporated and they seriously ponder their offences they tremble in the fearful expectation of the Axe or Gallows A sinner may conceal his fears from others and appear jolly and brave when conscience stings him with secret remorse as a Clock seems to be calme and still to the eye but 't is full of secret motions within under a merry countenance there may be a bleeding heart To conclude so far is a sinner from being able to quench these terrors that many times the more they are opposed the more powerful they grow thus many who for a time breathed nothing but defiances to conscience and committed sin with greedinesse yet conscience hath with such fury returned upon them that they have run from profanesse to superstition as fugitive slaves are forc't back to their Masters and serve in the vilest Drudgery fearing severe punishments 2. The best men who enjoy a sweet calmness and are not disquieted with the terrors of conscience they abhor that Doctrine which discards the fear of a Deity so that those who are most freed from these terrors believe them to be radicated in nature and grounded upon truth and those who esteem them vain are most furiously tormented with them in which respect the Divine goodnesse shines forth in the greatest lustre towards those who love and fear him and his justice against those who contemn it thus Caligula who was the boldest Atheist in the world yet when it thundred ran with trembling under his bed as if God from heaven had summoned him to judgement whereas Socrates who was the Heathens Martyr died with the same tranquility of spirit wherein he lived 3. 'T is worthy of our serious thoughts that these terrors of conscience are most dreadful when the sinner approaches death the sense of guilt which before was smothered is then revived conscience like a sleeping Lyon awakes and destroys at once experience t●lls us many sinners who have lived in a sencelesse dye in a desperate manner and from whence doth this proceed but from the presages of a future judgement conscience anticipates the vengeance of God then the Alarums are encreast and the storme is more violent for the soul being sensible of its immortal nature extends its fears to Eternity and trembles at him who lives for ever and can punish for ever Argument 3. The consent of Nations agrees in the belief of a God although the Gentiles did grossely mistake the life and essence of the infinite Deity imagining him to be of some humane forme and weaknesse and in this respect were without God in the world yet they conspired in the acknowledgement of a Divinity the multiplicity of their false gods strengthens the Argument it being clear they would rather have any God then none and this belief cannot be an imposture because 't is First Universal What Nation so barbarous as not to worship a God certainly that which is common to all men hath a foundation in nature Secondly 't is perpetual falshoods are not long lived but the Character and Impression of God is indelibly sealed upon the spirits of men Thus we see the Universal Reason of the World to Determine there is a God 2. The Scripture proves there is a God to faith Psal 19. David speaking of the double manifestation of God by his Works and his Word appropriates a converting power to the Word this exceeds the discovery of God in the Creation in respect of its clearnesse and efficacy Psalme 138.2 Thou hast magnified thy Word above all thy Name There are more apparent Characters of Gods Attributes and Perfections in the Scripture than in the Book of Nature in the Creation there is Vestigium the foot-print of God but in the Word there is Imago his Image and lively Representation As the Angels when they assumed visible bodies and appeared unto men yet by the brightnesse and Majesty of their appearance discovered themselves to be above an humane Original so the Scriptures although conveyed to us in ordinary language and words yet by their authority and sanctity evidence their Divine descent and that there is a holy and righteous God from whom they proceed There is a vehement Objection urged by Atheists in all Ages against a Divine Providence and consequently against Gods Being We may hear the Tragedian thus resenting it Sed cur idem Qui tanta regis sub quo vasti Pondera mundi librata suos Ducunt orbes hominum nimium Securus ades non sollicitus Prodesse bonis nocuisse malis Senec. Hippol. The afflicted state of innocency and goodnesse and the prosperous state of oppression and wickednesse Honest men suffer whilest the unrighteous and profane swim in the Streames of Prosperity hence they concluded fortuna certa aut incerta
natura had the charge of these sublunary things even the holy Prophet himself was liable to this temptation Psal 73.9 10 11 12 13 14. he saw that as the clean Creatures were sacrificed every day the Turtle and the Lamb the Emblems of innocency and charity whilest the Swine and other unclean Creatures were spared Plutarch and Seneca and Cicero have rendred satisfaction concerning this method of the Divine Providence So good men were harrast with troubles when the wicked were exempted and this shook his faith but by entring into the Sanctuary of God where he understood their end he comes off with victory now for the removing this Objection Consider First we are not competent Judges of Gods actions we see but one half of Ezekiels Vision the Wheels but not the eye in the Wheels nothing but the Wheels on which the world seems disorderly to run not the eye of Providence which governs them in their most vertiginous changes The actions of God do not want clearnesse but clearing What we cannot acquit is not to be charged on God as unjust the stick which is streight being in the water seems crooked by the refraction of the beams through a double medium we see through flesh and spirit and cannot distinctly judge the ways of God but when we are not able to comprehend the particular reasons of his dispensations yet we must conclude his judgements to be right as will appear by observing Secondly The sufferings of the righteous do not blemish Gods justice 1. God always strikes an offender every man being guilty in respect of his Law Now though love cannot hate yet it may be angry and upon this account where the judgements of God are a great deep unfathomable by any finite understanding yet his righteousnesse standeth like the high Mountains as it is in Psalme 36. visible to every eye if the most righteous person shall look inward and weigh his own carriage and desert he must necessarily glorifie the justice and holinesse of God in all his proceedings 2. The afflictions of good men are so far from staining Gods justice that they manifest his mercy for the least sin being a greater evil than the greatest affliction God uses temporal crosses to prevent or destroy sin he imbitters their lives to wean their affections from the World and to create in them strong desires after heaven as long as the waters of tribulation are on the earth so long they dwell in the Ark but when the Land is dry even the Dove it self will be wandring and defile its self When they are afflicted in their outward man it is that the inward man may be revived as birds are brought to perfection by the ruines of the shell that is not a real evil which God uses as an instrument to save us Who will esteem that Physitian unjust who prevents the death of his Patient by giving a bitter potion 3. If the Righteous be thus afflicted upon earth we may conclude there is a reward in the next World if they are thus sharply treated in the way their Countrey is above where God is their portion and happinesse Thirdly The temporary prosperity of the wicked reflects no dishonour upon Gods justice or holinesse for God measures all things by the Standard of eternity a thousand years to him are as one day Now we do not charge a Judge with unrighteousnesse if he defer the execution of a Malefactor for the day the longest life of a sinner bears not that proportion to eternity besides their reprieve increases and secures their ruine they are as Grapes which hang in the Sun till they are ripe and fit for the Wine-presse God spares them now but will punish them for ever he condemns them to prosperity in this world and judges them not worth his anger intending to poure forth the vials of his wrath on them in the next Fourthly The more sober Heathens have concluded from hence there is a judgement to come because otherwise the best would be most miserable and the ungodly prosperous from hence they have inferred that because all things are dispenc't in a promiscuous manner to the just and unjust in this world therefore there must be an after-reckoning Fifthly There are many visible examples of the goodnesse and justice of God in this World either in rewarding afflicted innocency or punishing prosperous iniquities He that shall read the story of Joseph and consider that wonderful chain of causes managed by the Divine Providence how God made use of the treachery of his brethren not as a sale but a conveyance how by the Prison he came to the principality must conclude there is a watchful eye which orders all things And how many instances are there of Gods severe and impartial justice there is no State or History but presents some examples wherein an exact proportion in the time measure and kind between the sin and punishment is most conspicuous the unnatural sin of Sodom was punish't with a supernatural showre of fire and brimstone Pharaoh had made the River guilty of the blood of the Hebrew Infants his first plague is the turning of the River into blood Adonibezec is just so served as he did by the seventy Kings Judas who wanted bowels for his Lord wanted bowels for himself in life and death for he hanged himself and his bowels gushed out and thus the punishment as a hand points at the sin and convinces the World of a Deity Use 1 Vse 1. This is just matter of terror to Atheists which are of three sorts 1. Vita 2. Voto 3. Judicio First To those who are practical Atheists vita in life who live down this truth denying God in their lives sad and certain it is that many who pretend they know God yet so live they as if there were no Deity to whom they must give an account Such are the secure that sleep in sin notwithstanding all Gods thunder and if ever sleep were the true image of death this is the sleep The sensual who are so lost in carnal pleasures they scarce remember whether they have a soul if at any time conscience begins to murmure they relieve their melancholy thoughts with their company and cups like Saul sending for the Musick when the evil spirit was upon him The incorrigible who notwithstanding the designes of Gods mercy to reduce them although Providences Ordinances conspire to bring them off from their evil ways yet they persist in their disobedience Let such consider it is not a loose and ineffective assent to the being and perfections of God which will save them God is not glorified by an unactive faith nay this will put the most dreadful accent and the most killing aggravations on their sins that believing there is a God they dare presumptuously offend him and provoke the Almighty to jealousie as if they were able either to evade or to sustain his wrath 't is the greatest prodigy in the World to believe there is a God and yet
enough you will finde conversi●n expressed by regeneration Joh. 3.3 Except a man be born again c. Mark we must not only be reformed but regenerated Now because generation is an ordinary work of nature and often falls out in the course of second causes therefore 't is expressed by the Metaphor of resurrection Ephes 2.5 But that which hath been may be againe therefore 't is called a Creation Eph. 2.10 we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his workmanship 2 Cor. 4.6 2 Cor. 5.17 Psal 51.10 yea further 't is expressed by victory 1 Joh. 4.4 or the beating and binding the strong man by one that is stronger than he Luk. 11.21 22. by bringing into Captivity every proud thought 2 Cor. 10.5 All these expressions doth the Scripture use to set out the mystery of grace one expression may not enough be heeded and therefore are many types and figures of it used that what is w●nting in one notion may be supplied by another as let us gather them up a little there must be not only light in the mind but the heart must be moved and that not a little stirred but changed fashioned anew born again and because generation supposeth a previous disposition in the matter not only is it called regeneration but the term resurrection is used in which the matter is wholly unprepared but yet because still here is matter to work upon therefore 't is called Creation which was a making all things out of nothing God works faith where there is no faith and repentance where was no repentance and calls the things that are not as though they were but now because sin makes us worse than nothing and as in Creation as there was nothing to help so there was nothing to resist and hinder therefore 't is expressed by victory implying the opposition of Gods work and the resistance that there is in the heart of man till it be over-powered by grace 2. The next proof is from those assertions whereby all power is denied to man to convert himself to God or to do any thing that is spiritually good as when 't is said he cannot know 1 Cor. 2.14 he cannot believe Joh. 6.44 he cannot obey Rom. 8.7 nay to instance in single acts he cannot think a good thought of himself 2 Cor. 3.5 he cannot speak a good word Mat. 12.34 How can ye being evil speak good things he cannot do any thing John 15.5 He doth not say nihil magnum but nihil not no great thing but without me ye can do nothing Well then when man can neither know nor believe nor obey nor think nor speak nor do any thing without grace surely man is without strength wholly impotent and unable to turn himself to God But here is an Objection If it be so how can these things stand with the mercy of God as the Creatour of man kind to require the debt of him that is not able to pay with the Justice of God as the Judge of the world to punish him with eternal death for the neglect of that which he could not performe or with the wisdome of the supreme law-giver to exhort him by promises which hath no power to do what he is exhorted unto I answer to the first God doth not lose his right though man hath lost his power their impotency doth not dissolve their obligation a drunken servant is a servant and 't is against all reason the Master should lose his right to command by the servants default a Prodigal debtour that hath nothing to pay yet is liable to be sued for the debt without any injustice God contracted with us in Adam and that obedience he requireth is not only due by Covenant but by Law not only by positive Law and contract but by immutable right 't is harsh men think to suffer for Adams fault to which they were not conscious and actually consenting but every man will finde an Adam in his own heart the old man is there wasting away the few remaines of natural light and strength and shall not God challenge the debt of obedience from a debtour that is both proud and prodigal we are proud for when we are miserable we think our selves happy and when we are poor we think our selves rich and when we are blind we conceit our selves very seeing and when we are naked we think our selves well clad Rev. 3.17 and therefore God may admonish us of our duty and demand his right if for no other reason but to shew us our impotency and that we may not pretend that we were not call'd upon for what we owe and as man is proud so he is Prodigal we spend what is left and throw away those relicks of conscience and moral inclinations which escaped out of the ruines of the fall 2. As to the second How God can with justice punish him for the neglect of what he could not do I answer our natural impotency is voluntary We must not consider man only as impotent to good but as delighting in evil and loving it with all his heart as man cannot so he will not come to God John 5.40 our impotency lies in our obstinacy and so man is left without excuse we refuse the grace that is offered to us and by continuing in sin increase our bondage our inveterate customes turning to another nature 3. As to the last how God can exhort and perswade us For answer suppose we should say This is only for the elects sake who certainly are the called according to purpose Rom. 8.28 whereas others are called obiter by the by and as they live intermingled with them if the elect did dwell alone and were a distinct community by themselves the objection were plausible but they are hidden amongst others and therefore the Reprobate have the like favour in the external means with them the world standeth for the elects sake yet the Sun doth not shine upon them alone nor the showres fall upon their fields alone or let me illustrate it thus The sun shineth though blind men see it not the raine falls upon the Rocks and Mountains as well as the fruitful Valleys so are exhortations of duty promiscuously rendred to good and bad this might be answer enough but that which I rather say is that these exhortations have their use for they carry their own blessing with them to them to whom God means them for good the word has a ministerial subserviency to the power of God as when Christ said Lazarus come forth it raised him out of his grave as for others that are not converted by them 't is for their conviction and to bridle their fiercenesse and a means to civilize them and keep them from growing worse whereby many temporal blessings do accrue to them as Pagan Rome flourished in all manner of vertue and successe as long as moral precepts were in force but of this more in the next objection 2. Objection If man be so altogether without strength why do ye presse him
to be enlarged by another 5. The fifth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the efficacy of it I did not so much as mention the efficacy of the former Covenants for there was never so much as any one made happy by them 't is sadly true that the threatnings of punishment for the neglect of duty took hold of them the threatnings seemed plainly to belong to the nature of those Covenants but in the Gospel Covenant 't is otherwise for it is said John 3.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abides which shews that the wrath was brought upon them by the violation of the former Covenant he speaks as of that which was upon them already But yet mistake not as if refusing the Gospel were no sin or not punished they sin more grievously that sin against Gospel love than they that sin only against Legal goodness but wrath doth not properly belong to the Essence of the Gospel Thus you have the first thing I undertook namely the nature of the Covenant positively considered the second is the comparative excellency of the New Covenant above others I will be brief in shewing its excellency above the Covenant of Works more large in shewing you how 't is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Only suppose to prevent mistakes that each Covenant is in its own kind most perfect and most accommodated to the state of the people and to the purposes for which they were instituted This premised First The New Covenant of Grace is better than the Covenant of Nature I forbear to speak of the agreement and diff●rence of them I shall speak only of the excellency of this better Covenant 1. The Covenant of Works was a Declaration of Gods Justice than which nothing can be more terrible to a guilty sinner but the Covenant of Grace is a Declaration of Gods mercy in Christ and let the overwhelmed conscience speak is not this better 2. The Foundation of the Covenant of Works was the Creation of man and the integrity of his nature the Foundation of the Covenant of Grace is mans Redemption by Jesus Christ 3. The Promise of the Covenant of Works was eternal life in Paradise the Promise of the New Covenant is eternal life in Heaven 4. The Covenant of Works had no Mediator no possibility of recovering the least slip the New Covenant is ratified in the blood of the Son of God 't is composed on purpose for our relief * Camero Thus the New Covenant is better than the Covenant of Works Secondly The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Beloved you may observe I do not say better than the Covenant strictly Legal but better than the whole Dispensation which the Jews and all other Believers lived under before Christs Incarnation better than the Old Doctrine of spiritual grace delivered by Moses and the Prophets openly promising Eternal life unto the Fathers and the Dull people of the Jews under the condition of perfect obedience to the Moral Law together with the intolerable burdens of Legal rights and yoke of most straight Mosaical policy but covertly under the condition of repentance and faith in the future Messiah prefigured in the shadowes and types of Ceremonies that by this forme of Divine worship and policy a stiffe-necked people might partly be tamed and partly be brought to Christ that lay hid under those Ceremonies So that in short you see the Old Testament or the Old Covenant for by a Metonymie they are chiefly one and the same thing and the Apostle plainly so expresseth himself 2 Cor. 3.14 Untill this day remaineth the same vaile untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which vaile is done away in Christ and this contains these three things 1. The old kind of doctrine which was openly and principally Legal covertly and lesse principally Evangelical 2. The old way of worship and Legal Priest-hood 3. That Mosaical policy which was tyed to one people * Paraeus This Covenant was made by God to Adam presently after the fall G n. 3.15 afterward to Abraham and his posterity Gen. 17.1 2 7 8. The symbole of this Covenant was circumcision from verse 10. to the 14. I forbear further particularising to whom it was often renewed and confirmed whereupon it is called the Covenants Rom. 9.4 Ephes 2.12 Now the New Covenant of Reconciliation to God by Christ exhibited in the flesh is the better Covenant The Gospel is the Table of the New Testament longè divinio● quam smaragdina Hermetis far beyond the Emerauld Table of Hermes which the Chymists vainly boast to yield the Philosophers stone to enrich all persons and the Panacea that cures all diseases here 's the elect and precious stone 1 Pet. 2.6 * Crocii Syntag. But I will come to particulars only premising this Caution Caution Let not any thing I shall say be interpreted as if I put an hostile contrariety between the Old Covenant and the New in spiritual practice they yield spiritual help to each other Justin Martyr saith that grace is not according to the Law nor against the Law but above the Law therefore they are not adversa but diversa the Gospel in Scripture is called the Law Isa 2.3 only 't is the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 and the Law of the Spirit Rom. 8.2 therefore when we advance the Gospel Rom. 3.31 do we then make voide the Law through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Gal. 3.21 Is the Law then against the promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life v●rily righteousnesse should hav● been by the law The believers in the Old Testament were saved by the free mercy of God in Christ Gerhar l. c. Heb. 9.15 He is the Mediator of the New Testament and by means of death for the Redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance And their Sacraments and ours Maccov l. c. sealed the same ●hing 1 Cor. 10.3 4. They did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ. This premised I shall now shew you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 1. The Gospel-Covenant is a better Covenant than the Legal in respect of its Original and manner of patefaction 't is true they have both one principal efficient cause but the Law may in some sort be known by nature it was written in mans heart at the first and the character is not wholly worne out Rom. 2.15 The Gentiles shew the work of the Law written in their hearts but now the Gospel was immediately manifested from God to the Church alone Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Mat. 16.16 17. And Simon Peter answered
losse of their lives Ye have not yet resisted unto blood saith the Apostle but how soon it may come to that ye know not Heb. 12.4 It 's your duty and will be your wisdome to prepare for such a black bloody day as that there are two things in the death of Christ that may animate and embolden us into a willingnesse to dye for him 1. A motive one good turne requires another 2. A pattern Christ suffered for us leaving us an example that ye should follow his steps 1 Pet. 2.21 Verbi verba sunt nobis Documenta verbi facta sunt nobis exempla August A place very much abused by the Socinians as though there were no more in the death of Christ then an example but one end of Christs death must not exclude another in the blood of Christ there 's both a price and a pattern he hath set us a Copy and upon his call we should be ready to write after him with our blood 6. By Faith and an hearty acceptance of Christ let us put in for a share and get an interest in the blood of Christ He hath it 's true dyed for sinners but without faith what is all this to you though ye be sinners Without blood Christ could not save you and without faith the blood of Christ cannot save you Rom. 3.25 Heb. 9.14 Acts 15.9 God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood the conscience is purged by his blood and the heart pur●fied by faith This precious blood of Christ doth no other way purifie than as applyed and sprinkled by faith Every man was under the Law to lay his hand on his burnt-offering of atonement Lev. 1.4 he must own it for his Sacrifice thou must stretch out an hand of faith and put it on the head of thy sin-offering owning Christ as thy Lord and Saviour for it is not Christs blood as barely shed upon the Crosse but as received into the heart that justifies and saves The Son of man is lifted up John 3.15 that whosoever believes on him should not perish Universal causes act not but by a particular application as Adams sin pollutes no child till applyed by the generation of the Parent The Sun though it enlightens the whole world helps no man to see till its light be received into the eye Suppose the blood of Christ were as extensive and universal a cause of salvation as any men pretend to and contend for it could produce no such effect till faith hath wrought a particular application a great gift enriches not the beggar in the rich mans hand but in his own having received it Use 3. Here 's abundant comfort to all them that have by faith applyed and interested themselves in Christ crucified here 's blood that will interpose between you and harmes Christs treading the Wine presse leads you into the Wine Celler though to him it was very painful to you it is very comfortable that which he felt as blood believers may taste as wine Never was there such a Cordial for drooping and disconsolate soules as that which came from Christs heart when his side was broacht and set running upon the Crosse Comfort in five particulars 1. Your enemies are foyled A Believer hath many enemies this blood of Christ hath either reconciled or disarmed them either made them friends or left them impotent enemies To give a short list of a few of them 1. The justice of God that 's satisfied out of Christ it hath a dreadful quarrel and implacable controversie and poor believers are many times afraid under their misapprehensions that exact and inexorable justice will either non-suit or give a verdict against them but they are more afraid than hurt this blood hath made justice their friend Being justified by faith Rom. 5.1 Rev. 4.3 we have peace with God and in Christ he now sits with a rain-bow about his Throne God once drowned the world in wrath but smelling a sweet savour of rest from Noahs sacrifice he purposed and promised never to do so any more and as a badge and token of his favour and the firmnesse of that Covenant of Peace he put his Rain-bow in the clouds If you can upon good grounds say that Christ is yours there 's a Rain-bow about Gods Throne his Bench of Judicature and condemnation is turned into a mercy-seat justice will set hand and Seale to your acquittance and be so farre from pleading against you that it turnes your Advocate Rom. 3.25 26. and Christ having shed his blood because God is just the believer must be justified 2. The Law is fulfilled To be under the Law is a state full of danger and terrour and Saints are many times afraid that it will be put in as a black bill of inditement against them but the blood of Christ hath scracht the curses out of the Rolle He hath Redeemed them from the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 Rom. 6.14 being made a Curs● for them they are not under the Law but under grace Not unde● the Law as to its invenomed curses inexorable severity and intolerable penalties The Law it self to every believer 1 Tim. 1.9 is as it were non-suited by the death of the Law-maker It is not made for a righteous man it was given to Adam when he was righteous and yet strongly obliges such as are righteous but it lies not against a righteous man so the word signifies as to his condemnation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is not laid as an Axe to the root of the tree Col. 2.15 3. Satan is subdued Christs bruised heele hath broken his head He spoyled principalities and powers and made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in his Crosse The whole Host of Hell with all their traine of Artillery was led Captive by him on the Crosse and tyed to the Chariot-wheels of this triumphant Conquerour When the door-post was sprinkled with blood the destroying Angel passed away the blood of Christ sprinkled on the conscience is a choice Antidote and preservative against this devouring Abaddon not but that he still may be a Tempter and a troubler but he shall never be a conquerour never a tormentor Christopher Haasse a Swedish Senator being at the point of death the Devil appeared by his bed side with pen ink and paper Come quoth he reckon up thy sins in order as thou hast committed them that I may carry them in a Catalogue to Gods Tribunal whether thou art going Well Satan saith he if it must be so let the Catalogue be under this head and Title The seed of the woman shall break the Serpents head and away flew the Devil in a great rage ah sirs had we but the right art of pleading the blood of Christ it would make this roaring Lion more to tremble than the Lion doth at the cock-crowing 4. Sin is abolished and that is a far worse enemy than the Devil Many a
verse Having in the 19. verse asserted Christs fitness for that work it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell c. Besides that infinite fulness which he had as God by natural and necessary generation there was another unmeasured fulness depending upon Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and good pleasure and thereby imparted unto Christ Now he comes to shew his work described First By its nature To reconcile to himself to make peace Secondly By its instrument that is the blood of the Cross by him Thirdly The object of it which are All things whether they be things in earth or things in heaven By which learned Davenant understands the Angels spoken of as the things in heaven and so many others supposing that the Elect Angels wer● confirmed in their estate by Christ But with submission to better judgements I conceive 1. that there is not sufficient evidence in Scripture to shew that the holy Angels had their confirmation from Christ nor doth it seem to be necessary forasmuch as it is commonly acknowledged that Adam who was under the same Covenant with the Angels if he had continued in the observation of Gods precepts for so long time as God judged meet he should have been confirmed by vertue of the Covenant of Works some other way And therefore it was rather to be thought that the Angels have their confirmatiom from Christ as God and Head over all things than as Mediatour The actions of Christ as Mediatour supposing a breach according to that place Gal. 3.20 A M●diatour is not a Mediatour of one i. e. of two parties which are one politically i. e. which are agreed in one but of parties at variance 2. Howsoever if the Angels had been confirmed by Christ yet surely they were not reconciled by Christ for Reconciliation implies a former enmity as these things in heaven are said to be And therefore I rather understand it of departed Saints Patriarchs Prophets c. who as they went to Heaven not to any Limbus so this expression is used to insinuate that they were saved by the grace of Jesus Christ even as we as it is Acts 15.11 and that the blood of Jesus Christ did expiate not only those sins which were committed after his death but those also which were long since past Rom. 3.25 as Sol nondum conspictus illuminat orbem The light and influence of the Sun is dispersed among us before the body of the Sun doth appear above our Horizon So then here you have mans Reconciliation Justification and Salvation described together with the procuring cause of it set forth 1. More generally By him 2. More specially By the blood of his Cross by the shedding of his blood for us by his death and passion compleated on the Cross The doctrine I intend to handle is this That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans justification and salvation Amongst all those heresies which God hath suffered to spring among us that they that are approved may be manifest none are more dangerous than those which concern the person and office of Christ of those many streams of errour which run into the dead Sea of Socinianism these are two They deny the Godhead and the satisfaction of Christ and so indeed subvert the whole Fabrick of the Gospel This latter I shall here endeavour to discuss and shall proceed in this Method 1. I shall explain it 2. Assert 3. Defend 4. Apply it 1. For the Explication of this great Gospel-mystery which truly if it fall we are without hope and so of all creatures most miserable I shall lay down these steps First God made the world and man in it for his own service and glory And this end he cannot be disappointed in but must have it one way or other Secondly Man by sin thwharted Gods end and cast dirt upon his glory and so doth every sinner Every sin is a reflection upon Gods Name a blot in Gods Government of the world so that some make it a pretence for their Atheism saying That if there were a God he would not suffer sin to be in the world Thirdly God is inclined by his Nature and obliged by his interest to hate sin and punish the sinner and so to recover his glory 1. I say God is inclined by his nature to hate and punish sin I do not positively conclude that he is absolutely obliged I shall not here meddle with that nice question Whether God was so far obliged to punish it by his nature that he could not pardon sin without satisfaction but this is manifest look upon man as a sinner and so Gods Nature must needs be opposite unto him The Scripture describes God in such manner not only in regard of his Will but also in respect of his Nature Hab. 1.13 Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil and canst not look on iniquity c. Exod. 34.6 where the nature of the Divine Majesty is represented among other parts of the description this is one He will by no meanes clear the guilty Psalme 11.5 The wicked his soul hateth and the reason is added from Gods Nature ver 7. For the righteous Lord loveth righteousnesse his countenance doth behold the upright And it may further appear that here punishment of sin is not an act of Gods Will but of his Nature Because the Actions of Gods Will are only known by Revelation not by reason or the light of Nature but that God should and would punish sin this was known by natures light to such as were unacquainted with Revelation-light Hence came the Conclusion Acts 28.4 This man is a Murderer whom though he hath escaped the Sea yet Vengeance suffereth him not to live Vengeance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a supposed Goddesse but indeed nothing else but Divine Justice 2. God is obliged by his interest to punish him as he is the Ruler of the world By sin there comes a double mischief 1. God is wronged 2. The world is wronged by a bad example and hardned in sin so that if God might pardon sin as it is a wrong to himself yet he is in a manner obliged to punish it to right the wronged world and to make such sinners patterns of severity that the world may not make them examples of ungodlinesse even as King James might pardon the Powder-Traytors so far forth as his Person was concerned but if you look on it as a wrong to the whole Nation to the Protestant Religion so he was obliged to punish them to make them warnings to others in the like cases so that you see mans punishment was necessary for Gods glory and the Worlds good Fourthly The punishment to be inflicted must be sutable to sins Nature and Gods Majesty and therefore an infinite punishment for this is justice to observe an exact proportion between sin and punishment Fifthly The only way whereby this punishment might be suffered and yet man saved was by the incarnation and
made righteous in Law Righteousnesse is a conformity to the Law he that fulfills the Law is righteous in the eye of that Law he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within the protection of it as he that transgresseth the Law is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guilty in the eye of the Law and without the protection of it Now the Law of the New Covenant runs thus He that believeth shall not perish so that a Believer keeps and fulfills this Law and therefore faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.22 23 24. because faith is the keeping of the New Covenant which therefore is called the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 in opposition to the Old Covenant called there by the Apostle the Law of Works As therefore innocency or perfect obedience would have justified Adam had he stood by vertue of the Law of Works or Old Covenant whose tenor is Obey and live for then he had fulfilled that Law and as his Disobedience actually condemned him by vertue of the same Law Disobey and dye for it Gen. 2.17 So now believing in Christ justifyeth by vertue of the Law of faith for it is the keeping and fulfilling of the Gospel-Covenant whose tenor is Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And again unbelief actually condemneth by vertue of the same Law He that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the Name of the only begotten Son of God Joh. 3.18 That is because the unbeliever is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the protection of the Gospel or Law of faith he cometh not up to its righteousnesse he is condemned already as a sinner by the Law of Works and yet once more with a witnesse condemned as an unbeliever as a monster that hath twice been accessory to his own murder first in wounding himself and secondly in refusing to be healed The Law of works includes us all under sin we are all dead our case was desperate but God who is rich in mercy through his great love wherewith he hath loved us Ephes 2.4 John 3.16 his immense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when we were dead in sins and trespasses hath sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And this is that Law according to which he will judge the world according to my Gospel saith Paul Rom. 2.27 Every Believer therefore though he wants the righteousnesse of the Law of Works viz. innocency yet he shall not be condemned because he hath the righteousnesse of the Gospel viz. faith which is the New Law in force according to which God now dealeth with us and shall judge the world at the last day And here it will be richly worth our very heedful Observation that although a Believer hath not the righteousnesse of the Law of Works i●herent in himself for if he had he were not a sinner but should be justified by that Law yet by faith he lays hold upon Christs satisfaction which in the very eye of the Law of Works is an unexceptionably perfect an infinitely glorious righteousnesse So that faith justifieth us even at the Bar of the Law of Works Ratione objecti as it lays hold on Christs satisfaction which is our Legal righteousnesse it justifieth us at the Bar of the Gospel or Law of faith formaliter ratione sui as it is Covenant-keeping or a fulfilling of the Gospel Law For he that keeps a Law is righteous where that Law is Judge the Law-Maker by his very making of the Law makes him righteous and the Judge that pronounceth according to the Law for a Judge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will infal●ibly pronounce him so But that with all requisite distinctnesse we may apprehend this great affair let us take a view of some of the most considerable and important causes which concur to the producing this excellent effect the discharge and justification of a sinner and state their several interests and concernments in their respective influences upon and contributions towards it 1. How free grace justifieth And first The free grace of God is the first wheel that sets all the rest in motion It s contribution is that of a proegumenal cause or internal motive disposing God to send his Son John 3.16 That sinners believing might be justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus Rom. 3.24 For Christ dyed not to render God good he was so eternally but that with the honour of his justice he might exert and display his goodnesse which contriv'd and made it self this way to break forth into the world 2. How Christs satisfaction Secondly Christs satisfaction is doubly concern'd in our Justification 1. In respect of God as a procatartick cause of infinite merit and impetrative power for the sake of which God is reconciling himself unto the world in Christ not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Cor. 5.19 2. In respect of the Law of Works Christs satisfaction justifieth us formally as our proper Legal righteousnesse I call it our righteousness because it becomes imputed to us upon our believing faith being our Gospel title by pleading which we lay claim to all the benefits accruing from the merit of Christs performance to a●l effects uses and purposes as if it had been personally our own I call it our Legal righteousnesse because thereby the Law of God owns it self fully apaid and acquiesceth in it as in full reparations and amends made unto it for the injury and dishonour received by the sin of man We must plead this against all the challenges and accusations of the Law Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 And thus our Legal righteousnesse required in the first Covenant that of Works is wholly without us in our Redeemer yet imputed upon our account Thirdly The Gospel justifieth quâ Lex lata 3. How the Gospel as it is the Law of faith for the very tenor of the Gospel-Covenant is Believe and thou shalt be saved Fourthly Faith justifieth vi Legis latae 4. How faith as it is our Evangelical righteousnesse or our keeping the Gospel-Law for that Law suspends justification upon believing Faith pretends to no merit or vertue of its own but professedly avows its dependance upon the merit of Christs satisfaction as our Legal righteousnesse on which it layeth hold nor can it shew any other title to be it self our Evangelical righteousnesse but only Gods sanction who chose this act of believing to the honour of being the justifying act because it so highly honoureth Christ So that as a most judicious pen expresseth it the act of believing is as the silver but Gods Authority in the Gospel-sanction is the Kings Coyne or Image stamp't upon it which gives it all its value as to justification Without this stamp it could never have been currant and if God had set this stamp on
declare to them the true God and he doth it ab effectu That God which made the world and all things therein is Lord of heaven and earth ver 24. To Create is the best demonstration of a Deity And this God being everywhere by way of repletion * Jer. 23.24 cannot be locally confined He dwelleth not in Tem●l●s made with hands ver 24. And though in former times when the vaile of Ignorance was drawn over the face of the world God seemed lesse severe ver 30. The times of this ignorance God winked at 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He did as it were overlook them not taking the extremity of the Law yet now he commandeth all men everywhere to repent ver 30. And if it be asked why now repent why may we not take our full sleep The Reason is because now is the broad day-light of the Gospel which as it discovers sin more clearly so judgment upon sinners He hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world Which words are Gods Alarum to the world to awaken it out of security This is a sweet yet dreadful point When Saint Paul discoursed of judgement to come Faelix trembled Acts 24.25 He that is not affected with this Truth hath an heart of stone For the illustration of this there are six things I shall discusse 1. That there shall be a day of judgement 2. Why there must be a day of judgement 3. When the day of judgement shall be 4. Who shall be the Judge 5. The order and the method of the Trial. 6. The effect or consequent of it I begin with the first That there shall be a day of judgement There is a twofold day of judgement 1. Dies particularis a particular judgement at the day of death immediately upon the souls dissolution from the body it hath a judgment passed upon it * Hebr. 9.27 Eccles 12.7 Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was the spirit shall return to God that gave it As soon as the breath expires the soul receives its particular sentence and knows how it shall be with it to all eternity 2. There is Dies universalis a general day of judgement which is the great Assises when the world shall be gathered together and of this the Text is to be understood He hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world I might impannel a whole Jury of Scriptures giving in their verdict to this but in the mouth of two or three witnesses the truth will be confirmed Eccles 12.14 God shall bring every work into judgment with every secret thing Eccles 12.14 whether it be good or evil Mat. 12.36 Every idle word men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of judgement * Mat. 12 36. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 96 13. Now is the day of Arr ars then will be the day of Account Psalme 96.13 For he cometh for he cometh to judge the Earth The Ingemination denotes the certainty and infallibility of his coming Secondly Why there must be a day of judgement 1. That God may execute justice on the wicked Things seem to be carried here in the world with an unequal balance The Candle of God shines upon the wicked * Job 29.3 They that tempt God are delivered * Mal. 3.15 Diogenes seeing Harpalus a Thief go●on prosperously said sure God had cast off the government of the world and minded not how things went here below 2 Pet. 3.4 2 Pet. 3.4 There shall be in the last days Scoffers saying Where is the promise of his coming Therefore God will have a day of Assizes to vindicate his justice he will let sinners know that long-forbearance is no forgiveness 2. That God may exercise mercy to the godly Here piety was the white which was shot at they who prayed and wept had the hardest measure those Christians whose zeal did flame most met with the fiery tryal Rom. 8.36 Rom. 8.36 For thy sake we are killed all the day long The Saints as Cyprian saith are put in the wine-presse and oft the blood of these grapes is pressed out God will therefore have a day of judgement that he may reward all the tears and sufferings of his people They shall have their Crown and Throne and White Robes though they may be Losers for him they shall lose nothing by him * Rev. 7.9 Thirdly When the day of judgement shall be 'T is certain there shall be a judgment uncertain when the Angels know not the day nor Christ neither as he was man Matth. 24.36 And the reason why the time is not known is 1. That we may not be curious There are somethings which God would have us ignorant of Acts 1.7 It is not for you to know the times or seasons which the Father hath put in his own power We must not pry into Gods Ark or intermeddle with his Arcana imperii it is a kinde of Sacriledge as Salvian speaks for any man to break into the Holy of holies and enter into Gods secrets 2. God hath concealed the time of judgement that we may not be careless We are alwayes to keep Centinel having our Loyns girr and our Lamps burning not knowing how soon that day may overtake us God would have us live every day saith Austin as if the last day were approaching * Ideo latet ultimus dies ut observentur omnes dies Austin Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum This is the genuine Use our Saviour makes of it Mark 13.32 Of that day and houre knows no man no not the Angels in heaven Take ye heed watch and pray for ye know not when the time is But though we cannot tell precisely when this day of the Lord shall be yet in probability the time cannot be far off Hebr. 10.3.7 He that shall come Hebr. 10.37 will come and will not tarry Chrysostome hath a simile when saith he we see an old man going on Crutches his Joynts weak his radical moisture dried up though we do not know the just time when he will dye yet it is sure he cannot live long because natures stock is spent So the world is decrepit and goes as it were upon Crutches therefore it cannot be long before the worlds Funerals and the birth-day of judgement The Age which Saint John wrote in was the last time 1 John 2.18 in the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.18 the last houre then sure the time we now live in may be called the last minute Psal 96.13 For he cometh to judge the Earth Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall come but he cometh * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shew how near the time is It is almost day-break and the Court is ready to sit Jam. 5.9 The Judge standeth at the door Verily if Security * Mat. 24.37 Apostasie * 1. Tim. 4.1 Decay of Love * Mat. 24.11
the searing of the conscience is the clasping of the book but when this book of conscience shall be unclasped at the great day then all their Hypocrisie Treason Atheisme shall appear to the view of Men and Angels * Luke 12.3 the sinnes of men shall be written upon their forehead as with a Pen of Iron * Cunctis agminibus patebunt universa scelera tua Bern. Thirdly The Circumstances of the Tryal where consider foure things 1. The Impartiality 2. The Exactnesse 3. The Perspicuity 4. The Supremacy First The Impartiality of the Tryal Jesus Christ will do every man justice he will as the Text saith judge the world in righteousnesse It will be dies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 justice holds the scales The Thebanes did picture their Judges blind and without hands * Reusner blinde that they might not respect persons without hands that they might take no bribes Christs Scepter is a Scepter of righte●usn●sse * Hebr. 1.8 Hebr. 1.8 He is no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or respecter of persons 't is not nearnesse of blood prevailes Many of Christs Kindred shall be condemned 'T is not gloriousnesse of profession many shall go to hell with Christ in their mouths Mat. 7.22 * Mat. 7.22 Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy Name and in thy Name cast out Divels c Yet though they cast out Divels they are cast out to the Divel 'T is not the varnish of a picture that a judicous eye is taken with but the curiousnesse of the work 'T is not the most shining profession Christ is taken with unlesse he see the curious workmanship of grace in the heart drawn by the Pensil of the Holy Ghost Things are not carried there by parties but aequa lance in a most just balance Christ hath true weights for false hearts there are no fees taken in that Court the Judge will not be brib'd with an hypocritical tear or a Judas kisse * Veniet dies illa in qua plus valebunt pura corda quam astuta verba conscientia bona quam marsupia plena judex enim non falletur verbis nec flectetur donis Bern. Secondly The Exactnesse of the Tryal it will be very critical t●en will Christ throughly purge his floor Mat. 3.12 Not a grace or a sin but his Fan will discover Christ will at the day of judgement make an heart-anatomy as the Chyrurgion makes a dissection in the body and doth criticize upon the several parts or as the Goldsmith doth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bring his gold to the balance and touch-stone and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pierce his gold thorow to see if it be right and genuine and whether there be not a baser mettal w thin Thus the Lord Jesus whose Eyes are as a flame of f●re Revel 1.14 will pierce thorow the hearts of men and see if there be the right mettal within having the Image and Superscription of God upon it Paint falls off before he fire the hypocrites paint will fall off at the fiery Tryal nothing then will stand us in stead but sincerity Thirdly the perspicuity of the Trial sinners shall be so clearly convicted that they shall hold up their hand at the Barre and cry guilty those words of David may be fitly applyed here Psalm 51.4 that thou mayst be cleare when thou judgest The sinner himself shall clear God of injustice The Greek word for vengeance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies justice Gods taking vengeance is doing justice sin makes God angry but it cannot make him unrighteous the wicked shall drink a Sea of wrath but not sip one drop of injustice Christ will say Sinner what Apology canst thou make for thy self are not thy sins written in the book of conscience hadst thou not that book in thy own keeping who could interline it now the sinner being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-condemned shall clear his Judge Lord though I am damned yet I have no wrong done me thou art cleare when thou judgest Fourthly The Supremacy of the Court this is the highest Court of Judicature from whence is no appeal Men can remove their causes from one place to another from the common Law to the Court of Chancery but from Christs Court there is no appeal he who is once doomed here his condition is irreversible 6. The sixth and last particular is the effect or consequence of the Tryal Which consists in three things First Segregation Christ will separate the godly and the wicked Mat. 25.32 Matth. 25.32 He shall separate them one from another as a Shepherd divideth his Sheep from the Goats Then will be the great day of separation it is a great grief to the godly in this life that they live among the wicked Wo is me that I sojourn in Meseck Psal 120.5 Wicked men blaspheme God Psal 74.18 and persecute the Saints 2 Tim. 3.12 They are compar'd to dogs * Psal 22.16 to Bulls * Psal 68.30 to Lions * Psal 57.4 they roare upon the godly and tear them as their Prey Cain kills Ishmael mocks Shimei rails The godly and the wicked are now promiscuously mingled together * Mat. 13.30 and this is as offensive as the tying a dead man to a living but Christ will ere long make a separation as the Fan doth separate the wheat from the chaff as a Furnace separates the gold from the drosse or as a searcer strains out the spirits from the dregs Christ w●ll put the sheep by themselves who have the ear-mark of Election upon them and the Coats by themselves after which separation there follows Secondly The Sentence which is two-fold 1. The sentence of absolution pronounced upon the godly Matthew 25.34 Come ye blessed of my Father inherit the Kingdom prepared for you After the pronouncing of which blessed sentence the godly shall go from the Barre and sit upon the Bench with Christ 1 Cor. 6.3 Know ye not that the Saints shall judge the world The Saints shall be Christs Assessors they shall sit with him in Judicature as the Justices of Peace with the Judge they shall Vote with Christ and applaud him in all his judicial proceedings Here the world doth judge the Saints but there the Saints shall judge the world 2. The sentence of condemnation pronounced upon the wicked Matth. 25.41 ite maledicti Depart from me ye cursed into everlasting fire I may allude to that James 3.10 Out of the same mouth proceeds blessing and cursing out of the same mouth of Christ proceeds blessing to the godly and cursing to the wicked the same wind which brings one ship to the Haven blows another ship upon the Rock Depart from me the wicked once said to God Depart Job 21.14 They say unto God Depart from us and now God will say to them Depa t from me this will be an heart-rending word Chrysostome saith this word Depart is worse than the fire Depart from
way upon the hearing of this terrible Text shall say to me as the Devils in the Gergesens said to our Saviour Art thou come hither to torment us before the time Mat. 8.29 I say no but to warn you to flee from the wrath to come and reduce you from the broad into the narrow way 3.17 7.13 14. for all the while you are in a state of nature going on in sin against God you do but wrong your own souls and by hating wisdome love death Prov. 8. ult Rom. 6. ult yea eternal death though you like not to hear of it Let not prejudice take away your judgement and then a Boanerges * Mark 3.17 with Joh. 12.29 a son of thunder to day may fit you to give better entertainment to a Barnabas * Acts 4.36 with Rev. 4.5 a sonne of Consolation to morrow For my part I hope I am not studious neither do I expect to please men Gal. 1.10 1 Cor. 4.3 in treating on this severe point their censure is a small thing to me if I may approve my self the servant of Christ our Judge which I shall endeavour in not erring from the scope of this his last sentence in my Text wherein we have Text divided 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. The persons sentenced or judged viz. the wicked described by their station on the left hand condition cursed 2. The person sentencing viz. Christ who is Lord Chief Justice of all the world me 3. The punishment or sentence it self pronounced by this Judge who cannot but do right namely Depart from me into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels from God who hath no beginning into Hell which hath no end noting the pain of 1 Tim. 1.7 Ter. à quo ad quem Loss Depart from me Sense into everlasting fire c. Where we have Hell Torments set forth by their quality extremity eternity quantity extremity eternity 1. Extremity aggravated by their inflammation fire the preparation of them prepared the association in them the Divel and ●his Angels 2. Eternity which makes all Hell ●ndeed evalasting fire Take the summe in this Proposition Doctrine The wicked shall depart from Christ into the greatest Torments Or if you will have it shorter take it in Davids words a Psal 9.17 The wicked shall be turned into Hell I shall endeavour to prepare this for Application by Explication and Confirmation I. Explication of the Subject Predicate I. Explicat 1. The Subject the wicked i. e. All ungodly men and women who dye in their sins unclean unsanctified Rev. 21.27 1 Cor. 6.9 10. 2 Thes 1.9 Colos 3.6 who know not God nor obey the Gospel the Goats on Christs left hand at the great day in my Text denominated the cursed * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 execratio horrenda abominanda Camerarius Ger. Harm Evang. with a dreadful execration detested of God with abomination and destinated to all misery without remedy 2. The Predicate the greatest punishment or Hell of which I shall say somewhat to First The name Hell answering to the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sheol and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quid nominis quid rei which though the former primarily signifies the grave and the latter the valley of the son ●f Himmon yet they do also signifie extreame and eternal torment especially the latter in the new Testament where Christ speaks b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 5.29 30. with v. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the whole body being cast into Hell the fiery Hell which Mark explains to be inextinguishable c Mark 9.43 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with Mat. 18.9 Hence our Saviour elsewhere bids fear him who is able to destroy soul and body 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Hell d Mat. 10.28.23.15.33 Luke 12.5 Men could not cast the soul into the proper Gehinnom but God can cast that into Hell after the body is killed which several of the Ancient Jewish Doctors * Targ. Jonath B. Uz. Hierus Paraph. in Gen. 3. ult Praeparavit Gehennam improbis infuturo seculo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. apprehending they did by Gehinnom Metaphorically describe the infernal fire as the Learned * Targ. Jonath B. Uz. Hierus Paraph. in Gen. 3. ult Praeparavit Gehennam improbis infuturo seculo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. have proved notwithstanding what is said to the contrary in that abominable Treatise of Hell justly sentenc'd to be burnt about two years ago wherein the Jesuited Pen-man * P. Cheitomaeus Beza Scapula Minshaw Usher Fulk Buxtorf Lex Talm. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ider● sonant apud Ignatium Epist ad Ephes 4. S. R. Lond. printed 1657. whither out of ignorance or malice or both hath most shamefully wronged our best Authors But could he and any others which they cannot evade the Tropical signification of Gehenna yet all the strength of their Arguments to shake and remove Hell Pillars will be but just enough as it fared with Sampson in a far more lawful undertaking Judg. 1.16 28. when he shook the Pillars of the house in which the Philistines were to pull down the rotten Fabrick of their hellish Tenet upon their own Pates sit'h there are abundantly more of Scripture expressions noting an extreame and eternal misery after this life is ended viz. Destruction by way of eminency e Mat. 7.13 utter darknesse where weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth f 22.13 and the worme dyeth not g Mark 9.43.48 damnation h Mat. 23.33 everlasting punishment i 25.46 eternal fire chains blacknesse and mists of darkness k Jude ep 6 7 13. the Prison where the spirits of the disobedient be l 2 Pet. 2.4 17. with 1 Pet. 3.19 wrath to come m 1 Thes 1.10 5.9 the furnace of fire n Mat. 13 42. the second death bottomless pit place of torment lake of fire and brimstone o Rev. 2.11 9.2 14.10 20.10 19.20 21.8 Secondly The nature of Hell may be thus described 't is no lesse than the eternal and second death in its latitude as opposite to eternal life i.e. The most miserable state of the wicked wherein they are everlastingly separated from the sight of God and all comfortable good The description of Hell lock't up in chains of darknesse under the fresh lively and afflicting sense of the wrath of God justly kindled and ●ontinually flaming against them for their sins and according to the measure of them so that they are filled with never ceasing horrors of conscience and scorched in soul and body with such grievous flames as will for ev●r torment but never consume them to an annihilation The description explained More particularly this Description suggests two things agreeable to them already noted in the Text further to be explained viz.
torments to eternity with the enemies of God rather than to part with the pleasures of sinne which a●e bu● for a season and seem to have that wrote on the tables of their hearts which that Wretch subscribed under the Image of God and the Devil * Domine si tu non vis iste me rogitat Lord if thou wilt not here is one that begs of me to be his and his I will be Now if there be a Law a Judge punishments and rewards in some degree here then every man is a Prophet in this case of this Future state 4. The promiscuous dispensations and providences of God in this world * Eccles 9.2 Psal 17.14 Lam. 3.16 all things coming alike to all nay the wicked it may be have their belly full of a large portion in this life when the godly have their teeth broken with gravel stones and covered with ashes these argue 1. There is a day to come when the scales shall be turned Abel is slaine for his piety when Cain lives and builds Cities Herod reigns Herodias danceth when John Baptists head is serv'd in in a Charger And though God sometimes by extempore and sudden justice hangs up some wicked wretches in chaines yet many times the most wretched oppressors are too strong and high for justice in this world and they that live like Lyons die like Lambs they have liberty in their lives and * Psal 73.4 no bands in their deaths Dionysius a bloody Tyrant dies quietly in his bed when David lies * Psal 32.3 roaring all night and a good Josiah falls in Battle which made the Prophet cry out * Hab. 1.8 Wherefore doth the wicked devour one more righteous than himself the just must therefore live by his Faith in the world to come or else all Piety will die therefore there shall be a judgement hereafter for * Heb. 6.10 Psal 58.11 God is not unrighteou● to forget their labour of love and patience doubtless there is a reward for the righteous verily there is a God that judgeth in the earth 2. Is the life to come such a Kingdome then here is field-room for all our ambition avarice and contention to shew it self be ambitious for something if we must be ambitious let us all King it here What scuffling and scrambling is there for Crowns and Scepters in the world out of that impetuous lust of dominering whereas a prophane Esau sold his Birth-right which had a Kingdome and a Blessing too in it * Gen. 25.34 for a mess of pottage Lysimachus when inflamed with thirst profered his Kingdome for a draught of cold water and how much gold or how many Kingdomes would Dives give if he had them * Luke 16.24 for a drop of cold water or to be delivered from that one Kingdome of the Devil and shall Christians contend about these things Alas Christian Religion was never made for a secular Engine we may as soon turn Axiomes of Truth into Swords and Speares the Rules of holy living into Canons and Musquets and prayers and teares into powder and shot as to make Religion a troubler of the order and peace of the world that is of a Dove-like * Mat. 10.16 innocent temper full of * Jam. 3.17 meeknesse humility gentlenesse easinesse to be entreated without partiality without hypocrisie can suffer any evil but do none can live and secure it self better by suffering than the crafty world by acting to use sinful means to avoid suffering or preserve worldly greatness is like him that when one hoped to see him at his Diocess ere long Replyed He feared he should be in heaven before that time should come It is not Christian Religion but that Anti-Christian spirit which diffuseth it self all over Christendome in its Doctrines and Agitations its Philtres and Poysons that inflames it more with contentions and Warres than any part of the world besides For Religion truly Christian * Mat. 12.25 takes only the Kingdome of Heaven by violence Let one Romane Emperour busie himself in catching flies another gather Cockle-shells with his Army on the Sands after great preparations for an Expedition silly emblemes of the most valiant attempts of many highly-famed Mortals but let Christians March with all Zeale only for the holy Land of Promise All those tittles of Honour for we pronounce them too long which the world playes with as children with Farthing Candles blowing them in with one breath puffing them out with another if they had never so good a * Membrana dignitatis Sen. Pattent yet what will they come to * Isa 34.4 Rev. 6.14 when the Heavens shall role up as a Scrole much more shall these shrivel up as a piece of Parchment before the Flames when all the Armes and Ensignes of Honour shall be blazoned alike in a Field ardent at the judgement day Beauty that blossome of flesh and blood which now carries so many Captives at her Wheeles tyrannizing over fond mortals affections when we come to those beauties of Glory will be no more comely than a dry skull in comparison of the Ravishing Lustre that will be in the most deformed body of the Poorest Lazarillo whose Brightness will transcend the loveliest face more than the rarest Jewel doth a vile piece of Jett And though perhaps difference of Sexes may remaine for all Scotus his Glosse That in Christ Jesus there is neither male nor female yet * Delectent intuitum non inflectent ad vitium they will only delight the eye not incline to any vicious thought all lust being fired out and no spark of concupiscence left in the Saints but Grace triumphing in those objects that conquered it here when * Mat. 11.12 they shall be as the Angels of God only pure flames of Divine Love and joy When all the pure gold in the World shall be melted out of the veins of the Earth and mens Coffers into one common streame and all Pearles and precious Stones should lie as the gravel on the side of that River yet they would scarcely be thought fit then to make a Metaphor of for the very Pavement of the new Jerusalem one sight whereof will dimm and deface all the glory of the World 3. Must the Title be Inheritance then look to your evidences Regeneration and Adoption as ever you look for this Kingdome prove your Fathers Will and your selves Sonnes it is no matter how your names are wrote on earth in dust or Marble in reproach or renown if they be written in Heaven Some say this world is but a shadow of that above and it was so before sin had blotted and defaced all therefore look for the lineaments of that Kingdome above to be pourtrayed on you all are for an Heaven but as Eusebius says there were many * Ebionitarum Encratitarum Nazaraeorum c. spurious Gospels so Basilis asserted one hundred sixty five Heavens as many Heavens as dayes in a yeare The Turks
raised 480. to be believed 581. reasons of it 586 587 588 589. Resurrection the effect of the New Covenant and union with Christ 388. Resurrection after what manner and with what difference 591. how effected p. 593. it is to be believed 595. a ground of comfort ib. 596 597 598 599. a ground of terror 560. how made happy to our selves 603 604. Revenge accompanieth repentance 545. S Sacraments in the Old Testament were various and many 122. Tree of life a Sacrament in Paradise ibid. Sacraments prove corruption of nature 153. Saints are good company 3. Salvation by Christ an Argument of original pravity 153. Salvation the end of Faith 473. Salvation difficult 482. Sanctification Covenant priviledge 14. Satisfaction of Christ explained 337 339 340 341. its Matter 408 Form 412. Terms 417. Satisfaction not made by man himself 407. but by Christ 408 409 410. and how done 402. Satisfaction of Christ the only plea to procure justification at Gods bar ib. Scripture the Word explained 86. Scripture proves a God 48. Scripture similitudes shew the union between Christ and Believers 384. Scripture only discovers mans natural pravity 151. Sea its course and confinement proved a God 35 36. Secret sins discovered by natural conscience 44. Sense of Scriptures power on the soul prove them Divine 98. Sense of sin and sorrow for it are precursive parts of true Repentance 492. Sense of a short life helps to Repentance 349. Self sinful to be studied 168. Self examination an help to Repentance 548. Severity of Gods justice 295. Sense its pain in hell 626. Constituted by Real presence of all evil Impression of justice Personal Feeling 627 628. Sentence of last day 614. Sight of things invisible an effect of Faith 471. Sin to be feared and fled from 643 644. Sin a defect nothing positive 112 113. it is most unreasonable p. 114. subjects man to an impotency of saving himself 115. justifieth God in punishing man 116 117. should rather be gotten out than inquired how it came into the world 113. Sins evil seen in Christ his death 294. Sin better discovered by the New than Old Covenant 250. Sin abolished by Christ his death 302 303. Sin is imputed inherent extensive diffusive 165. Sin may exist and prevaile in a true Saint 505. Sin mortified by the Spirit 389. Sinner elect and called the subjects of Faith 460. Shame was in Christs death 206. Sensible sinner subject of true repentance 489. Society in heaven what 658 659. Sons of God partakers of the whole essence of the Father is the same numerical nature 66. 67. Sonship to God is by Creation 435. Generation 435. Marriage 435. Adoption 435. Sonship by Adoption Honourable 437 440. Free 437 440. Permanent 437 440. Sonship to God marks of it p. 453 454. Sorrow and humility usher faith 476. Soul of Christ suffered 410. Souls in heaven subject to Jesus Christ 324 325. Spirit of God in man a signe of union with Christ 389. Spirit of God justifieth how 422. Spirits evil shall be chained when Saints go to heaven 652. Speed facilitates repentance 452. Sting of conscience a note of Deity 45. Sting in Christ his death 286 287. Study of Scriptures a duty 99 100. Suns scituation and motion proveth a God 33 34. Sullen repentance what 518. Systems of Religion profitable for Ministers and people 5. they instruct in the faith antidote error 7 12. Adorn the truth 16. help the understanding 17. the memory 18. affections 19. such are found in Scripture 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. to be studied by young Divines 21. T Temptation of Satan did not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Things in heaven subject to Christ what 323 324. Things on earth subject to Christ what they are 325. Things under the earth 326. Every Tongue what it means 329. Terms of Covenant between God the Father and his Son 225. Torments of Hell Exquisite Intolerable Easelesse Remediless Universal and various 629 630 631. Tryal of last day shall be 1. Universal 2. Formal 3. Impartial 4. Exact 5. Perspicuous 6. Supreme 610 611 612. its consequence 613. Trinity proved by Old Testament text 72. New Testament 74 75. Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance 50. U Union of two natures in Christ without confusion or transmutation 270. Union of believers and Christ necessary p. 377. what kind it is not 379. what kind it is 381 382. its causes 383. grounds 385. its marks 389 390 391 392. it is to be sought by sinners and improved by Saints 396 397 398 399 400. Unbelievers miserable 48. not Gods sons 447. Vocation its twofold estate 437. Vocation a Resurrection a new Creation 361. W Will of God signified in a rule of rectitude 107. Witness from heaven differs in six particulars from witnesse on earth 67 68. we have both to prove Christ the Son of God 66. Word of God declareth his wrath 181 182 183. World visible its being and parts 31 32. World an enemy to faith 481. to be slighted by ●aints 549. Works their use in point of Covenant 126 127. how they justifie 422. Wrath of God what and how aggravated 177 178 179 180. falleth on man here 184. fully at the day of judgement ibid. sheweth his justice and wisdome p. 193 194 195 196. it is to be avoided 197 198. Y Yoak of the Law borne by Jesus Christ 280 281. Z Zeal Negative p. 2. Affirmative p. 2. Zeal accompanieth true Repentance 544. FINIS