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

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the root there needs no more than a right understanding of the true and proper notion and manner of Christs redeeming us it is not by way of Solution but of Satisfaction Clearly thus our case to God is not properly that of debtors but that of criminal Subjects Gods aspect to usward not properly that of a Creditor but that of a Rector and Judge The person Christ sustained and the part he acted not in a strict sense that of a Surety paying the very debt in kind and so discharging a bond but that of a Mediator expiating our guilt and making reparations to Divine Justice another way than by the execution of the Law And indeed the very nature of a Law is such as it is quite impossible that the obligation either of its threatning or command should in a proper sense be fulfilled by any other than the very person threatned and commanded alius here makes aliud If another suffer the penalty the threatning is not fulfilled Nor if another performs the duty the command for the obligation as to punishment lies on the person threatned noxa caput sequitur and that to duty on the person commanded it cannot be fulfilled in kind by another but it ceases to be the same thing and becomes another th●ng from that in the Obligation yet it may be such another thing and Christs Righteousnesse both active and passive really is such as the Rector or Judge may accept of with honour and be satisfied with as if the very same thing had been suffered and done just in the same manner as the Law threatned and commanded it That Christ hath paid not the idem but tantundem i. e. not fulfilled the Law as for us in kind but satisfied it for us is most evident For 1. The Law obliged the sinners person to suffer Christ was no sinner 2. All men to suffer forasmuch as all had sinned Christ was but one man 3. The punishment due by Law was eternal Christ suffered but for a season and is entered into his glory thus Christ paid not the same thing that was in the Obligation but something equivalent thereunto This being obtain'd that the Lord Christ hath Redeemed us not by way of solution or discharging a Bond by payment in kind but by way of satisfaction or making amends to the injur'd justice of the Law It follows from the reason nature of the thing 1. That God pardons freely we are not only beholding to Christ for satisfying but to God too infinitely for accepting of any satisfaction at all he might have refused it he had done sinners no wrong if he had executed the rigour of the Law without hearkening to termes of Reconciliation Quite contrary a Creditor doth not pardon the debtor when the surety hath discharged the Bond by full payment in kinde the Debtor is beholding indeed to his friend the Surety but not at all to the Creditor who cannot refuse to cancel the Bond nay it were wrong and injustice in him if he did 2. That none hath or can have actual interest in or benefit by this Redemption but upon such termes as God and Christ have mutually compromised in and agreed to viz. the conditions of the Gospel-Covenant above mentioned See the answer to the third quere 1. The Reason hereof is partly from God the injur'd Law-giver of the world who seeing it was at his liberty to accept of satisfaction or no hath of necessity the right to make his own termes when and how far forth and in what manner and method he will condescend to admit the sinner to the actual benefit of Christs satisfaction 2. And partly too from Christ for as he is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Mediator between God and man a friend to both parties nay a person consisting of both natures the offended and offending he is engaged necessarily by vertue both of Office and person to espouse with equal tendernesse of regard he interests of both parties for he is really concerned in them both they are his concernments as well as theirs True indeed a Surety that dischargeth a Bond by full payment in kinde he sustaines and beares only the person of the Debtor minds only his indemnity doth what he doth upon his account and for his sake But our great Mediator must consult not only our impunity but his Fathers yea and his own honour and therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 get you hence all you that either yet never did or that do not now repent believe and conscientiously endeavour to obey here 's not the least jot of benefit for you in the case you are in from this Redemption for how infinite soever the merit of Christs satisfaction is it conferreth nothing actually upon any person that hath not actually a Gospel-claime and title to plead it before God The immediate effect actually resulting from Christs performance is the procuring the Gospel-Covenant to be ratified by his Father as a Law whereby sinners upon the termes propounded become reconcilable unto God actually it is of force to all that have but to none that want the conditions of it Now the keeping this Gospel-Covenant God expects from us in person though by the assistance of his Spirit which he hath promised to give to them that humbly and earnestly ask it of him Luke 11.1 To affirme that Christ hath kept the Gospel for us too is to utter the most self-contradicting blasphemy and absurdity imaginable as if he could repent or believe in himself free except or cancel our Obligation to obey the Moral Law by his own obeying it as if Christ had so done all that nothing remaines to be done on our part Such strange extreames do some men run into that to avoid Justification by works by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are as extravagant on the other hand thinking the grace of God cannot be free except the sinner become either a senselesse statue meerly passive or which is yet worse have a Writ of ease to be quite idle or wich is worst of all a Licence to sin by Prerogative Let the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chastise this insolence Rom. 6.15 Shall we sin because we are not under the Law but under grace God forbid If Christ had obeyed the Law for us in the sense of paying a debt or discharging a Bond the Apostles answer could not stand Rom. 3.31 Do we then make void the Law through faith yea we establish the Law When a believer breaks the Law he sins for sinne is the transgression of the Law nay he cannot break it wilfully but he breaks the very Gospel-Covenant one condition whereof is sincere obedience and the guilt of that sin lieth upon him unpardoned untill by hearty repentance and fresh applications by faith to the blood of sprinkling which are the only Titles good in Law the only Gospel-claimes to pardon he hath sued out a new pardon for actual Remission is only of past sins Rom. 3.25 according to the tenor of
no lesse concerned in the second than the first Table of the Law If David sin against Bathsheba her chastity or Vriah his life yet he must confesse unto God Against the have I sinned and wrought this wickednesse in thy sight however the trespasse is against man the transgression is against God the sin which is committed against God is to be only confessed unto God not unto man but the sin which is committed against man must be confessed unto God and likewise unto men to God alwayes who can pardon the eternal punishment to men ordinarily as when the Church is scandalized or the particular person is offended and damnified James 5.16 and in this last case restitution must be added to our confession Luke 19. Zacheus like where we have wronged any we must make acknowledgement and reparation and in all offences to men when we come before God we must consider whether our brother hath ought against us Mat. 5.24 and go and be reconciled the God that binds men to forgive till seventy times seven times binds the offendor so often to return and say I have offended Luke 17.4 The auricular confession of the Papists is vanity superstition and evil but particular acknowledgements of sin to God and sometimes to men is duty indispensable in vain doth Saul say to Samuel I have sinned whilst he never seeks to God for the pardon 3. Confession of sin and prayer for pardon must be free and not extorted The natural not forced language of the penitent the confession of constraint falleth equally under suspicion with the unrequired accusations of malice both which are frequently false true repentance doth convince of the sinfulnesse of sin and constraine the soule to confesse it with candor ingenuity and freedome as weary of it as the stomach of nauseous matter that it naturally without any co-action casts up Confession springs from the Saints as Elihu his plea for God against Job I am full of matter the Spirit of the Lord constraineth me saith he to Job Job 32.18 19 20. The confession of the wicked is constrained and no longer doth he cry to God than he is under the cudgel of his judgements or on the Rack of his own conscience so Pharaoh his plagues and Judas his anxiety may extort an I have sinned however the children of God must be sometimes pinched and whipped into their complaints yet their cry is natural and confessions free and voluntary a ready eccho to the least reproof Psal 141.5 and desiring that the righteous may smite and God shew them their iniquity 4. Confession and supplication must not be more free than full not straitned any more than extorted sin must be confest not only in general and in the lump with a Lord have mercy upon us miserable sinners but in its particular species and parts as Israel We have forsaken the Lord and served Baal in Judg. 10.10 and we have to all our sins added this evil to ask us a King to go about to change our Government 1 Sam. 12.19 not only open known hainous and flagitious offences but even secret and particular lusts David bewails and confesseth not only his murther executed on Uriah but his self-revenge intended against Nabal and the very cutting off the lap of Sauls garment not only sin simply in it self but with all its aggravations of time place manner occasion sinne must be taken up by the roots and spread before God in all its branches In iniquity was I conceived in sin brought forth as well as against thee have I sinned In vaine doth Caine confesse his cruelty to A●el and conceale his irreligion to God or Judas complaine of betraying innocent bl●od whilst he makes no mention of his covetousnesse 5. Shame and sorrow must seize on the confessing suppliant for sinnes pardon Contrition of heart and confusion of face must be the result of confession dayes of atonement Lev. 23.27 28. were dayes of soul-affliction because of confession of sin Davids complaints makes him water his couch and mingle his bred with teares lying in the dust and renting of Garments were required from such as came to confesse iniquity the spirit of repentance is a spirit of mourning 6. Confession must be made with confidence and supplication in hope of pardon the true penitent is prostrate before God as a Father not as a Judge men may confesse and be hanged but the children of God cry with Shecaniah We have transgressed but yet there is hope in Israel concerning this thing Ezra 10.2 they pray in faith Father forgive us our trespasses not in feare mercy my Lord mercy Judas's confession was therefore false because fearful and flying to his own destruction not the innocent blood by him betrayed that he might have been saved we have shewed you the subject of repentance must be the believing sinner hopes of mercy puts halters on our necks confidence of pardon seats us in Gods Chair to condemne our selves the confessions of despair are the outcries of the damned in hell Thus then Beloved I have laid before you the true nature of true repentance I well know it is a common Theme and much Treated of but little practiced nay indeed little considered and understood How many pretenders are there among us that may yet ponder the nature of Gospel-repentance which if it be well understood will neither appeare to be so lightly come by nor sleightly performed as it is deemed we must know that every common repentance will not serve our turn unto the Remission of sin but that repentance which Christ gives is in respect of nature 1. A grace supernatural without the reach of mans arme or acquirement 2. Whereby the believing sinner apprehensive of his own guilt and Gods grace in and through Jesus Christ 3. Sensibly affected with and afflicted for his sin as committed against God under conviction and contrition for all his sin as sin 4. Doth return from sin all sin unto God and God only as his all in all 5. Freely confessing and frequently begging pardon for his iniquity Consider my Brethren this description of Repentance you have had unfolded and the nature of the grace discovered for it will be very useful to you as a touchstone of doctrine and practice for the confutation of all false notions about Repentance as that 1. Repentance is the result of nature and at mans command we may repent when we will as the Arminians teach but you must remember its supernatural 2. That pennance is a transient act of confession and self-castigation as the Papists teach you must know it is a grace or habit 3. That repentance is before faith and not the result of the Gospel and effect of the blood of Christ as some Divines suggest 4. That c●nviction contrition and confession are not necessary to repentance as the Antinomians teach or sufficient repentance as the Legalist and Pharisee teach that a turning from sin to sin or at least not to God and
clearly implies there were that did say so 3. A third principle he layes down is the doctrine of original corruption even in the regenerate themselves (c) Pelagiani negant originate peccatum Aug. cont Mendac Against those that taught the * Pelagiani Aug. contr Mend. total abolition of original sin in and by Baptisme or that denied the being or at least the damnable nature of it Verse 8. If we say we have no sin c. 4. The necessity of confession of sin not only against them (d) Epiphanius calls the Novatians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 murderers of repentance Basil de poenit that decried repentance for sin and confession of sin but against them that denied pardon to them (e) Montanistae Novatiani Jerom. Ep. ad Marcel de erroribus Montani that repent If we confesse our sinnes he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins c. 5. He asserts the doctrine of actual sinne in the regenerate against them that affirmed that (f) The Simonians Gnosticks and other hereticks of that age taught that there was no sin but unbelief that to the justified all things were clean however they live vid. Aug. de perfectione justi c. 21 Clem. Alex. c. conceived the Apostles after the coming down of the Holy Ghost upon them nullis esse peccatis aut passionibus ohnoxii Joviniani docebant justum nec leviter peccare a justified person could not sin or which is the same that God sees no sin in his children If we say that we have not sinned we make him a lyar c. If we say we have no sin there 's the denial of original sin if we say we have not sinned there 's the denial of actual sin both make up the great heresie of the (g) Catharists in the third Centurie after Christ Catharists who held perfection in this life 6. The Apostle vindicates the preceptive obligation of the moral Law even over justified persons Against the Antinomian (h) The Simonians Carpocratians Marcionites Maniches did not only deny the moral law but curse and blaspheme it as given not by God but by some unlucky nature heresie which presumptuously breaketh even that yoke also from the neck of the Disciples Chap. 2. verse 3 4 5. Hereby we know that we love him if we keep his Commandments So early were these poysonous weeds sprung up in the Church of God The other Module which the Apostle layeth down is a Catalogue of Gospel-evidences certain marks and signs of an interest in Christ A Catalogue of Scripture-evidences and of a right and title to life eternal such as these 1. Obedience to Gods Commandments ut sup 2. Contempt of the world Ch. 2.15 3. Stedfastnesse in the doctrine of the Gospel verse 8 19 20 24. 4. Conformity to Jesus Christ in holinesse ch 3. ver 3. 5. Mortification 6 7 8 10. 6. Love to the Saints verse 14. and chapter 5.2 10 11. 7. A believing confession * Most blasphemously denied by the Simonians Chrystolites P●o●t●es c. Aug. de haeres of Gods sending Jesus Christ into the world as the promised Messias with love to him and thankfulnesse for him chap. 4. In the four first verses of the fifth chapter we have no lesse than seven evidences each lincking in with the other and bearing witnesse to the other As 1. You have faith in Christ bearing witnesse to Regeneration Whosoever believeth c. is born of God 2. Love to God bearing witnesse to faith He that loveth him that begat c. 3. Love to the Saints bearing witnesse to our love of God He loveth him also that is begotten Augustine understands it of our love to Christ but the Context expounds it of our love to the Saints for so it followeth ver 2. where we have 4. Love to God reciprocally witnessing our love to the Saints Hereby we know we love the children of God when we love God 5. Obedience to Gods Commandments bearing witnesse again to our love And keep his Commandments 6. Delight testifying the truth of our obedience His Commandments are not grievous 7. And lastly Victory over the world bearing witnesse to Regeneration For whosoever is born of God overcometh the world Verse 4. It were easie out of this and the other two subsequent Epistles to compleat the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Gospel EVIDENCES which are not thus expresly delineated that by them only the Church might describe her members as some loose and vaine spirits fancy but for the members of the Church to try and examine themselves by whither they be real and living members yea or no. It were easie I say to adde to the Catalogue but I have insisted too long upon the first demonstration sc Scripture Pattern I come now to the second demonstration namely The advantages of such Modules 1. For the Ornament of the truth The excellency and advantage of such Forms and Collections of Evangelical truths And In the first place it addes much to the beauty and ornament of the truth whither it be delivered from the Pulpit or from the Press in such Systemes and Platforms the Hearer or Reader may as in a Map or Table sometimes of one sort sometimes of another behold divine truths standing one by another in their Method and Connexion mutually casting light and lustre upon each other Every truth single is very precious and indeed of infinite value as purchased with and ratified in the blood of Christ but to see the truths of the Gospel linked together in their proper union facing one another like the Cherubims Exod. 25.20 is very glorious As the stones of the Temple when they were squared and polished in the Forrest were very costly for both matter and workmanship but when they were layd into the building and formed up into a Temple what a beautiful and magnificent structure did they make The Disciples beholding it Luk. 21.5 were filled with delight and wonder The Curtains of the Sanctuary each by themselves were very rich both for their materials and curious Embroyderies but had you seen them in their Connecture each Curtain fastned to the other with taches of gold and so making up one entire perfect Tabernacle sparkling and shining in all its native spendour it would have been a ravishing sight The very representation of many Countries in one Nation of many Nations in one of the divisions or quarters of the world and of all the quarters described in one Globe or Map it is very delightful to the eye of an intelligent beholder at once discovering the scite and cognation the Longitude and Latitude the distance and degree of every Kingdome and County such globes and tables are full of delight and profit It is in a most eminent manner observable in the Creation of the world of every single days work it is said God saw that it was good but when the whole Compages of heaven and earth was set together into
in his creation with a perfect and universal rectitude 2. That mans defection from his primitive state was purely voluntary and from the unconstrained choice of his own mutable and self-determining will Though the latter part of the Text would afford a sufficient ground to treat of the state of man now fallen yet that being by agreement left to another hand I observe no more from it then what concerns the manner of his fall and that only as it depended on a mutable will In handling these truths I shall 1. Open them in certain explicatory Theses 2. Improve them in some few praictcal and applicatory inferences 1. About the former that God endued c. take these Propositions for explication Prop. 1 1. All created rectitude consists in conformity to some rule or Law Rectitude is a meer relative thing and its relation is to a rule By a rule I here mean a law strictly taken and therefore I speak this only of created rectitude A law is a rule of duty given by a Superiour to an Inferiour nothing can be in that sense a rule to God or the measure of increated rectitude Prop. 2 2. The highest rule of all created rectitude is the will of God considered as including most intrinsecally an eternal and immutable reason justice and goodness 'T is certain there can be no higher rule to creatures than the divine Will Rom. 7.12 Rom. 12.102 Ezek. 18.25 ch 33. and as certain that the government of God over his creatures is alwayes reasonable and just and gracious and that this reasonablenesse justice and goodnesse by which it is so should be subjected any where but in God himself none that know what God is according to our more obvious notions of him can possibly think Prop. 3 3. Any sufficient signification of this Will touching the reasonable creatures duty is a law indispensably obliging such a creature A law is a constitution de debito and 't is the Legislatours will not concealed in his own breast but duly expressed that makes this constitution and infers an obligation on the Subject Prop. 4 4. The Law given to Adam at his creation was partly natural given by way of internal impression upon his soul partly positive given as is probable by some more external discovery or revelation That the main body of laws whereby man was to be governed should be at first given no other way than by stamping them upon his mind and heart was a thing congruous enough to his innocent state as it is to Angels and Saints in glory it being then exactly contempered to his nature highly approvable to his reason as is evident in that being faln his reason ceases not to approve it Rom. 2.18 fully sutable to the inclination and tendency of his will and not at all regretted by any reluctant principle that might in the least oppose or render him doubtful about his duty Yet was it most reasonable also that some positive commands should be superadded that Gods right of dominion and government over him as Creatour might be more expresly asserted and he might more fully apprehend his own obligation as a creature to do somethings because it was his Makers Will as well as others because they appeared to him in their own nature reasonable and fit to be done for so the whole of what God requires of man is fitly distinguished into some things which he commands because they are just and some things that are just because he commands them Prop. 5 5. Adam was indued in his creation with a sufficient ability and habitude to conform to this whole Law both natural and positive in which ability and habitude his original rectitude did consist This Proposition carries in it the main truth we have now in hand therefore requires to be more distinctly insisted on There are two things in it to be considered The thing it self he was endued with The manner of the endowment 1. The thing it self wherewith he was endued that was uprightnesse rectitude otherwise called the image of God though that expression comprehends more than we now speak of as his immortality dominion over the inferiour creatures c. which uprightness or rectitude consisted in the habitual conformity or conformability of all his natural powers to this whole Law of God and is therefore considerable two wayes viz. In relation to its Subject Rule 1. In relation to its subject that was the whole soul in some sense it may be said the whole man even the several powers of it And here we are led to consider the parts of this rectitude for 't is coextended if that phrase may be allowed with its subject and lies spread out into the several powers of the soul for had any power been left destitute of it such is the frame of man and the dependance of his natural powers on each other in order to action that it had disabled him to obey and had destroyed his rectitude for bonum non oritur nisi ex causis integris malum vero ex quovis defectu Davenant de justitia habituali i. And hence as Davenant well observes according to the parts if I may so speak of the subject wherein it was Mans original rectitude must be understood to consist of 1. A perfect illumination of mind to understand and know the Will of God 2. A compliance of heart and will therewith 3. An obedient subordination of the sensitive appetite and other inferiour powers that in nothing they might resist the former That it comprehends all these appears by comparing Col. 3.10 where the image of God wherein man was created is said to consist in knowledge that hath its seat and subject in the mind with Ephes 4.24 where righteousness and holiness are also mentioned the one whereof consists in equity towards men the other in loyalty and devotedness to God both which necessarily suppose the due framing of the other powers of the soul to the ducture of an inlightened mind And besides that work of sanctification which in these Scriptures is expresly called a renovation of man according to the image of God wherein he was created doth in other Scriptures appear as the forementioned Authour also observes to consist of parts proportionable to these I mention viz. illumination of mind Ephes 1.18 conversion of heart Psal 51.10 victory over concupiscence Rom. 6.7 throughout 2. Consider this rectitude in relation to its Rule that is the Will of God revealed 1 John 3.4 or the Law of God sin is the transgression of the Law and accordingly righteousnesse must needs be conformity to the Law viz. actual righteousnesse consists in actual conformity to the Law that habitual rectitude which Adam was furnished with in his Creation of which we are speaking in an habitual conformity or an ability to conform to the same Law This habitual conformity was as of the whole soul so to the whole Law i. e. to both the parts or kinds of it natural and positive
under the obediential observance and poysonous malediction of that Law upon which there was only the print of his own authoririty for though the humane nature abstractly considered is as a creature bound to the observance of a Law yet being in conjunction with the second person in the Trinity and assumed into the personality of the Son of God it was exempted from obedience and indemnified as to curse and penalty Christ submitted to the Ceremonial Law in his circumcision put his neck under the yoke of the moral Law to fulfill the preceptive part by his Perfect obedience and satisfie the maledictive part by his compleat sufferings all which subjection was not a debt that God could have challenged of him but a pure voluntary subscription The Law is not made in some sense for a righteous man 1. Tim. 1.9 but it is not made in any sense for the glorious God 3. And which is a step beneath both these he appeared as a sinful man or in the likeness of sinful flesh Rom. 8.3 subjection to the Law made him very low but the similitude of sin which is the violation of the Law was a far greater abasement Christs appearing in the likenesse of sinful flesh must not be understood as though his flesh were only a likenesse and appearance Non in similitudine carnis quasi caro non esset caro sed in similitudine carnis peccati quia caro erat sed peccati caro non erat Aug. Heb. 9. ult or he had only an aerial and phantastical body as some of old absurdly fancied and affirmed he had true real flesh though but the similitude and resemblance of sinful flesh the word likenesse relates not to flesh but sin not flesh in likeness but sin in likeness a being under a Law implies nothing of sin it was the case of Adam and the Angels and both without sin or any thing that look't like sin but our blessed Lord condescended not only to subjection but to the print and appearances of transgression He shall appear saith the Apostle the second time without sin unto salvation Intimating that the first time he appeared with sin upon him when he returns in glory he shall have no dints of sin upon him the smell or fingeing of it shall not be upon his garments but his first entrance was with many of those prints and marks that sin where ever it is uses to leave behinde it Sin was neither inherent in him nor committed by him but imputed to him Sin never defiled him but it defaced him he had nothing of its impurity but much of its penalty he was not tainted with that plague but he was pleased to take upon him the tokens In the same Chapter the Prophet tells us He had done no violence neither was any deceit in his mouth and he was numbred with Transgressors Isa 53.9 12. He trode not one step awry in sin but many of the footsteps of sin appeared upon him to instance in a few 1. Poverty he came in a low and mean condition and that 's the very likenesse of sin the great bankrupt that brought all to beggery Though he was rich yet for our sakes he b came poor 2 Cor. 8.9 When he rode to Jerusalem it was not in state in a gilded Coach with six horses or mounted like a Lord Mayor with embossed trappings but as one might rather say like a Beggar that is sent with a Passe from one Town to another Matth. 21.5 Sitting upon an Asse Matth. 8.20 and a Colt the foole of an Asse The Foxes have holes and the Birds of the Aire have nests but the Son of man had not where to lay his head He was at such a very low ebb as to worldly riches Matth. 17. ult 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 valet 2 s. 6 d. that once he and one of his Apostles could not both of them make a purse for half a crown to pay their tax without the working of a Miracle Isa 55.3 2 Thess 2.3 2. Another likenesse of sin was sorrow He was a man of sorrows and acquainted with griefs as Antichrist is called a man of sin his very make and constitution is sin so was Christ a man of sorrows and as it were made up of them they were in a manner his complexion We read oft of his weeping but it is not observed that ever there was a smile upon his face Now sin and sorrow are so near of kin that the Hebrew language compriseth both in one word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they are as like as mother and daughter and both called by the same name 3. A third likenesse of sin was shame and reproach Sin was the inlet of shame when our first Parents had sinned their eyes were opened Gen. 3.7 Chap. 2. ult and they knew that they were naked and sewed fig-leaves toge her Why they were naked before and were not ignorant of it but then it was no shame to them sin gave them a sight of their nakednesse so as they never saw it before This similitude of sin was upon Christ when he was called Glutton Wine-bibber Conjurer Blasphemer Divel and what not that might cause and increase contempt We hid as it were our faces from him saith the Prophet he was despised and we esteemed him not Isa 55.3 how vile and contemptible is that person upon whom we turn the back in scorn to whom we will not vouchsafe so much as a look or the glance of an eye I am a reproach of men saith the Psalmist in the person of Christ and desp sed of the people Psal 22.6 4. Another similitude of sin was the withdrawment of his Father and clouding the li●h● of his counte●ance His fathers forsaking him whereof he makes that heavy heart-breaking complaint Matth 27.46 My God my God why hast thou for●aken me The frown of his Father and brow-beating of his displeasure was the very likenesse of sin for from that noysome vapour o●ly arises a cloud to over-cast the light of his countena ce Nothing but that builds up a partition wall betwixt him and us Your iniquities have separated betwixt you and your God and your sins have hid his face from you We hid our face from Christ Isa 59 2. and in that there was reproach but alas this was nothing in comparison a Prince need not trouble himself that he hath not the smile of his Groom What if all creatures in heaven and earth had hid their faces from Christ he could well have born up under it but the hiding of his Fathers face even broke his heart as a burden intolerable 5. And lastly Christ submitted to death and that 's ano●her likenesse of sin Sin entred into the world and death by sin Rom. 5.12 they came together as it were hand in hand this was ●he penalty inflicted upon sin In the day thou e●test thou shalt su●ely dye Gen. 2.17 Now in this
requir●ng sometimes the one sometimes the other when Repentance is the duty to be discharged calling sometimes for fasting weeping and walking in sackcloth and ashes nay the rending of the heart and not the garmen●s Joel 2.11 12. and sometimes and that very commonly for turning to the Lord nay the whole work of Repentance is in Scripture expressed by Humiliation in the promise of pardon to the penitent their Repentance is described to be an humbling of the uncircumcised heart and acceptance of the punishment of their sin Lev. 26.41 So when Rehoboam and Manasseh Repented they are only said to humble themselves 2 Chron. 12.6 33.2 And under the Gospel we read of Repentance for sin as well as from sin and 't is denominated godly sorrow which worketh Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 Working not only as a cause but complement perfecting finishing and compleating Repentance and therefore the Apostle James requires them that draw nigh to God and clean their h art and purifie their hands that they be afflicted mourn and weep and humble themselves under the hand of God James 2.8 9 10. And the Covenant of Grace promising Repentance doth expresse it self by these two acts you shall see the evil of yo r wayes and loa h y●ur selves because of your iniquities and ab●minations And I w●ll put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my ways Ezek. 36.27 31. So that according to the expressions of Scripture as well as the experiences of the Saints Humi●iation of the s●ul is an essential act and eminent part of Repentance and this is that which I in the description do denominate sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God thereby intending to note unto you that the soul must be humbled that will be lifted up by the Lord and his humiliation doth and must consist of these two parts Conviction and Contrition sight of and sorrow for sin The first part of humiliation is A Spirit of Conviction First part of humiliation or sight of sin in every penitent soul which is no other than the operation of the Holy Ghost opening the blinde eye to see the deviations of the soul and the destruction inevitably attending the persistance in it this act of Repentance and Humiliation is no other but the Prodigals return to himself in sense of his own starving condition whil'st his fathers servants have bread enough Luke 15.17 Rom. 7.9 the arrival of the Law unto the reviving of sin in Pauls sense and feeling the communing with our hearts that we may tremble Psal 4.5 and not sin a searching and trying our ways that we may return unto the Lord a smiting on the thigh with a What have we done Lam. 3.39 the smiting of Davids heart 2 Sam 24.10 with an I have sinned against the Lord the judging of our selves that we may not be judged of the Lord the Spirit of bondage which goeth before the Spirit of Adoption In a word it is the souls serious erection of a Court in its own breast and setting conscience in the Throne and making a judicial processe to descry and determine its eternal condition in order to which 1. It spreads before it self the Law of God as that wh●ch must be the Rule of life and reason of death and condemnation the will of God dictating duty and disswading iniquity awarding recompence according to obedience or disobedience In a word determining of men Thus do and live or thus do and dye thus I will be worshipped and you shall be rewarded in this if you transgresse you shall be thus punished the soul seeth clearly that the Law is in nature and necessity a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ whil'st by serious consideration of its genuine sense and due extent the soul standeth convinced this is du y enjoyned this is sin inhibited herein if I offend not only in deed and word but thought or imagination I am a Transgressor bound under guilt and the expectation of judgment thus the coming of the Law into Pauls minde becomes the revival of sin and Josiah his reading in the Law of Moses led him to the tremblings of heart and renting his garment before the Lord 2 Chron. 34.18 19. For as indeed wi●hout the Law there is no transgression so without the knowledge of the Law there can be no conviction ignorance of Divine pleasure is the great obstruction of Repentance and therefore the Prince of this world doth daily endeavour to blow out the light of the Word or to blinde the eyes of the sons of men that they may not see and be converted but God sends his Prophets rising up early and sending them to read the Law in the ears of men that Israel may see his sinne and Judah her transgression The first act of Repentance is the falling of the scales from off the sinners eyes the first language of a turning soul is Lord what wouldest thou have me to do So that the soul humbling self-examinant seeing the Law to be holy just and good that which must be the rule and reason of its condition it being to arraign and condemn it self becomes studious of the Law in its full sense and due extent in commands prohibitions promises and threats and sets before its eye every particular precept and pondereth the righteousnesse of that God who hath declared a curse against every one that continueth not in the Law to do it and so by the justification of and insight to the Law of God exciteth the soul to self-reflexion and is constrained to cry out What have I done whereupon it 2. Surveigheth the past course of his own life summoneth together all faculties powers and members of both soul and body to make rehearsal of his past conversation in word thought and deed and to give an exact account of their conformity or disagreement with the Law of God established and rule by which it must be judged and now he communeth with his hear● considereth his ways examineth him ●l● makes an exact comparison of his life with Gods Law layeth the li●e close to h s carriage and so convinceth himself of his deviations and ●rregularities insomuch that sin reviveth and he dyeth guilt appeareth and grief and shame aboundeth his own heart condemns him as disobedient and a Transgressor of the Law that he is constrained to c●y out What I sh●uld do I have not done and I have left undone what I ought to have done Rom. 7.19 I have sinned against the Lord if God be severe to mark what is amisse I cannot abide in his presence for I have not only offended in part of his holy Law and broken the least of his Commandments but I have violated the whole Law and am a Transgressor against every Command nay he cometh on this consideration to be convinced of his anomy and ataxy the pravity of his nature that enmity to the Law which is implanted in his very being and that irregularity whereby
composed of several Nations between whom there are great antipathies yet march in rank and order and with equal courage fight for the safety of a Kingdom we presently conclude there is a wise General who thus united them And is there not greater reason to believe that a Soveraign Spirit governs the Host of heaven and earth and unites them to maintain the peace of the World To assert that irrational creatures act for a general and unknown good without the motion of a higher cause is equally unreasonable as to say a curious Picture is drawn by a Pensil without the hand of the Painter which guided it in every line according to the Idea of his minde We must then of necessity infer that those particular causes which cannot conduct themselves are directed by an universal cause which cannot erre and thus we see the whole World is an entire and continual Argument of Gods Being and Attributes Secondly The second Argument is drawn from natural conscience which is a subordinate God and acts all things with respect to a higher Tribunal as Saint Paul speaking of those visible Testimonies which God hath exprest to men in the Creation saith Acts 14.17 that he left not himself without a witnesse giving them rain and fruitful seasons by the same proportion we may say God hath not left himself without an internal witnesse having planted in every man a conscience whereby he is dignified above the lower order of beings and made sensible of the supreme Judge to whose Tribunal he is subject now conscience in its double work as it accuses or excuses by turns upon good or bad Actions proves there is a God 1. Natural conscience being clear and innocent is the life-guard which secures from fears vertuous persons who have not offered violence to the light of conscience in times of danger as in a fierce storme at Sea or fearful Thunder at Land when guilty spirits are surprized with horrour they are not liable to those fears being wrapt up in their own innocency Parcus Deorum cultor infrequens insanientis dum sapientiae consultus erro nunc retrorsum vela dare atque iterare cursus cogor relictos Namque Diespiter igni corusco nubila dividens f●etumque per purum tonanteis egit equos volucremque currum Horat. ad 34. l. 31. the reason of their security proceeds from a belief that those terrible works of nature are ordered by an intelligent and righteous providence which is God 2. It gives courage and support to an innocent person when opprest and injured by the unrighteous the natural conscience so long as it is true to its self by adhering to honest principles it is victorious against all attempts whatsoever si fractus illabatur orbis if the weight of all the miseries in the world should come rushing upon him at once it would bear up under them all and stand unbroken in the midst of those ruines the spirit of a man is of strength enough to sustain all his infirmities as a Ship lives in the rough Seas and floats above them the waters being without it so a vertuous person rides out all storms and is preserved from sinking because the fury of worldly troubles cannot reach beyond his outward man the conscience which is the mans strength remains firme and unshaken yea as those Roses are usually sweetest which grow near stinking weeds so the peace joy and glory of a good conscience is then most sensible when a man is otherwise in the most afflicted and oppressed state now from whence proceeds this calmnesse and serenity this vigor and constancy of spirit but from the apprehension of a supreme Judge who at the last will vindicate their cause 2. We may clearly evidence there is a God from the accusations of a guilty conscience this is that never dying worme which if a sinner treads on it will turn again this is a temporal hell a spiritual Tophet what torments are there in the Regions of darknesse which an accusing conscience doth not inflict on a sinner in this life so intolerable are the stings of it that many have took Sanctuary in a Grave and run upon the first death to prevent the miseries of the second Now the shame horror despair and that black train of affections which lash an offender for his vicious acts discovers there is a principle within which threatens vengeance from a righteous and angry God This Argument will be more pressing if we consider that conscience attaches a sinner First for secret crimes which are above the cognizance of men conscience is Gods spy in our bosomes which mixes it self with all our thoughts and actions let a man therefore take what course he will to hide his offence let him sin in the closest retirement that humane policy can contrive where there is no possibility of legal conviction yet his Accuser his Judge his Hel is in his own bosome when the sin is most secret conscience brings in the evidence produces the Law urges the penalty passes the sentence begins the punishment so that the sinner is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 self-condemned for those sins which are not punishable by man yea sometimes a discovery of concealed sins though certainly bringing temporal death hath been extorted by the horror and anguish of an accusing conscience the reason of all is because in secret sins conscience appeals to Gods Omnisciency who is greater than our consciences and knows all things 1 John 3.20 And upon this account it is praejudicium judicii a kinde of antedated day of judgement a domestical dooms-day and brings upon a sinner the beginning of his sorrows 2. It stings with remorse for those sins which are above the power of man to revenge those who command Armies and by their greatnesse are secured from the penalties of the Law yet conscience sets their sins in order before their eyes and these as so many armed men charge them thorow and overwhelme them many instances there are Belshazzar in the midst of his cups and bravery how was he invaded by fear and horrour when he saw the hand-writing on the Wall the whole Army of the Persians could not discourage his spirit but when conscience revived his guilt and the apprehensions of Gods justice he sunk under the burden the hand-writing from without was terrible because conscience opened a hand-writing within Tiberius the Emperour who was doubly dy'd in unnatural lusts and cruelties could neither evade nor dissemble the horrors of his mind Nero after the barbarous murdering of his mother was always pursued by imaginary Divels his distracted fancy representing to him furies and flames ready to torment him How many Tyrants have trembled on the Throne when the condemned innocents have rejoyced in their sufferings from hence we may infallibly conclude the conscience of the most powerful sinner is under the feeling of a Deity for if there were no punishments to be feared but those the Magistrate inflicts in his own Dominions why are Soveraign
God grounded upon the perswasion of his glorious being and the goodnesse of his nature which is not terrible to them but when they consider his mercy is a holy mercy and that it is never dispenc't to the prejudice of his justice though they cannot hate God for his goodnesse directly yet they hate him with it for although he is the perfection of beauty and goodnesse it self yet they being evil there is no congruity or conveniency between God and them they love sin and hate punishment Now God as Author legis by the most strict Laws forbids sin and as ultor peccati inflicts severe punishments from hence it proceeds the most lovely and sweet Attributes of God cannot endear him to them no more than the natural or moral excellencies of a Judge the comelinesse of his person or his wisdome and knowledge can draw forth the love of a Malefactor when he is condemned by him Moreover since the general nature of sin is an eternal contrariety to the nature and will of God the love of it must needs argue the hatred of God for as the Lord Jesus requires an universal chearful and constant obedience as the most clear evidence of love to him if you love me keep my Commandments So the Argument will be as strong to conclude backward If you keep not Gods Commandments you hate him to live in the practice of known sinnes is a vertual and interpretative hatred of God 2. The benefits which God bestows upon us deserve our love How great an endearment did he passe upon us in our Creation we might have been admitted into the lowest form of Creatures and have only enjoyed the life of flies or worms but he made us little lower than the Angels and Crowned us with glory and honour and gave us dominion over all the works of his hands Psal 8.5 Whereas the rest of the Creatures were the acts of his power the Creation of man was an act of power and wisdome in all the rest there was nothing but he spake the word and they were made Psal 148.5 But in the making of man there was a consultation about it Gen. 1. Let us make man he framed our bodies so that all the parts conspire for the ornament and service of the whole Psal 139.15 Thine eye did see my substance being yet imperfect and in thy book were all my members written and therefore Lactantius said truly hominem non patrem esse sed generandi Ministrum man is only the instrument which the Lord doth use for the effecting of his purpose to raise the beautiful Fabrick of mans body Now if we are obliged to expresse the dearest love to our Parents with how much greater reason should we love God who is the fountain of all our beings He hath breathed into man a spiritual immortal rational soul which is more worth than the whole World this is in some sort a spark and ray of Divine brightnesse 't is capable of Gods Image 't is a fit Companion for Angels to joyne with them in the praises of God and enjoy a blessed eternity with them 'T is capable of communion with God himself who is the fountain of life and happinesse The soul is endowed with those faculties which being terminated upon God it enjoys an infinite and everlasting blessednesse The understanding by knowledge rests in God as the first and highest in genere veri the will by love embraces him as the last and greatest in genere boni and so receives perfection and satisfaction which is the incommunicable priviledge of the rational soul Beasts can only converse with drossy and material objects they are confined to earthly things but the soul of man may enjoy the possession and fruition of God who is the Supreme and Soveraign good Now this should inflame our love to God he formed our bodies he inspired our souls Moreover if we consider our lives we shall finde a chain of mercy which reaches from one end to the other of them How many Miracles of Providence do we enjoy in our preservation how many unseen dangers do we escape how great are our daily supplies The provisions we receive do serve not only for necessity but for delight every day we have the provisions of meat and drink not only to cure hunger and all our thirst but to refresh the heart and to make us chearful in our work every houre is filled up with the bounties of God Now what shall we render to the Lord for all his benefits he desires our love this is the most proper return we can make for love is of an opening and expansive quality calling forth the heart our love within should break forth to close with Gods love without the love of obedience in us with the love of favour and bounty in him 'T is a principle of nature deeply implanted in the hearts of men to return love for love nay the very Beasts are not deficient in this Esay 1.3 The Oxe knows his Owner and the Asse his Masters Crib Those Creatures which are of all the most stupid and heavy respect their Feeders and expresse dumb signs of love unto them How much more should we love God who spreads our Table fills our Cup and causes his Sun to shine and his Rain to fall on us 'T is an Argument of Secret Atheisme in the heart that in the confluence of mercies we enjoy we do not look up to the Author of them as if common mercies were the effects of Chance and not of Providence if a man constantly relieves our wants we judge it the most barbarous disingenuity not to repay love to him but God loads us with his benefits every day his wisdome is always busied to serve his mercy and his mercy to serve our necessities but we are insensible and unaffected and yet the meanest mercy as it comes from God hath an excellency stamp't upon it We should upbraid our souls for our coldnesse to God everywhere we encounter sensible demonstrations of his love to us in every moment of our lives we have some pledges of his goodnesse Let us light our Torch at this Mountain of fire let the renewed act of his bounty constrain us to love him we should love him for his excellency though we had no benefit by him nay though he hated us we are bound to love him as he is truly amiable in himself how much more when he draws us with the cords of a man with bands of love whosoever requites the love of God with hatred as every impenitent sinner doth puts off the nature of man and degenerates into a Divel 2. Fear this is that eternal respect which is due to our Creator an humble reverence we owe to him as he is infinitely above us the holy Angels cover their faces when they have the clearest views of his glory Esay 6.1 2 3. The Lord is represented as sitting on a Throne and the Seraphims stood about each having six wings with twain he covered his
may not believe a doctrine thus holy a doctrine thus practised by him that published it and confirmed by miracles then a man is under an impossibility of ever being satisfied from any thing from God for what shall satisfie If God speak to us from heaven we should as much suspect that as if an Angel come from heaven we should suspect him but since we believe and know there 's a God and he is just and merciful it 's impossible the divine goodnesse should consent to such Impostors But you will say what are these miracles to us I say therefore thirdly they are a sufficient reason to engage us to believe the divinity of this holy doctrine though we never saw them You do not see Christ your selves nor did you see him dye nor work miracles but would you have had Christ live alwayes among you If you would he must then never dye and the great comfort of our life depended upon his death he dyed is risen and gone to heaven would you have him come down from heaven and dye that you might see it and would you have him dye quite thorow the world at the same time which must be if you would imagine we must see every thing our selves it 's a great piece of madnesse to believe nothing but what we see our selves Austin was troubled himself in this case Lib. 6. Con●es cap. 4. he had been cheated before and now he was resolved he would believe nothing but what should be plain to him at length says he O my God thou shewed'st me how many things I believed which I saw not I considered I believed I had a father and mother and such persons were my Parents how can I tell that a man may say it may be he was drop't from heaven and God made him in an extraordinary way so if I never were out of this Town it 's madnesse for a man to say there 's never another Town in England or to say there is no Sea because I saw it not Nay if a man come and tell me there 's this doctrine that teaches me all self-denial mortification weanednesse from the world and say this is of God and when he hath done ventures life children family have we not reason to believe it If you will not believe 't is either because the first persons were deceived themselves or else because you think they would deceive you now deceiv'd themselves they could not be when they saw so many miracles done and deceive you that they would not neither for would any good man to deceive an other undo himself they dyed for it and writ this book and sealed it with their blood and therefore there can be no reason to doubt of it they were witnesses and delivered what they saw Luke 1.2 7. Prop. As we have rational evidence the Scripture is the Word of God so we have evidence also from inward sensation born we are with principles of conscience and the truths in this book are so homogeneal to man that he shall finde something within himself to give testimony for it 2 Cor. 4.2 By manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God Joh. 5.44 Men believe not because they receive honour one of another and in Scripture they that would not believe are they that would not repent Mat. 21.28 to the 33. men that practice drunkennesse whoredome sensuality covetousnesse pride and know that these things are sinnes they are the great unbelievers because they are loth to leave their sins offer the greatest reason in the world for a thing if it be against a mans interest how hard and almost next to impossible is it to convince him A man would believe that the Romans were in England that reads the Roman History but if he shall finde the coyne of the Roman Emperour he will much more believe it Do a bad action O the secret terrours that a man finds within him as if he felt something of hell already Do a good action and the secret sweetnesse joy and peace that attends it that he cannot but say I believe it for I feel some degrees of it already 1 Cor. 14.24 25 c. he speaks to the inward principles of his conscience The reason men believe not the Scriptures is not because 't is unreasonable to believe them but because they have a desperate love to sinne and they are loth to entertain that that should check their interest There is in every life that certain sagacity by which a man apprehends what is natural to that life what nourishes that life a man that lives according to the Law written in his heart finds there 's that in this Revelation that feeds nourishes and encourages it so that this man finds experimental satisfaction in it Doth the Word of God tell me the wayes of God are pleasant I thought they were hard and difficult now I finde the yoke of Christ is easie and that no happinesse like this and no blessednesse like that I thought if I did not comply with such things I could never be blessed now I finde I need nothing to make me happy but my God he finds and feels these things are certan true and real Thus I have done with the demonstration You will easily observe I have neither taken notice of what the Papists tell us we must believe the Scripture because the Church saith it we cannot tell what the Church is till the Scripture had told us And though I have not mentioned the testimony of the Spirit yet I suppose I have spoke to the thing for I cannot understand what should be meant by the testimony of the Spirit except we either mean miracles wrought which in Scripture is called the testimony of the Spirit of Christ Acts 15.8 9. the giving of the Holy Ghost it 's the giving of those extraordinary miracles that fell down among them so Heb. 2.4 Acts 5.32 I say if by the testimony of the Spirit you mean this then you can mean nothing else but the Spirit assisting enabling helping our faculties to see the strength of that Argument God hath given us and by experience to feel what may be felt which comes under the head of sensation APPLICATION First then study the Scripture If a famous man do but write an excellent book O how do we long to see it or suppose I could tell you that there 's in France or Germany a book that God himself writ I am confident men may draw all the money out of your purses to get that book you have it by you O that you would study it Wnen the Eunuch was riding in his Chariot he was studying the Prophet Isaiah he was not angry when Philip came and as one would have thought asked him a bold question Vnderstandest thou what thou readest he was glad of it Acts 8 27 28. one great end of the year of release was that the Law might be read Deut 31.9 it 's the wisdome of
should be rewardable and punishable accordingly in a state that should be everlasting and unchangeable The liberty therefore of the Viators and the Comprehensors Gibieuf well distinguishes into inchoata or consummabilis Gibieuf de libertate Dei creatur ae and perfecta or consummata the former such as Adams was at his Creation the latter such as is the state of Angels and Saints in glory and as his would have been had he held out and persisted innocent through the intended time of tryal It was therefore no strange thing that man should be created defectible 't was as little strange that a defectible creature should deficere For the manner of that defection whether errour of the understanding preceded or inconsideration only and a neglect of its office with the great difficulties some imagine herein I wave discourse about them judging that advice good and sober for to consider how sinne may be gotten out of the world then how it came in Though 't is most probable there was in the instant of temptation a meere suspension of the understandings act not as previous to the sinne but as a part of it and thereupon a sudden precipitation of will Estius in scil as Estius doth well determine 6. Man being created mutable as to his holinesse must needs be so as to his happinesse too And that both upon a legal account for the Law had determined that if he did sinne he must dye and also upon a natural for it was not possible that his soul being once depraved by sinne the powers of it vitiated their order each to other and towards their objects broken and interrupted there should remaine a disposition and aptitude to converse with the highest good The Use follows which shall be only in certain practical Inferences that will issue from these truths partly considered singly and severally partly together and in conjunction From the first 1. Did God create man upright as hath been shewn then how little reason had man to sinne how little reason had he to desert God to be weary of his first estate Could Gods making him his making him upright be a reason why he should sinne against him was his directing his heart and the natural course of his affections towards himself a reason why he should forsake him what was there in his state that should make it grievous to him was his duty too much for him God made him upright so that every part of it was connatural to him was his priviledge too little he knew and loved and enjoyed the highest and infinite good O think then how unreasonable and disingenuous a thing sin was that a creature that was nothing but a few houres ago now a reasonable being capable of God! yet sin Urge your hearts with this we are too apt to think our selves unconcerned in Adams sin we look upon our selves too abstractly we should remember we are Members of a Community and it should be grievous to us to think that our species hath dealt so unkindly and unworthily with God and besides do not we sinne daily after the similitude of Adams transgression and is not sin as unreasonable and unjust a thing as ever 2. Was our primitive state so good and happy how justly may we reflect and look back towards our first state how fitly might we take up Jobs words Job 29.2 4 5 14 20. O that I were as in months past As in the dayes of my youth When the Almighty was yet with me When I put on righteousnesse and it cloathed me When my glory was fresh in me c. With what sadnesse may we call to minde the things that are past and the beginnings of Ancient time when there was no stain upon our natures no cloud upon our minds no pollution upon our hearts when with pure and undefiled souls we could embrace and rest and rejoyce in the eternal and incomprehensible good when we remember these things do not our bowels turn are not our souls poured out within us From the second 1. Did man so voluntarily ruine himself how unlikely is he now to be his own saviour he that was a self-destroyer from the beginning that ruined himself as soon as God had made him is he likely now to save himself is it easier for him to recover his station than to have kept it or hath he improved himself by sinning and gain'd strength by his fall for a more difficult undertaking is he grown better natur'd towards himself and his God than he was at first 2. How little reason hath he to blame God though he finally perish what would he have had God to have done more to prevent it he gave his Law to direct him his threatning to warn him his promise for his encouragement was evidently implyed his nature was sufficiently disposed to improve and comport with all these yet he sins is God to be charg'd with this sins upon no necessity with no pretence but that he must be seeking out inventions trying experiments assaying to better his state as plainly despising the Law suspecting the truth envying the greatnesse asserting and aspiring to the Soveraignty and Godhead of his Maker Had we any of us a minde to contend with God about this matter how would we order our cause how would we state our quarrel if we complain that we should be condemn'd and ruin'd all in one man that is to complain that we are Adams children A childe might as well complain that he is the sonne of a Beggar or a Traytor and charge it as injustice upon the Prince or Law of the Land that he is not born to a Patrimony this is a misery to him but no man will say it is a wrong And can it be said we are wrong'd by the common Ruler of the world that we do not inherit from our father the righteousnesse and felicity we had wilfully lost long before we were his children If we think it hard we should be tyed to termes we never consented to Might not an heire as well quarrel with the Magistrate that he suffers him to become liable to his fathers debts and to lie in prison if he have not to pay But besides who can imagine but we should have consented had all man-kind been at that time existent in innocency together i. e. Let the case be stated thus suppose Adam our common Parent to have had all his children together with him before the Lord while the Covenant of Works was not as yet made and while as yet God was not under any engagment to the children of men Let it be supposed that he did propound it to the whole race of man-kind together that he would capitulate with their common Parent on their behalf according to the termes of that first Covenant if he stood they should stand if he fall they must all fall with him Let it be considered that if this had not been consented to God might without the least colour of exception being
there needeth no Mediatour And hence Moses Law was not properly a Covenant of Works Gal. 3.19 because that Law was given in the hand of a Mediatour 4. The Covenant of Works once broken God abates nothing of his justice no not upon repentance but the soul that sinned dyed Mark our Text Thou shalt dye the death by which doubling of the words in the Hebrew Idiom of speech is meant Vehemency and Certainty Vatablus which was effected and so had continued inevitably without the help of another Covenant hinted in that first promise Gen. 3.15 For the first Covenant gives no relief to a poor sinner when he hath broken it but leaves him hopelesse and helplesse under a fearful expectation of wrath and fury indignation 5. The Lord in the Covenant of Works accepts the person for the Works sake that is he mainly looks at the work how adequate it is to the command and rule which he so exactly heeds that upon the least failer his justice breaks out in wrath neither can any personal excellency in the world salve the matter Deut. 27. ult Cursed is he that continueth not in all the words of the Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen a doleful Amen Jam. 2.10 and whosoever keeps the whole Law and offends in one point is guilty of all Note that whosoever God respects no mans person in that case 6. The Covenant of Works in performance of the condition leaves a man matter of boasting and glorying in himself and makes God a debtour to him Where is boasting it is excluded by what Law of works Rom. 3.27 Nay as if he had said the Covenant of Works affords matter of boasting to him that worketh to justification by his own personal power and righteousnesse Now to him that worketh is the reward reckoned not of grace Rom. 4.4 but of debt i. e. it obligeth God to pay it him as a due which is the language of Pharisees and Papists which were justly challenged and claimed 1. Were we indeed under a Covenant of Works and not of Grace 2. Were our works perfect 3. Did we not lye at Gods mercy for our guilt All which declare man impotent and grace necessary and withal Jews and Papists to be enemies to the Crosse of Christ and Covenant of Grace and under a Covenant of Works of which more anon 7. The Covenant of Works leaves a man still in doubt while resting in it in that state because it is a mutable state at best he had all in his own hands and then Satan cunningly rooked him of all God puts him into a good bottome and leaves him to be his own Pilot at Sea the Divel assaults him and sinks him and therefore the second Covenant takes all into Gods hands that it may continue safe under his Father by care and custoddy 1 Pet. 1.4 5. John 10.28 29. and so gives the soul good security against death and danger which Adam had not while he stood much lesse can any rich or honourable man in his fools Paradise here in this world say his Mountain is unmoveable his glory unchangeable seeing it passeth away as a Pageant 1 Cor. 7.31 if Adams Paradise was so mutable much more theirs if he stood not in his integrity how shall they stand in their iniquity 8. The Covenant of Works was made with all men in Adam who was made and stood as a publick person head and root in a common and comprehensive capacity I say it was made with him as such and with all in him Quo mansit remanente quo pereunte peribat he and all stood and fell together for even the Elect may say We are all by nature the children of wrath as well as others Rom. 3.19 and that of St. Paul We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God But the Covenant of Grace is a discriminating thing it takes in some and leaves out others Christ is not a head in Covenant with all as Adam was but of his Elect only for we finde many in the world under the headship of Satan and Antichrist and old Adam who are out of Christ not only because unconverted as Saints themselves are before regeneration but out of Christ in the account of Gods Election Donation and Covenant who have none of his special love nor ever shall have Thus I have briefly opened the distinguishing Characters of the Covenant of Works which might have been more enlarged by those of the Covenant of Grace which is easily done by way of opposition and comparison one with the other and therefore and for brevities sake I omit it and come to the next question Quest 4. Whether this Covenant of Works made with Adam was revived and repeated to Israel in Moses time and if so in what sense and why Answ I answer affirmatively that in some sort the Covenant of Works was revived and repeated to them which appears from these grounds 1. They were tyed to Commandments under a curse Gal. 3.10 Deut. 28 1 2. ver 15.16 2. Blessing is promised to obedience they are both set down by Moses at large in Deuteronomy chap. 28. and elsewhere 3. It is expresly called a Covenant I mean the giving of the Law for obedience The Lord God made a Covenant with us in Horeb. Deut. 5.2 4. It is opposed to the Covenant of Grace as another Covenant upon this very distinguishing account of obedience and faith works and grace as you may see at large among other places in that of the Hebrews Hebr. 8.6 7 8 9 10 c. Now there are foure principal ends which the Lord had in so doing 1. That he might hereby make men know what sin is how prone we are to it and how averse and head-strong against all good this is done by a Law of Works Rom. 7.7 to the 13. ver This indeed is Gods clear glasse by which he discovers to us the moral and penal evil of sin so Rom. 3.20 2. That hereby the Lord might hold men in to obedience by a strong curb because we are so apt to break fence he hedgeth up our way with thornes Hos 2.5 6. 3. That God might stop every mouth and make all guilty before him Rom. 3.19 4. That men may hereby be lash't and driven to Christ as with a School-masters rod to see an absolute need of him and to make out hard after him Gal. 3.22 23 24. For men care not to run to a City of Refuge unlesse the avenger of blood follow behinde at their heels neither do the whole need or regard the Physician but the sick and wounded Yet notwithstanding all this they were not properly under a Covenant of Works neither was the law given to them as such a Covenant meerly 1. Because as the Law was to convince of sin so it
Demon. 1 1. Ratione faederis by the reason of the Covenant of Works which God made with Adam we were in him all of us legally when God first made a Covenant with man it was not with Adam ratione individui as an individual person sed ratione ●aturae as he bore our nature with him as the representative of man-kind God makes his Covenant with Christ as Head and Mediatour of his Church with Abraham as the father of the faithful with Adam as the stock of man-kind Isa 53.11 Psal 40.8 we were in him parties in the Covenant and had interest in the mercy which should accompany the keeping of it and were liable to the curse which should follow the breach of it Now Adam violating the Covenant the guilt of that violation descends upon all his posterity Rom. 5.19 Constituti sunt peccatores 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chry. they were constituted sinners It is to be noted that God never makes a Covenant with a single person personally and individually that all others are unconcerned in it but with whomsoever God enters into Covenant that person is a representative of others and is to be looked upon as a publick person otherwise God should make as many Covenants as there are persons which is the greatest absurdity to assert and so in Covenanting with Adam he looked on him as the stock and root of mankind Arg. 2 2. Ratione Collationis The Apostle in two places makes a remarkable comparison between Adam and Christ the first and second Adam comparing the good of the last with the evil of the first the grace of the one with the sin of the other the life conveyed by the one with the death transmitted by the other Rom. 5.12 c. 1 Cor. 15.45 c. Now the righteousnesse of Christ redounds to believers to justification so the sin of Adam redounds to his posterity to condemnation by Adam we are cast by Christ we are cleared by Adam guilty by Christ innocent the comparison would else be wholly insignificant as by Christ we are made really righteous so by Adam we are made really sinners we are Princes in Christ Prisoners in Adam Crowned in Christ cursed in Adam this is is one great drift of the comparison Particle 2 2. The sin of Adam is derived to us not only by way of imputation but by way of inhaesion we receive from offending Adam Adamus genus nostrum tabificavit Aug. vitiositatem libidinem morbidum affectum a vitiosity lusting and a contagious distemper we receive not only a defect of holiness but deordination pravity evil disposition propension to mischief Ephes 4.22 John 3.6 Jam. 3.15 Col. 3.5 aversion to all good this sometimes the Scripture calls the Old man the flesh divelish wisdome the hell that sets the whole course of nature on fire earthly members And that Adams sin is propagated to us by way of inhaesion is likewise demonstrable by a double evidence Arg. 1 1. From the confession of some of the best of Gods Saints Psal 51.5 The soul of David was no sooner united to his body than sin was united to both he had not only a Crown of gold but grace he was not only a King after mans desire but a Saint after Gods heart 1 Sam. 13.24 yet this sinful leprosie he drew from Adam this Original staine clave to him he was a sinner in the womb though a Prince in the Throne and a Saint in the Sanctuary And so Paul that excellent Apostle how doth he moan this inward spot which he drew from Adam how doth he complain of indwelling sin Rom. 7.17 of an evil within him verse 19. of a law of his members verse 23. These groans of such eminent Saints are too pregnant an argument that the sin of Adam transmitted to us doth not only cast guilt on our persons but filth on our natures lay a charge to us but throw a stain upon us Arg. 2 2. As Christ doth not only vouchsafe believers imputed but infused righteousnesse the merit of his obedience but the graces of his Spirit to justifie but to renew and sanctifie us 1 Cor. 1.30 so the first Adam not only conveighs guilt to condemn but filth to defile us else the work of sanctification would be wholly unnecessary and the comparison between the first and second Adam would be maimed and imperfect Christ makes us heavenly as well as pronounceth us heavenly and Adam makes us earthly as well as leaves us to the punishment of those that are so The full comparison between the first and second Adam speaks this clearly Adam had sin to defile Rev. 1.5 Christus valnera sanarit quae Adamus portavit Cypr. and therefore Christ had blood to wash Here may that observable passage of Austin come in Vidi ego zelantem puerum c. I have seen saith Augustin a child with his eye full of envy venting his malice c. Whence comes this incurvation and waywardness of nature but from Adam happily the parents of this child were true and eminent believers so that there must be a tabes a disaffectednesse transmitted from Adam to his posterity against the opinion of Peter Lumbard and the Schoolmen 2. The second thing to be opened for the dispatching of the doctrinal part of the Text it is this To vindicate the righteousnesse of God in this transmission and conveyance And the justice of God is most glorious in this propagation of Adams sinne and this may be cleared in a double Demonstration Demon. 1 Adams sin is ours as well as his as a Learned man most elegantly Si quis peste laborans alios inficiat hi moriuntur Pet. Martyr dicitur illorum quisque non alienâ sed sua peste mortuus esse Now there is a double Argument to prove Ad●ms sin ours 1. Else God did punish us for anothers sin that fault which is not our own which is against divine justice God doth not usually strike the son for the fathers crime and make the son feel the bruise of the fathers fall that the father should merit the stroak and the posterity feel it this is against his own protestation Ezek. 18.2 2. The Antithesis between Christ and Adam would not hold if Adams was not to be reputed ours for as the righteousnesse of Christ ita communicatur membris ut quisque fidelis dicere possit illam esse suam c. as Bucan well observes is so communicated to us that every believer may say This righteousnesse is mine so the iniquity of Adam is so communicated to all his posterity that every child of Adam may sadly say This iniquity is mine and I am righteously punished for it And now therefore I say if Adams sin be ours in the guilt and stain of it let us acknowledge Gods justice in the transmission of it Demon. 2 2. Had Adam stood we expected the entaile of perfection and happinesse that the Crown should have descended to us as his issue
my conscience and speaks not a word of comfort to me The Word 1. Rings many a sad peale in the ears of conscience and which he cannot abde to hear or think of in that it doth declare 1. His sinne The Word faithfully disovers Gods streightness and mans crookedness and swervings from that platforme and rule to which he should be conformed as the Counter-part to the Original This charges omissions commissions and bunglings in the good which he does do Psal 05.21 and sets all in order before his eyes if possible to make him ashamed and confounded in himself 2. The due and desert of sinne every breaker of the Law the Law pronounces and dooms to be cursed There is that necessary connexion that it is impossible to be chargeable with sin against the Law and not liable to the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in every thing that is written in the Book of the Law to do it Justification it self takes not away the desert of sin pardoned sins are as well sins and as much sins as they were pardon makes not the Malefactour none makes not that the fact was not committed or not faulty or that it deserved not death for then he should have been legally acquitted not graciously pardoned Those will never take heaven of grace that take not hell as their proper desert The Lord will have his own weare this rope about their necks the desert of hell in their hearts to the very grave Assurance and in the very highest degree takes not away the sense of the deserts of sin but amplifies and enlarges them The deserts of sin shall be perfectly acknowledged in the state of glory and the Ransomer adored and admired upon this score Nothing so heightens grace as this that persons deserving to suffer are yet freed in Christ from suffering eternal wrath as if they had not deserved it This desert was no doubtful and dark point in the consciences of the Hearthens themselves Rom. 1. ult They know the judgement of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death But the Word more distinctly layes this home to the heart Prov. 11.23 The expectation of the wicked is wrath There is nothing else that he can justly and solidly expect in that estate and expecting otherwise he does but cozen himself 3. The sinners exclusion while in that estate from any part in the great and precious promis●s of the Gospel The Word opens the promises but knocks his fingers off from touching and eating of this Tree of life This is none of the meanest heart-cutting terrors to natural men to see many come from the East and West and sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdome of heaven and themselves cast out Mat. 8.11 12. incorporated with the Patriarchs into fellowship of the same grace and title to the same glory and themselves debarred from both to view the unsearchable riches of Christ displayed and themselves justled off from any intermedling as to present application or grounds of application of them as their own I met lately with a godly woman who heard a Sermon full of choice comforting supporting promises to weary and heavy laden sinners which warmed her heart but in the closure was strucken through with the first arrows of God discerning her self excluded in her present estate from any part in them This makes the Gospel a fiery Serpent to sting them which is the Pole holding up the brazen Serpent for healing to others 2. The Word attaches and binds him over Ye shall answer this at the day of Christ and hangs the writ upon his door as the man that is in Gods debt and is to look for an Arrest and to be dragged into prison till the utmost farthing be paid unlesse a speedy timely peace be made and inforces this partly from the will and justice of God that hath made indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish the portion of every soul that goeth on to do evil Rom. 2.8.9 and partly from the nature and circumstances of sin it self Debts may be so great so long owing so growing and the negligence and boldnesse of the debtor such that makes it necessary in point of wisdome not to keep the writ longer off from his back 3. The Word excites terrours A man bound in a very great summe in which the forfeiture will be his undoing the very obligation troubles There are no debts but where any ingenuity is induce answerable cares And the Lord knowing the frame and tendring the peace of his people advises therefore against all debts especially sticking under them and not coming timely and carefully off Rom. 13.8 Owe nothing unto any man much more to be over head and eares in Gods debt and no care to agree with him is a very dreadful condition Mat. 5.25 If these terrours actually are not yet they are very subject every moment to be excited The Sea may be very calme but the least storme makes it nothing but commotions conscience though now quiet hath a very wide and clamorous mouth when the Lord commissions and commands it to rebuke for sin These terrours hold the sinner in bondage or all his life time subject unto bondage Heb. 2.15 This is the second branch of the misery of a natural estate to be in all these respects under the Curse of the Law and to have the Lord fight against him with the sword of his mouth Revel 2.16 Here is patience that the Lord will fight with this sword first that he may reclaime and lead to repentance rather than destroy him and if this prevaile then is the curse turned into a blessing and the bondage ends in liberty indeed but if this do not prevaile then there remains nothing else but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devoure the adversaries Heb. 10.27 3. Every natural man and woman is obnoxious to all the effects of the wrath of God and of the curses denounced in his Word 1. There are manifold effects of Gods wrath that are upon him or are apt every moment to be rushing in upon him in this life 1. Upon the body Look upon all the breaches flawes defects monstrosities in the body and set them upon the score of sin Every man else had been like Absalom and much more 2 Sam. 14.25 From the sole of his foot even to the Crown of his head there was no blemish in him these argue not special sin Joh. 9.2 yet had never been without sin look upon all diseases natural or adventitious John 5.14 Sin no more lest a worse thing come unto thee there had never been a stone in the reins or in the bladder if not first in the heart These crumblings by degrees into the dust flow in by sin We pity the ruines which War hath made in goodly Palaces but those are nothing to the havock which sin hath made in the more noble Fabricks of
it self the hearing makes the ears tingle but the wrath does not make the heart quake Ye had better hear the Heralds in the Princes name denouncing the war and send out for peace than have the Prince himself come with fire and sword into your bowels upon the contempt 3. This may informe us of the righteousness and wisdome of the Lord in this wrath annexed and declared against sinne 1. Consider the high rewards the Lord hath propounded The Law is not so fiery in comminations against sin but the Gospel is as full of a 1 Cor. 2.9 2 Cor. 12.4 grace and promises to wayes of duty Now bring things to the bar of reason it self and may not the Lord annex this dreadful wrath to sin that doth annex such glorious incomprehensible promises to the duties and weak services of his people sin strictly deserves these not May not he punish severely that rewards eminently how just is it that persons invited to the Supper Luke 14 24. and making excuses should not taste thereof that despisers of the recompences of God should suffer eternal losse of them and be scourged with the contrary to them 2. Consider the Ends the Lord hath designed to reach 1. In the Elect. 1. To startle Luke 12.5 I will forewarn you whom ye shall fear Fear him which after he hath killed hath power to cast into hell yea I say unto you fear him Faith in the threatning engenders fear as faith in the promise genders hope faith and fear were conjoyned in Noah Heb. 11.7 and wrought together in his obedience and preservation 2. To make all things else little that meet them in the world to shoulder them off from the truth and homage of Christ A Merchant in a Storme throws his goods over-board the wrath of God makes the startled sinner part with any thing and incur any thing rather than incur that Moses had rather incur the wrath of a thousand Pharaohs than the wrath of God because he knew the power of his wrath As Gods people have rewards promised that out-weigh all that they are called to part with so terrours propounded that all other terrours may be over-looked and incurred rather than these 3. To worme out the esteems of the world and the sensual pleasures honours and profits thereof the fewel of lust there is need of violence to pull out of this fire Now he that propounds an end pitches upon means fitted to compasse that end A Cleaver of knotty timber must have a wedge that will go through The mother that will mean the childe must lay such bitter things on the brest as will make the childe loath the milk So the Lord hath declared those wages to sin that shall turn the edge of love and liking to sin That had need be very bitter that shall make those very sweets bitter to us No lesser evils would work the sense of that evil of sin into the conscience And those secretly grudge and complain of the pains as too great to whom they are too little to awaken and lead them to repentance 2. In the Reprobate 1. That he may discover his perfect and infinite displeasure against sin and in these great letters that all the world may read his full hatred of it Eli his faint checks proclaimed his faint dislikes of his sons sins High dislikes produce answerable checks Affections in men are the feet the soul goes forth upon and s rong affections goe a very nimble eager pace The Lord much more because of his infinite contrariety to sin 2. That he may discover the power of his justice and wrath Rom. 9.17 For this same purpose have I raised thee up that I might shew my power in thee and that my Name might be declared throughout all the earth Those which glorifie not God in that manner which he would he will glorifie himself in the manner that they would not Pharaoh said Who is the Lord and trampled his authority and commands under foot Now as he did sometimes bring light out of darknesse and the Apothecary doth Preservatives out of rank poysons so the Lord not actively glorified doth fetch the glory of his power and vindictive justice out of sin it self The walkers in greatest pride and scorne of God the Lord will have everlasting glory in their everlasting smart and he will so punish that heaven and hell shall ring of his justice and power and displicence against sin and that his threatnings to the utmost are made good and were not scare-crowes 3. Consider the dreadful aggravations of sin It is 1. A confederacy with the devil A sworn servant about the Princes person to contract amity and hold correspondence with the worst of his enemies makes the sin rise and his judgement without pity Should a Christian fall from a mild and gracious Prince without a cause and side with the Turk or worshipper of the devil against him we should think no punishment too much for him 2. A defection from and insurrection against God and ateasing the Lord into the lists and field 1 Cor. 10.22 Do we provoke the Lord to jealousie are we stronger than he Goliah challenges and defies the Host of Israel till David comes forth and sends a stone into his braines and cuts his head off with his own sword and gives his flesh to the fouls of heaven so sinners till they draw the Lord and the weight of his infinite and eternal displeasure forth against themselves even that weight which sinks them and they are never able to rise from under it again Now sins rise as the quality of the person that they are done against He that flies in my face and gives me blows and wounds thereby there is an Action of battery and damages to be had against him He that doth the same against the Judge of Assize or the King upon the Throne that is Treason and his life and estate are hardly enough to make amends for it The infinity of God makes the infinity of the evil and meritoriousness of wrath in sin The Majesty rises and so the guilt and demerit rises infinitely 3. The contempt of all means used for fetching the Rebel in How often would I have gathered you Mat. 23.37 and ye would not Men stand out and if they could have stood would have stood out and continued hostility against heaven for ever How equal is it that a creature nigh to God falling off to the devil without a cause and which chooses to have God his enemy and that no means can reduce though the danger and evil of sin be evidenced and his inability to stand an act of oblivion offered and highest preferment and yet will not come in How just is it that he reap the fruit of his continuing at a distance from his Soveraign and in disobedience against him 4. This may inform us of the distemper and pride of mans heart that will charge his misery anywhere rather than upon himself 1. Upon instruments forreign
and living in heaven should not be as powerful to save and bring us to God as Christ dying was to reconcile us to him The third Comparison is the privative mercy or being saved from hell with the positive mercy or obtaining a title to heaven Verse 11. and not only so but we joy in God as having now received the atonement 2. For the comparison between Christ and Adam the sum of it is that Christ is more able to save than Adam to destroy and therefore justified persons need to fear nothing As Adam was a publick person and root of man-kinde so is Christ a publick person for Adam was * The figure of him that was to come Rom. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Adam was a publick person but a finite person having no intrinsick value in himself and only was all us by divine institution but Christ besides the institution of God was an infinite person and therefore there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a much more upon Christ his sacred vertue exceedeth that cursed influence of Adam in many particulars amply set down in the latter end of the Chapter by the Apostle The words begin the first Comparison In them 1. The condition wherein we are by nature is set forth by two notions ungodly and without strength the one noteth we have no worth to move God to help us for we were ungodly the other that we have no power to help our selves for we were without strength we were without strength and so need help ungodly and so refused help 2. The means of our recovery Christ died for us 3. The s asonablenesse of our redemption in due time For the first notion whereby our natural estate is expressed ungodly I shall pass it by the next notion without strength will yield us this point That man faln is destitute of all power and means of rising again or helping himself out of that misery into which he hath plunged himself by sin This will appeare if you consider his condition with respect to the Law or with respect to the Gospel and those terms of grace which God offers in Christ the former more properly falls under the consideration of this place but because of the method of this exercise you expect the discussion of the latter also I shall take occasion from hence to speak of that 1. With respect to the Law that will be understood by a view of that Scripture that expresseth the tenour of the Law Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all the words of this Law to do them where is considerable 1. The duty is exacts 2. The penalty it inflicts 3. The operation that both these have upon the faln creature 1. The duty it exacts an innocent nature that is presupposed for the person must continue it doth not say Now being the sentence of the Law doth not suppose man as lapsed and faln or as having already broken with God but as in a good and sound estate and then universal perpetual perfect obedience is indispenceably required he must continue in all things with all the heart and that continually if he fails in one point he is gone this is personally exacted of all men as long as they abide under Adams Covenant he that doth them shall live in them and the sould that sinnes shall dye Now if God should call us to an account for the most inoffensive day that ever we passed over what would become of us Psal 130.3 If thu shouldest mark iniquities O Lord who could * That is rectas in curia be able to make a bold defence stand better never born than to be liable to that judgement when the Law shall take the sinner by the throat and say Pay me that thou owest what shall he poor wretch do so that here we are without strength altogether unable to come up to the obedience of the Law of works Rom. 8.3 The Law can make nothing perfect because 't is become weak through our flesh to faln man it establisheth a course of punishing sin not of taking away sin we may increase the debt but we cannot lessen it if our obedience were exact for the future let us suppose it yet the paying of new debts doth not quit old scores they that could not keep themselves when intire and innocent cannot recover themselves when lost and faln 2. The penalty it inflicts Cursed is every one how cursed cursed in all that he hath Deut. 28.15 16 17 18. All his enjoyments become a snare and temporal comforts do but harden him and prepare him for a greater misery Cursed in all that he doth his prayer is turned into sin his hearing the savour of death unto death all his toyle and labour in outward service is to no purpose Prov. 21.27 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination how much more when he bringeth it with a wicked mind At the best 't is but an abomination God will not accept an offering at his hands much more when 't is pulluted with sinful and evil aimes but this is not all he is cursed for evermore the Law bindeth him over body and soul to everlasting torments and in time he shall hear that dreadful sentence Matth. 25.41 Go ye cursed into everlasting fire prepared for the Divel and his Angels there is but the slender thread of a fraile life that hinders the execution of this sentence upon him a sinner stands upon the very brink of hell and ever and anon is ready to be cast in where he shall eternally lie under the wrath of God so that here we are without strength because we cannot satisfie the justice of God for one sin but are alwayes satisfying and can never be said to have satisfied like a poor man that pays a debt of a thousand pounds by a farthing a week 3. Consider how this works with him an exaction of duty under so severe a penalty doth either terrifie or stupifie the conscience he that escapeth the one suffereth the other or else thirdly doth irritate corruption or fourthly obtrude us upon a sottish despaire so as to give over all endeavours and hope of salvation First Sometimes it terrifieth that 's easily done the conscience of a sinner is a sore place they are all their life time subject to bondage Hebr. 2.14 There is a hidden fear in the heart of a wicked man not alwayes felt but soon awakened either by a sound conviction from the Word or some sore judgment or by the agonies of death or serious thoughts of the world to come Foelix trembled when Paul did but mention Gods judgment Acts 24.25 the Prisoner makes the Judge tremble a sinner is afraid to think of his condition if God do but a little break in upon his heart do what he can he lies under the bondage of a wounded spirit and where ever he goes like the Divels he carrieth his own hell about with him Secondly If it terrifieth not the conscience it
stupifieth the conscience that they grow senslesse of their misery past feeling Ephes 4.19 and that 's a dangerous Crisis and estate of soul when once a man comes to that and goeth like a fool to the correction of the stocks Thirdly it irritateth their inbred corruption Rom. 7.9 The Commandment came that is in full conviction and power and sin revived and I dyed the more we understand of the necessity of our subjection to God the more opposite is the soul to him as a Damm makes a River or strong streame the more violent or as a Bullock at the first yoking becometh the more unruly Or Fourthly It breedeth a sottish despaire Jer. 18.12 There is no hope therefore we will walk after our own devices and do every one according to the evil imaginations of our own heart 't is to no purpose to speak to us or strive further about us as if they had said there is no hope and therefore we will live as we list without any further care of turning to God this is the worst kinde of despaire when a man is * Psal 81.12 given up to his own hearts lust and runneth headlong in the way of destruction without hope of returning there is more hope of them that are under despairing fears or a terrified conscience than there is of those which are under despairing resolutions or a stupid and sottish obstinacy thus as to the Law man is helplesse 2. Consider man as to terms of grace offered in the Gospel he is still without strength not only in a damnable condition by the Law but without grace unable to accept the Gospel this will appear by two considerations 1. By those emphatical terms of Scripture by which the Case and Cure of man is set forth 2. By those positive assertions whereby all power is denied to man to convert himself to God or to do any thing that is spiritually good 1. Those emphatical expressions which represent His Case His Cure 1. His Case the Scripture sets forth mans condition thus that he is born in sin Psal 51.5 and things natural are not easily altered greedy of sin Job 16.15 He drinketh in iniquity like water it noteth a vehement propension as greedy to sin as a thirsty man to drink thirst is the most implacable appetite hunger is far better born but this you will say is but now and then in a great temptation or vehement passion no Gen. 6.5 Every imagination of the thought of his heart is evil only evil and that continually by how many aggravating and increasing circumstances is mans sin there set forth there is in him a Mint alwayes at work his minde coyning evil thoughts his heart evil desires and carnal motions and his memory is the closet and store house wherein they are kept But may not a man be reclaimed is not this his bondage and trouble no his heart is a heart of stone Ezek. 36.26 that is inflexible insensible when God useth the Word some common motions of his Spirit some rouzing providences yet all in vain for mans heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked Jer. 17.9 inventing shifts and excuses to avoid God and to cheat it self of its own happinesse But is not the New Testament more favourable than the Old or is not man grown better since there was so much grace discovered I answer No there is a perfect harmony between the Testaments there you will finde man represented as a childe of wrath by nature Ephes 2.3 even the Elect as well as others to be a servant of sin Rom. 6.17 Never such an imperious Master never such a willing servant sin never leaveth commanding and we love the work you will finde him again expressed as one averse from God alienated from his life Ephes 4.18 'T is a melancholy thought to a carnal heart to think of the life of God as an enemy to the Law Rom. 8.7 One that neither can nor will please God as blind and knoweth not what to do 2 Pet. 1.9 and this blindnesse spiritual is worse than bodily a man that is blind in body seeketh for a fit guide as Elymas when he was stricken blinde sought about for one to lead him by the hand Acts 13.11 as weak and without strength here in the Text yea stark dead in trespasses and sins Ephes 2.5 yea worse than dead a dead man doth no more hurt his evil dieth with him but there is a life of resistance and rebellion against God that goes along with this death in sin Now put all this together and you may spell out mans misery what a wretched impotent creature he is in his natural estate the Scripture does not speak this by glances or short touches neither is it an Hyperbole used once or twice but every where where it professedly speaks of this matter certainly man contributeth little to his own conversion he cannot hunger and thirst after Christ that drinks in iniquity like water there is nothing in nature to carry him to grace who is altogether sinful if the Scripture had only said that man had accustomed himself to sin and was not born in sin that man were somewhat prone to iniquity and not greedy of it and did often think evil and not continually that man were somewhat obstinate and not a stone an adamant if the Scripture had only said that men were indifferent to God and not a professed enemy if a captive of sin and not a servant if only weak and not dead if only a neuter and not a rebel then there might be something in man and the work of conversion not so difficult but the Scripture saith the quite contrary 2. The Cure certainly to remedy so great an evil requires an Almighty power and the al-sufficiency of grace therefore 't is good to see how conversion is described in Scripture sometimes by enlightning the minde Ephes 1.18 and the eyes of your understandings being enlightned c. Man the wisest creature on this side heaven is stark blinde in the things of God though he hath the light of nature and can put on the spectacles of Art and dresse his notions of divine things by the glasse of the Word yet ere the cure is wrought something must be done upon the faculty the eyes of our understandings must be enlightned as well as the object revealed I but this infusion of light is not all the Scripture speaks of opening the heart Acts 16.14 He opened the heart of Lydia God doth not only knock at the heart but open it he knocks many times by the outward means but findes no entrance yea as one that would open a door he tries key after key till he hath tried all the keys in the bunch so does God use means after means but till he * Cant. 5.4 5. putteth his fingers upon the handles of the lock the door is not opened to him well then the mind must be enlightned and the heart opened if these words are not emphatical
1 John 5.4 as well as a Saviour a Faith that is for obedience as well as priviledge Oh you that have this Faith go away in peace be of good comfort This everlasting Covenant betwixt the Father and the Son is yours your good was promoted and secured in this Treaty and foederal Engagement How much doth this Covenant speak for the benefit of believers if you be such 't is all yours By it you are already brought into a state of Grace by it you shall hereafter be brought into a state of glory Upon this Covenant Christ now sees you as his seed upon this Covenant you shall hereafter see him as your Saviour face to face unto Eternity To this Father to this Son with the Holy Spirit be glory for evermore THE COVENANT OF GRACE Heb. 8.6 But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministry by how much also he is the Mediatour of a better Covenant which was established upon better promises THE general design of this Epistle is my special design in this Text viz. to demonstrate to you that you live under the best of gracious dispensations that Jesus Christ our deservedly adored Mediator of the New Covenant hath obtained a more excellent Ministry and by the faithful discharge of that Ministry more excellent benefits than either Moses the Messenger-Mediator or the Levitical Priests the Stationary-Mediators of the Old Covenant But now now is not here a note of time but of opposition as in Rom. 7.17 now then i. e. after the Law received so Grotius or if you will have it to note the time 't is the time of the Gospel this last time Hath he obtained not by usurpation but by election he hath of divine grace freely received * Anselm A more excellent ministry 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Minister is he that doth something at the command of another Heb. 1.7 and so 't is said of Magistrates Rom. 13.6 they are Gods Ministers but 't is chiefly spoken of the Priests Nehemiah 10.39 The Priests that minister because they offer those things that God requires they are said to minister Exodus 28.35 43. Christs ministry is more excellent thatn the Levitical he executes it partly on earth and partly in heaven but he amplifies the excellency chiefly from the excellency of the Covenant * Paraeus and therefore it follows By how much also he is the Mediator of a better Covenant If you take the old Covenant for the whole dispensation under the old Testament as well Gospel-promises as those things which are more strictly legal then we may truly say he old and new Covenant are for substance the same and therefore the Comparison relates rather to the form than to the matter of the Covenant * Calvin The Covenant of grace is dispensed with more latitude clearnesse and power of the Holy Ghost * D●odate and therefore it may be called a better Covenant Which was established upon better promises 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys He names that which may most affect them with joy in saying it is established upon better promises All Cove●ants consist in promises The Covenants of Kings and Princes amongst themselves consist in promises of either not hurting or helping one another the Covenants of Princes and people consist in promises the Prince promises justice clemency and defence the people promise love obedience and gratitude so in the Covenant of grace the first and chief part whereof is I will be thy God and of thy seed and we promise faith obedience and worship the promises of the Old Covenant run more upon temporal good things the promises of the New Covenant are chiefly remission of sins sanctification by the Spirit c. and the Covenant is said to be established the word is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 q. d. Legislatum Law and Covenant are joyned together in Scripture They kept not the Covenant of God and refused to walk in his Law Psal 78.10 The New Covenant containeth certain precepts which every one must obey that will obtaine the promise Thus you have the meaning of the words The Observation I shall commend to you is this The Gospel Covenant or the new Covenant is the best Covenant that ever God made with man I will not stay you long in the general notion of a Covenant the word sometimes signifies an absolute promise of God without any restipulation as Gods engagement to Noah Gen. 9.11 And I will establish my Covenant with you neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood neither shall there any more be a flood to destroy the earth Whatever mans carriage shall be God promises that he will no more drown the world So the promise of perseverance Heb. 8.10 This is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their minds and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people Our perseverance doth not leane upon imperfect grace but upon divine favour but I wave this and shall speak of Covenants as they note the free promise of God with restipulation of our duty * Camero A Covenant is amicus status interfaederatos so Martin a friendly state between Allies 'pray ' consider the several Covenants the Scripture mentions and they are three namely the Natural Legal and Gospel Covenant the Natural commonly called the Covenant of Works that flourished till the first sin the Legal Covenant that flourished till the Ascention of Christ and the pouring out of the holy Ghost upon the Apostles though it began to languish from Johns preaching and began to grow old throuhout the course of Christs Mini●try the Gosp l Covenant that flourisheth from Christ till the end of the world I shall speak but little of the first something more of the second but dwell upon the last 1. The Natural Covenant is that whereby God by the right of Creation doth require a perfect obedience of all man-kind and promiseth a most blessed life in Paradise to those that obey him and threateneth eternal death to those that disobey him that it may appeare to all how he loves righteousnesse and holinesse how he hates impiety and wickednesse In this Covenant I shall consider but these three things 1. Gods condiscention that he would enter into Covenant with man God was at liberty whether he would create man or not and when God had made this glorious Fabrick there could be no engagement upon him besides his own goodnesse to keep it from ruine Matth. 20.15 Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own but man having an understanding and will to comprehend and observe the Laws given him had a natural obligation to duty which can no way be dissolved there is no power in heaven or earth can disoblige man from loving and obeying God Now that God will deale with man not summo
jure not imperiously and threateningly but magna comitate that God will deale with man as with his friend and though he may give what Laws he will yet he will give none but what are easie and yet make them more easie by bountifully rewarding an easie obedience this speaks wonderful condiscention 2. The second thing considerable in the Natural Covenant is mans duty which consisted in the knowledge and love of God whence would have proceeded piety to God justice and love to man this was mans natural duty for we must distinguish the duty from the Symbole of duty Natural duty consisteth in those things that are good in their own nature and not in those things that are only good because God commands them the Law about the forbidden fruit was only for the tryal of mans obedience for had not the divine command intervened it would have been as lawful for man to have eaten of that Tree as any other Tree in Paradise but 3. The last thing I shall mention concerning this Natural Covenant is the Promise of Reward now that consisted in a perpetual life flowing with all manner of good things agreeable to the soule and body of man in that perfect estate 2. The second Covenant was the Legal now the Legal Covenant is that whereby God did r●quire of the people of Israel obedience to the Moral Ceremonial and Judicial Law and to that obedience he promised all sorts of blessings in the Land of Canaan and to the dis bedient he denounced most severe curses and death and all to this end that he might bring them to the future Messiah Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only something more Therefore consider 1. Gods condiscention is singularly observable that ever he would enter into another Covenant with man when the first was broken this Moses useth as a mighty Argument to perswade Israel to observe the Covenant Deut. 4. from the 32. to the 40. verse Ask now of the dayes that are past which were before thee since the day that God created man upon earth and ask from the one side of heaven unto thie other whether there hath been any such thing as this great thing is or hath been heard like it Did ever people hear the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire as thou hast heard and live Or hath God assayed to go and take him a Nation from the midst of another Nation by temptations by signes and by wonders and by warre and by a mighty hand and by a stretched-out arme and by great terrours according to all that the Lord your God did for you in Egypt before your eyes c. thou shalt therefore keep his Statutes and his Commandments which I command thee this day that it may go well with thee and thy children after thee c. 2. Consider mans duty in the Legal Covenant and that is obedience to the moral Law to which was added the Ceremonial Law for a Rule and Direction in the worship of God and the Judicial Law which was their divine policy for the government of the State All these are comprehended in the ten Commandments but the more-particular their directions were the more plain was their duty and the truth is it was but need that they should have particular direction when their Legal Covenant neither admitted of faith in the Redeemer nor repentance of sin for pardon of sin and curse for sin are inconsistent Gal. 3.10 As many as are of the works of the Law are under the Curse for it is written Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them As many as depend upon the works of the Law for Justification are under the curse and the Law discovered no other way of Justification but by Works 3. The third thing considerable in the Legal Covenant is the promise that God made to those that obeyed it and that was perpetual happiness in the Land of Canaan By the way to prevent mistakes I do not say neither will the Scripture at all warrant any such assertion as that the Fathers under the Old Testament had only temporal promises they had salvation promised them and pardon of sin promised them but thanks to the Gospel for those promises the Apostle tells us Gal. 3.17 The Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was foure hundred and thirty years after cannot disannull that it should make the promise of none effect the Morning Star of the Gospel Covenant that shone upon Abraham foure hundred and thirty years before the Legal Covenant was given did shine thorough that dark dispensation But to speak of the Legal promises as L●gal so they are of temporal good things and they were made to works not to faith Rom. 4.4 To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt 4. The fourth thing considerable in this Covenant which had no place at all in the former is a Mediator Now the Mediator of the Covenant strictly legal was Moses for That needed only a meer man it not admitting of satisfaction nor reconciliation of mercy nor pardon Moses might serve as a Messenger to make known the minde of God unto the people Deut. 5.5 I stood b●tween the Lord and you at that time to shew you the Word of the Lord in the Natural Covenant communion with God was natural unto man and so there needed no Mediator In the Legal Covenant man was rather considered as what he should be than what he was and so a meer man was able in the name of the people to promise obedience and in the name of God to promise a reward and this Moses did you have both very plain in Deut. 5. The people do as it were say Go to God from us upon this Errand Ver. 27. Go thou n●ar and hear all that the Lord our God shall say and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall speak unto thee and we will hear it and do it and God doth as it were say Go dismiss them with this blessing if they will be obedient Ver. 28.29 30. And the Lord heard the voice of your words when ye spake unto me I have heard the voice of the words of this people which they have spoken unto thee they have well said all that they have spoken O that there were such an heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandments alwayes that it might be well with them and with their children for ever Go say to them Get you into your Tents again q. d. If they will keep their promise assure them I will keep mine and thus much concerning the Covenant strictly Legal 3. The third Covenant is the G●spel-Covenant and here Beloved here is 2 Sam. 23.5 the Everlasting Coven●nt ordered in all things and sure This is all our salvation and all our desire Here is the
better Covenant established upon better promises But I must explain it before I admire it The Gospel Covenant is that whereby God upon the condition propounded of faith in Christ promiseth remission of sins in his blood and a heavenly life and that for this end that he might shew forth the riches of his mercy * Camero Here I shall propose the same considerations as in the former Covenant only still something more and more comfortably considerable in the consideration of the persons contracting namely God and man according to the proposed method 1. Consider Gods gracious condescention And now Beloved that I have named Gods gracious condescention were my heart but duly affected with it it would constrain me to stop and put in a large Parenthesis of admiration before I should speak a word more Will God after the loss of the natural communion wherein he created man will God when man d●eads his Majesty and trembles at his revenging justice will God then as a merciful Father enter into a Covenant of peace with poor undone sinners affrighted with the sense of sin and wrath O the incomprehensible ●ondescention of such unsearchable riches of grace that grace should abound according to sins abounding when sin over-flow d all its banks that God should make a way thorough the deep into the heavenly Canaan never can we enough admire such Extasying grace This is the first thing considerable 2. The second thing considerable is the duty which God requires in this Gospel Covenant and that is Faith faith whereby we embrace the remedy offered us We want a pardon and nothing but faith can receive it we want perfect Righteousnesse and nothing but faith can furnish us with it we want that which may make this Covenant effectual to us and make it a blessing to us and nothing can do any of these things but faith faith is the Antecedent Condition for which the Reward is given 3. The third thing considerable in the Gospel Covenant is the promise Now the promise of the Gospel Covenant is comprehended in the word Salvation therefore the Gospel is called the salvation of God Acts 28.28 And this is the great businesse of Christ to be a Saviour Isa 49.6 That thou mayst be my salvation to the end of the earth when the Angels preached the Gospel they thought they could not expresse their news in better language than to tell people of salvation that must needs be great joy to all people In short when Gospel Ministers come clad with garments of salvation as Heraulds do with the garments of their Office then Saints may well shout aloud for joy Psal 132.16 Now this promise of salvation contains all Gospel promises in it but they are reduced to these foure 1. Justification this is a priviledge which other Covenants were unacquainted with and without this what would become of poor sinful man And this may well be the first great Gospel promise I might name not some Verses but whole Chapters to prove it Rom. 4. and 5. Gal. 3. and 4. but in a word if you would know the preciousness of this promise Ask those that have but felt what sin is and they will tell you 2. The second promise contained in Gospel salvation is Sanctification Rom. 8.2 3 4. The Law of the Sp●rit of life in Christ hath made me free from the Law of sin and death for what the Law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likenesse of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit q.d. The efficacy and power of the sanctifying Spirit which gives life to believers frees us from the tyranny of sin and death and whereas the Law by reason of the corruption of our nature could not make us pure and perfect but rather kindled than extinguished corruption God hath cloathed his Son with our flesh to take away the guilt and power of sin that his perfect righteousnesse might be imputed to us and fulfill●d by us that we might not live according to the motion of our sinful nature but according to the motion of his holy Spirit 3. The third promise is the resurrection of the body You know the penal●y of sin is the death of soul and body though the soul be immortal yet its being miserable for ever may sadly be called an Eternal death Now let the guilt of sin be abolished and you do therewith abolish the punishment of it for gu●lt is only an obligation to punishmen● let sin be pardoned and the sinner is freed from death and though believers dye yet it is as a corne of wheat falls into the ground they thereby ob●ain a multiplied life John 6.54 Whoso eateth my flesh and drinke●h my blood hath Eternal life and I will raise him up at the last day 4. The last promise is Eternal life a spiritual blessed and immortal life in heaven John 3.16 God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have Everlasting life The Covenant of Grace is excellent fitted to bring us to the chiefest good Now the chiefest good consists in communion with God that was broken by sin and can never be perfectly recovered till sin be abolished therefore when the guilt of sin is taken away by Justification and the filthinesse of sin is taken away by Sanctification and the penalty of sin taken away by Resurrection then what can hinder our communion with God when we have once obtained perfect holinesse nothing can hinder us of perfect happinesse Thus you have the promise of the Gospel-Covenant which was the third considerable in it 4. The fourth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the Mediator of this better Covenant and that is Jesus Christ God-man blessed for ever through his dignity he hath purchased salvation Hebr. 9.12 14. By his own blood he entred in once into the holy place having obtained Eternal Redemption for us how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God c. And he is not only the Author of Eternal salvation by his merit and efficacy but the most absolute example and pattern to us how we should walk that we may obtain his purchased salvation Rom. 8.29 God did predestinate us to be conformable to the Image of his Sonne that he might be the first born among many brethren 1 Cor. 15.49 And as we have born the Image of the Earthly we shall also bear the Image of the heavenly And this is the only Covenant whereof Christ is Mediator the first Covenant needed no Mediator the Old Covenant as Legal take it without its sprinkling of Gospel and so chiefly Moses but in all respects meer men were Mediators but of the New Covenant Christ was Mediator but this I shall leave
to be enlarged by another 5. The fifth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the efficacy of it I did not so much as mention the efficacy of the former Covenants for there was never so much as any one made happy by them 't is sadly true that the threatnings of punishment for the neglect of duty took hold of them the threatnings seemed plainly to belong to the nature of those Covenants but in the Gospel Covenant 't is otherwise for it is said John 3.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abides which shews that the wrath was brought upon them by the violation of the former Covenant he speaks as of that which was upon them already But yet mistake not as if refusing the Gospel were no sin or not punished they sin more grievously that sin against Gospel love than they that sin only against Legal goodness but wrath doth not properly belong to the Essence of the Gospel Thus you have the first thing I undertook namely the nature of the Covenant positively considered the second is the comparative excellency of the New Covenant above others I will be brief in shewing its excellency above the Covenant of Works more large in shewing you how 't is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Only suppose to prevent mistakes that each Covenant is in its own kind most perfect and most accommodated to the state of the people and to the purposes for which they were instituted This premised First The New Covenant of Grace is better than the Covenant of Nature I forbear to speak of the agreement and diff●rence of them I shall speak only of the excellency of this better Covenant 1. The Covenant of Works was a Declaration of Gods Justice than which nothing can be more terrible to a guilty sinner but the Covenant of Grace is a Declaration of Gods mercy in Christ and let the overwhelmed conscience speak is not this better 2. The Foundation of the Covenant of Works was the Creation of man and the integrity of his nature the Foundation of the Covenant of Grace is mans Redemption by Jesus Christ 3. The Promise of the Covenant of Works was eternal life in Paradise the Promise of the New Covenant is eternal life in Heaven 4. The Covenant of Works had no Mediator no possibility of recovering the least slip the New Covenant is ratified in the blood of the Son of God 't is composed on purpose for our relief * Camero Thus the New Covenant is better than the Covenant of Works Secondly The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Beloved you may observe I do not say better than the Covenant strictly Legal but better than the whole Dispensation which the Jews and all other Believers lived under before Christs Incarnation better than the Old Doctrine of spiritual grace delivered by Moses and the Prophets openly promising Eternal life unto the Fathers and the Dull people of the Jews under the condition of perfect obedience to the Moral Law together with the intolerable burdens of Legal rights and yoke of most straight Mosaical policy but covertly under the condition of repentance and faith in the future Messiah prefigured in the shadowes and types of Ceremonies that by this forme of Divine worship and policy a stiffe-necked people might partly be tamed and partly be brought to Christ that lay hid under those Ceremonies So that in short you see the Old Testament or the Old Covenant for by a Metonymie they are chiefly one and the same thing and the Apostle plainly so expresseth himself 2 Cor. 3.14 Untill this day remaineth the same vaile untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which vaile is done away in Christ and this contains these three things 1. The old kind of doctrine which was openly and principally Legal covertly and lesse principally Evangelical 2. The old way of worship and Legal Priest-hood 3. That Mosaical policy which was tyed to one people * Paraeus This Covenant was made by God to Adam presently after the fall G n. 3.15 afterward to Abraham and his posterity Gen. 17.1 2 7 8. The symbole of this Covenant was circumcision from verse 10. to the 14. I forbear further particularising to whom it was often renewed and confirmed whereupon it is called the Covenants Rom. 9.4 Ephes 2.12 Now the New Covenant of Reconciliation to God by Christ exhibited in the flesh is the better Covenant The Gospel is the Table of the New Testament longè divinio● quam smaragdina Hermetis far beyond the Emerauld Table of Hermes which the Chymists vainly boast to yield the Philosophers stone to enrich all persons and the Panacea that cures all diseases here 's the elect and precious stone 1 Pet. 2.6 * Crocii Syntag. But I will come to particulars only premising this Caution Caution Let not any thing I shall say be interpreted as if I put an hostile contrariety between the Old Covenant and the New in spiritual practice they yield spiritual help to each other Justin Martyr saith that grace is not according to the Law nor against the Law but above the Law therefore they are not adversa but diversa the Gospel in Scripture is called the Law Isa 2.3 only 't is the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 and the Law of the Spirit Rom. 8.2 therefore when we advance the Gospel Rom. 3.31 do we then make voide the Law through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Gal. 3.21 Is the Law then against the promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life v●rily righteousnesse should hav● been by the law The believers in the Old Testament were saved by the free mercy of God in Christ Gerhar l. c. Heb. 9.15 He is the Mediator of the New Testament and by means of death for the Redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance And their Sacraments and ours Maccov l. c. sealed the same ●hing 1 Cor. 10.3 4. They did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ. This premised I shall now shew you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 1. The Gospel-Covenant is a better Covenant than the Legal in respect of its Original and manner of patefaction 't is true they have both one principal efficient cause but the Law may in some sort be known by nature it was written in mans heart at the first and the character is not wholly worne out Rom. 2.15 The Gentiles shew the work of the Law written in their hearts but now the Gospel was immediately manifested from God to the Church alone Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Mat. 16.16 17. And Simon Peter answered
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
We have three notable advantages in our temporal promises beyond what they had in theirs 1. The Old Covenant had special promises of temporal good things in the Land of Canaan for the preserving of their Mosaical policy untill the time of the Messiah to be born of that people promises of long life c. The New Covenant hath promises of all good things necessary without any such clog All good works shall be rewarded and he promiseth to give a present temporal reward in part of payment Eph. 6.8 Whatsoever good thing any man doth the same shall he receive of the Lord whether he be bond or free and which is more 1 Tim. 4.8 Godlinesse is profitable unto all having promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come 2. The temporal good things promised in the Old Testament were symbolical they prefigured spiritual benefits by Christ we have them without any such adjoyned significations Col. 2.17 They had a shadow of things to come but the body is of Christ They had a more sparing taste of heavenly good things in earthly benefits we have a more streight and direct way unto eternal life 3. Promises of temporal good things were in the Old Covenant more frequent in the New Covenant more rare and this I name as their excellency because they are thrown in as meer additions to spiritual promises * Alting Ma. 16.33 Seek ye first the Kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be added unto you this for temporal promises And for spiritual promises which are the best of the Gospel-Covenant not only the conditions of those promises are more easie for whereas it was Do this and live Gal. 3.15 now it is Believe and thou shalt not come into condemnation * Camero Joh. 3.18 but the condition is also promised Jer. 31.34 I will make a New Covenant with the House of Israel and with the House of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day that I took them by the hand to bring them out of the Land of Egypt which my C●venant they brake although I was an Husband unto them saith the Lord but this shall be the Covenant that I will make with the House of Israel after those dayes saith the Lord I will put my law into their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people and they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his brother saying Know the Lord for they shall know me from the least of th●m unto the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquity and I will remember their sinnes no more Gods hearty good will is herein manifested Jer. 32.41 I will rejoyce over them to do them good and I will plant them in this land assuredl● with my whole heart and with my whole soul If you say these are Old-Testament promises and belonged to them to whom they were spoken and were not only Prophetical so as to concern another people * Calv. Instit I grant it Rom. 3.19 We know that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law But they had not that efficacy of the Spirit to make these promises so effectual as was Prophesied and promised for the times of the Gospel * Synop. pu th Joel 2.28 And it shall come to passe afterwards mark that afterwards I will poure out my Spirit upon all flesh c. The measure of the Spirit which they did receive tended mostly to bondage Gal. 4.24 25. but the Spirit is to us a Spirit of Adoption Rom. 8.15 And therefore the Gospel is specially called the Word of Gods grace Acts 20.32 as if all the grace that God had formerly expressed had been nothing in comparison of this Rom. 6.14 Ye are not under the Law but under grace Law and grace are opposed as condemnation and mercy thus the Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the promises of it 5. The Gospel is the better Covenant in respect of the effects of it the Old Covenant shews us sin doth accuse us and declares us guilty before the judgement of God Rom. 3.19 20. That every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledge of sinne It subjects us under the curse and condemneth sinners for the transgressing of Gods commands Deut. 27.26 Cursed be he that confirmeth not all the words of this Law to do them and all the people shall say Amen So Gal. 3.10 it is the ministry of death 2 Cor. 3.6 7. but now the Gospel that proclaims pardon of sin and lifts up with quickening consolation Isa 61.1 2. in the Law God is considered as reproving sin and approving righteousnesse in the Gospel as remitting sin and repairing righteousnesse and therefore the Word of the Gospel is called good seed Mat. 13.3 The seed of Regeneration 1 Pet. 1.23 The Word of Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.18 19. The Ministration of the Spirit Gal. 3.2 The Word of faith Rom. 10.8 The Word of life Phil. 2.16 The power of God Rom. 1.16 That whereby the righteousnesse of God is manifest Rom. 3.21 The destruction of unbelievers is not the end of the Gospel but that is through their own fault Polan Syntag. eventus adventitius an accidental event God abundantly declares in the Gospel that he delights not in the death of sinners but in the saving translation of them by faith and repentance from the power of darknesse into the Kingdome of his dear Son The best effect of the Legal Covenant is the bringing man into the Gospel-Covenant and 'pray ' observe how when it is most effectual it turns over the sinner to the Better Covenant 1. It discovers sin to us Rom. 7.7 I had not known sin but by the Law but wherefore is it that we know sin at all that we might be compelled to seek reparation in the Gospel-Covenant Gal. 3.21 22. The Scripture hath concluded all under sin that the promise of faith in Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe 2. The Old Covenant restrains sin there is a natural stupidnesse in mens consciences but then when the dreadful threatnings of the Law still sound in their ears man is somewhat affrighted and hath some reluctancy though afterwards the Law of the minde is led captive by the Law of the members and man forbears sin as having a bridle put upon him Ringente interim intus tumultuante appetitu corrupto though he be restrained from sin yet it is but a kinde of coactior it ends best when it ends in a spontaneous and voluntary inclination of the minde to forsake sin and hate it and that is the work of the Gosp●l-Covenant 3. The Old Covenant works fear
when sin hath been committed and the raging of the affections are a little appeased then the minde returns unto its self and the Spirit that was resisted brings to remembrance those grievous and unavoidabl● threanings which the Law denounceth whereupon there follows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Legal repentance that is a wishing that the Fact were undone and that he had not committed the sin that causeth that trouble but not that he is any better than before for shew him a new temptation and he presently runs after it though under trouble of minde and though expectation of wrath incredibly full of anguish doth sting and vex him intolerably But now Beloved where this ends well there the Spirit insinuates something to put him upon panting after a Redeemer and to get power against sin and this brings unspeakable joy and begets peace past all understanding thus you see the best effects of the Law is the bringing men to the Gospel which shews the fifth excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 6. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of its objects or persons taken into Covenant and that under a double consideration their multiplicity and their quality 1. In respect of the number The Old Covenant belonged only to one people the New to Jews and Gentiles Abraham and his posterity were taken into Covenant and all the world beside were excluded those few others that were admitted it was by extraordinary grace and they were as it were planted into Abrahams family but now the partition Wall is broken down which as it were shut up the mercy of God in the confines of Israel Now peace is proclaimed to those that are far off as well as to those that are near that they might become one people this is a great mystery Colos 1.26 Certainly all may well say so as we are poor Gentiles and we are made nigh by the blood of his Crosse Col. 1.20 21. 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better in respect of the quality of the persons taken into it the Law is proposed to wicked secure and hardened sinners 1 Tim. 1.9 The Law is not made for a righteous man but for the lawless and disobedient for ungodly and for sinners for unholy and profane for murderers of fathers and murd●rers of mothers for men-slayers for whoremongers c. to restrain and bridle them but the Gospel lifts up broken-hearted sinners Luk. 4.18 He hath sent me to heale the broken-hearted to preach deliverance to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind to set at liberty them that are bruised to preach the acceptable year of the Lord The Law is to terrifie the conscience the Gospel is to comfort it * Gerhard l. c. 7. The last excellency I shall name is this the Gospel-Covenant is every way faultlesse it is the last and best Dispensation of Divine grace Hebr. 8.7 If the first Covenant had been faultlesse then should no place have been sought for the second as if he should say the Covenant from Mount Sinai was not such Quo non alterum posset esse perfectius * Grotius that man could not desire a better Hebr. 7.18 19. There is verily a disanulling of the Commandment going before for the weaknesse and unprofitableness thereof for the Law made nothing perfect but the bringing in of a better hope did by the which we draw nigh unto God plainly this is so excellent we cannot desire a better The Old Covenant is abrogated 1. As to the circumstance de futuro it all related to the future Messiah Christ is come and that consideration therefore ceaseth 2. 'T is abrogated as to the impossible condition of perfect obedience the Gospel sincerity of the meanest believer is better than the exactest obedience of the highest Legalist 3. 'T is abrogated as to the burden of Legal Ceremonies Priesthood and shadows God gave these things to them and the Gospel to us as we give nuces parvulo codicem grandi * Beda things of smaller value to a little childe but a good book to him when he is grown up They have lost their Temple their Priesthood their Unction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * Chrysost c. We have Heaven for our Temple and Christ for our Priest and the Spirit for our Unction 4. The Old Covenant is abrogated as to the yoke of Mosaical policy we have nothing to do with the Judicial Laws of the Jews any farther than they are Moral or of a Moral equity Luk. 16.16 The Law and the Prophets were untill John Hebr. 7.12 The Priesthood being changed there is made of necessity a change of the Law And thus I have doctrinally shewed you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant APPLICATION 1. This retorts wicked mens Reproaches into their own faces They cry out against the Ministers of the Gospel for preaching terrour to them Be it known to you the Gospel is properly employed in celebrating the mercy of God in the pardon of sin and comforting drooping sinners but in your doing what you can to put out this comfortable light you force us to fetch fire from Mount Sinai to take hold of you 'T is true the Law was given with Thunder and Lightning and terrible Miracles the Gospel was attested with a comfortable voice from heaven and healing Miracles but as sinners broken by the Law needed some Gospel-balm to heal their wounds so secure Gospel sinners need Legal threatnings to fright them out of their sluggishnesse and sleepy security If whispers of peace will not awaken them we must cry aloud to stir them up if it be possible to break off sinning and to minde salvation Sirs 't is no pleasure to us to speak words unpleasing to you you hinder us from work more purely Evangelical and which 't is a thousand fold more pleasure to us to be conversant about 'Pray take notice that were it not in love and faithfulnesse to your souls we would never be so poorly employed as to be pelting at your base lusts Do but try us Break off your soul-undoing wickednesse and you shall never hear us rate you any more you your selves being Judges ex gr Ask a sober man whether the lashing of drunkennesse makes him smart or not Ask a chaste person whether the naming of such Texts as Prov. 22.14 The mouth of strange women is a deep pit he that is abhorred of the Lord shall fall therein Prov. 23.27 An whore is a deep ditch and a strange woman is a narrow pit reproach him in short Ask one that 's conscientious whether he thinks the Minister hath a spite at him in his Sermon because he names 1 Cor. 6.9 10. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Be not deceived neither Fornicators nor Idolaters nor Adulterers nor Effeminate nor Abusers of themselves with mankinds nor Thieves nor Covetous nor Drunkards nor Revilers nor Extortioners shall inherit the Kingdome of God Alas all these will tell
in this nature only Heb. 4.14 15 16. 2. His Names Christ Jesus this was his proper Name Jesus Christ his appellative Name Jesus that denotes the work and businesse for which he came into the world as appeares from the reason which the Angel that came from heaven as an Herauld to proclaim his incarnat●on gives of the imposition of this Name Thou shalt call his Name J●sus f●r he shall save his people from their sins This Name though it be given to others in Scripture yet to him eminently to them as types of that compleat Saviour who should come after them and save his people from their sinnes Christ that denotes the several Offices in the exercise whereof he executes this work of salvation Christ in the Greek being the same with Messiah in the Hebrew i. e. anointed Under the Law the solemne ordination or setting apart both of things and persons to special services was by anointing thus we read of three sorts of persons anointed Kings Priests Prophets and in respect of all these Offices Jesus is called Christ From the words thus briefly explained arise these two Observations 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator 2. That there is no other Mediator between God and man but Jesus Christ Doctr. 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator and indeed considering what God is and withal what man is how vastly disproportionable how unspeakably unsuitable our very natures are to his how is it possible there should be any sweet communion betwixt them who are not only so infinitely distant but so extreamly contrary God is holy but we are sinful Isa 6.3 with Gen. 3.5 1 Joh. 1.5 with Eph. 5 8. Rom. 7 1● in him is nothing but light in us nothing but darknesse in him nothing that 's evil in us nothing that 's good he is all beauty we nothing but deformity he is justice and we gui●tinesse he a consuming fire and we but dried stubble in a word he an infini●ely and incomprehensibly glorious Majesty and we poor sinful dust and ashes who have sunk and debased our selves by sin below the meanest rank of creatures and made our selves the burthen of the whole Creation and can there be any communion any friendship between such Can too walk together Amos 3.3 except they be agreed And what agreement can there ever be but through a Mediator If ever God be reconciled to us it must be through a Mediator because of that indispensible necessity of satisfaction Rom. 8.7 and our inability to make it If ever we be reconciled to God it must be through a Mediator because of that radicated enmity that is in our natures to every thing of God and our impotency to it and thus in both respects that God may be willing to be a friend to us and that we may not be unwilling to be friends to him there needs a Mediatour 2 Cor. 5.19 compared with Joh. 14.6 Doctr. 2. That there 's no other Mediator betwen God and man but Jesus Christ And one Mediator i. e. but one Opus est Mediatore ad Mediatorem istum Bernard p. 262 Leo. 1. Papa Roman Epist. 83. ad Palestinos Episcop c. 4. The fondnesse of Papists in their multiplicity of Mediators not only unto God but to our Mediator himself having no other foundation than only their superstition cannot be of moment with them who labour to be wise according to Scripture That those members of the Church who are contemporary here on earth do indeed pray for one another cannot be denied but that they are therefore Mediators of Intercession hath been denied by the more Antient Papists themselves This Title of Mediator is throughout the New Testament appropriated unto Christ Heb. 8.6 H●b 9.15 Heb. 12.24 and indeed there 's none else fit for so high a work as this but only he Resol 1. The singular suitablenesse of his person to this eminent employment To interpose as a Mediator betwixt God and men was an employment above the capacity of men Angels or any creature but Jesus Christ in respect of the dignity of his person was every way suited for this work Which you may take in these four particulars 1. That he was truly God equal with the Father of the same nature and substance not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the like nature but of the same nature as is excellently cleared by that famous Champion for the Deity of Christ against the Arrians Athanasius Col. 2.9 In him dwelleth the fulness of the God-head bodily Non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non divinitatis sed deitatis D. Prideaux fasc p. 76. 't is not the fulnesse of the Divinity but of the Deity thereby intimating an identity of essence with God the Father and holy Ghost Though the Divine essence be after a several manner in the several Persons of the blessed Trinity in the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without receiving it from any other in the Son by an eternal generation and in the holy Ghost by proceeding yet 't is the same essence of God that is in all three persons Tylen Syntagm p. 401. Lysord his plain mans senses exercised p. 82. because such is the infinite simplicity of this essence that it cannot be divided or parcelled Thus Christ not to speak any thing concerning the other persons is stiled so the Son of God as one equal with the Father for upon this it is that the Jews ground their charge of blasphemy against him that he said God was his Father making himself equal with God Joh. 5.18 The force of their reason lies in this the natural Son of God is truly God and equal with God as the natural son of man is man equal and of the same substance with his father Angels and men are the Sons of God by Adoption Lyford p. 93. but Christ is the natural Son of God the only Son of God and therefore truly God I and my Father are one Joh. 10.30 he thought it no robbery to be equal with God Phil. 2.6 For the further confirmation of this take these Arguments 1. He whom Scripture honours with all those Names which a●e peculiar unto God must needs be God That Christ hath these Names ascribed to him appeares from these instances He is not only stiled God the Word was God Joh. 1.1 but God with such additional discrimination● 〈◊〉 neither Magistrates who because they are Gods Depu●ies and Vicegerents here on earth Psal 82 6. are sometimes called Gods nor a●y creature is capable of The great God Tit. 2.13 The true God 1 Joh. 5.20 The mighty God Isa 9.6 Over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 The Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 The Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15.48 Yea that great Name Jehovah the Lord or Jehovah our
is proper to each nature by reason of the hypostatical union is ascribed to the whole person 4. This union of two natures in one person is without confusion or transmutation the natures remaining distinct and the properties and operations of both natures distinct notwithstanding this union Some things are proper to the Godhead of which the Manhood is uncapable and some things proper to the Manhood of which the Godhead is uncapable We cannot say the Godhead was athirst weary dyed neither can we say the Manhood was the Fountain of all being the Creator and Preserver of all things or that it is ubiquitary or omnipresent though we may say all of the same person 'T is observed by learned Writers that the dividing of the person which is but one Hooker Eccles Pol. p. 299. and the confounding of the natures which are two hath occasioned those grand Errors in this Article of faith by which the peace of the Church hath been so much disturbed And sutably to these foure heads that have been spoken to there have arisen foure several heresies 1. The Arrians denying the Deity of Christ against whom the Council of Nice Determined that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly God Hooker ibid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The Apollinarians who maimed and misinterpreted his humane nature against whom the Council of Constantinople Determined that he was compleat and perfect Man 3. The Nestorians who divided Christ into two persons because of his two natures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against whom the Council of Ephesus Determined that he was God-man in one person 4. The Eutichians who confounded these two natures in one person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against whom the Council of Chalcedon Determined that he was God-man in one person without confusion or mutation of natures But in the foure above-named heads enough hath been said by way of Antidote against those dangerous mistakes And all being duly considered we cannot but see great reason why he should be called wonderful Isa 9.6 Well might the Apostle cry out by way of admiration Without controversie great is the mystery of godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 5. The singular fitnesse of Christ for this work of Mediation arises from his being God-man in two natures united in one person without Confusion or Transmutation 1. Had he not been truly God he had been too mean a person for so high an employment it was God that had been offended an infinite Majesty that had been despised The person therefore interposing must have some equality with him to whom he interposes Had the whole society of persevering Angels interposed on mans behalf it had been to little purpose one Christ was infinitely more than all and that because he was truly God 2. Had he not been compleatly man he had been no way capable of performing that indispensibly necessary condition upon which God was willing to be reconciled viz. The satisfying of that righteous sentence God had pronounced Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye That therefore he might be capable of dying which as God he could not and that the justice of God might be satisfied in the same nature by which it had been offended 't was necessary he should be man 3. Had he not been God and man in one person the sufferings of his humane nature could not have derived that infinite value from the Divine nature Mediat●o Christi est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We could not have called his blood the blood of God as 't is called Acts 20.28 it would have been no more than the blood of a creature and consequently as unavailable as the blood of Bulls c. Hebr. 9.12 Hebr. 10.4 4. Had he not been God-man without confusion of natures his Deity might either have advanced his humanity above the capacity of suffering or his humanity might have debased his Deity below the capability of meriting which is no lesse than blasphemy to ima●ine And this is the first reason the singular fitnesse of Christ for this work because of the Dignity of his person Reason 2. The singular fitnesse of Christ for this employment in respect of the sutablenesse of his Offices There is a threefold misery upon all men or a threefold bar to communion with God 1. The guilt of their sins which themselves are never able to expiate or satisfie for 2. The blindnesse of their minds the cure whereof is too difficult for any creature Physician 3. Their bondage and captivity to sin and Satan which are enemies too strong for man to deal with Sutably to these three great necessities Jesus Christ is anointed of God to a threefold Office of a Priest a Prophet a King the former of which Offices he exercises on our behalf to God and the two last from God to us 1. The Priestly Office of Christ is the great the only relief we have against the guilt of sin the work of the Priesthood consisted under the Law chiefly of these two parts 1. Satisfaction for the sins of the people Lev. 4.16 17 18 19 c. 2. Intercession unto God on their behalf Levit. 16.12 13. Both which were verified in Christ our great high Priest Hebr. 4.14 And hence it is that the Apostle encourages us to come with boldness unto the Throne of Grace Hebr. 4.16 What was done by others Typically was done by Christ Really 1. His satisfaction in discharging those debts which his people had run into with Divine justice to the utmost farthing and this he did by offering up that one single sacrifice which was infinitely more worth than all those multitudes of sacrifices offered up of old and from which all former sacrifices had their vertue and efficacy Ephes 5.2 The Priests of old offered up creatures but this high Priest offers up himself they offered the blood of Bullocks c. Hebr. 9.13 14. but Christ the blood of God Acts 20.28 They offered many sacrifices and Christ but one but such a one as infinitely exceeded all their many such a one as perfected for ever them that are sanctified Hebr. 10.14 One Sun is worth more than thousands of Stars and one Jewel than millions of ordinary stones and so one Christ is more effectual than all Lebanon or the cattel on a thousand hills 2. His intercession this is the other part of his Priestly Office his satisfaction that was performed on earth his Intercession is performed chiefly in heaven by the former he purchased pardon and Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.19 compared with Verse 21. by the latter he applies the benefits he hath purchased his sufferings though they were but while he was on earth yet the benefit of them extends to all ages of the Church both before and since his passion and his Intercession is that which sues out these blessings for his people and therefore that great Apostle joynes both together as the foundation of all his comfort Rom.
hast his Benjamin thou shalt be sure not to go without thy Messe thy five Messes i Matth. 6.33 Seek first the Kingdome of God and all these things shall be * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 added i. e. cast in as paper and packthread to the bargain 3. A loving affectionate frame Believer thou art married to Christ Jesus that Relation calls aloud for union of hand heart spirits all He is bone of thy bone flesh of thy flesh therefore to be dearly loved k 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graecus Aug. count all that thou art and hast too little for him Love him dearly for what he is for what he hath for what he hath done suffered purchased promised Love him more for what he is than for what he hath more for his person than for his rings bracelets jewels joynture Love him with a cordial active conforming constant transcendent love Psal 116.1 2. 4. A truly noble heavenly frame such a frame whereby thou mayst truly contemn this poor dunghill world Believer being united unto Christ thou art indeed cloathed with the Sun and therefore thou shouldst like uhy mother tread the Moon under thy feet Rev. 12.1 We should never fix our hearts on that whereon our God would have us put our feet Such Eagles as Believers should not stoop at Flies 't is not for persons united unto Christ to be fond on these beautiful vanities fair-faced nothings chases in Arras handsome pictures drawn on Ice such are all enjoyments on this side Christ Believer thy head thy husband thy treasure is above there let thy l Anima illic potius sit ubi amat quam ubi animat heart be also Having Christ for thy portion let a little a very little of the world serve thee for thy passage 5. A pitiful compassionate frame to those that are not as yet united unto Christ That are yet without hope because without Christ Oh as the Elect of God put on * Col. 3.12 bowels toward such Poor souls they are sinking drowning thou art safe on the shoar got into the Ark. They are frying burning in Sodom Thou safe in Zoar a brand pluck't out of the fire Oh pity those that do not will not cannot pity themselves That 's the third advice 4. And lastly walk worthy of this union Let your Conversation be sutable to your Condition This I shall dispatch in these three particulars 1. Walk zealously Be wisely * Gal. 4.18 zealous in and for the promoting the honour of this Christ to whom you are united Make it your only plot and businesse to advance his honour 't is your own peculiar interest so to do Be jealous of any thing that doth or may eclipse or sully his glory He that toucheth him his Person Natures Offices Days Ordinances Ministers Servants let him be thought to touch the apple of thine eye Zech. 2.8 Let the zeal of his house even eat thee up Psal 69.9 2. Walk fruitfully so it becomes every branch ingraffed into Christ the true Vine Phil. 1.11 Thy fruitfulnesse adds much to thy Christs honour the plenty of the crop sets a glosse on the Husbandmans care The fully loaden branch reflects an honour on the root If men see our good works our fruitfulnesse in every good work they will then glorifie our Father Matth. 5.16 John 15.16 3. Walk lovingly tenderly towards believers fellow-members They that are so happy as to be united unto one head should be very careful to be of one heart Believers formerly were so of one heart and * Acts 4.32 one soul as if animated with one and the same soul sutable to the Philosophers description of true love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Formerly Believers were like Scilurus his bundle of Arrows so trust up together no breaking of them But alas now 't is sad to see how those that agree in one common faith should yet disagree as implacable foes Oh Beloved that Brethren Joseph and Benjamin Moses and Aaron Abraham and Lot should fall out especially when the Canaani●e is in the Land Shall Gebal Ammon Amal k and the Philistines shall these agree and shall Ephraim and Judah be at variance shall the Wolf Lyon Bear Leopa●d associate and shall not Lambs and Doves O let such their sin and shame never be publish't in Gath nor spoken in the street of Askelon Believers you have heard the fable of the contest between belly and members The moral of it bids you consult if not your duty yet your safety By your divisions you do but dig your own graves Remember Saints we are all one by spiritual relation why should we not be m 1 Cor. 12.13 27. 1.9 10. 1 Joh. 4.12 16 Gal. 3.28 one in our affection I shall close all with that of the Apostle Ephes 4.3 to 7. wherein he draws this arrow to the very head Keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace Why because there is one Body one Spirit one Hope one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one God Let me adde you are one with Christ the head 't is your duty therefore and 't will be your priviledge honour safety to be one with one another THE NATURE OF Justification OPENED Rom. 5.1 Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God c. THE words present us for the Argument of this morning exercise with the great doctrine of Justification first to be opened and then improved 1. To be opened And that we may not with Aquinas and the Papists in ipso l●mine impingere stumble the very first step we take and so quite ever after lose our way by confoundi●g justification with sanctification I shall only premise that as in sanctification ●he change is absolute and inherent so in justification the change is relative and juridical the former is wrought in the sinners person he becomes a new creature but this latter is wrought in his state he becomes absolved at the bar of divine Justice For Justification is a law-state 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it abolisheth the convincing power of sin or its guilt Our businesse therefore is to discover the processe at Gods bar in the justification of a sinner which will be best done by comparing it with that at mans which we are familiarly acquainted with To be justified therefore implies in general three things 1. The person is charg'd with guilt 2. Pleads to the charge 3. Upon that plea is discharged by the Judge 1. A justified person must be charg'd with guilt Now guilt is the Relation which sin hath to punishment for sin is the breach of the Law and punishment is the vengeance which the Law threatens for that breach And as the threatening it self is in the nature of it a guard to the Law to prevent the breach of it bidding as it were the transgressour come at his peril break the Law if he dare be wise before hand lest he rue it too late so the punishment
in the very nature of it is a vindication of the equity of the injur'd Law the reparation and amends it makes it self for the wrong done it by damnifying the person injuring her proportionally to the injury Now that a justified person must be charged with guilt i. e. with the breach of Law and by consequence with desert of punishment appears because otherwise if a man be pronounced tighteous whom no body ever accused or questioned he is only praised not justified 2. The person to be justified must plead for himself either in person or by his Advocate who sustains his person for to refuse to plead is to despaire quite of being justified and to abandon ones self over unto punishment silence gives consent it argues the accused person hath nothing to say for himself why he should not be condemned Our Law you know sheweth no mercy to one that will not plead he is to be Prest to death An endited person must plead therefore something in his own behalf why he should be justified if he would be Now either the man is guilty of the charge or not guilty I must speak to both cases and shew what pleas are requisite in each and which of them is the plea upon which a sinner is justified at the Bar of God Case 1. If the endited person be not guilty of the charge justice it self must justifie him upon that plea. Si accusasse sufficiat quis erit innocens an innocent person may be accused he can never be convinc't for that that is not can never be demonstrated the Judge or Jury were themselves guilty if they found innocence guilty Now to be justified thus is to be purely and meerly justified not at all to be pardoned for such a one stands upon his termes bears himself upon his own righteousnesse begs no mercy 'T is no favour to justifie him 't is his due he is not beholding to the Judge a jot the exact rigour of the Law acquits him To bring this to the present businesse I shall demonstrate that we can never be justified at the Bar of God by pleading not guilty For First the plea is false Although in a very restrained sense there is none so wicked but he may plead not guilty and be justified as to this or that particular fact charged upon him Nimrod was not guilty of Abels murther Nay a Saint may be guilty of some sins which the Devil may plead not guilty too as grieving the comforting the sealing Spirit abusing the Redeemers grace c. yet nothing short of universal innocence nothing but a perfect righteousnesse a total exemption from all manner of guilt will entitle us before Gods Tribunal to this plea James 2.10 For whosoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all 1. Because the punishment due to the breach of the whole Law viz. the curse of God is due to every breach of every part Gal. 3.10 Deut. 27.26 Cursed is he that continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them The wages of sinne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of every single sinne is death Romans 6.23 2. Because he that offends in one point affronteth the authority of all as is excellently observed in the next verse For he that said James 2.11 Do not com● it adultery said also Do not steale Every sin hath Atheisme in it it denies the God that is above to trample upon the Majesty of God shining in o●e Commandment is at once to trample upon that Majesty which enacted all 3. Because thereby he becomes infected with a contagious disposition to be guilty of all the same principle which embolden'd him now will another time if but excited with equal strengths of temptation to commit any other sin or to repeat the same sins again and again though excited with still weaker and weaker temptations for as frequent acts strengthen the habit of sin so the habit facilitates the acts From hence it appeares that the holy Angels that Adam in innocency that the man Christ Jesus might indeed plead not guilty before God and be justified upon that plea but now impossible for us Rom. 3.20.23 Psa 14.1 1 John 1.8 Secondly the plea being false there is no hope upon this issue to be justified unlesse there were some defect in the Judge or in the evidence In the Judge either of prudence in not understanding or of integrity or power in not executing the Law aright But in our case these are alike that is infinitely impossible for we have to do with the All-wise Legislator himself who is also the Holy Holy Holy Lord God Almighty and shall not this Judge of all the earth do right Gen. 18.25 Nor can there be any defect in the evidence for the books shall be opened at the last day Rev. 20.12 and the dead shall be judged out of those things which are written in the books according to their works Nay even now there are two day-books a filling down goes every houre every moment all we do and think and speak in the book of Gods remembrance fairly written not an iota not a tittle either mist or blurred of this God hath given us a counterpart to keep in our own bosomes the Register of conscience though a very imperfect copy full of blots mistakes omissions yet enough alone to convince us instead of a thousand witnesses for every sinner will be his own accuser and condemner rising up as an Advocate in the behalf of the great Judge against himself at the day of judgement Prima est haec ultio quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur Case 2. And this was the first plea not guilty but the case is not ours and therefore this plea will never justifie us I come therefore to the other which in our case is guilty and here are two wayes of pleading First meer mercy for mercies sake but indeed this is not to plead at all but to beg And as in the last case when an innocent person upon his pleading not guilty is discharg'd that is pure justification but no pardon so here quite contrary when a guilty person is discharg'd out of mercy this is pure pardon but no justification for there shines not one beame of Justice in such a discharge meer mercy is all in all Whence it follows that the Socinians who to avoid the necessity of acknowledging Christs satisfaction to Divine Justice affirm that Justification is nothing but meer Remission of sins do abuse the Wo●d and contradict themselves for who seeth not that to be pardon'd gratis out of pure mercy without the least reparation made either for the injury and indignity done to the Law or satisfaction to the honour justice and authority of the Law-giver by the sin affronted is not to b● justified at all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but only to be gratified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. discharged upon the sole
both meer supererogations of an infinitely glorious person And first for his active Ri●hteousnesse i● stood in his obedience to the Ceremonial and Moral Laws 1. His obedience to the Ceremonial Law was a meer supererogation for the substance to comply with the shadows the Antitype to do homage to its ow● types besides he submitted to those very Ordinances whose end and institution supposeth guilt and wh●se Nature argues them designed only for the use of sinners what foreskin of impurity had he to be cut off in circumc●sion what filth to be washt aw●y in baptism did the holy childe Jesus defile his mothers womb as common mortals do that are conceiv'd in sin and brought forth in iniquity And yet he was circumcised and baptized and his mother offered for her purification Luke 1.21 22. ch 3.21 No imaginable obligation lay on him to these submissions being to him meer ciphers wholly insignificant 2. His obedience to the Moral Law Although it must be granted that as man it was his duty Gal. 4.4 yet was it not his duty to become man True a creatures homage was due from him when a creature a servants work when in the form of a servant but the whole was free and arbitrary because his entring into that state was so for what but his own infinite love could ever move the eternal Word to pitch his Tent in our Nature what obligation lay on the Heir of all things to take the form of a servant who bound the eternal Son of God to become in the fulnesse of time the Son of man And as his active righteousnesse so secondly his passive too was a meer supererogation for his Almighty Fathers Holy All-seeing Eye could never espy the least iniquity in him to punish what had the Divine Justice to do with him for he was a sinlesse person he suffered not for himself Dan. 9.26 No for us 2 Cor. 5.21 And therefore since no obligation lay on him to do what he did or to suffer what he suffered he may impute the merit both of the one and the other to whomsoever and upon what termes soever he and his Father please But before I come to consider the termes upon which Christs satisfaction is applied I must answer some questions and clear the scruples in the way Object 1 1. What is become of the Law of that first Covenant made with Adam in Paradise Gen. 2.17 repeated again to the Jews Deut 27.26 The sum of which you have fully expressed Ezek. 18.4 The soul that sinneth it shall dye I answer It is not executed nor abrogated but released or dispensed with First it is not fully executed for there is no condemnation to them that re in Christ Jesus c. Rom. 8.1 Secondly It ●s not abrogated for it is in part executed upon Believers they are liable to the first or natural death which is the wages of sin although the second death hath no power over them besides all manner of chastisements and afflictions Psal 89.30 31 32. And also that Law is totally executed upon finally impenitent unbelievers over whom not the first only but the second death also hath power 2 Thess 1.8 For he that believeth not is condemned already John 3.18 That is the Gospel finds him and every one in a state of condemnation but those who believe it proclaims deliverance to those who through unbelief reject it judging themselves unworthy of everlasting life see Acts 13.46 it leaves such as it found them viz. under the condemnation of the Old Covenant since they refuse the pardoning mercy of the New Thirdly I answer therefore positively that the first Covenant is released and dispensed with by super-inducing a New Covenant of Grace over it that whosoever closeth with and comes into the terms of the New should be exempted from the rigour and extremity i. e. from the eternal condemnation of the Old Joh. 3.16 It is not said He that believes shall not be sick shall not be afflicted shall not dye No but he shall not perish Thus you see the Covenant of Works as to its execution upon such as are in the Covenant of Grace is in the chief part restrained but yet in some part inflicted They never shall complain under the eternal and destructive yet they do complain under the temporal and corrective punishment of their sinnes Lam. 3.39 Yet more particularly for the clearer understanding of this we must consider that the first Covenant lays a double obligation on sinful man First In reference to what is past and here it requires satisfaction and reparation from us for our sin in breaking it And secondly In reference to the future after such satisfaction and amends made it requires perfect conformity still as at first absolute obedience to all Gods commands being the eternal debt of the reasonable creature to that God that made it in his own Image if therefore we could which hath already been proved to be impossible ever have satisfied Gods injur'd Law for our past breach the Law would still have come upon us for future exact conformity to pay the residue of that eternal debt and its language would be Sin no more lest a worse thing befall thee as a Felon though butn't in the hand is yet bound to live honestly for the future at his peril Now the New Covenant of Grace relieves us as to both these cases and dispences with the rigor of the Law As to the first It comforts us with the good news that the Son of God hath satisfied his Fathers Justice and if we believe but in him God will accept of us as if we had satisfied in our own persons The case the Law leaves us in is well expressed Isa 33.14 Hebr. 10.31 But the relief the Gospel brings us in St. Pauls language Rom. 8.33 34. You have both together excellently Ezek. 33.10 11. As to the second Obligation the New Covenant dispenseth with the rigor of that too for woe to a justified and pardoned person if he must lose all again upon the least defailance therefore the Gospel proclaims pardon of sin upon repentance and acceptance of sincere endeavours to obey him Gods language now is Sinners be but in good earnest do but love me heartily and my ways let me but see a childe-like ingenuity in you and I will put down your upright though imperfect performances in the book of my remembrance Mal. 3.16 and blot out your transgressions when repented of out of the book of my remembrance Mandata Dei tanquam facta reputantur Aug. Retr l. 1. quando quicquid non fit ignoscitur Thus doth the candor of the Gospel dispence with the rigor of the Law God deals not with us as an Aegyptian task-master but as a Father with his children whom he loves Christs yoke is easie his burden light Object 2 If any doubt how it stands with Gods veracity and immutability having once declared that the soul that sinneth shall dye to contradict it by declaring
made righteous in Law Righteousnesse is a conformity to the Law he that fulfills the Law is righteous in the eye of that Law he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within the protection of it as he that transgresseth the Law is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 guilty in the eye of the Law and without the protection of it Now the Law of the New Covenant runs thus He that believeth shall not perish so that a Believer keeps and fulfills this Law and therefore faith is imputed to him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.22 23 24. because faith is the keeping of the New Covenant which therefore is called the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 in opposition to the Old Covenant called there by the Apostle the Law of Works As therefore innocency or perfect obedience would have justified Adam had he stood by vertue of the Law of Works or Old Covenant whose tenor is Obey and live for then he had fulfilled that Law and as his Disobedience actually condemned him by vertue of the same Law Disobey and dye for it Gen. 2.17 So now believing in Christ justifyeth by vertue of the Law of faith for it is the keeping and fulfilling of the Gospel-Covenant whose tenor is Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved And again unbelief actually condemneth by vertue of the same Law He that believeth not is condemned already because he hath not believed in the Name of the only begotten Son of God Joh. 3.18 That is because the unbeliever is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without the protection of the Gospel or Law of faith he cometh not up to its righteousnesse he is condemned already as a sinner by the Law of Works and yet once more with a witnesse condemned as an unbeliever as a monster that hath twice been accessory to his own murder first in wounding himself and secondly in refusing to be healed The Law of works includes us all under sin we are all dead our case was desperate but God who is rich in mercy through his great love wherewith he hath loved us Ephes 2.4 John 3.16 his immense 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when we were dead in sins and trespasses hath sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life And this is that Law according to which he will judge the world according to my Gospel saith Paul Rom. 2.27 Every Believer therefore though he wants the righteousnesse of the Law of Works viz. innocency yet he shall not be condemned because he hath the righteousnesse of the Gospel viz. faith which is the New Law in force according to which God now dealeth with us and shall judge the world at the last day And here it will be richly worth our very heedful Observation that although a Believer hath not the righteousnesse of the Law of Works i●herent in himself for if he had he were not a sinner but should be justified by that Law yet by faith he lays hold upon Christs satisfaction which in the very eye of the Law of Works is an unexceptionably perfect an infinitely glorious righteousnesse So that faith justifieth us even at the Bar of the Law of Works Ratione objecti as it lays hold on Christs satisfaction which is our Legal righteousnesse it justifieth us at the Bar of the Gospel or Law of faith formaliter ratione sui as it is Covenant-keeping or a fulfilling of the Gospel Law For he that keeps a Law is righteous where that Law is Judge the Law-Maker by his very making of the Law makes him righteous and the Judge that pronounceth according to the Law for a Judge is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will infal●ibly pronounce him so But that with all requisite distinctnesse we may apprehend this great affair let us take a view of some of the most considerable and important causes which concur to the producing this excellent effect the discharge and justification of a sinner and state their several interests and concernments in their respective influences upon and contributions towards it 1. How free grace justifieth And first The free grace of God is the first wheel that sets all the rest in motion It s contribution is that of a proegumenal cause or internal motive disposing God to send his Son John 3.16 That sinners believing might be justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus Rom. 3.24 For Christ dyed not to render God good he was so eternally but that with the honour of his justice he might exert and display his goodnesse which contriv'd and made it self this way to break forth into the world 2. How Christs satisfaction Secondly Christs satisfaction is doubly concern'd in our Justification 1. In respect of God as a procatartick cause of infinite merit and impetrative power for the sake of which God is reconciling himself unto the world in Christ not imputing their trespasses unto them 2 Cor. 5.19 2. In respect of the Law of Works Christs satisfaction justifieth us formally as our proper Legal righteousnesse I call it our righteousness because it becomes imputed to us upon our believing faith being our Gospel title by pleading which we lay claim to all the benefits accruing from the merit of Christs performance to a●l effects uses and purposes as if it had been personally our own I call it our Legal righteousnesse because thereby the Law of God owns it self fully apaid and acquiesceth in it as in full reparations and amends made unto it for the injury and dishonour received by the sin of man We must plead this against all the challenges and accusations of the Law Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is Christ that dyed c. Rom. 8.33 And thus our Legal righteousnesse required in the first Covenant that of Works is wholly without us in our Redeemer yet imputed upon our account Thirdly The Gospel justifieth quâ Lex lata 3. How the Gospel as it is the Law of faith for the very tenor of the Gospel-Covenant is Believe and thou shalt be saved Fourthly Faith justifieth vi Legis latae 4. How faith as it is our Evangelical righteousnesse or our keeping the Gospel-Law for that Law suspends justification upon believing Faith pretends to no merit or vertue of its own but professedly avows its dependance upon the merit of Christs satisfaction as our Legal righteousnesse on which it layeth hold nor can it shew any other title to be it self our Evangelical righteousnesse but only Gods sanction who chose this act of believing to the honour of being the justifying act because it so highly honoureth Christ So that as a most judicious pen expresseth it the act of believing is as the silver but Gods Authority in the Gospel-sanction is the Kings Coyne or Image stamp't upon it which gives it all its value as to justification Without this stamp it could never have been currant and if God had set this stamp on
any other grace as love that then would have been currant and have justified us as faith doth now Fifthly God justifieth in a proper sense two ways first 5. How God As a Legislator secondly as a Judge 1. As a Legislator enacting by his Soveraign Authority that sweet and gracious Law of the New Covenant by vertue of whose tenor every sinner that believes is justified from the guilt of sin from which he could not be justified by the Law of Moses Acts 13.38 9. This Law of justification by faith is Gods own act and deed the great Instrumentum pacis between God and man he hath proclaimed his Letters Patents the King of heaven and earth hath in the Gospel our Magna Charta given his Warrant under his own broad Seal that he that believeth shall not be condemned 2. As a Judge the God of heaven may in three respects be said to justifie a Believer First Forthwith upon his believing God owneth him secretly within himself as a person justified God esteems and approves of him as in that state unto which he hath by believing a title good in Law an indefeasible right a justified estate emergeth actually as soon as faith the Law-title thereunto emergeth as a necessary resultance by vertue of the tenor of the Gospel-Law which only justified vertually potentially and conditionally before every Believer in general but now actually absolutely and in particular it justifieth him as a Believer when he is so Secondly At the moment of dissolution God justifieth as the Judge of all the earth passing a private sentence and award unto everlasting life upon every believing soul Thirdly But eminently at the last day when the Ancient of days shall take the Throne and in open Court before the whole Creation by publick sentence for ever acquit and discharge Believers at that great and last Assizes 6. How Works Sixthly Shall I need to adde that Works are said to justifie us Jam. 2.4 because they justifie our faith or demonstrate before God and man and to our own consciences that our faith is not a dead and barren but a true and living one by its fruitfulness in well-doing 7. How the Spirit Seventhly But I must not forget lastly that the Spirit of God is said to justifie us 1 Cor. 6.11 and that two ways first directly by working faith in the heart which is one of the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5.22 Now Causa causae est etiam causa causati the Spirit justifieth as it is the Author of the justifying grace Secondly reflexively The Divine Spirit clears up justification to a Believers conscience by discovering the truth of faith by working assurance and by sealing a Believer to the day of Redemption The Spirit it self beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God and if children then heirs c. Rom. 8.16 17. Thus I have at length done with my first Task the opening of the Point which finds it self summed up in this definition Justification is a judicial act of God as Law-giver and Judge of the world gracioussly discharging a Believer for the sake of Christs satisfaction from the condemnation of the Law of Works by the tenor of the Gospel-Law or New Covenant which requireth of accepte h from imputeth unto sinners faith in Christ Jesus as their righteousnesse see Rom. 3.25 6 7 8. Rom. 4.5 Phil. 3.9 To improve it now which was my other task by way of refutation I infer against the Antimonians first Vse Refut That justification is not from eternity 1. Because a person must be charged with guilt before he is justified or discharged but nothing can be before eternity if discharg'd from eternity when was he charged what from eternity too then he will be at once eternally charged with and discharged from guilt which if any excuse from a contradiction they are much wiser than I am 2. My Text convinceth them actual faith is not from eternity therefore not justification before God for if faith justifie us not before God but only at the bar of conscience then there will be no justification at Gods bar at all once mention'd in Scripture for works do it at mans bar what is it I wonder that justifieth from eternity Not Gods decree to justifie for then his decree to glorifie would make glorification from eternity too but Decreta Dei nihil ponunt actu in subjecto Gods decrees are immanent acts and passe nothing actually upon the creature 3. A justified person was actually under condemnation whil'st he was an unbeliever Rom. 3.18 He that believeth not is condemned already but he could not be at all condemned if justified from eternity 4. Saint Paul expressely affirms that the believing Corinthians were not once but now were justified 1 Cor. 6.11 Such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus c. Secondly I infer against them that they are dangerously mistaken in thinking that a Believer is righteous in the sight of God with the self-same active and passive righteousnesse wherewith Christ was righteous as though Believers suffered in Christ and obeyed in Christ and were as righteous in Gods esteem as Christ himself having his personal righteousnesse made personally theirs by imputa●ion This is their fundamental mistake and from hence tanquam ex equo Trojano issue out a throng of such false and corrupt deductions and consequences as these That God sees no sin in his children that affliction and death are not proper punishments of sin to Believers that all future sins are already actually forgiven as well as past and present that a Believer must not pray for the pardon of sinne but only for the manifestation of it that God loved Noah when drunk Lot when so and besides incestuous David when acting Adultery and Murther Peter when he was cursing and swearing and denying Christ with as high a love of complacency and delight as when co●versant in the most spiritual exercises of grace that all which God requires as a sinners duty in the Gospel is to believe that Christ dyed absolutely for him in particular that this is alone true Gospel faith and the doubting or questioning this the unbelief which the Gospel so much condemneth that to argue our justification from our sanctification and gather assurance of Gods love from our love and fear of him is a Legal principle that obedience to Gods Commandments is not properly a Believers debt but that all the obligation which lies upon him to holinesse is only the voluntary expression of his love and gratitude to God not as what is due but what is comely And lastly for I should be tyred to name all that Christ hath kept the Gospel-Covenant for us as well as satisfied the Law So that not only our Legal righteousnesse is without us in Christ our Surety but our Evangelical righteousnesse it self also Now to pluck up all these desperate consequences by
the New Covenant which is a perpetual Law of pardoning repenting and believing sinners whomsoever whensoever but as such Neither was Christs suffering like the Cancelling of a Bond a total discharge of us from suffering the penalty threatened in the Law we dye still and afflictions are punishments still True indeed upon Christs satisfaction made God and he are agreed that a believing sinner should not be punished with the everlasting destructive penalty threatened for whosoever believes shall not perish but they are not that he shall not be John 3.16 for he is punished with the temporal corrective punishments of the threatening as sicknesse and natural death yet even these through infinite goodnesse so ordering and disposing it prove much more a benefit than a penalty to a believer Vse 2 Vse 2. What cause have we then with the lowest and profoundest Humility to adore the Majesty of the living God First To adore his holinesse Reverence those eyes of his that are purer than that they can endure to behold iniquity Hab. 1.13 Let this God be thy dread and awe Dare not to make a mock of sin tremble at the horrid guilt and sinfulnesse of the least sin look upon it as an affront and treason against an Eternal Majesty as worthy the Curse of the Law and the wrath of an Almighty God as that which could not be expiated at a lesser rate than the blood of God Acts 20.28 Secondly to adore his wisdome in finding out such a person to satisfie his justice as our Redeemer Consider here that God could not suffer could not dye Nay could not properly satisfie himself for it had not been a satisfaction to his justice at all but meer mercy and so no justification of a sinner but meer pardon if the person satisfying had been only God Again Consider that a meer creature could never satisfie as I before demonstrated a meer creature had perish't in the attempt would have been overwhelmed and crush't to pieces with that insupportable load the guilt of sin and the wrath of God The person therefore that must satisfie must neither be finite nor infinite neither the creature nor the Creator neither God nor man yet must be both Here now the understandings of men and Angels must have been tyred to all eternity Rom. 11.33 see also Eph. 1.7 8. fully hereunto and lost for ever in a bottomlesse gulf of horror and amazement to finde out such a person O the depth of the riches of the wisdome and knowledge of God! Thirdly To adore the infinite riches of his grace Rom. 3.24 in justification and here consider 1. God might have let man alone seized the forfeiture as the Tree fell it might have lain for ever what obliged God to accept of satisfaction 2. The Redeemer hath trodden the wine-presse alone what ever was done in this satisfaction he did it Of the people there was none with him The sinner hath not the least hand in it could not pay one Christ paid every to the utmost farthing Thirdly It was the Judge himself who contrived this way to justifie us and it was at his cost he gave his Son herein God commended his love to us as Abraham once did his faith to God in that he spared not his son his only begotten son whom he loved So that if we rightly weigh it it will appear that by how much the satisfaction is the fuller by so much the pardon is the freer by how much his justice is the more by so much too is his mercy the more glorified and still still infinitely the more are we obliged Use 3. Consol Here 's unspeakable comfort for every humble though doubting soul every contrite spirit that hungers and thirsts after righteousnesse Vse 3 First Consider how full satisfaction Christ hath made he is able to save to the utmost all that come to God through him he is the beloved Son in whom the Father is well-pleased all power is committed into his hands God hath exalted him to be a Prince and a Saviour to give Repentance and Remission of sins Secondly Consider he inviteth thee as a sinner to come in unto this Gospel-righteousnesse in the general tenor of his Proclamation Whosoever believes c. If any man sin 1 John 2.1 2. we have an Advocate with the Father c. An Whosoever excludes none that excludes not himself Thirdly Consider Christ assures thee that art the person I now speak to he who is the Truth assures thee thou shalt be welcome Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy-laden and I will give you rest c. This is your very case Heark the Master call●th you will you not be of good courage and Go when he saith Come he that never yet cast out any that came unto him that never will he saith so himself Thou mayst believe him he never broke his word yet he will not begin with thee he cannot deny himself Fourthly Consider those standing Monuments of Gods free justifying grace that are on record in the Scripture What hath been done may be done again Nay will be done again in the case we speak of by the God that changeth not God hath pardoned as great sinners see Ephraims case Jer. 31.18 see the Corinthians example 1 Cor. 6.10 11. see Pauls 1 Tim. 1.13 Whoever goes and doth likewise shall receive likewise for Christ is yesterday and to day and the same for ever Fifthly Consider it is the very designe of God in giving his Son and of Christ in giving himself to dye for us to justifie such as thou art Isa 16.1 Luke 4.19 20. Jer. 3.12 1 John 5.9 Vse 4. Exhort First To the Unconverted Vse 4 Use 4. Exhort Let me then beseech sinners not to love death Why should iniquity be your ruine There is balme in Gilead there is a Physitian there Why are ye unwilling to be healed Turn ye Turn ye why will ye dye Would it be a hard matter to perswade a condemned person to be willing not to be executed were he not distracted if having a pardon offered upon the easie terms of confessing his fault and serious promising amendment he should bid the Prince keep his Pardon to himself for his part he was in love with his chains he would not be released he would dye Thou art the man whoever thou art that neglectest Gospel-grace what fury and raging madnesse is it that thou art guilty of Thy soul with all its eternal interests lies at stake and as if it were neither here nor there what became of thee for ever thou despisest the riches of Gods forbearance after thy hardnesse and impenitent heart Rom. 2.4 5. treasuring up wrath against the day of wrath Is it well done of thee sinner is this thy kindnesse to thy own soul is this thy thanks to thy Redeemer How inexcusable art thou thy self being Judge thou canst not answer it to thy conscience to thy God with the least colour or shadow
Promises of the Gospel In which are two things formally constitutive of Saving Faith 1. Acceptation of Christ and the Promises Faith is that hand which doth touch the top of the golden Scepter or that closeth with and entertaineth what God offereth receiving Christ hence a weak Faith is true Faith and saving Joh. 1.12 as well as strong because it indeed receiveth the gift though with a trembling hand This is the coming unto Christ Joh. 6.35 and appropriating what before lay in common the applying what before was only applicable making the soul to say with Thomas believing Joh. 20.28 My Lord and my God Zanch. in Coloss 2.6 Sicut accepistis quomodo accipitur Fide So the good things purchased by Christ and following upon our receiving of Christ are said to be received as the atonement abundance of grace the gift of righteousness Ro. 5.11.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fidei videl manu oblata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and expresly remission of sin is said to be received by Faith Act. 26.18 2. Innitency recumbency of soul upon a Christ received entrusting him entirely with 2 Tim. 1.12 Isa 50.10 Cant. 8.5 and committing to him the care of Soul and salvation staying the soul upon him leaning upon the beloved rouling the soul upon him resting with whole weight upon him as faithful able loving and this is truly fiducia this is truly Credere in Christum To believe in or upon Christ more than Credere Christum Christo to believe a Christ that he is and to believe Christ or his word It is a phrase in Prophane writers unusual as the thing it self salvation by Faith was unknown To this belong those expressions of the eyes being toward God 2 Chron. 20.12 Psal 123.2 Isa 45.22 Joh. 3.14 15. and looking to him even as the Serpent was lifted up to be looked upon with expectation of healing vertue so Christ to be looked unto by the Soul with a longing expectation and confident dependance The End of Faith is the glory of God in mans salvation Final Cause the one as supream and ultimate the other as subordinate that God might save his Creature to whom he wished well in a way of demonstration and exaltation of his glorious justice and mercy therefore was Saving Faith and Salvation by Faith ordained Justice that he might be just Rom. 3.26 that is demonstrated and declared to be just as Psal 51.6 both in not pardoning without satisfaction and therefore punishing sin upon the Surety and then in pardoning the sinner through faith uniting to and interesting in the Surety therefore saith the Apostle God is faithful and just to forgive Me●cy in that he accepteth the satisfaction of another and imputeth his righteousness to the sinner by Faith receiving it and that he found out and provided alone this way of salvation by Faith It was of Faith that it might be of Grace Rom. 4.16 Ephes 2.8 for by Grace are we saved through faith and thereby works as meriting and so mans confidence in and boasting of himself are excluded Rom. 27. and Gods glory entirely secured and advanced by mens submit●ing to the righteousness of God by Faith Rom 10.3 Hab 2.4 Faith and Pride being utterly inconsistent Indeed trusting God upon his bare word not having merit nor humane probability Rom 4.20 Heb 10.39 1 Pet 1.9 giveth great glory to God That Mans Salvation is an end of Faith all the New Testament witnesseth even that we believe to the saving of our souls and receive the end of our Faith in the salvation of our Souls 4. Effects The Effects more proper or less proper and Consequents of true Faith Col 3.4 1. Union with Christ who is our life and so we live by Faith What can more necessarily and immediately follow upon the offer on Gods part in the Gospel of Christ to be ours and our receiving him by Faith than union to his person though no personal union 2 Cor 13.5 Ephes 3.17 Hence having Christ in us and our being in the Faith are made the same because Christ dwelleth in our hearts by Faith Whatever the Spirit on Christs part doth before by way of uniting us to Christ apprehending us for Christ Jesus as some understand Phil. 3.12 Faith is the hand on our part that receives and the band that fastneth Christ to us This I take to be the fruit of the first consummate Vital act of the quickned soul and then is the mariage knot tied 2. Hence follow Remission of sins and justification of the person through Christ and his righteousness apprehended and appropriated This Peter testifies to be the witness of the Prophets Act 10.43 even that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins The pardoned alone live for the guilty are dead in Law which the people sensibly bewailed in saying if our iniquities be upon us Ezek 33.10 and we pine away in them how shall we then live Joyn this with our living by Faith and you see Faiths necessity and efficacy towards pardon It was St. Pauls ardent desire that he having won Christ got him been united to him might be found in him having the righteousness which is of God through faith in Christ. Nothing more frequent than the assertions and demonstrations of Justification by Faith in S. Pauls Epistles especially to the Romans and Galatians The manner of Faiths efficacy wherein is by a judicious person of our own well expressed for the cutting off those two eager controversies about the Instrumentality and conditionality of Faith It is saith he the general opinion of the Orthodox wherein all agree That Faith is a means appointed by God in the use whereof the chi dr n of men are made partakers of Justification 3. Adoption That our receiving into the number and having a right to the Priviledges of the Sons of God the Spirit of Adoption boldness at the Throne of Grace present supply future inheritance is the fruit and product of Faith appears from Scripture and consequence To as many as received him Joh. 1.12 or believed on his name gave he power to become the Sons of God For indeed we being by Faith united to Christ and the faultiness of our persons taken away through Christ what more immediately follows from this loveliness in him and oneness with him than communication of Sonship which cannot be in that way that Christ is a Son Ephes 1.5.6 and therefore is by the Adoption of children by Jesus Christ Adoption therefore is the effect of Faith through union to and Justification through Christ intermediately caused thereby Causa causae est causa causati 4. Audience and answer of prayer Our Lord hath given universal proof to this Mat. 21.22 in assuring that all things whatsoever shall be asked in prayer believing shall be received By St. James Jam. 1.6 7. asking
back to perdition in such God hath no pleasure Heb 10.38 2 Pet 2.21 It had been better for them never to have known c. This commonly ends in bitterest enmity to the Faith and true professors of it 3. All sins laying waste the Conscience are inconsistent with faith because Faith and a good conscience are inseparable companions 2 Tim 3.9 Contrarily By way of Contrariety there may be considered these things possibly some also under the former head in part as Opposite to true Faith First Flesh and blood these cannot enter into the kingdom of G d and oppose faith that would bring thither I name this first because it is the greatest enemy and gives advantage to all others and then indeed are we tempted to unbelief or any thing else when we ●re drawn aside of our own hearts By Flesh and blood is meant Sense 2 Cor 5.7 living by sence is the great hinderer and supplanter of Faith Also Carnal reason judging every thing by its own unsuitable apprehensions and so misrepresenting the things of God to it the Gospel is foolishness though it is the wisdom and power of God to them that believe This taketh notice of the meanness of the faithful in the world and stumbleth at it c. Abraham left both these Servants below when he went up into the Mount to the Lord to exercise that eminent Faith of his Rom 4.18.19 c. Yea indeed Sense and Rea●on appeared eminently contrary to him in his entertaining the ●romise at first else had not the great strength of his Faith been manifested nor God glorifi d so much Secondly Satans assaults He not only at first keeps out Faith by blinding mens minds 2 Cor 4.4 but afterwards doth with Faith as the King of S ria charged his Captains to do with the King of Israel He knows what an enemy to h●s kingdom Faith is 1 King 22.31 by it we resist him and consequent●y put him to flight and quench his darts He knows if our Faith fail all fails Luke 22.31 Luke 8.12 and therefore he desires to winnow the soul and get the go●d seed out of our hearts lest we should believe and be saved Thirdly The World is a great adversary 1 John 5.4 Why else is Faith called the Victory over the world but that there is hostility between the world and it Fourthly I might add m ns own delays 1. Causing hardness in their hearts from themselves To day to day believe Heb 2.15 Joh 12.38 39 40. unless you would harden your hearts 2. Provoking God to seal men up under their injudicious unperswadable minds for their long opposition to the light and word of Faith Gen 6.3 Act 7.51 The Spirit of Faith will not alway strive when men still resist him I shall improve all that hath been spoken by some few Uses and conclude Vses The first sort of Uses shall be Corollaries for Information 1. Of the certain and u ●peakable misery of ●he unbeliever Information from the sure happiness of the believer Contrariorum contraria est consequentia Remember what hath been spoken before of the excellent Effects and Consequents o● Faith Union with Christ Justification Adoption c. and that great and everlasting fruit Salvation upon all which we may co●clude with the Apostle Gal 3.9 blessed are they w●ich be of F●ith or believe with faithful Abraham Luk 45. yea therefore blessed is he tha b●liev●th because there shall be a performan●e of ●ll tho e things which have been spoken of the Lord Now turn the Table invert the sense read all backward understand all contrary of the unb●liever No union with but separation and distance fr●m Christ No pardon of sin reconciliation and justification but guilt in fu l force the curse of the Law John 3● 36 and so he is left to stand or fall by himself and the wrath of God are upon him No Adoption of Sons but rejection as spurious and a Sonship to the Devil the god of this world c. No Salvation Mark 16.16 Joh. 3.18 but inevitable condemnation He that believeth not shall be condemned yea is condemned already because he believeth not in the name of the only begotten Son of God i. e. his present state is a state of certain damnableness as sure as if he were condemned already Not that there can be no believing afterward and recovery thereby 1 Cor. 6.11 for who then should be saved for such were some yea all of them that are justified by faith in the name of the Lord Jesus as the Apostle speaks of other sinners He that believeth not maketh God a liar 1 Joh. 5.10 Joh. 3.36 but he shall find him exactly true to his cost in such words as these He that believeth not the Son shall not see life The unbelieving as well as more carnal sinners shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone Rev. 21.8 which is the second death Heb. 3.12 Joh. 5.40 Act. 13.46 Matth. 13.58 Men by unbelief depart from the living God will not come for life and judge themselves unworthy of eternal life and bring a kind of impotency upon the Omnipotent as to the doing them any good No wonder then if Jesus wondered at their unbelief that held his hands from helping them Mark 6.5 6. Oh! how much better were it for them among us that believe not that they had never had offers of Salvation never heard the Gospel of the Grace of God! 2. It is no small matter to be saved since Faith is such a thing as before described and without it there is no Salvation Should Christ now come should he finde Faith on the earth Alas the small number of those that shall be saved there being so few Believers though so many Professors of Faith among Christians This is sadly manifest in the gross Ignorance of the most and suitable apprehensions in the Doctrine of Faith of very few In the Errors Heresies Apostasies of many even denying the Lord that bought them In the altogether contradictory life of most to that Faith they pretend to have which as well as Repentance should have fruits meet for it brought forth and accordingly it is known No wonder if they that take true Saving Faith to be no more than Assent a●d a professed owning the Doctrine of the Gospel a Confidence at all adventures of Gods love c. or some such thing think the way to heaven broad and wonder at any speaking of the paucity of those that shall be saved 3. Hence take notice of the Reasonableness of the Christian Religion 1. That God requireth no more but Believe Other things indeed are required but they naturally flow from faith are inseparably linked with faith and faith cannot be without them faith is the great work of God and command of the Gospel 2. That this is so suitable Without faith no salvation can be
evil is ever present but to do good he hath no minde so that he must needs cry out I have sinned and must return or else I perish now reproof finds ready acceptance from him the Ministers of God shall meet with no murmuring if they cry unto him Thou art the man for he is apt and ready to draw up a Bill of Inditement and read a large accusation against his own soul his iniquities now finds him out and followeth him every where that it becomes alive and appears against him with vigour not admitting the least of Apology but leading him to Condemnation and laying him open to the Curse due unto them that break the Law and therefore he now 3. Sentenceth himself as accursed of God and bound over to Divine fury the conscience of his guilt concludes him under the condemnation of the Law that he seeth cause to wonder at his very being concludeth himself unworthy the least of mercy and God to be just in the greatest of judgments which lie upon him and so proceedeth to judge himself and seal up his own soul under the curse standing under the continual expectation of Gods fiery indignation to be revealed from heaven determining it self a debtor to the Law and as such liable to justice and in it self unable to make the least satisfaction so that now the soul doth not only assent unto the Law as true in all its threats but app yeth them unto himself confessing unto him belongs shame and confusion hell and horrour wo and eternal misery that he knoweth not how to escape but if God proceed against him he is most miserable and undone forever and so is constrained with anguish of soul to cry out What shall I do to be saved This is then the first part of humiliation when the soul in this due order and judicial method of conviction is brought to a sight of sin to see God offended the Law violated the soul damned and destinated to everlast●ng woe if not Redeemed by the mercy of a God who hath established Jesus Christ his Son to be a Lord and Saviour to g ve Remissi●n and Repentance and so it proceeds to the sorrow for his sin as committed against God Second part of humiliation The second part then of penitential humiliation is contrition or sorrow for sin as committed against God Herein the soul is not only acquainted with but afflicted for its guilt seeeth not only that it is a sinner but sorroweth under and is ashamed of so sad and sinful an estate the stony heart is broken the Adamantine soul dissolved he rends not his garment but his heart and goeth out and weepeth bitterly He seeth with shame his many abominations and rendeth with soul-distressing sorrow and anguish the Curse of the Law that is due unto him and considereth with almost soul-distracting despaire the doleful estate into which his sin hath resolved him for he seeth God with whom he is not able to plead to be highly offended and therefore must with Job confesse that he is n t able to answer when God reproveth Job 40.4 5. he is vile and must lay his hand on his mouth though in his pride he hath once spoke yet now he hath no answer yea twice but he dare proceed no further Well seeing that all contending with God is but a da kening counsel by words wi hout knowledge and so he becomes submisse and silent under the saddest of affliction inflicted by God Psal 51.4 Lam 3.39 Crying out Against thee thee only have I sinned And why should a living man complaine for the punishment of his sin the soul is in it self confounded on the sense that God claps his hands against him for his sin therefore his hea●t cannot endure or his hands be strong Ezek. 22.13 14. Compunction of spir●t is the only condition of the convinced Penitent he seeth he is liable to the curse of the Law and his only outcry is What shall we do to be saved He being convinced that he hath crucified the Lord of life is pricked at the heart and in all approaches unto God he is ashamed and amazed bec●use a man o● polluted lips nay Isa 6.6 sadly seeing that sin overspreads him Isa 64 6. his very righteousnesse is as a menstruous cloth he like the poor Publican stands afar off and dares not so much as lift up his eyes to heaven and his only note and eccho is Lord be merciful to me a sinner Luke 18.13 he humbleth himself under the hand of God as having deserved the most heavy of plagues his haughty spirit is now laid low within him he is wholly resolved into sorrow even godly sorrow it is his grief that guilt is on his spirit but his greater grief that his sin is gone out against God a gracious and an holy God a just and an holy Law his sorrow is a sorrow of candor and ingenu ty not so much that he is liable to the lash and obnoxious to the curse as that a Father is offended the image of his God defaced his grand complaint is I have sinned against God his soul-affliction and heart-trembling is God is offended the frownes of God sink deeper and seize more sadly on his spirit than the sharpest of his sufferings his earnest cry is for the joy of Gods salvation he is not only afflicted with the terrours of the Law Psal 51 12. which he confesseth belongeth to him but is melted with merciful Ministrations of the Gospel of which he is so unworthy he cannot look unto Christ but with a spirit of mourning moved by the strength of the remedy to see the heighth of his malady and by the dolor of a Saviour Zech. 12.10 made sensible of the depth of his miserie by the mercy and love manifested to so great a sinner he is led to mourn over a gracious Saviour like Mary Magdalene he loveth much and manifesteth it by lamenting much Luke 7.47 because much is forgiven Thus then the believing sinner comes home by weeping-crosse findes conviction and contrition antecedaneous acts unto his conversion a sense of and sorrow for his sin precursive parts of his Repentance and God holds this method in g ving Repentance for sundry wife and gracious ends which he hath propounded to be effected As 1. To suit them for and engage them to set an esteem on Christ Jesus and the Remission of sin in him The whole need not the Physician but the sick and Christ came not to call the righteous to repentance but the sinner Mat. 9.12 The hunted beast fl es to his Den and the pursued Malefactor to the hornes of the Altar the chased man-killer to his City of Refuge so the humbled sinner unto Jesus Christ like Paul slaine with the sense of sin and constrained to cry out O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin Rom 7.24 25. it soon seeth and saluteth Christ for
his Saviour with an I thank God through Jesus Christ I have gained the victory The weary and heavy laden are the men invited to Christ for ease and refreshment Mat. 11.28 for indeed such on●y seek him and can be satisfied in him and duly savour him the full stomach of a proud Pharisee loaths the honey-comb of Christ his righteousnesse whil'st to the hungry appetite of the humbled sinner the bitterest passions of a Saviour are exceeding sweet the deeper the sense of misery the sweeter is the sense of mercy How acceptable is the fountain of living waters to the chased panting heart Deus oleum non infundit nisi in vas contritum Bern. and the blood of Christ to the thirsty soul and conscience scorched with the sense of Gods wrath the broken and the contrite heart is the only Sacrifice acceptable to God the wounded Samaritan is the fit object of his compassion a Mary Magdalene cannot but love much when looking on her sins she seeth much is forgiven 2. To set them at enmity with sin and in due submission to his sacred Will Sin is natural to the sons of men and only smart for it will make us sick and willing to be rid of it untill God bring Israel into affliction they regard him not but then they seek him daily Hosea 5.14 An unbroken sinner is as unfit for Gods instruction as an unbroken Colt for the saddle or unfallowed ground for seed Manasseh his Bonds break in him the power of his sin ● Chron. 33.12 and the shakings of the prison to the heart-ake of the Jaylor makes him pliable to divine pleasure Act. 16.30 What shall I do to be saved Sense of sin is a principle of submission under affliction Why should a living man complaine for the punishment of his sin Sins revival unto remorse of conscience constrains Pauls outcry O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of corruption the humbled heart gives an heedy eare to divine instruction They are not stiff-necked but give their hand to the Lord to be led by him 2 Chron. 30.8 and therefore God will teach the humbl● his way Psal 25.9 A bruised heart is like soft waxe prepared for divine impression so that to the end Christ may be of esteem as a Lord and Saviour the penitent soul must on due conviction cry out Wherewith shall I come before the Lord and bow my self before the High God shall I come before him wit● burnt-offerings with Calves of a year old will the Lord be pleased with thousands of Rams or ten thousand rivers of oyle shall I give my fi●st-born for my transgression or the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul Micah 6.6 7. And to the end we may be set against sin it must sting the conscience and so work us into a willingnesse to do or suffer the Will of God making us with earnestnesse and resolution cry when pricked at the heart What shall we do to be saved so that a sight of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are parts of and essential to true repentance only before I passe from this Conclusion let it be noted that they are precursive acts Repentance cannot be constituted without them but they are precursive such as alwayes go before sometimes yea too often at least in shew and appearance without true Repentance Judas is convinced of and cast down for sin unto utter despaire crying out I have sinned in betraying innocent blood And Ahab may humble himself in all external expressions and many internal operations of the soul and yet never be turned unto the Lord. We may not indeed deny that humiliation especially in the external acts and expressions goeth many times without conversion and compleated repentance and so we must needs conclude Conviction is not true grace or an estate of saving holinesse but that sad complaints of guilt may passe from Reprobates and damned soules yet we must remember Repentance or conversion never goeth without humiliation sight of and sorrow for sinne In the order of nature men must be convinced of and confounded for the evil from which they are converted we cannot hate and avoid the evil we do not know and know to afflict us and the order of Scripture doth alwayes call to a communing with our hearts that we may stand in awe and not sin Psal 4.5 a searching and trying our wayes before we turn unto the Lord the Law must do its work as a Schoolmaster to every soule that is brought to Christ and the Gospe● ever sends the prick into the h art of such as repent unto remission of sin Acts 2.37 38. and the spirit of bondage before the spirit of Adoption of power love and a sound minde Rom. 8.15 Preaching Repentance is the opening the blind eye and the bringing the Prodigal into his right minde that in the sense of his sad estate he may go unto his father and seek mercy The work of the Word is to make them sinners of sense that shall come to Christ for cure to cast down all proud imaginations and every high thought which exalteth it self and so to bring into obedi●nce to Christ 2 Cor. 10.5 to affect men with guilt and danger that they may with fervency cry What shall we do to be saved to convince that the issues of death will be the end of the way in which they now walk that they may flee with desire and returne without delay In a word to affect the heart with the high transgressions of Gods holy Law the disobedience of a gracious Father and offence done to infinitenesse that the soule may down on its knees prostrate it self at the foot-stoole of mercy fly to Jesus Christ as its Redeemer Surety and alone satisfaction and so sue out its pardon by a serious return to God and these are as it were the pangs of the New Birth natural and necessary though sometimes abortive and miscarrying the first part of sincere repentance though not alwayes successeful to perfect and compleat it for although we must not call the convinced conscience a Gospel-Convert yet the Convert is alwayes convinced sense of and sorrow for sin is no infallible sign of saving grace yet saving grace and sincere repentance is never wrought without a sight of and sorrow for sin as committed against God for this is the precursive act of true repentance and whenever God will seale up under impenitency he stops the passage and possibility of humility making the eare heavy and the eye dim and the heart hard lest they should see with their eyes hear with their eares and be of humbled hearts and so be converted Mat. 13.15 And so much for the third Conclusion but again in the nature of repentance we must Note Conclusion 4 Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance Sincere conversion is the summa totale and ratio formalis of a Gospel-penitent Remorse for sin without a
returne from sin will afford you no comfort sin is an aversion from God and repentance a conversion to God the common call of sinners unto repentance is to turn and return to G d Isa 44.22 55 7. Jer. 4.1 18 11. and many other places whenever repentance is promised or predicated and spoken of in Scripture it is ordinary by this terme of turning and returning to the Lord Isa 19.22 Isa 59.20 and that not only in the Old but also in the New Testament 1 Pet. 2.25 We were like sheep that were going astray but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of our soules Every sinner is towards God like Hagar resisting the Will and then running from the presence of her Mistresse untill by the Angel of the Covenant called to repentance and caused to return by weeping-crosse and submit under his hand Like Travellers we are out of the way and running upon our ruine and had need to call one on another Come and let us return to our God Hos 6.1 Like the Prodigal we are out of our wits untill by a spirit of repentance we recover our sound mind and return to our Father from whom we have madly run away so that the very formality of repentance is returning All Judas conviction and confession nay contrition and condemnation will not constitute a Gospel-penitent for want of conversion Repentance when it is true and saving makes the sinner sadly smite on his thigh and say What have I done and speedily to face about and say I will do so no more the Gospel-penitent is a positive Changeling no more the same he was Old things are done away all things are become new he is really and throughly changed not in his substance as the Familists fondly fancy nor in quantity measure and degree as common Christians too commonly dreame but in quality nature frame and disposition the soul and body in regard of their essence powers faculties proper and natural actions remaine the same after that they were before repentance sorrow fear joy love desire natural passions and affections are indeed altered not annihilated restrained nay regulated not ruined but the whole man is in respect of property bent and disposition no more the same but a very Changeling that it may be said of them as of Onesimus in time past unprofitable but now profitable Philem. 11. Or as of the Corinthians they were Thieves Fornicators Idolaters Adulterers Effeminate Covetous Drunkards Revilers Extortioners What not but they are washed they are cleansed they are sanctified the very best of men before the grace of God their Saviour appear by the working of Repentance and renewing of the Holy Ghost are as the Apostles themselves were Foolish Disobedient Deceived serving divers lusts and pleasures rebellious to Gods holy will running from his gracious presence and continually going astray but when by the grace of Repentance they see and are sadned for their aberrations and sinful course they speedily return from all sin to God so that turning is their general act and businesse and it consists of two parts answerable to the terms about which it is conversant and they are Recession from sin Reversion to God Or as the Prophet in the Name of the Lord phraseth it a ceasing to do evil and learning to do well Isa 1.16 Or the wicked mans forsaking his evil way and the unright●ous man his thoughts and returning to the Lord Isa 55.7 Or as the Apostle James a cleansing your hands you sinners and purging your hearts you double-minded and drawing nigh unto the Lord James 4.8 The work of Regeneration doth consist in putting off the Old and putting on the New man It is not being conformed to the World or fashioned ac●ording to the lust of ignorance but being transformed by the renewing of our minde to be holy as God is holy Rom. 12.2 1 Pet. 1.14 15. First part of conversion So that the first part of Conversion is a Recession from all sin which the Psalmist calleth a departing from iniquity Psal 34.14 37.27 as the original word will bear it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a substracting from sin that the number and increase of it may be small and at the length amount to just nothing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and as the Prophet Isaiah a ceasing from evil as the Septuagint rendreth it a resting and being quiet from the practice of iniquity so in Isa 1.16 and at after a forsaking of his evil ways utterly deserting and relinquishing sin Isa 55.7 this is that which the Apostle calleth a casting off flinging from us with detestation and anger the works of darkness Rom. 13.12 so as never more to have f●llowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse but rather reprove them Ephes 5.8 Nay it is an Apostasie from sin to break League with and violate all those bonds in which we stand bound to profanesse and with rage and resolution rebel against the Soveraignty of sin which it hath exercised over us if we will call on the Name of the Lord and become his Subjects we must recede rebel against sin bid open defiance and proclaime open war against it notwithstanding all those engagements that lie upon us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let him depart saith our Translation in the Original Apostatize from unrighteousnesse 2 Tim. 2.19 Sin hath an interest in and engagement upon men by nature they are obliged to follow it and the whole man is too much devoted to pursue and obey the dictates of lust but Repentance dischargeth all and turneth the whole man into an estrangednesse to nay enmity against sin so that both soul and body in faculties and members do withdraw from sin the thoughts are now no more engaged to contrive and devise iniquity nor the heart to embrace it or hands to act it the members of the body are no longer yielded to be the instruments of unrighteousnesse but the contrary is now effected by Repentance In a word the penitent soul recedes and turns from all sin First By the apprehension of his minde seeing sin and its sinfulnesse he discerns the contrariety of it to the Image of God by the Law which is by the Spirit of Repentance engraven on his heart he now knows sin which he never knew before he discovereth abundance of evil in what he deemed exceeding good he now seeth he sinned to the damnation of his soul in what he thought to have been good service to God he is now freed from error and readily disowns and damneth as desperately wicked what he sometimes allowed and argued for as eminently good with Jobs proud friends when penitent seeth he hath need of Gods pardon and Jobs prayer for the very things he spake for God and like pharisaical Paul seeth horrid unrighteousnesse in all his self-righteousnesse of which he had vaunted so that sin shall no more impose on his judgment but he will try all its dictates and discover the falsehood that is therein Secondly By the
alteration of his will and affections that he shall not more disallow than detest the sinfulnesse of sin he no sooner seeth his iniquity but he loatheth himself because of his abominations sin was never so much the object of his affections as now it is the object of his passions what he before loved desired delighted in he now by Repentance hateth feareth envieth with David he hateth every false way and the very workers of iniquity if he be surprised by the difficulty of his estate or distemper of his minde with an act of sin he loatheth himself because of it and with Paul professeth I do the things that I would not do the very existency of sin in him is his intolerable burden Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of corruption is his out-cry death is desired because he would sin no more he would rather be redeemed from his vain conversation than from wrath to come penitent An●elme had rather bein hell without than in heaven with his iniquity and therefore he yet recedes Thirdly Into an abstinence from nay actual resistance of sin he puts away the evil of his doings forsakes his way abstains from the appearances of evil he is now ashamed of what he hath sometimes acted with eagernesse he now preacheth the Gospel he sometime destroyed and blesseth the name he blasphemed he is not only restrained himself but he labours to reclaime others from iniquity nay not only is his hand with-held from sin but his heart is set against it his study is to mortifie his earthly members and his resolution that sin shall not raigne in his mor●al body that he should obey it in the lust thereof he is careful to avoid all occasions and inducements unto evil he feareth to make provision for the flesh to fulfill the lust thereof his hearty prayer is that he may not fall into temptation but be delivered from evil he resisteth all sinful assaults striveth against sin unto very blood his righteous soul is grieved for the sins of others all his complaint under sorrows is against sin his care is to be rid of sin his fear of falling into sin So that the Gospel-penitent maketh a perfect recession from sin all sin sin in its kinde not in its species or degree not only this and that sin but sin which is contrary to Gods Law and Image be it sin small or great natural and near allied unto him it is his care to keep himself from his own iniquity the sin of his complexion calling constitution or condition he will not indulge his right eye or right hand in opposition to Gods holinesse No pleasure profit or honour shall willingly hi●e him to the least iniquity the penitent eye judgeth sin by its complexion not its composition by its colour not by its weight he determines of it not by comparison with it self but its non-conformity to Gods Law so that if you say of any thing there is sin in it you have said enough to set the Gospel penitent against it for he is turned from all evil yet take along with you this cautionary Note that you run not into sinful despaire and despondency in observing your penitent Recession from sinne viz. Sins existency and sometimes prevalency Caution is consistent with a penitent recession and turning from it Sin may remain though it doth not raigne in a gracious soul Who is there that lives and sins n●t If we say sin is not in us we are lyars and the truth is not in us The righteous themselves often fall Noah the Preacher of Repentance to the old World becomes the sad pattern of impiety to the new World Penitent Paul hath cause to complain when I would do good evil is present with me Sin abides in our souls whil'st our souls abide in our bodies so long as we live we must expect to bear the burden of corruption sin exists in the best of Saints by way of suggestion natural inclination and violent instigation and enforcement of evil and so taking advantage of the difficulty of our estate and distemper of our minds it drives us sometimes into most horrid actions even Davids Adultery or Peters denial of Christ which of the Saints have not had a sad experience hereof nor must it seem to us strange for Repentance doth not cut down sin at a blow no it is a constant militation and course of mortification an habit and principle of perpetual use not action of an houre o● little time as we have Noted before it is a recession from si● all our days though sin run after us if once we be perfectly freed from sins assaults we shake hands with Repentance for we need it no more so that let it not be the trouble of any that sin is in them but let it be their comfort that it is shunned by them that you fall into sin faile not in your spirits let this be your support that you flie from fall out with and fight against sin the true penitent doth evidence the truth and strength of his Repentance by not admiting sins dictates without resi●●ance not acting sins precepts without reluctance when he deviseth evil his minnde is to serve the Law of God and he approveth of that as good he doth what he would not the Law in his members rebels against the Law of his minde and leadeth him captive and therefore he abides not under sins guilt or power without remorse if he be drawn to deny his Master he goeth out and weepeth bitterly he is in his own eye a wretched man whil'st oppressed with a body of corruption nay he retireth not into sinful society without repining his soul soon thinks he hath dwelt too long in Meshech and in the Tents of Kedar the wicked are to him an abomination whil'st then any soul maintaineth this conflict and so visibly disalloweth what he sometime doth he may safely say it is no more I but sin that dwelleth in me for his servants you are to whom you yield your selves servants Rom. 6.16 and comfortably conclude that as a Gospel-penitent he turneth from all sin and that is the first part of the formality of Repentance the second naturally followeth and that is Second part of conversion Reversion to God a reception of God God and God only becomes the adequate object of Gospel Repentance man by sin hath his back on God by Repentance he faceth about all sin doth agree in this that it is an aversion from God and the cure of it by Repentance must be conversion to God when God calls for true Repentance it is with an if thou wilt return O Israel return unto me Jer. 4.1 and when Repentance is promised it is promised that the children of Israel shall return and seek the Lord their God and David their King and shall fear the Lord and his goodnesse Hosea 3.5 And when they provoke one another to Repentance it is with a come let us return
sinned before the Lord 2 Sam. 12.13 Returning Israel must take with them words and say Receive us graciously take away all iniquity Ashur shall not save us we will not ride upon Horses neither will we say any more to the work of our hands ye are our gods Hos 14.3 When the Prodigal comes to himself he goe●h to his father and cryeth I have sinned against heaven and against thee I am no more worthy to be counted thy son make me as one of thy hired servants Luk. 15.21 Confession of and prayer for sins pardon are such inseparable concomitants of Repentance that the whole work of Repentance is expressed by them as if they were the formality thereof thus when Repentance is the result of Gods chastisements God observes if they shall confesse their iniquity and the iniquity of their Fathers their trespasse whereby they have trespassed against me and that they have walked contrary unto me then will I be merciful Levit. 26.40 When Achan is called to Repentance he is required to give glory to God and confesse his iniquity Josh 7.18 and so Israel is required only to acknowledge her iniquity that she hath transgressed against the Lord her God and hath scattered her wayes to the strangers c. Nay the very promise of pardon to the penitent is entailed on an humble suppliant confession of sin if we confesse our iniquity he is merciful and gracious ready to forgive us our sins 1 Joh. 1.8 So that there is no coming to God but with confession of sin and prayer for its pardon and indeed there is great reason that these should accompany true Repentanee because confession and supplication are First The vent of grief they give ease and quiet to the penitent perplexed soul conviction concealed is like a burning bile in which the ill humours in a mans body do rancour and swell burn and pain the whole body as willing to be gone and only giveth ease by being lanced open'd and let out by confession and supplication guilt concealed is like the winde confined in the bowels of the earth making roaring ruptures and dreadful earthquakes unconfest sin is the spring of horror and principle of all amazement David found it so on his sad experience Psal 32.3 When I kept silence my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long but I acknowledge mine iniquity untill then he could find no comfort Secondly The vomit of sin so Origen did usually call confession for it is the loathsome rejection of sin an easing of the soul by evacuation of what burdened it casting up with grief and pain what we cast off with detestation confession is the emptying the soul of sin by expression of all passion against it self accusation and condemnation turn the heart and whole man against sin shame makes us shun evil the penitents in the Primitive times did confesse their iniquities to God in the sight of the Church and if they again relapsed into the same sin and apostatized to their old course were said to return with the Dog to his vomit and the Sow to her wallowing in the mire 2 Pet. 2.22 Thirdly The vindication of Gods justice in all the afflictions by him inflicted David acknowledgeth and cryeth out Against thee thee onely have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight that thou mayst be justified when thou speakest and clear when thou judgest Psal 51.3 and therefore confession is said to be a giving glory to God Josh 7.19 Jerem. 13.16 Lam. 3.39 It quells all quarrelling passions against God Why should a living man complain a man for the punishment of his sinne The language of a confessing penitent is Thou hast punished us lesse then our Iniqui ies do deserve Ezra 9.13 And to us belong Confusion of face but to the Lord belongeth Righteousnesse Daniel 9. 〈…〉 Fourthly The voice in which God is well-pleased God loves to see his people with ropes about their necks Only acknowledge thine iniqu●ty is Gods demand this soon meeteth with acceptance I have sinned is no sooner spoken by David 2 Sam. 12.13 but the Lord also hath taken away thine iniquity is replied by the Prophet nay Psal 32.5 David can witnesse I but said I will confess and thou forgavest mine iniquity God will nor stay his correcting hand untill the stubborn heart acknowledge his iniquity but then he will do it Levit. 26. the compassions of God give an affectionate check to the sharpest corrections of his children if but moved by their confession and complaint Ephraim cannot sooner relent under Gods hand than he repent of his anger I heard Ephraim bemoaning himself saying I was as a Bullock unaccustomed to the yoke I was ashamed I was confounded turn me and I shall be turned moves Gods very bowels to pity Is not Ephraim my dear son Is he not a pleasant childe I will surely have mercy upon him Jer. 31.18 19 20. We see then that there is much reason why the Gospel-penitent must be a confessing suppliant but before I passe this Conclusion let me briefly propound unto you the Rules which must guide our Confession evidencing and accompanying our Repentance and they are these 1. Confession must spring from Conviction and spread it self unto Condemnation Soul-sense of guilt unto sighing must make the tongue speak of it unto shame compunction of spirit must be expressed by supplication Then shall you remember your own evil wayes and your doings that were not good and shall loath your selves our common Translation reads it But shall judge your selves not worthy to live as other and better Translations read for your iniquities and your abominations is the promise of the Covenant of Grace Ezek. 36.13 Confession of sin wh ch springs not from sensible conviction and spreads not to self-condemnation is an historical narration verbal recitation of sin like the cursory reading of an ordinary Inditement no penitential confession of sin the penitent prodigal begins with I have sinned and ends with I am not worthy it is an easie matter for Saul to say I have sin●ed I have transgressed the Commandment of the Lord but still he staves off the sense of it and not only disputeth against reproof but at length diverts his conviction by an Apology I feared the people and obeyed their voice 1 Sam. 15.24 Conscience is placed in us the Law spread before us and self-scrutiny imposed on us as precursive to our repenting confessions we are required to judge our selves which imports to be convinced we deserve to die and so to put halters on our own necks 2. God alwayes and men ordinarily must be the object of our confessions and supplications Whatever sin is committed God is the object of it his holy Law is violated by it though some sins are committed against God immediately and extend not unto men as all breach of the first Table of the Law and miscarryings of acts of Religion yet all sins against men are also against God who is
holinesse as the Quakers and our sinful age suggest is the formality of repentance but you may find and make it specially useful to conviction and discovery of false repentance with which men are apt to take up and content themselves and if this which you have heard be the nature of true Repentance then these are false Repentances with which take heed you be not deceived 1. Popish pennance 1. False repentance which is indeed scrued very high by the Church of Rome unto a detracting from the satisfaction of Jesus Christ and making mans own sufferings Partners and Peers to Christ his satisfaction wherein it is not only Heretical but blasphemous but indeed in it self is very low and weak not able to afford us the least of comfort because a false and fained repentance consisting in auricular confession to the Priest never instituted by God and self-castigation in a most cruel and violent manner or Pilgrimages interdicted by the very light of nature and never enjoyned by the Lord and is different from true Repentance in that it is meerly external on the body not at all seizing on the soul chastisements of the outward without any serious conviction or contrition of the inward man tearing the flesh without renting the heart nay and that in a way of superstition and will-worship like the self-cuttings and torments of the Priests of Baal 1 King 18.27 28. and like to finde the same acceptance and a transient action without any inward principle habit and disposition and too often under the p●rpose of continuing in sinne nay many times making way to sin as the Popish Conspirators in the Gun-powder Treason confessed and did pennance for the wickednesse they intended so that it is every way inconsistent to the nature of true repentance for it hath man not God for its object nature nay lust for its principle action not frame and disposition for its forme is external in its property and intention of sinne for its end and so must needes be sinful and soul-damning Repentance in its quality 2. False repentance Pagans Repentance which is effected in men as men without any the least respect unto Religion all men have a natural conscience and some remainders of the Law of God discovering a Deity and directing duties of preservation to themselves and humane Society by this they are checked on all miscarriages and grosse exorbitancies and not only grieved and offended at the present but also curbed and restrained for the future Thus Alexander when sober repents the slaughter of his friend Clitus in a drunken humour and consults the Philosophers as so many Ministers for the pacification of his conscience and so Polemo though in his drunken fit he came to the Schoole of Xen●crates and heard him read of sobriety yet went home and repenting his drunkennesse became sober ever after yet this is no other than a false repentance effected by the only power of nature whose best things are but splendida peccata shining sins and is meerly a restraint of action no renewing of disposition it wants both principle and power to make it saving this light within them without supernatural grace doth but lead them a smoother way to hell for at the best vertue contrary to their natural vice not God and his Will is the object of their conversion 3. False repentance The prophane mans repentance Pharaoh-like repenting of good and returning to evil having let Israel go pursueth them to bring them againe to bondage and like the children of Israel Jer. 34.12 13 14 c. who let every man his servant go free and then fetch them back againe Like the repentance of Ananias and Saphira who run as farre as others in selling their estates for the common good of the Church Acts 5.5 but soon repent to the retaining some part and lying to the holy Ghost How many amongst us do now repent their sighing and sad thoughts that their sin hath cost them and the serious discharges of holy duties fasting praying reading hearing and the like which they have done bewailing themselves that ever they looked towards heaven or left the way of hell this is a most sad and sinful repentance in every respect opposite to the nature of repentance being an inversion of the very termes instead of turning from sin to God a turning from God to sin these mens latter end must needs be worse than their beginning because having begun in the spirit they end in the flesh and it is hapned unto them according to Proverb The dog is returned to his vomit and the sow to her wallowing in the mire The formalist and legal repen●ance these men are eminent 4. False repentance and exact in the external and precursive acts of repentance they humble themselves before God and confesse iniquity and seek for pardon of sin rent their garments and ●ie in sack-cloth Ahab-like they are alarum'd by the Prophet Elijah for their sin 1 Kings 21.27 and therefore humble themselves before the Lord they are full of conviction and seeming contrition but never reach unto conversion they lament sin but lie in sin like Herod heare John gladly but retain their Herodias and like Foelix tremble to heare of righteousnesse temperance Act. 24.25 26 27. and judgement to come but yet look for a bribe and dismisse Paul till some other time that so they may quiet conscience and grant a truce to the Devil those like the young man in the Gospel are not far from the Kingdom of God but yet fall short they never come at repentance The Slaves repentance which is extorted and extenuated 5. False repentance neither free nor full like the repentance of Saul or Pharaoh so long as they are constrained they confesse their guilt when they can no longer hide their villany they own it though with an endeavour to extenuate it thus Saul by the dint of Argument is at length driven to confesse to Samuel I have sinned yet he that staved off the Prophets reproof as long as he could at last stifleth his conscience by pleading the feare of the people whom he pretended to fear and obey and seeks no more than to avoid the present blow Hon●ur me saith he to Samu l in the sight of the people So Pharaoh when under the cudgel will confesse he hath sinned and will let Israel go but Gods hand is no sooner staid but his obduracy returns it were well for many penitents if they could go from a sick bed a prison an anxious conscience to heaven for so long as they are in this condition they are in a good mood but no longer these men like flint stones flie in sunder by the hammer but still retain their hardnesse there is in them no principle that may make them candid in confession or free in the forsaking of sin 6. False repentance A sullen and self-destructive repentance these men in an angry humour and by the anxiety of
our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and perfect holinesse in the fear of God 2 Cor. 7.1 The whole work of the Gospel is to carry on and compleat Repentance this is the profit to be reaped by every Ordinance the Word preached perswades Repentance th● Sacraments received stir up and seal Repentance the communion of the Saints carrieth on the work of Repentance Exhorting one another daily lest any be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin Hebr. 3.13 The Gospel is the great Charter of our priviledges purchased by Jesus Christ and they all run into this Repentance this is the benefit by Christs death Resurrection and Ascension this is the fruit of the Spirit of Adoption Zech. 12.10 it is a Spirit of prayer and mourning over him whom we have pierced in brief Repentance is the contract of the Covenant of Grace the Law cannot give it and the light of nature cannot give it only the Gospel can effect it the Covenant of Grace confers on us an accesse to and communion with God as our God not as we are innocent for we are guilty of the breach of the first Covenant but as we are penitent sorrowful for and turned from the evil of our ways so that in this respect we must needs conclude Repentance is a grace of great necessity we reap no benefit enjoy no priviledge of the Gospel but by Repentance the mystery of Redemption Christs Incarnation Death Resurrection Ascension and Exaltation and all the Ministrations of the Gospel are in vain to the impenitent 3. Most pregnant Arguments perswading to Repentance are proposed in and by the Gospel this is light so powerfully convincing that all others which past before it is but darknesse in comparison of it whether it be the light of nature making known sin as it is specifical and particular contrary to certain standing dictates not in its contrariety to the image and holinesse of God and that without any clear and certain way of escape and Repentance or the light of the Law which layeth men under full plain and clear conviction even unto self-condemnation but coucheth the pardon and possiibility of Redemption under such dark figures and expressions that with much difficulty it may direct and provoke Repentance but in the Gospel the Sun of r ghteousnesse shines brightly unto conviction and self-condemnation nay unto speedy and chearful conversion There is no Argument in Nature or in the Law to enforce Repentance but it is urged in the Gospel I and much more doth Nature stir up Repentance by sins inconveniency to mans state or the Law by sins incongruity to the holy just and good command of God the Gospel doth the same nay and further addeth its inconsistency with that estate int● which we are resolved by the Redemption of Jesus Christ and so it presenteth us with two most pregnant Powerfully Convinc ng and Perswasive Arguments unto Repentance such which no Professed Religion in the World it self excepted doth propound and they are these 1. The death of Jesus Christ. 2. The day of Judgment The first Argument propounded in the Gospel to perswade Repentance is The death of the Lord Jesus Christ This is an Argument potent in operation to every true believer faith doth no sooner touch the hem of its garment but it cureth like the bones of Elisha quickens the dead man that is but let down into this Grave and pregnant in perswasion to every rational soul that is but candid and ingenuous It is storied of Antonius the Senator of Rome that he intending to provoke the people to r●venge the death of Caesar slain at the Senate by Brutus and Cassius brought out his bloody Robe and cryed out Here is the bloody Robe of your Quondam Emperour Thus the Gospel presents to our faith a crucified Christ and slain Saviour slain for and by our sins that we may look on him whom we have pi●rced and mourn over him that we may see him whom our lusts have slain and be revenged on them by Repentance The contemplations of a crucified Christ cannot but constrain Repentance Mount Calvary is a place of heart-melting to every ingenuous soul that makes it his walk for that it presents unto his observation a man nay more than a man a God under the most grievous sufferings not for his own but the sins of others exposed unto that sad estate not by any constraint or necessity but his own choice pity and compassion in whom we reads these three heart-moving Repentance-provoking considerations viz. 1. The great severity of offended justice and fury provoked by his iniquity Here he seeth the vilenesse of his sin and fiercenesse of Gods anger who would not nay in justice could not spare man without satisfaction he had said it and now seeth it executed In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye the death Here is furious justice which falls fearfully on a Surety a Mediator and fierce fury that favours not a Son an only begott n Son Surely sin is hainous greatly provoking to God that his displeasure thus rageth It is sure a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God who makes the Son of his love thus roare out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me Oh Impiety horrid Impiety that cannot be expiated by any thing but the very heart-blood of God! O fury fearful fury that forsakes a Son only become a Surety for sinners what pensive thoughts must needs arise in the serious observer of this sad spectacle especially when he proceeds to the next consideration which is this 2. Great love and pity of a Saviour who willingly endureth these sad sufferings out of choice not constraint for the sins of others not of himself Oh unconceivable love ineffable pity that we sinned and he thus suffered he left glory to be exposed to shame he undertakes an Atonement and Reconciliation between God and man and endure h infinite fury to effect it no guile was ever found in his mouth whose soul undergoeth this grief the debt was ours and he payeth the utmost Mite for us All we went astray and on him was laid the punishment of us all Isa 53.3 4. he is wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our sins and that whil'st we were sinners that slighted and rejected him Greater love can no man shew than to dye for his friend but behold here is matchlesse love whil'st we were yet enemies Christ gave himself for us These Torments we must have endured to Eternity if they had not been inflicted on him 3. We here see the gracious acceptance we have with God the great liberty of accesse to God which is to us afforded the wrath of God thus poured forth on his Son is pacified towards sinners and the Covenant of Works being thus accomplished is abolished and man that was at distance from God draweth nigh unto him for this crucified Christ was thus lifted up that he might draw all men unto himself
the whole man and shutteth out all list or leasure to repent 7. They are in danger dolefully to outdate the day of grace God doth manifest graces beauty and magnifie the necessity of Repentance by limiting its time to day if ye will hear his voice well and good if not he will sweare in his wrath you shall not enter into his rest if the day of grace be once expired Repentance may be sought with tears but not obtained and then the pleasures of sin will be shortning conscience will grow clamorous and torment with an expectation of fiery indignat●on to be revealed from heaven lamenting too late Oh that I had known in that my day Luke 19.42 the things which Concerne my Peace which are now hid from mine eyes Such as in time will not when it is too late shall see that repentance is the One Thing Necessary of mans life is even of absolute Necessity I have laid before you the two first general things considerable viz. the Nature and Necessity of Repentance wherein I have been longer than intention but shall be more brief in the two remaining I passe then to the third thing propounded viz. The Notes and Characters of true Repentance And concerning this I might return back to the description of Repentance and make that an examination of the truth of your Repentance but I will leave that to your own private meditations and only examine your Rep●ntance by the Characters propounded by the Apostle Paul to the Corinthians For behold this self-same thing that you have sorrowed after a godly sort what carefulnesse it hath wrought in you yea what clearing of your selves yea what indigna●ion yea what feare yea what vehement desire yea what zeale yea what revenge 2 Cor. 7.11 in which we have two remarkable Notes and Characters of true Rpentance First The general nature of it godly sorrow Secondly The Concomitants thereof care fear c. 1. Mark of Repentance The first Note or Mark of Repentance is godly sorrow I have before Noted sorrow to be essential to Repentance God never calls to Repentance but he calls to weeping or promiseth Repentance Mr. Calamies Sermon before the house of Commons Octob. 22. 1644. but he promiseth a spirit of mourning excellently well saith an eminent Minister of this CITY God hath tyed sin and sorrow together with Adamantine chains A woman may as soon look to be delivered of a Childe in a dream as a man to repent without sorrow Sorrow is indeed the daughter of sin but God hath made the daughter a means to destroy the mother you must not look to dance with the Divel all day and sup with Christ at night to lie in Dalilah's Lap all your lives and go to Abrahams bosome when you dye To the merry Greeks and Boon Companions of the world Repentance seems madnesse because it calls for mourning for wheresoever there is true Repentance there must there will be sorrow for sinne This sorrow must be godly sorrow after a godly sort it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow according to God Godly in its Author Occasion Object End and Effects it must be godly sorrow in its Author springing from God and God alone the working of natural passions by a supernatural power and principle a spirit of mourning even the Spirit of God melting and making the hard heart to mourn a rock relenting on the stroak of Gods rod the stony heart is taken away and an heart of flesh given by the Lord this sorrow is Gods gift from Golgotha the death of the Son of the Son of God depresseth in us all joy and comfort Nature is no Author though an Actor in this grief It is godly in its Occasion Divine offence rather than Humane losse sinne not smart is the ground reason occasion of it it is most in their hearts who in respect of the world have least cause to mourn it is not for losse of wife children goods or credit but breach of Divine Law its complaint is not I am undone but God is offended the Law violated Christ is dishonoured it is more for deformity than deserved misery for extinguished holinesse than miseries to be endured a mourning for sin as sin as it is offensivum Dei aversivum à Deo an act of disobedience an act of unkindnesse It is dolor to God Against thee thee only have I sinned The souls unlikenesse to God unlocks its passion the utmost of perplexities cannot abate its joys if God appear well-pleased nor the highest of enjoyments silence its sorrow whil'st God stands offended It is godly in its object it is s rrow towards God Acts 20.21 A lamenting after the Lord 1 Sam. 7.2 A looking unto Christ and mourning ove● him whom we have pierced Zech. 12.10 As a man runs with bleared eyes to the party offended Oh Sir I have offended wronged you will you forgive me So penitent David runs to God and with remorse crieth Against thee thee only have I sinned And the Prodigal crieth to his father I have sinned against thee In days of affliction and atonement Israel assembled and mourned before the Lord penitent Ephraim crieth Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised This sorrow speaks not in the ears of men but God it is not open and seen to the world but secret serious towards God It is godly in its end and effects it is expressed to God that God may be enjoyed this sorrow speaks unto God the vindication of his justice That thou mayst be justified when thou judgest and righteous when thou speakest It is not a mourning of murmuration but of justification Why should a man complain a man for the punishment of his sin it is a sorrow that sets a lustre on the least mercy it is of the Lords mercy we are not consumed We are lesse than the least of his mercies is its language this sorrow is of submission I have sinned let the Lord do what seems him good it lies prostrate at the feet of God for mercy and resigned into the will of God Wherein I have done amiss shew it me I will do so no more and so devotes it self unto God to suffer or do his will its out-cry is Lord what wouldest thou have me to do it is every way godly sorrow This is the first Mark of Repentance The second Note or Character followeth upon it 2. Mark of Repentance and is the Concomitants some call them adjuncts properties effects but I shall only say inseparable Concomitants of this godly sorrow and these are seven in number First Care by some rendred study in the Original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Concomitant of godly sorrow which as Cicero rendreth is a very earnest application of a man unto something with great delight And as Interpreters render it signifieth serious intention of minde and speedy sedulous execution of hand so that it stands opposite to security and slothfulness and intends to Note the diligence and dexterity of
altera siniat hujus Horaque erit tantis ultima nulla malis Ovid that it was the comm n opinion among them that the wicked were held in chains by Pluto so they call the Prince of Devils in chaines which cannot be loosed 'T would take up much time and not be so fit for your Christian ears to mention what conceits the Poets have of Tartarus i. e. in plain English Hell and the judgement there wherein for want of Scripture Revelation they are much out in their fictions concerning the manner of this punishment yet these imaginations of theirs give some evidence to the thing it self written in their consciences about which the Word of God doth informe us more fully and clearly Every ones guilty conscience not seared and stifled calls for our assent to this same Doctrine the secret checks in our own bosome do sometime affright and appale us even anticipating torments and giving the sinner an earnest of that summe of misery which is the wages of sin the payment whereof shall never have an end Rom. 6. ult so that every conscious wretch may find and feel such a worm crawling in his own breast which unless it be kill'd by the Physician who only cures sin-stung souls with his own blood will never dye The very Turks speak of the house of perdition Alcoran Mahom c. 14. p. 160. c. 20. p. 198. and affirm that they who have turned Gods grace into impiety shall abide eternally in the fire of hell and there be eternally tormented Thirdly It cannot but be equitable that the wicked who despised everlasting happiness should suffer eternal miseries They would not be heirs of an Everlasting Kingdowe Joh. 5.40 with Isa 9.6 7. and Dan. 7.14 27. and Rev. 14.6 Mat. 2.12 46 18.8 Joh. 5.39 40. with Jude Epist ver 21. Factus est malo dignus aeterno qui hoc in se peremit bonum quo esse posset aeternum August Dan. 12.2 and therefore no marvel they are everlastingly shut out They sleight and refuse Gods eternal mercy and the honour which the Heirs of glory do accept of upon the terms of the Gospel and therefore they must arise to shame and everlasting contempt and undergo eternal misery according to the terms of the Law For Fourthly The violation of those everlasting obligations which lie upon them unto God do demerit an answerable punishment Sit'h the wicked have trampled upon the blood of the Covenant Heb. 10.28 29. and abused the many favours God tendred to them to make them meet for glory by which they have fitted themselves for destruction 't is but reasonable they should be punisht with the mist and blackness of darkness for ever Rom. 9.22 23. 2 Pet. 2.17 Jude ver 13. Rom. 1.18 25. Isa 60.19 Rev. 14.6 Rom. 16.26 who by their prophaness and errours did seek to cloud the beams of Gods infinite goodness Everlasting light and eternal truth To draw to a period Fifthly If wicked impenitents after this life shall not be punisht by God with everlasting torments then something must hinder Either on Gods part or Theirs If on Gods part then 't is either 1. Because he will not Now what his will is you have heard revealed and may know further if you consult the Scripture My Text acquaints you plainly with Christs mind and that 's the mind of God Or 2. Because he cannot which to affirme were to deny his Omnipotency to say he is not God Or 3. Because he dare not what were this but to suppose the Soveraign Judge upon the Bench to be as it were a cowardly Underling to the trembling Prisoner at the Bar when his very breath can kindle the fiery River of brimstone into which he sentenceth every impenitent Malefactor Isa 30.33 Or 4. Because like unjust Judges he may be corrupted with bribes Gen. 18.25 but shall not the Judge of all the World do right If the hindrance be on the wickeds part then I conceive it must be either 1. Because their living and sinning but a short time here on earth does not deserve eternal punishment in Hell for the evil of punishment should be but commensurate to the evil of sin Now there is no proportion betwixt finite and infinite I confesse this pretence is ready to shake the faith of many in this point but if the ground of it be rightly understood it may confirme the point for 1. If the wicked had lived always they would alwayes have separated themselves from God by sinning against him and never have repented of their sin nor been weary of sinning neither then will God be weary of plaguing or repent of punishing The Schoolmen from Augustine argue Pe●cant in aeterno suo ergò puniuntur in ae●erno Dei Aquin. Supl. Scot. in Sent. Thom. 1.2 dae Q. 99. l. ult Q 87. Arts. 5. which will never have an end but remain while God is God This may be illustrated by a similitude as men addicted to pleasure do in the night time eagerly and earnestly pursue their game at Chesse Tables or the like by an inch of candle which unexpectedly goes out would questionlesse have play'd willingly all night had the light lasted So wicked men they desire to spend all their inch of time in the pursuit of their sins if that would continue they would continue in sin and not leave sinning wherefore they shall not leave suffering had they lived for ever here they would have sinned for ever Rev. 9.6 but in Hell where they would not live they must be kept alive because of their will of sin upon Earth Oh! wicked wretch is it not a righteous thing with God what thinkest thou Ad magnam justitiam judicantis pertinet ut nunquam careant supplicio qui in hac vita nunquam voluerunt carere peccato Gregor that thy punishment for thy sin should never cease in Hell who shouldst thou live for ever here thou wouldst be an Eternal standing provocation to his Majesty I deny not but the wicked will sin Eternally in Hell yet I lay not the stresse on that which some do as the reason of their Eternal punishment but because they ●●ven ceased nor would have ceased to transgresse Gods Law Gen. 2.17 Rom. 6. ult 5.12 Gal. 3.9 whiles upon earth and Eternal punishment was denounced against the first transgression which every one that lives and dyes in sin is not only guilty of but will not repent of he would not be reconciled to God here Isa 30.15 Matth. 23.37 John 5.40 Ezek. 33.11 and God will not be reconciled to him hereafter but will say to him always as Tyberius once said to one that requested death rather than long imprisonment Suet. in vita Tyber nondum tecum redii in gratiam I am not yet reconciled to thee that I should shew thee such a favour Prov. 8.36 Deut. 30.19 John 6.40 54. 3.36 Ezra 8.22 Hos 13.9 2. The sinner hath
but his choice and option if he be plagued with Eternal death 't is no other than that which he prefer'd before Eternal life The Lord sets life and death before us as by Moses the typical so by Christ the true Messiah if we will choose Christ and accept of him we may have Eternal life if not we must be sure of Eternal death he that refuseth the Eternal weight of glory in one end of the scale chooseth Eternal punishment in the other end as our first Parents did choose the curse by their voluntary refusing of the blessing which bad choice of theirs laid obnoxious unto Eternal pain both themselves and their posterity who cannot complain of God for inflicting the death they are by corrupt nature liable to sith besides their choice in their first parents and in their own persons they who live under the Gospel have as great a mercy tendred by the second Adam as Eternal death is a grievous punishment yea the Atheist who as 't was said of Antiochus Epiphanes takes more pains to go to Hell Buntings Itinerarie than some others to go to Heaven must confesse that he deserves his wages of Eternal death as his Pay sith he hath toyled and drudged all his life long in the Devils Service only to fit himself for misery 3. The Schoolmen have observed from the Philosopher Aquia Supl. Q. 99. Art 1. that the punishment ought to be levied according to the dignity of him against whom the offence is committed He is more severely punish't who gives his Soveraign a box on the ear than he that does so to his equal Now wicked men and that without Repentance sin against the Eternal God by the violation of his Honourable Law which he resolves to magnisie Isa 42.21 And as they ought not in their own case so they are unqualified to be competent Judges of their Own offences sit'h they cannot see the thousandth part of that evil there is in the least sin and therefore unfit to apportion the punishment which ought to be levied by the Judge of all the World who knows what is meet Gen. 18.25 and will do nothing but what is right proportionable to the offence committed against the supreme Majesty Peccatum in Deum crimen laesae Majestatis Adsit Regula peccatis quae paenas irroget aequas Horatius for where there is satisfaction required there must be proportion which would not at all be here in this case without some kind of infiniteness and because that cannot be found in any meer creature in value it must necessarily be in duration for if after millions of years it could ever be said the damned had fully satisfied Gods justice it might be said they shall be set free as the prisoner from the Goal having paid the debt Luk. 12 58 59 a thing impossible but because the sufferings of the damned which are all the satisfaction they can give infinite justice in regard of the subject being finite Ex parte subjecti and consequently not of nifinite value they must be so in duration at least à parte post as to the future for the defect of satisfaction in the temporal finite punishment of any meer creature Excep If it be excepted Excep neither by the Eternal punishment of men is Gods justice satisfied for then this punishment would not be Eternal Contradictio in Adjecto which is a contradiction in the very thing it self if ever it could be said of Gods justice now 't is satisfied Repl. I Reply 1. Let it be very well considered Repl. whether Gods iustice being infinite and consequently an essential Attribute in God doth not require from man upon his delinquency that satisfaction which is of infinite value Infiniti valoris he the party offended being essentially of infinite dignity Now such a satisfaction i. e. of infinite value could only be made by Christ who being the Surety of the Covenant and suffered in our stead is God-man in one person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 20.28 and gave plenary satisfaction unto God John 1.14 1 Tim. 3.16 Rom. 3.25 2. Though Eternal punishment may not be called a satisfaction made or given to the party offended yet 't is that which the party offending must ever be in making or giving Parti laesae by the order of the Supreme Judge who is to hear the cause and apportion the punishment to the fault because he the delinquent wanting that infinitenesse in dignity of person which doth bear a proportion to the dignity of the party offended must make this up by an infinite duration of punishment which may perhaps in some sort be termed satisfaction performed to the Law it being the payment of the whole in the obligation Satisfactio legi praestita Peysolutio totius quod est in obligatione for upon defailance of paying the debt of duty and obedience what more is required of the debt of penalty and suffering to be paid Debitum officii Debitumsupp li cii than death in its full latitude temporal spiritual and Eternal so that in this respect 't is no error to call it satisfaction but if we speak of a compleat satisfaction made to the party offended Parti offensae it must be granted that none but the only Son of God did or could give it thus for the first great impediment pretended in regard of the Subject Or 2. It is because there is a possibility of freedom from the Prison of Hell and then this must be either by Covenant and Compact which whoever affirms proferat tabulas for 't is fan y not faith which believeth any such thing without the written Word Or by commutation and what place for such a fancy Is any so absurd as to think there are any in Hell who belong to God and in Heaven who belong to the Divel that there should be matter for such a Chimaera such a strange fiction Or by force and what were this but to over-power Omnipotency Or by fraud and what were this but to out-wit Divine Wisdome and to put a trick upon him whose understanding is infinite Or by a price paid and what is it that offending man can lay down as a sufficient compensation or satisfaction to an offended God who is infinite for the injury done unto him which God should accept of 1 Sam. 2.25 Godw. Rom. Antiq. l. 1. Sect. 2. ●● Ephes 5.6 is hard to fancy and woful experience if nothing else will may convince vain man that 't is impossible to procure Or by manumission now this doth belong only to obedient servants not to ch●ldren of disobedience Or 3. The impediment is because there is an impossibility in regard of the subject as is pretended of undergoing torments of an eternal duration by a finite creature Ex parte subjecti and therefore all the Hell Socinians c. grant Socinus Racov. Cat. Crellius Bidle Richardson c.
between the parts Thus Abraham entred into Covenant with God and he took a Heifer Shee Goat Gen. 15. Ver. 9.10 and a Ramme and divided them in the midst and laid one piece against another Ver. 9.10 And behold a burning Lamp passed between those pieces Ver. 17.18 in that same day the Lord made a Covenant with Abraham This cutting of the sacrifice into pieces and passing thorow was a lively and dreadful signe that the party who should break Covenant should be cut asunder and into pieces as he well d●se ved and as he at least implicitely imprecated upon himself notable to this purpose is that in the Prophet Jeremy I will give the men that have transgressed my Covenant Jer. 34.18 19 20. which have not performed the words of the Covenant which they made before me when they cut the Calfe in twaine and passed between the parts thereof the Princes of Judah the Princes of Jerusalem the Eunuchs and the Priests and all the People of the Land which passed between the parts of the Calf I will even give them into the hand of their enemy into the hand of them that se k their life c. that is to be slain and cut in pieces by the Sword And herein I take the Emphasis of the expression to lie Lev. 26.25 I will bring a Sword upon you which shall avenge the quarrel of my Covenant i. e. by cutting them asunder And this custome was conveyed to the Gentiles they went between the fire and carried a Sword in their hands and so took an oath Lib. 10. contra Jul. as Cyril proves out of Sophocles Thus Virgil speaking of Romulus and Tatius Aeneid 8. Hinc foedus à foedo animali foedè mactato Caesae jungebant foedera porcae They cut a Swine in sunder and made a League and to name no more Titus Livius speaking of the League between the Romans and Albans the Foecialis Herald or Minister of those Ceremonies cryed If the Romans shall falsifie by publick and wicked fraud in that day O Jupiter do thou so smite the Romans as I smite this Swine and so knock't the Swine on the head with a stone By all which it appears that Covenants have been ever held solemn and sacred things and that men by breaking of them deserved dreadful punishments In like manner there was the shedding dividing and sprinkling of blood at the making of Covenants and hence it was called the blood of the Covenant Exod. 24.6 7 8. Moses took half the blood and put it in Basons and half of the blood he sprinkled on the Altar and he took the book of the Covenant and read in the audien●e of the people and they said All that the Lord hath said will we do and be obedient and Moses took the blood and sprinkled it on the people and said Behold the blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you concerning all these words Note He sprinkled the Altar instead of God who being incorporeal and a Spirit could not be sprinkled yet being a Covenant party would have the Altar sprinkled for him So much shall serve for the first Question setting forth in our Answer to it the name and nature of a Covenant in general the second Question follows Quest 2. What ground we have to speak of Gods Covenant with Adam and to call it a Covenant there being no mention of it here in the Text nor elsewhere in Scripture do we read of Gods Covenant with Adam Answ However the name be not here yet the thing is here and elsewhere comparing Scripture with Scripture it is a nice cavil in Socinians to call fot the word Satisfaction others for the word Sacrament others for the word Trinity others for the words Faith alone justifying others for the word Sabbath for Lords day c. and thence to conclude against Satisfaction Sacraments Trinity Justification by faith alone and Sabbath for want of expresse words when the things themselves are lively set down in other words so in this case of Gods Covenant with Adam we have 1. Gods Command which lays man under an obligation 2. We have Gods promise upon condition of obedience 3. We have Gods threatning upon his disobedience 4. We have their understanding it so as appears in Eves words to the Serpent 5. Chap. 3.3 We have the two Trees as signs and symbols of the Covenant 6. We have a second Covenant and a New Covenant therefore there was a first and Old Covenant a Covenant of Grace supposeth one of Works Object If any shall say by first and old Covenant was meant Gods Covenant with Israel and not with Adam and so by Covenant of Works the same is meant namely that which the Lord made at Mount Sinai Answ Hereunto I answer There is a repetition of the Covenant of Works with Adam in the Law of Moses Hebr. 8.7 8 9. Gal. 3.12 Rom. 10.5 as in that of the Apostle to the Galatians The Law is not of faith b●t the man that doth these things shall live in them so likewise to the Romans Moses dsscribes the righteousness which is of the Law that the man who doth these things shall live in them Thus it was with Adam principally and properly therefore he was under a Covenant of Works when God gave him that command in my Text. Quest. 3. Wherein then doth this Covenant of Works consist what is the nature tenour and end of it as such Answ 1. This Covenant required working on our part as the condition of it for justification and happinesse therefore called a Covenant of Works Gal. 3.12 thus before the man that doth these things shall live Working indeed is also required under grace now but 1. Not to Justification 2. Not from our own Power Ephes 2.8 Jam. 2.20 3. Not previous to faith which worketh by love and lives by working but man lives by faith 2. A second Characteristical signe of the Covenant of Works is this that in and under it man is left to stand upon his own legs and bottome to live upon his own stock and by his own industry he had a power to stand and not to have fallen this is meant when it is said God created man in his own Image Gen. 1.27 Eccles 7.29 And again This only have I found that God made man upright 3. In the first Covenant namely that of Works man had no need of a Mediatour God did then stipulate with Adam immediately for seeing as yet he had not made God his enemy by sin he needed no days-man to make friends hy intercession for him Gen. 1. ult After mans Creation God said He saw every thing which he had mude and behold it was very good and after the Covenant made in chap. 2. it s said They were naked and they were not ashamed i. e. they had not contracted guilt by committing of sinne from whence onely ariseth shame therefore under the Covenant