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A50402 The law of God ratified by the gospel of Christ, or, The harmony of the doctrine of faith with the law of righteousness wherein many of the types and rites of the ceremonial law are unfolded, and the moral law adjusted a rule of holy living to all, though justified by faith / as it was delivered in several sermons preacht to the parochial congregation of Mayfield in Sussex by Mr. Mainard late rector thereof, publisht since his death. Maynard, John, 1600-1665. 1674 (1674) Wing M1450; ESTC R33505 161,259 298

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not the light of his word and his Law written in the Scriptures to many Nations yet he giveth to them all the light and Law of Nature and therefore the transgressions of the Law of Nature are sins against God The Apostle saith until the Law sin was in the world but sin is not imputed where there is no Law nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after tbe similitude of Adams transgression Sin was in the world before the Law was given on mount Sinai But how can it be just to charge sin upon them who had no Law against which to sin Nevertheless death raigned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression Who are they Some seem to understand Infants only who sinned not actually in their own persons as Adam did yet dying in their infancy were guilty of original sin Others take it for all that lived between the time of Adam and Moses who sinned not after the similitude of Adams transgression because they sinned not against an express Law given by revelation from Heaven as Adam did who sinned against that express prohibition of God forbidding him to eat of the fruit of the Tree of knowledge of good and evil under the pain of certain death and destruction I conceive this latter sense more probable because of that special limitation of time from Adam to Moses for the case of those that dye in their Infancy for ought I know is the same whether before or after the time of Moses before and after the Law written but the condition of those that lived between Adams time and that of Moses differed from those that lived after Now the Apostle sheweth that death the punishment of sin fell upon them so did many other judgements the flood destroying the old world the showr of fire and brimstone upon Sodom fell within the compass of that time and therefore certainly they were guilty of sin and justly punished because these calamities were the just judgements of God who is the righteous judge of all the world and therefore although these sinned not against any positive Law of God delivered to them either by word or writing yet they sinned against the light and Law of Nature which God had given them Secondly This may shew us the reason and the justice of those severe executions of God upon Heathen Nations who had no Scripture nor written Law to sin against They sinned against the Light and Law of Nature for the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness because that which may be known of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it unto them c. The Judgements and Calamities publick national private personal brought upon any of mankind in several ages are evidences of Gods wrath and displeasure against them and therefore proofs of their sin and guiltiness against God otherwise the Lord who is perfectly righteous would not bring these evils upon them and among the rest the death of the body is a universal declaration of the wrath of God against mankind for sin If any should be free from all other evils yet this alone would be a sufficient proof of their sinfulness and therefore the Lord said unto Adam and in him to each particular person of his posterity soon after he had sinned and they had sinned in him Dust thou art and to dust thou shalt return By one man sin entred into the world and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Euery dead Corps every Funeral that ye see or hear of all the persons that have died from the beginning of the world unto this day have by their death manifested the wrath of God against sin and mens guiltiness before the Lord for though through the grace and mercy of God in Christ the death of a true believer is turned into a blessing and made an inlet or entrance into everlasting life yet in its own Nature it is a consequent of sin and sin was the original of it In special the Heathens who had not the mind of God so fully revealed to them as those within the Church yet had the Light and Law of Nature and in sinning against that Light and Law were justly punished for they held the Truth in unrighteousness This common Light and Law of Nature was the Truth of God und they by opposing their wills and lusts against it and so not following the guidance of it were found guilty of fighting against God and crossing that Light which the Lord had given them and therefore the Lord dealt with them as Enemies So the Lord punished Sodom and the Cities adjoynning with fire and brimstone So the Canaanites and Amorites were destroyed for their sins against the Light and Law of Nature and Israel was planted in their Land The Lord told Abraham that his seed should possess it but not until after four hundred years Why Because the iniquity of the Amorites was not yet full so that it was the fullness of their iniquity which was the cause of their destruction it was because their sin was come to its full height that they were rooted out So the Lord having forbidden Israel the practice of divers great sins saith Defile not your selves in any of these things for in all these things the Nations are defiled which I cast out before you And the Land is defiled therefore I do visit the iniquity thereof upon it and the Land it self vomiteth out the Inhabitants The Lord threatned divers grievous Judgements by the Prophet Amos against many Heathen Nations Syria the Philistines Tyrus Edom Ammon Moab All the miseries of war brought upon Heathen Nations what were they but revelations and reall demonstrations of the wrath of God from Heaven for their sins against the Law and Light of Nature The ruining of the Babylonish Monarchy by the Medes and Persians of the Persian by the Macedonians and Grecians the Macedonians by the Romans of the Roman by the Saracens and Turks on the one side and divers Northern Nations on the other these and the like were just Judgements of God upon Heathens for sins against the Light and Law of Nature So I conceive the cruel Spaniards were unjust executioners of the righteous Judgements of God upon the poor Indians or Americans for their sins against the same common Light and Law of Nature for the Lord executeth just Judgements by wicked men yea by Divels who aime not at all at the Lords end but either delight to exercise their malice and cruelty or act thus to make a ful conquest and utterly disable a people to make head again Thirdly This may clearly convince us that the sins of Christians are far more heinous then the sins of Infidels and Heathens because they sin against the same Law
a pattern of holiness to men and women So the Lord in his Law saith Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self So that the least want of love unto our neighbour the least defect in love is condemned the least inclination contrary to love is forbidden Then again whatsoever is contrary to the right order of the affections in relation to God and our neighbour is against the Law for the Law commandeth to love God with all the mind c. And this is the first and greatest Commandment that of love to our Neighbour is the second and therefore love to God is to hold the chiefest place and so the weighty and principal duties of the first Table scil those toward God are to be looked at as the principal and love to our Neighbour is to be subordinate unto this love to God God is to be loved for himself Men are to be loved in the Lord and for the Lord. Now every inordinate affection every disorder of the affections this way is against ●he Law When the first and greatest Commandment is as it were turned into the second when any man hath an higher place or greater share in thine affections then God The Law forbiddeth and condemneth whatsoever in the heart or soul is contrary to any Commandment of the Law not only ●ctual thoughts but the inherent corruption every inclination to evil whatsoever distemper there is in the heart and soul contrary to any branch of any Command either of the first or second Table All sin is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whatsoever is contrary to the Law Now the very inclination to sin is contrary to the Law and therefore sinful Every inclination to distrust to Idolatry superstition to the dishonour of God c. is condemned by the Law This is the sin that naturally dwelleth in every one the corruption of Nature propagated from Adam the body of sin cross and contrary to the body of the Law in every point in every iota or title 3. All omissions of duties towards God and men are condemned by the Law 4. All commissions of sin in thought word and deed are condemned by the Law every evil thought every vain thought every profane ●ngodly obscene unchast malicious speech every idle word every action contrary to the Law grosser actions looks gestures And as we are to consider the perfection of the Law so on the the other side take notice of the severity of the Law The Law spareth not the least sin but denounceth a curse against every one Cursed is every one that confirmeth not all the words of the Law to do them and as the Apostle hath it Cursed i● every one that continueth not in all things written in the book of the Law to do them Nothing contrary to the Law can escape the curse o● the Law The word spoken by Angels was steadfast and every transgression and disobedience received a just recompense of reward This word was the Law in the delivering whereof the Lord was pleased to use the ministry of Angels Such is the severity of the Law that it spareth no transgression or disobedience but layeth a penalty upon every one 3. Consider the perfect the infinite justice holiness purity majesty of God who is both the Law giver and the Judge who gave his pure and perfect Law and who will judge impartially by the Law Shall mortal man be more just than God Shall a man be more pure than his Maker Behold he put no trust in his servants and his Angels he charged with folly How much less on them which dwell in houses of clay whose foundation is in the dust Saith the Psalmist O Lord my God thou art very great thou art cloathed with honour and majesty who coverest thy self with light as with a garment behold the Nations are as a drop of a bucket and are counted as the small dust of the ballance behold he taketh up the Isles as a very little thing All Nations before him are as nothing and they are counted to him less than nothing and vanity The Prophet Isaiah in a glorious vision beheld a representation of the divine Majesty saith he I saw the Lord sitting upon a Throne high and lifted up and his train filled the Temple about it stood the Seraphims each one had six wings with twain he covered his face and with twain he covered his feet and with twain he did fly and one cried unto another and said holy holy holy is the Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory With what terrour glory and majesty did the Lord appear on Mount Sinai when he published the Law to the people of Israel There were Thunders and Lightnings and a thick cloud upon the Mount and the voice of a Trum●et exceeding loud so that all the people that was in the Camp trembled and Mount Sinai was altogether on a smoak because the Lord decended upon it in fire c. And Moses told the people The Lord thy God is a consuming ●re even a jealous God Now lay these things together the woful corruption of mans Nature every way contrary to the holy Law of God as darkness is to light having nothing in it conformable to the Law the ●umberless sins of omission and commission ●f each person against the Law the just ●igour and severity of the Law denouncing ●curse against every transgression and dis●bedience the unspeakable unconceivable ●●finite purity justice majesty of God who 〈◊〉 both Law-giver and judge And then ●ow clear is it that none can be justified in the sight of God by any works of theirs performed in obedience to the Law Secondly But there was a second thing proposed scil to shew how it appeareth by the doctrine of the Gospel that none can be justified by any works performed by themselves in obedience to the Law The Angel said to Ioseph concerning Christ Thou shalt call his name Iesus for he shall save his people from their sins He shall save them and therefore their own works shall not save them He shall save them from their sins and therefore he found them in their sins poor guilty condemned creatures and such as could not be saved or justified by their own works or righteousness The Lord Christ the night before he died said This is my blood of the new Testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins The Lord Christ did shed his most pretious blood for the remission or forgiveness of sins He by his death and obedience satisfied the justice of God for the sins of those who could not satisfie for themselves by any works of righteousness of their own compare this with that of the Apostle I do not frustrate the grace of God for if righteousness come by the Law then Christ is dead in vain This sheweth clearly that justification by the righteousness of Christ and justification by a mans
manifested and made visible and so framed this humane nature thus united to his God-head after the image of God in perfect Righteousness and holiness and inabled it to perform full and compleat obedience to the Law And thus the work of Satan was destroyed one of the Sons of Adam one of the seed of the woman after the fall of mankind being inabled to fulfill the Righteousness of the Law Fourthly Ye may note by the way that I do not speak of this as the full sense of this Text as it this were all that Christ did in destroying the works of the Devil and in restoring what he had ruined but I speak of it as a part of the Apostles meaning and a part of that work of Christ concerning the point in hand Fifthly Observe that by this work Christ established the Law For first As the Law was given to man so the Son of God took upon him the nature of man and subjected it to the Law as it is said he was made under the Law 2. He wrote this Law of perfect holiness and Righteousness upon this humane Soul thus united to his God-head 3. In this nature of man He perfectly fulfilled the Law by all which he acknowledged the Law to be a perfect Rule of Righteousness which as man he was bound to obey and so did really confirm and ratifie the Authority of it whereas on the contrary they that taught m●n to seek justification and to approve themselves as Righteous in the sight of God by their own personal works of obedience to the Law though they pretended to magnifie the Law they did make void the Law because their Righteousness was far short of what the Law required and therefore to profess that they looked to be justified or found Righteous in the sight of God by their own imperfect works done in obedience to the Law was to accuse the Law of imperfection and so to make void the Law Saith David The Law of the Lord is perfect and therefore none can be justified by the Law unless their Righteousness be perfect Now for sinful men whose natures are contrary to the Law whose sinful omissions and commissions are numberless whose best works are exceedingly imperfect and defective to profess themselves justified by the Law is to deny the perfection of the Law and so to abolish or make void the Law So much for the first particular point comprehended in the general doctrine The second is this That the Lord Iesus Christ established the Law by making full satisfaction to the Law where note two particulars 1. That Christ did make full satisfaction to the Law 2. That hereby he did establish it 1. For the former When Christ was gloriously transfigured upon a certain mountain in the sight of three of his Disciples Behold there talked with him two men which were Moses and Elias who appeared in glory and spake of his decease which he should accomplish at Ierusalem These two holy men of God who many ages before had been taken out of this world by an extraordinary dispensation of God were sent to meet the Lord Christ upon this Mount and why these two Moses was the Lawgiver I mean the ministerial Law-giver the Minister Servant or Instrument of the Lord by whom God who is the only authentical the supream Law-giver delivered and as it were handed over his Law to the people of Israel Elias was one of the most eminent among all the Prophets and exceeding zealous of the Law and by an extraordinary warrant from God slew divers hundreds of false Prophets for Idolatary and for teaching the people to transgress the Law and when he complained against Israel for their heinous sins against the Law the Lord directed him to annoint Hazael to be King over Syria Iehu to be King over Israel and Elisha to be Prophet in his stead as so many executioners of Gods justice upon backsliding Israel for their horrible sins against the Law It seemeth then that these two were sent to shew that the Lord Jesus Christ was he of whom the Law and the Prophets spake whom the Ceremonial Law shadowed out by Types and Figures who was to perform full obedience to the Moral Law and make full satisfaction for the transgressions of men against the Law and to accomplish what was foretold by the Prophets and it is said expresly that they spake of his decease which he should accomplish at Hierusalem They spake of his death and sufferings whereby he should make full satisfaction for the sins and transgressions of men against the Law and fulfill the sayings of the Prophets It is not barely said he should dye or suffer death but that he should 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accomplish his decease He should fully and compleatly suffer such a death as should make full satisfaction to the Law He should undergo the full penalty of the Law and make full payment of all the debts which the Law could charge upon his people To make this appear more clearly consider these particulars 1. That the Lord Iesus Christ was very God in the beginning was the word and the word was with God and the word was God the same was in the beginning with God all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made The Son of God is called the word God the Father manifesting himself by the Son as a man maketh known his mind by his words or speech There is the coessential word of God and there is the declarative word of God the Son of God is the coessential word of God of the same essence with God the Father The declarative word of God is that which we have in the holy Scriptures So Christ prayed to his Father for his people Sanctifie them through thy Truth thy word is truth For this cause saith the Apostle thank we God without ceasing because when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us ye received it not as the word of men but as it is in truth the word of God which worketh effectually in you that believe These and the like places shew the folly of those who seem to hold that there is no other word of God but Christ whereas it is plain that the holy Ghost calleth the word written in the Scriptures and the word preached and taught according to the Scriptures the Word of God scil his declarative word but Christ is the coessential or co substantial word of God and here it i● said He was in the beginning declaring his eternity when the world and the creatures in it were made He was not made but he was from eternity before all things and accordingly he saith to his Father O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was that is from all eternity And the word was with God that sheweth the personal distinction betwixt the Father and the
Son who are one God and two distinct persons then his God-head is expresly asserted And the word was God the same God with the Father all things were made by him and without him was not any thing made that was made all the Creatures were made by Christ of nothing and therefore he is very God for by him were all things created that are in Heaven and that are in Earth visible and invisible whether they be Thrones or Dominions or Principalities or Powers all things were Created by him and for him and he is before all things and by him all things consist not only all visible Creatures on Earth but also all the glorious Angels of Heaven were created by him and his eternity is declared He is before all things his Almighty power is asserted by him all things consist The frame of the world would fall in peices the Beings of the Creatures would be disjoynted dissolved did not his Almighty Arm hold all together He upholdeth all things by the word of power and least any blasphemous adversary of Christ his God-head should object that Christ might create the world as a● instrument and inferiour Agent under the Father The Apostle telleth us All things were created not only by him but also for him He is the principal Agent and he is the cheif end of the Creation They were made for his glory a clear evidence to prove him to be very God the same God with the Father for it is the peculiar Prerogative of God to be the highest of the whole Creation for whom all things were made for of him and through him and to him are all things to him in this place and for him in the other have the same sense and the original is the same in both 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostle shews That Christ being in the form of God thought or judged it to be no Robbery to be equal with God in all eternity he was in the form of God he was really properly essentially God and therefore judged it to be no robbery to be equal with God This cutteth off all cavils for how could it have been less then an high degree of robbery or Sacriledge for any one that was not as truly and properly God as the Father even the same God with the Father to judge himself equal with God in as much as God the Creator is infinitely above the most excellent of the Creatures Secondly He took upon him the Nature of man the word was made flesh The eternal word or Son of God who was before all time without beginning of dayes was pleased in the fulness of time to be made flesh not by transmutation but by assumption not by turning his unchangeable God-head into flesh but by taking flesh that is a true humane Nature soul and body into the unity of his person so uniting the nature of man to his God-head as to make it properly his own to become one person with himself the God-head being never separated again from the manhood nor confounded with it both natures remaining distinct but never divided from each other the same Christ remaining perfect God and perfect man so where it is shewed that being in the form of God c. it followeth But made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant and was made in the likeness of men and found in fashion as a man c. And without controversie great is the mystery of Godliness God was manifest in the flesh This is indeed a great mystery of such an height and depth and far exceedeth the reach of mens understandings yet a most certain and infallible truth to be received by faith and it was necessary the Redeemer of manking should be both God and man that he might satisfie the justice of God and bear the penalty of the Law due to the sins of the world First It was necessary that he should be God 1. That he might inable the humane nature to bear the weight of Gods wrath and revenging justice to support the manhood from sinking under it and being swallowed up of it whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains of death because it was not possible that he should be holden of it death had taken a prisoner whom it was no way able to hold Jesus Christ as he was man suffered death and lay dead in the grave but as he was God he raised his humane nature from the dead Secondly That the infinite worth and excellency of his God-head might make his sufferings of sufficient value to satisfie the justice of God and the severity of the Law for the numberless sins of the world the same man that suffered being one person with God and so his sufferings being though not the sufferings of the God-head yet the sufferings of God that is the sufferings of him who is God and therefore it is said that God hath purchased a Church with his own blood And what is there which the blood of God was not sufficient to purchase Secondly It was necessary Christ should be man that he might satisfie the Law and bear the penalty 1. That he might be subject to the Law for it was impossible that the God-head should be made under the Law because the Law received its Authority from God and therefore could have no Authority over him therefore he was made of a womnn and so made under the Law 2. That he might be in a capacity to suffer the full penalty of the Law for it is impossible for the God-head which is the fountain of life to dye or to bear the Curse being the fulness of blessedness and therefore saith the Apostle We see Jesus who was made a little lower then the Angels for the suffering of death He that being very God was infinitely higher then the Angels took into the unity of his person a nature a little lower then the Angels scil the nature of man and that for the suffering of death and so for the satisfying of the Law 3. That He might make Satisfaction to the Law and bear the punishment of it in the s●me nature of man in which the Law was transgressed and broken for verily He took not on him the nature of Angels but He took on him the seed of Abraham wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his Brethren that he might be a merciful and faithful High-Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people to make satisfaction for the transgressions of the people against the Law and to reconcile them to God the Law-giver 3. He took upon him the guilt of mens sins putting himself into the state and standing in the state of guilty sinners as it were putting his Name into their Bond and voluntarily taking their debts upon himself all we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way and the
Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all If the whole Congregation sinned they were to bring a young Bullock to be offered for their sin and before it was killed the Elders of the Congregation representing all the people under the Government were to lay their hands on the head of the Bullock before the Lord It seemeth b● this Ceremony they did as it were put off the sins of all the people from the guilty sinners upon the Sacrifice So the Lord Christ before he suffered for the sins of his people first took upon himself the guilt of all their sins for he hath made him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in him the guilt of mens sins was imputed unto him and put upon his account as his righteousness is imputed to Believers and accounted theirs 4. He subjected himself to the Curse of the Law due to men for their sins against the Law for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them then it followeth ver 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us for it is written Cursed is every on that hangeth on a tree Thus he exposed himself to the flames of divine wrath which would have been a consuming fire to a meer Creature but as the wood of the Altar for burnt offering was overlaid with Brass that it might not be devoured by the fire so his humane nature being united to the God-head was so fortified to endure the burning heat of the wrath and Curse of God that it was not consumed by it but although the God-head was inseparably united to the manhood and did not leave it for a moment yet it did so withhold its divine influence from the Manhood for a time that it suffered extream and unconceivable torments in body but especially in soul as appeareth in the holy story for though God the Father loved him infinitely as his Son and as one that was perfectly holy and righteous in his own person yet he executed his justice upon him to the full as he presented himself before him burdened with the guilt of mans sins against the Law It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief Saith the Apostle He spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us He spared not his own Son He found him engaged to satisfie the Law for the sins of men and therefore he executed the severity of the Law upon him and spared him not but delivered him up for us all saith the Text. He did as it were deliver him up with his own hand for sinners delivering him up by the hand of his love towards sinners to the hand of his justice to be punished for their sins so that I conceive it may be said that Christ had judgement without mercy that through him mercy might glory over judgment toward repenting and believing sinners Fifthly He actually suffered death He did shed his most precious blood He humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross. He poured out his soul unto death Iesus when he had cried again with a loud voice yeilded up the Ghost When they came to Iesus and saw that he was dead already they brake not his leggs but one of the Souldiers with his Spear pierced his side and forthwith came thereout blood and water Lastly That it might be manifest that the Prince of life was really dead for the satisfaction of the Law He suffered his body to be caried to Prison to be shut up in the grave and held under the power of death untill the third day Now in the place where he was crucified there was a garden and in the Garden a new Sepulchre wherein was never man yet laid there laid they Iesus Thus ye see the Lord Jesus Christ satisfied the Law to the full endured the rigour and bare the penalty of it Secondly by satisfying the Law and endruing the severity of it he established the Law I suppose it is not necessary to speak much of this particular because the opening of the former giveth light unto it breifly thus 1. The Law required perfect obedience as ye heard the full performance of every branch and tittle of it 2. In case of disobedience transgression defect and failing in obedience the Law denounced a grievous penalty a Curse death and destruction as was noted also yea the Law given to mankind in Adam had the sentence of death annexed In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die 3. Hence it followeth that if neither the Law be fulfilled in a way of obedience nor satisfied by the inflicting of the punishment then it is made void and declared to be of no force to have lost its authority its vigour and to be frustrated of its end 4. Thereupon we may infer by the rule of contraries that the Lord Jesus Christ having in the nature of man born the full penalty severity and Curse of the Law due to the sins of men against the Law and by his God-head to which his humane nature wherein he suffered is personally united gave sufficient value and worth to his sufferings to make full satisfaction to the Law to the uttermost that the Law in its greatest rigour could require hence it clearly followeth that Christ established the Law This was a reall and full acknowledgement of the Authority of the Law the wonderful abasement the grievous sufferings of the Son of God were signal evidences infallible demonstrations of the force and authority of the Law the Lord of glory appearing in the form of a Servant to make way for satisfying the Law he that is the brightness of the Fathers glory enduring the shame of the Cross did abundantly witness to the world the Authority of the Law The Lord Jesus Christ spared not his most precious blood but freely poured it forth to satisfie the Law for the sins of his people and thereby ratified and sealed the Authority of the Law How should this be improved to stir up poor souls without delay to turn to the Lord and flee to Christ For in as much as the Lord Jesus did both perform perfect obedience to the Law and bear the full penalty and curse of the Law and by both these establish the Law it sheweth clearly that the Law standeth in full force against all that are out of Christ they being guilty of sin against the Law are subject to the Curse of the Law for being not found in Christ they have no part in his perfect righteousness and full satisfaction and therefore are every moment in danger of the sentence of condemnation denounced by the the Law It is true that Christ hath fully satisfied the Law But what doth this help them that remain in their natural estate
measure Excellent discourses of Philosophers Yet is it an imperfect Rule now cannot guide sinners to blessedness discovers not the great mystery of the Trinity or the state of perfection man was Created in his fall and recovery c. An additional imperfection from the heart on which it is written as from blurr'd paper the words or Letters are imperfectly read Yet useful it is to Gods glory to humane Societies as remote preparators to receiving the Gospel in which much above nothing contrary to the light of Nature it justifies God leaves man without excuse not increasing this light not acting up to it This defect of theirs was sin against God who as Lawgiver to all hath given this Law punisht the breakers of it before the Law given on mount Sinai Rom. 5. 13 14. illustrated These punishments were just as severe in every age and ruine of several Monarchies The sins of Christians greater than of Heathens or Iews What Christians are in name in participation with Christ who is dishonoured by their sins which many Heathens abhor Seneca and Pliny abhor'd Drunkenness Tully decry'd Frauds in Contracts Chap. VIII Moral Law written abridged in the ten Commandments established by the Doctrine of justification by faith though it excludes the Righteousness of works from our justification not excluded from all other use None justified by works of the Law because all are born in state of sin Works of faith follow justification as fruit are imperfect examined by the rigor of the Law which bears not the least aberration requires the whole of mans heart alwaies in highest degree of love to God and for his sake to man our neighbour nothing must be omitted or wanting or defective Mans works cannot justifie before the infinite justice holiness and Majesty of God our Lawgiver Man to be saved was found in sin is saved by grace from which they fall who would be justified by the Law being a Covenant of nature quite different from the Gospel Works justifying in St. James sense Jam. 2. 24. explained Iustifying faith is an Active principle as prevalent habits are They miserable who are not in Christ because condemned no middle State outward fairness insufficient inward change necessary Historical faith doth not justifie Iustifying faith hath sense of its need of Christ who is a complete Saviour and wherein this compleatness is How earnest we should be to be found in him careful to bring forth much fruit but not to trust in it keep the mean between the dangerous extreams of a dead faith and resting on the works of Faith How Christ establisht the Law by fulfilling it which he did without destroying it what occasion of that Mat. 5. 17. how made under the Law though he was the Lawgiver bound therefore to fulfill the Law perfectly so became a perfect High-Priest according to the type wherein every blemisht person was prohibited medling with the Priestly function Sinless perfection necessary to the Sacrifice Christ offer'd in offering himself Fulfilling the Righteousness of the Law is an establishing of the Law to the exactness whereof man was at first created the Law of our Creation afterwards exemplified in the decalogue Satans design to obliterate this Law by our sin to bring us under a Law of sin how this effected hence God dishonoured man destroyed both arising from Satans malice against the glory of God and happiness of man This work of Satan Christ came to destroy and hath done it which no meer creature could have done Angels could not and why This work is really a repairing man though expressed by destroying of Satans work so raising up the dead is called destruction of the Grave 1 Joh. 3. 8. at large unfolded Christ God imprest on our nature in himself the absolute perfection of that holiness the Law required of mans nature Christ hath fully satisfied the Law and accomplisht the Prophecies concerning him which was God the coessential word who made all supports all in heaven and earth and doth it as primary efficient cause and final for his own glory so was without robbery equal with God yet became man uniting the humane nature to the Godhead which supported the humane nature gave value to the sufferings of it in which nature he made under the Law was in capacity of suffering the Curse which the Godhead fountain of life and blessedness was not liable to Who come not to Christ are expos'd to all that their sins deserve and the Law threatens Sin then is bitter and will be the shame of Sinners Who are in Christ have sound foundation of comfort Christ hath satisfied the Law for them To whom his perfect righteousness is imputed so the Law establisht this enlarged and illustrated Debts paid by surety the debtor discharged the payment imputed God imputes it and of Grace or freely to the Believer on his believing in Christ. So faith justifieth not meritoriously nor efficiently not materially or formally but objectively and instrumental●y as apprehending Christ his righteousness Hence our blessedness joyned with our Sanctification How Christ establisht the Law by perfectly fulfilling all the Righteousness which it required Contraiwise the doctrine of justification by our works makes void the Law in great part reducing its Commands to the scantling of that obed●ence which is pretended to justifie us The mystery of Christs immense love to us Believers should be humble and will be● Great sinners may be encouraged to come to Christ whose righteousness is the righteousness of Jehovah Look to the truth of your faith the suitableness of your life justified ones are sanctified ones The Law is made a rule of holiness in life to those that are justified without works of the Law and this by the Authority of Christ who hath for us satisfied it as a Covenant and now ratified it as a Rule to us we cannot live justified by it we must live sanctified to it The Law as Covenant of works useful to Believers to humble awaken and drive them to seek a remedy The Law a Rule useful to believers keeping them poor in spirit in sight of what they once were what they still are It is useful to quicken and stir them up to greater study of holiness Our Redemption no prejudice to the Law rather an exalting of it The peaceable comport of the Law and Faith which oppos'd to each other is great error of Antinomians High Presumption to boast of justification by Faith and yet be the servants of sin against the holiness of the Commandment He is out of Christ who continues in sin in contempt of the Law and to the abuse of free grace which imparteth inherent Righteousness to sanctification as it imputeth Christ his righteousness to justification ERRATA PAge 5. line 2. read these p. 17. l. ult add here p. 18. for when l. 18. r. even p. 21. for Circumcellions r. Circumcellians p. 32. l. 19. for Corrupts r. Corrupt p. 33. l. 2. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l 13. r. Hymenaeus p. 37.
any flee from sin and not rather add sin to sin doing evil that good may come that Gods grace may be the more manifested to his glory The Apostle rejecteth these with detestation shewing that notwithstanding all their perverse cavils they shall find God a severe judge and that their damnation is just for it doth no way lessen the guilt of sin that God getteth glory by it for sin in its own nature tendeth to the darkning of Gods Glory and men by sinning dishonour God but such is the infinite perfection of God that as he commanded the light to shine out of darkness though darkness be contrary to the light so he can work good and get himself glory out of the evil of sin which in it self tendeth to rob him of his glory So in the sixth Chapter of this Epistle shall we continue in sin that grace may abound The Apostle had shewed before that all had sinned in Adam besides the guilt of their own actual sins yea even such as lived before the Law was given by Moses and that by the publishing of the Law sin abounded the guilt of sin increased but then withal he added that where sin abounded grace did much more abound the free love and favour of God was gloriously manifested in pardoning sin thus heightned and aggravated by the express Law and in freely justifying sinners condemned by the written Law Hence this Question or Objection to which the Apostle answers with detestation as before and withal sheweth that they who are justified by the righteousness of Christ have received the Spirit and so dye to sin and live to righteousness and are engaged hereunto by their Baptisme and therefore it is in vain for any to hope for justification and pardon of sin through Christ who yeild themselves up to the service of sin So verse 14th he saith to Believers Ye are not under the Law but under Grace Hence again a Question or Objection of corrupt nature or carnal reason What then Shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace May we not therefore sin securely if we be free from the Law if the Law have no power nor authority over us to condemn us The Apostle answereth this after his usual manner with detestation and then more fully Know ye not that to whom ye yeild your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness They that are just●fied by Christ and freed from the curse the condemnation and rigour of the Law are the Members of Christ and servants of righteousness but they that sin securely upon a conceit that they are freed from the Law are indeed the servants of sin and this service of sin tendeth to everlasting death The Reason of this in general is the contrariety of mans nature unto God and his Truth since the fall since the Image of God was defaced and the Nature of man corrupted by sin so that the powers of the soul thus degenerated are become cross and opposite unto the counsel and truth of God They are of the world therefore speak they of the world and the world heareth them we are of God he that knoweth God heareth us he that is not of God heareth not us hereby know we the spirit of Truth and the spirit of Error all of us are naturally of the world and all remain so unless the Lord do effectually by his grace call them out of the world and so their worldly minds and hearts are unsutable and opposite unto the mind and truth of God More particularly 1. Ignorance is a great cause why men deprave the Scriptures and pervert the Truths of God the light shineth in darkness and the darkness comprehendeth it not All are naturally darkness and therefore full of contrariety to the light and truth of God ye were sometimes darkness saith the Apostle to those that then were light in the Lord the best of those whom God hath savingly inlightned by his spirit were sometimes darkness Lye not one to another seeing that ye have put off the old man with his deeds and have put on the new man which is renewed in knowledge after the Image of him that created him They that are regenerated are renewed as in other regards so in knowledge This sheweth that the old man is possessed with darkness Corrupt Nature is void of saving knowledge and therefore in that condition men are apt to put light for darkness and darkness for light The Sadduces that denied that great Mystery of the Resurrection of the body I conceive were much pleased with an Argument whereby they hoped to non-plus the Lord Jesus Christ they seemed not directly to deny the Resurrection but only to desire a Resolution in a difficult case concerning ●a woman that had seven husbands out-liv'd them all The Question was which of those seven should enjoy her for his wife at the Resurrection but the Lord Christ telleth them they shewed gross ignorance in that wherein they thought themselves ve●y acute saith he Ye do err not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God and first sheweth them how by the Almighty power of God the bodies of the Saints at the Resurrection should be so wonderfully transformed and glorified that they should not need nor desire marriage or other things of the like natrue no more then the Angels do which are Spirits and have no bodies then he proveth by the Scripture that the dead shall rise Now this ignorance is more or less gross in several persons some that are not so grossely ignorant as others yet being weak in knowledge and judgement are apt to miscarry in this kind First by misunderstanding some Texts or passages of holy Scripture so it seemeth the Saints at Thessalonica mistook what the Apostle had written to them in his former Epistle when speaking of the last day he saith This we say unto you by the word of the Lord that we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not prevent them which are asleep the Lord himself shall descend from Heaven with a shout with the voice of the Archangel and with the Trumpet of God and the dead in Christ shall rise first then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the Clouds to meet the Lord in the Air. Where twice he speaketh of himself if we look on the bare words as if he should live to the end of the world as if Christ should come in glory before Paul should leave this world I conceive he spake by way of supposition that if he and other Believers then living should remain to the last day then they should be thus translated to Glory and as he saith elsewhere they should not dye but should be changed and this he might do to teach others by his example to live in a continual expectation
dye to sin to mortifie their members which are upon the earth to live to righteousness to walk in newness of life Thirdly the pride of corrupt Nature is very contrary to the Gospel which teacheth to be poor in spirit to empty our selves of all self-sufficiency to go out of our selves to become fools that we may be wise to be less than nothing in our own eyes to receive all of meer grace the free love and favour of God to present our selves in anothers garment before God in the righteousness of Christ for the covering of our shame and cloathing of our nakedness to look for no acceptance of any service but by anothers worthiness the merit of Christ. Fourthly corrupt and inordinate self-love may move men to reject or corrupt the Truths of the Gospel which teacheth self denyal and the renouncing of all that is dear unto us so far as it standeth in opposition against Christ Then saith Iesus unto his Disciples If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me The Gospel striketh at the right eye at the heart and root of the most beloved lusts How then will self-love rise up against it Fifty inordinate love of the world of things below being deeply rooted in corrupt Nature raiseth rebellion against the Gospel and moveth men either to reject or corrupt the Truths revealed in it Felix trembled at Pauls discourse and commanded him away the young man went away sorrowful when Christ required him to fell all and give to the poor and follow him in hope of treasures in Heaven The Pharises who were covetous when they heard Christ speak against that sin de●ided him Love not the world neither the things that are in the world if any man love the world the love of the Father is not in him So if any man love the world inordinately the love of the Truth is not in him for all that is in the world the lust of the flesh the lust of the eyes and the pride of life is not of the Father but is of the world The Use of this may be First to teach us to see and bewayle the corruption of our nature and withal to make us sensible how dangerous it is to continue in our natural estate destitute of the spirit of Christ Our corrupt nature is apt to corrupt and deny the precious Truths of the Gospel it were a dangerous and malignant disease of the body that should turn the best physick into poyson and either cast it out of the stomach as soon as it is taken in or grow worse by occasion of the remedy Our natures are wholly overspread with the deadly disease of sin and corruption and there is no part ●ound in them as the Apostle saith I know that in me that is in my flesh dwelleth no good thing He had much good in him through grace a great measure of the spirit of Christ but in his flesh so far as he was carnal so far as he was not renewed by the holy Ghost ●o far there was no good thing dwelling in him which sheweth that in them which are not regenerate there is nothing spiritually good nothing suitable and pleasing to God Whence these two great evils follow First an inclination to reject the Remedy● like a corrupt Stomack that gives no entertainment to the Physick leaveth it no time to work the cure but presently casteth it out So do many in the state of corrupt Nature they hear the Truths of the Gospel which the Lord hath appoynted as pre●ious Remedies against that disease and reject them cast them up again either denying them in the secret thoughts not believing them or not seriously minding or regarding them So the Apostle told the unbelieving Iews it was necessary that the word of God should first have been spoken to you but seeing ye put it from you and judge your selves unworthy of everlasting life Lo we turn to the Gentiles He charged them for putting the word of God from them The Apostle had put the word of God home to them and they put it from them thus it is with many The Gospel is tendered to them as necessary physick sent down from Heaven and ministred to them by the Preachers of the word but they put it from them either they do not take it down or presently cast it up again Secondly there is an inclination in corrupt Nature to corrupt the Truths of the Gospel and to make them occasions of increasing the disease and so to make the Gospel to become the servant of death unto death Corrupt Nature is apt to make both the law and the Gospel occasions of increasing these diseases of the soul concerning the Law the Apostle saith when we were in the flesh the motions of sin which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death This explaineth afterwards as in other passages wherefore the Law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good the Law is perfectly holy and just and good and therefore cannot be properly the cause of any thing sinful and unholy Was that then which is good made death unto me God forbid But sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful such is the malignity of corrupt Nature that it worketh evil out of good and maketh the pure and holy Law of God an occasion of sin the more sin is forbidden reproved threatned condemned by the Law the more vehemently is the corruption of nature carried after sin So for the Gospel the Apostle Peter saith that Christ preached in the Gospel is to them that are disobedient a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence when to them which stumble at the word being disobedient whereunto also they were appointed They stumble and take offence because they like not those terms upon which Christ is offered to them in the Gospel How dangerous is it then to continue in this estate of corrupt nature How earnest should poor souls be with the Lord to deliver them The body is in a sad estate when all both food and physick increaseth some deadly disease in it The word and Gospel of God is both food and physick and corrupt Nature is apt to make it an occasion to increase sin and aggravate condemnation Cry mightily to the Lord to work a through cure upon your souls to change and renew your natures to send his spirit along with his word that it may overpower the diseases of your souls and be unto you the favour of life unto life Secondly This may teach us not to think it strange that so many pretious Truths of the Gospel are denyed and rejected in these days so many parts of Scripture abused with false interpretations and corrupt glosses so many errors and lyes maintained instead of Truths Corrupt nature
of Nature consisting of those notions of good and evil which were left or new written by the Lord in the minds of men and women after that the nature of mankind was corrupted by sin which Law though it be now imperfect yet in many things it sheweth the difference between good and evil and hath power over the Conscience to inform convince excuse and accuse The other two delivered peculiarly to the people of Israel are the Law of Ordinances of Ceremonies and the Law moral And the Apostle proveth that none of these Laws can justifie the strictest observers of them all men and women being naturally corrupt and possest with principles of opposition against the purity and perfection of the moral Law and those that are renewed by grace being but imperfectly conformed to the Law As for the Law of Ceremonies it is in its own nature no perfect rule of righteousness but consisting of figures and shadows and such earthly and carnal observances as had a mystical signification of spiritual and heavenly things The Law of nature is comprehended in the moral Law delivered in the Scriptures first published to Israel and then communicated together with the Gospel to the Nations of the world So that that which is imperfectly written in the minds of men naturally is perfectly declared by the Law written by the finger of God in Tables of stone scil the ten Commandments and more fully opened in other parts of Scripture And therefore though it was expedient for the Apostle to speak distinctly of them in the former part of his discourse to convince both Israelites and Heathens of their unrighteousness and g●ilt yet in this place I conceive the Law of nature and the written Law may well be comprehended under one and so I take the Apostles meaning to be that by the doctrine of free justification through the righteousness of Christ both the Ceremonial and moral Law are established To begin with the former observe this point That the Law of Ceremonies is established by the doctrine of the Gospel Or thus The doctrine of free justification through the righteousnes of Christ apprehended by faith establisheth the Ceremonial Law For the right understanding of this we may consider First In general What these Ceremonial institutions were Secondly How they were misunderstood or abused by ignorant and carnal Israelites Thirdly How they are established by the Gospel or doctrine of justification by faith First These Ceremonial Ordinances were instituted by the Authority of God himself as parts of his outward worship and figures of heavenly and spiritual things to be observed untill the death of Christ. 1. They were instituted by the authority of God himself So Circumcision was commanded immediately by God himself to Abraham and his posterity So the Lord gave express directions to Moses and Aaron concerning the Ordinance of the Passeover and Moses being fourty days and fourty nights in the Mount received Ceremonial Laws from the Lord to be observed by the people Secondly They were parts of Gods outward worship Some of them more directly and properly as the Sacrifices which were to be offered to the Lord only so also the sweet Incense and divers others Other of them more improperly as things subservient to the worship of God as the Altar of burnt-offerings the Ark the Golden Table c. Thirdly They were figures of Heavenly and spiritual things Who serve unto the example and shadow of heavenly things as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the Tabernacle For see saith he that thou make all things according to the patern shewed thee in the Mount Fourthly They were to be observed until the death of Christ. Above when he said Sacrifice and offerings and burnt-offerings and offering for sin thou wouldst not neither hadst pleasure therein which are offered by the Law Th●● said he that is Christ Lo I come to do thy will O God He taketh away the first that he may establish the second By the which Will we are sanctified by the offering of the body of Iesus Christ once for all The Ceremonies of the Law were to continue until Christ offered himself in sacrifice and then they were to be taken away and to give place to his all-sufficient Sacrifice and accordingly the Lord Christ himself manifested in the flesh and made under the Law did in his own person observe the Ceremonies of the Law But at his death the veile of the Temple wa● rent in twain from the top to the bottom which I conceive signified both the abolishing of legal Ceremonies and the opening of the way into the heavenly sanctuary by the death of Christ. Now there being great abundance and varieties of these Ceremonial institutions I conceive they may be reduced to four heads 1. Sacraments 2. Sacrifices 3. Sacred persons and things subservient to holy uses 4. Sacred observances 1. Sacraments and those ordinarily were two 1. Circumcision whereby they were solemnly admitted into the Church and visibly sealed as parties to the Covenant 2. The passeover wherein they were admitted by faith to feed upon Christ the Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world slain in the eternal counsel of God before the foundation of the world and to be actually Sacrificed in the fulness of time 2. Sacrifices 1. Whole burntofferings 2. Meat-offerings 3. Sin-offerings 4. Thank-offerings or Peace-offerings and among these especially the daily burnt-offering presented to the Lord morning and evening every day in the year 3. Sacred persons and things Such were the Priests and Levites especially the High-priest The holy places 1. A Tabernacle 2. A Temple with the several parts Consecrated days and times the feasts of the passover of Pentecost of Tabernacles the new Moons the weekly Sabbaths as limited to the last day of the week c. The utensils of the Sanctuary the Altar of burntoffering the golden Altar of Incense the Loaves the Table of shew-bread the Ark Mercy-seat c. 4. Sacred observances Their divers washings and purifyings absteining from divers creatures as unclean with very many usages injoyned In the second place consider how these things were understood or abused by ignorant or carnal Israelites I conceive 1. That many of them had little or no knowledge of the mystical signification or spiritual meaning of these types and shadows they did not see Christ in them 2. That they rested in the outward work If they were outwardly Circumcised they looked not after the Circumcision of the heart mortification of sin self-denyal regeneration having fed upon the Lamb with unlevened bread in the feast of the Passeover they minded not the Lamb of God nor sought after the unleavened bread of sincerity and Truth When they offered Sacrifice they looked no farther than the beast that was slaine not minding the perfect all-sufficient sacrifice of Christ. It seemeth they were
the interpretation of this Mystery For the bodyes of those beasts whose blood is brought into the Sanctuary by the high priest for sin are burnt without the Camp wherefore Iesus also that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the Gate And he bearing his Cross went forth unto a place called the place of a Skull which is called in the Hebrew Golgotha It seemeth this was a loathsome place without the City where they executed the vilest offenders and so at that time there were two malefactours Crucified with the Lord Jesus Christ one at each hand A place of a skul where there were it is likely many skuls and bones of such as had been there put to death even as the sin-offering was burnt at the place where the ashes were poured out First Here we have an other evidence of the wonderful abasement of the Lord of glory thrust out of the Camp out of the City as an outcast as an unclean and cursed thing so extreamly was he vilified whom all the Angels of God worship and to whom every knee must bow of those in heaven c And therefore let us make the same use of it as was formerly hinted Secondly In particular let us make the use of it which the Apostle points us to Let us go forth therefore unto him without the Camp bearing his reproach Both Iews and Gentiles conspired together in Crucifying the Lord Christ and therefore Believers must go out of the Iews Camp and out of the worlds Camp bearing the reproach of Christ they must not joyn with the obstinate Iews in observing legal Ceremonies nor be conformed to the world but labour to be conformed to a crucified Saviour and be content to endure scorn reproach persecution for Christ following the Lamb whithersoever he goeth Many will seem to close with Christ if they can find him in the Camp if they can enjoy their credit their favour with the world their earthly interests But how few will go forth to him out of the Camp bearing his reproach so as to be rejected by the world and dealt with as outcasts and the off scouring of all things For saith the Apostle here have we no continuing City but we seek one to come If Christ suffered without the Gate of the City let us not be so affected as if this world were the place of our rest Let us not mind earthly things let us have our conversation in Heaven labouring to make sure of our interest in that everlasting inheritance Let us therefore fear lest a promise being left us of entring into his rest any of you should seem to come short of it The Apostle urgeth from this Type of the sin-offering that they which would still rest in the observation of Iewish Ceremonies had no right in Christ We have an Altar whereof they have no right to eat which serve the Tabernacle for the bodies c. as before The bodies of the sin-offerings were burnt without the Camp and so the Priest did eat no part of their flesh whereby was signified that they who would feed upon Christ and partake of the benefit of his sacrifice must leave the Tabernacle or Temple Priesthood Sacrifices Ceremonies of the Law now that Christ hath suffered for thus are all established by Christ not so as to be observed much less to be rested in but so as to attain their end in Christ in whom it appeareth that they are no empty shadowes but lively types of great and weighty Mysteries whereof also they are useful illustrations Thirdly I proceed to somewhat of meat-offerings It seemeth these were sometimes offered by themselves and sometimes joyned with other sacrifices as they were offered by themselves we have them set down Lev. 2. The original word is taken for a gift or present so these meat-offerings were to be given and presented to the Lord and this offering was to be fine flower of the purest part of the wheat and so it is conceived to signifie the perfect purity of Christ offering himself to God for his people resembled by pure flower without any mixture of bran The Lord Christ is brought in speaking to his Father Sacrifice and offering thou wouldst not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt offerings and Sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure Then said I Loe I come in the volumn of the book it is written of me to do thy will O God I conceive here those three sorts of sacrifices are mentioned burnt-offerings sin-offerings and meat-offerings none of these could satisfie the justice of God for the sins of men and therefore he prepared or fitted a body for his Son an humane nature fitted to suffer for the sins of men a pure humane nature as the pure flower of wheat by the miraculous operation of the holy Ghost This humane nature united in one person with the Son of God was sufficient to make full satisfaction to the infinite justice of God which all the sacrifices of the Law could not do In respect of his body or humane nature he was fitted for a sacrifice in respect of his God-head he was an all sufficient sacrifice of infinite value Labour then to lay hold on Christ by faith and to turn to the Lord by repentance that ye may have interest in this most pretious offering this compleat and most perfect sacrifice every way fitted for this use for as Christ is the only Son of God he is most nigh unto the Father the same God with the Father and infinitely beloved of the Father of infinite worth and excellency and so able to make full satisfaction to his justice As he is the Son of man so he is nigh unto men their Brother one of the seed of that woman who was the Mother of all living one of the same nature and so of a nature fit to suffer and therefore he is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him 2. This meat offering of fine flower seemeth also to signifie the offering up of believers to Christ because the members are to be conformed to their head They shall bring all your Brethren for an offering to the Lord out of all Nations The word there translated offering is the same that elsewhere is rendred meat-offering Suitable whereunto is that of the Apostle saith he that I should be the Minister of Iesus Christ to the Gentiles ministring the Gospel of God that the offering up of the Gentiles might be acceptable being sanctified by the holy Ghost Although the Gentiles were prophane Idolaters and defiled with manifold abominations and so fitly resembled by the beasts that were unclean under the Law yet the Apostle preaching the Gospel to them and the holy spirit of Christ working in and with his Ministry upon their souls were renewed cleansed sanctified and so presented as an acceptable offering to the Lord 1. Let all Christians pray
saved whether by their own works and performances or by the grace and free favour of God imputing to them the righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ and working faith in their hearts by his spirit thereby enabling them to receive Christ and apply his righteousness to themselves 2. For the deciding of this question or the determining this controversie the hearts lives and actions of men were to be tried and examined by a rule of righteousness which the supream Law-giver had given unto men 3. The Apostle in this dispute having to do with two sorts of people 1. The Gentiles or such as were strangers to the commonwealth or Church of Israel who had no written Law of divine Authority among them he dealeth with them another way and goeth about to convince them of their guiltiness and unrighteousness and sinning against the Law of Nature 2. The people of Israel who for many hundred years had been the peculiar Covenant-people or Church of God and who had the moral Law of God written briefly with the finger of God in Tables of stone and more largely opened in other parts of Scripture by holy men inspired and moved by the holy Ghost These he trieth by this more full and perfect Law and proveth them guilty of sin against the Law and so concludes that both Israelites and Gentiles were guilty before God and there was none of them righteous by his own works no not one and therefore all of them were to go out of themselves and to flee to Christ by faith that being found in him they might be freely justified by his righteousness I conceive therefore that the Question or Objection in this Text being occasioned by the Apostles former discourse doth concern all those Laws which he mentioned before by which he proveth that men could not be justified scil the Ceremonial Law the Law of Nature and the moral Law written and accordingly the Answer taketh in all Yea we establish the Law But because these two do concern the same things forbidding the same sins and commanding the same duties and what is more imperfectly contained in the Law of Nature is far more perfectly declared in the Moral Law written I do not hold it so necessary to shew how these two are severally established by the doctrine of the Gospel for if this be made evident concerning the moral Law written which being more large and full comprehendeth the Law of Nature in it it will follow that the Law of Nature is established also Notwithstanding in as much as the Apostle hath shewed that none can be justified by the light and Law of Nature I think fit to speak something briefly of that also as conceiving it to be included in this Objection and the Apostles Answer to it The point then which I observe is this That God hath given to men a light and Law of Nature This I take to be plainly expressed in divers passages of the first and second Chapters of this Epistle and twice implyed in this verse 1. In the Objection Do we then make void the Law through faith Doth the doctrine of justification through the righteousness of Christ applied by faith excluding all other ways of justification make the Law of Ceremonies the Law moral the Light and Law of Nature as formerly mentioned of no effect altogether void of no force or use 2. In the Answer We establish the Law and as the Law of Ceremonies and the Law moral so the Law and light of Nature so that the Apostle sheweth according to the point that God hath given unto men a light and Law of Nature That which may be known of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it unto them for the invisible things of God are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead so that they are without excuse● because that when they knew God they glorified him not as God c. Where it is manifest the Apostle speaks of the Law and light of Nature common to men in general even to those that had no light of Scripture nor written Law of God For when the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law these having not the Law are a Law unto themselves which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their Conscience also hearing witness and their thoughts the mean while or between themselves accusing or excusing one another For the underderstanding of this point let us consider 1. What this Light or Law of Nature is It may be described thus It is the knowledge which God hath given unto man in their natural estate since the fall of men whereby he hath in some degree made known unto them himself and the good they ought to do and the evils they ought to shun 1. It is given of God so in both those places of Scripture mentioned before in the one 〈◊〉 is said God hath shewed it unto them in the other they shew the work of the Law written in their hearts Now who can write immediately upon the heart and soul but God who is the Father of spirits who formeth the spirit of man within him and therefore I do not call it the Law of Nature in this sense as if it were propagated from Adam by natural generation but because it is given of God to men as generally as if it were born with them The Prophet sheweth that God giveth to the Husbandman his skill and knowledge for his God doth instruct him unto discretion and doth teach him this also cometh forth from the Lord who is wonderful in counsel and excellent in working So the Lord saith of Bezaleel I have filled him with the spirit of God in wisdom and in understanding and in knowledge and in all manner of workmanship to devise cunning works to work in Gold and in Silver and in Brass c. So that if God be the giver of skill and ability for arts and handy-crafts we need not doubt but he is the Author of the light and Law of Nature given unto man whereby they see a difference between truth and falshood good and evil and the Lord may give excellent gifts of this kind to such men to whom he giveth no sanctifying and saving graces 2. It is a knowledge So it is said they knew God they have a knowledge So it is said of Christ that was the true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world The Son of God giveth this common light generally to men This light differeth much from that light of life which Christ giveth to them that follow him whereof he speaketh Chap. 8. I am the light of the world he that followeth me shall not walk in darkness but shall have the light of life This is meant of a spiritual saving light leading men to everlasting life which is given to none but them that follow Christ
but there is a common light and knowledge which Christ giveth to them that are strangers to him yea to such as are his enemies 3. This Light and Law of Nature is given unto men in their natural estate since the fall since their nature was corrupted by sin Before the fall while man was in the state of primitive integrity as God had created him in his own likeness after his Image that is in wisdom righteousness and true holiness the light and Law which God implanted in man was clear and perfect man had an exact Rule imprinted upon his soul to walk by But this Rule being defaced by the sin of man the Lord gave men some degree of light and knowledge in this state of corrupt Nature which in many things might restrain their corruptions from breaking out into such extremities as Satan and their own lusts might stir them up to and whereby they might be reduced into a more orderly course of life and manifest effects of this have been found not only in natural persons living under the Gospel which were strangers to the life of grace but also in many Heathens who never heard the doctrine of salvation yea in some heathen Persecutors of the Church as Trajan Antoninus Philosophus and Iulian the Apostate 4. It was said in the description that by this light of Nature God hath in some degree made known himself unto them So the Apostle saith that which may be known of God is manifest in them for God hath shewed it unto them I conceive by this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which may be known of God the Apostle meaneth that which may be known of God without special Revelation such as is declared in Scripture this was manifest in them by that common general light of Nature which God had given them For 1. They had inward principles of Natural light And 2. They had the works of God 1. His works of Creation For the invisible things of him from the beginning of the world are clearly seen being understood by the things that are made even his eternal power and Godhead The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handy-work their line is gone out into all the earth and their words unto the end of the world The creatures do as it were speak out the excellency and glory of their Creator to all the Nations of the world 2. His works of Providence God hath made of one blood all Nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth and hath determined the times before appointed and the bounds of their habitation that they should seek the Lord if happily they might feel after him and find him though he be not far from every one of us for in him we live move and have our being So the same Apostle told the Heathens that God in times past suffered all Nations to walk in their own waies not giving them the light of his word to guide them in the way of salvation nevertheless saith he He left not himself without witness in that he did good and gave us rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons filling our hearts with food and gladness by his works of Providence he made some discovery of himself unto them I conceive by this light of Nature within them and the light which was held forth unto them by the works of God from without they might know that there was a God and that this God was of infinite perfection eternal almighty most wise good righteous that he was to be served and worshipped iu such a way as was pleasing to him that as the world was made by him so both it and all the creatures in it were under his government that as a righteous judge he would punish evil doers and reward the righteous They might by the light of reason conclude that none of the creatures could make themselves for nothing can act before it hath a being and therefore all the creatures must receive their beings from a cause that was before them hereupon they might assuredly gather that there is a first universal cause of all things who is eternal without beginning of infinite perfection The orderly and perpetual motion of the Heavens Sun Moon and Stars the continual succession of day and night the Spring Summer Harvest Winter the correspondency and Harmony that is between the Creatures being fitted and suited to each other the sun drawing of vapours from the earth and waters into the air there to be botled up in the Clouds the Clouds sending down showers upon the earth the earth bringing forth grass herbs corn and other fruits for the use of men beasts and fowls and the beasts and fowls themselves fitted for the use of men the senses of the body and their objects fitted and suited to each other there are sounds and voices and an ear to receive them there are colours and there is the eye fitted to behold them so of the rest yea how exactly are the several parts of the same body fitted and suited to each other These and many other things discernable by the light of Nature might clearly convince men that there is a God of infinite power and wisdom who is the cause and Author of all Fifthly It was said that by this light and Law of Nature God hath given unto men in some degree to discern the good which they ought to do and the evil which they ought to shun So ye heard before the Apostle saith The Gentiles having not the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law they do some things contained in the written Law of God though they have not this Law How by Nature by the Light and Law of Nature and in so doing they shew the work of the Law written in their hearts The Heathen Philosophers have written much in commendation of moral virtues and set forth the odiousness of many vices and dishonest practices Abimelech King of Gerar blamed Abraham when out of weakness calling his Wife his Sister he seemed to lay a snare before him and give him occasion to commit adultery unawares What hast thou done unto us and what have I offended thee that thou hast brought on me and on my Kingdom a great sin Thou hast done deeds unto me that ought not to be done So he said to Sarah concerning her Husband Abraham Behold he is to thee a covering of the eyes unto all that are with thee and with all other thus she was reproved Thus much of the description Secondly We may consider the imperfection of this Law and Light of Nature 1. In general It is not sufficient to bring men to blessedness and salvation The Lord Christ saith I am the way the truth and the Life no man cometh unto the Father but by me neither is there salvation in any other for there is none other Name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be
saved Whosoever shall call on the Name of the Lord shall be saved How then shall they call on him on whom they have not believed It must be a prayer of faith and where sound faith is there are other saving graces And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard And how shall they hear without a Preacher so that the light of Nature was not sufficient unto salvation 2. In special I conceive the Law and light of Nature was defective and imperfect 1. In it self I suppose it did not make known unto men the great Mystery of Trinity in unity three persons in one God nor the state of perfection wherein man was created nor his woful fall and revolt from God Their own experience taught them that the Nature of man was inclined to evil the powers of the soul disordered the senses misleading the affections the affections leading reason captive but they had no light to discover to them the first cause of all this mischief they were as far to seek concerning the Remedy That great depth of the Incarnation of the Son of God of God manifest in the flesh for mans Redemption was hidden from them their own Consciences accused them and condemned them as guilty but they had no light to shew them how divine justice might be satisfied they knew not of the blood righteousness sacrifice satisfaction of Jesus Christ God and man that is sufficient to take away sin and to make peace between God and sinners The light of Nature could not enable them to see into the mystical union between Christ and believers by his spirit and their faith The doctrines of free justification by the righteousness of Christ imputed of Regeneration Adoption Sanctification Communion with God Resnrrection unto glory are not revealed by the light of Nature This light did nor shew them how to walk before God unto all pleasing it did not teach them the right way of mortifying their lusts of walking in the spirit it did not discover to them the special institutions of God and ordinances of his worship Secondly It was defective and imperfect by reason of the subject the soul of man in which it was This light and Law of Nature being given to men in their corrupt natural estate is much darkned by the Natural blindness errours vanities lusts that are in the minds and hearts of men as if a man write upon fowl and blurred Paper how much is lost of that which is written and how hardly is it read sometimes a sentence broken off in the midst here and there half words one letter mistaken for another so the light and Law of Nature being put into the defiled hearts and souls of men hath many defects in it Thirdly It may be considered of what use this light and Law of Nature was sith it was defective and not sufficient to lead men to salvation It might be useful 1. For the glory of God who by this means had a witness in the hearts and Consciences of men of natural men yea of Heathens that he loved righteousness and hated wickedness their own Consciences pleading for God against them 2. It was of use for the preservation of humane societies in families ●nd Common-wealths keeping men within some limits of common honesty and preventing those outrages which the violence of mens lusts and the power of Satan might hurry them into 3. I conceive it might be useful as a remote preparative for the receiving of the Gospel in some to whom the word of salvation was tendred for though the pride and prejudice of mens natural spirits might cause them to resist the holy Ghost speaking in the Gospel preached yet the light of nature well improved finding nothing in the doctrine of the Gospel contrary to it but far above it might incline the minds of many to attend to a far higher and more glorious light shining in the doctrine of salvation I speak of this but as a remote preparative whereby ingenuous spirits might be moved to give heed to the Gospel but it must be a far higher cause even the mighty power of Christ his spirit that can bring them to receive the Gospel in an effectual and saving way Fourthly How doth this light and Law of Nature leave men without excuse I conceive First Because they did in many things shut their eyes against the light not seeking to increase that light received by improving their reason and understandings as one Candle lighteth another so one degree of light improved begetteth another and so there is lumen de lumine light as it were springing from light whereas light smothered endeth in darkness 2. Because they did not act according to that light received nor walk according to those natural abilities which they had The Heathens lived in gross Idolatry against the light of Nature whereby they might have learned that dead Images were utterly unfit to represent the living God Carnal Christians sin against the light of Nature as in many other things so I conceive in not submitting to that higher light of spiritual Mysteries so as to receive the love of the Truth that they may be saved The use of this may be 1. To inform us that Acts againt the Law of Nature are sings against God not only as they are against his written Law but also as they are against the Law of Nature because as the point sheweth God hath given unto men this light and Law of Nature the impression of this Law of Nature upon the hearts and souls of men is one of the acts of his legislative power I conceive when the Prophet saith The Lord is our Iudge the Lord is our Law-giver the Lord is our King he will save us he speaketh of God in reference to his Church to whom he hath a more peculiar Relation of this kind He gave them his Law written in the Scripture and he raigneth over them as a King in a special maner Blessed is the Nation whose God is the Lord and the people whom he hath chosen for his own Inheritance the Church is the Lords Inheritance A King may have an hereditary Kingdom which he maketh greatest account of and he may have other tributary Kingdoms subject to him to which he giveth Law also So David was King of Israel in a peculiar manner but he had also the Kingdoms of Edom Moa● Ammon Syria c. under him The Lord looketh upon the Church as his peculiar Kingdom and to them he hath given a perfect Law in writing in the holy Scirptures but besides that he hath a universal soveraignty and Dominion the Authority of a Law-giver over all the Nations of the world Iews Turks Indians c. The Lord most high is terrible he is a great King over all the Earth And again God is King of all the Earth And so he is a Law-giver to all the Nations of the Earth If he giveth
graces of Christ derived from him to Christians are compared to that precious ointment under the Ceremonial Law that was made of principal spices pure Myrrhe sweet Cynamon sweet Calamus and Cassia sweet Aromatical choice ingredients which being artificially compounded together what a sweet and fragrant smell did it yeild But how far doth the sweet savour of that spiritual ointment the graces of the spirit derived from Christ to true Christians excel this material ointment How great is their guilt in the sight of God that profess themselves Christians that is anointed of God and yet cherish in their hearts noisome and unsavory lusts and wallow in the mire and in the stinking sinks of abominable sins who profess themselves Christians i. e. anointed with heavenly gragrac●s and yet remain graceless and profane 3. The Name Christian signifieth a Disciple a Scholar a follower of Christ. How great is thy sin 1. If under this name thou livest in ignorance dost thou not herein cast a great reproach upon the Lord Jesus Christ Hast thou been 20 30 40 years his Disciple his Scholar and hast thou learned little or nothing all this while Hadst thou any sincere love to Christ and his doctrine how is it that thou hast profited no more 2. Wilt thou call thy self a Christian that is a Disciple or follower of Christ and dost thou not cease to act and walk contrary to him in drunkenness in riot revellings chamberings wantonness c. Dost thou not herein highly dishonour Christ in calling thy self a Christian or follower of Christ Is not this as if thou shouldst say Christ taught thee these things and walkt before thee in such ways as these Oh take heed lest thou be found guilty of a kind of real and implicite blasphemy Is it not either a mocking of Christ or an implicite blaspheming of Christ for people to call themselves Christians that is followers and scholars of Christ and to go on from time to time in lewd and wicked courses How grievous is the sin of them that live under the Gospel and are more obstinate more stubborn more hardned in their sins than divers of the Heathens So the Lord Christ sheweth that the Heathens of Tyre and Sidon would have repented in sackcloth and ashes if the same means had been afforded them which Corazin and Bethsaida had The men of Nineve shall rise in judgement with this generation and shall condemn it because they repented at the preaching of Ionas and behold a greater then Ionas is here If the Ninevites abounding in wealth and pleasure their City being the head of the Assyrian Monarchy an Heathenish people did so far relent at the preaching of Ionas who came among them from a strange Nation Oh tremb●e to think of your account if ye continue to harden your hearts against so many sermons so many messages brought unto you in the name of Christ and confirmed by his Authority Will ye be able to hold up your faces before the men of Nineve in the day of Judgement How grievous is the sin of professed Christians living under the light of the word and Gospel of Christ who on the one side having nothing in them better then the wiser sort of Heathens And 2. Live in such practices as the better sort of Heathens abhorred and scorned 1. How many living under the Gospel have nothing in them better then some of the Heathens nothing practically better no better frame of soul no better resolutions and affections nothing of Christ his regenerating spirit nothing of his renewing grace nothing of the new creature It may be they have some more knowledge of Christ and his Gospel then Heathens so have the Divels but they have no better hearts than Heathens 2. How many such live in the ordinary practice of such sins which the wiser sort of Heathens abhorred and scorned How disgraceful was drunkenness by the light of Nature to sober Heathens and how did they despise drunkards What discourses have Seneca and Pliny against drunkenness setting it forth not only as odious but as ridiculous shewing the baseness and sillyness of such courses Yea Are there not many Turks at this day who would scorn to make themselves such sotts as many professed Christians do What notable passages hath Tully against chearing and indirect dealing in matter of Contracts Bargains c. The like may be said of many other Cases Let us then lay to heart the abounding of sin and wickedness among us against the light and Law of Nature aggravated by the light of the written Law the everlasting Gospel of Christ and yet humble our selves and cry mightily unto the Lord if it be possible that his wrath may be turned away from us and let us every one in particular exceedingly tremble to be found Christians in name and Heathens in heart and life and therefore worse than meer Heathens CHAP. VIII I Proceed now to the Moral Law concerning which the Apostle saith it is established by the doctrine of Justification through the Righteousness of Christ apprehended by faith without any consideration of the works of the Law performed by the person justified By the the Moral Law I understand the Law written in the Scripture whereof we have a brief sum or Abridgment in the ten Commandments which again is contracted into a narrower compass Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all soul and with all thy mind This is the first and greatest Commandment and the second is like unto it Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self The Law thus abridged is largely unfolded in other parts of Scripture with the additions of many threatnings against disobedience and promises to obedience 1. then I intend to propose a general point of doctrine and then to point at the particulars comprehended in it The general doctrine is this That the Gospel teaching the free justification of Believers without consideration of any works of theirs done in obedience to the Law but through the Righteousness of Christ alone applied by faith doth establish the moral Law So it is shewed in this Text Through faith the Law is established That which I desire to clear unto you is how or wherein the moral Law is established by faith this may be shewed 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively And so we may come to the several branches or special doctrines comprised in this general 1. Negatively thus The moral Law is not established but declared to be of no use for the justification of sinners in the sight of God by the doctrine of justification through the Righteousness of Christ imputed of God and applied by faith Or more briefly for help of Memory thus Iustification by faith in Christ excludeth justification by the works of the Law This ye may take as a point of doctrine implied in the Text if it be compared with the Apostles foregoing discourse to which it hath relation For the Apostle speaketh of it
as of a thing strongly proved and concluded as clear and certain that it being declared and demonstrated that none have fulfilled the Law but all are found guilty of sin against the Law therefore none can be justified in the sight of God by the works of the Law hence it followeth that there is no way remaining for any of mankind to be justified and approved righteous before God but only through the righteousness of Christ imputed to them of God and applied by faith Hereupon ariseth the Q●estion or Objection in the Text Do we then c. and the Answer is Yea we establish the Law that is it is established in other respects and for other ends and uses but is declared to be void and of no use at all for the justifying of sinners by any works which they can perform in obedience to the Law So that as the Ceremonial Law is declared by the doctrine of the Gospel to be of no use either for justification of sinners or for outward observation and yet established in other respects as hath been shewed so the moral Law by the same doctrine of the Gospel is declared to be of no force for justification of sinners and yet established in other respects For the present the Negative is to be considered So the Apostle having spoken of the priviledges of the people of Israel above the Gentiles as in other regards so chiefly because unto them were committed the oracles of God then moveth a Q●estion What then Are we better than they No in no wise for we have before proved both Iews and Gentiles that they are all under sin as it is written there is none righteous no not one The Israelites though they had outward Church-priviledges above the Gentiles yet were no better by Nature than they they were children of wrath by Nature as well as others and it was as impossible for them to be justified by their own righteousness or works of obedience to the Law as it was for the Heathen Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight Two things may be considered here for the opening and confirming this point The first is this What grounds there are in general to prove that none can be justified by their own works p●rformed in obedience to the Law 2. How this is declared by the doctrine of the Gospel Of the former the general grounds may be three The first taken from the consideration of the state of man as he is in and of himself The second from the Law The third from God who is both the Lawgiver and Iudge 1. From Man He is from his birth a lump of flesh filled with carnal lusts and fleshly corruptions That which is born of the flesh is flesh and in this flesh dwelleth no good thing and this carnal and fleshly mind is enmity against God it is not subservient to the Law of God neither indeed can be so then they that are in the flesh cannot please God they are all dead in trespasses and sins inclined to walk according to the course of this world according to the Prince of the power of the air the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience and are by Nature the children of wrath and therefore every imagination of the thoughts of mans heart by Nature is only evil continually and therefore the Apostle counted all things which he had of himself out of Christ loss and dung for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus all his own righteousness and best performances out of Christ were as loss and dung and therefore of no weight nor worth towards his justification of no value at all towardrs the satisfying of Gods justice If any say that after he was in Christ renewed by his spirit his works were of some value I Answer 1. That is nothing to the business in hand for when once the soul is united to Christ it is already justified upon another account scil through the perfect righteousness of Christ and none can find acceptance with God for their persons or services until they are in Christ and justified and therefore these services and duties make nothing towards their justification but follow upon their justification 2. The best duties of the best saints of God in this life are not answerable to the perfect purity and exactness of the Law and that is the second ground whereby it may appear that none can be justified or approve themselves righteous before the Lord by any works of obedience to the Law scil 1. The consideration of the purity and perfection of the Law 2. The severity of the Law not bearing with the least aberration or swerving from it or transgression against it 1. The perfection of the Law The Law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good The Law is spiritual it is a compleat and perfect rule of righteousness and it is not for the imperfection of the Law that it doth not make men righteous but it is because of the imperfection and corruption of men who cannot answer the perfection of the Law 1. The Law requireth a full and perfect conformity of the whole man of all the powers of the soul and affections of the heart and so of all the sences and parts of the body to the strait and pure rule of the Law that there should be nothing contrary to the Law nothing defective or wanting This is the voice of the Law Hear O Israel the Lord our God is one Lord and thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul and with all thy migbt and these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart The Law requireth a perfect conformity unto its self that the whole heart and soul should be filled with the love of God that the whole strength of the heart and soul all the might of the inner man should be bent upon God and carried after God in love and so by consequent that there should be nothing in the heart or soul in the least degree contrary to the love of God not the least love of any sin nor the least inclination towards it for the least declining of the heart or soul toward sin is contrary to the Law which requireth the whole heart or soul to be given up to God in love and that with all its strength or might yea the least remission of love the want of love in the full perfection of it is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it is against the Law and condemned by the Law the want of the perfection of holiness and righteousness in the ●rame of the heart and soul is against the Law I am the Lord your God ye shall therefore sanctifie your selves and ye shall be holy for I am holy The Lord in his Law proposeth himself his own perfect holiness as
covered and ye may have holy boldness and confidence before the Lord. What a blessed priviledge hath the soul which can say with the Apostle I am crucified with Christ nevertheless I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me How happy shalt thou be if finding thy self in Christ and finding Christ dwelling in thine heart thou canst assure thy self that thou art washed in his bloud from all thy sins that he hath crossed all thy sins out of the Debt Book of Gods justice that he is thine Advocate with the Father and the propitiation for thy sins pleading thy cause at the right hand of God and bearing thy name among the rest of the Israel of God upon his breast-plate for a memorial continually Bend thy care and endeavour to the uttermost toward this one thing necessary to make sure of Christ and his most perfect Righteousness 5. Renounce all trust abhor any degree of confidence in thine own Graces duties services Grow in grace and in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ watch alwayes fear alwaies bring forth much fruit labour to do holy duties in sincerity with servency of spirit strive after perfection more more that thou maist fill thy mouth with arguments abundance of evidence that thou art truly united unto Christ by a lively principle of faith unfeigned and so justified by his Righteousness but do not entertain the least thought that way as if all that thou hast done or canst do should make the least satisfaction to the justice of God for any of thy sins or any way help toward thy justification In a word Take heed of splitting thy soul against either of these two Rocks either on the one side deceiving thy self with a dead faith without holiness and fruits of faith and so thinking thy sins to be pardoned and thy person justified when it is nothing so Or on the other side resting with any confidence upon any graces or duties Labour after these and look upon them as evidences of the soundness of thy faith but lean not upon them as grounds to support thy faith So much for the Negative Let us now consider the Affirmative whereby it may appear how and in what regard the moral Law is declared to be established by the doctrine of Faith I conceive the Law is established in five respects First By that full obedience performed to the Law by the Lord Iesus Christ. Secondly By that full satisfaction which he made to the Law in bearing the penalty of it Thirdly In the imputation of his perfect Righteousness to Believers Fourthly In that he establisheth the Law as a Rule of obedience for his people Fifthly In that he conformeth his people to the Law and these may be so many branches of the general point and therefore so many special points of doctrine 1. Then observe this point That the Lord Iesus Christ did establish the Law by fulfilling it or He did perform full and perfect obedience to the Law and so establish the Law Wherein you may note two particulars First That Christ did fulfill the Law Secondly That in fulfilling it he did establish it 1. Of the former So he said Think not that I am come to destroy the Law and the Prophets I am not come to destroy but to fulfill I conceive this speech was delivered soon after the Lord Christ began publickly to preach and this was seasonable to prevent or remove dangerous prejudices or mistakes For besides that general expectation of the Messias about that time the Scepter being departed from Iudah and they being subject to a Forreign yoak there were many extraordinary things which happened at the Birth of Christ Then the Testimony which Iohn Baptist gave him the Heavens opening the holy Ghost descending upon him in the visible form of a Dove God the Father by an audible voice from Heaven proclaiming this is my beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased His fasting forty days and forty nights when he was led of the spirit into the Wilderness to be tempted of the Divel His wonderful diligence in preaching in divers places His glorious miracles in healing all manner of sickness and diseases especially in delivering those that were possessed with Divels The great multitudes of people following him from Galilee Decapolis Hierusalem Iudea and from beyond Iordan in somuch that his fame was spread abroad suddenly beyond the borders of the Land of Israel throughout all Syria These and the like things might well raise the peoples expectation and give them occasion to look for some notable change to be wrought by him and as men are lead by divers principles are upon such occasions apt to fancy some one thing some another so it is likely the most did expect that he should set up an earthly Kingdom some might think that he would take away the Law which God delivered to their Fathers by Moses and the doctrine of the Prophets and hereupon some might seek advantage to disparage his person and his doctrine others might hope that he would open a door for carnal liberty as in our dayes upon occasion of far lesser changes some have embraced strange fancies as if the time were come to cast off those ordinances which Christ hath appointed to be used until the end of the world as if an universal liberty must be granted to all corrupt opinions Heresies Blasphemies under colour of favouring tender Consciences Now the Lord to remedy these things telleth plainly that He came not to destroy but fulfill the Law and the Prophets 1. He fulfilled the Ceremonial Law by exhibiting the substance of those Types and accomplishing those things which were signified and represented by them 2. He fulfilled the Prophets verifying their prophesies teaching doing and suffering that which they foretold 3. He fulfilled the Moral Law 1. Doctrinally rejecting the ●orrupt interpretations then received and giving the true and full sense of the Law 2. He fulfilled the Law practically by performing full and perfect obedience to the Law which is the thing in hand So he said before It becometh us to fulfill all Righteousness God sent forth his Son made of a woman under the Law He was made under the Law by his own voluntary act taking upon him the Nature of man and the office of a Mediatour between God and men though as God he was the Lawgiver and therefore having put himself into this estate he was bound to obey the Law fully in every particular and could not have failed in one jot or tittle without being guilty of sin and therefore all those Texts which declare his perfect Righteousness being compared with this do prove that he performed perfect obedience to the Law So where Stephen calleth him the just one and Paul saith He knew no sin scil no sin either original or
actual either of commission or omission in thought word or deed and Peter saith He was a Lamb without blemish and without spot who did no sin neither was guile found in his mouth and that he suffered for sins the just for the unjust these and the like passages compared with that place prove that he performed perfect obedience to the Law for being as was said made under the Law it was absolutely necessary that he should fulfill it that he might approve himself to be the just one knowing no sin a Lamb without blemish and without spot c. because every 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whatsoever is against the Law is sin whatsoever is contrary to the R●le of the Law whatsoever is defective and falleth short of the perfect purity of the Law is sin and therefore in as much as the Lord was made under the Law and yet was found to be without all spot of sin when he offered up himself in sacrifice and poured forth his blood for the sins of the world It is most clear that he performed full and perfect obedience to the Law and this was necessary 1. That he might be a perfect High Priest The Priest in the old Testament being a Type of Christ was to be without outward blemish in his person or body No man that hath a blemish of the seed of Aaron the Priest shall come nigh to offer the offering of the Lord made by fire and in the next Chapter there is a severe threatning against any of Aarons posterity if having any legal uncleanness upon them they should presume to meddle with the holy things of the Tabernacle suppose they were polluted with Leprosie or a running Issue or by touching an other that was unclean c. This figured the perfect purity and holiness of Christ the true and eternal High-Priest who was to offer up himself in sacrifice to God for such an High-Priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled seperate from sinners made higher than the Heavens who needeth not dayly as those High Priests to offer up Sacrifice first for his own sin and then for the sins of the people for this he did once when he offered up himself He is an High-Priest holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners and whereas the High-Priests of the old Testament were subject to sin and therefore needed to offer sacrifice for their own sins as well as for the peoples He being free from sin offered not needed not to offer for any sins of his own They offered dayly often renewing their offerings because they were imperfect and had respect to the perfect offering of Christ but he offered himself once for all for the sins of his people His sacrifice being most perfect and compleat never to be renewed 2. It was necessary that the Lord Christ should perform full and perfect obedience to the Law that he might be a pure offering a spotless sacrifice to take away the sins of his people How much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your Conscience from dead works to serve the living God That the vertue and efficacy of Christ's blood might reach to the inward man and purge the soul and Conscience from sin it was necessary that he should offer up himself a sacrifice without spot as one whom the Law could not charge with the least aberration or swerving from the perfect purity of it The second particular noted was that the Lord Christ by fulfilling the Law did establish it Here we may consider First That God gave man his Law in the Creation writing a perfect Law of Righteousness and true holiness in the mind and heart of the first man and woman God created man in his own Image in the Image of God created he him male and female created he them Now what was this framing of man in the image of God but the fashioning of his heart and soul according to the wisdom purity holiness and righteousness of God which was the writing and imprinting his Law upon the sould of man as he gave to other creatures natural properties and natural instincts according to their several kinds each of which was a Law unto them scil the Law of their Creation So he imprinted the likeness of his own wisdom Righteousness and holiness upon the first man and woman as the Law of their Creation Now this likeness of God his holiness and Righteousness imprinted upon the souls of our first parents was the same for substance with that moral Law written in the Scriptures for as the moral Law written in the Scriptures is a declaration of the wisdom Righteousness and holiness of God and a rule of Righteousness and holiness to men So was that Image and likeness of God imprinted upon the souls of the first man and woman It was the moral Law written in their hearts and minds Secondly Consider that the great mischeivous design of the Devil 1. Was to destroy this Law of God written in the heart of man to deface the likeness of God his wisdom holiness and Righteousness in their souls to make void and abolish the Law of mans Creation for ever that none of mankind should ever have either knowledge or ability or will to do any thing pleasing unto God and therefore the Apostle declaring the woful ruines of mankind brought upon them by sin and Satan and shewing what all are by nature saith There is none Righteous no not one there is none that understandeth there is none that seeketh after God none Righteous none able to please God none that understandeth none that know how to do it none that seek after God none that have a will truly bent and resolved upon it 2. To subject and enslave the souls of men and women to a contrary Law to the Law of sin and death called a Law of sin in regard of the nature of it and a Law of death and destruction in respect of the end toward which it leadeth His design was to fill the souls of men with darkness errour false conceits about things that concern salvation with rebellion against God and his Law with lusts and corruptions inclining him to all manner of sins against the Law and therefore it is said they are all gone out of the way they have a Law of sin in their hearts and souls that hath turned them quite out of the way to which the Law of God directed them and set them in a course derectly contrary to it 3. I conceive the Devil herein aimed at two things 1. The dishonour of God 2. The destruction of mankind excercising his malice both against God and man 1. The Devils being cast down by the justice of God from their glorious estate and habitation for their Apostacy from God and reserved under chains in darkness acted an high degree of rebellion against God opposing him in his Soveraignty in h●s legislative
power and Authority striving to abolish the Law and to deface the likeness of God's holiness out of the minds of all mankind for ever that God should have none amongst the children of men to serve obey and honour him but all of them should become slaves and vassals to the Devils being led captive by them at their will 2. They aimed at the destruction of mankind to bring them into the same condemnation with themselves by blotting out the Law written in their minds according to which they should have walked and according to which they shall be judged and bringing them under a contrary Law of sin and death so then God having written this Law in the soul and the Devil having blotted it out and brought mankind under a contrary Law of sin In the third place let us consider the work of the Lord Iesus Christ that was to destroy the works of the Devil Saith the Apostle Iohn He that committeth sin is of the Devil for the Devil sinneth from the begining for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devil He that committeth sin he that maketh sin his business sinning with the full bent of his will is of the Devil He remaineth in that condition into which the Devil brought mankind at the first subject to the Law and power of sin which is quite contrary to that Law of righteousness and holiness which God imprinted upon the soul of man in the Creation for the Devil sinneth from the beginning he sinned and fell from God and he drew men into sin and still leadeth them on in a course of sin and disobedience against God Now saith the Apostle for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the Devil He doth not say barely that the Son of God destroyed the works of the Devil but for this purpose the Son of God was manifested that c. one great work of the Devil as ye heard was to deface the likeness of God in the soul of man and to bring him under a Law of sin This work among others Christ came to destroy where note 1. That no meer Creature was able to destroy this work of the Devil It may be some may think that good and holy Angels might be as able to undo this evil work as Devils or evil Angels were to do it But it is not so the reason is not because the good Angels have less power than the Devils but because of the nature of that work of the Devil for the work of the Devil was a destroying work as hath been shewed it was the destroying of the Law of mans Creation which was written in his soul the defacing and blotting out of Gods hand-writing the likeness of Gods holiness and the subjecting of man to the destroying Law of sin it was the taking away of mans spiritual life by dividing him from God the fountain of life Now to destroy or undo this destructive work of Satan is to abolish that Law of sin and death in man and to write that contrary Law in the soul of man which Satan had blotted out that is to restore man to the likeness of God to fashion him again after the Image of God in knowledge Righteousness and holiness to raise man whom Satan had murdered to spiritual life Now it requireth a far greater power to repair and restore then to destroy one Murderer may take away life all the Angels in Heaven nor all the men on earth cannot restore life to the dead None but the living God can do it who is the fountain of life So the Devil and man yeilding to the Devils suggestion could destroy spiritual life The Law written in the heart of man that primitive perfection and integrity of mans Nature framed after the Image of God in knowledge righteousness and holiness but no meer Creatures none but the Prince of life the supream Law-giver by whom all things were made could restore spiritual life write this primitive Law in the soul of man But it may be Objected That this work which the Apostle Iohn saith Christ came into the world to do is a work of destroying I Answ. We are to consider the object of this destroying work of Christ what it was that Christ destroyed that was a destructive work wrought by the Devil that great destroyer and Murderer Christ came to destroy that destruction which Satan had wrought to destroy destruction is to repair and restore that which was destroyed to destroy death is to restore life So the Apostle speaking of the Resurrection of Believers to glory saith When this corruptible shall have put on incorruption and this mortal shall have put on immortality then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written Death is swallowed up in victory Death had slain thousands of Saints and Christ by restoring them to life raising them to immortality and everlasting life shall swallow up death in victory So in the Prophecy of Hosea I will ransome them from the power of the grave I will redeem them from Death O death I will be thy Plague O Grave I will be thy destruction The Lord may be said as it were to kill death and to destroy or bury the grave when he ransometh his people from death and the grave and raiseth them up to everlasting life So in this case when Christ is said to destroy the destructive works of Satan ye must understand that he was to restore that which Satan had ruined This no meer Creature in Heaven and Earth was able to do and therefore in the second place the Son of God undertook it it was a work of Almighty power to restore the Law of mans Creation spiritual life the Likeness of God his Righteousness and Holiness to any of Adams posterity to any of the seed of the woman and to inable any of them to perform ●ull and perfect obedience to the Law None but God could do it and therefore the Son of God who is very God performed it The Devil seemed for ever to have deprived mankind of the Image of God and for ever to have disabled all the Sons of men from fulfilling the Law but the Son of God confounded Satan herein and destroyed this destroying work of the Devil by restoring that which he had destroyed by framing one of Adams posterity one of the seed of the woman after the Image of God in righteousness and holiness and inabling him perfectly in every point to fulfill the Law Thirdly The Apostle shews how the Son of God performed this great work it was by the manifestation of himself For this purpose the Son of God was manifested c. His manifestation was his incarnation his being made flesh taking the nature of man into the unity of his person for the Son of God in his divine nature is invisible not manifested but when he became Man he was
divisions occasioned by Preaching old forgotten truths but the fault in those that will not endure such doctrines Satans malice and some mens weakness So the inundation of Popish Superstitions broke in How much we should resent these things their danger Toleration of them discussed in the Objections for Errours answered Chap. III. Objections against truth many times are double falshoods this riseth from Ignorance Credulity malice and want of Arguments to confirm errours No strange or new thing that men erre and are slanderous Protestant Ministers are no promoters of Antichrist but his great Adversaries lessening them greatens Antichrists interest Seducing Sectaries expedite Antichrists affairs Satan hath still hindered reformation by such ways Chap. IV. A Threefold Law first given to the Gentiles with the Iews the other given only to the Iew. Law of nature and its use The Ceremonial cannot justifie nor the Moral yet neither made void by Faith Faith confirms the Ceremonial Law what this is 't is of God how long to last abus'd or not understood by many of the Iews who precisely observed Ceremonial cleanness palpably neglecting moral purity In what sense doctrine of Faith doth not abolish the Ceremonial Law The dispute between Iews and Samaritans and whence it arose when and how long continued Divine worship in spirit and truth not limited to any place Law Ceremonial a School-master to bring us to Christ full of deep mysteries and spiritual realities cleared by the Gospel These unfolded in explication of Circumcision seal of that promise I will be their God which contains all grace and comfort is made good to us in Christ the Covenant sealed by Circumcision the same that is sealed by Baptisme Passeover what its occasion the circumstances of it its meaning in each particular applied to Christ. Actual faith in Christ delivers from Curse of the Law should excite to thanfulness holiness exercise faith preparedness for our duties godly sorrow Feast of first Fruits when enjoyned excite to endeavour a rising to newness of life Chap. V. Few Creatures appointed for Sacrifices three sorts of Beasts two of Fowls all meek resembling Christ as we should Korban whence derived how apply'd to Christ through whom we are made nigh to God Burnt offering 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It s import to us the rites in offering it blindness of the Iews and to be pittied deep slaine of sin it is deadly to the sinner or his surety Christs Bloud precious shed that we should not live in sin The continual burnt-offering Christians should offer morning and evening as most likely the Iews did pray and praise God in their Houses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 its signification Imputation of sin to Christ speaks Gods love of Compassion to sinners sin base and shameful The blood of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sprinkled before the Lord on the Golden Altar the meaning hereof It s inward fat burned what meant some other rites in the offering it and their import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what it was noted Christ and how a sufficient sacrifice therefore fit to be trusted in How the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 noteth the Christians sacrifice and apply'd Oyle used in the meat offering its purport with other rites of it explained Salt with all Sacrifices and its meaning The Covenant of Salt The drink offering wherein it consisted The Peace offering what and on what occasion meaneth whole Christian duty in general to be offered to God through Christ. Peace-offering might be male or female part of it to be burnt part for the Priest part for the offerer hence our Communion with God inferr'd How Sacrificers are partakers of the Altar Priests under the Law were sacred persons especially the High-Priest type of Christ whose is an eternal Priesthood The Garments of the High-Priest and their meaning viz. the holiness beauty and glory of Christ in general A more particular view of each part of the Garments their import and our instruction Ordinary Priests were in a sort types of Christians who are to be spiritual Priests and Sacrifices Ministers of the Gospel no where called Priests in the New Testament Tabernacle and Temple agreed in some differed in other particulars how each signified Christ to dwell with us in much humility and love we ought therefore to unite our selves to him estrange our selves from sin scandalous sins should not be cause of gladness in any who observe them in others Temple and Tabernacle signify'd each be liever Sin defiles the whole man the heart first the outward man next sin begins in the heart Altar made of Shittim wood the meaning covered with brass its purport the Godheadpreserving the humane nature under its sufferings Where the Altar was placed its meaning The Altar of incense its meaning The Ark what in it and their Import The mercy seat the Cherubims looking down towards the Ark. The fire used in Sacrifices its meaning Christs love to us undergoing such sufferings for us requireth love from us to him This fire came from Heaven never was to go out such should Christian zeal be Chap. VI. Sacred observances as restraint from unclean beasts so not in their own nature the meaning equalleth all mankind in their Original Gods Soveraignty in chusing Israel incomprehensible His infinite goodness calling the Gentiles who should be thankful and take heed of unbelief and all sin Our liberty to use all wholesome food Blood whether now forbidden Probably a Natural though secret reason why so many Creatures were forbidden to Israel Prohibition of eating blood Acts 15. explained Festivals Religious among the Iews noted our Christian joy What feasts these were At the time of the feast of Harvest Christ sent down the Spirit on his Apostles who were to gather in the Harvest of the Gentiles Feast of ingathering about our September the meaning of it well applyed in three or four particulars The feast of Trumpets the type of Preaching the Gospel and calling to faith and repentance who are deaf to this shall be astonied at the last Trumpets sound The various washings in use among the Iews well unfolded shew Christ the accomplishment of them and our Christian duty of dayly purging our selves in the fountain of his blood Chap. VII St. Pauls design to deliver to us the doctrine of justification by grace This clear'd by reducing all men under an examen The Gentile examined and cast by Law of nature transgressed The Iew examined and cast by the written Law moral transgressed There is a Law of nature this not nulled by Faith What this Law is in the particular description of it T is engraven on the heart given by Christ yet different from that he gives Believers who follow him It was a perfect rule before the fall it is yet of great use though much impaired The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he was to be served and worshipped that he created all being himself eternal and omnipotent wise and good This Law declared what is good and what evil in some
l. 16. r. Consequents p. 44. l. penult r. exhort p. 53. l. 12. r. tolerable for Chap. IV r. V. p. 125. in the margin for Officers r. Offerer p. 130. l. 33. dele him p. 153. l. 22. r. persons p. 160. l. 1. for An r. any p. 212. l. 2. for no r not p. 239. l. 21. r. woman p. 240. l. 17. for state r. stead p. 243. l. 6. r. enduring p. 263. l. 25. r. For. Rom. 3. 31. Do we then make void the Law through Faith God forbid yea we establish the Law CHAP. I. THe holy Apostle in this divine Epistle according to the wisdom given unto him as his fellow Apostle saith of him having laid down that great fundamental truth of the Gospel that righteousness and everlasting life is to be obtained by faith that is by the perfect Righteousness of Christ imputed to Believers by God the Father and applied by Faith proveth it by shewing that none are justified any other way and this he cleareth by making it evident that all sorts of men Israelites and Gentiles are sinful and guilty before the Lord and therefore none of them justified by any works of their own in the fight of God He proveth the Gentiles to have sinned against the law and light of Nature and Reason the Israelites to have sinned against that Law not only so but against the written Law and that both Ceremonial and Moral against th● Ceremonial Law in that they rested in the outward observation of it not looking to the substance and end of it and so their Circumcision was made uncircumcision The moral Law condemned them because their corrupt natures were enmity against it contrary unto it they sinned against it in omissions commissions their best performances fell far short of the full perfection of it and therefore they all stood condemned before the Lord whose exact justice alloweth of no righteousness but that which is every way perfect These things being cleared from the 17th verse of the first Chapter to the 20th verse of this third Chapter Then he declareth another way of justification revealed in the Gospel even by the full satisfaction and perfect righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ imputed by God the righteous Judge of all the world to Believers and applied by faith And having proved this in the latter part of this and in the two next Chapters he in●●rt●th th●se words in the end of the third Chapter Do we then c. although he had not finished his discourse of free justification by faith through the righteousness of Christ yet he wou●d put in a caveat against the licentious ●buse of this excel●ent Doctrine though it seemeth a little out of order not tying himself so precisely to method as to negl●ct the vindicating the honour of Christ and the preventing or removing of such a mistake upon which poor souls are apt to make Shipwrack So that in these words we may note first a Question or Objection Do we make void the Law through faith secondly an Answer 1. By way of detestation or abhorrence God forbid or let it not be far be it from us 2. By way of denial implied in a contrary Assertion and that with advantage We are so far from making void the Law through faith that by this doctrine we establish the Law Do we make void the Law Do we make the Law a vain empty useless thing of no force Do we take away all authority and binding power from the Law through faith through the Doctrine of the Gospel teaching men another way of obtaining justification and righteousness by the perfect righteousness of Christ apprehended by faith without any respect unto or consideration of the works of the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let it not be far be it from us Yea we establish the Law we give more honour to the Law we acknowledge more fully and truly the perfection purity authority of the Law than they do which teach and seek righteousness by the works of the Law From this objection may be noted this point That Ignorance and malice is apt to mistake slander or pervert the most precious Truths of the Gospel or thus The corrupt Nature of man is apt to corrupt the most precious Truths of the Gospel So in this present Chapter For the Apostle having before proved the people of Israel had as much need of the Righteousness of Christ to save them from condemnation and to justifie them and present them as righteous before God as the Heathen their sins and guilt being as great as that of the Heathens or rather greater It seems hereupon some were ready to argue What advantage then hath the Iew and what profit is there of Circumcision As if they had said this doctrine taketh away all difference betwixt Iew and Gentile it giveth unto Israel the peculiar people of God no more priviledge or dignity in things pertaining to God than to the worst of Heathen Idolaters it was to no purpose that God distinguished them from other Nations by the ordinance of Circumcision Thus is corrupt Nature apt to corrupt the precious Truths of the Gospel But the Apostle shews that the Iews had much advantage over the Gentiles chiefly because that unto them were committed the Oracles of God They had the word of God the writings of Moses and the Prophets given by the inspiration of the holy Ghost directing them to the Messias to whom they were to seek for Righteousness and in whom they were to believe that they might be justified They had Sacrifices prescribed them by the wisdom of God as special helps to strengthen their faith in the perfect Sacrifice of Christ the Redeemer and therefore they had much advantage above the Heathens if they improved it for their eternal good and yet notwithstanding all this it was as impossible for them to be justified by their own works and righteousness as for the Heathens and they had as much need of Christ and his righteousness for justification as a●ese In this the Iews had the advantage above the Heathens that they had far better means to lead them unto Christ than the Heathens Herein they were both alike that neither the one nor the other could be justified and saved by their own works but only by Christ and his righteousness Again in this regard the condition of the obstinate and unbelieving Iews was worse than that of the profane Gentiles that they sinned against greater light and means not improving their priviledges and advantages but receiving the grace of God in vain Then followeth another objection If mans unrighteousness commendeth the Righteousness of God if Gods Righteousness in justifying sinners be the more gloriously manifested by reason of mens wickedness how then can it stand with the righteousness of God to punish men for sin and again if the glory of God his rich Grace do appear and shine forth so much the more admirably by the heinousness of peoples sins why should
eminent Saints of his to err in some things that men may learn not to think of men above that which is meet but to give that great prerogative of infallibility to the God of truth alone who hath revealed his Truth in the holy Scriptures and therefore Christians should try all spirits and doctrines by this Rule bring them all to the Law and to the Testimony concluding that if they speak not according to this Rule it is because there is no light in them no light in their doctrine so far as it will not endure the trial of Scripture light yea the Apostle speaks very high in this case Though we or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel unto you than that which we have preached let him be accursed If it were possible for a blessed Angel to preach false doctrine we must reject and cleave to the Scripture against all contradiction For answer to the Second Question In as much as Satan and the corrupt nature of man are the cause of Errours and Heresies What is the reason that many carnal persons both such as are of civil conversation and fair moral principles and also such as are loose and licentious yea openly profane are free from errours in such places and ages where when false doctrines abound whereas they are such in whom the corruption of nature raigneth and such as are held captive by Satan according to his will For answer to this I conceive First that some such persons being naturally quick of apprehension and judicious may be so clearly convinced of some truths that though many deny them and oppose them yet they will stand to them especially when there is liberty for all sides to hold and profess what they list and a man may stick to the Truth without loss and danger in such cases natural Conscience is a strong tye upon mens spirits to cause them not willfully to deny a known Truth Secondly Some may affect the reputation of constancy being loth to be noted for light vain and fickle persons and therefore in as much as it was their lot to be trained up from their childhood in the truth they will cleave to it howsoever others cast it off so long as they see they may do it with safety They account it a childish thing to hearken to every novelty and vain fancy as indeed it is and therefore not becoming their gravity It may be they would have been as obstinate in error had they happened to have been taught it in their youth as now they seem to be constant in the Truth Is not this apparent in divers at this day who stand firm in doctrinal truths and remain perversely stiffe in old Ceremonyes and superstitious observances which have no footing in the holy Scriptures because they have been trained up in both On the one side they were trained up under sound doctrine concerning the main points of faith On the other side they received some superstitious observances by tradition and therefore they will part with neither Thirdly I suppose Satan having possession of carnal persons another way doth not much temp● some of them to renounce the Truth and entertain errours because they are not such as are likely to do him any special service in promoting false doctrines Fourthly many carnal persons may be engaged to stand for the Truth against errors because some whom they respect or upon whom they depend or of whom they look for some advantage go that way Fifthly many carnal persons seem to be indifferent in matter of Religion They are serious and hearty about things that bring in profit in following their business or in pursuing their pleasures in satisfying their lusts they think it no great matter what men hold or profess in matter of doctrine When the Iews accused the Apostle Paul for teaching false doctrine saith Gallio the Roman deputy If it be a question of words and names and of your law look ye to it for I will be no judge of such matters See how slightly he speaks of matters of Religion as if they were but empty words whereas the Question between Paul and the Iews was one of the weigtiest that ever was in controversie scil Whether the Lord Jesus were the Christ And so Festus another Roman Governour relating Pauls Case to King Agrippa accused by the Iews said When the Accusers stood up they brought none accusation of such things as I supsed but had certain questions against him of their own superstition and of one Iesus which was dead whom Paul affirmed to be alive It seemeth he thought these things to be frivolous queries not worthy of the cognizance of so great a Magistrate as himself whereas the R●surrection of Christ from the dead which was in question between Paul and his adversaries was such a fundamental point as that mans salvation depended upon it Thus it seemeth many are kept from embracing errours because they hold it a matter of no great weight what men profess in point of Religion But let all that mind their salvation receive the love of the Truth and walk in it hating and shunning every false opinion and every false way out of sincere love to the Lord Jesus Christ and true zeal for his Glory So much of the Question or Objection CHAP. II. THe Answer is first by way of abhorrence or detestation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let it not be or far be it from ●s which our translaturs render God Forbid I suppose because this English phrase is used in cases of like nature howsoever the Apostle by these words signified that he abhorred and detested such a consequence as to make void the Law by the doctrine of free justification through the righteousness of Christ applied by Faith Hence may be noted this point That gracious hearts do exceedingly abhor those opinions which corrupt or oppose the truth of God Heresies and false doctrines are odious to the godly 1. This may appear in many examples and first in the old Testament Moses did exceedingly abhorre the wicked counsel of Balaam whereby he taught the Midianites to deceiv● the people of Israel so as to draw many of them from the worship of God to Idolatry and therefore saith he to the people arm some of your selves to the war and let them go against the Midianites and avenge the Lord of Midian which they did and slew the Males and five Kings of Midian and Balaam himself who gave this wicked counsel But Moses was not satisfied with this execution but was wroth with the officers of the Host and said unto them have ye saved all the women alive Behold these caused the Children of Israel through the counsel of Balaam to commit trespass against the Lord in the matter of Peor and there was a plague among the congregation of the Lord and then he commanded them to kill all except the women children which were Virgins And it seemeth that
Lord Christ gave her Jesus saith unto her Woman beleeve me the hour cometh when ye shall neither in this Mountain nor yet at Hierusalem worship the Father Ye worship ye know not what we know what we worship for salvation is of the Iews But the hour cometh and now is when the true worshippers shall worship the Father in spirit and Truth for the Father seeketh such to wrship him God is a Spirit and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in Truth The woman saith unto him I know that Messias cometh which is called Christ when he is come he will tell us all things Iesus saith unto her I that speak unto thee am he I conceive in this Answer the Lord Christ sheweth 1. That both the Iews and Samaritans were in an errour for it seemeth both of them thought that the Lord had confined his most solemn worship to one certain place throughout all ages as one party said at Mount Gerizim the other at Hierusalem and that the Ceremonies and Sacrifices there used should be alwaies continued Bus the Lord Christ told the woman that God had not limited himself to either of these places and that the time was now at hand when it should be as free to worship God in any other place as in either of these 2. He passeth sentence for the Iews against the Samaritans in this Controversie So far as concerned the present state of things saith he ye scil ye Samaritans worship ye know not what We scil we Iews know what we worship for salvation is of the Iews Ye Samaritans do ye know not what in your worshipping ye know not God aright ye have no warrant from his word either for your Temple once standing on this Mount or for limiting the worship of God to this place or for the way of worship Ye blindly follow the groundless Traditions of your Fathers But we know what we worship we follow the directions of God himself delivered by Moses and the Prophets both for the place and manner of Gods worship for salvation is of the Iews They are the Church of God to whom God hath committed his oracles teaching the way of Salvation and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ the Saviour of the world was to come 3. He confirmeth and amplifieth the first part of his Answer shewing that the Lord in a short time would set up a more spiritual way of worship in his Church more sutable to his spiritual Nature to which these carnal ordinances and Ceremonial ordinances should give place Secondly I Answer affirmatively that the doctrine of the Gospel and in particular this Gospel-doctrine of free justification through the righteousness of Christ doth establish the Ceremonial Law For 1. Then is a thing established when it attaineth its proper end Now by the Gospel the Law of Ceremonies attained its proper end For 1. The end of it was to be a School-master to bring men to Christ. Circumcision sealed the righteousness of faith which Circumcision it self could not give but was to be found in Christ it taught men to look after the Circumcision of the heart which was to be had in Christ alone by union with him by faith and partaking of his spirit The Passeover pointed out unto them Christ the Lamb of God without spot which taketh away the sins of the world The Sacrifices directed them to Christ the perfect Sacrifice The blood of the Sacrifices led them to the sprinkling of the blood of Christ which alone was sufficient to take away sin Now these and other Ceremonies attained their end in Christ and in the justification of sinners through the blood death satisfaction righteousness of Christ apprehended and applied by faith according to the doctrine of the Gospel and so this Law of Ceremonies was established and the validity of it declared But on the other side they that pretend so much zeal for Circumcision and other Ceremonies of the Law making it a part of the matter of their justification and resting in the bare outward observance as pleasing to the Lord in it self did cross the main end of the Ceremonial Law and propose such false ends as were impossible to be attained Secondly The doctrine of the Gospel making Christ the end of the Law for righteousness in whom wisdom righteousness sanctification redemption and salvation alone is to be had sheweth that the Ceremonial Ordinances were no empty shadowes and vain appearances like those of the Heathen but significant signs and Types full of deep Mysteries of exceeding great weight and importance pointing at the person of the Lord Jesus his office his actings his sufferings and the fruits and benefits of these whereas they that so stiffely opposed the strict observation of the Ceremonies of the Law against the doctrine of Christ delivered in the Gospel what did they make of them but begerly elements empty appearances without fruit use or profit So that the Preachers of the Gospel did honour the Ceremonial Law though they took away the observation of them by declaring the substance whereof they were shadowes and the observers of the Ceremonies in the times of the Gospel did greatly disparage them Thirdly The doctrine of the Gospel doth still establish the Ceremonial Law as an illustration of the mystery of Christ in the Gospel and sheweth that great use may still be made of them that way for the Ceremonies were as it were visible Prophesies of Christ and the things of Christ. And as Prophesies are dark before they are fulfilled but clear after they are accomplished and do much illustrate the events so these Ceremonies were obscure resemblances of Christ but now since what they signified is fulfilled the comparing the Types with the Antitypes giveth much light The Use which I intend to make of this point is to compare some of the principal Ceremonies of the old Testament with the Mysteries of the Gospel that so we may more clearly see how they are established by Christ and that we may improve them for our edification And first to begin with the Sacraments of the Ceremonial Law and there in 1. Circumcision The institution of this Sacrament is laid down Genesis the sevententh saith the Lord to Abraham This is my Covenant which ye shall keep between me and you and thy seed after thee every man child among you shall be Circumcised and ye shall Circumcise the flesh of your foreskin and it shall be a token of the Covenant betwixt me and you And elsewhere Moses saith to the people of Israel Circumcise the foreskin of your heart and be no more stiffe-necked This sheweth that the Circumcision of the flesh directed them to the inward Circumcision of the heart the mortification of sinful lusts inordinate affections and all sorts of corruptions To which agreeth that of the Apostle Circumcision is that of the heart in the spirit and not in the letter whose praise is not
to another looking towards the mercy-seat so the holy Angels attend upon God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ for the service of his Church ministring for them who shall be heirs of salvation They are ready with their wings stretched out to execute the will of Christ and do his pleasure for the protection and good of his people 2. The holy Angels look into the mysteries of Christ in his Gospel as the Cherubims toward the Ark and mercy-seat which thing the Angels defire to look into And the Apostle having spoken of the glorious Mysteries of Christ in the Gospel made known to him by revelation and made known by him in his Ministery who preached among the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ addeth this to the intent that now unto the Principalities and powers in heavenly places might be known by the Church the manifold wisdom of God How inexcusable is the negligence of those that will not take pains to be acquainted with the mysteries of Christ which the glorious Angels did search into Ninthly The fire that was used in the sacrifices of the Law may be considered 1. As the fire burned the Sacrifices which were offered to the Lord so the fire of Gods wrath fell upon Christ for the sins of the world when he offered himself in sacrifice to his Father to satisfie his justice and therefore he was in a grievous agony and his sweat was it as were great drops of blood falling down to the ground and he complained my soul is exceeding sorrowful even unto death And when he was upon the Cross he cried out with a loud voice saying My God My God why hast thou forsaken me 1. See here the Love of Christ toward sinners interposing himself between the burning wrath of God and them that which was of such a scorching heat to him would have been a consuming fire to them 2. How should the hearts of believers be inflamed with love to Christ who endured the flames of divine wrath to save them from everlasting burnings 3. How restless should all be until they are sound in Christ that his righteousness may shelter them from the fire of Gods wrath How unsufferable will that be to them which was so grievous to him Secondly This fire came from Heaven there came a fire out from before the Lord and consumed upon the Altar the burnt-offering c. And so in the Temple built by Solomon fire came down from Heaven and consumed the burnt-offering and sacrifices so the Lord sends down that heavenly fire of his spirit upon his people to consume their dross warm their hearts with holy flames of love and zeal refine their spirits So Christ is said to Baptize his people with the holy Ghost and fire Thirdly This fire was to be kept burning upon the Altar continually and never to go out Christians having once the heavenly fire of grace and holy affections kindled in their hearts by the spirit of Christ should labour to keep it continually burning take heed of quenching the Spirit Tenthly The Vail may be taken notice of The Apostle intimateth a twofold va●l for he speaketh of a second Vail I conceive then this second and inward Vail was that which was hanged before the most holy place and the first was that hanging mentioned there being three Courts in the Tabernacle the first and outermost where the people were the second where the Priests were between the which two was the first Vail the third which was the most holy place into which went none but the High-priest and this was divided from the middle Court by the second Vail So the Mysteries of the Gospel were hidden in a great measure before Christ his coming in the flesh by a Vail of Ceremonies which are now revealed in Christ at whose death the Vail of the Temple was rent in twain from the top to th●● bottom CHAP. VI. Something may be spoken also of Sacred Observances which were required of Israel under the Ceremonial Law these being 〈◊〉 many and of great variety I intend to touch some of them and pass by the 〈◊〉 And 1. Consider that restraint that was laid upon them in the use of the Creatures many of these they were forbidden to eat as being unclean not in their own Nature but by the ordinance of God in this Law of Ceremonies 1. This sheweth whereas Israel and other Nations were all alike by Creation being all ●ade of one blood in the first man and wo●●n from whom they all descended as so many branches of one common root or stock ●nd were all alike corrupted by sin unclean in the sight of God and children of wrath yet the Lord according to the Counsel of his own will was pleased to make a diffe●●nce or distinction separating the Nation 〈◊〉 Israel from the rest of mankind conse●rating the people of Israel as a peculiar people to himself and rejecting the rest as ●nclean So it is said to Israel Thou art an ●oly people to the Lord thy God and the Lord ●ath chosen thee to be a peculiar people unto himself above all the Nations that are upon the Earth Then followeth this prohibition restraining them from eating divers Creatures The Lord hath chosen Iacob for himself and Israel for his peculiar Treasure He sheweth his word unto Iacob his statutes and his Judgements to Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation and for his Judgements they have not known them Balaam extolling the priviledges of Israel among other passages saith For from the top of the Rocks I see him and from the Hills I behold him Loe the people that dwell alone and shall not be reckoned among the Nations although Balaam spake it yet the Lord put the word in his mouth The people of Israel dwelt alone being separated by the Lord from the rest of the world as a peculiar people and Church of God and was not reckoned among the Nations they were not put into the common account and therefore the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated Gentiles and Heathen signifying properly Nations and being used in Scripture for all people except the people of Israel agree exactly with this passage and shewe●●● that Israel was not reckoned among the Nations 1. This sheweth that the Lord as a Soveraign a supreme and absolute Lord dealeth with his creatures according to his pleasure What man is able to give a reason why this people should be preferred above all others That for so many hundred years the rest of the world should be excluded as aliens from the common-wealth of Israel c. and Israel alone taken into Covenant with God It was not for any Righteousness the Lord sound in them as Moses told them understand that the Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it
the way of the Lord make his paths strait Yea the Lord Christ himself in his own person sounded this Silver Trumpet From that time Iesus began to preach and to say Repent for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand He who gave himself for a sacrifice and poured forth his blood to make atonement and reconciliation between God and sinners did preach repentance to them to prepare them for atonement and reconciliation It is very lamentable to consider how many live under the sound of the Silver Trumpet many years and yet are not prepared for atonement and reconciliation to God through Christ nor brought to the beginnings of sound and saving repentance but either are secure careless dead-hearted minding earthly things or resting in outward performances or openly profane and wicked Oh how dreadful will the sound of that Trumpet be at the last day for the Lord himself shall descend from Heaven with a shout with the voice of the Arch-Angel and with the Trumpet of God I say how dreadful shall the sound of that Trumpet be to such who go on hardning their hearts in security and impenitency against the sound of the Silver Trumpet of the Gospel 2. The day of atonement and humiliation was about four or five days before the feast of Tabernacles wherein they were to rejoyce before the Lord so sincere humiliation and repentance make way for sound spiritual joy Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted godly sorrow maketh way for heavenly rejoycing But when a man goeth on to glut himself with the pleasures of sins or earthly contents not afflicting his soul for sin he hath no part in this spiritual feast to such belongs that sad threatning Wo unto you that laugh now for ye shall mourn and weep Fifthly Consider their manifold washings with water in divers Cases to purifie themselves from legal uncleannesses Ceremonial pollutions as when any was cleansed from the Leprosie he was to be sprinkled with water mingled with blood seven times and afterwards to wash both his cloaths and his body in water so they that had running issues when they were cleansed from them were commanded to wash their cloaths and their bodies in water and so in divers other Cases Now the Apostle Iohn proves that the Lord Jesus is The Christ thus This is he that came by water and blood even Iesus Christ n●● by water only but by water and blood and i● is the spirit that beareth witness because the spirit is Truth whereas there was great use of water and blood in the Law of Ceremonies the blood of the 〈◊〉 and the water many wayes used for cleansing and purifying it sheweth that all these things were accomplished in Christ and attained their end in him he performed and fulfilled what was signified and typified both by water and blood His blood was shed as the blood of the most perfect sacrifice to take away the guilt of sin and to justifie sinners and save them from condemnation and the sanctifying spirit and grace of Christ cleansing his people from the filth of sin washing their hearts from wickedness and making them holy as he is holy and therefore he addeth ver 8 there are three that bear witness in earth the spirit the water and the blood And ver 10 He that believeth hath the witness in himself He that savingly believeth in Christ being united to him by faith hath this threefold witness in himself the spirit of Christ witnessing with his spirit that he is in Christ reconciled to God by Christ an adopted child and Heir of God through Christ the only begotten Son of God and Heir of all things the blood of Christ cleansing his Conscience from the guilt of sin the grace of Christ resembled by water sanctifying him and conforming him to Christ in holiness so that such an one hath an evidence in his own soul both that Jesus is the very Christ and that he is his Christ for he findeth that Christ hath fulfilled that in and upon his soul which was figured by the blood and water under the Law of Ceremonies This is a blessed and most precious priviledge which all that are under the Gospel should labour with all diligence to make their own Oh what an happiness is it for Christians to have this threefold witness in themselves In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established Here are three witnesses beyond exception A Christian having this threesold witness in himself in the poorest outward estate is richer and happier then all the treasures of the earth and all the Kingdoms of the world can make him but how few are they that have any other witness of their interest in Christ but their own fancy how few do seriously and diligently seek for any other In that great and last day how will ye stand in the presence of God when numberless sins are charged upon you Will ye say Christ hath satisfied for your sins what shall this profit you unless ye be united unto Christ Will ye plead that ye believe in Christ and so are made one with him where is your witness Oh take heed of appearing before the all-seeing God without a witness And therefore I beseech you consider seriously of your condition and rest not till ye are in Christ and until he come into your souls both by water and blood and give you the witness of his spirit 2. Those frequent washings under the Law of Ceremonies may stir up Christians to frequent endeavours dayly to purifie themselves as Christ is pure to cleanse themselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit perfecting holiness in the fear of God to draw cleansing and sanctifying virtue from Christ more and more by faith They were to wash their bodies and cloaths to be sprinkled with water seven times There is a fountain opened for sin and for uncleanness a fountain of most precious blood and water of most Soveraign virtue the sufferings of Christ and the grace of God are to wash away the guilt of sin and the uncleanness and pollution of sin Do not forsake your own mercies and neglect so great salvation It is sad that when such a precious fountain is opened so few are washed and cleansed Thus much concerning the Ceremonial Law to shew how and in what respects it is established by the doctrine of the Gospel CHAP. VII THere are two other Laws mentioned by the Apostle in the former part of this Epistle by neither of which men can be justified in the sight of God One is the Law of Nature the other is the Moral Law written and delivered in the Scriptures It was needful for the Apostle to speak distinctly of both these For 1. His great design was to make known the only way whereby men might be justified and accepted as righteous in the sight of God the righteous judge of all the world that so they might be everlastingly blessed and
and Light of Nature which Heathens did and beside against a far clearer Light and more perfect Law delivered to them in the holy Scriptures of the old and new Testament for the Light and Law of Nature though it was given to the Heathen yet it was not peculiar to them it was not limited to them alone but was common to them with others it is given also to Iews who have the old Testament also it is given to Christians who have both old and new Testament and therefore their sins are highly aggravated So the the Lord by the Prophet Amos having threatned heavy Judgements against those Heathen Nations mentioned before then turneth his speech to the people of Iudah Thus saith the Lord for three transgressions of Iudah and for four I will not turn away the punishment thereof because they have defiled the Law of the Lord and have not kept his Commandment and their lies caused them to err after the which their Fathers have walked but I will send a fire upon Iudah and it shall devour the Palaces of Ierusalem they had the written Law and Commandments of God which the other had not and therefore they despised and kept not they had the Truth of God revealed from Heaven and delivered to them by Moses and the Prophets immediately inspired by the holy spirit of God but they rather chose to walk in lyes after the example of their Fathers and therefore their sins were much more sinful than those of the Heathens Then he threatneth Israel scil the rest of Israel the Kingdom of the ten Tribes who followed the sin of Ieroboam charging them first with barbarous cruelty and oppression contrary to common humanity because they sold the righteous for silver and the poor for a pair of shoes I conceive he speaketh especially against that great sin of Judges and Magistrates in perverting justice for Bribes and withal against them which hired such corrupt officers to act unjustly by giving them rewards They sold the righteous for Silver they exposed the innocent to the lust and will of their Adversaries for mony and the poor for a pair of shooes either because being once corrupted with some considerable gains they afterward were so hardened in their sins that they would pervert justice for a pair of shooes for a triflle or else because they could not get much for giving sentence against a poor man in his Cause because their Adversaries would not offer much to have their will of them who had little to loose these corrupt judges would transgress for a petty-bribe where no more was to be had That pant after the dust of the earth on the head of the poor or as one readeth it that pant or breath after the head of the poor that they may cast it down to the dust of the earth If we take it the former way the sense may seem to be this when they have overthrown the poor and laid him in the dust such is there inhumane cruelty that they are not satisfied with his misery but desire his utter ruine and destruction 2. An other sin was abominable uncleannness that Father and Son would lye with the same woman which is set forth and heightned with this aggravation they prophaned the holy Name of God pretending to be the people of God and yet committing such lewdness this highly redounded to the Lords dishonour above the sins of meer Heathens 3. Their wicked glorying and triumphing in their oppression and prophaning that worship which themselves had embraced as religious laying themselves down upon clothes laid to pledge by every Altar keeping the garments of the poor which they had taken to pledge and being so far from restoring them according to the Law that they durst lye upon them by the very Altars and drink the wine of the condemned in the house of their God feasting themselves in the Temple of their God with the very spoils taken from those whom they had unjustly condemned these sins of Israel are aggravated divers ways in the words following There Israel and Iudah are both joyned together Hear this word that the Lord hath spoken against you O Children of Israel against the whole family which I brought up from the Land of Egypt saying You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities The Lord had owned them above others and made himself known to them above all other people and therefore their sin was greater than others and they might expect more gievous punishments How much more are sins of professed Christians more heinous than those of the Heathens who have greater light then the people of Israel had having the new Testament added to the old who have the Lord Jesus Christ set forth before them in the Gospel not under Types and shadowes but clearly not as to come but as already come actually crucified for sin buried risen again ascended into Heaven The Lord Christ sheweth that the sins of Corazin and Bethsaida were more heinous than those of Tyre and Sidon and their condemnation would be more intolerable in the day of Judgement because they sinned against greater light The like comparison he maketh between Capernaum and Sodom And the very Name of Christian is an aggravation of the sins of those who profess themselves Christians This Name was first given to them that professed the faith of Christ at Antioch because of the great success of the Gospel there Barnabas and Saul or Paul a whole year assembled themselves with the Church and taught much people and the Disciples were called Christians first at Antioch The denomination of a Christian is derived from the blessed and glorious Name of Christ himself as he is annointed of God the Father with the spirit above measure What signifieth a Christian then but 1. A member of Christ united to him as the head of the whole mystical body of the Church How great is the sin of those that can themselves Christians and suffer themselves to be led by Satan the enemy of 〈◊〉 readily entertaining his suggestions and temptations serving this Prince of darkness in the work of darkness Saith the Apostle Shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot God forbid or let it not be What know ye not that he which is joyned to an Harlot is one body for two saith he shall be one flesh It is a fearful thing for a man professing himself a Christian that is a member of Christ to make himself a member of an Harlot or for a woman making the same profession to make her self the member of a fornicatour or Adulterer 2. The name of a Christian signifieth one that partaketh of the annointing of Christ of the same spirit and the same graces in some measure wherewith Christ was annointed above his fellows yea above measure He which stablisheth us with you and anointeth us is God The
own works performed in obedience to the Law cannot stand together Christ died to purchase forgiveness of sins and justification for his people but if any would be justified by the Law they go about to frustrate the grace of God as if Christ had died in vain Christ is become of none effect to you whosoever of you are justified by the Law ye are fallen from grace when he saith Whosoever c. he doth not grant that any are or can be justified by the Law but whosoever rely upon the works of the Law for justification hoping to be justified by the Law they loose the benefit of Christs death and satisfaction The Lord Christ is able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him and therefore none of them do save themselves or justifie themselves in any part There is a most clear place to shew that justification by works and justification by faith cannot stand together that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God is evident for the just shall live by faith or the just by faith shall live and the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them Justification righteousness everlasting life and salvation is obtained by faith in Christ applying his righteousness to the soul but the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them The Law is a Covenant of another Nature the man that doth the works of the Law shall live in them There is no possibility of being justified by the Law unless a man could perfectly fulfill it this is impossible for any man to do 1. Because of the corruption of his Nature which is every way contrary to the Law 2. Because all and far more than all that he can do for the time to come is due debt to the justice of God and cannot make the least satisfaction for his sins past no not for any one of those numberless sins whereof he was formerly guilty 3. Because the best mans righteousness is imperfect and falleth short of the perfection of the Law no righteousness can satisfie the justice of God but that which is compleat and perfect and therefore the righteousness and performances of the holiest men are of no account at all in the sight of God towards their justification But it may be said that the Apostle Iames saith Ye see then how that by works a man is justified and not by faith only For Answer to this I conceive That this Apostle Iames here directeth his speech to this end s●il to shew the vanity and folly of those who deceive themselves with a shadow of faith presumptuously fancying to themselves an interest in Christ imagining that their sins are forgiven and their persons justified by his death satisfaction and righteousness but their faith is not sound it is not such a faith as truly receiveth Christ into the heart whereby Believers are made one with Christ possessing him partaking of his spirit which stirreth them up to conform themselves to Christ to follow him to bring forth the fruits of the spirit and therefore he saith ver 20. Faith without works is dead So it is a working faith which justifieth because such a faith alone doth truly lay hold of Christ and his righteousness On the other side holiness and good works do not at all justifie believers in a proper sense but evidence the persons to be justified because they shew that such by faith unfeigned are united unto Christ whose righteousness alone doth justifie and therefore he saith What doth it profit my Brethren if a man say he hath faith and have not works Can faith save him He speaketh of such as say they have faith not of those that have a lively saving faith indeed So ver 19. he speaketh to such Thou believest that there is one God thou dost well the Divels also believe and tremble So that he sheweth that a dead faith is but such a faith as the Divels have which is far from justifying and saving those that have it 2. I conceive his meaning is that holiness and the fruits of faith do declare and manifest true believers to be justified before men A man will say thou hast faith and I have works shew me thy faith without thy works and I will shew thee my faith by my works as if he had said Natural life shews it self by the motions and actings of life so doth spiritual life evidence it self by the motions and actings of spiritual life True faith embracing Christ and his righteousness for justification is a principle of spiritual life Thou therefore who pretendest to have this faith how canst thou make it appear how canst thou shew or declare it when thou puttest forth no motions or actings of spiritual life The use of this may be 1. To shew us the miserable and woful estat of all that are not in Christ. They are no justified they cannot be justified in that condition for there is no way for men to be justified in the fight of God by any works of their own performed in obedience to the Law and if they be not justified then they are condemned there is no middle estate between these two So the Apostle implieth where speaking of those that are in Christ he faith It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth This sheweth that they that are justified and accepted as righteous in the sight of God are not condemned and so on the contrary they that are not justified are condemned All then that are not in Christ are in the state of condemnation so it is implied ver 1. There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Iesus who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit So on the other side there is no justification no salvation to them that are not in Christ Jesus He that believeth not is condemned already he is condemned for his sin the sentence of condemnation is passed upon him by the Lord and he wanteth a sound saving faith to lay hold on Christ and his righteousness whereby alone he might be justified and freed from the sentence of condemnation and therefore while poor souls remain in this condition what can they do but treasure up wrath against the day of wrath and the revelation of the righteous judgement of God People may attend upon ordinances perform divers duties in publick and in private and yet still lye under the sentence of condemnation They may make some kind of reformation refraining from some outward gross acts of sin they may be civil and orderly in their conversations above many other and yet the wrath of God may still abide upon them In this case it is not enough to alter your course in some things but your state and condition must be altered nothing can help you while you are out of Christ and stand upon your
but by such a Righteousness as was fully answerable to the Rule of the Law and therefore because in this corrupt state of Nature wherein all mankind are since the fall no man could have performed perfect obedience to the Law in his own person but all must have lain under the sentence of condemnation and utterly perished The Lord Christ having taken upon him the Name of Jesus and the office of a Saviour and Redeemer to save his people from their sins yet would not save them in an illegal and irregular way not by his royal prerogative without respect to the Law but by fulfilling the Righteousness of the Law in his own person and then communicating his perfect righteousness to them investing them with it cloathing them with this spotless and glorious robe of his Righteousness On the other side the contrary doctrine of justification by the works of the Law teaching that men might be delivered from Condemnation and approve themselves as righteous in the sight of God by their own inherent holiness and works performed by them in obedience to the Law did deny the force the vigour and Authority of the Law because the holiness and performances of the best of them did fall far short of the perfection of the Law Now to say that men may be justified by the works of the Law whose works did not answer the righteousness required in the Law was to declare the Law to be void to have lost its power to condemn the transgressours of the Law But Christ having fulfilled the righteousness of the Law and born the full punishment of it and communicated his righteousness to Believers hath dearly and abundantly ratified the Authority of the Law and so as the Apostle saith Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth The Law attaineth its end in Christ because He hath fully answered and satisfied the Law and communicateth his perfect righteousness to his people that they might be justified and saved without the least prejudice to the Authority of the Law The use of this may be to stir up Believers exceedingly to admire and magnifie the Lord Iesus Christ who being very God the supream Law-giver from whom the Law received all its force and Authority was pleased by a voluntary Act of his love to become man and so to be made under the Law to subject himself to the Authority and power of the Law to perform perfect obedience to the Law and to bear the Curse of it and then as it were to make over and communicate to poor guilty condemned sinners this his perfect righteousness for their justification and salvation and therefore the Apostle prayed thus for Believers that Christ may dwell in their hearts by faith That ye being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge It is an height and depth which Creatures cannot reach a breadth and length which they cannot measure but those that have interest in Christ and his perfect righteousness should labour to view and surveigh it diligently that they may see into it more and more and advance and magnifie the Lord Jesus Christ who is Iehovah their Righteousness Secondly This may take down the natural pride of mens hearts the best of Adams posterity except Christ alone would have been accursed and condemned wretches had they not been justified and saved by a borrowed Righteousness by the Righteousness of another even of Christ communicated and imputed to them and accounted theirs Where is boasting then it is excluded By what Law of works nay but by the Law of faith that is by the doctrine of the Gospel which declareth that the only way for men to escape condemnation and to appear righteous before God is to become poor in spirit and as wretched guilty lost creatures to go out of themselves and renounce all hope and confidence in themselves and all their own abilities duties and performances and to flee to Christ alone that they may be justified by his righteousness and accepted of God in him to come as poor naked wretches that have never a rag of their own to cover their shame and to beg of Christ white rayment the spotless covering of his righteousness this doctrine excludeth boasting and confoundeth pride if there be any thing for which thy heart is apt to be lifted up either to think highly of thy self or to despise others remember that if thou art an unbeliever thou standest guilty and condemned before the Lord and so hast cause instead of exalting thy self to be exceedingly abased and to be restless until thou be delivered from condemnation and hast obtained pardon and justification through the righteousness of Christ If thou art a true believer remember thou art justified by a righteousness which was never wrought by thee in any part but wholly and only by the Lord Jesus Christ and out of the riches of grace and mercy communicated and imputed to thee whereof thou wast as unworthy as any of them that lye under the sentence of condemnation Hast thou not then a double cause of humiliation 1. Because of thine own guiltiness and unworthiness in thy self 2. Because so rich a favour was freely bestowed upon thee for the greater the gift is which is bestowed upon unworthy persons the more cause have they to be low in their own eyes the bounty of the giver and greatness of the gift casteth shame upon the unworthiness of the receiver Thirdly This may encourage the worst of men and women the chief of sinners to come to Christ and to turn to the Lord. Here is a perfect Righteousness a full Satisfaction here is a Saviour and Mediator between God and man the man Christ Jesus who hath performed perfect obedience to the Law and suffered the punishment of the Law due to the greatest sinners for the greatest sins and therefore as was noted before he is called Iehovah our Righteousness for though Believers are not justified by the essential Righteousness of Christ as God yet I conceive the infinite worth of the infinite Iehovah God the Son raiseth that righteousness which he hath wrought for sinners to such an unspeakable value as is sufficient for the sins of the whole world How inexcusable then is their neglect who rather lye in their sins then seek to Christ And on the other side what a door of hope is opened to them who are discouraged through the greatness of their sins What can hinder thee from receiving pardon and obtaining full forgiveness Not the greatness of sin for Christ hath done and suffered that which is abundantly sufficient to answer all nothing can hinder thee but an impenitent and unbelieving heart Fourthly Let Christians be stirred up exceedingly to labour after truth of faith and strength of faith for as the Righteousness of Christ is that for
Apostle alledgeth the very word of the Law as ratified by the Authority of Christ as a rule of holiness to which his people must conform their hearts and lives But it may be Objected that divers passages of the new Testament make against this such as these The Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient And the Apostle saith to them that are in Christ Ye are not under the Law but under grace God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that are under the Law Fo Answer to thes● things consider That the Law may be considered two wayes 1. As a Covenant of works severely requiring full and exact obedience and perfect righteousness upon pain of the Curse and so Believers being in Christ are not under the Law but under grace The Lord hath reconciled them to himself in Christ received them into a Covenant of grace discharged them of the curse of the Law and sentence of condemnation justified and accepted them as righteous through the righteousness of Christ given them access to his mercy seat so that the Law is not made for a righteous man as a covenant of works Believers are not to be judged according to the rigour and severity of the Law nor subject to the curse or condemnation of the Law and therefore the Apostle saith Christ hath redeemed us from the Curse of the Law being made a Curse for us but the lawless and disobedient natural persons being out of Christ and standing upon their own bottom and so being to answer the justice of God upon their own account are under the Law as a Covenant of works and subject to the malediction Curse and condemnation of the Law Secondly The Law may be considered as a Rule of life as a direction to true Believers guiding them in the wayes of God teaching them how they ought to walk and to please God how to walk answerably to his saving mercies and spiritual blessings communicated to them in Christ and in this regard the Law is established by Christ for the use of his people and so I conceive in this sense the Law is so far from being a Covenant of works that it becometh a part of the Covenant of grace or a Rule subservient to the Gospel So the Apostle telleth the believing Thessalonians Ye know what Commandments we gave you by the Lord Iesus the Commandments which he delivered to them were given by the Lord Jesus in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ by vertue of his Authority and Commission received from him Now what Commandments were these Even the same that are delivered in the Law in some of which the Apostle giveth instance First in general This is the will of God even your sanctification that ye should be sanctified and so conformed to the Law of God in all things Then in special That every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour not in the lusts of Concupiscence c. In a word the Law is of use both unto them that are out of Christ and to them that are in Christ To the former it discovereth the contrariety of their Natures hearts and lives to the mind and will of God their utter disability to fulfill the Law and thereupon makes known unto them their woful estate that they lye open to the wrath and Curse of God and the danger of everlasting condemnation and so the Law may be of use 1. To take down the natural pride that is in men and women to cause them to see their own vileness and lost condition to renounce all confidence in their own imaginary righteousness to abase themselves to the dust before the Lord For by the Law is the knowledge of sin Secondly The Law may be of use to such to drive them out of themselves to seek after the remedy to cause them to flee to Christ that they may be washed in his blood from all their sins justified by his perfect righteousness and so redeemed from the Curse of the Law and delivered from the wrath to come 2. To true Believers the Law may be useful 1. To humble them and make them poor in spirit and low in their own eyes And that 1. In respect of their state by Nature 2. In respect of their present condition now that they are renewed by grace In the former respect they may see in the glass of the pure and holy Law of God the woful deformities and blemishes of their souls as they were of themselves their numberless omissions and commissions and being inlightned by the spirit of Christ these things are the more manifest to them Secondly In respect of their present condition as they are renewed by grace though they have the spirit of Christ conforming them in some degree to the Law yet by comparing both the frame of their souls and their thoughts words actings conversations with the pure and spiritual Law of God they find themselves far short of the mark and that they need daily renewed acts of grace and free pardon from the mercy seat Secondly The Law is of use to direct them to shew them what frame of spirit what wayes are pleasing to the Lord who is the Law-giver and Author of the Law 3. The Law is useful to Believers to quicken them and stir them up more and more to purge themselves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit to cleanse their hearts from those corruptions which are contrary to the Law and to labour after an increase and growth in all holy and sanctifying graces and to strive after farther perfection saith the Apostle Brethren I count not my self to have apprehended but this one thing I do forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forth unto those things which are before I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Iesus It seemeth the Apostle notwithstanding that great measure of the spirit of Christ which he had received and the great improvement made of his Talents the eminent services done to the Church yet looked upon the mark as being far before him a great way beyond him that is that he was far short of the perfection of holiness and righteousness which the Law required and therefore he did reach forth and press forward with all his might When the best Christians find how far they fall short of that height of perfection which the Law calleth for scil to love the Lord their God with all the heart and all the mind and all the soul and all the might c. May not this be a powerful motive to quicken them to use all holy endeavours for the perfecting of holiness in the fear of God Secondly The Lord Christ by making the Law a rule of life and holy obedience for his people hath established the Law It is true he hath redeemed sincere Believers from
Joh 5. 6 8. 10. 2 Cor. 13. 1. 2 Joh. 3. 3. 2 Cor. 7. 1. Zach. 13. 1. Doct. 5. God hath given men a Law of Nature Rom. 1. 19 20 21. Rom 2. 14 15. 1. What this Law is Description It is given of God Isa. 28. 24. 26. 28. Rom. 1. 21. Joh. 1. 9. Joh. 8. 12. 3. In their natural state 4. Hereby they do somewhat know God Rom. 1. 19. ver 20. Act. 14. 16 17 5. By that light they know somewhat of good and evil Gen. 20. 9 16. This Law of Nature is imperfect 1. Not able to bring to bliss Joh. 14. 6. Act. 4. 12. Rom. 10. 13 c 2. Particularly defective in 1. It self 2. In the subject in which it was Sect. 3. The use of this Law of Nature 1. For Gods glory 2. For preservation of humane societies 3. A remote preparatory for receiving the Gospel Sect. 4. How doth it leave men without excuse Vse 1. Isa. 33. 22. Psal. 33. 62. Psal. 47. 2 7. Rom. 5. 13 14 Vse 8. Rom. 1. 18 c. Gen. 3. 19. Rom. 5. 12. Gen. 15. 13. 16. Lev. 18. 24. 25. Amos 1. 2. Vse 3. Am. 2. 4 5. Amos 2. 4 5. ver 6 c. ver 7. Chap. 3. 1 2. Mat. 11. 22. Act. 11. 26. 1 Cor. 6. 15. 1 Cor. 1. 21. Ex. 30. 23 24. Mat. 11. 2● Mat. 12. 41. Mat. 22. 37 38 39. 6. Doct. In general propounded How the Moral Law stablisht by faith Sect. 1. Negat 1. Particular Doct. Rom. 3. 9 10. ver 20. The point cleared by 1. General grounds 2. Particular declaration of the Doctrine of the Gospel Three general grounds 1. From mans state 2. From the nature of the Law 3. From God Joh. 3. 6. Rom. 7. 18. Ch. 8. 7. 8. Eph. 2. 1 2 3. Gen. 6. 5. Phil. 3. 7 8. Obj. Answ. 1. 2. From the Law 's exactness Rom. 7. 12. 14. Deut. 6. 4 56. This perfect love includeth perfect knowledge faith c Lev. 11. 44. 19. 18. 1 Joh. 3. 4 2. Laws severity Deut. 27. 26. Gal. 3. 10. Heb. 2. 2 Gal. 3. 19. 3. From the infinite purity of God Joh. 4. 17 18 19. Psal. 104. 1. c. Isa. 40. 15 16. ch 6. 1 2 3. Exod. 19. 16. 10. 18. Deut. 4. 24. Rev. 1. 14. His eyes were as a flame of fire 2. The doctrine of the Gospel declares this Mat. 1. 21. Mat. 26. 28. Gal. 2. 21. Gal. 5. 4. Heb. 7. 25. Gal. 3. 11 12. Ohj. Jam. 2. 24. Answ. ver 14. Answ. 2. ver 18. 1. Vse The misery of all out of Christ. Rom. 8. 33 34. Joh. 3. 18. Rom. 2. 5. Rom. 9. 31 32. Obj. Answ. Mat. 1. 20. Job 14. 30. Psa 40. 6 7 8 Heb. 10. Mat. 3. 15. Gal 3. 10. 13. Eph. 5. 2. Heb. 9. 14. Mat. 3. 17. Phil. 2. 6. Heb. 1. 3. Gal. 2. 20. Affirmatively Sect. 2. Mat. 5. 17. Mat. 3. 16 17. Mat. 4. Mat. 3. 15. Gal. 4. 4. Act. 7. 12. 2 Cor. 5. 21. 1 Per. 1. 19. 1 Pet. 2. 22 3 18. Lev. 21. 21. Chap. 22. 3. Heb. 7. 26 27. Heb. 9. 14. Gen. ● 27. See Eph. 4. 24. Col. 3. 10. Rom. 3. 10 11. Rom. 8. 2. Rom. 3. 12. 1 Joh. 3. 8. Obj. Answ. Obj. Awsw. 1 Cor. 15. 54. Hos. 13. 14. Psal. 19. 7. Sect. 2. Luk. ●9 30 31. 1 King 18. 40. 19. 14 15 16 17. Joh. 1. 1 2 3. Joh. 17. 17. 1 Thes. 2. 13. Joh. 17. 5. Col. 1. 16. Heb. 1. 3. Rom. 11. 36. Phil. 2. 6. Joh. 1. 14. Phil. 2. 7 8. 1 Tim. 3. 16. Act. 2. 24. Act. 20. 28. Heb. 2. 9. Heb. 2. 16 17. Isa. 53. 6. Lev. 4. 15. 2 Cor. 5. 21. Gal. 3. 10 13. Isa. 53. 10. Rom. 8. 33. Phil. 2. 8. Isa. 53. 12. Matth. 27. 50. Joh. 19. 33 34. ver 41 42. Gen. 2. 17. Vse 1. Vse 2. Vse 3. Rom. 8. 1. Sect 3. 1. Branch 2 Cor. 5. 21. Rom. 4. 22 23 24. Rom. 4. 6. Rom. 8. 33 34. Rom. 3. 30. Rom. 3. 24. 1 Joh. 4. 18. Mat 12. 18. Joh. 17. 9. Heb. 2. 13. Rom. 3. 21 22 ver 28. Rom. 4. 7 8. 8. 1. Rom. 8. 30. 2. Branch Rom. 10. 4. Vse 1. Eph. 3. 17 18 19. Jer. 23. 6. Vse 2. Rom. 3. 27. Vse 3. Vse 4. Mark 9. 24. Luk. 17. 5. Vse 5. Luk. 1. 74 75. Rom. 12. 1● 1 Cor. 1. 30. 1 Cor. 6. 11. Sect. 4. Doct. Mat. 5. 17 18. Mat. 22. 35 36 37 38 39. 40. Rom. 12. 9. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Tit. 2. 11 12. 1 Pet. 1. 15 16 Lev. 11. 44. Obj. 1 Tim. 1 9. Rom. 6. 14. Gal. 4. 4 5. Answ. Gal. 3. 13. 1 Thes. 4. 2 3. Rom. 3. 20. Phil. 3. 13 14 2 Pet. 2. 18 19 2. Vse Rom. 5. 20. Chap. 6. 1 2.