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A92854 The humbled sinner resolved what he should do to be saved. Or Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ the only way of salvation for sensible sinners. Discovering the quality, object, acts, seat, subject, inseparable concomitants and degrees of justifying faith. The agreement and difference of a strong and weak faith; the difficulty of beleeving, the facility of mistake about it, and the misery of unbelief. The nature of living by faith, and the improvement of it to a full assurance. Wherein several cases are resolved, and objections answered. / By Obadiah Sedgwick, Batchelour in Divinity and late minister of the Gospel in Covent Garden. Sedgwick, Obadiah, 1600?-1658. 1657 (1657) Wing S2375; Thomason E900_1; ESTC R203520 234,690 315

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obedience in none but him I rest on none but him on him do I believe he hath satisfied to the utmost and I trust on him that he hath done it for me Brethren the case stands thus a man is borne in sin and he goes on in much sin a long time at length God awakens his conscience makes him to possesse the iniquities of his heels of his birth of his youth of his age of his life and perhaps besets the soul round about with some sensible dread of his infinite displeasure Now the man knowes not what to do good Lord saith he what a miserable creature am I here 's sin committed over and over the Law broken God provoked conscience raging hell gaping I am violated saith the Law wronged saith Justice thou hast sinned saith Conscience I will be satisfied saith the Lord saith the poor soul what shall become of me what have I to quiet God I can finde nothing what shall I do to pacifie him I cannot imagine it If I say that I have not sinned my conscience tells me I lye if I say I will not sin hereafter Why yet how will this satisfie for former gilt I tell you brethren that a heart brought to this sensible experience is marvelously oppressed the very heart cracks and the sins of that soul snap a sunder under the sense of manifold gilt and Gods displeasure But then God comes in the Gospel and calls out to the poor and distressed sinner come hither saith God I will shew thee a way of salvation O how the soul listens to such a message but how Lord can this be what am I or what can I do Nothing saith God for thou art an enemy and thou art without strength But I have laid Salvation upon one that is Mighty Who is that Lord It is my own Son whom I have out of my love sent into the world to be made man and to dye and satisfie for sinners to beare their iniquities to answer for all their transgressions and he is become a surety and a Priest and hath sacrificed his own soul to be an offering for sin and I offer him unto thee to be thy surety to be thy Priest to take away thy sinnes Now take him saith God to the soul and with him the discharge of thy sins Hereupon the soul being perswaded of the truth of this good testimony and with many teares admiring at the riches of divine love and mercy it doth now by faith close in with Christ put it self on him embraceth him with all the heart as a sufficient and perfect Saviour As if the soul now fastning it self by faith on Christ in this respect should thus be speake the Lord. O Lord thou art pleased justly to charge my sins upon my conscience I confesse and am ashamed that I have thus sinned against thee yea and I acknowledg that I am never able to answer thee for those sins But thou hast appointed thine own Son to be my Saviour and Priest whose office it was to beare the sins of the people these sins therefore which conscience now chargeth upon me I do by faith charge upon thine own Sonne for he was made sin for us thou didst ordaine him to be a surety and therefore I beseech thee Lord look for satisfaction of my debts in his precious blood and take away thy curse from my soul for he was made a curse for us he did susteine thy wrath in our steed to deliver from wrath Now therefore O Lord I put my soul only upon thy only Son whom I take to be my sacrifice him I offer up unto thee as my propitiation I have sinned but thy Son hath dyed for my sins I have provoked thee but thy Son hath pacified thee I have wronged thee but thy Son hath satisfied thee he did not die for his own sins but for my sins he was not made a curse for himself but for me I lay hold on his blood to be my peace and satisfaction and salvation As if a man were like to be carried to prison for debt and hunting up and down for a friend to stand for him at length he findes one only man and him he brings to the creditor and saith here 's a man will pay you and ransome me so faith for a troubled and obliged sinner to God it findes out Christ and saith Lo Lord here is thy Son who is my surety he will discharge he is my ransome SECT IV. FOr Christ as a Saviour and King and Prophet and Lord what is the exercise of faith there I tell you what I think of it It is a work of a believing heart whereby it doth accept of Christ to be the sole teacher and ruler of heart and life and resigne up himself wholly to him to be fashioned as it were and guided by him A man never comes to the truth of beleeving but he shall finde this that faith will change his Master For faith changeth the heart and the heart being once changed will quickly change its Lord So that to believe on Christ as a King as a Lord as a Prophet it is to admit him to give him up the whole man into his hands to his holy and spiritual Government as if the heart should say thus much thou art a Holy Christ and thou art he who art to reigne now I take thee to be my Holy Lord and I resigne up my selfe I passeover my selfe unto thee I will have no Lord but thee and I do with all my heart accept of thee to make me Holy as thou art Holy and to subdue this vile heart of mine and to rule in me by thy blessed and mighty Spirit SECT V. THus briefly of the immediate object of faith on which faith immediately looks viz the person of Jesus Christ to take and receive Christ as Lord and Saviour This is true faith yet by the way note a few things First that this taking is with all the heart it is not a pretended taking a dissembled work there is a taking of Christ with the tongue and a taking of him with the heart O no when true faith takes Christ it brings in the very strength of the soul O Lord Jesus I do embrace thee accept of thee with all my soul with all my might and with all my affections Secondly this taking of Christ is of all Christ of Lord as well as Jesus when the heart is made sensible of sin and Satan and world and Christ and now falls off from them I will have no more to do with you I will serve you no longer Christ only shall be my Saviour and he only shall be my Lord I will put my soul under his Scepter and Government Thirdly this taking of Christ is onely of Christ For it is a conjugall taking which consists of unity one they say in the Metaphysicks is divided in it self and divided from all besides it self so is it in faiths taking of Christ One Faith One Lord said the Apostle
the Law of God requires under the paine of eternal damnation The perfection of good works according to the strict exigence of the Law consists especially in two things 1. One is that a man be able to performe them with all of his heart and with a plenary love without the intervening or sliping in of any evil inclination or motion which abates that due and required intension or in any measure sprinkleth or tainteth them with any defilement 2. Another is that a man is to perform good works in that manner with a perpetual and constant ten our or course all his life Those two are the ingredients of perfection as appears by that of Christ Thou shalt love the Lord c. And that of Paul He is cursed that doth not continue in all that is written c. Gal. 3. 10. These are the conditions of works legally good and which must justifie a man if he will be justified according to the legal Covenant But who can performe such perfect and good works Adam might have done them and Christ did but what one sinner can who can say my heart is cleane and that we do not in many things offend all Paul cries out I am carnal but the Law is spiritual The good that he would do he could not do and the evil which he would not do that did he do Good Lord how often are we at a losse in our most retired meditations and how our hearts lie flat on earth when our eyes look towards heaven in prayer For one good work that we do how many bad which we should not do like boyes for one faire line twenty with blots and blurs or like the Archers whereas they hit the mark once they misse it a hundred times Let us but cast the accounts of our ill works with the good and we shall finde with shame and sorrow that our good works are not equal with our bad in number nor so strong in dignity to wipe out the bad but the bad as they are more for number so their cry of gilt is more meritorious to cast both our persons and all our works before the judgement seat of God then the good to ingratiate or merit for us 2. What proportion 'twixt our works and 'twixt our pardon and salvation If Jacob be lesse then the least of outward benefits Good God! how far more unworthy are we of the spiritual yea of the Eternal When we have done all we have not done more then duty and that can never be merit which is but duty nay when we have done all we can we have not done our duty we are but unprofitable servants and that which failes of duty comes short of dignity or merit It is true that God commands accepts delights in will graciously reward good works what for their own sake No for his mercies sake he will save the man whose heart is holy and whose life is fruitful What for the works sake No but for his Christs sake It cannot be denied but that there is some relation 'twixt good works and salvation as between the meanes and the end but there is not that relation as 'twixt an efficient cause and an effect for the efficient cause of our salvation is only Gods grace and favour Nor as 'twixt a meritorious cause and the reward for the meritorious cause of our salvation is only the obedience of Jesus Christ Nor as 'twixt an apprehensive cause may I use such an improper speech for that only is faith the instrument of our salvation c. There is not in regenerate men such an adequation or full 3. Noe ability to keep the whole Law wholly answerablenesse of duty as to keep and fulfil the Law as it is the Covenant of life and salvation There are divers Arguments to cleare this I will touch one or two 3. Reasons 1. Imperfect actions do not fulfil a perfect Rule no more then a short line answers a long copy or a line partly crooked doth that which is streight But the duties which regenerate men perform are imperfect actions for as much as they flow from an imperfect agent viz. from the soul of a Christian which is partly spiritual and partly carnal not wholly spiritual nor wholy carnal even from this doth the Apostle conclude the impossibility for us to fulfil the Law Rom. 8. 3. viz. from the weakness or infirmity of the flesh that is of the old man not yet fully purged and changed 2. If any man could perfectly fulfil the Law then some man had no need of Christ either to be his Redeemer or to be his Intercessor for a Redeemer and Intercessour is in case of transgression and failing and so Christ should be to a regenerate person at least an idle and fruitlesse intercessour for as much as it doth appertaine to his intercession to pacifie and reconcile and ingratiate but what use of this where all things and services are just already as they should be without any animadvertency of the Law against them But Christ is an Intercessor even for the Saints He makes intercession for us saith Paul Rom. 8. and Saint John implies that an Advocate is for a sinner only for him 1 John 2. 1. If any man sinne we have an Advocate c. If for a sinner only then for a transgressor of the Law and if for a transgressor of the Law then not for one who doth perfectly fulfil it 3. If the just must live by faith Then he cannot perfectly fulfil the Law for then he might live by his works but the just shall live by his faith Gal. 3. 11. That no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God it is evident for the just shall live by faith Mark the place shall live by faith If it comes to the matter of life and death then farewel works Cursed is every one that doth not continue in all that is written to do them If he will save his life he must get him faith to fly to mercy and Christ yea and mark of whom he speaks this It is not of a person unconverted but it is of the just even the just must live by his faith that is By Christ on which faith doth rest not by his own merits works obedience Now put all this together there are but two ways to save a man either by faith in Christ or else by the observance of the Law But none can observe the Law so as to be justified by it Because 1. His holinesse is short 2. His works ineffectual 3. His performances unanswerable Ergo to beleeve in Christ is the only way Every mouth is stopped by the Law and all the world is to become gilty before God Therefore by the Deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sin Rom. 3. 19 20. Suppose a man had many great debts and several poore friends and he seeks to one of them good sir be
to utter how God doth forgive a sinner before he hath sinned which must be if pardon for all sins be a momentany act Yet I had rather captivate my judgment then occasion dispute only remember two things First no doubt but the justified person shall have every sin pardoned not some only but all Secondly justification doth not admit degrees though it may a continuance The righteousnesse and merit of Christ which is our justification is not more or lesse but is at all times one and most perfect SECT V. THe righteousnesse of Jesus Christ is that by which only we are justified The righteousnesse of Christ is the matter of our justification not the essential righteousnesse of his God-head but the righteousnesse of Christ as Mediator both God and man which was either The habitual holinesse of his Person in the absence of all sinne and in the rich and plentiful presence of all holy and requisite qualities Or the actual holinesse of his life and death by obedience the once perfectly fulfilling the commands and by the passive obedience of the other voluntarily suffering the penalty and commination of the Law for transgressions Now all this righteousnesse is imputed to us in justification For First no other righteousnesse can justifie Secondly as Christ was made sinne for us so we are made righteousnesse by him viz. only by imputation The Papists call upon us for a righteousnesse in Justification they will bring one forth of their hearts and good works Menstruous cloths saith the Scripture but we produce a righteousnesse most full perfect every way exact not in us but in Christ yet imputed to us by God How clear is the Scripture for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. He hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousnesse of God in him Jer. 23. 6. The Lord our righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. Christ Jesus is made unto us of God c. righteousnesse How often doth the Apostle peculiarly interest imputed righteousnesse handling the doctrine of Justification Rom. 4. But the Apostle clears all Rom. 5. 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous Adae peccatum imputabitur mihi Christi justitia non pertinebit ad me said Bernard Object But Christs righteousnesse is His and how can it present us righteous before God It is none of ours Sol. First it is his in respect of Inhaesion but it is ours in respect of imputation His personally ours meritoriously Secondly we may be considered two wayes either absolutely 〈…〉 for me and alone or else as conjoyned with Christ and thus being by faith made one with Christ he makes over his righteousnesse unto us upon which God looks as ours in the matter of justification Ob. But if Christs righteousnesse becomes ours so by imputation that we may be truly accounted and accepted of as righteous Then by the like reason because redemption is made ours we may likewise be reputed true Redeemers and Saviours Sol. This is one of the arrows which Bellarmine draws out of his Quiver against the imputation of Christs righteousnesse but it is of no force For he is to be termed a Redeemer and Saviour not who doth receive and take the redemption and salvation procured by another but who brings redemption and salvation we are by the Redemption of Christ truly said to be redeemed though not our Redeemers and so by the imputation of Christs righteousnesse are we truly accounted righteous persons Obj. Againe if the righteousnesse of Christ be so imputed to us in justification that for it we are accounted perfectly righteous as if it were our own most perfect and intrinsecal Then why may not we be accounted as righteous as Christ yea and having Christs righteousnesse why may we not be the Saviours of men Since that is the righteousnesse which doth save all that are saved Sol. I answer To compare the same righteousnesse with the same is illogical and grosse for it is one and the same righteousnesse which is inherent in Christ and imputed to the beleeving soule Secondly the righteousnesse of Christ is not imputed to any particular beleever according to the whole latitude of its efficacy but according to the particular exigence of the person It is not imputed to Paul as the general price of redemption for all but as the price by which his soul in particular is redeemed These things being dispatched there is a difference amongst some Divines about that righteousnesse which is imputed some holding the passive onely others the active and passive Sol. The latter seems most solid Reasons these First there is no Justification without the fulfilling the whole Law but now to the fulfilling of the Law since the fall of Adam two things are required one is perfect and personal conformity to the Law in answering that active condition of it Do this and live Another is a plenary satisfaction to the sentence of the Law by bearing the penalty therein denounced in regard of sins already committed Secondly Again faith doth not abrogate the Law but establish it but if it should teach justification without Christs fulfilling of the Law it should abrogate the Law SECT VI. THe last thing which I should have inserted before is this That the justification of a sinner is a gracious and just action It is a gracious action that is the gracious love and favour of God was the cause of it It was his own free grace and favour that gave Christ his Sonne to be our righteousnesse and it is his free grace to give us faith to beleeve on his Son and when we do beleeve it is his Grace which imputeth unto us the righteousnesse of Christ Secondly it is a just and righteous action Rom. 3. 25 26. That he might be just and the Justifier of him that beleeveth in Jesus Gods justice is such that he will forgive no man his sinnes for which he is not perfectly satisfied neither will he accept of any as righteous who hath not a personal righteousnesse but having received a perfect satisfaction he will acquit the sinner beleeving for he is just and righteous and his Justice will not make a second demand yet here is the graciousnesse of God which will admit of the satisfaction and of the righteousnesse of another for us CHAP. X. The difficulty of beleeving in Jesus Christ A Second Use from this great assertion shall be to put our selves to a Tryal and Examination If to Vse 2 beleeve in Jesus Christ our Lord be the only way to be saved Then it doth much concerne us to search our selves whether we do beleeve indeed in Iesus Christ There are three things which I will premise as so many grounds why we should put our selves upon this enquiry and then I will give unto you the discoveries themselves The premises are these First the difficulty of beleeving in Jesus Christ Secondly the facility of errour
and with all those to have a heart glued to the world folded up in the love of sinne resolved against all hazards to shift off all profession rather then to endure any storme what so great a task is this But to have a minde taught of God and to have an understanding bowed with the strength of Divine light and inward change to the obedience of truth and to have a will sweetly renewed and with an holy trembling humbly receiving Christ in his person and offices and bestowing the whole soul and body on him againe here the work sticks CHAP. XII The sure and dangerous misery of unbeliefe THe last thing which may stirre us to try our selves is the consideration of that amazing danger and unspeakable misery to which the soul is assuredly obnoxious in case of unbelief Why will you say What danger if we believe Obj. not I answer there are three special dangers First all thy sinnes stand upon record against thee like so many sad debts which thou hast run thy self into from thy conception to this very day They are all written with the pen of a Diamond there is no blotting out of a mans sinnes but by the blood of Christ and the unbeliever hath not his portion in that blood and therefore there are all thy sinnes uncancelled thy sinnes of nature and all thy sinnes of life such a sin and such a sin then and there and againe committed c. O how great is the volume of them the number of them cannot be numbred and the guilt of them cannot be conceived if one sin binds thee over to hell Good God! To what flames of vengeance and horrible degre●s and intensions of misery and wrath do all thy sins oblige thee Yea and as Solomon said in another case Prov. 9 12. If thou scornest thou alone shalt beare it so I say here if thou remain an unbeliever thou alone must answer for all thy sinnes Whatsoever the wrathful displeasure of God is whatsoever the horrors of conscience are whatsoever the gnawings of that worm are whatsoever the heat of hell flames are Whatsoever the doleful separation from God is Whatsoever curse the Law implies for sin that maist thou expect who wilt not believe in Christ O! if that wrath was so hot when it obliquely as it were fell on Christ where it had no unholy and self-guilty quality to admix with it selfe that he sweat drops of blood and cryed out my God c. How wilt thou with any patience ease possible quietnesse susteine the extream wrath of the Almighty Judge who art vile and filthy and hast a conscience with all thy torments to gall and vex thee with the stings of misery guilts and self-accusations tell me how art thou able what canst thou say how canst thou beare up before the Lord if he should arise if he should terribly arise to judge the nations He is the Holy God and Just and is True and Great in power What satisfaction canst thou bring where are thine oblations or with what wilt thou reconcile thy self to the Lord Whereby canst thou either make thy former sins to be no sins or perswade the Lord to be propitious to thee without Christ Nay verily he will judge thee as an unrighteous person for if thou hast not Christ what righteousnesse hast thou there is no hope for thee to be acquitted nay nor hope to be saved nay thou art sure to be damned Mark 16. 15. Go you into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature 16. He that beleeveth and is baptized shall be saved but he that beleeveth not shall be damned John 3. 18. He that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not beleeved in the name of the only begotten Sonne of God 36. He that beleeveth on the Son hath everlasting life and he that beleeveth not the Son sha●● not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him Rev. 2. 8. The fearful and unbelieving are cast into the lake of fire and brimstone But you will say Why This is strange Why such Obj. extreame misery for not beleeving what sinne is it It is one of the greatest sins in the world not to believe that is Sol. not to receive the Lord Jesus Christ Because It is a sinne against the greatest love to the world Joh. 3. 16. God so loved the world that he gave c. Rom 5. 8. But God commendeth his love towards us that whiles we were yet sinners Christ dyed for us God shewed the greatnesse of his love to bestow his Sonne and Christ shewed the greatnesse of his love to dye for us Greater love said Christ can no man shew then to lay down his life c. Now for the Lord to finde out a way of Salvation and in love to our soules to offer this Son of his unto us and to beseech us to be reconciled and then for us like them who were envited to the supper we cannot come we will not come O this c. It is a sin for which there can be no remedy for asmuch as it is a sin against the only remedy of a sinful soul The sentence of the Law may be repealed by the Gospel but not ècontra There is no plaister for the soul but the blood of Christ which yet unbelief will not take and receive It is a sinne which as much as in it lies makes void and vaine all the Covenant of Grace turning all the goodnesse of it into nothing and all the truthes of it into lyes and makes the blood of Christ to be shed in vaine He that beleeveth not makes God a lyar because he beleeveth not the record that God gave of his Sonne 1 John 5. 10. It is a sin which directly murders the soul because it doth wilfully hold it off from Christ who would upon believing pardon and justifie and save All these things being premised let us now descend towards the triall or evidences of true faith in Christ where I beseech you observe CHAP. XIII Rules for the discovery of faith FIrst some Rules of Direction for the manner of ●vidence and testifying of faith that you may neither be deceived by presumption nor perplexed by error and doubting Two things Secondly some lively instance of true faith as the Word of God doth clearly represent them The Rules of discovery and finding out faith which are these SECT I. THere are some things without which faith cannot be in the heart and yet they do not necessarily and infallibly conclude that a man hath faith They do well distinguish in the Schools 'twixt an Antecedent and a Cause a Cause is such a thing as is before the effect and which bei●g put the effect also is put one will not go without the other But an Antecedent is that which must go before another thing yet it is not necessary that if it be that the other thing should follow The rising of the Sunne is a cause of day and therefore this will
to salvation 1. Not in a by way in a false way but in a true and direct way If God doth skill the way to heaven if he hath laid out to sinners the right way then believing is it Eph. 2. 8. By grace you are saved through faith Heb. 10. 39. We are not of them who draw back unto perdition but of them that beleeve to the saving of the soul 2. Not in an uncertaine but firme way It 's an infallible way of salvation Heaven is the assured mansion for thy soul if thy heart be the true lodging of saith 1 Pet. 1. 4. To an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that fadeth not away reserved in beaven for you Object True that may not fade away but we may fall away that may remain but we ma● be lost Sol. No saith the Apostle but as that is reserved for you so you shall be preserved unto that as mercy and truth will keep your portion sure so truth and power shall keep your persons sure Ver. 5. Who are kept b● the power of God through faith unto salvation therefore he addes a word more ver 9. Receiving the end of your faith even the salvation of your souls Now is not this a comfort to a man that he is in the true and sure way to heaven Every man is in a journey in a way wicked men have their wayes but the end of them is bitternesse and hell after all their jollities and pleasures yet their wayes are the pathes of death But the beleeving soul is in the way of life and therefore he is said already to have eternal life John 3. and to be saved O what is this I am going to my God to my Father to my inheritance SECT II. SEcondly here is another comfort to true beleevers there 2. Simile is a real and blessed exchange 'twixt them and Christ As upon the conjugal knot there is a mutual resultancy of communion The wife partakes of the estate of her husband and the husband interchangably of the estate of his wife for the personal union draws with it the real union If thou be mine thine estate is mine So is it in the spiritual espousing of the soul and Christ by faith Christ partakes of our estate and we shall partake of his estate He is ours and all his are ours we are his and therefore ours are his This exchange consists in these things 1. Christ doth take our sins and debts upon himself Look as the man who marries the woman if he take her person he must take her debts and satisfaction too So doth Christ when he takes us to be his he takes our sinnes also to be his How to be his not by way of infusion and infection as if our sinful qualities were transmitted from our persons into his nature O no he never takes upon him our sinnes to make his nature sin●u● ●ut by way of imputation and of satisfaction The guilt of our sinnes is imputed unto him as to a willing surety who doth present himself in our stead to make payment and satisfaction As Paul said to Philemon concerning his servant Onesimus If he hath wronged thee or oweth thee ought put that upon mine account So saith Christ to the penitent and beleeving Philem. 18. soul if thou hast any guilt and debt to be answered for unto God put them all upon my account if ●hou hast wronged my Father I will make the satisfaction to the utmost for I was made sinne for thee 2 Cor. 5. 19 20. I poured out my soul for thy transgression It cost me my heart blood to reconcile thee to my Father and to slay enmity And as Rebekah said to Jacob in another case upon me my sonne be the curse so saith Christ to the beleeving soul Why thy sinnes did expose thee unto the curse of the Law but I was made a curse for thee I did bear that burden my self upon the crosse and upon my shoulders were all thy griefs and sorrows borne I was wounded for thy transgressions and I was bruised for thy iniquities And therefore we are said to have redemption and remission of sins in his blood Eph. 1. 7. Now what a comfort is this to a Beleever that Christ hath eased him of his great debts that he hath laid down the price for him he is his surety and hath di●charged and hath cancelled the Law of Ordinances and hath blotted out the hand writing God was in Christ saith the Apostle reconciling the world to himself not imputing their sinne unto them mark it not imputing 2 Cor. 5. 19. their tre●passes unto them what is the not imputing of sinne but the not charging of it the not reckoning for it And what is it which he saith unto them trespasses were not imputed unto them as if God should say let them go I have nothing to say unto them my Sonne hath satisfied my justice fully for them Now saith Paul out of David Blessed is the man unto whom the Lord will not impute sinne Yea he is blessed Rom. 4. 8. indeed for if the Lord should single out the most able transgressour for the least moity and scruple of guilt and arreigne his conscience with a judicial and straight severity O how the sinews of the soul would flie assunder and eternal despaire of ever satisfying so great and pure and infinite a justice would swallow up the thought and imaginations Till a man knows where to lay down his sinful burden his soul will be miserably afflicted but now if a man beleeves in Jesus Christ Christ will take off his burdens I will answer for thee saith Christ I will satisfie for thee As David spake in another case when Goliah presented himself against the Host of Israel Let no mans heart faile because of him thy servant will go and fight with this Phylestian So saith Christ to the beleeving soul be not dejected do not despaire though thy sins 1 Sam. 17. 32. be many and great yet I have overcome them I have discharged them my Sacrifice was presented it was sufficient it was effectual it was accepted for thee Secondly Christ doth bestow his righteousnesse upon us This is a great comfort to a sensible and understanding soul that there is a righteousnesse for it which it may safely and confidently present unto Gods justice These things are most true First that we are by nature all of us wretched sinners the whole Rom. 3. 19. world is guilty before God Secondly Divine justice hath a quarrel against every guilty soul and will have compleat and full and perfect satisfaction Thirdly no not our best graces performances are commensurate and square payment in the eyes of pure justice all of them as inherent in us and acted by us are but imperfect excellencies No man hath so much holinesse as is required nor doth he so much as he is obliged Every particular grace though it be of an heavenly and divine original yet it
thou not heard of that accursed and despitfull death which I was put to numbred with transgressors cast out of the City nailed to the crosse pierced through the heart and yet my love to thy soul made me to poure out my soul an offering for thy sins Why and shall I veile my glory under the condition of a servant in vaine shall I combate and conquer Satan in vaine shall I beare the scorne of men the wrath of God the terrors of death the curse of the Law in vaine was not all this for thee shouldst not thou have susteined all this if I had not and must thou not if thou refusest him who hath done it and yet wilt thou prefer thy sins before me yet wilt thou not accept of me yet wilt thou not get faith to receive me have I sought thee freely bought thee so dearly and thou neglect and refuse me so easily Thirdly consider thou hast extreame need of a Lord Jesus 3. Motives Christ Excellency prevailes much with an ingenious nature and necessity with the worst when the Lepers saw that they must either venture their lives or die they would out into the Camp when the Prodigal saw he must famish abroad or repaire home he would then back to his fathers house Why Brethren the Captive doth not more need a Redeemer and the sick doth not more need a Physician then the sinner doth need a Christ and a Saviour Were we in Adams created innocency then we need not to look after a Saviour but we are fallen but we are broken but we are sold under sin but we are transgressors from the womb but we are by nature the children of disobedience and wrath Had we any stock left in our hands to set up our broken souls againe had we any strength to repaire our losse to recover our good to purchase our own peace and salvation but we are dead in trespasses Eph. 2. 1. we all fall short of the glory of God Rom. 3. 23. we are all without strength Rom. 5. 6. Could any thing be a Plank to the Shipwrack but Christ or an hand to lay hold on the rock but faith then we needed not to give such diligence for faith to believe but there is no salvation in any other name and there is no quality but faith to get us into Christ It is not the confidence which thou mayest put upon the faith of another which will do it as every mans soul is for his own body so every mans faith is for his own soul the wise virgins had no more oile then would serve their own Lamps and no mans faith is more then enough for himself Though Christ can save many yet faith saves him only who hath it It is not the confidence of a naked decree which will do it if God hath decreed to save me I shall be saved O no his decrees are his own secret wayes and the way which he hath opened to us is to get faith and to believe in his Son It is not an empty profession nor the worthlesse accesse of all the creatures that can ensure or save thy soul Only Christ none but Christ thou art wounded and Christ is thy plaister thou art dead and Christ is thy life thou art sold and Christ is thy ransome thou art an enemy and Christ is thy peace The debts are infinite the curse great the justice of God pure thy strength nothing and nothing satisfies and delivers but Christ and none hath Christ but the believer why then wilt thou not labor for faith Fourthly consider Christ is every way fitted to thy need 4. Motive Why Brethren gold will ransome a debtor to man it will not ransome a sinner from the Law an offender against God Why look upon your need aright and then judge who but Christ for a sinner There is guilt much guilt lying upon thy soul and who is the Priest to suffer to offer to satisfie to take away transgressions but Christ None can blot out the guilt of sin for us but he who had not a spot of sin in himself There is filth much filth defiling our natures poysoning our actions and who is the Prophet to enlighten to teach to change to cleanse from sinfulnesse but Christ None can teach us holinesse and obedience but he who was Holy undefiled separated from sinners and was obedient to the death There is dominion much dominion of sin prescribing a Law to our members sending out all insolent inclinations holding us in a willing subjection to every base lust and who is the King to conquer the heart to subdue iniquities to lead captivity captive to spoile principalities and powers to bid the captive go free to erect a thorne of righteousnesse and peace in the soul but Christ So that the wise love of God hath prepared and fitted Christ in all respects sutable to the exigencies and straits of a sinful soul and hath appointed faith to be that which shall put on this Christ upon the needy soul why then will we not labour for faith Fifthly God hath not only fitted a Saviour for thee but he 5. 〈◊〉 comes neer unto thee with him he deales mightily with thy soul ●o beleeve on him Thou hast the word of revelation to this very day wherein the mystery of thy salvation is made known and cleare unto th●e Thou needest not to say in thine heart Who shall ascend into heaven to bring Christ down from above or who shall descend into the deeps to bring up Christ againe from the dead But the word is nigh thee even in thy mouth and in thy heart that is the word of faith which we preach That if thou shalt confesse with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him him from the dead thou shalt be saved Rom. 6. 7 8 9. Thou hast the word of gracious proposition God hath offered Christ with all his plentiful redemption with his strong salvation unto thee yea he hath assured thee by his Word of John 3. truth which cannot lie nor deceive that if thou believest on him thou shalt be saved by him Thou hast the word of injunction which layes a bond of duty upon thee This is his Commandment that we beleeve on the Name John 3. 23. of his Son Jesus Christ Nay thou hast the word of penalty and correction God hath said that he will judge thee for not believing and that in the sharpest method of expression He that believes not shall be damned Nay thou hast the word of obsecration and gentle intreaty God stoops infinitely below himself he doth streine curtesie with thee God doth beseech you by us and we pray you in Christs stead to be reconciled to God Nay thou hast the word of expostulation why will you not beleeve why will ye die in your sins why will ye not come to me that you may be saved How often would I have gathered thee All the day long
to Christ Great sinnings are never eased either by dispaire or by unbelief But two things they should cause 1. One is great humblings and sorrow 2. Another is great desires and beseechings for Christ Suppose a man owed his whole estate his only way was to beg a whole discharge suppose a man had many wounds and deep ones too for this reason should he go to the Chyrurgion Why Brethren what would you alone do with great sinnings Can you ever discharge them can you ever satisfie for them Nay do they not open unto thee thy great need of Christ and point the way to him 1. God hath greater mercies then we sins 2. Christ hath stronger merits and satisfactions to the utmost 3. Greater sins should hasten us into the mercy-seat the greater wounds to the Physician 4. The greatest sinners when humbled have been accepted and pardoned Manasses Ma●y Magdaline Paul Some great sinners have miscarried because they never came to Christ 6. Hadst thou lesse sinnes wouldst thou not come in Why then c. 7. The greatest sinner never miscarried by coming to Christ and the least sinner doth for not coming to Christ Thy not coming to Christ bindes all thy sins on thy soul Thy unbelief is a worse sin then all the rest and that shall appear unto thee thus First it is a refusal of all thy remedy as if it were a small thing to provoke Justice thou doest now provoke mercy too Secondly it is that which besides its own gilty qualities keep● also all the former guilts upon the account Every sin that thou hast committed heretofore it doth keep its sting i●s accusation its force against thee if thou wilt not beleeve so that this can be neither safety nor wisdome for thee to hold off because of the greatnesse of thy sins Christ is a great Saviour He is called a mighty Saviour and the salvation in him is called a great salvation and the redemption in him a plenteous redemption 1 Joh. 21. If any man sin we have an Advocate wi●h the Father Jesus Christ the righteous v. 2. And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world I remember in the Levitical Law there were sacrifices for all sorts of sins what did they prefigure but the ample efficacy in the death of Christ which was an atonement for sins of all kindes and was as the daily sacrifice for the expiation of the continued and augmented number of transgressions Why what are thy thoughts of Christ and of redemption in him doest thou not know First that the sinner must finde his full discharge in his blood thou must be beholding to Christ for the payment of the smallest as well as of the greatest debt Secondly That the strength and merit of Christs death exceeds the merit of all sin where sin abounded there grace abounded much more If it had not then the sinner could not have been pardoned for then justice had not been satisfied Thirdly What the extension of Christs death may be I will not dispu●e but this is clear the intension or merit of his death is infinite and exceeds the greatest sins Why if sins had not been great or if the greatnesse of them did prejudice from Christ really God would never have given so great a Saviour as Christ the Apostle saith Heb. 7. that he is able to save to the utmost And that he redeemes us from the law Gal. 4. From all transgression whatsoever committed against the Law and from all the curses of the Law against them Fourthly Christ hath already answered this scruple by giving instances of mercy to great sinners was not David a murderer of Vriah was not Mary Magdalen a foul sinner was not Zacheus a griping oppressor was not Paul a bitter and sore persecutor were not those amongst the Corinthians sinners in the highest forme and yet Christ called them and washed them and justified them Fifthly the matter is not 'twixt thee and Christ about the greatnesse or littlenesse of former sinnings but about the present disposition and affection of thy soul not what thou hast loved heretofore but what thou wilt now love not what thou hast followed and served heretofore but what thou wilt now chuse and obey Though the Jewes had been a sinful Nation laden with iniquity a seed of evill doers corrupters of themselves Isa 1. 4 5 6. Forsakers of the Lord provokers of the holy one of Israel Apostates Revolters putrified from the sole of the foot even unto the head stark naught Yet God comes unto them and Articles thus with them ver 16. Wash you make you clean cease to do evil vers 17. Learn to do well as if he should say though you have been thus abundantly evil yet now harken unto me let your hearts be turned from sins and bestow them on me and my service Object But what shall we do for pardon of the former sins Sol. Why saith God do not you trouble your selves for that only hearken unto me and be willing and obedient for hereafter and as for former sinnings though your sinnes be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool ver 18. The same I say in this case Christ will finde blood enough to get the pardon of sins if thy heart would come off from sin to accep● of him I stand not saith Christ upon what thou hast been I can easily discharge thee only that which I require is this leave thy sins and accept of me I beseech you take heed of two things one is a secret Pride that you will not be brought to be beholding to God for great pardons Another is a present love of sin This and not the former sinnings prejudiceth from Christ Obj. But God is just and he will not hold the sinner guiltlesse and he hath revealed his wrath from heaven against all unrighteousnesse and therefore if I should flye to the City of refuge yet from thence would he withdraw me and be avenged of me Sol. I Answer 1. Even this also should constraine thee to believe forasmuch as by unbelief thou becomest a great rebel against the Gospel and he will come in flaming fire to take vengeance on them that obey not the Gospel of our Lord Jesus 2 Thes 1. 8. 2. Unlesse justice be satisfied assuredly it will never spare thee for Justice will have either thy obedience or thy satisfaction But then the way to present satisfaction to Gods justice is to beleeve in Christ forasmuch as God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their trespasses It was Jesus Christ who performed full obedience and endured an accursed death to satisfie Gods justice and this not for himself but for the believer and for none but for the believer So that there is no other way comfortably to answer justice but by believing in Christ For now thou hast a surety one who stood
be Prophets but neither to be Kings nor Priests Againe we read of some who were to be Kings and Priests as Melchisedek others to be Prophets and Kings as David some to be Priests and Prophets but not any one was anointed a King and a Priest and a Prophet conjunctively Now here is the excellency and the eminence of Christs anointing He was anointed to all those three offices not only to be a Priest but also a Prophet not onely to be a Prophet but also to be a King Had he been a Priest only he might have offered sacrifice for our sinful gilt But who should have then been the Prophet to have opened the eyes of the blind and to give the ignorant knowledge Had he been a Priest to suffer and a Prophet to instruct only who should then have been a King to have abolished the confusions of the Heart and Life and to have subdued our sinnes and so to lead captivity captive Nay that he might be a compleat Saviour and Mediator He was anointed to be Priest Prophet and King I will open something in every one of these He was anointed to be a Priest Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedek Psal 110. 4. so Heb. 3. 1. Jesus Christ is called the Apostle and High Priest of our profession ver 2. He was faithful to him that appointed him see Heb 4. 10. 7. 26. There are these things implyed in his anointing to be our Priest .. 1. That he was designed perfectly to fulfil the Law of God for us He was a satisfactory Priest there was the ceremonial Law which he fulfilled by abrogation and there was the Morall Law which he fulfilled by obedience Whatsoever the Law of God could require either for the holinesse of nature or of life that was to be found in Christ And such a high Priest became us who is holy harmelesse undefiled seperate from sinners c. Heb. 7. 26. Hence is he often called the holy and just one Act. 3. 14. and Chap. 4. 27 30. and is said to be without sin He had no sinne at all of which he was personally gilty but he was every way a righteous person and fulfilled all righteousness I say fulfilled it not for himself only but for us so that if you would now look for a righteousnesse which can every way satisfie and which is every way punctually exact and unblameable you must look out of your selves unto the righteousnesse of Christ as Paul did Phil. 3. and therefore he saith that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness unto every one that believeth Rom. 10. 4. To make expiation for sinnes He was an expiatory Priest There was in the Law sacrifices offered by the Priest of which some were Gratulatory wherin God was praised and others were Expiatory wherein God was appeased as in the oblations of the Lamb c. thus it stands with us As we are creatures we are bound to obey God as rational and righteous creatures we were bound to obey the Morall Law of God and now as sinful creatures we are bound to answer the transgressions of that Law by exposing our persons to the endurance of the great curse of that Law and the wrath of God The Law is broken by us Gods justice is wronged his indignation moved and our own gilt like so many cords hold us fast and deliver us bound hand and foot to the vengeance and punishment of Gods pure and righteous justice Now suppose you saw a number of Malefactors going to execution the Kings Son meets them they are heavy weeping and sobbing because death is approaching Why saith the Kings Son weep not you have provoked my father and have deserved death but fear you not I will take a course to preserve your lives How so Thus I will lay down my own life for you I will dye for you to deliver you It is even thus betwixt Christ and us we all have sinned and by reason of sinne are bound over to death and hell how now shall we escape Thus God did give his own Son and he did take our sins on him and did dye and shed his blood to expiate our gilt and procure our pardon Hence is he called a sacrifice for sin and he is 2 Cor. 3. 1 Pet. 2. Esay 53. Rom. 4. said to be made sin for us And to beare our sins in his own body on the tree and that our iniquities was laid on him and that the chastisement of our peace was upon him and to be delivered to death for our sinnes and that Christ our Passeover was sacrificed for us 1 Cor. 5. 7. And observe the phrase Christ our Passeover c. You know that the Passeover had a Lamb and the Lamb lost his life and blood and that blood was sprinkled upon the doors of the Children of Israel and the destroying Angel did pass by the doors where it was sprinkled and their lives were preserved so it is here we should have been destroyed but Jesus Christ our Passeover was sacrificed for us i. e. he did poure out his own blood which did answer for our gilt and so preserved our souls Now concerning his Priestly expiation of our sinnes observe First the Priest who did offer this expiatory sacrifice Secondly the sacrifice it self Thirdly the Altar upon which it was offered Fourthly The dignity and efficacy thereof The Priest was Jesus Christ as God and man as our Mediator for that did belong to the Priest who was to offer sacrifice to be a middle person Aaron was to bear upon him the sinnes of the people and to offer for them so Jesus Christ as God and man was he who did offer up that sacrifice which did expiate our sinnes Heb. 5. 5. He that said unto him thou art my Sonne to day have I begotten thee vers 6. He saith also in another place Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedeck The sacrifice it self was Christ as consisting of soul and body by reason of our sins we had forfeited both our souls and bodyes to the curse of the Law and to the wrath of God The arrest and attachment was out against both but now Jesus Christ became our Priest and offered his soul and body to quit and release ours Therefore it is said that he made his soul an offering for sint Isai 53. 10. And that his soul was exceeding sorrowful even to death Mat. 26. 38. In it he felt the bitter anguish and wrath which made him to sweat even drops of blood And as for his body that was prepared for him to suffer for us hence it is said that he bore our sins on his own body on the tree 1 Pet. 2. 24. It is very true that the Godhead formally was not the sacrifice that could neither suffer nor be afflicted only it did aid and assist the humane nature which was offered up as a sacrifice The Altar on which this sacrifice was offered which did
expiate our sins was Christ as God as the suffering did properly belong to the humane nature so the efficacy of that suffering did appertaine to the divine nature had he been God only he could not have suffered had he been man only he could not have merited The Altar sanctifieth the gift not the gift the Altar for here that which did make up the high efficacy of the sacrifice was the divine nature of Christ That Jesus Christ who was God and man did offer up himself as a sacrifice for sinnes was more then if all the holy Angels and holy men in the world had suffered there is now by reason of the divine nature an infinite dignity to answer for all our sins which else had stood uncancelled The efficacy of this sacrifice which is this that he took away our sins blotted out the hand writing nailed them to his cross buried them in his grave Heb. 9. 28. Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many 10 11. Every High Priest standeth daily ministring and offering often-times the same sacrifice which can never take away sins 12. But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever sate down on the right hand of God He did by his sacrifice take away all the gilt of sin and all the satisfactory punishment for all this was charged upon him as our Mediator our Priest and our surety yea and he made a perfect reconciliation betwixt his father and us and therefore as our Priest he is our propitiation 1 Joh. 2. 1. and our reconciliator and peace Eph. 2. 14. and our atonement Romanes 5. 11. So that to give the summe of all this Jesus Christ was anointed that is designed by God the Father to be our Priest i. e. to offer up himself as a perfect satisfaction to divine Justice for the remission of all our sins and punishments and this he did perfectly performe for us and this was accepted of God for us I say for us he was made sin for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him and who is made righteousnes redemption and sanctification and wisdome to us and that of God whatsoever he did or suffered from his Father it was as our surety in our stead and so it is reputed A third part of his Priestly office is this that he doth make intercession Isa 53. 12. He bare the sinnes of many and made intercession for the transgressors so Rom. 8. 34. It is Christ that dyed or rather that is risen againe and is even at the right hand of God who also maketh intercession for us And therefore he is called our advocate 1 Joh. 2. 1. and is said to appear for us Heb. 9. 24. He is as it were the Deputy or rather our Attorney to Negotiate for us with the Father There is a two fold intercession one by way of duty another by way of merit one of charity another of dignity When I pray for any man in distresse I am said to be an intercessor to deal for him with God as a matter of my duty and out of a charitable respect But Christ he only interceeds meritoriously and by way of dignity His intercession as I conceive intimates three things The exhibition of his person before the Father as our Surety our Redeemer our Mediator I am he and I am here to answer This exhibition of his glorious merits for he doth not nakedly appeare who appeares as an intercessor but he must actively appeare and so doth Christ He went up to heaven with the price of his blood with the ransome which he purchased with the righteousnesse and satisfaction made with the merits of his oblation and sacrifice and there he presents them continually before his father as if Christ should still say Father I am he that dyed for to get pardon to get favour to get grace and to get such or such good things this is the blood that I shed the price that I paid to satisfie thy justice to fulfil thy Law to remit these sins to confer these graces c. The ingratiating us with the Father which he doth by the continuall application of his own merits when sin gets up to accuse our persons and our prayers then Christ shews himself our intercessor by putting aside the force of the bill of complaint and answers for our persons and for our services True O Father this man hath sinned thus against thee but I am his surety to satisfie for these his sinnes and I did shed my blood for them therefore now look not on him but on me and for my sake accept of him and be propitious to him So for infirmities true O Father his imperfections in duty are many but I am to beare the iniquity of the holy offerings and my righteousnesse is perfect and that I present unto thee for him now notwithstanding his weaknesses for my merits accept of his person grant him his request do him good Thus Christ is the Angel who offered up the prayers of the Saints with incense Rev. 8. 3 4. Nay Father accept and incline thine eares I have deserved acceptance and audience c. SECT IV. SEcondly Christ was anointed to be a Prophet so Deut. 18. 18. I will raise you up a Prophet from among their brethren the which is expresly interpreted to be Christ by Peter in Act. 3. 20 22. Therefore Christ is called Counsellor Isa 9. 6. one who doth advise and direct his Church and the Doctor or Teacher Mat. 23. 8. and the Apostle of our profession Heb. 3. 1. and the faithfull witnesse Rev. 1. 5. And a witness to the people Isa 55. 4. A Leader and a Commander yea he is called the Light of his Church Isai 61. 1. And the light of the world Luke 2. 32. that is it is he who did reveal to the world the true Doctrine of eternal life and the Angel of the Covenant Mal. 3. 1. and the Bishop of our souls 1 Pet. 2. 25. and the wisdome of God 1 Cor. 1. 24. The anointing of Christ to be a Prophet implyes That he was to reveale the will of his Father and the wayes of life Joh. 15. 15 All things that I have heard of my father have I made known unto you So Heb. 1. 2. In these last dayes he hath spoken to us by his Son Joh. 6. 68. Master to whom should we go thou hast the words of eternall life see Isaiah 61. 2. Matthew 11. 27. There is no person who must dare to prescribe any other doctrine but such as Christ hath delivered He may not coine new Articles of faith nor of obedience Christ is appointed to be the Prophet of his Church that is to deliver unto them all such truths from his father which shall and do concerne their everlasting salvation That he is to make us know effectually the things which he doth reveale in his Word There is no Prophet able to convey his doctrine beyond the eare though it be as
Salvation for a sinner Secondly that there is a way tending thereto as a meritorious 5. Arguments cause of it Thirdly that every man is a sinner for all have sinned and come short of the glory of God Rom. 3. 22. Now then know that there are but two wayes of life according Two wayes of life to which there is a double Covenant First one Legal Secondly the other Evangelical The Legal Covenant is do this and live the Evangelical Covenant is believe and live The Legal Covenant grounds salvation in our own persons and the Evangelical in the righteousnesse of another person And these Covenants are opposite that one cannot consist with the other For and mark this though the Law and the Gospel may and do and shall consist as the Law is a word of rule for obedience yet they cannot possibly consist is the Covenant of justification and salvation that is whosoever will stand to the Covenant of works to be justified by it he rejects the Covenant of grace and so Econtra Well then this being true that our life is to be had by the Covenant of Works or of Grace I will briefly shew unto you that we sinners can never be justified and saved by the Legal Covenant which if I clear then it will be evident that our salvation is only by faith in Jesus Christ Thus then all the possibility to be justified and saved by the Legall Covenant ariseth from one of these grounds viz either because That there is a fulnesse and exactnesse in inherent holinesse 3. Things That there is a dignity and efficacy in actual obedience which they call good works That there is a latitude or sufficiency of duty to fulfil the Law which may be conceived to be in a regenerate person but none of these can justifie and save Ergo For the first viz inherent holinesse this holinesse is that 1. Inherent holinesse which is wrought in our whole soul by the Spirit of God whereby of wicked he makes us good and of unholy he makes us holy and according to the severall degrees of it is the person lesse or more holy Now this we say that though the justified person hath this infused inherent holinesse Yet this is not that which Cannot justifie and save can justifie him before God that is for the dignity of which he can stand so before the judgement of God as to be pronounced just and righteous and so acquitted which I prove thus 1. That can never be the cause of our justification which is defective and imperfect and leaves yet the person in some measure sinful I 4. Reasons of it cannot in the Court of Justice be pronounced perfectly just for that righteousnesse which is imperfectly just no more then he can in a strict court be reputed to make full satisfaction who hath not paid halfe his debt or to be throughly well who is scarse able to walk three turnes in the Chamber But that holiness which is in us inherent holinesse is very imperfect I speak of that which is in us here on earth it is not adequate or parallel to the whole will of God which requires perfection of degrees as well as of parts That it is imperfect is as cleare as day First it is at combate with sin Ergo it is not perfect the argument is good for whiles one contrary is mixed with the other there is still imperfection Sinne and Grace are contrary and conflictings shew imperfection as victory notes perfection Secondly that which may be encreased is not perfect but our inherent holinesse may receive more encrease Hence those many exhortations to perfect holiness 2 Cor. 7 1. and to labor after perfection 2 Cor. 1. 3. Thirdly all the parts of holinesse are imperfect Faith is not so clear an eye nor Hope so fixed an Anchor nor Love so pure a streame but that each of them need additions of degrees of strength of help the Moon when it draweth into nearest conjunction with the Sun and is filled with the longest beames of communicated light it hath yet her spots which like so many reproaches stick in the heart of her so is it with the holiest person on earth with the largest measures of inherent graces he hath yet great measures of sinne which like so many spots do blemish and disable the soul to stand perfectly pure and just before the eyes of God That righteousnesse by which we are justified is manifested without the Law See Rom. 3. 21. and what that righteousnesse is he expresseth in ver 22. even the righteousnesse of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe But inherent righteousnesse is not manifested without the Law Why because the Law commands this inherent righteousnesse viz. To love the Lord our God with all our hearts c. That cannot be the cause of our justification and salvation upon which the conscience dares not to rest in the secret agonies of conflict or in the eminent houres of death when the soul is to enter conflict with the wrath of God being wounded with the sense of sinne and cited as it were before the tribunal of Gods holy and strict justice dares it then to put it self seriously and in good earnest upon its own holinesse to make its peace to be its propitiation to satisfie the trials and demands of Gods justice One Chemnitius well observeth of the Papists that when they are to dispute with men they will plead for inherent holinesse but when they are to contend with God they will flie only to Christ tutissimum est said Bellarmine It was no ill meditation that of Anselme Conscientia mea meruit damnationem Paenitentia mea non sufficit ad Anselme satisfactionem sed certum est quod miserecordia tua superat omnem offensionem that is O Lord my conscience tells me I have deserved damnation all the repentance that I have or can perform comes short of satisfaction but thy mercy even thy mercy only can pardon and so exceed all my transgressions The most holy persons do every day sin and need daily pardon and daily mercy how then can we be justified or saved for the merit or dignity of any holinesse in our selves How ridiculous were it that he should think himself to stand in great favour and acceptation before his Prince for the singularity of his continued vertues and performances who every day breaks out into such acts which need the Kings gracious mercy and pardon There is no dignity or meritorious efficacy in actual holinesse or 2. Actual holiness or good works cannot justifie 2. Reasons of it in good works by reason whereof we can be justified and saved I know this fields is very large I will not expatiate but speak in a word of it with a proper respect to the thing in hand I prove the thing thus 1. No man since Adams fall can performe works in that perfection which
the chiefest good 7. It is that which stirres up the heart with a choice of Christ and resolution to have him what ever may befal it 8. It is that which makes the heart to cry servently to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ to work his blessed grace of faith Yea which draws out of us strong supplications with many teares and longings and to implead all the promises of making mercy good and Christ good and faith good unto us 9. It is that which establisheth the soul to a patient expectation for ever to lie at the poole for ever to attend the doors of the Sanctuary till the soul can take and close with Christ by true beleeving But then to open unto you the way more distinctly I would commend this course unto a person that he may at length get a believing heart 1. Study thy natural condition throughly The right sense of this 8. Things though it doth not forma●ly cause faith yet it may have a compelling force to make us look after Christ and to strive for faith The Apostle calls the Law a Schoolmaster to Christ Gal. 3. why because it doth reveal such a smart and strong evidence of the sinful condition that it scourgeth a man out of himself to look for a Saviour yea it helps much to cast the proud soul down and to break and crush his natural bottom which otherwise would st●ve off and hinder a man from believing Therefore study thy natural condition O I would believe and I would have Christ yea but why what need seest thou in thy self of him I tell you that the more desperate the soul sees its own natural condition the more willingly may it be drawn to apprehend adore and embrace its remedies and safeties Now there are three things to convince our selves of about our natural condition I meane the state without Christ First the ugly vilenesse of it That it is sinful and stark naught it is no such thing as God doth like or approve but his soul abhors and hates it For it is compounded of nothing but want of good and inclination to evil to all that is opposite to God and holinesse That thou art in it poor and blinde and miserable and naked an ignorant opposing unconceiving creature of any spiritual good proud and sensual and vain and earthly loathsom and dead Secondly the sure and fearful misery of it Thou art without God without Christ without the Covenant not a drop of mercy for thee whiles thou remain'st thus but all the wrath of God is against thee and thou art under the dominion of sinne and terrible curse of the Law all the threatnings in the book of God are ever ready to sease on thee and how soon may they arrest thee if God gives them commission Thirdly the utter insufficiency to deliver thy self out of this state Thou art never able to merit the least mercy nor to answer the great justice of God Though thou shouldest offer thousands of lambs and ten thousand rivers of oyle thou art so totally broken in thy strength that thou canst not pay a farthing and never canst thou be a Redeemer to thy self from thy sins or Gods justice Now drive and fasten these things as real and experimental truths into thy heart till thou art shut up under sinne as the Apostle speaks Gal. 3. that is so convinced on all sides concerning thy natural self that thou art faine to fall down and cry out O Lord I am unclean I am uncleane I am uncleane a miserable wretch a lost person for ever unlesse thou shew great compassion to my poor soul This condition is deadly and barren I am full of sinne and without strength and this condition is so fearful that verily I will not rest in it Men and brethren what shall I do to be saved Is there no balm in Gilead for a wounded soul no City of refuge for a distressed sinner no Rock of safety for a shipwrackt person no hope of salvation yet left for me 2. Then study the hope of a sinful soul Why though thou hast been very wicked and hast exceeded in transgressions yet there may be hope The Gospel it is the ●ape of good hope it is that which thrusts out some sight of land to a tossed sinner It is a message from heaven proclaiming both the hope and possibility and also the way and method of salvation for a sinful person Look as the Law points out a way of salvation for a righteous and innocent man so the Gospel doth for an offending and sinful man Therefore study it much take some accurate paines to be throughly and really informemed and convinced what Gods dispositions are therein revealed towards sinners Now here are two things which I would commend 1. One is the study of Christ Study him all over perhaps thou mayest see that in him which may answer many yea all thy feares Perhaps thou mayest see so much in him as may win much upon thy heart to come in and accept of him by faith Therefore peruse him well First that he is God and man and as so a Mediator and because so therefore an Almighty and a compassionate Redeemer Secondly that it proceeds from the love and Counsel of God to give him to be the Saviour of sinners God did see the fallen state and great misery of men and his absolute insufficiency to recover himself and therefore his own love moved him to give his own Sonne in whom he did ordain the salvation of sinners Thirdly that Christ was willing to become a Mediator yea he did freely give his life to make peace and procure salvation and this sacrifice of his was both acceptable and effectual Fourthly that God would have thee to come unto him for life and that Christ is the surety and Mediator and only hope of sinners Fifthly that Christ hath in him all and enough to make up thy state and to reconcile thee and God and to get full pardon and to present thee righteous and to procure for thee eternal life Sixthly that Christ seeks even after thee by the Ministry of the Gospel and both offers himself with all his purchase unto thee and hath and yet doth beseech thee to accept of him I say study these things who knows how the great studies of Christ may be at length blessed with faith in Christ This I am sure of that the ignorance of the nature and offices and works and benefits and alsufficiency and marvellous affections and readinesse in Christ is a notable strength to unbeliefe Ergo on the contrary the knowledge of them is a good means for faith 2. Another is the study of the new Covenant Why what mayest thou not there see to draw on thy soul to Christ yea what arguments doth God there fill thy mouth with to conquer himself He gives thee in that Covenant ample and prevailing grounds by which thou ma●est with an humble confidence even plead with him for Christ and faith
it is quiet faith makes our state sure and assurance peaceful Two effects he there delivers of this blessed assurance one is a transcendent joy and another is a compleat peace It glads the heart and it pacifies the heart It is most true that faith in its vital act of acceptation intitles us to both Every beleever hath cause of great joy sweet peace but it is faith in this eminent act of assurance which replenisheth the soul with actual joy and actual comfort For now the beleever sees and knows his happinesse He hath a Christ and knows it he hath pardon of sinne and knows it he stands in favour of God and knows it that which held up his soule is now opened all the causes of his comfort shine as it were and clearly discover themselves in a way of well grounded propriety As David said concerning his enemies Psalme 27. 1. The Lord is my light and my salvation whom shall I fear The Lord is the strength of my life of whom shall I be afraid So the assured soule in this case can exult God is my God Christ is my Christ they have pardoned my sinnes accepted of my person what should trouble me what should disquiet me my soule doth now rejoyce in God my Saviour Who shall lay any thing to the the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died Romans 8. 34. Sinne that is pardoned Justice that is satisfied my soul that is reconciled my person that is justified my prayers they are answered my heart that is pacified for God is mine and Christ is mine and I am his Before I am assured I see my sinnes look up to Christ and adventure my soule on him for pardon I trust on him yet I may feare but when I am assured I see my sinnes look up to Christ and my soule is quiet and rejoyceth As it was with the Israelites when they were Neere the red sea they looked back on their enemies and looked up to God but yet they were exceedingly afraid Afterwards when they had past through the read sea and stood upon the shore they looked back upon the same enemies but now as drowned and then their sighes were turned into joyes and their feares into peace They exceedingly rejoyed Why in assurance though we look upon the same sinnes yet not in the same manner Now we look upon them as drowned enemies as iniquities cast into the depths of the sea as pardoned iniquities Now though sin doth grieve the soule yet sinne pardoned doth quiet and rejoyce the soul 3. Assurance doth arme the heart against future temptations There are two sorts of temptations against both which the assurance of faith doth arme the beleever 1. To sinne Though assurance be a kinde of heaven upon earth yet in this doth the beatifical vision differ from a beleeving assurance that the one leaves no sinne at all but the other is a day of great comfort to a beleeving sinner yet even an assured person hath yet much of a sinning nature remaining in him Neverthelesse though assurance doth not wholly cast off feare yet it doth exceedingly keep off sinne A beleeving person shall not easily sinne whiles he is reading his pardon and looking his Christ in the face How can I do this great wickednesse and sinne against God If the meere respect of a God was so prevalent with Joseph O how much more powerful is the propriety in a God How can I do this great wickednesse and sinne against my God Should such a man as I flee said Nehemiah so the assured Christian should such a man as I sinne Nay remember it Sinne is never more odious to the heart then when the heart is most assured The great and rich mercy of God in Christ it is the principal bane of a temptation The man who formerly would have stept out against the threats of justice having now obtained mercy trembles at the very thoughts of sinning 2 To despaire it is possible for an assured person to sinne and then this is probable and more then ●o that new sinnings will quickly cloud ol● assurance Though a beleever looseth not his life yet ●e may loose his health and though he hath a Father 〈◊〉 y●t by sinning he looseth the sight of that Father 〈…〉 exceedingly humbled and repents ●●d 〈…〉 cannot read his former Evidences he 〈…〉 cast off for ever and shall be remembred 〈…〉 y●t an ancient assurance well grounded 〈…〉 and preserve the soul against despair● 〈…〉 ●hat God will not cast off the soul Jer. 〈…〉 hath app●●●●ed of old unto me saying I 〈…〉 an everlast●ng love therefore with lo●●ng 〈…〉 thee Ver. 4. Againe I will build thee and thou shalt be built So Psal 8● 30. 〈◊〉 his children fors●ke my Law and walk not in my judgments Ver. 31. If they break my statute● and keep not my commandments Ver. 32. Then will I visit their transgression with the red and their iniquities with st●ipes Ver. 33. Neverthelesse my loving kindnesse will I not utte●ly take from him nor suffer my faithfulnesse to faile V●r. 34. My Covenant will I not break c. Sure mercies of David Isaiah 55. 3. So for Christ Ioh 13. 1. Having loved his own he loved them to the end 4. Assurance by faith sweetens all other blessing to us Job speaking of many outward mercies in ●●s children in his plenty his honours Job 29. 5. 67. and ver 3. he recounts one which shadowed all of them his candle shin●d upon my head A● if the evidence of Gods favou● were like the light which gives life and beau●y to all the colours in the roome and without which all our blessings lay dead and dark O what an enlivening matter is this to all that I enjoy and God is my God too and Chri●t is my Christ too and my sins are pardoned too here is a dear and loving husband yea and God is my God too here are te●der and observing children yea and Christ is my Christ too here is plenty of food and raiment and friends yea and my sins are pardoned too But the want of this may check all our blessings and is able to marre the very comfort of our comforts I am exceeding rich yea but I cannot yet say that God is my God I am greatly honoured by man yea but I cannot yet say that Christ is my Redeemer I have health and marrow in my bones and want not for any outward mercy yea but I cannot yet say that my sinnes are pardoned for ought I know that may yet stand upon record which may lose my soul for ever 5. Nay again it is able to sweeten all our crosses a crosse is more or lesse heavy to the Christian by how much the more or the lesse God appeares to the soul The Disciples may even in a storme rejoyce if Christ be in the Ship It was an excellent speech that of Job 29. 3. By his light I walked through