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

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see that we abiding with him in the places he hath set us in he will be with us and blesse us so as we shall want nothing that is good For direction to all such as desire to find the accomplishment Vse 3 of this gracious promise of God to his people that God will be from himselfe an all-sufficient good to them this is to teach them how to walk that they may find this blessing performed to th●m let them betake themselves to God alone and cast themselves wholly upon him Let them make him all unto them let them make it appeare that they look after nothing in heaven but him nor desire any thing in the earth in comparison of him as Psal 73.25 Psal 73.25 And then when th●ir hearts are taken off from these r●eds and broken staves which they r●sted on when it is with th●m as the Prophet speaketh Isai 17.7 8. that they look unto t●eir maker and not to the creature not to th●ir own devices and projects but onely to the holy One of Israel then will the Lord appeare in his glory and will make it manifest that from himselfe he will be an all-sufficient good to his people Let all other things be to us as though they were not use them as though we used them not see a fulnesse of all things in God Let us cast our selves upon the bounty kindnesse and all-sufficiency of the Lord And then will he arise and help us and doe for us according to our need Imitate the practise of Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20. when hee saw himselfe destitute of help Our eyes saith he are unto thee O Lord we know not what to doe Let the Lord s●e that our hearts are withdrawn from the creature and those helps which we leaned upon and that we doe faithfully relie upon him and then will hee ride upon the heavens for our help as Deut. 33.26 Deut. 33.26 and say This is a people that will not lie they have cast themselves upon mee and therefore I will not faile them nor forsake them I will be an all-sufficient good unto them For comfort unto godly and faithfull parents that having Vse 4 come over hither have here spent their estates by which they might have provided comfortably for their children they have come hither for the name of Christ that they might enj●y him in the means of his worship and though they doe here find grace and mercy from the Lord and a spirituall advantage to their souls yet they meet with losses troubles and straits for the outward man that they can now doe little for them What shall parents now doe What shall children doe Here is comfort look to the all-sufficient God that from himselfe will be all in all to his people Though there bee no blessing in the hand of the Parent yet there is in the hand of the Lord. What hee would have done for the children by the hand of the Parents he wil now doe it from himselfe by his own hand It is said of Isaac that after the death of Abraham God bl●ssed him Gen. 25.11 Gen. 25.11 If Isaac prosper whiles Abraham lives he might seem to be upholden by the substance of his father But when Abraham was d●ad then it was evident that the blessing upon Isaac came from the Lord So whiles the Parents estates continue children might seem to bee enriched by them but when their fathers estates are wasted and come to nothing and yet the children are provided for and prosper then it appeares to bee from the Lord. L●t therefore both parents and children depend up●n him and live by faith in him who wil be a Father to them an all-sufficient good to those that trust in him 3. Now to the third and last particular in this promise I will be your God To be God implies soveraignty and superiority over all To be over all as Rom. 9.5 Rom 9.5 and above all a● Ephes 4.6 Ephes 4.6 This therefore is also comprehended in the promise That hee wil bee God over us and above us to rule us to command us to direct and order our wayes for us That though he doe advance and set us up on high when he takes us into covenant with himselfe as Deut. 26.18 19. yet so as that he wil be Lord and G●d over us as Pharaoh said to Joseph when he advanced him to that high honour Yet saith he on the Kings Throne I will bee above thee So though God do lift up his people by entring into covenant with them so that all the world are but servants to minister unto them for their good yet will the Lord still retain his soveraignty over them and bee exalted above them As he wil be above all his ●nemies in that wherein they deale proudly as hee was above the Egyptians Exod. 18.11 to breake them in peeces with a rod of Iron So hee will bee above his owne people to rule them with a golden Scepter And this is a blessing of the covenant of grace Now this benefit implies these things First that the Lord will bring his people from under the power and dominion of other Lords which have gotten the superiority over them and bring them into subjection unto himselfe alone so that whereas they might say concerning the time before as Isai 26.13 Other Lords have had dominion over us besides thee yet now they shall rule over them no more but they shall be subject to him only Hence saith the Lord Joel 3.3 4 Joel 3.3 4. c They have cast lots for my people c. And what have you to doe with me O Tyre and Zydon and all the coast of Palestine will you render mee a recompence c. The meaning is as if God should speak to the enemies of his Church You have trampled upon my people and dealt cruelly with them and this you have done in revenge against me because I have plagued you Will you thus recompence me I will break you in peeces and deliver my p●ople from under y●ur power As a King when he make●h a covenant with a people to be King over them he then covenants with them to save them out of the ha●ds of all their enemies to suffer no foraigne power to tyrannize over th●m So it is here the Lord promiseth that no tyrant shall rule over his people neither sinne nor Satan nor the world nor the lust of their own hearts but he himselfe will rule over them 2. When he hath delivered us from our enemies then he will be God over us to command us and appoint us what wee shall doe to please him Though he communicate himselfe to us in all his goodnesse grace and mercy yet he will not lose his soveraignty over us In Exod. 4.16 Exod. 4.16 Moses was called a God unto Aaron because he was to command appoint and direct Aaron in all and Aaron was to execute all according to the direction received from Moses So the Lord
he is to be God over us that wee must neither sp●ak nor do but according to the command of God As a man when he maketh a covenant of marriage with a woman he covenants with her to be her head to rule her that she shal be subject to him to please him or as when a man hires a servant c. So when the Lord takes us into covenant with himselfe it is that we shall bee his servants to doe his will pleasure and commandement When Isaac sent away his son Jacob to Padan Aran hee blessed him but withall he g●ve him a charge Gen. 28.1.6 Gen. 28 1.6 in both verses the blessing and the charge are m●ntioned tog●ther So wh●n the Lord giveth this blessing to us That hee will bee our God the charge goeth with it see th●t you keep the charge of the Lord your God and that you do whatsoever I comm●nd you 3. B cause the Lord knows as he speaks himself Isai 48.4 Isai 48.4 that we are obstinate and our neck is an Iron sinew c. and are r●ady to say as Jer. 2.31 Wee are Lords wee will not come at thee we will have none to command us Therfore the Lord promiseth this al●o when he saith That I will be a God over you that hee will subdue the rebelliousnesse of spirit that is in us and the stoutnesse of our hearts that he will bend and bow these stiffe necks of ours and make us pliable to his will in all things He will subdue our rebellions Micah 7.19 He will over-rule our unruly proud and presumptuous spirits and cause us to keep his Statut●s and Commandements to doe them This the Lord promiseth Ezek. 20.33 As I live saith the Lord surely with a mighty hand and wi●h a stretched out a●m and with fury powred out will I rule over you These words are a promise of grace that though they had other purposes in their minds they were thinking to goe after their Idols and to become as other countries serving wood and stone as verse 32. yet saith the Lord it shall not bee so I will over-rule these sinfull Idolatrous hearts of yours and you shal not serve these false Gods which you are doting upon but I will bring you unto my selfe and you shall serve me And this exposition is confirmed by the 34 37 38. verses compared together I will bring you into the wildernesse and there plead with you face to face and th●re make you ashamed and I will make you passe under the rod and bring you into the bond of the covenant and purge out from among you the rebels c. This is therefore a promise of grace There is indeed one word which seems to favour another interpret●tion given by some as if God did herein threaten a judgement because he saith I will rule you with wrath powred out verse 33. But this doth not hinder but the words may bee taken up as a promise of grace For the wrath here threatned may bee intended against the coun●ries into which they were scattered a d who held them in bondage as verse 34. or else it may be extended to the hypocrites and reprobates amongst themselves whom the Lord would separate and cut off from them as verse 37.38 God might threaten wrath to them though he extend grace and mercy to his own people Or if it be understood of the judgements which he would execute upon his owne people taken into covenant with him yet this makes nothing against the interpretation before given Because the Lord doth by his corrections in which he shewes himselfe angry with his people subdue their stout hearts and over-power their rebellious natures and make them submit themselves unto him hee maketh those messengers of his wrath to become meanes of good unto his people he layes his yoak on them to tame their unruly spirits Thus saith the Lord concerning Solomon 2 Sam. 7.14 That if he did sin against him he would correct him And it is said 1 Kings 11.9 that God was angry with Solomon and he powred out wrath against him stirring up adversaries to trouble him A father rules over his child●en in love and tender compassion and yet by reason of their unruly disposition hee is sometimes forced to shew himselfe angry with them by some sharp corrections So it is with the Lord in the rule that he exerciseth over his people Therefore though we do restraine the wrath powred forth to be upon his own children yet it may bee a promise of grace that the Lord will by meanes thereof bring under and over-rule the stubbornnesse of their hearts and governe them with a mighty hand whether they will or no. Thus hee over-ruled the spirit of the Prophet Ezek. 3.14 Ezek. 3.14 that though hee had no mind to preach to the Jewes being such a rebellious people yet the hand of the Lord carried him to the performance of it with indignation of his own spirit which was against it 4. When he hath subdued our spirits unto him and brought us to submit unto his will then he will be God over us to teach instruct and direct us in the way wherein we should walk that if either ignorance or heedlesnesse doe turn us out of the way then the Lord guides us into the right way wherein we ought to walk as Isai 48.17 And this he promiseth to doe Isai 30.21 You shall heare a voyce behind you c. we are apt to heare and passe by as though we heard not therefore the Lord is said to call after us as one that speaks behind us and cries to us Ho Ho you are out of your way this is the way c. This also h●e promiseth Psalm 25.9.12 Psal 25.9.12 that when he hath once meekned our crosse spirits and made us willing to obey him then he will guide us in judgement and teach us the way which himself chuseth for us And thus the Lord will be God over his people a God above them as a Prince is ov●r his p●ople an husband over his wife a father o●e his children a master over his servants or a shepheard o er his flock to rule and order them according to his owne mind And this is no small benefit and blessing of the covenant For look as it is for the good of a people to be under the government of a gracious King the good of the wife to bee under the government of a prudent husband the good of a child to be under the government of a godly father and for the good of the fl●ck to be under the guidance of a skilf●ll shepheard So it is for the good of the people of God that hee will bee pleased to bee a God over them and that he will not leave them to the rebellious lusts of their own hearts This is a rich blessing of the covenant of grace As it is said of Solomon that because the Lord loved Israel therefore he gave them such a King 2
of God and have such promises made unto them What shall we doe to helpe forward their calling and conversion Quest Take away as much as in us lyes the stumbling block which Ans 1 hinders their coming in and these blockes are two First The one is the Idolatry of Christian Churches especially that of Rome whiles we doe any thing to uphold these Idolatries we doe put the stumbling block before them to hinder them but take away these stones and blockes which they stumble at and then their way will be more easie and plaine Secondly The other is the carnalnesse and licentiousnesse of the lives of Christians this is a great stumbling blocke unto them remove this from before them let them see a spirit of grace shining upon us and appearing in our lives and then we shall make plaine the way of the Lord for them to returne to Sion see Esay 57.14 Intreat the Lord for them that he would visit them in due time be we their remembrancers before the Lord they have long lyen in the dungeon as Esa 42.22 and been made a prey of and there hath been none to say restore let us therefore speake unto God in their behalfe and say Lord restore thy ancient people bring them back to the fellowship of thy Church take to you the words of Micah Chap. 7.14 Feed thy people with thy rod and the flock of thine inheritance in the middest of Carmell let them feed in Bashan and Gilead as in old time commend their estate unto God and the rather should we doe this Because 1. They prayed for us when we were no people that we might be the people of God Psal 67.1 2. When the salvation of God was revealed to them they prayed that it might be revealed unto us Wee have a little sister said they Cant. 8.8 They took thought for us we being then that little sister and so let us doe for them 2. It is from them that the meanes of salvation is come to us the Law is called their Law Joh. 10.34 It was given as an inheritance to the children of Israel Deut. 33.4 And the spirituall things of the Gospel are called their spirituall things Rom. 15.27 And thence is that in Esa 2.3 The Law shall goe forth of Sion and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem yea and of them came Christ concerning the flesh Rom. 9. All the meanes of grace and salvation are theirs first and from them they come unto us and thence it is that Christ himselfe tells us That salvation is of the Jewes Joh. 4.22 Wee owe them this therefore as a requitall unto them 3. Consider a further good that shall come unto our selves by their calling unto Christ there shall be an increase of blessing coming to our selves Great light shall be manifested and knowledge shall increase Esa 24. ult The light of the Sunne and of the Moone shall be darkned by the light which shall come from that Church the light of the Jewish Church which was but as the light of the Moone and the light of the Gentile Churches which is as the Sunne shall both be dim in comparison of the light which shall be in that Church when the glory of the Lord is risen upon them See Esa 60.1.2 which speakes of the estate of the Jewish Church after their calling as appeares by that which goes before Chap. 59. end Many of those dark Prophecies which now lye hid in obscuritie shall then be brought to light the accomplishment of them will then give us the interpretation 4. Admit we neither had received benefit from them hitherto nor could expect any further blessing hereafter yet consider the glory which shall then come to Christ by their coming in the glory of his kingdome shall be enlarged Jerusalem shall be a throne of glory to him Jer. 3.17 then shall the Lord be glorified in them all the house of Israel shall glory in the Lord Esa 45.25 and shall draw others of the Gentiles unto them 5. If there were neither good to our selves nor glory to Christ by their calling yet even pitie and compassion should move us consider who they are even the children of Abraham our father and Sarah our mother they are our brethren and our flesh and how should it pitie us to see the children of our father in the dungeon and prison-pit Oh pray for them that the blessing of Abraham their father may come upon them For consolation to such parents as have entered into a Covenant Vse 2 with the Lord and have in truth given up themselves unto him to be his people they may be assured that the vertue the blessing and efficacy of the Covenant shall never be disanulled but it shall goe on to you and your children for ever by your Covenant you have such hold of God that you may be assured he will be a God not to you onely but to a thousand generations after you not but that there may be an interruption for a time but the strength of the Covenant will take hold againe so as there shall not faile but some of your seed shall stand before the Lord to serve him for ever This you see fulfilled in the people of the Jewes though there hath been a breaking off for a time yet the Covenant will bring them in againe and Gods Covenant is the same with you as it was with Abraham and therefore looke what mercy Abrahams seed have belonging to them the same doth belong to yours also therefore give up your selves unto God make a Covenant with him and this your Covenant shall draw in your children to partake of the blessing and grace of the Covenant with you even to many generations never to be broken off Vse 3 It may also serve for a consolation unto such children as are descended from parents that have been in Covenant with God they may goe to God and plead the Covenant of their fathers and hope to be received to favour The people of Israel in their distresses ordinarily used to plead the Covenant which God had made with Abraham Isaac and Jacob as Exod. 32.13 Deut. 9.26 27. If you have had godly parents though you have walked frowardly against God yet cast not away all hope but remember the Covenant the Lord hath made with thy fathers and entreat that it may be extended unto thee The Lord himselfe lays this foundation of comfort for such children Esa 51.1 2. Looke unto the rocke whence yee are hewen consider Abraham your father q. d. Consider what mercy I shewed unto him and the same mercy expect for your selves the oyle that is powred out upon the head will run downe to the rest of the members Thus we have heard the scope of these words as they respect the Jewes in particular to whom they were first spoken let us now a little further consider of them as they concerne our selves What was spoken of them is appliable to all that are in the same estate with them
with this spirit of submission and seek peace from him go and put thy rope about thy neck like Benhadads servants and confesse thy own guiltinesse without this God will never enter into covenant with thee God will have thee know thou must take thy life as a free gift of grace and that thou standest at his mercy either to save thee or destroy thee 3. Come with an humble submission to yeeld up thy self to the obedience of the will of God wee must receive him from the law of our life by which we must live When you come to make a covenant with God you must not come to give lawes unto God but to take lawes from God not to impose lawes upon him that he shall save you so and so but you must leave God free to make the conditions of the covenant after his own minde and will think it honour enough that you may be a people in covenant with God and have your life granted by covenant from him but for the conditions leave them to God let him command and require what he will he must be free or else he will not make a covenant with you This is that which Hezekiah exhorted to to come and give the hand to the Lord and serve him we must come and make a covenant with God as a servant with his master as Subjects with their Prince a covenant of service not to be our own Lords the sons of David and princes of Israel when Solomon sate upon the Throne came and gave the hand unto Solomon 1 Chron. 29.24 they made a covenant with him but it was with submission to his power such is the covenant which we must make with God we must give the hand under God submitting to him to be ruled by him Thence it is that we are called upon to deny our selves If any one will be my disciple let him deny himself c. we must not cleave to our selves to our wills and make our own Lawes we must deny our own inclinations wills and affections refuse to be governed by them and resign up our selves to the will of God this is the resolution we must come unto if we will enter into covenant with God as it was in the sacrifice of the Law he that offered it laid his hand upon the head of it as dedicating it to God and quitting it from himself as if he should say I have no more to do with this bullock it is now the Lords that was in part the signification of that action so if we will be the Lords people in covenant with him we must resigne our selves only and wholly to be for him Rom. 12.1 2. we mu●t present our bodies as a living and acceptable sacrifice consecrate and devote them to God to live unto him and to be our own no more as it is in a marriage covenant when a man and woman make a covenant they do resigne up themselves one to another not to be to themselves any more it is a marriage covenant that we make with God I will marry thee to my self saith the Lord therefore we must do as the Spouse doth resigne up our selves to be ruled and governed according to his will 4. If we would enter into covenant with God we must come before him in the name of a Mediator that is the Lord Jesus in the mediation of his sacrifice we must offer up to the Lord a satisfaction for all our treacherous rebellion against him in that sacrifice we must come and seek reconciliation and the renewing of our covenant with God without such a sacrifice whereby Gods justice may be satisfied there is no hope of a covenant to be made between God and you As in the Law Exod. 34.1 to 8. they come and sacrifice and so the covenant is made between God and them Now these were types of Christs sacrifice come therefore sprinkled with the blood of Christ and say Lord here is the blood of the sacrifice which maketh satisfaction for my rebellion and in this blood enter into covenant with me They that make a covenant with God do it by sacrifice Psal 50.5 And therefore in the mediation of Christs blood and by faith in it look for a re-union and knitting of God and us together 5. After all this that you have broken your covenant with your sins judged your selves for them submitted your selves to the will of God and come in the name of a Mediator then by faith look at the gracious invitation of God and consider his readinesse and willingnesse to enter into covenant with you though there be an infinite disparity between the God of glory and us yet he is pleased to invite us to make a covenant with him if you seek to him he will not turn away his face from you as Hezekiah saith to the people 2 Chron. 30.8 9. though he might turn away from you in wrath and displeasure yet he will not but will enter into a gracious Covenant with you He that cometh to me I will in no wise cast off saith Christ Joh. 6.37 In that manner therefore goe thou and humble thy selfe before God confesse thy treachery and rebellion and looke at God as having a golden scepter in his hand and intreat him to enter into a Covenant with thee and submit thy selfe wholly to be at his command plead the promise of his grace touch the top of the scepter and take hold of the Covenant and then certainly in time the Lord will speake to thy soule and conscience by the testimony of his Spirit that he will be a God unto thee and take thee to be one of his people Thus you see the way to enter into Covenant with God It may serve for all such as are already entred into Covenant Vse 3 with God to admonish such to looke unto themselves and to take heed they be not unfaithfull in the Covenant that they have made with him Take heed of breaking Covenant but let us walk according to the covenant that we have made with him This the Lord expects Exod. 19.5 that if wee enter into covenant with him we should be carefull to keepe it In the things of this life a strict eye is had to the covenant In all conveyances of Lands we look narrowly to the covenants and if they be broken all is gone Now ou● life lyes upon our keeping covenant with God labour therefore so to walke that it may appeare that you have a care to keepe the covenant which you have made with God Wee have made a covenant with him in our Baptisme in our conversion and turning unto God and coming to the Lords Supper Now it is not enough to enter into Covenant but wee must keepe it wee have broken the first covenant of workes take heed wee breake not a second there being no more place for any more covenants Now therefore cleave to the Lords Covenant and live unto him Let there not be in any of us an unfaithfull heart to
thinke or whether a heavenly life and glory in both as some others thinke I will not determine it not being much materiall It 's enough to know that life and blessednesse was and is promised in both 5. There is in both C●venants a condition required on our part for the attaining of the life promised wee are not left to our libertie in either Covenants neither of the two Covenants promise life absolutely whether wee obey or no and whether we believe or no but under the condition of faith or obedience the promise of life is made 6. Both Covenants require a perfect righteousnesse of us that wee may have life no life is promised in either Covenants but upon the bringing in of a perfect righteousness● before God either of our owne or of anothers the covenant of grace as well as that of workes will make this good that no unrighteous person shall enter into the kingdome of God Hence Rom. 3. last the Gospel stablisheth the Law they agree herein and doe not crosse one another 7. Both Covenants are unchangeable never to be reversed or altered The covenant of grace is an unchangeable covenant it is an everlasting covenant more unchangeable then the covenant of the day and of the night more unmovable then mountaines that cannot be moved as Esa 54.10 Jer. 35.20 So likewise the covenant of workes is an unchangeable covenant Mat. 5.17 Heaven and earth shall passe away but not one j●t of the Law shall faile Though now in the estate of corruption no man attaines life by the covenant of workes yet this so comes to passe not because the covenant is changed but because we are changed and cannot fulfill the condition to which the promise is made the covenant stands fast but wee have not stood fast in the covenant but it is now become impossible to us that wee are unable to fulfill it as the Apostle speakes Rom. 8.3 yea it is the unchangablenesse and stabilitie of this covenant which condemnes all the world of sinfull and ungodly men The Law hath said Cursed is every one which continueth not in all things c. And the soule that sinneth and flies not to the covenant of grace shall dye This word takes hold upon them and condemnes them Nay more for the fulfilling of this Covenant the Lord Jesus Christ came downe from heaven and b●came man to fulfill that righteousnesse of the Law which was now bec●me impossible to us Rom. 8.3 So unchangeable is the covenant of workes that rather then it shall not be fulfilled the sonne of God must come downe to doe it Thus wee see the agreements between the covenant of workes and the covenant of grace But the principall and w●ightier consideration is to set downe the proper diff●re●c●s between th●m which some have gone about to darken and obs●ur● and doe make them agree too neare and so make a compound of both Covenants a● if one should mixe wine and water tog●●●●r whereby they doe disanull the nature of the Covenant of gr●●● and tu●●● it into a covenant of workes Herein t●●●●fore ●ee ●us● labour the more carefully to set downe the true and reall differences between them which being done wee shall see the nature both of the one and the other more distinctly and clearly The differences are many Differ 1 The first difference is in the condition of the Covenants the one requires doing the other believing the one workes the other faith The one saith Doe this and live the other saith Believe and thou shalt be saved the way of life which the Law propounds is Doe these things comprehended in the Law and doe them constantly and then thou shalt live as Gal. 3.12 The Law saith The man that doth these things c. But the condition of the Covenant of grace is faith Acts 16.31 Believe in the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved But here a twofold doubt may be moved Quest 1. Whether faith be not required in the Law in the Covenant of workes 2. Whether workes be not required in the covenant of grace If both these be required faith in the Covenant of workes and workes in the covenant of grace then how stands the difference between the two Covenants Answ For answer to the first when it is demanded whether faith be not required in the Covenant of workes I answer It is but first it is not the same faith secondly nor required for the same end as in the Covenant of grace To explaine this I say the Covenant of workes requires faith and that in a threefold act thereof 1. In regard of dependance upon God the fountaine and author of all good wee were not in our first and best being which wee had by creation wee were not I say so perfect but wee stood in need still to depend upon him that had created us for the continuance of that being which he had given us It is imprinted in the nature of every creature to depend for sustentation upon that from whence it had its beginning as the chicken upon the hen c. So the whole creation lookes backe unto him that made it for preservation in their being as Psal 104.21.27 Psal 145.15 And if it be so in these unreasonable creatures thus to depend upon their Creator then was the same in man much more the covenant of the Law required this faith of man in the beginning though now we be as Gods in our owne eyes selfe-sufficient depending upon our selves and none else for all the good wee hope for yet at the beginning it was not so But man was to depend upon God for his being and well-being 2. Another act of faith required in the Law was a perswasion that God was well pleased with him whilst he walked in the way of love and obedience to his creator he was to believe without feare and doubt that so long as he obeyed the will of the Lord he was well-pleased with him 3. He was to believe the blessing of life promised in that covenant and to expect it according to the promise In all these regards faith was commanded in the Covenant of workes It may here be demanded Object If faith be required in the covenant of workes why is it not expressed in plaine words as well as doing the Covenant of workes saith Thou shalt love the Lord thy God and serve him but it doth not call for any act of faith at all The reason thereof is Answ because when the Covenant of workes was made with man he was then in his integritie sinne was not yet come into the world and therefore there was no cause for man to doubt of Gods love and acceptation of him But having received so great benefits from God made after his image but little inferior to the Angels and having dominion given him over all the workes of Gods hands he was now to be put in minde of his dutie towards his creator and therefore was to be stirred up to love honour
man was yet righteous persisting in that innocency and righteousnesse in which he was created there was yet no breach made the heart and mind of man answering to the mind of God and therefore there was no need of a Mediator to bring them together But when the Covenant of grace is made with man there is a former breach between God and him and so there is need of a third partie of a Mediator to make them one Hence is that in Gal. 3.20 A Mediator is not a Mediator of one whiles wee are one with God there is no need of a Mediator no more then there is need for one to mediate between a man and himselfe this is the ordinary interpretation of that place though it may probably beare another sense and so it was betwixt God and man in the beginning there was no variance then between them by sinne then God made a Covenant with man as with his friend as Abraham is called the friend of God but when sin had made a breach between God and man then strangenesse and enmitie followed God is estranged from us and wee are enemies unto God so that without a Mediator wee can never come to be united into Covenant againe Now man feares and trembles to come before God and God being offended cannot be at peace unlesse his Justice be satisfied Therefore when Adam had once sinned he feared to come into the presence of God and hid himselfe till God revealed and made knowne to him the Mediator of the Covenant that the Seed of the woman should breake the Serpents head The Covenant of workes was delivered to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai by the hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 Object and so the difference is taken away I grant the Covenant of workes was then revealed and made Answ 1 knowne to the children of Israel as being before almost obliterated and blotted out of mans heart and therefore God renewed the knowledge of the Covenant of workes to them I grant also that the Law was given to them by the mediation Answ 2 of Moses who was a mediator betwixt God and them But I adde withall that the Law though it containe the summe Answ 3 of the Covenant of workes yet was not delivered unto that people for this end to stand between God and them as a Covenant of workes by which they should be justified and live but onely as it was subservient and helpfull unto them to attaine the end of the former Covenant of grace which God had made with them in their fathers God had promised Abraham to be a God to him and to his seed but now the Israelites having been long trained up among an ignorant and Idolatrous people they little knew what need they had to flie to the promise of grace and therefore the Lord now reveales his Law to them in that manner to make them see by the terrors of the Law that they cannot come neare unto God thereby this was the Lords end in giving the Law unto them and not to stand between God and them as a Covenant of life by which they should live This is evident by that of the Apostle Gal. 3.19 Wherefore then serveth the Law The Apostle had before proved that wee are justified by faith in the free promise and not by workes some then might object Why was the Law then given to the children of Israel The Apostle answers it was given to restraine transgression to convince men of sin and to be as a Schoolmaster to bring them to Christ Gal. 3.24 These then were the ends of giving the Law 1. That the knowledge of sinne might abound Rom. 5 19 20. The Law entred that sinne might abound that is the knowledge of it that man might know his sinne Secondly To lead them to Christ Thirdly To restraine the transgression and sinne of man and to keepe them in obedience But not as I said to stand in the forme of a Covenant for them to be justified and saved thereby The Law is to be considered two wayes First Absolutely and by it selfe as containing a Covenant of workes Secondly Dependantly and with respect to the Covenant of grace 1. Absolutely alone by it selfe and so it was given as a Covenant to Adam in the beginning and so considered it shews the way and meanes of life by which wee might live 2. Respectively as having reference to the Covenant of grace and so it was given to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai both as antecedent and consequent thereto As antecedent to it to prepare them for Christ and the Covenant of grace and also as subsequent to it to teach them how to walke and please God when they were entred into a new Covenant with him And thus was it given unto them And here because some may doubt of this truth I will therefore lay downe some grounds to confirme it and to make it cleare that the Covenant made with Israel at Mount Sinai was not a Covenant of workes Argu. 1 That Covenant which God made with Israel at Mount Sinai had Circumcision for the signe and seale of it which was the signe and seale of the same Covenant which God made with Abraham Gen. 17. And therefore this Covenant made with Israel having the same signe and seale with the other made with Abraham it was the same Covenant also For if the Covenant had been altered the seale should have been altered also the seales of the one Covenant not being sutable to the other It were now absurd to bring in the seales of the Covenant of workes made with Adam and to annex them to the Covenant of grace now made with us in Christ and no lesse inconvenient were it to put the seales of the Covenant of grace to the Covenant of workes Now if this Covenant made with Israel was the same with that which was made with Abraham having the same seale and confirmation then surely it was not a covenant of workes but of grace because the covenant made with Abraham was a covenant of grace and not of workes Rom. 4. Object But it may be said that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes else how doth the Apostles Argument hold which he urgeth Gal. 5.3 where he saith If yee be circumcised yee are bound to keepe the whole Law As implying that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes binding them to the observation of the whole Law that they might be justified thereby even as Baptisme binding us to believe on Christ for forgivenesse of sinnes is therefore called a Sacrament of the Covenant of grace Wee must consider Circumcision two wayes First Answ According to its primitive institution as it was appointed by God unto Abraham and then as it was abusively urged and intended by those Judaizing Apostles which sought to corrupt the truth In the Primitive institution of it it was appointed to be a seale of the covenant of grace as is evident Rom. 4.11 But the
expect from him he prayeth not for them he pleads onely for them that fly to grace through him these that enter into a covenant of grace have Christ their advocate but as for those that are under the Law they have God against them the Law against them they have all creatures to accuse and to testifie against them but have not one to mediate for them no Christ no Mediator to stand up in their cause to turne away from them the wrath which they have provoked It may serve for direction Doe we then desire to be in covenant Vse 2 with God to be under grace and to partake with the Saints in the blessings of this Covenant Then trust not to your selves to your own righteousnesse but goe to Jesus Christ the Mediator of the Covenant give up your selves unto him put your selves into his hand and goe hand in hand with him into the presence of the Father that he may mediate for you and plead your cause As the Israelites said unto Moses Goe thou and speake unto God for us so let us say unto Christ Lord Jesus Goe thou and plead with the Father for us if wee come neare unto God without thee wee dye the fire will consume us wee are destroyed This is the way All men hope well of themselves and trust to their own righteousnesse or else they thinke that the promises of God are large and that Christ is a Mediator for all men and as the Jewes trusted in Moses Joh. 5. so doe all now trust in Christ And usually none are more confident then those that never knew their need of a Mediator betwixt God and them But as the Israelites had they not heard those thundercrackes seene the lightning and tempest and earthquake had not these made them afraid and shaken their hearts they would never have gone so unto Moses and besought him to be a Mediator between God and them so surely is it with us wee never come to Christ to mediate for us till by the Law wee see our selves to be dead condemned men Here therefore begin look upon the terrors of the Law see and read thine own condemnation and curse against thee by that Covenant and then as the Israelites when they were slung with the fiery Serpents they looked up to the brasen Serpent by it to be healed and as they in their feare went unto Moses so let us in our feare goe unto the Lord Jesus who is the onely Mediator between God and us It may serve for incouragement unto such as are smitten downe with the terrors of the Almightie so as they dare not approach neare unto God to offer up any service or sacrifice unto him but God appeares in their eyes as a consuming fire they had rather fly unto the holes of the rockes and have mountaines to cover them and hills to fall upon them then to approach before the face of the dreadfull and just God As Exod. 20.21 the children of Israel stood afar off from God they durst not draw near because they saw God as a consuming fire Exod. 24.7 so it is with some fearfull consciences God is terrible unto them they dare not come neare where the Lord is to have any thing to doe with him thus it was with Adam after he had sinned he runs into the thicket to hide himselfe from the presence of the Lord and rather would he have had the trees fired about his eares and himselfe to have been turned to ashes with them then to have been brought forth before the face of God to answer for his sin which he had done Thus also it was with David himselfe after his sin of pride in numbering the people 1 Chron. 21.30 But let such remember what the Lord spake to the children of Israel in the like case Exod. 20.18.20 Feare not saith Moses for God is come to prove you that his feare may be in you that you sin not feare not with a slavish and servile feare to fly from his presence onely feare him with a reverend feare feare to sin against him Let them not be afraid to come before God but consider though there is no accesse to the Lord whiles they be under the Law there being none there to mediate for them yet let them fly from that Covenant to a Covenant of grace and here there is an Advocate a Mediator ever standing at the right hand of God to plead for such as come unto God by him so that though we have been enemies and strangers yet coming for grace in the Mediator his name there is hope wee may finde grace and acceptance by him therefore saith the Apostle Eph. 2.18 19. Through him wee have accesse unto the Father c. and Chap. 3.12 In him wee have boldnesse and accesse with confidence Heb. 7.25 He is able to save all that come unto God by him Be our case never so miserable in our owne eyes yet if wee come unto God by him he is able to save us to the uttermost and if wee come unto him he will not cast us away Joh. 6.37 For comfort to such as are entred into Covenant with God by Vse 4 the mediation of the Lord Jesus the Mediator of the Covenant here is their comfort that this covenant so made can never be disanulled or broken off Satan will not be wanting to make a breach if possible he can he envieth this uniting of God and man in covenant one with another As soone as ever he saw a Covenant passed between God and our first parents he presently bestirred himselfe to make a breach between them he did then cast between them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an apple of strife as I may so call it to draw man to violate the Covenant of obedience which God had bound him in and so he broke asunder the Covenant between God and man and thus he seekes still to disanull all Covenants between God and us And were our Covenant now without a Mediator as the former was he might prevaile against us and make a new breach as he did before but now here is our stay and strong assurance that if we be once taken into this Covenant of grace this covenant will hold though God might in his Justice breake with us and we● would breake with God through our sinfull infirmitie and backsliding disposition that is in us yet the Mediator the Lord Jesus Christ standing betwixt God and us keeps us together that wee can never fall asunder he pleads with the Father to reconcile him to us when he is angry with us he pleads also with us and when wee are going backe from God he brings us to him againe by renewing in us our repentings before him he draws the heart againe before the throne of grace powres upon us a spirit of grace and supplication puts in our mouths words of confession and stirres up in us sighes and groanes of spirit intreating the Lord that though wee have gone backe from him yet he
light and new truths we drinke not in old poysoned errors and be fed with windy fancies in stead of bread Aske for the old way Jer. 6.16 Jer. 6.16 The old way is the good way wherein you must finde rest to your soules Men have itching eares itching mindes and itching tongues also itching to be fed with and to be venting novelties It hath been the blemish of our English Nation that they have been alwayes new-fangled running after new fashions taking up the fashions of every Nation The poverty of our estates will not here permit us to follow new fashions but yet still the vanitie of our mindes is working and doating upon our new opinions whereby men are led into pathes that were not troden by the Fathers of old God charges the false Prophets Jer. 18.15 Jer. 18.15 that they led his people from the ancient wayes Whiles every one is forward to vent his own imagination and hath libertie so to doe every one saying I have seene I have seene when indeed they have seene nothing but the vanitie and lying imagination of their own heart they fill the world with idle fancies which breed questions rather then godly edifying Aske therefore for the way which Abraham David Moses Isaiah and Jeremy with the rest of the Prophets walked in and departed not therefrom Though we have cause to praise the Lord for the aboundant manifestation of the Doctrine of Grace in these dayes more then before Christs coming in the flesh yet the Doctrine is the same As the light of the Sun which shines at noone-time or mid-day is the same light which shined in the morning onely more cleare and bright then before so the Doctrine of Grace though more clearly manifested then formerly when hid under types and shadowes yet the truth is the same Wee hope to be saved by grace as they did and they had the same Doctrine of Grace as we have therefore seeke we after the old way 2. But though the substance of the Covenant was the same then and now yet there is a difference in regard of the manner of dispensation and revealing it being diversly propounded according to the severall times ages states and conditions of the Church delivered one way before the coming of Christ and another way afterward And therefore in regard of the old way and manner of administration of it it 's called the old Covenant and in regard of the new manner of dispensing it 's called the new Covenant The same Covenant therefore is called both new and old as is evident Heb. 8.8.13 Heb. 8.8 13. But lest any should thinke that the old Covenant there spoken of was properly and strictly the Covenant of workes see what is said before Pag. 59 60. c. Wherein stands the difference between the old and new manner of the dispensation of the Covenant of grace Quest It stands principally in foure things Answ 1. One more burthensome another more easie 2. One more darke the other more cleare 3. One more weake the other more lively and strong 4. In regard of the extent of the dispensation one dispensed to that one people of the Jewes the other to all Nations First The Covenant in the former dispensation of it was more burthensome and heavie to be borne and is now made to us more easie which appeares by those places of Scripture-speeches which the Holy-Ghost useth of the Ordinances of the old Testament Acts 15.10 Acts 15.10 They were a yoke which neither we nor our Fathers could beare and Colos 2.20 Colos 2.20 If saith the Apostle you be freed from these worldly Ordinances why are you burthened with traditions He did not say Why will you take upon you the observation of traditions but why are yee burthened with them implying they were an heavy burthen So Galat. 4.3 Galat 4.3 he comparing the state of the Church then and now he saith they were then in a kinde of bondage in respect of us now In the dayes of the New Testament the burthen is made light c. Therefore saith Christ Mat. 11. Take my yoke upon you for my yoke is easie and my burthen light He taketh off the burthen of the Ceremoniall Law that we need not be b●●thened with it Consider the burthen that lay upon them First The burthen of their costly Sacrifices that if any had but touched an uncleane thing he must come and offer sacrifice sometime a bullock sometime a lambe If we were for every offence to offer such sacrifices we should count it an heavie burthen Secondly They had long and tedious journeys to Jerusalem the Land lay more in length then breadth and Jerusalem stood almost at one end of it and thither thrice a yeare all the males were to goe and appeare before God Deut. 16.16 Thirdly They were restrained from many liberties which wee now enjoy we are allowed many creatures for meat which they might not eat as the Hare swine c. Difference of meats is now taken away Fourthly They were tyed to the observation of many dayes the new Moones and many Ceremoniall Sabbaths to which they were bound and not at libertie as we are Now whether wee respect one of these or all together it was a burthensome thing to them But now the yoke is made more easie therefore Christ compares the Jewish Church to a childe that in his nonage is under tutors and governours till the time appointed by the Father But the Church now is like a man growne up that hath his patrimony in his own hand Gal. 4.1 2. Gal. 4.1 2. Though we be bound to the duties of the Morall Law as well as they yet a great yoke is taken off from us Vse Seeing we have so much libertie in the dayes of the Gospel and are eased of the burthen that lay upon them it must teach us with the more freedome and willingnesse to offer up those spirituall sacrifices unto God which he calls for at our hands He hath taken off from our shoulders the heavie yoke which lay upon them Let us not therefore be as the people of Israel of whom the Lord complains Hosea 11.3.4 Hosea 11.3.4 that though he had taken off the yoke and laid meat before them yet they were like an unruly beast that kicketh with the heele If now when the Lord hath taken off the yoke of the Ceremoniall Law and hath given us the Covenant of his grace without those burthens that lay upon them if yet we deale unkindly with him and count those spirituall services which he requires from the inward man to be a burthen unto us how may the Lord complaine of us much more Let us therefore give unto the Lord voluntary and spirituall sacrifices the lesser that our burthen is the greater is the sin if we serve not the Lord with a chearfull heart in the services he requires from us Secondly The Covenant was then revealed more darkly and obscurely but now the dispensation of it is
more cleare and evident the light now is marvellous it is as the Sun shining at noone-day Hence Rom. 16.25 26. Rom. 16.25 26. the Gospel is called the revelation of the ministery which was kept secret since the foundation of the world but it is now made manifest c. Though it was revealed before yet it was but darkly but now it is revealed more clearly since the coming of our Saviour Christ so also Ephes 3 4 5. Ephes 3.4 5. and Colos 2.26 Colos 2.26 Consider the truth of this in some particulars First Consider the promise of eternall life it was darkly covered over not clearly promised to them The promise of eternall life is very rarely in expresse termes mentioned in the old Testament I know but one place which is in Dan. 12.2 Dan. 12.2 where plaine mention is made of life eternall It was shadowed out to them in the promise of inhabiting in the Land of Canaan which was a shadow of eternall life so the threatning of eternall death was typed out by the threatning of exclusion out of the Lords Land Hosea 9.3 Hosea 9.3 When they should be driven into captivity it was a type of their sending into hell if they did not returne to walke with him in his Covenant And hence are those promises They shall inherite the land and dwell in the earth Psal 37.11 Psal 37.11 Not as if that were all they were to looke for but because it was the type of another and better inheritance in heaven This was the cause that made Jacob Gen. 49.29 Gen. 49.29 give that charge to his sonnes that they should not bury him in Aegypt but carry him into the land of Canaan And Joseph Gen. 50.24 25. tooke an oath of his brethren that they should carry his bones with them And why was this done but because they looked at that Land as more then an earthly possession taking it as a type of heaven and by giving that charge they testified their faith in the promise of God concerning the possession of life eternall Therefore also it was that Abraham though he indured many troubles and injuries in the land of promise and had time to have returned into his own Country yet he would not Heb. 11.15 Heb. 11.15 because he looked at that as a land of promise and a type of the rest that remained for him in the kingdome of God Thus was the promise of eternall life obscurely propounded Secondly Consider the revealing of Christ either the person of Christ or his offices and wee shall see that they were darkly propounded unto them in respect of what they are to us Christ was but shadowed out to them in types and figures and dark prophesies Concerning his person it was revealed unto them that he should be God as Isai 9.6 Isai 9.6 where he is called the mighty God and also that he should be man and therefore said to be borne Isa 9.6 But how he should be both God and man in one person was very darkly revealed Which made the Jewes that they could not answer to that question how Christ should be both Lord and sonne to David So for his offices his Mediatorship was typed out by Moses his being between God and the people his Priesthood typed out by Melchisedek among the Canaanites and Aaron among the Jews and his sacrifice by their sacrifices his Propheticall office shadowed to them by Moses who revealed the minde of God to the people Therefore saith Moses Deut. 18.18 Deut. 18.18 A Prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you like unto me which is applyed unto Christ Acts 3.22 Acts 3.22 His Kingly office typed out in the kingdome of David and Solomon Luk. 1.31 Luk. 1.31.32 God shall give him the kingdome of his Father David But how darke these things were unto them you may perceive by the speeches of the Disciples unto Christ who knew not how he should execute those offices they knew not that he should dye they dreamt of an earthly kingdome they saw Christ under a vaile but wee see him with open face 2 Cor. 3. 2 Cor. 3. end Thirdly The benefits that come by Christ were not so clearly made knowne to them as they are to us Justification was signified by the sprinkling of the bloud of the sacrifice Exod. 24.7 8. Exod. 24 7 8. So sanctification was typed out by the water of purification The benefits which are so clearly revealed unto us that Christ is our wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption were but darkly propounded unto them So that the light now is become like the light at noone day the light that they had was but like the dawning of the day or the light of the starres Hence is that of Christ Mat. 13.16 17. Blessed are your eyes for they see and your eares for they heare c. Quest Why was the Covenant revealed more darkly then and more clearly now 1. Answ Because the work of our redemption was not then transacted and accomplished the things were not then passed as now they be and therefore as the light of the Sun is lesse before its rising then afterward so Christ before his rising in the world was not so fully knowne as since 2. The Church was then in its minority and infancy but now it is of full age Gal. 4.1 2. Galat. 4.1 2. Therefore as a Father gives some hints of his purpose and will to his childe when he is under age but makes knowne all his minde to him when he is growne up so dealt the Lord with his Church then as with children c. 3. It was meet that this glory should be reserved to Christ himselfe he being the great Prophet of the Church that he should reveale more to the world then ever was knowne before It was not meet that all should be revealed before his coming but that he should have the glory of revealing those deepe things which were hid with God making them knowne to his Church and people And therefore they were more darkly revealed before Onely this observe that the further the times were from Christs coming the lesse light they had and the nearer to Christ the more light sprung up The promise to Eve was more darke more cleare to Abraham and still more cleare to David c. And the reason of this is First Because Christ is the light of the world Now as the Sunne the further it is from rising the lesse light it gives and the nearer to rising the more so did Christ the Sun of righteousnesse Secondly The more light was discovered neare the coming of Christ to stirre up the mind● of people to wait for Christ and his coming The more knowne the more desired Ignoti ●●lla c●pido the lesse knowne the lesse desired Thirdly Before the Law was given there was lesse sense of sin and therefore the lesse revelation of Christ But as the sense of sin increased by the
converseth with us but somewhat strangely speaking as by so many Interpreters by them to interpret his mind and will to us but when hee will shew himselfe to us more fami iarly then he bids away unto all these former means silver gold and corn c. and when all these are set aside then he comes and sayes plainly Now you shall see what I my selfe will doe for you and that I who am the Lord all-suffi●ient am the Lord your God and from my selfe I will blesse you you shall now see my immediate care of you And when the Lords people see this thereby they know him better and honour him more thereby are they forced to say as Psalm 148.13 Psal 148.13 His Name onely is excellent his Name onely is worthy to bee exalted Before they were ready to ascribe some excellency to the means and instruments sacrificing to their own nets but when they come to nothing and the Lord hath by himselfe fulfilled our desire then are we lifted up to glorifie him hee alone is seen to be an all sufficient God unto his people So that if wee ask Why is the Lord alone in doing good to his people and there is none with him as David was asked 1 Sam. 21.1 1 Sam. 21.1 The answer is because I will not give my glory to another saith God but will have my whole glory to my selfe alone He is alone that he alone may be glorified Reason 2 It is also for the further comfort and consolation of the people of God when then they shall see from whence their help commeth how God by his immediate hand hath wrought for their good A gift from the Princes own hand is farre more gratefull then that which comes another way So when the Lord casteth in kindnesse and favours upon his people from himselfe this is more comfortable then to have it by another means Indeed during the time of the trials of Gods people their faith is put to soar plunges that they begin to question as they said Exod. 17.7 Exod. 17 7. Is The Lord amongst us or not And are ready to say as Isai 49.14 Isai 49.14 The Lord hath forgotten me c. But when they see what hee hath done how he hath ridden on the heavens for their help and on the clouds in his glory and all for their succour and good when they see the Lord himselfe supplying their wants from himselfe then they change their mind and say as Exod. 15.11 Exod. 15.11 Who is like unto thee O Lord amongst the Gods who is like thee glorious in holinesse fearfull in praises doing wonders There is no God like our God who hath done marvellously for us and we who have such a God shall never be ashamed This may serve to help our faith against the discouragem●nts Vse 1 which wee are apt to fall into in the straits into which the Lord hath brought us God hath dealt with us as with his people Israel we are brought out of a fat land into a wildernesse and here we meet with necessities God hath now set us besides our hopes and expectations our props which wee leaned upon are broken our mony is spent our states are w●sted and our necessities begin to increase upon us and now wee know not how to be supplied the waters of the river are cut off and now wee begin to be full of cares and feares what wee shall doe when our means faile us then our hearts begin to faile us yea and our faith also we begin to be out of hope and so we doe as the Israelites did who though when they heard of deliverance at first they bowed down their heads and worshipped yet when they met with straits then they quarrelled with Moses Why hast thou brought us hither So we begin to quarrell with Gods providence and without selves and to question whether wee have done well to come hither or no. But against this discouragement learn we to live by faith in this doctrine now delivered t●at God will be all things to his people from himselfe alone Therefore though means faile yet let not our hearts faile for the faithfull God will not faile us he hath tied us to means so that wee may not neglect them neither can wee maintain the comfort of our lives without them but the Lord stands in no need of them hee needs not silver or gold wooll or flax nor houses full of store he needs not a fruitfull land to provide for the necessities of his people he can without them provide for our good If wee were left to provide for our selves then we might d●sp●ir when means are cut off but the Lord hath said Cast your care upon me I will care for you As Joseph said to Pharaoh Without me God will provide an answer for Pharaoh so may silver and gold and such things say to us Without us God will provide for the wealth of his people Though our means be gone yet God is the same and if our faith were before fixt upon the Lord then shew it now when means faile us If wee cannot now trust him our former saith was in the means not in the Lord. The more our straits be the more look after the Lord himselfe that he should from himselfe minister needfull things unto us When the stream fails and runs no more then goe to the fountain where the waters are sweeter and more sure See the speech of faith Hab. 3.17.18 Hab. 3.17.18 Though the Fig-tree doe not blossome nor fruit be in the vines and the f●●ids yeeld no fruit c. yet I will rejoyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation Though all means fail yet will I rejoyce In the Mount will the Lord be seen Gen. 22.14 If we could but grow up to more dependance upon him to live by faith in him alone it would bee our great advantage for though means doe prove as a broken reed or as a false hearted friend yet the Lord is faithfull and they that trust in him are blessed he will by himselfe create peace and comfort to his people Vse 2 To settle our hearts against the wavering disposition which we are subject unto in this ●and Sometimes the places wee live in are hard and barren and this unsettles us we know not how to subsist I deny not but that one place may be better then another more desireable more fruitfull in it selfe But yet the Lord promiseth Exod. 20 24. Exod 20.24 that in every place where hee sets the remembrance of his Name thither he will come and blesse his people and what is wanting from the place shall bee made up from the Lord himselfe He turneth a barren land into fruitfulfulnesse for his people Psal 107. Psalm 107. If the places be barren wherein we live let us be the more humble the more fruitfull in well-doing the more diligent in prayer the more strong in faith And then we shall
Grace and peace goe hand in hand There is a raigne and rule of grace Rom. 5.21 Rom. 5.21 And so there is of peace Colos 3.15 Colos 3.15 As under the raigne of Solomon there was abundance of peace so there is under the government of Christ he is the King of Salem And the more the soule is subjected unto his government the more peace it finds And that may be seene in these two things First In the dispensations and administrations of Gods providence though things goe crosse against us we meet with many troubles Gods providences seeme to crosse his promises yet there is peace to the soule in it therefore saith Christ Joh. 16. last In the world you shall have trouble but in mee you shall have peace Certain it is that if ever our hearts be out of quiet it is because there is some sedition and trayterous conspiracy which hath been rising up against the kingdome of Christ and this workes trouble but where the soule is subjected to the regiment of grace it maketh it to rest in peace In all wrongs injuries and crosses it knowes the Lord will right them In all wants it knowes that he will provide In all kind of tryalls that he will with the temptation give an issue in due time But the heart that is unsubdued to Gods kingdome is ready to fret against God and sit downe discontented when any thing crosseth him Secondly As it resteth in peace under the dispensations of Gods providences so it rests in peace in regard of the spirituall enemies of our salvation which fight against our soules Whatsoever threatens our ruine the soule shrowds it selfe under the wing of the Almightie and concludes with the Prophet Isai 33.22 The Lord is my Judge he is my King and he will save me Let us examine our selves by these things and we may see whether we be under the government of God and so whether we be in Covenant with him Vse 3 This may serve for a rule of direction and withall for a ground of consolation to the Lords servants when they feele the strength of their corruptions working in them and their lusts prevailing against them that they make them groane and cry with Paul O wretched man that I am c. when they find themselves foyled againe and againe and can get no helpe against those evills let them fly to this promise of grace let them lay this promise of the Covenant before them and remember what the Lord hath said I will rule over you with a mightie hand Ezek. 20.33 Ezek. 20.33 Remember the Lord of his promise and claime it that it may be made good unto thee And say Lord thou hast promised that thou wilt rule over me why is it then that these tyrants rule and raigne in my soule why doth unbeliefe pride worldlinesse rule Thus make we our refuge to the throne of Grace and then as the Lord will fulfill the other promises of his Covenant so he will also fulfill this and will rule us by his Grace he will come and plead the cause of his people against all their enemies and say as Isai 52.5 Isai 52.5 What have I to doe here that my people are taken away for nought they that rule over them make them to howle c. His meaning is as if he should say What doe you meane Aegypt and Ashur to trouble my people that you put me also to trouble in rescuing them let them alone or else I will make you feele my power c. So it is in the enemies of our soules when we are forced to howle unto God by reason of the bondage of our corruptions he will set us free he himselfe will be a God over us to rule us by his Spirit This being one of the blessings of the Covenant of Grace to have Vse 4 God to be Lord over us let us then all be admonished to give up our selves to the regiment of his grace as the Macedonians 2 Cor. 8.5 2 Cor. 8.5 They gave themselves to the Lord. The Lord gives himselfe to us good reason that we should give up our selves to him O happy day when the soule is perswaded to give up it selfe into such an hand Thinke it enough that yee have spent the time past in the service of sinne and Satan those cruell Lords which you have obeyed 1 Pet. 4.3 1 Pet. 4.3 and now for time to come give up your soules to him that is ready with stretched out armes to receive those that come to him When God calls to us to returne then let us answer Behold we come unto thee Jer. 3.22 Jer. 3.22 And for a motive consider First That though you may stand out against the government and authoritie of Gods grace yet you cannot resist the government of his power but there the Lord will be above you as he was above Pharaoh and the Aegyptians Exod. 18.11 Exod. 18.11 He thought to have been above God and to have kept the children of Israel in bondage but wherein they dealt proudly he was above them If thou wilt not be subject to his grace yet thou shalt be subject to his power which no creature can resist therefore all the while that thou standest out against the government of Gods grace thou dost but spurne against the prick which is hard to doe Secondly Looke at this as one of the great blessings of the Covenant to be under the Lords government and guidance Is it not better to be under the government of the blessed holy gracious and mercifull God then under the uncleane wicked and cruell enemy Satan the Devill But it may be some will say they will be under neither but that cannot be there are no more spirituall regiments in the world he that is not subject to the government of Gods grace is a subject to the Devill What a glorious priviledge is this that a Christian may say that no creature nor Angel nor Devill nor sin hath power over him but God alone This is even to be a King upon earth Let every soule therefore be exhorted to come under this government and let us not doe as the Israelites 1 Sam. 8.7 1 Sam. 8.7 who cast off God from being their King Cast not off the Lord lest he cast off you and you become a reprobate people but if you will be your owne men you will not have God to be over you if it seeme evill unto you to serve the Lord then choose you whom you will serve goe every one and serve his own Idolls as Ezek. 20.39 Ezek. 20.39 and walke after your own counsell but withall remember what Samuel told the Israelites that if they would have a King they should at last cry out for the King that they had chosen so you that will not have God to rule over you but your own lusts you will cry out one day and howle for the King that you have chosen and you shall then
him or for him not for our selves but for him mourning that we have pierced him and grieved his Spirit by our sinnes 5. An heart willing to forgive and to doe good unto those that have done evill against us Mat. 6.14 Mat. 6.14 when wee cannot onely forbeare them but forgive them and beare a loving heart to them that have been unloving towards us This disposition of heart in us springs from an higher fountaine of grace which hath been shed downe upon us in forgiving our sinnes When the heart can reason with it selfe to suppresse revengefull desires when they are stirring in us and can argue as Mat. 18. and Eph. 4. Mat. 18. Eph. 4. the Lord is willing to forgive me my debts and ought not I also to forgive my fellow-servant that hath offended me Such a disposition of heart is a fruit and token of the forgivenesse of our sinnes Mat. 6.14 The grace that hath been shewed us in the forgivenesse of our sinnes workes an answerable disposition in us making us ready to forgive the sinnes of our brethren 6. A free and full confession of sinne when we deale openly with the Lord freely willing to open all our whole heart before the Lord discovering knowne sinnes secret sinnes the most prevailing beloved and inward corruptions willing to take the shame of all unto our selves and still to be more vile in our selves that mercy might be glorified in our forgivenesse When we can bring out the whole pack and not keepe a sin back so farre as wee know any thing by our selves but lay all open and naked before the face of God till there be no more to be found such confession hath a promise of forgivenesse 1 Joh. 1.9 1 Joh. 1.9 There may be a forced confession as was that of Saul when he was so fully convinced of his sinne that he would no longer deny it 1 Sam. 15. And of Judas who out of extremitie of horror and rage of conscience was made to confesse his wickednesse in betraying innocent bloud There may be also a formall superficiall and partiall confession when we doe in a generall fashion confesse our selves sinners which confession hath no promise of forgivenes because these confessions are ever accompanied first with a desire if possible to maintaine our own innocency secondly with a spirit of unbeliefe and misgiving heart fearing lest our own mouth should judge us and wee become witnesses against our selves Thirdly with a spirit of pride loath to confesse our selves to be so vile as we must acknowledge our selves to be if we should confesse all our sinnes against our selves But when a man is willing to search out all his sin unto the last that he may lay open all his heart and confesse all his iniquitie against himselfe before the Lord being vile in his own eyes and desiring to be more vile loathing himselfe for all his abominations of such an one that can thus come before the Lord in humble confession of his sinnes I doubt not to say unto him Goe thy way in peace thy sin is forgiven thee If God give us a heart thus humbly to confesse it is unto us a signe there is in God a heart mercifully to forgive Exhortation to all the Saints that have tasted of this rich grace Vse 6 in the forgivenes of their sinnes Let them ascribe glory unto him that hath shewed this mercy on them extolling that grace which hath forgiven them this the Lord lookes for he would have his grace glorified by us Eph. 1.6 Ephes 1.6 The Lord himselfe publisheth this as his own glory that he is a God forgiving iniquitie transgression and sin Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 And the servants of God have herein given glory unto him as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passeth by the transgression of the remnant of thine heritage We should make the praise of this grace to ring through the whole world that heaven and earth may take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed on us This grace can never be sufficiently glorified by us To teach us willingly to become servants unto this God of all Vse 7 Grace who dealeth thus mercifully with his people See Hos 14.5 Hos 14.5 When the Lord there promiseth to heale the rebellions of his people by taking away their iniquities from them marke what this workes in them ver 9. What have wee say they any more to doe with Idolls with our former sinnes we will serve them them no more we will henceforth serve thee our gracious God which promisest to heale all our backslidings His will wee be him will wee serve And thus much of the second Benefit The third Benefit of the Covenant is the renewing and sanctifying of our natures by the graces of the Spirit The Lord having first justified us by his grace in the forgivenesse of our sinnes he the● goes on to sanctifie us that we might be an holy people unto him to serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes Luk. 1. Luke 1. When he hath made us imputedly righteous he will have us inherently righteous also And by the promise of this benefit the Lord answers another scruple which his people might be subject unto We might thinke with our selves this is indeed a great benefit which the Lord hath promised hith●rto namely to forgive all my sin But though the Lord should performe all this mercy unto mee forgiving unto me all my former sins unto this day yet I have such a vile sinfull nature within mee that I shall returne and sin againe as wickedly as ever I did before and so shall bring a new guiltinesse upon my self Hereto the Lord answers No it shall not be I will renew alter and change that sinfull and wicked nature that is in you I will make your heart a new heart so as you shall be enabled to doe my will and walk in my wayes I will sanctifie you to be an holy and pretious people to my self This renovation and sanctification of our nature stands first in cleansing away our sinfull corruption and then in an infusion and filling of us with the holy graces of the Spirit As a vessell which wee intend for any honourable use first wee scoure and rinse out the filth that is in it and then we sweeten it with other things and so make it fit for service and use Satan had defiled us with his loathsome filthinesse but so many as the Lord sets apart unto himselfe to be vessels of honour in his house those hee cleanseth from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and seasoneth them with all the sweet and gracious gifts of his Spirit Hence it is that we are said to be made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Peter 1.4 and to be renewed with the ren●wing of the holy Ghost Titus 3.5 And we are said to be created new in Christ Jesus Eph. 2.10 because
hee makes them able to lend unto others makes them the head and others the taile c. sets up his own above and the other beneath 7. God is in Covenant with our whole man he is the God of our body as well as soule and spirit we are wholly his he hath taken us wholly to be his own and therefore even as our Saviour Christ in Matth. 22. doth hereby prove the resurrection of Abrahams body because God was in Covenant with Abraham he was the God of Abraham of whole Abraham body as well as soule and therefore God being the God of the living and not of the dead Abrahams body must live and rise againe so by the same argument we may gather assurance that God will provide for our outward man because he is the God of the whole man he is a God to us not only to pardon our sinnes to sanctifie and save our soules but he is the God of our bodies also to feed and to cloth them to minister to them such things as are convenient for them And hence is that in 1 Cor. 6.13 as our body is for the Lord to serve and glorifie him so is the Lord also for the body to redeem it to nourish it to glorifie it 8. The Lord knowes how many discouragements we meet with here to dishearten us in his service And therefore he casts in these outward blessings as encouragements to provoke us to serve him with more willingnesse and cheerefulnesse of Spirit As Hezekiah caused the Levites to have provision brought in unto them that they might be encouraged in the service of the Lord 2 Chron. 31.4 so will the Lord doe much more hee will have his servants to know that they shall not serve him for nought Iob 1. not so much as to shut a doore in his house in vaine Mal. 1. 9. The Lord hath commanded such duties unto his servants as they cannot performe without a supply in these outward things works of love mercy kindnesse helpfulnesse one to another yea he would have us to abound in these things and as examples to goe before all other people And therefore he will also furnish us with sufficiency that we may be compleat unto every good work He will not send on a message and cut off the feet of him whom he sends Prov. 26.6 10. The Lord looks for service from our outward man give up your body as an holy living Sacrifice unto God Rom. 12.1 Glorifie God in your bodies and spirits for they are God's saith Paul 1 Cor. 6. but he will not reap where he hath not sown nor look to gather where he hath not scattered he will sustaine us if he look for service from us 11. We are Gods houshold and family and therefore hee will provide for his own If he have charged us to provide for our own 1 Tim. 5.8 he will not he cannot be wanting to his If he feed the Ravens Job 39.3 and cloath the Lilies Matth. 6.26 he will not suffer his children to want bread 12. By giving us these outward things the Lord would nourish our faith in the hope of things spirituall and heavenly for when we see his care over us in these lesser things it may assure us that he will not neglect us in those that are of greater moment The outward blessings which God gave unto Israel were not outward blessings alone but pledges and tokens of better things he gave them bread from heaven and it was an outward bodily food but not that only but it was a pledge to them of the true bread from heaven he gave them water out of the Rock which did quench their bodily thirst but not that only but was a sign and pledge of Christ the true Rock out of whom springs the water of life he gave them a good and fat land to dwell in where they had vine-yards orchards gardens and lived in pleasure therein through his great goodnesse Neh. 9. but not as an outward blessing only but as a pledge of a better inheritance And thus doth he unto us though every thing is not now typicall to us as to them yet thus far we may go to say that these outward blessings are made pledges unto us of Gods love towards us in better things so as we may argue from the lesse to the greater that if he be so mindfull of us in these smaller things of this life then doubtlesse he will not neglect us in those greater things which concerne the eternall salvation of our soules 13. He knowes we have need of these things Matth. 6.32 and therefore he having commanded us to give unto him that needeth Ephes 4.28 and open our hand wide unto the poore Deut. 15.11 surely he will not shut up the bowels of his compassion from his own needy servants but will open his good treasure unto them to satisfie them with good things Deut. 28.12 Quest But sometimes wee see Gods faithfull servants to bee kept short in these outward blessings how comes this to passe the Lord having made such ample promises unto them and how farre forth may any bee assured to have a sufficiency in these things Answ To the first I conceive thus First all the promises of things pertaining to this life are subordinate and subservient to the promises which concern our inward man and our eternall salvation God doth not promise us these outward things so as to make against our spirituall good but so as to further and help it forward he promiseth them with Christ not against Christ nor to hinder his Kingdome in our hearts Rom. 8.32 If it so fall out that sufficiency in these may better us in the inward man wee shall not want them but because the Lord sees us sometimes to abuse them to the fulfilling of our wanton desires to pride security confidence and trusting in them here the Lord is free from his promise least by filling us with those things that are outward he should empty us of that little grace that is in us Secondly there are times of tryall in which the Lord will try all his children The Lord will try the righteous saith the Prophet Psal 11.5 thus he tryed them in Heb. 11.36 37. they were tryed with mockings and scourgings being destitute afflicted and tormented Thus also he tryed Israel in the wildernesse Deut. 8.2 16. and thus he tryed holy Job God will know what is in us he will see whether we serve him for wages yea or no or whether wee would continue to serve him out of love though he should give us nothing Hee will see whether we follow him for loaves or whether we can be content to cleave to him in wants and necessities having nothing But though the Lord will thus try us yet these times of tryall last not alwayes these are not the wayes of Gods ordinary dispensation towards his people During these times of tryall the Lord doth sometimes cut short his servants in outward things but it is to do
pray for but God doth promise to us these outward things therefore we may pray for them Christ also hath taught us the same Matth. 6. and it s our duty to doe it thereby to testifie our dependence upon God our heavenly Father for the supply of all our necessities and in so doing wee give glory to God as acknowledging that every good gift must come from him James 1.17 3. Whereas some of Gods servants are possessed with doubts concerning their estate before God as fearing that they are not the Lords people because they are suffered to prosper so much in outward things this point may serve to remove that scruple because these outward blessings are blessings of grace to the people of God and therefore may well stand with a gracious estate If we endeavour to walk before God in truth and uprightnesse striving to keep a pure conscience in all things towards God and man then for any one to say I feare I am none of Gods people because I prosper in the world is all one as if he should say I feare the Lord intends me no good because he makes good unto me the blessings which he hath promised in his Covenant Vse 3. For direction 1. In the want of these outward blessings 2. In the enjoyment of them First In the want of them and here consider 1. The cause whence it is that we are deprived of them 2. What to doe to get them supplyed I. As for the cause of our wants what shall we say is God unfaithfull doth his promise faile is he unmindfull of his Covenant if not then think what is the cause of these wants which lie upon us c. In Iosh 7. when Ioshua saw the people flie before their enemies which seemed contrary to the promise of God the Lord having before promised to Joshuah that not a man should stand before him all the dayes of his life Joshuah falls on his face before God and begins to expostulate with him why he had brought them thither to destroy them But mark the Lords Answer Get thee up saith the Lord to Ioshuah why lyest thou upon thy face Israel hath sinned and therefore they cannot stand before their enemies Ioshuah not knowing nor considering the sinne of the people hee wonders at their overthrow as if the Lord had not been mindfull of his promise he having promised that not a man should be able to stand before them But the Lord tells Ioshuah Nay saith the Lord It is not I that have failed in my Covenant towards you but you have bro●en Covenant with me Israel hath sinned and transgressed my Covenant and therefore it is that they cannot stand before their enemies So we when we feele our selves pressed with wants and necessities we are apt to think that Gods falls short of his promise towards us He hath promised sufficiency of all good things to his servants but we see not his promise made good unto us we suffer wants And now we are ready to aske why hath the Lord brought us hither into this wildernesse to destroy us But let us know it is not the Lord which hath broken promise with us but we have sinned and broken Covenant with him There is amongst us an accursed thing which till it be cast out of the campe of Israel we shall not stand before our necessities but they will prevaile against us as an armed man They are our iniquities which have turned away these things and our sins have hindred good things from us Jer. 5.25 Our own wayes and doings have procured these things unto us we may thank our selves if we be cut short in the things we would have Let God be true and every man a lyar Let him be acknowledged faithfull in his promise but we have dealt treacherously against him we have sinned and there is the true cause of our misery 1. We have amongst us Achans sinne I saw and coveted saith he we have amongst us worldlinesse and coveteousnesse which hath seised upon us and hath eaten up our hearts The rust hereof hath consumed the good that was in us we pretended to come hither for ordinances but now ordinances are light matters with us and we are turned after the prey Had any other people that professed themselves to be of the world and for the world had they thus walked the Lord would have said of them they are gone thither for the worlds goods and let them take their fill of it let them have what they goe for But as for us the Lord will not suffer us so If he see us forsaking the substance the true treasure to runne after these shadows they shall flie from us the more that we pursue them till we turn againe unto the Lord and then though we follow not them yet they shall follow us and shall pursue us and overtake us as Moses speaks Deut. 28.2 As now we are pressed with wants so then we shall be laden with benefits Psal 68. 2. We have amongst us excesse and pride of life pride in apparell daintiness in dyet and that in those who in times past would have been glad to have been satisfied with bread this is the sinne of the lowest of our people 3. Another sort are idle and walk inordinately not labouring at all but live unprofitably going from house to house They cannot put their hand to works 4. We have abundance of oppression and injustice in our dealings with breach of Covenants and promises there is want of truth and justice it is almost departed from our streets The Lord may now complaine of us as sometimes he did before of Israel I looked for judgement but behold oppression for righteousnesse but behold a crying Isai 5.7 and this sin will make a fire which is not blown by man to kindle of it selfe to consume us Job 20.19 26. 5. By these our sinnes we have brought a reproach upon the Gospel the glorious Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ which should have been glorified by us So long as the Gospel held its credit amongst us so long the Lord also manifested his marvellous goodnesse towards us upholding us also and keeping us from those wants which now we feele But when the credit of the Gospel began to suffer by us we began to suffer with it also receiving therein a just recompence of our evill as was meet 6. There is amongst us a straight-heartednesse and close-handednesse towards the Lord in not ministring to the things which concern his worship the least portion is enough and the worst is good enough for those things that concern his honour This is a sinne which the Lord hath ever been wont to punish with scarcity as we may see in Hag. 1. Mal. 3.9 10. Prov. 20.25 These are the Achans which have robbed us of our silver and gold these sinnes have spoyled us of our substance and where the e things are found it is no marvell though we complaine of wants yet not through breach of Covenant on
the Lords part but through our sinfull breaking with him Israel hath sinned wee have sinned and therefore it is that we are fallen and come down so low Secondly Are we in want and doe we desire to enjoy a sufficiency of these outward blessings would we be set in a way in which wee may be sure to be provided for we have the way here set before us we heare that these blessings are promised in Gods Covenant The promising of them is one branch of that Covenant which the Lord makes with his people The way then is this First to enter into a Covenant with God and then to walk in Covenant with him as becomes his people 1. Enter into Covenant with him Art thou in hunger nakednesse or if not in such extremities yet wantest thou those things which thy condition stands in need of It may be thou art a stranger to the Covenant betwixt God and his people and hast lived an alien from God Thou hast with the Prodigall forsaken thy Fathers house departed away from God living viciously and sinfully and therefore the Lord hath brought thee to the same condition as the Prodigall was brought unto in these thy necessities doe thou then as the Prodigall did when he was in necessity and knew not what to doe he then bethinks himselfe In my Fathers house saith he there is bread enough but I am ready to perish for hunger I will therefore arise and goe to my Father and humble my selfe unto him desiring to be as one of his hired servants Think with thy selfe what provision the Lord makes for those that are of his houshold his children and servants have bread enough Arise therefore out of thy sin by repentance goe unto him and sue to be taken into his family and to be one of his servants and then will the Father call for roabs to cover thy nakednesse and bring out the fatted calfe to satisfie thy hunger thou shalt be fed with food convenient for thee Thy bread shall not faile and thy water shall be sure Though he suffer aliens to want yet his family shall bee provided for but then remember this withall to walk in Covenant with God walk as becomes one of the family of heaven and of the houshold of God be faithfull and diligent in his service have a care of his honour doe nothing to blemish his name bee carefull to please him in all things be zealous for his glory Be thankfull that he hath taken thee to bee one of his Be faithfull in thy particular calling as therein serving the Lord and not to serve thine own turn Study to bee usefull and serviceable to others of Gods servants which are of the same houshold of faith with thee and in this way of the Covenant look for and expect the blessing of it Doe good saith the Prophet and thou shalt be fed assuredly Psal 37.3 If yee be willing and obedient ye shall eat the good things of the land Isai 1.19 and if at any time thou be put to straights and wants doe as Jacob did put God in minde of his Covenant and promise Lord thou saidst saith Jacob that thou wouldest doe me good Lord say thou thou hast said thou wilt care for me and provide things needfull for thy servants and therefore though I be not worthy of the least of all thy mercies not worthy to be fed with the crums which fall from thy childrens table yet because thou hast said that thou wilt satiate thy people with thy goodnesse make good thy word which thou hast spoken Let thy mercy come unto me as I trust in thee Thus doe and then lay thy life upon it thou shalt not want Bread shall be given thee and thy waters shall not faile thou shalt have thy daily portion provided for thee Though thou hast not much laid up in store for many yeares or dayes yet thou shalt have thine Omer day by day And as those in Nehem. 11.23 12.47 they had by the Kings appointment every day a set portion so shalt thou have thy daily allowance daily bread with all such other things as concern this present life II. As in the want so in the enjoyment of outward good things the former consideration gives us direction also doe we enjoy them hath God made good his promise unto us have we a portion convenient for us Then 1. Learn hereby to acknowledge God in these gifts of his goodnesse and grace towards us see his hand in them and know that it is he that gives us all things to enjoy 1 Tim. 6.18 say not it is our own hand that hath done this Though these outward things be but the blessings of the left hand the lesser blessings of the Covenant yet the Lord would be acknowledged even in these This is one reason why the Lord promiseth these things to us in his Covenant that we might learn thereby to acknowledge that they come not unto us by chance or fortune as Heathens thought calling them therefore Bona Fortunae nor yet as carnall Christians think by our own providence or wisedome but look at them as blessings comming from the Lord himselfe This lesson the Lord teacheth us Deut. 8.17 18. Say not it is mine own hand which hath prepared me this abundance but it is the Lord which gives thee power to get substance c. and when we are wanting in acknowledging his hand in them the Lord complaines of our neglect as we may see in Hos 2.8 shee did not know that I gave her her corne and wine and oyle and multiplyed her silver and gold c. And thence it is as I think though others interpret the place otherwise that in Iob 31.27 where Iob speaks of his great substance and riches hee saith his mouth did not kisse his hand That is he did not applaud himselfe nor did he ascribe it to his own handy works Some other would have said this hand hath done it as Isai 10.13 which had been a kissing of his hand and an honouring of himselfe and not a giving glory to God But Job abhorred this so should we let us in our heart acknowledge that it is not our own hand but the Lord which hath given us all our abundance of good things In them see his bounty towards us As he hath let the streame of his bounty run forth towards us so should wee run back and acknowledge the bountifulnesse of the Lord for the wheat and for the wine which he hath given us Ier. 31.12 Should God withhold his hand we might labour long enough and put all our gettings into a broken bag Hag. 1. The race is not alwayes to the swift nor the battle to the strong nor riches to men of understanding and of strength but the Lord gives to every one as pleaseth him And as we should see Gods bounty towards us in these so wee should see his Grace also in them Look at them as blessings of Grace which are communicated to us by
the Covenant of Grace which he hath made with us in Christ They are not so unto the wicked who are not in Covenant with the Lord but to the Saints they are in Gen. 33.5 when Iacob speaks of his children these saith he are the children which God of his Grace hath given thy servant Iacob saw Grace in this so should we see Grace in every outward blessing wee enjoy Object But these outward blessings are common to good and bad and no man can know love or hatred by these things which are before him how then may I know that God gives me these things out of Grace and love Answ 1. If we come by them in the way of the Covenant we walking before God in the way of holy obedience and dependance upon him It s certain they doe then come to us as blessings and are given us by vertue of his Covenant And therefore it is that in Deut. 28.1 2 8 12. If thou shalt diligently observe the Commandements of the Lord thy God saith Moses then shall he command the blessing to come upon thee and all these blessings shall overtake thee c. he doth not say thus shall thou be enriched thus shalt thou encrease in goods c. but thus shall the Lord blesse thee and these blessings shall come upon thee to note unto us that when we walk with God in this way of obedience conscionably then what ever good things come unto us they come as a blessing The Lord not only gives the blessing it selfe but hee gives it as a blessing and a blessing of Grace comming through his Covenant 2. If they be as bands and cords of love betwixt God and us as bands to draw us nearer unto him and as cords to tie us faster unto him causing us to love him more and to honour him in the use of those good things which we have received from him doubtlesse they doe then come from his Grace towards us and are blessings of the Covenant I have loved thee saith the Lord in Jer. 31.3 and with mercy have I drawn thee If God draw us unto him by any meanes there is mercy in it and there is a blessing in it Take this as a rule for ever what ever brings us to God is a blessing as contrariwise whatever separates us from God is a curse And that which causeth love comes from love If these things work love in our hearts towards God then doe they come from his love towards us Consider then are our hearts carried away from God by the things we enjoy this is dangerous But are our hearts thereby more drawn and knit unto him then own them as blessings of the Covenant as springing from the fountaine of Grace which God hath opened to us in Christ 2. Seeing these outward good things are given to Gods people by Covenant as blessings and as springing from Grace this must teach us to be content with such a measure of them as our Father seeth meetest for us though we have lesse in outward things yet there is the same grace in that little as if we had an hundred fold Sometimes there is much love seen in a little thing and so it is in these gifts which God gives to his children The gift may be small but the love is great from which it comes This love should satisfie whether the gift we receive from it be lesse or more As a younger childe which his Father loves tenderly though he have not so large allowance and liberall maintenance as his elder brother that is grown to yeares yet he comforts himselfe in this he saith in his heart I know my Father loves me as well as any childe he hath and thus satisfies himselfe in his Fathers love though his yearely allowance bee not equall with some other so should we Though we have not so much wheat and wine and oyle c. yet we may satiate our soule with the Lords goodnesse Ier. 31.12 14. that goodnesse of his being the same towards us in our little as if our portion were much more abundant And this contentation we should the rather labour for because if we be not satisfied with that lesser portion which the Lord bestows upon us untill we abound it is suspicious and we have cause to doubt whether our contentment be not more in the gift then in the grace and love of the Giver For if it be his love that satisfies us why are we not satisfied when we have lesse as if we had more if we have food and rayment having them from the gift of his Grace let us therewith bee content Satisfie us with thy mercy saith Moses Psal 90.14 Moses could be satisfied with mercy though he had but little else there is a satisfying sufficiency in it if wee can but see it and rellish it in the things we enjoy Let us make sure of this that what we have it may come from the hand of Grace and then let us be contented with it be it lesse or more 3. Doth the Lord thus provide for his servants in these outward things let us then serve him with our outward man Hee blesseth us with all kinde of blessings in spirituall things pertaining to our inward man and in outward things pertaining to our outward man to the end that we might serve him and glorifie him in both he feeds and cloaths our bodies he maintaines the health and strength of them therefore give them up as a living sacrifice unto him R●m 12.1 Let him be magnified in our body Phil. 1.20 Our body must be for the Lord as the Lord is for the body 1 Cor. 6.13 And it is the Apostles exhortation Let us glorifie him both in body and Spirit for they are God's 4. This same consideration before named may teach us how to use the good things of this life which we doe enjoy For 1. Doe we receive them from Grace doe not then abuse them unto sinne to pride wantonnesse excesse c. This is to turn the Grace of God shewed in giving of them to us into licentiousnesse In Hosea 2.8 the Lord complaines there that when he had given them corne and wine silver and gold they bestowed them upon Baal abusing them to Idolatry and to sinne And it s noted as the sinne of wicked Athaliah that the dedicate things which should have been to the honouring of God these shee bestowed upon Baalim 2 Chron. 24.7 When we thus abuse his blessings unto sinne we turne that against God which we have received from him for good And in so doing we may justly feare least they become testimonies against us in the day of our account Therefore do not so requite the Lord Deut. 32. Remember from what hand wee have received them and take heed we abuse them not 2. Hence learn to return part of our substance unto God Give up that unto him which we have received from him The Lord gives us leave to eat and to drink and to cheere our
should have said unto us you have once broken my Covenant and yet if you will at last fulfill my Law which I gave unto you I will yet accept you as just unto life yet we could not have done it the condition was too hard for us to perform If we had been held close to this condition of fulfilling the Law we should have missed of life for ever The Lord therefore seeing and pittying of our infirmity was pleased to propound unto us another condition saying unto us only beleive Beleive on my son trust on my grace and thou shalt be saved herein the Lord hath condescended to our weaknesse taking compassion of our infirmities laying upon us no other burthen but this Beleeve my promise accept my grace and rest upon it and this thy faith shall save thee Thou shalt never perish 3. It serves for comfort to all Gods faithfull ones that have beleived through grace if you have received this first gift if it be given you to beleeve you shall not fail of a second gift even the gift of eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Though your repentance be lesse then to equall the measure of your sins though your obedience be imperfect yea though your faith it selfe be weak also yet if it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfained syncere and sound this your faith is accepted of God and is imputed to you for righteousnesse Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham saith the Apostle Gal. 3.9 Blessed is shee that beleeveth saith the Angell Luke 1.45 and the Son of God comes in as a third witnesse testifying that whosoever beleeveth in him shall not perish but is passed from death to life Iohn 3. Here are three witnesses from heaven and earth all witnessing the blessed estate of such as do beleive Faith is well termed precious faith 1 Pet. 1.2 Pet. 1.1 because it makes us partakers of all the precious blessings of grace which are contained in the Covenant The faithfull are inheritours of all the priviledges which God hath promised to his chosen and therefore it is that they are called heires of promise Heb. 6.17 and heires of blessing 1 Pet. 3.9 You beleevers be exhorted to see and owne your blessednesse take notice of the great things the Lord hath done for you he hath made a covenant with you even a Covenant of peace and blessing and life for ever God is become your God he will be all things unto you and when all helpes under heaven fail you yet from himselfe he will do you good all your sins are forgiven you his spirit is yours to lead you to sanctifie you and to heal the evils that be in you he will uphold you in that state wherein you stand and will keep you that you shall never perish and will at last bring you to a full injoyment of himselfe in his heavenly Kingdome where you shall for ever blesse him and be made blessed by him and shall rejoyce before him with joy unspeakable and glorious pluck up your hearts therefore and be glad lift up your heads strengthen the weak hands and the feeble knees serve the Lord with gladnesse and joyfulnesse of spirit considering the day of our salvation draweth neer though now for a time you may be in heavinesse through manifold temptations and afflictions in this evill world yet faint not you being partakers of that precious faith you have the holy and faithfull God in Covenant with you to love you to blesse you and to save you and yet a little while and he that shall come will come and receive you to himselfe and then you shall fully know what it is to have beleived and to have been in Covenant with God what it is to have God to be your God when you shall see him and enjoy him as he is Only nourish your faith and live by faith make much of this precious grace cherish it by thinking often on the promises and of that grace which hath been shewed upon you from on high study to walke worthy of that mercy received and in so doing wait for the end of your faith the salvation of your soule 4. If faith be the condition of the Covenant then woe to all unbeleevers that go on in their impenitency and unbeleife Their unbeleife deprives them of that good which the Lord hath by his Covenant promised to his people they have no part nor portion in God they are without God without Christ without Covenant without promise without mercy their sins are unpardoned they are under the curse the wrath of God abides upon them there is nothing to take it away from them but if they abide in unbeleif wrath abides upon them for ever There is a wrath wherby God is angry with his own people but that anger lasts but for a little season it is but for a moment Isai 4.7 8. it passeth away and abides not upon them but the unbeleiver hath wrath abiding on him for ever John 3.36 In Iude 5. it is said that God afterwards destroyed those Israelites that beleived not when once they had had the means of grace made known then not beleiving God afterwards destroyed them you that tread in the steps of their unbeleif you are little troubled to thinke what misery is comming upon you as not knowing that you are in danger but you are under wrath your judgement hastneth and your damnation sleepeth not be awakened therefore be thinke your selves and consider what your end will be by your unbeleif you put a bar to exclude your selves from the blessing of life promised to Gods people you thus continuing the Lord neither will nor can save you You will thinke this an hard saying but you will finde it too true God cannot lye Titus 1.2 much lesse can he forswear but God hath sworne this that such shall never enter into his rest Psal 95. and Hebr. 3. ult In Mat. 13. ult It s said Christ did not many great works in his owne country for their unbeleifes sake But in Marke 6.5 it s said hee could not doe them he neither did them nor could do them unbeleif stops the course and diverts the stream of Gods goodnesse from comming unto us Christs usuall speech to those that expected any blessing from him was this According to your faith be it unto you faith makes all things possible Marke 6.23 It will reverse the sentence of death which is passed upon us and bring us back unto life but unbeleife makes it impossible so that we cannot be saved The Lord can do nothing against his own counsell and will and he hath concluded this with himselfe to save none but such as beleive and that whosoever beleeveth not shall perish all you unbeleevers consider this your unbeleefe will bee your destruction Secondly Is there such a work of faith in bringing us into Covenant with God and in enabling us to walk in Covenant with him 1. This serves to direct all the people of God
how to live and walke before God look at your selves as such as have God in Covenant with you to blesse you with all blessings meet and expedi●nt for you whether they be blessings of this life or that which is to come you are no more strangers and forreiners you are not aliens from the Covenant or common-wealth of Israel All the good which God hath promised to his Israel belongs to you Live therefore a life of faith resting upon the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you Naturall men live by sence and reason live you by faith in Gods Covenant and promise and there is much use to be made of this consideration 1. In case we have sinned and done things that we should not and thereby have grieved the Lord as David did of whom it is said that the thing that David had done displeased the Lord yet herein make use of our faith trusting still to his grace and mercy for forgivenesse according to his Covenant we must not now fly away from God and stand afar off or cast away our hope as if we had lost our God and had no more part or portion in him but still beleive that we renewing our Repentance before him he will still be our God and love us still and will be mercifull to our iniquities Now is a time to put forth faith in Gods promise we must remember we are not under that hard condition of workes but under the condition of Faith It s the weaknesse and sinfull infirmity of many of Gods people who walk in much discouragement of spirit because of some failings which they see in themselves by which they become uncomfortable to themselvs and to others when yet their conscientious walking and tendernes is manifest to all such a discouraged spirit might well become a childe of the Law that is under the condition of Workes but it becomes not such as are under the condition of Faith Hath the Lord said that if his people sin against him after hee hath taken them into Covenant with himselfe he will cast them off and acknowledge them no more See what Samuel speaks to the children of Israel in 1 Sam. 12.19 20. Ye have indeed sinned a great sin and done all this wickednesse yet feare not depart not from following the Lord for the Lord will not forsake his people The Lord know●● our frailty and remembers we are but dust and therefore hath told us that he will spare us as a father spareth his son that s●rveth him Mal. 3.17 and will be mercifull to our sins If we were or could be without sin we should not have needed such promises of forgivenesse but when the Lord tooke us into Covenant with himselfe he knew we should still need daily mercy and compassion to heale our backslidings and foreseeing our need of such promises he hath made them knowne unto us that we might live by them looking up unto him by faith in the fence of our daily infirmities for a gracious acceptance of us and forgivenesse of our sins 2. In case we want any blessing suppose some speciall grace to enable us to walke more fruitfully in our particular places and callings look herein at the Covenant as a storehouse full of all rich blessings and make use of faith which is the condition of the Covenant set that aworke and draw out of this fountain as much as we need if we want wisedome boldnesse meeknesse temperance remember by what means we must receive them we receive the spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 beleive this promise therefore wherein the Lord hath said he will give the Holy Ghost to them that desire him Luke 11.13 This is the way the Saints have taken David when he found his heart defiled with those lusts what course took he to get it cleansed from these impurities he flyes to God by the prayer of faith desiring to have a clean heart created in him when the Church found her self shut up under deadnesse and hardnesse of heart they fly for help to Gods Covenant Thou art our father and we are thy people Breake not thy covenant with us Isai 63. and 64. Ier. 14. 3. In case we be troubled with feares of Apostacy and backsliding as thinking though we have begun well yet we shall never be able to continue Persecutions discouragements temptations are so many so violent that we thinke we shall never stand out against them here also live by faith God will give an issue to all our temptations in the mean time commit our soules to God in well doing and beleeve as Paul did that he will deliver you from every evill work and preserve you blamelesse to his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. If Satan annoy with his temptations say as Jehoshua did The Lord rebuke thee O Satan Zach. 3. and remember the promise The Lord will shortly tread him under our feet Rom. 16. 4 In case of any service or duty to be performed unto God remember his Covenant I will make you able to keepe my judgements and to doe them Ezek. 36.27 In 1 Chron. 15.26 it is said God helped the Levites in bearing the Arke so will he help us to undergoe the burthen of that work which is too heavy for us if we rest upon him by faith if we have a word of faith to assure us that the work to be done is for the generall Gods worke and that it is particularly required of us as Our works a worke of our calling we have then good warrant to depend upon his help he hath called us he hath sent us to the work and therefore he will be with us according to that speech of his to Gideon in Judges 6.14 16. I have sent thee and therefore I will be with thee This is written not for him only but for us also that being called to any ministration or service we might by faith look for the same presence of God with us the same assistance as he had Many other particulars might be named but these may suffice to give a short direction how to live by faith in the promise and Covenant of God according to the severall occasions which befall us 2. As we must depend upon God by faith for all good things which the Covenant promiseth so we must remember the other part of the Covenant That God will be a God over us as well as a God to blesse us and therefore here our care must be to advance the Lord on high that it may be seen by our subjection unto him that we doe acknowledge him to be our God above us and over us he hath humbled himself to take such underlings as we are into Covenant with himselfe and hath thereby advanced us above our selves our duty is to set up him that hath abased himselfe for our sakes and to humble our selves to walke with our God Micah 6.8 It is said of Abraham that by his faith he gave glory to God if we be the children of Abraham let
I come down unto you Nay he would not cease this work to save his life Neh. 6.11 When David was giving direction concerning the building of the Temple The work is great saith he And why great because it is not for man but for the Lord 1 Chron. 29.1 and 22.5 The men of the world look at their own things as the great things which they must attend unto the things of God are with them things of lesse value they preferre their own things before the things of Jesus Christ But those that are the Lords people must remember that they have given themselves unto the Lord 2 Cor. 8.5 so as they are not their own any more but the Lords and to be for themselves no further then may stand with his honour no further to seek their own things then may be for the Lord and not against the Lord. Here then first we must preferre his commandements before the commandements and wills of men resolving with the Apostles to obey God rather then men Secondly doe his work in the first ●●●e not first for our selves and then for God as the manner is but see that God be first served remembring the words of our blessed Saviour that he which loves himselfe or any other thing 〈◊〉 then Christ is not worthy of him Thirdly offer our best things to God to be for his service and honour the best of our time the best of our children the best of our substance the fat of our wheat and of our wine must be for the Lord. Prov. 3.9 Honour God with thy riches and with the first of all thine encrease the first are usually the best and most desired Mich. 7.1 And therefore when we give the first and best unto God God counteth himselfe honoured by us when we bring him the leane and the scabbie the lame and the blind things of no worth the Lord is then despised in our eyes Mal. 1. 4. If we will honour God as his people should doe we must stand for his honour in times of generall declining when all seeme to neglect him and lay his honour in the dust When People Nations and Languages shall fall down and worship the golden Image which Nebuchadnezar the King sets up then to despise the Kings commandement and to worship our God alone this is indeed to honour him When we shall be forbidden to make prayer unto our God Then with Daniel to have our Window open towards Jerusalem and to make our prayer before him is an honouring of him When we serve him only in times of generall Reformation living in a Land of uprightnesse when it is an honour to our selves to conforme to those that are faithfull with God in these times its more doubtfull whether we seek to honour God or to honour our selves but in corrupt times of generall Apostacy when the world turns their back upon God then to cleave to him and stand for his worship then to say with Joshuah Let all the world chuse whom they will serve but I and my house will serve the Lord this is to honour him indeed and to give him glory before the face of the whole world see Ezek. 44.12 13 15. 5. If we will exalt God we must rest upon his help at dead lifts when all other helps faile us in greatest straits when we know not which way to turn us when we see no help either in heaven or earth but in him alone Herein Jehoshaphat gave glory to God when he knew not what to doe then were his eyes towards the Lord 2 Chron. 20. Thus the three Children when cast into the fiery Furnace and Daniel when thrown into the Lyons Den yet then they believed that the God whom the served was able to deliver them Dan. 3. And thus Moses honoured God at the Red Sea when all was desperate in the eye of flesh and blood yet Moses by the power of faith then believed a deliverance should come Stand still saith he and see the salvation of God God is greatly honoured by us when we trust upon him in such desperate times 6. If we will honour God we must be exceeding carefull to keep our vowes and promises which we have made unto him walk circumspectly according to the Covenant we have entred into We see how the Lord sometimes blames Israel for despising his Covenant which they had made with him Ezek. 16.59 we cannot neglect our Covenant with him but it will argue a neglect of God himselfe Thou hast despised me saith the Lord to David when he had despised the Commandement which he had promised to observe 2 Sam. 12 9.10 We commonly deale with our promises to God as we doe with those which we make to our little children we think to please them with promises for the present but neither mind greatly what we say unto them nor take any care to performe as thinking they will never remember what we say unto them any longer then whiles we are speaking But would we deale so with our Prince would not he count it a sleighting of him if having bound our selves by promise to performe such a service to him we should have no care to performe Be sure the Lord will require the promises we have made unto him Hast thou then opened thy mouth unto the Lord know thou canst not goe back Judg. 11. Thou canst not neglect thy promise to God without a neglect of God himselfe 7. If we will honour God we must lie under the authority of every word of his and conforme our selves to his example labouring to become followers of him in imitating the vertues of God which hee hath set before us to walk by It s a part of that honour which children owe to their parents to obey their commands and to imitate their godly example in well doing we cannot honour God more then when we are humbled at his feet to receive his word Deut. 33.3 suffering his word to rule in our hearts so as we dare not goe against it in any thing trembling to sinne against it Esay 66. and when we renounce the manners of the world seeking to become followers of God as deare children this is to set him up as honoured by us Ephes 5. 8. In a word if we will honour God we must contend in his cause with much striving being zealous for him and for the defence of his Word Truth Gospel Kingdome and whatsoever concerns his honour not yeelding or giving place one hour Gal. 2. not leaving an hoofe behind us Exod. 10.26 standing out to the utmost in the things of his Kingdome And when we have done all that we can do still magnifie his grace that he wil vouchsafe to admit such as we be to minister unto him even as David did when as he had shewed a great deale of zeale in furnishing the house of God having given of his own cost an hundred thousand Talents of Gold and an hundred thousand Talents of Silver 1 Chron. 22.14 and had withall
which is shewed on us First loving the Lord not for his gifts and rewards but with a free love as he hath loved us and serving him with a free spirit and a willing minde Secondly be free in doing good unto all men even to such as have deserved nothing or if any thing onely evill at our hand though they be aliens and strangers and such as we never hope to receive any good from yet freely do them good even where we look for nothing againe Luke 14.12 14. as God hath done unto us so doe we unto them in this we shall shew our selves the children of our Father in heaven Matth. 5. 2. As it is a free Covenant so it is a sure Covenant certaine to bee performed It cannot faile those that rest upon it shall finde it will not be as a lie unto them to deceive them but the accomplishment will every way answer their expectation and hope Thus saith David 2 Sam. 23.5 God hath made with me a Covenant perfect in all points and sure and in Esay 55.3 The promises of the Covenant are called the sure mercies of David not because they are sure unto David alone but because they are sure and shall be sure unto all the seed of David that are in Covenant with God as David was The promises of Gods Covenant are not yea and nay various and uncertaine but they are Yea and Amen sure to be fulfilled 2 Cor. 1. There shall not faile so much as one word of all that good which God hath promised to doe for his people see Iosh 21.45 23.14 1 King 8.56 The stability of Gods Covenant is compared to the firmnesse and unmovablenesse of the mighty mountaines Esay 54.19 and to the unvariable course of the day and night Jer. 33.20 to imply that it is as easie yea more easie as the places quoted import for the mountaines to remove out of their places and the course of the day and night to cease as for the Covenant of God to faile Reas 1. The Covenant and promises of grace are built upon the unchangeable purpose of God which is a foundation remaining sure and cannot be shaken 2 Tim. 2.19 and for this cause it is that in Tit. 1.2 the Lord is said to have promised eternall life before the world began not that any promise could then be made to us in person but because first God then purposed it in himselfe secondly According to that his purpose he promised life to Christ for us and in our behalfe and thirdly because the promise of life which is in time made unto us in our own person is according to that purpose of God in himselfe and that promise from everlasting made unto Christ and hereto agrees that of the Apostle in Heb. 6.17 where he grounds the truth and certainty of the promise upon the stablenesse of Gods counsell so that unlesse Gods Counsell and purpose change the promise cannot faile Reas 2. The freenesse of the Covenant proves the surenesse and certainty of it as before we argued It is free that it might bee sure so here its sure because its free the former Covenant of works was not sure because it was not free but depended upon some things in our selves which were mutable and changeable and if the Covenant of grace did depend upon the mutability of our will as that did the promise of life now made to this Covenant could be no surer then it was before but this Covenant is free and therefore sure nothing can hinder free grace from giving eternall life to whom it will mans unrighteousnesse comming betweene may prevent a promise made upon condition of righteousnesse but it cannot prevent a promise of free grace Reas 3. God hath given us many pledges to assure us of the certainty of his Covenant and the blessing of it First his word is gone out of his mouth and he cannot alter it Psal 89. Secondly he hath written it to make it more sure and what he hath written is written never to be blotted out Thirdly He hath sealed it with his own seale and so it is become as the Laws of the Medes and Persians which alter not Fourthly He hath sworn it Psal 89.3 ●5 Heb. 6.17 Fifthly He hath given us the earnest of his Spirit 2 Cor. 1.22 Sixthly Christ the Mediator and Testator of it hath confirmed it by his own blood Heb. 9.16 17 18. What can then be more sure Object But in Numb 14.34 God tells the Israelites they shall feele his breach of promise and in Ezek. 16.59 he tells them that he would deale with them as they had done with him in breaking his Covenant and so in Zach. 11.10 by all which it may seeme Gods Covenant may faile Answ Men may be said to be in Covenant with God two wayes First In appearance by visible profession Secondly According to truth the former sort professe hope in the promise of life but being hypocrites which never gave themselves to the Lord in truth they fall short of the promise and are deprived Heb. 4. But those which are truly in Covenant with God having given up themselves unto him in simplicity and truth to be his people towards these Gods promise stands firme never to be changed There were in Israel a mixt people some believed some believed not and yet they all did in shew accept the conditions of the Covenant and professed themselves to be a people in Covenant with God Those of them which in truth believed had the promise of God fully accomplished unto them Those that believed not they enjoyed it not because of their unbeliefe they were in truth none of the children of the Covenant although they professed it and therefore no marvell they missed of the blessing promised As in Exod. 32.32 33. Some are said to be blotted out of the book of life not that those which are written in it are ever indeed blotted out but because some which seemed to have their names written therein are at length declared and made manifest that they never were of those that were written there but were written in earth as Jeremy speaks Jer. 17.13 rather then in heaven so it is here in the case in hand God seemes to break his promise with some but not with those which are truly in Covenant with him only he makes such hypocrites as professe and pretend hope of obtaining the promise to see and feele that all their expectation is in vaine when they finde themselves disappointed of the blessing they hoped for The one sort namely such as truly believe they enjoy the promise following faith to the conservation of the soule the other sort namely seeming hypocrites and formall professors deprive themselves through unbeliefe but the Covenant and promise of God stands firme and sure to all that lay hold on it by a true faith Vse 1. This may shame us for our unbeliefe When we heare of the great things of the Covenant which God hath promised we heare