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A77775 The Gospel-covenant; or The covenant of grace opened. Wherein are explained; 1. The differences betwixt the covenant of grace and covenant of workes. 2. The different administration of the covenant before and since Christ. 3. The benefits and blessings of it. 4. The condition. 5. The properties of it. / Preached in Concord in Nevv-England by Peter Bulkeley, sometimes fellow of Johns Colledge in Cambridge. Published according to order. Bulkeley, Peter, 1583-1659. 1646 (1646) Wing B5403; Thomason E331_1; ESTC R200735 319,203 371

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condemnation but the gift is of many offences unto justification c. Adams one sin brought guilt upon him and all his posteritie because he was under the covenant of workes and therefore justification can be had by that Covenant no more But it is not so in the Covenant of grace neither one sin nor many sinnes doe exclude from life in this covenant But this gift is of many offences c. And this holds true not onely of such sinnes as are committed before our entrance into a covenant of grace with God but of such sins as are committed afterward as is evident Psal 89.31.34 God having made a Covenant with them though he chastise them yet his Covenant will be not breake c. The reason of this difference is from the summe and scope of the Covenant of workes which is to bind us to a totall full perfect and constant obedience of the Law in all things unto the end Gal. 3.10 so that one or once fayling breakes that Covenant But in the Covenant of grace God promiseth not onely to forgive but to multiply forgivenesses Isa 55.7 Isai 55.7 Hence though in many things we sin all as James 3.2 yet 1 Joh. 2.2 1 Joh. 2.2 wee have an Advocate with the Father And 1 Joh. 1.7 The bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin No number of sinnes doth exclude from salvation till they be accompanied with finall Apostasie impenitency and unbeliefe till as Heb. 3.12 wee doe by an evill heart depart away from the living God Hence also saith the Apostle Rom. 5.19 Where sin abounds there grace abounds much more God will glorifie his grace by our sinne As sin takes occasion by the Law Rom. 7.10 so grace takes occasion by our sin God will glorifie his grace thereby and make it marvellous in the eyes of the world so that men shall wonder that such grace should be shewed in pardoning such sinnes that they shall say as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passest by the transgression of the remnant of thy people Consolation to the weake Saints of God Vse who are often cast downe in themselves through sense of their own infirmities and the many falls they are subject unto by reason of which they are cast into sad feares and doubts concerning themselves yea so farre as to make conclusions against themselves that they cannot belong unto God because as they thinke if they were the Lords people and his grace were effectuall in them they should not be so often overcome But such must know that so long as the sinnes that are in us be repented of and mourned for it is not one nor many infirmities which can make voyd the Covenant of grace which wee are entred into or hinder us of the blessing that comes thereby Wee must remember that we are not under the Law but under Grace wee must not be too severe against our selves like Novatians denying pardon to second falls In so doing we set such limits to the grace of God as he himselfe hath not set God hath not said He will pardon once and no more or that he will pardon sinnes before grace received but not those committed after God never so stinted his grace but his gift of grace is against many offences unto justification of life In denying therefore of pardon to our selves for sins iterated and for our often infirmities so long as there is a spirit of repentance working in us and we are humbled for them before God we doe not onely wrong our selves and deprive our soules of the peace we might enjoy but we do wrong to the grace of God as if that grace were not sufficient for us as if that God could not or would not renew his gracious pardon to us as wee renew our repentance towards him Let such consider what the Lord hath commanded us to doe we must not onely forgive seven times but seventy times seven times if our brother turne againe and say it repenteth me And can wee thinke that God lookes for more mercy from us towards our brethren then he will shew towards his owne children He hath bidden us daily to pray for the forgivenesse of our sinnes as knowing that we are subject to daily infirmities and doe stand in need of daily mercy and forgivenesse And therefore to limit Gods grace as we are apt to doe is in effect to turne the Covenant of grace into a Covenant of workes as if there were no more grace under the one then under the other Know therefore that whiles there is in us an holy watchfulnesse against the sin that dwells within us whiles it is our desire and care to please the Lord whiles we feele in our selves the spirit of grace causing us to mourne over him whom we have pierced by our sinnes though we be overtaken again and again through the infirmity of the flesh that is in us yet know that it is not one nor many offences that can deprive us of the blessing of this covenant of grace in which God hath promised to multiply forgivenesses according to the multitude of his great mercies Yet let no man abuse this doctrine unto carnall liberty this is childrens bread impure dogges and carnall livers that make no conscience of sinning have nothing to doe with this consolation it is onely to support the weak to comfort the feeble minded not to encourage the wicked and impenitent in their sin Let such know that though God abound in mercy and do multiply forgivenesses unto such as are humbled for their sins yet he will multiply plagues also upon impenitent wretches that goe on in their evill way To such neither many nor any one of all their sins shall be forgiven but being under the law they shall make an account to God for every transgression God will repay them all their wickednesses not one shall be forgotten or forgiven He is indeed abundant in goodnesse reserving mercy for his people and so he is also abundant in wrath against rebellious sinners and will abundantly reward the proud doer That the covenant of works if it be accomplished and fulfilled Differ 8 leaves in man matter of glorying and boasting in himselfe but the covenant of grace excludes all glorying in a mans selfe and leaves him nothing of his own to boast of but in the grace of God If Adam who was under the covenant of works had fulfilled that covenant he might have come before the Lord and said Behold Lord I have fulfilled the commandment which thou gavest me and done thy will now therefore justifie me and give me the life which thou hast promised here Adam had had something in himselfe to glory in Thus the Apostle speaks of Abraham that if he had had the righteousnesse of works by his fulfilling of the Law he should have had whereof to glory before God Rom. 4.1 Rom. 4.1 he might have said as the elder son did in Luk. 15.29 Luke 15.29
not regarded It 's a thundering speech of the Apostle in Heb. 10.29 where he saith That those that sinned under Moses Law dyed without mercy and yet much sorer vengeance shall be unto those that despise the Gospel of Christ Can any thing be worse then to dye without mercy Yes saith the Apostle those shall have sorer vengeance It shall be vengeance that they suffer yea sore vengeance and sorer then those suffered which under Moses law dyed without mercy and yet more it shall be much sorer yea so much sorer as cannot be uttered but is left to our consideration to thinke How much sorer vengeance saith the Apostle and it must needs be such when the Lord himselfe professeth he will laugh at such mens destruction and mocke when their misery comes Prov. 1. And saith that he will rejoyce over them in destroying of them Deut. 28.63 No plagues like the plagues of such as reject the Gospel of Christ Reason 1 This sin sets more of God against us then was before before the Gospel came unto us we had justice against us armed with power both which were provoked by us but yet mercy was ready to save us if we would come in and accept of the grace offered mercy was not yet become our enemy as not yet being provoked by us but when it is brought to us by the Gospel and is despised by us now mercy and grace it selfe also is against us and is made our enemy now mercy joynes with justice and increased wrath Reason 2 There is in this sin a speciall indignitie offered unto Christ himselfe the Son is despised in it which the Father will not suffer It is one great part of the Fathers counsell to honour and advance his Son for the Father loveth the Son and will have all men to honour the Son as they honour the Father Joh. 5.23 As the Son did all things to honour the Father Joh. 8.49 Joh. 17.4 So it is the Fathers purpose and will to honour the Son Acts 3.13 2 Pet. 1.17 This contempt therefore which is offered unto Christ when he is offered in the Gospel and is set light by God the Father will avenge to the full As the bloud of Abel cryed to God for vengeance against Cain so doth the contempt done to the bloud of Christ cry to heaven against the despisers of it much more Christs bloud hath a double cry and it will prevaile both wayes First To prevaile for mercy towards those that count it precious and trust in it for them it saith Father forgive them But it cryes also for judgement against the despisers of it that God would avenge the contempt of it upon them and this bloud will be heard whatsoever it calls for whether for mercy or judgement Vse This may serve to be a warning to all such people to whom the Gospel of Christ is come let them in the feare of God take heed lest they neglect so great salvation Heb. 2. and let them with thankfulnesse and love entertain the grace which is brought unto them by the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1. If you become despisers God will work such things among you as who so heareth them his eares shall tingle Acts 1. and your hearts shall ake in the suffering of them much more Heb. 2. for if every transgression and disobedience committed against the Law or against the dim light of nature doe receive a just recompence of reward if those which are without the Law perished in those sinnes which they committed without the Law and if those which are without the Gospel perish in their ignorance because they know it not how then shall those escape which have both law of grace and Gospel of grace revealed unto them and yet doe neglect those great things Be warned and take heed It will be your wisdome now in this your day to consider the things which concern your peace 2 Cor. 6.1 feare lest you should receive the grace of God in vaine take heed of despising and setting light by the tydings of your salvation lest the same things which were ordained to be unto life be found to be unto you unto death Rom. 7. and then the greater meanes you have had to bring you to life the more bitter will your death be This is the great condemnation of the world that when grace is revealed and tendered unto men yet it is not received with love that they might be saved by it Joh. 3.19 It 's put away and is not esteemed lamentable is the case of such people This made Christ to weep over Jerusalem Luk. 19.41 42. because they knew not they regarded not the things of their peace no peoples case more to be pitied and mourned for then theirs that injoy the Gospel but esteeme it not Let such consider what is said of the Jewes when they put away the Gospel from them they did thereby judge themselves unworthy of eternall life Acts 13.46 Not that they did thinke themselves unworthy of life nor did they with their mouthes speake any such thing but as a man may shew h●s judgement of a thing as well by his fact as by his words so did they by their fact in that sinfull rejecting of the Gospel of salvation they did as it were pronounce a sentence against themselves by which all men might see that they were unworthy of the salvation preached to them such therefore as do reject the Gospel do by that contempt testifie and pronounce judgement against themselves that they are unworthy to be saved These as they love not the blessing of the Gospel so it shall be farre from them and as they choose the wayes of sin and death so it shall come unto them they shall dye in their sinnes with a double destruction And heare O England my deare native Countrey whose womb bare me Admonition to England whose breath nourished me and in whose armes I should desire to dye give eare to one of thy children which dearely loveth thee Be thou exhorted thankfully to accept the grace which is now ready to be revealed unto thee The way is now preparing the high mountaines which with their shadowes caused darknesse are now a laying low and the low valleys ready to be exalted the crooked things to be made straight that all flesh that lives within thy borders may see the salvation of our God Thy light is now coming and the glory of the Lord is now rising upon thee though darknesse hath covered a part of thee hitherto through the wickednesse of those that hated light yet now the Lord himselfe I trust will rise upon thee and the glory of the Lord shall be seene upon thee Now therefore stirre up thy selfe with thankfulnesse and joy of heart to embrace the things of thy peace which shall be brought unto th●e See that thou love the Gospel not in word and in shew onely but in deed and in truth and not for novelties sake
to him by the Father Esa 50.5 6. Joh. 10.17 18. And according to all this which Christ thus covenanted with the Father he was carefull to discharge the same Joh. 17.4.6 Joh. 12.49 50. 4. According to all this Covenant passed betwixt the Father and Christ Christ expects the glory which was promised to himselfe and to his members To himselfe Joh. 17.5 and to his members Joh. 17.24 He expects the accomplishment of both from the Father Thus farre then I grant a Covenant betwixt God the Father and Christ and hence it is that God is called the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes 1.3 which is by reason of the Covenant betwixt them But if any shall hereupon conclude that there is no Covenant passing betwixt God and us then I say they deny that which is as cleare in Scripture as the Sunne shining at noone day I may say of them as the Apostle doth of some 1 Tim. 1.7 that when they would be teachers they understand not what they say nor whereof they affirme There is therefore a Covenant passing between God and man which I will prove by these evidences 1. Consider those expresse testimonies wherein mention is made of Gods Covenanting with the people of Israel which must needs hold forth a Covenant between God and man Deut. 4.23 Take heed unto your selves lest you forget the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you c. Esa 55.1 2 3. where the Lord calls every one that thirsts after life to come unto him These are called to enter into Covenant with God but these speeches cannot be applyed to Christ but to us that wee should come to Christ and through him make up an everlasting Covenant betwixt God and us see also Jer. 31.31 I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Judah and in Ezek. 20.37 saith God I will bring them into the bond of the Covenant which places hold forth a Covenant between God and man 2. Consider more particularly such testimonies as doe expresse Gods Covenant with sundry particular Saints as with Abraham Gen. 15.18 and 17.2.4.7 and the same renewed to Isaac Gen. 26. 3. and confirmed to Jacob Gen. 35.12 all mentioned together Levit. 26.42 Psal 83.3 2 Chron. 13.5 I thinke that there is none so sottish as to say these persons were Christ 3. Lest any should say It 's true God makes a Covenant with us but it is made with us not in our persons but in Christ Therefore in the third place consider such Scriptures as doe not onely expresse a Covenant of God made with us but a Covenant on our part made with God as Psal 50.5 Call my Saints together that make a Covenant with mee with sacrifice the Saints make a Covenant with God Hence we are said to passe into Covenant with the Lord Deut. 29.12 as God for his part enters into Covenant with us so doe we also with him 4. Consider those places frequently used in Scripture in which wee are said sometimes to keep Covenant as Psal 25.10 Psal 44.17 103.17 18. Sometimes to transgresse and breake Covenant Gen. 17.14 and not to be faithfull in Covenant Levit. 26.15 From which places I argue thus Those that either keepe or breake Covenant those are in Covenant and doe make a Covenant with God but wee are said to breake or keepe Covenant Ergo. 5. Consider that the Covenant made with Christ concerning us was made from everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 The promise was made to Christ before the foundation of the world but there is a Covenant also made in time Deut. 29.12 noted in these words this day if there were no other Covenant between God and us but what is made with Christ then it cou●d not be said to be to day because the Covenant made with Christ was before the world was and therefore the Covenant and promise that is made to day must needs be made with us 6. That Covenant of which Christ is the testator must needs be a Covenant with us else if the Covenant were made onely with Christ then he must be both testator and the partie to whom the Testament and Legacies are bequeathed which is absurd Men doe not use to bequeath a testament to themselves but Christ is appointed the testator Heb. 9. In the covenant between the Father and Christ there he is a partie not the testator but in this he is the testator therefore besides the covenant between God and Christ there is also a Covenant between God and us and therefore the covenant is not made with Christ alone but with us also 7. A seventh argument may be taken from the paritie and likenesse between the covenant of works and the covenant of grace though there be great difference between them as shall be shewed afterward yet they agree in this in that they are both made betwixt the same parties and persons between God and man God made a covenant of workes with Adam and that being broken he comes and makes with him a new covenant of grace through Christ Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman shall breake the serpents head one of these covenants comes in the roome and stead of the other and therefore the parties covenanting are the same God and Adam in the first covenant the same God and the same Adam in the second covenant 8. From the end and use of the Sacraments which is to confirme the covenant of grace as being the seales of it Rom. 4.11 Now in reason these two must goe together the Covenant and the seale of it It were a fond thing in a man to make a covenant with one and to give the seales to another they must have the seales that have the covenant made with them but the seales of the covenant the Sacraments are given to us and therefore the covenant is made with us also 9. If there be no promise or covenant made to us as some would have it then infidelitie and unbeliefe is in us no sinne for as the Apostle saith Where there is no law or commandement there is no transgression so where there is no promise there is no unbeliefe When God promiseth and yet then wee believe not this makes unbeliefe a great sinne but if wee have no promise made unto us then are wee not bound to believe and so our not believing is no sinne 10. The contrary doctrine is a doctrine tending to licentiousnesse for as the covenant tends as wee have heard to bind us faster to God to walke before him in obedience so on the contrary to say that there is no covenant between God and us it opens a gap to loosnesse of spirit For if there be no covenant then cannot a man be charged with unfaithfulnesse to God though he walk never so loosly and therefore let such men as broach such tenents take heed whilest they teach such libertie they be not found to be the servants of corruption 2 Pet. 2.19 These are the arguments to
man was yet righteous persisting in that innocency and righteousnesse in which he was created there was yet no breach made the heart and mind of man answering to the mind of God and therefore there was no need of a Mediator to bring them together But when the Covenant of grace is made with man there is a former breach between God and him and so there is need of a third partie of a Mediator to make them one Hence is that in Gal. 3.20 A Mediator is not a Mediator of one whiles wee are one with God there is no need of a Mediator no more then there is need for one to mediate between a man and himselfe this is the ordinary interpretation of that place though it may probably beare another sense and so it was betwixt God and man in the beginning there was no variance then between them by sinne then God made a Covenant with man as with his friend as Abraham is called the friend of God but when sin had made a breach between God and man then strangenesse and enmitie followed God is estranged from us and wee are enemies unto God so that without a Mediator wee can never come to be united into Covenant againe Now man feares and trembles to come before God and God being offended cannot be at peace unlesse his Justice be satisfied Therefore when Adam had once sinned he feared to come into the presence of God and hid himselfe till God revealed and made knowne to him the Mediator of the Covenant that the Seed of the woman should breake the Serpents head The Covenant of workes was delivered to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai by the hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 Object and so the difference is taken away I grant the Covenant of workes was then revealed and made Answ 1 knowne to the children of Israel as being before almost obliterated and blotted out of mans heart and therefore God renewed the knowledge of the Covenant of workes to them I grant also that the Law was given to them by the mediation Answ 2 of Moses who was a mediator betwixt God and them But I adde withall that the Law though it containe the summe Answ 3 of the Covenant of workes yet was not delivered unto that people for this end to stand between God and them as a Covenant of workes by which they should be justified and live but onely as it was subservient and helpfull unto them to attaine the end of the former Covenant of grace which God had made with them in their fathers God had promised Abraham to be a God to him and to his seed but now the Israelites having been long trained up among an ignorant and Idolatrous people they little knew what need they had to flie to the promise of grace and therefore the Lord now reveales his Law to them in that manner to make them see by the terrors of the Law that they cannot come neare unto God thereby this was the Lords end in giving the Law unto them and not to stand between God and them as a Covenant of life by which they should live This is evident by that of the Apostle Gal. 3.19 Wherefore then serveth the Law The Apostle had before proved that wee are justified by faith in the free promise and not by workes some then might object Why was the Law then given to the children of Israel The Apostle answers it was given to restraine transgression to convince men of sin and to be as a Schoolmaster to bring them to Christ Gal. 3.24 These then were the ends of giving the Law 1. That the knowledge of sinne might abound Rom. 5 19 20. The Law entred that sinne might abound that is the knowledge of it that man might know his sinne Secondly To lead them to Christ Thirdly To restraine the transgression and sinne of man and to keepe them in obedience But not as I said to stand in the forme of a Covenant for them to be justified and saved thereby The Law is to be considered two wayes First Absolutely and by it selfe as containing a Covenant of workes Secondly Dependantly and with respect to the Covenant of grace 1. Absolutely alone by it selfe and so it was given as a Covenant to Adam in the beginning and so considered it shews the way and meanes of life by which wee might live 2. Respectively as having reference to the Covenant of grace and so it was given to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai both as antecedent and consequent thereto As antecedent to it to prepare them for Christ and the Covenant of grace and also as subsequent to it to teach them how to walke and please God when they were entred into a new Covenant with him And thus was it given unto them And here because some may doubt of this truth I will therefore lay downe some grounds to confirme it and to make it cleare that the Covenant made with Israel at Mount Sinai was not a Covenant of workes Argu. 1 That Covenant which God made with Israel at Mount Sinai had Circumcision for the signe and seale of it which was the signe and seale of the same Covenant which God made with Abraham Gen. 17. And therefore this Covenant made with Israel having the same signe and seale with the other made with Abraham it was the same Covenant also For if the Covenant had been altered the seale should have been altered also the seales of the one Covenant not being sutable to the other It were now absurd to bring in the seales of the Covenant of workes made with Adam and to annex them to the Covenant of grace now made with us in Christ and no lesse inconvenient were it to put the seales of the Covenant of grace to the Covenant of workes Now if this Covenant made with Israel was the same with that which was made with Abraham having the same seale and confirmation then surely it was not a covenant of workes but of grace because the covenant made with Abraham was a covenant of grace and not of workes Rom. 4. Object But it may be said that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes else how doth the Apostles Argument hold which he urgeth Gal. 5.3 where he saith If yee be circumcised yee are bound to keepe the whole Law As implying that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes binding them to the observation of the whole Law that they might be justified thereby even as Baptisme binding us to believe on Christ for forgivenesse of sinnes is therefore called a Sacrament of the Covenant of grace Wee must consider Circumcision two wayes First Answ According to its primitive institution as it was appointed by God unto Abraham and then as it was abusively urged and intended by those Judaizing Apostles which sought to corrupt the truth In the Primitive institution of it it was appointed to be a seale of the covenant of grace as is evident Rom. 4.11 But the
expect from him he prayeth not for them he pleads onely for them that fly to grace through him these that enter into a covenant of grace have Christ their advocate but as for those that are under the Law they have God against them the Law against them they have all creatures to accuse and to testifie against them but have not one to mediate for them no Christ no Mediator to stand up in their cause to turne away from them the wrath which they have provoked It may serve for direction Doe we then desire to be in covenant Vse 2 with God to be under grace and to partake with the Saints in the blessings of this Covenant Then trust not to your selves to your own righteousnesse but goe to Jesus Christ the Mediator of the Covenant give up your selves unto him put your selves into his hand and goe hand in hand with him into the presence of the Father that he may mediate for you and plead your cause As the Israelites said unto Moses Goe thou and speake unto God for us so let us say unto Christ Lord Jesus Goe thou and plead with the Father for us if wee come neare unto God without thee wee dye the fire will consume us wee are destroyed This is the way All men hope well of themselves and trust to their own righteousnesse or else they thinke that the promises of God are large and that Christ is a Mediator for all men and as the Jewes trusted in Moses Joh. 5. so doe all now trust in Christ And usually none are more confident then those that never knew their need of a Mediator betwixt God and them But as the Israelites had they not heard those thundercrackes seene the lightning and tempest and earthquake had not these made them afraid and shaken their hearts they would never have gone so unto Moses and besought him to be a Mediator between God and them so surely is it with us wee never come to Christ to mediate for us till by the Law wee see our selves to be dead condemned men Here therefore begin look upon the terrors of the Law see and read thine own condemnation and curse against thee by that Covenant and then as the Israelites when they were slung with the fiery Serpents they looked up to the brasen Serpent by it to be healed and as they in their feare went unto Moses so let us in our feare goe unto the Lord Jesus who is the onely Mediator between God and us It may serve for incouragement unto such as are smitten downe with the terrors of the Almightie so as they dare not approach neare unto God to offer up any service or sacrifice unto him but God appeares in their eyes as a consuming fire they had rather fly unto the holes of the rockes and have mountaines to cover them and hills to fall upon them then to approach before the face of the dreadfull and just God As Exod. 20.21 the children of Israel stood afar off from God they durst not draw near because they saw God as a consuming fire Exod. 24.7 so it is with some fearfull consciences God is terrible unto them they dare not come neare where the Lord is to have any thing to doe with him thus it was with Adam after he had sinned he runs into the thicket to hide himselfe from the presence of the Lord and rather would he have had the trees fired about his eares and himselfe to have been turned to ashes with them then to have been brought forth before the face of God to answer for his sin which he had done Thus also it was with David himselfe after his sin of pride in numbering the people 1 Chron. 21.30 But let such remember what the Lord spake to the children of Israel in the like case Exod. 20.18.20 Feare not saith Moses for God is come to prove you that his feare may be in you that you sin not feare not with a slavish and servile feare to fly from his presence onely feare him with a reverend feare feare to sin against him Let them not be afraid to come before God but consider though there is no accesse to the Lord whiles they be under the Law there being none there to mediate for them yet let them fly from that Covenant to a Covenant of grace and here there is an Advocate a Mediator ever standing at the right hand of God to plead for such as come unto God by him so that though we have been enemies and strangers yet coming for grace in the Mediator his name there is hope wee may finde grace and acceptance by him therefore saith the Apostle Eph. 2.18 19. Through him wee have accesse unto the Father c. and Chap. 3.12 In him wee have boldnesse and accesse with confidence Heb. 7.25 He is able to save all that come unto God by him Be our case never so miserable in our owne eyes yet if wee come unto God by him he is able to save us to the uttermost and if wee come unto him he will not cast us away Joh. 6.37 For comfort to such as are entred into Covenant with God by Vse 4 the mediation of the Lord Jesus the Mediator of the Covenant here is their comfort that this covenant so made can never be disanulled or broken off Satan will not be wanting to make a breach if possible he can he envieth this uniting of God and man in covenant one with another As soone as ever he saw a Covenant passed between God and our first parents he presently bestirred himselfe to make a breach between them he did then cast between them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an apple of strife as I may so call it to draw man to violate the Covenant of obedience which God had bound him in and so he broke asunder the Covenant between God and man and thus he seekes still to disanull all Covenants between God and us And were our Covenant now without a Mediator as the former was he might prevaile against us and make a new breach as he did before but now here is our stay and strong assurance that if we be once taken into this Covenant of grace this covenant will hold though God might in his Justice breake with us and we● would breake with God through our sinfull infirmitie and backsliding disposition that is in us yet the Mediator the Lord Jesus Christ standing betwixt God and us keeps us together that wee can never fall asunder he pleads with the Father to reconcile him to us when he is angry with us he pleads also with us and when wee are going backe from God he brings us to him againe by renewing in us our repentings before him he draws the heart againe before the throne of grace powres upon us a spirit of grace and supplication puts in our mouths words of confession and stirres up in us sighes and groanes of spirit intreating the Lord that though wee have gone backe from him yet he
a mind to returne to the Law though they had had grace revealed to them We have a mind to live and dye under that Covenant as the fish in the Sea and the mole in the earth But see what it is a severe and rigid Master the will of it can never be accomplished Therefore fly from it to this amiable and gracious Lord that accepts of weakest indeavours so they be done in sinceritie So long as wee strive to doe the will of the Lord and fly to grace for pardon and acceptance wee doe fulfill the Covenant of grace Therefore cast off that yoke which cannot be borne and take the yoke of Christ upon us for that is easie and his burthen light Mat. 11.29 30. Mat. 11.29 30 Though we doe by sin breake the Covenant of workes and so Differ 11 make it voyd that there is no life and salvation to be had thereby yet there is hope and helpe by flying to the Covenant of grace But if the Covenant of grace be broken and made voyd as it may to those which onely externally lay hold on it there is no more helpe for such a soule It 's in vaine to fly back to the Covenant of workes I deny not but many sinnes may be committed by those that are under the Covenant of grace which yet doe finde helpe and mercy from God as was shewed out of Rom. 5.16 Rom. 5.16 Because the bond of the covenant is not broken As it is between man and wife though shee be foolish passionate and wilfull yet these doe not breake the Covenant of marriage so long as shee remaineth faithfull So here But if the Covenant of grace be made voyd then there is no more helpe nor hope It is in the Covenant of workes as it was under the Law Num. 35.6 25. If a man had committed man-slaughter he was subject to the avenger of bloud yet there were Cities of refuge for him to fly unto where he was to remaine to the death of the High-Priest so it is with those that sin against the Covenant of workes though one hath committed bloudy sins yet there is a refuge for him which the Apostle seemes to allude unto Heb. 6.18 Heb. 6.18 We have strong consolation that have made our refuge c. The Covenant of grace is as Isa 25.4 a refuge against the tempest c. Here is a safe Sanctuary it saves such as are condemned by the Covenant of workes But if a man sin against the Covenant of grace so as to make it voyd to himselfe there is no refuge for him no remedy for him as Solomon speakes of those that being often reproved harden their neck Prov. 29.1 Hence is that in Heb. 10. from 26. to 31. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sinnes c. The reason of this difference is Because in the Covenant of workes we have to doe with justice but in the covenant of grace with grace and mercy and therefore as when a man hath committed a trespasse against the Law and Justice condemnes him yet the grace and favour of the Prince may save him but if he contemne the favour of the Prince then he must dye So though we have provoked justice yet we may fly to grace and get helpe there but if wee have offended against mercy and made grace our enemy whither can wee then goe there is no refuge then left for us Vse To let us see the great danger of sinning against Grace there is danger in sinning against the Covenant of workes but it is more dangerous to sin against Grace For there is helpe for such as breake the Covenant of workes but no helpe for such as make voyd the Covenant of grace to themselves These are the killing and destroying sinnes that leave no remedy It is true as was said before that the Lord passeth by many weaknesses of his servants that desire and indeavour to cleanse themselves from all filthinesse and spareth them as a Father his sonne Mal. 3.17 Mal. 3.17 But contemptuous sinnes against Grace are beyond all helpe This is to sin desperately Herein men stumble at the stumbling stone they thinke that now under the dayes of grace though they be yet under the Law they may sin without danger and continue in their evills but here the danger is the greatest therefore take heed how you make Grace your enemy If the Law condemne us Grace may save us But if Grace save us not who shall plead for us How doe men sin Quest so as to make the Covenant of Grace voyd unto themselves and to make Grace their enemy 1. By neglecting and slighting the offers tenders of Grace Answ which are made unto them hereby they become guilty of sinne against Grace In Mat. 22. and Lak 14. the Father invites men to the marriage of his Sonne and so to receive all the blessings that are prepared and made ready There is mercy ready forgivenesse ready c. But marke their answer They cannot come the profits and pleasures of the world hinder them ●rom embracing the tenders of Grace What follows then the sentence goes out of the mouth of Grace it selfe They shall not taste of my Supper Grace invites but it is refused and therefore passeth that direfull sentence So Psal 81.11 Psal 81.11 God offers himselfe to be a God unto them but they will have none of him Then he gave them up to walke after their own hearts lusts c. When we will not have his Grace upon his tearmes then God gives up to Justice When God calls upon us as he doth upon his people Isai 55.1.3 Isai 55.1.3 Come unto me and incline your eare take me to be a God unto you and I will make a sure and everlasting Covenant with you if then wee depart away from God as Hos 11.2 Hos 11.2 and wee will have our lusts and keepe the Idols of our hearts then the offers of grace are made voyd unto us 2. When men turne back from the grace which they have received and grow weary of it when we are convinced of the excellency of grace and doe take hold of the Covenant as it were with one hand but not with all our heart and therefore doe Apostatise and turne back to our own lusts then doe we frustrate all the promises of grace to our selves This exposes grace to contempt as if there were more good to be found in sin and in the world then in the grace of Christ Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 10.26 39. Heb 10.26 39. That they that sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sin They that draw back doe it to their own perdition and so Psal 73.27 Psal 73.27 They that turne back from thee shall perish If they be entangled againe saith the Apostle Peter 2 Pet. 2.20 2
command us to believe unto life but it must shew us Christ on whom we must pitch our Faith But this the law doth not Christ is only revealed by the Gospel not by the law the Law knows him not Adam in his best estate knew not Christ and yet Adam had then the knowledge of the whole law and of all that the law required The law then not revealing Christ cannot command faith because faith cannot bee without Christ who is the object which it is carried unto Object If it bee said that the law is a Schoole-master to lead us unto Christ and therefore the Law reveales Christ Answ I answer if we take the law for the morall law then its bringing of us to Christ is only occasionall in as much as it drives us from it selfe as making us to see that by it there is no hope of life it curseth all it gives hope of life to none but the Gospel shewing us a salvation to be had in Christ now the Law by the severity of it is an occasion unto us of seeking life where it is to bee found But to bring us to Christ is no proper work of the law It is no otherwise then as if a child knowing the tendernesse of his Fathers love and finding his Schoole-master to be very severe and sharp runnes from the severity of his Master to hide himselfe under his Fathers wing yet not by the teaching or bidding of his Master but his severity is the occasion of it so it is in the point in hand But if we take the Law for the Law Ceremoniall It s true that the Ceremoniall law points out Christ unto us but the Ceremoniall law was Gospel in the substance of it though vailed over with types and shadowes which were to continue till the body was come How the carnall minded Jewes misunderstood those ceremonies it matters not It s certaine that in the primitive institution of them they were ordained for Evangelicall ends and therefore this infringeth not the truth before laid downe namely that the law sc the law of works properly so called doth not reveale Christ and therefore cannot command faith in Christ 4. If faith be commanded not in the Gospel but in the law then unbeliefe is no sinne against the Gospel but only against the law for where there is no commandement or law to bind there is no transgression Rom. 4. so that if the Gospel have no commandement to command us to believe then not to believe is no sinne against the Gospel and if so then those that have had the Gospel preached unto them all their life long shall lie under no more guilt of sinne then those that never had any more then the law only 5. If our calling be by the Gospel not by the law then the commandement which commands faith is a commandement of the Gospel not of the law our faith is wrought by our calling our calling is by the Gospel Gal. 1.15 2 Thes 2.14 and therefore the commandement of faith is a commandement of the Gospel Object Our calling and Faith also is wrought by the Gospel yet not by the commandement but by the promise Answ It is by the commandement though we exclude not the promise the commandement is indeed made more alluring more drawing by the promise annexed but the very name and terme of calling imports that it is not wrought without the commandement and therefore it is that we have these and the like voyces and commandements of Gods calling unto us Come unto me Return unto me Come out from among them Separate your selves and I will receive you Are not these so many commandements of God and by these the Lord inclines and drawes the heart to come unto him In Esay 55.5 there are the words of God the Father unto Christ Thou shalt call a Nation saith the Father unto him and they shall runne unto thee But what voyce is that by which Christ shall call the Nation that comes unto him The Prophet tells us in vers 1.3 Come to the waters yee that thirst saith Christ Come unto mee and I will make a Covenant with you These commandements backed with promises doe draw and make the Nation so called to come to Christ and runne after him so Jer. 3.22 Return O backsliding I●rael Here 's a commandement and what followes Behold we come unto thee for thou art the Lord our God See therefore how the Lord makes use of the commandement joyned with the promise to draw men unto him Thus it was with those Bretheren Mat. 4.19 21. and with Matthew the Publican whom Christ called from the receit of Custome Matt. 9. Follow me saith Christ to him he said no more but presently hee riseth up and followes him Matth. 9.9 And thus usually Come unto me saith Christ follow me believe on me c. which commandedements being accompanied with a Spirit of grace going with them the soule follows Christ to apprehend that grace to which it is called The summe of this argument is this that if there be a commandement concurring to our calling then there is a commandement concurring to the working of our faith and if our calling be by the Gospel then the commandement by which we are called to faith is a commandement of the Gospel and not of the Law 6. In 1 Ioh. 3.23 This saith the Apostle is his commandement that we believe in the name of his Son Iesus Christ Here is a direct commandement to believe Is this a legall commandement the whole Epistle breathes nothing but a spirit of grace and of the Gospel many passages in the Epistle might be noted for the confirmation thereof but I am loth to spend time in a thing so cleare 7. The commandements of the law wound and kill as it is in 2 Cor. 3.6 they doe not heale nor give life but the commandement of believing doth heale and give life to those that are wounded How many dying soules have been raised to life how many wounded consciences have bin eased and healed by that sweet invitation and drawing commandement of our blessed Saviour Come unto me all yee c Matth. 11.28 This comming is all one with believing Joh. 6.35 and the commandement to come is a commandement to believe and will any say this is a legall commandement then could it never have healed and given life as it hath done for the law woundeth but healeth not The comfort and sweetnesse which is in this invitation shews of what nature it is not legall but Evangelicall In Mark 10.49 when Jesus had called Bartimeus To come unto him those about him speak encouragingly unto him Be of good comfort say they for he calleth thee there is comfort in the very call invitation or command of Christ To come unto him It encourageth us to come it shews us that it is his will we should come unto him and that he is willing to receive such as come and will not cast them away Ioh. 6. But the Law
Gal. 3.16 concerning the one seede of Abraham to which the promises are made which seede is Christ shewing who is that one seed there called Christ 3. What the Covenant at Sinai was whether a Covenant of workes or of grace 4. Whether justification may be evidenced by sanctification whether that way of evidencing be a going aside to a Covenant of workes and whether one under the Covenant of works may be truly sanctified 5. Whether the commandement commanding faith be a commandement of the Law or no. 6. Whether faith be a condition onely consequent to our justification not antecedent 7. Whether the conditionall promises be promises of free grace or no and of their agreement with those promises which are called absolute These and some other such passages are herein touched as occasion was ministred by the matter handled And in regard that some of the same opinions are now stirring in old England which lately troubled New my hope in the Lord is that this my weak endeavour the Lord accompanying it with his blessing may be of some use now in these times if not to recall those that are led aside by errour yet to settle some that are doubtfull and wavering in the truth But though these things are touched here and there yet my chiefe ayme hath been to lead on the weake Christian to a practicall use of the truths which are here delivered in which the greatest part of this work is spent If in any of these thou findest thy self helped by this my labour either in thy knowledge or practise returne glory to God and help me by thy prayers that I may so finish that little remnant of my course which is yet before me that I may rejoyce in the day of Christ that I have not run in vaine neither have laboured in vaine If any that are more judicious shall vouchsafe to see what is herein performed and shall thinke themselves burdened with interruption by reason of application by use of each point delivered I desire them to consider that as in the preaching so in the publishing of this Treatise it was then is now intended rather for their sakes which stand in need of both then for such as need not I write not to teach the judicious but to help the weak who stand in need not only to know the truth but to be led on to see how the knowledge of it doth serve to any use for practise of life One thing more I may not omit Whereas it may be marvailed that in the beginning of the Treatise I propound two points to be handled viz. first to shew the nature of the Covenant of grace and secondly that we are saved by that Covenant and not by the Covenant of workes whereas I say both these are propounded and yet I handle but one of them the reason of my so doing is partly because I saw the Treatise to exceed in bulk what I expected in the beginning partly because the handling of the former alone doth answer the end which in the beginning was aymed at which was to open the nature and substance of the Covenant of grace and partly also because this is my first adventure in this kinde If this which I have done shall finde acceptance with the Saints I may adde the rest in due time if the Lord give life and strength otherwise I shall thinke this enough and too much which is done already In the meane time I commend this my endeavour with thee courteous Reader to the blessing of God beseeching him that is the God of all grace to enable us so to live a life of grace here that in the end we may enjoy the grace of life according to the covenant and promise of grace which he hath made with us in Christ his beloved To whom be glory for ever Amen In whom I rest Thine in any service of love for Christs sake PETER BULKELEY ❧ TO THE READER THe blessed God hath evermore delighted to reveale and communicate himselfe by way of Covenant he might have done good to man before his fall as also since his fall without binding himselfe in the bond of Covenant Noah Abraham and David Jewes Gentiles might have had the blessings intended without any promise or Covenant but the Lords heart is so full of love especially to his owne that it cannot be contained so long within the bounds of secrecie viz. from Gods eternall purpose to the actuall accomplishment of good things intended but it must aforehand overflow and breake out into the many streames of a blessed Covenant the Lord can never get neer enough to his people and thinkes he can never get them neer enough unto himselfe and therefore unites and binds and fastens them close to himselfe and himselfe unto them by the bonds of a Covenant And therefore when wee breake our Covenant and that will not hold us he takes a faster bond and makes a sure and everlasting Covenant according to grace not according to workes and that shall hold his people firme unto himselfe and hold himselfe close and fast unto them that he may never depart from us Oh the depth of Gods grace herein that when sinfull man deserves never to have the least good word from him that he should open his whole heart and purpose to him in a Covenant that when he deserves nothing else but separation from God and to be driven up and downe the world as a vagabond or as dryed leaves fallen from our God that yet the Almighty God cannot be content with it but must make himselfe to us and us to himselfe more sure and neare then ever before And is not this Covenant then Christian Reader worth thy looking into and searching after Surely never was there a time wherein the Lord calls his people to more serious searching into the nature of the Covenant then in these dayes For are there not some who cut off the entaile to children of those in Covenant and so lessen shorten the riches of grace in the Lords free Covenant and that in the time of more grace under the Gospel then he was wont to dispense under the Law Are there not others who preach a new or rather another Gospel or Covenant viz That actuall remission of sins and reconciliation with God purchased indeed in Redemption by Christs death is without nay before faith the Condition though wrought of God of the Covenant of grace expresly opposed to the Law or Covenant of workes Rom. 3.27 and ever required as the meanes and therefore antecedent to the attainment of those ends in the constant ministry of the Apostles of Christ Act. 2.38 10.43 Is it not time for the people of God now to pry into the secret of Gods Covenant which he reveales to them that feare him Psal 25.14 when by clipping of it and distinguishing about it the beautifull countenance of it begins to be changed and transformed by those Angels of new light which once it had
Sinai had not Christ for the Mediator of it Heb. 8.6 But Christ was the Mediator of the covenant of grace ever since that covenant was first made even in the time of Adam Gen. 3.15 and of Abraham Joh. 8.5 and of Moses Acts 15.11 and afore his coming in the flesh as well as since Heb. 13.8 Answ I grant that Christ was not in his owne person visible Mediator of that covenant yet in his type he was for when Moses stood betwixt God and them Deut. 5.5 and as a Mediator he tooke the Law from God to deliver it unto them Gal. 3.19 he did not so stand in that place of Mediator in his owne name but in the name of Christ as representing Christ of whom he was therein a type and figure so that what Moses did in that Mediatorship Christ did it in him It is said of Christ 1 Pet. 3. He went and preached to the old world in the ministry of Noah so he went and was Mediator between God and Israel in the ministry of Moses and as Aaron was Mediator between God and them in the Priestly office so was Moses in the Propheticall office and yet neither of them in their owne names and for themselves but both of them as they were types of Christ and thus Christ was Mediator of that typicall covenant in his type and afterward Mediator of the Evangelicall covenant in his owne person Object 2 The covenant of grace is said to be established upon better promises then the first covenant made at Mount Sinai Heb. 8.6 Now these better promises are promises of life upon better conditions i upon condition of faith in Christ and not upon that impossible condition of perfect obedience to the Law The covenant of grace therefore being built upon better promises then the former covenant at Mount Sinai therefore the covenant at Mount Sinai cannot be a covenant of grace because the promises of the covenant of grace are alwayes the same Acts 15.11 Answ As wee read of better promises so we read also of a better testament and better sacrifices Heb. 7.22 8.6 9.23 Now mark shall we from those better sacrifices of the new Testament conclude that the former Testament which had sacrifices though it wanted these better sacrifices was a covenant of workes No the covenant of workes taken properly hath no sacrifices at all The same I say concerning the better Testament Heb. 7.22 8.6 Where the comparison is betwixt the Testament under the Messiah and the Testament under Levi as the verses before doe make manifest the Testament under the Messiah is called a better Testament then that under Levi yet was that Testament under Levi a Testament or Covenant of grace and not of workes This therefore I conceive that those better promises are not so called in regard of the substance of the promises but of the manner of propounding them Even as the sacrifices of the new Testament are said to be better then the sacrifices of the old not in substance but in the manner of exhibiting If I may so speake they had the same sacrifices in substance as wee have even the Lambe slaine from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. But he was then slaine onely in types and figures not really or personally But now in the new Testament there is a reall and personall offering up of Christ himselfe and not in the type onely and therefore it is called a better sacrifice And so it is in the promises the promise of eternall life was then made but how seldome plainly expressed but shadowed over in the promise of their dwelling in the land of Canaan which was to them a type of heaven but now wee have the promise of eternall life plainly and nakedly set before us so that wee may say as they said Joh. 16. Now speakest thou plainly and speakest no parables now the Lord speakes to us without putting such vailes before our eyes which held them that they did not see into the end of that which was spoken so as now in this sense our promises are better then theirs because more clearly and plainly revealed In a word the Covenant under the Messiah is compared with the Covenant under Levi the sacrifices of the one with the sacrifices of the other the promises of the one with the promises of the other Looke then how the one is better so are they all as the sacrifices of the one are better then the sacrifices of the other so is the Testament and so are the promises which betternesse is not in the substance but in the manner of revealing The Covenant made at Mount Sinai was the Covenant of the Object 3 Morall law which is the Covenant of workes This objection is answered by that which was before delivered Answ 1 of a two-fold consideration of the Law 1. Absolutely 2. With respect to the Covenant of grace and as dependant on that and thus onely it was delivered to them and not as a Covenant by which they should be saved no more then it is to us though wee have it in our Bibles Answ 2 Though the Morall Law was then given them yet there was more then that Law delivered to them namely all the ordinances of the Ceremoniall Law which belong to the covenant of grace and not of workes and all of them together made up but one covenant wherein they were to walke with God Object 4 The first Testament delivered at Mount Sinai was such as no salvation could be attained by it for therefore it is said not to be faultlesse Heb. 8.7 But the Covenant of grace did alwayes bring salvation Therefore c. Answ That Covenant did give life and salvation was attained by it And though it be said to be faulty yet not so as to hinder or debar from salvation but onely it was defective in respect of the full perfection of the new Covenant as it is now revealed It was not so cleare and manifest as now it is there was then a defect in comparison of what it is now by the revelation of Jesus Christ but not faulty to as that interpretation would make it Compare herewith Heb. 10.1 2 3 4. Object 5 This is made a difference betwixt the covenant of grace and the covenant at Sinai that the covenant of grace promiseth forgivenesse of sinnes and the writing of the Law in our hearts which the former covenant at Sinai did not Therefore it was not a covenant of grace but of workes Answ It is true the covenant at Sinai did not promise forgivenesse of sinnes scil so clearly and the writing of the Law in our hearts scil so abundantly in so full a measure as the new covenant doth but if from the denying of the full measure we shall deny the whole benefit in any measure this will not follow no more then this followes that because the Prophets did not reveale Christ so plainly as the Apostles therefore they did not reveale him at all They had types
of the forgivenesse of sinnes in the killing of the sacrifice in putting their sinnes upon the head of the Goat So also the Law was written in their hearts else David could not have said Thy law is within my heart but not so fully as in the new manifestation of the Covenant under the Gospel In Joh. 7.39 it is said The Spirit was not yet given because Jesus was not yet glorified not but that the Spirit was then given in a measure but not so abundantly as after his ascension So here c. But in Gal. 4.22.24 25. the Covenant at Sinai is expresly distinguished Object 6 from the new covenant or testament the covenant at Sinai being signified by Hagar which brings forth children to bondage who was cast out with her sonne and ha● no inheritance with Isaac the sonne of the free woman therefore the covenant at Sinai must needs be a covenant of workes It is not to be denied Answ but that the Law which is the summe of the covenant of workes was then published at Sinai but wee must withall remember what was before expressed concerning the two-fold consideration of the Law First Absolute in it selfe as it was given to Ad●m Secondly Respective depending upon the promise of grace in which respect it was given to that people of Israel Now the Apostle speaks of the Law and covenant of works both wayes First he speak●s of it in the relative consideration as it had respect to that people and to the covenant of grace before made with them in Abraham and of this consideration of it he speakes from Chapter 3.17 to Chapter 4.21 and then from the beginning of ver 21. of the fourth Chapter to the end of the Chapter there he begins to intreat of the Law as simply considered in it selfe And indeed if wee so consider it simply by it selfe it doth containe nothing but a covenant of workes and begets children to bondage which shall have no inheritance with the children of promise which lay hold of the new Covenant but yet the former truth still holds firme and unshaken namely that it was not a Covenant of workes as it had respect to that people that is it was not given to them with intent that they should looke to be justified and to live thereby but onely to lead them to Christ and to restraine transgression as the Apostle fully shewes in the third Chapter This two-fold consideration of the Law here spoken of is evident to any that doth with attention read those two Chapters and attends to the scope of them for that which the Apostle speakes concerning the Law and the Jewes being under the Law Chap. 4.1 2 3. c. cannot be meant of those that are under it as under a Covenant of workes but of those that were children of God by grace though yet under age c. Againe that which he speakes of the Law in Chap. 4.29 30. with the verses before from ver 21. to the end cannot be applyed otherwise then to the children of the Law and Covenant of workes strictly and properly so called And therefore this two-fold consideration of the Law is grounded upon the Text it selfe And the Apostle ariseth from one of these unto the other First speaking of the Law as it had reference to that people shewing for what end it was given unto them which he handles Chapter 3.17 to Chap. 4.21 and then falls to an absolute consideration of it in it selfe shewing the danger of being under the Law being so considered simply as a covenant of workes namely that it casts us out of the inheritance which is given onely to the children of promise the Covenant then which God made with Israel at Sinai was a covenant of grace God renewing with them the former covenant made before with them in Abraham but withall did then shew them the covenant of workes what it was thereby to force them to cleave unto the former promise of grace The summe is that though the Law which containes the covenant of workes was delivered to the Israelites at Mount Sinai by a Mediator Moses by reason of that reference it had in them to the covenant of grace yet was it not so given by a Mediator unto Adam to whom it was given as a meere covenant of workes by which he should live And in this appeares the difference between the one Covenant and the other the covenant of workes is without a Mediator there being no breach between God and man when the covenant of workes was given But the covenant of grace is by a Mediator to make up the breach which sin hath made between God and us so as now in this estate of sin there is no peace with God no blessing from God but it must be obtained by the Mediator between God and man Jesus Christ Hence is that Ephes 2.13.16.18 where the Apostle shewes how both Jewes and Gentiles are made neere to God by Christ Wee were aliens and strangers but now are made Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God and have entrance and accesse to the Father by Christ Neither is there any other blessing to be looked for but as it comes to us through the hand of the Mediator he it is that hath received gifts for men Psal 68.18 and he gives gifts to men Eph. 4.8 by him wee have remission of sinnes Eph. 1.7 by him wee receive the Spirit of life and grace Joh. 1.16 By him the Mediator wee enter and are brought into covenant with God by him we are kept in covenant with him by him wee receive all the blessings of the Covenant and without a Mediator there is no peace no blessing to be looked for All the promises of the Covenant are made by him and fulfilled 2 Cor. 1.20 In him they are yea and Amen though every promise doe not by name mention Christ yet it hath respect unto Christ and without Christ wee can receive nothing that comes in the nature of a blessing or that comes from grace Grace comes onely by Jesus Christ Joh. 1.17 This serves to let us see the misery of all such as are under the Vse 1 Law under the Covenant of workes and not under grace let them consider they must come and stand before God the Judge of all who shall judge every man according to his workes and then shall all their sinnes be set in order before them and laid unto their charge and the Law passe sentence of death upon them and their own Consciences terrifie them and which is the upshot of their misery there shall be none to plead for them not one in heaven and earth to stand betwixt Gods wrath and them to turne it away from them but they shall be left unto themselves to dye and perish in their sinnes The Law hath no Mediator Christ is no Mediator to such as are under the Law he hath not a word to speake for them he tells such Joh. 17.19 how little they must
holinesse which the holy God requires and lookes for And thus it was with the young man Mark 10. Mark 10. that was so perfect in his owne eyes who thought he had kept all the Commandements of the Law mentioned to him yet he comes as one unsatisfied in his own minde and doubtfull whether he had done enough to bring him unto life And therefore comes to Christ to know what more he should doe beside what he had done alreadie The Papists who build upon their workes teach a doctrine of doubting No man say they can come to be assured and setled in an undoubted perswasion of his own salvation and well may they teach such a doctrine when they build upon such a sandy foundation of their own workes Let them establish their owne righteousnesse with all the strength they can as the Jewes did Rom. 10.3 Rom. 10.3 yet as long as they rest here and doe not submit to the righteousnesse which is offered by grace the issue will be anxiety of mind fearfulnesse of heart conscience will be perplexed it will never finde rest nor peace but let a man renounce his own righteousnesse and fly to the Covenant of grace and cast himselfe wholly upon grace here is a sure rock for the anchor of our faith to rest upon Let us then hereby see the way of peace to quietnesse of heart Vse and assurance for ever Isai 26.3 Isai 26.3 even to stay our selves upon this rock fly to the rock that is higher then we as Psal 61.2 Psal 61.2 build upon the foundation of grace and come off from the foundation of our own workes they that rest upon the Covenant of workes will be diffident of their owne estate they are upon a rock that is no higher then themselves and when the waters swell they will quickly get above them But if wee rest on the foundation of grace that is a rock that is higher then our selves there is safety all the surges and waves of greatest troubles can never get above the top of this rock stand here and we are safe for ever Hence Rom. 5.1 2. Rom. 5.1 2. Being justified by faith we have peace with God c. But many that doe believe and build on this foundation Object are yet troubled with many feares and are full of doubting c. These doubts and feares of theirs Answ are not like the feares of those that build upon their workes the cause of their feare is not because there is not a sufficient foundation to beare them up but because their adhaerence and dependence is feeble and weak They are weak in faith they are flesh and spirit there is in them a spirit of faith which cleaves to grace and there is also a spirit of unbeliefe which is leaning to their owne workes and this causeth their doubtfulnesse But it is otherwise with those that doe wholly rest upon their workes Let a man build himselfe upon these never so resolutely let him establish his own righteousnesse with all the strength he can yet this will never give him assurance not because he doth not adhaere firmly to his foundation but because his foundation is nought and shakes under him Suppose two men both in feare of drowning by water one stands on a firme rock the other on a quick-sand he that stands on the quick-sand stands there resolutely he that is on the rock is doubtfull and weake in his resolution So it is in this case In the one of these the foundation is firme but adhaerence is weake In the other adhaerence is strong but his foundation is unsound The way to true peace is to rest wholly upon grace and the more we commit our selves to grace alone the more peace Hence saith the Apostle 2 Tim. 1.12 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and am perswaded that he will keep that which I have committed to him And 2 Tim. 4.18 2. Tim. 4.18 The Lord shall deliver me c. When feare shall seise on hypocrites which have trusted in themselves and in their own workes then shall those have confidence which have rested on grace these shall be able to look death in the face and shall have confidence in the day of Judgement Differ 10 The Covenant of workes is impossible to be fulfilled by us in this state of corruption But the covenant of grace by the help of grace is possible to be fulfilled Since the day that sin came into the world never did any man fulfill the Covenant of workes all of us being transgressors from the wombe Hence saith the Apostle Rom. 8.3 Rom. 8.3 What the Law could not doe c. And Rom. 9.31 32. He saith that the Jewes which followed after the Law of righteousnesse did not attaine unto that righteousnesse The Papists may talke of perfect keeping of the Law but the Scripture teacheth us another doctrine Prov. 20.9 Who can say I have made my heart cleane And 1 King 8.46 There is no man that sinneth not But the Covenant of grace is possible and therefore the Saints doe plead this before the Lord Psal 44.17 Psal 44.17 that they have been faithfull in his Covenant They doe not plead themselves to be without sinne against the Covenant of workes and yet they can say they had not dealt falsly with God in the Covenant of grace Nay the Lord himselfe lookes at them as fulfilling and keeping Covenant with him Psal 103.18 Psal 103.18 One of these Covenents is as Acts 15.10 Acts 15.10 a yoake too heavie for us now to beare the other as Mat. 11.29 30. Mat. 11.29 30 an easie yoake and a light burthen The Pharisees that were teachers of the Covenant of workes laid load and heavie burthens upon mens necks Mat. 23. Mat 23. But the Commandements of the Covenant of grace are not grievous The Covenant of grace may be fulfilled 1 Joh. 5.4 or else no man could be saved To provoke us to come from under the Covenant of workes Vse and to get under the Covenant of grace Who would serve an hard soure Master that will never be pleased with any thing that he can doe when he hath spent his utmost strength such a Master is the Law we can never fulfill the minde and will of this Master But grace is kinde loving easie to be intreated taking every thing in good part so it be done in truth and faithfulnesse according to the strength received It will accept the will to doe when wee have no abilitie to performe It saith Well done good and faithfull servant But alas it is with us as with all flesh and with all other things Every thing desires to continue in its state in which it was bred and borne Now we are borne under the Law the Covenant of workes and therefore would faine continue under it This made Paul speake in that manner to the Galatians Cap. 4.21 Gal. 4.21 Yee that will be under the Law They had
Pet. 2.20 then their latter end is worse then their beginning Here is another way to make voyd the grace of God to our selves 3. When we turne the grace of God into lasciviousnesse as Jude third verse when men presume upon grace they sin presumptuously and thinke that Grace shall beare all save all and though they goe on presumptuously in an head-strong way yet Grace shall pardon all This Paul meets withall Rom. 6.1 Rom. 6.1 Shall we fin that grace may abound c. Men are ready to abuse the precious Grace of God we will sinne and grace shall abound This turning of grace into wantonnesse frustrates the Covenant of grace unto our selves Jude 3.4 verses Let us therefore take heed that we sin not against grace I would to God that none of these things were found in the Generation of Jacob among our Churches sinnes against Grace are the most dangerous sinnes therefore beware Differ 12 The Covenant of workes was made with man in the state of Innocency before his fall but the covenant of grace was made afterwards when he had fallen for before the fall there was no impossitie but man was able to have fulfilled the Law and therefore God might justly require such obedience of him then man stood in no need of a Covenant of grace he might have had life by the Covenant of workes but after the fall then he became impotent unable to fulfill the Law which God had given him and then without a new Covenant of grace he could not live and therefore now God enters into a Covenant of grace with him Object This may seeme to imply that the Covenant of workes is more ancient then the Covenant of grace which is not to be granted because the Covenant of grace was from before the world began 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 I answer that both covenants must be considered two wayes Answer First as they were in mente divina in the counsell and purpose of the Father Secondly as they are actually enacted and stricken with us Now if we speak of the former how they were in the eternall purpose of God then I say it is true that the covenant of grace was from eternity But so was the covenant of works also which appeares by these two things First both these purposes that I may so speak for our conceiving though both are but one in God I say both these I wil glorifie my self in my justice and I wil also glorifie my selfe in my grace are from eternity one as well as the other Rom. 9.22.23 Now the means of glorifying his justice is by entring with m●n into a covenant of works therefore as the end was from eternity so was the means also Secondly Christ himself when he received the promise and covenant of grace for us did withall receive a commandment and covenant of works to be fulfilled by him in our behalfe Hence he is said to bee made under the law Galat. 4. Galat. 4. he received a commandment from the Father John 12.49 John 12.49 And was sent to fulfill the righteousnesse of the Law for us Rom. 8.3 Rom. 8.3 By which means he becommeth the end of the Law Rom. 10.4 Rom. 10.4 And as he was made under the Law and did fulfil it in fulness of time wherin he was sent so he was preordained hereunto before the world was 1 Pet. 1.20 1 Pet. 1.20 So that in respect of Gods counsell and purpose there is neither prius nor posterius betwixt these covenants but they are from everlasting neither of them before nor after another But if we look at the manifestation and enacting and striking of the covenant with us the covenant of works was first in as much as the state of perfection was before the state of imperfection in which the covenant of grace was made with us Therefore for a man now to suppose an accomplishing of the covenant of works to be saved thereby Vse is in eff●ct to conceive a new creation of man or to suppose man not fallen but as perfect as Adam was in his creation before his fall and is in effect the same as to say that we have no need of a covenant of grace as then Adam had not The covenant of works is revealed by the light of Nature but Differ 13 the covenant of grace is revealed by a supernaturall light from above Natures light teaches men to look for life and righteousnesse by works and this is written in all mens hearts Rom. 2.15 Rom. 2.15 And therefore if you should ask all the men in the world severally one by one How doe you hope to be saved They would all answer By works and by doing good All men by nature have something of the law in their hearts though sin hath blotted out a great part of it but the covenant of Grace is not known but by the revelation of the Spirit Hence saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 2.6 7 8. 1 Cor. 2.6 7 8. that the Gospel is a mystery an hidden wisdome which none of the Princes of the world knew though they have the greatest helps to find out hidden things but it is brought by the Son out of the bosome of the Father John 1. John 1. Flesh and bloud doth not reveale this doctrine Matth. 16.17 Matth. 16.17 Vse Then let no man think to attain the knowledge of the covenant of grace and find out the mystery thereof by naturall understanding by any strength of wit learning The strongest parts will not reach it till it be revealed to us from heaven And if any have understood the mystery of this covenant let them learn to say as Christ doth Mat. 11.25 Father I thank thee that thou hast revealed these things unto me c. Differ 14 The covenant of works was made with all men all men being in Adams loins and he standing as a publick person in the room of all his children when God made that covenant with him but the covenant of grace is not made with all men but only with the faithfull with those that are given unto Christ by the Father John 17. John 17. And therefore by the covenant of works God is a God to one as well as to another God is not God of one people more then of another by the covenant of works for it was made equally with us all in Adam it being made with him for all his posterity And therefore seeing we are all equally the sons of Adam this covenant makes no difference betwixt man and man but all are shut up under it all bound to fulfill it and if they break it as we all doe then liable are we to the sentence of death But in the covenant of grace God is the God of one people and not of another Hence is that in Gen. 17.21 Gen. 17.21 God saith that he will establish his covenant with Isaac and not with Ishmael So it was made with
Covenants about childrens toyes and light matters but such as concerne the welfare of the Kingdome so when the great Monarch of heaven and earth enters into Covenant with us it is about the great things of our salvation the great things of heaven yea of God himselfe The Covenant is full of blessings it is a rich store-house replenished with all manner of blessings It is not dry nor barren but like the fat Olive or fruitfull Vine the fruit whereof cheares the heart of God and man God himselfe is delighted in the communication of his grace to his people and they are delighted with the participation of his grace from him The Covenant is a tree of life to those that feed upon it they shall live for ever It is a Well of salvation Isai 12.3 Isai 12.3 It 's a fountaine of good things to satisfie every thirstie soule Zach. 13.1 Zach. 13.1 It is a treasure full of goods as Deut. 28.12 Here is unsearchable riches in this Covenant which can never be emptied nor come to an end Our finite narrow understandings can never apprehend the infinite grace this Covenant containes no more then an egge-shell is able to containe the water of the whole Sea Yet it is not in vaine to consider them as wee are able to expresse them though they be above that which we are able to speake or thinke As Moses though he could not see Gods face nor discerne his glory to the full yet he was permitted to see his back parts so we may take a little view of the blessings promised though the full cannot be seene As in a Map we have the bounds of a Lordship set forth the rivers woods meadowes pastures c. these are seen darkly in the Map but they are nothing to that when they are seen in their own beautie and greennesse to see the silver streames in the rivers the beautifull woods the large medowes fat pastures and goodly orchards which are farre more excellent in themselves then when they are seene in the Map So we can shew you but a little Map of those glorious things which the Covenant containes but by that little that you doe see you may be raised up to the consideration of the things that are not seene but are to be revealed in due time Now the blessings of the Covenant are infolded and wrapped up in the promises of it every promise of Grace containing a blessing in it as every threatning of the Law contains a curse They are now infolded in the promise the time of unfolding is not yet come The time of full discovery is when the heavens come to be folded up Heb. 1.12 Heb. 1.12 then the promises shall be unfolden and then wee shall fully see the blessings of the Covenant Wee have now a right and interest in them which is safe and sure but as yet we have them but by promise onely and therefore it is that the termes of Covenant and promise are taken for the same Eph. 2.12 Ephes 2.12 Rom. 9.5 Hence also we are said to be heires in hope of eternall life Tit. 3.7 Titus 3.7 not in present possession but in hope Therefore if wee would see what are the blessings of the Covenant we must looke into the promises Now the promises and blessings of the Covenant are of two sorts First of things spirituall and eternall Secondly of things temporall that concerne this outward life The spirituall blessings of the Covenant are chiefly comprehended in these places of Scripture Jer. 31.31.33 Jer 31.31.33 This shall be my Covenant saith the Lord after those dayes I will put my Law in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my people And they shall teach no more every man his neighbour saying Know the Lord for they shall all know me from the least of them to the greatest of them for I will forgive their iniquitie and remember their sinne no more So Ezek. 36.25 26 27 28. Ezek. 36.25 26 27 28. Then will I sprinkle cleane water upon you and yee shall be cleane from all your filthinesse and from all your Idolls will I cleanse you A new heart also will I give you c. So also Jerem. 32.38 39 40. They shall be my people and I will be their God and I will give them one heart c. Gen. 17.7 Gen. 17.7 I will be a God unto thee and thy seed These places compared together with such other doe expresse the summe of all the great things promised in the Covenant First Here is that great promise I will be your God and you shall be my people Secondly But if any say Alas how can God be a God unto me so sinfull as I am that have sinned provoked him as I have done therefore to take away this God saith that shall not hinder I will forgive your iniquities and remember them no more Thirdly But if the soule say further that though God should take all my former sinnes away and pardon them yet I have such a sinfull wretched nature in me that I shall breake out into new sinnes against him and bring a new guiltinesse upon my selfe The Lord removes and takes away this also and promiseth that he will renew our natures and give us hearts of flesh he will wash us from our filthinesse and write his law in our hearts and inable us to keepe his Statutes c. Fourthly But because some may yet say Though God should doe all this for me yet such is my infirmitie and weaknesse that I shall depart againe from the Lord I shall never hold out Therefore the Lord makes answer to this also and tells us that he will never depart away from us and that he will put such a feare of him into our hearts that wee shall never depart from him Jer. 32.40 To begin with the first which is the great promise of the Covenant I will be thy God Gen. 17.7 Gen. 17.7 Jer. 31.33 Jer. 31.33 This is set in the midst of the promises as the heart in the midst of the body to communicate life to all the rest of the members This promise hath influence into all the rest As Christ speaking of the Commandements of the Law calls that commandement of loving the Lord with all our heart the great Commandement so may this be called the great promise of the new-Covenant It is as great as God is He is an infinite God the heaven of heavens is not able to contain him Yet this promise containes him God shuts up himselfe in it I will be your God 1. Here is sufficiency It is a promise of infinite worth an overflowing blessing a rich possession an hid treasure which none can rightly value It was a great promise that Balak made to Balaam Numb 22.17 Numb 22.17 I will promote thee to great honour A greater which Ah●suerus made to Esther cap. 5.6 That he would give her the halfe of his kingdome A
greater then that which was made to Christ Mat. 4. if he that made it had been able to have performed it But this promise passeth them all If wee had a promise of an hundred worlds or of ten heavens this is more then all When God said to Abraham I will be thy God what could he give or say more As Heb. 6.13 God having no greater to sweare by swore by himselfe so God being minded to doe great things for his people and having no greater thing to give giveth them himselfe well therefore might the Apostle 2 Pet. 1. 2 Pet. 1. looking at these promises call them exceeding great and precious promises This is the greatest promise that ever was made or can be made to any creature Angels or men Herein God giveth himselfe to be wholly ours all his glory power wisdome goodnesse grace holinesse mercy kindnesse all is ours for the good of his people that are in Covenant with him Quantus quantus est he is all ours Hence saith the Lord to Moses Exod. 33.19 Exod. 33.19 I will make all my goodnesse to passe before thee And the Apostle 1 Cor. 3.19 All things are yours and all shut up in this I will be thy God When a man taketh a wife into the Covenant of marriage with him what ever he is he is wholly hers he gives himselfe and that which he hath to her so when the mightie God of heaven and earth taketh his people into covenant with him he is an husband to them and marries them to himselfe and therefore what ever he is in the glory and excellency of his nature it is all for the good and comfort of his people Consider God essentially or personally all is theirs God in his essence and glorious attributes communicates himselfe to them for their good And God personally considered as Father Sonne and Holy-Ghost they all enter into Covenant with us Isai 54.5 The Father enters into a Covenant with us he promises to be a Father to us 2 Cor. 6.17 Hence saith the Lord Exod. 4.22 Exod. 4.22 Israel is my sonne my first-borne and Jer. 31.9.20 Jer. 31.9.20 Is Ephraim my deare sonne is he my pleasant childe The Lord speaketh as though he were fond of his children delighting in them as Psal 147.11 Psal 147.11 pitying of them Psal 103.13 As a Father hath a care for his children to lay up something for them so the Lord hath a care to provide both heavenly and earthly inheritance for his children he hath a care to nurture and instruct them in his wayes Deut. 32.10 Deut. 32.10 2. Christ the Sonne is in Covenant with us and speakes to us as Isai 43.1 Isai 43.1 Thou art mine and Hosea 13.14 I will redeeme them I will ransome them O death I will be thy death Thou hast destroyed my people but I will destroy thee There is the Covenant of the Sonne with us He brings us back to his Father from whose presence we were banished and sets us before his face for ever He undertakes with us to take up all Controversies which may fall between God and us He promiseth to restore us to the Adoption of sonnes and not onely to the title but also to the inheritance of sonnes that wee might be where he is Joh. 17.24 3. The Holy Ghost makes a Covenant with us as Heb. 10.15 16. Heb. 10.15 16 Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witnes to us testifying of this Covenant which he makes with us For after that he had said before This is the Covenant that I will make with them I will put my Law into their hearts and in their minds will I write them c. Though the Father be implyed in it yet here is the proper worke of the Holy Ghost What the Father hath purposed to his people from all eternitie and the Sonne hath purchased for them in time that the Holy Ghost effects in them He applyes the bloud of Christ for the remission of sinnes he writes the law in our hearts he teacheth us he washeth us from our filthinesse and comforteth us in our sadnes supports us in our faintings and guides us in our wandrings He that effects these things for us is there said to make a Covenant with us Thus God personally considered Father Sonne and Holy Ghost are in Covenant with us 2. As there is sufficiency in this promise so also a propriety to all the faithfull Therefore it is said not onely I will be God but I will be thy God and so every faithfull soule may say God is my God 1. They have a right in him 2. They have a possession of him First They have a right in him The name God in the promise is a name or title of relation as the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vir which signifie not onely a man in generall but a man with speciall relation to such a woman as he hath by Covenant betrothed to himselfe So here the name God it notes forth the relation in which God stands to us Hence it is said he is not ashamed to be called their God Heb. 11.16 Therefore when he had made a Covenant with Abraham he called himselfe the God of Abraham and afterwards the God of Isaac the God of Jacob the God of Israel As a woman may say of him to whom shee is married this man is my husband so may every faithfull soule say of the Lord he is my God Secondly They have possession of him He doth impart and communicate himselfe unto them in his holinesse in his mercy in his truth in the sense of his grace and goodnesse He doth not onely shew himselfe unto them but communicate himselfe unto them Hence it is said 1 Joh. 1.3 1 Joh. 1.3 Wee have fellowship with the Father c. and Christ is said to come and sup with them Rev. 3.20 Rev. 3.20 and to kisse them with the kisses of his mouth Cant. 1.1 2. And to be neare to them in all that they call upon him for Deut. 4.7 Deut. 4.7 It is true we have here but the first fruits the earnest peny a little part of that fulnesse which shall be revealed because we live by faith and by promise more then by sense and sight And thence it is that sometimes Gods owne people seeme to feele God departed from them as Isa 45.15 Isai 45.15 65.15 Yet they enjoy God still even in such desertions First In regard of his Grace pardoning their failings Secondly In his power sustaining Thirdly In his grace sanctifying them Fourthly In all these they have a sure pledge of a more full communion with him when the fulnesse of time is come Reason The reason why the Lord promiseth to give himselfe to his people is because a reasonable creature can be made blessed no other way then by enjoying of God himself It is not all the other things of the world that can make man happy but onely
but legall Christians and legall Preachers as allowed this way All her assurance was from revelation it was revealed unto her that shee was one of the Elect of God and shee knew all things by immediate revelation from above but I fear she knows not that her glorious revelations were but Satanicall delusions Let her damned heresies shee fell into denying the resurrection c. and the just vengeance of God by which she perished terrifie all her seduced followers from having any more to doe with her leaven which shee spred among them Beware of her sinne least yee perish in her plague Vse 2. Is there a condition of the Covenant Then let this provoke us all who look for the blessing which it brings to be faith●ull with God in keeping our Covenant with him take heed we fall not short of the condition least we be deprived of the blessing this is that which the Apostle teaches us Heb. 4.1 Seeing we have a promise left us of entering into his rest there is the blessing promised let us feare least through unbeliefe any of us should be deprived there is the condition required The words through unbeliefe are not in the Text expressed but they are evidently implyed as appears both by the coherence with the third Chapter and by that which followes Chap. 4.2 To be deprived of such a blessing is a heavy losse such as can never be recompenced and the preventing of this losse so far as concernes us is by keeping of our Covenant which the Lord commands us to walk in If we forsake the condition we forsake the promise and therefore it is also that when God took Abraham into a Covenant with him he did not only tell Abraham what he would be unto him a God to blesse him but he brings Abraham to walk in Covenant with him Thou also shalt keep my Covenant saith the Lord Gen. 17.9 Thou shalt walk before me and bee upright Gen. 17 1. When God takes us into Covenant with him we are said to be brought into the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20. to teach us that now we must look at our selves as tyed and bound unto God in a Covenant never to be broken we are not now any longer at our own liberty to walke as we list but must observe our Covenant to walk therein when we walk so that we may truly say before the Lord our heart is not turned back from thee neither have we dealt falsely with thee in thy Covenant as it in Psal 44.17 18 this keeps the heart in a comfortable expectation of the blessed hope which is set before us Thus Paul I have kept the faith I have finished my course and now henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4.7 8. Let us carefully walk in the condition and then the promise will be sure not only sure in it self but su●e to us 2 Pet. 1.10 These bonds of the Covenant are not like the fetters of a prison they are like the pleasing bonds of wedlock vincula nuptiarum which every one gladly enters into Oh let us love these bonds give up both our hands unto the Lord yea and our hearts also to be bound in them for ever these are sweet bonds they work no griefe seek not therefore to break them Psal 2. nor cast them from you say not we will be our own and walk by our will such lawlesse and licentious spirits as will be at liberty they shall be at liberty to their wo they shall have such a liberty as Jeremy threatned to the rebellious Jewes a liberty to the sword to the famine and to the pestilence Jer. 34. a liberty to goe to hell to their eternall destruction a liberty with a curse granted unto them in wrath which shall end in chaines of everlasting darknesse and bring them into that prison from whence there is no going out Therefore let all such as look for the blessing and life promised in the Covenant Let them walk faithfully in the condition of it and in this way expect the mercy which is promised Thus wee have shewed First That there is a condition of the Covenant Secondly Why the Lord hath put a condition unto it 3. The third point follows to shew what the condition is which though it hath been obiter mentioned before yet is now to be spoken of more particularly The condition then of the Covenant of Grace is faith Rom. 4.16 Rom. 10.9 10. If thou believest in the Lord Jesus thou shalt be saved so Acts 18.31 Joh. 3.16 hence in Rom. 3.27 The Gospel is called the Law of Faith because as the Law of works doth put works as the condition of that Covenant so the Gospel puts faith as the condition of the new Covenant Quest But why is faith made the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. The blessing of life promised is not in our selves but in Christ Christ is life and he which hath the Sonne hath hath life and he which hath not the Son hath not life 1 Joh. 5.12 We are dead Colos 3.3 and our Works are dead Heb. 9.14 there is no life in them they cannot bring life unto them that doe them nor can wee quicken our own soules but Christ is the life of men Joh. 1.4 Colos 3.4 and the way to receive Christ and the life which is in him is only by faith Ioh. 1.12 unbeliefe rejects Christ and puts him away But faith as an hand puts forth it selfe to receive him in whom our life is If we had life in our selves and could have found it in our own works it had then been needlesse to appoint faith as the condition of the Covenant but being that both we our selves are dead in sinne and our works are dead works nothing but death to be found in either therefore it s required that wee believe in Christ that we may receive life from him 2. The condition of the law is now become impossible unto us through the infirmity of our flesh Rom. 8.3 and therefore the Apostle saith that the Law cannot possibly give life Gal. 3.21 Therefore the Lord would go that way with us no more the Lord saw by Adam what would be the fruit of that condition if we had been put upon the same as Adam was we should have done as he did we should have shewed our selves men like men transgressing the Covenant as Hoseah speaks Hos 6.7 This condition being above our ability to performe the Lord hath in goodnesse appointed another which is possible through grace to be fulfilled by us having now received a spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 It is now given us to believe Phil. 1.29 this is possible 3. It is by faith that it might be by grace Rom. 4.16 The Covenant is stablished upon the condition of faith that it might appeare to be by grace that wee obtain the blessing the condition must answer the nature of the Covenant therefore being a Covenant of grace the
heaven looking for grace and mercy according to Iehoshaphats speech Our eyes are towards thee 2 Chron. 20. It hungers and thirsts after grace but feares it shall never be satisfied it feeles a need and faine would have but sence of unworthinesse consciousnesse of manifold sinnes the sentence of the Law like the thundering and lightning at Mount Sinai all of them being sharpned by Satans working in them and with them doe strike such a fear into the heart as was in Israel then that though desires be stirring and working yet hope is very feeble causing us to doe as Israel did there who though they heard the Lord say I am the Lord your God yet the terror of the thunder made them to stand afar off and so we we hear the Lord offering to be our God in covenant with us but such are the discouragements that we dare not come near to seek after the grace which is revealed Hitherto therefore the mind of the poor sinner desiring to bee in Covenant with God is unquiet within it selfe hurried too and fro finding no rest it heares of peace with God but feels it not but in stead of peace finds trouble feare doubtings discouragements to keep it off from the way of peace faith being yet yong and faint hath much adoe to sustain the heart in any hope that it sink not down in discouragement But yet though it bee weak it will be doing what it is able setting the minde to consider the promises and encouragements which God hath given us in his word how hee invites all to come unto him even every one that thirsts Esay 55. telling us That whosoever comes unto him he will not cast away Joh. 6.37 And hence while the minde is possessed with these things because so great a businesse as making a Covenant of peace with the high God and about so great an affaire as the life and salvation of our soule cannot be transacted in a tumult Therefore 4. In the fourth place faith takes the soule aside and carries it into some solitary place that there it may be alone with it selfe and with God with whom it hath to doe This businesse and multitude of other occasions cannot be done together and therefore the soule must be alone that it may the more fully commune with it selfe and utter it selfe fully before the Lord Thus the poore Church in the time of her affliction when the Lord seemed to hide himselfe from her shee sate alone as she speaks Lament 3.28 29. and Jer. 15.17 I sate alone because of thy plague The way of the Lord is prepared in the Desert Esay 40.3 when the Lord will come to the soule and draw it into communion with himselfe he will have his way hereto prepared in the Desert not in the throng of a City but in a solitary Desert place he will allure us and draw us into the Wildernesse from the company of men when he will speak to our heart and when he prepares our heart to speak unto him Hoseah 2. Not that such a one doth despise or neglect the fellowship of Gods people but he now sees and knows full well that his help is not in man and therefore waits not upon the sonnes of Adam Mich. 5.7 He is glad to hear of any hope and how others have beene succoured and pulled out of the like distresse c. but though he hath an eare open unto these and the like helps yet the soule cannot rest in them but must retire it selfe and get alone where it may think its full and satisfie it self e in thoughts of its own estate and of the offers and promises of Grace which God hath made to such lost sinners And whiles the soule is thus alone with it selfe and with God sometimes thinking of its own misery and sinne sometimes of the Lords mercy now presented in such and such promises sometimes calling to minde how others have found favour with God notwithstanding their sinnes sometimes thinking what should move the Lord thus to invite us and call us unto him and to give us these desires after him why thinks the soule should the Lord doe thus if there were no hope that he would receive me whiles I say the soule being alone is thus exercised in these thoughts at length the fire kindles so as the soule can now rest no longer but a spirit of faith being within like fire in the bones the heart hitherto having beene as a Wine-vessell which hath had no vent yet now the spirit within compels him to open his lips and to utter before the Lord the meditations of his heart And therefore 5. In the fifth place the soule resolves now to go to the throne of Grace suing for Grace proving whether the Lord will bee gracious and mercifull to accept of a reconciliation faith speaks within as they did in Jonah 3.9 who can tell whether the Lord will return c. and as Amos 5.15 It may be the Lord may yet be mercifull such an one cannot yet say that he will yet knowes not but he may be gracious and therefore doth as those lepers in 2 King 7.3 who knowing that they were sure to perish if they sate still resolved to try what might befall them in going into the Camp of the Aramites and as Esther who would try whether the King would hold out his golden Sceper towards her yea or no so the poore sinner knowing how it is with him and thinking hee must perish if he thus continue and hearing also such gracious invitations c. thereupon resolves to goe and seek the Lord begging Grace and acceptance before him Doth the Lord say seek yee my face the heart answers within Lord I will seek thy face Doth the Lord say Come unto me the heart answereth Behold we come unto thee for thou art the Lord our God Ier. 3.22 And now the soule betakes it selfe unto God sending up complaints against it selfe with lamentations for its own sinfull rebellions accompanyed with strong cryes to heaven with sighes and groanes of Spirit which cannot be expressed it confesseth with grief and bitter mourning all former iniquities smites upon the thigh with repenting Epharim lies down at Gods foot-stoole putting its mouth in the dust acknowledging Gods righteousnesse if he should condemn and cast off for ever and yet withall pleads for Grace that it may be accepted as one of his It sayes unto God Lord I have nothing to plead why thou maist not condemn me but if thou wilt receive me thy mercy shall appeare in me thou maist shew forth all thy goodnesse take away therefore all mine iniquities and receive mee graciously Hoseah 14.3 It pleads Gods promise Lord thou hast said thou wilt be gracious Lord make good this word to the soule of thy servant be my God my mercifull God and make me thy servant thus the soule lies at the throne of Grace and pleads for Grace 6. As faith is thus earnest in suing to God for Grace and
will be sanctified in them Levit. 10.3 but without holinesse we pollute his name Ezek. 36. it is not sanctified in us 7. The seasons and times we live in call for holinesse these are dayes of grace wherein we enjoy all the holy things of God more aboundantly then in former times to the end that we might abound in all the holy graces of the spirit The Lord gives us his holy ordinances that we might be sanctified by them being changed into the similitude of the same holiness This argument the Apostle useth Rom. 13.11 And this reason should move us the more because the greater the light is in which we live the more evident are the blots and blemishes which are in us moats in the Sun-beame being more conspicuous then beames are in the dark therefore as the dayes we live in be dayes of light so let us walk as children of light shining forth as lights in the midst of a perverse and corrupt generation Phil. 2. 8. Consider a time of separation must come wherein the Lord Jesus will divide and separate the holy from the unholy as a shepheard separates the sheep from the goats Matth. 25. ●t will be good to be found among the Saints at that day and to stand in the assembly of the righteous Wo then unto all those that are secluded from them to all those that must stand without and be amongst dogges and Devils having no fellowship with Christ nor with his Saints It s good therefore to be holy it will be found so then wo unto the prophane and ungodly at that day And for our selves here the people of New-England we should in a speciall manner labour to shine forth in holinesse above other people we have that plenty and aboundance of ordinances and meanes of grace as few people enjoy the like we are as a City set upon an hill in the open view of all the earth the eyes of the world are upon us because we professe our selves to be a people in Covenant with God and therefore not only the Lord our God with whom we have made Covenant but heaven and earth Angels and men that are witnesses of our profession will cry shame upon us if wee walke contrary to the Covenant which wee have professed and promised to walk in If we open the mouthes of men against our profession by reason of the scandallousnes of our lives we of all men shall have the greater sinne To conclude Let us study so to walk that this may be our excellency and dignity among the Nations of the world among which we live That they may be constrained to say of us only this people is wise an holy and blessed people that all that see us may see and know that the name of the Lord is called upon us and that we are the seed which the Lord hath blessed Deut. 28.10 Esay 61.9 There is no people but will strive to excell in some thing what can we excell in if not in holinesse If we look to number we are the fewest If to strength we are the weakest If to wealth and riches we are the poorest of all the people of God through the whole world we can not excell nor so much as equall other people in these things and if we come short in grace and holinesse too we are the most despicable people under heaven our worldly dignitie is gone if we lose the glory of grace too then is the glory wholly departed from our Israel and we are become vile strive we therefore herein to excell and suffer not this crown to be taken away from us Be we an holy people so shall we be honourable before God and precious in the eyes of his Saints And thus also of the properties of the Covenant Now the God of peace that brought againe the Lord Iesus the great shepheard of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting Covenant make us perfect in all good works to doe his will working in us that which is pleasing in his sight through Iesus Christ to whom be prayse for ever and ever Amen FINIS THE TABLE A ABsolute promises refresh the soul 290 the use of them 289 How they agree with the conditionall 292 both one in substance 291. Acts of faith two 289 they enable to walk with God 315 seq they only are the conditions of the Covenant 298 why so ibid. Actually none in the state of salvation before he believe 322 nor justified till Christ be Actually his 324. Actuall holinesse what 378. Affections sanctified signes of true sanctification 239. Agreement in both Covenants 50 51 in the condition and freenesse of grace in the Covenant 292. All-sufficiency in God to his people 130 the reasons of it ib. he is All-sufficient in two respects 132 how he is so 133 he is so from himselfe 136 137. Assurance works a holy security 250. Ark the want thereof promised as a blessing under the Gospel 5. B Beliefe none actually justified before he Believe 322. Binding the Covenant is so 282 293 294. Benefits that arise to the Saints from the Covenant 147 seq from the knowledge of the Conant 119 120 the things which are to come are the great things promised in the Covenant 277 278. Blessings the Covenant the fountaine of them 342 pledges of better things 262 how God makes it appeare they are from himselfe 138 139 why God doth so 141 142. Blood of Christ taken two wayes 229 of the Covenant what it signifieth 229. Burthen the Covenant of Grace under the Old Testament so 106 we are free from that Burthen ibid. C Calling wrought by the commandement 331. Captivity applyed to three things 2 3. the Iewes at this day in Captivity 3. Christ a Covenant between the Father and him 29 30. his name taken two wayes 36. darkly revealed in the old Testament 108 the righteousnesse of the Saints 324 vid. Mediatour Circumcision considered two wayes 59. Cleane how to become cleane from sinne 241. Condition what it is in the Covenant of Grace 295 it excludes not freenesse of Grace 291 336. that it is in the Covenant 280 proved from the nature of it 281 282. it hinders not the free grace of the Covenant 323. Contempt of the Gospel what a great sinne 10 11. reasons of it 12. Commandement our calling wrought by it 331 of the Law and Gospel how different 332. Conversion the obedience of the soule to God at its conversion 310 vid. Iewes Covenant between God Christ 29 30 between man and God proved 31 32. the danger of breaking it 49 a comfort to believers 48 49. the Lord conveys life and blessednesse by it to us 26 28. why called a Testament 283 why called a Covenant of salt 368 why so few embrace it 376 the certainty of it 364 it is a storehouse of blessings 342 it is sure 360 why so ibid. It is conditionall 285 the necessity of entring into a Covenant with God 43 44. what we are to doe to get into Covenant
with God 44 45 46 wherein both Covenants agree 50 51. wherein they differ 52 56 70 73 75. how faith in both differ 53 54. both Covenants considered two wayes 97 the Covenant of works requires faith 52 53. why the Lord conveys life and blessednesse to us by the Covenant 26 27 28 the Covenant of Grace the same in all ages 102 103 more powerfully dispensed since then before the comming of Christ 112. D Demeanour of Fath after prayer 307 308. Differences between the two Covenants fifteen 52 between faith in both covenants 53 54 between both in requiring works 55 between the Commandement of Law and Gospel 332. Discontent● the causes of them 134. Dispositions sanctified tokens of true sanctification 239 240. Draw nothing in us to Draw God into Covenant with us 353. E Effects of the Spirit of Grace in the soul 88 of true sanctification 235 236 237 of light in the soul 380 Effect of the Covenant is to work holinesse 373 seq England an admonition to it to receive the Grace offered 14. Encouragement to faith 261. Enmity in our nature against God 353. When it is that we make grace our Enemy 95 96. Evangelicall condition excludes not free grace 326. Everlasting the Covenant is 367 why so 368 the blessings of the Covenant are so ibid. how the first Covenat is so 369. Exalted God is to be Exalted chiefly 346. how he is to be Exalted 348 when hee is ibid. F Faith the condition of the Covenant of Grace 295 why it is ibid. how closeth with the Covenant 302. encouragements to it 261 two acts of it 289 290 not commanded in the Law 331 proved ibid. its workings 304 its weaknesse 303 its earnestnesse in prayer unto God 307. its demeanour after prayer as God answers or not answers 308 309. Looks on the Lords Government as a mercifull government 312 reconciles the heart unto God 313 enables to walk with God ibid. when the life of faith is most seen 314 faith of Christ why so called 329 It is a strengthening grace 317 gets assisting strength from Christ 313 We are not actually justified before it comes 322 the reasons of it ibid. Fall why the Saints cannot fall away 248. Father God the Father in Covenant with us 124 with Christ 29 30. Forgivenesse of sin the benefit of it 164 why the Lord doth forgive sinnes 165 166 what a man is to doe that he may be forgiven 169 signes when a mans sinnes are forgiven 171 172. Freenesse of Gods grace 81 how the condition and the freenesse of grace agree in the Covenant 292 The condition in the Covenant excludes not the freenesse of grace 291 how it appeares that the Covenant is free 354 why it is so 356 the freenesse of grace in the Covenant 353. G Gentiles beleeving are the seed of Abraham 17. God alone satisfies a sanctified soule ●38 his things great 346. Glorying twofold 87 what glorying is ibid. the Covenant of grace teacheth to glory in God alone 85 88 holinesse the glory of a people 381. Gospel vayled in the Ceremoniall Law 330 the commandement of Faith a commandement of the Gospel Government of the Lord when we are under it 153 154 a mercifull government 312. Grace habituall may be a tryall of our state 231 232 it appeares in cleansing us from filthinesse of sinne 181 why the Lord would have his Covenant to bee of free Grace 356 the free grace of God in pardoning of sinne 159 the infinitenesse of it 160 Faith a strengthning Grace 317 the Covenant at mount Sinai a Covenant of Grace 65 66 the performance of the promise of Grace is Grace 355 the freenesse of Grace in entring into Covenant with us 353. H Habituall holinesse 376 Habit of Faith not the condition of the Covenant 298 reasons of it ibid. Heaven Canaan a type of it 107. Heart sanctified finds no peace but in the way that 's holy 236. Holy Ghost in Covenant with us 124 the Covenant a holy Covenant 373 why it is holy 374. Holinesse what 375 a twofold holinesse ibid. signes of a true 379 it s the glory of a people 381 the perfection of our Christian state 381 it s wrought by the Covenant 373. I Iewes after their conversion shall continue faithfull 7 shall inhabit their own land again 16 their conversion 17 18 reasons of it 19 two hindrances of their conversion 20 why wee should pray for their conversion 20. Iustice without mercy in the Covenant of Works 77. Iustification considered three wayes 322 sanctification an evidence of it 183 it goes not before faith 322 the reasons of it Ibid. K Knowledge of the Covenant what benefit 119 120. Know whether we be in Covenant 378. L Law considered two wayes 58 Ceremoniall a Gospel vailed 330 commandeth not faith 333 the condition of it impossible to be fulfilled 295. Law-Giver who and how 328. Libertines mistake the Covenant 379. Light the effects of it in the soule 380. Life of Faith what it is 314 when it is most seen ibid. Love of God to us should comfort us in the enjoyment of lesser blessings 273 274. M Man in Covenant with God two wayes 361 man seeks not God but God man 353. Mediator who 68 69 the Covenant of Grace given by a Mediatour 66 Chirst in his Type a Mediatour of that Covenant given at Mount Sinai 62 wee are not to goe to God but by a Mediatour 67 68 Christ that Mediatour 68 69 Christ an everlasting Mediatour 370 the comfort the mediation of Christ affords the Saints 69 70. Morall Law how it leads to Christ 330 Motives to holinesse 330 seq Mover in making the Covenant who first 299 353. N Nature of man in enmity against God 353. New why the Covenant of Grace is so called 195 New-England 14. O Obedience of the soule to God at its first conversion 310. Old why the Covenant of Grace is so called 105. Outward blessings pledges of better things 262 what the Outward blessings are that God promiseth his servants 264. why the Lord keeps his servants sometimes short in Outward things 263 in what manner God premiseth Outward blessings 165 they are part of the Covenant 267 they may be prayed for 166 God is the giver of them 271 272 the causes why the Saints are often deprived of them 267 seq when Outward things are blessings and tokens of Gods love 272 273 Outward blessings should make us serve God with the Outward man 274. P Peace cannot be wrought in the soul by the Covenant of works 90 91 a sanctified soul can finde no Peace but in that that 's holy 236. People of God are promised to have God himselfe 122 123 reasons of it 126. Person God first acceps the Person then the sacrifice 70 71. Personally God personally in Covenant with us 1●4 Perseverance in grace the Certainty of it 245 246 the reasons of it 246 247. Preservation in the state of grace part of the Covenant 243 244. Performance of the promise o● grace is free grace 353. Perfection of a Christian state what 281. Positive holinesse what 376. Possession of honour uncertaine 366 true grace is an everlasting Possession 255. Professours severall sorts of them hollow-hearted 256 257. Promises absolute the use of them 289 conditionall are of free grace 326 proved ibid. promises to encourage the people to return from Babylon 2. Q Qualifications may be tokens of Iustification 234 Qualifications in the promises when we are to make use of them 358. R Reasonable it is that God should rule over his people 311. R●concilement of the heart unto God is by faith 313. Relative holinesse what 375. Righteousness that justifies what it is 322. Riches of grace opened 126 Riches uncertaine 366. S Salt why the Covenant is so called 368. Saints who is their strength 254. Sanctifi●a●ion twofold 227 it s a blessing that will make those that receive it blessed 177 why so 178 179 it is an evidence of justification 183 Sanctification more manifest to the soul then Iustification 233 the reason of it ibid. the effects of Sanctification 235 236 237. It makes wary against staining sins 237 it makes us sensible of our weaknesses 23 some reall work in the soul proves not a reall Sanctification 228. Security that is wrought by assurance what it is 241. Seed of Abraham double 35 36. Separation between Iew and Gentile ended at Christs Ascension 97. Sinne a wrong done to God 160 Sinne turns good things into evill 164 Sinne the greatest evill why 163 God chuseth sometime the worst of sinners 354 why he doth so 355 Sins cannot make voyd the Covenant of Grace 84 85. when it is that Sinne makes voyd the Covenant of Grace 95 96. Son the Son of God in Covenant with us 124. Spirit whether the Spirit of Law or Grace dwels within us 88 how to know when our comfort is from the Spirit of grace 89. Storehouse of rich blessings what is 342. Streng●h of the Saints who is 254. Substance the absolute and conditionall promises one in substance 29. T Temporary blessings of the Covenant 259. Testament why the Covenant called a Testament 283 284. The old Testament revealed the Covenant of Grace darkly 107 why so 109 it revealed it only to the Iewes 115 116. Thankfulnesse 118. Things of God great things 343. True taken two wayes 228. Truth of sanctification signes of it 235 seq Truth of holinesse signes of it 379. Trust encouragements to Trust in God 261. Tryals of our estate may be made by the conditions of the Covenant 288 289. Tryall of our estate may be made by habituall grace 231 232. V Vnbeliefe the danger of it 340 unbeliefe dishonours God 363 it shames us 362 it weakens our comfort 363. Vncertaine riches are uncertaine 366. Vnworthinesse hinders not the freenesse of Gods grace 357. Vse of absolute promises what 289. W Worst of sinners chosen of God 353. Work of Faith what 314 how Works are considered in the Covenant of grace 3●4 The Covenant of grace requires Works 35 The Covenant at Mount Sinai not a Covenant of Works proved 58 A man that is under the Covenant of Works cannot attaine sanctification 184 the reasons of it ibid. Our Works are dead works 295 good Works the fruit of the Tree of faith 9 justification cannot be attained by the Works of the Law 226. Z Zeale for God is an honour to God 149. FINIS
seemes to have some speciall emphasis and force in it when it 's said As for thee also thou shalt be saved by the bloud c. I have sent forth thy prisoners c. He had told them before in verse 9th that Christ shall come then in verse 10. he tells them the Gentiles shall be called and then addes in verse 11. As for thee also thou shalt be saved c. As if he should say though thou O Sion for thy rejecting of Christ come unto thee shalt for a time be forsaken and cast as a prisoner into the pit into miserable thraldome yet at length even thou also shalt be delivered and brought back into glorious libertie for a while thou must be a poore prisoner or captive in the pit of the prison and the Gentiles set in the best roome but yet thou also shalt againe be brought out of the pit in which thou art holden Thus saith the Apostle in Rom. 11.23 Though for the present the Gentiles be taken in and Jewes broken off yet shall they also be graffed in again The Apostle putting in the word also in the same emphaticall manner as it is here used by the Prophet In the words are two things First The present estate and misery of the Jewes they are as prisoners in a pit Secondly A promise of restitution they shall be set free First They are prisoners in the pit of the prison-house they are now brought low they were sometimes the onely people It was said of them Blessed art thou O Israel Deut. 33.29 No people like thy people Israel 2 Sam. 7.23 But now they are become a people scattered and peeled spoyled and troden under-feet sometimes they had the high places of the earth in possession dwelling in a Land which was the glory of all lands but now they are brought downe into the lower parts of the earth prisoners in the pit they are a captive an enslaved people being made as a very footstoole for the enemy to tread upon This have they brought upon themselves for their sinfull rejecting of Christ and putting from them the Gosp●l of salvation which was preached unto them Christ came unto them but they received him not Joh. 1.11 The Gospel was offered them but they would none of it Act. 13.46 and therefore the Lord hath also rejected them making them the lowest and basest of all people Observ See hence what the contempt of Christ and the Gospel brings a people unto where the Gospel comes and is received it magnifies a Nation sets it up on high it lifts them up to heaven in dignitie as Christ spake of Capernaum Mat. 11. It ennobles a people as it is said of the Beraeans that they were a more noble people then those of Thessalonica because they did with such readinesse high esteeme embrace the Gospel when it was brought unto them Act. 17.11 But on the other side when it is despised God will staine the glory of that people and make them to be despised and the greater the advancement was the greater will the abasement be the contempt of it brings utmost misery it finds us in misery when it comes unto us but when it leaves us being despised by us our misery is increased by it and made double to what it was before though we were prisoners then yet wee were prisoners of hope Zech. 9.12 But when we put it away then we are left without hope without helpe This sin is the sin of all sins it hath the guilt of all other sins in it and addes more unto them this is the killing sin the destroying and damning sin Ioh. 3.19 This brings the greatest and utmost wrath in 1 Thes 2.16 it 's said of the Jewes that for this sin the wrath of God comes upon them to the uttermost It 's a sweet speech of Paul in Rom. 5.20 That where sin abounds there grace aboundeth much more but it is as terrible on the other side that where grace doth abound in the offers of it by the Gospel there sin and wrath by sin abounds much more also where that grace is disesteemed therefore it is that Christ tells the Jews If he had not come unto them they should have had no sin but now they have no excuse nor cloake for their sin Joh. 15.22 The sins of harlots whoremongers swearers drunkards murderers are lesse then this sin of rejecting the Gospel of Christ Mat. 21. Publicans and harlots are better then they the filthinesse of Sodome and Gomorrah is knowne they were exceeding sinners against the Lord Gen. 13.13 their sins were not of the common sort but exceeded and therefore they perished not by the common visitation of all men but their judgement was exemplary to stand as a warning to all ages a fire not blowne by man as it is in Job 20.26 consumed them the fire of God fell upon them from heaven This was terrible and yet their sin was lesse then this sin of rejecting the Gospel and their condemnation shall be more easie in the day of Judgement then theirs shall be which receive not the grace of the Gospel when it is brought unto them Mat. 10. Heathens shall perish in their ignorance and those that dyed under the light of the Law shall have heavier punishment but those that neglect the grace of the Gospel shall exceed both when God punished the wickednesse of the Jewes before Christs coming it was a very heavie plague which was brought upon them it was an evill and an onely evill Ezek. 7.5 It was such a plague that under the whole heavens had not been the like as was done unto Jerusalem Dan. 9.12 And yet afterwards when Christ had come to them and was rejected by them his wrath was then more heavie Oh the miseries which then they endured then God stirred up all his anger and gave way to his wrath even to the uttermost then he fulfilled that which he had afore spoken Deut. 32.23 He spent his plagues and arrowes upon them as if he would emptie the treasure of all his plagues which he had laid up in store in executing them upon that people And this the Lord Jesus foretold them while he was with them Mat. 22.7 and forewarned them of what would follow if having the vineyard in their possession they did not yeeld the fruit of it he told them the Lord would miserably destroy those husbandmen Mat. 21.41 One of our translations reads it He will cruelly destroy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And certainly the Lord never shewed so great severitie against any people as he will doe against those which despise the message of grace brought by the Gospel even as that people is now become a spectacle of wrath above all people When the Scripture threatens a woe it notes the extremitie of that misery which is to come but here is woe upon woe threatned against this sin woe to thee Bethsaida woe to thee Chorazin woe to those places where the Gospel comes and is
more cleare and evident the light now is marvellous it is as the Sun shining at noone-day Hence Rom. 16.25 26. Rom. 16.25 26. the Gospel is called the revelation of the ministery which was kept secret since the foundation of the world but it is now made manifest c. Though it was revealed before yet it was but darkly but now it is revealed more clearly since the coming of our Saviour Christ so also Ephes 3 4 5. Ephes 3.4 5. and Colos 2.26 Colos 2.26 Consider the truth of this in some particulars First Consider the promise of eternall life it was darkly covered over not clearly promised to them The promise of eternall life is very rarely in expresse termes mentioned in the old Testament I know but one place which is in Dan. 12.2 Dan. 12.2 where plaine mention is made of life eternall It was shadowed out to them in the promise of inhabiting in the Land of Canaan which was a shadow of eternall life so the threatning of eternall death was typed out by the threatning of exclusion out of the Lords Land Hosea 9.3 Hosea 9.3 When they should be driven into captivity it was a type of their sending into hell if they did not returne to walke with him in his Covenant And hence are those promises They shall inherite the land and dwell in the earth Psal 37.11 Psal 37.11 Not as if that were all they were to looke for but because it was the type of another and better inheritance in heaven This was the cause that made Jacob Gen. 49.29 Gen. 49.29 give that charge to his sonnes that they should not bury him in Aegypt but carry him into the land of Canaan And Joseph Gen. 50.24 25. tooke an oath of his brethren that they should carry his bones with them And why was this done but because they looked at that Land as more then an earthly possession taking it as a type of heaven and by giving that charge they testified their faith in the promise of God concerning the possession of life eternall Therefore also it was that Abraham though he indured many troubles and injuries in the land of promise and had time to have returned into his own Country yet he would not Heb. 11.15 Heb. 11.15 because he looked at that as a land of promise and a type of the rest that remained for him in the kingdome of God Thus was the promise of eternall life obscurely propounded Secondly Consider the revealing of Christ either the person of Christ or his offices and wee shall see that they were darkly propounded unto them in respect of what they are to us Christ was but shadowed out to them in types and figures and dark prophesies Concerning his person it was revealed unto them that he should be God as Isai 9.6 Isai 9.6 where he is called the mighty God and also that he should be man and therefore said to be borne Isa 9.6 But how he should be both God and man in one person was very darkly revealed Which made the Jewes that they could not answer to that question how Christ should be both Lord and sonne to David So for his offices his Mediatorship was typed out by Moses his being between God and the people his Priesthood typed out by Melchisedek among the Canaanites and Aaron among the Jews and his sacrifice by their sacrifices his Propheticall office shadowed to them by Moses who revealed the minde of God to the people Therefore saith Moses Deut. 18.18 Deut. 18.18 A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you like unto me which is applyed unto Christ Acts 3.22 Acts 3.22 His Kingly office typed out in the kingdome of David and Solomon Luk. 1.31 Luk. 1.31.32 God shall give him the kingdome of his Father David But how darke these things were unto them you may perceive by the speeches of the Disciples unto Christ who knew not how he should execute those offices they knew not that he should dye they dreamt of an earthly kingdome they saw Christ under a vaile but wee see him with open face 2 Cor. 3. 2 Cor. 3. end Thirdly The benefits that come by Christ were not so clearly made knowne to them as they are to us Justification was signified by the sprinkling of the bloud of the sacrifice Exod. 24.7 8. Exod. 24 7 8. So sanctification was typed out by the water of purification The benefits which are so clearly revealed unto us that Christ is our wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption were but darkly propounded unto them So that the light now is become like the light at noone day the light that they had was but like the dawning of the day or the light of the starres Hence is that of Christ Mat. 13.16 17. Blessed are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare c. Quest Why was the Covenant revealed more darkly then and more clearly now 1. Answ Because the work of our redemption was not then transacted and accomplished the things were not then passed as now they be and therefore as the light of the Sun is lesse before its rising then afterward so Christ before his rising in the world was not so fully knowne as since 2. The Church was then in its minority and infancy but now it is of full age Gal. 4.1 2. Galat. 4.1 2. Therefore as a Father gives some hints of his purpose and will to his childe when he is under age but makes knowne all his minde to him when he is growne up so dealt the Lord with his Church then as with children c. 3. It was meet that this glory should be reserved to Christ himselfe he being the great Prophet of the Church that he should reveale more to the world then ever was knowne before It was not meet that all should be revealed before his coming but that he should have the glory of revealing those deepe things which were hid with God making them knowne to his Church and people And therefore they were more darkly revealed before Onely this observe that the further the times were from Christs coming the lesse light they had and the nearer to Christ the more light sprung up The promise to Eve was more darke more cleare to Abraham and still more cleare to David c. And the reason of this is First Because Christ is the light of the world Now as the Sunne the further it is from rising the lesse light it gives and the nearer to rising the more so did Christ the Sun of righteousnesse Secondly The more light was discovered neare the coming of Christ to stirre up the mind● of people to wait for Christ and his coming The more knowne the more desired Ignoti ●●lla c●pido the lesse knowne the lesse desired Thirdly Before the Law was given there was lesse sense of sin and therefore the lesse revelation of Christ But as the sense of sin increased by the
revelation of the Law so there was more cleare revelation of Christ to them Though at the best it was but darke in comparison of what it is now in the dayes of the New Testament This should teach us with thankfulnesse to accept and prize these dayes of the Sonne of man Vse wherein Chri●●●ath so clearly revealed the Covenant of his Grace to us that many Kings and Princes have desired to see the things that wee see c. Nay how many in other Nations doe desire to see the things that we see and yet cannot see them Abraham saw Christ but it was afarre off The Israelites saw him but he was then vailed But now wee see him with open face How may wee stand and admire this grace and say with the Disciples John 14. Lord why is it that thou wilt reveale thy selfe to us and not to the world Count it not a small mercy that wee have Christ revealed so clearly now more then formerly It is one of the great promises of God unto his Church as we may see Isai 11.9 Isai 11.9 That the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of God And Jerem. 31.34 That all shall know the Lord c. These are the dayes fore-spoken of wherein wee doe in a degree and measure see eye to eye Isai 52.8 though something more may be added in the conversion of the Jewes As God therefore promiseth it as a blessing so count it a blessing Christ taketh the vaile from before his face and saith Behold me behold me O yee sonnes of men Isai 65. Isai 65. Therefore First grow up in the knowledge of the covenant and of the blessings of it We should not now bee ignorant of what God hath promised on his part nor what he requires on our part If we have any intimation given us of a Legacy in some rich mans will O how carefull are we to enquire into it How much more should we labour to know this Testament Secondly labour also to grow setled in the doctrine which the covenant teacheth us not being carried away with every new fangled conceit but grounded in the truth which you have received Be children in malice but in knowledge and judgement be men of ripe age able to discerne between things that differ and to try all things holding fast that which is good Vnlesse we doe thus First we lose the benefit of the dayes of light in which we live if we be still ignorant of the covenant and of the benefits thereby to be received and live not by faith in them as good we had never heard them we take Gods grace in vain In vain should the Sunne rise and give light if wee shut our eyes and will not see it Secondly if we be still ignorant of the doctrine of the covenant and unsetled it argues a sinfull neglect and great contempt of the grace of God and of the light we enjoy and therefore as men open their windowes when the day appeareth though they had drawn their curtains before so let us open our eyes to discerne the doctrine of the grace of God Thirdly if any be now ignorant and ungrounded in the doctrine of grace it is a token of a dangerous estate therefore saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 4.4 If our Gospel be now hid it is bid to them that are lost in whom the God of this world c. And so for ungroundednesse see what the Apostle Peter saith 2 Pet. 3.16 2 Pet. 3.16 That they that are unstable and pervert the Scriptures doe it to their own destruction Seeing the doctrine of grace is so clearly manifested let us labour to know it and to be stablished therein that so we may turn neither to the right hand nor to the left Seeing the light of grace doth more clearly shine now then in Vse 2 dayes before let us therefore goe on in our way with more alacrity and cheerfulnesse of spirit we having the day-light shining to us and guiding us The light of the Lord is risen up on high to guide our feet into the way of peace Therefore as travellers though they walk heavily and uncomfortably whiles they are compassed with darknesse yet when light appeares they goe cheerfully so we that are pilgrimes and travellers should rejoyce that the day is come as they that sailed with Paul Acts 27. we should rejoyce in the light striving against all discouragements we meet withall and walking on cheerfully in the way that is set before us To teach us to walk more exactly inoffensively considering Vse 3 we have our way so plain before us It is no wonder if they that be in the dark stumble they cannot see the blocks that be in their way but they that walk in the day stumble not So it should be with us we should now labour to take heed of offences both of giving and taking offences causlesly John 11.9.10 Endeavour to walk inoffenso pede If we stumble it is not for want of light but of heedfulnesse Let us strive to walk evenly considering wee have more light then the Saints had formerly Labour to suppresse our inordinate passions and affections pride worldlinesse self-willednesse emulation keep these within these should be like the wild beasts of the field which retire to their dens when the Sunne ariseth they are afraid to bee seen in the light so these wild lusts of ours should not dare to appeare in these dayes of light they cannot stirre forth but the light will discover them sinne is now more conspicuous and more odious Let us therefore walk soberly modestly and orderly Thirdly the third difference in the manner of dispensation is in respect of power and efficacie The dispensation of the covenant works more powerfully and strongly now then in the dayes before Christs comming It was then more weak in the consciences of Gods people then now if we speak of the body of them Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 7.18.19 The commandement going before was disanulled by reason of the weaknesse of it It was not then simply and absolutely weak and unprofitable so that it could not communicate life and salvation to any but comparatively weak in respect of the lively and powerfull communication of it now Hence also Galat. 4.9 Gal. 4.9 they are called weak and beggerly rudiments The covenant then did not bring men to that perfection in grace as the new covenant doth And this was becau●e there was a lesse forcible influence of the Spirit accompanying the dispensation of the covenant then The spirit was not then given in that large measure as now because Christ was not then glorified Joh. 7.39 And because the spirit was given in a less measure therefore those ordinances were lesse profitable The liberall pouring out of the Spirit was reserved unto the time of Christs ascension to the end it might bee known that it is from Christ glorified that we doe receive the Spirit as John 16.7 If I goe not away